The Price of Love
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Price of Love, by Arnold Bennett
1914
In the evening dimness of old Mrs. Maldon's sitting-room stood the youthful virgin, Rachel Louisa Fleckring. The prominent fact about her appearance was that she wore an apron. Not one of those white, waist-tied aprons, with or without bibs, worn proudly, uncompromisingly, by a previous generation of unaspiring housewives and housegirls! But an immense blue pinafore-apron, covering the whole front of the figure except the head, hands, and toes. Its virtues were that it fully protected the most fragile frock against all the perils of the kitchen; and that it could be slipped on or off in one second, without any manipulation of tapes, pins, or buttons and buttonholes—for it had no fastenings of any sort and merely yawned behind. In one second the drudge could be transformed into the elegant infanta of boudoirs, and vice versa . To suit the coquetry of the age the pinafore was enriched with certain flouncings, which, however, only intensified its unshapen ugliness.
On a plain, middle-aged woman such a pinafore would have been intolerable to the sensitive eye. But on Rachel it simply had a piquant and perverse air, because she was young, with the incomparable, the unique charm of comely adolescence; it simply excited the imagination to conceive the exquisite treasures of contour and tint and texture which it veiled. Do not infer that Rachel was a coquette. Although comely, she was homely—a downright girl, scorning and hating all manner of pretentiousness. She had a fine best dress, and when she put it on everybody knew that it was her best; a stranger would have known. Whereas of a coquette none but her intimate companions can say whether she is wearing best or second-best on a given high occasion. Rachel used the pinafore-apron only with her best dress, and her reason for doing so was the sound, sensible reason that it was the usual and proper thing to do.
She opened a drawer of the new Sheraton sideboard, and took from it a metal tube that imitated brass, about a foot long and an inch in diameter, covered with black lettering. This tube, when she had removed its top, showed a number of thin wax tapers in various colours. She chose one, lit it neatly at the red fire, and then, standing on a footstool in the middle of the room, stretched all her body and limbs upward in order to reach the gas. If the tap had been half an inch higher or herself half an inch shorter, she would have had to stand on a chair instead of a footstool; and the chair would have had to be brought out of the kitchen and carried back again. But Heaven had watched over this detail. The gas-fitting consisted of a flexible pipe, resembling a thick black cord, and swinging at the end of it a specimen of that wonderful and blessed contrivance, the inverted incandescent mantle within a porcelain globe: the whole recently adopted by Mrs. Maldon as the dangerous final word of modern invention. It was safer to ignite the gas from the orifice at the top of the globe; but even so there was always a mild disconcerting explosion, followed by a few moments' uncertainty as to whether or not the gas had lighted properly.
Arnold Bennett
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THE PRICE OF LOVE
A TALE
ARNOLD BENNETT
CONTENTS
MONEY IN THE HOUSE
LOUIS' DISCOVERY
THE FEAST
IN THE NIGHT
NEWS OF THE NIGHT
THEORIES OF THE THEFT
THE CINEMA
END AND BEGINNING
THE MARRIED WOMAN
THE CHASM
JULIAN'S DOCUMENT
RUNAWAY HORSES
THE MARKET
THE CHANGED MAN
THE LETTER
IN THE MONASTERY
MRS. TAMS'S STRANGE BEHAVIOUR
RACHEL AND MR. HORROCLEAVE
CHAPTER I
MONEY IN THE HOUSE
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER II
LOUIS' DISCOVERY
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER III
THE FEAST
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER IV
IN THE NIGHT
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER V
NEWS OF THE NIGHT
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER VI
THEORIES OF THE THEFT
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER VII
THE CINEMA
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER VIII
END AND BEGINNING
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER IX
THE MARRIED WOMAN
I
II
III
CHAPTER X
THE CHASM
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER XI
JULIAN'S DOCUMENT
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER XII
RUNAWAY HORSES
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER XIII
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER XIV
THE MARKET
I
II
III
CHAPTER XV
THE CHANGED MAN
I
II
III
CHAPTER XVI
THE LETTER
I
II
III
CHAPTER XVII
IN THE MONASTERY
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER XVIII
MRS. TAMS'S STRANGE BEHAVIOUR
I
II
III
CHAPTER XIX
RACHEL AND MR. HORROCLEAVE
I
II
III