I hadn't thought about that, but it's true. The fight restores Severn and Mr. Thomas to their original friendly relationship. Lawrence tells us that
The angry, combative postures they assume, therefore, are not natural. At first, Lawrence doesn't specify why they've changed. He only vaguely saysas a rule the two men were very friendly
Eventually, though, the reason becomes clear: Mrs. Thomas. We see this in the argument over Woman's Bill. Mr. Thomas brings up the topic as way of gaining the attention of his wife.there came times when, for no reason whatever, they were sullenly hostile.
This annoys Severn because now he's the one being ignored. If only Mrs. Thomas would agree with him, then he could be comfortable. This fight with words foreshadows the fight with fists, and we see that Mrs. Thomas is the one making the men combative. Lawrence even makes this explicit with sentences like:Presently Thomas, always courting his wife and insultingly overlooking Severn, raised a point of politics
Mrs. Thomas excites them to a hatred that isn't natural. When the fight breaks out, though, they're doing something together which minimalizes Mrs. Thomas's role. That reunites them.It was surprising how friendly the two men were, as soon as they had something to do together, or when Mrs. Thomas was absent. Then they were comrades.
That's interesting. I didn't know all this about L's personal life. How autobiographical do you think the story is?
Mrs. Severn orchestrates the action within the story, but the story doesn't say much of anything about the lives of these characters outside of this point in time. A reader could extrapolate from what we know in this story, and decide that Mrs. Severn was always controlling. But, I think this would have to remain speculative. There's nothing I could find in the story which describes the household outside of this little bit we get.
I don't remember it ever saying who directly was responsible for her leaving, but it is implied that Mrs. Thomas is throwing her out. The last line
So, it either has to be Mr. or Mrs. Thomas. There's no reason why Mr. Thomas would be throwing her out, however Mrs. Thomas could be throwing her out in a similar tiff like that the men are having. The text gives us little hints that make this seem probable. For example, Severn, who loses the fight for Mrs. Thomas and the fight itself, is connected with Kate, who loses out with Severn and her job. After Severn starts to lose in the fight, Lawrence explains thatKate, her fate disposed of by her "betters", pased out of their three live.
Severn and Kate connect at this moment because they are both suffering the same fate. Mr. Thomas is quarreling with Severn, just as Mrs. Thomas is quarreling with Kate. And, both Severn and Kate are being repulsed by their "betters."With a shock of real agony, he met the eyes of Kate. She bent forward, she captured his eyes.
It sounds like this is constant complain of Mrs. Thomas's. She tells Severn
Whether that makes her justified in being snippy with him when he gets home, I don't know. But, it does sound like Mr. Thomas has a problem with punctuality."No," she said, quite bitterly. "Mr. Thomas is never in when he's wanted."



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Don't you mean 'Mrs. Thomas' and not 'Mrs. Severn?'
"It's so mysterious, the land of tears."

