names of some of the people you were learning about in your last
   history lesson.'
   More glances were exchanged, and a very plain little girl in the
   front row, in a brown jumper and skirt, with her hair screwed into
   two tight pigtails, remarked cloudily, 'It was about the Ancient
   Britons.'  At this two other girls took courage, and answered
   simultaneously.  One of them said, 'Columbus', and the other
   'Napoleon'.
   Somehow, after that, Dorothy seemed to see her way more clearly.
   It was obvious that instead of being uncomfortably knowledgeable as
   she had feared, the class knew as nearly as possible no history at
   all.  With this discovery her stage-fright vanished.  She grasped
   that before she could do anything else with them it was necessary
   to find out what, if anything, these children knew.  So, instead of
   following the time-table, she spent the rest of the morning in
   questioning the entire class on each subject in turn; when she had
   finished with history (and it took about five minutes to get to the
   bottom of their historical knowledge) she tried them with geography,
   with English grammar, with French, with arithmetic--with everything,
   in fact, that they were supposed to have learned.  By twelve o'clock
   she had plumbed, though not actually explored, the frightful abysses
   of their ignorance.
   For they knew nothing, absolutely nothing--nothing, nothing,
   nothing, like the Dadaists.  It was appalling that even children
   could be so ignorant.  There were only two girls in the class who
   knew whether the earth went round the sun or the sun round the
   earth, and not a single one of them could tell Dorothy who was the
   last king before George V, or who wrote Hamlet, or what was meant
   by a vulgar fraction, or which ocean you crossed to get to America,
   the Atlantic or the Pacific.  And the big girls of fifteen were not
   much better than the tiny infants of eight, except that the former
   could at least read consecutively and write neat copperplate.  That
   was the one thing that nearly all of the older girls could do--they
   could write neatly.  Mrs Creevy had seen to that.  And of course,
   here and there in the midst of their ignorance, there were small,
   disconnected islets of knowledge; for example, some odd stanzas
   from 'pieces of poetry' that they had learned by heart, and a few
   Ollendorffian French sentences such as 'Passez-moi le beurre, s'il
   vous plait' and 'Le fils du jardinier a perdu son chapeau', which
   they appeared to have learned as a parrot learns 'Pretty Poll'.  As
   for their arithmetic, it was a little better than the other
   subjects.  Most of them knew how to add and subtract, about half of
   them had some notion of how to multiply, and there were even three
   or four who had struggled as far as long division.  But that was
   the utmost limit of their knowledge; and beyond, in every direction,
   lay utter, impenetrable night.
   Moreover, not only did they know nothing, but they were so unused
   to being questioned that it was often difficult to get answers out
   of them at all.  It was obvious that whatever they knew they had
   learned in an entirely mechanical manner, and they could only gape
   in a sort of dull bewilderment when asked to think for themselves.
   However, they did not seem unwilling, and evidently they had made
   up their minds to be 'good'--children are always 'good' with a new
   teacher; and Dorothy persisted, and by degrees the children grew,
   or seemed to grow, a shade less lumpish.  She began to pick up,
   from the answers they gave her, a fairly accurate notion of what
   Miss Strong's regime had been like.
   It appeared that, though theoretically they had learned all the
   usual school subjects, the only ones that had been at all seriously
   taught were handwriting and arithmetic.  Mrs Creevy was particularly
   keen on handwriting.  And besides this they had spent great
   quantities of time--an hour or two out of every day, it seemed--in
   drudging through a dreadful routine called 'copies.'  'Copies' meant
   copying things out of textbooks or off the blackboard.  Miss Strong
   would write up, for example, some sententious little 'essay' (there
   was an essay entitled 'Spring' which recurred in all the older
   girls' books, and which began, 'Now, when girlish April is tripping
   through the land, when the birds are chanting gaily on the boughs
   and the dainty flowerets bursting from their buds', etc., etc.), and
   the girls would make fair copies of it in their copybooks; and the
   parents, to whom the copybooks were shown from time to time, were no
   doubt suitably impressed.  Dorothy began to grasp that everything
   that the girls had been taught was in reality aimed at the parents.
   Hence the 'copies', the insistence on handwriting, and the parroting
   of ready-made French phrases; they were cheap and easy ways of
   creating an impression.  Meanwhile, the little girls at the bottom
   of the class seemed barely able to read and write, and one of them--
   her name was Mavis Williams, and she was a rather sinister-looking
   child of eleven, with eyes too far apart--could not even count.  This
   child seemed to have done nothing at all during the past term and a
   half except to write pothooks.  She had quite a pile of books filled
   with pothooks--page after page of pothooks, looping on and on like
   the mangrove roots in some tropical swamp.
   Dorothy tried not to hurt the children's feelings by exclaiming at
   their ignorance, but in her heart she was amazed and horrified.
   She had not known that schools of this description still existed in
   the civilized world.  The whole atmosphere of the place was so
   curiously antiquated--so reminiscent of those dreary little private
   schools that you read about in Victorian novels.  As for the few
   textbooks that the class possessed, you could hardly look at them
   without feeling as though you had stepped back into the mid
   nineteenth century.  There were only three textbooks of which each
   child had a copy.  One was a shilling arithmetic, pre Great War but
   fairly serviceable, and another was a horrid little book called The
   Hundred Page History of Britain--a nasty little duodecimo book with
   a gritty brown cover, and, for frontispiece, a portrait of Boadicea
   with a Union Jack draped over the front of her chariot.  Dorothy
   opened this book at random, came to page 91, and read:
   After the French Revolution was over, the self-styled Emperor
   Napoleon Buonaparte attempted to set up his sway, but though he won
   a few victories against continental troops, he soon found that in
   the 'thin red line' he had more than met his match.  Conclusions
   were tried upon the field of Waterloo, where 50,000 Britons put to
   flight 70,000 Frenchmen--for the Prussians, our allies, arrived too
   late for the battle.  With a ringing British cheer our men charged
   down the slope and the enemy broke and fled.  We now come on to the
   great Reform Bill of 1832, the first of those beneficent reforms
   which have made British liberty what it is and marked us off from
   the less fortunate nations [etc 
					     					 			., etc.]. . . .
   The date of the book was 1888.  Dorothy, who had never seen a
   history book of this description before, examined it with a feeling
   approaching horror.  There was also an extraordinary little
   'reader', dated 1863.  It consisted mostly of bits out of Fenimore
   Cooper, Dr Watts, and Lord Tennyson, and at the end there were the
   queerest little 'Nature Notes' with woodcut illustrations.  There
   would be a woodcut of an elephant, and underneath in small print:
   'The elephant is a sagacious beast.  He rejoices in the shade of
   the Palm Trees, and though stronger than six horses he will allow a
   little child to lead him.  His food is Bananas.'  And so on to the
   Whale, the Zebra, and Porcupine, and the Spotted Camelopard.  There
   were also, in the teacher's desk, a copy of Beautiful Joe, a
   forlorn book called Peeps at Distant Lands, and a French phrase-
   book dated 1891.  It was called All you will need on your Parisian
   Trip, and the first phrase given was 'Lace my stays, but not too
   tightly'.  In the whole room there was not such a thing as an atlas
   or a set of geometrical instruments.
   At eleven there was a break of ten minutes, and some of the girls
   played dull little games at noughts and crosses or quarrelled over
   pencil-cases, and a few who had got over their first shyness
   clustered round Dorothy's desk and talked to her.  They told her
   some more about Miss Strong and her methods of teaching, and how
   she used to twist their ears when they made blots on their
   copybooks.  It appeared that Miss Strong had been a very strict
   teacher except when she was 'taken bad', which happened about twice
   a week.  And when she was taken bad she used to drink some medicine
   out of a little brown bottle, and after drinking it she would grow
   quite jolly for a while and talk to them about her brother in
   Canada.  But on her last day--the time when she was taken so bad
   during the arithmetic lesson--the medicine seemed to make her worse
   than ever, because she had no sooner drunk it than she began
   sinking and fell across a desk, and Mrs Creevy had to carry her out
   of the room.
   After the break there was another period of three quarters of an
   hour, and then school ended for the morning.  Dorothy felt stiff
   and tired after three hours in the chilly but stuffy room, and she
   would have liked to go out of doors for a breath of fresh air, but
   Mrs Creevy had told her beforehand that she must come and help get
   dinner ready.  The girls who lived near the school mostly went home
   for dinner, but there were seven who had dinner in the 'morning-
   room' at tenpence a time.  It was an uncomfortable meal, and passed
   in almost complete silence, for the girls were frightened to talk
   under Mrs Creevy's eye.  The dinner was stewed scrag end of mutton,
   and Mrs Creevy showed extraordinary dexterity in serving the pieces
   of lean to the 'good payers' and the pieces of fat to the 'medium
   payers'.  As for the three 'bad payers', they ate a shamefaced
   lunch out of paper bags in the school-room.
   School began again at two o'clock.  Already, after only one
   morning's teaching, Dorothy went back to her work with secret
   shrinking and dread.  She was beginning to realize what her life
   would be like, day after day and week after week, in that sunless
   room, trying to drive the rudiments of knowledge into unwilling
   brats.  But when she had assembled the girls and called their names
   over, one of them, a little peaky child with mouse-coloured hair,
   called Laura Firth, came up to her desk and presented her with a
   pathetic bunch of browny-yellow chrysanthemums, 'from all of us'.
   The girls had taken a liking to Dorothy, and had subscribed
   fourpence among themselves, to buy her a bunch of flowers.
   Something stirred in Dorothy's heart as she took the ugly flowers.
   She looked with more seeing eyes than before at the anaemic faces
   and shabby clothes of the children, and was all of a sudden
   horribly ashamed to think that in the morning she had looked at
   them with indifference, almost with dislike.  Now, a profound pity
   took possession of her.  The poor children, the poor children!  How
   they had been stunted and maltreated!  And with it all they had
   retained the childish gentleness that could make them squander
   their few pennies on flowers for their teacher.
   She felt quite differently towards her job from that moment
   onwards.  A feeling of loyalty and affection had sprung up in her
   heart.  This school was HER school; she would work for it and be
   proud of it, and make every effort to turn it from a place of
   bondage into a place human and decent.  Probably it was very little
   that she could do.  She was so inexperienced and unfitted for her
   job that she must educate herself before she could even begin to
   educate anybody else.  Still, she would do her best; she would do
   whatever willingness and energy could do to rescue these children
   from the horrible darkness in which they had been kept.
   3
   During the next few weeks there were two things that occupied
   Dorothy to the exclusion of all others.  One, getting her class
   into some kind of order; the other, establishing a concordat with
   Mrs Creevy.
   The second of the two was by a great deal the more difficult.  Mrs
   Creevy's house was as vile a house to live in as one could possibly
   imagine.  It was always more or less cold, there was not a
   comfortable chair in it from top to bottom, and the food was
   disgusting.  Teaching is harder work than it looks, and a teacher
   needs good food to keep him going.  It was horribly dispiriting to
   have to work on a diet of tasteless mutton stews, damp boiled
   potatoes full of little black eyeholes, watery rice puddings, bread
   and scrape, and weak tea--and never enough even of these.  Mrs
   Creevy, who was mean enough to take a pleasure in skimping even her
   own food, ate much the same meals as Dorothy, but she always had
   the lion's share of them.  Every morning at breakfast the two fried
   eggs were sliced up and unequally partitioned, and the dish of
   marmalade remained for ever sacrosanct.  Dorothy grew hungrier and
   hungrier as the term went on.  On the two evenings a week when she
   managed to get out of doors she dipped into her dwindling store of
   money and bought slabs of plain chocolate, which she ate in the
   deepest secrecy--for Mrs Creevy, though she starved Dorothy more or
   less intentionally, would have been mortally offended if she had
   known that she bought food for herself.
   The worst thing about Dorothy's position was that she had no
   privacy and very little time that she could call her own.  Once
   school was over for the day her only refuge was the 'morning-room',
   where she was under Mrs Creevy's eye, and Mrs Creevy's leading idea
   was that Dorothy must never be left in peace for ten minutes
   together.  She had taken it into her head, or pretended to do so,
   that Dorothy was an idle person who needed keeping up to the mark.
   And so it was always, 'Well, Miss Millborough, you don't seem 
					     					 			 to
   have very much to do this evening, do you?  Aren't there some
   exercise books that want correcting?  Or why don't you get your
   needle and do a bit of sewing?  I'm sure _I_ couldn't bear to just
   sit in my chair doing nothing like you do!'  She was for ever
   finding household jobs for Dorothy to do, even making her scrub the
   schoolroom floor on Saturday mornings when the girls did not come
   to school; but this was done out of pure ill nature, for she did
   not trust Dorothy to do the work properly, and generally did it
   again after her.  One evening Dorothy was unwise enough to bring
   back a novel from the public library.  Mrs Creevy flared up at the
   very sight of it.  'Well, really, Miss Millborough!  I shouldn't
   have thought you'd have had time to READ!' she said bitterly.  She
   herself had never read a book right through in her life, and was
   proud of it.
   Moreover, even when Dorothy was not actually under her eye, Mrs
   Creevy had ways of making her presence felt.  She was for ever
   prowling in the neighbourhood of the schoolroom, so that Dorothy
   never felt quite safe from her intrusion; and when she thought
   there was too much noise she would suddenly rap on the wall with
   her broom-handle in a way that made the children jump and put them
   off their work.  At all hours of the day she was restlessly,
   noisily active.  When she was not cooking meals she was banging
   about with broom and dustpan, or harrying the charwoman, or
   pouncing down upon the schoolroom to 'have a look round' in hopes
   of catching Dorothy or the children up to mischief, or 'doing a bit
   of gardening'--that is, mutilating with a pair of shears the
   unhappy little shrubs that grew amid wastes of gravel in the back
   garden.  On only two evenings a week was Dorothy free of her, and
   that was when Mrs Creevy sallied forth on forays which she called
   'going after the girls'; that is to say, canvassing likely parents.
   These evenings Dorothy usually spent in the public library, for
   when Mrs Creevy was not at home she expected Dorothy to keep out of
   the house, to save fire and gaslight.  On other evenings Mrs Creevy
   was busy writing dunning letters to the parents, or letters to the
   editor of the local paper, haggling over the price of a dozen
   advertisements, or poking about the girls' desks to see that their
   exercise books had been properly corrected, or 'doing a bit of
   sewing'.  Whenever occupation failed her for even five minutes she
   got out her workbox and 'did a bit of sewing'--generally
   restitching some bloomers of harsh white linen of which she had
   pairs beyond number.  They were the most chilly looking garments
   that one could possibly imagine; they seemed to carry upon them, as
   no nun's coif or anchorite's hair shirt could ever have done, the
   impress of a frozen and awful chastity.  The sight of them set you
   wondering about the late Mr Creevy, even to the point of wondering
   whether he had ever existed.
   Looking with an outsider's eye at Mrs Creevy's manner of life, you
   would have said that she had no PLEASURES whatever.  She never did
   any of the things that ordinary people do to amuse themselves--
   never went to the pictures, never looked at a book, never ate
   sweets, never cooked a special dish for dinner or dressed herself
   in any kind of finery.  Social life meant absolutely nothing to
   her.  She had no friends, was probably incapable of imagining such
   a thing as friendship, and hardly ever exchanged a word with a
   fellow being except on business.  Of religious belief she had not
   the smallest vestige.  Her attitude towards religion, though she
   went to the Baptist Chapel every Sunday to impress the parents with
   her piety, was a mean anti-clericalism founded on the notion that
   the clergy are 'only after your money'.  She seemed a creature
   utterly joyless, utterly submerged by the dullness of her
   existence.  But in reality it was not so.  There were several
   things from which she derived acute and inexhaustible pleasure.
   For instance, there was her avarice over money.  It was the leading