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<date>January 1896</date>
               <biblScope>Symons, Arthur. "Pages from the Life of Lucy Newcome." <emph rend="italic">The Savoy</emph>, vol. 2, April 1896, pp. 147-160. <emph rend="italic">Savoy Digital Edition</emph>,
                              edited by Christopher Keep and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2018-2020. <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/savoyv2-symons-lucy/</biblScope>
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<div n="SAVOYV2_35pr" type="fiction">
<head>
<title level="a"><emph rend="bold"><emph rend="indent3">PAGES FROM THE LIFE OF LUCY NEWCOME </emph></emph></title>
</head>

<p>
<emph rend="indent3">&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;I</emph></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>AS Lucy Newcome walked down the street, with the baby <lb/>
               in her arms, her first sensation was one of thankfulness, to <lb/>
               be out of the long, blank, monotonous hospital, where she <lb/>
               had suffered obscurely ; to be once more free, and in the <lb/>
               open air. &#160;How refreshing it is to be out of doors again ! &#160;she <lb/>
               said to herself. &#160;But she had not walked many steps before <lb/>
               the unfamiliar morning air made her feel quite light-headed ; for a moment <lb/>
               she fancied she was going to faint ; and she leant against the wall, closing <lb/>
               her eyes, until the feeling had passed. &#160;As she walked on again, things still <lb/>
               seemed a little dizzy before her eyes, and she had to draw in long breaths, for <lb/>
               fear that curious cloudy sensation should come into her brain once more. &#160;She <lb/>
               held the baby carefully, drawing the edges of the cloak around its face, so that <lb/>
               it should not feel cold and wake up. &#160;It was the first time she had carried the <lb/>
               baby out of doors, and it seemed to her that everyone must be looking at her. <lb/>
               She was not much afraid of being recognized, for she knew that she had altered <lb/>
               so much since her confinement ; and for that reason she was glad to be looking <lb/>
               so thin and white and ill. &#160;But she felt sure that people would wonder who she <lb/>
               was, and why such a young girl was carrying a baby ; perhaps they would not <lb/>
               think it was hers ; she might be only carrying it for some married woman. <lb/>
               And she let her left hand, on which there was no wedding-ring, show from <lb/>
               under the shawl in which it had been her first instinct to envelope it. &#160;Many <lb/>
               thoughts came into her mind, but in a dull confused way, as she walked slowly <lb/>
               along, feeling the weight of the baby dragging at her arms. &#160;At last they <lb/>
               began to ache so much that she looked around for somewhere to sit down. <lb/>
               She had not noticed where she had been going ; why should she ? &#160;where was <lb/>
               there for her to go ? &#160;and she found herself in one of the side streets, at the end <lb/>
               of which, she remembered, was the park. &#160;There, at all events, she could sit <lb/>
               down ; and when she had found a seat, she took the baby on her knees, and lay <lb/>
               back in the corner with a sense of relief. <lb/></p>

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<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>At first she did not try to think of plans for the future. &#160;She merely <lb/>
               resigned herself, unconsciously enough, to the vague, peaceful, autumn sadness <lb/>
               of the place and the hour. &#160;The damp smell of the earth, sharp and comforting, <lb/>
               came to her nostrils ; the leaves, smelling a little musty, dropped now and then <lb/>
               past her face on to the shawl in which the baby was wrapt. &#160;There was only <lb/>
               enough breeze to make a gentle sighing among the branches overhead ; and <lb/>
               she looked up at the leafy roof above her, as she had looked up so often when <lb/>
               a child, and felt better for being there. &#160;Gradually her mind began to con- <lb/>
               centrate itself : what am I to do, she thought, what am I to do? <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Just then the little creature lying on her knees stirred a little, and opened <lb/>
               its blue eyes. &#160;She caught it to her breast with kiss after kiss, and began to <lb/>
               rock it to and fro, with a passionate fondness. &#160;&#8220;Mammy&#8217;s little one,&#8221; she <lb/>
               said ; &#8220;all Mammy&#8217;s, Mammy&#8217;s own ;&#8221; and began to croon over it, with a sort <lb/>
               of fierce insistence. &#160;Yes, she must do something, and at once, for the child&#8217;s <lb/>
               sake. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>But the more she tried to find some plan for the future, the more hopeless <lb/>
               did the task seem to become. &#160;There was her aunt, whom she would never go <lb/>
               back to, whom she would never see again ; never. &#160;There was her cousin, who <lb/>
               had cast her off; and she said to herself that she hated her cousin. &#160;All her <lb/>
               aunt&#8217;s friends were so respectable : they would never look at her ; and she <lb/>
               could never go to them. &#160;Her cousin&#8217;s friends were like himself, only worse, <lb/>
               much worse. &#160;No, there was nowhere for her to look for help ; and how was <lb/>
               she to help herself? &#160;She knew nothing of any sort of business, she had no <lb/>
               showy accomplishments to put to use ; and besides, with a baby, who would <lb/>
               give her employment ? &#160;Oh, why had she ever listened to her cousin, why had <lb/>
               she been such a fool as to have a baby ? &#160;she said to herself, furiously ; and <lb/>
               then, feeling the bundle stir in her arms, she fell to hugging and kissing it <lb/>
               again. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>As she lifted up her face, a woman who was passing half paused, looking <lb/>
               at her in a puzzled way, and then, after walking on a little distance, turned <lb/>
               and came back, hesitatingly. &#160;Lucy knew her well : it was Mrs. Graham, her <lb/>
               aunt&#8217;s laundress, with whom she had had to settle accounts every week. &#160;She <lb/>
               had never liked the woman, but now she was overjoyed at meeting her ; and as <lb/>
               Mrs. Graham said, questioningly, &#8220;Miss Lucy? Lord, now, it isn't you?&#8221; she <lb/>
               answered, &#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s me ; don't you know me, Mrs. Graham ?&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Well,&#8221; the woman said, &#8220;I wasn't sure ; how you have changed, miss <lb/>
               I asked Mrs. Newcome where you was, and she said you was gone abroad.&#8221; <lb/>
               The woman stopped and looked curiously at the baby. &#160;She had taken <lb/></p>

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           </fw>

<p>
               in the situation at a glance ; and though she was rather surprised, she was not <lb/>
               nearly so much surprised as Lucy had expected, and she seemed more <lb/>
               interested than shocked. <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Pretty baby, miss,&#8221; she said, stooping down to have a closer look. <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Lucy, in a matter of fact way, &#8220;it 's my baby. &#160;I've been very <lb/>
               unhappy.&#8221; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Have you now, miss?&#8221; said Mrs. Graham, sitting down by her side, and <lb/>
               looking at her more curiously than ever. &#160;&#8220;Well, you do look ill. &#160;But where <lb/>
               have you been all this time, and where are you living now ?&#8221; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;I'm not living anywhere,&#8221; said Lucy ; &#8220;I only came out of hospital <lb/>
               to-day and I've nowhere to go.&#8221; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;You don't mean to say that !&#8221; said Mrs. Graham ; &#8220;but,&#8221; she added, <lb/>
               looking at the baby, &#8220;his father&#160;&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;&#160;.&#8221; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;He has left me,&#8221; said Lucy, as quietly as she could. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>At this Mrs. Graham glanced at her in a somewhat less favourable way. <lb/>
               She did not disapprove of people running away from home and getting <lb/>
               children as irregularly as they liked ; but she very much disapproved of their <lb/>
               being left. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;I haven't a penny in the world,&#8221; Lucy went on ; &#8220;at least, I have only <lb/>
               a little more than two shillings ; and I don't know what I am going to do.&#8221; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Oh dear now, oh dear !&#8221; said Mrs. Graham, rather coldly, &#8220;that&#8217;s very <lb/>
               sad, it is. &#160;I do say that's hard lines. &#160;And so you was left without anything. <lb/>
               That&#8217;s very hard lines.&#8221; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;I&#8217;m so glad I met you, Mrs. Graham,&#8221; said Lucy. &#160;&#8220;Perhaps you can <lb/>
               help me. &#160;Oh, do try to help me if you can ! &#160;I haven't anybody, really, to <lb/>
               look to, and I haven't a roof to shelter me. &#160;I can't stay in the streets all day. <lb/>
               I&#8217;m so afraid the baby will take cold, or something. &#160;It isn't for myself I mind <lb/>
               so much. &#160;What shall I do ?&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>While Lucy spoke, Mrs. Graham was considering matters. &#160;Without <lb/>
               being exactly hard-hearted, she was not naturally sympathetic, and, while <lb/>
               she felt sorry for the poor girl, she was not at all carried away by her feelings. <lb/>
               But she did not like to leave her there as she was, and an idea had occurred <lb/>
               to her which made her all the more ready to act kindly towards a creature <lb/>
               in distress. &#160;So she said, after a moment&#8217;s pause, &#8220;Well, you&#8217;d better come <lb/>
               along with me, miss, and have a rest, anyway. &#160;Shan&#8217;t I carry the baby?&#8221; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Oh, you are good !&#8221; cried Lucy, seizing her hand, and almost crying as <lb/>
               she tried to thank her. &#170;&#8220;No, no, I&#8217;ll carry the baby ! &#160;And may I really come <lb/>
               in with you ? &#160;You don&#8217;t mind ? &#160;You don't mind being seen ?&#8221; <lb/></p>

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</fw>

<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Oh, no, <emph rend="italic">I</emph> don't mind ! &#160;&#8221;said Mrs. Graham, a little loftily. &#160;&#8220;It&#8217;s this <lb/>
               way, miss.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>And they began to walk across the park. &#160;Lucy felt so immensely <lb/>
               relieved that she was almost gay. &#160;She gave up thinking of what was going <lb/>
               to happen, and trudged along contentedly by the side of the older woman. <lb/>
               After they had left the park and had reached the poorer quarter of the town, <lb/>
               she suddenly stopped outside a sweet-shop. &#160;&#8220;It won't be very extravagant if <lb/>
               I get a pennyworth of acid-drops, will it ?&#8221; she said, with almost her old <lb/>
               smile ; and Mrs. Graham had to wait while she went in and bought them. &#160;Then <lb/>
               they went on together through street after street, till at last Mrs. Graham <lb/>
               said, &#8220;It&#8217;s here, come in.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>As the door opened Lucy heard the barking of a dog ; and next moment <lb/>
               she found herself in a room such as she had never been in in her life, but <lb/>
               which seemed to her, at that moment, the most delightful place in the world. <lb/>
               It was a kitchen, horribly dirty, with a dog-kennel in one corner, and a rabbit- <lb/>
               hutch on the top of the kennel ; there was a patchwork rug on the floor, and <lb/>
               a deal table in the middle, with a piece of paper on one end of it as a table- <lb/>
               cloth, and a loaf of bread, without a plate, standing in the middle of the table. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Have something to eat, miss,&#8221; said Mrs. Graham, and Lucy sank into <lb/>
               an old stuffed armchair, which stood by the side of the fire-place, the springs <lb/>
               broken and protruding, and the flock coming through the horse-hair in great <lb/>
               gray handfuls. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>The baby was still asleep, and lay quietly on her lap as she munched <lb/>
               ravenously at the thick slice of bread and butter which Mrs. Graham cut for <lb/>
               her. &#160;All at once she heard a little cry, and, looking round in the corner <lb/>
               behind her, she saw a baby lying in a clothes-basket. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;You&#8217;ll have to sleep with the children to-night,&#8221; said Mrs. Graham. <lb/>
               &#8220;We&#8217;ve only two rooms besides this, and the children has one of them. <lb/>
               When you&#8217;ve had a bit of a meal, you'd better lie down and rest yourself.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>When Lucy went into the room which was to be her bedroom for the <lb/>
               night, she could not at first distinguish the bed. &#160;There were no bedclothes, but <lb/>
               some old coats and petticoats had been heaped up over a mattress on a little <lb/>
               iron bedstead in the corner. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Now just lie down for a bit,&#8221; said Mrs. Graham, &#8220;and you give me the <lb/>
               baby. I know the ways of them.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Lucy threw herself on the bed. &#160;She could at least rest there ; and she <lb/>
               put a couple of acid-drops into her mouth, and then, almost before she knew <lb/>
               it, she was asleep, in her old baby-fashion, sucking her thumb. <lb/></p>

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               </fw>

<p>
<emph rend="indent3">&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;II</emph></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Lucy slept at Mrs. Graham&#8217;s two nights. &#160;She had been told that she <lb/>
               would have to work ; and she would do anything, she said, anything. &#160;Mrs. <lb/>
               Graham had a cousin, Mrs. Marsh, who had a large laundry ; and Mrs. Marsh <lb/>
               happened to be just then in want of a shirt and collar hand. &#160;Lucy knew <lb/>
               nothing about ironing, but she was sure she could learn it without the least <lb/>
               difficulty. &#160;So the two women set out for Mrs. Marsh&#8217;s. It was not very far <lb/>
               off, and when they got there Mr. and Mrs. Marsh were standing at the big side- <lb/>
               gate, where the things were brought in and out, watching one of their vans <lb/>
               being unloaded. &#160;The shop-door was open, and inside, in the midst of the <lb/>
               faint steam, rising from piles of white linen, smoking under the crisp hiss of <lb/>
               the hot irons, Lucy saw four young women, wearing loose blouses, their <lb/>
               sleeves rolled up above their elbows, their faces flushed with the heat, bending <lb/>
               over their work. &#160;Mrs. Marsh looked at her amiably enough, and she led the <lb/>
               way into the laundry. &#160;Besides the four girls, the two shirt and collar hands, <lb/>
               the gauferer and the plain ironer, there was a man ramming clothes into a <lb/>
               boiler with a long pole, and a youth, Mrs. Marsh&#8217;s son, turning a queer, new- <lb/>
               fangled instrument like a barrel, which dollied the clothes by means of some <lb/>
               mechanical contrivance. &#160;Clothes were hanging all around on clothes-horses, <lb/>
               and overhead, on lines ; the shirts were piled up in neat heaps at the end of <lb/>
               the ironing-boards ; some of the things lay in baskets on the ground. As <lb/>
               Lucy looked around, her eye suddenly caught a white embroidered dress <lb/>
               which was hanging up to dry ; and for the moment she felt quite sick ; it was <lb/>
               exactly like a dress of her mother&#8217;s. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>And the heat, too, was overpowering ; she scarcely knew what was being <lb/>
               said, as the two women discussed her to her face, and bargained between <lb/>
               themselves as to the price of her labour. &#160;She realized that she was to come <lb/>
               there next day ; that she was to learn to iron cuffs and collars and shirt-fronts <lb/>
               like the young woman nearest to her, whom they called Polly ; and, as a <lb/>
               special favour, she was to be paid eight shillings a-week, the full price at once <lb/>
               instead of only six shillings, which was generally given to beginners. &#160;That <lb/>
               she realized, she realized it acutely ; for she was already beginning to find <lb/>
               out that money means something very definite when you are poor, and that a <lb/>
               shilling more or less may mean all the difference between everything and <lb/>
               nothing. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>That day it was arranged that she should rent a little attic in a house <lb/>
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</fw>

               not far from Mrs. Graham&#8217;s, a house where a carpenter and his wife lived : <lb/>
               they had no children, and she could have a room to herself. &#160;She was <lb/>
               to pay five shillings a-week for her room and what they called her keep, that <lb/>
               is to say, breakfast and supper, which, she soon found out, meant bread and <lb/>
               cheese one day, bread and dripping another, and bread and lard a third, <lb/>
               always with some very weak tea, water just coloured. &#160;Then there was the <lb/>
               baby ; she could not look after the baby while she was out at work, so the <lb/>
               carpenter&#8217;s wife, who was called Mrs. Marsh, like the laundress, though she was <lb/>
               no relation, promised to take charge of the baby during the day for half-a- <lb/>
               crown extra. &#160;Five shillings and half-a-crown made seven-and-six, and that <lb/>
               left her only sixpence a week to live on : could one say to live on ? &#160;At all <lb/>
               events, she had now a roof over her head ; she would scarcely starve, not <lb/>
               quite starve ; and she sat in her attic, the first night she found herself there, <lb/>
               and wondered what was going to happen : if she would have strength to do <lb/>
               the work, strength to live on, day after day, strength to nurse her baby, whose <lb/>
               little life depended on hers. &#160;She sat on the edge of the bed, looking out at <lb/>
               the clear, starry sky, visible above the roofs, and she sent up a prayer, up into <lb/>
               that placid, unresponsive sky, hanging over her like the peace that passeth <lb/>
               understanding, and has no comfort in it for mere mortals, a prayer for <lb/>
               strength, only for the strength of day by day, one day at a time. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Next morning she took up her place at the ironing-board, next to Polly, <lb/>
               between her and the head ironer, whom she was told to watch. &#160;They were all <lb/>
               Lancashire girls, not bad-hearted, but coarse and ignorant, always swearing <lb/>
               and using foul language. &#160;Lucy had never heard people who talked like that ; <lb/>
               it wounded her horribly, and her pale face went crimson at every one of their <lb/>
               coarse jokes. &#160;They had no sort of ill-will to her, but they knew she had a <lb/>
               child, and was not married, and they could not help reminding her of the fact, <lb/>
               which indeed seemed to them no less scandalous than their language seemed <lb/>
               to her. &#160;They really believed that a woman who had been seduced was exactly <lb/>
               the same as a prostitute ; they talked of people who led a gay life : &#8220;Ah, my <lb/>
               wench, it's a gay life, but a short one ;&#8221; and they were convinced that every- <lb/>
               one who led a gay life came to a deplorable end before she was five-and- <lb/>
               twenty. &#160;To have had a child, without having been married, was the first <lb/>
               step, so they held, in an inevitably downward course ; indeed, they believed <lb/>
               that all kinds of horrible things came of it, and they talked to one another of <lb/>
               the ghastly stories they had &#8220;heerd tell.&#8221; Lucy had never heard of such <lb/>
               things, and she half believed them. &#8220;Can all this really be true ?&#8221; she said <lb/>
               to herself sometimes, in a paroxysm of terror ; and she tried not to think of <lb/></p>

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               </fw>

<p>
               it, as of something that might possibly be true, but must certainly be kept <lb/>
               out of sight and out of mind. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>One of the girls, Polly, was always very nice to her, and would come <lb/>
               round sometimes to her little room and hold the baby for her ; but the others <lb/>
               called her &#8220;Miss Stuck-up,&#8221; &#8220;Miss Fine-airs,&#8221; and when she blushed, cried, <lb/>
               even, at the ribaldries which seemed to them so natural and matter-of-course, <lb/>
               they would taunt her with her bastard, and ask her if she didn't know how a <lb/>
               baby was made, she who pretended to be such an innocent. &#160;She never tried <lb/>
               to answer them ; she did her work (after three days she could do it almost as <lb/>
               well as the most practised of them), and she got through day after day as best she <lb/>
               could. &#160;&#8220;It was for baby's sake,&#8221; she whispered to herself, &#8220;all for baby's sake.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>In the middle of the day they had a dinner-hour, and the girls brought <lb/>
               their dinner with them, which they generally ate out of doors, in the drying- <lb/>
               ground at the back, glad to be out of the steam and heat for a few minutes. <lb/>
               That hour was Lucy&#8217;s terror. &#160;She had no dinner to bring with her : how <lb/>
               could she, out of sixpence a week ? &#160;and every day she pretended to go out <lb/>
               and get her meal at an eating-house, scared lest one of them should come <lb/>
               round the corner, and see her walking up and down the road, filling up the <lb/>
               time until she could venture to go back again. &#160;She knew that if any one of <lb/>
               them had guessed the truth, had known that she could never afford even the <lb/>
               cheapest price of a dinner, they would one and all have shared with her their <lb/>
               sandwiches, and bread and cheese, and meat pies, and apple dumplings. <lb/>
               But she would not have let them know for worlds ; and the aching suspense, <lb/>
               lest she should be found out, was almost as bad to bear as the actual pang of <lb/>
               hunger. &#160;She grew thinner and paler, and every day it seemed to her that the <lb/>
               baby grew thinner and paler too. &#160;How could she nourish it, when she had no <lb/>
               nourishment herself? &#160;She wept over it, and prayed God in agony not to visit <lb/>
               her sin on the child. &#160;All this while the poor little thing lay and wailed, <lb/>
               a feeble, fretful, continual wail, ceasing and going on, ceasing and going on <lb/>
               again. &#160;It seemed to her that the sound would lodge itself in her brain, and <lb/>
               drive her mad, quite mad. &#160;She heard it when she was in the laundry, bending <lb/>
               over the steaming linen ; it pierced through the crisp hiss of the irons as they <lb/>
               passed shiningly over the surface ; she heard it keeping time to her footsteps <lb/>
               as she walked hungrily up and down that road in the dinner-hour ; she <lb/>
               dreamt of it even, and woke up to hear the little wail break out in the stillness <lb/>
               of the night, in her attic bed. &#160;And the wail was getting feebler and feebler ; <lb/>
               the baby was dying, oh ! &#160;she knew that it was dying, and she could not save <lb/>
               it ; there was no way, absolutely no way to save it. <lb/></p>
<p>
<fw type="head"><emph rend="indent3">&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;K</emph></fw></p>


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<p>
<fw type="head"><emph rend="indent3">&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;III</emph></fw></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>She had now been eight weeks at the laundry, and she seemed to get <lb/>
               thinner every day. &#160;As she looked at her face in the glass, she was quite <lb/>
               frightened at the long hollows she saw in her white cheeks, the dark lines <lb/>
               under her eyes : her own face seemed to fade away from her as she looked at <lb/>
               it, away into a mist ; and through the mist she heard the small persistent <lb/>
               crying of the baby, as if from a great way off. &#160;&#8220;Am I going to be ill ?&#8221; she <lb/>
               wondered, looking down at her fingers helplessly. &#160;Certainly both she and the <lb/>
               child were in need of the doctor ; but who was to pay for a doctor ? &#160;It was <lb/>
               impossible. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>That day, for the first time since she had been at the laundry, she had a <lb/>
               half-holiday, and she put on her hat and went out into the streets, merely to <lb/>
               walk about, and so think the less. &#160;&#8220;I can at least look at the shops,&#8221; she said <lb/>
               to herself, and she made her way to the more fashionable part of the town, <lb/>
               where the milliners&#8217; and jewellers&#8217; shops were, and as she looked at the rings <lb/>
               and bracelets, the smart hats and stylish jackets, it seemed to her worse than <lb/>
               ever, to see all these things, and to know that none of them would ever be hers. <lb/>
               It was now three o&#8217;clock ; she had had nothing since her early breakfast, and <lb/>
               the long walk, the loitering about, had tired her ; it seemed to her, once more, <lb/>
               as if a mist came floating up about her, through which the sound of voices was <lb/>
               deadened before it reached her ears, and the ground felt a little uncertain <lb/>
               under her feet, as if it were slightly elastic as she trod upon it. &#160;She turned <lb/>
               aside out of the main street, into the big arcade, where she thought it would <lb/>
               be quieter, and she found herself staring at a row of photographs of actresses, <lb/>
               quite blankly, hardly seeing them. &#160;As she put her hand to her forehead, to <lb/>
               press down her eyelids for a moment, she heard some one speaking to her, <lb/>
               and looking round she saw a middle-aged gentleman standing by her side, <lb/>
               and saying in a very kind voice : &#8220;My child, are you ill ?&#8221; Was she then <lb/>
               looking so ill ? &#160;she wondered, or was she really ill ? &#160;She did not think so, <lb/>
               only hungry and faint. &#160;How hungry and faint she was ! &#160;And as she shook her <lb/>
               head, and said &#8220;No, thank you,&#8221; she felt certain that the old gentleman, who <lb/>
               looked so kind, would not believe her. &#160;Evidently he did not believe her, for <lb/>
               he continued to look at her, and to say&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;what was it ? &#160;she only, knew that <lb/>
               he told her, quite decidedly, that she must come and have some tea. &#160;&#8220;Thank <lb/>
               you,&#8221; she said again : how was she to say no ? &#160;and she walked along beside <lb/>
               the gentleman in silence. &#160;He did not say anything more, but before she <lb/></p>

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<p>
               quite knew it, they were sitting at a little table in a tea-shop, and she had a <lb/>
               cup of tea before her, real tea (how well she remembered, from what a distance, <lb/>
               the taste of real tea !), and she was buttering a huge scone that made her <lb/>
               mouth water, only to look at it. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>When she had eaten her scone and drunk her tea, she saw that the <lb/>
               gentleman was looking at her more kindly than ever, but with a certain ex- <lb/>
               pression which she could not help understanding. &#160;He was a man of about <lb/>
               fifty, somewhat tall, with broad shoulders and a powerful head, on which the <lb/>
               iron-gray hair was cut close. &#160;His face was bronzed, he had a thick, closely- <lb/>
               cut beard, and his eyes were large, gray, luminous, curiously sympathetic eyes, <lb/>
               very kind, but a little puzzling in their expression. &#160;And he began to talk to <lb/>
               her, asking her questions, feeling his way. &#160;She blushed furiously : how he <lb/>
               had misunderstood her ! &#160;She was not angry, only frightened and disturbed ; <lb/>
               and of course such a thing could never be, never. &#160;He seemed quite grieved <lb/>
               when she told him hurriedly that she must go ; and when they were outside <lb/>
               the shop he insisted on walking a few steps with her ; if not then, would she <lb/>
               not come and see him some other day ? &#160;He would be so glad to do anything <lb/>
               he could to help her ; that is, if she would come and see him. &#160;But she blushed <lb/>
               again, and shook her head, and told him how impossible it was ; but as he <lb/>
               insisted on her taking his card, she took it. &#160;What was the harm ? He had <lb/>
               been kind to her. And of course she would never use it. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>That night, as she ate her supper of bread and dripping, washing it down <lb/>
               with what Mrs. Marsh called tea, she thought of the tea-shop and the meal <lb/>
               she had had there, the pleasantness of the place, the bright little tables, the <lb/>
               waitresses gliding about, the well-dressed people who had been in there. &#160;And <lb/>
               the life she was living seemed more unbearable than ever. &#160;At first she had <lb/>
               been so glad to be anywhere, to find any sort of refuge, where there was a <lb/>
               roof over her head, and some sort of bed to lie on, that the actual sordidness <lb/>
               of her surroundings had seemed of little moment ; but now it seemed more <lb/>
               and more impossible to go on living among such people, without an educated <lb/>
               person to speak to, without a book to read, without any of the little pleasant- <lb/>
               nesses of comfortable life. &#160;No, I cannot go on with this for ever, she said <lb/>
               to herself; and she began to muse, thinking vague things, vaguely ; thinking <lb/>
               of what the girls at the laundry said to her, what they thought of her, and how <lb/>
               to them it would be no difference at all, no difference at all ; for was she not <lb/>
               (they all said it) a fallen creature ? &#160;When she went upstairs, and heard the <lb/>
               feeble wail of her child, she almost wondered that she could have refused to <lb/>
               take the man&#8217;s money, which would have paid for a doctor. &#160;Oh, yes, she was <lb/></p>

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<p>
               a fallen creature, no doubt ; and when you are once fallen you go on falling. <lb/>
               But of course, all the same, it was impossible : she <emph rend="italic">could</emph> not ; and there was <lb/>
               an end of it. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>But such thoughts as these, once set wandering through her brain, came <lb/>
               back, and brought others with them. &#160;They came especially when she was <lb/>
               very hungry ; they seemed to float to her on the steam of that tea which she <lb/>
               had drunk in the tea-shop ; they whispered to her from the small, prim letters <lb/>
               of the card which she still kept, with its sober, respectable-looking name, <lb/>
               &#8220;Mr. Reginald Barfoot,&#8221; and the address of a huge, handsome building <lb/>
               which she had often seen, mostly laid out in bachelor&#8217;s flats, very expensive <lb/>
               flats. &#160;But of course, all the same, it was impossible. <lb/></p>
<p>
<fw type="head"><emph rend="indent3">&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;IV</emph></fw></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>On the Saturday of that week, while she was working at the laundry, she <lb/>
               had a message from Mrs. Marsh to say that her child was very ill. &#160;She <lb/>
               hurried back, and found the little thing in convulsions. &#160;The poor little wasted <lb/>
               body shook as if every moment would be its last. &#160;She held it in her arms, <lb/>
               and crooned over it, and cried over it, and with her lips and fingers seemed to <lb/>
               soothe the pain out of it. &#160;Presently it dropped into a quiet slumber. &#160;Lucy <lb/>
               sat on the chair by the bedside, and thought. &#160;She had never seen an <lb/>
               attack like that : she was terribly frightened : would it not come on again ? <lb/>
               and if so, what was to be done ? &#160;A doctor, certainly a doctor must be <lb/>
               called. &#160;But she had no money, and doctors (she remembered her aunt&#8217;s <lb/>
               doctor) were so expensive. &#160;The money must be got, and at once. &#160;She <lb/>
               looked at the card, at the address. &#160;Was it not a matter of life or death ? &#160;She <lb/>
               would go. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Then she felt that it was impossible ; that she could never do it. &#160;Was it <lb/>
               really a matter of life or death ?&#160;The baby slept quietly. &#160;She would wait till <lb/>
               to-morrow. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Through that night, and half-way through Sunday, the child seemed much <lb/>
               better ; but about three the convulsions came on again. &#160;Lucy was frantic with <lb/>
               terror, and when the little thing, now growing feebler and feebler, had got over <lb/>
               a worse paroxysm than ever, and had quieted down again, she called Mrs. <lb/>
               Marsh, and begged her to look after the child while she went and fetched the <lb/>
               doctor. &#8220;I may be a little while,&#8221; she said ; &#8220;but baby is quiet now ; you&#8217;ll <lb/></p>

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<p>
               be very careful, won&#8217;t you ?&#8220; She gave the child one big kiss on both his little <lb/>
               eyes ; then she put on her hat and went out. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>She went straight to the address on the card, without hesitation now, rang <lb/>
               at the door, and a man-servant showed her into a room which seemed to her <lb/>
               filled with books and photographs and pretty things. &#160;There was a fire in the <lb/>
               grate, which shed a warm, comfortable glow over everything. &#160;She held <lb/>
               out her hands to it ; she was shivering a little. &#160;How nice it is here, she could <lb/>
               not help thinking, or, rather, the sensation of its comfort flashed through her <lb/>
               unconsciously, as she stood there looking at the photographs above the mantel- <lb/>
               piece, as blankly as she had looked at those photographs, that other day, in the <lb/>
               arcade. &#160;And then the door opened, and Mr. Barfoot came in, smiling, as he <lb/>
               had smiled at her before. &#160;He did not say anything, only smiled ; and as he <lb/>
               came quite close, and took her hand, a sudden terror came into her eyes, she <lb/>
               drew back violently, and covering her face with her hands, sobbed out, &#8220;I can&#8217;t, <lb/>
               I can&#8217;t !&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>For a moment the man looked at her wonderingly ; then the expression <lb/>
               of his face changed, he took her hands very gently, saying, &#8220;My poor child !&#8221; <lb/>
               Something in the voice and touch reassured her ; she let him draw away her <lb/>
               hands from before her eyes, in which the tears were beginning to creep over <lb/>
               the lower eyelids. &#160;She looked straight into his face ; there was no smile there <lb/>
               now, and she almost wondered why she had been so frightened a moment <lb/>
               before. &#160;He led her to a chair. &#160;&#8220;Sit down, now,&#8221; he said, &#8220;and let us have a <lb/>
               talk.&#8221; She sat down, already with a sense of relief, and he drew up a chair <lb/>
               beside her, and took her hand again, soothingly, as one might take the hand of <lb/>
               a timid child. &#160;&#8220;Now,&#8221; he said, &#8220;tell me all about it. &#160;How ill you look, my <lb/>
               poor girl. &#160;You are in trouble. &#160;Tell me all about it.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>At first she was silent, looking into his face with a sort of hesitating con- <lb/>
               fidence. &#160;Then, looking down again, she said, &#8220;May I ?&#8221;<lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;I want you to,&#8221; he said. &#160;&#8220;I want you to let me help you.&#8221;<lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Oh, will you ?&#8221; she said impulsively, pressing the hand he held. &#160;&#8220;I <lb/>
               haven&#8217;t a friend in the world. &#160;I am all alone. &#160;I have been very unhappy. &#160;It <lb/>
               was all my fault. &#160;Will you really help me? &#160;It isn't for myself, it&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;it&#8217;s my <lb/>
               baby. &#160;I am afraid he&#8217;s dying, he&#8217;s so very ill, and to-day he had convulsions, <lb/>
               and I thought&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160; I thought he would really have died. &#160;And I haven&#8217;t a <lb/>
               penny to get a doctor. &#160;And that&#8217;s why I came.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>She broke off, and the hesitation came into her eyes again. &#160;She let her <lb/>
               hand rest quite still ; he felt the fingers turning cold as she waited for what he <lb/>
               would say. <lb/></p>

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<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Why didn't you tell me before ?&#8221; &#160;was all he said, but the voice and the <lb/>
               eyes were kinder than ever. &#160;She almost smiled, she was so grateful ; and he<lb/> 
               went on, &#8220;Now we must see about the doctor at once. &#160;There&#8217;s a doctor who <lb/>
               lives only three doors from here. &#160;If he's in, you must take him back with <lb/>
               you. &#160;Here, do you see, you&#8217;ll give him this card ; or, no, I&#8217;ll see him about <lb/>
               that. &#160;Just get him to come with you. &#160;And now I'm going to give you a <lb/>
               sovereign, for anything you want, and to-morrow&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160; but first of all, the <lb/>
               doctor. &#160;Would you like me to come with you ?&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;No, please,&#8221; said Lucy. <lb/>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Well, you had better go there at once. &#160;And mind you get anything you <lb/>
               want, and for yourself, too. &#160;Why, you don&#8217;t know how ill you look yourself! <lb/>
               And then to-morrow I shall come and see how you are getting on, and then <lb/>
               you must tell me all about yourself. &#8217;Not now. &#8217;You go straight to the doctor. <lb/>
               By the way, what is your address ?&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Lucy told him, hardly able to speak ; she could not quite understand how <lb/>
               it was that things had turned out so differently from what she had expected, <lb/>
               or how everything seemed to be coming right without any trouble at all. &#160;She <lb/>
               was bewildered, grateful, quiescent ; and as she got up, and closed her hand <lb/>
               mechanically over the sovereign he slipped into it, she was already thinking of <lb/>
               the next thing to do, to find the doctor, to take the doctor back with her at <lb/>
               once, to save her child. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>&#8220;Now I shall come in to-morrow at eleven,&#8221; she heard him saying, &#8220;and <lb/>
               then I&#8217;ll see if you want anything more. &#160;Now good-bye. &#160;Dr. Hedges, the <lb/>
               third door from here, on the same side.&#8221;<lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>He opened the door for her himself, and as she went downstairs she felt <lb/>
               the sovereign in her hand, pressing into her flesh, in a little round circle. &#160;She <lb/>
               wrapped up the sovereign in her handkerchief, and thrust it into her bodice. <lb/>
               She was repeating, &#8220;Dr. Hedges, the third door from here, on the same side,&#8221; <lb/>
               over and over again, without knowing it, so mechanically, that she would have <lb/>
               passed the door had she not seen a brougham standing outside. &#160;It was the <lb/>
               doctor&#8217;s brougham, and as she went up the steps in front of the house, the <lb/>
               door opened and the doctor himself came out. &#160;&#8220;I want you, please, to come <lb/>
               with me at once,&#8221; she said ; &#8220;my baby&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160;.&#160;&#160; I&#8217;m afraid he&#8217;ll die if you don&#8217;t. <lb/>
               Can you come at once ?&#8221;<lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>The doctor looked at her critically ; he liked pretty women, and this one <lb/>
               was so young too. &#160;&#8220;Yes, my dear,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll come at once, if you like. <lb/>
               Where is it ? &#160;All right ; jump in ; we&#8217;ll be there in a minute.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
               The doctor talked cheerfully, and without expecting any answer, all the <lb/></p>

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               way to the house. &#160;&#8220;It&#8217;s the mother,&#8221; he thought to himself, &#8220;who wants the <lb/>
               doctor.&#8221; &#160;Lucy sat by his side white and motionless, putting up her hand <lb/>
               sometimes to her bodice, to feel if the gold was there. &#160;&#8220;Heart wrong,&#8221; <lb/>
               thought the doctor. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>When they reached the house, Lucy opened the door. &#160;&#8220;Come in,&#8221; she <lb/>
               said, and began to fly up the stairs ; then, suddenly checking herself, &#8220;No, <lb/>
               come quietly, perhaps baby is sleeping.&#8221; &#160;They went up quietly, and Lucy <lb/>
               opened the attic door with infinite precaution. &#160;As she held open the door <lb/>
               for the doctor to come in, she saw Mrs. Marsh move towards her, she saw the <lb/>
               bed, and on the bed a little body lying motionless, its white face on the <lb/>
               pillow ; she saw it all at a glance, and, as the doctor came cheerfully into the <lb/>
               room, she realized that everything had been in vain, that (she said to herself) <lb/>
               she had waited just too long. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>She sat down by the side of the bed, and looked straight in front of her, <lb/>
               not saying a word, nor crying ; she seemed to herself to have been stunned. <lb/>
               The doctor examined the child, and then, taking Mrs. Marsh into a corner of <lb/>
               the room, began to question her. &#160;&#8220;Poor little thing,&#8221; said Mrs. Marsh, &#8220;he <lb/>
               just went off like you might have snuffed out a candle. &#160;He was always <lb/>
               weakly, like ; and she, you know, sir, she ain't by no means strong, not fit to <lb/>
               have the charge of a baby, sir. &#160;I&#8217;m that thankful she takes it so quiet like. <lb/>
               Did you say, sir, there&#8217;ll have to be a crowner's quest ? &#160;Well, I do hope not ; <lb/>
               it do look so bad.&#8221; <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>At this moment they heard a wild cry behind them ; both turned, and <lb/>
               saw Lucy fling herself full length upon the bed, clasping the little body in her <lb/>
               arms, sobbing convulsively. &#160;The tears streamed down her cheeks, the sobs <lb/>
               forced themselves out in great bursts, almost in shouts. &#160;&#8220;It will do her good <lb/>
               to have a good cry," said the doctor. &#8221;I&#8217;ll leave you now ; rely on me to see <lb/>
               after things.&#8221; And he went out quietly. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Lucy never remembered quite how she got through the rest of that day. <lb/>
               It always seemed to her afterwards like a bad dream, through which she had <lb/>
               found her way vaguely, in a thick darkness. &#160;Early in the evening she <lb/>
               undressed and went to bed, and then, lying awake in the little room where <lb/>
               the dead baby lay folded in white things and covered up for its long sleep, <lb/>
               her mind seemed to soak in, unconsciously, all the discomfortable impressions <lb/>
               that had made up her life since she had been living in that miserable little <lb/>
               room. &#160;Through all the hopeless sordidness of that life she lived again, <lb/>
               enduring the insults of the laundry, the labour of long days, starvation almost, <lb/>
               and the loneliness of forced companionship with such people as Mrs. Marsh <lb/></p>

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               and Polly the ironer. &#160;She had borne it for her child&#8217;s sake, and now there <lb/>
               was no longer any reason for bearing it. &#160;Her life had come to a full stop ;<lb/> 
               the past was irrevocably past, folded away like the little dead body ; her <lb/>
               mind had not the courage to look a single step before her into the future ; she <lb/>
               closed her eyes, and tried to shut down the darkness upon her brain. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>When she awoke in the morning it was nearly nine o&#8217;clock. &#160;She got up <lb/>
               and dressed slowly, carefully, and when she had had her breakfast she went out <lb/>
               to an undertaker&#8217;s, from whom she ordered a baby&#8217;s coffin. &#160;Remembering that <lb/>
               she had a sovereign, she asked him to make it very nicely, and chose the <lb/>
               particular kind of wood. &#160;She stayed in the shop some time, looking at <lb/>
               inscriptions on the coffin lids, and asking questions about the ages of the <lb/>
               people who were going to be buried. &#160;When she got back it was nearly <lb/>
               eleven. &#160;She had taken off her hat, and was tidying her hair, quite mechanically, <lb/>
               in front of the glass, when she heard a clock strike. &#160;Then she remembered <lb/>
               that Mr. Barfoot was coming to see her about eleven. &#160;She stood there, lifting <lb/>
               the hair back from her forehead with her two thin hands, and her eyes met <lb/>
               their reflection in the glass, very seriously and meditatively. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent7"/><ref target="#ASY">Arthur Symons.</ref>
<lb/>
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