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The Rainbow

Page 433

But she must move out of the intricately woven illusion of

her life: the illusion of a father whose life was an Odyssey in

an outer world; the illusion of her grandmother, of realities so

shadowy and far-off that they became as mystic

symbols:--peasant-girls with wreaths of blue flowers in

their hair, the sledges and the depths of winter; the

dark-bearded young grandfather, marriage and war and death; then

the multitude of illusions concerning herself, how she was truly

a princess of Poland, how in England she was under a spell, she

was not really this Ursula Brangwen; then the mirage of her

reading: out of the multicoloured illusion of this her life, she

must move on, to the Grammar School in Nottingham.

She was shy, and she suffered. For one thing, she bit her

nails, and had a cruel consciousness in her finger-tips, a

shame, an exposure. Out of all proportion, this shame haunted

her. She spent hours of torture, conjuring how she might keep

her gloves on: if she might say her hands were scalded, if she

might seem to forget to take off her gloves.

For she was going to inherit her own estate, when she went to

the High School. There, each girl was a lady. There, she was

going to walk among free souls, her co-mates and her equals, and

all petty things would be put away. Ah, if only she did not bite

her nails! If only she had not this blemish! She wanted so much

to be perfect--without spot or blemish, living the high,

noble life.

It was a grief to her that her father made such a poor

introduction. He was brief as ever, like a boy saying his

errand, and his clothes looked ill-fitting and casual. Whereas

Ursula would have liked robes and a ceremonial of introduction

to this, her new estate.

She made a new illusion of school. Miss Grey, the

headmistress, had a certain silvery, school-mistressy beauty of

character. The school itself had been a gentleman's house. Dark,

sombre lawns separated it from the dark, select avenue. But its

rooms were large and of good appearance, and from the back, one

looked over lawns and shrubbery, over the trees and the grassy

slope of the Arboretum, to the town which heaped the hollow with

its roofs and cupolas and its shadows.

So Ursula seated herself upon the hill of learning, looking

down on the smoke and confusion and the manufacturing, engrossed

activity of the town. She was happy. Up here, in the Grammar

School, she fancied the air was finer, beyond the factory smoke.

She wanted to learn Latin and Greek and French and mathematics.

She trembled like a postulant when she wrote the Greek alphabet

for the first time.

She was upon another hill-slope, whose summit she had not

scaled. There was always the marvellous eagerness in her heart,

to climb and to see beyond. A Latin verb was virgin soil to her:

she sniffed a new odour in it; it meant something, though she

did not know what it meant. But she gathered it up: it was

significant. When she knew that: x2-y2 = (x + y)(x-y) then she felt that she had grasped something, that she was

liberated into an intoxicating air, rare and unconditioned. And

she was very glad as she wrote her French exercise: "J'AI DONNE LE PAIN A MON PETIT FRERE."

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