It was what they wanted.
Otherwise Gerald could never have done what he did.
He was just ahead of them in giving them what they wanted, this participation in a great and perfect system that subjected life to pure mathematical principles.
This was a sort of freedom, the sort they really wanted.
It was the first great step in undoing, the first great phase of chaos, the substitution of the mechanical principle for the organic, the destruction of the organic purpose, the organic unity, and the subordination of every organic unit to the great mechanical purpose.
It was pure organic disintegration and pure mechanical organisation.
This is the first and finest state of chaos.
Gerald was satisfied.
He knew the colliers said they hated him.
But he had long ceased to hate them.
When they streamed past him at evening, their heavy boots slurring on the pavement wearily, their shoulders slightly distorted, they took no notice of him, they gave him no greeting whatever, they passed in a grey-black stream of unemotional acceptance.
They were not important to him, save as instruments, nor he to them, save as a supreme instrument of control.
As miners they had their being, he had his being as director.
He admired their qualities.
But as men, personalities, they were just accidents, sporadic little unimportant phenomena.
And tacitly, the men agreed to this.
For Gerald agreed to it in himself.
He had succeeded.
He had converted the industry into a new and terrible purity.
There was a greater output of coal than ever, the wonderful and delicate system ran almost perfectly.
He had a set of really clever engineers, both mining and electrical, and they did not cost much.
A highly educated man cost very little more than a workman.
His managers, who were all rare men, were no more expensive than the old bungling fools of his father's days, who were merely colliers promoted.
His chief manager, who had twelve hundred a year, saved the firm at least five thousand.
The whole system was now so perfect that Gerald was hardly necessary any more.
It was so perfect that sometimes a strange fear came over him, and he did not know what to do.
He went on for some years in a sort of trance of activity. What he was doing seemed supreme, he was almost like a divinity.
He was a pure and exalted activity.
But now he had succeeded—he had finally succeeded.
And once or twice lately, when he was alone in the evening and had nothing to do, he had suddenly stood up in terror, not knowing what he was.
And he went to the mirror and looked long and closely at his own face, at his own eyes, seeking for something.
He was afraid, in mortal dry fear, but he knew not what of.
He looked at his own face.
There it was, shapely and healthy and the same as ever, yet somehow, it was not real, it was a mask.
He dared not touch it, for fear it should prove to be only a composition mask.
His eyes were blue and keen as ever, and as firm in their sockets.
Yet he was not sure that they were not blue false bubbles that would burst in a moment and leave clear annihilation.
He could see the darkness in them, as if they were only bubbles of darkness.
He was afraid that one day he would break down and be a purely meaningless babble lapping round a darkness.
But his will yet held good, he was able to go away and read, and think about things.
He liked to read books about the primitive man, books of anthropology, and also works of speculative philosophy.
His mind was very active.
But it was like a bubble floating in the darkness.
At any moment it might burst and leave him in chaos.
He would not die.
He knew that.
He would go on living, but the meaning would have collapsed out of him, his divine reason would be gone.
In a strangely indifferent, sterile way, he was frightened.
But he could not react even to the fear.
It was as if his centres of feeling were drying up.