He would have no RAISON D'ETRE if there were no lugubrious miseries in the world, as an undertaker would have no meaning if there were no funerals.
Mrs Crich recoiled back upon herself, she recoiled away from this world of creeping democracy.
A band of tight, baleful exclusion fastened round her heart, her isolation was fierce and hard, her antagonism was passive but terribly pure, like that of a hawk in a cage.
As the years went on, she lost more and more count of the world, she seemed rapt in some glittering abstraction, almost purely unconscious.
She would wander about the house and about the surrounding country, staring keenly and seeing nothing.
She rarely spoke, she had no connection with the world.
And she did not even think.
She was consumed in a fierce tension of opposition, like the negative pole of a magnet.
And she bore many children. For, as time went on, she never opposed her husband in word or deed.
She took no notice of him, externally.
She submitted to him, let him take what he wanted and do as he wanted with her.
She was like a hawk that sullenly submits to everything.
The relation between her and her husband was wordless and unknown, but it was deep, awful, a relation of utter inter-destruction.
And he, who triumphed in the world, he became more and more hollow in his vitality, the vitality was bled from within him, as by some haemorrhage.
She was hulked like a hawk in a cage, but her heart was fierce and undiminished within her, though her mind was destroyed.
So to the last he would go to her and hold her in his arms sometimes, before his strength was all gone.
The terrible white, destructive light that burned in her eyes only excited and roused him.
Till he was bled to death, and then he dreaded her more than anything.
But he always said to himself, how happy he had been, how he had loved her with a pure and consuming love ever since he had known her.
And he thought of her as pure, chaste; the white flame which was known to him alone, the flame of her sex, was a white flower of snow to his mind.
She was a wonderful white snow-flower, which he had desired infinitely.
And now he was dying with all his ideas and interpretations intact.
They would only collapse when the breath left his body.
Till then they would be pure truths for him.
Only death would show the perfect completeness of the lie.
Till death, she was his white snow-flower.
He had subdued her, and her subjugation was to him an infinite chastity in her, a virginity which he could never break, and which dominated him as by a spell.
She had let go the outer world, but within herself she was unbroken and unimpaired.
She only sat in her room like a moping, dishevelled hawk, motionless, mindless.
Her children, for whom she had been so fierce in her youth, now meant scarcely anything to her.
She had lost all that, she was quite by herself.
Only Gerald, the gleaming, had some existence for her.
But of late years, since he had become head of the business, he too was forgotten.
Whereas the father, now he was dying, turned for compassion to Gerald.
There had always been opposition between the two of them.
Gerald had feared and despised his father, and to a great extent had avoided him all through boyhood and young manhood.
And the father had felt very often a real dislike of his eldest son, which, never wanting to give way to, he had refused to acknowledge.
He had ignored Gerald as much as possible, leaving him alone.
Since, however, Gerald had come home and assumed responsibility in the firm, and had proved such a wonderful director, the father, tired and weary of all outside concerns, had put all his trust of these things in his son, implicitly, leaving everything to him, and assuming a rather touching dependence on the young enemy.
This immediately roused a poignant pity and allegiance in Gerald's heart, always shadowed by contempt and by unadmitted enmity.
For Gerald was in reaction against Charity; and yet he was dominated by it, it assumed supremacy in the inner life, and he could not confute it.
So he was partly subject to that which his father stood for, but he was in reaction against it.
Now he could not save himself.
A certain pity and grief and tenderness for his father overcame him, in spite of the deeper, more sullen hostility.
The father won shelter from Gerald through compassion.
But for love he had Winifred.
She was his youngest child, she was the only one of his children whom he had ever closely loved. And her he loved with all the great, overweening, sheltering love of a dying man.
He wanted to shelter her infinitely, infinitely, to wrap her in warmth and love and shelter, perfectly.
If he could save her she should never know one pain, one grief, one hurt.
He had been so right all his life, so constant in his kindness and his goodness.