He had much to see to, that night and all next day. A telegram at

breakfast reassured him about Annette, and he only caught the last train

back to Reading, with Emily's kiss on his forehead and in his ears her

words:

"I don't know what I should have done without you, my dear boy."

He reached his house at midnight. The weather had changed, was mild

again, as though, having finished its work and sent a Forsyte to

his last account, it could relax. A second telegram, received at

dinner-time, had confirmed the good news of Annette, and, instead of

going in, Soames passed down through the garden in the moonlight to his

houseboat. He could sleep there quite well. Bitterly tired, he lay down

on the sofa in his fur coat and fell asleep. He woke soon after dawn and

went on deck. He stood against the rail, looking west where the river

swept round in a wide curve under the woods. In Soames, appreciation of

natural beauty was curiously like that of his farmer ancestors, a sense

of grievance if it wasn't there, sharpened, no doubt, and civilised, by

his researches among landscape painting. But dawn has power to fertilise

the most matter-of-fact vision, and he was stirred. It was another world

from the river he knew, under that remote cool light; a world into which

man had not entered, an unreal world, like some strange shore sighted

by discovery. Its colour was not the colour of convention, was hardly

colour at all; its shapes were brooding yet distinct; its silence

stunning; it had no scent. Why it should move him he could not tell,

unless it were that he felt so alone in it, bare of all relationship and

all possessions. Into such a world his father might be voyaging, for all

resemblance it had to the world he had left. And Soames took refuge from

it in wondering what painter could have done it justice. The white-grey

water was like--like the belly of a fish! Was it possible that this

world on which he looked was all private property, except the water--and

even that was tapped! No tree, no shrub, not a blade of grass, not a

bird or beast, not even a fish that was not owned. And once on a time

all this was jungle and marsh and water, and weird creatures roamed and

sported without human cognizance to give them names; rotting luxuriance

had rioted where those tall, carefully planted woods came down to the

water, and marsh-misted reeds on that far side had covered all the

pasture. Well! they had got it under, kennelled it all up, labelled it,

and stowed it in lawyers' offices. And a good thing too! But once in

a way, as now, the ghost of the past came out to haunt and brood

and whisper to any human who chanced to be awake: 'Out of my unowned

loneliness you all came, into it some day you will all return.'




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