The Complete Novels. D. H. Lawrence

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The Complete Novels - D. H. Lawrence

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should like to know where,” retorted his wife.

      “Iv'ry-wheer! I'm nobbut a sack o' faggots.”

      Mrs. Morel laughed. He had still a wonderfully young body, muscular, without any fat. His skin was smooth and clear. It might have been the body of a man of twenty-eight, except that there were, perhaps, too many blue scars, like tattoo-marks, where the coal-dust remained under the skin, and that his chest was too hairy. But he put his hand on his side ruefully. It was his fixed belief that, because he did not get fat, he was as thin as a starved rat. Paul looked at his father's thick, brownish hands all scarred, with broken nails, rubbing the fine smoothness of his sides, and the incongruity struck him. It seemed strange they were the same flesh.

      “I suppose,” he said to his father, “you had a good figure once.”

      “Eh!” exclaimed the miner, glancing round, startled and timid, like a child.

      “He had,” exclaimed Mrs. Morel, “if he didn't hurtle himself up as if he was trying to get in the smallest space he could.”

      “Me!” exclaimed Morel—“me a good figure! I wor niver much more n'r a skeleton.”

      “Man!” cried his wife, “don't be such a pulamiter!”

      “'Strewth!” he said. “Tha's niver knowed me but what I looked as if I wor goin' off in a rapid decline.”

      She sat and laughed.

      “You've had a constitution like iron,” she said; “and never a man had a better start, if it was body that counted. You should have seen him as a young man,” she cried suddenly to Paul, drawing herself up to imitate her husband's once handsome bearing.

      Morel watched her shyly. He saw again the passion she had had for him. It blazed upon her for a moment. He was shy, rather scared, and humble. Yet again he felt his old glow. And then immediately he felt the ruin he had made during these years. He wanted to bustle about, to run away from it.

      “Gi'e my back a bit of a wesh,” he asked her.

      His wife brought a well-soaped flannel and clapped it on his shoulders. He gave a jump.

      “Eh, tha mucky little 'ussy!” he cried. “Cowd as death!”

      “You ought to have been a salamander,” she laughed, washing his back. It was very rarely she would do anything so personal for him. The children did those things.

      “The next world won't be half hot enough for you,” she added.

      “No,” he said; “tha'lt see as it's draughty for me.”

      But she had finished. She wiped him in a desultory fashion, and went upstairs, returning immediately with his shifting-trousers. When he was dried he struggled into his shirt. Then, ruddy and shiny, with hair on end, and his flannelette shirt hanging over his pit-trousers, he stood warming the garments he was going to put on. He turned them, he pulled them inside out, he scorched them.

      “Goodness, man!” cried Mrs. Morel, “get dressed!”

      “Should thee like to clap thysen into britches as cowd as a tub o' water?” he said.

      At last he took off his pit-trousers and donned decent black. He did all this on the hearthrug, as he would have done if Annie and her familiar friends had been present.

      Mrs. Morel turned the bread in the oven. Then from the red earthenware panchion of dough that stood in a corner she took another handful of paste, worked it to the proper shape, and dropped it into a tin. As she was doing so Barker knocked and entered. He was a quiet, compact little man, who looked as if he would go through a stone wall. His black hair was cropped short, his head was bony. Like most miners, he was pale, but healthy and taut.

      “Evenin', missis,” he nodded to Mrs. Morel, and he seated himself with a sigh.

      “Good-evening,” she replied cordially.

      “Tha's made thy heels crack,” said Morel.

      “I dunno as I have,” said Barker.

      He sat, as the men always did in Morel's kitchen, effacing himself rather.

      “How's missis?” she asked of him.

      He had told her some time back:

      “We're expectin' us third just now, you see.”

      “Well,” he answered, rubbing his head, “she keeps pretty middlin', I think.”

      “Let's see—when?” asked Mrs. Morel.

      “Well, I shouldn't be surprised any time now.”

      “Ah! And she's kept fairly?”

      “Yes, tidy.”

      “That's a blessing, for she's none too strong.”

      “No. An' I've done another silly trick.”

      “What's that?”

      Mrs. Morel knew Barker wouldn't do anything very silly.

      “I'm come be-out th' market-bag.”

      “You can have mine.”

      “Nay, you'll be wantin' that yourself.”

      “I shan't. I take a string bag always.”

      She saw the determined little collier buying in the week's groceries and meat on the Friday nights, and she admired him. “Barker's little, but he's ten times the man you are,” she said to her husband.

      Just then Wesson entered. He was thin, rather frail-looking, with a boyish ingenuousness and a slightly foolish smile, despite his seven children. But his wife was a passionate woman.

      “I see you've kested me,” he said, smiling rather vapidly.

      “Yes,” replied Barker.

      The newcomer took off his cap and his big woollen muffler. His nose was pointed and red.

      “I'm afraid you're cold, Mr. Wesson,” said Mrs. Morel.

      “It's a bit nippy,” he replied.

      “Then come to the fire.”

      “Nay, I s'll do where I am.”

      Both colliers sat away back. They could not be induced to come on to the hearth. The hearth is sacred to the family.

      “Go thy ways i' th' armchair,” cried Morel cheerily.

      “Nay, thank yer; I'm very nicely here.”

      “Yes, come, of course,” insisted Mrs. Morel.

      He rose and went awkwardly. He sat in Morel's armchair awkwardly. It was too great a familiarity. But the fire made him blissfully happy.

      “And

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