Title:      A CLERGYMAN'S DAUGHTER
   Author:     George Orwell
   CHAPTER 1
   1
   As the alarm clock on the chest of drawers exploded like a horrid
   little bomb of bell metal, Dorothy, wrenched from the depths of
   some complex, troubling dream, awoke with a start and lay on her
   back looking into the darkness in extreme exhaustion.
   The alarm clock continued its nagging, feminine clamour, which
   would go on for five minutes or thereabouts if you did not stop it.
   Dorothy was aching from head to foot, and an insidious and
   contemptible self-pity, which usually seized upon her when it was
   time to get up in the morning, caused her to bury her head under
   the bedclothes and try to shut the hateful noise out of her ears.
   She struggled against her fatigue, however, and, according to her
   custom, exhorted herself sharply in the second person plural.  Come
   on, Dorothy, up you get!  No snoozing, please!  Proverbs vi, 9.
   Then she remembered that if the noise went on any longer it would
   wake her father, and with a hurried movement she bounded out of
   bed, seized the clock from the chest of drawers, and turned off the
   alarm.  It was kept on the chest of drawers precisely in order that
   she should have to get out of bed to silence it.  Still in
   darkness, she knelt down at her bedside and repeated the Lord's
   Prayer, but rather distractedly, her feet being troubled by the
   cold.
   It was just half past five, and coldish for an August morning.
   Dorothy (her name was Dorothy Hare, and she was the only child of
   the Reverend Charles Hare, Rector of St Athelstan's, Knype Hill,
   Suffolk) put on her aged flannelette dressing-gown and felt her way
   downstairs.  There was a chill morning smell of dust, damp plaster,
   and the fried dabs from yesterday's supper, and from either side of
   the passage on the second floor she could hear the antiphonal
   snoring of her father and of Ellen, the maid of all work.  With
   care--for the kitchen table had a nasty trick of reaching out of
   the darkness and banging you on the hip-bone--Dorothy felt her way
   into the kitchen, lighted the candle on the mantelpiece, and, still
   aching with fatigue, knelt down and raked the ashes out of the
   range.
   The kitchen fire was a 'beast' to light.  The chimney was crooked
   and therefore perpetually half choked, and the fire, before it
   would light, expected to be dosed with a cupful of kerosene, like a
   drunkard's morning nip of gin.  Having set the kettle to boil for
   her father's shaving-water, Dorothy went upstairs and turned on her
   bath.  Ellen was still snoring, with heavy youthful snores.  She
   was a good hard-working servant once she was awake, but she was one
   of those girls whom the Devil and all his angels cannot get out of
   bed before seven in the morning.
   Dorothy filled the bath as slowly as possible--the splashing always
   woke her father if she turned on the tap too fast--and stood for a
   moment regarding the pale, unappetizing pool of water.  Her body
   had gone goose-flesh all over.  She detested cold baths; it was for
   that very reason that she made it a rule to take all her baths cold
   from April to November.  Putting a tentative hand into the water--
   and it was horribly cold--she drove herself forward with her usual
   exhortations.  Come on, Dorothy!  In you go!  No funking, please!
   Then she stepped resolutely into the bath, sat down and let the icy
   girdle of water slide up her body and immerse her all except her
   hair, which she had twisted up behind her head.  The next moment
   she came to the surface gasping and wriggling, and had no sooner
   got her breath back than she remembered her 'memo list', which she
   had brought down in her dressing-gown pocket and intended to read.
   She reached out for it, and, leaning over the side of the bath,
   waist deep in icy water, read through the 'memo list' by the light
   of the candle on the chair.
   It ran:
   7 oc.  H.C.
   Mrs T baby?  Must visit.
   BREAKFAST.  Bacon.  MUST ask father money.  (P)
   Ask Ellen what stuff kitchen father's tonic NB. to ask about stuff
   for curtains at Solepipe's.
   Visiting call on Mrs P cutting from Daily M angelica tea good for
   rheumatism Mrs L's cornplaster.
   12 oc.  Rehearsal Charles I.  NB. to order 1/2 lb glue 1 pot
   aluminium paint.
   DINNER (crossed out) LUNCHEON . . . ?
   Take round Parish Mag NB. Mrs F owes 3/6d.
   4.30 pm Mothers' U tea don't forget 2 1/2 yards casement cloth.
   Flowers for church NB. 1 tin Brasso.
   SUPPER.  Scrambled eggs.
   Type Father's sermon what about new ribbon typewriter?
   NB. to fork between peas bindweed awful.
   Dorothy got out of her bath, and as she dried herself with a towel
   hardly bigger than a table napkin--they could never afford decent-
   sized towels at the Rectory--her hair came unpinned and fell down
   over her collar-bones in two heavy strands.  It was thick, fine,
   exceedingly pale hair, and it was perhaps as well that her father
   had forbidden her to bob it, for it was her only positive beauty.
   For the rest, she was a girl of middle height, rather thin, but
   strong and shapely, and her face was her weak point.  It was a
   thin, blonde, unremarkable kind of face, with pale eyes and a nose
   just a shade too long; if you looked closely you could see crow's
   feet round the eyes, and the mouth, when it was in repose, looked
   tired.  Not definitely a spinsterish face as yet, but it certainly
   would be so in a few years' time.  Nevertheless, strangers commonly
   took her to be several years younger than her real age (she was not
   quite twenty-eight) because of the expression of almost childish
   earnestness in her eyes.  Her left forearm was spotted with tiny
   red marks like insect bites.
   Dorothy put on her nightdress again and cleaned her teeth--plain
   water, of course; better not to use toothpaste before H.C.  After
   all, either you are fasting or you aren't.  The R.C.s are quite
   right there--and, even as she did so, suddenly faltered and
   stopped.  She put her toothbrush down.  A deadly pang, an actual
   physical pang, had gone through her viscera.
   She had remembered, with the ugly shock with which one remembers
   something disagreeable for the first time in the morning, the bill
   at Cargill's, the butcher's, which had been owing for seven months.
   That dreadful bill--it might be nineteen pounds or even twenty, and
   there was hardly the remotest hope of paying it--was one of the
   chief torments of her life.  At all hours of the night or day it
   was waiting just round the corner of her consciousness, ready to
   spring upon her and agonize her; and with it came the memory of a
   score of lesser bills, mounting up to a figure of which she dared
   not even think.  Almost  
					     					 			involuntarily she began to pray, 'Please
   God, let not Cargill send in his bill again today!' but the next
   moment she decided that this prayer was worldly and blasphemous,
   and she asked forgiveness for it.  Then she put on her dressing-
   gown and ran down to the kitchen in hopes of putting the bill out
   of mind.
   The fire had gone out, as usual.  Dorothy relaid it, dirtying her
   hands with coal-dust, dosed it afresh with kerosene and hung about
   anxiously until the kettle boiled.  Father expected his shaving-
   water to be ready at a quarter past six.  Just seven minutes late,
   Dorothy took the can upstairs and knocked at her father's door.
   'Come in, come in!' said a muffled, irritable voice.
   The room, heavily curtained, was stuffy, with a masculine smell.
   The Rector had lighted the candle on his bed-table, and was lying
   on his side, looking at his gold watch, which he had just drawn
   from beneath his pillow.  His hair was as white and thick as
   thistledown.  One dark bright eye glanced irritably over his
   shoulder at Dorothy.
   'Good morning, father.'
   'I do wish, Dorothy,' said the Rector indistinctly--his voice
   always sounded muffled and senile until he put his false teeth in--
   'you would make some effort to get Ellen out of bed in the
   mornings.  Or else be a little more punctual yourself.'
   'I'm so sorry, Father.  The kitchen fire kept going out.'
   'Very well!  Put it down on the dressing-table.  Put it down and
   draw those curtains.'
   It was daylight now, but a dull, clouded morning.  Dorothy hastened
   up to her room and dressed herself with the lightning speed which
   she found necessary six mornings out of seven.  There was only a
   tiny square of mirror in the room, and even that she did not use.
   She simply hung her gold cross about her neck--plain gold cross; no
   crucifixes, please!--twisted her hair into a knot behind, stuck a
   number of hairpins rather sketchily into it, and threw her clothes
   (grey jersey, threadbare Irish tweed coat and skirt, stockings not
   quite matching the coat and skirt, and much-worn brown shoes) on to
   herself in the space of about three minutes.  She had got to 'do
   out' the dining-room and her father's study before church, besides
   saying her prayers in preparation for Holy Communion, which took
   her not less than twenty minutes.
   When she wheeled her bicycle out of the front gate the morning was
   still overcast, and the grass sodden with heavy dew.  Through the
   mist that wreathed the hillside St Athelstan's Church loomed dimly,
   like a leaden sphinx, its single bell tolling funereally boom!
   boom! boom!  Only one of the bells was now in active use; the other
   seven had been unswung from their cage and had lain silent these
   three years past, slowly splintering the floor of the belfry
   beneath their weight.  In the distance, from the mists below, you
   could hear the offensive clatter of the bell in the R.C. church--a
   nasty, cheap, tinny little thing which the Rector of St Athelstan's
   used to compare with a muffin-bell.
   Dorothy mounted her bicycle and rode swiftly up the hill, leaning
   over her handlebars.  The bridge of her thin nose was pink in the
   morning cold.  A redshank whistled overhead, invisible against the
   clouded sky.  Early in the morning my song shall rise to Thee!
   Dorothy propped her bicycle against the lychgate, and, finding her
   hands still grey with coal-dust, knelt down and scrubbed them clean
   in the long wet grass between the graves.  Then the bell stopped
   ringing, and she jumped up and hastened into church, just as
   Proggett, the sexton, in ragged cassock and vast labourer's boots,
   was clumping up the aisle to take his place at the side altar.
   The church was very cold, with a scent of candle-wax and ancient
   dust.  It was a large church, much too large for its congregation,
   and ruinous and more than half empty.  The three narrow islands of
   pews stretched barely half-way down the nave, and beyond them were
   great wastes of bare stone floor in which a few worn inscriptions
   marked the sites of ancient graves.  The roof over the chancel was
   sagging visibly; beside the Church Expenses box two fragments of
   riddled beam explained mutely that this was due to that mortal foe
   of Christendom, the death-watch beetle.  The light filtered, pale-
   coloured, through windows of anaemic glass.  Through the open south
   door you could see a ragged cypress and the boughs of a lime-tree,
   greyish in the sunless air and swaying faintly.
   As usual, there was only one other communicant--old Miss Mayfill,
   of The Grange.  The attendance at Holy Communion was so bad that
   the Rector could not even get any boys to serve him, except on
   Sunday mornings, when the boys liked showing off in front of the
   congregation in their cassocks and surplices.  Dorothy went into
   the pew behind Miss Mayfill, and, in penance for some sin of
   yesterday, pushed away the hassock and knelt on the bare stones.
   The service was beginning.  The Rector, in cassock and short linen
   surplice, was reciting the prayers in a swift practised voice,
   clear enough now that his teeth were in, and curiously ungenial.
   In his fastidious, aged face, pale as a silver coin, there was an
   expression of aloofness, almost of contempt.  'This is a valid
   sacrament,' he seemed to be saying, 'and it is my duty to
   administer it to you.  But remember that I am only your priest, not
   your friend.  As a human being I dislike you and despise you.'
   Proggett, the sexton, a man of forty with curly grey hair and a
   red, harassed face, stood patiently by, uncomprehending but
   reverent, fiddling with the little communion bell which was lost in
   his huge red hands.
   Dorothy pressed her fingers against her eyes.  She had not yet
   succeeded in concentrating her thoughts--indeed, the memory of
   Cargill's bill was still worrying her intermittently.  The prayers,
   which she knew by heart, were flowing through her head unheeded.
   She raised her eyes for a moment, and they began immediately to
   stray.  First upwards, to the headless roof-angels on whose necks
   you could still see the sawcuts of the Puritan soldiers, then back
   again, to Miss Mayfill's black, quasi-pork-pie hat and tremulous
   jet ear-rings.  Miss Mayfill wore a long musty black overcoat, with
   a little collar of greasy-looking astrakhan, which had been the
   same ever since Dorothy could remember.  It was of some very
   peculiar stuff, like watered silk but coarser, with rivulets of
   black piping wandering all over it in no discoverable pattern.  It
   might even have been that legendary and proverbial substance, black
   bombazine.  Miss Mayfill was very old, so old that no one
   remembered her as anything but an old woman.  A faint scent
   radiated from her--an ethereal scent, analysable as eau-de-Cologne,
   mothballs, and a sub-flavour of gin.
   Dorothy drew a long glass-headed pin from the lapel of her coat,
   and furtively, under cover of Miss Mayfill's back, pressed the
   point against her forearm.  Her flesh tingled  
					     					 			apprehensively.  She
   made it a rule, whenever she caught herself not attending to her
   prayers, to prick her arm hard enough to make blood come.  It was
   her chosen form of self-discipline, her guard against irreverence
   and sacrilegious thoughts.
   With the pin poised in readiness she managed for several moments
   to pray more collectedly.  Her father had turned one dark eye
   disapprovingly upon Miss Mayfill, who was crossing herself at
   intervals, a practice he disliked.  A starling chattered outside.
   With a shock Dorothy discovered that she was looking vaingloriously
   at the pleats of her father's surplice, which she herself had sewn
   two years ago.  She set her teeth and drove the pin an eighth of an
   inch into her arm.
   They were kneeling again.  It was the General Confession.  Dorothy
   recalled her eyes--wandering, alas! yet again, this time to the
   stained-glass window on her right, designed by Sir Warde Tooke,
   A.R.A., in 1851 and representing St Athelstan's welcome at the gate
   of heaven by Gabriel and a legion of angels all remarkably like one
   another and the Prince Consort--and pressed the pinpoint against a
   different part of her arm.  She began to meditate conscientiously
   upon the meaning of each phrase of the prayer, and so brought her
   mind back to a more attentive state.  But even so she was all but
   obliged to use the pin again when Proggett tinkled the bell in the
   middle of 'Therefore with Angels and Archangels'--being visited, as
   always, by a dreadful temptation to begin laughing at that passage.
   It was because of a story her father had told her once, of how when
   he was a little boy, and serving the priest at the altar, the
   communion bell had a screw-on clapper, which had come loose; and so
   the priest had said:  'Therefore with Angels and Archangels, and
   with all the company of Heaven, we laud and magnify Thy glorious
   name; evermore praising Thee, and saying, Screw it up, you little
   fat-head, screw it up!'
   As the Rector finished the consecration Miss Mayfill began to
   struggle to her feet with extreme difficulty and slowness, like
   some disjointed wooden creature picking itself up by sections, and
   disengaging at each movement a powerful whiff of mothballs.  There
   was an extraordinary creaking sound--from her stays, presumably,
   but it was a noise as of bones grating against one another.  You
   could have imagined that there was only a dry skeleton inside that
   black overcoat.
   Dorothy remained on her feet a moment longer.  Miss Mayfill was
   creeping towards the altar with slow, tottering steps.  She could
   barely walk, but she took bitter offence if you offered to help
   her.  In her ancient, bloodless face her mouth was surprisingly
   large, loose, and wet.  The underlip, pendulous with age, slobbered
   forward, exposing a strip of gum and a row of false teeth as yellow
   as the keys of an old piano.  On the upper lip was a fringe of
   dark, dewy moustache.  It was not an appetizing mouth; not the kind
   of mouth that you would like to see drinking out of your cup.
   Suddenly, spontaneously, as though the Devil himself had put it
   there, the prayer slipped from Dorothy'Beasts of England's lips:  O God, let me not
   have to take the chalice after Miss Mayfill!
   The next moment, in self-horror, she grasped the meaning of what
   she had said, and wished that she had bitten her tongue in two
   rather than utter that deadly blasphemy upon the altar steps.  She
   drew the pin again from her lapel and drove it into her arm so hard
   that it was all she could do to suppress a cry of pain.  Then she
   stepped to the altar and knelt down meekly on Miss Mayfill's left,
   so as to make quite sure of taking the chalice after her.
   Kneeling, with head bent and hands clasped against her knees, she
   set herself swiftly to pray for forgiveness before her father
   should reach her with the wafer.  But the current of her thoughts
   had been broken.  Suddenly it was quite useless attempting to pray;