Later, in Paris, he is subject to the attentions of a fellow art student, Miss Price, for whom he also feels remarkable physical revulsion: “the way in which Miss Price ate took his appetite away. She ate noisily and greedily, a little like a wild beast in a menagerie, and after she had finished each course rubbed the plate with pieces of bread till it was white and shining, as if she did not wish to lose a single drop of gravy” (p. 202). While he recognizes the beauty of another woman art student, Miss Chalice, rumors of her promiscuity alienate and disgust him. Perhaps the roots of Philip's revulsion are to be found in his creator's discreet but lifelong homosexuality.
It is only Mildred who draws him, and the attraction is immediate. Once she snubs him, he has to elicit some response from her. Maugham writes, “He could not get her out of his mind. He laughed angrily at his own foolishness: it was absurd to care what an anaemic little waitress said to him, but he was strangely humiliated” (p. 275). From there he moves quickly to obsession. This is not to say that he finds her physically attractive: “He did not think her pretty; he hated the thinness of her, only that evening he had noticed how the bones of her chest stood out in evening dress . . . ; he did not like her mouth, and the unhealthiness of her color vaguely repelled him” (p. 283). Through greedy, scheming indifference, Mildred draws Philip from humiliation to humiliation. Even after she has left him and he has gotten over her (with another young woman whom he likes very much but does not find pretty), he cannot resist her reentrance into his life.
Philip's affair with Mildred is full of incident. His obsession manifests itself now as sexual attraction, now as paternal interest, now as fondness for her baby daughter. It seems to thrive on the inappropriateness of the connection, on the way that the connection impoverishes and isolates Philip, on the way that Mildred serves up ever-new versions of humiliation and betrayal. Philip repeatedly asks himself why he has fallen in love with Mildred, of all people. Everything about her directly contradicts his lifelong fantasy of first love. He can never answer his own question and, overtly, Maugham never does, either. Perhaps, the author seems to imply, there is some link to the death of Philip's mother. But the mother herself, a sacrosanct figure, offers no clue to Philip's choice of object.
The reader must notice, though, that Mildred's most salient quality is shamelessness, which is combined with selfish energy that stands in strong contrast to Philip's sensitive self-consciousness. With Mildred's every entrance into the narrative, the novel perks up. Not only is she powerful in herself, she has the power to engage Philip, to prevent him from taking refuge in his customary supercilious detachment. She draws him kicking and screaming into a world of passionate feeling and profound contradictions. Symbolically, after he has spent all of his money on her, no inherited income insulates him from the workaday world any longer, and he is forced to draw on his strength and his skills, as he never has before, simply to survive.
Although Maugham may not have understood the psychological roots of Philip's obsession and Mildred's indifference, his genius for observation and his relentless belief in literary truth enabled him to portray one of the most compelling and chilling sexual relationships in twentieth-century British literature.
By contrast, his portrayal of the marital refuge Philip takes in Sally Athelney, the daughter of his best friend, strikes the reader as bloodless and static, rather as the contrast between David Copperfield's first marriage to Dora and his second to Agnes does. Sally is young, large, blond, earthy, and silent. Though Philip knows Sally as Athelney's daughter, he doesn't realize he is in love with her until he joins the annual family hop picking, in Mrs. Athelney's native village of Ferne, in Kent. On the evening of the first day, Philip is struck anew by Sally's excellent qualities: “She was like some rural goddess, and you thought of those fresh, strong girls whom old Herrick had praised in exquisite numbers” (p. 605). They do not hesitate to initiate a sexual relationship, but Philip's plans are unrestrained by it—he is readying himself to see the world as a medical officer on a tramp steamer—until Sally discovers she is pregnant. This news reveals to Philip the depth of his love for her, and so, even when she tells him that the pregnancy has been a false alarm, he decides to claim her anyway and take up the life of a small-town English doctor in the Kentish countryside.
It isn't very convincing, not nearly as convincing as the obsession with Mildred. And Sally slows the narrative with every entrance rather than quickening it. Perhaps the answer is that it is here that Philip's fate diverges decidedly from the fate of his creator and model. Whereas Philip gives up his travels when his youthful adventures are done, at the same juncture, Maugham embarked upon his, knowing that his inspiration lay far afield from the English countryside. In some sense, Sally is England, an ideal, beautiful, innocent, and laconic figure that Philip embraces so that Maugham can give her up.
Maugham was much more interested in literary greatness, and compiled more than one version of his list of the world's greatest novels into books with titles like Books and You. He grew increasingly preoccupied, as he aged, with his own reputation. Vast commercial success did not satisfy him, and he knew he was being overlooked while others, such as John Galsworthy, were recipients of awards and honors. Since Maugham's death, his reputation has, as he feared it would, much declined, both as a playwright and as a novelist. His plays and short stories, and most of his novels, too earnestly bear the stamp of their times and their social milieu. Maugham's habit of writing from life without assimilating and pondering what he saw, without giving his stories “interesting in themselves” the depth that comes from an intimately felt and idiosyncratic “telling” did not, it appears now, serve him well. But his unsentimental candor and his willingness to explore the far reaches of sexual obsession infused Maugham's most personal novel with lasting grandeur.
I
THE DAY broke grey and dull. The clouds hung heavily, and there was a rawness in the air that suggested snow. A woman servant came into a room in which a child was sleeping and drew the curtains. She glanced mechanically at the house opposite, a stucco house with a portico, and went to the child's bed.
‘Wake up, Philip,' she said.
She pulled down the bed-clothes, took him in her arms, and carried him downstairs. He was only half awake.
‘Your mother wants you,' she said.
She opened the door of a room on the floor below and took the child over to a bed in which a woman was lying. It was his mother. She stretched out her arms, and the child nestled by her side. He did not ask why he had been awakened. The woman kissed his eyes, and with thin, small hands felt the warm body through his white flannel nightgown. She pressed him closer to herself.
‘Are you sleepy, darling?' she said.
Her voice was so weak that it seemed to come already from a great distance. The child did not answer, but smiled comfortably. He was very happy in the large, warm bed, with those soft arms about him. He tried to make himself smaller still as he cuddled against his mother, and he kissed her sleepily. In a moment he closed his eyes and was fast asleep. The doctor came forward and stood by the bedside.
‘Oh, don't take him away yet,' she moaned.
The doctor, without answering, looked at her gravely. Knowing she would not be allowed to keep the child much longer, the woman kissed him again; and she passed her hand down his body till she came to his feet; she held the right foot in her hand and felt the five small toes; and then slowly passed her hand over the left one. She gave a sob.
‘What's the matter?' said the doctor. ‘You're tired.'
She shook her head, unable to speak, and the tears rolled down her cheeks. The doctor bent down.
‘Let me take him.'
She was too weak to resist his wish, and she gave the child up. The doctor handed him back to his nurse.
‘You'd better put him back in his own bed.'
‘Very well, sir.'
The little boy, still sleeping, was taken away. His mother sobbed now broken-heartedly.
&
nbsp; ‘What will happen to him, poor child?'
The monthly nurse tried to quiet her, and presently, from exhaustion, the crying ceased. The doctor walked to a table on the other side of the room, upon which, under a towel, lay the body of a still-born child. He lifted the towel and looked. He was hidden from the bed by a screen, but the woman guessed what he was doing.
‘Was it a girl or a boy?' she whispered to the nurse.
‘Another boy.'
The woman did not answer. In a moment the child's nurse came back. She approached the bed.
‘Master Philip never woke up,' she said.
There was a pause. Then the doctor felt his patient's pulse once more.
‘I don't think there's anything I can do just now,' he said. ‘I'll call again after breakfast.'
‘I'll show you out, sir,' said the child's nurse.
They walked downstairs in silence. In the hall the doctor stopped.
‘You've sent for Mrs Carey's brother-in-law, haven't you?'
‘Yes, sir.'
‘D'you know at what time he'll be here?'
‘No, sir, I'm expecting a telegram.'
‘What about the little boy? I should think he'd be better out of the way.'
‘Miss Watkin said she'd take him, sir.'
‘Who's she?'
‘She's his godmother, sir. D'you think Mrs Carey will get over it, sir?'
The doctor shook his head.
II
IT WAS a week later. Philip was sitting on the floor in the drawing-room at Miss Watkin's house in Onslow Gardens. He was an only child and used to amusing himself. The room was filled with massive furniture, and on each of the sofas were three big cushions. There was a cushion too in each armchair. All these he had taken and, with the help of the gilt rout chairs, light and easy to move, had made an elaborate cave in which he could hide himself from the Red Indians who were lurking behind the curtains. He put his ear to the floor and listened to the herd of buffaloes that raced across the prairie. Presently, hearing the door open, he held his breath so that he might not be discovered; but a violent hand pulled away a chair and the cushions fell down.
‘You naughty boy, Miss Watkin will be cross with you.'
‘Hulloa, Emma!' he said.
The nurse bent down and kissed him, then began to shake out the cushions, and put them back in their places.
‘Am I to come home?' he asked.
‘Yes, I've come to fetch you.'
‘You've got a new dress on.'
It was in 1885, and she wore a bustle. Her gown was of black velvet, with tight sleeves and sloping shoulders, and the skirt had three large flounces. She wore a black bonnet with velvet strings. She hesitated. The question she had expected did not come, and so she could not give the answer she had prepared.
‘Aren't you going to ask how your mamma is?' she said at length.
‘Oh, I forgot. How is mamma?'
Now she was ready.
‘Your mamma is quite well and happy.'
‘Oh, I am glad.'
‘Your mamma's gone away. You won't ever see her any more.'
Philip did not know what she meant.
‘Why not?'
‘Your mamma's in heaven.'
She began to cry, and Philip, though he did not quite understand, cried too. Emma was a tall, big-boned woman, with fair hair and large features. She came from Devonshire and, notwithstanding her many years of service in London, had never lost the breadth of her accent. Her tears increased her emotion, and she pressed the little boy to her heart. She felt vaguely the pity of that child deprived of the only love in the world that is quite unselfish. It seemed dreadful that he must be handed over to strangers. But in a little while she pulled herself together.
‘Your Uncle William is waiting in to see you,' she said. ‘Go and say good-bye to Miss Watkin, and we'll go home.'
‘I don't want to say good-bye,' he answered, instinctively anxious to hide his tears.
‘Very well, run upstairs and get your hat.'
He fetched it, and when he came down Emma was waiting for him in the hall. He heard the sound of voices in the study behind the dining-room. He paused. He knew that Miss Watkin and her sister were talking to friends, and it seemed to him—he was nine years old—that if he went in they would be sorry for him.
‘I think I'll go and say good-bye to Miss Watkin.'
‘I think you'd better,' said Emma.
‘Go in and tell them I'm coming,' he said.
He wished to make the most of his opportunity. Emma knocked at the door and walked in. He heard her speak.
‘Master Philip wants to say good-bye to you, miss.'
There was a sudden hush of the conversation, and Philip limped in. Henrietta Watkin was a stout woman, with a red face and dyed hair. In those days to dye the hair excited comment, and Philip had heard much gossip at home when his godmother's changed colour. She lived with an elder sister, who had resigned herself contentedly to old age. Two ladies, whom Philip did not know, were calling, and they looked at him curiously.
‘My poor child,' said Miss Watkin, opening her arms.
She began to cry. Philip understood now why she had not been in to luncheon and why she wore a black dress. She could not speak.
‘I've got to go home,' said Philip, at last.
He disengaged himself from Miss Watkin's arms, and she kissed him again. Then he went to her sister and bade her good-bye too. One of the strange ladies asked if she might kiss him, and he gravely gave her permission. Though crying, he keenly enjoyed the sensation he was causing; he would have been glad to stay a little longer to be made so much of, but felt they expected him to go, so he said that Emma was waiting for him. He went out of the room. Emma had gone downstairs to speak with a friend in the basement, and he waited for her on the landing. He heard Henrietta Watkin's voice.
‘His mother was my greatest friend. I can't bear to think that she's dead.'
‘You oughtn't to have gone to the funeral, Henrietta,' said her sister. ‘I knew it would upset you.'
Then one of the strangers spoke.
‘Poor little boy, it's dreadful to think of him quite alone in the world. I see he limps.'
‘Yes, he's got a club-foot. It was such a grief to his mother.'
Then Emma came back. They called a hansom, and she told the driver where to go.
III
WHEN THEY reached the house Mrs Carey had died init was in a dreary, respectable street between Notting Hill Gate and High Street, KensingtonEmma led Philip into the drawing-room. His uncle was writing letters of thanks for the wreaths which had been sent. One of them, which had arrived too late for the funeral, lay in its cardboard box on the hall-table.
‘Here's Master Philip,' said Emma.
Mr Carey stood up slowly and shook hands with the little boy. Then on second thoughts he bent down and kissed his forehead. He was a man of somewhat less than average height, inclined to corpulence, with his hair, worn long, arranged over the scalp so as to conceal his baldness. He was clean-shaven. His features were regular, and it was possible to imagine that in his youth he had been good-looking. On his watch-chain he wore a gold cross.
‘You're going to live with me now, Philip,' said Mr Carey. ‘Shall you like that?'
Two years before Philip had been sent down to stay at the vicarage after an attack of chicken-pox; but there remained with him a recollection of an attic and a large garden rather than of his uncle and aunt.
‘Yes.'
‘You must look upon me and your Aunt Louisa as your father and mother.'
The child's mouth trembled a little, he reddened, but did not answer.
‘Your dear mother left you in my charge.'
Mr Carey had no great ease in expressing himself. When the news came that his sister-in-law was dying, he set off at once for London, but on the way thought of nothing but the disturbance in his life that would be caused if her death forced him to undertake the care of her son. He was well over fifty, a
nd his wife, to whom he had been married for thirty years, was childless; he did not look forward with any pleasure to the presence of a small boy who might be noisy and rough. He had never much liked his sister-in-law.
‘I'm going to take you down to Blackstable tomorrow,' he said.
‘With Emma?'
The child put his hand in hers, and she pressed it.
‘I'm afraid Emma must go away,' said Mr Carey.
‘But I want Emma to come with me.'
Philip began to cry, and the nurse could not help crying too. Mr Carey looked at them helplessly.
‘I think you'd better leave me alone with Master Philip for a moment.'
‘Very good, sir.'
Though Philip clung to her, she released herself gently. Mr Carey took the boy on his knee and put his arm round him.
‘You mustn't cry,' he said. ‘You're too old to have a nurse now. We must see about sending you to school.'
‘I want Emma to come with me,' the child repeated.
‘It costs too much money, Philip. Your father didn't leave very much, and I don't know what's become of it. You must look at every penny you spend.'
Mr Carey had called the day before on the family solicitor. Philip's father was a surgeon in good practice, and his hospital appointments suggested an established position; so that it was a surprise on his sudden death from blood-poisoning to find that he had left his widow little more than his life insurance and what could be got from the lease of their house in Bruton Street. This was six months ago; and Mrs Carey, already in delicate health, finding herself with child, had lost her head and accepted for the lease the first offer that was made. She stored her furniture, and, at a rent which the parson thought outrageous, took a furnished house for a year, so that she might suffer from no inconvenience till her child was born. But she had never been used to the management of money, and was unable to adapt her expenditure to her altered circumstances. The little she had slipped through her fingers in one way and another, so that now, when all expenses were paid, not much more than two thousand pounds remained to support the boy till he was able to earn his own living. It was impossible to explain all this to Philip and he was sobbing still.