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Anna of the Five Towns

Chapter 27: CHAPTER XIV
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About This Book

Set in a provincial industrial community, the novel follows a young woman dominated by a tight-fisted relative whose control of family money shapes her prospects. Her reserved temperament and moral scruples collide with local religious respectability and the competing attentions of two very different suitors, forcing decisions about duty, independence, and affection. The narrative traces daily life in the town—chapel meetings, social ceremonies, and domestic routines—while charting the gradual consequences of economic stinginess, emotional repression, and social expectation on individuals and relationships, culminating in a series of personal reversals and moral reckonings.


[1] Cut: canal.




CHAPTER XIV

END OF A SIMPLE SOUL

The next morning, at half-past seven, Anna was standing in the garden-doorway of the Priory. The sun had just risen, the air was cold; roof and pavement were damp; rain had fallen, and more was to fall. A door opened higher up the street, and Willie Price came out, carrying a small bag. He turned to speak to some person within the house, and then stepped forward. As he passed Anna she sprang forth.

'Oh!' she cried, 'I had just come up here to see if the workmen had locked up properly. We have some of our new furniture in the house, you know.' She was as red as the sun over Hillport.

He glanced at her. 'Have you heard?' he asked simply.

'About what?' she whispered.

'About my poor old father.'

'Yes. I was hoping—hoping you would never know.'

By a common impulse they went into the garden of the Priory, and he shut the door.

'Never know?' he repeated. 'Oh! they took care to tell me.'

A silence followed.

'Is that your luggage?' she inquired. He lifted up the handbag, and nodded.

'All of it?'

'Yes,' he said. 'I'm only an emigrant.'

'I've got a note here for you,' she said. 'I should have posted it to the steamer; but now you can take it yourself. I want you not to read it till you get to Melbourne.'

'Very well,' he said, and crumpled the proffered envelope into his pocket. He was not thinking of the note at all. Presently he asked: 'Why didn't you tell me about my father? If I had to hear it, I'd sooner have heard it from you.'

'You must try to forget it,' she urged him. 'You are not your father.'

'I wish I had never been born,' he said. 'I wish I'd gone to prison.'

Now was the moment when, if ever, the mother's influence should be exerted.

'Be a man,' she said softly. 'I did the best I could for you. I shall always think of you, in Australia, getting on.'

She put a hand on his shoulder. 'Yes,' she said again, passionately: 'I shall always remember you—always.'

The hand with which he touched her arm shook like an old man's hand. As their eyes met in an intense and painful gaze, to her, at least, it was revealed that they were lovers. What he had learnt in that instant can only be guessed from his next action....


Anna ran out of the garden into the street, and so home, never looking behind to see if he pursued his way to the station.

Some may argue that Anna, knowing she loved another man, ought not to have married Mynors. But she did not reason thus; such a notion never even occurred to her. She had promised to marry Mynors, and she married him. Nothing else was possible. She who had never failed in duty did not fail then. She who had always submitted and bowed the head, submitted and bowed the head then. She had sucked in with her mother's milk the profound truth that a woman's life is always a renunciation, greater or less. Hers by chance was greater. Facing the future calmly and genially, she took oath with herself to be a good wife to the man whom, with all his excellences, she had never loved. Her thoughts often dwelt lovingly on Willie Price, whom she deemed to be pursuing in Australia an honourable and successful career, quickened at the outset by her hundred pounds. This vision of him was her stay. But neither she nor anyone in the Five Towns or elsewhere ever heard of Willie Price again. And well might none hear! The abandoned pitshaft does not deliver up its secret. And so—the Bank of England is the richer by a hundred pounds unclaimed, and the world the poorer by a simple and meek soul stung to revolt only in its last hour.




Jamieson & Munro, Ltd., Printers, Stirling.








Uniform with this Volume


   36 De Profundis                                          Oscar Wilde
   37 Lord Arthur Savile's Crime                            Oscar Wilde
   38 Selected Poems                                        Oscar Wilde
   39 An Ideal Husband                                      Oscar Wilde
   40 Intentions                                            Oscar Wilde
   41 Lady Windermere's Fan                                 Oscar Wilde
   42 Charmides and other Poems                             Oscar Wilde
   43 Harvest Home                                          E. V. Lucas
   44 A Little of Everything                                E. V. Lucas
   45 Vallima Letters                            Robert Louis Stevenson
   46 Hills and the Sea                                  Hilaire Belloc
   47 The Blue Bird                                 Maurice Maeterlinck
   50 Charles Dickens                                  G. K. Chesterton
   53 Letters from Self-Made Merchant to his Son  George Horace Larimer
   54 The Life of John Ruskin                         W. G. Collingwood
   57 Sevastopol and other Stories                          Leo Tolstoy
   58 The Lore of the Honey-Bee                        Tickner Edwardes
   60 From Midshipman to Field Marshal                  Sir Evelyn Wood
   63 Oscar Wilde                                        Arthur Ransome
   64 The Vicar of Morwenstow                           S. Baring-Gould
   65 Old Country Life                                  S. Baring-Gould
   76 Home Life in France                             M. Betham-Edwards
   77 Selected Prose                                        Oscar Wilde
   78 The Best of Lamb                                      E. V. Lucas
   80 Selected Letters                           Robert Louis Stevenson
   83 Reason and Belief                                Sir Oliver Lodge
   85 The Importance of Being Earnest                       Oscar Wilde
   91 Social Evils and their Remedy                         Leo Tolstoy
   93 The Substance of Faith                           Sir Oliver Lodge
   94 All Things Considered                            G. K. Chesterton
   95 The Mirror of the Sea                               Joseph Conrad
   96 A Picked Company                                   Hilaire Belloc
  116 The Survival of Man                              Sir Oliver Lodge
  126 Science from an Easy Chair                      Sir Ray Lankester
  141 Variety Lane                                          E. V. Lucas
  144 A Shilling for my Thoughts                       G. K. Chesterton
  146 A Woman of No Importance                              Oscar Wilde
  149 A Shepherd's Life                                    W. H. Hudson
  193 On Nothing                                         Hilaire Belloc
  300 Jane Austen and her Times                            G. E. Mitton
  114 Select Essays                                 Maurice Maeterlinck
  218 R. L. S.                                             Francis Watt
  223 Two Generations                                       Leo Tolstoy
  126 On Everything                                      Hilaire Belloc
  934 Records and Reminiscences                     Sir Francis Burnand
  253 My Childhood and Boyhood                              Leo Tolstoy
  254 On Something                                       Hilaire Belloc


A Selection only.


Uniform with this Volume

    1 The Mighty Atom                                     Marie Corelli
    2 Jane                                                Marie Corelli
    3 Boy                                                 Marie Corelli
    4 Spanish Gold                                     G. A. Birmingham
    5 The Search Party                                 G. A. Birmingham
    6 Teresa of Watling Street                           Arnold Bennett
    9 The Unofficial Honeymoon                            Dolf Wyllarde
   12 The Demon                              C. N. and A. M. Williamson
   17 Joseph                                                Frank Danby
   18 Round the Red Lamp                             Sir A. Conan Doyle
   20 Light Freights                                       W. W. Jacobs
   22 The Long Road                                        John Oxenham
   71 The Gates of Wrath                                 Arnold Bennett
   72 Short Cruises                                        W. W. Jacobs
   81 The Card                                           Arnold Bennett
   87 Lalage's Lovers                                  G. A. Birmingham
   93 White Fang                                            Jack London
  105 The Wallet of Kai Lung                              Ernest Bramah
  108 The Adventures of Dr. Whitty                     G. A. Birmingham
  113 Lavender and Old Lace                                 Myrtle Reed
  115 Old Rose and Silver                                   Myrtle Reed
  122 The Double Life of Mr. Alfred Burton        E. Phillips Oppenheim
  125 The Regent                                         Arnold Bennett
  127 Sally                                            Dorothea Conyers
  129 The Lodger                                    Mrs. Belloc Lowndes
  135 A Spinner In the Sun                                  Myrtle Reed
  137 The Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu                           Sax Rohmer
  139 The Golden Centipede                                Louise Gerard
  140 The Love Pirate                        C. N. and A. M. Williamson
  143 The Way of these Women                      E. Phillips Oppenheim
  143 Sandy Married                                    Dorothea Conyers
  145 Chance                                              Joseph Conrad
  148 Flower of the Dusk                                    Myrtle Reed
  150 The Gentleman Adventurer                             H. C. Bailey
  154 The Hyena of Kallu                                  Louise Gerard
  190 The Happy Hunting Ground                        Mrs. Alice Perrin
  191 My Lady of Shadows                                   John Oxenham
  211 Max Carrados                                        Ernest Bramah
  212 Under Western Eyes                                  Joseph Conrad
  213 The Kloof Bride                                  Ernest Glanville
  215 Mr. Grex of Monte Carlo                     E. Phillips Oppenheim
  216 The Wonder of Love                                 E. M. Albanesi
  217 A Weaver of Dreams                                    Myrtle Reed
  219 The Family                                        Elinor Mordaunt
  220 A Heritage of Peril                               A. W. Marchmont
  221 The Kinsman                                         Mrs. Sidgwick
  222 Emmanuel Burden                                    Hilaire Belloc
  224 Broken Shackles                                      John Oxenham
  225 A Knight of Spain                                  Marjorie Bowen
  227 Byeways                                            Robert Hichens
  228 Gossamer                                         G. A. Birmingham
  230 The Salving of a Derelict                           Maurice Drake
  231 Cameos                                              Marie Corelli
  232 The Happy Valley                                     B. M. Croker
  245 The Shop Girl                          C. N. and A. M. Williamson
  250 The Lost Regiment                                Ernest Glanville
  261 Tarzan of the Apes                           Edgar Rice Burroughs

A Selection only.