The Sea Lady by H. G. Wells, is part of the HackerNoon Books Series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here. SOME FIRST IMPRESSIONS
SOME FIRST IMPRESSIONS
There with as much verisimilitude as I can give it, is how the Folkestone mermaid really came to land. There can be no doubt that the whole affair was a deliberately planned intrusion upon her part. She never had cramp, she couldnât have cramp, and as for drowning, nobody was near drowning for a moment except Mr. Bunting, whose valuable life she very nearly sacrificed at the outset of her adventure. And her next proceeding was to demand an interview with Mrs. Bunting and to presume upon her youthful and glowing appearance to gain the support, sympathy and assistance of that good-hearted[31]Â lady (who as a matter of fact was a thing of yesterday, a mere chicken in comparison with her own immemorial years) in her extraordinary raid upon Humanity.
Her treatment of Mrs. Bunting would be incredible if we did not know that, in spite of many disadvantages, the Sea Lady was an extremely well read person. She admitted as much in several later conversations with my cousin Melville. For a time there was a friendly intimacyâso Melville always preferred to present itâbetween these two, and my cousin, who has a fairly considerable amount of curiosity, learnt many very interesting details about the life âout thereâ or âdown thereââfor the Sea Lady used either expression. At first the Sea Lady was exceedingly reticent under the gentle insistence of his curiosity, but after a time, I gather, she gave way to bursts of cheerful[32]Â confidence. âIt is clear,â says my cousin, âthat the old ideas of the submarine life as a sort of perpetual game of âwho-hoopâ through groves of coral, diversified by moonlight hair-combings on rocky strands, need very extensive modification.â In this matter of literature, for example, they have practically all that we have, and unlimited leisure to read it in. Melville is very insistent upon and rather envious of that unlimited leisure. A picture of a mermaid swinging in a hammock of woven seaweed, with what bishops call a âlatter-dayâ novel in one hand and a sixteen candle-power phosphorescent fish in the other, may jar upon oneâs preconceptions, but it is certainly far more in accordance with the picture of the abyss she printed on his mind. Everywhere Change works her will on things. Everywhere, and even among the immortals, Modernity spreads. Even on Olympus I suppose[33]Â there is a Progressive party and a new Phaeton agitating to supersede the horses of his father by some solar motor of his own. I suggested as much to Melville and he said âHorrible! Horrible!â and stared hard at my study fire. Dear old Melville! She gave him no end of facts about Deep Sea Reading.
Of course they do not print books âout there,â for the printerâs ink under water would not so much run as flyâshe made that very plain; but in one way or another nearly the whole of terrestrial literature, says Melville, has come to them. âWe know,â she said. They form indeed a distinct reading public, and additions to their vast submerged library that circulates forever with the tides, are now pretty systematically sought. The sources are various and in some cases a little odd. Many books have been found in sunken ships. âIndeed!â said Melville. There is always[34]Â a dropping and blowing overboard of novels and magazines from most passenger-carrying vesselsâsometimes, but these are not as a rule valuable additionsâa deliberate shying overboard. But sometimes books of an exceptional sort are thrown over when they are quite finished. (Melville is a dainty irritable reader and no doubt he understood that.) From the sea beaches of holiday resorts, moreover, the lighter sorts of literature are occasionally getting blown out to sea. And so soon as the Booms of our great Popular Novelists are over, Melville assured me, the libraries find it convenient to cast such surplus copies of their current works as the hospitals and prisons cannot take, below high-water mark.
âThatâs not generally known,â said I.
âThey know it,â said Melville.
In other ways the beaches yield. Young couples who âbegin to sit heapy,â[35]Â the Sea Lady told my cousin, as often as not will leave excellent modern fiction behind them, when at last they return to their proper place. There is a particularly fine collection of English work, it seems, in the deep water of the English Channel; practically the whole of the Tauchnitz Library is there, thrown overboard at the last moment by conscientious or timid travellers returning from the continent, and there was for a time a similar source of supply of American reprints in the Mersey, but that has fallen off in recent years. And the Deep Sea Mission for Fishermen has now for some years been raining down tracts and giving a particularly elevated tone of thought to the extensive shallows of the North Sea. The Sea Lady was very precise on these points.
When one considers the conditions of its accumulation, one is not surprised to hear that the element of fiction is as[36] dominant in this Deep Sea Library as it is upon the counters of Messrs. Mudie; but my cousin learnt that the various illustrated magazines, and particularly the fashion papers, are valued even more highly than novels, are looked for far more eagerly and perused with envious emotion. Indeed on that point my cousin got a sudden glimpse of one of the motives that had brought this daring young lady into the air. He made some sort of suggestion. âWe should have taken to dressing long ago,â she said, and added, with a vague quality of laughter in her tone, âit isnât that weâre unfeminine, Mr. Melville. Onlyâas I was explaining to Mrs. Bunting, one must consider oneâs circumstancesâhow can one hope to keep anything nice under water? Imagine lace!â
âSoaked!â said my cousin Melville.
âDrenched!â said the Sea Lady.
âRuined!â said my cousin Melville.[37]
âAnd then you know,â said the Sea Lady very gravely, âoneâs hair!â
âOf course,â said Melville. âWhy!âyou can never get it dry!â
âThatâs precisely it,â said she.
My cousin Melville had a new light on an old topic. âAnd thatâs whyâin the old timeââ?â
âExactly!â she cried, âexactly! Before there were so many Excursionists and sailors and Low People about, one came out, one sat and brushed it in the sun. And then of course it really was possible to do it up. But nowâââ
She made a petulant gesture and looked gravely at Melville, biting her lip the while. My cousin made a sympathetic noise. âThe horrid modern spirit,â he saidâalmost automatically.âŚ
But though fiction and fashion appear to be so regrettably dominant in the nourishment of the mer-mind, it must not be[38] supposed that the most serious side of our reading never reaches the bottom of the sea. There was, for example, a case quite recently, the Sea Lady said, of the captain of a sailing ship whose mind had become unhinged by the huckstering uproar of the Times and Daily Mail, and who had not only bought a second-hand copy of the Times reprint of the EncyclopĂŚdia Britannica, but also that dense collection of literary snacks and samples, that All-Literature Sausage which has been compressed under the weighty editing of Doctor Richard Garnett. It has long been notorious that even the greatest minds of the past were far too copious and confusing in theirâas the word goesâlubrications. Doctor Garnett, it is alleged, has seized the gist and presented it so compactly that almost any business man now may take hold of it without hindrance to his more serious occupations.[39] The unfortunate and misguided seaman seems to have carried the entire collection aboard with him, with the pretty evident intention of coming to land in Sydney the wisest man aliveâa Hindoo-minded thing to do. The result might have been anticipated. The mass shifted in the night, threw the whole weight of the science of the middle nineteenth century and the literature of all time, in a virulently concentrated state, on one side of his little vessel and capsized it instantly.âŚ
The ship, the Sea Lady said, dropped into the abyss as if it were loaded with lead, and its crew and other movables did not follow it down until much later in the day. The captain was the first to arrive, said the Sea Lady, and it is a curious fact, due probably to some preliminary dippings into his purchase, that he came head first, instead of feet down and limbs expanded in the customary way.âŚ[40]
However, such exceptional windfalls avail little against the rain of light literature that is constantly going on. The novel and the newspaper remain the worldâs reading even at the bottom of the sea. As subsequent events would seem to show, it must have been from the common latter-day novel and the newspaper that the Sea Lady derived her ideas of human life and sentiment and the inspiration of her visit. And if at times she seemed to underestimate the nobler tendencies of the human spirit, if at times she seemed disposed to treat Adeline Glendower and many of the deeper things of life with a certain sceptical levity, if she did at last indisputably subordinate reason and right feeling to passion, it is only just to her, and to those deeper issues, that we should ascribe her aberrations to their proper cause.âŚ[41]
II
My cousin Melville, I was saying, did at one time or another get a vague, a very vague conception of what that deep-sea world was like. But whether his conception has any quality of truth in it is more than I dare say. He gives me an impression of a very strange world indeed, a green luminous fluidity in which these beings float, a world lit by great shining monsters that drift athwart it, and by waving forests of nebulous luminosity amidst which the little fishes drift like netted stars. It is a world with neither sitting, nor standing, nor going, nor coming, through which its inhabitants float and drift as one floats and drifts in dreams. And the way they live there! âMy dear man!â said Melville, âit must be like a painted ceiling!âŚâ
I do not even feel certain that it is in[42]Â the sea particularly that this world of the Sea Lady is to be found. But about those saturated books and drowned scraps of paper, you say? Things are not always what they seem, and she told him all of that, we must reflect, one laughing afternoon.
She could appear, at times, he says, as real as you or I, and again came mystery all about her. There were times when it seemed to him you might have hurt her or killed her as you can hurt and kill anyoneâwith a penknife for exampleâand there were times when it seemed to him you could have destroyed the whole material universe and left her smiling still. But of this ambiguous element in the lady, more is to be told later. There are wider seas than ever keel sailed upon, and deeps that no lead of human casting will ever plumb. When it is all summed up, I have to admit, I do not know, I cannot[43]Â tell. I fall back upon Melville and my poor array of collected facts. At first there was amazingly little strangeness about her for any who had to deal with her. There she was, palpably solid and material, a lady out of the sea.
This modern world is a world where the wonderful is utterly commonplace. We are bred to show a quiet freedom from amazement, and why should we boggle at material Mermaids, with Dewars solidifying all sorts of impalpable things and Marconi waves spreading everywhere? To the Buntings she was as matter of fact, as much a matter of authentic and reasonable motives and of sound solid sentimentality, as everything else in the Bunting world. So she was for them in the beginning, and so up to this day with them her memory remains.[44]
III
The way in which the Sea Lady talked to Mrs. Bunting on that memorable morning, when she lay all wet and still visibly fishy on the couch in Mrs. Buntingâs dressing-room, I am also able to give with some little fulness, because Mrs. Bunting repeated it all several times, acting the more dramatic speeches in it, to my cousin Melville in several of those good long talks that both of them in those happy daysâand particularly Mrs. Buntingâalways enjoyed so much. And with her very first speech, it seems, the Sea Lady took her line straight to Mrs. Buntingâs generous managing heart. She sat up on the couch, drew the antimacassar modestly over her deformity, and sometimes looking sweetly down and sometimes openly and trustfully into Mrs. Buntingâs face, and speaking in a soft clear grammatical[45]Â manner that stamped her at once as no mere mermaid but a finished fine Sea Lady, she âmade a clean breast of it,â as Mrs. Bunting said, and âfully and franklyâ placed herself in Mrs. Buntingâs hands.
âMrs. Bunting,â said Mrs. Bunting to my cousin Melville, in a dramatic rendering of the Sea Ladyâs manner, âdo permit me to apologise for this intrusion, for I know it is an intrusion. But indeed it has almost been forced upon me, and if you will only listen to my story, Mrs. Bunting, I think you will findâwell, if not a complete excuse for meâfor I can understand how exacting your standards must beâat any rate some excuse for what I have doneâfor what I must call, Mrs. Bunting, my deceitful conduct towards you. Deceitful it was, Mrs. Bunting, for I never had crampâ But then, Mrs. Buntingââand here Mrs. Bunting would[46] insert a long impressive pauseââI never had a mother!â
âAnd then and there,â said Mrs. Bunting, when she told the story to my cousin Melville, âthe poor child burst into tears and confessed she had been born ages and ages ago in some dreadful miraculous way in some terrible place near Cyprus, and had no more right to a surnameâ Well, thereâ!â said Mrs. Bunting, telling the story to my cousin Melville and making the characteristic gesture with which she always passed over and disowned any indelicacy to which her thoughts might have tended. âAnd all the while speaking with such a nice accent and moving in such a ladylike way!â
âOf course,â said my cousin Melville, âthere are classes of people in whom one excusesâ One must weighâââ
âPrecisely,â said Mrs. Bunting. âAnd you see it seems she deliberately chose[47] me as the very sort of person she had always wanted to appeal to. It wasnât as if she came to us haphazardâshe picked us out. She had been swimming round the coast watching people day after day, she said, for quite a long time, and she said when she saw my face, watching the girls batheâyou know how funny girls are,â said Mrs. Bunting, with a little deprecatory laugh, and all the while with a moisture of emotion in her kindly eyes. âShe took quite a violent fancy to me from the very first.â
âI can quite believe that, at any rate,â said my cousin Melville with unction. I know he did, although he always leaves it out of the story when he tells it to me. But then he forgets that I have had the occasional privilege of making a third party in these good long talks.
âYou know itâs most extraordinary[48]Â and exactly like the German story,â said Mrs. Bunting. âOomâwhat is it?â
âUndine?â
âExactlyâyes. And it really seems these poor creatures are Immortal, Mr. Melvilleâat least within limitsâcreatures born of the elements and resolved into the elements againâand just as it is in the storyâthereâs always a somethingâthey have no Souls! No Souls at all! Nothing! And the poor child feels it. She feels it dreadfully. But in order to get souls, Mr. Melville, you know they have to come into the world of men. At least so they believe down there. And so she has come to Folkestone. To get a soul. Of course thatâs her great object, Mr. Melville, but sheâs not at all fanatical or silly about it. Any more than we are. Of course weâpeople who feel deeplyâââ
âOf course,â said my cousin Melville,[49]Â with, I know, a momentary expression of profound gravity, drooping eyelids and a hushed voice. For my cousin does a good deal with his soul, one way and another.
âAnd she feels that if she comes to earth at all,â said Mrs. Bunting, âshe must come among nice people and in a nice way. One can understand her feeling like that. But imagine her difficulties! To be a mere cause of public excitement, and silly paragraphs in the silly season, to be made a sort of show of, in factâshe doesnât want any of it,â added Mrs. Bunting, with the emphasis of both hands.
âWhat does she want?â asked my cousin Melville.
âShe wants to be treated exactly like a human being, to be a human being, just like you or me. And she asks to stay with us, to be one of our family, and to learn how we live. She has asked me[50] to advise her what books to read that are really nice, and where she can get a dress-maker, and how she can find a clergyman to sit under who would really be likely to understand her case, and everything. She wants me to advise her about it all. She wants to put herself altogether in my hands. And she asked it all so nicely and sweetly. She wants me to advise her about it all.â
âUm,â said my cousin Melville.
âYou should have heard her!â cried Mrs. Bunting.
âPractically itâs another daughter,â he reflected.
âYes,â said Mrs. Bunting, âand even that did not frighten me. She admitted as much.â
âStillâââ
He took a step.
âShe has means?â he inquired abruptly.[51]
âAmple. She told me there was a box. She said it was moored at the end of a groin, and accordingly dear Randolph watched all through luncheon, and afterwards, when they could wade out and reach the end of the rope that tied it, he and Fred pulled it in and helped Fitch and the coachman carry it up. Itâs a curious little box for a lady to have, well made, of course, but of wood, with a ship painted on the top and the name of âTomâ cut in it roughly with a knife; but, as she says, leather simply will not last down there, and one has to put up with what one can get; and the great thing is itâs full, perfectly full, of gold coins and things. Yes, goldâand diamonds, Mr. Melville. You know Randolph understands somethingâ Yes, well he says that boxâoh! I couldnât tell you how much it isnât worth! And all the gold things with just a sort of faint reddy touch.⌠But anyhow, she[52] is rich, as well as charming and beautiful. And really you know, Mr. Melville, altogetherâ Well, Iâm going to help her, just as much as ever I can. Practically, sheâs to be our paying guest. As you knowâitâs no great secret between usâAdelineâ Yes.⌠Sheâll be the same. And I shall bring her out and introduce her to people and so forth. It will be a great help. And for everyone except just a few intimate friends, she is to be just a human being who happens to be an invalidâtemporarily an invalidâand we are going to engage a good, trustworthy womanâthe sort of woman who isnât astonished at anything, you knowâtheyâre a little expensive but theyâre to be got even nowadaysâwho will be her maidâand make her dresses, her skirts at any rateâand we shall dress her in long skirtsâand throw something over It, you knowâââ[53]
âOverââ?â
âThe tail, you know.â
My cousin Melville said âPrecisely!â with his head and eyebrows. But that was the point that hadnât been clear to him so far, and it took his breath away. Positivelyâa tail! All sorts of incorrect theories went by the board. Somehow he felt this was a topic not to be too urgently pursued. But he and Mrs. Bunting were old friends.
âAnd she really has ⌠a tail?â he asked.
âLike the tail of a big mackerel,â said Mrs. Bunting, and he asked no more.
âItâs a most extraordinary situation,â he said.
âBut what else could I do?â asked Mrs. Bunting.
âOf course the thingâs a tremendous experiment,â said my cousin Melville, and repeated quite inadvertently, âa tail!â[54]
Clear and vivid before his eyes, obstructing absolutely the advance of his thoughts, were the shiny clear lines, the oily black, the green and purple and silver, and the easy expansiveness of a mackerelâs termination.
âBut really, you know,â said my cousin Melville, protesting in the name of reason and the nineteenth centuryââa tail!â
âI patted it,â said Mrs. Bunting.
IV
Certain supplementary aspects of the Sea Ladyâs first conversation with Mrs. Bunting I got from that lady herself afterwards.
The Sea Lady had made one queer mistake. âYour four charming daughters,â she said, âand your two sons.â
âMy dear!â cried Mrs. Buntingâthey[55]Â had got through their preliminaries by thenââIâve only two daughters and one son!â
âThe young man who carriedâwho rescued me?â
âYes. And the other two girls are friends, you know, visitors who are staying with me. On land one has visitorsâââ
âI know. So I made a mistake?â
âOh yes.â
âAnd the other young man?â
âYou donât mean Mr. Bunting.â
âWho is Mr. Bunting?â
âThe other gentleman whoâââ
âNo!â
âThere was no oneâââ
âBut several mornings ago?â
âCould it have been Mr. Melville?âŚÂ I know! You mean Mr. Chatteris! I remember, he came down with us one morning. A tall young man with fairârather[56] curlyish you might sayâhair, wasnât it? And a rather thoughtful face. He was dressed all in white linen and he sat on the beach.â
âI fancy he did,â said the Sea Lady.
âHeâs not my son. Heâsâheâs a friend. Heâs engaged to Adeline, to the elder Miss Glendower. He was stopping here for a night or so. I daresay heâll come again on his way back from Paris. Dear me! Fancy my having a son like that!â
The Sea Lady was not quite prompt in replying.
âWhat a stupid mistake for me to make!â she said slowly; and then with more animation, âOf course, now I think, heâs much too old to be your son!â
âWell, heâs thirty-two!â said Mrs. Bunting with a smile.
âItâs preposterous.â
âI wonât say that.â[57]
âBut I saw him only at a distance, you know,â said the Sea Lady; and then, âAnd so he is engaged to Miss Glendower? And Miss Glendowerââ?â
âIs the young lady in the purple robe whoâââ
âWho carried a book?â
âYes,â said Mrs. Bunting, âthatâs the one. Theyâve been engaged three months.â
âDear me!â said the Sea Lady. âShe seemedâ And is he very much in love with her?â
âOf course,â said Mrs. Bunting.
âVery much?â
âOhâof course. If he wasnât, he wouldnâtâââ
âOf course,â said the Sea Lady thoughtfully.
âAnd itâs such an excellent match in every way. Adelineâs just in the very position to help himâââ[58]
And Mrs. Bunting it would seem briefly but clearly supplied an indication of the precise position of Mr. Chatteris, not omitting even that he was the nephew of an earl, as indeed why should she omit it?âand the splendid prospects of his alliance with Miss Glendowerâs plebeian but extensive wealth. The Sea Lady listened gravely. âHe is young, he is able, he may still be anythingâanything. And she is so earnest, so clever herselfâalways reading. She even reads Blue Booksâgovernment Blue Books I meanâdreadful statistical schedulely things. And the condition of the poor and all those things. She knows more about the condition of the poor than any one Iâve ever met; what they earn and what they eat, and how many of them live in a room. So dreadfully crowded, you knowâperfectly shocking.⌠She is just the helper he needs. So dignifiedâso capable[59] of giving political parties and influencing people, so earnest! And you know she can talk to workmen and take an interest in trades unions, and in quite astonishing things. I always think sheâs just Marcella come to life.â
And from that the good lady embarked upon an illustrative but involved anecdote of Miss Glendowerâs marvellous blue-bookishness.âŚ
âHeâll come here again soon?â the Sea Lady asked quite carelessly in the midst of it.
The query was carried away and lost in the anecdote, so that later the Sea Lady repeated her question even more carelessly.
But Mrs. Bunting did not know whether the Sea Lady sighed at all or not. She thinks not. She was so busy telling her all about everything that I donât think she troubled very much to see how her information was received.[60]
What mind she had left over from her own discourse was probably centred on the tail.
V
Even to Mrs. Buntingâs sensesâshe is one of those persons who take everything (except of course impertinence or impropriety) quite calmlyâit must, I think, have been a little astonishing to find herself sitting in her boudoir, politely taking tea with a real live legendary creature. They were having tea in the boudoir, because of callers, and quite quietly because, in spite of the Sea Ladyâs smiling assurances, Mrs. Bunting would have it she must be tired and unequal to the exertions of social intercourse. âAfter such a journey,â said Mrs. Bunting. There were just the three, Adeline Glendower being the third; and Fred and the three other girls, I understand, hung about in a[61] general sort of way up and down the staircase (to the great annoyance of the servants who were thus kept out of it altogether) confirming one anotherâs views of the tail, arguing on the theory of mermaids, revisiting the garden and beach and trying to invent an excuse for seeing the invalid again. They were forbidden to intrude and pledged to secrecy by Mrs. Bunting, and they must have been as altogether unsettled and miserable as young people can be. For a time they played croquet in a half-hearted way, each no doubt with an eye on the boudoir window.
(And as for Mr. Bunting, he was in bed.)
I gather that the three ladies sat and talked as any three ladies all quite resolved to be pleasant to one another would talk. Mrs. Bunting and Miss Glendower were far too well trained in the observances of[62]Â good society (which is as every one knows, even the best of it now, extremely mixed) to make too searching enquiries into the Sea Ladyâs status and way of life or precisely where she lived when she was at home, or whom she knew or didnât know. Though in their several ways they wanted to know badly enough. The Sea Lady volunteered no information, contenting herself with an entertaining superficiality of touch and go, in the most ladylike way. She professed herself greatly delighted with the sensation of being in air and superficially quite dry, and was particularly charmed with tea.
âAnd donât you have tea?â cried Miss Glendower, startled.
âHow can we?â
âBut do you really meanââ?â
âIâve never tasted tea before. How do you think we can boil a kettle?â
âWhat a strangeâwhat a wonderful[63] world it must be!â cried Adeline. And Mrs. Bunting said: âI can hardly imagine it without tea. Itâs worse thanâ I mean it reminds meâof abroad.â
Mrs. Bunting was in the act of refilling the Sea Ladyâs cup. âI suppose,â she said suddenly, âas youâre not used to itâ It wonât affect your digesââ She glanced at Adeline and hesitated. âBut itâs China tea.â
And she filled the cup.
âItâs an inconceivable world to me,â said Adeline. âQuite.â
Her dark eyes rested thoughtfully on the Sea Lady for a space. âInconceivable,â she repeated, for, in that unaccountable way in which a whisper will attract attention that a turmoil fails to arouse, the tea had opened her eyes far more than the tail.
The Sea Lady looked at her with sudden frankness. âAnd think how wonderful[64] all this must seem to me!â she remarked.
But Adelineâs imagination was aroused for the moment and she was not to be put aside by the Sea Ladyâs terrestrial impressions. She piercedâfor a moment or soâthe ladylike serenity, the assumption of a terrestrial fashion of mind that was imposing so successfully upon Mrs. Bunting. âIt must be,â she said, âthe strangest world.â And she stopped invitingly.âŚ
She could not go beyond that and the Sea Lady would not help her.
There was a pause, a silent eager search for topics. Apropos of the Niphetos roses on the table they talked of flowers and Miss Glendower ventured: âYou have your anemones too! How beautiful they must be amidst the rocks!â
And the Sea Lady said they were very prettyâespecially the cultivated sorts.âŚ[65]
âAnd the fishes,â said Mrs. Bunting. âHow wonderful it must be to see the fishes!â
âSome of them,â volunteered the Sea Lady, âwill come and feed out of oneâs hand.â
Mrs. Bunting made a little coo of approval. She was reminded of chrysanthemum shows and the outside of the Royal Academy exhibition and she was one of those people to whom only the familiar is really satisfying. She had a momentary vision of the abyss as a sort of diverticulum of Piccadilly and the Temple, a place unexpectedly rational and comfortable. There was a kink for a time about a little matter of illumination, but it recurred to Mrs. Bunting only long after. The Sea Lady had turned from Miss Glendowerâs interrogative gravity of expression to the sunlight.
âThe sunlight seems so golden here,â[66]Â said the Sea Lady. âIs it always golden?â
âYou have that beautiful greenery-blue shimmer I suppose,â said Miss Glendower, âthat one catches sometimes ever so faintly in aquariaâââ
âOne lives deeper than that,â said the Sea Lady. âEverything is phosphorescent, you know, a mile or so down, and itâs likeâI hardly know. As towns look at nightâonly brighter. Like piers and things like that.â
âReally!â said Mrs. Bunting, with the Strand after the theatres in her head. âQuite bright?â
âOh, quite,â said the Sea Lady.
âButââ struggled Adeline, âis it never put out?â
âItâs so different,â said the Sea Lady.
âThatâs why it is so interesting,â said Adeline.[67]
âThere are no nights and days, you know. No time nor anything of that sort.â
âNow thatâs very queer,â said Mrs. Bunting with Miss Glendowerâs teacup in her handâthey were both drinking quite a lot of tea absent-mindedly, in their interest in the Sea Lady. âBut how do you tell when itâs Sunday?â
âWe donâtââ began the Sea Lady. âAt least not exactlyââ And thenââOf course one hears the beautiful hymns that are sung on the passenger ships.â
âOf course!â said Mrs. Bunting, having sung so in her youth and quite forgetting something elusive that she had previously seemed to catch.
But afterwards there came a glimpse of some more serious divergenceâa glimpse merely. Miss Glendower hazarded a supposition that the sea people also had their Problems, and then it[68]Â would seem the natural earnestness of her disposition overcame her proper attitude of ladylike superficiality and she began to ask questions. There can be no doubt that the Sea Lady was evasive, and Miss Glendower, perceiving that she had been a trifle urgent, tried to cover her error by expressing a general impression.
âI canât see it,â she said, with a gesture that asked for sympathy. âOne wants to see it, one wants to be it. One needs to be born a mer-child.â
âA mer-child?â asked the Sea Lady.
âYesâ Donât you call your little onesââ?â
âWhat little ones?â asked the Sea Lady.
She regarded them for a moment with a frank wonder, the undying wonder of the Immortals at that perpetual decay and death and replacement which is the gist of human life. Then at the expression of[69] their faces she seemed to recollect. âOf course,â she said, and then with a transition that made pursuit difficult, she agreed with Adeline. âIt is different,â she said. âIt is wonderful. One feels so alike, you know, and so different. Thatâs just where it is so wonderful. Do I lookâ? And yet you know I have never had my hair up, nor worn a dressing gown before today.â
âWhat do you wear?â asked Miss Glendower. âVery charming things, I suppose.â
âItâs a different costume altogether,â said the Sea Lady, brushing away a crumb.
Just for a moment Mrs. Bunting regarded her visitor fixedly. She had, I fancy, in that moment, an indistinct, imperfect glimpse of pagan possibilities. But there, you know, was the Sea Lady in her wrapper, so palpably a lady, with her[70]Â pretty hair brought up to date and such a frank innocence in her eyes, that Mrs. Buntingâs suspicions vanished as they came.
(But I am not so sure of Adeline.)
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This book is part of the public domain. H. G. Wells (2011). The Sea Lady. Urbana, Illinois: Project Gutenberg. Retrieved October 2022, from https://www.gutenberg.org/files/35920/35920-h/35920-h.htm
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