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<h2> CHAPTER XII. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>light, Mildew, and
Smut...” Mary was puzzled and distressed. Perhaps her ears had played her
false. Perhaps what he had really said was, “Squire, Binyon, and Shanks,”
or “Childe, Blunden, and Earp,” or even “Abercrombie, Drinkwater, and
Rabindranath Tagore.” Perhaps. But then her ears never did play her false.
“Blight, Mildew, and Smut.” The impression was distinct and ineffaceable.
“Blight, Mildew...” she was forced to the conclusion, reluctantly, that
Denis had indeed pronounced those improbable words. He had deliberately
repelled her attempts to open a serious discussion. That was horrible. A
man who would not talk seriously to a woman just because she was a woman—oh,
impossible! Egeria or nothing. Perhaps Gombauld would be more
satisfactory. True, his meridional heredity was a little disquieting; but
at least he was a serious worker, and it was with his work that she would
associate herself. And Denis? After all, what WAS Denis? A dilettante, an
amateur...</p>
<p>Gombauld had annexed for his painting-room a little disused granary that
stood by itself in a green close beyond the farm-yard. It was a square
brick building with a peaked roof and little windows set high up in each
of its walls. A ladder of four rungs led up to the door; for the granary
was perched above the ground, and out of reach of the rats, on four
massive toadstools of grey stone. Within, there lingered a faint smell of
dust and cobwebs; and the narrow shaft of sunlight that came slanting in
at every hour of the day through one of the little windows was always
alive with silvery motes. Here Gombauld worked, with a kind of
concentrated ferocity, during six or seven hours of each day. He was
pursuing something new, something terrific, if only he could catch it.</p>
<p>During the last eight years, nearly half of which had been spent in the
process of winning the war, he had worked his way industriously through
cubism. Now he had come out on the other side. He had begun by painting a
formalised nature; then, little by little, he had risen from nature into
the world of pure form, till in the end he was painting nothing but his
own thoughts, externalised in the abstract geometrical forms of the mind’s
devising. He found the process arduous and exhilarating. And then, quite
suddenly, he grew dissatisfied; he felt himself cramped and confined
within intolerably narrow limitations. He was humiliated to find how few
and crude and uninteresting were the forms he could invent; the inventions
of nature were without number, inconceivably subtle and elaborate. He had
done with cubism. He was out on the other side. But the cubist discipline
preserved him from falling into excesses of nature worship. He took from
nature its rich, subtle, elaborate forms, but his aim was always to work
them into a whole that should have the thrilling simplicity and formality
of an idea; to combine prodigious realism with prodigious simplification.
Memories of Caravaggio’s portentous achievements haunted him. Forms of a
breathing, living reality emerged from darkness, built themselves up into
compositions as luminously simple and single as a mathematical idea. He
thought of the “Call of Matthew,” of “Peter Crucified,” of the “Lute
players,” of “Magdalen.” He had the secret, that astonishing ruffian, he
had the secret! And now Gombauld was after it, in hot pursuit. Yes, it
would be something terrific, if only he could catch it.</p>
<p>For a long time an idea had been stirring and spreading, yeastily, in his
mind. He had made a portfolio full of studies, he had drawn a cartoon; and
now the idea was taking shape on canvas. A man fallen from a horse. The
huge animal, a gaunt white cart-horse, filled the upper half of the
picture with its great body. Its head, lowered towards the ground, was in
shadow; the immense bony body was what arrested the eye, the body and the
legs, which came down on either side of the picture like the pillars of an
arch. On the ground, between the legs of the towering beast, lay the
foreshortened figure of a man, the head in the extreme foreground, the
arms flung wide to right and left. A white, relentless light poured down
from a point in the right foreground. The beast, the fallen man, were
sharply illuminated; round them, beyond and behind them, was the night.
They were alone in the darkness, a universe in themselves. The horse’s
body filled the upper part of the picture; the legs, the great hoofs,
frozen to stillness in the midst of their trampling, limited it on either
side. And beneath lay the man, his foreshortened face at the focal point
in the centre, his arms outstretched towards the sides of the picture.
Under the arch of the horse’s belly, between his legs, the eye looked
through into an intense darkness; below, the space was closed in by the
figure of the prostrate man. A central gulf of darkness surrounded by
luminous forms...</p>
<p>The picture was more than half finished. Gombauld had been at work all the
morning on the figure of the man, and now he was taking a rest—the
time to smoke a cigarette. Tilting back his chair till it touched the
wall, he looked thoughtfully at his canvas. He was pleased, and at the
same time he was desolated. In itself, the thing was good; he knew it. But
that something he was after, that something that would be so terrific if
only he could catch it—had he caught it? Would he ever catch it?</p>
<p>Three little taps—rat, tat, tat! Surprised, Gombauld turned his eyes
towards the door. Nobody ever disturbed him while he was at work; it was
one of the unwritten laws. “Come in!” he called. The door, which was ajar,
swung open, revealing, from the waist upwards, the form of Mary. She had
only dared to mount half-way up the ladder. If he didn’t want her, retreat
would be easier and more dignified than if she climbed to the top.</p>
<p>“May I come in?” she asked.</p>
<p>“Certainly.”</p>
<p>She skipped up the remaining two rungs and was over the threshold in an
instant. “A letter came for you by the second post,” she said. “I thought
it might be important, so I brought it out to you.” Her eyes, her childish
face were luminously candid as she handed him the letter. There had never
been a flimsier pretext.</p>
<p>Gombauld looked at the envelope and put it in his pocket unopened.
“Luckily,” he said, “it isn’t at all important. Thanks very much all the
same.”</p>
<p>There was a silence; Mary felt a little uncomfortable. “May I have a look
at what you’ve been painting?” she had the courage to say at last.</p>
<p>Gombauld had only half smoked his cigarette; in any case he wouldn’t begin
work again till he had finished. He would give her the five minutes that
separated him from the bitter end. “This is the best place to see it
from,” he said.</p>
<p>Mary looked at the picture for some time without saying anything. Indeed,
she didn’t know what to say; she was taken aback, she was at a loss. She
had expected a cubist masterpiece, and here was a picture of a man and a
horse, not only recognisable as such, but even aggressively in drawing.
Trompe-l’oeil—there was no other word to describe the delineation of
that foreshortened figure under the trampling feet of the horse. What was
she to think, what was she to say? Her orientations were gone. One could
admire representationalism in the Old Masters. Obviously. But in a
modern...? At eighteen she might have done so. But now, after five years
of schooling among the best judges, her instinctive reaction to a
contemporary piece of representation was contempt—an outburst of
laughing disparagement. What could Gombauld be up to? She had felt so safe
in admiring his work before. But now—she didn’t know what to think.
It was very difficult, very difficult.</p>
<p>“There’s rather a lot of chiaroscuro, isn’t there?” she ventured at last,
and inwardly congratulated herself on having found a critical formula so
gentle and at the same time so penetrating.</p>
<p>“There is,” Gombauld agreed.</p>
<p>Mary was pleased; he accepted her criticism; it was a serious discussion.
She put her head on one side and screwed up her eyes. “I think it’s
awfully fine,” she said. “But of course it’s a little
too...too...trompe-l’oeil for my taste.” She looked at Gombauld, who made
no response, but continued to smoke, gazing meditatively all the time at
his picture. Mary went on gaspingly. “When I was in Paris this spring I
saw a lot of Tschuplitski. I admire his work so tremendously. Of course,
it’s frightfully abstract now—frightfully abstract and frightfully
intellectual. He just throws a few oblongs on to his canvas—quite
flat, you know, and painted in pure primary colours. But his design is
wonderful. He’s getting more and more abstract every day. He’d given up
the third dimension when I was there and was just thinking of giving up
the second. Soon, he says, there’ll be just the blank canvas. That’s the
logical conclusion. Complete abstraction. Painting’s finished; he’s
finishing it. When he’s reached pure abstraction he’s going to take up
architecture. He says it’s more intellectual than painting. Do you agree?”
she asked, with a final gasp.</p>
<p>Gombauld dropped his cigarette end and trod on it. “Tschuplitski’s
finished painting,” he said. “I’ve finished my cigarette. But I’m going on
painting.” And, advancing towards her, he put his arm round her shoulders
and turned her round, away from the picture.</p>
<p>Mary looked up at him; her hair swung back, a soundless bell of gold. Her
eyes were serene; she smiled. So the moment had come. His arm was round
her. He moved slowly, almost imperceptibly, and she moved with him. It was
a peripatetic embracement. “Do you agree with him?” she repeated. The
moment might have come, but she would not cease to be intellectual,
serious.</p>
<p>“I don’t know. I shall have to think about it.” Gombauld loosened his
embrace, his hand dropped from her shoulder. “Be careful going down the
ladder,” he added solicitously.</p>
<p>Mary looked round, startled. They were in front of the open door. She
remained standing there for a moment in bewilderment. The hand that had
rested on her shoulder made itself felt lower down her back; it
administered three or four kindly little smacks. Replying automatically to
its stimulus, she moved forward.</p>
<p>“Be careful going down the ladder,” said Gombauld once more.</p>
<p>She was careful. The door closed behind her and she was alone in the
little green close. She walked slowly back through the farmyard; she was
pensive.</p>
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