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The Time of Man

Page 34

by Elizabeth Madox Roberts


  ‘I’ll go somewheres far out of hearen of this place. I’ve done little that’s amiss here, but still I’d have to go. I couldn’t see my way to stay here and that’s what I studied out all day. I aim to go far, so far that word from this place can’t come there or is not likely. The strongest man in the place, I was, vigorous to lift above the rest, but they sneaked in on me when I was asleep and tied me with a rope. If I could ’a’ got one hand free. It wouldn’t be in reason to ask a man to stay on here now, and I aim to start when the moon rises, although I done little amiss here, God knows. I’ll be a long piece off by sunup. Walk, I will, and leave you the horses, and you and Hen can make out right well. Afterwhile I’ll send for you-all if you’re of a mind to come where I am, but I got to go now. You and the rest better stay where you got a roof over your heads and no man can take it away from you. I paid the rent ahead as you know. Don’t let any man tell you different, but they won’t trouble you, Ellie. If they do there’s men up around Pike’s will take your part, and I’ll come back, God knows, and come fixed to fight with the law on my side or maybe a weapon. But I’ll be gone at moonrise. I can’t see e’er other way, every man’s arm raised against me.’

  Ellen was sitting in her stiff little chair across the hearth rocks, receiving his words, staring at the floor where the footmarks of the mob still stained the boards although she had swept them. Then she said:

  ‘No, I’d go with you, Jasper, wherever you see fitten to go. I couldn’t nohow see my way to stay behind. I’d go where you go and live where you lives, all my enduren life. If you need to go afore sunup, why then I need to go afore sunup too. I couldn’t make out to live on here with you gone. I’d have to go where you go and when.’

  They sat in silence for a time, repeating their decisions, approaching each other. He would go far, to the Beech-grove country or perhaps further.

  ‘Whatever this country feels to you, why it feels the same to me,’ Ellen murmured. ‘I’d have to go.’

  Then they held the thought together in mind, altering it and repeating it until it became a plan. They would load all onto the wagon, as long as it would hold, and leave the rest behind. ‘I’d want my plough and my axe, Jasper said, ‘but the balance of the wagon room could be for the house plunder. The team is strong and we can load on as long as e’er thing more can stick. We’d take the pigs and the chickens. It wouldn’t be right nohow to leave them here to starve.’ The plan lost its strangeness as they talked of it, mellowed it, and presently it became inevitable. They would lie down awhile to sleep but when the moon rose they would awaken and prepare to go quickly.

  Jasper awakened when, at midnight, the moonlight began to pale the air outside. He brought the wagon near the door, hitched for the departure, and Ellen called Hen and Nannie and Joe to help. Then the furniture was loaded onto the wagon, set snugly together, and as many of the utensils as could be taken, but the rest were left behind. Joe put the hens and the pigs into a coop together and this was secured. Then Ellen gathered all the food that she had and all the foodstuffs, murmuring, ‘They did me harm, those men with the black rags on their faces,’ for the food was in no great quantity and there were seven to feed. Jasper made a warm seat of the feather beds and quilts near the front of the wagon, a place for the smaller children and Nannie to ride, but Hen and Joe sat near. By the time the moon was well above the trees they were on the road, the horses stepping briskly, for they must be far from the reach of this country before the night was done. They hurried down hillroads and over mire, or they turned at crossings without waiting to dispute of ways or to talk of destinations. The damp of the frost arose from the ploughed fields that had been set in readiness before the spring. The stony fields and the rough hills lying around Rock Creek began to recede but they did not slacken the pace of their journey.

  ‘Where are we a-goen, Mammy?’ Nan said.

  ‘I don’t know. Somewheres…’

  ‘Some better place,’ Hen said. ‘Rock Creek is a poor country to settle in.’

  ‘A hard country, not gentle like you’d want,’ Ellen said.

  Then Nannie began to talk about the sky, looking out upon the stars. ‘They are wide apart tonight, the stars, and they’re a few, only bright ones.’

  ‘It’s the moon sets the stars off and away like that, if you ever noticed,’ another said.

  ‘I heared it said one time that all stars have names. Wouldn’t it be a thing to do now, to walk out of a night and to say, “there’s this one and there’s that”, a-callen by name?’

  ‘You could learn that in books,’ Dick said, ‘and that I’m sure. You could learn the names of all the stars maybe.’

  ‘Where are any books? We got no books,’ Hen said.

  ‘And all the sky and how deep it goes, and whe’r it’s got an end or not?’

  ‘You could learn that too in books, it’s said. I got a heap of books to read and ne’er a one have I read yet but two or maybe three. You could never read all the books in the world, I reckon, if you read all your days until you’re old.’

  ‘I don’t aim to get old. I wouldn’t. Grow up is all I aim.’

  ‘But the wisdom of the world is the dearest thing in life, learnen is, and it’s my wish to get a hold onto some of that-there. It’s found in books, is said, and that’s what I know. I couldn’t bear to settle down in life withouten I had it. It means as much as all the balance of life, seems like. Books is what I want. In books, it’s said, you’d find the wisdom of all the ages.’

  ‘Another year and I aim to have a crop all my own, share and share on some good land. I’m big enough to set out for my own self by now.’

  ‘Where do we think we’ll go now, Mammy, and where will we stay tonight?’ one asked.

  ‘I don’t know. A far piece from here.’

  ‘God knows!’

  ‘Some better country. Our own place maybe. Our trees in the orchard. Our own land sometime. Our place to keep…’

  ‘In them you’d find the answers to all the questions you’d ever ask and why it’s so…’

  ‘I wonder how deep it goes and whe’r it’s got an end and what the end is like…’

  ‘And nohow I couldn’t bear to settle down and not…’

  ‘How blue it is, even of a night, and a little whiter round the moon, but deep in, as far as you can see…’

  They went a long way while the moon was still high above the trees, stopping only at some creek to water the beasts. They asked no questions of the way but took their own turnings.

  BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

  Elizabeth Madox Roberts (1881–1941) was the second of eight children born to Simpson Roberts, an engineer, and Elizabeth Roberts, a teacher. She was raised in Springfield, and after leaving school spent most of her twenties teaching elementary school. She first began writing poetry after moving to Colorado in 1910, and enrolled at the University of Chicago in 1917, at the age of thirty-six, to study literature.

  After graduating Roberts returned to Springfield. Her first novel, The Time of Man, was published to widespread acclaim in 1926, and she went on to publish a further seven novels, as well as poetry and two volumes of short stories. In 1936 she was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma, but continued to write during her last few years. She died in Florida in 1941, and is buried in Springfield.

  SELECTED TITLES FROM HESPERUS PRESS

  Author Title Foreword writer

  Pietro Aretino The School of Whoredom Paul Bailey

  Pietro Aretino The Secret Life of Nuns

  Jane Austen Lesley Castle Zoë Heller

  Jane Austen Love and Friendship Fay Weldon

  Honoré de Balzac Colonel Chabert A.N. Wilson

  Charles Baudelaire On Wine and Hashish Mgaret Drabble

  Giovanni Boccaccio Life of Dante A.N. Wilson

  Charlotte Brontë The Spell

  Emily Brontë Poems of Solitude Helen Dunmore

  Mikhail Bulgakov Fatal Eggs Doris Lessing

  Mikhail Bulgakov The Heart of a Dog A.S. Byatt


  Giacomo Casanova The Duel Tim Parks

  Miguel de Cervantes The Dialogue of the Dogs Ben Okri

  Geoffrey Chaucer The Parliament of Birds

  Anton Chekhov The Story of a Nobody Louis de Bernières

  Anton Chekhov Three Years William Fiennes

  Wilkie Collins The Frozen Deep

  Joseph Conrad Heart of Darkness A.N. Wilson

  Joseph Conrad The Return Colm Tóibín

  Gabriele D’Annunzio The Book of the Virgins Tim Parks

  Dante Alighieri The Divine Comedy: Inferno

  Dante Alighieri New Life Louis de Bernières

  Daniel Defoe The King of Pirates Peter Ackroyd

  Marquis de Sade Incest Janet Street-Porter

  Charles Dickens The Haunted House Peter Ackroyd

  Charles Dickens A House to Let

  Fyodor Dostoevsky The Double Jeremy Dyson

  Fyodor Dostoevsky Poor People Charlotte Hobson

  Alexandre Dumas One Thousand and One Ghosts

  George Eliot Amos Barton Matthew Sweet

  Henry Fielding Jonathan Wild the Great Peter Ackroyd

  F. Scott Fitzgerald The Popular Girl Helen Dunmore

  Gustave Flaubert Memoirs of a Madman Germaine Greer

  Ugo Foscolo Last Letters of Jacopo Ortis Valerio Massimo Manfredi

  Elizabeth Gaskell Lois the Witch Jenny Uglow

  Théophile Gautier The Jinx Gilbert Adair

  André Gide Theseus

  Johann Wolfgang von Goethe The Man of Fifty A.S. Byatt

  Nikolai Gogol The Squabble Patrick McCabe

  E.T.A. Hoffmann Mademoiselle de Scudéri Gilbert Adair

  Victor Hugo The Last Day of a Condemned Man Libby Purves

  Joris-Karl Huysmans With the Flow Simon Callow

  Henry James In the Cage Libby Purves

  Franz Kafka Metamorphosis Martin Jarvis

  Franz Kafka The Trial Zadie Smith

  John Keats Fugitive Poems Andrew Motion

  Heinrich von Kleist The Marquise of O– Andrew Miller

  Mikhail Lermontov A Hero of Our Time Doris Lessing

  Nikolai Leskov Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk Gilbert Adair

  Carlo Levi Words are Stones Anita Desai

  Xavier de Maistre A Journey Around my Room Alain de Botton

  André Malraux The Way of the Kings Rachel Seiffert

  Katherine Mansfield Prelude William Boyd

  Edgar Lee Masters Spoon River Anthology Shena Mackay

  Guy de Maupassant Butterball Germaine Greer

  Prosper Mérimée Carmen Philip Pullman

  Sir Thomas More The History of King Richard III Sister Wendy Beckett

  Sándor Petofi John the Valiant George Szirtes

  Francis Petrarch My Secret Book Germaine Greer

  Luigi Pirandello Loveless Love

  Edgar Allan Poe Eureka Sir Patrick Moore

  Alexander Pope The Rape of the Lock and A Key to the Lock Peter Ackroyd

  Antoine-François Prévost Manon Lescaut Germaine Greer

  Marcel Proust Pleasures and Days A.N. Wilson

  Alexander Pushkin Dubrovsky Patrick Neate

  Alexander Pushkin Ruslan and Lyudmila Colm Tóibín

  François Rabelais Pantagruel Paul Bailey

  François Rabelais Gargantua Paul Bailey

  Christina Rossetti Commonplace Andrew Motion

  George Sand The Devil’s Pool Victoria Glendinning

  Jean-Paul Sartre The Wall Justin Cartwright

  Friedrich von Schiller The Ghost-seer Martin Jarvis

  Mary Shelley Transformation

  Percy Bysshe Shelley Zastrozzi Germaine Greer

  Stendhal Memoirs of an Egotist Doris Lessing

  Robert Louis Stevenson Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Helen Dunmore

  Theodor Storm The Lake of the Bees Alan Sillitoe

  Leo Tolstoy The Death of Ivan Ilych

  Leo Tolstoy Hadji Murat Colm Tóibín

  Ivan Turgenev Faust Simon Callow

  Mark Twain The Diary of Adam and Eve John Updike

  Mark Twain Tom Sawyer, Detective

  Oscar Wilde The Portrait of Mr W.H. Peter Ackroyd

  Virginia Woolf Carlyle’s House and Other Sketches Doris Lessing

  Virginia Woolf Monday or Tuesday Scarlett Thomas

  Emile Zola For a Night of Love A.N. Wilson

  Copyright

  Published by Hesperus Press Limited

  28 Mortimer Street, London W1W 7RD

  www.hesperuspress.com

  The Time of Man first published in 1926

  First published by Hesperus Press Limited, 2013

  This ebook edition first published in 2013

  Designed and typeset by Fraser Muggeridge studio

  All rights reserved. This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly

  ISBN 978–1–78094–191–2

 

 

 


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