The Forsyte Saga - Volume 3 - Page 172/204

The weeks which followed the death of his father were sad and empty to

the only Jolyon Forsyte left. The necessary forms and ceremonies--the

reading of the Will, valuation of the estate, distribution of the

legacies--were enacted over the head, as it were, of one not yet of age.

Jolyon was cremated. By his special wish no one attended that ceremony,

or wore black for him. The succession of his property, controlled to

some extent by old Jolyon's Will, left his widow in possession of Robin

Hill, with two thousand five hundred pounds a year for life. Apart from

this the two Wills worked together in some complicated way to insure

that each of Jolyon's three children should have an equal share in their

grandfather's and father's property in the future as in the present,

save only that Jon, by virtue of his sex, would have control of his

capital when he was twenty-one, while June and Holly would only have the

spirit of theirs, in order that their children might have the body after

them. If they had no children, it would all come to Jon if he outlived

them; and since June was fifty, and Holly nearly forty, it was

considered in Lincoln's Inn Fields that but for the cruelty of income

tax, young Jon would be as warm a man as his grandfather when he died.

All this was nothing to Jon, and little enough to his mother. It was

June who did everything needful for one who had left his affairs in

perfect order. When she had gone, and those two were alone again in the

great house, alone with death drawing them together, and love driving

them apart, Jon passed very painful days secretly disgusted and

disappointed with himself. His mother would look at him with such a

patient sadness which yet had in it an instinctive pride, as if she were

reserving her defence. If she smiled he was angry that his answering

smile should be so grudging and unnatural. He did not judge or condemn

her; that was all too remote--indeed, the idea of doing so had never

come to him. No! he was grudging and unnatural because he couldn't have

what he wanted be cause of her. There was one alleviation--much to do in

connection with his father's career, which could not be safely entrusted

to June, though she had offered to undertake it. Both Jon and his mother

had felt that if she took his portfolios, unexhibited drawings and

unfinished matter, away with her, the work would encounter such icy

blasts from Paul Post and other frequenters of her studio, that it would

soon be frozen out even of her warm heart. On its old-fashioned plane

and of its kind the work was good, and they could not bear the thought

of its subjection to ridicule. A one-man exhibition of his work was the

least testimony they could pay to one they had loved; and on preparation

for this they spent many hours together. Jon came to have a curiously

increased respect for his father. The quiet tenacity with which he

had converted a mediocre talent into something really individual was

disclosed by these researches. There was a great mass of work with

a rare continuity of growth in depth and reach of vision. Nothing

certainly went very deep, or reached very high--but such as the work

was, it was thorough, conscientious, and complete. And, remembering

his father's utter absence of "side" or self-assertion, the chaffing

humility with which he had always spoken of his own efforts, ever

calling himself "an amateur," Jon could not help feeling that he had

never really known his father. To take himself seriously, yet never

that he did so, seemed to have been his ruling principle. There was

something in this which appealed to the boy, and made him heartily

endorse his mother's comment: "He had true refinement; he couldn't help

thinking of others, whatever he did. And when he took a resolution which

went counter, he did it with the minimum of defiance--not like the Age,

is it? Twice in his life he had to go against everything; and yet it

never made him bitter." Jon saw tears running down her face, which

she at once turned away from him. She was so quiet about her loss that

sometimes he had thought she didn't feel it much. Now, as he looked at

her, he felt how far he fell short of the reserve power and dignity in

both his father and his mother. And, stealing up to her, he put his arm

round her waist. She kissed him swiftly, but with a sort of passion, and

went out of the room.