Of course it had to occur on a Thursday afternoon. The season was summer,
suitable for pale and fragile toilettes. And the eight children who sat round
Aunt Harriet's great table glittered like the sun. Not Constance's specially
provided napkins could hide that wealth and profusion of white lace and
stitchery. Never in after-life are the genteel children of the Five Towns so
richly clad as at the age of four or five years. Weeks of labour, thousands of
cubic feet of gas, whole nights stolen from repose, eyesight, and general
health, will disappear into the manufacture of a single frock that accidental
jam may ruin in ten seconds. Thus it was in those old days; and thus it is
to-day. Cyril's guests ranged in years from four to six; they were chiefly older
than their host; this was a pity, it impaired his importance; but up to four
years a child's sense of propriety, even of common decency, is altogether too
unreliable for a respectable party.
Round about the outskirts of the table were the elders, ladies the majority;
they also in their best, for they had to meet each other. Constance displayed a
new dress, of crimson silk; after having mourned for her mother she had
definitely abandoned the black which, by reason of her duties in the shop, she
had constantly worn from the age of sixteen to within a few months of Cyril's
birth; she never went into the shop now, except casually, on brief visits of
inspection. She was still fat; the destroyer of her figure sat at the head of
the table. Samuel kept close to her; he was the only male, until Mr. Critchlow
astonishingly arrived; among the company Mr. Critchlow had a grand-niece.
Samuel, if not in his best, was certainly not in his everyday suit. With his
large frilled shirt-front, and small black tie, and his little black beard and
dark face over that, he looked very nervous and self-conscious. He had not the
habit of entertaining. Nor had Constance; but her benevolence ever bubbling up
to the calm surface of her personality made self-consciousness impossible for
her. Miss Insull was also present, in shop-black, 'to help.' Lastly there was
Amy, now as the years passed slowly assuming the character of a faithful
retainer, though she was only twenty- three. An ugly, abrupt, downright girl,
with convenient notions of pleasure! For she would rise early and retire late in
order to contrive an hour to go out with Master Cyril; and to be allowed to put
Master Cyril to bed was, really, her highest bliss.
All these elders were continually inserting arms into the fringe of fluffy
children that surrounded the heaped table; removing dangerous spoons out of cups
into saucers, replacing plates, passing cakes, spreading jam, whispering
consolations, explanations, and sage counsel. Mr. Critchlow, snow-white now but
unbent, remarked that there was 'a pretty cackle,' and he sniffed. Although the
window was slightly open, the air was heavy with the natural human odour which
young children transpire. More than one mother, pressing her nose into a lacy
mass, to whisper, inhaled that pleasant perfume with a voluptuous thrill.
Cyril, while attending steadily to the demands of his body, was in a mood
which approached the ideal. Proud and radiant, he combined urbanity with a
certain fine condescension. His bright eyes, and his manner of scraping up jam
with a spoon, said: "I am the king of this party. This party is solely in my
honour. I know that. We all know it. Still, I will pretend that we are equals,
you and I." He talked about his picture-books to a young woman on his right
named Jennie, aged four, pale, pretty, the belle in fact, and Mr. Critchlow's
grand-niece. The boy's attractiveness was indisputable; he could put on quite an
aristocratic air. It was the most delicious sight to see them, Cyril and Jennie,
so soft and delicate, so infantile on their piles of cushions and books, with
their white socks and black shoes dangling far distant from the carpet; and yet
so old, so self-contained! And they were merely an epitome of the whole table.
The whole table was bathed in the charm and mystery of young years, of helpless
fragility, gentle forms, timid elegance, unshamed instincts, and waking souls.
Constance and Samuel were very satisfied; full of praise for other people's
children, but with the reserve that of course Cyril was hors concours. They both
really did believe, at that moment, that Cyril was, in some subtle way which
they felt but could not define, superior to all other infants.
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