The Rainbow - Page 20/493

In the morning he woke up and thought about it, and for the

first time in his life, knew what it was to feel really acutely

irritable, in a misery of real bad temper. After bawling and

snarling at Tilly, he took himself off for very shame, to be

alone. And looking at the ashen fields and the putty roads, he

wondered what in the name of Hell he could do to get out of this

prickly sense of disgust and physical repulsion. And he knew

that this was the result of his glorious evening.

And his stomach did not want any more brandy. He went

doggedly across the fields with his terrier, and looked at

everything with a jaundiced eye.

The next evening found him back again in his place at the

"Red Lion", moderate and decent. There he sat and stubbornly

waited for what would happen next.

Did he, or did he not believe that he belonged to this world

of Cossethay and Ilkeston? There was nothing in it he wanted.

Yet could he ever get out of it? Was there anything in himself

that would carry him out of it? Or was he a dunderheaded baby,

not man enough to be like the other young fellows who drank a

good deal and wenched a little without any question, and were

satisfied.

He went on stubbornly for a time. Then the strain became too

great for him. A hot, accumulated consciousness was always awake

in his chest, his wrists felt swelled and quivering, his mind

became full of lustful images, his eyes seemed blood-flushed. He

fought with himself furiously, to remain normal. He did not seek

any woman. He just went on as if he were normal. Till he must

either take some action or beat his head against the wall.

Then he went deliberately to Ilkeston, in silence, intent and

beaten. He drank to get drunk. He gulped down the brandy, and

more brandy, till his face became pale, his eyes burning. And

still he could not get free. He went to sleep in drunken

unconsciousness, woke up at four o'clock in the morning and

continued drinking. He would get free. Gradually the

tension in him began to relax. He began to feel happy. His

riveted silence was unfastened, he began to talk and babble. He

was happy and at one with all the world, he was united with all

flesh in a hot blood-relationship. So, after three days of

incessant brandy-drinking, he had burned out the youth from his

blood, he had achieved this kindled state of oneness with all

the world, which is the end of youth's most passionate desire.

But he had achieved his satisfaction by obliterating his own

individuality, that which it depended on his manhood to preserve

and develop.