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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:38:57 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:38:57 -0700
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12100 ***
+
+[Illustration: THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER
+DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT]
+
+BETWEEN THE DARK
+AND THE DAYLIGHT
+
+Romances
+
+BY
+W.D. HOWELLS
+1907
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAP.
+I. A SLEEP AND A FORGETTING
+II. THE EIDOLONS OF BROOKS ALFORD
+III. A MEMORY THAT WORKED OVERTIME
+IV. A CASE OF METAPHANTASMIA
+V. EDITHA
+VI. BRAYBRIDGE'S OFFER
+VII. THE CHICK OF THE EASTER EGG
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT
+
+A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE LIVELY GIRLS SHE
+BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM
+
+"SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... 'NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE, EXCEPT--'"
+
+"NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY MARK"
+
+"'YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!'"
+
+"SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. 'WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON FOR?'"
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+A SLEEP AND A FORGETTING
+
+
+I
+
+Matthew Lanfear had stopped off, between Genoa and Nice, at San Remo in
+the interest of a friend who had come over on the steamer with him, and
+who wished him to test the air before settling there for the winter with
+an invalid wife. She was one of those neurasthenics who really carry
+their climate--always a bad one--with them, but she had set her mind on
+San Remo; and Lanfear was willing to pass a few days in the place making
+the observations which he felt pretty sure would be adverse.
+
+His train was rather late, and the sunset was fading from the French sky
+beyond the Italian shore when he got out of his car and looked round for
+a porter to take his valise. His roving eye lighted on the anxious
+figure, which as fully as the anxious face, of a short, stout, elderly
+man expressed a sort of distraction, as he stood loaded down with
+umbrellas, bags, bundles, and wraps, and seemed unable to arrest the
+movements of a tall young girl, with a travelling-shawl trailing from
+her arm, who had the effect of escaping from him towards a bench beside
+the door of the waiting-room. When she reached it, in spite of his
+appeals, she sat down with an absent air, and looked as far withdrawn
+from the bustle of the platform and from the snuffling train as if on
+some quiet garden seat along with her own thoughts.
+
+In his fat frenzy, which Lanfear felt to be pathetic, the old gentleman
+glanced at him, and then abruptly demanded: "Are you an American?"
+
+We knew each other abroad in some mystical way, and Lanfear did not try
+to deny the fact.
+
+"Oh, well, then," the stranger said, as if the fact made everything
+right, "will you kindly tell my daughter, on that bench by the door
+yonder"--he pointed with a bag, and dropped a roll of rugs from under
+his arm--"that I'll be with her as soon as I've looked after the trunks?
+Tell her not to move till I come. Heigh! Here! Take hold of these, will
+you?" He caught the sleeve of a _facchino_ who came wandering by, and
+heaped him with his burdens, and then pushed ahead of the man in the
+direction of the baggage-room with a sort of mastery of the situation
+which struck Lanfear as springing from desperation rather than
+experience.
+
+Lanfear stood a moment hesitating. Then a glance at the girl on the
+bench, drooping a little forward in freeing her face from the veil that
+hung from her pretty hat, together with a sense of something quaintly
+charming in the confidence shown him on such purely compatriotic
+grounds, decided him to do just what he had been asked. The girl had got
+her veil up by this time, and as he came near, she turned from looking
+at the sunset over the stretch of wall beyond the halting train, and met
+his dubious face with a smile.
+
+"It _is_ beautiful, isn't it?" she said. "I know I shall get well, here,
+if they have such sunsets every day."
+
+There was something so convincingly normal in her expression that
+Lanfear dismissed a painful conjecture. "I beg your pardon," he said.
+"I am afraid there's some mistake. I haven't the pleasure--You must
+excuse me, but your father wished me to ask you to wait here for him
+till he had got his baggage--"
+
+"My father?" the girl stopped him with a sort of a frowning perplexity
+in the stare she gave him. "My father isn't here!"
+
+"I beg your pardon," Lanfear said. "I must have misunderstood. A
+gentleman who got out of the train with you--a short, stout gentleman
+with gray hair--I understood him to say you were his daughter--requested
+me to bring this message--"
+
+The girl shook her head. "I don't know him. It must be a mistake."
+
+"The mistake is mine, no doubt. It may have been some one else whom he
+pointed out, and I have blundered. I'm very sorry if I seem to have
+intruded--"
+
+"What place is this?" the girl asked, without noticing his excuses.
+
+"San Remo," Lanfear answered. "If you didn't intend to stop here, your
+train will be leaving in a moment."
+
+"I meant to get off, I suppose," she said. "I don't believe I'm going
+any farther." She leaned back against the bars of the bench, and put up
+one of her slim arms along the top.
+
+There was something wrong. Lanfear now felt that, in spite of her
+perfect tranquillity and self-possession; perhaps because of it. He had
+no business to stay there talking with her, but he had not quite the
+right to leave her, though practically he had got his dismissal, and
+apparently she was quite capable of taking care of herself, or could
+have been so in a country where any woman's defencelessness was not any
+man's advantage. He could not go away without some effort to be of use.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said. "Can I help you in calling a carriage; or
+looking after your hand-baggage--it will be getting dark--perhaps your
+maid--"
+
+"My _maid_!" The girl frowned again, with a measure of the amazement
+which she showed when he mentioned her father. "_I_ have no maid!"
+
+Lanfear blurted desperately out: "You are alone? You came--you are going
+to stay here--alone?"
+
+"Quite alone," she said, with a passivity in which there was no
+resentment, and no feeling unless it were a certain color of dignity.
+Almost at the same time, with a glance beside and beyond him, she called
+out joyfully: "Ah, there you are!" and Lanfear turned, and saw scuffling
+and heard puffing towards them the short, stout elderly gentleman who
+had sent him to her. "I knew you would come before long!"
+
+"Well, I thought it was pretty long, myself," the gentleman said, and
+then he courteously referred himself to Lanfear. "I'm afraid this
+gentleman has found it rather long, too; but I couldn't manage it a
+moment sooner."
+
+Lanfear said: "Not at all. I wish I could have been of any use to--"
+
+"My daughter--Miss Gerald, Mr.--"
+
+"Lanfear--Dr. Lanfear," he said, accepting the introduction; and the
+girl bowed.
+
+"Oh, doctor, eh?" the father said, with a certain impression. "Going to
+stop here?"
+
+"A few days," Lanfear answered, making way for the forward movement
+which the others began.
+
+"Well, well! I'm very much obliged to you, very much, indeed; and I'm
+sure my daughter is."
+
+The girl said, "Oh yes, indeed," rather indifferently, and then as they
+passed him, while he stood lifting his hat, she turned radiantly on him.
+"Thank you, ever so much!" she said, with the gentle voice which he had
+already thought charming.
+
+The father called back: "I hope we shall meet again. We are going to the
+Sardegna."
+
+Lanfear had been going to the Sardegna himself, but while he bowed he
+now decided upon another hotel.
+
+The mystery, whatever it was, that the brave, little, fat father was
+carrying off so bluffly, had clearly the morbid quality of unhealth in
+it, and Lanfear could not give himself freely to a young pleasure in the
+girl's dark beauty of eyes and hair, her pale, irregular, piquant face,
+her slender figure and flowing walk. He was in the presence of something
+else, something that appealed to his scientific side, to that which was
+humane more than that which was human in him, and abashed him in the
+other feeling. Unless she was out of her mind there was no way of
+accounting for her behavior, except by some caprice which was itself
+scarcely short of insanity. She must have thought she knew him when he
+approached, and when she addressed him those first words; but when he
+had tried to set her right she had not changed; and why had she denied
+her father, and then hailed him with joy when he came back to her? She
+had known that she intended to stop at San Remo, but she had not known
+where she had stopped when she asked what place it was. She was
+consciously an invalid of some sort, for she spoke of getting well under
+sunsets like that which had now waned, but what sort of invalid was she?
+
+
+II
+
+Lanfear's question persisted through the night, and it helped, with the
+coughing in the next room, to make a bad night for him. None of the
+hotels in San Remo receive consumptive patients, but none are without
+somewhere a bronchial cough. If it is in the room next yours it keeps
+you awake, but it is not pulmonary; you may comfort yourself in your
+vigils with that fact. Lanfear, however, fancied he had got a poor
+dinner, and in the morning he did not like his coffee. He thought he had
+let a foolish scruple keep him from the Grand Hotel Sardegna, and he
+walked down towards it along the palm-flanked promenade, in the gay
+morning light, with the tideless sea on the other hand lapping the rough
+beach beyond the lines of the railroad which borders it. On his way he
+met files of the beautiful Ligurian women, moving straight under the
+burdens balanced on their heads, or bestriding the donkeys laden with
+wine-casks in the roadway, or following beside the carts which the
+donkeys drew. Ladies of all nations, in the summer fashions of London,
+Berlin, St. Petersburg, Paris, and New York thronged the path. The sky
+was of a blue so deep, so liquid that it seemed to him he could scoop it
+in his hand and pour it out again like water. Seaward, he glanced at the
+fishing-boats lying motionless in the offing, and the coastwise steamer
+that runs between Nice and Genoa trailing a thin plume of smoke between
+him and their white sails. With the more definite purpose of making sure
+of the Grand Hotel Sardegna, he scanned the different villa slopes that
+showed their level lines of white and yellow and dull pink through the
+gray tropical greenery on the different levels of the hills. He was duly
+rewarded by the sight of the bold legend topping its cornice, and when
+he let his eye descend the garden to a little pavilion on the wall
+overlooking the road, he saw his acquaintances of the evening before
+making a belated breakfast. The father recognized Lanfear first and
+spoke to his daughter, who looked up from her coffee and down towards
+him where he wavered, lifting his hat, and bowed smiling to him. He had
+no reason to cross the roadway towards the white stairway which climbed
+from it to the hotel grounds, but he did so. The father leaned out over
+the wall, and called down to him: "Won't you come up and join us,
+doctor?"
+
+"Why, yes!" Lanfear consented, and in another moment he was shaking
+hands with the girl, to whom, he noticed, her father named him again. He
+had in his glad sense of her white morning dress and her hat of
+green-leafed lace, a feeling that she was somehow meeting him as a
+friend of indefinite date in an intimacy unconditioned by any past or
+future time. Her pleasure in his being there was as frank as her
+father's, and there was a pretty trust of him in every word and tone
+which forbade misinterpretation.
+
+"I was just talking about you, doctor," the father began, "and saying
+what a pity you hadn't come to our hotel. It's a capital place."
+
+"_I've_ been thinking it was a pity I went to mine," Lanfear returned,
+"though I'm in San Remo for such a short time it's scarcely worth while
+to change."
+
+"Well, perhaps if you came here, you might stay longer. I guess we're
+booked for the winter, Nannie?" He referred the question to his
+daughter, who asked Lanfear if he would not have some coffee.
+
+"I was going to say I had had my coffee, but I'm not sure it _was_
+coffee," Lanfear began, and he consented, with some demur, banal enough,
+about the trouble.
+
+"Well, that's right, then, and no trouble at all," Mr. Gerald broke in
+upon him. "Here comes a fellow looking for a chance to bring you some,"
+and he called to a waiter wandering distractedly about with a "Heigh!"
+that might have been offensive from a less obviously inoffensive man.
+"Can you get our friend here a cup and saucer, and some of this good
+coffee?" he asked, as the waiter approached.
+
+"Yes, certainly, sir," the man answered in careful English. "Is it not,
+perhaps, Mr. and Misses Gerald?" he smilingly insinuated, offering some
+cards.
+
+"Miss Gerald," the father corrected him as he took the cards. "Why,
+hello, Nannie! Here are the Bells! Where are they?" he demanded of the
+waiter. "Bring them here, and a lot more cups and saucers. Or, hold on!
+I'd better go myself, Nannie, hadn't I? Of course! You get the crockery,
+waiter. Where did you say they were?" He bustled up from his chair,
+without waiting for a distinct reply, and apologized to Lanfear in
+hurrying away. "You'll excuse me, doctor! I'll be back in half a minute.
+Friends of ours that came over on the same boat. I must see them, of
+course, but I don't believe they'll stay. Nannie, don't let Dr. Lanfear
+get away. I want to have some talk with him. You tell him he'd better
+come to the Sardegna, here."
+
+Lanfear and Miss Gerald sat a moment in the silence which is apt to
+follow with young people when they are unexpectedly left to themselves.
+She kept absently pushing the cards her father had given her up and down
+on the table between her thumb and forefinger, and Lanfear noted the
+translucence of her long, thin hand in the sunshine striking across the
+painted iron surface of the garden movable. The translucence had a
+pathos for his intelligence which the pensive tilt of her head enhanced.
+She stopped toying with the cards, and looked at the addresses on them.
+
+"What strange things names are!" she said, as if musing on the fact,
+with a sigh which he thought disproportioned to the depth of her
+remark.
+
+"They seem rather irrelevant at times," he admitted, with a smile.
+"They're mere tags, labels, which can be attached to one as well as
+another; they seem to belong equally to anybody."
+
+"That is what I always say to myself," she agreed, with more interest
+than he found explicable.
+
+"But finally," he returned, "they're all that's left us, if they're left
+themselves. They are the only signs to the few who knew us that we ever
+existed. They stand for our characters, our personality, our mind, our
+soul."
+
+She said, "That is very true," and then she suddenly gave him the cards.
+"Do you know these people?"
+
+"I? I thought they were friends of yours," he replied, astonished.
+
+[Illustration: A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE
+LIVELY GIRLS SHE BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM]
+
+"That is what papa thinks," Miss Gerald said, and while she sat dreamily
+absent, a rustle of skirts and a flutter of voices pierced from the
+surrounding shrubbery, and then a lively matron, of as youthful a
+temperament as the lively girls she brought in her train, burst upon
+them, and Miss Gerald was passed from one embrace to another until all
+four had kissed her. She returned their greeting, and shared, in her
+quieter way, their raptures at their encounter.
+
+"Such a hunt as we've had for you!" the matron shouted. "We've been
+up-stairs and down-stairs and in my lady's chamber, all over the hotel.
+Where's your father? Ah, they did get our cards to you!" and by that
+token Lanfear knew that these ladies were the Bells. He had stood up in
+a sort of expectancy, but Miss Gerald did not introduce him, and a
+shadow of embarrassment passed over the party which she seemed to feel
+least, though he fancied a sort of entreaty in the glance that she let
+pass over him.
+
+"I suppose he's gone to look for _us_!" Mrs. Bell saved the situation
+with a protecting laugh. Miss Gerald colored intelligently, and Lanfear
+could not let Mrs. Bell's implication pass.
+
+"If it is Mrs. Bell," he said, "I can answer that he has. I met you at
+Magnolia some years ago, Mrs. Bell. Dr. Lanfear."
+
+"Oh, I beg your pardon, Dr. Lanfear," Miss Gerald said. "I couldn't
+think--"
+
+"Of my tag, my label?" he laughed back. "It isn't very distinctly
+lettered."
+
+Mrs. Bell was not much minding them jointly. She was singling Lanfear
+out for the expression of her pleasure in seeing him again, and
+recalling the incidents of her summer at Magnolia before, it seemed, any
+of her girls were out. She presented them collectively, and the eldest
+of them charmingly reminded Lanfear that he had once had the magnanimity
+to dance with her when she sat, in a little girl's forlorn despair of
+being danced with, at one of those desolate hops of the good old Osprey
+House.
+
+"Yes; and now," her mother followed, "we can't wait a moment longer, if
+we're to get our train for Monte Carlo, girls. We're not going to play,
+doctor," she made time to explain, "but we are going to look on. Will
+you tell your father, dear," she said, taking the girl's hands
+caressingly in hers, and drawing her to her motherly bosom, "that we
+found you, and did our best to find him? We can't wait now--our carriage
+is champing the bit at the foot of the stairs--but we're coming back in
+a week, and then we'll do our best to look you up again." She included
+Lanfear in her good-bye, and all her girls said good-bye in the same
+way, and with a whisking of skirts and twitter of voices they vanished
+through the shrubbery, and faded into the general silence and general
+sound like a bevy of birds which had swept near and passed by.
+
+Miss Gerald sank quietly into her place, and sat as if nothing had
+happened, except that she looked a little paler to Lanfear, who remained
+on foot trying to piece together their interrupted tête-à-tête, but not
+succeeding, when her father reappeared, red and breathless, and wiping
+his forehead. "Have they been here, Nannie?" he asked. "I've been
+following them all over the place, and the _portier_ told me just now
+that he had seen a party of ladies coming down this way."
+
+He got it all out, not so clearly as those women had got everything in,
+Lanfear reflected, but unmistakably enough as to the fact, and he looked
+at his daughter as he repeated: "Haven't the Bells been here?"
+
+[Illustration: "SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... 'NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE,
+EXCEPT--'"]
+
+She shook her head, and said, with her delicate quiet: "Nobody has been
+here, except--" She glanced at Lanfear, who smiled, but saw no opening
+for himself in the strange situation. Then she said: "I think I will go
+and lie down a while, now, papa. I'm rather tired. Good-bye," she said,
+giving Lanfear her hand; it felt limp and cold; and then she turned to
+her father again. "Don't you come, papa! I can get back perfectly well
+by myself. Stay with--"
+
+"I will go with you," her father said, "and if Dr. Lanfear doesn't mind
+coming--"
+
+"Certainly I will come," Lanfear said, and he passed to the girl's
+right; she had taken her father's arm; but he wished to offer more
+support if it were needed. When they had climbed to the open flowery
+space before the hotel, she seemed aware of the groups of people about.
+She took her hand from her father's arm, as if unwilling to attract
+their notice by seeming to need its help, and swept up the gravelled
+path between him and Lanfear, with her flowing walk.
+
+Her father fell back, as they entered the hotel door, and murmured to
+Lanfear: "Will you wait till I come down?" ... "I wanted to tell you
+about my daughter," he explained, when he came back after the quarter of
+an hour which Lanfear had found rather intense. "It's useless to pretend
+you wouldn't have noticed--Had nobody been with you after I left you,
+down there?" He twisted his head in the direction of the pavilion, where
+they had been breakfasting.
+
+"Yes; Mrs. Bell and her daughters," Lanfear answered, simply.
+
+"Of course! Why do you suppose my daughter denied it?" Mr. Gerald asked.
+
+"I suppose she--had her reasons," Lanfear answered, lamely enough.
+
+"No _reason_, I'm afraid," Mr. Gerald said, and he broke out hopelessly:
+"She has her mind sound enough, but not--not her memory. She had
+forgotten that they were there! Are you going to stay in San Remo?" he
+asked, with an effect of interrupting himself, as if in the wish to put
+off something, or to make the ground sure before he went on.
+
+"Why," Lanfear said, "I hadn't thought of it. I stopped--I was going to
+Nice--to test the air for a friend who wishes to bring his invalid wife
+here, if I approve--but I have just been asking myself why I should go
+to Nice when I could stay at San Remo. The place takes my fancy. I'm
+something of an invalid myself--at least I'm on my vacation--and I find
+a charm in it, if nothing better. Perhaps a charm is enough. It used to
+be, in primitive medicine."
+
+He was talking to what he felt was not an undivided attention in Mr.
+Gerald, who said, "I'm glad of it," and then added: "I should like to
+consult you professionally. I know your reputation in New York--though
+I'm not a New-Yorker myself--and I don't know any of the doctors here. I
+suppose I've done rather a wild thing in coming off the way I have,
+with my daughter; but I felt that I must do something, and I hoped--I
+felt as if it were getting away from our trouble. It's most fortunate my
+meeting you, if you can look into the case, and help me out with a
+nurse, if she's needed, and all that!" To a certain hesitation in
+Lanfear's face, he added: "Of course, I'm asking your professional help.
+My name is Abner Gerald--Abner L. Gerald--perhaps you know my standing,
+and that I'm able to--"
+
+"Oh, it isn't a question of that! I shall be glad to do anything I can,"
+Lanfear said, with a little pang which he tried to keep silent in
+orienting himself anew towards the girl, whose loveliness he had felt
+before he had felt her piteousness.
+
+"But before you go further I ought to say that you must have been
+thinking of my uncle, the first Matthew Lanfear, when you spoke of my
+reputation; I haven't got any yet; I've only got my uncle's name."
+
+"Oh!" Mr. Gerald said, disappointedly, but after a blank moment he
+apparently took courage. "You're in the same line, though?"
+
+"If you mean the psychopathic line, without being exactly an alienist,
+well, yes," Lanfear admitted.
+
+"That's exactly what I mean," the elder said, with renewed hopefulness.
+"I'm quite willing to risk myself with a man of the same name as Dr.
+Lanfear. I should like," he said, hurrying on, as if to override any
+further reluctance of Lanfear's, "to tell you her story, and then--"
+
+"By all means," Lanfear consented, and he put on an air of professional
+deference, while the older man began with a face set for the task.
+
+"It's a long story, or it's a short story, as you choose to make it.
+We'll make it long, if necessary, later, but now I'll make it short.
+Five months ago my wife was killed before my daughter's eyes--"
+
+He stopped; Lanfear breathed a gentle "Oh!" and Gerald blurted out:
+
+"Accident--grade crossing--Don't!" he winced at the kindness in
+Lanfear's eyes, and panted on. "That's over! What happened to _her_--to
+my daughter--was that she fainted from the shock. When she woke--it was
+more like a sleep than a swoon--she didn't remember what had happened."
+Lanfear nodded, with a gravely interested face. "She didn't remember
+anything that had ever happened before. She knew me, because I was there
+with her; but she didn't know that she ever had a mother, because she
+was not there with her. You see?"
+
+"I can imagine," Lanfear assented.
+
+"The whole of her life before the--accident was wiped out as to the
+facts, as completely as if it had never been; and now every day, every
+hour, every minute, as it passes, goes with that past. But her
+faculties--"
+
+"Yes?" Lanfear prompted in the pause which Mr. Gerald made.
+
+"Her intellect--the working powers of her mind, apart from anything like
+remembering, are as perfect as if she were in full possession of her
+memory. I believe," the father said, with a pride that had its pathos,
+"no one can talk with her and not feel that she has a beautiful mind,
+that she can think better than most girls of her age. She reads, or she
+lets me read to her, and until it has time to fade, she appreciates it
+all more fully than I do. At Genoa, where I took her to the palaces for
+the pictures, I saw that she had kept her feeling for art. When she
+plays--you will hear her play--it is like composing the music for
+herself; she does not seem to remember the pieces, she seems to
+improvise them. You understand?"
+
+Lanfear said that he understood, for he could not disappoint the
+expectation of the father's boastful love: all that was left him of the
+ambitions he must once have had for his child.
+
+The poor, little, stout, unpicturesque elderly man got up and began to
+walk to and fro in the room which he had turned into with Lanfear, and
+to say, more to himself than to Lanfear, as if balancing one thing
+against another: "The merciful thing is that she has been saved from the
+horror and the sorrow. She knows no more of either than she knows of her
+mother's love for her. They were very much alike in looks and mind, and
+they were always together more like persons of the same age--sisters, or
+girl friends; but she has lost all knowledge of that, as of other
+things. And then there is the question whether she won't some time,
+sooner or later, come into both the horror and the sorrow." He stopped
+and looked at Lanfear. "She has these sudden fits of drowsiness, when
+she _must_ sleep; and I never see her wake from them without being
+afraid that she has wakened to everything--that she has got back into
+her full self, and taken up the terrible burden that my old shoulders
+are used to. What do you think?"
+
+Lanfear felt the appeal so keenly that in the effort to answer
+faithfully he was aware of being harsher than he meant. "That is a
+chance we can't forecast. But it is a chance. The fact that the
+drowsiness recurs periodically--"
+
+"It doesn't," the father pleaded. "We don't know when it will come on."
+
+"It scarcely matters. The periodicity wouldn't affect the possible
+result which you dread. I don't say that it is probable. But it's one
+of the possibilities. It has," Lanfear added, "its logic."
+
+"Ah, its logic!"
+
+"Its logic, yes. My business, of course, would be to restore her to
+health at any risk. So far as her mind is affected--"
+
+"Her mind is not affected!" the father retorted.
+
+"I beg your pardon--her memory--it might be restored with her physical
+health. You understand that? It is a chance; it might or it might not
+happen."
+
+The father was apparently facing a risk which he had not squarely faced
+before. "I suppose so," he faltered. After a moment he added, with more
+courage: "You must do the best you can, at any risk."
+
+Lanfear rose, too. He said, with returning kindness in his tones, if not
+his words: "I should like to study the case, Mr. Gerald. It's very
+interesting, and--and--if you'll forgive me--very touching."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+"If you decide to stay in San Remo, I will--Do you suppose I could get
+a room in this hotel? I don't like mine."
+
+"Why, I haven't any doubt you can. Shall we ask?"
+
+
+III
+
+It was from the Hotel Sardegna that Lanfear satisfied his conscience by
+pushing his search for climate on behalf of his friend's neurasthenic
+wife. He decided that Ospedaletti, with a milder air and more sheltered
+seat in its valley of palms, would be better for her than San Remo. He
+wrote his friend to that effect, and then there was no preoccupation to
+hinder him in his devotion to the case of Miss Gerald. He put the case
+first in the order of interest rather purposely, and even with a sense
+of effort, though he could not deny to himself that a like case related
+to a different personality might have been less absorbing. But he tried
+to keep his scientific duty to it pure of that certain painful pleasure
+which, as a young man not much over thirty, he must feel in the strange
+affliction of a young and beautiful girl.
+
+Though there was no present question of medicine, he could be installed
+near her, as the friend that her father insisted upon making him,
+without contravention of the social formalities. His care of her hardly
+differed from that of her father, except that it involved a closer and
+more premeditated study. They did not try to keep her from the sort of
+association which, in a large hotel of the type of the Sardegna, entails
+no sort of obligation to intimacy. They sat together at the long table,
+midway of the dining-room, which maintained the tradition of the old
+table-d'hôte against the small tables ranged along the walls. Gerald had
+an amiable old man's liking for talk, and Lanfear saw that he willingly
+escaped, among their changing companions, from the pressure of his
+anxieties. He left his daughter very much to Lanfear, during these
+excursions, but Lanfear was far from meaning to keep her to himself. He
+thought it better that she should follow her father in his forays among
+their neighbors, and he encouraged her to continue such talk with them
+as she might be brought into. He tried to guard her future encounters
+with them, so that she should not show more than a young girl's usual
+diffidence at a second meeting; and in the frequent substitution of one
+presence for another across the table, she was fairly safe.
+
+A natural light-heartedness, of which he had glimpses from the first,
+returned to her. One night, at the dance given by some of the guests to
+some others, she went through the gayety in joyous triumph. She danced
+mostly with Lanfear, but she had other partners, and she won a pleasing
+popularity by the American quality of her waltzing. Lanfear had already
+noted that her forgetfulness was not always so constant or so inclusive
+as her father had taught him to expect; Mr. Gerald's statement had been
+the large, general fact from which there was sometimes a shrinking in
+the particulars. While the warmth of an agreeable experience lasted, her
+mind kept record of it, slight or full; if the experience were
+unpleasant the memory was more apt to fade at once. After that dance she
+repeated to her father the little compliments paid her, and told him,
+laughing, they were to reward him for sitting up so late as her
+chaperon. Emotions persisted in her consciousness as the tremor lasts in
+a smitten cord, but events left little trace. She retained a sense of
+personalities; she was lastingly sensible of temperaments; but names
+were nothing to her. She could not tell her father who had said the nice
+things to her, and their joint study of her dancing-card did not help
+them out.
+
+Her relation to Lanfear, though it might be a subject of international
+scrutiny, was hardly a subject of censure. He was known as Dr. Lanfear,
+but he was not at first known as her physician; he was conjectured her
+cousin or something like that; he might even be her betrothed in the
+peculiar American arrangement of such affairs. Personally people saw in
+him a serious-looking young man, better dressed and better mannered than
+they thought most Americans, and unquestionably handsomer, with his
+Spanish skin and eyes, and his brown beard of the Vandyke cut which was
+then already beginning to be rather belated.
+
+Other Americans in the hotel were few and transitory; and if the English
+had any mind about Miss Gerald different from their mind about other
+girls, it would be perhaps to the effect that she was quite mad; by this
+they would mean that she was a little odd; but for the rest they had
+apparently no mind about her. With the help of one of the English ladies
+her father had replaced the homesick Irish maid whom he had sent back to
+New York from Genoa, with an Italian, and in the shelter of her gay
+affection and ignorant sympathy Miss Gerald had a security supplemented
+by the easy social environment. If she did not look very well, she did
+not differ from most other American women in that; and if she seemed to
+confide herself more severely to the safe-keeping of her physician, that
+was the way of all women patients.
+
+Whether the Bells found the spectacle of depravity at Monte Carlo more
+attractive than the smiling face of nature at San Remo or not, they did
+not return, but sent for their baggage from their hotel, and were not
+seen again by the Geralds. Lanfear's friend with the invalid wife wrote
+from Ospedaletti, with apologies which inculpated him for the
+disappointment, that she had found the air impossible in a single day,
+and they were off for Cannes. Lanfear and the Geralds, therefore,
+continued together in the hotel without fear or obligation to others,
+and in an immunity in which their right to breakfast exclusively in that
+pavilion on the garden wall was almost explicitly conceded. No one,
+after a few mornings of tacit possession, would have disputed their
+claim, and there, day after day, in the mild monotony of the December
+sunshine, they sat and drank their coffee, and talked of the sights
+which the peasants in the street, and the tourists in the promenade
+beyond it, afforded. The rows of stumpy palms which separated the road
+from the walk were not so high but that they had the whole lift of the
+sea to the horizon where it lost itself in a sky that curved blue as
+turquoise to the zenith overhead. The sun rose from its morning bath on
+the left, and sank to its evening bath on the right, and in making its
+climb of the spacious arc between, shed a heat as great as that of
+summer, but not the heat of summer, on the pretty world of villas and
+hotels, towered over by the olive-gray slopes of the pine-clad heights
+behind and above them. From these tops a fine, keen cold fell with the
+waning afternoon, which sharpened through the sunset till the dusk; but
+in the morning the change was from the chill to the glow, and they could
+sit in their pavilion, under the willowy droop of the eucalyptus-trees
+which have brought the Southern Pacific to the Riviera, with increasing
+comfort.
+
+In the restlessness of an elderly man, Gerald sometimes left the young
+people to their intolerable delays over their coffee, and walked off
+into the little stone and stucco city below, or went and sat with his
+cigar on one of the benches under the palm-lined promenade, which the
+pale northern consumptives shared with the swarthy peasant girls resting
+from their burdens, and the wrinkled grandmothers of their race
+passively or actively begging from the strangers.
+
+While she kept her father in sight it seemed that Miss Gerald could
+maintain her hold of his identity, and one morning she said, with the
+tender fondness for him which touched Lanfear: "When he sits there among
+those sick people and poor people, then he knows they are in the world."
+
+She turned with a question graver in her look than usual, and he said:
+"Yes, we might help them oftener if we could remember that their misery
+was going on all the time, like some great natural process, day or dark,
+heat or cold, which seems to stop when we stop thinking of it. Nothing,
+for us, at least, exists unless it is recalled to us."
+
+"Yes," she said, in her turn, "I have noticed that. But don't you
+sometimes--sometimes"--she knit her forehead, as if to keep her thought
+from escaping--"have a feeling as if what you were doing, or saying, or
+seeing, had all happened before, just as it is now?"
+
+"Oh yes; that occurs to every one."
+
+"But don't you--don't you have hints of things, of ideas, as if you had
+known them, in some previous existence--"
+
+She stopped, and Lanfear recognized, with a kind of impatience, the
+experience which young people make much of when they have it, and
+sometimes pretend to when they have merely heard of it. But there could
+be no pose or pretence in her. He smilingly suggested:
+
+ "'For something is, or something seems,
+ Like glimpses of forgotten dreams.'
+
+These weird impressions are no more than that, probably."
+
+"Ah, I don't believe it," the girl said. "They are too real for that.
+They come too often, and they make me feel as if they would come more
+fully, some time. If there was a life before this--do you believe there
+was?--they may be things that happened there. Or they may be things that
+will happen in a life after this. You believe in _that_, don't you?"
+
+"In a life after this, or their happening in it?"
+
+"Well, both."
+
+Lanfear evaded her, partly. "They could be premonitions, prophecies, of
+a future life, as easily as fragmentary records of a past life. I
+suppose we do not begin to be immortal merely after death."
+
+"No." She lingered out the word in dreamy absence, as if what they had
+been saying had already passed from her thought.
+
+"But, Miss Gerald," Lanfear ventured, "have these impressions of yours
+grown more definite--fuller, as you say--of late?"
+
+"My impressions?" She frowned at him, as if the look of interest, more
+intense than usual in his eyes, annoyed her. "I don't know what you
+mean."
+
+Lanfear felt bound to follow up her lead, whether she wished it or not.
+"A good third of our lives here is passed in sleep. I'm not always sure
+that we are right in treating the mental--for certainly they are
+mental--experiences of that time as altogether trivial, or
+insignificant."
+
+She seemed to understand now, and she protested: "But I don't mean
+dreams. I mean things that really happened, or that really will happen."
+
+"Like something you can give me an instance of? Are they painful things,
+or pleasant, mostly?"
+
+She hesitated. "They are things that you know happen to other people,
+but you can't believe would ever happen to you."
+
+"Do they come when you are just drowsing, or just waking from a drowse?"
+
+"They are not dreams," she said, almost with vexation.
+
+"Yes, yes, I understand," he hesitated to retrieve himself. "But _I_
+have had floating illusions, just before I fell asleep, or when I was
+sensible of not being quite awake, which seemed to differ from dreams.
+They were not so dramatic, but they were more pictorial; they were more
+visual than the things in dreams."
+
+"Yes," she assented. "They are something like that. But I should not
+call them illusions."
+
+"No. And they represent scenes, events?"
+
+"You said yourself they were not dramatic."
+
+"I meant, represent pictorially."
+
+"No; they are like the landscape that flies back from your train or
+towards it. I can't explain it," she ended, rising with what he felt a
+displeasure in his pursuit.
+
+
+IV
+
+He reported what had passed to her father when Mr. Gerald came back from
+his stroll into the town, with his hands full of English papers; Gerald
+had even found a New York paper at the news-stand; and he listened with
+an apparent postponement of interest.
+
+"I think," Lanfear said, "that she has some shadowy recollection, or
+rather that the facts come to her in a jarred, confused way--the
+elements of pictures, not pictures. But I am afraid that my inquiry has
+offended her."
+
+"I guess not," Gerald said, dryly, as if annoyed. "What makes you think
+so?"
+
+"Merely her manner. And I don't know that anything is to be gained by
+such an inquiry."
+
+"Perhaps not," Gerald allowed, with an inattention which vexed Lanfear
+in his turn.
+
+The elderly man looked up, from where he sat provisionally in the hotel
+veranda, into Lanfear's face; Lanfear had remained standing. "_I_ don't
+believe she's offended. Or she won't be long. One thing, she'll forget
+it."
+
+He was right enough, apparently. Miss Gerald came out of the hotel door
+towards them, smiling equally for both, with the indefinable difference
+between cognition and recognition habitual in her look. She was dressed
+for a walk, and she seemed to expect them to go with her. She beamed
+gently upon Lanfear; there was no trace of umbrage in her sunny gayety.
+Her face had, as always, its lurking pathos, but in its appeal to
+Lanfear now there were only trust and the wish of pleasing him.
+
+They started side by side for their walk, while her father drove beside
+them in one of the little public carriages, mounting to the Berigo Road,
+through a street of the older San Remo, and issuing on a bare little
+piazza looking towards the walls and roofs of the mediaeval city,
+clustered together like cliff-dwellings, and down on the gardens that
+fell from the villas and the hotels. A parapet kept the path on the
+roadside nearest the declivities, and from point to point benches were
+put for the convenient enjoyment of the prospect. Mr. Gerald preferred
+to take his pleasure from the greater elevation of the seat in his
+victoria; his daughter and Lanfear leaned on the wall, and looked up to
+the sky and out to the sea, both of the same blue.
+
+The palms and eucalyptus-trees darkened about the villas; the bits of
+vineyard, in their lingering crimson or lingering gold, and the orchards
+of peaches and persimmons enriched with the varying reds of their
+ripening leaves and fruits the enchanting color scheme. The rose and
+geranium hedges were in bloom; the feathery green of the pepper-trees
+was warmed by the red-purple of their grape-like clusters of blossoms;
+the perfume of lemon flowers wandered vaguely upwards from some point
+which they could not fix.
+
+Nothing of all the beauty seemed lost upon the girl, so bereft that she
+could enjoy no part of it from association. Lanfear observed that she
+was not fatigued by any such effort as he was always helplessly making
+to match what he saw with something he had seen before. Now, when this
+effort betrayed itself, she said, smiling: "How strange it is that you
+see things for what they are like, and not for what they are!"
+
+"Yes, it's a defect, I'm afraid, sometimes. Perhaps--"
+
+"Perhaps what?" she prompted him in the pause he made.
+
+"Nothing. I was wondering whether in some other possible life our
+consciousness would not be more independent of what we have been than it
+seems to be here." She looked askingly at him. "I mean whether there
+shall not be something absolute in our existence, whether it shall not
+realize itself more in each experience of the moment, and not be always
+seeking to verify itself from the past."
+
+"Isn't that what you think is the way with me already?" She turned upon
+him smiling, and he perceived that in her New York version of a Parisian
+costume, with her lace hat of summer make and texture and the vivid
+parasol she twirled upon her shoulder, she was not only a very pretty
+girl, but a fashionable one. There was something touching in the fact,
+and a little bewildering. To the pretty girl, the fashionable girl, he
+could have answered with a joke, but the stricken intelligence had a
+claim to his seriousness. Now, especially, he noted what had from time
+to time urged itself upon his perception. If the broken ties which once
+bound her to the past were beginning to knit again, her recovery
+otherwise was not apparent. As she stood there her beauty had signally
+the distinction of fragility, the delicacy of shattered nerves in which
+there was yet no visible return to strength. A feeling, which had
+intimated itself before, a sense as of being in the presence of a
+disembodied spirit, possessed him, and brought, in its contradiction of
+an accepted theory, a suggestion that was destined to become conviction.
+He had always said to himself that there could be no persistence of
+personality, of character, of identity, of consciousness, except through
+memory; yet here, to the last implication of temperament, they all
+persisted. The soul that was passing in its integrity through time
+without the helps, the crutches, of remembrance by which his own
+personality supported itself, why should not it pass so through eternity
+without that loss of identity which was equivalent to annihilation?
+
+Her waiting eyes recalled him from his inquiry, and with an effort he
+answered, "Yes, I think you do have your being here and now, Miss
+Gerald, to an unusual degree."
+
+"And you don't think that is wrong?"
+
+"Wrong? Why? How?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know." She looked round, and her eye fell upon her father
+waiting for them in his carriage beside the walk. The sight supplied her
+with the notion which Lanfear perceived would not have occurred
+otherwise. "Then why doesn't papa want me to remember things?"
+
+"I don't know," Lanfear temporized. "Doesn't he?"
+
+"I can't always tell. Should--should _you_ wish me to remember more than
+I do?"
+
+"I?"
+
+She looked at him with entreaty. "Do you think it would make my father
+happier if I did?"
+
+"That I can't say," Lanfear answered. "People are often the sadder for
+what they remember. If I were your father--Excuse me! I don't mean
+anything so absurd. But in his place--"
+
+He stopped, and she said, as if she were satisfied with his broken
+reply: "It is very curious. When I look at him--when I am with him--I
+know him; but when he is away, I don't remember him." She seemed rather
+interested in the fact than distressed by it; she even smiled.
+
+"And me," he ventured, "is it the same with regard to me?"
+
+She did not say; she asked, smiling: "Do you remember me when I am
+away?"
+
+"Yes!" he answered. "As perfectly as if you were with me. I can see you,
+hear you, feel the touch of your hand, your dress--Good heavens!" he
+added to himself under his breath. "What am I saying to this poor
+child!"
+
+In the instinct of escaping from himself he started forward, and she
+moved with him. Mr. Gerald's watchful driver followed them with the
+carriage.
+
+"That is very strange," she said, lightly. "Is it so with you about
+everyone?"
+
+"No," he replied, briefly, almost harshly. He asked, abruptly: "Miss
+Gerald, are there any times when you know people in their absence?"
+
+"Just after I wake from a nap--yes. But it doesn't last. That is, it
+seems to me it doesn't. I'm not sure."
+
+As they followed the winding of the pleasant way, with the villas on the
+slopes above and on the slopes below, she began to talk of them, and to
+come into that knowledge of each which formed her remembrance of them
+from former knowledge of them, but which he knew would fade when she
+passed them.
+
+The next morning, when she came down unwontedly late to breakfast in
+their pavilion, she called gayly:
+
+"Dr. Lanfear! It _is_ Dr. Lanfear?"
+
+"I should be sorry if it were not, since you seem to expect it, Miss
+Gerald."
+
+"Oh, I just wanted to be sure. Hasn't my father been here, yet?" It was
+the first time she had shown herself aware of her father except in his
+presence, as it was the first time she had named Lanfear to his face.
+
+He suppressed a remote stir of anxiety, and answered: "He went to get
+his newspapers; he wished you not to wait. I hope you slept well?"
+
+"Splendidly. But I was very tired last night; I don't know why,
+exactly."
+
+"We had rather a long walk."
+
+"Did we have a walk yesterday?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it was _so_! I thought I had dreamed it. I was beginning to
+remember something, and my father asked me what it was, and then I
+couldn't remember. Do you believe I shall keep on remembering?"
+
+"I don't see why you shouldn't."
+
+"Should you wish me to?" she asked, in evident, however unconscious,
+recurrence to their talk of the day before.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+She sighed. "I don't know. If it's like some of those dreams or gleams.
+Is remembering pleasant?"
+
+Lanfear thought for a moment. Then he said, in the honesty he thought
+best to use with her: "For the most part I should say it was painful.
+Life is tolerable enough while it passes, but when it is past, what
+remains seems mostly to hurt and humiliate. I don't know why we should
+remember so insistently the foolish things and wrong things we do, and
+not recall the times when we acted, without an effort, wisely and
+rightly." He thought he had gone too far, and he hedged a little. "I
+don't mean that we _can't_ recall those times. We can and do, to console
+and encourage ourselves; but they don't recur, without our willing, as
+the others do."
+
+She had poured herself a cup of coffee, and she played with the spoon in
+her saucer while she seemed to listen. But she could not have been
+listening, for when she put down her spoon and leaned back in her chair,
+she said: "In those dreams the things come from such a very far way
+back, and they don't belong to a life that is like this. They belong to
+a life like what you hear the life after this is. We are the same as we
+are here; but the things are different. We haven't the same rules, the
+same wishes--I can't explain."
+
+"You mean that we are differently conditioned?"
+
+"Yes. And if you can understand, I feel as if I remembered long back of
+this, and long forward of this. But one can't remember forward!"
+
+"That wouldn't be remembrance; no, it would be prescience; and your
+consciousness here, as you were saying yesterday, is through knowing,
+not remembering."
+
+She stared at him. "Was that yesterday? I thought it was--to-morrow."
+She rubbed her hand across her forehead as people do when they wish to
+clear their minds. Then she sighed deeply. "It tires me so. And yet I
+can't help trying." A light broke over her face at the sound of a step
+on the gravel walk near by, and she said, laughing, without looking
+round: "That is papa! I knew it was his step."
+
+
+V
+
+Such return of memory as she now had was like memory in what we call the
+lower lives. It increased, fluctuantly, with an ebb in which it almost
+disappeared, but with a flow that in its advance carried it beyond its
+last flood-tide mark. After the first triumph in which she could address
+Lanfear by his name, and could greet her father as her father, there
+were lapses in which she knew them as before, without naming them.
+Except mechanically to repeat the names of other people when reminded of
+them, she did not pass beyond cognition to recognition. Events still
+left no trace upon her; or if they did she was not sure whether they
+were things she had dreamed or experienced. But her memory grew stronger
+in the region where the bird knows its way home to the nest, or the bee
+to the hive. She had an unerring instinct for places where she had once
+been, and she found her way to them again without the help from the
+association which sometimes failed Lanfear. Their walks were always
+taken with her father's company in his carriage, but they sometimes left
+him at a point of the Berigo Road, and after a long détour among the
+vineyards and olive orchards of the heights above, rejoined him at
+another point they had agreed upon with him. One afternoon, when Lanfear
+had climbed the rough pave of the footways with her to one of the
+summits, they stopped to rest on the wall of a terrace, where they sat
+watching the changing light on the sea, through a break in the trees.
+The shadows surprised them on their height, and they had to make their
+way among them over the farm paths and by the dry beds of the torrents
+to the carriage road far below. They had been that walk only once
+before, and Lanfear failed of his reckoning, except the downward course
+which must bring them out on the high-road at last. But Miss Gerald's
+instinct saved them where his reason failed. She did not remember, but
+she knew the way, and she led him on as if she were inventing it, or as
+if it had been indelibly traced upon her mind and she had only to follow
+the mystical lines within to be sure of her course. She confessed to
+being very tired, and each step must have increased her fatigue, but
+each step seemed to clear her perception of the next to be taken.
+
+Suddenly, when Lanfear was blaming himself for bringing all this upon
+her, and then for trusting to her guidance, he recognized a certain
+peasant's house, and in a few moments they had descended the
+olive-orchard terraces to a broken cistern in the clear twilight beyond
+the dusk. She suddenly halted him. "There, there! It happened
+then--now--this instant!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"That feeling of being here before! There is the curb of the old
+cistern; and the place where the terrace wall is broken; and the path up
+to the vineyard--Don't you feel it, too?" she demanded, with a
+joyousness which had no pleasure for him.
+
+"Yes, certainly. We were here last week. We went up the path to the
+farm-house to get some water."
+
+"Yes, now I am remembering--remembering!" She stood with eagerly parted
+lips, and glancing quickly round with glowing eyes, whose light faded in
+the same instant. "No!" she said, mournfully, "it's gone."
+
+A sound of wheels in the road ceased, and her father's voice called:
+"Don't you want to take my place, and let me walk awhile, Nannie?"
+
+"No. You come to me, papa. Something very strange has happened;
+something you will be surprised at. Hurry!" She seemed to be joking, as
+he was, while she beckoned him impatiently towards her.
+
+He had left his carriage, and he came up with a heavy man's quickened
+pace. "Well, what is the wonderful thing?" he panted out.
+
+She stared blankly at him, without replying, and they silently made
+their way to Mr. Gerald's carriage.
+
+"I lost the way, and Miss Gerald found it," Lanfear explained, as he
+helped her to the place beside her father.
+
+She said nothing, and almost with sinking into the seat, she sank into
+that deep slumber which from time to time overtook her.
+
+"I didn't know we had gone so far--or rather that we had waited so long
+before we started down the hills," Lanfear apologized in an involuntary
+whisper.
+
+"Oh, it's all right," her father said, trying to adjust the girl's
+fallen head to his shoulder. "Get in and help me--"
+
+Lanfear obeyed, and lent a physician's skilled aid, which left the
+cumbrous efforts of her father to the blame he freely bestowed on them.
+"You'll have to come here on the other side," he said. "There's room
+enough for all three. Or, hold on! Let me take your place." He took the
+place in front, and left her to Lanfear's care, with the trust which was
+the physician's right, and with a sense of the girl's dependence in
+which she was still a child to him.
+
+They did not speak till well on the way home. Then the father leaned
+forward and whispered huskily: "Do you think she's as strong as she
+was?"
+
+Lanfear waited, as if thinking the facts over. He murmured back: "No.
+She's better. She's not so strong."
+
+"Yes," the father murmured. "I understand."
+
+What Gerald understood by Lanfear's words might not have been their
+meaning, but what Lanfear meant was that there was now an interfusion of
+the past and present in her daily experience. She still did not
+remember, but she had moments in which she hovered upon such knowledge
+of what had happened as she had of actual events. When she was stronger
+she seemed farther from this knowledge; when she was weaker she was
+nearer it. So it seemed to him in that region where he could be sure of
+his own duty when he looked upon it singly as concern for her health. No
+inquiry for the psychological possibilities must be suffered to divide
+his effort for her physical recovery, though there might come with this
+a cessation of the timeless dream-state in which she had her being, and
+she might sharply realize the past, as the anaesthete realizes his
+return to agony from insensibility. The quality of her mind was as
+different from the thing called culture as her manner from convention. A
+simplicity beyond the simplicity of childhood was one with a poetic
+color in her absolute ideas. But this must cease with her restoration to
+the strength in which she could alone come into full and clear
+self-consciousness. So far as Lanfear could give reality to his
+occupation with her disability, he was ministering to a mind diseased;
+not to "rase out its written trouble," but if possible to restore the
+obliterated record, and enable her to spell its tragic characters. If he
+could, he would have shrunk from this office; but all the more because
+he specially had to do with the mystical side of medicine, he always
+tried to keep his relation to her free from personal feeling, and his
+aim single and matter-of-fact.
+
+It was hard to do this; and there was a glamour in the very
+topographical and meteorological environment. The autumn was a long
+delight in which the constant sea, the constant sky, knew almost as
+little variance as the unchanging Alps. The days passed in a procession
+of sunny splendor, neither hot nor cold, nor of the temper of any
+determinate season, unless it were an abiding spring-time. The flowers
+bloomed, and the grass kept green in a reverie of May. But one afternoon
+of January, while Lanfear was going about in a thin coat and panama hat,
+a soft, fresh wind began to blow from the east. It increased till
+sunset, and then fell. In the morning he looked out on a world in which
+the spring had stiffened overnight into winter. A thick frost painted
+the leaves and flowers; icicles hung from pipes and vents; the frozen
+streams flashed back from their arrested flow the sun as it shone from
+the cold heaven, and blighted and blackened the hedges of geranium and
+rose, the borders of heliotrope, the fields of pinks. The leaves of the
+bananas hung limp about their stems; the palms rattled like skeletons in
+the wind when it began to blow again over the shrunken landscape.
+
+
+VI
+
+The caprice of a climate which vaunted itself perpetual summer was a
+godsend to all the strangers strong enough to bear it without suffering.
+For the sick an indoor life of huddling about the ineffectual fires of
+the south began, and lasted for the fortnight that elapsed before the
+Riviera got back its advertised temperature. Miss Gerald had drooped in
+the milder weather; but the cold braced and lifted her, and with its
+help she now pushed her walks farther, and was eager every day for some
+excursion to the little towns that whitened along the shores, or the
+villages that glimmered from the olive-orchards of the hills. Once she
+said to Lanfear, when they were climbing through the brisk, clear air:
+"It seems to me as if I had been here before. Have I?"
+
+"No. This is the first time."
+
+She said no more, but seemed disappointed in his answer, and he
+suggested: "Perhaps it is the cold that reminds you of our winters at
+home, and makes you feel that the scene is familiar."
+
+"Yes, that is it!" she returned, joyously. "Was there snow, there, like
+that on the mountains yonder?"
+
+"A good deal more, I fancy. That will be gone in a few days, and at
+home, you know, our snow lasts for weeks."
+
+"Then that is what I was thinking of," she said, and she ran strongly
+and lightly forward. "Come!"
+
+When the harsh weather passed and the mild climate returned there was no
+lapse of her strength. A bloom, palely pink as the flowers that began to
+flush the almond-trees, came upon her delicate beauty, a light like that
+of the lengthening days dawned in her eyes. She had an instinct for the
+earliest violets among the grass under the olives; she was first to hear
+the blackcaps singing in the garden-tops; and nothing that was novel in
+her experience seemed alien to it. This was the sum of what Lanfear got
+by the questioning which he needlessly tried to keep indirect. She knew
+that she was his patient, and in what manner, and she had let him divine
+that her loss of memory was suffering as well as deprivation. She had
+not merely the fatigue which we all undergo from the effort to recall
+things, and which sometimes reaches exhaustion; but there was apparently
+in the void of her oblivion a perpetual rumor of events, names,
+sensations, like--Lanfear felt that he inadequately conjectured--the
+subjective noises which are always in the ears of the deaf. Sometimes,
+in the distress of it, she turned to him for help, and when he was able
+to guess what she was striving for, a radiant relief and gratitude
+transfigured her face. But this could not last, and he learned to note
+how soon the stress and tension of her effort returned. His compassion
+for her at such times involved a temptation, or rather a question, which
+he had to silence by a direct effort of his will. Would it be worse,
+would it be greater anguish for her to know at once the past that now
+tormented her consciousness with its broken and meaningless
+reverberations? Then he realized that it was impossible to help her even
+through the hazard of telling her what had befallen; that no such effect
+as was to be desired could be anticipated from the outside.
+
+If he turned to her father for counsel or instruction, or even a
+participation in his responsibility, he was met by an optimistic
+patience which exasperated him, if it did not complicate the case. Once,
+when Lanfear forbearingly tried to share with him his anxiety for the
+effect of a successful event, he was formed to be outright, and remind
+him, in so many words, that the girl's restoration might be through
+anguish which he could not measure.
+
+Gerald faltered aghast; then he said: "It mustn't come to that; you
+mustn't let it."
+
+"How do you expect me to prevent it?" Lanfear demanded, in his vexation.
+
+Gerald caught his breath. "If she gets well, she will remember?"
+
+"I don't say that. It seems probable. Do you wish her being to remain
+bereft of one-half its powers?"
+
+"Oh, how do I know what I want?" the poor man groaned. "I only know that
+I trust you entirely, Doctor Lanfear. Whatever you think best will be
+best and wisest, no matter what the outcome is."
+
+He got away from Lanfear with these hopeless words, and again Lanfear
+perceived that the case was left wholly to him. His consolation was the
+charm of the girl's companionship, the delight of a nature knowing
+itself from moment to moment as if newly created. For her, as nearly as
+he could put the fact into words, the actual moment contained the past
+and the future as well as the present. When he saw in her the
+persistence of an exquisite personality independent of the means by
+which he realized his own continuous identity, he sometimes felt as if
+in the presence of some angel so long freed from earthly allegiance that
+it had left all record behind, as we leave here the records of our first
+years. If an echo of the past reached her, it was apt to be trivial and
+insignificant, like those unimportant experiences of our remotest
+childhood, which remain to us from a world outlived.
+
+It was not an insipid perfection of character which reported itself in
+these celestial terms, and Lanfear conjectured that angelic immortality,
+if such a thing were, could not imply perfection except at the cost of
+one-half of human character. When the girl wore a dress that she saw
+pleased him more than another, there was a responsive pleasure in her
+eyes, which he could have called vanity if he would; and she had at
+times a wilfulness which he could have accused of being obstinacy. She
+showed a certain jealousy of any experiences of his apart from her own,
+not because they included others, but because they excluded her. He was
+aware of an involuntary vigilance in her, which could not leave his
+motives any more than his actions unsearched. But in her conditioning
+she could not repent; she could only offer him at some other time the
+unconscious reparation of her obedience. The self-criticism which the
+child has not learned she had forgotten, but in her oblivion the wish to
+please existed as perfectly as in the ignorance of childhood.
+
+This, so far as he could ever put into words, was the interior of the
+world where he dwelt apart with her. Its exterior continued very like
+that of other worlds where two young people have their being. Now and
+then a more transitory guest at the Grand Hotel Sardegna perhaps fancied
+it the iridescent orb which takes the color of the morning sky, and is
+destined, in the course of nature, to the danger of collapse in which
+planetary space abounds. Some rumor of this could not fail to reach
+Lanfear, but he ignored it as best he could in always speaking gravely
+of Miss Gerald as his patient, and authoritatively treating her as such.
+He convinced some of these witnesses against their senses; for the
+others, he felt that it mattered little what they thought, since, if it
+reached her, it could not pierce her isolation for more than the instant
+in which the impression from absent things remained to her.
+
+A more positive embarrassment, of a kind Lanfear was not prepared for,
+beset him in an incident which would have been more touching if he had
+been less singly concerned for the girl. A pretty English boy, with the
+dawn of a peachy bloom on his young cheeks, and an impulsiveness
+commoner with English youth than our own, talked with Miss Gerald one
+evening and the next day sent her an armful of flowers with his card. He
+followed this attention with a call at her father's apartment, and after
+Miss Gerald seemed to know him, and they had, as he told Lanfear, a
+delightful time together, she took up his card from the table where it
+was lying, and asked him if he could tell her who that gentleman was.
+The poor fellow's inference was that she was making fun of him, and he
+came to Lanfear, as an obvious friend of the family, for an explanation.
+He reported the incident, with indignant tears standing in his eyes:
+"What did she mean by it? If she took my flowers, she must have known
+that--that--they--And to pretend to forget my name! Oh, I say, it's too
+bad! She could have got rid of me without that. Girls have ways enough,
+you know."
+
+"Yes, yes," Lanfear assented, slowly, to gain time. "I can assure you
+that Miss Gerald didn't mean anything that could wound you. She isn't
+very well--she's rather odd--"
+
+"Do you mean that she's out of her mind? She can talk as well as any
+one--better!"
+
+"No, not that. But she's often in pain--greatly in pain when she can't
+recall a name, and I've no doubt she was trying to recall yours with the
+help of your card. She would be the last in the world to be indifferent
+to your feelings. I imagine she scarcely knew what she was doing at the
+moment."
+
+"Then, do you think--do you suppose--it would be any good my trying to
+see her again? If she wouldn't be indifferent to my feelings, do you
+think there would be any hope--Really, you know, I would give anything
+to believe that my feelings wouldn't offend her. You understand me?"
+
+"Perhaps I do."
+
+"I've never met a more charming girl and--she isn't engaged, is she? She
+isn't engaged to you? I don't mean to press the question, but it's a
+question of life and death with me, you know."
+
+Lanfear thought he saw his way out of the coil. "I can tell you, quite
+as frankly as you ask, that Miss Gerald isn't engaged to _me_."
+
+"Then it's somebody else--somebody in America! Well, I hope she'll be
+happy; _I_ never shall." He offered his hand to Lanfear. "I'm off."
+
+"Oh, here's the doctor, now," a voice said behind them where they stood
+by the garden wall, and they turned to confront Gerald with his
+daughter.
+
+"Why! Are you going?" she said to the Englishman, and she put out her
+hand to him.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Evers is going." Lanfear came to the rescue.
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry," the girl said, and the youth responded.
+
+"That's very good of you. I--good-by! I hope you'll be very happy--I--"
+He turned abruptly away, and ran into the hotel.
+
+"What has he been crying for?" Miss Gerald asked, turning from a long
+look after him.
+
+Lanfear did not know quite what to say; but he hazarded saying: "He was
+hurt that you had forgotten him when he came to see you this afternoon."
+
+"Did he come to see me?" she asked; and Lanfear exchanged looks of
+anxiety, pain, and reassurance with her father. "I am so sorry. Shall I
+go after him and tell him?"
+
+"No; I explained; he's all right," Lanfear said.
+
+"You want to be careful, Nannie," her father added, "about people's
+feelings when you meet them, and afterwards seem not to know them."
+
+"But I _do_ know them, papa," she remonstrated.
+
+"You want to be careful," her father repeated.
+
+"I will--I will, indeed." Her lips quivered, and the tears came, which
+Lanfear had to keep from flowing by what quick turn he could give to
+something else.
+
+An obscure sense of the painful incident must have lingered with her
+after its memory had perished. One afternoon when Lanfear and her father
+went with her to the military concert in the sycamore-planted piazza
+near the Vacherie Suisse, where they often came for a cup of tea, she
+startled them by bowing gayly to a young lieutenant of engineers
+standing there with some other officers, and making the most of the
+prospect of pretty foreigners which the place afforded. The lieutenant
+returned the bow with interest, and his eyes did not leave their party
+as long as they remained. Within the bounds of deference for her, it was
+evident that his comrades were joking about the honor done him by this
+charming girl. When the Geralds started homeward Lanfear was aware of a
+trio of officers following them, not conspicuously, but unmistakably;
+and after that, he could not start on his walks with Miss Gerald and her
+father without the sense that the young lieutenant was hovering
+somewhere in their path, waiting in the hopes of another bow from her.
+The officer was apparently not discouraged by his failure to win
+recognition from her, and what was amounting to annoyance for Lanfear
+reached the point where he felt he must share it with her father. He had
+nearly as much trouble in imparting it to him as he might have had with
+Miss Gerald herself. He managed, but when he required her father to put
+a stop to it he perceived that Gerald was as helpless as she would have
+been. He first wished to verify the fact from its beginning with her,
+but this was not easy.
+
+"Nannie," he said, "why did you bow to that officer the other day?"
+
+"What officer, papa? When?"
+
+"You know; there by the band-stand, at the Swiss Dairy."
+
+She stared blankly at him, and it was clear that it was all as if it had
+not been with her. He insisted, and then she said: "Perhaps I thought I
+knew him, and was afraid I should hurt his feelings if I didn't
+recognize him. But I don't remember it at all." The curves of her mouth
+drooped, and her eyes grieved, so that her father had not the heart to
+say more. She left them, and when he was alone with Lanfear he said:
+
+"You see how it is!"
+
+"Yes, I saw how it was before. But what do you wish to do?"
+
+"Do you mean that he will keep it up?"
+
+"Decidedly, he'll keep it up. He has every right to from his point of
+view."
+
+"Oh, well, then, my dear fellow, you must stop it, somehow. You'll know
+how to do it."
+
+"I?" said Lanfear, indignantly; but his vexation was not so great that
+he did not feel a certain pleasure in fulfilling this strangest part of
+his professional duty, when at the beginning of their next excursion he
+put Miss Gerald into the victoria with her father and fell back to the
+point at which he had seen the lieutenant waiting to haunt their farther
+progress. He put himself plumply in front of the officer and demanded in
+very blunt Italian: "What do you want?"
+
+The lieutenant stared him over with potential offence, in which his
+delicately pencilled mustache took the shape of a light sneer, and
+demanded in his turn, in English much better than Lanfear's Italian:
+"What right have you to ask?"
+
+"The right of Miss Gerald's physician. She is an invalid in my charge."
+
+A change quite indefinable except as the visible transition from coxcomb
+to gentleman passed over the young lieutenant's comely face. "An
+invalid?" he faltered.
+
+"Yes," Lanfear began; and then, with a rush of confidence which the
+change in the officer's face justified, "one very strangely, very
+tragically afflicted. Since she saw her mother killed in an accident a
+year ago she remembers nothing. She bowed to you because she saw you
+looking at her, and supposed you must be an acquaintance. May I assure
+you that you are altogether mistaken?"
+
+The lieutenant brought his heels together, and bent low. "I beg her
+pardon with all my heart. I am very, very sorry. I will do anything I
+can. I would like to stop that. May I bring my mother to call on Miss
+Gerald?"
+
+He offered his hand, and Lanfear wrung it hard, a lump of gratitude in
+his throat choking any particular utterance, while a fine shame for his
+late hostile intention covered him.
+
+When the lieutenant came, with all possible circumstance, bringing the
+countess, his mother, Mr. Gerald overwhelmed them with hospitality of
+every form. The Italian lady responded effusively, and more sincerely
+cooed and murmured her compassionate interest in his daughter. Then all
+parted the best of friends; but when it was over, Miss Gerald did not
+know what it had been about. She had not remembered the lieutenant or
+her father's vexation, or any phase of the incident which was now
+closed. Nothing remained of it but the lieutenant's right, which he
+gravely exercised, of saluting them respectfully whenever he met them.
+
+
+VII
+
+Earlier, Lanfear had never allowed himself to be far out of call from
+Miss Gerald's father, especially during the daytime slumbers into which
+she fell, and from which they both always dreaded her awakening. But as
+the days went on and the event continued the same he allowed himself
+greater range. Formerly the three went their walks or drives together,
+but now he sometimes went alone. In these absences he found relief from
+the stress of his constant vigilance; he was able to cast off the bond
+which enslaves the physician to his patient, and which he must ignore at
+times for mere self-preservation's sake; but there was always a lurking
+anxiety, which, though he refused to let it define itself to him,
+shortened the time and space he tried to put between them.
+
+One afternoon in April, when he left her sleeping, he was aware of
+somewhat recklessly placing himself out of reach in a lonely excursion
+to a village demolished by the earthquake of 1887, and abandoned
+himself, in the impressions and incidents of his visit to the ruin, to a
+luxury of impersonal melancholy which the physician cannot often allow
+himself. At last, his care found him, and drove him home full of a
+sharper fear than he had yet felt since the first days. But Mr. Gerald
+was tranquilly smoking under a palm in the hotel garden, and met him
+with an easy smile. "She woke once, and said she had had such a pleasant
+dream. Now she's off again. Do you think we'd better wake her for
+dinner? I suppose she's getting up her strength in this way. Her
+sleeping so much is a good symptom, isn't it?"
+
+Lanfear smiled forlornly; neither of them, in view of the possible
+eventualities, could have said what result they wished the symptoms to
+favor. But he said: "Decidedly I wouldn't wake her"; and he spent a
+night of restless sleep penetrated by a nervous expectation which the
+morning, when it came, rather mockingly defeated.
+
+Miss Gerald appeared promptly at breakfast in their pavilion, with a
+fresher and gayer look than usual, and to her father's "Well, Nannie,
+you _have_ had a nap, this time," she answered, smiling:
+
+"Have I? It isn't afternoon, is it?"
+
+"No, it's morning. You've napped it all night."
+
+She said: "I can't tell whether I've been asleep or not, sometimes; but
+now I know I have been; and I feel so rested. Where are we going
+to-day?"
+
+She turned to Lanfear while her father answered: "I guess the doctor
+won't want to go very far, to-day, after his expedition yesterday
+afternoon."
+
+"Ah," she said, "I _knew_ you had been somewhere! Was it very far? Are
+you too tired?"
+
+"It was rather far, but I'm not tired. I shouldn't advise Possana,
+though."
+
+"Possana?" she repeated. "What is Possana?"
+
+He told her, and then at a jealous look in her eyes he added an account
+of his excursion. He heightened, if anything, its difficulties, in
+making light of them as no difficulties for him, and at the end she
+said, gently: "Shall we go this morning?"
+
+"Let the doctor rest this morning, Nannie," her father interrupted,
+whimsically, but with what Lanfear knew to be an inner yielding to her
+will. "Or if you won't let _him_, let _me_. I don't want to go anywhere
+this morning."
+
+Lanfear thought that he did not wish her to go at all, and hoped that by
+the afternoon she would have forgotten Possana. She sighed, but in her
+sigh there was no concession. Then, with the chance of a returning
+drowse to save him from openly thwarting her will, he merely suggested:
+"There's plenty of time in the afternoon; the days are so long now; and
+we can get the sunset from the hills."
+
+"Yes, that will be nice," she said, but he perceived that she did not
+assent willingly; and there was an effect of resolution in the readiness
+with which she appeared dressed for the expedition after luncheon. She
+clearly did not know where they were going, but when she turned to
+Lanfear with her look of entreaty, he had not the heart to join her
+father in any conspiracy against her. He beckoned the carriage which had
+become conscious in its eager driver from the moment she showed herself
+at the hotel door, and they set out.
+
+When they had left the higher level of the hotel and began their clatter
+through the long street of the town, Lanfear noted that she seemed to
+feel as much as himself the quaintness of the little city, rising on one
+hand, with its narrow alleys under successive arches between the high,
+dark houses, to the hills, and dropping on the other to sea from the
+commonplace of the principal thoroughfare, with its pink and white and
+saffron hotels and shops. Beyond the town their course lay under villa
+walls, covered with vines and topped by pavilions, and opening finally
+along a stretch of the old Cornice road.
+
+"But this," she said, at a certain point, "is where we were yesterday!"
+
+"This is where the doctor was yesterday," her father said, behind his
+cigar.
+
+"And wasn't I with you?" she asked Lanfear.
+
+He said, playfully: "To-day you are. I mustn't be selfish and have you
+every day."
+
+"Ah, you are laughing at me; but I know I was here yesterday."
+
+Her father set his lips in patience, and Lanfear did not insist.
+
+They had halted at this point because, across a wide valley on the
+shoulder of an approaching height, the ruined village of Possana showed,
+and lower down and nearer the seat the new town which its people had
+built when they escaped from the destruction of their world-old home.
+
+World-old it all was, with reference to the human life of it; but the
+spring-time was immortally young in the landscape. Over the expanses of
+green and brown fields, and hovering about the gray and white cottages,
+was a mist of peach and cherry blossoms. Above these the hoar olives
+thickened, and the vines climbed from terrace to terrace. The valley
+narrowed inland, and ceased in the embrace of the hills drawing
+mysteriously together in the distances.
+
+"I think we've got the best part of it here, Miss Gerald," Lanfear broke
+the common silence by saying. "You couldn't see much more of Possana
+after you got there."
+
+"Besides," her father ventured a pleasantry which jarred on the younger
+man, "if you were there with the doctor yesterday, you won't want to
+make the climb again to-day. Give it up, Nannie!"
+
+"Oh no," she said, "I can't give it up."
+
+"Well, then, we must go on, I suppose. Where do we begin our climb?"
+
+Lanfear explained that he had been obliged to leave his carriage at the
+foot of the hill, and climb to Possana Nuova by the donkey-paths of the
+peasants. He had then walked to the ruins of Possana Vecchia, but he
+suggested that they might find donkeys to carry them on from the new
+town.
+
+"Well, I hope so," Mr. Gerald grumbled. But at Possana Nuova no
+saddle-donkeys were to be had, and he announced, at the café where they
+stopped for the negotiation, that he would wait for the young people to
+go on to Possana Vecchia, and tell him about it when they got back. In
+the meantime he would watch the game of ball, which, in the piazza
+before the café, appeared to have engaged the energies of the male
+population. Lanfear was still inwardly demurring, when a stalwart
+peasant girl came in and announced that she had one donkey which they
+could have with her own services driving it. She had no saddle, but
+there was a pad on which the young lady could ride.
+
+"Oh, well, take it for Nannie," Mr. Gerald directed; "only don't be gone
+too long."
+
+They set out with Miss Gerald reclining in the kind of litter which the
+donkey proved to be equipped with. Lanfear went beside her, the peasant
+girl came behind, and at times ran forward to instruct them in the
+points they seemed to be looking at. For the most part the landscape
+opened beneath them, but in the azure distances it climbed into Alpine
+heights which the recent snows had now left to the gloom of their pines.
+On the slopes of the nearer hills little towns clung, here and there;
+closer yet farm-houses showed themselves among the vines and olives.
+
+It was very simple, as the life in it must always have been; and Lanfear
+wondered if the elemental charm of the scene made itself felt by his
+companion as they climbed the angles of the inclines, in a silence
+broken only by the picking of the donkey's hoofs on the rude mosaic of
+the pavement, and the panting of the peasant girl at its heels. On the
+top of the last upward stretch they stopped for the view, and Miss
+Gerald asked abruptly: "Why were you so sad?"
+
+"When was I sad?" he asked, in turn.
+
+"I don't know. Weren't you sad?"
+
+"When I was here yesterday, you mean?" She smiled on his fortunate
+guess, and he said: "Oh, I don't know. It might have begun with
+thinking--
+
+ 'Of old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago.'
+
+You know the pirates used to come sailing over the peaceful sea yonder
+from Africa, to harry these coasts, and carry off as many as they could
+capture into slavery in Tunis and Algiers. It was a long, dumb kind of
+misery that scarcely made an echo in history, but it haunted my fancy
+yesterday, and I saw these valleys full of the flight and the pursuit
+which used to fill them, up to the walls of the villages, perched on the
+heights where men could have built only for safety. Then, I got to
+thinking of other things--"
+
+"And thinking of things in the past always makes you sad," she said, in
+pensive reflection. "If it were not for the wearying of always trying to
+remember, I don't believe I should want my memory back. And of course to
+be like other people," she ended with a sigh.
+
+It was on his tongue to say that he would not have her so; but he
+checked himself, and said, lamely enough: "Perhaps you will be like
+them, sometime."
+
+She startled him by answering irrelevantly: "You know my mother is dead.
+She died a long while ago; I suppose I must have been very little."
+
+She spoke as if the fact scarcely concerned her, and Lanfear drew a
+breath of relief in his surprise. He asked, at another tangent: "What
+made you think I was sad yesterday?"
+
+"Oh, I knew, somehow. I think that I always know when you are sad; I
+can't tell you how, but I feel it."
+
+"Then I must cheer up," Lanfear said. "If I could only see you strong
+and well, Miss Gerald, like this girl--"
+
+They both looked at the peasant, and she laughed in sympathy with their
+smiling, and beat the donkey a little for pleasure; it did not mind.
+
+"But you will be--you will be! We must hurry on, now, or your father
+will be getting anxious."
+
+They pushed forward on the road, which was now level and wider than it
+had been. As they drew near the town, whose ruin began more and more to
+reveal itself in the roofless walls and windowless casements, they saw a
+man coming towards them, at whose approach Lanfear instinctively put
+himself forward. The man did not look at them, but passed, frowning
+darkly, and muttering and gesticulating.
+
+Miss Gerald turned in her litter and followed him with a long gaze. The
+peasant girl said gayly in Italian: "He is mad; the earthquake made him
+mad," and urged the donkey forward.
+
+Lanfear, in the interest of science, habitually forbade himself the
+luxury of anything like foreboding, but now, with the passing of the
+madman, he felt distinctively a lift from his spirit. He no longer
+experienced the vague dread which had followed him towards Possana, and
+made him glad of any delay that kept them from it.
+
+They entered the crooked, narrow street leading abruptly from the open
+country without any suburban hesitation into the heart of the ruin,
+which kept a vivid image of uninterrupted mediaeval life. There, till
+within the actual generation, people had dwelt, winter and summer, as
+they had dwelt from the beginning of Christian times, with nothing to
+intimate a domestic or civic advance. This street must have been the
+main thoroughfare, for stone-paved lanes, still narrower, wound from it
+here and there, while it kept a fairly direct course to the little
+piazza on a height in the midst of the town. Two churches and a simple
+town house partly enclosed it with their seamed and shattered façades.
+The dwellings here were more ruinous than on the thoroughfare, and some
+were tumbled in heaps. But Lanfear pushed open the door of one of the
+churches, and found himself in an interior which, except that it was
+roofless, could not have been greatly changed since the people had
+flocked into it to pray for safety from the earthquake. The high altar
+stood unshaken; around the frieze a succession of stucco cherubs
+perched, under the open sky, in celestial security.
+
+He had learned to look for the unexpected in Miss Gerald, and he could
+not have said that it was with surprise he now found her as capable of
+the emotions which the place inspired, as himself. He made sure of
+saying: "The earthquake, you know," and she responded with compassion:
+
+"Oh yes; and perhaps that poor man was here, praying with the rest, when
+it happened. How strange it must all have seemed to them, here where
+they lived so safely always! They thought such a dreadful thing could
+happen to others, but not to them. That is the way!"
+
+It seemed to Lanfear once more that she was on the verge of the
+knowledge so long kept from her. But she went confidently on like a
+sleepwalker who saves himself from dangers that would be death to him in
+waking. She spoke of the earthquake as if she had been reading or
+hearing of it; but he doubted if, with her broken memory, this could be
+so. It was rather as if she was exploring his own mind in the way of
+which he had more than once been sensible, and making use of his
+memory. From time to time she spoke of remembering, but he knew that
+this was as the blind speak of seeing.
+
+He was anxious to get away, and at last they came out to where they had
+left the peasant girl waiting beside her donkey. She was not there, and
+after trying this way and that in the tangle of alleys, Lanfear decided
+to take the thoroughfare which they had come up by and trust to the
+chance of finding her at its foot. But he failed even of his search for
+the street: he came out again and again at the point he had started
+from.
+
+"What is the matter?" she asked at the annoyance he could not keep out
+of his face.
+
+He laughed. "Oh, merely that we're lost. But we will wait here till that
+girl chooses to come back for us. Only it's getting late, and Mr.
+Gerald--"
+
+"Why, I know the way down," she said, and started quickly in a direction
+which, as they kept it, he recognized as the route by which he had
+emerged from the town the day before. He had once more the sense of his
+memory being used by her, as if being blind, she had taken his hand for
+guidance, or as if being herself disabled from writing, she had directed
+a pen in his grasp to form the words she desired to put down. In some
+mystical sort the effect was hers, but the means was his.
+
+They found the girl waiting with the donkey by the roadside beyond the
+last house. She explained that, not being able to follow them into the
+church with her donkey, she had decided to come where they found her and
+wait for them there.
+
+"Does no one at all live here?" Lanfear asked, carelessly.
+
+"Among the owls and the spectres? I would not pass a night here for a
+lemonade! My mother," she went on, with a natural pride in the event,
+"was lost in the earthquake. They found her with me before her breast,
+and her arms stretched out keeping the stones away." She vividly
+dramatized the fact. "I was alive, but she was dead."
+
+"Tell her," Miss Gerald said, "that my mother is dead, too."
+
+"Ah, poor little thing!" the girl said, when the message was delivered,
+and she put her beast in motion, chattering gayly to Miss Gerald in the
+bond of their common orphanhood.
+
+The return was down-hill, and they went back in half the time it had
+taken them to come. But even with this speed they were late, and the
+twilight was deepening when the last turn of their road brought them in
+sight of the new village. There a wild noise of cries for help burst
+upon the air, mixed with the shrill sound of maniac gibbering. They saw
+a boy running towards the town, and nearer them a man struggling with
+another, whom he had caught about the middle, and was dragging towards
+the side of the road where it dropped, hundreds of feet, into the gorge
+below.
+
+The donkey-girl called out: "Oh, the madman! He is killing the signor!"
+
+Lanfear shouted. The madman flung Gerald to the ground, and fled
+shrieking. Miss Gerald had leaped from her seat, and followed Lanfear as
+he ran forward to the prostrate form. She did not look at it, but within
+a few paces she clutched her hands in her hair, and screamed out: "Oh,
+my mother is killed!" and sank, as if sinking down into the earth, in a
+swoon.
+
+"No, no; it's all right, Nannie! Look after her, Lanfear! I'm not hurt.
+I let myself go in that fellow's hands, and I fell softly. It was a
+good thing he didn't drop me over the edge." Gerald gathered himself up
+nimbly enough, and lent Lanfear his help with the girl. The situation
+explained itself, almost without his incoherent additions, to the effect
+that he had become anxious, and had started out with the boy for a
+guide, to meet them, and had met the lunatic, who suddenly attacked him.
+While he talked, Lanfear was feeling the girl's pulse, and now and then
+putting his ear to her heart. With a glance at her father: "You're
+bleeding, Mr. Gerald," he said.
+
+"So I am," the old man answered, smiling, as he wiped a red stream from
+his face with his handkerchief. "But I am not hurt--"
+
+"Better let me tie it up," Lanfear said, taking the handkerchief from
+him. He felt the unselfish quality in a man whom he had not always
+thought heroic, and he bound the gash above his forehead with a
+reverence mingling with his professional gentleness. The donkey-girl had
+not ceased to cry out and bless herself, but suddenly, as her care was
+needed in getting Miss Gerald back to the litter, she became a part of
+the silence in which the procession made its way slowly into Possana
+Nuova, Lanfear going on one side, and Mr. Gerald on the other to support
+his daughter in her place. There was a sort of muted outcry of the whole
+population awaiting them at the door of the locanda where they had
+halted before, and which now had the distinction of offering them
+shelter in a room especially devoted to the poor young lady, who still
+remained in her swoon.
+
+When the landlord could prevail with his fellow-townsmen and townswomen
+to disperse in her interest, and had imposed silence upon his customers
+indoors, Lanfear began his vigil beside his patient in as great quiet
+as he could anywhere have had. Once during the evening the public
+physician of the district looked in, but he agreed with Lanfear that
+nothing was to be done which he was not doing in his greater experience
+of the case. From time to time Gerald had suggested sending for some San
+Remo physician in consultation. Lanfear had always approved, and then
+Gerald had not persisted. He was strongly excited, and anxious not so
+much for his daughter's recovery from her swoon, which he did not doubt,
+as for the effect upon her when she should have come to herself.
+
+It was this which he wished to discuss, sitting fallen back into his
+chair, or walking up and down the room, with his head bound with a
+bloody handkerchief, and looking, with a sort of alien picturesqueness,
+like a kindly brigand.
+
+Lanfear did not leave his place beside the bed where the girl lay, white
+and still as if dead. An inexpressible compassion for the poor man
+filled his heart. Whatever the event should be, it would be tragical for
+him. "Go to sleep, Mr. Gerald," he said. "Your waking can do no good. I
+will keep watch, and if need be, I'll call you. Try to make yourself
+easy on that couch."
+
+"I shall not sleep," the old man answered. "How could I?" Nevertheless,
+he adjusted himself to the hard pillows of the lounge where he had been
+sitting and drowsed among them. He woke just before dawn with a start.
+"I thought she had come to, and knew everything! What a nightmare! Did I
+groan? Is there any change?"
+
+Lanfear, sitting by the bed, in the light of the wasting candle, which
+threw a grotesque shadow of him on the wall, shook his head. After a
+moment he asked: "How long did you tell me her swoon had lasted after
+the accident to her mother?"
+
+"I don't think she recovered consciousness for two days, and then she
+remembered nothing. What do you think are the chances of her remembering
+now?"
+
+"I don't know. But there's a kind of psychopathic logic--If she lost her
+memory through one great shock, she might find it through another."
+
+"Yes, yes!" the father said, rising and walking to and fro, in his
+anguish. "That was what I thought--what I was afraid of. If I could die
+myself, and save her from living through it--I don't know what I'm
+saying! But if--but if--if she could somehow be kept from it a little
+longer! But she can't, she can't! She must know it now when she wakes."
+
+Lanfear had put up his hand, and taken the girl's slim wrist quietly
+between his thumb and finger, holding it so while her father talked on.
+
+"I suppose it's been a sort of weakness--a sort of wickedness--in me to
+wish to keep it from her; but I _have_ wished that, doctor; you must
+have seen it, and I can't deny it. We ought to bear what is sent us in
+this world, and if we escape we must pay for our escape. It has cost her
+half her being, I know it; but it hasn't cost her her reason, and I'm
+afraid for that, if she comes into her memory now. Still, you must
+do--But no one can do anything either to hinder or to help!"
+
+He was talking in a husky undertone, and brokenly, incoherently. He made
+an appeal, which Lanfear seemed not to hear, where he remained immovable
+with his hand on the girl's pulse.
+
+"Do you think I am to blame for wishing her never to know it, though
+without it she must remain deprived of one whole side of life? Do you
+think my wishing that can have had anything to do with keeping her--But
+this faint _may_ pass and she may wake from it just as she has been. It
+is logical that she should remember; but is it certain that she will?"
+
+A murmur, so very faint as to be almost no sound at all, came like a
+response from the girl's lips, and she all but imperceptibly stirred.
+Her father neither heard nor saw, but Lanfear started forward. He made a
+sudden clutch at the girl's wrist with the hand that had not left it and
+then remained motionless. "She will never remember now--here."
+
+He fell on his knees beside the bed and began to sob. "Oh, my dearest!
+My poor girl! My love!" still keeping her wrist in his hand, and laying
+his head tenderly on her arm. Suddenly he started, with a shout: "The
+pulse!" and fell forward, crushing his ear against her heart, and
+listened with bursts of: "It's beating! She isn't dead! She's alive!"
+Then he lifted her in his arms, and it was in his embrace that she
+opened her eyes, and while she clung to him, entreated:
+
+"My father! Where is he?"
+
+A dread fell upon both the men, blighting the joy with which they
+welcomed her back to life. She took her father's head between her hands,
+and kissed his bruised face. "I thought you were dead; and I thought
+that mamma--" She stopped, and they waited breathless. "But that was
+long ago, wasn't it?"
+
+"Yes," her father eagerly assented. "Very long ago."
+
+"I remember," she sighed. "I thought that I was killed, too. Was it
+_all_ a dream?" Her father and Lanfear looked at each other. Which
+should speak? "This is Doctor Lanfear, isn't it?" she asked, with a dim
+smile. "And I'm not dreaming now, am I?" He had released her from his
+arms, but she held his hand fast. "I know it is you, and papa; and yes,
+I remember everything. That terrible pain of forgetting is gone! It's
+beautiful! But did he hurt you badly, papa? I saw him, and I wanted to
+call to you. But mamma--"
+
+However the change from the oblivion of the past had been operated, it
+had been mercifully wrought. As far as Lanfear could note it, in the
+rapture of the new revelation to her which it scarcely needed words to
+establish, the process was a gradual return from actual facts to the
+things of yesterday and then to the things of the day before, and so
+back to the tragedy in which she had been stricken. There was no sudden
+burst of remembrance, but a slow unveiling of the reality in which her
+spirit was mystically fortified against it. At times it seemed to him
+that the effect was accomplished in her by supernatural agencies such
+as, he remembered once somewhere reading, attend the souls of those
+lately dead, and explore their minds till every thought and deed of
+their earthly lives, from the last to the first, is revealed to them out
+of an inner memory which can never, any jot or tittle, perish. It was as
+if this had remained in her intact from the blow that shattered her
+outer remembrance. When the final, long-dreaded horror was reached, it
+was already a sorrow of the past, suffered and accepted with the
+resignation which is the close of grief, as of every other passion.
+
+Love had come to her help in the time of her need, but not love alone
+helped her live back to the hour of that supreme experience and beyond
+it. In the absorbing interest of her own renascence, the shock, more
+than the injury which her father had undergone, was ignored, if not
+neglected. Lanfear had not, indeed, neglected it; but he could not help
+ignoring it in his happiness, as he remembered afterwards in the
+self-reproach which he would not let the girl share with him. Nothing,
+he realized, could have availed if everything had been done which he did
+not do; but it remained a pang with him that he had so dimly felt his
+duty to the gentle old man, even while he did it. Gerald lived to
+witness his daughter's perfect recovery of the self so long lost to her;
+he lived, with a joy more explicit than their own, to see her the wife
+of the man to whom she was dearer than love alone could have made her.
+He lived beyond that time, rejoicing, if it may be so said, in the fond
+memories of her mother which he had been so long forbidden by her
+affliction to recall. Then, after the spring of the Riviera had whitened
+into summer, and San Remo hid, as well as it could, its sunny glare
+behind its pines and palms, Gerald suffered one long afternoon through
+the heat till the breathless evening, and went early to bed. He had been
+full of plans for spending the rest of the summer at the little place in
+New England where his daughter knew that her mother lay. In the morning
+he did not wake.
+
+"He gave his life that I might have mine!" she lamented in the first
+wild grief.
+
+"No, don't say that, Nannie," her husband protested, calling her by the
+pet name which her father always used. "He is dead; but if we owe each
+other to his loss, it is because he was given, not because he gave
+himself."
+
+"Oh, I know, I know!" she wailed. "But he would gladly have given
+himself for me."
+
+That, perhaps, Lanfear could not have denied, and he had no wish to do
+so. He had a prescience of happiness for her which the future did not
+belie; and he divined that a woman must not be forbidden the extremes
+within which she means to rest her soul.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE EIDOLONS OF BROOKS ALFORD
+
+
+I should like to give the story of Alford's experiences just as Wanhope
+told it, sitting with us before the glowing hearth in the Turkish room,
+one night after the other diners at our club had gone away to digest
+their dinners at the theatre, or in their bachelor apartments up-town,
+or on the late trains which they were taking north, south, and west; or
+had hurried back to their offices to spend the time stolen from rest in
+overwork for which their famished nerves would duly revenge themselves.
+It was undoubtedly overwork which preceded Alford's experiences if it
+did not cause them, for he was pretty well broken from it when he took
+himself off in the early summer, to put the pieces together as best he
+could by the seaside. But this was a fact which Wanhope was not obliged
+to note to us, and there were certain other commonplaces of our
+knowledge of Alford which he could omit without omitting anything
+essential to our understanding of the facts which he dealt with so
+delicately, so electly, almost affectionately, coaxing each point into
+the fittest light, and then lifting his phrase from it, and letting it
+stand alone in our consciousness. I remember particularly how he touched
+upon the love-affair which was supposed to have so much to do with
+Alford's break-up, and how he dismissed it to its proper place in the
+story. As he talked on, with scarcely an interruption either from the
+eager credulity of Rulledge or the doubt of Minver, I heard with a
+sensuous comfort--I can use no other word--the far-off click of the
+dishes in the club kitchen, putting away till next day, with the musical
+murmur of a smitten glass or the jingle of a dropped spoon. But if I
+should try to render his words, I should spoil their impression in the
+vain attempt, and I feel that it is best to give the story as best I can
+in words of my own, so far from responsive to the requisitions of the
+occult incident.
+
+The first intimation Alford had of the strange effect, which from first
+to last was rather an obsession than a possession of his, was after a
+morning of idle satisfaction spent in watching the target practice from
+the fort in the neighborhood of the little fishing-village where he was
+spending the summer. The target was two or three miles out in the open
+water beyond the harbor, and he found his pleasure in watching the smoke
+of the gun for that discrete interval before the report reached him, and
+then for that somewhat longer interval before he saw the magnificent
+splash of the shot which, as it plunged into the sea, sent a fan-shaped
+fountain thirty or forty feet into the air. He did not know and he did
+not care whether the target was ever hit or not. That fact was no part
+of his concern. His affair was to watch the burst of smoke from the fort
+and then to watch the upward gush of water, almost as light and vaporous
+to the eye, where the ball struck. He did not miss one of the shots
+fired during the forenoon, and when he met the other people who sat down
+with him at the midday dinner in the hotel, his talk with them was
+naturally of the morning's practice. They one and all declared it a
+great nuisance, and said that it had shattered their nerves terribly,
+which was not perhaps so strange, since they were all women. But when
+they asked him in his quality of nervous wreck whether he had not
+suffered from the prolonged and repeated explosions, too, he found
+himself able to say no, that he had enjoyed every moment of the firing.
+He added that he did not believe he had even noticed the noise after the
+first shot, he was so wholly taken with the beauty of the fountain-burst
+from the sea which followed; and as he spoke the fan-like spray rose and
+expanded itself before his eyes, quite blotting out the visage of a
+young widow across the table. In his swift recognition of the fact and
+his reflection upon it, he realized that the effect was quite as if he
+had been looking at some intense light, almost as if he had been looking
+at the sun, and that the illusion which had blotted out the agreeable
+reality opposite was of the quality of those flying shapes which repeat
+themselves here, there, and everywhere that one looks, after lifting the
+gaze from a dazzling object. When his consciousness had duly registered
+this perception, there instantly followed a recognition of the fact that
+the eidolon now filling his vision was not the effect of the dazzled
+eyes, but of a mental process, of thinking how the thing which it
+reported had looked.
+
+By the time Alford had co-ordinated this reflection with the other, the
+eidolon had faded from the lady's face, which again presented itself in
+uninterrupted loveliness with the added attraction of a distinct pout.
+
+"Well, Mr. Alford!" she bantered him.
+
+"Oh, I beg your pardon! I was thinking--"
+
+"Not of what I was saying," she broke in, laughingly, forgivingly.
+
+"No, I certainly wasn't," he assented, with such a sense of approaching
+creepiness in his experience that when she challenged him to say what
+he _was_ thinking of, he could not, or would not; she professed to
+believe that he would not.
+
+In the joking that followed he soon lost the sense of approaching
+creepiness, and began to be proud of what had happened to him as out of
+the ordinary, as a species of psychological ecstasy almost of spiritual
+value. From time to time he tried, by thinking of the splash and upward
+gush from the cannon-shot's plunge in the sea, to recall the vision, but
+it would not come again, and at the end of an afternoon somewhat
+distraughtly spent he decided to put the matter away, as one of the odd
+things of no significance which happen in life and must be dealt with as
+mysteries none the less trifling because they are inexplicable.
+
+"Well, you've got over it?" the widow joked him as he drew up towards
+her, smiling from her rocker on the veranda after supper. At first, all
+the women in the hotel had petted him; but with their own cares and
+ailments to reclaim them they let the invalid fall to the peculiar
+charge of the childless widow who had nothing else to do, and was so
+well and strong that she could look after the invalid Professor of
+Archaeology (at the Champlain University) without the fatigues they must
+feel.
+
+"Yes, I've got over it," he said.
+
+"And what was it?" she boldly pursued.
+
+He was about to say, and then he could not.
+
+"You won't tell?"
+
+"Not yet," he answered. He added, after a moment, "I don't believe I
+can."
+
+"Because it's confidential?"
+
+"No; not exactly that. Because it's impossible."
+
+"Oh, that's simple enough. I understand exactly what you mean. Well, if
+ever it becomes less difficult, remember that I should always like to
+know. It seemed a little--personal."
+
+"How in the world?"
+
+"Well, when one is stared at in that way--"
+
+"Did I stare?"
+
+"Don't you _always_ stare? But in this case you stared as if there was
+something wrong with my hair."
+
+"There wasn't," Alford protested, simple-heartedly. Then he recollected
+his sophistication to say: "Unless its being of that particular shade
+between brown and red was wrong."
+
+"Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford! After that I _must_ believe you."
+
+They talked on the veranda till the night fell, and then they came in
+among the lamps, in the parlor, and she sat down with a certain
+provisionality, putting herself sideways on a light chair by a window,
+and as she chatted and laughed with one cheek towards him she now and
+then beat the back of her chair with her open hand. The other people
+were reading or severely playing cards, and they, too, kept their tones
+down to a respectful level, while she lingered, and when she rose and
+said good-night he went out and took some turns on the veranda before
+going up to bed. She was certainly, he realized, a very pretty woman,
+and very graceful and very amusing, and though she probably knew all
+about it, she was the franker and honester for her knowledge.
+
+He had arrived at this conclusion just as he turned the switch of the
+electric light inside his door, and in the first flash of the carbon
+film he saw her sitting beside the window in such a chair as she had
+taken and in the very pose which she had kept in the parlor. Her
+half-averted face was lit as from laughing, and she had her hand lifted
+as if to beat the back of her chair.
+
+"Good Heavens, Mrs. Yarrow!" he said, in a sort of whispered shout,
+while he mechanically closed the door behind him as if to keep the fact
+to himself. "What in the world are you doing here?"
+
+Then she was not there. Nothing was there; not even a chair beside the
+window.
+
+Alford dropped weakly into the only chair in the room, which stood next
+the door by the head of his bed, and abandoned himself a helpless prey
+to the logic of the events.
+
+It was at this point, which I have been able to give in Wanhope's exact
+words, that, in the ensuing pause, Rulledge asked, as if he thought some
+detail might be denied him: "And what was the logic of the events?"
+
+Minver gave a fleering laugh. "Don't be premature, Rulledge. If you have
+the logic now, you will spoil everything. You can't have the moral until
+you've had the whole story. Go on, Wanhope. You're so much more
+interesting than usual that I won't ask how you got hold of all these
+compromising minutiae."
+
+"Of course," Wanhope returned, "they're not for the general ear. I go
+rather further, for the sake of the curious fact, than I should be
+warranted in doing if I did not know my audience so well."
+
+We joined in a murmur of gratification, and he went on to say that
+Alford's first coherent thought was that he was dreaming one of those
+unwarranted dreams in which we make our acquaintance privy to all sorts
+of strange incidents. Then he knew that he was not dreaming, and that
+his eye had merely externated a mental vision, as in the case of the
+cannon-shot splash of which he had seen the phantom as soon as it was
+mentioned. He remembered afterwards asking himself in a sort of terror
+how far it was going to go with him; how far his thought was going to
+report itself objectively hereafter, and what were the reasonable
+implications of his abnormal experiences. He did not know just how long
+he sat by his bedside trying to think, only to have his conclusions whir
+away like a flock of startled birds when he approached them. He went to
+bed because he was exhausted rather than because he was sleepy, but he
+could not recall a moment of wakefulness after his head touched the
+pillow.
+
+He woke surprisingly refreshed, but at the belated breakfast where he
+found Mrs. Yarrow still lingering he thought her looking not well. She
+confessed, listlessly, that she had not rested well. She was not sure,
+she said, whether the sea air agreed with her; she might try the
+mountains a little later. She was not inclined to talk, and that day he
+scarcely spoke with her except in commonplaces at the table. They had no
+return to the little mystery they had mocked together the day before.
+
+More days passed, and Alford had no recurrence of his visions. His
+acquaintance with Mrs. Yarrow made no further advance; there was no one
+else in the hotel who interested him, and he bored himself. At the same
+time his recovery seemed retarded; he lost tone, and after a fortnight
+he ran up to talk himself over with his doctor in Boston. He rather
+thought he would mention his eidolons, and ask if they were at all
+related to the condition of his nerves. It was a keen disappointment,
+but it ought not to have been a surprise, for him to find that his
+doctor was off on his summer vacation. The caretaker who opened the door
+to Alford named a young physician in the same block of Marlborough
+Street who had his doctor's practice for the summer, but Alford had not
+the heart to go to this alternate.
+
+He started down to his hotel on a late afternoon train that would bring
+him to the station after dusk, and before he reached it the lamps had
+been lighted in his car. Alford sat in a sparsely peopled smoker, where
+he had found a place away from the crowd in the other coaches, and
+looked out of the window into the reflected interior of his car, which
+now and then thinned away and let him see the weeds and gravel of the
+railroad banks, with the bushes that topped them and the woods that
+backed them. The train at one point stopped rather suddenly and then
+went on, for no reason that he ever cared to inquire; but as it slowly
+moved forward again he was reminded of something he had seen one night
+in going to New York just before the train drew into Springfield. It had
+then made such another apparently reasonless stop; but before it resumed
+its course Alford saw from his window a group of trainmen, and his own
+Pullman conductor with his lantern on his arm, bending over the figure
+of a man defined in his dark clothing against the snow of the bank where
+he lay propped. His face was waxen white, and Alford noted how
+particularly black the mustache looked traversing the pallid visage. He
+never knew whether the man was killed or merely stunned; you learn
+nothing with certainty of such things on trains; but now, as he thought
+of the incident, its eidolon showed itself outside of his mind, and
+followed him in every detail, even to a snowy stretch of the embankment,
+until the increasing speed of the train seemed to sweep it back out of
+sight.
+
+Alford turned his eyes to the interior of the smoker, which, except for
+two or three dozing commuters and a noisy euchre-party, had been empty
+of everything but the fumes and stale odors of tobacco, and found it
+swarming with visions, the eidolons of everything he remembered from his
+past life. Whatever had once strongly impressed itself upon his nerves
+was reported there again as instantly as he thought of it. It was
+largely a whirling chaos, a kaleidoscopic jumble of facts; but from time
+to time some more memorable and important experience visualized itself
+alone. Such was the death-bed of the little sister whom he had been
+wakened, a child, to see going to heaven, as they told him. Such was the
+pathetic, foolish face of the girl whom long ago he had made believe he
+cared for, and then had abruptly broken with: he saw again, with
+heartache, her silly, tender amaze when he said he was going away. Such
+was the look of mute astonishment, of gentle reproach, in the eyes of
+the friend, now long dead, whom in a moment of insensate fury he had
+struck on the mouth, and who put his hand to his bleeding lips as he
+bent that gaze of wonder and bewilderment upon him. But it was not alone
+the dreadful impressions that reported themselves. There were others, as
+vivid, which came back in the original joyousness: the face of his
+mother looking up at him from the crowd on a day of college triumph when
+he was delivering the valedictory of his class; the collective gayety of
+the whole table on a particularly delightful evening at his dining-club;
+his own image in the glass as he caught sight of it on coming home
+accepted by the woman who afterwards jilted him; the transport which
+lighted up his father's visage when he stepped ashore from the vessel
+which had been rumored lost, and he could be verified by the senses as
+still alive; the comical, bashful ecstasy of the good fellow, his
+ancient chum, in telling him he had had a son born the night before, and
+the mother was doing well, and how he laughed and danced, and skipped
+into the air.
+
+The smoker was full of these eidolons and of others which came and went
+with constant vicissitude. But what was of a greater weirdness than
+seeing them within it was seeing them without in that reflection of the
+interior which travelled with it through the summer night, and repeated
+it, now dimly, now brilliantly, in every detail. Alford sat in a daze,
+with a smile which he was aware of, fixed and stiff as if in plaster, on
+his face, and with his gaze bent on this or that eidolon, and then on
+all of them together. He was not so much afraid of them as of being
+noticed by the other passengers in the smoker, to whom he knew he might
+look very queer. He said to himself that he was making the whole thing,
+but the very subjectivity was what filled him with a deep and hopeless
+dread. At last the train ceased its long leaping through the dark, and
+with its coming to a stand the whole illusion vanished. He heard a gay
+voice which he knew bidding some one good-bye who was getting into the
+car just back of the smoker, and as he descended to the platform he
+almost walked into the arms of Mrs. Yarrow.
+
+"Why, Mr. Alford! We had given you up. We thought you wouldn't come back
+till to-morrow--or perhaps ever. What in the world will you do for
+supper? The kitchen fires were out ages ago!"
+
+In the light of the station electrics she beamed upon him, and he felt
+glad at heart, as if he had been saved from something, a mortal danger
+or a threatened shame. But he could not speak at once; his teeth closed
+with tetanic force upon each other. Later, as they walked to the hotel,
+through the warm, soft night in which the south wind was roaming the
+starless heavens for rain, he found his voice, and although he felt that
+he was speaking unnaturally, he made out to answer the lively questions
+with which she pelted him too thickly to expect them to be answered
+severally. She told him all the news of the day, and when she began on
+yesterday's news she checked herself with a laugh and said she had
+forgotten that he had only been gone since morning. "But now," she said,
+"you see how you've been missed--how _any_ man must be missed in a hotel
+full of women."
+
+She took charge of him when they got to the house, and said if he would
+go boldly into the dining-room, where they detected, as they approached,
+one lamp scantly shining from the else darkened windows, she would beard
+the lioness in her den, by which she meant the cook in the kitchen, and
+see what she could get him for supper. Apparently she could get nothing
+warm, for when a reluctant waitress appeared it was with such a chilly
+refection on her tray that Alford, though he was not very hungry,
+returned from interrogating the obscurity for eidolons, and shivered at
+it. At the same time the swing-door of the long, dim room opened to
+admit a gush of the outer radiance on which Mrs. Yarrow drifted in with
+a chafing-dish in one hand and a tea-basket in the other. She floated
+tiltingly towards him like, he thought, a pretty little ship, and sent a
+cheery hail before.
+
+"I've been trying to get somebody to join you at a premature
+Welsh-rarebit and a belated cup of tea, but I can't tear one of the
+tabbies from their cards or the kittens from their gambols in the
+amusement-hall in the basement. Do you mind so very much having it
+alone? Because you'll have to, whether you do or not. Unless you call me
+company, when I'm merely cook."
+
+She put her utensils on the table beside the forbidding tray the
+waitress had left, and helped lift herself by pressing one hand on the
+top of a chair towards the electric, which she flashed up to keep the
+dismal lamp in countenance. Alford let her do it. He durst not, he
+felt, stir from his place, lest any movement should summon back the
+eidolons; and now in the sudden glare of light he shyly, slyly searched
+the room for them. Not one, fair or foul, showed itself, and slowly he
+felt a great weight lifting from his heart. In its place there sprang up
+a joyous gratitude towards Mrs. Yarrow, who had saved him from them,
+from himself. An inexpressible tenderness filled his breast; the tears
+rose to his eyes; a soft glow enveloped his whole being, a warmth of
+hope, a freshness of life renewed, encompassed him. He wished to take
+her in his arms, to tell her how he loved her; and as she bustled about,
+lighting the lamp of her chafing-dish, and kindling the little
+spirit-stove she had brought with her to make tea, he let his gaze dwell
+upon every pose, every motion of her with a glad hunger in which no
+smallest detail was lost. He now believed that without her he must die,
+without her he could not wish to live.
+
+"Jove," Rulledge broke in at this point of Wanhope's story, which I am
+telling again so badly, "I think Alford was in luck."
+
+Minver gave a harsh cackle. "The only thing Rulledge finds fault with in
+this club is 'the lack of woman's nursing and the lack of woman's
+tears.' Nothing is wanting to his enjoyment of his victuals but the fact
+that they are not served by a neat-handed Phyllis, like Alford's."
+
+Rulledge glanced towards Wanhope, and innocently inquired, "Was that her
+first name?"
+
+Minver burst into a scream, and Rulledge looked red and silly for having
+given himself away; but he made an excursion to the buffet outside, and
+returned with a sandwich with which he supported himself stolidly under
+Minver's derision, until Wanhope came to his relief by resuming his
+story, or rather his study, of Alford's strange experience.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow first gave Alford his tea, as being of a prompter brew than
+the rarebit, but she was very quick and apt with that, too; and pretty
+soon she leaned forward, and in the glow from the lamp under the
+chafing-dish, which spiritualized her charming face with its thin
+radiance, puffed the flame out with her pouted lips, and drew back with
+a long-sighed "There! That will make you see your grandmother, if
+anything will."
+
+"My grandmother?" Alford repeated.
+
+"Yes. Wouldn't you like to?" Mrs.. Yarrow asked, pouring the thick
+composition over the toast (rescued stone-cold from the frigid tray) on
+Alford's plate. "I'm sure I should like to see mine--dear old gran! Not
+that I ever saw her--either of her--or should know how she looked. Did
+you ever see yours--either of her?" she pursued, impulsively.
+
+"Oh yes," Alford answered, looking intently at her, but with so little
+speculation in the eyes he glared so with that he knew her to be uneasy
+under them.
+
+She laughed a little, and stayed her hand on the bail of the teapot.
+"Which of her?"
+
+"Oh, both!"
+
+"And--and--did she look so much like _me_?" she said, with an added
+laugh, that he perceived had an hysterical note in it. "You're letting
+your rarebit get cold!"
+
+He laughed himself, now, a great laugh of relaxation, of relief. "Not
+the least in the world! She was not exactly a phantom of delight."
+
+"Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford. Now, it's your tea's getting cold."
+
+They laughed together, and he gave himself to his victual with a relish
+that she visibly enjoyed. When that question of his grandmother had been
+pushed he thought of an awful experience of his childhood, which left on
+his infant mind an indelible impression, a scar, to remain from the
+original wound forever. He had been caught in a lie, the first he could
+remember, but by no means the last, by many immemorable thousands. His
+poor little wickedness had impugned the veracity of both these terrible
+old ladies, who, habitually at odds with each other, now united, for
+once, against him. He could always see himself, a mean little
+blubbering-faced rascal, stealing guilty looks of imploring at their
+faces, set unmercifully against him, one in sorrow and one in anger,
+requiring his mother to whip him, and insisting till he was led, loudly
+roaring, into the parlor, and there made a liar of for all time, so far
+as fear could do it.
+
+When Mrs. Yarrow asked if he had ever seen his grandmother he expected
+instantly to see her, in duplicate, and as a sole refuge, but with
+little hope that it would save him, he kept his eyes fast on hers, and
+to his unspeakable joy it did avail. No other face, of sorrow or of
+anger, rose between them. For the time his thought was quit of its
+consequence; no eidolon outwardly repeated his inward vision. A warm
+gush of gratitude seemed to burst from his heart, and to bathe his whole
+being, and then to flow in a tide of ineffable tenderness towards Mrs.
+Yarrow, and involve her and bear them together heavenward. It was not
+passion, it was not love, he perceived well enough; it was the utterance
+of a vital conviction that she had saved him from an overwhelming
+subjective horror, and that in her sweet objectivity there was a
+security and peace to be found nowhere else.
+
+He greedily ate every atom of his rarebit, he absorbed every drop of
+the moisture in the teapot, so that when she shook it and shook it, and
+then tried to pour something from it, there was no slightest dribble at
+the spout. But they lingered, talking and laughing, and perhaps they
+might never have left the place if the hard handmaiden who had brought
+the tea-tray had not first tried putting her head in at the swing-door
+from the kitchen, and then, later, come boldly in and taken the tray
+away.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow waited self-respectfully for her disappearance, and then she
+said, "I'm afraid that was a hint, Mr. Alford."
+
+"It seemed like one," he owned.
+
+They went out together, gayly chatting, but she would not encourage the
+movement he made towards the veranda. She remained firmly attached to
+the newel-post of the stairs, and at the first chance he gave her she
+said good-night and bounded lightly upward. At the turn of the stairs
+she stopped and looked laughing down at him over the rail. "I hope you
+won't see your grandmother."
+
+"Oh, not a bit of it," he called back. He felt that he failed to give
+his reply the quality of epigram, but he was not unhappy in his failure.
+
+Many light-hearted days followed this joyous evening. No eidolons
+haunted Alford's horizon, perhaps because Mrs. Yarrow filled his whole
+heaven. She was very constantly with him, guiding his wavering steps up
+the hill of recovery, which he climbed with more and more activity, and
+keeping him company in those valleys of relapse into which he now and
+then fell back from the difficult steeps. It came to be tacitly, or at
+least passively, conceded by the other ladies that she had somehow
+earned the exclusive right to what had once been the common charge; or
+that if one of their number had a claim to keep Mr. Alford from killing
+himself by all sorts of imprudences, which in his case amounted to
+impieties, it was certainly Mrs. Yarrow. They did not put this in terms,
+but they felt it and acted it.
+
+She was all the safer guardian for a delicate invalid because she
+loathed manly sports so entirely that she did not even pretend to like
+them, as most women, poor things, think themselves obliged to do. In her
+hands there was no danger that he would be tempted to excesses in golf.
+She was really afraid of all boats, but she was willing to go out with
+him in the sail-boat of a superannuated skipper, because to sit talking
+in the stern and stoop for the vagaries of the boom in tacking was such
+good exercise. She would join him in fishing from the rotting pier, but
+with no certainty which was a cunner and which was a sculpin, when she
+caught it, and with an equal horror of both the nasty, wriggling things.
+When they went a walk together, her notion of a healthful tramp was to
+find a nice place among the sweet-fern or the pine-needles, and sit down
+in it and talk, or make a lap, to which he could bring the berries he
+gathered for her to arrange in the shallow leaf-trays she pinned
+together with twigs. She really preferred a rocking-chair on the veranda
+to anything else; but if he wished to go to those other excesses, she
+would go with him, to keep him out of mischief.
+
+There could be only one credible reading of the situation, but Alford
+let the summer pass in this pleasant dreaming without waking up till too
+late to the pleasanter reality. It will seem strange enough, but it is
+true, that it was no part of his dream to fancy that Mrs. Yarrow was in
+love with him. He knew very well, long before the end, that he was in
+love with her; but, remaining in the dark otherwise, he considered only
+himself in forbearing verbally to make love to her.
+
+"Well!" Rulledge snarled at this point, "he _was_ a chump."
+
+Wanhope at the moment opposed nothing directly to the censure, but said
+that something pathetically reproachful in Mrs. Yarrow's smiling looks
+penetrated to Alford as she nodded gayly from the car window to him in
+the little group which had assembled to see her off at the station when
+she left, by no means the first of their happy hotel circle to go.
+
+"Somebody," Rulledge burst out again, "ought to have kicked him."
+
+"What's become," Minver asked, "of all the dear maids and widows that
+you've failed to marry at the end of each summer, Rulledge?"
+
+The satire involved flattery so sweet that Rulledge could not perhaps
+wish to make any retort. He frowned sternly, and said, with a face
+averted from Minver: "Go on, Wanhope!"
+
+Wanhope here permitted himself a philosophical excursion in which I will
+not accompany him. It was apparently to prepare us for the dramatic fact
+which followed, and which I suppose he was trying rather to work away
+from than work up to. It included some facts which he had failed to
+touch on before, and which led to a discussion very interesting in
+itself, but of a range too great for the limits I am trying to keep
+here. It seems that Alford had been stayed from declaring his love not
+only because he doubted of its nature, but also because he questioned
+whether a man in his broken health had any right to offer himself to a
+woman, and because from a yet finer scruple he hesitated in his poverty
+to ask the hand of a rich woman. On the first point, we were pretty well
+agreed, but on the second we divided again, especially Rulledge and
+Minver, who held, the one, that his hesitation did Alford honor, and
+quite relieved him from the imputation of being a chump; and the other
+that he was an ass to keep quiet for any such silly reason. Minver
+contended that every woman had a right, whether rich or poor, to the man
+who loved her; and, moreover, there were now so many rich women that, if
+they were not allowed to marry poor men, their chances of marriage were
+indefinitely reduced. What better could a widow do with the money she
+had inherited from a husband she probably did not love than give it to a
+man like Alford--or to an ass like Alford, Minver corrected himself.
+
+His _reductio ad absurdum_ allowed Wanhope to resume with a laugh, and
+say that Alford waited at the station in the singleness to which the
+tactful dispersion of the others had left him, and watched the train
+rapidly dwindle in the perspective, till an abrupt turn of the road
+carried it out of sight. Then he lifted his eyes with a long sigh, and
+looked round. Everywhere he saw Mrs. Yarrow's smiling face with that
+inner pathos. It swarmed upon him from all points; and wherever he
+turned it repeated itself in the distances like that succession of faces
+you see when you stand between two mirrors.
+
+It was not merely a lapse from his lately hopeful state with Alford, it
+was a collapse. The man withered and dwindled away, till he felt that he
+must audibly rattle in his clothes as he walked by people. He did not
+walk much. Mostly he remained shrunken in the arm-chair where he used to
+sit beside Mrs. Yarrow's rocker, and the ladies, the older and the
+older-fashioned, who were "sticking it out" at the hotel till it should
+close on the 15th of September, observed him, some compassionately,
+some censoriously, but all in the same conviction.
+
+"It's plain to be seen what ails Mr. Alford, _now_."
+
+"Well, I guess it _is_."
+
+"_I_ guess so."
+
+"I _guess_ it is."
+
+"Seems kind of heartless, her going and leaving him so."
+
+"Like a sick kitten!"
+
+"Well, I should say as _much_."
+
+"Your eyes bother you, Mr. Alford?" one of them chanted, breaking from
+their discussion of him to appeal directly to him. He was rubbing his
+eyes, to relieve himself for the moment from the intolerable affliction
+of those swarming eidolons, which, whenever he thought of this thing or
+that, thickened about him. They now no longer displaced one another, but
+those which came first remained fadedly beside or behind the fresher
+appearances, like the earlier rainbow which loses depth and color when a
+later arch defines itself.
+
+"Yes," he said, glad of the subterfuge. "They annoy me a good deal of
+late."
+
+"You want to get fitted for a good pair of glasses. I kept letting it
+go, when I first began to get old-sighted."
+
+Another lady came to Alford's rescue. "I guess Mr. Alford has no need to
+get fitted for old sight yet a while. You got little spidery
+things--specks and dots--in your eyes?"
+
+"Yes--multitudes," he said, hopelessly.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you what: you want to build up. That was the way with
+me, and the oculist said it was from getting all run down. I built up,
+and the first thing I knew my sight was as clear as a bell. You want to
+build up."
+
+"You want to go to the mountains," a third interposed. "That's where
+Mrs. Yarrow's gone, and I guess it'll do her more good than sticking it
+out here would ever have done."
+
+Alford would have been glad enough to go to the mountains, but with
+those illusions hovering closer and closer about him, he had no longer
+the courage, the strength. He had barely enough of either to get away to
+Boston. He found his doctor this time, after winning and losing the
+wager he made himself that he would not have returned to town yet, and
+the good-fortune was almost too much for his shaken nerves. The cordial
+of his friend's greeting--they had been chums at Harvard--completed his
+overthrow. As he sank upon the professional sofa, where so many other
+cases had been diagnosticated, he broke into tears. "Hello, old fellow!"
+the doctor said, encouragingly, and more tenderly than he would have
+dealt with some women. "What's up?"
+
+"Jim," Alford found voice to say, "I'm afraid I'm losing my mind."
+
+The doctor smiled provisionally. "Well, that's _one_ of the signs you're
+not. Can you say how?"
+
+"Oh yes. In a minute," Alford sobbed, and when he had got the better of
+himself he told his friend the whole story. In the direct examination he
+suppressed Mrs. Yarrow's part, but when the doctor, who had listened
+with smiling seriousness, began to cross-examine him with the question,
+"And you don't remember that any outside influence affected the
+recurrence of the illusions, or did anything to prevent it?" Alford
+answered promptly: "Oh yes. There was a woman who did."
+
+"A woman? What sort of a woman?"
+
+Alford told.
+
+"That is very curious," the doctor said. "I know a man who used to have
+a distressing dream. He broke it up by telling his wife about it every
+morning after he had dreamt it."
+
+"Unluckily, she isn't my wife," Alford said, gloomily.
+
+"But when she was with you, you got rid of the illusions?"
+
+"At first, I used to see hers; then I stopped seeing any."
+
+"Did you ever tell her of them?"
+
+"No; I didn't."
+
+"Never tell anybody?"
+
+"No one but you."
+
+"And do you see them now?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you think, because you've told me of them?"
+
+"It seems so."
+
+The doctor was silent for a marked space. Then he asked, smiling: "Well,
+why not?"
+
+"Why not what?"
+
+"Tell your wife."
+
+"How, my wife?"
+
+"By marriage."
+
+Alford looked dazed. "Do you mean Mrs. Yarrow?"
+
+"If that's her name, and she's a widow."
+
+"And do you think it would be the fair thing for a man on the verge of
+insanity--a physical and mental wreck--to ask a woman to marry him?"
+
+"In your case, yes. In the first place, you're not so bad as all that.
+You need nothing but rest for your body and change for your mind. I
+believe you'll get rid of your illusions as soon as you form the habit
+of speaking of them promptly when they begin to trouble you. You ought
+to speak of them to some one. You can't always have me around, and Mrs.
+Yarrow would be the next best thing."
+
+"She's rich, and you know what I am. I'll have to borrow the money to
+rest on, I'm so poor."
+
+"Not if you marry it."
+
+Alford rose, somewhat more vigorously than he had sat down. But that day
+he did not go beyond ascertaining that Mrs. Yarrow was in town. He found
+out the fact from the maid at her door, who said that she was nearly
+always at home after dinner, and, without waiting for the evening of
+another day, Alford went to call upon her.
+
+She said, coming down to him in a rather old-fashioned, impersonal
+drawing-room which looked distinctly as if it had been left to her: "I
+was so glad to get your card. When did you leave Woodbeach?"
+
+"Mrs. Yarrow," he returned, as if that were the answer, "I think I owe
+you an explanation."
+
+"Pay it!" she bantered, putting out her hand.
+
+"I'm so poverty-stricken that I don't know whether I can. Did you ever
+notice anything odd about me?"
+
+His directness seemed to have a right to directness from her. "I noticed
+that you stared a good deal--or used to. But people _do_ stare."
+
+"I stared because I saw things."
+
+"Saw things?"
+
+"I saw whatever I thought of. Whatever came into my mind was externated
+in a vision."
+
+She smiled, he could not make out whether uneasily or not. "It sounds
+rather creepy, doesn't it? But it's very interesting."
+
+"That's what the doctor said; I've been to see him this morning. May I
+tell you about my visions? They're not so creepy as they sound, I
+believe, and I don't think they'll keep you awake."
+
+"Yes, do," she said. "I should like of all things to hear about them.
+Perhaps I've been one of them."
+
+"You have."
+
+"Oh! Isn't that rather personal?"
+
+"I hope not offensively."
+
+He went on to tell her, with even greater fulness than he had told the
+doctor. She listened with the interest women take in anything weird, and
+with a compassion for him which she did not conceal so perfectly but
+that he saw it. At the end he said: "You may wonder that I come to you
+with all this, which must sound like the ravings of a madman."
+
+"No--no," she hesitated.
+
+"I came because I wished you to know everything about me
+before--before--I wouldn't have come, you'll believe me, if I hadn't had
+the doctor's assurance that my trouble was merely a part of my being
+physically out of kilter, and had nothing to do with my sanity--Good
+Heavens! What am I saying? But the thought has tormented me so! And in
+the midst of it I've allowed myself to--Mrs. Yarrow, I love you. Don't
+you know that?"
+
+Alford may have had a divided mind in this declaration, but after that
+one word Mrs. Yarrow had no mind for anything else. He went on.
+
+"I'm not only sick--so sick that I sha'n't be able to do any work for a
+year at least--but I'm poor, so poor that I can't afford to be sick."
+
+She lifted her eyes and looked at him, where she sat oddly aloof from
+those possessions of hers, to which she seemed so little related, and
+said, with a smile quivering at the corners of her pretty mouth, "I
+don't see what that has to do with it."
+
+"What do you mean?" He stared at her hard.
+
+"Am I in duplicate or triplicate, this time?"
+
+"No, you're only one, and there's none like you! I could never see any
+one else while I looked at you!" he cried, only half aware of his
+poetry, and meaning what he said very literally.
+
+But she took only the poetry. "I shouldn't wish you to," she said, and
+she laughed.
+
+He could not believe yet in his good-fortune. His countenance fell. "I'm
+afraid I don't understand, or that you don't. It doesn't seem as if I
+could get to the end of my unworthiness, which isn't voluntary. It seems
+altogether too base. I can't let you say what you do, if you mean it,
+till you know that I come to you in despair as well as in love. You
+saved me from the fear I was in, again and again, and I believe that
+without you I shall--Ah, it seems very base! But the doctor--If I could
+always tell some one--if I could tell _you_ when these things were
+obsessing me--haunting me--they would cease--"
+
+Mrs. Yarrow rose, with rather a piteous smile. "Then, I am a
+prescription!" She hoped, woman-like, that she was solely a passion; but
+is any woman worth having, ever solely a passion?
+
+"Don't!" Alford implored, rising too. "Don't, in mercy, take it that
+way! It's only that I wish you to know everything that's in me; to know
+how utterly helpless and worthless I am. You needn't have a pang in
+throwing such a thing away."
+
+She put out her hand to him, but at arm's-length. "I sha'n't throw you
+away--at least, not to-night. I want to think." It was a way of saying
+she wished him to go, and he had no desire to stay. He asked if he might
+come again, and she said, "Oh yes."
+
+"To-morrow?"
+
+"Not to-morrow, perhaps. When I send. Was it _young_ Doctor Enderby?"
+
+They had rather a sad, dry parting; and when her door closed upon him he
+felt that it had shut him out forever. His shame and his defeat were so
+great that he did not think of his eidolons, and they did not come to
+trouble him. He woke in the morning, asking himself, bitterly, if he
+were cured already. His humiliation was such that he closed his eyes to
+the light, and wished he might never again open them to it.
+
+The question that Mrs. Yarrow had to ask Dr. Enderby was not the
+question he had instantly forecast for her when she put aside her veil
+in his office and told him who she was. She did not seem anxious to be
+assured of Alford's mental condition, or as to any risks in marrying
+him. Her inquiry was much more psychological; it was almost impersonal,
+and yet Dr. Enderby thought she looked as if she had been crying.
+
+She had a difficulty in formulating her question, and when it came it
+was almost a speculation.
+
+"Women," she said, a little hoarsely, "have no right, I suppose, to
+expect the ideal in life. The best they can do seems to be to make the
+real look like it."
+
+Dr. Enderby reflected. "Well, yes. But I don't know that I ever put it
+to myself in just those terms."
+
+Then she remarked, as if that were the next thing: "You've known Mr.
+Alford a long time."
+
+"We were at school together, and we shared the same rooms in Harvard."
+
+"He is very sincere," she added, as if this were relevant.
+
+"He's a man who likes to have a little worse than the worst known about
+him. One might say he was excessively sincere." Enderby divined that
+Alford had been bungling the matter, and he was willing to help him out
+if he could.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow fixed dimly beautiful eyes upon him. "I don't know," she
+said, "why it wouldn't be ideal--as much ideal as anything--to give
+one's self absolutely to--to--a duty--or not duty, exactly; I don't mean
+that. Especially," she added, showing a light through the mist, "if one
+wanted to do it."
+
+Then he knew she had made up her mind, and though on some accounts he
+would have liked to laugh with her, on other accounts he felt that he
+owed it to her to be serious.
+
+"If women could not fulfil the ideal in that way--if they did not
+constantly do it--there would be no marriages for love."
+
+"Do you think so?" she asked, with a shaking voice. "But men--men are
+ideal, too."
+
+"Not as women are--except now and then some fool like Alford." Now,
+indeed, he laughed, and he began to praise Alford from his heart, so
+delicately, so tenderly, so reverently, that Mrs. Yarrow laughed too
+before he was done, and cried a little, and when she rose to leave she
+could not speak; but clung to his hand, on turning away, and so flung it
+from behind her with a gesture that Enderby thought pretty.
+
+At this point, Wanhope stopped as if that were the end.
+
+"And did she let Alford come to see her again?" Rulledge, at once
+romantic and literal, demanded.
+
+"Oh yes. At any rate, they were married that fall. They are--I believe
+he's pursuing his archaeological studies there--living in Athens."
+
+"Together?" Minver smoothly inquired.
+
+At this expression of cynicism Rulledge gave him a look that would have
+incinerated another. Wanhope went out with Minver, and then, after a
+moment's daze, Rulledge exclaimed: "Jove! I forgot to ask him whether
+it's stopped Alford's illusions!"
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+A MEMORY THAT WORKED OVERTIME
+
+
+Minver's brother took down from the top of the low bookshelf a small
+painting on panel, which he first studied in the obverse, and then
+turned and contemplated on the back with the same dreamy smile. "I don't
+see how that got _here_," he said, absently.
+
+"Well," Minver returned, "you don't expect _me_ to tell you, except on
+the principle that any one would naturally know more about anything of
+yours than you would." He took it from his brother and looked at the
+front of it. "It isn't bad. It's pretty good!" He turned it round. "Why,
+it's one of old Blakey's! How did _you_ come by it?"
+
+"Stole it, probably," Minver's brother said, still thoughtfully. Then
+with an effect of recollecting: "No, come to think of it," he added,
+"Blakey gave it to me." The Minvers played these little comedies
+together, quite as much to satisfy their tenderness for each other as to
+give their friends pleasure. "Think you're the only painter that gets me
+to take his truck as a gift? He gave it to me, let's see, about ten
+years ago, when he was trying to make a die of it, and failed; I thought
+he would succeed. But it's been in my wife's room nearly ever since, and
+what I can't understand is what she's doing with it down here."
+
+"Probably to make trouble for you, somehow," Minver suggested.
+
+"No, I don't think it's _that_, quite," his brother returned, with a
+false air of scrupulosity, which was part of their game with each other.
+He looked some more at the picture, and then he glanced from it at me.
+"There's a very curious story connected with that sketch."
+
+"Oh, well, tell it," Minver said. "Tell it! I suppose I can stand it
+again. Acton's never heard it, I believe. But you needn't make a show of
+sparing him. I _couldn't_ stand that."
+
+"I certainly haven't heard the story," I said, "and if I had I would be
+too polite to own it."
+
+Minver's brother looked towards the open door over his shoulder, and
+Minver interpreted for him: "She's not coming. I'll give you due
+warning."
+
+"It was before we were married, but not much before, and the picture was
+a sort of wedding present for my wife, though Blakey made a show of
+giving it to me. Said he had painted it for me, because he had a
+prophetic soul, and felt in his bones that I was going to want a picture
+of the place where I first met her. You see, it's the little villa her
+mother had taken that winter on the Viale Petrarca, just outside of
+Florence. It _was_ the first place I met her, but not the last."
+
+"Don't be obvious," Minver ordered.
+
+His brother did not mind him. "I thought it was mighty nice of Blakey.
+He was barking away, all the time he was talking, and when he wasn't
+coughing he was so hoarse he could hardly speak above a whisper; but he
+kept talking on, and wishing me happy, and fending off my gratitude,
+while he was finding a piece of manila paper to wrap the sketch in, and
+then hunting for a piece of string to tie it. When he handed it to me at
+last, he gasped out: 'I don't mind her knowing that I partly meant it as
+the place where _she_ first met _you_, too. I'm not ashamed of it as a
+bit of color. Anyway, I sha'n't live to do anything better.'
+
+"'Oh, yes, you will,' I came back in that lying way we think is kind
+with dying people. I suppose it is; anyway, it turned out all right with
+Blakey, as he'll testify if you look him up when you go to Florence. By
+the way, he lives in that villa _now_."
+
+"No?" I said. "How charming!"
+
+Minver's brother went on: "I made up my mind to be awfully careful of
+that picture, and not let it out of my hand till I left it with 'her'
+mother, to be put among the other wedding presents that were
+accumulating at their house in Exeter Street. So I held it on my lap
+going in by train from Lexington, where Blakey lived, and when I got out
+at the old Lowell Depot--North Station, now--and got into the little
+tinkle-tankle horse-car that took me up to where I was to get the Back
+Bay car--Those were the prehistoric times before trolleys, and there
+were odds in horse-cars. We considered the blue-painted Back Bay cars
+very swell. _You_ remember them?" he asked Minver.
+
+"Not when I can help it," Minver answered. "When I broke with Boston,
+and went to New York, I burnt my horse-cars behind me, and never wanted
+to know what they looked like, one from another."
+
+"Well, as I was saying," Minver's brother went on, without regarding his
+impatriotism, "when I got into the horse-car at the depot, I rushed for
+a corner seat, and I put the picture, with its face next the car-end,
+between me and the wall, and kept my hand on it; and when I changed to
+the Back Bay car, I did the same thing. There was a florist's just
+there, and I couldn't resist some Mayflowers in the window; I was in
+that condition, you know, when flowers seemed to be made for her, and I
+had to take her own to her wherever I found them. I put the bunch
+between my knees, and kept one hand on it, while I kept my other hand on
+the picture at my side. I was feeling first-rate, and when General
+Filbert got in after we started, and stood before me hanging by a strap
+and talking down to me, I had the decency to propose giving him my seat,
+as he was about ten years older."
+
+"Sure?" Minver asked.
+
+"Well, say fifteen. I don't pretend to be a chicken, and never did. But
+he wouldn't hear of it. Said I had a bundle, and winked at the bunch of
+Mayflowers. We had such a jolly talk that I let the car carry me a block
+by and had to get out at Gloucester and run back to Exeter. I rang, and,
+when the maid came to the door, there I stood with nothing but the
+Mayflowers in my hand."
+
+"Good _coup de théâtre_," Minver jeered. "Curtain?"
+
+His brother disdained reply, or was too much absorbed in his tale to
+think of any. "When the girl opened the door and I discovered my fix I
+burst out, 'Good Lord!' and I stuck the bunch of flowers at her, and
+turned and ran. I suppose I must have had some notion of overtaking the
+car with my picture in it. But the best I could do was to let the next
+one overtake me several blocks down Marlborough Street, and carry me to
+the little jumping-off station on Westchester Park, as we used to call
+it in those days, at the end of the Back Bay line.
+
+"As I pushed into the railroad office, I bet myself that the picture
+would not be there, and, sure enough, I won."
+
+"You were always a lucky dog," Minver said.
+
+"But the man in charge was very encouraging, and said it was sure to be
+turned in; and he asked me what time the car had passed the corner of
+Gloucester Street. I happened to know, and then he said, Oh yes, that
+conductor was a substitute, and he wouldn't be on again till morning;
+then he would be certain to bring the picture with him. I was not to
+worry, for it would be all right. Nothing left in the Back Bay cars was
+ever lost; the character of the abutters was guarantee for that, and
+they were practically the only passengers. The conductors and the
+drivers were as honest as the passengers, and I could consider myself in
+the hands of friends.
+
+"He was so reassuring that I went away smiling at my fears, and
+promising to be round bright and early, as soon, the official
+suggested--the morrow being Sunday--as soon as the men and horses had
+had their baked beans.
+
+"Still, after dinner, I had a lurking anxiety, which I turned into a
+friendly impulse to go and call on Mrs. Filbert, whom I really owed a
+bread-and-butter visit, and who, I knew, would not mind my coming in the
+evening. The general, she said, had been telling her of our pleasant
+chat in the car, and would be glad to smoke his after-dinner cigar with
+me, and why wouldn't I come into the library?
+
+"We were so very jolly together, all three, that I made light of my
+misadventure about the picture. The general inquired about the flowers
+first. He remembered the flowers perfectly, and hoped they were
+acceptable; he thought he remembered the picture, too, now I mentioned
+it; but he would not have noticed it so much, there by my side, with my
+hand on it. I would be sure to get it. He gave several instances,
+personal to him and his friends, of recoveries of lost articles; it was
+really astonishing how careful the horse-car people were, especially on
+the Back Bay line. I would find my picture all right at the Westchester
+Park station in the morning; never fear.
+
+"I feared so little that I slept well, and even overslept; and I went to
+get my picture quite confidently, and I could hardly believe it had not
+been turned in yet, though the station-master told me so. The substitute
+conductor had not seen it, but more than likely it was at the stables,
+where the cleaners would have found it in the car and turned it in. He
+was as robustly cheerful about it as ever, and offered to send an
+inquiry by the next car; but I said, Why shouldn't I go myself; and he
+said that was a good idea. So I went, and it was well I did, for my
+picture was not there, and I had saved time by going. It was not there,
+but the head man said I need not worry a mite about it; I was certain to
+get it sooner or later; it would be turned in, to a dead certainty. We
+became rather confidential, and I went so far as to explain about
+wanting to make my inquiries very quietly on Blakey's account: he would
+be annoyed if he heard of its loss, and it might react unfavorably on
+his health.
+
+"The head man said that was so; and he would tell me what I wanted to
+do: I wanted to go to the Company's General Offices in Milk Street, and
+tell them about it. That was where everything went as a last resort, and
+he would bet any money that I would see my picture there the first thing
+I got inside the door. I thanked him with the fervor I thought he
+merited, and said I would go at once.
+
+"'Well,' he said, 'you don't want to go to-day, you know. The offices
+are not open Sunday. And to-morrow's a holiday. But you're all right.
+You'll find your picture there, don't you have any doubts about it.'
+
+"That was my next to last Sunday supper with my wife, before she became
+my wife, at her mother's house, and I went to the feast with as little
+gayety as I suppose any young man ever carried to a supper of the kind.
+I was told, afterwards, that my behavior up to a certain point was so
+suggestive either of secret crime or of secret regret, that the only
+question was whether they should have in the police or I should be given
+back my engagement ring and advised to go. Luckily I ceased to bear my
+anguish just in time.
+
+"The fact is, I could not stand it any longer, and as soon as I was
+alone with her I made a clean breast of it; partially clean, that is: I
+suppose a fellow never tells _all_ to a girl, if he truly loves her."
+Minver's brother glanced round at us and gathered the harvest of our
+approving smiles. "I said to her, 'I've been having a wedding present.'
+'Well,' she said, 'you've come as near having no use for a wedding
+present as anybody _I_ know. Was having a wedding present what made you
+so gloomy at supper? Who gave it to you, anyway?' 'Old Blakey.' 'A
+painting?' 'Yes--a sketch.' 'What of?' This was where I qualified. I
+said: 'Oh, just one of those Sorrento things of his.' You see, if I told
+her that it was the villa where we first met, and then said I had left
+it in the horse-car, she would take it as proof positive that I did not
+really care anything about her or I never could have forgotten it."
+
+"You were wise as far as you went," Minver said. "Go on."
+
+"Well, I told her the whole story circumstantially: how I had kept the
+sketch religiously in my lap in the train, and then held it down with my
+hand all the while beside me in the first horse-car, and did the same
+thing in the Back Bay car I changed to; and felt of it the whole time I
+was talking with General Filbert, and then left it there when I got out
+to leave the flowers at her door, when the awful fact came over me like
+a flash. 'Yes,' she said, 'Norah said you poked the flowers at her
+without a word, and she had to guess they were for me.'
+
+"I had got my story pretty glib by this time; I had reeled it off with
+increasing particulars to the Westchester Park station-master, and the
+head man at the stables, and General Filbert, and I was so
+letter-perfect that I had a vision of the whole thing, especially of my
+talking with the general while I kept my hand on the picture--and then
+all was dark.
+
+"At the end she said we must advertise for the picture. I said it would
+kill Blakey if he saw it; and she said: No matter, _let_ it kill him; it
+would show him that we valued his gift, and were moving heaven and earth
+to find it; and, at any rate, it would kill _me_ if I kept myself in
+suspense. I said I should not care for that; but with her sympathy I
+guessed I could live through the night, and I was sure I should find the
+thing at the Milk Street office in the morning.
+
+"'Why,' said she, 'to-morrow it'll be shut!' and then I didn't really
+know what to say, and I agreed to drawing up an advertisement then and
+there, so as not to lose an instant's time after I had been at the Milk
+Street office on Tuesday and found the picture had not been turned in.
+She said I could dictate the advertisement and she would write it down,
+and she asked: 'Which one of his Sorrento things was it? You must
+describe it exactly, you know.' That made me feel awfully, and I said I
+was not going to have my next-to-last Sunday evening with her spoiled by
+writing advertisements; and I got away, somehow, with all sorts of
+comforting reassurances from her. I could see that she was feigning them
+to encourage me.
+
+"The next morning, I simply could not keep away from the Milk Street
+office, and my unreasonable impatience was rewarded by finding it at
+least ajar, if not open. There was the nicest kind of a young fellow
+there, and he said he was not officially present; but what could he do
+for me? Then I told him the whole story, with details I had not thought
+of before; and he was just as enthusiastic about my getting my picture
+as the Westchester Park station-master or the head man of the stables.
+It was morally certain to be turned in, the first thing in the morning;
+but he would take a description of it, and send out inquiries to all the
+conductors and drivers and car-cleaners, and make a special thing of it.
+He entered into the spirit of the affair, and I felt that I had such a
+friend in him that I confided a little more and hinted at the double
+interest I had in the picture. I didn't pretend that it was one of
+Blakey's Sorrento things, but I gave him a full and true description of
+it, with its length, breadth, and thickness, in exact measure."
+
+Here Minver's brother stopped and lost himself in contemplation of the
+sketch, as he held it at arm's-length.
+
+"Well, did you get your picture?" I prompted, after a moment.
+
+"Oh yes," he said, with a quick turn towards me. "This is it. A District
+Messenger brought it round the first thing Tuesday morning. He brought
+it," Minver's brother added, with a certain effectiveness, "from the
+florist's, where I had stopped to get those Mayflowers. I had left it
+there."
+
+"You've told it very well, this time, Joe," Minver said. "But Acton here
+is waiting for the psychology. Poor old Wanhope ought to be here," he
+added to me. He looked about for a match to light his pipe, and his
+brother jerked his head in the direction of the chimney.
+
+"Box on the mantel. Yes," he sighed, "that was really something very
+curious. You see, I had invented the whole history of the case from the
+time I got into the Back Bay car with my flowers. Absolutely nothing had
+happened of all I had remembered till I got out of the car. I did not
+put the picture beside me at the end of the car; I did not keep my hand
+on it while I talked with General Filbert; I did not leave it behind me
+when I left the car. Nothing of the kind happened. I had already left it
+at the florist's, and that whole passage of experience which was so
+vividly and circumstantially stamped in my memory that I related it four
+or five times over, and would have made oath to every detail of it, was
+pure invention, or, rather, it was something less positive: the reflex
+of the first half of my horse-car experience, when I really did put the
+picture in the corner next me, and did keep my hand on it."
+
+"Very strange," I was beginning, but just then the door opened and Mrs.
+Minver came in, and I was presented.
+
+She gave me a distracted hand, as she said to her husband: "Have you
+been telling the story about that picture again?" He was still holding
+it. "Silly!"
+
+She was a mighty pretty woman, but full of vim and fun and sense.
+
+"It's one of the most curious freaks of memory I ever heard of, Mrs.
+Minver," I said.
+
+Then she showed that she was proud of it, though she had called him
+silly. "Have you told," she demanded of her husband, "how oddly your
+memory behaved about the subject of the picture, too?"
+
+"I have again eaten that particular piece of humble-pie," Minver's
+brother replied.
+
+"Well," she said to me, "_I_ think he was simply so possessed with the
+awfulness of having lost the picture that all the rest took place
+prophetically, but unconsciously."
+
+"By a species of inverted presentiment?" I suggested.
+
+"Yes," she assented, slowly, as if the formulation were new to her, but
+not unacceptable. "Something of that kind. I never heard of anybody else
+having it."
+
+Minver had got his pipe alight, and was enjoying it. "_I_ think Joe was
+simply off his nut, for the time being."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+A CASE OF METAPHANTASMIA
+
+
+The stranger was a guest of Halson's, and Halson himself was a
+comparative stranger, for he was of recent election to our dining-club,
+and was better known to Minver than to the rest of our little group,
+though one could not be sure that he was very well known to Minver. The
+stranger had been dining with Halson, and we had found the two smoking
+together, with their cups of black coffee at their elbows, before the
+smouldering fire in the Turkish room when we came in from dinner--my
+friend Wanhope the psychologist, Rulledge the sentimentalist, Minver the
+painter, and myself. It struck me for the first time that a fire on the
+hearth was out of keeping with a Turkish room, but I felt that the cups
+of black coffee restored the lost balance in some measure.
+
+Before we had settled into our wonted places--in fact, almost as we
+entered--Halson looked over his shoulder and said: "Mr. Wanhope, I want
+you to hear this story of my friend's. Go on, Newton--or, rather, go
+back and begin again--and I'll introduce you afterwards."
+
+The stranger made a becoming show of deprecation. He said he did not
+think the story would bear immediate repetition, or was even worth
+telling once, but, if we had nothing better to do, perhaps we might do
+worse than hear it; the most he could say for it was that the thing
+really happened. He wore a large, drooping, gray mustache, which, with
+the imperial below it, quite hid his mouth, and gave him, somehow, a
+martial effect, besides accurately dating him of the period between the
+latest sixties and earliest seventies, when his beard would have been
+black; I liked his mustache not being stubbed in the modern manner, but
+allowed to fall heavily over his lips, and then branch away from the
+corners of his mouth as far as it would. He lighted the cigar which
+Halson gave him, and, blowing the bitten-off tip towards the fire,
+began:
+
+"It was about that time when we first had a ten-o'clock night train from
+Boston to New York. Train used to start at nine, and lag along round by
+Springfield, and get into the old Twenty-sixth Street Station here at
+six in the morning, where they let you sleep as long as you liked. They
+call you up now at half-past five, and, if you don't turn out, they haul
+you back to Mott Haven, or New Haven, I'm not sure which. I used to go
+into Boston and turn in at the old Worcester Depot, as we called it
+then, just about the time the train began to move, and I usually got a
+fine night's rest in the course of the nine or ten hours we were on the
+way to New York; it didn't seem quite the same after we began saying
+Albany Depot: shortened up the run, somehow.
+
+[Illustration: "NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY
+MARK"]
+
+"But that night I wasn't very sleepy, and the porter had got the place
+so piping hot with the big stoves, one at each end of the car, to keep
+the good, old-fashioned Christmas cold out, that I thought I should be
+more comfortable with a smoke before I went to bed; and, anyhow, I could
+get away from the heat better in the smoking-room. I hated to be leaving
+home on Christmas Eve, for I never had done that before, and I hated to
+be leaving my wife alone with the children and the two girls in our
+little house in Cambridge. Before I started in on the old horse-car for
+Boston, I had helped her to tuck the young ones in and to fill the
+stockings hung along the wall over the register--the nearest we could
+come to a fireplace--and I thought those stockings looked very weird,
+five of them, dangling lumpily down, and I kept seeing them, and her
+sitting up sewing in front of them, and afraid to go to bed on account
+of burglars. I suppose she was shyer of burglars than any woman ever was
+that had never seen a sign of them. She was always calling me up, to go
+down-stairs and put them out, and I used to wander all over the house,
+from attic to cellar, in my nighty, with a lamp in one hand and a poker
+in the other, so that no burglar could have missed me if he had wanted
+an easy mark. I always kept a lamp and a poker handy."
+
+The stranger heaved a sigh as of fond reminiscence, and looked round for
+the sympathy which in our company of bachelors he failed of; even the
+sympathetic Rulledge failed of the necessary experience to move him in
+compassionate response.
+
+"Well," the stranger went on, a little damped perhaps by his failure,
+but supported apparently by the interest of the fact in hand, "I had the
+smoking-room to myself for a while, and then a fellow put his head in
+that I thought I knew after I had thought I didn't know him. He dawned
+on me more and more, and I had to acknowledge to myself, by and by, that
+it was a man named Melford, whom I used to room with in Holworthy at
+Harvard; that is, we had an apartment of two bedrooms and a study; and I
+suppose there were never two fellows knew less of each other than we did
+at the end of our four years together. I can't say what Melford knew of
+me, but the most I knew of Melford was his particular brand of
+nightmare."
+
+Wanhope gave the first sign of his interest in the matter. He took his
+cigar from his lips, and softly emitted an "Ah!"
+
+Rulledge went further and interrogatively repeated the word "Nightmare?"
+
+"Nightmare," the stranger continued, firmly. "The curious thing about it
+was that I never exactly knew the subject of his nightmare, and a more
+curious thing yet was Melford himself never knew it, when I woke him up.
+He said he couldn't make out anything but a kind of scraping in a
+door-lock. His theory was that in his childhood it had been a much
+completer thing, but that the circumstances had broken down in a sort of
+decadence, and now there was nothing left of it but that scraping in the
+door-lock, like somebody trying to turn a misfit key. I used to throw
+things at his door, and once I tried a cold-water douche from the
+pitcher, when he was very hard to waken; but that was rather brutal, and
+after a while I used to let him roar himself awake; he would always do
+it, if I trusted to nature; and before our junior year was out I got so
+that I could sleep through, pretty calmly; I would just say to myself
+when he fetched me to the surface with a yell, 'That's Melford
+dreaming,' and doze off sweetly."
+
+"Jove!" Rulledge said, "I don't see how you could stand it."
+
+"There's everything in habit, Rulledge," Minver put in. "Perhaps our
+friend only dreamt that he heard a dream."
+
+"That's quite possible," the stranger owned, politely. "But the case is
+superficially as I state it. However, it was all past, long ago, when I
+recognized Melford in the smoking-room that night: it must have been ten
+or a dozen years. I was wearing a full beard then, and so was he; we
+wore as much beard as we could in those days. I had been through the
+war since college, and he had been in California, most of the time, and,
+as he told me, he had been up north, in Alaska, just after we bought it,
+and hurt his eyes--had snow-blindness--and he wore spectacles. In fact,
+I had to do most of the recognizing, but after we found out who we were
+we were rather comfortable; and I liked him better than I remembered to
+have liked him in our college days. I don't suppose there was ever much
+harm in him; it was only my grudge about his nightmare. We talked along
+and smoked along for about an hour, and I could hear the porter outside,
+making up the berths, and the train rumbled away towards Framingham, and
+then towards Worcester, and I began to be sleepy, and to think I would
+go to bed myself; and just then the door of the smoking-room opened, and
+a young girl put in her face a moment, and said: 'Oh, I beg your pardon.
+I thought it was the stateroom,' and then she shut the door, and I
+realized that she looked like a girl I used to know."
+
+The stranger stopped, and I fancied from a note in his voice that this
+girl was perhaps like an early love. We silently waited for him to
+resume how and when he would. He sighed, and after an appreciable
+interval he began again. "It is curious how things are related to one
+another. My wife had never seen her, and yet, somehow, this girl that
+looked like the one I mean brought my mind back to my wife with a quick
+turn, after I had forgotten her in my talk with Melford for the time
+being. I thought how lonely she was in that little house of ours in
+Cambridge, on rather an outlying street, and I knew she was thinking of
+me, and hating to have me away on Christmas Eve, which isn't such a
+lively time after you're grown up and begin to look back on a good many
+other Christmas Eves, when you were a child yourself; in fact, I don't
+know a dismaler night in the whole year. I stepped out on the platform
+before I began to turn in, for a mouthful of the night air, and I found
+it was spitting snow--a regular Christmas Eve of the true pattern; and I
+didn't believe, from the business feel of those hard little pellets,
+that it was going to stop in a hurry, and I thought if we got into New
+York on time we should be lucky. The snow made me think of a night when
+my wife was sure there were burglars in the house; and in fact I heard
+their tramping on the stairs myself--thump, thump, thump, and then a
+stop, and then down again. Of course it was the slide and thud of the
+snow from the roof of the main part of the house to the roof of the
+kitchen, which was in an L, a story lower, but it was as good an
+imitation of burglars as I want to hear at one o'clock in the morning;
+and the recollection of it made me more anxious about my wife, not
+because I believed she was in danger, but because I knew how frightened
+she must be.
+
+"When I went back into the car, that girl passed me on the way to her
+stateroom, and I concluded that she was the only woman on board, and her
+friends had taken the stateroom for her, so that she needn't feel
+strange. I usually go to bed in a sleeper as I do in my own house, but
+that night I somehow couldn't. I got to thinking of accidents, and I
+thought how disagreeable it would be to turn out into the snow in my
+nighty. I ended by turning in with my clothes on, all except my coat;
+and, in spite of the red-hot stoves, I wasn't any too warm. I had a
+berth in the middle of the car, and just as I was parting my curtains to
+lie down, old Melford came to take the lower berth opposite. It made me
+laugh a little, and I was glad of the relief. 'Why, hello, Melford,'
+said I. 'This is like the old Holworthy times.' 'Yes, isn't it?' said
+he, and then I asked something that I had kept myself from asking all
+through our talk in the smoking-room, because I knew he was rather
+sensitive about it, or used to be. 'Do you ever have that regulation
+nightmare of yours nowadays, Melford? He gave a laugh, and said: 'I
+haven't had it, I suppose, once in ten years. What made you think of
+it?' I said: 'Oh, I don't know. It just came into my mind. Well,
+good-night, old fellow. I hope you'll rest well,' and suddenly I began
+to feel light-hearted again, and I went to sleep as gayly as ever I did
+in my life."
+
+The stranger paused again, and Wanhope said: "Those swift transitions of
+mood are very interesting. Of course they occur in that remote region of
+the mind where all incidents and sensations are of one quality, and
+things of the most opposite character unite in a common origin. No one
+that I remember has attempted to trace such effects to their causes, and
+then back again from their causes, which would be much more important."
+
+"Yes, I dare say," Minver put in. "But if they all amount to the same
+thing in the end, what difference would it make?"
+
+"It would perhaps establish the identity of good and evil," Wanhope
+suggested.
+
+"Oh, the sinners are convinced of that already," Minver said, while
+Rulledge glanced quickly from one to the other.
+
+The stranger looked rather dazed, and Rulledge said: "Well, I don't
+suppose that was the conclusion of the whole matter?"
+
+"Oh no," the stranger answered, "that was only the beginning of the
+conclusion. I didn't go to sleep at once, though I felt so much at
+peace. In fact, Melford beat me, and I could hear him far in advance,
+steaming and whistling away, in a style that I recalled as
+characteristic, over a space of intervening years that I hadn't
+definitely summed up yet. It made me think of a night near Narragansett
+Bay, where two friends of mine and I had had a mighty good dinner at a
+sort of wild club-house, and had hurried into our bunks, each one so as
+to get the start of the others, for the fellows that were left behind
+knew they had no chance of sleep after the first began to get in his
+work. I laughed, and I suppose I must have gone to sleep almost
+simultaneously, for I don't recollect anything afterwards till I was
+wakened by a kind of muffled bellow, that I remembered only too well. It
+was the unfailing sign of Melford's nightmare.
+
+"I was ready to swear, and I was ashamed for the fellow who had no more
+self-control than that: when a fellow snores, or has a nightmare, you
+always think first off that he needn't have had it if he had tried. As
+usual, I knew Melford didn't know what his nightmare was about, and that
+made me madder still, to have him bellowing into the air like that, with
+no particular aim. All at once there came a piercing scream from the
+stateroom, and then I knew that the girl there had heard Melford and
+been scared out of a year's growth."
+
+The stranger made a little break, and Wanhope asked, "Could you make out
+what she screamed, or was it quite inarticulate?"
+
+"It was plain enough, and it gave me a clew, somehow, to what Melford's
+nightmare was about. She was calling out, 'Help! help! help! Burglars!'
+till I thought she would raise the roof of the car."
+
+"And did she wake anybody?" Rulledge inquired.
+
+"That was the strange part of it. Not a soul stirred, and after the
+first burst the girl seemed to quiet down again and yield the floor to
+Melford, who kept bellowing steadily away. I was so furious that I
+reached out across the aisle to shake him, but the attempt was too much
+for me. I lost my balance and fell out of my berth onto the floor. You
+may imagine the state of mind I was in. I gathered myself up and pulled
+Melford's curtains open and was just going to fall on him tooth and
+nail, when I was nearly taken off my feet again by an apparition: well,
+it looked like an apparition, but it was a tall fellow in his
+nighty--for it was twenty years before pajamas--and he had a small dark
+lantern in his hand, such as we used to carry in those days so as to
+read in our berths when we couldn't sleep. He was gritting his teeth,
+and growling between them: 'Out o' this! Out o' this! I'm going to shoot
+to kill, you blasted thieves!' I could see by the strange look in his
+eyes that he was sleep-walking, and I didn't wait to see if he had a
+pistol. I popped in behind the curtains, and found myself on top of
+another fellow, for I had popped into the wrong berth in my confusion.
+The man started up and yelled: 'Oh, don't kill me! There's my watch on
+the stand, and all the money in the house is in my pantaloons pocket.
+The silver's in the sideboard down-stairs, and it's plated, anyway.'
+Then I understood what his complaint was, and I rolled onto the floor
+again. By that time every man in the car was out of his berth, too,
+except Melford, who was devoting himself strictly to business; and every
+man was grabbing some other, and shouting, 'Police!' or 'Burglars!' or
+'Help!' or 'Murder!' just as the fancy took him."
+
+"Most extraordinary!" Wanhope commented as the stranger paused for
+breath.
+
+In the intensity of our interest, we had crowded close upon him, except
+Minver, who sat with his head thrown back, and that cynical cast in his
+eye which always exasperated Rulledge; and Halson, who stood smiling
+proudly, as if the stranger's story did him as his sponsor credit
+personally.
+
+"Yes," the stranger owned, "but I don't know that there wasn't something
+more extraordinary still. From time to time the girl in the stateroom
+kept piping up, with a shriek for help. She had got past the burglar
+stage, but she wanted to be saved, anyhow, from some danger which she
+didn't specify. It went through me that it was very strange nobody
+called the porter, and I set up a shout of 'Porter!' on my own account.
+I decided that if there were burglars the porter was the man to put them
+out, and that if there were no burglars the porter could relieve our
+groundless fears. Sure enough, he came rushing in, as soon as I called
+for him, from the little corner by the smoking-room where he was
+blacking boots between dozes. He was wide enough awake, if having his
+eyes open meant that, and he had a shoe on one hand and a shoe-brush in
+the other. But he merely joined in the general up-roar and shouted for
+the police."
+
+"Excuse me," Wanhope interposed. "I wish to be clear as to the facts.
+You had reasoned it out that the porter could quiet the tumult?"
+
+"Never reasoned anything out so clearly in my life."
+
+"But what was your theory of the situation? That your friend, Mr.
+Melford, had a nightmare in which he was dreaming of burglars?"
+
+"I hadn't a doubt of it."
+
+"And that by a species of dream-transference the nightmare was
+communicated to the young lady in the stateroom?"
+
+"Well--yes."
+
+"And that her call for help and her cry of burglars acted as a sort of
+hypnotic suggestion with the other sleepers, and they began to be
+afflicted with the same nightmare?"
+
+"I don't know that I ever put it to myself so distinctly, but it appears
+to me now that I must have reached some such conclusion."
+
+"That is very interesting, very interesting indeed. I beg your pardon.
+Please go on," Wanhope courteously entreated.
+
+"I don't remember just where I was," the stranger faltered.
+
+Rulledge returned with an accuracy which obliged us all: "'The porter
+merely joined in the general uproar and shouted for the police.'"
+
+"Oh yes," the stranger assented. "Then I didn't know what to do, for a
+minute. The porter was a pretty thick-headed darky, but he was
+lion-hearted; and his idea was to lay hold of a burglar wherever he
+could find him. There were plenty of burglars in the aisle there, or
+people that were afraid of burglars, and they seemed to think the porter
+had a good idea. They had hold of one another already, and now began to
+pull up and down the aisles in a way that reminded me of the
+old-fashioned mesmeric lecturers, when they told their subjects that
+they were this or that, and set them to acting the part. I remembered
+how once when the mesmerist gave out that they were at a horse--race,
+and his subjects all got astride of their chairs, and galloped up and
+down the hall like a lot of little boys on laths. I thought of that now,
+and although it was rather a serious business, for I didn't know what
+minute they would come to blows, I couldn't help laughing. The sight was
+weird enough. Every one looked like a somnambulist as he pulled and
+hauled. The young lady in the stateroom was doing her full share. She
+was screaming, 'Won't somebody let me out?' and hammering on the door. I
+guess it was her screaming and hammering that brought the conductor at
+last, or maybe he just came round in the course of nature to take up the
+tickets. It was before the time when they took the tickets at the gate,
+and you used to stick them into a little slot at the side of your berth,
+and the conductor came along and took them in the night, somewhere
+between Worcester and Springfield, I should say."
+
+"I remember," Rulledge assented, but very carefully, so as not to
+interrupt the flow of the narrative. "Used to wake up everybody in the
+car."
+
+"Exactly," the stranger said. "But this time they were all wide awake to
+receive him, or fast asleep, and dreaming their roles. He came along
+with the wire of his lantern over his arm, the way the old-time
+conductors did, and calling out, 'Tickets!' just as if it was broad day,
+and he believed every man was trying to beat his way to New York. The
+oddest thing about it was that the sleep-walkers all stopped their
+pulling and hauling a moment, and each man reached down to the little
+slot alongside of his berth and handed over his ticket. Then they took
+hold and began pulling and hauling again. I suppose the conductor asked
+what the matter was; but I couldn't hear him, and I couldn't make out
+exactly what he did say. But the passengers understood, and they all
+shouted 'Burglars!' and that girl in the stateroom gave a shriek that
+you could have heard from one end of the train to the other, and
+hammered on the door, and wanted to be let out.
+
+"It seemed to take the conductor by surprise, and he faced towards the
+stateroom and let the lantern slip off his arm, and it dropped onto the
+floor and went out; I remember thinking what a good thing it didn't set
+the car on fire. But there in the dark--for the car lamps went out at
+the same time with the lantern--I could hear those fellows pulling and
+hauling up and down the aisle and scuffling over the floor, and through
+all Melford bellowing away, like an orchestral accompaniment to a combat
+in Wagner opera, but getting quieter and quieter till his bellow died
+away altogether. At the same time the row in the aisle of the car
+stopped, and there was perfect silence, and I could hear the snow
+rattling against my window. Then I went off into a sound sleep, and
+never woke till we got into New York."
+
+The stranger seemed to have reached the end of his story, or at least to
+have exhausted the interest it had for him, and he smoked on, holding
+his knee between his hands and looking thoughtfully into the fire.
+
+He had left us rather breathless, or, better said, blank, and each
+looked at the other for some initiative; then we united in looking at
+Wanhope; that is, Rulledge and I did. Minver rose and stretched himself
+with what I must describe as a sardonic yawn; Halson had stolen away
+before the end, as one to whom the end was known. Wanhope seemed by no
+means averse to the inquiry delegated to him, but only to be formulating
+its terms. At last he said:
+
+"I don't remember hearing of any case of this kind before.
+Thought-transference is a sufficiently ascertained phenomenon--the
+insistence of a conscious mind upon a certain fact until it penetrates
+the unconscious mind of another and is adopted as its own. But in the
+dream state the mind seems passive, and becomes the prey of this or that
+self-suggestion, without the power of imparting it to another dreaming
+mind. Yet here we have positive proof of such an effect. It appears that
+the victim of a particularly terrific nightmare was able to share its
+horrors--or rather unable _not_ to share them--with a whole sleeping-car
+full of people whose brains helplessly took up the same theme, and
+dreamed it, as we may say, to the same conclusions. I said proof, but of
+course we can't accept a single instance as establishing a scientific
+certainty. I don't question the veracity of Mr.--"
+
+"Newton," the stranger suggested.
+
+"Newton's experience," Wanhope continued, "but we must wait for a good
+many cases of the kind before we can accept what I may call
+metaphantasmia as being equally established with thought-transference.
+If we could it would throw light upon a whole series of most curious
+phenomena, as, for instance, the privity of a person dreamed about to
+the incident created by the dreamer."
+
+"That would be rather dreadful, wouldn't it?" I ventured. "We do dream
+such scandalous, such compromising things about people."
+
+"All that," Wanhope gently insisted, "could have nothing to do with the
+fact. That alone is to be considered in an inquiry of the kind. One is
+never obliged to tell one's dreams. I wonder"--he turned to the
+stranger, who sat absently staring into the fire--"if you happened to
+speak to your friend about his nightmare in the morning, and whether he
+was by any chance aware of the participation of the others in it?"
+
+"I certainly spoke to him pretty plainly when we got into New York."
+
+"And what did he say?"
+
+"He said he had never slept better in his life, and he couldn't remember
+having a trace of nightmare. He said he heard _me_ groaning at one time,
+but I stopped just as he woke, and so he didn't rouse me as he thought
+of doing. It was at Hartford, and he went to sleep again, and slept
+through without a break."
+
+"And what was your conclusion from that?" Wanhope asked.
+
+"That he was lying, I should say," Rulledge replied for the stranger.
+
+Wanhope still waited, and the stranger said, "I suppose one conclusion
+might be that I had dreamed the whole thing myself."
+
+"Then you wish me to infer," the psychologist pursued, "that the entire
+incident was a figment of your sleeping brain? That there was no sort of
+sleeping thought-transference, no metaphantasmia, no--Excuse me. Do you
+remember verifying your impression of being between Worcester and
+Springfield when the affair occurred, by looking at your watch, for
+instance?"
+
+The stranger suddenly pulled out his watch at the word. "Good Heavens!"
+he called out. "It's twenty minutes of eleven, and I have to take the
+eleven-o'clock train to Boston. I must bid you good-evening, gentlemen.
+I've just time to get it if I can catch a cab. Good-night, good-night. I
+hope if you come to Boston--eh--Good-night! Sometimes," he called over
+his shoulder, "I've thought it might have been that girl in the
+stateroom that started the dreaming."
+
+He had wrung our hands one after another, and now he ran out of the
+room.
+
+Rulledge said, in appeal to Wanhope: "I don't see how his being the
+dreamer invalidates the case, if his dreams affected the others."
+
+"Well," Wanhope answered, thoughtfully, "that depends."
+
+"And what do you think of its being the girl in the stateroom?"
+
+"That would be very interesting."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+EDITHA
+
+
+The air was thick with the war feeling, like the electricity of a storm
+which has not yet burst. Editha sat looking out into the hot spring
+afternoon, with her lips parted, and panting with the intensity of the
+question whether she could let him go. She had decided that she could
+not let him stay, when she saw him at the end of the still leafless
+avenue, making slowly up towards the house, with his head down and his
+figure relaxed. She ran impatiently out on the veranda, to the edge of
+the steps, and imperatively demanded greater haste of him with her will
+before she called aloud to him: "George!"
+
+He had quickened his pace in mystical response to her mystical urgence,
+before he could have heard her; now he looked up and answered, "Well?"
+
+"Oh, how united we are!" she exulted, and then she swooped down the
+steps to him. "What is it?" she cried.
+
+"It's war," he said, and he pulled her up to him and kissed her.
+
+She kissed him back intensely, but irrelevantly, as to their passion,
+and uttered from deep in her throat. "How glorious!"
+
+"It's war," he repeated, without consenting to her sense of it; and she
+did not know just what to think at first. She never knew what to think
+of him; that made his mystery, his charm. All through their courtship,
+which was contemporaneous with the growth of the war feeling, she had
+been puzzled by his want of seriousness about it. He seemed to despise
+it even more than he abhorred it. She could have understood his
+abhorring any sort of bloodshed; that would have been a survival of his
+old life when he thought he would be a minister, and before he changed
+and took up the law. But making light of a cause so high and noble
+seemed to show a want of earnestness at the core of his being. Not but
+that she felt herself able to cope with a congenital defect of that
+sort, and make his love for her save him from himself. Now perhaps the
+miracle was already wrought in him. In the presence of the tremendous
+fact that he announced, all triviality seemed to have gone out of him;
+she began to feel that. He sank down on the top step, and wiped his
+forehead with his handkerchief, while she poured out upon him her
+question of the origin and authenticity of his news.
+
+All the while, in her duplex emotioning, she was aware that now at the
+very beginning she must put a guard upon herself against urging him, by
+any word or act, to take the part that her whole soul willed him to
+take, for the completion of her ideal of him. He was very nearly perfect
+as he was, and he must be allowed to perfect himself. But he was
+peculiar, and he might very well be reasoned out of his peculiarity.
+Before her reasoning went her emotioning: her nature pulling upon his
+nature, her womanhood upon his manhood, without her knowing the means
+she was using to the end she was willing. She had always supposed that
+the man who won her would have done something to win her; she did not
+know what, but something. George Gearson had simply asked her for her
+love, on the way home from a concert, and she gave her love to him,
+without, as it were, thinking. But now, it flashed upon her, if he could
+do something worthy to _have_ won her--be a hero, _her_ hero--it would
+be even better than if he had done it before asking her; it would be
+grander. Besides, she had believed in the war from the beginning.
+
+"But don't you see, dearest," she said, "that it wouldn't have come to
+this if it hadn't been in the order of Providence? And I call any war
+glorious that is for the liberation of people who have been struggling
+for years against the cruelest oppression. Don't you think so, too?"
+
+"I suppose so," he returned, languidly. "But war! Is it glorious to
+break the peace of the world?"
+
+"That ignoble peace! It was no peace at all, with that crime and shame
+at our very gates." She was conscious of parroting the current phrases
+of the newspapers, but it was no time to pick and choose her words. She
+must sacrifice anything to the high ideal she had for him, and after a
+good deal of rapid argument she ended with the climax: "But now it
+doesn't matter about the how or why. Since the war has come, all that is
+gone. There are no two sides any more. There is nothing now but our
+country."
+
+He sat with his eyes closed and his head leant back against the veranda,
+and he remarked, with a vague smile, as if musing aloud, "Our
+country--right or wrong."
+
+"Yes, right or wrong!" she returned, fervidly. "I'll go and get you some
+lemonade." She rose rustling, and whisked away; when she came back with
+two tall glasses of clouded liquid on a tray, and the ice clucking in
+them, he still sat as she had left him, and she said, as if there had
+been no interruption: "But there is no question of wrong in this case.
+I call it a sacred war. A war for liberty and humanity, if ever there
+was one. And I know you will see it just as I do, yet."
+
+He took half the lemonade at a gulp, and he answered as he set the glass
+down: "I know you always have the highest ideal. When I differ from you
+I ought to doubt myself."
+
+A generous sob rose in Editha's throat for the humility of a man, so
+very nearly perfect, who was willing to put himself below her.
+
+Besides, she felt, more subliminally, that he was never so near slipping
+through her fingers as when he took that meek way.
+
+"You shall not say that! Only, for once I happen to be right." She
+seized his hand in her two hands, and poured her soul from her eyes into
+his. "Don't you think so?" she entreated him.
+
+[Illustration: "'YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!'"]
+
+He released his hand and drank the rest of his lemonade, and she added,
+"Have mine, too," but he shook his head in answering, "I've no business
+to think so, unless I act so, too."
+
+Her heart stopped a beat before it pulsed on with leaps that she felt in
+her neck. She had noticed that strange thing in men: they seemed to feel
+bound to do what they believed, and not think a thing was finished when
+they said it, as girls did. She knew what was in his mind, but she
+pretended not, and she said, "Oh, I am not sure," and then faltered.
+
+He went on as if to himself, without apparently heeding her: "There's
+only one way of proving one's faith in a thing like this."
+
+She could not say that she understood, but she did understand.
+
+He went on again. "If I believed--if I felt as you do about this
+war--Do you wish me to feel as you do?"
+
+Now she was really not sure; so she said: "George, I don't know what you
+mean."
+
+He seemed to muse away from her as before.
+
+"There is a sort of fascination in it. I suppose that at the bottom of
+his heart every man would like at times to have his courage tested, to
+see how he would act."
+
+"How can you talk in that ghastly way?"
+
+"It _is_ rather morbid. Still, that's what it comes to, unless you're
+swept away by ambition or driven by conviction. I haven't the conviction
+or the ambition, and the other thing is what it comes to with me. I
+ought to have been a preacher, after all; then I couldn't have asked it
+of myself, as I must, now I'm a lawyer. And you believe it's a holy war,
+Editha?" he suddenly addressed her. "Oh, I know you do! But you wish me
+to believe so, too?"
+
+She hardly knew whether he was mocking or not, in the ironical way he
+always had with her plainer mind. But the only thing was to be outspoken
+with him.
+
+"George, I wish you to believe whatever you think is true, at any and
+every cost. If I've tried to talk you into anything, I take it all
+back."
+
+"Oh, I know that, Editha. I know how sincere you are, and how--I wish I
+had your undoubting spirit! I'll think it over; I'd like to believe as
+you do. But I don't, now; I don't, indeed. It isn't this war alone;
+though this seems peculiarly wanton and needless; but it's every war--so
+stupid; it makes me sick. Why shouldn't this thing have been settled
+reasonably?"
+
+"Because," she said, very throatily again, "God meant it to be war."
+
+"You think it was God? Yes, I suppose that is what people will say."
+
+"Do you suppose it would have been war if God hadn't meant it?"
+
+"I don't know. Sometimes it seems as if God had put this world into
+men's keeping to work it as they pleased."
+
+"Now, George, that is blasphemy."
+
+"Well, I won't blaspheme. I'll try to believe in your pocket
+Providence," he said, and then he rose to go.
+
+"Why don't you stay to dinner?" Dinner at Balcom's Works was at one
+o'clock.
+
+"I'll come back to supper, if you'll let me. Perhaps I shall bring you a
+convert."
+
+"Well, you may come back, on that condition."
+
+"All right. If I don't come, you'll understand."
+
+He went away without kissing her, and she felt it a suspension of their
+engagement. It all interested her intensely; she was undergoing a
+tremendous experience, and she was being equal to it. While she stood
+looking after him, her mother came out through one of the long windows
+onto the veranda, with a catlike softness and vagueness.
+
+"Why didn't he stay to dinner?"
+
+"Because--because--war has been declared," Editha pronounced, without
+turning.
+
+Her mother said, "Oh, my!" and then said nothing more until she had sat
+down in one of the large Shaker chairs and rocked herself for some time.
+Then she closed whatever tacit passage of thought there had been in her
+mind with the spoken words: "Well, I hope _he_ won't go."
+
+"And _I_ hope he _will_," the girl said, and confronted her mother with
+a stormy exaltation that would have frightened any creature less
+unimpressionable than a cat.
+
+Her mother rocked herself again for an interval of cogitation. What she
+arrived at in speech was: "Well, I guess you've done a wicked thing,
+Editha Balcom."
+
+The girl said, as she passed indoors through the same window her mother
+had come out by: "I haven't done anything--yet."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In her room, she put together all her letters and gifts from Gearson,
+down to the withered petals of the first flower he had offered, with
+that timidity of his veiled in that irony of his. In the heart of the
+packet she enshrined her engagement ring which she had restored to the
+pretty box he had brought it her in. Then she sat down, if not calmly
+yet strongly, and wrote:
+
+ "GEORGE:--I understood when you left me. But I think we had better
+ emphasize your meaning that if we cannot be one in everything we
+ had better be one in nothing. So I am sending these things for your
+ keeping till you have made up your mind.
+
+ "I shall always love you, and therefore I shall never marry any one
+ else. But the man I marry must love his country first of all, and
+ be able to say to me,
+
+ "'I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ Loved I not honor more.'
+
+ "There is no honor above America with me. In this great hour there
+ is no other honor.
+
+ "Your heart will make my words clear to you. I had never expected
+ to say so much, but it has come upon me that I must say the utmost.
+
+ EDITHA."
+
+She thought she had worded her letter well, worded it in a way that
+could not be bettered; all had been implied and nothing expressed.
+
+She had it ready to send with the packet she had tied with red, white,
+and blue ribbon, when it occurred to her that she was not just to him,
+that she was not giving him a fair chance. He had said he would go and
+think it over, and she was not waiting. She was pushing, threatening,
+compelling. That was not a woman's part. She must leave him free, free,
+free. She could not accept for her country or herself a forced
+sacrifice.
+
+In writing her letter she had satisfied the impulse from which it
+sprang; she could well afford to wait till he had thought it over. She
+put the packet and the letter by, and rested serene in the consciousness
+of having done what was laid upon her by her love itself to do, and yet
+used patience, mercy, justice.
+
+She had her reward. Gearson did not come to tea, but she had given him
+till morning, when, late at night there came up from the village the
+sound of a fife and drum, with a tumult of voices, in shouting, singing,
+and laughing. The noise drew nearer and nearer; it reached the street
+end of the avenue; there it silenced itself, and one voice, the voice
+she knew best, rose over the silence. It fell; the air was filled with
+cheers; the fife and drum struck up, with the shouting, singing, and
+laughing again, but now retreating; and a single figure came hurrying up
+the avenue.
+
+She ran down to meet her lover and clung to him. He was very gay, and he
+put his arm round her with a boisterous laugh. "Well, you must call me
+Captain now; or Cap, if you prefer; that's what the boys call me. Yes,
+we've had a meeting at the town-hall, and everybody has volunteered; and
+they selected me for captain, and I'm going to the war, the big war, the
+glorious war, the holy war ordained by the pocket Providence that
+blesses butchery. Come along; let's tell the whole family about it. Call
+them from their downy beds, father, mother, Aunt Hitty, and all the
+folks!"
+
+But when they mounted the veranda steps he did not wait for a larger
+audience; he poured the story out upon Editha alone.
+
+"There was a lot of speaking, and then some of the fools set up a shout
+for me. It was all going one way, and I thought it would be a good joke
+to sprinkle a little cold water on them. But you can't do that with a
+crowd that adores you. The first thing I knew I was sprinkling hell-fire
+on them. 'Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of war.' That was the style.
+Now that it had come to the fight, there were no two parties; there was
+one country, and the thing was to fight to a finish as quick as
+possible. I suggested volunteering then and there, and I wrote my name
+first of all on the roster. Then they elected me--that's all. I wish I
+had some ice-water."
+
+She left him walking up and down the veranda, while she ran for the
+ice-pitcher and a goblet, and when she came back he was still walking up
+and down, shouting the story he had told her to her father and mother,
+who had come out more sketchily dressed than they commonly were by day.
+He drank goblet after goblet of the ice-water without noticing who was
+giving it, and kept on talking, and laughing through his talk wildly.
+"It's astonishing," he said, "how well the worse reason looks when you
+try to make it appear the better. Why, I believe I was the first convert
+to the war in that crowd to-night! I never thought I should like to kill
+a man; but now I shouldn't care; and the smokeless powder lets you see
+the man drop that you kill. It's all for the country! What a thing it is
+to have a country that _can't_ be wrong, but if it is, is right,
+anyway!"
+
+Editha had a great, vital thought, an inspiration. She set down the
+ice-pitcher on the veranda floor, and ran up-stairs and got the letter
+she had written him. When at last he noisily bade her father and mother,
+"Well, goodnight. I forgot I woke you up; I sha'n't want any sleep
+myself," she followed him down the avenue to the gate. There, after the
+whirling words that seemed to fly away from her thoughts and refuse to
+serve them, she made a last effort to solemnize the moment that seemed
+so crazy, and pressed the letter she had written upon him.
+
+"What's this?" he said. "Want me to mail it?"
+
+"No, no. It's for you. I wrote it after you went this morning. Keep
+it--keep it--and read it sometime--" She thought, and then her
+inspiration came: "Read it if ever you doubt what you've done, or fear
+that I regret your having done it. Read it after you've started."
+
+They strained each other in embraces that seemed as ineffective as their
+words, and he kissed her face with quick, hot breaths that were so
+unlike him, that made her feel as if she had lost her old lover and
+found a stranger in his place. The stranger said: "What a gorgeous
+flower you are, with your red hair, and your blue eyes that look black
+now, and your face with the color painted out by the white moonshine!
+Let me hold you under the chin, to see whether I love blood, you
+tiger-lily!" Then he laughed Gearson's laugh, and released her, scared
+and giddy. Within her wilfulness she had been frightened by a sense of
+subtler force in him, and mystically mastered as she had never been
+before.
+
+She ran all the way back to the house, and mounted the steps panting.
+Her mother and father were talking of the great affair. Her mother said:
+"Wa'n't Mr. Gearson in rather of an excited state of mind? Didn't you
+think he acted curious?"
+
+"Well, not for a man who'd just been elected captain and had set 'em up
+for the whole of Company A," her father chuckled back.
+
+"What in the world do you mean, Mr. Balcom? Oh! There's Editha!" She
+offered to follow the girl indoors.
+
+"Don't come, mother!" Editha called, vanishing.
+
+Mrs. Balcom remained to reproach her husband. "I don't see much of
+anything to laugh at."
+
+"Well, it's catching. Caught it from Gearson. I guess it won't be much
+of a war, and I guess Gearson don't think so, either. The other fellows
+will back down as soon as they see we mean it. I wouldn't lose any sleep
+over it. I'm going back to bed, myself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gearson came again next afternoon, looking pale and rather sick, but
+quite himself, even to his languid irony. "I guess I'd better tell you,
+Editha, that I consecrated myself to your god of battles last night by
+pouring too many libations to him down my own throat. But I'm all right
+now. One has to carry off the excitement, somehow."
+
+"Promise me," she commanded, "that you'll never touch it again!"
+
+"What! Not let the cannikin clink? Not let the soldier drink? Well, I
+promise."
+
+"You don't belong to yourself now; you don't even belong to _me_. You
+belong to your country, and you have a sacred charge to keep yourself
+strong and well for your country's sake. I have been thinking, thinking
+all night and all day long."
+
+"You look as if you had been crying a little, too," he said, with his
+queer smile.
+
+"That's all past. I've been thinking, and worshipping _you_. Don't you
+suppose I know all that you've been through, to come to this? I've
+followed you every step from your old theories and opinions."
+
+"Well, you've had a long row to hoe."
+
+"And I know you've done this from the highest motives--"
+
+"Oh, there won't be much pettifogging to do till this cruel war is--"
+
+"And you haven't simply done it for my sake. I couldn't respect you if
+you had."
+
+"Well, then we'll say I haven't. A man that hasn't got his own respect
+intact wants the respect of all the other people he can corner. But we
+won't go into that. I'm in for the thing now, and we've got to face our
+future. My idea is that this isn't going to be a very protracted
+struggle; we shall just scare the enemy to death before it comes to a
+fight at all. But we must provide for contingencies, Editha. If anything
+happens to me--"
+
+"Oh, George!" She clung to him, sobbing.
+
+"I don't want you to feel foolishly bound to my memory. I should hate
+that, wherever I happened to be."
+
+"I am yours, for time and eternity--time and eternity." She liked the
+words; they satisfied her famine for phrases.
+
+"Well, say eternity; that's all right; but time's another thing; and I'm
+talking about time. But there is something! My mother! If anything
+happens--"
+
+She winced, and he laughed. "You're not the bold soldier-girl of
+yesterday!" Then he sobered. "If anything happens, I want you to help my
+mother out. She won't like my doing this thing. She brought me up to
+think war a fool thing as well as a bad thing. My father was in the
+Civil War; all through it; lost his arm in it." She thrilled with the
+sense of the arm round her; what if that should be lost? He laughed as
+if divining her: "Oh, it doesn't run in the family, as far as I know!"
+Then he added, gravely: "He came home with misgivings about war, and
+they grew on him. I guess he and mother agreed between them that I was
+to be brought up in his final mind about it; but that was before my
+time. I only knew him from my mother's report of him and his opinions; I
+don't know whether they were hers first; but they were hers last. This
+will be a blow to her. I shall have to write and tell her--"
+
+He stopped, and she asked: "Would you like me to write, too, George?"
+
+"I don't believe that would do. No, I'll do the writing. She'll
+understand a little if I say that I thought the way to minimize it was
+to make war on the largest possible scale at once--that I felt I must
+have been helping on the war somehow if I hadn't helped keep it from
+coming, and I knew I hadn't; when it came, I had no right to stay out of
+it."
+
+Whether his sophistries satisfied him or not, they satisfied her. She
+clung to his breast, and whispered, with closed eyes and quivering lips:
+"Yes, yes, yes!"
+
+"But if anything should happen, you might go to her and see what you
+could do for her. You know? It's rather far off; she can't leave her
+chair--"
+
+"Oh, I'll go, if it's the ends of the earth! But nothing will happen!
+Nothing _can_! I--"
+
+She felt herself lifted with his rising, and Gearson was saying, with
+his arm still round her, to her father: "Well, we're off at once, Mr.
+Balcom. We're to be formally accepted at the capital, and then bunched
+up with the rest somehow, and sent into camp somewhere, and got to the
+front as soon as possible. We all want to be in the van, of course;
+we're the first company to report to the Governor. I came to tell
+Editha, but I hadn't got round to it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She saw him again for a moment at the capital, in the station, just
+before the train started southward with his regiment. He looked well, in
+his uniform, and very soldierly, but somehow girlish, too, with his
+clean-shaven face and slim figure. The manly eyes and the strong voice
+satisfied her, and his preoccupation with some unexpected details of
+duty flattered her. Other girls were weeping and bemoaning themselves,
+but she felt a sort of noble distinction in the abstraction, the almost
+unconsciousness, with which they parted. Only at the last moment he
+said: "Don't forget my mother. It mayn't be such a walk-over as I
+supposed," and he laughed at the notion.
+
+He waved his hand to her as the train moved off--she knew it among a
+score of hands that were waved to other girls from the platform of the
+car, for it held a letter which she knew was hers. Then he went inside
+the car to read it, doubtless, and she did not see him again. But she
+felt safe for him through the strength of what she called her love. What
+she called her God, always speaking the name in a deep voice and with
+the implication of a mutual understanding, would watch over him and keep
+him and bring him back to her. If with an empty sleeve, then he should
+have three arms instead of two, for both of hers should be his for life.
+She did not see, though, why she should always be thinking of the arm
+his father had lost.
+
+There were not many letters from him, but they were such as she could
+have wished, and she put her whole strength into making hers such as she
+imagined he could have wished, glorifying and supporting him. She wrote
+to his mother glorifying him as their hero, but the brief answer she got
+was merely to the effect that Mrs. Gearson was not well enough to write
+herself, and thanking her for her letter by the hand of some one who
+called herself "Yrs truly, Mrs. W.J. Andrews."
+
+Editha determined not to be hurt, but to write again quite as if the
+answer had been all she expected. Before it seemed as if she could have
+written, there came news of the first skirmish, and in the list of the
+killed, which was telegraphed as a trifling loss on our side, was
+Gearson's name. There was a frantic time of trying to make out that it
+might be, must be, some other Gearson; but the name and the company and
+the regiment and the State were too definitely given.
+
+Then there was a lapse into depths out of which it seemed as if she
+never could rise again; then a lift into clouds far above all grief,
+black clouds, that blotted out the sun, but where she soared with him,
+with George--George! She had the fever that she expected of herself, but
+she did not die in it; she was not even delirious, and it did not last
+long. When she was well enough to leave her bed, her one thought was of
+George's mother, of his strangely worded wish that she should go to her
+and see what she could do for her. In the exaltation of the duty laid
+upon her--it buoyed her up instead of burdening her--she rapidly
+recovered.
+
+Her father went with her on the long railroad journey from northern New
+York to western Iowa; he had business out at Davenport, and he said he
+could just as well go then as any other time; and he went with her to
+the little country town where George's mother lived in a little house
+on the edge of the illimitable cornfields, under trees pushed to a top
+of the rolling prairie. George's father had settled there after the
+Civil War, as so many other old soldiers had done; but they were Eastern
+people, and Editha fancied touches of the East in the June rose
+overhanging the front door, and the garden with early summer flowers
+stretching from the gate of the paling fence.
+
+It was very low inside the house, and so dim, with the closed blinds,
+that they could scarcely see one another: Editha tall and black in her
+crapes which filled the air with the smell of their dyes; her father
+standing decorously apart with his hat on his forearm, as at funerals; a
+woman rested in a deep arm-chair, and the woman who had let the
+strangers in stood behind the chair.
+
+The seated woman turned her head round and up, and asked the woman
+behind her chair: "_Who_ did you say?"
+
+Editha, if she had done what she expected of herself, would have gone
+down on her knees at the feet of the seated figure and said, "I am
+George's Editha," for answer.
+
+But instead of her own voice she heard that other woman's voice, saying:
+"Well, I don't know as I _did_ get the name just right. I guess I'll
+have to make a little more light in here," and she went and pushed two
+of the shutters ajar.
+
+Then Editha's father said, in his public will-now-address-a-few-remarks
+tone: "My name is Balcom, ma'am--Junius H. Balcom, of Balcom's Works,
+New York; my daughter--"
+
+"Oh!" the seated woman broke in, with a powerful voice, the voice that
+always surprised Editha from Gearson's slender frame. "Let me see you.
+Stand round where the light can strike on your face," and Editha dumbly
+obeyed. "So, you're Editha Balcom," she sighed.
+
+"Yes," Editha said, more like a culprit than a comforter.
+
+"What did you come for?" Mrs. Gearson asked.
+
+Editha's face quivered and her knees shook. "I came--because--because
+George--" She could go no further.
+
+"Yes," the mother said, "he told me he had asked you to come if he got
+killed. You didn't expect that, I suppose, when you sent him."
+
+"I would rather have died myself than done it!" Editha said, with more
+truth in her deep voice than she ordinarily found in it. "I tried to
+leave him free--"
+
+"Yes, that letter of yours, that came back with his other things, left
+him free."
+
+Editha saw now where George's irony came from.
+
+"It was not to be read before--unless--until--I told him so," she
+faltered.
+
+"Of course, he wouldn't read a letter of yours, under the circumstances,
+till he thought you wanted him to. Been sick?" the woman abruptly
+demanded.
+
+"Very sick," Editha said, with self-pity.
+
+"Daughter's life," her father interposed, "was almost despaired of, at
+one time."
+
+Mrs. Gearson gave him no heed. "I suppose you would have been glad to
+die, such a brave person as you! I don't believe _he_ was glad to die.
+He was always a timid boy, that way; he was afraid of a good many
+things; but if he was afraid he did what he made up his mind to. I
+suppose he made up his mind to go, but I knew what it cost him by what
+it cost me when I heard of it. I had been through _one_ war before.
+When you sent him you didn't expect he would get killed."
+
+The voice seemed to compassionate Editha, and it was time. "No," she
+huskily murmured.
+
+"No, girls don't; women don't, when they give their men up to their
+country. They think they'll come marching back, somehow, just as gay as
+they went, or if it's an empty sleeve, or even an empty pantaloon, it's
+all the more glory, and they're so much the prouder of them, poor
+things!"
+
+The tears began to run down Editha's face; she had not wept till then;
+but it was now such a relief to be understood that the tears came.
+
+"No, you didn't expect him to get killed," Mrs. Gearson repeated, in a
+voice which was startlingly like George's again. "You just expected him
+to kill some one else, some of those foreigners, that weren't there
+because they had any say about it, but because they had to be there,
+poor wretches--conscripts, or whatever they call 'em. You thought it
+would be all right for my George, _your_ George, to kill the sons of
+those miserable mothers and the husbands of those girls that you would
+never see the faces of." The woman lifted her powerful voice in a
+psalmlike note. "I thank my God he didn't live to do it! I thank my God
+they killed him first, and that he ain't livin' with their blood on his
+hands!" She dropped her eyes, which she had raised with her voice, and
+glared at Editha. "What you got that black on for?" She lifted herself
+by her powerful arms so high that her helpless body seemed to hang limp
+its full length. "Take it off, take it off, before I tear it from your
+back!"
+
+[Illustration: "SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. 'WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON
+FOR?'"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The lady who was passing the summer near Balcom's Works was sketching
+Editha's beauty, which lent itself wonderfully to the effects of a
+colorist. It had come to that confidence which is rather apt to grow
+between artist and sitter, and Editha had told her everything.
+
+"To think of your having such a tragedy in your life!" the lady said.
+She added: "I suppose there are people who feel that way about war. But
+when you consider the good this war has done--how much it has done for
+the country! I can't understand such people, for my part. And when you
+had come all the way out there to console her--got up out of a sick-bed!
+Well!"
+
+"I think," Editha said, magnanimously, "she wasn't quite in her right
+mind; and so did papa."
+
+"Yes," the lady said, looking at Editha's lips in nature and then at her
+lips in art, and giving an empirical touch to them in the picture. "But
+how dreadful of her! How perfectly--excuse me--how _vulgar_!"
+
+A light broke upon Editha in the darkness which she felt had been
+without a gleam of brightness for weeks and months. The mystery that had
+bewildered her was solved by the word; and from that moment she rose
+from grovelling in shame and self-pity, and began to live again in the
+ideal.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+BRAYBRIDGE'S OFFER
+
+
+We had ordered our dinners and were sitting in the Turkish room at the
+club, waiting to be called, each in his turn, to the dining-room. It was
+always a cosey place, whether you found yourself in it with cigars and
+coffee after dinner, or with whatever liquid or solid appetizer you
+preferred in the half-hour or more that must pass before dinner after
+you had made out your menu. It intimated an exclusive possession in the
+three or four who happened first to find themselves together in it, and
+it invited the philosophic mind to contemplation more than any other
+spot in the club.
+
+Our rather limited little down-town dining-club was almost a celibate
+community at most times. A few husbands and fathers joined us at lunch;
+but at dinner we were nearly always a company of bachelors, dropping in
+an hour or so before we wished to dine, and ordering from a bill of fare
+what we liked. Some dozed away in the intervening time; some read the
+evening papers or played chess; I preferred the chance society of the
+Turkish room. I could be pretty sure of finding Wanhope there in these
+sympathetic moments, and where Wanhope was there would probably be
+Rulledge, passively willing to listen and agree, and Minver ready to
+interrupt and dispute. I myself liked to look in and linger for either
+the reasoning or the bickering, as it happened, and now, seeing the
+three there together, I took a provisional seat behind the painter, who
+made no sign of knowing I was present. Rulledge was eating a caviar
+sandwich, which he had brought from the afternoon tea-table near by, and
+he greedily incited Wanhope to go on, in the polite pause which the
+psychologist had let follow on my appearance, with what he was saying. I
+was not surprised to find that his talk related to a fact just then
+intensely interesting to the few, rapidly becoming the many, who were
+privy to it; though Wanhope had the air of stooping to it from a higher
+range of thinking.
+
+"I shouldn't have supposed, somehow," he said, with a knot of
+deprecation between his fine eyes, "that he would have had the pluck."
+
+"Perhaps he hadn't," Minver suggested.
+
+Wanhope waited for a thoughtful moment of censure eventuating in
+toleration. "You mean that she--"
+
+"I don't see why you say that, Minver," Rulledge interposed,
+chivalrously, with his mouth full of sandwich.
+
+"I didn't say it," Minver contradicted.
+
+"You implied it; and I don't think it's fair. It's easy enough to build
+up a report of that kind on the half-knowledge of rumor which is all
+that any outsider can have in the case."
+
+"So far," Minver said, with unbroken tranquillity, "as any such edifice
+has been erected, you are the architect, Rulledge. I shouldn't think you
+would like to go round insinuating that sort of thing. Here is Acton,"
+and he now acknowledged my presence with a backward twist of his head,
+"on the alert for material already. You ought to be more careful where
+Acton is, Rulledge."
+
+"It would be great copy if it were true," I owned.
+
+Wanhope regarded us all three, in this play of our qualities, with the
+scientific impartiality of a bacteriologist in the study of a culture
+offering some peculiar incidents. He took up a point as remote as might
+be from the personal appeal. "It is curious how little we know of such
+matters, after all the love-making and marrying in life and all the
+inquiry of the poets and novelists." He addressed himself in this turn
+of his thought, half playful, half earnest, to me, as if I united with
+the functions of both a responsibility for their shortcomings.
+
+"Yes," Minver said, facing about towards me. "How do you excuse yourself
+for your ignorance in matters where you're always professionally making
+such a bluff of knowledge? After all the marriages you have brought
+about in literature, can you say positively and specifically how they
+are brought about in life?"
+
+"No, I can't," I admitted. "I might say that a writer of fiction is a
+good deal like a minister who continually marries people without knowing
+why."
+
+"No, you couldn't, my dear fellow," the painter retorted. "It's part of
+your swindle to assume that you _do_ know why. You ought to find out."
+
+Wanhope interposed concretely, or as concretely as he could: "The
+important thing would always be to find which of the lovers the
+confession, tacit or explicit, began with."
+
+"Acton ought to go round and collect human documents bearing on the
+question. He ought to have got together thousands of specimens from
+nature. He ought to have gone to all the married couples he knew, and
+asked them just how their passion was confessed; he ought to have sent
+out printed circulars, with tabulated questions. Why don't you do it,
+Acton?"
+
+I returned, as seriously as could have been expected:
+
+"Perhaps it would be thought rather intimate. People don't like to talk
+of such things."
+
+"They're ashamed," Minver declared. "The lovers don't either of them, in
+a given case, like to let others know how much the woman had to do with
+making the offer, and how little the man."
+
+Minver's point provoked both Wanhope and myself to begin a remark at the
+same time. We begged each other's pardon, and Wanhope insisted that I
+should go on.
+
+"Oh, merely this," I said. "I don't think they're so much ashamed as
+that they have forgotten the different stages. You were going to say--?"
+
+"Very much what you said. It's astonishing how people forget the vital
+things and remember trifles. Or perhaps as we advance from stage to
+stage what once seemed the vital things turn to trifles. Nothing can be
+more vital in the history of a man and a woman than how they became
+husband and wife, and yet not merely the details, but the main fact,
+would seem to escape record if not recollection. The next generations
+knows nothing of it."
+
+"That appears to let Acton out," Minver said. "But how do _you_ know
+what you were saying, Wanhope?"
+
+"I've ventured to make some inquiries in that region at one time. Not
+directly, of course. At second and third hand. It isn't inconceivable,
+if we conceive of a life after this, that a man should forget, in its
+more important interests and occupations, just how he quitted this
+world, or at least the particulars of the article of death. Of course,
+we must suppose a good portion of eternity to have elapsed." Wanhope
+continued, dreamily, with a deep breath almost equivalent to something
+so unscientific as a sigh: "Women are charming, and in nothing more
+than the perpetual challenge they form for us. They are born defying us
+to match ourselves with them."
+
+"Do you mean that Miss Hazelwood--" Rulledge began, but Minver's laugh
+arrested him.
+
+"Nothing so concrete, I'm afraid," Wanhope gently returned. "I mean, to
+match them in graciousness, in loveliness, in all the agile contests of
+spirit and plays of fancy. It's pathetic to see them caught up into
+something more serious in that other game, which they are so good at."
+
+"They seem rather to like it, though, some of them, if you mean the game
+of love," Minver said. "Especially when they're not in earnest about
+it."
+
+"Oh, there are plenty of spoiled women," Wanhope admitted. "But I don't
+mean flirting. I suppose that the average unspoiled woman is rather
+frightened than otherwise when she knows that a man is in love with
+her."
+
+"Do you suppose she always knows it first?" Rulledge asked.
+
+"You may be sure," Minver answered for Wanhope, "that if she didn't know
+it, _he_ never would." Then Wanhope answered for himself:
+
+"I think that generally she sees it coming. In that sort of wireless
+telegraphy, that reaching out of two natures through space towards each
+other, her more sensitive apparatus probably feels the appeal of his
+before he is conscious of having made any appeal."
+
+"And her first impulse is to escape the appeal?" I suggested.
+
+"Yes," Wanhope admitted, after a thoughtful reluctance.
+
+"Even when she is half aware of having invited it?"
+
+"If she is not spoiled she is never aware of having invited it. Take
+the case in point; we won't mention any names. She is sailing through
+time, through youthful space, with her electrical lures, the natural
+equipment of every charming woman, all out, and suddenly, somewhere from
+the unknown, she feels the shock of a response in the gulfs of air where
+there had been no life before. But she can't be said to have knowingly
+searched the void for any presence."
+
+"Oh, I'm not sure about that, Professor," Minver put in. "Go a little
+slower, if you expect me to follow you."
+
+"It's all a mystery, the most beautiful mystery of life," Wanhope
+resumed. "I don't believe I could make out the case as I feel it to be."
+
+"Braybridge's part of the case is rather plain, isn't it?" I invited
+him.
+
+"I'm not sure of that. No man's part of any case is plain, if you look
+at it carefully. The most that you can say of Braybridge is that he is
+rather a simple nature. But nothing," the psychologist added, with one
+of his deep breaths, "is so complex as a simple nature."
+
+"Well," Minver contended, "Braybridge is plain, if his case isn't."
+
+"Plain? Is he plain?" Wanhope asked, as if asking himself.
+
+"My dear fellow, you agnostics doubt everything!"
+
+"I should have said picturesque. Picturesque, with the sort of
+unbeautifulness that takes the fancy of women more than Greek
+proportion. I think it would require a girl peculiarly feminine to feel
+the attraction of such a man--the fascination of his being grizzled and
+slovenly and rugged. She would have to be rather a wild, shy girl to do
+that, and it would have to be through her fear of him that she would
+divine his fear of her. But what I have heard is that they met under
+rather exceptional circumstances. It was at a house in the Adirondacks,
+where Braybridge was, somewhat in the quality of a bull in a china-shop.
+He was lugged in by the host, as an old friend, and was suffered by the
+hostess as a friend quite too old for her. At any rate, as I heard (and
+I don't vouch for the facts, all of them), Braybridge found himself at
+odds with the gay young people who made up the hostess's end of the
+party, and was watching for a chance to--"
+
+Wanhope cast about for the word, and Minver supplied it--"Pull out."
+
+"Yes. But when he had found it Miss Hazelwood took it from him."
+
+"I don't understand," Rulledge said.
+
+"When he came in to breakfast, the third morning, prepared with an
+excuse for cutting his week down to the dimensions it had reached, he
+saw her sitting alone at the table. She had risen early as a consequence
+of having arrived late the night before; and when Braybridge found
+himself in for it, he forgot that he meant to go away, and said
+good-morning, as if they knew each other. Their hostess found them
+talking over the length of the table in a sort of mutual fright, and
+introduced them. But it's rather difficult reporting a lady verbatim at
+second hand. I really had the facts from Welkin, who had them from his
+wife. The sum of her impressions was that Braybridge and Miss Hazelwood
+were getting a kind of comfort out of their mutual terror because one
+was as badly frightened as the other. It was a novel experience for
+both. Ever seen her?"
+
+We looked at one another. Minver said: "I never wanted to paint any one
+so much. It was at the spring show of the American Artists. There was a
+jam of people; but this girl--I've understood it was she--looked as
+much alone as if there were nobody else there. She might have been a
+startled doe in the North Woods suddenly coming out on a
+twenty-thousand-dollar camp, with a lot of twenty-million-dollar people
+on the veranda."
+
+"And you wanted to do her as The Startled Doe," I said. "Good selling
+name."
+
+"Don't reduce it to the vulgarity of fiction. I admit it would be a
+selling name."
+
+"Go on, Wanhope," Rulledge puffed impatiently. "Though I don't see how
+there could be another soul in the universe as constitutionally scared
+of men as Braybridge is of women."
+
+"In the universe nothing is wasted, I suppose. Everything has its
+complement, its response. For every bashful man, there must be a bashful
+woman," Wanhope returned.
+
+"Or a bold one," Minver suggested.
+
+"No; the response must be in kind to be truly complemental. Through the
+sense of their reciprocal timidity they divine that they needn't be
+afraid."
+
+"Oh! _That's_ the way you get out of it!"
+
+"Well?" Rulledge urged.
+
+"I'm afraid," Wanhope modestly confessed, "that from this point I shall
+have to be largely conjectural. Welkin wasn't able to be very definite,
+except as to moments, and he had his data almost altogether from his
+wife. Braybridge had told him overnight that he thought of going, and he
+had said he mustn't think of it; but he supposed Braybridge had spoken
+of it to Mrs. Welkin, and he began by saying to his wife that he hoped
+she had refused to hear of Braybridge's going. She said she hadn't heard
+of it, but now she would refuse without hearing, and she didn't give
+Braybridge any chance to protest. If people went in the middle of their
+week, what would become of other people? She was not going to have the
+equilibrium of her party disturbed, and that was all about it. Welkin
+thought it was odd that Braybridge didn't insist; and he made a long
+story of it. But the grain of wheat in his bushel of chaff was that Miss
+Hazelwood seemed to be fascinated by Braybridge from the first. When
+Mrs. Welkin scared him into saying that he would stay his week out, the
+business practically was done. They went picnicking that day in each
+other's charge; and after Braybridge left he wrote back to her, as Mrs.
+Welkin knew from the letters that passed through her hands, and--Well,
+their engagement has come out, and--" Wanhope paused, with an air that
+was at first indefinite, and then definitive.
+
+"You don't mean," Rulledge burst out in a note of deep wrong, "that
+that's all you know about it?"
+
+"Yes, that's all I know," Wanhope confessed, as if somewhat surprised
+himself at the fact.
+
+"Well!"
+
+Wanhope tried to offer the only reparation in his power. "I can
+conjecture--we can all conjecture--"
+
+He hesitated; then: "Well, go on with your conjecture," Rulledge said,
+forgivingly.
+
+"Why--" Wanhope began again; but at that moment a man who had been
+elected the year before, and then gone off on a long absence, put his
+head in between the dull-red hangings of the doorway. It was Halson,
+whom I did not know very well, but liked better than I knew. His eyes
+were dancing with what seemed the inextinguishable gayety of his
+temperament, rather than any present occasion, and his smile carried his
+little mustache well away from his handsome teeth. "Private?"
+
+"Come in! come in!" Minver called to him. "Thought you were in Japan?"
+
+"My dear fellow," Halson answered, "you must brush up your contemporary
+history. It's more than a fortnight since I was in Japan." He shook
+hands with me, and I introduced him to Rulledge and Wanhope. He said at
+once: "Well, what is it? Question of Braybridge's engagement? It's
+humiliating to a man to come back from the antipodes and find the nation
+absorbed in a parochial problem like that. Everybody I've met here
+to-night has asked me, the first thing, if I'd heard of it, and if I
+knew how it could have happened."
+
+"And do you?" Rulledge asked.
+
+"I can give a pretty good guess," Halson said, running his merry eyes
+over our faces.
+
+"Anybody can give a good guess," Rulledge said. "Wanhope is doing it
+now."
+
+"Don't let me interrupt." Halson turned to him politely.
+
+"Not at all. I'd rather hear your guess, if you know Braybridge better
+than I," Wanhope said.
+
+"Well," Halson compromised, "perhaps I've known him longer." He asked,
+with an effect of coming to business: "Where were you?"
+
+"Tell him, Rulledge," Minver ordered, and Rulledge apparently asked
+nothing better. He told him, in detail, all we knew from any source,
+down to the moment of Wanhope's arrested conjecture.
+
+"He did leave you at an anxious point, didn't he?" Halson smiled to the
+rest of us at Rulledge's expense, and then said: "Well, I think I can
+help you out a little. Any of you know the lady?"
+
+"By sight, Minver does," Rulledge answered for us. "Wants to paint her."
+
+"Of course," Halson said, with intelligence. "But I doubt if he'd find
+her as paintable as she looks, at first. She's beautiful, but her charm
+is spiritual."
+
+"Sometimes we try for that," the painter interposed.
+
+"And sometimes you get it. But you'll allow it's difficult. That's all I
+meant. I've known her--let me see--for twelve years, at least; ever
+since I first went West. She was about eleven then, and her father was
+bringing her up on the ranch. Her aunt came along by and by and took her
+to Europe--mother dead before Hazelwood went out there. But the girl was
+always homesick for the ranch; she pined for it; and after they had kept
+her in Germany three or four years they let her come back and run wild
+again--wild as a flower does, or a vine, not a domesticated animal."
+
+"Go slow, Halson. This is getting too much for the romantic Rulledge."
+
+"Rulledge can bear up against the facts, I guess, Minver," Halson said,
+almost austerely. "Her father died two years ago, and then she _had_ to
+come East, for her aunt simply _wouldn't_ live on the ranch. She brought
+her on here, and brought her out; I was at the coming-out tea; but the
+girl didn't take to the New York thing at all; I could see it from the
+start; she wanted to get away from it with me, and talk about the
+ranch."
+
+"She felt that she was with the only genuine person among those
+conventional people."
+
+Halson laughed at Minver's thrust, and went on amiably: "I don't suppose
+that till she met Braybridge she was ever quite at her ease with any
+man--or woman, for that matter. I imagine, as you've done, that it was
+his fear of her that gave her courage. She met him on equal terms. Isn't
+that it?"
+
+Wanhope assented to the question referred to him with a nod.
+
+"And when they got lost from the rest of the party at that picnic--"
+
+"Lost?" Rulledge demanded.
+
+"Why, yes. Didn't you know? But I ought to go back. They said there
+never was anything prettier than the way she unconsciously went for
+Braybridge the whole day. She wanted him, and she was a child who wanted
+things frankly when she did want them. Then his being ten or fifteen
+years older than she was, and so large and simple, made it natural for a
+shy girl like her to assort herself with him when all the rest were
+assorting themselves, as people do at such things. The consensus of
+testimony is that she did it with the most transparent unconsciousness,
+and--"
+
+"Who are your authorities?" Minver asked; Rulledge threw himself back on
+the divan and beat the cushions with impatience.
+
+"Is it essential to give them?"
+
+"Oh no. I merely wondered. Go on."
+
+"The authorities are all right. She had disappeared with him before the
+others noticed. It was a thing that happened; there was no design in it;
+that would have been out of character. They had got to the end of the
+wood-road, and into the thick of the trees where there wasn't even a
+trail, and they walked round looking for a way out till they were turned
+completely. They decided that the only way was to keep walking, and by
+and by they heard the sound of chopping. It was some Canucks clearing a
+piece of the woods, and when she spoke to them in French they gave them
+full directions, and Braybridge soon found the path again."
+
+Halson paused, and I said: "But that isn't all?"
+
+"Oh no." He continued thoughtfully silent for a little while before he
+resumed. "The amazing thing is that they got lost again, and that when
+they tried going back to the Canucks they couldn't find the way."
+
+"Why didn't they follow the sound of the chopping?" I asked.
+
+"The Canucks had stopped, for the time being. Besides, Braybridge was
+rather ashamed, and he thought if they went straight on they would be
+sure to come out somewhere. But that was where he made a mistake. They
+couldn't go on straight; they went round and round, and came on their
+own footsteps--or hers, which he recognized from the narrow tread and
+the dint of the little heels in the damp places."
+
+Wanhope roused himself with a kindling eye. "That is very interesting,
+the movement in a circle of people who have lost their way. It has often
+been observed, but I don't know that it has ever been explained.
+Sometimes the circle is smaller, sometimes it is larger, but I believe
+it is always a circle."
+
+"Isn't it," I queried, "like any other error in life? We go round and
+round, and commit the old sins over again."
+
+"That is very interesting," Wanhope allowed.
+
+"But do lost people really always walk in a vicious circle?" Minver
+asked.
+
+Rulledge would not let Wanhope answer. "Go on, Halson," he said.
+
+Halson roused himself from the revery in which he was sitting with
+glazed eyes. "Well, what made it a little more anxious was that he had
+heard of bears on that mountain, and the green afternoon light among the
+trees was perceptibly paling. He suggested shouting, but she wouldn't
+let him; she said it would be ridiculous if the others heard them, and
+useless if they didn't. So they tramped on till--till the accident
+happened."
+
+"The accident!" Rulledge exclaimed, in the voice of our joint emotion.
+
+"He stepped on a loose stone and turned his foot," Halson explained. "It
+wasn't a sprain, luckily, but it hurt enough. He turned so white that
+she noticed it, and asked him what was the matter. Of course that shut
+his mouth the closer, but it morally doubled his motive, and he kept
+himself from crying out till the sudden pain of the wrench was over. He
+said merely that he thought he had heard something, and he had an awful
+ringing in his ears; but he didn't mean that, and he started on again.
+The worst was trying to walk without limping, and to talk cheerfully and
+encouragingly with that agony tearing at him. But he managed somehow,
+and he was congratulating himself on his success when he tumbled down in
+a dead faint."
+
+"Oh, come now!" Minver protested.
+
+"It _is_ like an old-fashioned story, where things are operated by
+accident instead of motive, isn't it?" Halson smiled with radiant
+recognition.
+
+"Fact will always imitate fiction, if you give her time enough," I said.
+
+"Had they got back to the other picnickers?" Rulledge asked, with a
+tense voice.
+
+"In sound, but not in sight of them. She wasn't going to bring him into
+camp in that state; besides, she couldn't. She got some water out of the
+trout-brook they'd been fishing--more water than trout in it--and
+sprinkled his face, and he came to, and got on his legs just in time to
+pull on to the others, who were organizing a search-party to go after
+them. From that point on she dropped Braybridge like a hot coal; and as
+there was nothing of the flirt in her, she simply kept with the women,
+the older girls, and the tabbies, and left Braybridge to worry along
+with the secret of his turned ankle. He doesn't know how he ever got
+home alive; but he did, somehow, manage to reach the wagons that had
+brought them to the edge of the woods, and then he was all right till
+they got to the house. But still she said nothing about his accident,
+and he couldn't; and he pleaded an early start for town the next
+morning, and got off to bed as soon as he could."
+
+"I shouldn't have thought he could have stirred in the morning,"
+Rulledge employed Halson's pause to say.
+
+"Well, this beaver _had_ to," Halson said. "He was not the only early
+riser. He found Miss Hazelwood at the station before him."
+
+"What!" Rulledge shouted. I confess the fact rather roused me, too; and
+Wanhope's eyes kindled with a scientific pleasure.
+
+"She came right towards him. 'Mr. Braybridge,' says she, 'I couldn't let
+you go without explaining my very strange behavior. I didn't choose to
+have these people laughing at the notion of _my_ having played the part
+of your preserver. It was bad enough being lost with you; I couldn't
+bring you into ridicule with them by the disproportion they'd have felt
+in my efforts for you after you turned your foot. So I simply had to
+ignore the incident. Don't you see?' Braybridge glanced at her, and he
+had never felt so big and bulky before, or seen her so slender and
+little. He said, 'It _would_ have seemed rather absurd,' and he broke
+out and laughed, while she broke down and cried, and asked him to
+forgive her, and whether it had hurt him very much; and said she knew he
+could bear to keep it from the others by the way he had kept it from her
+till he fainted. She implied that he was morally as well as physically
+gigantic, and it was as much as he could do to keep from taking her in
+his arms on the spot."
+
+"It would have been edifying to the groom that had driven her to the
+station," Minver cynically suggested.
+
+"Groom nothing!" Halson returned with spirit. "She paddled herself
+across the lake, and walked from the boat-landing to the station."
+
+"Jove!" Rulledge exploded in uncontrollable enthusiasm.
+
+"She turned round as soon as she had got through with her hymn of
+praise--it made Braybridge feel awfully flat--and ran back through the
+bushes to the boat-landing, and--that was the last he saw of her till he
+met her in town this fall."
+
+"And when--and when--did he offer himself?" Rulledge entreated,
+breathlessly. "How--"
+
+"Yes, that's the point, Halson," Minver interposed. "Your story is all
+very well, as far as it goes; but Rulledge here has been insinuating
+that it was Miss Hazelwood who made the offer, and he wants you to bear
+him out."
+
+Rulledge winced at the outrage, but he would not stay Halson's answer
+even for the sake of righting himself.
+
+"I _have_ heard," Minver went on, "that Braybridge insisted on paddling
+the canoe back to the other shore for her, and that it was on the way
+that he offered himself." We others stared at Minver in astonishment.
+Halson glanced covertly towards him with his gay eyes. "Then that wasn't
+true?"
+
+"How did you hear it?" Halson asked.
+
+"Oh, never mind. Is it true?"
+
+"Well, I know there's that version," Halson said, evasively. "The
+engagement is only just out, as you know. As to the offer--the when and
+the how--I don't know that I'm exactly at liberty to say."
+
+"I don't see why," Minver urged. "You might stretch a point for
+Rulledge's sake."
+
+Halson looked down, and then he glanced at Minver after a furtive
+passage of his eye over Rulledge's intense face. "There was something
+rather nice happened after--But, really, now!"
+
+"Oh, go on!" Minver called out in contempt of his scruple.
+
+"I haven't the right--Well, I suppose I'm on safe ground here? It won't
+go any further, of course; and it _was_ so pretty! After she had pushed
+off in her canoe, you know, Braybridge--he'd followed her down to the
+shore of the lake--found her handkerchief in a bush where it had caught,
+and he held it up, and called out to her. She looked round and saw it,
+and called back: 'Never mind. I can't return for it now.' Then
+Braybridge plucked up his courage, and asked if he might keep it, and
+she said 'Yes,' over her shoulder, and then she stopped paddling, and
+said: 'No, no, you mustn't, you mustn't! You can send it to me.' He
+asked where, and she said: 'In New York--in the fall--at the
+Walholland.' Braybridge never knew how he dared, but he shouted after
+her--she was paddling on again--'May I _bring_ it?' and she called over
+her shoulder again, without fully facing him, but her profile was
+enough: 'If you can't get any one to bring it for you.' The words barely
+reached him, but he'd have caught them if they'd been whispered; and he
+watched her across the lake and into the bushes, and then broke for his
+train. He was just in time."
+
+Halson beamed for pleasure upon us, and even Minver said: "Yes, that's
+rather nice." After a moment he added: "Rulledge thinks she put it
+there."
+
+"You're too bad, Minver," Halson protested. "The charm of the whole
+thing was her perfect innocence. She isn't capable of the slightest
+finesse. I've known her from a child, and I know what I say."
+
+"That innocence of girlhood," Wanhope said, "is very interesting. It's
+astonishing how much experience it survives. Some women carry it into
+old age with them. It's never been scientifically studied--"
+
+"Yes," Minver allowed. "There would be a fortune for the novelist who
+could work a type of innocence for all it was worth. Here's Acton always
+dealing with the most rancid flirtatiousness, and missing the sweetness
+and beauty of a girlhood which does the cheekiest things without knowing
+what it's about, and fetches down its game whenever it shuts its eyes
+and fires at nothing. But I don't see how all this touches the point
+that Rulledge makes, or decides which finally made the offer."
+
+"Well, hadn't the offer already been made?"
+
+"But how?"
+
+"Oh, in the usual way."
+
+"What is the usual way?"
+
+"I thought everybody knew _that_. Of course, it was _from_ Braybridge
+finally, but I suppose it's always six of one and half a dozen of the
+other in these cases, isn't it? I dare say he couldn't get any one to
+take her the handkerchief. My dinner?" Halson looked up at the silent
+waiter, who had stolen upon us and was bowing towards him.
+
+"Look here, Halson," Minver detained him, "how is it none of the rest of
+us have heard all those details?"
+
+"_I_ don't know where you've been, Minver. Everybody knows the main
+facts," Halson said, escaping.
+
+Wanhope observed, musingly: "I suppose he's quite right about the
+reciprocality of the offer, as we call it. There's probably, in
+ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, a perfect understanding before
+there's an explanation. In many cases the offer and the acceptance must
+really be tacit."
+
+"Yes," I ventured, "and I don't know why we're so severe with women when
+they seem to take the initiative. It's merely, after all, the call of
+the maiden bird, and there's nothing lovelier or more endearing in
+nature than that."
+
+"Maiden bird is good, Acton," Minver approved. "Why don't you institute
+a class of fiction where the love-making is all done by the maiden
+birds, as you call them--or the widow birds? It would be tremendously
+popular with both sexes. It would lift an immense responsibility off the
+birds who've been expected to shoulder it heretofore if it could be
+introduced into real life."
+
+Rulledge fetched a long, simple-hearted sigh. "Well, it's a charming
+story. How well he told it!"
+
+The waiter came again, and this time signalled to Minver.
+
+"Yes," he said, as he rose. "What a pity you can't believe a word Halson
+says."
+
+"Do you mean--" we began simultaneously.
+
+"That he built the whole thing from the ground up, with the start that
+we had given him. Why, you poor things! Who could have told him how it
+all happened? Braybridge? Or the girl? As Wanhope began by saying,
+people don't speak of their love-making, even when they distinctly
+remember it."
+
+"Yes, but see here, Minver!" Rulledge said, with a dazed look. "If it's
+all a fake of his, how came _you_ to have heard of Braybridge paddling
+the canoe back for her?"
+
+"That was the fake that tested the fake. When he adopted it, I _knew_ he
+was lying, because I was lying myself. And then the cheapness of the
+whole thing! I wonder that didn't strike you. It's the stuff that a
+thousand summer-girl stories have been spun out of. Acton might have
+thought he was writing it!"
+
+He went away, leaving us to a blank silence, till Wanhope managed to
+say: "That inventive habit of mind is very curious. It would be
+interesting to know just how far it imposes on the inventor himself--how
+much he believes of his own fiction."
+
+"I don't see," Rulledge said, gloomily, "why they're so long with my
+dinner." Then he burst out: "I believe every word Halson said! If
+there's any fake in the thing, it's the fake that Minver owned to."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+THE CHICK OF THE EASTER EGG
+
+
+The old fellow who told that story of dream-transference on a
+sleeping-car at Christmas-time was again at the club on Easter Eve.
+Halson had put him up for the winter, under the easy rule we had, and he
+had taken very naturally to the Turkish room for his after-dinner coffee
+and cigar. We all rather liked him, though it was Minver's pose to be
+critical of the simple friendliness with which he made himself at home
+among us, and to feign a wish that there were fewer trains between
+Boston and New York, so that old Newton (that was his name) could have a
+better chance of staying away. But we noticed that Minver was always a
+willing listener to Newton's talk, and that he sometimes hospitably
+offered to share his tobacco with the Bostonian. When brought to book
+for his inconsistency by Rulledge, he said he was merely welcoming the
+new blood, if not young blood, that Newton was infusing into our body,
+which had grown anaemic on Wanhope's psychology and Rulledge's romance;
+or, anyway, it was a change.
+
+Newton now began by saying abruptly, in a fashion he had, "We used to
+hear a good deal in Boston about your Easter Parade here in New York. Do
+you still keep it up?"
+
+No one else answering, Minver replied, presently, "I believe it is still
+going on. I understand that it's composed mostly of milliners out to
+see one another's new hats, and generous Jewesses who are willing to
+contribute the 'dark and bright' of the beauty in which they walk to the
+observance of an alien faith. It's rather astonishing how the synagogue
+takes to the feasts of the church. If it were not for that, I don't know
+what would become of Christmas."
+
+"What do you mean by their walking in beauty?" Rulledge asked over his
+shoulder.
+
+"I shall never have the measure of your ignorance, Rulledge. You don't
+even know Byron's lines on Hebrew loveliness?
+
+ "'She walks in beauty like the night
+ Of cloudless climes and starry skies,
+ And all that's best of dark and bright
+ Meets in her aspect and her eyes.'"
+
+"Pretty good," Rulledge assented. "And they _are_ splendid, sometimes.
+But what has the Easter Parade got to do with it?" he asked Newton.
+
+"Oh, only what everything has with everything else. I was thinking of
+Easter-time long ago and far away, and naturally I thought of Easter now
+and here. I saw your Parade once, and it seemed to me one of the great
+social spectacles. But you can't keep anything in New York, if it's
+good; if it's bad, you can."
+
+"You come from Boston, I think you said, Mr. Newton," Minver breathed
+blandly through his smoke.
+
+"Oh, I'm not a _real_ Bostonian," our guest replied. "I'm not abusing
+you on behalf of a city that I'm a native proprietor of. If I were, I
+shouldn't perhaps make your decadent Easter Parade my point of attack,
+though I think it's a pity to let it spoil. I came from a part of the
+country where we used to make a great deal of Easter, when we were boys,
+at least so far as eggs went. I don't know whether the grown people
+observed the day then, and I don't know whether the boys keep it now; I
+haven't been back at Easter-time for several generations. But when I was
+a boy it was a serious thing. In that soft Southwestern latitude the
+grass had pretty well greened up by Easter, even when it came in March,
+and grass colors eggs a very nice yellow; it used to worry me that it
+didn't color them green. When the grass hadn't got along far enough,
+winter wheat would do as well. I don't remember what color onion husks
+would give; but we used onion husks, too. Some mothers would let the
+boys get logwood from the drug-store, and that made the eggs a fine,
+bold purplish black. But the greatest egg of all was a calico egg, that
+you got by coaxing your grandmother (your mother's mother) or your aunt
+(your mother's sister) to sew up in a tight cover of brilliant calico.
+When that was boiled long enough the colors came off in a perfect
+pattern on the egg. Very few boys could get such eggs; when they did,
+they put them away in bureau drawers till they ripened and the mothers
+smelt them, and threw them out of the window as quickly as possible.
+Always, after breakfast, Easter Morning, we came out on the street and
+fought eggs. We pitted the little ends of the eggs against one another,
+and the fellow whose egg cracked the other fellow's egg won it, and he
+carried it off. I remember grass and wheat colored eggs in such trials
+of strength, and onion and logwood colored eggs; but never calico eggs;
+_they_ were too precious to be risked; it would have seemed wicked.
+
+"I don't know," the Boston man went musingly on, "why I should remember
+these things so relentlessly; I've forgotten all the important things
+that happened to me then; but perhaps these were the important things.
+Who knows? I only know I've always had a soft spot in my heart for
+Easter, not so much because of the calico eggs, perhaps, as because of
+the grandmothers and the aunts. I suppose the simple life is full of
+such aunts and grandmothers still; but you don't find them in hotel
+apartments, or even in flats consisting of seven large, light rooms and
+bath." We all recognized the language of the advertisements, and laughed
+in sympathy with our guest, who perhaps laughed out of proportion with a
+pleasantry of that size.
+
+When he had subdued his mirth, he resumed at a point apparently very
+remote from that where he had started.
+
+"There was one of those winters in Cambridge, where I lived then, that
+seemed tougher than any other we could remember, and they were all
+pretty tough winters there in those times. There were forty snowfalls
+between Thanksgiving and Fast Day--you don't know what Fast Day is in
+New York, and we didn't, either, as far as the fasting went--and the
+cold kept on and on till we couldn't, or said we couldn't, stand it any
+longer. So, along about the middle of March somewhere, we picked up the
+children and started south. In those days New York seemed pretty far
+south to us; and when we got here we found everything on wheels that we
+had left on runners in Boston. But the next day it began to snow, and we
+said we must go a little farther to meet the spring. I don't know
+exactly what it was made us pitch on Bethlehem, Pennsylvania; but we had
+a notion we should find it interesting, and, at any rate, a total change
+from our old environment. We had been reading something about the
+Moravians, and we knew that it was the capital of Moravianism, with the
+largest Moravian congregation in the world; I think it was Longfellow's
+'Hymn of the Moravian Nuns' that set us to reading about the sect; and
+we had somehow heard that the Sun Inn, at Bethlehem, was the finest
+old-fashioned public house anywhere. At any rate, we had the faith of
+our youthful years, and we put out for Bethlehem.
+
+"We arrived just at dusk, but not so late that we couldn't see the
+hospitable figure of a man coming out of the Sun to meet us at the
+omnibus door and to shake hands with each of us. It was the very
+pleasantest and sweetest welcome we ever had at a public house; and
+though we found the Sun a large, modern hotel, we easily accepted the
+landlord's assurance that the old Inn was built up inside of the hotel,
+just as it was when Washington stayed in it; and after a mighty good
+supper we went to our rooms, which were piping warm from two good
+base-burner stoves. It was not exactly the vernal air we had expected of
+Bethlehem when we left New York; but you can't have everything in this
+world, and, with the snowbanks along the streets outside, we were very
+glad to have the base-burners.
+
+"We went to bed pretty early, and I fell into one of those exemplary
+sleeps that begin with no margin of waking after your head touches the
+pillow, or before that, even, and I woke from a dream of heavenly music
+that translated itself into the earthly notes of bugles. It made me sit
+up with the instant realization that we had arrived in Bethlehem on
+Easter Eve, and that this was Easter Morning. We had read of the
+beautiful observance of the feast by the Moravians, and, while I was
+hurrying on my clothes beside my faithful base-burner, I kept quite
+superfluously wondering at myself for not having thought of it, and so
+made sure of being called. I had waked just in time, though I hadn't
+deserved to do so, and ought, by right, to have missed it all. I tried
+to make my wife come with me; but after the family is of a certain size
+a woman, if she is a real woman, thinks her husband can see things for
+her, and generally sends him out to reconnoitre and report. Besides, my
+wife couldn't have left the children without waking them, to tell them
+she was going, and then all five of them would have wanted to come with
+us, including the baby; and we should have had no end of a time
+convincing them of the impossibility. We were a good deal bound up in
+the children, and we hated to lie to them when we could possibly avoid
+it. So I went alone.
+
+"I asked the night porter, who was still on duty, the way I wanted to
+take, but there were so many people in the streets going the same
+direction that I couldn't have missed it, anyhow; and pretty soon we
+came to the old Moravian cemetery, which was in the heart of the town;
+and there we found most of the Moravian congregation drawn up on three
+sides of the square, waiting and facing the east, which was beginning to
+redden. Of all the cemeteries I have seen, that was the most beautiful,
+because it was the simplest and humblest. Generally a cemetery is a
+dreadful place, with headstones and footstones and shafts and tombs
+scattered about, and looking like a field full of granite and marble
+stumps from the clearing of a petrified forest. But here all the
+memorial tablets lay flat with the earth. None of the dead were assumed
+to be worthier of remembrance than another; they all rested at regular
+intervals, with their tablets on their breasts, like shields, in their
+sleep after the battle of life. I was thinking how right and wise this
+was, and feeling the purity of the conception like a quality of the
+keen, clear air of the morning, which seemed to be breathing straight
+from the sky, when suddenly the sun blazed up from the horizon like a
+fire, and the instant it appeared the horns of the band began to blow
+and the people burst into a hymn--a thousand voices, for all I know. It
+was the sublimest thing I ever heard, and I don't know that there's
+anything to match it for dignity and solemnity in any religious rite. It
+made the tears come, for I thought how those people were of a church of
+missionaries and martyrs from the beginning, and I felt as if I were
+standing in sight and hearing of the first Christians after Christ. It
+was as if He were risen there 'in the midst of them.'"
+
+Rulledge looked round on the rest of us, with an air of acquiring merit
+from the Bostonian's poetry, but Minver's gravity was proof against the
+chance of mocking Rulledge, and I think we all felt alike. Wanhope
+seemed especially interested, though he said nothing.
+
+"When I went home I told my wife about it as well as I could, but,
+though she entered into the spirit of it, she was rather preoccupied.
+The children had all wakened, as they did sometimes, in a body, and were
+storming joyfully around the rooms, as if it were Christmas; and she was
+trying to get them dressed. 'Do tell them what Easter is like; they've
+never seen it kept before,' she said; and I tried to do so, while I took
+a hand, as a young father will, and tried to get them into their
+clothes. I don't think I dwelt much on the religious observance of the
+day, but I dug up some of my profane associations with it in early life,
+and told them about coloring eggs, and fighting them, and all that;
+there in New England, in those days, they had never seen or heard of
+such a thing as an Easter egg.
+
+"I don't think my reminiscences quieted them much. They were all on
+fire--the oldest hoy and girl, and the twins, and even the two-year-old
+that we called the baby--to go out and buy some eggs and get the
+landlord to let them color them in the hotel kitchen. I had a deal of
+ado to make them wait till after breakfast, but I managed, somehow; and
+when we had finished--it was a mighty good Pennsylvania breakfast, such
+as we could eat with impunity in those halcyon days: rich coffee, steak,
+sausage, eggs, applebutter, buckwheat cakes and maple syrup--we got
+their out-door togs on them, while they were all stamping and shouting
+round and had to be caught and overcoated, and fur-capped and hooded
+simultaneously, and managed to get them into the street together. Ever
+been in Bethlehem?"
+
+We all had to own our neglect of this piece of travel; and Newton, after
+a moment of silent forgiveness, said:
+
+"Well, I don't know how it is now, but twenty-five or thirty years ago
+it was the most interesting town in America. It wasn't the old Moravian
+community that it had been twenty-five years before that, when none but
+Moravians could buy property there; but it was like the Sun Hotel, and
+just as that had grown round and over the old Sun Inn, the prosperous
+manufacturing town, with its iron-foundries and zinc-foundries, and all
+the rest of it, had grown round and over the original Moravian village.
+If you wanted a breath of perfect strangeness, with an American quality
+in it at the same time, you couldn't have gone to any place where you
+could have had it on such terms as you could in Bethlehem. I can't begin
+to go into details, but one thing was hearing German spoken everywhere
+in the street: not the German of Germany, but the Pennsylvania German,
+with its broad vowels and broken-down grammatical forms, and its English
+vocables and interjections, which you caught in the sentences which came
+to you, like _av coorse_, and _yes_ and _no_ for _ja_ and _nein_. There
+were stores where they spoke no English, and others where they made a
+specialty of it; and I suppose when we sallied out that bright Sunday
+morning, with the baby holding onto a hand of each of us between us, and
+the twins going in front with their brother and sister, we were almost
+as foreign as we should have been in a village on the Rhine or the Elbe.
+
+"We got a little acquainted with the people, after awhile, and I heard
+some stories of the country folks that I thought were pretty good. One
+was about an old German farmer on whose land a prospecting metallurgist
+found zinc ore; the scientific man brought him the bright yellow button
+by which the zinc proved its existence in its union with copper, and the
+old fellow asked in an awestricken whisper: 'Is it a gold-mine?' 'No,
+no. Guess again.' 'Then it's a _brass-mine_!' But before they began to
+find zinc there in the lovely Lehigh Valley--you can stand by an open
+zinc-mine and look down into it where the rock and earth are left
+standing, and you seem to be looking down into a range of sharp mountain
+peaks and pinnacles--it was the richest farming region in the whole fat
+State of Pennsylvania; and there was a young farmer who owned a vast
+tract of it, and who went to fetch home a young wife from Philadelphia
+way, somewhere. He drove there and back in his own buggy, and when he
+reached the top overlooking the valley, with his bride, he stopped his
+horse, and pointed with his whip. 'There,' he said, 'as far as the sky
+is blue, it's all ours!' I thought that was fine."
+
+"Fine?" I couldn't help bursting out; "it's a stroke of poetry."
+
+Minver cut in: "The thrifty Acton making a note of it for future use in
+literature."
+
+"Eh!" Newton queried. "Oh! I don't mind. You're welcome to it, Mr.
+Acton. It's a pity somebody shouldn't use it, and of course _I_ can't."
+
+"Acton will send you a copy with the usual forty-per-cent. discount and
+ten off for cash," the painter said.
+
+They had their little laugh at my expense, and then Newton took up his
+tale again. "Well, as I was saying--By the way, what _was_ I saying?"
+
+The story-loving Rulledge remembered. "You went out with your wife and
+children for Easter eggs."
+
+"Oh yes. Thank you. Well, of course, in a town geographically American,
+the shops were all shut on Sunday, and we couldn't buy even an Easter
+egg on Easter Sunday. But one of the stores had the shade of its
+show-window up, and the children simply glued themselves to it in such a
+fascination that we could hardly unstick them. That window was full of
+all kinds of Easter things--I don't remember what all; but there were
+Easter eggs in every imaginable color and pattern, and besides these
+there were whole troops of toy rabbits. I had forgotten that the natural
+offspring of Easter eggs is rabbits; but I took a brace, and remembered
+the fact and announced it to the children. They immediately demanded an
+explanation, with all sorts of scientific particulars, which I gave
+them, as reckless of the truth as I thought my wife would suffer without
+contradicting me. I had to say that while Easter eggs mostly hatched
+rabbits, there were instances in which they hatched other things, as,
+for instance, handfuls of eagles and half-eagles and double-eagles,
+especially in the case of the golden eggs that the goose laid. They knew
+all about that goose; but I had to tell them what those unfamiliar
+pieces of American coinage were, and promise to give them one each when
+they grew up, if they were good. That only partially satisfied them, and
+they wanted to know specifically what other kinds of things Easter eggs
+would hatch if properly treated. Each one had a preference; the baby
+always preferred what the last one said; and _she_ wanted an ostrich,
+the same as her big brother; he was seven then.
+
+"I don't really know how we lived through the day; I mean the children,
+for my wife and I went to the Moravian church, and had a good long
+Sunday nap in the afternoon, while the children were pining for Monday
+morning, when they could buy eggs and begin to color them, so that they
+could hatch just the right kind of Easter things. When I woke up I had
+to fall in with a theory they had agreed to between them that any kind
+of two-legged or four-legged chick that hatched from an Easter egg would
+wear the same color, or the same kind of spots or stripes, that the egg
+had.
+
+"I found that they had arranged to have calico eggs, and they were going
+to have their mother cover them with the same sort of cotton prints that
+I had said my grandmother and aunts used, and they meant to buy the
+calico in the morning at the same time that they bought the eggs. We had
+some tin vessels of water on our stoves to take the dryness out of the
+hot air, and they had decided that they would boil their eggs in these,
+and not trouble the landlord for the use of his kitchen.
+
+"There was nothing in this scheme wanting but their mother's consent--I
+agreed to it on the spot--but when she understood that they each
+expected to have two eggs apiece, with one apiece for us, she said she
+never could cover a dozen eggs in the world, and that the only way would
+be for them to go in the morning with us, and choose each the handsomest
+egg they could out of the eggs in that shop-window. They met this
+proposition rather blankly at first; but on reflection the big brother
+said it would be a shame to spoil mamma's Easter by making her work all
+day, and besides it would keep till that night, anyway, before they
+could begin to have any fun with their eggs; and then the rest all said
+the same thing, ending with the baby: and accepted the inevitable with
+joy, and set about living through the day as well as they could.
+
+"They had us up pretty early the next morning--that is, they had me up;
+their mother said that I had brought it on myself, and richly deserved
+it for exciting their imaginations, and I had to go out with the two
+oldest and the twins to choose the eggs; we got off from the baby by
+promising to let her have two, and she didn't understand very well,
+anyway, and was awfully sleepy. We were a pretty long time choosing the
+six eggs, and I don't remember now just what they were; but they were
+certainly joyous eggs; and--By the way, I don't know why I'm boring a
+brand of hardened bachelors like you with all these domestic details?"
+
+"Oh, don't mind _us_," Minver responded to his general appeal. "We may
+not understand the feelings of a father, but we are all mothers at
+heart, especially Rulledge. Go on. It's very exciting," he urged, not
+very ironically, and Newton went on.
+
+"Well, I don't believe I could say just how the havoc began. They put
+away their eggs very carefully after they had made their mother admire
+them, and shown the baby how hers were the prettiest, and they each
+said in succession that they must be very precious of them, for if you
+shook an egg, or anything, it wouldn't hatch; and it was their plan to
+take these home and set an unemployed pullet, belonging to the big
+brother, to hatching them in the coop that he had built of laths for her
+in the back yard with his own hands. But long before the afternoon was
+over, the evil one had entered Eden, and tempted the boy to try fighting
+eggs with these treasured specimens, as I had told we boys used to fight
+eggs in my town in the southwest. He held a conquering course through
+the encounter with three eggs, but met his Waterloo with a regular
+Blücher belonging to the baby. Then he instantly changed sides; and
+smashed his Blücher against the last egg left. By that time all the
+other children were in tears, the baby roaring powerfully in ignorant
+sympathy, and the victor steeped in silent gloom. His mother made him
+gather up the ruins from the floor, and put them in the stove, and she
+took possession of the victorious egg, and said she would keep it till
+we got back to Cambridge herself, and not let one of them touch it. I
+can tell you it was a tragical time. I wanted to go out and buy them
+another set of eggs, and spring them for a surprise on them in the
+morning, after they had suffered enough that night. But she said that if
+I dared to dream of such a thing--which would be the ruin of the
+children's character, by taking away the consequences of their
+folly--she should do, she did not know what, to me. Of course she was
+right, and I gave in, and helped the children forget all about it, so
+that by the time we got back to Cambridge I had forgotten about it
+myself.
+
+"I don't know what it was reminded the boy of that remaining Easter egg
+unless it was the sight of the unemployed pullet in her coop, which he
+visited the first thing; and I don't know how he managed to wheedle his
+mother out of it; but the first night after I came home from
+business--it was rather late and the children had gone to bed--she told
+me that ridiculous boy, as she called him in self-exculpation, had
+actually put the egg under his pullet, and all the children were wild to
+see what it would hatch. 'And now,' she said, severely, 'what are you
+going to do? You have filled their heads with those ideas, and I suppose
+you will have to invent some nonsense or other to fool them, and make
+them believe that it has hatched a giraffe, or an elephant, or
+something; they won't be satisfied with anything less.' I said we should
+have to try something smaller, for I didn't think we could manage a
+chick of that size on our lot; and that I should trust in Providence.
+Then she said it was all very well to laugh; and that I couldn't get out
+of it that way, and I needn't think it.
+
+"I didn't, much. But the children understood that it took three weeks
+for an egg to hatch, and anyway the pullet was so intermittent in her
+attentions to the Easter egg, only sitting on it at night, or when held
+down by hand in the day, that there was plenty of time. One evening when
+I came out from Boston, I was met by a doleful deputation at the front
+gate, with the news that when the coop was visited that morning after
+breakfast--they visited the coop every morning before they went to
+school--the pullet was found perched on a cross-bar in a high state of
+nerves, and the shell of the Easter egg broken and entirely eaten out.
+Probably a rat had got in and done it, or, more hopefully, a mink, such
+as used to attack eggs in the town where I was a boy. We went out and
+viewed the wreck, as a first step towards a better situation; and
+suddenly a thought struck me. 'Children,' I said, 'what did you really
+expect that egg to hatch, anyway?' They looked askance at one another,
+and at last the boy said: 'Well, you know, papa, an egg that's been
+cooked--' And then we all laughed together, and I knew they had been
+making believe as much as I had, and no more expected the impossible of
+a boiled egg than I did."
+
+"That was charming!" Wanhope broke out. "There is nothing more
+interesting than the way children join in hypnotizing themselves with
+the illusions which their parents think _they_ have created without
+their help. In fact, it is very doubtful whether at any age we have any
+illusions except those of our own creation; we--"
+
+"Let him go on, Wanhope," Minver dictated; and Newton continued.
+
+"It was rather nice. I asked them if their mother knew about the egg;
+and they said that of course they couldn't help telling her; and I said:
+'Well, then, I'll tell you what: we must make her believe that the chick
+hatched out and got away--' The boy stopped me: 'Do you think that would
+be exactly true, papa?' 'Well, not _exactly_ true; but it's only for the
+time being. We can tell her the exact truth afterwards,' and then I laid
+my plan before them. They said it was perfectly splendid, and would be
+the greatest kind of joke on mamma, and one that she would like as much
+as anybody. The thing was to keep it from her till it was done, and they
+all promised that they wouldn't tell; but I could see that they were
+bursting with the secret the whole evening.
+
+"The next day was Saturday, when I always went home early, and I had the
+two oldest children come in with the second-girl, who left them to take
+lunch with me. They had chocolate and ice-cream, and after lunch we
+went around to a milliner's shop in West Street, where my wife and I had
+stopped a long five minutes the week before we went to Bethlehem,
+adoring an Easter bonnet that we saw in the window. I wanted her to buy
+it; but she said, No, if we were going that expensive journey, we
+couldn't afford it, and she must do without, that spring. I showed it to
+them, and 'Now, children,' I said, 'what do you think of that for the
+chick that your Easter egg hatched?' And they said it was the most
+beautiful bonnet they had ever seen, and it would just exactly suit
+mamma. But I saw they were holding something back, and I said, sharply,
+'Well?' and they both guiltily faltered out: 'The _bird_, you know,
+papa,' and I remembered that they belonged to the society of Bird
+Defenders, who in that day were pledged against the decorative use of
+dead birds or killing them for anything but food. 'Why, confound it,' I
+said, 'the bird is the very thing that makes it an Easter-egg chick!'
+but I saw that their honest little hearts were troubled, and I said
+again: 'Confound it! Let's go in and hear what the milliner has to say.'
+Well, the long and short of it was that the milliner tried a bunch of
+forget-me-nots over the bluebird that we all agreed was a thousand times
+better, and that if it were substituted would only cost three dollars
+more, and we took our Easter-egg chick home in a blaze of glory, the
+children carrying the bandbox by the string between them.
+
+"Of course we had a great time opening it, and their mother acted her
+part so well that I knew she was acting, and after the little ones were
+in bed I taxed her with it. 'Know? Of course I knew!' she said. 'Did you
+think they would let you _deceive_ me? They're true New-Englanders, and
+they told me all about it last night, when I was saying their prayers
+with them.' 'Well,' I said, 'they let you deceive _me_; they must be
+true Westerners, too, for they didn't tell me a word of your knowing.' I
+rather had her there, but she said: 'Oh, you goose--' We were young
+people in those days, and goose meant everything. But, really, I'm
+ashamed of getting off all this to you hardened bachelors, as I said
+before--"
+
+"If you tell many more such stories in this club," Minver said,
+severely, "you won't leave a bachelor in it. And Rulledge will be the
+first to get married."
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Between The Dark And The Daylight
+by William Dean Howells
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12100 ***
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Between the Dark and the Daylight: Romances, by W.D. Howells</title>
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12100 ***</div>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust1l.jpg" name="illust1"><img src="images/illust1m.jpg" title="THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT" alt="[Illustration: THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT]" style="width: 450px; height: 760px" /></a><br /><span style="font-size: 0.75em; font-variant: small-caps" class="nonprinting">(&#8220;<a href="#illust1ref">their joint study...</a>")</span></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h1 class="title">Between the Dark and the Daylight</h1>
+
+<h1 class="subtitle">Romances</h1>
+
+<h1 class="authorship">by<br />
+W.D. Howells</h1>
+<h1 class="date">1907</h1>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+<div>
+<span style="font-size: 0.625em">CHAP.</span>
+<ol class="contents">
+<li><a href="#chapter1">A Sleep and a Forgetting</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter2">The Eidolons of Brooks Alford</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter3">A Memory that Worked Overtime</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter4">A Case of Metaphantasmia</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter5">Editha</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter6">Braybridge&#8217;s Offer</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter7">The Chick of the Easter Egg</a></li>
+</ol>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+<ul class="illustrations">
+<li><a href="#illust1">Their joint study of her dancing-card did not
+help them out</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust2">A lively matron, of as youthful a temperament as
+the lively girls she brought in her train, burst upon them</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust3">&#8220;She shook her head, and said,...
+&#8216;Nobody has been here, except&#8212;&#8217;&#8221;</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust4">&#8220;No burglar could have missed me if he had
+wanted an easy mark&#8221;</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust5">&#8220;&#8216;You shall not say
+that!&#8217;&#8221;</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust6">&#8220;She glared at editha. &#8216;What you got
+that black on for?&#8217;&#8221;</a></li> </ul>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter1" id="chapter1">I</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">A Sleep and a Forgetting</h2>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Matthew Lanfear had stopped off, between Genoa and Nice, at San Remo
+in the interest of a friend who had come over on the steamer with him,
+and who wished him to test the air before settling there for the winter
+with an invalid wife. She was one of those neurasthenics who really
+carry their climate&#8212;always a bad one&#8212;with them, but she had
+set her mind on San Remo; and Lanfear was willing to pass a few days in
+the place making the observations which he felt pretty sure would be
+adverse.</p>
+
+<p>His train was rather late, and the sunset was fading from the French
+sky beyond the Italian shore when he got out of his car and looked round
+for a porter to take his valise. His roving eye lighted on the anxious
+figure, which as fully as the anxious face, of a short, stout, elderly
+man expressed a sort of distraction, as he stood loaded down with
+umbrellas, bags, bundles, and wraps, and seemed unable to arrest the
+movements of a tall young girl, with a travelling-shawl trailing from
+her arm, who had the effect of escaping from him towards a bench beside
+the door of the waiting-room. When she reached it, in spite of his
+appeals, she sat down with an absent air, and looked as far withdrawn
+from the bustle of the platform and from the snuffling train as if on
+some quiet garden seat along with her own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>In his fat frenzy, which Lanfear felt to be pathetic, the old
+gentleman glanced at him, and then abruptly demanded: &#8220;Are you an
+American?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We knew each other abroad in some mystical way, and Lanfear did not
+try to deny the fact.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, then,&#8221; the stranger said, as if the fact made
+everything right, &#8220;will you kindly tell my daughter, on that bench
+by the door yonder&#8221;&#8212;he pointed with a bag, and dropped a
+roll of rugs from under his arm&#8212;&#8220;that I&#8217;ll be with her
+as soon as I&#8217;ve looked after the trunks? Tell her not to move till
+I come. Heigh! Here! Take hold of these, will you?&#8221; He caught the
+sleeve of a <em>facchino</em> who came wandering by, and heaped him with
+his burdens, and then pushed ahead of the man in the direction of the
+baggage-room with a sort of mastery of the situation which struck
+Lanfear as springing from desperation rather than experience.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear stood a moment hesitating. Then a glance at the girl on the
+bench, drooping a little forward in freeing her face from the veil that
+hung from her pretty hat, together with a sense of something quaintly
+charming in the confidence shown him on such purely compatriotic
+grounds, decided him to do just what he had been asked. The girl had got
+her veil up by this time, and as he came near, she turned from looking
+at the sunset over the stretch of wall beyond the halting train, and met
+his dubious face with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It <em>is</em> beautiful, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; she said.
+&#8220;I know I shall get well, here, if they have such sunsets every
+day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There was something so convincingly normal in her expression that
+Lanfear dismissed a painful conjecture. &#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221;
+he said. &#8220;I am afraid there&#8217;s some mistake. I haven&#8217;t
+the pleasure&#8212;You must excuse me, but your father wished me to ask
+you to wait here for him till he had got his baggage&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My father?&#8221; the girl stopped him with a sort of a
+frowning perplexity in the stare she gave him. &#8220;My father
+isn&#8217;t here!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; Lanfear said. &#8220;I must have
+misunderstood. A gentleman who got out of the train with you&#8212;a
+short, stout gentleman with gray hair&#8212;I understood him to say you
+were his daughter&#8212;requested me to bring this
+message&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl shook her head. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know him. It must be a
+mistake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The mistake is mine, no doubt. It may have been some one else
+whom he pointed out, and I have blundered. I&#8217;m very sorry if I
+seem to have intruded&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What place is this?&#8221; the girl asked, without noticing
+his excuses.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;San Remo,&#8221; Lanfear answered. &#8220;If you didn&#8217;t
+intend to stop here, your train will be leaving in a moment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I meant to get off, I suppose,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t believe I&#8217;m going any farther.&#8221; She leaned back
+against the bars of the bench, and put up one of her slim arms along the
+top.</p>
+
+<p>There was something wrong. Lanfear now felt that, in spite of her
+perfect tranquillity and self-possession; perhaps because of it. He had
+no business to stay there talking with her, but he had not quite the
+right to leave her, though practically he had got his dismissal, and
+apparently she was quite capable of taking care of herself, or could
+have been so in a country where any woman&#8217;s defencelessness was
+not any man&#8217;s advantage. He could not go away without some effort
+to be of use.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Can I help you in
+calling a carriage; or looking after your hand-baggage&#8212;it will be
+getting dark&#8212;perhaps your maid&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My <em>maid!</em>&#8221; The girl frowned again, with a
+measure of the amazement which she showed when he mentioned her father.
+&#8220;<em>I</em> have no maid!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear blurted desperately out: &#8220;You are alone? You
+came&#8212;you are going to stay here&#8212;alone?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Quite alone,&#8221; she said, with a passivity in which there
+was no resentment, and no feeling unless it were a certain color of
+dignity. Almost at the same time, with a glance beside and beyond him,
+she called out joyfully: &#8220;Ah, there you are!&#8221; and Lanfear
+turned, and saw scuffling and heard puffing towards them the short,
+stout elderly gentleman who had sent him to her. &#8220;I knew you would
+come before long!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I thought it was pretty long, myself,&#8221; the
+gentleman said, and then he courteously referred himself to Lanfear.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid this gentleman has found it rather long, too;
+but I couldn&#8217;t manage it a moment sooner.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear said: &#8220;Not at all. I wish I could have been of any use
+to&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My daughter&#8212;Miss Gerald, Mr.&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Lanfear&#8212;Dr. Lanfear,&#8221; he said, accepting the
+introduction; and the girl bowed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, doctor, eh?&#8221; the father said, with a certain
+impression. &#8220;Going to stop here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A few days,&#8221; Lanfear answered, making way for the
+forward movement which the others began.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, well! I&#8217;m very much obliged to you, very much,
+indeed; and I&#8217;m sure my daughter is.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl said, &#8220;Oh yes, indeed,&#8221; rather indifferently,
+and then as they passed him, while he stood lifting his hat, she turned
+radiantly on him. &#8220;Thank you, ever so much!&#8221; she said, with
+the gentle voice which he had already thought charming.</p>
+
+<p>The father called back: &#8220;I hope we shall meet again. We are
+going to the Sardegna.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear had been going to the Sardegna himself, but while he bowed he
+now decided upon another hotel.</p>
+
+<p>The mystery, whatever it was, that the brave, little, fat father was
+carrying off so bluffly, had clearly the morbid quality of unhealth in
+it, and Lanfear could not give himself freely to a young pleasure in the
+girl&#8217;s dark beauty of eyes and hair, her pale, irregular, piquant
+face, her slender figure and flowing walk. He was in the presence of
+something else, something that appealed to his scientific side, to that
+which was humane more than that which was human in him, and abashed him
+in the other feeling. Unless she was out of her mind there was no way of
+accounting for her behavior, except by some caprice which was itself
+scarcely short of insanity. She must have thought she knew him when he
+approached, and when she addressed him those first words; but when he
+had tried to set her right she had not changed; and why had she denied
+her father, and then hailed him with joy when he came back to her? She
+had known that she intended to stop at San Remo, but she had not known
+where she had stopped when she asked what place it was. She was
+consciously an invalid of some sort, for she spoke of getting well under
+sunsets like that which had now waned, but what sort of invalid was
+she?</p>
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>Lanfear&#8217;s question persisted through the night, and it helped,
+with the coughing in the next room, to make a bad night for him. None of
+the hotels in San Remo receive consumptive patients, but none are
+without somewhere a bronchial cough. If it is in the room next yours it
+keeps you awake, but it is not pulmonary; you may comfort yourself in
+your vigils with that fact. Lanfear, however, fancied he had got a poor
+dinner, and in the morning he did not like his coffee. He thought he had
+let a foolish scruple keep him from the Grand Hotel Sardegna, and he
+walked down towards it along the palm-flanked promenade, in the gay
+morning light, with the tideless sea on the other hand lapping the rough
+beach beyond the lines of the railroad which borders it. On his way he
+met files of the beautiful Ligurian women, moving straight under the
+burdens balanced on their heads, or bestriding the donkeys laden with
+wine-casks in the roadway, or following beside the carts which the
+donkeys drew. Ladies of all nations, in the summer fashions of London,
+Berlin, St. Petersburg, Paris, and New York thronged the path. The sky
+was of a blue so deep, so liquid that it seemed to him he could scoop it
+in his hand and pour it out again like water. Seaward, he glanced at the
+fishing-boats lying motionless in the offing, and the coastwise steamer
+that runs between Nice and Genoa trailing a thin plume of smoke between
+him and their white sails. With the more definite purpose of making sure
+of the Grand Hotel Sardegna, he scanned the different villa slopes that
+showed their level lines of white and yellow and dull pink through the
+gray tropical greenery on the different levels of the hills. He was duly
+rewarded by the sight of the bold legend topping its cornice, and when
+he let his eye descend the garden to a little pavilion on the wall
+overlooking the road, he saw his acquaintances of the evening before
+making a belated breakfast. The father recognized Lanfear first and
+spoke to his daughter, who looked up from her coffee and down towards
+him where he wavered, lifting his hat, and bowed smiling to him. He had
+no reason to cross the roadway towards the white stairway which climbed
+from it to the hotel grounds, but he did so. The father leaned out over
+the wall, and called down to him: &#8220;Won&#8217;t you come up and
+join us, doctor?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, yes!&#8221; Lanfear consented, and in another moment he
+was shaking hands with the girl, to whom, he noticed, her father named
+him again. He had in his glad sense of her white morning dress and her
+hat of green-leafed lace, a feeling that she was somehow meeting him as
+a friend of indefinite date in an intimacy unconditioned by any past or
+future time. Her pleasure in his being there was as frank as her
+father&#8217;s, and there was a pretty trust of him in every word and
+tone which forbade misinterpretation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was just talking about you, doctor,&#8221; the father began,
+&#8220;and saying what a pity you hadn&#8217;t come to our hotel.
+It&#8217;s a capital place.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<em>I&#8217;ve</em> been thinking it was a pity I went to
+mine,&#8221; Lanfear returned, &#8220;though I&#8217;m in San Remo for
+such a short time it&#8217;s scarcely worth while to change.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, perhaps if you came here, you might stay longer. I guess
+we&#8217;re booked for the winter, Nannie?&#8221; He referred the
+question to his daughter, who asked Lanfear if he would not have some
+coffee.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was going to say I had had my coffee, but I&#8217;m not sure
+it <em>was</em> coffee,&#8221; Lanfear began, and he consented, with
+some demur, banal enough, about the trouble.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, that&#8217;s right, then, and no trouble at all,&#8221;
+Mr. Gerald broke in upon him. &#8220;Here comes a fellow looking for a
+chance to bring you some,&#8221; and he called to a waiter wandering
+distractedly about with a &#8220;Heigh!&#8221; that might have been
+offensive from a less obviously inoffensive man. &#8220;Can you get our
+friend here a cup and saucer, and some of this good coffee?&#8221; he
+asked, as the waiter approached.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, certainly, sir,&#8221; the man answered in careful
+English. &#8220;Is it not, perhaps, Mr. and Misses Gerald?&#8221; he
+smilingly insinuated, offering some cards.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Miss Gerald,&#8221; the father corrected him as he took the
+cards. &#8220;Why, hello, Nannie! Here are the Bells! Where are
+they?&#8221; he demanded of the waiter. &#8220;Bring them here, and a
+lot more cups and saucers. Or, hold on! I&#8217;d better go myself,
+Nannie, hadn&#8217;t I? Of course! You get the crockery, waiter. Where
+did you say they were?&#8221; He bustled up from his chair, without
+waiting for a distinct reply, and apologized to Lanfear in hurrying
+away. &#8220;You&#8217;ll excuse me, doctor! I&#8217;ll be back in half
+a minute. Friends of ours that came over on the same boat. I must see
+them, of course, but I don&#8217;t believe they&#8217;ll stay. Nannie,
+don&#8217;t let Dr. Lanfear get away. I want to have some talk with him.
+You tell him he&#8217;d better come to the Sardegna, here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear and Miss Gerald sat a moment in the silence which is apt to
+follow with young people when they are unexpectedly left to themselves.
+She kept absently pushing the cards her father had given her up and down
+on the table between her thumb and forefinger, and Lanfear noted the
+translucence of her long, thin hand in the sunshine striking across the
+painted iron surface of the garden movable. The translucence had a
+pathos for his intelligence which the pensive tilt of her head enhanced.
+She stopped toying with the cards, and looked at the addresses on
+them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What strange things names are!&#8221; she said, as if musing
+on the fact, with a sigh which he thought disproportioned to the depth
+of her remark.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They seem rather irrelevant at times,&#8221; he admitted, with
+a smile. &#8220;They&#8217;re mere tags, labels, which can be attached
+to one as well as another; they seem to belong equally to
+anybody.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is what I always say to myself,&#8221; she agreed, with
+more interest than he found explicable.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But finally,&#8221; he returned, &#8220;they&#8217;re all
+that&#8217;s left us, if they&#8217;re left themselves. They are the
+only signs to the few who knew us that we ever existed. They stand for
+our characters, our personality, our mind, our soul.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She said, &#8220;That is very true,&#8221; and then she suddenly gave
+him the cards. &#8220;Do you know these people?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I? I thought they were friends of yours,&#8221; he replied,
+astonished.</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust2l.jpg" name="illust2"><img src="images/illust2m.jpg" title="A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE LIVELY GIRLS SHE BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM" alt="[Illustration: A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE LIVELY GIRLS SHE BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM]" style="width: 450px; height: 723px" /></a></div>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is what papa thinks,&#8221; Miss Gerald said, and while
+she sat dreamily absent, a rustle of skirts and a flutter of voices
+pierced from the surrounding shrubbery, and then a lively matron, of as
+youthful a temperament as the lively girls she brought in her train,
+burst upon them, and Miss Gerald was passed from one embrace to another
+until all four had kissed her. She returned their greeting, and shared,
+in her quieter way, their raptures at their encounter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Such a hunt as we&#8217;ve had for you!&#8221; the matron
+shouted. &#8220;We&#8217;ve been up-stairs and down-stairs and in my
+lady&#8217;s chamber, all over the hotel. Where&#8217;s your father? Ah,
+they did get our cards to you!&#8221; and by that token Lanfear knew
+that these ladies were the Bells. He had stood up in a sort of
+expectancy, but Miss Gerald did not introduce him, and a shadow of
+embarrassment passed over the party which she seemed to feel least,
+though he fancied a sort of entreaty in the glance that she let pass
+over him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose he&#8217;s gone to look for <em>us!</em>&#8221; Mrs.
+Bell saved the situation with a protecting laugh. Miss Gerald colored
+intelligently, and Lanfear could not let Mrs. Bell&#8217;s implication
+pass.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If it is Mrs. Bell,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I can answer that
+he has. I met you at Magnolia some years ago, Mrs. Bell. Dr.
+Lanfear.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I beg your pardon, Dr. Lanfear,&#8221; Miss Gerald said.
+&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t think&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of my tag, my label?&#8221; he laughed back. &#8220;It
+isn&#8217;t very distinctly lettered.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bell was not much minding them jointly. She was singling Lanfear
+out for the expression of her pleasure in seeing him again, and
+recalling the incidents of her summer at Magnolia before, it seemed, any
+of her girls were out. She presented them collectively, and the eldest
+of them charmingly reminded Lanfear that he had once had the magnanimity
+to dance with her when she sat, in a little girl&#8217;s forlorn despair
+of being danced with, at one of those desolate hops of the good old
+Osprey House.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes; and now,&#8221; her mother followed, &#8220;we
+can&#8217;t wait a moment longer, if we&#8217;re to get our train for
+Monte Carlo, girls. We&#8217;re not going to play, doctor,&#8221; she
+made time to explain, &#8220;but we are going to look on. Will you tell
+your father, dear,&#8221; she said, taking the girl&#8217;s hands
+caressingly in hers, and drawing her to her motherly bosom, &#8220;that
+we found you, and did our best to find him? We can&#8217;t wait
+now&#8212;our carriage is champing the bit at the foot of the
+stairs&#8212;but we&#8217;re coming back in a week, and then we&#8217;ll
+do our best to look you up again.&#8221; She included Lanfear in her
+good-bye, and all her girls said good-bye in the same way, and with a
+whisking of skirts and twitter of voices they vanished through the
+shrubbery, and faded into the general silence and general sound like a
+bevy of birds which had swept near and passed by.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Gerald sank quietly into her place, and sat as if nothing had
+happened, except that she looked a little paler to Lanfear, who remained
+on foot trying to piece together their interrupted t&#234;te-&#224;-t&#234;te, but not
+succeeding, when her father reappeared, red and breathless, and wiping
+his forehead. &#8220;Have they been here, Nannie?&#8221; he asked.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve been following them all over the place, and the
+<i>portier</i> told me just now that he had seen a party of ladies coming
+down this way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He got it all out, not so clearly as those women had got everything
+in, Lanfear reflected, but unmistakably enough as to the fact, and he
+looked at his daughter as he repeated: &#8220;Haven&#8217;t the Bells
+been here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust3l.jpg" name="illust3"><img src="images/illust3m.jpg" title="&#8220;SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... &#8216;NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE, EXCEPT&#8212;&#8217;&#8221;" alt="[Illustration: &#8220;SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... &#8216;NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE, EXCEPT&#8212;&#8217;&#8221;]" style="width: 599px; height: 450px" /></a></div>
+
+<p>She shook her head, and said, with her delicate quiet: &#8220;Nobody
+has been here, except&#8212;&#8221; She glanced at Lanfear, who smiled,
+but saw no opening for himself in the strange situation. Then she said:
+&#8220;I think I will go and lie down a while, now, papa. I&#8217;m
+rather tired. Good-bye,&#8221; she said, giving Lanfear her hand; it
+felt limp and cold; and then she turned to her father again.
+&#8220;Don&#8217;t you come, papa! I can get back perfectly well by
+myself. Stay with&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I will go with you,&#8221; her father said, &#8220;and if Dr.
+Lanfear doesn&#8217;t mind coming&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Certainly I will come,&#8221; Lanfear said, and he passed to
+the girl&#8217;s right; she had taken her father&#8217;s arm; but he
+wished to offer more support if it were needed. When they had climbed to
+the open flowery space before the hotel, she seemed aware of the groups
+of people about. She took her hand from her father&#8217;s arm, as if
+unwilling to attract their notice by seeming to need its help, and swept
+up the gravelled path between him and Lanfear, with her flowing
+walk.</p>
+
+<p>Her father fell back, as they entered the hotel door, and murmured to
+Lanfear: &#8220;Will you wait till I come down?&#8221; ... &#8220;I
+wanted to tell you about my daughter,&#8221; he explained, when he came
+back after the quarter of an hour which Lanfear had found rather
+intense. &#8220;It&#8217;s useless to pretend you wouldn&#8217;t have
+noticed&#8212;Had nobody been with you after I left you, down
+there?&#8221; He twisted his head in the direction of the pavilion,
+where they had been breakfasting.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes; Mrs. Bell and her daughters,&#8221; Lanfear answered,
+simply.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course! Why do you suppose my daughter denied it?&#8221;
+Mr. Gerald asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose she&#8212;had her reasons,&#8221; Lanfear answered,
+lamely enough.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No <em>reason</em>, I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221; Mr. Gerald said,
+and he broke out hopelessly: &#8220;She has her mind sound enough, but
+not&#8212;not her memory. She had forgotten that they were there! Are
+you going to stay in San Remo?&#8221; he asked, with an effect of
+interrupting himself, as if in the wish to put off something, or to make
+the ground sure before he went on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why,&#8221; Lanfear said, &#8220;I hadn&#8217;t thought of it.
+I stopped&#8212;I was going to Nice&#8212;to test the air for a friend
+who wishes to bring his invalid wife here, if I approve&#8212;but I have
+just been asking myself why I should go to Nice when I could stay at San
+Remo. The place takes my fancy. I&#8217;m something of an invalid
+myself&#8212;at least I&#8217;m on my vacation&#8212;and I find a charm
+in it, if nothing better. Perhaps a charm is enough. It used to be, in
+primitive medicine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was talking to what he felt was not an undivided attention in Mr.
+Gerald, who said, &#8220;I&#8217;m glad of it,&#8221; and then added:
+&#8220;I should like to consult you professionally. I know your
+reputation in New York&#8212;though I&#8217;m not a New-Yorker
+myself&#8212;and I don&#8217;t know any of the doctors here. I suppose
+I&#8217;ve done rather a wild thing in coming off the way I have, with
+my daughter; but I felt that I must do something, and I hoped&#8212;I
+felt as if it were getting away from our trouble. It&#8217;s most
+fortunate my meeting you, if you can look into the case, and help me out
+with a nurse, if she&#8217;s needed, and all that!&#8221; To a certain
+hesitation in Lanfear&#8217;s face, he added: &#8220;Of course,
+I&#8217;m asking your professional help. My name is Abner
+Gerald&#8212;Abner L. Gerald&#8212;perhaps you know my standing, and
+that I&#8217;m able to&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it isn&#8217;t a question of that! I shall be glad to do
+anything I can,&#8221; Lanfear said, with a little pang which he tried
+to keep silent in orienting himself anew towards the girl, whose
+loveliness he had felt before he had felt her piteousness.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But before you go further I ought to say that you must have
+been thinking of my uncle, the first Matthew Lanfear, when you spoke of
+my reputation; I haven&#8217;t got any yet; I&#8217;ve only got my
+uncle&#8217;s name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; Mr. Gerald said, disappointedly, but after a blank
+moment he apparently took courage. &#8220;You&#8217;re in the same line,
+though?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you mean the psychopathic line, without being exactly an
+alienist, well, yes,&#8221; Lanfear admitted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s exactly what I mean,&#8221; the elder said, with
+renewed hopefulness. &#8220;I&#8217;m quite willing to risk myself with
+a man of the same name as Dr. Lanfear. I should like,&#8221; he said,
+hurrying on, as if to override any further reluctance of
+Lanfear&#8217;s, &#8220;to tell you her story, and
+then&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By all means,&#8221; Lanfear consented, and he put on an air
+of professional deference, while the older man began with a face set for
+the task.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a long story, or it&#8217;s a short story, as you
+choose to make it. We&#8217;ll make it long, if necessary, later, but
+now I&#8217;ll make it short. Five months ago my wife was killed before
+my daughter&#8217;s eyes&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stopped; Lanfear breathed a gentle &#8220;Oh!&#8221; and Gerald
+blurted out:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Accident&#8212;grade crossing&#8212;Don&#8217;t!&#8221; he
+winced at the kindness in Lanfear&#8217;s eyes, and panted on.
+&#8220;That&#8217;s over! What happened to <em>her</em>&#8212;to my
+daughter&#8212;was that she fainted from the shock. When she
+woke&#8212;it was more like a sleep than a swoon&#8212;she didn&#8217;t
+remember what had happened.&#8221; Lanfear nodded, with a gravely
+interested face. &#8220;She didn&#8217;t remember anything that had ever
+happened before. She knew me, because I was there with her; but she
+didn&#8217;t know that she ever had a mother, because she was not there
+with her. You see?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can imagine,&#8221; Lanfear assented.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The whole of her life before the&#8212;accident was wiped out
+as to the facts, as completely as if it had never been; and now every
+day, every hour, every minute, as it passes, goes with that past. But
+her faculties&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; Lanfear prompted in the pause which Mr. Gerald
+made.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Her intellect&#8212;the working powers of her mind, apart from
+anything like remembering, are as perfect as if she were in full
+possession of her memory. I believe,&#8221; the father said, with a
+pride that had its pathos, &#8220;no one can talk with her and not feel
+that she has a beautiful mind, that she can think better than most girls
+of her age. She reads, or she lets me read to her, and until it has time
+to fade, she appreciates it all more fully than I do. At Genoa, where I
+took her to the palaces for the pictures, I saw that she had kept her
+feeling for art. When she plays&#8212;you will hear her play&#8212;it is
+like composing the music for herself; she does not seem to remember the
+pieces, she seems to improvise them. You understand?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear said that he understood, for he could not disappoint the
+expectation of the father&#8217;s boastful love: all that was left him
+of the ambitions he must once have had for his child.</p>
+
+<p>The poor, little, stout, unpicturesque elderly man got up and began
+to walk to and fro in the room which he had turned into with Lanfear,
+and to say, more to himself than to Lanfear, as if balancing one thing
+against another: &#8220;The merciful thing is that she has been saved
+from the horror and the sorrow. She knows no more of either than she
+knows of her mother&#8217;s love for her. They were very much alike in
+looks and mind, and they were always together more like persons of the
+same age&#8212;sisters, or girl friends; but she has lost all knowledge
+of that, as of other things. And then there is the question whether she
+won&#8217;t some time, sooner or later, come into both the horror and
+the sorrow.&#8221; He stopped and looked at Lanfear. &#8220;She has
+these sudden fits of drowsiness, when she <em>must</em> sleep; and I
+never see her wake from them without being afraid that she has wakened
+to everything&#8212;that she has got back into her full self, and taken
+up the terrible burden that my old shoulders are used to. What do you
+think?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear felt the appeal so keenly that in the effort to answer
+faithfully he was aware of being harsher than he meant. &#8220;That is a
+chance we can&#8217;t forecast. But it is a chance. The fact that the
+drowsiness recurs periodically&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It doesn&#8217;t,&#8221; the father pleaded. &#8220;We
+don&#8217;t know when it will come on.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It scarcely matters. The periodicity wouldn&#8217;t affect the
+possible result which you dread. I don&#8217;t say that it is probable.
+But it&#8217;s one of the possibilities. It has,&#8221; Lanfear added,
+&#8220;its logic.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, its logic!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Its logic, yes. My business, of course, would be to restore
+her to health at any risk. So far as her mind is
+affected&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Her mind is not affected!&#8221; the father retorted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon&#8212;her memory&#8212;it might be restored
+with her physical health. You understand that? It is a chance; it might
+or it might not happen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The father was apparently facing a risk which he had not squarely
+faced before. &#8220;I suppose so,&#8221; he faltered. After a moment he
+added, with more courage: &#8220;You must do the best you can, at any
+risk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear rose, too. He said, with returning kindness in his tones, if
+not his words: &#8220;I should like to study the case, Mr. Gerald.
+It&#8217;s very interesting, and&#8212;and&#8212;if you&#8217;ll forgive
+me&#8212;very touching.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thank you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you decide to stay in San Remo, I will&#8212;Do you
+suppose I could get a room in this hotel? I don&#8217;t like
+mine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, I haven&#8217;t any doubt you can. Shall we
+ask?&#8221;</p>
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>It was from the Hotel Sardegna that Lanfear satisfied his conscience
+by pushing his search for climate on behalf of his friend&#8217;s
+neurasthenic wife. He decided that Ospedaletti, with a milder air and
+more sheltered seat in its valley of palms, would be better for her than
+San Remo. He wrote his friend to that effect, and then there was no
+preoccupation to hinder him in his devotion to the case of Miss Gerald.
+He put the case first in the order of interest rather purposely, and
+even with a sense of effort, though he could not deny to himself that a
+like case related to a different personality might have been less
+absorbing. But he tried to keep his scientific duty to it pure of that
+certain painful pleasure which, as a young man not much over thirty, he
+must feel in the strange affliction of a young and beautiful girl.</p>
+
+<p>Though there was no present question of medicine, he could be
+installed near her, as the friend that her father insisted upon making
+him, without contravention of the social formalities. His care of her
+hardly differed from that of her father, except that it involved a
+closer and more premeditated study. They did not try to keep her from
+the sort of association which, in a large hotel of the type of the
+Sardegna, entails no sort of obligation to intimacy. They sat together
+at the long table, midway of the dining-room, which maintained the
+tradition of the old table-d&#8217;h&#244;te against the small tables ranged
+along the walls. Gerald had an amiable old man&#8217;s liking for talk,
+and Lanfear saw that he willingly escaped, among their changing
+companions, from the pressure of his anxieties. He left his daughter
+very much to Lanfear, during these excursions, but Lanfear was far from
+meaning to keep her to himself. He thought it better that she should
+follow her father in his forays among their neighbors, and he encouraged
+her to continue such talk with them as she might be brought into. He
+tried to guard her future encounters with them, so that she should not
+show more than a young girl&#8217;s usual diffidence at a second
+meeting; and in the frequent substitution of one presence for another
+across the table, she was fairly safe.</p>
+
+<p>A natural light-heartedness, of which he had glimpses from the first,
+returned to her. One night, at the dance given by some of the guests to
+some others, she went through the gayety in joyous triumph. She danced
+mostly with Lanfear, but she had other partners, and she won a pleasing
+popularity by the American quality of her waltzing. Lanfear had already
+noted that her forgetfulness was not always so constant or so inclusive
+as her father had taught him to expect; Mr. Gerald&#8217;s statement had
+been the large, general fact from which there was sometimes a shrinking
+in the particulars. While the warmth of an agreeable experience lasted,
+her mind kept record of it, slight or full; if the experience were
+unpleasant the memory was more apt to fade at once. After that dance she
+repeated to her father the little compliments paid her, and told him,
+laughing, they were to reward him for sitting up so late as her
+chaperon. Emotions persisted in her consciousness as the tremor lasts in
+a smitten cord, but events left little trace. She retained a sense of
+personalities; she was lastingly sensible of temperaments; but names
+were nothing to her. She could not tell her father who had said the nice
+things to her, and <a name="illust1ref" id="illust1ref">their joint study of her
+dancing-card did not help them out</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Her relation to Lanfear, though it might be a subject of
+international scrutiny, was hardly a subject of censure. He was known as
+Dr. Lanfear, but he was not at first known as her physician; he was
+conjectured her cousin or something like that; he might even be her
+betrothed in the peculiar American arrangement of such affairs.
+Personally people saw in him a serious-looking young man, better dressed
+and better mannered than they thought most Americans, and unquestionably
+handsomer, with his Spanish skin and eyes, and his brown beard of the
+Vandyke cut which was then already beginning to be rather belated.</p>
+
+<p>Other Americans in the hotel were few and transitory; and if the
+English had any mind about Miss Gerald different from their mind about
+other girls, it would be perhaps to the effect that she was quite mad;
+by this they would mean that she was a little odd; but for the rest they
+had apparently no mind about her. With the help of one of the English
+ladies her father had replaced the homesick Irish maid whom he had sent
+back to New York from Genoa, with an Italian, and in the shelter of her
+gay affection and ignorant sympathy Miss Gerald had a security
+supplemented by the easy social environment. If she did not look very
+well, she did not differ from most other American women in that; and if
+she seemed to confide herself more severely to the safe-keeping of her
+physician, that was the way of all women patients.</p>
+
+<p>Whether the Bells found the spectacle of depravity at Monte Carlo
+more attractive than the smiling face of nature at San Remo or not, they
+did not return, but sent for their baggage from their hotel, and were
+not seen again by the Geralds. Lanfear&#8217;s friend with the invalid
+wife wrote from Ospedaletti, with apologies which inculpated him for the
+disappointment, that she had found the air impossible in a single day,
+and they were off for Cannes. Lanfear and the Geralds, therefore,
+continued together in the hotel without fear or obligation to others,
+and in an immunity in which their right to breakfast exclusively in that
+pavilion on the garden wall was almost explicitly conceded. No one,
+after a few mornings of tacit possession, would have disputed their
+claim, and there, day after day, in the mild monotony of the December
+sunshine, they sat and drank their coffee, and talked of the sights
+which the peasants in the street, and the tourists in the promenade
+beyond it, afforded. The rows of stumpy palms which separated the road
+from the walk were not so high but that they had the whole lift of the
+sea to the horizon where it lost itself in a sky that curved blue as
+turquoise to the zenith overhead. The sun rose from its morning bath on
+the left, and sank to its evening bath on the right, and in making its
+climb of the spacious arc between, shed a heat as great as that of
+summer, but not the heat of summer, on the pretty world of villas and
+hotels, towered over by the olive-gray slopes of the pine-clad heights
+behind and above them. From these tops a fine, keen cold fell with the
+waning afternoon, which sharpened through the sunset till the dusk; but
+in the morning the change was from the chill to the glow, and they could
+sit in their pavilion, under the willowy droop of the eucalyptus-trees
+which have brought the Southern Pacific to the Riviera, with increasing
+comfort.</p>
+
+<p>In the restlessness of an elderly man, Gerald sometimes left the
+young people to their intolerable delays over their coffee, and walked
+off into the little stone and stucco city below, or went and sat with
+his cigar on one of the benches under the palm-lined promenade, which
+the pale northern consumptives shared with the swarthy peasant girls
+resting from their burdens, and the wrinkled grandmothers of their race
+passively or actively begging from the strangers.</p>
+
+<p>While she kept her father in sight it seemed that Miss Gerald could
+maintain her hold of his identity, and one morning she said, with the
+tender fondness for him which touched Lanfear: &#8220;When he sits there
+among those sick people and poor people, then he knows they are in the
+world.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She turned with a question graver in her look than usual, and he
+said: &#8220;Yes, we might help them oftener if we could remember that
+their misery was going on all the time, like some great natural process,
+day or dark, heat or cold, which seems to stop when we stop thinking of
+it. Nothing, for us, at least, exists unless it is recalled to
+us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she said, in her turn, &#8220;I have noticed that.
+But don&#8217;t you sometimes&#8212;sometimes&#8221;&#8212;she knit her
+forehead, as if to keep her thought from escaping&#8212;&#8220;have a
+feeling as if what you were doing, or saying, or seeing, had all
+happened before, just as it is now?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes; that occurs to every one.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But don&#8217;t you&#8212;don&#8217;t you have hints of
+things, of ideas, as if you had known them, in some previous
+existence&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She stopped, and Lanfear recognized, with a kind of impatience, the
+experience which young people make much of when they have it, and
+sometimes pretend to when they have merely heard of it. But there could
+be no pose or pretence in her. He smilingly suggested:</p>
+
+<p class="poetry">&#8220;&#8216;For something is, or something seems,
+<br />Like glimpses of forgotten dreams.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 0em">These weird impressions are no more than
+that, probably.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, I don&#8217;t believe it,&#8221; the girl said.
+&#8220;They are too real for that. They come too often, and they make me
+feel as if they would come more fully, some time. If there was a life
+before this&#8212;do you believe there was?&#8212;they may be things
+that happened there. Or they may be things that will happen in a life
+after this. You believe in <em>that</em>, don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In a life after this, or their happening in it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, both.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear evaded her, partly. &#8220;They could be premonitions,
+prophecies, of a future life, as easily as fragmentary records of a past
+life. I suppose we do not begin to be immortal merely after
+death.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221; She lingered out the word in dreamy absence, as if
+what they had been saying had already passed from her thought.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But, Miss Gerald,&#8221; Lanfear ventured, &#8220;have these
+impressions of yours grown more definite&#8212;fuller, as you
+say&#8212;of late?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My impressions?&#8221; She frowned at him, as if the look of
+interest, more intense than usual in his eyes, annoyed her. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t know what you mean.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear felt bound to follow up her lead, whether she wished it or
+not. &#8220;A good third of our lives here is passed in sleep. I&#8217;m
+not always sure that we are right in treating the mental&#8212;for
+certainly they are mental&#8212;experiences of that time as altogether
+trivial, or insignificant.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She seemed to understand now, and she protested: &#8220;But I
+don&#8217;t mean dreams. I mean things that really happened, or that
+really will happen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Like something you can give me an instance of? Are they
+painful things, or pleasant, mostly?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated. &#8220;They are things that you know happen to other
+people, but you can&#8217;t believe would ever happen to you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do they come when you are just drowsing, or just waking from a
+drowse?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They are not dreams,&#8221; she said, almost with
+vexation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes, I understand,&#8221; he hesitated to retrieve
+himself. &#8220;But <em>I</em> have had floating illusions, just before
+I fell asleep, or when I was sensible of not being quite awake, which
+seemed to differ from dreams. They were not so dramatic, but they were
+more pictorial; they were more visual than the things in
+dreams.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she assented. &#8220;They are something like that.
+But I should not call them illusions.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. And they represent scenes, events?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You said yourself they were not dramatic.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I meant, represent pictorially.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; they are like the landscape that flies back from your
+train or towards it. I can&#8217;t explain it,&#8221; she ended, rising
+with what he felt a displeasure in his pursuit.</p>
+
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>He reported what had passed to her father when Mr. Gerald came back
+from his stroll into the town, with his hands full of English papers;
+Gerald had even found a New York paper at the news-stand; and he
+listened with an apparent postponement of interest.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; Lanfear said, &#8220;that she has some shadowy
+recollection, or rather that the facts come to her in a jarred, confused
+way&#8212;the elements of pictures, not pictures. But I am afraid that
+my inquiry has offended her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess not,&#8221; Gerald said, dryly, as if annoyed.
+&#8220;What makes you think so?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Merely her manner. And I don&#8217;t know that anything is to
+be gained by such an inquiry.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps not,&#8221; Gerald allowed, with an inattention which
+vexed Lanfear in his turn.</p>
+
+<p>The elderly man looked up, from where he sat provisionally in the
+hotel veranda, into Lanfear&#8217;s face; Lanfear had remained standing.
+&#8220;<em>I</em> don&#8217;t believe she&#8217;s offended. Or she
+won&#8217;t be long. One thing, she&#8217;ll forget it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was right enough, apparently. Miss Gerald came out of the hotel
+door towards them, smiling equally for both, with the indefinable
+difference between cognition and recognition habitual in her look. She
+was dressed for a walk, and she seemed to expect them to go with her.
+She beamed gently upon Lanfear; there was no trace of umbrage in her
+sunny gayety. Her face had, as always, its lurking pathos, but in its
+appeal to Lanfear now there were only trust and the wish of pleasing
+him.</p>
+
+<p>They started side by side for their walk, while her father drove
+beside them in one of the little public carriages, mounting to the
+Berigo Road, through a street of the older San Remo, and issuing on a
+bare little piazza looking towards the walls and roofs of the mediaeval
+city, clustered together like cliff-dwellings, and down on the gardens
+that fell from the villas and the hotels. A parapet kept the path on the
+roadside nearest the declivities, and from point to point benches were
+put for the convenient enjoyment of the prospect. Mr. Gerald preferred
+to take his pleasure from the greater elevation of the seat in his
+victoria; his daughter and Lanfear leaned on the wall, and looked up to
+the sky and out to the sea, both of the same blue.</p>
+
+<p>The palms and eucalyptus-trees darkened about the villas; the bits of
+vineyard, in their lingering crimson or lingering gold, and the orchards
+of peaches and persimmons enriched with the varying reds of their
+ripening leaves and fruits the enchanting color scheme. The rose and
+geranium hedges were in bloom; the feathery green of the pepper-trees
+was warmed by the red-purple of their grape-like clusters of blossoms;
+the perfume of lemon flowers wandered vaguely upwards from some point
+which they could not fix.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing of all the beauty seemed lost upon the girl, so bereft that
+she could enjoy no part of it from association. Lanfear observed that
+she was not fatigued by any such effort as he was always helplessly
+making to match what he saw with something he had seen before. Now, when
+this effort betrayed itself, she said, smiling: &#8220;How strange it is
+that you see things for what they are like, and not for what they
+are!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s a defect, I&#8217;m afraid, sometimes.
+Perhaps&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps what?&#8221; she prompted him in the pause he
+made.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nothing. I was wondering whether in some other possible life
+our consciousness would not be more independent of what we have been
+than it seems to be here.&#8221; She looked askingly at him. &#8220;I
+mean whether there shall not be something absolute in our existence,
+whether it shall not realize itself more in each experience of the
+moment, and not be always seeking to verify itself from the
+past.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t that what you think is the way with me
+already?&#8221; She turned upon him smiling, and he perceived that in
+her New York version of a Parisian costume, with her lace hat of summer
+make and texture and the vivid parasol she twirled upon her shoulder,
+she was not only a very pretty girl, but a fashionable one. There was
+something touching in the fact, and a little bewildering. To the pretty
+girl, the fashionable girl, he could have answered with a joke, but the
+stricken intelligence had a claim to his seriousness. Now, especially,
+he noted what had from time to time urged itself upon his perception. If
+the broken ties which once bound her to the past were beginning to knit
+again, her recovery otherwise was not apparent. As she stood there her
+beauty had signally the distinction of fragility, the delicacy of
+shattered nerves in which there was yet no visible return to strength. A
+feeling, which had intimated itself before, a sense as of being in the
+presence of a disembodied spirit, possessed him, and brought, in its
+contradiction of an accepted theory, a suggestion that was destined to
+become conviction. He had always said to himself that there could be no
+persistence of personality, of character, of identity, of consciousness,
+except through memory; yet here, to the last implication of temperament,
+they all persisted. The soul that was passing in its integrity through
+time without the helps, the crutches, of remembrance by which his own
+personality supported itself, why should not it pass so through eternity
+without that loss of identity which was equivalent to annihilation?</p>
+
+<p>Her waiting eyes recalled him from his inquiry, and with an effort he
+answered, &#8220;Yes, I think you do have your being here and now, Miss
+Gerald, to an unusual degree.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you don&#8217;t think that is wrong?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wrong? Why? How?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t know.&#8221; She looked round, and her eye
+fell upon her father waiting for them in his carriage beside the walk.
+The sight supplied her with the notion which Lanfear perceived would not
+have occurred otherwise. &#8220;Then why doesn&#8217;t papa want me to
+remember things?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; Lanfear temporized.
+&#8220;Doesn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t always tell. Should&#8212;should <em>you</em>
+wish me to remember more than I do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with entreaty. &#8220;Do you think it would make my
+father happier if I did?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That I can&#8217;t say,&#8221; Lanfear answered. &#8220;People
+are often the sadder for what they remember. If I were your
+father&#8212;Excuse me! I don&#8217;t mean anything so absurd. But in
+his place&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stopped, and she said, as if she were satisfied with his broken
+reply: &#8220;It is very curious. When I look at him&#8212;when I am
+with him&#8212;I know him; but when he is away, I don&#8217;t remember
+him.&#8221; She seemed rather interested in the fact than distressed by
+it; she even smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And me,&#8221; he ventured, &#8220;is it the same with regard
+to me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She did not say; she asked, smiling: &#8220;Do you remember me when I
+am away?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes!&#8221; he answered. &#8220;As perfectly as if you were
+with me. I can see you, hear you, feel the touch of your hand, your
+dress&#8212;Good heavens!&#8221; he added to himself under his breath.
+&#8220;What am I saying to this poor child!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In the instinct of escaping from himself he started forward, and she
+moved with him. Mr. Gerald&#8217;s watchful driver followed them with
+the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is very strange,&#8221; she said, lightly. &#8220;Is it
+so with you about everyone?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he replied, briefly, almost harshly. He asked,
+abruptly: &#8220;Miss Gerald, are there any times when you know people
+in their absence?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Just after I wake from a nap&#8212;yes. But it doesn&#8217;t
+last. That is, it seems to me it doesn&#8217;t. I&#8217;m not
+sure.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>As they followed the winding of the pleasant way, with the villas on
+the slopes above and on the slopes below, she began to talk of them, and
+to come into that knowledge of each which formed her remembrance of them
+from former knowledge of them, but which he knew would fade when she
+passed them.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, when she came down unwontedly late to breakfast in
+their pavilion, she called gayly:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dr. Lanfear! It <em>is</em> Dr. Lanfear?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I should be sorry if it were not, since you seem to expect it,
+Miss Gerald.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I just wanted to be sure. Hasn&#8217;t my father been
+here, yet?&#8221; It was the first time she had shown herself aware of
+her father except in his presence, as it was the first time she had
+named Lanfear to his face.</p>
+
+<p>He suppressed a remote stir of anxiety, and answered: &#8220;He went
+to get his newspapers; he wished you not to wait. I hope you slept
+well?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Splendidly. But I was very tired last night; I don&#8217;t
+know why, exactly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We had rather a long walk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did we have a walk yesterday?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then it was <em>so!</em> I thought I had dreamed it. I was
+beginning to remember something, and my father asked me what it was, and
+then I couldn&#8217;t remember. Do you believe I shall keep on
+remembering?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why you shouldn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Should you wish me to?&#8221; she asked, in evident, however
+unconscious, recurrence to their talk of the day before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She sighed. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know. If it&#8217;s like some of
+those dreams or gleams. Is remembering pleasant?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear thought for a moment. Then he said, in the honesty he thought
+best to use with her: &#8220;For the most part I should say it was
+painful. Life is tolerable enough while it passes, but when it is past,
+what remains seems mostly to hurt and humiliate. I don&#8217;t know why
+we should remember so insistently the foolish things and wrong things we
+do, and not recall the times when we acted, without an effort, wisely
+and rightly.&#8221; He thought he had gone too far, and he hedged a
+little. &#8220;I don&#8217;t mean that we <em>can&#8217;t</em> recall
+those times. We can and do, to console and encourage ourselves; but they
+don&#8217;t recur, without our willing, as the others do.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She had poured herself a cup of coffee, and she played with the spoon
+in her saucer while she seemed to listen. But she could not have been
+listening, for when she put down her spoon and leaned back in her chair,
+she said: &#8220;In those dreams the things come from such a very far
+way back, and they don&#8217;t belong to a life that is like this. They
+belong to a life like what you hear the life after this is. We are the
+same as we are here; but the things are different. We haven&#8217;t the
+same rules, the same wishes&#8212;I can&#8217;t explain.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You mean that we are differently conditioned?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. And if you can understand, I feel as if I remembered long
+back of this, and long forward of this. But one can&#8217;t remember
+forward!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That wouldn&#8217;t be remembrance; no, it would be
+prescience; and your consciousness here, as you were saying yesterday,
+is through knowing, not remembering.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She stared at him. &#8220;Was that yesterday? I thought it
+was&#8212;to-morrow.&#8221; She rubbed her hand across her forehead as
+people do when they wish to clear their minds. Then she sighed deeply.
+&#8220;It tires me so. And yet I can&#8217;t help trying.&#8221; A light
+broke over her face at the sound of a step on the gravel walk near by,
+and she said, laughing, without looking round: &#8220;That is papa! I
+knew it was his step.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<p>Such return of memory as she now had was like memory in what we call
+the lower lives. It increased, fluctuantly, with an ebb in which it
+almost disappeared, but with a flow that in its advance carried it
+beyond its last flood-tide mark. After the first triumph in which she
+could address Lanfear by his name, and could greet her father as her
+father, there were lapses in which she knew them as before, without
+naming them. Except mechanically to repeat the names of other people
+when reminded of them, she did not pass beyond cognition to recognition.
+Events still left no trace upon her; or if they did she was not sure
+whether they were things she had dreamed or experienced. But her memory
+grew stronger in the region where the bird knows its way home to the
+nest, or the bee to the hive. She had an unerring instinct for places
+where she had once been, and she found her way to them again without the
+help from the association which sometimes failed Lanfear. Their walks
+were always taken with her father&#8217;s company in his carriage, but
+they sometimes left him at a point of the Berigo Road, and after a long
+d&#233;tour among the vineyards and olive orchards of the heights above,
+rejoined him at another point they had agreed upon with him. One
+afternoon, when Lanfear had climbed the rough pave of the footways with
+her to one of the summits, they stopped to rest on the wall of a
+terrace, where they sat watching the changing light on the sea, through
+a break in the trees. The shadows surprised them on their height, and
+they had to make their way among them over the farm paths and by the dry
+beds of the torrents to the carriage road far below. They had been that
+walk only once before, and Lanfear failed of his reckoning, except the
+downward course which must bring them out on the high-road at last. But
+Miss Gerald&#8217;s instinct saved them where his reason failed. She did
+not remember, but she knew the way, and she led him on as if she were
+inventing it, or as if it had been indelibly traced upon her mind and
+she had only to follow the mystical lines within to be sure of her
+course. She confessed to being very tired, and each step must have
+increased her fatigue, but each step seemed to clear her perception of
+the next to be taken.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, when Lanfear was blaming himself for bringing all this upon
+her, and then for trusting to her guidance, he recognized a certain
+peasant&#8217;s house, and in a few moments they had descended the
+olive-orchard terraces to a broken cistern in the clear twilight beyond
+the dusk. She suddenly halted him. &#8220;There, there! It happened
+then&#8212;now&#8212;this instant!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That feeling of being here before! There is the curb of the
+old cistern; and the place where the terrace wall is broken; and the
+path up to the vineyard&#8212;Don&#8217;t you feel it, too?&#8221; she
+demanded, with a joyousness which had no pleasure for him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, certainly. We were here last week. We went up the path to
+the farm-house to get some water.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, now I am remembering&#8212;remembering!&#8221; She stood
+with eagerly parted lips, and glancing quickly round with glowing eyes,
+whose light faded in the same instant. &#8220;No!&#8221; she said,
+mournfully, &#8220;it&#8217;s gone.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A sound of wheels in the road ceased, and her father&#8217;s voice
+called: &#8220;Don&#8217;t you want to take my place, and let me walk
+awhile, Nannie?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. You come to me, papa. Something very strange has happened;
+something you will be surprised at. Hurry!&#8221; She seemed to be
+joking, as he was, while she beckoned him impatiently towards her.</p>
+
+<p>He had left his carriage, and he came up with a heavy man&#8217;s
+quickened pace. &#8220;Well, what is the wonderful thing?&#8221; he
+panted out.</p>
+
+<p>She stared blankly at him, without replying, and they silently made
+their way to Mr. Gerald&#8217;s carriage.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I lost the way, and Miss Gerald found it,&#8221; Lanfear
+explained, as he helped her to the place beside her father.</p>
+
+<p>She said nothing, and almost with sinking into the seat, she sank
+into that deep slumber which from time to time overtook her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know we had gone so far&#8212;or rather that we
+had waited so long before we started down the hills,&#8221; Lanfear
+apologized in an involuntary whisper.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s all right,&#8221; her father said, trying to
+adjust the girl&#8217;s fallen head to his shoulder. &#8220;Get in and
+help me&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear obeyed, and lent a physician&#8217;s skilled aid, which left
+the cumbrous efforts of her father to the blame he freely bestowed on
+them. &#8220;You&#8217;ll have to come here on the other side,&#8221; he
+said. &#8220;There&#8217;s room enough for all three. Or, hold on! Let
+me take your place.&#8221; He took the place in front, and left her to
+Lanfear&#8217;s care, with the trust which was the physician&#8217;s
+right, and with a sense of the girl&#8217;s dependence in which she was
+still a child to him.</p>
+
+<p>They did not speak till well on the way home. Then the father leaned
+forward and whispered huskily: &#8220;Do you think she&#8217;s as strong
+as she was?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear waited, as if thinking the facts over. He murmured back:
+&#8220;No. She&#8217;s better. She&#8217;s not so strong.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the father murmured. &#8220;I
+understand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>What Gerald understood by Lanfear&#8217;s words might not have been
+their meaning, but what Lanfear meant was that there was now an
+interfusion of the past and present in her daily experience. She still
+did not remember, but she had moments in which she hovered upon such
+knowledge of what had happened as she had of actual events. When she was
+stronger she seemed farther from this knowledge; when she was weaker she
+was nearer it. So it seemed to him in that region where he could be sure
+of his own duty when he looked upon it singly as concern for her health.
+No inquiry for the psychological possibilities must be suffered to
+divide his effort for her physical recovery, though there might come
+with this a cessation of the timeless dream-state in which she had her
+being, and she might sharply realize the past, as the anaesthete
+realizes his return to agony from insensibility. The quality of her mind
+was as different from the thing called culture as her manner from
+convention. A simplicity beyond the simplicity of childhood was one with
+a poetic color in her absolute ideas. But this must cease with her
+restoration to the strength in which she could alone come into full and
+clear self-consciousness. So far as Lanfear could give reality to his
+occupation with her disability, he was ministering to a mind diseased;
+not to &#8220;rase out its written trouble,&#8221; but if possible to
+restore the obliterated record, and enable her to spell its tragic
+characters. If he could, he would have shrunk from this office; but all
+the more because he specially had to do with the mystical side of
+medicine, he always tried to keep his relation to her free from personal
+feeling, and his aim single and matter-of-fact.</p>
+
+<p>It was hard to do this; and there was a glamour in the very
+topographical and meteorological environment. The autumn was a long
+delight in which the constant sea, the constant sky, knew almost as
+little variance as the unchanging Alps. The days passed in a procession
+of sunny splendor, neither hot nor cold, nor of the temper of any
+determinate season, unless it were an abiding spring-time. The flowers
+bloomed, and the grass kept green in a reverie of May. But one afternoon
+of January, while Lanfear was going about in a thin coat and panama hat,
+a soft, fresh wind began to blow from the east. It increased till
+sunset, and then fell. In the morning he looked out on a world in which
+the spring had stiffened overnight into winter. A thick frost painted
+the leaves and flowers; icicles hung from pipes and vents; the frozen
+streams flashed back from their arrested flow the sun as it shone from
+the cold heaven, and blighted and blackened the hedges of geranium and
+rose, the borders of heliotrope, the fields of pinks. The leaves of the
+bananas hung limp about their stems; the palms rattled like skeletons in
+the wind when it began to blow again over the shrunken landscape.</p>
+
+
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+<p>The caprice of a climate which vaunted itself perpetual summer was a
+godsend to all the strangers strong enough to bear it without suffering.
+For the sick an indoor life of huddling about the ineffectual fires of
+the south began, and lasted for the fortnight that elapsed before the
+Riviera got back its advertised temperature. Miss Gerald had drooped in
+the milder weather; but the cold braced and lifted her, and with its
+help she now pushed her walks farther, and was eager every day for some
+excursion to the little towns that whitened along the shores, or the
+villages that glimmered from the olive-orchards of the hills. Once she
+said to Lanfear, when they were climbing through the brisk, clear air:
+&#8220;It seems to me as if I had been here before. Have I?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. This is the first time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She said no more, but seemed disappointed in his answer, and he
+suggested: &#8220;Perhaps it is the cold that reminds you of our winters
+at home, and makes you feel that the scene is familiar.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that is it!&#8221; she returned, joyously. &#8220;Was
+there snow, there, like that on the mountains yonder?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A good deal more, I fancy. That will be gone in a few days,
+and at home, you know, our snow lasts for weeks.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then that is what I was thinking of,&#8221; she said, and she
+ran strongly and lightly forward. &#8220;Come!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>When the harsh weather passed and the mild climate returned there was
+no lapse of her strength. A bloom, palely pink as the flowers that began
+to flush the almond-trees, came upon her delicate beauty, a light like
+that of the lengthening days dawned in her eyes. She had an instinct for
+the earliest violets among the grass under the olives; she was first to
+hear the blackcaps singing in the garden-tops; and nothing that was
+novel in her experience seemed alien to it. This was the sum of what
+Lanfear got by the questioning which he needlessly tried to keep
+indirect. She knew that she was his patient, and in what manner, and she
+had let him divine that her loss of memory was suffering as well as
+deprivation. She had not merely the fatigue which we all undergo from
+the effort to recall things, and which sometimes reaches exhaustion; but
+there was apparently in the void of her oblivion a perpetual rumor of
+events, names, sensations, like&#8212;Lanfear felt that he inadequately
+conjectured&#8212;the subjective noises which are always in the ears of
+the deaf. Sometimes, in the distress of it, she turned to him for help,
+and when he was able to guess what she was striving for, a radiant
+relief and gratitude transfigured her face. But this could not last, and
+he learned to note how soon the stress and tension of her effort
+returned. His compassion for her at such times involved a temptation, or
+rather a question, which he had to silence by a direct effort of his
+will. Would it be worse, would it be greater anguish for her to know at
+once the past that now tormented her consciousness with its broken and
+meaningless reverberations? Then he realized that it was impossible to
+help her even through the hazard of telling her what had befallen; that
+no such effect as was to be desired could be anticipated from the
+outside.</p>
+
+<p>If he turned to her father for counsel or instruction, or even a
+participation in his responsibility, he was met by an optimistic
+patience which exasperated him, if it did not complicate the case. Once,
+when Lanfear forbearingly tried to share with him his anxiety for the
+effect of a successful event, he was formed to be outright, and remind
+him, in so many words, that the girl&#8217;s restoration might be
+through anguish which he could not measure.</p>
+
+<p>Gerald faltered aghast; then he said: &#8220;It mustn&#8217;t come to
+that; you mustn&#8217;t let it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How do you expect me to prevent it?&#8221; Lanfear demanded,
+in his vexation.</p>
+
+<p>Gerald caught his breath. &#8220;If she gets well, she will
+remember?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t say that. It seems probable. Do you wish her
+being to remain bereft of one-half its powers?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, how do I know what I want?&#8221; the poor man groaned.
+&#8220;I only know that I trust you entirely, Doctor Lanfear. Whatever
+you think best will be best and wisest, no matter what the outcome
+is.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He got away from Lanfear with these hopeless words, and again Lanfear
+perceived that the case was left wholly to him. His consolation was the
+charm of the girl&#8217;s companionship, the delight of a nature knowing
+itself from moment to moment as if newly created. For her, as nearly as
+he could put the fact into words, the actual moment contained the past
+and the future as well as the present. When he saw in her the
+persistence of an exquisite personality independent of the means by
+which he realized his own continuous identity, he sometimes felt as if
+in the presence of some angel so long freed from earthly allegiance that
+it had left all record behind, as we leave here the records of our first
+years. If an echo of the past reached her, it was apt to be trivial and
+insignificant, like those unimportant experiences of our remotest
+childhood, which remain to us from a world outlived.</p>
+
+<p>It was not an insipid perfection of character which reported itself
+in these celestial terms, and Lanfear conjectured that angelic
+immortality, if such a thing were, could not imply perfection except at
+the cost of one-half of human character. When the girl wore a dress that
+she saw pleased him more than another, there was a responsive pleasure
+in her eyes, which he could have called vanity if he would; and she had
+at times a wilfulness which he could have accused of being obstinacy.
+She showed a certain jealousy of any experiences of his apart from her
+own, not because they included others, but because they excluded her. He
+was aware of an involuntary vigilance in her, which could not leave his
+motives any more than his actions unsearched. But in her conditioning
+she could not repent; she could only offer him at some other time the
+unconscious reparation of her obedience. The self-criticism which the
+child has not learned she had forgotten, but in her oblivion the wish to
+please existed as perfectly as in the ignorance of childhood.</p>
+
+<p>This, so far as he could ever put into words, was the interior of the
+world where he dwelt apart with her. Its exterior continued very like
+that of other worlds where two young people have their being. Now and
+then a more transitory guest at the Grand Hotel Sardegna perhaps fancied
+it the iridescent orb which takes the color of the morning sky, and is
+destined, in the course of nature, to the danger of collapse in which
+planetary space abounds. Some rumor of this could not fail to reach
+Lanfear, but he ignored it as best he could in always speaking gravely
+of Miss Gerald as his patient, and authoritatively treating her as such.
+He convinced some of these witnesses against their senses; for the
+others, he felt that it mattered little what they thought, since, if it
+reached her, it could not pierce her isolation for more than the instant
+in which the impression from absent things remained to her.</p>
+
+<p>A more positive embarrassment, of a kind Lanfear was not prepared
+for, beset him in an incident which would have been more touching if he
+had been less singly concerned for the girl. A pretty English boy, with
+the dawn of a peachy bloom on his young cheeks, and an impulsiveness
+commoner with English youth than our own, talked with Miss Gerald one
+evening and the next day sent her an armful of flowers with his card. He
+followed this attention with a call at her father&#8217;s apartment, and
+after Miss Gerald seemed to know him, and they had, as he told Lanfear,
+a delightful time together, she took up his card from the table where it
+was lying, and asked him if he could tell her who that gentleman was.
+The poor fellow&#8217;s inference was that she was making fun of him,
+and he came to Lanfear, as an obvious friend of the family, for an
+explanation. He reported the incident, with indignant tears standing in
+his eyes: &#8220;What did she mean by it? If she took my flowers, she
+must have known that&#8212;that&#8212;they&#8212;And to pretend to
+forget my name! Oh, I say, it&#8217;s too bad! She could have got rid of
+me without that. Girls have ways enough, you know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes,&#8221; Lanfear assented, slowly, to gain time.
+&#8220;I can assure you that Miss Gerald didn&#8217;t mean anything that
+could wound you. She isn&#8217;t very well&#8212;she&#8217;s rather
+odd&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean that she&#8217;s out of her mind? She can talk as
+well as any one&#8212;better!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, not that. But she&#8217;s often in pain&#8212;greatly in
+pain when she can&#8217;t recall a name, and I&#8217;ve no doubt she was
+trying to recall yours with the help of your card. She would be the last
+in the world to be indifferent to your feelings. I imagine she scarcely
+knew what she was doing at the moment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then, do you think&#8212;do you suppose&#8212;it would be any
+good my trying to see her again? If she wouldn&#8217;t be indifferent to
+my feelings, do you think there would be any hope&#8212;Really, you
+know, I would give anything to believe that my feelings wouldn&#8217;t
+offend her. You understand me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps I do.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve never met a more charming girl and&#8212;she
+isn&#8217;t engaged, is she? She isn&#8217;t engaged to you? I
+don&#8217;t mean to press the question, but it&#8217;s a question of
+life and death with me, you know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear thought he saw his way out of the coil. &#8220;I can tell
+you, quite as frankly as you ask, that Miss Gerald isn&#8217;t engaged
+to <em>me</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then it&#8217;s somebody else&#8212;somebody in America! Well,
+I hope she&#8217;ll be happy; <em>I</em> never shall.&#8221; He offered
+his hand to Lanfear. &#8220;I&#8217;m off.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, here&#8217;s the doctor, now,&#8221; a voice said behind
+them where they stood by the garden wall, and they turned to confront
+Gerald with his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why! Are you going?&#8221; she said to the Englishman, and she
+put out her hand to him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Mr. Evers is going.&#8221; Lanfear came to the
+rescue.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m sorry,&#8221; the girl said, and the youth
+responded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s very good of you. I&#8212;good-by! I hope
+you&#8217;ll be very happy&#8212;I&#8212;&#8221; He turned abruptly
+away, and ran into the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What has he been crying for?&#8221; Miss Gerald asked, turning
+from a long look after him.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear did not know quite what to say; but he hazarded saying:
+&#8220;He was hurt that you had forgotten him when he came to see you
+this afternoon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did he come to see me?&#8221; she asked; and Lanfear exchanged
+looks of anxiety, pain, and reassurance with her father. &#8220;I am so
+sorry. Shall I go after him and tell him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; I explained; he&#8217;s all right,&#8221; Lanfear
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You want to be careful, Nannie,&#8221; her father added,
+&#8220;about people&#8217;s feelings when you meet them, and afterwards
+seem not to know them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I <em>do</em> know them, papa,&#8221; she
+remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You want to be careful,&#8221; her father repeated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I will&#8212;I will, indeed.&#8221; Her lips quivered, and the
+tears came, which Lanfear had to keep from flowing by what quick turn he
+could give to something else.</p>
+
+<p>An obscure sense of the painful incident must have lingered with her
+after its memory had perished. One afternoon when Lanfear and her father
+went with her to the military concert in the sycamore-planted piazza
+near the Vacherie Suisse, where they often came for a cup of tea, she
+startled them by bowing gayly to a young lieutenant of engineers
+standing there with some other officers, and making the most of the
+prospect of pretty foreigners which the place afforded. The lieutenant
+returned the bow with interest, and his eyes did not leave their party
+as long as they remained. Within the bounds of deference for her, it was
+evident that his comrades were joking about the honor done him by this
+charming girl. When the Geralds started homeward Lanfear was aware of a
+trio of officers following them, not conspicuously, but unmistakably;
+and after that, he could not start on his walks with Miss Gerald and her
+father without the sense that the young lieutenant was hovering
+somewhere in their path, waiting in the hopes of another bow from her.
+The officer was apparently not discouraged by his failure to win
+recognition from her, and what was amounting to annoyance for Lanfear
+reached the point where he felt he must share it with her father. He had
+nearly as much trouble in imparting it to him as he might have had with
+Miss Gerald herself. He managed, but when he required her father to put
+a stop to it he perceived that Gerald was as helpless as she would have
+been. He first wished to verify the fact from its beginning with her,
+but this was not easy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nannie,&#8221; he said, &#8220;why did you bow to that officer
+the other day?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What officer, papa? When?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You know; there by the band-stand, at the Swiss
+Dairy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She stared blankly at him, and it was clear that it was all as if it
+had not been with her. He insisted, and then she said: &#8220;Perhaps I
+thought I knew him, and was afraid I should hurt his feelings if I
+didn&#8217;t recognize him. But I don&#8217;t remember it at all.&#8221;
+The curves of her mouth drooped, and her eyes grieved, so that her
+father had not the heart to say more. She left them, and when he was
+alone with Lanfear he said:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You see how it is!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I saw how it was before. But what do you wish to
+do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean that he will keep it up?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Decidedly, he&#8217;ll keep it up. He has every right to from
+his point of view.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, then, my dear fellow, you must stop it, somehow.
+You&#8217;ll know how to do it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I?&#8221; said Lanfear, indignantly; but his vexation was not
+so great that he did not feel a certain pleasure in fulfilling this
+strangest part of his professional duty, when at the beginning of their
+next excursion he put Miss Gerald into the victoria with her father and
+fell back to the point at which he had seen the lieutenant waiting to
+haunt their farther progress. He put himself plumply in front of the
+officer and demanded in very blunt Italian: &#8220;What do you
+want?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The lieutenant stared him over with potential offence, in which his
+delicately pencilled mustache took the shape of a light sneer, and
+demanded in his turn, in English much better than Lanfear&#8217;s
+Italian: &#8220;What right have you to ask?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The right of Miss Gerald&#8217;s physician. She is an invalid
+in my charge.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A change quite indefinable except as the visible transition from
+coxcomb to gentleman passed over the young lieutenant&#8217;s comely
+face. &#8220;An invalid?&#8221; he faltered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Lanfear began; and then, with a rush of confidence
+which the change in the officer&#8217;s face justified, &#8220;one very
+strangely, very tragically afflicted. Since she saw her mother killed in
+an accident a year ago she remembers nothing. She bowed to you because
+she saw you looking at her, and supposed you must be an acquaintance.
+May I assure you that you are altogether mistaken?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The lieutenant brought his heels together, and bent low. &#8220;I beg
+her pardon with all my heart. I am very, very sorry. I will do anything
+I can. I would like to stop that. May I bring my mother to call on Miss
+Gerald?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He offered his hand, and Lanfear wrung it hard, a lump of gratitude
+in his throat choking any particular utterance, while a fine shame for
+his late hostile intention covered him.</p>
+
+<p>When the lieutenant came, with all possible circumstance, bringing
+the countess, his mother, Mr. Gerald overwhelmed them with hospitality
+of every form. The Italian lady responded effusively, and more sincerely
+cooed and murmured her compassionate interest in his daughter. Then all
+parted the best of friends; but when it was over, Miss Gerald did not
+know what it had been about. She had not remembered the lieutenant or
+her father&#8217;s vexation, or any phase of the incident which was now
+closed. Nothing remained of it but the lieutenant&#8217;s right, which
+he gravely exercised, of saluting them respectfully whenever he met
+them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+<p>Earlier, Lanfear had never allowed himself to be far out of call from
+Miss Gerald&#8217;s father, especially during the daytime slumbers into
+which she fell, and from which they both always dreaded her awakening.
+But as the days went on and the event continued the same he allowed
+himself greater range. Formerly the three went their walks or drives
+together, but now he sometimes went alone. In these absences he found
+relief from the stress of his constant vigilance; he was able to cast
+off the bond which enslaves the physician to his patient, and which he
+must ignore at times for mere self-preservation&#8217;s sake; but there
+was always a lurking anxiety, which, though he refused to let it define
+itself to him, shortened the time and space he tried to put between
+them.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon in April, when he left her sleeping, he was aware of
+somewhat recklessly placing himself out of reach in a lonely excursion
+to a village demolished by the earthquake of 1887, and abandoned
+himself, in the impressions and incidents of his visit to the ruin, to a
+luxury of impersonal melancholy which the physician cannot often allow
+himself. At last, his care found him, and drove him home full of a
+sharper fear than he had yet felt since the first days. But Mr. Gerald
+was tranquilly smoking under a palm in the hotel garden, and met him
+with an easy smile. &#8220;She woke once, and said she had had such a
+pleasant dream. Now she&#8217;s off again. Do you think we&#8217;d
+better wake her for dinner? I suppose she&#8217;s getting up her
+strength in this way. Her sleeping so much is a good symptom,
+isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear smiled forlornly; neither of them, in view of the possible
+eventualities, could have said what result they wished the symptoms to
+favor. But he said: &#8220;Decidedly I wouldn&#8217;t wake her&#8221;;
+and he spent a night of restless sleep penetrated by a nervous
+expectation which the morning, when it came, rather mockingly
+defeated.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Gerald appeared promptly at breakfast in their pavilion, with a
+fresher and gayer look than usual, and to her father&#8217;s
+&#8220;Well, Nannie, you <em>have</em> had a nap, this time,&#8221; she
+answered, smiling:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Have I? It isn&#8217;t afternoon, is it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, it&#8217;s morning. You&#8217;ve napped it all
+night.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She said: &#8220;I can&#8217;t tell whether I&#8217;ve been asleep or
+not, sometimes; but now I know I have been; and I feel so rested. Where
+are we going to-day?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She turned to Lanfear while her father answered: &#8220;I guess the
+doctor won&#8217;t want to go very far, to-day, after his expedition
+yesterday afternoon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I <em>knew</em> you had been
+somewhere! Was it very far? Are you too tired?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was rather far, but I&#8217;m not tired. I shouldn&#8217;t
+advise Possana, though.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Possana?&#8221; she repeated. &#8220;What is
+Possana?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He told her, and then at a jealous look in her eyes he added an
+account of his excursion. He heightened, if anything, its difficulties,
+in making light of them as no difficulties for him, and at the end she
+said, gently: &#8220;Shall we go this morning?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let the doctor rest this morning, Nannie,&#8221; her father
+interrupted, whimsically, but with what Lanfear knew to be an inner
+yielding to her will. &#8220;Or if you won&#8217;t let <em>him</em>, let
+<em>me</em>. I don&#8217;t want to go anywhere this morning.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear thought that he did not wish her to go at all, and hoped that
+by the afternoon she would have forgotten Possana. She sighed, but in
+her sigh there was no concession. Then, with the chance of a returning
+drowse to save him from openly thwarting her will, he merely suggested:
+&#8220;There&#8217;s plenty of time in the afternoon; the days are so
+long now; and we can get the sunset from the hills.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that will be nice,&#8221; she said, but he perceived that
+she did not assent willingly; and there was an effect of resolution in
+the readiness with which she appeared dressed for the expedition after
+luncheon. She clearly did not know where they were going, but when she
+turned to Lanfear with her look of entreaty, he had not the heart to
+join her father in any conspiracy against her. He beckoned the carriage
+which had become conscious in its eager driver from the moment she
+showed herself at the hotel door, and they set out.</p>
+
+<p>When they had left the higher level of the hotel and began their
+clatter through the long street of the town, Lanfear noted that she
+seemed to feel as much as himself the quaintness of the little city,
+rising on one hand, with its narrow alleys under successive arches
+between the high, dark houses, to the hills, and dropping on the other
+to sea from the commonplace of the principal thoroughfare, with its pink
+and white and saffron hotels and shops. Beyond the town their course lay
+under villa walls, covered with vines and topped by pavilions, and
+opening finally along a stretch of the old Cornice road.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But this,&#8221; she said, at a certain point, &#8220;is where
+we were yesterday!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This is where the doctor was yesterday,&#8221; her father
+said, behind his cigar.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And wasn&#8217;t I with you?&#8221; she asked Lanfear.</p>
+
+<p>He said, playfully: &#8220;To-day you are. I mustn&#8217;t be selfish
+and have you every day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, you are laughing at me; but I know I was here
+yesterday.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her father set his lips in patience, and Lanfear did not insist.</p>
+
+<p>They had halted at this point because, across a wide valley on the
+shoulder of an approaching height, the ruined village of Possana showed,
+and lower down and nearer the seat the new town which its people had
+built when they escaped from the destruction of their world-old
+home.</p>
+
+<p>World-old it all was, with reference to the human life of it; but the
+spring-time was immortally young in the landscape. Over the expanses of
+green and brown fields, and hovering about the gray and white cottages,
+was a mist of peach and cherry blossoms. Above these the hoar olives
+thickened, and the vines climbed from terrace to terrace. The valley
+narrowed inland, and ceased in the embrace of the hills drawing
+mysteriously together in the distances.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think we&#8217;ve got the best part of it here, Miss
+Gerald,&#8221; Lanfear broke the common silence by saying. &#8220;You
+couldn&#8217;t see much more of Possana after you got there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Besides,&#8221; her father ventured a pleasantry which jarred
+on the younger man, &#8220;if you were there with the doctor yesterday,
+you won&#8217;t want to make the climb again to-day. Give it up,
+Nannie!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh no,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I can&#8217;t give it
+up.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, then, we must go on, I suppose. Where do we begin our
+climb?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear explained that he had been obliged to leave his carriage at
+the foot of the hill, and climb to Possana Nuova by the donkey-paths of
+the peasants. He had then walked to the ruins of Possana Vecchia, but he
+suggested that they might find donkeys to carry them on from the new
+town.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I hope so,&#8221; Mr. Gerald grumbled. But at Possana
+Nuova no saddle-donkeys were to be had, and he announced, at the caf&#233;
+where they stopped for the negotiation, that he would wait for the young
+people to go on to Possana Vecchia, and tell him about it when they got
+back. In the meantime he would watch the game of ball, which, in the
+piazza before the caf&#233;, appeared to have engaged the energies of the
+male population. Lanfear was still inwardly demurring, when a stalwart
+peasant girl came in and announced that she had one donkey which they
+could have with her own services driving it. She had no saddle, but
+there was a pad on which the young lady could ride.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, take it for Nannie,&#8221; Mr. Gerald directed;
+&#8220;only don&#8217;t be gone too long.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They set out with Miss Gerald reclining in the kind of litter which
+the donkey proved to be equipped with. Lanfear went beside her, the
+peasant girl came behind, and at times ran forward to instruct them in
+the points they seemed to be looking at. For the most part the landscape
+opened beneath them, but in the azure distances it climbed into Alpine
+heights which the recent snows had now left to the gloom of their pines.
+On the slopes of the nearer hills little towns clung, here and there;
+closer yet farm-houses showed themselves among the vines and olives.</p>
+
+<p>It was very simple, as the life in it must always have been; and
+Lanfear wondered if the elemental charm of the scene made itself felt by
+his companion as they climbed the angles of the inclines, in a silence
+broken only by the picking of the donkey&#8217;s hoofs on the rude
+mosaic of the pavement, and the panting of the peasant girl at its
+heels. On the top of the last upward stretch they stopped for the view,
+and Miss Gerald asked abruptly: &#8220;Why were you so sad?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When was I sad?&#8221; he asked, in turn.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. Weren&#8217;t you sad?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When I was here yesterday, you mean?&#8221; She smiled on his
+fortunate guess, and he said: &#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t know. It might
+have begun with thinking&#8212;</p>
+
+<p class="poetry">&#8216;Of old, unhappy, far-off things, <br />And
+battles long ago.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 0em">You know the pirates used to come sailing
+over the peaceful sea yonder from Africa, to harry these coasts, and
+carry off as many as they could capture into slavery in Tunis and
+Algiers. It was a long, dumb kind of misery that scarcely made an echo
+in history, but it haunted my fancy yesterday, and I saw these valleys
+full of the flight and the pursuit which used to fill them, up to the
+walls of the villages, perched on the heights where men could have built
+only for safety. Then, I got to thinking of other
+things&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And thinking of things in the past always makes you
+sad,&#8221; she said, in pensive reflection. &#8220;If it were not for
+the wearying of always trying to remember, I don&#8217;t believe I
+should want my memory back. And of course to be like other
+people,&#8221; she ended with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>It was on his tongue to say that he would not have her so; but he
+checked himself, and said, lamely enough: &#8220;Perhaps you will be
+like them, sometime.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She startled him by answering irrelevantly: &#8220;You know my mother
+is dead. She died a long while ago; I suppose I must have been very
+little.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She spoke as if the fact scarcely concerned her, and Lanfear drew a
+breath of relief in his surprise. He asked, at another tangent:
+&#8220;What made you think I was sad yesterday?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I knew, somehow. I think that I always know when you are
+sad; I can&#8217;t tell you how, but I feel it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then I must cheer up,&#8221; Lanfear said. &#8220;If I could
+only see you strong and well, Miss Gerald, like this
+girl&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They both looked at the peasant, and she laughed in sympathy with
+their smiling, and beat the donkey a little for pleasure; it did not
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you will be&#8212;you will be! We must hurry on, now, or
+your father will be getting anxious.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They pushed forward on the road, which was now level and wider than
+it had been. As they drew near the town, whose ruin began more and more
+to reveal itself in the roofless walls and windowless casements, they
+saw a man coming towards them, at whose approach Lanfear instinctively
+put himself forward. The man did not look at them, but passed, frowning
+darkly, and muttering and gesticulating.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Gerald turned in her litter and followed him with a long gaze.
+The peasant girl said gayly in Italian: &#8220;He is mad; the earthquake
+made him mad,&#8221; and urged the donkey forward.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear, in the interest of science, habitually forbade himself the
+luxury of anything like foreboding, but now, with the passing of the
+madman, he felt distinctively a lift from his spirit. He no longer
+experienced the vague dread which had followed him towards Possana, and
+made him glad of any delay that kept them from it.</p>
+
+<p>They entered the crooked, narrow street leading abruptly from the
+open country without any suburban hesitation into the heart of the ruin,
+which kept a vivid image of uninterrupted mediaeval life. There, till
+within the actual generation, people had dwelt, winter and summer, as
+they had dwelt from the beginning of Christian times, with nothing to
+intimate a domestic or civic advance. This street must have been the
+main thoroughfare, for stone-paved lanes, still narrower, wound from it
+here and there, while it kept a fairly direct course to the little
+piazza on a height in the midst of the town. Two churches and a simple
+town house partly enclosed it with their seamed and shattered fa&#231;ades.
+The dwellings here were more ruinous than on the thoroughfare, and some
+were tumbled in heaps. But Lanfear pushed open the door of one of the
+churches, and found himself in an interior which, except that it was
+roofless, could not have been greatly changed since the people had
+flocked into it to pray for safety from the earthquake. The high altar
+stood unshaken; around the frieze a succession of stucco cherubs
+perched, under the open sky, in celestial security.</p>
+
+<p>He had learned to look for the unexpected in Miss Gerald, and he
+could not have said that it was with surprise he now found her as
+capable of the emotions which the place inspired, as himself. He made
+sure of saying: &#8220;The earthquake, you know,&#8221; and she
+responded with compassion:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes; and perhaps that poor man was here, praying with the
+rest, when it happened. How strange it must all have seemed to them,
+here where they lived so safely always! They thought such a dreadful
+thing could happen to others, but not to them. That is the
+way!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Lanfear once more that she was on the verge of the
+knowledge so long kept from her. But she went confidently on like a
+sleepwalker who saves himself from dangers that would be death to him in
+waking. She spoke of the earthquake as if she had been reading or
+hearing of it; but he doubted if, with her broken memory, this could be
+so. It was rather as if she was exploring his own mind in the way of
+which he had more than once been sensible, and making use of his memory.
+From time to time she spoke of remembering, but he knew that this was as
+the blind speak of seeing.</p>
+
+<p>He was anxious to get away, and at last they came out to where they
+had left the peasant girl waiting beside her donkey. She was not there,
+and after trying this way and that in the tangle of alleys, Lanfear
+decided to take the thoroughfare which they had come up by and trust to
+the chance of finding her at its foot. But he failed even of his search
+for the street: he came out again and again at the point he had started
+from.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What is the matter?&#8221; she asked at the annoyance he could
+not keep out of his face.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. &#8220;Oh, merely that we&#8217;re lost. But we will wait
+here till that girl chooses to come back for us. Only it&#8217;s getting
+late, and Mr. Gerald&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, I know the way down,&#8221; she said, and started quickly
+in a direction which, as they kept it, he recognized as the route by
+which he had emerged from the town the day before. He had once more the
+sense of his memory being used by her, as if being blind, she had taken
+his hand for guidance, or as if being herself disabled from writing, she
+had directed a pen in his grasp to form the words she desired to put
+down. In some mystical sort the effect was hers, but the means was
+his.</p>
+
+<p>They found the girl waiting with the donkey by the roadside beyond
+the last house. She explained that, not being able to follow them into
+the church with her donkey, she had decided to come where they found her
+and wait for them there.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Does no one at all live here?&#8221; Lanfear asked,
+carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Among the owls and the spectres? I would not pass a night here
+for a lemonade! My mother,&#8221; she went on, with a natural pride in
+the event, &#8220;was lost in the earthquake. They found her with me
+before her breast, and her arms stretched out keeping the stones
+away.&#8221; She vividly dramatized the fact. &#8220;I was alive, but
+she was dead.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell her,&#8221; Miss Gerald said, &#8220;that my mother is
+dead, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, poor little thing!&#8221; the girl said, when the message
+was delivered, and she put her beast in motion, chattering gayly to Miss
+Gerald in the bond of their common orphanhood.</p>
+
+<p>The return was down-hill, and they went back in half the time it had
+taken them to come. But even with this speed they were late, and the
+twilight was deepening when the last turn of their road brought them in
+sight of the new village. There a wild noise of cries for help burst
+upon the air, mixed with the shrill sound of maniac gibbering. They saw
+a boy running towards the town, and nearer them a man struggling with
+another, whom he had caught about the middle, and was dragging towards
+the side of the road where it dropped, hundreds of feet, into the gorge
+below.</p>
+
+<p>The donkey-girl called out: &#8220;Oh, the madman! He is killing the
+signor!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear shouted. The madman flung Gerald to the ground, and fled
+shrieking. Miss Gerald had leaped from her seat, and followed Lanfear as
+he ran forward to the prostrate form. She did not look at it, but within
+a few paces she clutched her hands in her hair, and screamed out:
+&#8220;Oh, my mother is killed!&#8221; and sank, as if sinking down into
+the earth, in a swoon.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, no; it&#8217;s all right, Nannie! Look after her, Lanfear!
+I&#8217;m not hurt. I let myself go in that fellow&#8217;s hands, and I
+fell softly. It was a good thing he didn&#8217;t drop me over the
+edge.&#8221; Gerald gathered himself up nimbly enough, and lent Lanfear
+his help with the girl. The situation explained itself, almost without
+his incoherent additions, to the effect that he had become anxious, and
+had started out with the boy for a guide, to meet them, and had met the
+lunatic, who suddenly attacked him. While he talked, Lanfear was feeling
+the girl&#8217;s pulse, and now and then putting his ear to her heart.
+With a glance at her father: &#8220;You&#8217;re bleeding, Mr.
+Gerald,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So I am,&#8221; the old man answered, smiling, as he wiped a
+red stream from his face with his handkerchief. &#8220;But I am not
+hurt&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Better let me tie it up,&#8221; Lanfear said, taking the
+handkerchief from him. He felt the unselfish quality in a man whom he
+had not always thought heroic, and he bound the gash above his forehead
+with a reverence mingling with his professional gentleness. The
+donkey-girl had not ceased to cry out and bless herself, but suddenly,
+as her care was needed in getting Miss Gerald back to the litter, she
+became a part of the silence in which the procession made its way slowly
+into Possana Nuova, Lanfear going on one side, and Mr. Gerald on the
+other to support his daughter in her place. There was a sort of muted
+outcry of the whole population awaiting them at the door of the locanda
+where they had halted before, and which now had the distinction of
+offering them shelter in a room especially devoted to the poor young
+lady, who still remained in her swoon.</p>
+
+<p>When the landlord could prevail with his fellow-townsmen and
+townswomen to disperse in her interest, and had imposed silence upon his
+customers indoors, Lanfear began his vigil beside his patient in as
+great quiet as he could anywhere have had. Once during the evening the
+public physician of the district looked in, but he agreed with Lanfear
+that nothing was to be done which he was not doing in his greater
+experience of the case. From time to time Gerald had suggested sending
+for some San Remo physician in consultation. Lanfear had always
+approved, and then Gerald had not persisted. He was strongly excited,
+and anxious not so much for his daughter&#8217;s recovery from her
+swoon, which he did not doubt, as for the effect upon her when she
+should have come to herself.</p>
+
+<p>It was this which he wished to discuss, sitting fallen back into his
+chair, or walking up and down the room, with his head bound with a
+bloody handkerchief, and looking, with a sort of alien picturesqueness,
+like a kindly brigand.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear did not leave his place beside the bed where the girl lay,
+white and still as if dead. An inexpressible compassion for the poor man
+filled his heart. Whatever the event should be, it would be tragical for
+him. &#8220;Go to sleep, Mr. Gerald,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Your waking
+can do no good. I will keep watch, and if need be, I&#8217;ll call you.
+Try to make yourself easy on that couch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall not sleep,&#8221; the old man answered. &#8220;How
+could I?&#8221; Nevertheless, he adjusted himself to the hard pillows of
+the lounge where he had been sitting and drowsed among them. He woke
+just before dawn with a start. &#8220;I thought she had come to, and
+knew everything! What a nightmare! Did I groan? Is there any
+change?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear, sitting by the bed, in the light of the wasting candle,
+which threw a grotesque shadow of him on the wall, shook his head. After
+a moment he asked: &#8220;How long did you tell me her swoon had lasted
+after the accident to her mother?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think she recovered consciousness for two days,
+and then she remembered nothing. What do you think are the chances of
+her remembering now?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. But there&#8217;s a kind of psychopathic
+logic&#8212;If she lost her memory through one great shock, she might
+find it through another.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes!&#8221; the father said, rising and walking to and
+fro, in his anguish. &#8220;That was what I thought&#8212;what I was
+afraid of. If I could die myself, and save her from living through
+it&#8212;I don&#8217;t know what I&#8217;m saying! But if&#8212;but
+if&#8212;if she could somehow be kept from it a little longer! But she
+can&#8217;t, she can&#8217;t! She must know it now when she
+wakes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear had put up his hand, and taken the girl&#8217;s slim wrist
+quietly between his thumb and finger, holding it so while her father
+talked on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose it&#8217;s been a sort of weakness&#8212;a sort of
+wickedness&#8212;in me to wish to keep it from her; but I <em>have</em>
+wished that, doctor; you must have seen it, and I can&#8217;t deny it.
+We ought to bear what is sent us in this world, and if we escape we must
+pay for our escape. It has cost her half her being, I know it; but it
+hasn&#8217;t cost her her reason, and I&#8217;m afraid for that, if she
+comes into her memory now. Still, you must do&#8212;But no one can do
+anything either to hinder or to help!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was talking in a husky undertone, and brokenly, incoherently. He
+made an appeal, which Lanfear seemed not to hear, where he remained
+immovable with his hand on the girl&#8217;s pulse.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you think I am to blame for wishing her never to know it,
+though without it she must remain deprived of one whole side of life? Do
+you think my wishing that can have had anything to do with keeping
+her&#8212;But this faint <em>may</em> pass and she may wake from it just
+as she has been. It is logical that she should remember; but is it
+certain that she will?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A murmur, so very faint as to be almost no sound at all, came like a
+response from the girl&#8217;s lips, and she all but imperceptibly
+stirred. Her father neither heard nor saw, but Lanfear started forward.
+He made a sudden clutch at the girl&#8217;s wrist with the hand that had
+not left it and then remained motionless. &#8220;She will never remember
+now&#8212;here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He fell on his knees beside the bed and began to sob. &#8220;Oh, my
+dearest! My poor girl! My love!&#8221; still keeping her wrist in his
+hand, and laying his head tenderly on her arm. Suddenly he started, with
+a shout: &#8220;The pulse!&#8221; and fell forward, crushing his ear
+against her heart, and listened with bursts of: &#8220;It&#8217;s
+beating! She isn&#8217;t dead! She&#8217;s alive!&#8221; Then he lifted
+her in his arms, and it was in his embrace that she opened her eyes, and
+while she clung to him, entreated:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My father! Where is he?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A dread fell upon both the men, blighting the joy with which they
+welcomed her back to life. She took her father&#8217;s head between her
+hands, and kissed his bruised face. &#8220;I thought you were dead; and
+I thought that mamma&#8212;&#8221; She stopped, and they waited
+breathless. &#8220;But that was long ago, wasn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; her father eagerly assented. &#8220;Very long
+ago.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I remember,&#8221; she sighed. &#8220;I thought that I was
+killed, too. Was it <em>all</em> a dream?&#8221; Her father and Lanfear
+looked at each other. Which should speak? &#8220;This is Doctor Lanfear,
+isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; she asked, with a dim smile. &#8220;And I&#8217;m
+not dreaming now, am I?&#8221; He had released her from his arms, but
+she held his hand fast. &#8220;I know it is you, and papa; and yes, I
+remember everything. That terrible pain of forgetting is gone!
+It&#8217;s beautiful! But did he hurt you badly, papa? I saw him, and I
+wanted to call to you. But mamma&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>However the change from the oblivion of the past had been operated,
+it had been mercifully wrought. As far as Lanfear could note it, in the
+rapture of the new revelation to her which it scarcely needed words to
+establish, the process was a gradual return from actual facts to the
+things of yesterday and then to the things of the day before, and so
+back to the tragedy in which she had been stricken. There was no sudden
+burst of remembrance, but a slow unveiling of the reality in which her
+spirit was mystically fortified against it. At times it seemed to him
+that the effect was accomplished in her by supernatural agencies such
+as, he remembered once somewhere reading, attend the souls of those
+lately dead, and explore their minds till every thought and deed of
+their earthly lives, from the last to the first, is revealed to them out
+of an inner memory which can never, any jot or tittle, perish. It was as
+if this had remained in her intact from the blow that shattered her
+outer remembrance. When the final, long-dreaded horror was reached, it
+was already a sorrow of the past, suffered and accepted with the
+resignation which is the close of grief, as of every other passion.</p>
+
+<p>Love had come to her help in the time of her need, but not love alone
+helped her live back to the hour of that supreme experience and beyond
+it. In the absorbing interest of her own renascence, the shock, more
+than the injury which her father had undergone, was ignored, if not
+neglected. Lanfear had not, indeed, neglected it; but he could not help
+ignoring it in his happiness, as he remembered afterwards in the
+self-reproach which he would not let the girl share with him. Nothing,
+he realized, could have availed if everything had been done which he did
+not do; but it remained a pang with him that he had so dimly felt his
+duty to the gentle old man, even while he did it. Gerald lived to
+witness his daughter&#8217;s perfect recovery of the self so long lost
+to her; he lived, with a joy more explicit than their own, to see her
+the wife of the man to whom she was dearer than love alone could have
+made her. He lived beyond that time, rejoicing, if it may be so said, in
+the fond memories of her mother which he had been so long forbidden by
+her affliction to recall. Then, after the spring of the Riviera had
+whitened into summer, and San Remo hid, as well as it could, its sunny
+glare behind its pines and palms, Gerald suffered one long afternoon
+through the heat till the breathless evening, and went early to bed. He
+had been full of plans for spending the rest of the summer at the little
+place in New England where his daughter knew that her mother lay. In the
+morning he did not wake.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He gave his life that I might have mine!&#8221; she lamented
+in the first wild grief.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, don&#8217;t say that, Nannie,&#8221; her husband
+protested, calling her by the pet name which her father always used.
+&#8220;He is dead; but if we owe each other to his loss, it is because
+he was given, not because he gave himself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I know, I know!&#8221; she wailed. &#8220;But he would
+gladly have given himself for me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That, perhaps, Lanfear could not have denied, and he had no wish to
+do so. He had a prescience of happiness for her which the future did not
+belie; and he divined that a woman must not be forbidden the extremes
+within which she means to rest her soul.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter2" id="chapter2">II</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">The Eidolons of Brooks Alford</h2>
+
+
+<p>I should like to give the story of Alford&#8217;s experiences just as
+Wanhope told it, sitting with us before the glowing hearth in the
+Turkish room, one night after the other diners at our club had gone away
+to digest their dinners at the theatre, or in their bachelor apartments
+up-town, or on the late trains which they were taking north, south, and
+west; or had hurried back to their offices to spend the time stolen from
+rest in overwork for which their famished nerves would duly revenge
+themselves. It was undoubtedly overwork which preceded Alford&#8217;s
+experiences if it did not cause them, for he was pretty well broken from
+it when he took himself off in the early summer, to put the pieces
+together as best he could by the seaside. But this was a fact which
+Wanhope was not obliged to note to us, and there were certain other
+commonplaces of our knowledge of Alford which he could omit without
+omitting anything essential to our understanding of the facts which he
+dealt with so delicately, so electly, almost affectionately, coaxing
+each point into the fittest light, and then lifting his phrase from it,
+and letting it stand alone in our consciousness. I remember particularly
+how he touched upon the love-affair which was supposed to have so much
+to do with Alford&#8217;s break-up, and how he dismissed it to its
+proper place in the story. As he talked on, with scarcely an
+interruption either from the eager credulity of Rulledge or the doubt of
+Minver, I heard with a sensuous comfort&#8212;I can use no other
+word&#8212;the far-off click of the dishes in the club kitchen, putting
+away till next day, with the musical murmur of a smitten glass or the
+jingle of a dropped spoon. But if I should try to render his words, I
+should spoil their impression in the vain attempt, and I feel that it is
+best to give the story as best I can in words of my own, so far from
+responsive to the requisitions of the occult incident.</p>
+
+<p>The first intimation Alford had of the strange effect, which from
+first to last was rather an obsession than a possession of his, was
+after a morning of idle satisfaction spent in watching the target
+practice from the fort in the neighborhood of the little fishing-village
+where he was spending the summer. The target was two or three miles out
+in the open water beyond the harbor, and he found his pleasure in
+watching the smoke of the gun for that discrete interval before the
+report reached him, and then for that somewhat longer interval before he
+saw the magnificent splash of the shot which, as it plunged into the
+sea, sent a fan-shaped fountain thirty or forty feet into the air. He
+did not know and he did not care whether the target was ever hit or not.
+That fact was no part of his concern. His affair was to watch the burst
+of smoke from the fort and then to watch the upward gush of water,
+almost as light and vaporous to the eye, where the ball struck. He did
+not miss one of the shots fired during the forenoon, and when he met the
+other people who sat down with him at the midday dinner in the hotel,
+his talk with them was naturally of the morning&#8217;s practice. They
+one and all declared it a great nuisance, and said that it had shattered
+their nerves terribly, which was not perhaps so strange, since they were
+all women. But when they asked him in his quality of nervous wreck
+whether he had not suffered from the prolonged and repeated explosions,
+too, he found himself able to say no, that he had enjoyed every moment
+of the firing. He added that he did not believe he had even noticed the
+noise after the first shot, he was so wholly taken with the beauty of
+the fountain-burst from the sea which followed; and as he spoke the
+fan-like spray rose and expanded itself before his eyes, quite blotting
+out the visage of a young widow across the table. In his swift
+recognition of the fact and his reflection upon it, he realized that the
+effect was quite as if he had been looking at some intense light, almost
+as if he had been looking at the sun, and that the illusion which had
+blotted out the agreeable reality opposite was of the quality of those
+flying shapes which repeat themselves here, there, and everywhere that
+one looks, after lifting the gaze from a dazzling object. When his
+consciousness had duly registered this perception, there instantly
+followed a recognition of the fact that the eidolon now filling his
+vision was not the effect of the dazzled eyes, but of a mental process,
+of thinking how the thing which it reported had looked.</p>
+
+<p>By the time Alford had co-ordinated this reflection with the other,
+the eidolon had faded from the lady&#8217;s face, which again presented
+itself in uninterrupted loveliness with the added attraction of a
+distinct pout.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, Mr. Alford!&#8221; she bantered him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I beg your pardon! I was thinking&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not of what I was saying,&#8221; she broke in, laughingly,
+forgivingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I certainly wasn&#8217;t,&#8221; he assented, with such a
+sense of approaching creepiness in his experience that when she
+challenged him to say what he <em>was</em> thinking of, he could not, or
+would not; she professed to believe that he would not.</p>
+
+<p>In the joking that followed he soon lost the sense of approaching
+creepiness, and began to be proud of what had happened to him as out of
+the ordinary, as a species of psychological ecstasy almost of spiritual
+value. From time to time he tried, by thinking of the splash and upward
+gush from the cannon-shot&#8217;s plunge in the sea, to recall the
+vision, but it would not come again, and at the end of an afternoon
+somewhat distraughtly spent he decided to put the matter away, as one of
+the odd things of no significance which happen in life and must be dealt
+with as mysteries none the less trifling because they are
+inexplicable.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve got over it?&#8221; the widow joked him as
+he drew up towards her, smiling from her rocker on the veranda after
+supper. At first, all the women in the hotel had petted him; but with
+their own cares and ailments to reclaim them they let the invalid fall
+to the peculiar charge of the childless widow who had nothing else to
+do, and was so well and strong that she could look after the invalid
+Professor of Archaeology (at the Champlain University) without the
+fatigues they must feel.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I&#8217;ve got over it,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what was it?&#8221; she boldly pursued.</p>
+
+<p>He was about to say, and then he could not.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You won&#8217;t tell?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not yet,&#8221; he answered. He added, after a moment,
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe I can.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Because it&#8217;s confidential?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; not exactly that. Because it&#8217;s
+impossible.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s simple enough. I understand exactly what you
+mean. Well, if ever it becomes less difficult, remember that I should
+always like to know. It seemed a little&#8212;personal.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How in the world?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, when one is stared at in that way&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did I stare?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you <em>always</em> stare? But in this case you
+stared as if there was something wrong with my hair.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There wasn&#8217;t,&#8221; Alford protested, simple-heartedly.
+Then he recollected his sophistication to say: &#8220;Unless its being
+of that particular shade between brown and red was wrong.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford! After that I <em>must</em> believe
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They talked on the veranda till the night fell, and then they came in
+among the lamps, in the parlor, and she sat down with a certain
+provisionality, putting herself sideways on a light chair by a window,
+and as she chatted and laughed with one cheek towards him she now and
+then beat the back of her chair with her open hand. The other people
+were reading or severely playing cards, and they, too, kept their tones
+down to a respectful level, while she lingered, and when she rose and
+said good-night he went out and took some turns on the veranda before
+going up to bed. She was certainly, he realized, a very pretty woman,
+and very graceful and very amusing, and though she probably knew all
+about it, she was the franker and honester for her knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>He had arrived at this conclusion just as he turned the switch of the
+electric light inside his door, and in the first flash of the carbon
+film he saw her sitting beside the window in such a chair as she had
+taken and in the very pose which she had kept in the parlor. Her
+half-averted face was lit as from laughing, and she had her hand lifted
+as if to beat the back of her chair.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good Heavens, Mrs. Yarrow!&#8221; he said, in a sort of
+whispered shout, while he mechanically closed the door behind him as if
+to keep the fact to himself. &#8220;What in the world are you doing
+here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then she was not there. Nothing was there; not even a chair beside
+the window.</p>
+
+<p>Alford dropped weakly into the only chair in the room, which stood
+next the door by the head of his bed, and abandoned himself a helpless
+prey to the logic of the events.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this point, which I have been able to give in
+Wanhope&#8217;s exact words, that, in the ensuing pause, Rulledge asked,
+as if he thought some detail might be denied him: &#8220;And what was
+the logic of the events?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver gave a fleering laugh. &#8220;Don&#8217;t be premature,
+Rulledge. If you have the logic now, you will spoil everything. You
+can&#8217;t have the moral until you&#8217;ve had the whole story. Go
+on, Wanhope. You&#8217;re so much more interesting than usual that I
+won&#8217;t ask how you got hold of all these compromising
+minutiae.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; Wanhope returned, &#8220;they&#8217;re not
+for the general ear. I go rather further, for the sake of the curious
+fact, than I should be warranted in doing if I did not know my audience
+so well.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We joined in a murmur of gratification, and he went on to say that
+Alford&#8217;s first coherent thought was that he was dreaming one of
+those unwarranted dreams in which we make our acquaintance privy to all
+sorts of strange incidents. Then he knew that he was not dreaming, and
+that his eye had merely externated a mental vision, as in the case of
+the cannon-shot splash of which he had seen the phantom as soon as it
+was mentioned. He remembered afterwards asking himself in a sort of
+terror how far it was going to go with him; how far his thought was
+going to report itself objectively hereafter, and what were the
+reasonable implications of his abnormal experiences. He did not know
+just how long he sat by his bedside trying to think, only to have his
+conclusions whir away like a flock of startled birds when he approached
+them. He went to bed because he was exhausted rather than because he was
+sleepy, but he could not recall a moment of wakefulness after his head
+touched the pillow.</p>
+
+<p>He woke surprisingly refreshed, but at the belated breakfast where he
+found Mrs. Yarrow still lingering he thought her looking not well. She
+confessed, listlessly, that she had not rested well. She was not sure,
+she said, whether the sea air agreed with her; she might try the
+mountains a little later. She was not inclined to talk, and that day he
+scarcely spoke with her except in commonplaces at the table. They had no
+return to the little mystery they had mocked together the day
+before.</p>
+
+<p>More days passed, and Alford had no recurrence of his visions. His
+acquaintance with Mrs. Yarrow made no further advance; there was no one
+else in the hotel who interested him, and he bored himself. At the same
+time his recovery seemed retarded; he lost tone, and after a fortnight
+he ran up to talk himself over with his doctor in Boston. He rather
+thought he would mention his eidolons, and ask if they were at all
+related to the condition of his nerves. It was a keen disappointment,
+but it ought not to have been a surprise, for him to find that his
+doctor was off on his summer vacation. The caretaker who opened the door
+to Alford named a young physician in the same block of Marlborough
+Street who had his doctor&#8217;s practice for the summer, but Alford
+had not the heart to go to this alternate.</p>
+
+<p>He started down to his hotel on a late afternoon train that would
+bring him to the station after dusk, and before he reached it the lamps
+had been lighted in his car. Alford sat in a sparsely peopled smoker,
+where he had found a place away from the crowd in the other coaches, and
+looked out of the window into the reflected interior of his car, which
+now and then thinned away and let him see the weeds and gravel of the
+railroad banks, with the bushes that topped them and the woods that
+backed them. The train at one point stopped rather suddenly and then
+went on, for no reason that he ever cared to inquire; but as it slowly
+moved forward again he was reminded of something he had seen one night
+in going to New York just before the train drew into Springfield. It had
+then made such another apparently reasonless stop; but before it resumed
+its course Alford saw from his window a group of trainmen, and his own
+Pullman conductor with his lantern on his arm, bending over the figure
+of a man defined in his dark clothing against the snow of the bank where
+he lay propped. His face was waxen white, and Alford noted how
+particularly black the mustache looked traversing the pallid visage. He
+never knew whether the man was killed or merely stunned; you learn
+nothing with certainty of such things on trains; but now, as he thought
+of the incident, its eidolon showed itself outside of his mind, and
+followed him in every detail, even to a snowy stretch of the embankment,
+until the increasing speed of the train seemed to sweep it back out of
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>Alford turned his eyes to the interior of the smoker, which, except
+for two or three dozing commuters and a noisy euchre-party, had been
+empty of everything but the fumes and stale odors of tobacco, and found
+it swarming with visions, the eidolons of everything he remembered from
+his past life. Whatever had once strongly impressed itself upon his
+nerves was reported there again as instantly as he thought of it. It was
+largely a whirling chaos, a kaleidoscopic jumble of facts; but from time
+to time some more memorable and important experience visualized itself
+alone. Such was the death-bed of the little sister whom he had been
+wakened, a child, to see going to heaven, as they told him. Such was the
+pathetic, foolish face of the girl whom long ago he had made believe he
+cared for, and then had abruptly broken with: he saw again, with
+heartache, her silly, tender amaze when he said he was going away. Such
+was the look of mute astonishment, of gentle reproach, in the eyes of
+the friend, now long dead, whom in a moment of insensate fury he had
+struck on the mouth, and who put his hand to his bleeding lips as he
+bent that gaze of wonder and bewilderment upon him. But it was not alone
+the dreadful impressions that reported themselves. There were others, as
+vivid, which came back in the original joyousness: the face of his
+mother looking up at him from the crowd on a day of college triumph when
+he was delivering the valedictory of his class; the collective gayety of
+the whole table on a particularly delightful evening at his dining-club;
+his own image in the glass as he caught sight of it on coming home
+accepted by the woman who afterwards jilted him; the transport which
+lighted up his father&#8217;s visage when he stepped ashore from the
+vessel which had been rumored lost, and he could be verified by the
+senses as still alive; the comical, bashful ecstasy of the good fellow,
+his ancient chum, in telling him he had had a son born the night before,
+and the mother was doing well, and how he laughed and danced, and
+skipped into the air.</p>
+
+<p>The smoker was full of these eidolons and of others which came and
+went with constant vicissitude. But what was of a greater weirdness than
+seeing them within it was seeing them without in that reflection of the
+interior which travelled with it through the summer night, and repeated
+it, now dimly, now brilliantly, in every detail. Alford sat in a daze,
+with a smile which he was aware of, fixed and stiff as if in plaster, on
+his face, and with his gaze bent on this or that eidolon, and then on
+all of them together. He was not so much afraid of them as of being
+noticed by the other passengers in the smoker, to whom he knew he might
+look very queer. He said to himself that he was making the whole thing,
+but the very subjectivity was what filled him with a deep and hopeless
+dread. At last the train ceased its long leaping through the dark, and
+with its coming to a stand the whole illusion vanished. He heard a gay
+voice which he knew bidding some one good-bye who was getting into the
+car just back of the smoker, and as he descended to the platform he
+almost walked into the arms of Mrs. Yarrow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, Mr. Alford! We had given you up. We thought you
+wouldn&#8217;t come back till to-morrow&#8212;or perhaps ever. What in
+the world will you do for supper? The kitchen fires were out ages
+ago!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In the light of the station electrics she beamed upon him, and he
+felt glad at heart, as if he had been saved from something, a mortal
+danger or a threatened shame. But he could not speak at once; his teeth
+closed with tetanic force upon each other. Later, as they walked to the
+hotel, through the warm, soft night in which the south wind was roaming
+the starless heavens for rain, he found his voice, and although he felt
+that he was speaking unnaturally, he made out to answer the lively
+questions with which she pelted him too thickly to expect them to be
+answered severally. She told him all the news of the day, and when she
+began on yesterday&#8217;s news she checked herself with a laugh and
+said she had forgotten that he had only been gone since morning.
+&#8220;But now,&#8221; she said, &#8220;you see how you&#8217;ve been
+missed&#8212;how <em>any</em> man must be missed in a hotel full of
+women.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She took charge of him when they got to the house, and said if he
+would go boldly into the dining-room, where they detected, as they
+approached, one lamp scantly shining from the else darkened windows, she
+would beard the lioness in her den, by which she meant the cook in the
+kitchen, and see what she could get him for supper. Apparently she could
+get nothing warm, for when a reluctant waitress appeared it was with
+such a chilly refection on her tray that Alford, though he was not very
+hungry, returned from interrogating the obscurity for eidolons, and
+shivered at it. At the same time the swing-door of the long, dim room
+opened to admit a gush of the outer radiance on which Mrs. Yarrow
+drifted in with a chafing-dish in one hand and a tea-basket in the
+other. She floated tiltingly towards him like, he thought, a pretty
+little ship, and sent a cheery hail before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been trying to get somebody to join you at a
+premature Welsh-rarebit and a belated cup of tea, but I can&#8217;t tear
+one of the tabbies from their cards or the kittens from their gambols in
+the amusement-hall in the basement. Do you mind so very much having it
+alone? Because you&#8217;ll have to, whether you do or not. Unless you
+call me company, when I&#8217;m merely cook.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She put her utensils on the table beside the forbidding tray the
+waitress had left, and helped lift herself by pressing one hand on the
+top of a chair towards the electric, which she flashed up to keep the
+dismal lamp in countenance. Alford let her do it. He durst not, he felt,
+stir from his place, lest any movement should summon back the eidolons;
+and now in the sudden glare of light he shyly, slyly searched the room
+for them. Not one, fair or foul, showed itself, and slowly he felt a
+great weight lifting from his heart. In its place there sprang up a
+joyous gratitude towards Mrs. Yarrow, who had saved him from them, from
+himself. An inexpressible tenderness filled his breast; the tears rose
+to his eyes; a soft glow enveloped his whole being, a warmth of hope, a
+freshness of life renewed, encompassed him. He wished to take her in his
+arms, to tell her how he loved her; and as she bustled about, lighting
+the lamp of her chafing-dish, and kindling the little spirit-stove she
+had brought with her to make tea, he let his gaze dwell upon every pose,
+every motion of her with a glad hunger in which no smallest detail was
+lost. He now believed that without her he must die, without her he could
+not wish to live.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jove,&#8221; Rulledge broke in at this point of
+Wanhope&#8217;s story, which I am telling again so badly, &#8220;I think
+Alford was in luck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver gave a harsh cackle. &#8220;The only thing Rulledge finds
+fault with in this club is &#8216;the lack of woman&#8217;s nursing and
+the lack of woman&#8217;s tears.&#8217; Nothing is wanting to his
+enjoyment of his victuals but the fact that they are not served by a
+neat-handed Phyllis, like Alford&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge glanced towards Wanhope, and innocently inquired, &#8220;Was
+that her first name?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver burst into a scream, and Rulledge looked red and silly for
+having given himself away; but he made an excursion to the buffet
+outside, and returned with a sandwich with which he supported himself
+stolidly under Minver&#8217;s derision, until Wanhope came to his relief
+by resuming his story, or rather his study, of Alford&#8217;s strange
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Yarrow first gave Alford his tea, as being of a prompter brew
+than the rarebit, but she was very quick and apt with that, too; and
+pretty soon she leaned forward, and in the glow from the lamp under the
+chafing-dish, which spiritualized her charming face with its thin
+radiance, puffed the flame out with her pouted lips, and drew back with
+a long-sighed &#8220;There! That will make you see your grandmother, if
+anything will.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My grandmother?&#8221; Alford repeated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. Wouldn&#8217;t you like to?&#8221; Mrs.. Yarrow asked,
+pouring the thick composition over the toast (rescued stone-cold from
+the frigid tray) on Alford&#8217;s plate. &#8220;I&#8217;m sure I should
+like to see mine&#8212;dear old gran! Not that I ever saw
+her&#8212;either of her&#8212;or should know how she looked. Did you
+ever see yours&#8212;either of her?&#8221; she pursued, impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; Alford answered, looking intently at her, but
+with so little speculation in the eyes he glared so with that he knew
+her to be uneasy under them.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed a little, and stayed her hand on the bail of the teapot.
+&#8220;Which of her?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, both!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And&#8212;and&#8212;did she look so much like
+<em>me?</em>&#8221; she said, with an added laugh, that he perceived had
+an hysterical note in it. &#8220;You&#8217;re letting your rarebit get
+cold!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He laughed himself, now, a great laugh of relaxation, of relief.
+&#8220;Not the least in the world! She was not exactly a phantom of
+delight.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford. Now, it&#8217;s your tea&#8217;s
+getting cold.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They laughed together, and he gave himself to his victual with a
+relish that she visibly enjoyed. When that question of his grandmother
+had been pushed he thought of an awful experience of his childhood,
+which left on his infant mind an indelible impression, a scar, to remain
+from the original wound forever. He had been caught in a lie, the first
+he could remember, but by no means the last, by many immemorable
+thousands. His poor little wickedness had impugned the veracity of both
+these terrible old ladies, who, habitually at odds with each other, now
+united, for once, against him. He could always see himself, a mean
+little blubbering-faced rascal, stealing guilty looks of imploring at
+their faces, set unmercifully against him, one in sorrow and one in
+anger, requiring his mother to whip him, and insisting till he was led,
+loudly roaring, into the parlor, and there made a liar of for all time,
+so far as fear could do it.</p>
+
+<p>When Mrs. Yarrow asked if he had ever seen his grandmother he
+expected instantly to see her, in duplicate, and as a sole refuge, but
+with little hope that it would save him, he kept his eyes fast on hers,
+and to his unspeakable joy it did avail. No other face, of sorrow or of
+anger, rose between them. For the time his thought was quit of its
+consequence; no eidolon outwardly repeated his inward vision. A warm
+gush of gratitude seemed to burst from his heart, and to bathe his whole
+being, and then to flow in a tide of ineffable tenderness towards Mrs.
+Yarrow, and involve her and bear them together heavenward. It was not
+passion, it was not love, he perceived well enough; it was the utterance
+of a vital conviction that she had saved him from an overwhelming
+subjective horror, and that in her sweet objectivity there was a
+security and peace to be found nowhere else.</p>
+
+<p>He greedily ate every atom of his rarebit, he absorbed every drop of
+the moisture in the teapot, so that when she shook it and shook it, and
+then tried to pour something from it, there was no slightest dribble at
+the spout. But they lingered, talking and laughing, and perhaps they
+might never have left the place if the hard handmaiden who had brought
+the tea-tray had not first tried putting her head in at the swing-door
+from the kitchen, and then, later, come boldly in and taken the tray
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Yarrow waited self-respectfully for her disappearance, and then
+she said, &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid that was a hint, Mr.
+Alford.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It seemed like one,&#8221; he owned.</p>
+
+<p>They went out together, gayly chatting, but she would not encourage
+the movement he made towards the veranda. She remained firmly attached
+to the newel-post of the stairs, and at the first chance he gave her she
+said good-night and bounded lightly upward. At the turn of the stairs
+she stopped and looked laughing down at him over the rail. &#8220;I hope
+you won&#8217;t see your grandmother.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, not a bit of it,&#8221; he called back. He felt that he
+failed to give his reply the quality of epigram, but he was not unhappy
+in his failure.</p>
+
+<p>Many light-hearted days followed this joyous evening. No eidolons
+haunted Alford&#8217;s horizon, perhaps because Mrs. Yarrow filled his
+whole heaven. She was very constantly with him, guiding his wavering
+steps up the hill of recovery, which he climbed with more and more
+activity, and keeping him company in those valleys of relapse into which
+he now and then fell back from the difficult steeps. It came to be
+tacitly, or at least passively, conceded by the other ladies that she
+had somehow earned the exclusive right to what had once been the common
+charge; or that if one of their number had a claim to keep Mr. Alford
+from killing himself by all sorts of imprudences, which in his case
+amounted to impieties, it was certainly Mrs. Yarrow. They did not put
+this in terms, but they felt it and acted it.</p>
+
+<p>She was all the safer guardian for a delicate invalid because she
+loathed manly sports so entirely that she did not even pretend to like
+them, as most women, poor things, think themselves obliged to do. In her
+hands there was no danger that he would be tempted to excesses in golf.
+She was really afraid of all boats, but she was willing to go out with
+him in the sail-boat of a superannuated skipper, because to sit talking
+in the stern and stoop for the vagaries of the boom in tacking was such
+good exercise. She would join him in fishing from the rotting pier, but
+with no certainty which was a cunner and which was a sculpin, when she
+caught it, and with an equal horror of both the nasty, wriggling things.
+When they went a walk together, her notion of a healthful tramp was to
+find a nice place among the sweet-fern or the pine-needles, and sit down
+in it and talk, or make a lap, to which he could bring the berries he
+gathered for her to arrange in the shallow leaf-trays she pinned
+together with twigs. She really preferred a rocking-chair on the veranda
+to anything else; but if he wished to go to those other excesses, she
+would go with him, to keep him out of mischief.</p>
+
+<p>There could be only one credible reading of the situation, but Alford
+let the summer pass in this pleasant dreaming without waking up till too
+late to the pleasanter reality. It will seem strange enough, but it is
+true, that it was no part of his dream to fancy that Mrs. Yarrow was in
+love with him. He knew very well, long before the end, that he was in
+love with her; but, remaining in the dark otherwise, he considered only
+himself in forbearing verbally to make love to her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221; Rulledge snarled at this point, &#8220;he
+<em>was</em> a chump.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope at the moment opposed nothing directly to the censure, but
+said that something pathetically reproachful in Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s
+smiling looks penetrated to Alford as she nodded gayly from the car
+window to him in the little group which had assembled to see her off at
+the station when she left, by no means the first of their happy hotel
+circle to go.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Somebody,&#8221; Rulledge burst out again, &#8220;ought to
+have kicked him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s become,&#8221; Minver asked, &#8220;of all the
+dear maids and widows that you&#8217;ve failed to marry at the end of
+each summer, Rulledge?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The satire involved flattery so sweet that Rulledge could not perhaps
+wish to make any retort. He frowned sternly, and said, with a face
+averted from Minver: &#8220;Go on, Wanhope!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope here permitted himself a philosophical excursion in which I
+will not accompany him. It was apparently to prepare us for the dramatic
+fact which followed, and which I suppose he was trying rather to work
+away from than work up to. It included some facts which he had failed to
+touch on before, and which led to a discussion very interesting in
+itself, but of a range too great for the limits I am trying to keep
+here. It seems that Alford had been stayed from declaring his love not
+only because he doubted of its nature, but also because he questioned
+whether a man in his broken health had any right to offer himself to a
+woman, and because from a yet finer scruple he hesitated in his poverty
+to ask the hand of a rich woman. On the first point, we were pretty well
+agreed, but on the second we divided again, especially Rulledge and
+Minver, who held, the one, that his hesitation did Alford honor, and
+quite relieved him from the imputation of being a chump; and the other
+that he was an ass to keep quiet for any such silly reason. Minver
+contended that every woman had a right, whether rich or poor, to the man
+who loved her; and, moreover, there were now so many rich women that, if
+they were not allowed to marry poor men, their chances of marriage were
+indefinitely reduced. What better could a widow do with the money she
+had inherited from a husband she probably did not love than give it to a
+man like Alford&#8212;or to an ass like Alford, Minver corrected
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>His <i>reductio ad absurdum</i> allowed Wanhope to resume with a laugh,
+and say that Alford waited at the station in the singleness to which the
+tactful dispersion of the others had left him, and watched the train
+rapidly dwindle in the perspective, till an abrupt turn of the road
+carried it out of sight. Then he lifted his eyes with a long sigh, and
+looked round. Everywhere he saw Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s smiling face with
+that inner pathos. It swarmed upon him from all points; and wherever he
+turned it repeated itself in the distances like that succession of faces
+you see when you stand between two mirrors.</p>
+
+<p>It was not merely a lapse from his lately hopeful state with Alford,
+it was a collapse. The man withered and dwindled away, till he felt that
+he must audibly rattle in his clothes as he walked by people. He did not
+walk much. Mostly he remained shrunken in the arm-chair where he used to
+sit beside Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s rocker, and the ladies, the older and the
+older-fashioned, who were &#8220;sticking it out&#8221; at the hotel
+till it should close on the 15th of September, observed him, some
+compassionately, some censoriously, but all in the same conviction.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s plain to be seen what ails Mr. Alford,
+<em>now</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I guess it <em>is</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<em>I</em> guess so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I <em>guess</em> it is.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Seems kind of heartless, her going and leaving him
+so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Like a sick kitten!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I should say as <em>much</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Your eyes bother you, Mr. Alford?&#8221; one of them chanted,
+breaking from their discussion of him to appeal directly to him. He was
+rubbing his eyes, to relieve himself for the moment from the intolerable
+affliction of those swarming eidolons, which, whenever he thought of
+this thing or that, thickened about him. They now no longer displaced
+one another, but those which came first remained fadedly beside or
+behind the fresher appearances, like the earlier rainbow which loses
+depth and color when a later arch defines itself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, glad of the subterfuge. &#8220;They annoy
+me a good deal of late.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You want to get fitted for a good pair of glasses. I kept
+letting it go, when I first began to get old-sighted.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Another lady came to Alford&#8217;s rescue. &#8220;I guess Mr. Alford
+has no need to get fitted for old sight yet a while. You got little
+spidery things&#8212;specks and dots&#8212;in your eyes?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes&#8212;multitudes,&#8221; he said, hopelessly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll tell you what: you want to build up. That was
+the way with me, and the oculist said it was from getting all run down.
+I built up, and the first thing I knew my sight was as clear as a bell.
+You want to build up.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You want to go to the mountains,&#8221; a third interposed.
+&#8220;That&#8217;s where Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s gone, and I guess
+it&#8217;ll do her more good than sticking it out here would ever have
+done.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford would have been glad enough to go to the mountains, but with
+those illusions hovering closer and closer about him, he had no longer
+the courage, the strength. He had barely enough of either to get away to
+Boston. He found his doctor this time, after winning and losing the
+wager he made himself that he would not have returned to town yet, and
+the good-fortune was almost too much for his shaken nerves. The cordial
+of his friend&#8217;s greeting&#8212;they had been chums at
+Harvard&#8212;completed his overthrow. As he sank upon the professional
+sofa, where so many other cases had been diagnosticated, he broke into
+tears. &#8220;Hello, old fellow!&#8221; the doctor said, encouragingly,
+and more tenderly than he would have dealt with some women.
+&#8220;What&#8217;s up?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jim,&#8221; Alford found voice to say, &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid
+I&#8217;m losing my mind.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor smiled provisionally. &#8220;Well, that&#8217;s
+<em>one</em> of the signs you&#8217;re not. Can you say how?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes. In a minute,&#8221; Alford sobbed, and when he had got
+the better of himself he told his friend the whole story. In the direct
+examination he suppressed Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s part, but when the doctor,
+who had listened with smiling seriousness, began to cross-examine him
+with the question, &#8220;And you don&#8217;t remember that any outside
+influence affected the recurrence of the illusions, or did anything to
+prevent it?&#8221; Alford answered promptly: &#8220;Oh yes. There was a
+woman who did.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A woman? What sort of a woman?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford told.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is very curious,&#8221; the doctor said. &#8220;I know a
+man who used to have a distressing dream. He broke it up by telling his
+wife about it every morning after he had dreamt it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Unluckily, she isn&#8217;t my wife,&#8221; Alford said,
+gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But when she was with you, you got rid of the
+illusions?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;At first, I used to see hers; then I stopped seeing
+any.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did you ever tell her of them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; I didn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Never tell anybody?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No one but you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And do you see them now?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you think, because you&#8217;ve told me of them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It seems so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor was silent for a marked space. Then he asked, smiling:
+&#8220;Well, why not?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why not what?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell your wife.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How, my wife?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By marriage.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford looked dazed. &#8220;Do you mean Mrs. Yarrow?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If that&#8217;s her name, and she&#8217;s a widow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And do you think it would be the fair thing for a man on the
+verge of insanity&#8212;a physical and mental wreck&#8212;to ask a woman
+to marry him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In your case, yes. In the first place, you&#8217;re not so bad
+as all that. You need nothing but rest for your body and change for your
+mind. I believe you&#8217;ll get rid of your illusions as soon as you
+form the habit of speaking of them promptly when they begin to trouble
+you. You ought to speak of them to some one. You can&#8217;t always have
+me around, and Mrs. Yarrow would be the next best thing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s rich, and you know what I am. I&#8217;ll have to
+borrow the money to rest on, I&#8217;m so poor.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not if you marry it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford rose, somewhat more vigorously than he had sat down. But that
+day he did not go beyond ascertaining that Mrs. Yarrow was in town. He
+found out the fact from the maid at her door, who said that she was
+nearly always at home after dinner, and, without waiting for the evening
+of another day, Alford went to call upon her.</p>
+
+<p>She said, coming down to him in a rather old-fashioned, impersonal
+drawing-room which looked distinctly as if it had been left to her:
+&#8220;I was so glad to get your card. When did you leave
+Woodbeach?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mrs. Yarrow,&#8221; he returned, as if that were the answer,
+&#8220;I think I owe you an explanation.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pay it!&#8221; she bantered, putting out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m so poverty-stricken that I don&#8217;t know whether
+I can. Did you ever notice anything odd about me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His directness seemed to have a right to directness from her.
+&#8220;I noticed that you stared a good deal&#8212;or used to. But
+people <em>do</em> stare.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I stared because I saw things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Saw things?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I saw whatever I thought of. Whatever came into my mind was
+externated in a vision.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She smiled, he could not make out whether uneasily or not. &#8220;It
+sounds rather creepy, doesn&#8217;t it? But it&#8217;s very
+interesting.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what the doctor said; I&#8217;ve been to see him
+this morning. May I tell you about my visions? They&#8217;re not so
+creepy as they sound, I believe, and I don&#8217;t think they&#8217;ll
+keep you awake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, do,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I should like of all things
+to hear about them. Perhaps I&#8217;ve been one of them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You have.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! Isn&#8217;t that rather personal?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope not offensively.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He went on to tell her, with even greater fulness than he had told
+the doctor. She listened with the interest women take in anything weird,
+and with a compassion for him which she did not conceal so perfectly but
+that he saw it. At the end he said: &#8220;You may wonder that I come to
+you with all this, which must sound like the ravings of a
+madman.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No&#8212;no,&#8221; she hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I came because I wished you to know everything about me
+before&#8212;before&#8212;I wouldn&#8217;t have come, you&#8217;ll
+believe me, if I hadn&#8217;t had the doctor&#8217;s assurance that my
+trouble was merely a part of my being physically out of kilter, and had
+nothing to do with my sanity&#8212;Good Heavens! What am I saying? But
+the thought has tormented me so! And in the midst of it I&#8217;ve
+allowed myself to&#8212;Mrs. Yarrow, I love you. Don&#8217;t you know
+that?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford may have had a divided mind in this declaration, but after
+that one word Mrs. Yarrow had no mind for anything else. He went on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not only sick&#8212;so sick that I
+sha&#8217;n&#8217;t be able to do any work for a year at least&#8212;but
+I&#8217;m poor, so poor that I can&#8217;t afford to be sick.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her eyes and looked at him, where she sat oddly aloof from
+those possessions of hers, to which she seemed so little related, and
+said, with a smile quivering at the corners of her pretty mouth,
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t see what that has to do with it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; He stared at her hard.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Am I in duplicate or triplicate, this time?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you&#8217;re only one, and there&#8217;s none like you! I
+could never see any one else while I looked at you!&#8221; he cried,
+only half aware of his poetry, and meaning what he said very
+literally.</p>
+
+<p>But she took only the poetry. &#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t wish you
+to,&#8221; she said, and she laughed.</p>
+
+<p>He could not believe yet in his good-fortune. His countenance fell.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid I don&#8217;t understand, or that you
+don&#8217;t. It doesn&#8217;t seem as if I could get to the end of my
+unworthiness, which isn&#8217;t voluntary. It seems altogether too base.
+I can&#8217;t let you say what you do, if you mean it, till you know
+that I come to you in despair as well as in love. You saved me from the
+fear I was in, again and again, and I believe that without you I
+shall&#8212;Ah, it seems very base! But the doctor&#8212;If I could
+always tell some one&#8212;if I could tell <em>you</em> when these
+things were obsessing me&#8212;haunting me&#8212;they would
+cease&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Yarrow rose, with rather a piteous smile. &#8220;Then, I am a
+prescription!&#8221; She hoped, woman-like, that she was solely a
+passion; but is any woman worth having, ever solely a passion?</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t!&#8221; Alford implored, rising too.
+&#8220;Don&#8217;t, in mercy, take it that way! It&#8217;s only that I
+wish you to know everything that&#8217;s in me; to know how utterly
+helpless and worthless I am. You needn&#8217;t have a pang in throwing
+such a thing away.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She put out her hand to him, but at arm&#8217;s-length. &#8220;I
+sha&#8217;n&#8217;t throw you away&#8212;at least, not to-night. I want
+to think.&#8221; It was a way of saying she wished him to go, and he had
+no desire to stay. He asked if he might come again, and she said,
+&#8220;Oh yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;To-morrow?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not to-morrow, perhaps. When I send. Was it <em>young</em>
+Doctor Enderby?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They had rather a sad, dry parting; and when her door closed upon him
+he felt that it had shut him out forever. His shame and his defeat were
+so great that he did not think of his eidolons, and they did not come to
+trouble him. He woke in the morning, asking himself, bitterly, if he
+were cured already. His humiliation was such that he closed his eyes to
+the light, and wished he might never again open them to it.</p>
+
+<p>The question that Mrs. Yarrow had to ask Dr. Enderby was not the
+question he had instantly forecast for her when she put aside her veil
+in his office and told him who she was. She did not seem anxious to be
+assured of Alford&#8217;s mental condition, or as to any risks in
+marrying him. Her inquiry was much more psychological; it was almost
+impersonal, and yet Dr. Enderby thought she looked as if she had been
+crying.</p>
+
+<p>She had a difficulty in formulating her question, and when it came it
+was almost a speculation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Women,&#8221; she said, a little hoarsely, &#8220;have no
+right, I suppose, to expect the ideal in life. The best they can do
+seems to be to make the real look like it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Enderby reflected. &#8220;Well, yes. But I don&#8217;t know that
+I ever put it to myself in just those terms.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then she remarked, as if that were the next thing:
+&#8220;You&#8217;ve known Mr. Alford a long time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We were at school together, and we shared the same rooms in
+Harvard.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He is very sincere,&#8221; she added, as if this were
+relevant.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s a man who likes to have a little worse than the
+worst known about him. One might say he was excessively sincere.&#8221;
+Enderby divined that Alford had been bungling the matter, and he was
+willing to help him out if he could.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Yarrow fixed dimly beautiful eyes upon him. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+know,&#8221; she said, &#8220;why it wouldn&#8217;t be ideal&#8212;as
+much ideal as anything&#8212;to give one&#8217;s self absolutely
+to&#8212;to&#8212;a duty&#8212;or not duty, exactly; I don&#8217;t mean
+that. Especially,&#8221; she added, showing a light through the mist,
+&#8220;if one wanted to do it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then he knew she had made up her mind, and though on some accounts he
+would have liked to laugh with her, on other accounts he felt that he
+owed it to her to be serious.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If women could not fulfil the ideal in that way&#8212;if they
+did not constantly do it&#8212;there would be no marriages for
+love.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you think so?&#8221; she asked, with a shaking voice.
+&#8220;But men&#8212;men are ideal, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not as women are&#8212;except now and then some fool like
+Alford.&#8221; Now, indeed, he laughed, and he began to praise Alford
+from his heart, so delicately, so tenderly, so reverently, that Mrs.
+Yarrow laughed too before he was done, and cried a little, and when she
+rose to leave she could not speak; but clung to his hand, on turning
+away, and so flung it from behind her with a gesture that Enderby
+thought pretty.</p>
+
+<p>At this point, Wanhope stopped as if that were the end.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And did she let Alford come to see her again?&#8221; Rulledge,
+at once romantic and literal, demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes. At any rate, they were married that fall. They
+are&#8212;I believe he&#8217;s pursuing his archaeological studies
+there&#8212;living in Athens.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Together?&#8221; Minver smoothly inquired.</p>
+
+<p>At this expression of cynicism Rulledge gave him a look that would
+have incinerated another. Wanhope went out with Minver, and then, after
+a moment&#8217;s daze, Rulledge exclaimed: &#8220;Jove! I forgot to ask
+him whether it&#8217;s stopped Alford&#8217;s illusions!&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter3" id="chapter3">III</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">A Memory that Worked Overtime</h2>
+
+
+<p>Minver&#8217;s brother took down from the top of the low bookshelf a
+small painting on panel, which he first studied in the obverse, and then
+turned and contemplated on the back with the same dreamy smile. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t see how that got <em>here</em>,&#8221; he said,
+absently.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Minver returned, &#8220;you don&#8217;t expect
+<em>me</em> to tell you, except on the principle that any one would
+naturally know more about anything of yours than you would.&#8221; He
+took it from his brother and looked at the front of it. &#8220;It
+isn&#8217;t bad. It&#8217;s pretty good!&#8221; He turned it round.
+&#8220;Why, it&#8217;s one of old Blakey&#8217;s! How did <em>you</em>
+come by it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Stole it, probably,&#8221; Minver&#8217;s brother said, still
+thoughtfully. Then with an effect of recollecting: &#8220;No, come to
+think of it,&#8221; he added, &#8220;Blakey gave it to me.&#8221; The
+Minvers played these little comedies together, quite as much to satisfy
+their tenderness for each other as to give their friends pleasure.
+&#8220;Think you&#8217;re the only painter that gets me to take his
+truck as a gift? He gave it to me, let&#8217;s see, about ten years ago,
+when he was trying to make a die of it, and failed; I thought he would
+succeed. But it&#8217;s been in my wife&#8217;s room nearly ever since,
+and what I can&#8217;t understand is what she&#8217;s doing with it down
+here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Probably to make trouble for you, somehow,&#8221; Minver
+suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s <em>that</em>,
+quite,&#8221; his brother returned, with a false air of scrupulosity,
+which was part of their game with each other. He looked some more at the
+picture, and then he glanced from it at me. &#8220;There&#8217;s a very
+curious story connected with that sketch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, tell it,&#8221; Minver said. &#8220;Tell it! I
+suppose I can stand it again. Acton&#8217;s never heard it, I believe.
+But you needn&#8217;t make a show of sparing him. I
+<em>couldn&#8217;t</em> stand that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I certainly haven&#8217;t heard the story,&#8221; I said,
+&#8220;and if I had I would be too polite to own it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver&#8217;s brother looked towards the open door over his
+shoulder, and Minver interpreted for him: &#8220;She&#8217;s not coming.
+I&#8217;ll give you due warning.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was before we were married, but not much before, and the
+picture was a sort of wedding present for my wife, though Blakey made a
+show of giving it to me. Said he had painted it for me, because he had a
+prophetic soul, and felt in his bones that I was going to want a picture
+of the place where I first met her. You see, it&#8217;s the little villa
+her mother had taken that winter on the Viale Petrarca, just outside of
+Florence. It <em>was</em> the first place I met her, but not the
+last.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be obvious,&#8221; Minver ordered.</p>
+
+<p>His brother did not mind him. &#8220;I thought it was mighty nice of
+Blakey. He was barking away, all the time he was talking, and when he
+wasn&#8217;t coughing he was so hoarse he could hardly speak above a
+whisper; but he kept talking on, and wishing me happy, and fending off
+my gratitude, while he was finding a piece of manila paper to wrap the
+sketch in, and then hunting for a piece of string to tie it. When he
+handed it to me at last, he gasped out: &#8216;I don&#8217;t mind her
+knowing that I partly meant it as the place where <em>she</em> first met
+<em>you</em>, too. I&#8217;m not ashamed of it as a bit of color.
+Anyway, I sha&#8217;n&#8217;t live to do anything better.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Oh, yes, you will,&#8217; I came back in that lying way
+we think is kind with dying people. I suppose it is; anyway, it turned
+out all right with Blakey, as he&#8217;ll testify if you look him up
+when you go to Florence. By the way, he lives in that villa
+<em>now</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No?&#8221; I said. &#8220;How charming!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver&#8217;s brother went on: &#8220;I made up my mind to be
+awfully careful of that picture, and not let it out of my hand till I
+left it with &#8216;her&#8217; mother, to be put among the other wedding
+presents that were accumulating at their house in Exeter Street. So I
+held it on my lap going in by train from Lexington, where Blakey lived,
+and when I got out at the old Lowell Depot&#8212;North Station,
+now&#8212;and got into the little tinkle-tankle horse-car that took me
+up to where I was to get the Back Bay car&#8212;Those were the
+prehistoric times before trolleys, and there were odds in horse-cars. We
+considered the blue-painted Back Bay cars very swell. <em>You</em>
+remember them?&#8221; he asked Minver.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not when I can help it,&#8221; Minver answered. &#8220;When I
+broke with Boston, and went to New York, I burnt my horse-cars behind
+me, and never wanted to know what they looked like, one from
+another.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, as I was saying,&#8221; Minver&#8217;s brother went on,
+without regarding his impatriotism, &#8220;when I got into the horse-car
+at the depot, I rushed for a corner seat, and I put the picture, with
+its face next the car-end, between me and the wall, and kept my hand on
+it; and when I changed to the Back Bay car, I did the same thing. There
+was a florist&#8217;s just there, and I couldn&#8217;t resist some
+Mayflowers in the window; I was in that condition, you know, when
+flowers seemed to be made for her, and I had to take her own to her
+wherever I found them. I put the bunch between my knees, and kept one
+hand on it, while I kept my other hand on the picture at my side. I was
+feeling first-rate, and when General Filbert got in after we started,
+and stood before me hanging by a strap and talking down to me, I had the
+decency to propose giving him my seat, as he was about ten years
+older.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sure?&#8221; Minver asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, say fifteen. I don&#8217;t pretend to be a chicken, and
+never did. But he wouldn&#8217;t hear of it. Said I had a bundle, and
+winked at the bunch of Mayflowers. We had such a jolly talk that I let
+the car carry me a block by and had to get out at Gloucester and run
+back to Exeter. I rang, and, when the maid came to the door, there I
+stood with nothing but the Mayflowers in my hand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good <i>coup de th&#233;&#226;tre</i>,&#8221; Minver jeered.
+&#8220;Curtain?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His brother disdained reply, or was too much absorbed in his tale to
+think of any. &#8220;When the girl opened the door and I discovered my
+fix I burst out, &#8216;Good Lord!&#8217; and I stuck the bunch of
+flowers at her, and turned and ran. I suppose I must have had some
+notion of overtaking the car with my picture in it. But the best I could
+do was to let the next one overtake me several blocks down Marlborough
+Street, and carry me to the little jumping-off station on Westchester
+Park, as we used to call it in those days, at the end of the Back Bay
+line.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;As I pushed into the railroad office, I bet myself that the
+picture would not be there, and, sure enough, I won.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You were always a lucky dog,&#8221; Minver said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But the man in charge was very encouraging, and said it was
+sure to be turned in; and he asked me what time the car had passed the
+corner of Gloucester Street. I happened to know, and then he said, Oh
+yes, that conductor was a substitute, and he wouldn&#8217;t be on again
+till morning; then he would be certain to bring the picture with him. I
+was not to worry, for it would be all right. Nothing left in the Back
+Bay cars was ever lost; the character of the abutters was guarantee for
+that, and they were practically the only passengers. The conductors and
+the drivers were as honest as the passengers, and I could consider
+myself in the hands of friends.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He was so reassuring that I went away smiling at my fears, and
+promising to be round bright and early, as soon, the official
+suggested&#8212;the morrow being Sunday&#8212;as soon as the men and
+horses had had their baked beans.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Still, after dinner, I had a lurking anxiety, which I turned
+into a friendly impulse to go and call on Mrs. Filbert, whom I really
+owed a bread-and-butter visit, and who, I knew, would not mind my coming
+in the evening. The general, she said, had been telling her of our
+pleasant chat in the car, and would be glad to smoke his after-dinner
+cigar with me, and why wouldn&#8217;t I come into the library?</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We were so very jolly together, all three, that I made light
+of my misadventure about the picture. The general inquired about the
+flowers first. He remembered the flowers perfectly, and hoped they were
+acceptable; he thought he remembered the picture, too, now I mentioned
+it; but he would not have noticed it so much, there by my side, with my
+hand on it. I would be sure to get it. He gave several instances,
+personal to him and his friends, of recoveries of lost articles; it was
+really astonishing how careful the horse-car people were, especially on
+the Back Bay line. I would find my picture all right at the Westchester
+Park station in the morning; never fear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I feared so little that I slept well, and even overslept; and
+I went to get my picture quite confidently, and I could hardly believe
+it had not been turned in yet, though the station-master told me so. The
+substitute conductor had not seen it, but more than likely it was at the
+stables, where the cleaners would have found it in the car and turned it
+in. He was as robustly cheerful about it as ever, and offered to send an
+inquiry by the next car; but I said, Why shouldn&#8217;t I go myself;
+and he said that was a good idea. So I went, and it was well I did, for
+my picture was not there, and I had saved time by going. It was not
+there, but the head man said I need not worry a mite about it; I was
+certain to get it sooner or later; it would be turned in, to a dead
+certainty. We became rather confidential, and I went so far as to
+explain about wanting to make my inquiries very quietly on
+Blakey&#8217;s account: he would be annoyed if he heard of its loss, and
+it might react unfavorably on his health.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The head man said that was so; and he would tell me what I
+wanted to do: I wanted to go to the Company&#8217;s General Offices in
+Milk Street, and tell them about it. That was where everything went as a
+last resort, and he would bet any money that I would see my picture
+there the first thing I got inside the door. I thanked him with the
+fervor I thought he merited, and said I would go at once.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Well,&#8217; he said, &#8216;you don&#8217;t want to go
+to-day, you know. The offices are not open Sunday. And to-morrow&#8217;s
+a holiday. But you&#8217;re all right. You&#8217;ll find your picture
+there, don&#8217;t you have any doubts about it.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was my next to last Sunday supper with my wife, before
+she became my wife, at her mother&#8217;s house, and I went to the feast
+with as little gayety as I suppose any young man ever carried to a
+supper of the kind. I was told, afterwards, that my behavior up to a
+certain point was so suggestive either of secret crime or of secret
+regret, that the only question was whether they should have in the
+police or I should be given back my engagement ring and advised to go.
+Luckily I ceased to bear my anguish just in time.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The fact is, I could not stand it any longer, and as soon as I
+was alone with her I made a clean breast of it; partially clean, that
+is: I suppose a fellow never tells <em>all</em> to a girl, if he truly
+loves her.&#8221; Minver&#8217;s brother glanced round at us and
+gathered the harvest of our approving smiles. &#8220;I said to her,
+&#8216;I&#8217;ve been having a wedding present.&#8217;
+&#8216;Well,&#8217; she said, &#8216;you&#8217;ve come as near having no
+use for a wedding present as anybody <em>I</em> know. Was having a
+wedding present what made you so gloomy at supper? Who gave it to you,
+anyway?&#8217; &#8216;Old Blakey.&#8217; &#8216;A painting?&#8217;
+&#8216;Yes&#8212;a sketch.&#8217; &#8216;What of?&#8217; This was where
+I qualified. I said: &#8216;Oh, just one of those Sorrento things of
+his.&#8217; You see, if I told her that it was the villa where we first
+met, and then said I had left it in the horse-car, she would take it as
+proof positive that I did not really care anything about her or I never
+could have forgotten it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You were wise as far as you went,&#8221; Minver said.
+&#8220;Go on.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I told her the whole story circumstantially: how I had
+kept the sketch religiously in my lap in the train, and then held it
+down with my hand all the while beside me in the first horse-car, and
+did the same thing in the Back Bay car I changed to; and felt of it the
+whole time I was talking with General Filbert, and then left it there
+when I got out to leave the flowers at her door, when the awful fact
+came over me like a flash. &#8216;Yes,&#8217; she said, &#8216;Norah
+said you poked the flowers at her without a word, and she had to guess
+they were for me.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I had got my story pretty glib by this time; I had reeled it
+off with increasing particulars to the Westchester Park station-master,
+and the head man at the stables, and General Filbert, and I was so
+letter-perfect that I had a vision of the whole thing, especially of my
+talking with the general while I kept my hand on the picture&#8212;and
+then all was dark.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;At the end she said we must advertise for the picture. I said
+it would kill Blakey if he saw it; and she said: No matter, <em>let</em>
+it kill him; it would show him that we valued his gift, and were moving
+heaven and earth to find it; and, at any rate, it would kill <em>me</em>
+if I kept myself in suspense. I said I should not care for that; but
+with her sympathy I guessed I could live through the night, and I was
+sure I should find the thing at the Milk Street office in the
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Why,&#8217; said she, &#8216;to-morrow it&#8217;ll be
+shut!&#8217; and then I didn&#8217;t really know what to say, and I
+agreed to drawing up an advertisement then and there, so as not to lose
+an instant&#8217;s time after I had been at the Milk Street office on
+Tuesday and found the picture had not been turned in. She said I could
+dictate the advertisement and she would write it down, and she asked:
+&#8216;Which one of his Sorrento things was it? You must describe it
+exactly, you know.&#8217; That made me feel awfully, and I said I was
+not going to have my next-to-last Sunday evening with her spoiled by
+writing advertisements; and I got away, somehow, with all sorts of
+comforting reassurances from her. I could see that she was feigning them
+to encourage me.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The next morning, I simply could not keep away from the Milk
+Street office, and my unreasonable impatience was rewarded by finding it
+at least ajar, if not open. There was the nicest kind of a young fellow
+there, and he said he was not officially present; but what could he do
+for me? Then I told him the whole story, with details I had not thought
+of before; and he was just as enthusiastic about my getting my picture
+as the Westchester Park station-master or the head man of the stables.
+It was morally certain to be turned in, the first thing in the morning;
+but he would take a description of it, and send out inquiries to all the
+conductors and drivers and car-cleaners, and make a special thing of it.
+He entered into the spirit of the affair, and I felt that I had such a
+friend in him that I confided a little more and hinted at the double
+interest I had in the picture. I didn&#8217;t pretend that it was one of
+Blakey&#8217;s Sorrento things, but I gave him a full and true
+description of it, with its length, breadth, and thickness, in exact
+measure.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Here Minver&#8217;s brother stopped and lost himself in contemplation
+of the sketch, as he held it at arm&#8217;s-length.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, did you get your picture?&#8221; I prompted, after a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; he said, with a quick turn towards me.
+&#8220;This is it. A District Messenger brought it round the first thing
+Tuesday morning. He brought it,&#8221; Minver&#8217;s brother added,
+with a certain effectiveness, &#8220;from the florist&#8217;s, where I
+had stopped to get those Mayflowers. I had left it there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve told it very well, this time, Joe,&#8221; Minver
+said. &#8220;But Acton here is waiting for the psychology. Poor old
+Wanhope ought to be here,&#8221; he added to me. He looked about for a
+match to light his pipe, and his brother jerked his head in the
+direction of the chimney.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Box on the mantel. Yes,&#8221; he sighed, &#8220;that was
+really something very curious. You see, I had invented the whole history
+of the case from the time I got into the Back Bay car with my flowers.
+Absolutely nothing had happened of all I had remembered till I got out
+of the car. I did not put the picture beside me at the end of the car; I
+did not keep my hand on it while I talked with General Filbert; I did
+not leave it behind me when I left the car. Nothing of the kind
+happened. I had already left it at the florist&#8217;s, and that whole
+passage of experience which was so vividly and circumstantially stamped
+in my memory that I related it four or five times over, and would have
+made oath to every detail of it, was pure invention, or, rather, it was
+something less positive: the reflex of the first half of my horse-car
+experience, when I really did put the picture in the corner next me, and
+did keep my hand on it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very strange,&#8221; I was beginning, but just then the door
+opened and Mrs. Minver came in, and I was presented.</p>
+
+<p>She gave me a distracted hand, as she said to her husband:
+&#8220;Have you been telling the story about that picture again?&#8221;
+He was still holding it. &#8220;Silly!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She was a mighty pretty woman, but full of vim and fun and sense.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s one of the most curious freaks of memory I ever
+heard of, Mrs. Minver,&#8221; I said.</p>
+
+<p>Then she showed that she was proud of it, though she had called him
+silly. &#8220;Have you told,&#8221; she demanded of her husband,
+&#8220;how oddly your memory behaved about the subject of the picture,
+too?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have again eaten that particular piece of humble-pie,&#8221;
+Minver&#8217;s brother replied.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; she said to me, &#8220;<em>I</em> think he was
+simply so possessed with the awfulness of having lost the picture that
+all the rest took place prophetically, but unconsciously.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By a species of inverted presentiment?&#8221; I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she assented, slowly, as if the formulation were
+new to her, but not unacceptable. &#8220;Something of that kind. I never
+heard of anybody else having it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver had got his pipe alight, and was enjoying it.
+&#8220;<em>I</em> think Joe was simply off his nut, for the time
+being.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter4" id="chapter4">IV</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">A Case of Metaphantasmia</h2>
+
+
+<p>The stranger was a guest of Halson&#8217;s, and Halson himself was a
+comparative stranger, for he was of recent election to our dining-club,
+and was better known to Minver than to the rest of our little group,
+though one could not be sure that he was very well known to Minver. The
+stranger had been dining with Halson, and we had found the two smoking
+together, with their cups of black coffee at their elbows, before the
+smouldering fire in the Turkish room when we came in from
+dinner&#8212;my friend Wanhope the psychologist, Rulledge the
+sentimentalist, Minver the painter, and myself. It struck me for the
+first time that a fire on the hearth was out of keeping with a Turkish
+room, but I felt that the cups of black coffee restored the lost balance
+in some measure.</p>
+
+<p>Before we had settled into our wonted places&#8212;in fact, almost as
+we entered&#8212;Halson looked over his shoulder and said: &#8220;Mr.
+Wanhope, I want you to hear this story of my friend&#8217;s. Go on,
+Newton&#8212;or, rather, go back and begin again&#8212;and I&#8217;ll
+introduce you afterwards.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger made a becoming show of deprecation. He said he did not
+think the story would bear immediate repetition, or was even worth
+telling once, but, if we had nothing better to do, perhaps we might do
+worse than hear it; the most he could say for it was that the thing
+really happened. He wore a large, drooping, gray mustache, which, with
+the imperial below it, quite hid his mouth, and gave him, somehow, a
+martial effect, besides accurately dating him of the period between the
+latest sixties and earliest seventies, when his beard would have been
+black; I liked his mustache not being stubbed in the modern manner, but
+allowed to fall heavily over his lips, and then branch away from the
+corners of his mouth as far as it would. He lighted the cigar which
+Halson gave him, and, blowing the bitten-off tip towards the fire,
+began:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was about that time when we first had a ten-o&#8217;clock
+night train from Boston to New York. Train used to start at nine, and
+lag along round by Springfield, and get into the old Twenty-sixth Street
+Station here at six in the morning, where they let you sleep as long as
+you liked. They call you up now at half-past five, and, if you
+don&#8217;t turn out, they haul you back to Mott Haven, or New Haven,
+I&#8217;m not sure which. I used to go into Boston and turn in at the
+old Worcester Depot, as we called it then, just about the time the train
+began to move, and I usually got a fine night&#8217;s rest in the course
+of the nine or ten hours we were on the way to New York; it didn&#8217;t
+seem quite the same after we began saying Albany Depot: shortened up the
+run, somehow.</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust4l.jpg" name="illust4"><img src="images/illust4m.jpg" title="&#8220;NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY MARK&#8221;" alt="[Illustration: &#8220;NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY MARK&#8221;]" style="width: 300px; height: 709px" /></a></div>
+
+<p>&#8220;But that night I wasn&#8217;t very sleepy, and the porter had
+got the place so piping hot with the big stoves, one at each end of the
+car, to keep the good, old-fashioned Christmas cold out, that I thought
+I should be more comfortable with a smoke before I went to bed; and,
+anyhow, I could get away from the heat better in the smoking-room. I
+hated to be leaving home on Christmas Eve, for I never had done that
+before, and I hated to be leaving my wife alone with the children and
+the two girls in our little house in Cambridge. Before I started in on
+the old horse-car for Boston, I had helped her to tuck the young ones in
+and to fill the stockings hung along the wall over the
+register&#8212;the nearest we could come to a fireplace&#8212;and I
+thought those stockings looked very weird, five of them, dangling
+lumpily down, and I kept seeing them, and her sitting up sewing in front
+of them, and afraid to go to bed on account of burglars. I suppose she
+was shyer of burglars than any woman ever was that had never seen a sign
+of them. She was always calling me up, to go down-stairs and put them
+out, and I used to wander all over the house, from attic to cellar, in
+my nighty, with a lamp in one hand and a poker in the other, so that no
+burglar could have missed me if he had wanted an easy mark. I always
+kept a lamp and a poker handy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger heaved a sigh as of fond reminiscence, and looked round
+for the sympathy which in our company of bachelors he failed of; even
+the sympathetic Rulledge failed of the necessary experience to move him
+in compassionate response.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; the stranger went on, a little damped perhaps by
+his failure, but supported apparently by the interest of the fact in
+hand, &#8220;I had the smoking-room to myself for a while, and then a
+fellow put his head in that I thought I knew after I had thought I
+didn&#8217;t know him. He dawned on me more and more, and I had to
+acknowledge to myself, by and by, that it was a man named Melford, whom
+I used to room with in Holworthy at Harvard; that is, we had an
+apartment of two bedrooms and a study; and I suppose there were never
+two fellows knew less of each other than we did at the end of our four
+years together. I can&#8217;t say what Melford knew of me, but the most
+I knew of Melford was his particular brand of nightmare.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope gave the first sign of his interest in the matter. He took
+his cigar from his lips, and softly emitted an &#8220;Ah!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge went further and interrogatively repeated the word
+&#8220;Nightmare?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nightmare,&#8221; the stranger continued, firmly. &#8220;The
+curious thing about it was that I never exactly knew the subject of his
+nightmare, and a more curious thing yet was Melford himself never knew
+it, when I woke him up. He said he couldn&#8217;t make out anything but
+a kind of scraping in a door-lock. His theory was that in his childhood
+it had been a much completer thing, but that the circumstances had
+broken down in a sort of decadence, and now there was nothing left of it
+but that scraping in the door-lock, like somebody trying to turn a
+misfit key. I used to throw things at his door, and once I tried a
+cold-water douche from the pitcher, when he was very hard to waken; but
+that was rather brutal, and after a while I used to let him roar himself
+awake; he would always do it, if I trusted to nature; and before our
+junior year was out I got so that I could sleep through, pretty calmly;
+I would just say to myself when he fetched me to the surface with a
+yell, &#8216;That&#8217;s Melford dreaming,&#8217; and doze off
+sweetly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jove!&#8221; Rulledge said, &#8220;I don&#8217;t see how you
+could stand it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s everything in habit, Rulledge,&#8221; Minver put
+in. &#8220;Perhaps our friend only dreamt that he heard a
+dream.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s quite possible,&#8221; the stranger owned,
+politely. &#8220;But the case is superficially as I state it. However,
+it was all past, long ago, when I recognized Melford in the smoking-room
+that night: it must have been ten or a dozen years. I was wearing a full
+beard then, and so was he; we wore as much beard as we could in those
+days. I had been through the war since college, and he had been in
+California, most of the time, and, as he told me, he had been up north,
+in Alaska, just after we bought it, and hurt his eyes&#8212;had
+snow-blindness&#8212;and he wore spectacles. In fact, I had to do most
+of the recognizing, but after we found out who we were we were rather
+comfortable; and I liked him better than I remembered to have liked him
+in our college days. I don&#8217;t suppose there was ever much harm in
+him; it was only my grudge about his nightmare. We talked along and
+smoked along for about an hour, and I could hear the porter outside,
+making up the berths, and the train rumbled away towards Framingham, and
+then towards Worcester, and I began to be sleepy, and to think I would
+go to bed myself; and just then the door of the smoking-room opened, and
+a young girl put in her face a moment, and said: &#8216;Oh, I beg your
+pardon. I thought it was the stateroom,&#8217; and then she shut the
+door, and I realized that she looked like a girl I used to
+know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger stopped, and I fancied from a note in his voice that
+this girl was perhaps like an early love. We silently waited for him to
+resume how and when he would. He sighed, and after an appreciable
+interval he began again. &#8220;It is curious how things are related to
+one another. My wife had never seen her, and yet, somehow, this girl
+that looked like the one I mean brought my mind back to my wife with a
+quick turn, after I had forgotten her in my talk with Melford for the
+time being. I thought how lonely she was in that little house of ours in
+Cambridge, on rather an outlying street, and I knew she was thinking of
+me, and hating to have me away on Christmas Eve, which isn&#8217;t such
+a lively time after you&#8217;re grown up and begin to look back on a
+good many other Christmas Eves, when you were a child yourself; in fact,
+I don&#8217;t know a dismaler night in the whole year. I stepped out on
+the platform before I began to turn in, for a mouthful of the night air,
+and I found it was spitting snow&#8212;a regular Christmas Eve of the
+true pattern; and I didn&#8217;t believe, from the business feel of
+those hard little pellets, that it was going to stop in a hurry, and I
+thought if we got into New York on time we should be lucky. The snow
+made me think of a night when my wife was sure there were burglars in
+the house; and in fact I heard their tramping on the stairs
+myself&#8212;thump, thump, thump, and then a stop, and then down again.
+Of course it was the slide and thud of the snow from the roof of the
+main part of the house to the roof of the kitchen, which was in an L, a
+story lower, but it was as good an imitation of burglars as I want to
+hear at one o&#8217;clock in the morning; and the recollection of it
+made me more anxious about my wife, not because I believed she was in
+danger, but because I knew how frightened she must be.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When I went back into the car, that girl passed me on the way
+to her stateroom, and I concluded that she was the only woman on board,
+and her friends had taken the stateroom for her, so that she
+needn&#8217;t feel strange. I usually go to bed in a sleeper as I do in
+my own house, but that night I somehow couldn&#8217;t. I got to thinking
+of accidents, and I thought how disagreeable it would be to turn out
+into the snow in my nighty. I ended by turning in with my clothes on,
+all except my coat; and, in spite of the red-hot stoves, I wasn&#8217;t
+any too warm. I had a berth in the middle of the car, and just as I was
+parting my curtains to lie down, old Melford came to take the lower
+berth opposite. It made me laugh a little, and I was glad of the relief.
+&#8216;Why, hello, Melford,&#8217; said I. &#8216;This is like the old
+Holworthy times.&#8217; &#8216;Yes, isn&#8217;t it?&#8217; said he, and
+then I asked something that I had kept myself from asking all through
+our talk in the smoking-room, because I knew he was rather sensitive
+about it, or used to be. &#8216;Do you ever have that regulation
+nightmare of yours nowadays, Melford? He gave a laugh, and said:
+&#8217;I haven&#8217;t had it, I suppose, once in ten years. What made
+you think of it?&#8217; I said: &#8216;Oh, I don&#8217;t know. It just
+came into my mind. Well, good-night, old fellow. I hope you&#8217;ll
+rest well,&#8217; and suddenly I began to feel light-hearted again, and
+I went to sleep as gayly as ever I did in my life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger paused again, and Wanhope said: &#8220;Those swift
+transitions of mood are very interesting. Of course they occur in that
+remote region of the mind where all incidents and sensations are of one
+quality, and things of the most opposite character unite in a common
+origin. No one that I remember has attempted to trace such effects to
+their causes, and then back again from their causes, which would be much
+more important.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I dare say,&#8221; Minver put in. &#8220;But if they all
+amount to the same thing in the end, what difference would it
+make?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It would perhaps establish the identity of good and
+evil,&#8221; Wanhope suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, the sinners are convinced of that already,&#8221; Minver
+said, while Rulledge glanced quickly from one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger looked rather dazed, and Rulledge said: &#8220;Well, I
+don&#8217;t suppose that was the conclusion of the whole
+matter?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh no,&#8221; the stranger answered, &#8220;that was only the
+beginning of the conclusion. I didn&#8217;t go to sleep at once, though
+I felt so much at peace. In fact, Melford beat me, and I could hear him
+far in advance, steaming and whistling away, in a style that I recalled
+as characteristic, over a space of intervening years that I hadn&#8217;t
+definitely summed up yet. It made me think of a night near Narragansett
+Bay, where two friends of mine and I had had a mighty good dinner at a
+sort of wild club-house, and had hurried into our bunks, each one so as
+to get the start of the others, for the fellows that were left behind
+knew they had no chance of sleep after the first began to get in his
+work. I laughed, and I suppose I must have gone to sleep almost
+simultaneously, for I don&#8217;t recollect anything afterwards till I
+was wakened by a kind of muffled bellow, that I remembered only too
+well. It was the unfailing sign of Melford&#8217;s nightmare.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was ready to swear, and I was ashamed for the fellow who had
+no more self-control than that: when a fellow snores, or has a
+nightmare, you always think first off that he needn&#8217;t have had it
+if he had tried. As usual, I knew Melford didn&#8217;t know what his
+nightmare was about, and that made me madder still, to have him
+bellowing into the air like that, with no particular aim. All at once
+there came a piercing scream from the stateroom, and then I knew that
+the girl there had heard Melford and been scared out of a year&#8217;s
+growth.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger made a little break, and Wanhope asked, &#8220;Could you
+make out what she screamed, or was it quite inarticulate?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was plain enough, and it gave me a clew, somehow, to what
+Melford&#8217;s nightmare was about. She was calling out, &#8216;Help!
+help! help! Burglars!&#8217; till I thought she would raise the roof of
+the car.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And did she wake anybody?&#8221; Rulledge inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was the strange part of it. Not a soul stirred, and after
+the first burst the girl seemed to quiet down again and yield the floor
+to Melford, who kept bellowing steadily away. I was so furious that I
+reached out across the aisle to shake him, but the attempt was too much
+for me. I lost my balance and fell out of my berth onto the floor. You
+may imagine the state of mind I was in. I gathered myself up and pulled
+Melford&#8217;s curtains open and was just going to fall on him tooth
+and nail, when I was nearly taken off my feet again by an apparition:
+well, it looked like an apparition, but it was a tall fellow in his
+nighty&#8212;for it was twenty years before pajamas&#8212;and he had a
+small dark lantern in his hand, such as we used to carry in those days
+so as to read in our berths when we couldn&#8217;t sleep. He was
+gritting his teeth, and growling between them: &#8216;Out o&#8217; this!
+Out o&#8217; this! I&#8217;m going to shoot to kill, you blasted
+thieves!&#8217; I could see by the strange look in his eyes that he was
+sleep-walking, and I didn&#8217;t wait to see if he had a pistol. I
+popped in behind the curtains, and found myself on top of another
+fellow, for I had popped into the wrong berth in my confusion. The man
+started up and yelled: &#8216;Oh, don&#8217;t kill me! There&#8217;s my
+watch on the stand, and all the money in the house is in my pantaloons
+pocket. The silver&#8217;s in the sideboard down-stairs, and it&#8217;s
+plated, anyway.&#8217; Then I understood what his complaint was, and I
+rolled onto the floor again. By that time every man in the car was out
+of his berth, too, except Melford, who was devoting himself strictly to
+business; and every man was grabbing some other, and shouting,
+&#8216;Police!&#8217; or &#8216;Burglars!&#8217; or &#8216;Help!&#8217;
+or &#8216;Murder!&#8217; just as the fancy took him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Most extraordinary!&#8221; Wanhope commented as the stranger
+paused for breath.</p>
+
+<p>In the intensity of our interest, we had crowded close upon him,
+except Minver, who sat with his head thrown back, and that cynical cast
+in his eye which always exasperated Rulledge; and Halson, who stood
+smiling proudly, as if the stranger&#8217;s story did him as his sponsor
+credit personally.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the stranger owned, &#8220;but I don&#8217;t know
+that there wasn&#8217;t something more extraordinary still. From time to
+time the girl in the stateroom kept piping up, with a shriek for help.
+She had got past the burglar stage, but she wanted to be saved, anyhow,
+from some danger which she didn&#8217;t specify. It went through me that
+it was very strange nobody called the porter, and I set up a shout of
+&#8216;Porter!&#8217; on my own account. I decided that if there were
+burglars the porter was the man to put them out, and that if there were
+no burglars the porter could relieve our groundless fears. Sure enough,
+he came rushing in, as soon as I called for him, from the little corner
+by the smoking-room where he was blacking boots between dozes. He was
+wide enough awake, if having his eyes open meant that, and he had a shoe
+on one hand and a shoe-brush in the other. But he merely joined in the
+general up-roar and shouted for the police.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Excuse me,&#8221; Wanhope interposed. &#8220;I wish to be
+clear as to the facts. You had reasoned it out that the porter could
+quiet the tumult?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Never reasoned anything out so clearly in my life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But what was your theory of the situation? That your friend,
+Mr. Melford, had a nightmare in which he was dreaming of
+burglars?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hadn&#8217;t a doubt of it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And that by a species of dream-transference the
+nightmare was communicated to the young lady in the
+stateroom?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well&#8212;yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And that her call for help and her cry of burglars acted as a
+sort of hypnotic suggestion with the other sleepers, and they began to
+be afflicted with the same nightmare?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know that I ever put it to myself so distinctly,
+but it appears to me now that I must have reached some such
+conclusion.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is very interesting, very interesting indeed. I beg your
+pardon. Please go on,&#8221; Wanhope courteously entreated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t remember just where I was,&#8221; the stranger
+faltered.</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge returned with an accuracy which obliged us all:
+&#8220;&#8216;The porter merely joined in the general uproar and shouted
+for the police.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; the stranger assented. &#8220;Then I
+didn&#8217;t know what to do, for a minute. The porter was a pretty
+thick-headed darky, but he was lion-hearted; and his idea was to lay
+hold of a burglar wherever he could find him. There were plenty of
+burglars in the aisle there, or people that were afraid of burglars, and
+they seemed to think the porter had a good idea. They had hold of one
+another already, and now began to pull up and down the aisles in a way
+that reminded me of the old-fashioned mesmeric lecturers, when they told
+their subjects that they were this or that, and set them to acting the
+part. I remembered how once when the mesmerist gave out that they were
+at a horse&#8212;race, and his subjects all got astride of their chairs,
+and galloped up and down the hall like a lot of little boys on laths. I
+thought of that now, and although it was rather a serious business, for
+I didn&#8217;t know what minute they would come to blows, I
+couldn&#8217;t help laughing. The sight was weird enough. Every one
+looked like a somnambulist as he pulled and hauled. The young lady in
+the stateroom was doing her full share. She was screaming,
+&#8216;Won&#8217;t somebody let me out?&#8217; and hammering on the
+door. I guess it was her screaming and hammering that brought the
+conductor at last, or maybe he just came round in the course of nature
+to take up the tickets. It was before the time when they took the
+tickets at the gate, and you used to stick them into a little slot at
+the side of your berth, and the conductor came along and took them in
+the night, somewhere between Worcester and Springfield, I should
+say.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I remember,&#8221; Rulledge assented, but very carefully, so
+as not to interrupt the flow of the narrative. &#8220;Used to wake up
+everybody in the car.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Exactly,&#8221; the stranger said. &#8220;But this time they
+were all wide awake to receive him, or fast asleep, and dreaming their
+roles. He came along with the wire of his lantern over his arm, the way
+the old-time conductors did, and calling out, &#8216;Tickets!&#8217;
+just as if it was broad day, and he believed every man was trying to
+beat his way to New York. The oddest thing about it was that the
+sleep-walkers all stopped their pulling and hauling a moment, and each
+man reached down to the little slot alongside of his berth and handed
+over his ticket. Then they took hold and began pulling and hauling
+again. I suppose the conductor asked what the matter was; but I
+couldn&#8217;t hear him, and I couldn&#8217;t make out exactly what he
+did say. But the passengers understood, and they all shouted
+&#8216;Burglars!&#8217; and that girl in the stateroom gave a shriek
+that you could have heard from one end of the train to the other, and
+hammered on the door, and wanted to be let out.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It seemed to take the conductor by surprise, and he faced
+towards the stateroom and let the lantern slip off his arm, and it
+dropped onto the floor and went out; I remember thinking what a good
+thing it didn&#8217;t set the car on fire. But there in the
+dark&#8212;for the car lamps went out at the same time with the
+lantern&#8212;I could hear those fellows pulling and hauling up and down
+the aisle and scuffling over the floor, and through all Melford
+bellowing away, like an orchestral accompaniment to a combat in Wagner
+opera, but getting quieter and quieter till his bellow died away
+altogether. At the same time the row in the aisle of the car stopped,
+and there was perfect silence, and I could hear the snow rattling
+against my window. Then I went off into a sound sleep, and never woke
+till we got into New York.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger seemed to have reached the end of his story, or at least
+to have exhausted the interest it had for him, and he smoked on, holding
+his knee between his hands and looking thoughtfully into the fire.</p>
+
+<p>He had left us rather breathless, or, better said, blank, and each
+looked at the other for some initiative; then we united in looking at
+Wanhope; that is, Rulledge and I did. Minver rose and stretched himself
+with what I must describe as a sardonic yawn; Halson had stolen away
+before the end, as one to whom the end was known. Wanhope seemed by no
+means averse to the inquiry delegated to him, but only to be formulating
+its terms. At last he said:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t remember hearing of any case of this kind
+before. Thought-transference is a sufficiently ascertained
+phenomenon&#8212;the insistence of a conscious mind upon a certain fact
+until it penetrates the unconscious mind of another and is adopted as
+its own. But in the dream state the mind seems passive, and becomes the
+prey of this or that self-suggestion, without the power of imparting it
+to another dreaming mind. Yet here we have positive proof of such an
+effect. It appears that the victim of a particularly terrific nightmare
+was able to share its horrors&#8212;or rather unable <em>not</em> to
+share them&#8212;with a whole sleeping-car full of people whose brains
+helplessly took up the same theme, and dreamed it, as we may say, to the
+same conclusions. I said proof, but of course we can&#8217;t accept a
+single instance as establishing a scientific certainty. I don&#8217;t
+question the veracity of Mr.&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Newton,&#8221; the stranger suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Newton&#8217;s experience,&#8221; Wanhope continued,
+&#8220;but we must wait for a good many cases of the kind before we can
+accept what I may call metaphantasmia as being equally established with
+thought-transference. If we could it would throw light upon a whole
+series of most curious phenomena, as, for instance, the privity of a
+person dreamed about to the incident created by the dreamer.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That would be rather dreadful, wouldn&#8217;t it?&#8221; I
+ventured. &#8220;We do dream such scandalous, such compromising things
+about people.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;All that,&#8221; Wanhope gently insisted, &#8220;could have
+nothing to do with the fact. That alone is to be considered in an
+inquiry of the kind. One is never obliged to tell one&#8217;s dreams. I
+wonder&#8221;&#8212;he turned to the stranger, who sat absently staring
+into the fire&#8212;&#8220;if you happened to speak to your friend about
+his nightmare in the morning, and whether he was by any chance aware of
+the participation of the others in it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I certainly spoke to him pretty plainly when we got into New
+York.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what did he say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He said he had never slept better in his life, and he
+couldn&#8217;t remember having a trace of nightmare. He said he heard
+<em>me</em> groaning at one time, but I stopped just as he woke, and so
+he didn&#8217;t rouse me as he thought of doing. It was at Hartford, and
+he went to sleep again, and slept through without a break.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what was your conclusion from that?&#8221; Wanhope
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That he was lying, I should say,&#8221; Rulledge replied for
+the stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope still waited, and the stranger said, &#8220;I suppose one
+conclusion might be that I had dreamed the whole thing
+myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then you wish me to infer,&#8221; the psychologist pursued,
+&#8220;that the entire incident was a figment of your sleeping brain?
+That there was no sort of sleeping thought-transference, no
+metaphantasmia, no&#8212;Excuse me. Do you remember verifying your
+impression of being between Worcester and Springfield when the affair
+occurred, by looking at your watch, for instance?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger suddenly pulled out his watch at the word. &#8220;Good
+Heavens!&#8221; he called out. &#8220;It&#8217;s twenty minutes of
+eleven, and I have to take the eleven-o&#8217;clock train to Boston. I
+must bid you good-evening, gentlemen. I&#8217;ve just time to get it if
+I can catch a cab. Good-night, good-night. I hope if you come to
+Boston&#8212;eh&#8212;Good-night! Sometimes,&#8221; he called over his
+shoulder, &#8220;I&#8217;ve thought it might have been that girl in the
+stateroom that started the dreaming.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He had wrung our hands one after another, and now he ran out of the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge said, in appeal to Wanhope: &#8220;I don&#8217;t see how his
+being the dreamer invalidates the case, if his dreams affected the
+others.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Wanhope answered, thoughtfully, &#8220;that
+depends.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what do you think of its being the girl in the
+stateroom?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That would be very interesting.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter5" id="chapter5">V</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">Editha</h2>
+
+
+<p>The air was thick with the war feeling, like the electricity of a
+storm which has not yet burst. Editha sat looking out into the hot
+spring afternoon, with her lips parted, and panting with the intensity
+of the question whether she could let him go. She had decided that she
+could not let him stay, when she saw him at the end of the still
+leafless avenue, making slowly up towards the house, with his head down
+and his figure relaxed. She ran impatiently out on the veranda, to the
+edge of the steps, and imperatively demanded greater haste of him with
+her will before she called aloud to him: &#8220;George!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He had quickened his pace in mystical response to her mystical
+urgence, before he could have heard her; now he looked up and answered,
+&#8220;Well?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, how united we are!&#8221; she exulted, and then she
+swooped down the steps to him. &#8220;What is it?&#8221; she cried.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s war,&#8221; he said, and he pulled her up to him
+and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>She kissed him back intensely, but irrelevantly, as to their passion,
+and uttered from deep in her throat. &#8220;How glorious!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s war,&#8221; he repeated, without consenting to her
+sense of it; and she did not know just what to think at first. She never
+knew what to think of him; that made his mystery, his charm. All through
+their courtship, which was contemporaneous with the growth of the war
+feeling, she had been puzzled by his want of seriousness about it. He
+seemed to despise it even more than he abhorred it. She could have
+understood his abhorring any sort of bloodshed; that would have been a
+survival of his old life when he thought he would be a minister, and
+before he changed and took up the law. But making light of a cause so
+high and noble seemed to show a want of earnestness at the core of his
+being. Not but that she felt herself able to cope with a congenital
+defect of that sort, and make his love for her save him from himself.
+Now perhaps the miracle was already wrought in him. In the presence of
+the tremendous fact that he announced, all triviality seemed to have
+gone out of him; she began to feel that. He sank down on the top step,
+and wiped his forehead with his handkerchief, while she poured out upon
+him her question of the origin and authenticity of his news.</p>
+
+<p>All the while, in her duplex emotioning, she was aware that now at
+the very beginning she must put a guard upon herself against urging him,
+by any word or act, to take the part that her whole soul willed him to
+take, for the completion of her ideal of him. He was very nearly perfect
+as he was, and he must be allowed to perfect himself. But he was
+peculiar, and he might very well be reasoned out of his peculiarity.
+Before her reasoning went her emotioning: her nature pulling upon his
+nature, her womanhood upon his manhood, without her knowing the means
+she was using to the end she was willing. She had always supposed that
+the man who won her would have done something to win her; she did not
+know what, but something. George Gearson had simply asked her for her
+love, on the way home from a concert, and she gave her love to him,
+without, as it were, thinking. But now, it flashed upon her, if he could
+do something worthy to <em>have</em> won her&#8212;be a hero,
+<em>her</em> hero&#8212;it would be even better than if he had done it
+before asking her; it would be grander. Besides, she had believed in the
+war from the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But don&#8217;t you see, dearest,&#8221; she said, &#8220;that
+it wouldn&#8217;t have come to this if it hadn&#8217;t been in the order
+of Providence? And I call any war glorious that is for the liberation of
+people who have been struggling for years against the cruelest
+oppression. Don&#8217;t you think so, too?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose so,&#8221; he returned, languidly. &#8220;But war!
+Is it glorious to break the peace of the world?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That ignoble peace! It was no peace at all, with that crime
+and shame at our very gates.&#8221; She was conscious of parroting the
+current phrases of the newspapers, but it was no time to pick and choose
+her words. She must sacrifice anything to the high ideal she had for
+him, and after a good deal of rapid argument she ended with the climax:
+&#8220;But now it doesn&#8217;t matter about the how or why. Since the
+war has come, all that is gone. There are no two sides any more. There
+is nothing now but our country.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He sat with his eyes closed and his head leant back against the
+veranda, and he remarked, with a vague smile, as if musing aloud,
+&#8220;Our country&#8212;right or wrong.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, right or wrong!&#8221; she returned, fervidly.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll go and get you some lemonade.&#8221; She rose
+rustling, and whisked away; when she came back with two tall glasses of
+clouded liquid on a tray, and the ice clucking in them, he still sat as
+she had left him, and she said, as if there had been no interruption:
+&#8220;But there is no question of wrong in this case. I call it a
+sacred war. A war for liberty and humanity, if ever there was one. And I
+know you will see it just as I do, yet.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He took half the lemonade at a gulp, and he answered as he set the
+glass down: &#8220;I know you always have the highest ideal. When I
+differ from you I ought to doubt myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A generous sob rose in Editha&#8217;s throat for the humility of a
+man, so very nearly perfect, who was willing to put himself below
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, she felt, more subliminally, that he was never so near
+slipping through her fingers as when he took that meek way.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You shall not say that! Only, for once I happen to be
+right.&#8221; She seized his hand in her two hands, and poured her soul
+from her eyes into his. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you think so?&#8221; she
+entreated him.</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust5l.jpg" name="illust5"><img src="images/illust5m.jpg" title="&#8220;&#8216;YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!&#8217;&#8221;" alt="[Illustration: &#8220;&#8216;YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!&#8217;&#8221;]" style="width: 450px; height: 759px" /></a></div>
+
+<p>He released his hand and drank the rest of his lemonade, and she
+added, &#8220;Have mine, too,&#8221; but he shook his head in answering,
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve no business to think so, unless I act so,
+too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her heart stopped a beat before it pulsed on with leaps that she felt
+in her neck. She had noticed that strange thing in men: they seemed to
+feel bound to do what they believed, and not think a thing was finished
+when they said it, as girls did. She knew what was in his mind, but she
+pretended not, and she said, &#8220;Oh, I am not sure,&#8221; and then
+faltered.</p>
+
+<p>He went on as if to himself, without apparently heeding her:
+&#8220;There&#8217;s only one way of proving one&#8217;s faith in a
+thing like this.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She could not say that she understood, but she did understand.</p>
+
+<p>He went on again. &#8220;If I believed&#8212;if I felt as you do
+about this war&#8212;Do you wish me to feel as you do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Now she was really not sure; so she said: &#8220;George, I
+don&#8217;t know what you mean.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to muse away from her as before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There is a sort of fascination in it. I suppose that at the
+bottom of his heart every man would like at times to have his courage
+tested, to see how he would act.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How can you talk in that ghastly way?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It <em>is</em> rather morbid. Still, that&#8217;s what it
+comes to, unless you&#8217;re swept away by ambition or driven by
+conviction. I haven&#8217;t the conviction or the ambition, and the
+other thing is what it comes to with me. I ought to have been a
+preacher, after all; then I couldn&#8217;t have asked it of myself, as I
+must, now I&#8217;m a lawyer. And you believe it&#8217;s a holy war,
+Editha?&#8221; he suddenly addressed her. &#8220;Oh, I know you do! But
+you wish me to believe so, too?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She hardly knew whether he was mocking or not, in the ironical way he
+always had with her plainer mind. But the only thing was to be outspoken
+with him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;George, I wish you to believe whatever you think is true, at
+any and every cost. If I&#8217;ve tried to talk you into anything, I
+take it all back.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I know that, Editha. I know how sincere you are, and
+how&#8212;I wish I had your undoubting spirit! I&#8217;ll think it over;
+I&#8217;d like to believe as you do. But I don&#8217;t, now; I
+don&#8217;t, indeed. It isn&#8217;t this war alone; though this seems
+peculiarly wanton and needless; but it&#8217;s every war&#8212;so
+stupid; it makes me sick. Why shouldn&#8217;t this thing have been
+settled reasonably?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Because,&#8221; she said, very throatily again, &#8220;God
+meant it to be war.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You think it was God? Yes, I suppose that is what people will
+say.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you suppose it would have been war if God hadn&#8217;t
+meant it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. Sometimes it seems as if God had put this
+world into men&#8217;s keeping to work it as they pleased.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now, George, that is blasphemy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I won&#8217;t blaspheme. I&#8217;ll try to believe in
+your pocket Providence,&#8221; he said, and then he rose to go.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why don&#8217;t you stay to dinner?&#8221; Dinner at
+Balcom&#8217;s Works was at one o&#8217;clock.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll come back to supper, if you&#8217;ll let me.
+Perhaps I shall bring you a convert.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, you may come back, on that condition.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;All right. If I don&#8217;t come, you&#8217;ll
+understand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He went away without kissing her, and she felt it a suspension of
+their engagement. It all interested her intensely; she was undergoing a
+tremendous experience, and she was being equal to it. While she stood
+looking after him, her mother came out through one of the long windows
+onto the veranda, with a catlike softness and vagueness.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t he stay to dinner?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Because&#8212;because&#8212;war has been declared,&#8221;
+Editha pronounced, without turning.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother said, &#8220;Oh, my!&#8221; and then said nothing more
+until she had sat down in one of the large Shaker chairs and rocked
+herself for some time. Then she closed whatever tacit passage of thought
+there had been in her mind with the spoken words: &#8220;Well, I hope
+<em>he</em> won&#8217;t go.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And <em>I</em> hope he <em>will</em>,&#8221; the girl said,
+and confronted her mother with a stormy exaltation that would have
+frightened any creature less unimpressionable than a cat.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother rocked herself again for an interval of cogitation. What
+she arrived at in speech was: &#8220;Well, I guess you&#8217;ve done a
+wicked thing, Editha Balcom.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl said, as she passed indoors through the same window her
+mother had come out by: &#8220;I haven&#8217;t done
+anything&#8212;yet.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>In her room, she put together all her letters and gifts from Gearson,
+down to the withered petals of the first flower he had offered, with
+that timidity of his veiled in that irony of his. In the heart of the
+packet she enshrined her engagement ring which she had restored to the
+pretty box he had brought it her in. Then she sat down, if not calmly
+yet strongly, and wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="letter">
+<p> &#8220;GEORGE:&#8212;I understood when you left me. But I think we
+ had better emphasize your meaning that if we cannot be one in
+ everything we had better be one in nothing. So I am sending these
+ things for your keeping till you have made up your mind.</p>
+
+<p> &#8220;I shall always love you, and therefore I shall never marry
+ any one else. But the man I marry must love his country first of
+ all, and be able to say to me,</p>
+
+<p class="poetry">&#8220;&#8216;I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ <br />Loved I not honor more.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p> &#8220;There is no honor above America with me. In this great hour
+ there is no other honor.</p>
+
+<p> &#8220;Your heart will make my words clear to you. I had never
+ expected to say so much, but it has come upon me that I must say the
+ utmost.</p>
+
+<p> EDITHA.&#8221;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>She thought she had worded her letter well, worded it in a way that
+could not be bettered; all had been implied and nothing expressed.</p>
+
+<p>She had it ready to send with the packet she had tied with red,
+white, and blue ribbon, when it occurred to her that she was not just to
+him, that she was not giving him a fair chance. He had said he would go
+and think it over, and she was not waiting. She was pushing,
+threatening, compelling. That was not a woman&#8217;s part. She must
+leave him free, free, free. She could not accept for her country or
+herself a forced sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>In writing her letter she had satisfied the impulse from which it
+sprang; she could well afford to wait till he had thought it over. She
+put the packet and the letter by, and rested serene in the consciousness
+of having done what was laid upon her by her love itself to do, and yet
+used patience, mercy, justice.</p>
+
+<p>She had her reward. Gearson did not come to tea, but she had given
+him till morning, when, late at night there came up from the village the
+sound of a fife and drum, with a tumult of voices, in shouting, singing,
+and laughing. The noise drew nearer and nearer; it reached the street
+end of the avenue; there it silenced itself, and one voice, the voice
+she knew best, rose over the silence. It fell; the air was filled with
+cheers; the fife and drum struck up, with the shouting, singing, and
+laughing again, but now retreating; and a single figure came hurrying up
+the avenue.</p>
+
+<p>She ran down to meet her lover and clung to him. He was very gay, and
+he put his arm round her with a boisterous laugh. &#8220;Well, you must
+call me Captain now; or Cap, if you prefer; that&#8217;s what the boys
+call me. Yes, we&#8217;ve had a meeting at the town-hall, and everybody
+has volunteered; and they selected me for captain, and I&#8217;m going
+to the war, the big war, the glorious war, the holy war ordained by the
+pocket Providence that blesses butchery. Come along; let&#8217;s tell
+the whole family about it. Call them from their downy beds, father,
+mother, Aunt Hitty, and all the folks!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But when they mounted the veranda steps he did not wait for a larger
+audience; he poured the story out upon Editha alone.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There was a lot of speaking, and then some of the fools set up
+a shout for me. It was all going one way, and I thought it would be a
+good joke to sprinkle a little cold water on them. But you can&#8217;t
+do that with a crowd that adores you. The first thing I knew I was
+sprinkling hell-fire on them. &#8216;Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of
+war.&#8217; That was the style. Now that it had come to the fight, there
+were no two parties; there was one country, and the thing was to fight
+to a finish as quick as possible. I suggested volunteering then and
+there, and I wrote my name first of all on the roster. Then they elected
+me&#8212;that&#8217;s all. I wish I had some ice-water.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She left him walking up and down the veranda, while she ran for the
+ice-pitcher and a goblet, and when she came back he was still walking up
+and down, shouting the story he had told her to her father and mother,
+who had come out more sketchily dressed than they commonly were by day.
+He drank goblet after goblet of the ice-water without noticing who was
+giving it, and kept on talking, and laughing through his talk wildly.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s astonishing,&#8221; he said, &#8220;how well the worse
+reason looks when you try to make it appear the better. Why, I believe I
+was the first convert to the war in that crowd to-night! I never thought
+I should like to kill a man; but now I shouldn&#8217;t care; and the
+smokeless powder lets you see the man drop that you kill. It&#8217;s all
+for the country! What a thing it is to have a country that
+<em>can&#8217;t</em> be wrong, but if it is, is right,
+anyway!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Editha had a great, vital thought, an inspiration. She set down the
+ice-pitcher on the veranda floor, and ran up-stairs and got the letter
+she had written him. When at last he noisily bade her father and mother,
+&#8220;Well, good-night. I forgot I woke you up; I sha&#8217;n&#8217;t
+want any sleep myself,&#8221; she followed him down the avenue to the
+gate. There, after the whirling words that seemed to fly away from her
+thoughts and refuse to serve them, she made a last effort to solemnize
+the moment that seemed so crazy, and pressed the letter she had written
+upon him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s this?&#8221; he said. &#8220;Want me to mail
+it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, no. It&#8217;s for you. I wrote it after you went this
+morning. Keep it&#8212;keep it&#8212;and read it sometime&#8212;&#8221;
+She thought, and then her inspiration came: &#8220;Read it if ever you
+doubt what you&#8217;ve done, or fear that I regret your having done it.
+Read it after you&#8217;ve started.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They strained each other in embraces that seemed as ineffective as
+their words, and he kissed her face with quick, hot breaths that were so
+unlike him, that made her feel as if she had lost her old lover and
+found a stranger in his place. The stranger said: &#8220;What a gorgeous
+flower you are, with your red hair, and your blue eyes that look black
+now, and your face with the color painted out by the white moonshine!
+Let me hold you under the chin, to see whether I love blood, you
+tiger-lily!&#8221; Then he laughed Gearson&#8217;s laugh, and released
+her, scared and giddy. Within her wilfulness she had been frightened by
+a sense of subtler force in him, and mystically mastered as she had
+never been before.</p>
+
+<p>She ran all the way back to the house, and mounted the steps panting.
+Her mother and father were talking of the great affair. Her mother said:
+&#8220;Wa&#8217;n&#8217;t Mr. Gearson in rather of an excited state of
+mind? Didn&#8217;t you think he acted curious?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, not for a man who&#8217;d just been elected captain and
+had set &#8217;em up for the whole of Company A,&#8221; her father
+chuckled back.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What in the world do you mean, Mr. Balcom? Oh! There&#8217;s
+Editha!&#8221; She offered to follow the girl indoors.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t come, mother!&#8221; Editha called, vanishing.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Balcom remained to reproach her husband. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+see much of anything to laugh at.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, it&#8217;s catching. Caught it from Gearson. I guess it
+won&#8217;t be much of a war, and I guess Gearson don&#8217;t think so,
+either. The other fellows will back down as soon as they see we mean it.
+I wouldn&#8217;t lose any sleep over it. I&#8217;m going back to bed,
+myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Gearson came again next afternoon, looking pale and rather sick, but
+quite himself, even to his languid irony. &#8220;I guess I&#8217;d
+better tell you, Editha, that I consecrated myself to your god of
+battles last night by pouring too many libations to him down my own
+throat. But I&#8217;m all right now. One has to carry off the
+excitement, somehow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Promise me,&#8221; she commanded, &#8220;that you&#8217;ll
+never touch it again!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What! Not let the cannikin clink? Not let the soldier drink?
+Well, I promise.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t belong to yourself now; you don&#8217;t even
+belong to <em>me</em>. You belong to your country, and you have a sacred
+charge to keep yourself strong and well for your country&#8217;s sake. I
+have been thinking, thinking all night and all day long.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You look as if you had been crying a little, too,&#8221; he
+said, with his queer smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all past. I&#8217;ve been thinking, and
+worshipping <em>you</em>. Don&#8217;t you suppose I know all that
+you&#8217;ve been through, to come to this? I&#8217;ve followed you
+every step from your old theories and opinions.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve had a long row to hoe.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And I know you&#8217;ve done this from the highest
+motives&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, there won&#8217;t be much pettifogging to do till this
+cruel war is&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you haven&#8217;t simply done it for my sake. I
+couldn&#8217;t respect you if you had.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, then we&#8217;ll say I haven&#8217;t. A man that
+hasn&#8217;t got his own respect intact wants the respect of all the
+other people he can corner. But we won&#8217;t go into that. I&#8217;m
+in for the thing now, and we&#8217;ve got to face our future. My idea is
+that this isn&#8217;t going to be a very protracted struggle; we shall
+just scare the enemy to death before it comes to a fight at all. But we
+must provide for contingencies, Editha. If anything happens to
+me&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, George!&#8221; She clung to him, sobbing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want you to feel foolishly bound to my memory. I
+should hate that, wherever I happened to be.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am yours, for time and eternity&#8212;time and
+eternity.&#8221; She liked the words; they satisfied her famine for
+phrases.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, say eternity; that&#8217;s all right; but time&#8217;s
+another thing; and I&#8217;m talking about time. But there is something!
+My mother! If anything happens&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She winced, and he laughed. &#8220;You&#8217;re not the bold
+soldier-girl of yesterday!&#8221; Then he sobered. &#8220;If anything
+happens, I want you to help my mother out. She won&#8217;t like my doing
+this thing. She brought me up to think war a fool thing as well as a bad
+thing. My father was in the Civil War; all through it; lost his arm in
+it.&#8221; She thrilled with the sense of the arm round her; what if
+that should be lost? He laughed as if divining her: &#8220;Oh, it
+doesn&#8217;t run in the family, as far as I know!&#8221; Then he added,
+gravely: &#8220;He came home with misgivings about war, and they grew on
+him. I guess he and mother agreed between them that I was to be brought
+up in his final mind about it; but that was before my time. I only knew
+him from my mother&#8217;s report of him and his opinions; I don&#8217;t
+know whether they were hers first; but they were hers last. This will be
+a blow to her. I shall have to write and tell her&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stopped, and she asked: &#8220;Would you like me to write, too,
+George?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe that would do. No, I&#8217;ll do the
+writing. She&#8217;ll understand a little if I say that I thought the
+way to minimize it was to make war on the largest possible scale at
+once&#8212;that I felt I must have been helping on the war somehow if I
+hadn&#8217;t helped keep it from coming, and I knew I hadn&#8217;t; when
+it came, I had no right to stay out of it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Whether his sophistries satisfied him or not, they satisfied her. She
+clung to his breast, and whispered, with closed eyes and quivering lips:
+&#8220;Yes, yes, yes!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But if anything should happen, you might go to her and see
+what you could do for her. You know? It&#8217;s rather far off; she
+can&#8217;t leave her chair&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;ll go, if it&#8217;s the ends of the earth! But
+nothing will happen! Nothing <em>can!</em> I&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She felt herself lifted with his rising, and Gearson was saying, with
+his arm still round her, to her father: &#8220;Well, we&#8217;re off at
+once, Mr. Balcom. We&#8217;re to be formally accepted at the capital,
+and then bunched up with the rest somehow, and sent into camp somewhere,
+and got to the front as soon as possible. We all want to be in the van,
+of course; we&#8217;re the first company to report to the Governor. I
+came to tell Editha, but I hadn&#8217;t got round to it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>She saw him again for a moment at the capital, in the station, just
+before the train started southward with his regiment. He looked well, in
+his uniform, and very soldierly, but somehow girlish, too, with his
+clean-shaven face and slim figure. The manly eyes and the strong voice
+satisfied her, and his preoccupation with some unexpected details of
+duty flattered her. Other girls were weeping and bemoaning themselves,
+but she felt a sort of noble distinction in the abstraction, the almost
+unconsciousness, with which they parted. Only at the last moment he
+said: &#8220;Don&#8217;t forget my mother. It mayn&#8217;t be such a
+walk-over as I supposed,&#8221; and he laughed at the notion.</p>
+
+<p>He waved his hand to her as the train moved off&#8212;she knew it
+among a score of hands that were waved to other girls from the platform
+of the car, for it held a letter which she knew was hers. Then he went
+inside the car to read it, doubtless, and she did not see him again. But
+she felt safe for him through the strength of what she called her love.
+What she called her God, always speaking the name in a deep voice and
+with the implication of a mutual understanding, would watch over him and
+keep him and bring him back to her. If with an empty sleeve, then he
+should have three arms instead of two, for both of hers should be his
+for life. She did not see, though, why she should always be thinking of
+the arm his father had lost.</p>
+
+<p>There were not many letters from him, but they were such as she could
+have wished, and she put her whole strength into making hers such as she
+imagined he could have wished, glorifying and supporting him. She wrote
+to his mother glorifying him as their hero, but the brief answer she got
+was merely to the effect that Mrs. Gearson was not well enough to write
+herself, and thanking her for her letter by the hand of some one who
+called herself &#8220;Yrs truly, Mrs. W.J. Andrews.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Editha determined not to be hurt, but to write again quite as if the
+answer had been all she expected. Before it seemed as if she could have
+written, there came news of the first skirmish, and in the list of the
+killed, which was telegraphed as a trifling loss on our side, was
+Gearson&#8217;s name. There was a frantic time of trying to make out
+that it might be, must be, some other Gearson; but the name and the
+company and the regiment and the State were too definitely given.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a lapse into depths out of which it seemed as if she
+never could rise again; then a lift into clouds far above all grief,
+black clouds, that blotted out the sun, but where she soared with him,
+with George&#8212;George! She had the fever that she expected of
+herself, but she did not die in it; she was not even delirious, and it
+did not last long. When she was well enough to leave her bed, her one
+thought was of George&#8217;s mother, of his strangely worded wish that
+she should go to her and see what she could do for her. In the
+exaltation of the duty laid upon her&#8212;it buoyed her up instead of
+burdening her&#8212;she rapidly recovered.</p>
+
+<p>Her father went with her on the long railroad journey from northern
+New York to western Iowa; he had business out at Davenport, and he said
+he could just as well go then as any other time; and he went with her to
+the little country town where George&#8217;s mother lived in a little
+house on the edge of the illimitable cornfields, under trees pushed to a
+top of the rolling prairie. George&#8217;s father had settled there
+after the Civil War, as so many other old soldiers had done; but they
+were Eastern people, and Editha fancied touches of the East in the June
+rose overhanging the front door, and the garden with early summer
+flowers stretching from the gate of the paling fence.</p>
+
+<p>It was very low inside the house, and so dim, with the closed blinds,
+that they could scarcely see one another: Editha tall and black in her
+crapes which filled the air with the smell of their dyes; her father
+standing decorously apart with his hat on his forearm, as at funerals; a
+woman rested in a deep arm-chair, and the woman who had let the
+strangers in stood behind the chair.</p>
+
+<p>The seated woman turned her head round and up, and asked the woman
+behind her chair: &#8220;<em>Who</em> did you say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Editha, if she had done what she expected of herself, would have gone
+down on her knees at the feet of the seated figure and said, &#8220;I am
+George&#8217;s Editha,&#8221; for answer.</p>
+
+<p>But instead of her own voice she heard that other woman&#8217;s
+voice, saying: &#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t know as I <em>did</em> get the
+name just right. I guess I&#8217;ll have to make a little more light in
+here,&#8221; and she went and pushed two of the shutters ajar.</p>
+
+<p>Then Editha&#8217;s father said, in his public
+will-now-address-a-few-remarks tone: &#8220;My name is Balcom,
+ma&#8217;am&#8212;Junius H. Balcom, of Balcom&#8217;s Works, New York;
+my daughter&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; the seated woman broke in, with a powerful voice,
+the voice that always surprised Editha from Gearson&#8217;s slender
+frame. &#8220;Let me see you. Stand round where the light can strike on
+your face,&#8221; and Editha dumbly obeyed. &#8220;So, you&#8217;re
+Editha Balcom,&#8221; she sighed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Editha said, more like a culprit than a
+comforter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What did you come for?&#8221; Mrs. Gearson asked.</p>
+
+<p>Editha&#8217;s face quivered and her knees shook. &#8220;I
+came&#8212;because&#8212;because George&#8212;&#8221; She could go no
+further.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the mother said, &#8220;he told me he had asked
+you to come if he got killed. You didn&#8217;t expect that, I suppose,
+when you sent him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I would rather have died myself than done it!&#8221; Editha
+said, with more truth in her deep voice than she ordinarily found in it.
+&#8220;I tried to leave him free&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that letter of yours, that came back with his other
+things, left him free.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Editha saw now where George&#8217;s irony came from.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was not to be read before&#8212;unless&#8212;until&#8212;I
+told him so,&#8221; she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course, he wouldn&#8217;t read a letter of yours, under the
+circumstances, till he thought you wanted him to. Been sick?&#8221; the
+woman abruptly demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very sick,&#8221; Editha said, with self-pity.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Daughter&#8217;s life,&#8221; her father interposed,
+&#8220;was almost despaired of, at one time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Gearson gave him no heed. &#8220;I suppose you would have been
+glad to die, such a brave person as you! I don&#8217;t believe
+<em>he</em> was glad to die. He was always a timid boy, that way; he was
+afraid of a good many things; but if he was afraid he did what he made
+up his mind to. I suppose he made up his mind to go, but I knew what it
+cost him by what it cost me when I heard of it. I had been through
+<em>one</em> war before. When you sent him you didn&#8217;t expect he
+would get killed.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The voice seemed to compassionate Editha, and it was time.
+&#8220;No,&#8221; she huskily murmured.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, girls don&#8217;t; women don&#8217;t, when they give their
+men up to their country. They think they&#8217;ll come marching back,
+somehow, just as gay as they went, or if it&#8217;s an empty sleeve, or
+even an empty pantaloon, it&#8217;s all the more glory, and
+they&#8217;re so much the prouder of them, poor things!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The tears began to run down Editha&#8217;s face; she had not wept
+till then; but it was now such a relief to be understood that the tears
+came.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you didn&#8217;t expect him to get killed,&#8221; Mrs.
+Gearson repeated, in a voice which was startlingly like George&#8217;s
+again. &#8220;You just expected him to kill some one else, some of those
+foreigners, that weren&#8217;t there because they had any say about it,
+but because they had to be there, poor wretches&#8212;conscripts, or
+whatever they call &#8217;em. You thought it would be all right for my
+George, <em>your</em> George, to kill the sons of those miserable
+mothers and the husbands of those girls that you would never see the
+faces of.&#8221; The woman lifted her powerful voice in a psalmlike
+note. &#8220;I thank my God he didn&#8217;t live to do it! I thank my
+God they killed him first, and that he ain&#8217;t livin&#8217; with
+their blood on his hands!&#8221; She dropped her eyes, which she had
+raised with her voice, and glared at Editha. &#8220;What you got that
+black on for?&#8221; She lifted herself by her powerful arms so high
+that her helpless body seemed to hang limp its full length. &#8220;Take
+it off, take it off, before I tear it from your back!&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust6l.jpg" name="illust6"><img src="images/illust6m.jpg" title="&#8220;SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. &#8216;WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON FOR?&#8217;&#8221;" alt="[Illustration: &#8220;SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. &#8216;WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON FOR?&#8217;&#8221;]" style="width: 450px; height: 773px" /></a></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The lady who was passing the summer near Balcom&#8217;s Works was
+sketching Editha&#8217;s beauty, which lent itself wonderfully to the
+effects of a colorist. It had come to that confidence which is rather
+apt to grow between artist and sitter, and Editha had told her
+everything.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;To think of your having such a tragedy in your life!&#8221;
+the lady said. She added: &#8220;I suppose there are people who feel
+that way about war. But when you consider the good this war has
+done&#8212;how much it has done for the country! I can&#8217;t
+understand such people, for my part. And when you had come all the way
+out there to console her&#8212;got up out of a sick-bed!
+Well!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; Editha said, magnanimously, &#8220;she
+wasn&#8217;t quite in her right mind; and so did papa.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the lady said, looking at Editha&#8217;s lips in
+nature and then at her lips in art, and giving an empirical touch to
+them in the picture. &#8220;But how dreadful of her! How
+perfectly&#8212;excuse me&#8212;how <em>vulgar!</em>&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A light broke upon Editha in the darkness which she felt had been
+without a gleam of brightness for weeks and months. The mystery that had
+bewildered her was solved by the word; and from that moment she rose
+from grovelling in shame and self-pity, and began to live again in the
+ideal.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter6" id="chapter6">VI</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">Braybridge&#8217;s Offer</h2>
+
+
+<p>We had ordered our dinners and were sitting in the Turkish room at
+the club, waiting to be called, each in his turn, to the dining-room. It
+was always a cosey place, whether you found yourself in it with cigars
+and coffee after dinner, or with whatever liquid or solid appetizer you
+preferred in the half-hour or more that must pass before dinner after
+you had made out your menu. It intimated an exclusive possession in the
+three or four who happened first to find themselves together in it, and
+it invited the philosophic mind to contemplation more than any other
+spot in the club.</p>
+
+<p>Our rather limited little down-town dining-club was almost a celibate
+community at most times. A few husbands and fathers joined us at lunch;
+but at dinner we were nearly always a company of bachelors, dropping in
+an hour or so before we wished to dine, and ordering from a bill of fare
+what we liked. Some dozed away in the intervening time; some read the
+evening papers or played chess; I preferred the chance society of the
+Turkish room. I could be pretty sure of finding Wanhope there in these
+sympathetic moments, and where Wanhope was there would probably be
+Rulledge, passively willing to listen and agree, and Minver ready to
+interrupt and dispute. I myself liked to look in and linger for either
+the reasoning or the bickering, as it happened, and now, seeing the
+three there together, I took a provisional seat behind the painter, who
+made no sign of knowing I was present. Rulledge was eating a caviar
+sandwich, which he had brought from the afternoon tea-table near by, and
+he greedily incited Wanhope to go on, in the polite pause which the
+psychologist had let follow on my appearance, with what he was saying. I
+was not surprised to find that his talk related to a fact just then
+intensely interesting to the few, rapidly becoming the many, who were
+privy to it; though Wanhope had the air of stooping to it from a higher
+range of thinking.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t have supposed, somehow,&#8221; he said, with
+a knot of deprecation between his fine eyes, &#8220;that he would have
+had the pluck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps he hadn&#8217;t,&#8221; Minver suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope waited for a thoughtful moment of censure eventuating in
+toleration. &#8220;You mean that she&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why you say that, Minver,&#8221; Rulledge
+interposed, chivalrously, with his mouth full of sandwich.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t say it,&#8221; Minver contradicted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You implied it; and I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s fair.
+It&#8217;s easy enough to build up a report of that kind on the
+half-knowledge of rumor which is all that any outsider can have in the
+case.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So far,&#8221; Minver said, with unbroken tranquillity,
+&#8220;as any such edifice has been erected, you are the architect,
+Rulledge. I shouldn&#8217;t think you would like to go round insinuating
+that sort of thing. Here is Acton,&#8221; and he now acknowledged my
+presence with a backward twist of his head, &#8220;on the alert for
+material already. You ought to be more careful where Acton is,
+Rulledge.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It would be great copy if it were true,&#8221; I owned.</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope regarded us all three, in this play of our qualities, with
+the scientific impartiality of a bacteriologist in the study of a
+culture offering some peculiar incidents. He took up a point as remote
+as might be from the personal appeal. &#8220;It is curious how little we
+know of such matters, after all the love-making and marrying in life and
+all the inquiry of the poets and novelists.&#8221; He addressed himself
+in this turn of his thought, half playful, half earnest, to me, as if I
+united with the functions of both a responsibility for their
+shortcomings.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Minver said, facing about towards me. &#8220;How
+do you excuse yourself for your ignorance in matters where you&#8217;re
+always professionally making such a bluff of knowledge? After all the
+marriages you have brought about in literature, can you say positively
+and specifically how they are brought about in life?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I can&#8217;t,&#8221; I admitted. &#8220;I might say that
+a writer of fiction is a good deal like a minister who continually
+marries people without knowing why.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you couldn&#8217;t, my dear fellow,&#8221; the painter
+retorted. &#8220;It&#8217;s part of your swindle to assume that you
+<em>do</em> know why. You ought to find out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope interposed concretely, or as concretely as he could:
+&#8220;The important thing would always be to find which of the lovers
+the confession, tacit or explicit, began with.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Acton ought to go round and collect human documents bearing on
+the question. He ought to have got together thousands of specimens from
+nature. He ought to have gone to all the married couples he knew, and
+asked them just how their passion was confessed; he ought to have sent
+out printed circulars, with tabulated questions. Why don&#8217;t you do
+it, Acton?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>I returned, as seriously as could have been expected:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps it would be thought rather intimate. People
+don&#8217;t like to talk of such things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re ashamed,&#8221; Minver declared. &#8220;The
+lovers don&#8217;t either of them, in a given case, like to let others
+know how much the woman had to do with making the offer, and how little
+the man.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver&#8217;s point provoked both Wanhope and myself to begin a
+remark at the same time. We begged each other&#8217;s pardon, and
+Wanhope insisted that I should go on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, merely this,&#8221; I said. &#8220;I don&#8217;t think
+they&#8217;re so much ashamed as that they have forgotten the different
+stages. You were going to say&#8212;?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very much what you said. It&#8217;s astonishing how people
+forget the vital things and remember trifles. Or perhaps as we advance
+from stage to stage what once seemed the vital things turn to trifles.
+Nothing can be more vital in the history of a man and a woman than how
+they became husband and wife, and yet not merely the details, but the
+main fact, would seem to escape record if not recollection. The next
+generations knows nothing of it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That appears to let Acton out,&#8221; Minver said. &#8220;But
+how do <em>you</em> know what you were saying, Wanhope?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve ventured to make some inquiries in that region at
+one time. Not directly, of course. At second and third hand. It
+isn&#8217;t inconceivable, if we conceive of a life after this, that a
+man should forget, in its more important interests and occupations, just
+how he quitted this world, or at least the particulars of the article of
+death. Of course, we must suppose a good portion of eternity to have
+elapsed.&#8221; Wanhope continued, dreamily, with a deep breath almost
+equivalent to something so unscientific as a sigh: &#8220;Women are
+charming, and in nothing more than the perpetual challenge they form for
+us. They are born defying us to match ourselves with them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean that Miss Hazelwood&#8212;&#8221; Rulledge began,
+but Minver&#8217;s laugh arrested him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nothing so concrete, I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221; Wanhope gently
+returned. &#8220;I mean, to match them in graciousness, in loveliness,
+in all the agile contests of spirit and plays of fancy. It&#8217;s
+pathetic to see them caught up into something more serious in that other
+game, which they are so good at.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They seem rather to like it, though, some of them, if you mean
+the game of love,&#8221; Minver said. &#8220;Especially when
+they&#8217;re not in earnest about it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, there are plenty of spoiled women,&#8221; Wanhope
+admitted. &#8220;But I don&#8217;t mean flirting. I suppose that the
+average unspoiled woman is rather frightened than otherwise when she
+knows that a man is in love with her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you suppose she always knows it first?&#8221; Rulledge
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You may be sure,&#8221; Minver answered for Wanhope,
+&#8220;that if she didn&#8217;t know it, <em>he</em> never would.&#8221;
+Then Wanhope answered for himself:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think that generally she sees it coming. In that sort of
+wireless telegraphy, that reaching out of two natures through space
+towards each other, her more sensitive apparatus probably feels the
+appeal of his before he is conscious of having made any
+appeal.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And her first impulse is to escape the appeal?&#8221; I
+suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Wanhope admitted, after a thoughtful
+reluctance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Even when she is half aware of having invited it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If she is not spoiled she is never aware of having invited it.
+Take the case in point; we won&#8217;t mention any names. She is sailing
+through time, through youthful space, with her electrical lures, the
+natural equipment of every charming woman, all out, and suddenly,
+somewhere from the unknown, she feels the shock of a response in the
+gulfs of air where there had been no life before. But she can&#8217;t be
+said to have knowingly searched the void for any presence.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m not sure about that, Professor,&#8221; Minver
+put in. &#8220;Go a little slower, if you expect me to follow
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all a mystery, the most beautiful mystery of
+life,&#8221; Wanhope resumed. &#8220;I don&#8217;t believe I could make
+out the case as I feel it to be.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Braybridge&#8217;s part of the case is rather plain,
+isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; I invited him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not sure of that. No man&#8217;s part of any case is
+plain, if you look at it carefully. The most that you can say of
+Braybridge is that he is rather a simple nature. But nothing,&#8221; the
+psychologist added, with one of his deep breaths, &#8220;is so complex
+as a simple nature.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Minver contended, &#8220;Braybridge is plain, if
+his case isn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Plain? Is he plain?&#8221; Wanhope asked, as if asking
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My dear fellow, you agnostics doubt everything!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I should have said picturesque. Picturesque, with the sort of
+unbeautifulness that takes the fancy of women more than Greek
+proportion. I think it would require a girl peculiarly feminine to feel
+the attraction of such a man&#8212;the fascination of his being grizzled
+and slovenly and rugged. She would have to be rather a wild, shy girl to
+do that, and it would have to be through her fear of him that she would
+divine his fear of her. But what I have heard is that they met under
+rather exceptional circumstances. It was at a house in the Adirondacks,
+where Braybridge was, somewhat in the quality of a bull in a china-shop.
+He was lugged in by the host, as an old friend, and was suffered by the
+hostess as a friend quite too old for her. At any rate, as I heard (and
+I don&#8217;t vouch for the facts, all of them), Braybridge found
+himself at odds with the gay young people who made up the
+hostess&#8217;s end of the party, and was watching for a chance
+to&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope cast about for the word, and Minver supplied
+it&#8212;&#8220;Pull out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. But when he had found it Miss Hazelwood took it from
+him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand,&#8221; Rulledge said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When he came in to breakfast, the third morning, prepared with
+an excuse for cutting his week down to the dimensions it had reached, he
+saw her sitting alone at the table. She had risen early as a consequence
+of having arrived late the night before; and when Braybridge found
+himself in for it, he forgot that he meant to go away, and said
+good-morning, as if they knew each other. Their hostess found them
+talking over the length of the table in a sort of mutual fright, and
+introduced them. But it&#8217;s rather difficult reporting a lady
+verbatim at second hand. I really had the facts from Welkin, who had
+them from his wife. The sum of her impressions was that Braybridge and
+Miss Hazelwood were getting a kind of comfort out of their mutual terror
+because one was as badly frightened as the other. It was a novel
+experience for both. Ever seen her?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We looked at one another. Minver said: &#8220;I never wanted to paint
+any one so much. It was at the spring show of the American Artists.
+There was a jam of people; but this girl&#8212;I&#8217;ve understood it
+was she&#8212;looked as much alone as if there were nobody else there.
+She might have been a startled doe in the North Woods suddenly coming
+out on a twenty-thousand-dollar camp, with a lot of
+twenty-million-dollar people on the veranda.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you wanted to do her as The Startled Doe,&#8221; I said.
+&#8220;Good selling name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t reduce it to the vulgarity of fiction. I admit it
+would be a selling name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Go on, Wanhope,&#8221; Rulledge puffed impatiently.
+&#8220;Though I don&#8217;t see how there could be another soul in the
+universe as constitutionally scared of men as Braybridge is of
+women.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In the universe nothing is wasted, I suppose. Everything has
+its complement, its response. For every bashful man, there must be a
+bashful woman,&#8221; Wanhope returned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Or a bold one,&#8221; Minver suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; the response must be in kind to be truly complemental.
+Through the sense of their reciprocal timidity they divine that they
+needn&#8217;t be afraid.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! <em>That&#8217;s</em> the way you get out of
+it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; Rulledge urged.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221; Wanhope modestly confessed,
+&#8220;that from this point I shall have to be largely conjectural.
+Welkin wasn&#8217;t able to be very definite, except as to moments, and
+he had his data almost altogether from his wife. Braybridge had told him
+overnight that he thought of going, and he had said he mustn&#8217;t
+think of it; but he supposed Braybridge had spoken of it to Mrs. Welkin,
+and he began by saying to his wife that he hoped she had refused to hear
+of Braybridge&#8217;s going. She said she hadn&#8217;t heard of it, but
+now she would refuse without hearing, and she didn&#8217;t give
+Braybridge any chance to protest. If people went in the middle of their
+week, what would become of other people? She was not going to have the
+equilibrium of her party disturbed, and that was all about it. Welkin
+thought it was odd that Braybridge didn&#8217;t insist; and he made a
+long story of it. But the grain of wheat in his bushel of chaff was that
+Miss Hazelwood seemed to be fascinated by Braybridge from the first.
+When Mrs. Welkin scared him into saying that he would stay his week out,
+the business practically was done. They went picnicking that day in each
+other&#8217;s charge; and after Braybridge left he wrote back to her, as
+Mrs. Welkin knew from the letters that passed through her hands,
+and&#8212;Well, their engagement has come out, and&#8212;&#8221; Wanhope
+paused, with an air that was at first indefinite, and then
+definitive.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean,&#8221; Rulledge burst out in a note of
+deep wrong, &#8220;that that&#8217;s all you know about it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s all I know,&#8221; Wanhope confessed, as if
+somewhat surprised himself at the fact.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope tried to offer the only reparation in his power. &#8220;I can
+conjecture&#8212;we can all conjecture&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated; then: &#8220;Well, go on with your conjecture,&#8221;
+Rulledge said, forgivingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why&#8212;&#8221; Wanhope began again; but at that moment a
+man who had been elected the year before, and then gone off on a long
+absence, put his head in between the dull-red hangings of the doorway.
+It was Halson, whom I did not know very well, but liked better than I
+knew. His eyes were dancing with what seemed the inextinguishable gayety
+of his temperament, rather than any present occasion, and his smile
+carried his little mustache well away from his handsome teeth.
+&#8220;Private?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come in! come in!&#8221; Minver called to him. &#8220;Thought
+you were in Japan?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My dear fellow,&#8221; Halson answered, &#8220;you must brush
+up your contemporary history. It&#8217;s more than a fortnight since I
+was in Japan.&#8221; He shook hands with me, and I introduced him to
+Rulledge and Wanhope. He said at once: &#8220;Well, what is it? Question
+of Braybridge&#8217;s engagement? It&#8217;s humiliating to a man to
+come back from the antipodes and find the nation absorbed in a parochial
+problem like that. Everybody I&#8217;ve met here to-night has asked me,
+the first thing, if I&#8217;d heard of it, and if I knew how it could
+have happened.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And do you?&#8221; Rulledge asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can give a pretty good guess,&#8221; Halson said, running
+his merry eyes over our faces.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Anybody can give a good guess,&#8221; Rulledge said.
+&#8220;Wanhope is doing it now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t let me interrupt.&#8221; Halson turned to him
+politely.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not at all. I&#8217;d rather hear your guess, if you know
+Braybridge better than I,&#8221; Wanhope said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Halson compromised, &#8220;perhaps I&#8217;ve
+known him longer.&#8221; He asked, with an effect of coming to business:
+&#8220;Where were you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell him, Rulledge,&#8221; Minver ordered, and Rulledge
+apparently asked nothing better. He told him, in detail, all we knew
+from any source, down to the moment of Wanhope&#8217;s arrested
+conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He did leave you at an anxious point, didn&#8217;t he?&#8221;
+Halson smiled to the rest of us at Rulledge&#8217;s expense, and then
+said: &#8220;Well, I think I can help you out a little. Any of you know
+the lady?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By sight, Minver does,&#8221; Rulledge answered for us.
+&#8220;Wants to paint her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; Halson said, with intelligence. &#8220;But I
+doubt if he&#8217;d find her as paintable as she looks, at first.
+She&#8217;s beautiful, but her charm is spiritual.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sometimes we try for that,&#8221; the painter interposed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And sometimes you get it. But you&#8217;ll allow it&#8217;s
+difficult. That&#8217;s all I meant. I&#8217;ve known her&#8212;let me
+see&#8212;for twelve years, at least; ever since I first went West. She
+was about eleven then, and her father was bringing her up on the ranch.
+Her aunt came along by and by and took her to Europe&#8212;mother dead
+before Hazelwood went out there. But the girl was always homesick for
+the ranch; she pined for it; and after they had kept her in Germany
+three or four years they let her come back and run wild again&#8212;wild
+as a flower does, or a vine, not a domesticated animal.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Go slow, Halson. This is getting too much for the romantic
+Rulledge.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Rulledge can bear up against the facts, I guess,
+Minver,&#8221; Halson said, almost austerely. &#8220;Her father died two
+years ago, and then she <em>had</em> to come East, for her aunt simply
+<em>wouldn&#8217;t</em> live on the ranch. She brought her on here, and
+brought her out; I was at the coming-out tea; but the girl didn&#8217;t
+take to the New York thing at all; I could see it from the start; she
+wanted to get away from it with me, and talk about the ranch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She felt that she was with the only genuine person among those
+conventional people.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halson laughed at Minver&#8217;s thrust, and went on amiably:
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t suppose that till she met Braybridge she was ever
+quite at her ease with any man&#8212;or woman, for that matter. I
+imagine, as you&#8217;ve done, that it was his fear of her that gave her
+courage. She met him on equal terms. Isn&#8217;t that it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope assented to the question referred to him with a nod.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And when they got lost from the rest of the party at that
+picnic&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Lost?&#8221; Rulledge demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, yes. Didn&#8217;t you know? But I ought to go back. They
+said there never was anything prettier than the way she unconsciously
+went for Braybridge the whole day. She wanted him, and she was a child
+who wanted things frankly when she did want them. Then his being ten or
+fifteen years older than she was, and so large and simple, made it
+natural for a shy girl like her to assort herself with him when all the
+rest were assorting themselves, as people do at such things. The
+consensus of testimony is that she did it with the most transparent
+unconsciousness, and&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who are your authorities?&#8221; Minver asked; Rulledge threw
+himself back on the divan and beat the cushions with impatience.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Is it essential to give them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh no. I merely wondered. Go on.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The authorities are all right. She had disappeared with him
+before the others noticed. It was a thing that happened; there was no
+design in it; that would have been out of character. They had got to the
+end of the wood-road, and into the thick of the trees where there
+wasn&#8217;t even a trail, and they walked round looking for a way out
+till they were turned completely. They decided that the only way was to
+keep walking, and by and by they heard the sound of chopping. It was
+some Canucks clearing a piece of the woods, and when she spoke to them
+in French they gave them full directions, and Braybridge soon found the
+path again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halson paused, and I said: &#8220;But that isn&#8217;t
+all?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh no.&#8221; He continued thoughtfully silent for a little
+while before he resumed. &#8220;The amazing thing is that they got lost
+again, and that when they tried going back to the Canucks they
+couldn&#8217;t find the way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t they follow the sound of the chopping?&#8221;
+I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Canucks had stopped, for the time being. Besides,
+Braybridge was rather ashamed, and he thought if they went straight on
+they would be sure to come out somewhere. But that was where he made a
+mistake. They couldn&#8217;t go on straight; they went round and round,
+and came on their own footsteps&#8212;or hers, which he recognized from
+the narrow tread and the dint of the little heels in the damp
+places.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope roused himself with a kindling eye. &#8220;That is very
+interesting, the movement in a circle of people who have lost their way.
+It has often been observed, but I don&#8217;t know that it has ever been
+explained. Sometimes the circle is smaller, sometimes it is larger, but
+I believe it is always a circle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t it,&#8221; I queried, &#8220;like any other error
+in life? We go round and round, and commit the old sins over
+again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is very interesting,&#8221; Wanhope allowed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But do lost people really always walk in a vicious
+circle?&#8221; Minver asked.</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge would not let Wanhope answer. &#8220;Go on, Halson,&#8221;
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>Halson roused himself from the revery in which he was sitting with
+glazed eyes. &#8220;Well, what made it a little more anxious was that he
+had heard of bears on that mountain, and the green afternoon light among
+the trees was perceptibly paling. He suggested shouting, but she
+wouldn&#8217;t let him; she said it would be ridiculous if the others
+heard them, and useless if they didn&#8217;t. So they tramped on
+till&#8212;till the accident happened.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The accident!&#8221; Rulledge exclaimed, in the voice of our
+joint emotion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He stepped on a loose stone and turned his foot,&#8221; Halson
+explained. &#8220;It wasn&#8217;t a sprain, luckily, but it hurt enough.
+He turned so white that she noticed it, and asked him what was the
+matter. Of course that shut his mouth the closer, but it morally doubled
+his motive, and he kept himself from crying out till the sudden pain of
+the wrench was over. He said merely that he thought he had heard
+something, and he had an awful ringing in his ears; but he didn&#8217;t
+mean that, and he started on again. The worst was trying to walk without
+limping, and to talk cheerfully and encouragingly with that agony
+tearing at him. But he managed somehow, and he was congratulating
+himself on his success when he tumbled down in a dead faint.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, come now!&#8221; Minver protested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It <em>is</em> like an old-fashioned story, where things are
+operated by accident instead of motive, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; Halson
+smiled with radiant recognition.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fact will always imitate fiction, if you give her time
+enough,&#8221; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Had they got back to the other picnickers?&#8221; Rulledge
+asked, with a tense voice.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In sound, but not in sight of them. She wasn&#8217;t going to
+bring him into camp in that state; besides, she couldn&#8217;t. She got
+some water out of the trout-brook they&#8217;d been fishing&#8212;more
+water than trout in it&#8212;and sprinkled his face, and he came to, and
+got on his legs just in time to pull on to the others, who were
+organizing a search-party to go after them. From that point on she
+dropped Braybridge like a hot coal; and as there was nothing of the
+flirt in her, she simply kept with the women, the older girls, and the
+tabbies, and left Braybridge to worry along with the secret of his
+turned ankle. He doesn&#8217;t know how he ever got home alive; but he
+did, somehow, manage to reach the wagons that had brought them to the
+edge of the woods, and then he was all right till they got to the house.
+But still she said nothing about his accident, and he couldn&#8217;t;
+and he pleaded an early start for town the next morning, and got off to
+bed as soon as he could.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t have thought he could have stirred in the
+morning,&#8221; Rulledge employed Halson&#8217;s pause to say.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, this beaver <em>had</em> to,&#8221; Halson said.
+&#8220;He was not the only early riser. He found Miss Hazelwood at the
+station before him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What!&#8221; Rulledge shouted. I confess the fact rather
+roused me, too; and Wanhope&#8217;s eyes kindled with a scientific
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She came right towards him. &#8216;Mr. Braybridge,&#8217; says
+she, &#8216;I couldn&#8217;t let you go without explaining my very
+strange behavior. I didn&#8217;t choose to have these people laughing at
+the notion of <em>my</em> having played the part of your preserver. It
+was bad enough being lost with you; I couldn&#8217;t bring you into
+ridicule with them by the disproportion they&#8217;d have felt in my
+efforts for you after you turned your foot. So I simply had to ignore
+the incident. Don&#8217;t you see?&#8217; Braybridge glanced at her, and
+he had never felt so big and bulky before, or seen her so slender and
+little. He said, &#8216;It <em>would</em> have seemed rather
+absurd,&#8217; and he broke out and laughed, while she broke down and
+cried, and asked him to forgive her, and whether it had hurt him very
+much; and said she knew he could bear to keep it from the others by the
+way he had kept it from her till he fainted. She implied that he was
+morally as well as physically gigantic, and it was as much as he could
+do to keep from taking her in his arms on the spot.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It would have been edifying to the groom that had driven her
+to the station,&#8221; Minver cynically suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Groom nothing!&#8221; Halson returned with spirit. &#8220;She
+paddled herself across the lake, and walked from the boat-landing to the
+station.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jove!&#8221; Rulledge exploded in uncontrollable
+enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She turned round as soon as she had got through with her hymn
+of praise&#8212;it made Braybridge feel awfully flat&#8212;and ran back
+through the bushes to the boat-landing, and&#8212;that was the last he
+saw of her till he met her in town this fall.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And when&#8212;and when&#8212;did he offer himself?&#8221;
+Rulledge entreated, breathlessly. &#8220;How&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s the point, Halson,&#8221; Minver interposed.
+&#8220;Your story is all very well, as far as it goes; but Rulledge here
+has been insinuating that it was Miss Hazelwood who made the offer, and
+he wants you to bear him out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge winced at the outrage, but he would not stay Halson&#8217;s
+answer even for the sake of righting himself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I <em>have</em> heard,&#8221; Minver went on, &#8220;that
+Braybridge insisted on paddling the canoe back to the other shore for
+her, and that it was on the way that he offered himself.&#8221; We
+others stared at Minver in astonishment. Halson glanced covertly towards
+him with his gay eyes. &#8220;Then that wasn&#8217;t true?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How did you hear it?&#8221; Halson asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, never mind. Is it true?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I know there&#8217;s that version,&#8221; Halson said,
+evasively. &#8220;The engagement is only just out, as you know. As to
+the offer&#8212;the when and the how&#8212;I don&#8217;t know that
+I&#8217;m exactly at liberty to say.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why,&#8221; Minver urged. &#8220;You might
+stretch a point for Rulledge&#8217;s sake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halson looked down, and then he glanced at Minver after a furtive
+passage of his eye over Rulledge&#8217;s intense face. &#8220;There was
+something rather nice happened after&#8212;But, really, now!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, go on!&#8221; Minver called out in contempt of his
+scruple.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t the right&#8212;Well, I suppose I&#8217;m on
+safe ground here? It won&#8217;t go any further, of course; and it
+<em>was</em> so pretty! After she had pushed off in her canoe, you know,
+Braybridge&#8212;he&#8217;d followed her down to the shore of the
+lake&#8212;found her handkerchief in a bush where it had caught, and he
+held it up, and called out to her. She looked round and saw it, and
+called back: &#8216;Never mind. I can&#8217;t return for it now.&#8217;
+Then Braybridge plucked up his courage, and asked if he might keep it,
+and she said &#8216;Yes,&#8217; over her shoulder, and then she stopped
+paddling, and said: &#8216;No, no, you mustn&#8217;t, you mustn&#8217;t!
+You can send it to me.&#8217; He asked where, and she said: &#8216;In
+New York&#8212;in the fall&#8212;at the Walholland.&#8217; Braybridge
+never knew how he dared, but he shouted after her&#8212;she was paddling
+on again&#8212;&#8216;May I <em>bring</em> it?&#8217; and she called
+over her shoulder again, without fully facing him, but her profile was
+enough: &#8216;If you can&#8217;t get any one to bring it for
+you.&#8217; The words barely reached him, but he&#8217;d have caught
+them if they&#8217;d been whispered; and he watched her across the lake
+and into the bushes, and then broke for his train. He was just in
+time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halson beamed for pleasure upon us, and even Minver said: &#8220;Yes,
+that&#8217;s rather nice.&#8221; After a moment he added:
+&#8220;Rulledge thinks she put it there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re too bad, Minver,&#8221; Halson protested.
+&#8220;The charm of the whole thing was her perfect innocence. She
+isn&#8217;t capable of the slightest finesse. I&#8217;ve known her from
+a child, and I know what I say.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That innocence of girlhood,&#8221; Wanhope said, &#8220;is
+very interesting. It&#8217;s astonishing how much experience it
+survives. Some women carry it into old age with them. It&#8217;s never
+been scientifically studied&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Minver allowed. &#8220;There would be a fortune
+for the novelist who could work a type of innocence for all it was
+worth. Here&#8217;s Acton always dealing with the most rancid
+flirtatiousness, and missing the sweetness and beauty of a girlhood
+which does the cheekiest things without knowing what it&#8217;s about,
+and fetches down its game whenever it shuts its eyes and fires at
+nothing. But I don&#8217;t see how all this touches the point that
+Rulledge makes, or decides which finally made the offer.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, hadn&#8217;t the offer already been made?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But how?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, in the usual way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What is the usual way?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I thought everybody knew <em>that</em>. Of course, it was
+<em>from</em> Braybridge finally, but I suppose it&#8217;s always six of
+one and half a dozen of the other in these cases, isn&#8217;t it? I dare
+say he couldn&#8217;t get any one to take her the handkerchief. My
+dinner?&#8221; Halson looked up at the silent waiter, who had stolen
+upon us and was bowing towards him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Look here, Halson,&#8221; Minver detained him, &#8220;how is
+it none of the rest of us have heard all those details?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<em>I</em> don&#8217;t know where you&#8217;ve been, Minver.
+Everybody knows the main facts,&#8221; Halson said, escaping.</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope observed, musingly: &#8220;I suppose he&#8217;s quite right
+about the reciprocality of the offer, as we call it. There&#8217;s
+probably, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, a perfect understanding
+before there&#8217;s an explanation. In many cases the offer and the
+acceptance must really be tacit.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I ventured, &#8220;and I don&#8217;t know why
+we&#8217;re so severe with women when they seem to take the initiative.
+It&#8217;s merely, after all, the call of the maiden bird, and
+there&#8217;s nothing lovelier or more endearing in nature than
+that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Maiden bird is good, Acton,&#8221; Minver approved. &#8220;Why
+don&#8217;t you institute a class of fiction where the love-making is
+all done by the maiden birds, as you call them&#8212;or the widow birds?
+It would be tremendously popular with both sexes. It would lift an
+immense responsibility off the birds who&#8217;ve been expected to
+shoulder it heretofore if it could be introduced into real
+life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge fetched a long, simple-hearted sigh. &#8220;Well, it&#8217;s
+a charming story. How well he told it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The waiter came again, and this time signalled to Minver.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, as he rose. &#8220;What a pity you
+can&#8217;t believe a word Halson says.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean&#8212;&#8221; we began simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That he built the whole thing from the ground up, with the
+start that we had given him. Why, you poor things! Who could have told
+him how it all happened? Braybridge? Or the girl? As Wanhope began by
+saying, people don&#8217;t speak of their love-making, even when they
+distinctly remember it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but see here, Minver!&#8221; Rulledge said, with a dazed
+look. &#8220;If it&#8217;s all a fake of his, how came <em>you</em> to
+have heard of Braybridge paddling the canoe back for her?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was the fake that tested the fake. When he adopted it, I
+<em>knew</em> he was lying, because I was lying myself. And then the
+cheapness of the whole thing! I wonder that didn&#8217;t strike you.
+It&#8217;s the stuff that a thousand summer-girl stories have been spun
+out of. Acton might have thought he was writing it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He went away, leaving us to a blank silence, till Wanhope managed to
+say: &#8220;That inventive habit of mind is very curious. It would be
+interesting to know just how far it imposes on the inventor
+himself&#8212;how much he believes of his own fiction.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see,&#8221; Rulledge said, gloomily, &#8220;why
+they&#8217;re so long with my dinner.&#8221; Then he burst out: &#8220;I
+believe every word Halson said! If there&#8217;s any fake in the thing,
+it&#8217;s the fake that Minver owned to.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter7" id="chapter7">VII</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">The Chick of the Easter Egg</h2>
+
+
+<p>The old fellow who told that story of dream-transference on a
+sleeping-car at Christmas-time was again at the club on Easter Eve.
+Halson had put him up for the winter, under the easy rule we had, and he
+had taken very naturally to the Turkish room for his after-dinner coffee
+and cigar. We all rather liked him, though it was Minver&#8217;s pose to
+be critical of the simple friendliness with which he made himself at
+home among us, and to feign a wish that there were fewer trains between
+Boston and New York, so that old Newton (that was his name) could have a
+better chance of staying away. But we noticed that Minver was always a
+willing listener to Newton&#8217;s talk, and that he sometimes
+hospitably offered to share his tobacco with the Bostonian. When brought
+to book for his inconsistency by Rulledge, he said he was merely
+welcoming the new blood, if not young blood, that Newton was infusing
+into our body, which had grown anaemic on Wanhope&#8217;s psychology and
+Rulledge&#8217;s romance; or, anyway, it was a change.</p>
+
+<p>Newton now began by saying abruptly, in a fashion he had, &#8220;We
+used to hear a good deal in Boston about your Easter Parade here in New
+York. Do you still keep it up?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>No one else answering, Minver replied, presently, &#8220;I believe it
+is still going on. I understand that it&#8217;s composed mostly of
+milliners out to see one another&#8217;s new hats, and generous Jewesses
+who are willing to contribute the &#8216;dark and bright&#8217; of the
+beauty in which they walk to the observance of an alien faith.
+It&#8217;s rather astonishing how the synagogue takes to the feasts of
+the church. If it were not for that, I don&#8217;t know what would
+become of Christmas.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean by their walking in beauty?&#8221; Rulledge
+asked over his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall never have the measure of your ignorance, Rulledge.
+You don&#8217;t even know Byron&#8217;s lines on Hebrew loveliness?</p>
+
+<p class="poetry">&#8220;&#8216;She walks in beauty like the night
+<br /><span style="padding-left: 2em">Of cloudless climes and starry
+ skies,</span>
+<br />And all that&#8217;s best of dark and bright
+<br /><span style="padding-left: 2em">Meets in her aspect and her
+ eyes.&#8217;&#8221;</span></p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pretty good,&#8221; Rulledge assented. &#8220;And they
+<em>are</em> splendid, sometimes. But what has the Easter Parade got to
+do with it?&#8221; he asked Newton.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, only what everything has with everything else. I was
+thinking of Easter-time long ago and far away, and naturally I thought
+of Easter now and here. I saw your Parade once, and it seemed to me one
+of the great social spectacles. But you can&#8217;t keep anything in New
+York, if it&#8217;s good; if it&#8217;s bad, you can.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You come from Boston, I think you said, Mr. Newton,&#8221;
+Minver breathed blandly through his smoke.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m not a <em>real</em> Bostonian,&#8221; our guest
+replied. &#8220;I&#8217;m not abusing you on behalf of a city that
+I&#8217;m a native proprietor of. If I were, I shouldn&#8217;t perhaps
+make your decadent Easter Parade my point of attack, though I think
+it&#8217;s a pity to let it spoil. I came from a part of the country
+where we used to make a great deal of Easter, when we were boys, at
+least so far as eggs went. I don&#8217;t know whether the grown people
+observed the day then, and I don&#8217;t know whether the boys keep it
+now; I haven&#8217;t been back at Easter-time for several generations.
+But when I was a boy it was a serious thing. In that soft Southwestern
+latitude the grass had pretty well greened up by Easter, even when it
+came in March, and grass colors eggs a very nice yellow; it used to
+worry me that it didn&#8217;t color them green. When the grass
+hadn&#8217;t got along far enough, winter wheat would do as well. I
+don&#8217;t remember what color onion husks would give; but we used
+onion husks, too. Some mothers would let the boys get logwood from the
+drug-store, and that made the eggs a fine, bold purplish black. But the
+greatest egg of all was a calico egg, that you got by coaxing your
+grandmother (your mother&#8217;s mother) or your aunt (your
+mother&#8217;s sister) to sew up in a tight cover of brilliant calico.
+When that was boiled long enough the colors came off in a perfect
+pattern on the egg. Very few boys could get such eggs; when they did,
+they put them away in bureau drawers till they ripened and the mothers
+smelt them, and threw them out of the window as quickly as possible.
+Always, after breakfast, Easter Morning, we came out on the street and
+fought eggs. We pitted the little ends of the eggs against one another,
+and the fellow whose egg cracked the other fellow&#8217;s egg won it,
+and he carried it off. I remember grass and wheat colored eggs in such
+trials of strength, and onion and logwood colored eggs; but never calico
+eggs; <em>they</em> were too precious to be risked; it would have seemed
+wicked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; the Boston man went musingly on,
+&#8220;why I should remember these things so relentlessly; I&#8217;ve
+forgotten all the important things that happened to me then; but perhaps
+these were the important things. Who knows? I only know I&#8217;ve
+always had a soft spot in my heart for Easter, not so much because of
+the calico eggs, perhaps, as because of the grandmothers and the aunts.
+I suppose the simple life is full of such aunts and grandmothers still;
+but you don&#8217;t find them in hotel apartments, or even in flats
+consisting of seven large, light rooms and bath.&#8221; We all
+recognized the language of the advertisements, and laughed in sympathy
+with our guest, who perhaps laughed out of proportion with a pleasantry
+of that size.</p>
+
+<p>When he had subdued his mirth, he resumed at a point apparently very
+remote from that where he had started.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There was one of those winters in Cambridge, where I lived
+then, that seemed tougher than any other we could remember, and they
+were all pretty tough winters there in those times. There were forty
+snowfalls between Thanksgiving and Fast Day&#8212;you don&#8217;t know
+what Fast Day is in New York, and we didn&#8217;t, either, as far as the
+fasting went&#8212;and the cold kept on and on till we couldn&#8217;t,
+or said we couldn&#8217;t, stand it any longer. So, along about the
+middle of March somewhere, we picked up the children and started south.
+In those days New York seemed pretty far south to us; and when we got
+here we found everything on wheels that we had left on runners in
+Boston. But the next day it began to snow, and we said we must go a
+little farther to meet the spring. I don&#8217;t know exactly what it
+was made us pitch on Bethlehem, Pennsylvania; but we had a notion we
+should find it interesting, and, at any rate, a total change from our
+old environment. We had been reading something about the Moravians, and
+we knew that it was the capital of Moravianism, with the largest
+Moravian congregation in the world; I think it was Longfellow&#8217;s
+&#8216;Hymn of the Moravian Nuns&#8217; that set us to reading about the
+sect; and we had somehow heard that the Sun Inn, at Bethlehem, was the
+finest old-fashioned public house anywhere. At any rate, we had the
+faith of our youthful years, and we put out for Bethlehem.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We arrived just at dusk, but not so late that we
+couldn&#8217;t see the hospitable figure of a man coming out of the Sun
+to meet us at the omnibus door and to shake hands with each of us. It
+was the very pleasantest and sweetest welcome we ever had at a public
+house; and though we found the Sun a large, modern hotel, we easily
+accepted the landlord&#8217;s assurance that the old Inn was built up
+inside of the hotel, just as it was when Washington stayed in it; and
+after a mighty good supper we went to our rooms, which were piping warm
+from two good base-burner stoves. It was not exactly the vernal air we
+had expected of Bethlehem when we left New York; but you can&#8217;t
+have everything in this world, and, with the snowbanks along the streets
+outside, we were very glad to have the base-burners.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We went to bed pretty early, and I fell into one of those
+exemplary sleeps that begin with no margin of waking after your head
+touches the pillow, or before that, even, and I woke from a dream of
+heavenly music that translated itself into the earthly notes of bugles.
+It made me sit up with the instant realization that we had arrived in
+Bethlehem on Easter Eve, and that this was Easter Morning. We had read
+of the beautiful observance of the feast by the Moravians, and, while I
+was hurrying on my clothes beside my faithful base-burner, I kept quite
+superfluously wondering at myself for not having thought of it, and so
+made sure of being called. I had waked just in time, though I
+hadn&#8217;t deserved to do so, and ought, by right, to have missed it
+all. I tried to make my wife come with me; but after the family is of a
+certain size a woman, if she is a real woman, thinks her husband can see
+things for her, and generally sends him out to reconnoitre and report.
+Besides, my wife couldn&#8217;t have left the children without waking
+them, to tell them she was going, and then all five of them would have
+wanted to come with us, including the baby; and we should have had no
+end of a time convincing them of the impossibility. We were a good deal
+bound up in the children, and we hated to lie to them when we could
+possibly avoid it. So I went alone.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I asked the night porter, who was still on duty, the way I
+wanted to take, but there were so many people in the streets going the
+same direction that I couldn&#8217;t have missed it, anyhow; and pretty
+soon we came to the old Moravian cemetery, which was in the heart of the
+town; and there we found most of the Moravian congregation drawn up on
+three sides of the square, waiting and facing the east, which was
+beginning to redden. Of all the cemeteries I have seen, that was the
+most beautiful, because it was the simplest and humblest. Generally a
+cemetery is a dreadful place, with headstones and footstones and shafts
+and tombs scattered about, and looking like a field full of granite and
+marble stumps from the clearing of a petrified forest. But here all the
+memorial tablets lay flat with the earth. None of the dead were assumed
+to be worthier of remembrance than another; they all rested at regular
+intervals, with their tablets on their breasts, like shields, in their
+sleep after the battle of life. I was thinking how right and wise this
+was, and feeling the purity of the conception like a quality of the
+keen, clear air of the morning, which seemed to be breathing straight
+from the sky, when suddenly the sun blazed up from the horizon like a
+fire, and the instant it appeared the horns of the band began to blow
+and the people burst into a hymn&#8212;a thousand voices, for all I
+know. It was the sublimest thing I ever heard, and I don&#8217;t know
+that there&#8217;s anything to match it for dignity and solemnity in any
+religious rite. It made the tears come, for I thought how those people
+were of a church of missionaries and martyrs from the beginning, and I
+felt as if I were standing in sight and hearing of the first Christians
+after Christ. It was as if He were risen there &#8216;in the midst of
+them.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge looked round on the rest of us, with an air of acquiring
+merit from the Bostonian&#8217;s poetry, but Minver&#8217;s gravity was
+proof against the chance of mocking Rulledge, and I think we all felt
+alike. Wanhope seemed especially interested, though he said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When I went home I told my wife about it as well as I could,
+but, though she entered into the spirit of it, she was rather
+preoccupied. The children had all wakened, as they did sometimes, in a
+body, and were storming joyfully around the rooms, as if it were
+Christmas; and she was trying to get them dressed. &#8216;Do tell them
+what Easter is like; they&#8217;ve never seen it kept before,&#8217; she
+said; and I tried to do so, while I took a hand, as a young father will,
+and tried to get them into their clothes. I don&#8217;t think I dwelt
+much on the religious observance of the day, but I dug up some of my
+profane associations with it in early life, and told them about coloring
+eggs, and fighting them, and all that; there in New England, in those
+days, they had never seen or heard of such a thing as an Easter egg.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think my reminiscences quieted them much. They
+were all on fire&#8212;the oldest hoy and girl, and the twins, and even
+the two-year-old that we called the baby&#8212;to go out and buy some
+eggs and get the landlord to let them color them in the hotel kitchen. I
+had a deal of ado to make them wait till after breakfast, but I managed,
+somehow; and when we had finished&#8212;it was a mighty good
+Pennsylvania breakfast, such as we could eat with impunity in those
+halcyon days: rich coffee, steak, sausage, eggs, applebutter, buckwheat
+cakes and maple syrup&#8212;we got their out-door togs on them, while
+they were all stamping and shouting round and had to be caught and
+overcoated, and fur-capped and hooded simultaneously, and managed to get
+them into the street together. Ever been in Bethlehem?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We all had to own our neglect of this piece of travel; and Newton,
+after a moment of silent forgiveness, said:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t know how it is now, but twenty-five or
+thirty years ago it was the most interesting town in America. It
+wasn&#8217;t the old Moravian community that it had been twenty-five
+years before that, when none but Moravians could buy property there; but
+it was like the Sun Hotel, and just as that had grown round and over the
+old Sun Inn, the prosperous manufacturing town, with its iron-foundries
+and zinc-foundries, and all the rest of it, had grown round and over the
+original Moravian village. If you wanted a breath of perfect
+strangeness, with an American quality in it at the same time, you
+couldn&#8217;t have gone to any place where you could have had it on
+such terms as you could in Bethlehem. I can&#8217;t begin to go into
+details, but one thing was hearing German spoken everywhere in the
+street: not the German of Germany, but the Pennsylvania German, with its
+broad vowels and broken-down grammatical forms, and its English vocables
+and interjections, which you caught in the sentences which came to you,
+like <i>av coorse</i>, and <i>yes</i> and <i>no</i> for <i>ja</i> and <i>nein</i>. There were
+stores where they spoke no English, and others where they made a
+specialty of it; and I suppose when we sallied out that bright Sunday
+morning, with the baby holding onto a hand of each of us between us, and
+the twins going in front with their brother and sister, we were almost
+as foreign as we should have been in a village on the Rhine or the
+Elbe.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We got a little acquainted with the people, after awhile, and
+I heard some stories of the country folks that I thought were pretty
+good. One was about an old German farmer on whose land a prospecting
+metallurgist found zinc ore; the scientific man brought him the bright
+yellow button by which the zinc proved its existence in its union with
+copper, and the old fellow asked in an awestricken whisper: &#8216;Is it
+a gold-mine?&#8217; &#8216;No, no. Guess again.&#8217; &#8216;Then
+it&#8217;s a <em>brass-mine</em>!&#8217; But before they began to find
+zinc there in the lovely Lehigh Valley&#8212;you can stand by an open
+zinc-mine and look down into it where the rock and earth are left
+standing, and you seem to be looking down into a range of sharp mountain
+peaks and pinnacles&#8212;it was the richest farming region in the whole
+fat State of Pennsylvania; and there was a young farmer who owned a vast
+tract of it, and who went to fetch home a young wife from Philadelphia
+way, somewhere. He drove there and back in his own buggy, and when he
+reached the top overlooking the valley, with his bride, he stopped his
+horse, and pointed with his whip. &#8216;There,&#8217; he said,
+&#8216;as far as the sky is blue, it&#8217;s all ours!&#8217; I thought
+that was fine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fine?&#8221; I couldn&#8217;t help bursting out;
+&#8220;it&#8217;s a stroke of poetry.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver cut in: &#8220;The thrifty Acton making a note of it for
+future use in literature.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Eh!&#8221; Newton queried. &#8220;Oh! I don&#8217;t mind.
+You&#8217;re welcome to it, Mr. Acton. It&#8217;s a pity somebody
+shouldn&#8217;t use it, and of course <em>I</em> can&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Acton will send you a copy with the usual forty-per-cent.
+discount and ten off for cash,&#8221; the painter said.</p>
+
+<p>They had their little laugh at my expense, and then Newton took up
+his tale again. &#8220;Well, as I was saying&#8212;By the way, what
+<em>was</em> I saying?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The story-loving Rulledge remembered. &#8220;You went out with your
+wife and children for Easter eggs.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes. Thank you. Well, of course, in a town geographically
+American, the shops were all shut on Sunday, and we couldn&#8217;t buy
+even an Easter egg on Easter Sunday. But one of the stores had the shade
+of its show-window up, and the children simply glued themselves to it in
+such a fascination that we could hardly unstick them. That window was
+full of all kinds of Easter things&#8212;I don&#8217;t remember what
+all; but there were Easter eggs in every imaginable color and pattern,
+and besides these there were whole troops of toy rabbits. I had
+forgotten that the natural offspring of Easter eggs is rabbits; but I
+took a brace, and remembered the fact and announced it to the children.
+They immediately demanded an explanation, with all sorts of scientific
+particulars, which I gave them, as reckless of the truth as I thought my
+wife would suffer without contradicting me. I had to say that while
+Easter eggs mostly hatched rabbits, there were instances in which they
+hatched other things, as, for instance, handfuls of eagles and
+half-eagles and double-eagles, especially in the case of the golden eggs
+that the goose laid. They knew all about that goose; but I had to tell
+them what those unfamiliar pieces of American coinage were, and promise
+to give them one each when they grew up, if they were good. That only
+partially satisfied them, and they wanted to know specifically what
+other kinds of things Easter eggs would hatch if properly treated. Each
+one had a preference; the baby always preferred what the last one said;
+and <em>she</em> wanted an ostrich, the same as her big brother; he was
+seven then.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t really know how we lived through the day; I mean
+the children, for my wife and I went to the Moravian church, and had a
+good long Sunday nap in the afternoon, while the children were pining
+for Monday morning, when they could buy eggs and begin to color them, so
+that they could hatch just the right kind of Easter things. When I woke
+up I had to fall in with a theory they had agreed to between them that
+any kind of two-legged or four-legged chick that hatched from an Easter
+egg would wear the same color, or the same kind of spots or stripes,
+that the egg had.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I found that they had arranged to have calico eggs, and they
+were going to have their mother cover them with the same sort of cotton
+prints that I had said my grandmother and aunts used, and they meant to
+buy the calico in the morning at the same time that they bought the
+eggs. We had some tin vessels of water on our stoves to take the dryness
+out of the hot air, and they had decided that they would boil their eggs
+in these, and not trouble the landlord for the use of his kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There was nothing in this scheme wanting but their
+mother&#8217;s consent&#8212;I agreed to it on the spot&#8212;but when
+she understood that they each expected to have two eggs apiece, with one
+apiece for us, she said she never could cover a dozen eggs in the world,
+and that the only way would be for them to go in the morning with us,
+and choose each the handsomest egg they could out of the eggs in that
+shop-window. They met this proposition rather blankly at first; but on
+reflection the big brother said it would be a shame to spoil
+mamma&#8217;s Easter by making her work all day, and besides it would
+keep till that night, anyway, before they could begin to have any fun
+with their eggs; and then the rest all said the same thing, ending with
+the baby: and accepted the inevitable with joy, and set about living
+through the day as well as they could.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They had us up pretty early the next morning&#8212;that is,
+they had me up; their mother said that I had brought it on myself, and
+richly deserved it for exciting their imaginations, and I had to go out
+with the two oldest and the twins to choose the eggs; we got off from
+the baby by promising to let her have two, and she didn&#8217;t
+understand very well, anyway, and was awfully sleepy. We were a pretty
+long time choosing the six eggs, and I don&#8217;t remember now just
+what they were; but they were certainly joyous eggs; and&#8212;By the
+way, I don&#8217;t know why I&#8217;m boring a brand of hardened
+bachelors like you with all these domestic details?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t mind <em>us</em>,&#8221; Minver responded to
+his general appeal. &#8220;We may not understand the feelings of a
+father, but we are all mothers at heart, especially Rulledge. Go on.
+It&#8217;s very exciting,&#8221; he urged, not very ironically, and
+Newton went on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t believe I could say just how the havoc
+began. They put away their eggs very carefully after they had made their
+mother admire them, and shown the baby how hers were the prettiest, and
+they each said in succession that they must be very precious of them,
+for if you shook an egg, or anything, it wouldn&#8217;t hatch; and it
+was their plan to take these home and set an unemployed pullet,
+belonging to the big brother, to hatching them in the coop that he had
+built of laths for her in the back yard with his own hands. But long
+before the afternoon was over, the evil one had entered Eden, and
+tempted the boy to try fighting eggs with these treasured specimens, as
+I had told we boys used to fight eggs in my town in the southwest. He
+held a conquering course through the encounter with three eggs, but met
+his Waterloo with a regular Bl&#252;cher belonging to the baby. Then he
+instantly changed sides; and smashed his Bl&#252;cher against the last egg
+left. By that time all the other children were in tears, the baby
+roaring powerfully in ignorant sympathy, and the victor steeped in
+silent gloom. His mother made him gather up the ruins from the floor,
+and put them in the stove, and she took possession of the victorious
+egg, and said she would keep it till we got back to Cambridge herself,
+and not let one of them touch it. I can tell you it was a tragical time.
+I wanted to go out and buy them another set of eggs, and spring them for
+a surprise on them in the morning, after they had suffered enough that
+night. But she said that if I dared to dream of such a thing&#8212;which
+would be the ruin of the children&#8217;s character, by taking away the
+consequences of their folly&#8212;she should do, she did not know what,
+to me. Of course she was right, and I gave in, and helped the children
+forget all about it, so that by the time we got back to Cambridge I had
+forgotten about it myself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what it was reminded the boy of that
+remaining Easter egg unless it was the sight of the unemployed pullet in
+her coop, which he visited the first thing; and I don&#8217;t know how
+he managed to wheedle his mother out of it; but the first night after I
+came home from business&#8212;it was rather late and the children had
+gone to bed&#8212;she told me that ridiculous boy, as she called him in
+self-exculpation, had actually put the egg under his pullet, and all the
+children were wild to see what it would hatch. &#8216;And now,&#8217;
+she said, severely, &#8216;what are you going to do? You have filled
+their heads with those ideas, and I suppose you will have to invent some
+nonsense or other to fool them, and make them believe that it has
+hatched a giraffe, or an elephant, or something; they won&#8217;t be
+satisfied with anything less.&#8217; I said we should have to try
+something smaller, for I didn&#8217;t think we could manage a chick of
+that size on our lot; and that I should trust in Providence. Then she
+said it was all very well to laugh; and that I couldn&#8217;t get out of
+it that way, and I needn&#8217;t think it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t, much. But the children understood that it took
+three weeks for an egg to hatch, and anyway the pullet was so
+intermittent in her attentions to the Easter egg, only sitting on it at
+night, or when held down by hand in the day, that there was plenty of
+time. One evening when I came out from Boston, I was met by a doleful
+deputation at the front gate, with the news that when the coop was
+visited that morning after breakfast&#8212;they visited the coop every
+morning before they went to school&#8212;the pullet was found perched on
+a cross-bar in a high state of nerves, and the shell of the Easter egg
+broken and entirely eaten out. Probably a rat had got in and done it,
+or, more hopefully, a mink, such as used to attack eggs in the town
+where I was a boy. We went out and viewed the wreck, as a first step
+towards a better situation; and suddenly a thought struck me.
+&#8216;Children,&#8217; I said, &#8216;what did you really expect that
+egg to hatch, anyway?&#8217; They looked askance at one another, and at
+last the boy said: &#8216;Well, you know, papa, an egg that&#8217;s been
+cooked&#8212;&#8217; And then we all laughed together, and I knew they
+had been making believe as much as I had, and no more expected the
+impossible of a boiled egg than I did.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was charming!&#8221; Wanhope broke out. &#8220;There is
+nothing more interesting than the way children join in hypnotizing
+themselves with the illusions which their parents think <em>they</em>
+have created without their help. In fact, it is very doubtful whether at
+any age we have any illusions except those of our own creation;
+we&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let him go on, Wanhope,&#8221; Minver dictated; and Newton
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was rather nice. I asked them if their mother knew about
+the egg; and they said that of course they couldn&#8217;t help telling
+her; and I said: &#8216;Well, then, I&#8217;ll tell you what: we must
+make her believe that the chick hatched out and got away&#8212;&#8217;
+The boy stopped me: &#8216;Do you think that would be exactly true,
+papa?&#8217; &#8216;Well, not <em>exactly</em> true; but it&#8217;s only
+for the time being. We can tell her the exact truth afterwards,&#8217;
+and then I laid my plan before them. They said it was perfectly
+splendid, and would be the greatest kind of joke on mamma, and one that
+she would like as much as anybody. The thing was to keep it from her
+till it was done, and they all promised that they wouldn&#8217;t tell;
+but I could see that they were bursting with the secret the whole
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The next day was Saturday, when I always went home early, and
+I had the two oldest children come in with the second-girl, who left
+them to take lunch with me. They had chocolate and ice-cream, and after
+lunch we went around to a milliner&#8217;s shop in West Street, where my
+wife and I had stopped a long five minutes the week before we went to
+Bethlehem, adoring an Easter bonnet that we saw in the window. I wanted
+her to buy it; but she said, No, if we were going that expensive
+journey, we couldn&#8217;t afford it, and she must do without, that
+spring. I showed it to them, and &#8216;Now, children,&#8217; I said,
+&#8216;what do you think of that for the chick that your Easter egg
+hatched?&#8217; And they said it was the most beautiful bonnet they had
+ever seen, and it would just exactly suit mamma. But I saw they were
+holding something back, and I said, sharply, &#8216;Well?&#8217; and
+they both guiltily faltered out: &#8216;The <em>bird</em>, you know,
+papa,&#8217; and I remembered that they belonged to the society of Bird
+Defenders, who in that day were pledged against the decorative use of
+dead birds or killing them for anything but food. &#8216;Why, confound
+it,&#8217; I said, &#8216;the bird is the very thing that makes it an
+Easter-egg chick!&#8217; but I saw that their honest little hearts were
+troubled, and I said again: &#8216;Confound it! Let&#8217;s go in and
+hear what the milliner has to say.&#8217; Well, the long and short of it
+was that the milliner tried a bunch of forget-me-nots over the bluebird
+that we all agreed was a thousand times better, and that if it were
+substituted would only cost three dollars more, and we took our
+Easter-egg chick home in a blaze of glory, the children carrying the
+bandbox by the string between them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course we had a great time opening it, and their mother
+acted her part so well that I knew she was acting, and after the little
+ones were in bed I taxed her with it. &#8216;Know? Of course I
+knew!&#8217; she said. &#8216;Did you think they would let you
+<em>deceive</em> me? They&#8217;re true New-Englanders, and they told me
+all about it last night, when I was saying their prayers with
+them.&#8217; &#8216;Well,&#8217; I said, &#8216;they let you deceive
+<em>me;</em> they must be true Westerners, too, for they didn&#8217;t
+tell me a word of your knowing.&#8217; I rather had her there, but she
+said: &#8216;Oh, you goose&#8212;&#8217; We were young people in those
+days, and goose meant everything. But, really, I&#8217;m ashamed of
+getting off all this to you hardened bachelors, as I said
+before&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you tell many more such stories in this club,&#8221; Minver
+said, severely, &#8220;you won&#8217;t leave a bachelor in it. And
+Rulledge will be the first to get married.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>The End</h2>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12100 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12100 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12100)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Between The Dark And The Daylight
+by William Dean Howells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Between The Dark And The Daylight
+
+Author: William Dean Howells
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2004 [EBook #12100]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BETWEEN THE DARK AND THE DAYLIGHT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Beginners Projects, Ben Beasley and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER
+DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT]
+
+BETWEEN THE DARK
+AND THE DAYLIGHT
+
+Romances
+
+BY
+W.D. HOWELLS
+1907
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAP.
+I. A SLEEP AND A FORGETTING
+II. THE EIDOLONS OF BROOKS ALFORD
+III. A MEMORY THAT WORKED OVERTIME
+IV. A CASE OF METAPHANTASMIA
+V. EDITHA
+VI. BRAYBRIDGE'S OFFER
+VII. THE CHICK OF THE EASTER EGG
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT
+
+A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE LIVELY GIRLS SHE
+BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM
+
+"SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... 'NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE, EXCEPT--'"
+
+"NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY MARK"
+
+"'YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!'"
+
+"SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. 'WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON FOR?'"
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+A SLEEP AND A FORGETTING
+
+
+I
+
+Matthew Lanfear had stopped off, between Genoa and Nice, at San Remo in
+the interest of a friend who had come over on the steamer with him, and
+who wished him to test the air before settling there for the winter with
+an invalid wife. She was one of those neurasthenics who really carry
+their climate--always a bad one--with them, but she had set her mind on
+San Remo; and Lanfear was willing to pass a few days in the place making
+the observations which he felt pretty sure would be adverse.
+
+His train was rather late, and the sunset was fading from the French sky
+beyond the Italian shore when he got out of his car and looked round for
+a porter to take his valise. His roving eye lighted on the anxious
+figure, which as fully as the anxious face, of a short, stout, elderly
+man expressed a sort of distraction, as he stood loaded down with
+umbrellas, bags, bundles, and wraps, and seemed unable to arrest the
+movements of a tall young girl, with a travelling-shawl trailing from
+her arm, who had the effect of escaping from him towards a bench beside
+the door of the waiting-room. When she reached it, in spite of his
+appeals, she sat down with an absent air, and looked as far withdrawn
+from the bustle of the platform and from the snuffling train as if on
+some quiet garden seat along with her own thoughts.
+
+In his fat frenzy, which Lanfear felt to be pathetic, the old gentleman
+glanced at him, and then abruptly demanded: "Are you an American?"
+
+We knew each other abroad in some mystical way, and Lanfear did not try
+to deny the fact.
+
+"Oh, well, then," the stranger said, as if the fact made everything
+right, "will you kindly tell my daughter, on that bench by the door
+yonder"--he pointed with a bag, and dropped a roll of rugs from under
+his arm--"that I'll be with her as soon as I've looked after the trunks?
+Tell her not to move till I come. Heigh! Here! Take hold of these, will
+you?" He caught the sleeve of a _facchino_ who came wandering by, and
+heaped him with his burdens, and then pushed ahead of the man in the
+direction of the baggage-room with a sort of mastery of the situation
+which struck Lanfear as springing from desperation rather than
+experience.
+
+Lanfear stood a moment hesitating. Then a glance at the girl on the
+bench, drooping a little forward in freeing her face from the veil that
+hung from her pretty hat, together with a sense of something quaintly
+charming in the confidence shown him on such purely compatriotic
+grounds, decided him to do just what he had been asked. The girl had got
+her veil up by this time, and as he came near, she turned from looking
+at the sunset over the stretch of wall beyond the halting train, and met
+his dubious face with a smile.
+
+"It _is_ beautiful, isn't it?" she said. "I know I shall get well, here,
+if they have such sunsets every day."
+
+There was something so convincingly normal in her expression that
+Lanfear dismissed a painful conjecture. "I beg your pardon," he said.
+"I am afraid there's some mistake. I haven't the pleasure--You must
+excuse me, but your father wished me to ask you to wait here for him
+till he had got his baggage--"
+
+"My father?" the girl stopped him with a sort of a frowning perplexity
+in the stare she gave him. "My father isn't here!"
+
+"I beg your pardon," Lanfear said. "I must have misunderstood. A
+gentleman who got out of the train with you--a short, stout gentleman
+with gray hair--I understood him to say you were his daughter--requested
+me to bring this message--"
+
+The girl shook her head. "I don't know him. It must be a mistake."
+
+"The mistake is mine, no doubt. It may have been some one else whom he
+pointed out, and I have blundered. I'm very sorry if I seem to have
+intruded--"
+
+"What place is this?" the girl asked, without noticing his excuses.
+
+"San Remo," Lanfear answered. "If you didn't intend to stop here, your
+train will be leaving in a moment."
+
+"I meant to get off, I suppose," she said. "I don't believe I'm going
+any farther." She leaned back against the bars of the bench, and put up
+one of her slim arms along the top.
+
+There was something wrong. Lanfear now felt that, in spite of her
+perfect tranquillity and self-possession; perhaps because of it. He had
+no business to stay there talking with her, but he had not quite the
+right to leave her, though practically he had got his dismissal, and
+apparently she was quite capable of taking care of herself, or could
+have been so in a country where any woman's defencelessness was not any
+man's advantage. He could not go away without some effort to be of use.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said. "Can I help you in calling a carriage; or
+looking after your hand-baggage--it will be getting dark--perhaps your
+maid--"
+
+"My _maid_!" The girl frowned again, with a measure of the amazement
+which she showed when he mentioned her father. "_I_ have no maid!"
+
+Lanfear blurted desperately out: "You are alone? You came--you are going
+to stay here--alone?"
+
+"Quite alone," she said, with a passivity in which there was no
+resentment, and no feeling unless it were a certain color of dignity.
+Almost at the same time, with a glance beside and beyond him, she called
+out joyfully: "Ah, there you are!" and Lanfear turned, and saw scuffling
+and heard puffing towards them the short, stout elderly gentleman who
+had sent him to her. "I knew you would come before long!"
+
+"Well, I thought it was pretty long, myself," the gentleman said, and
+then he courteously referred himself to Lanfear. "I'm afraid this
+gentleman has found it rather long, too; but I couldn't manage it a
+moment sooner."
+
+Lanfear said: "Not at all. I wish I could have been of any use to--"
+
+"My daughter--Miss Gerald, Mr.--"
+
+"Lanfear--Dr. Lanfear," he said, accepting the introduction; and the
+girl bowed.
+
+"Oh, doctor, eh?" the father said, with a certain impression. "Going to
+stop here?"
+
+"A few days," Lanfear answered, making way for the forward movement
+which the others began.
+
+"Well, well! I'm very much obliged to you, very much, indeed; and I'm
+sure my daughter is."
+
+The girl said, "Oh yes, indeed," rather indifferently, and then as they
+passed him, while he stood lifting his hat, she turned radiantly on him.
+"Thank you, ever so much!" she said, with the gentle voice which he had
+already thought charming.
+
+The father called back: "I hope we shall meet again. We are going to the
+Sardegna."
+
+Lanfear had been going to the Sardegna himself, but while he bowed he
+now decided upon another hotel.
+
+The mystery, whatever it was, that the brave, little, fat father was
+carrying off so bluffly, had clearly the morbid quality of unhealth in
+it, and Lanfear could not give himself freely to a young pleasure in the
+girl's dark beauty of eyes and hair, her pale, irregular, piquant face,
+her slender figure and flowing walk. He was in the presence of something
+else, something that appealed to his scientific side, to that which was
+humane more than that which was human in him, and abashed him in the
+other feeling. Unless she was out of her mind there was no way of
+accounting for her behavior, except by some caprice which was itself
+scarcely short of insanity. She must have thought she knew him when he
+approached, and when she addressed him those first words; but when he
+had tried to set her right she had not changed; and why had she denied
+her father, and then hailed him with joy when he came back to her? She
+had known that she intended to stop at San Remo, but she had not known
+where she had stopped when she asked what place it was. She was
+consciously an invalid of some sort, for she spoke of getting well under
+sunsets like that which had now waned, but what sort of invalid was she?
+
+
+II
+
+Lanfear's question persisted through the night, and it helped, with the
+coughing in the next room, to make a bad night for him. None of the
+hotels in San Remo receive consumptive patients, but none are without
+somewhere a bronchial cough. If it is in the room next yours it keeps
+you awake, but it is not pulmonary; you may comfort yourself in your
+vigils with that fact. Lanfear, however, fancied he had got a poor
+dinner, and in the morning he did not like his coffee. He thought he had
+let a foolish scruple keep him from the Grand Hotel Sardegna, and he
+walked down towards it along the palm-flanked promenade, in the gay
+morning light, with the tideless sea on the other hand lapping the rough
+beach beyond the lines of the railroad which borders it. On his way he
+met files of the beautiful Ligurian women, moving straight under the
+burdens balanced on their heads, or bestriding the donkeys laden with
+wine-casks in the roadway, or following beside the carts which the
+donkeys drew. Ladies of all nations, in the summer fashions of London,
+Berlin, St. Petersburg, Paris, and New York thronged the path. The sky
+was of a blue so deep, so liquid that it seemed to him he could scoop it
+in his hand and pour it out again like water. Seaward, he glanced at the
+fishing-boats lying motionless in the offing, and the coastwise steamer
+that runs between Nice and Genoa trailing a thin plume of smoke between
+him and their white sails. With the more definite purpose of making sure
+of the Grand Hotel Sardegna, he scanned the different villa slopes that
+showed their level lines of white and yellow and dull pink through the
+gray tropical greenery on the different levels of the hills. He was duly
+rewarded by the sight of the bold legend topping its cornice, and when
+he let his eye descend the garden to a little pavilion on the wall
+overlooking the road, he saw his acquaintances of the evening before
+making a belated breakfast. The father recognized Lanfear first and
+spoke to his daughter, who looked up from her coffee and down towards
+him where he wavered, lifting his hat, and bowed smiling to him. He had
+no reason to cross the roadway towards the white stairway which climbed
+from it to the hotel grounds, but he did so. The father leaned out over
+the wall, and called down to him: "Won't you come up and join us,
+doctor?"
+
+"Why, yes!" Lanfear consented, and in another moment he was shaking
+hands with the girl, to whom, he noticed, her father named him again. He
+had in his glad sense of her white morning dress and her hat of
+green-leafed lace, a feeling that she was somehow meeting him as a
+friend of indefinite date in an intimacy unconditioned by any past or
+future time. Her pleasure in his being there was as frank as her
+father's, and there was a pretty trust of him in every word and tone
+which forbade misinterpretation.
+
+"I was just talking about you, doctor," the father began, "and saying
+what a pity you hadn't come to our hotel. It's a capital place."
+
+"_I've_ been thinking it was a pity I went to mine," Lanfear returned,
+"though I'm in San Remo for such a short time it's scarcely worth while
+to change."
+
+"Well, perhaps if you came here, you might stay longer. I guess we're
+booked for the winter, Nannie?" He referred the question to his
+daughter, who asked Lanfear if he would not have some coffee.
+
+"I was going to say I had had my coffee, but I'm not sure it _was_
+coffee," Lanfear began, and he consented, with some demur, banal enough,
+about the trouble.
+
+"Well, that's right, then, and no trouble at all," Mr. Gerald broke in
+upon him. "Here comes a fellow looking for a chance to bring you some,"
+and he called to a waiter wandering distractedly about with a "Heigh!"
+that might have been offensive from a less obviously inoffensive man.
+"Can you get our friend here a cup and saucer, and some of this good
+coffee?" he asked, as the waiter approached.
+
+"Yes, certainly, sir," the man answered in careful English. "Is it not,
+perhaps, Mr. and Misses Gerald?" he smilingly insinuated, offering some
+cards.
+
+"Miss Gerald," the father corrected him as he took the cards. "Why,
+hello, Nannie! Here are the Bells! Where are they?" he demanded of the
+waiter. "Bring them here, and a lot more cups and saucers. Or, hold on!
+I'd better go myself, Nannie, hadn't I? Of course! You get the crockery,
+waiter. Where did you say they were?" He bustled up from his chair,
+without waiting for a distinct reply, and apologized to Lanfear in
+hurrying away. "You'll excuse me, doctor! I'll be back in half a minute.
+Friends of ours that came over on the same boat. I must see them, of
+course, but I don't believe they'll stay. Nannie, don't let Dr. Lanfear
+get away. I want to have some talk with him. You tell him he'd better
+come to the Sardegna, here."
+
+Lanfear and Miss Gerald sat a moment in the silence which is apt to
+follow with young people when they are unexpectedly left to themselves.
+She kept absently pushing the cards her father had given her up and down
+on the table between her thumb and forefinger, and Lanfear noted the
+translucence of her long, thin hand in the sunshine striking across the
+painted iron surface of the garden movable. The translucence had a
+pathos for his intelligence which the pensive tilt of her head enhanced.
+She stopped toying with the cards, and looked at the addresses on them.
+
+"What strange things names are!" she said, as if musing on the fact,
+with a sigh which he thought disproportioned to the depth of her
+remark.
+
+"They seem rather irrelevant at times," he admitted, with a smile.
+"They're mere tags, labels, which can be attached to one as well as
+another; they seem to belong equally to anybody."
+
+"That is what I always say to myself," she agreed, with more interest
+than he found explicable.
+
+"But finally," he returned, "they're all that's left us, if they're left
+themselves. They are the only signs to the few who knew us that we ever
+existed. They stand for our characters, our personality, our mind, our
+soul."
+
+She said, "That is very true," and then she suddenly gave him the cards.
+"Do you know these people?"
+
+"I? I thought they were friends of yours," he replied, astonished.
+
+[Illustration: A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE
+LIVELY GIRLS SHE BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM]
+
+"That is what papa thinks," Miss Gerald said, and while she sat dreamily
+absent, a rustle of skirts and a flutter of voices pierced from the
+surrounding shrubbery, and then a lively matron, of as youthful a
+temperament as the lively girls she brought in her train, burst upon
+them, and Miss Gerald was passed from one embrace to another until all
+four had kissed her. She returned their greeting, and shared, in her
+quieter way, their raptures at their encounter.
+
+"Such a hunt as we've had for you!" the matron shouted. "We've been
+up-stairs and down-stairs and in my lady's chamber, all over the hotel.
+Where's your father? Ah, they did get our cards to you!" and by that
+token Lanfear knew that these ladies were the Bells. He had stood up in
+a sort of expectancy, but Miss Gerald did not introduce him, and a
+shadow of embarrassment passed over the party which she seemed to feel
+least, though he fancied a sort of entreaty in the glance that she let
+pass over him.
+
+"I suppose he's gone to look for _us_!" Mrs. Bell saved the situation
+with a protecting laugh. Miss Gerald colored intelligently, and Lanfear
+could not let Mrs. Bell's implication pass.
+
+"If it is Mrs. Bell," he said, "I can answer that he has. I met you at
+Magnolia some years ago, Mrs. Bell. Dr. Lanfear."
+
+"Oh, I beg your pardon, Dr. Lanfear," Miss Gerald said. "I couldn't
+think--"
+
+"Of my tag, my label?" he laughed back. "It isn't very distinctly
+lettered."
+
+Mrs. Bell was not much minding them jointly. She was singling Lanfear
+out for the expression of her pleasure in seeing him again, and
+recalling the incidents of her summer at Magnolia before, it seemed, any
+of her girls were out. She presented them collectively, and the eldest
+of them charmingly reminded Lanfear that he had once had the magnanimity
+to dance with her when she sat, in a little girl's forlorn despair of
+being danced with, at one of those desolate hops of the good old Osprey
+House.
+
+"Yes; and now," her mother followed, "we can't wait a moment longer, if
+we're to get our train for Monte Carlo, girls. We're not going to play,
+doctor," she made time to explain, "but we are going to look on. Will
+you tell your father, dear," she said, taking the girl's hands
+caressingly in hers, and drawing her to her motherly bosom, "that we
+found you, and did our best to find him? We can't wait now--our carriage
+is champing the bit at the foot of the stairs--but we're coming back in
+a week, and then we'll do our best to look you up again." She included
+Lanfear in her good-bye, and all her girls said good-bye in the same
+way, and with a whisking of skirts and twitter of voices they vanished
+through the shrubbery, and faded into the general silence and general
+sound like a bevy of birds which had swept near and passed by.
+
+Miss Gerald sank quietly into her place, and sat as if nothing had
+happened, except that she looked a little paler to Lanfear, who remained
+on foot trying to piece together their interrupted tête-à-tête, but not
+succeeding, when her father reappeared, red and breathless, and wiping
+his forehead. "Have they been here, Nannie?" he asked. "I've been
+following them all over the place, and the _portier_ told me just now
+that he had seen a party of ladies coming down this way."
+
+He got it all out, not so clearly as those women had got everything in,
+Lanfear reflected, but unmistakably enough as to the fact, and he looked
+at his daughter as he repeated: "Haven't the Bells been here?"
+
+[Illustration: "SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... 'NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE,
+EXCEPT--'"]
+
+She shook her head, and said, with her delicate quiet: "Nobody has been
+here, except--" She glanced at Lanfear, who smiled, but saw no opening
+for himself in the strange situation. Then she said: "I think I will go
+and lie down a while, now, papa. I'm rather tired. Good-bye," she said,
+giving Lanfear her hand; it felt limp and cold; and then she turned to
+her father again. "Don't you come, papa! I can get back perfectly well
+by myself. Stay with--"
+
+"I will go with you," her father said, "and if Dr. Lanfear doesn't mind
+coming--"
+
+"Certainly I will come," Lanfear said, and he passed to the girl's
+right; she had taken her father's arm; but he wished to offer more
+support if it were needed. When they had climbed to the open flowery
+space before the hotel, she seemed aware of the groups of people about.
+She took her hand from her father's arm, as if unwilling to attract
+their notice by seeming to need its help, and swept up the gravelled
+path between him and Lanfear, with her flowing walk.
+
+Her father fell back, as they entered the hotel door, and murmured to
+Lanfear: "Will you wait till I come down?" ... "I wanted to tell you
+about my daughter," he explained, when he came back after the quarter of
+an hour which Lanfear had found rather intense. "It's useless to pretend
+you wouldn't have noticed--Had nobody been with you after I left you,
+down there?" He twisted his head in the direction of the pavilion, where
+they had been breakfasting.
+
+"Yes; Mrs. Bell and her daughters," Lanfear answered, simply.
+
+"Of course! Why do you suppose my daughter denied it?" Mr. Gerald asked.
+
+"I suppose she--had her reasons," Lanfear answered, lamely enough.
+
+"No _reason_, I'm afraid," Mr. Gerald said, and he broke out hopelessly:
+"She has her mind sound enough, but not--not her memory. She had
+forgotten that they were there! Are you going to stay in San Remo?" he
+asked, with an effect of interrupting himself, as if in the wish to put
+off something, or to make the ground sure before he went on.
+
+"Why," Lanfear said, "I hadn't thought of it. I stopped--I was going to
+Nice--to test the air for a friend who wishes to bring his invalid wife
+here, if I approve--but I have just been asking myself why I should go
+to Nice when I could stay at San Remo. The place takes my fancy. I'm
+something of an invalid myself--at least I'm on my vacation--and I find
+a charm in it, if nothing better. Perhaps a charm is enough. It used to
+be, in primitive medicine."
+
+He was talking to what he felt was not an undivided attention in Mr.
+Gerald, who said, "I'm glad of it," and then added: "I should like to
+consult you professionally. I know your reputation in New York--though
+I'm not a New-Yorker myself--and I don't know any of the doctors here. I
+suppose I've done rather a wild thing in coming off the way I have,
+with my daughter; but I felt that I must do something, and I hoped--I
+felt as if it were getting away from our trouble. It's most fortunate my
+meeting you, if you can look into the case, and help me out with a
+nurse, if she's needed, and all that!" To a certain hesitation in
+Lanfear's face, he added: "Of course, I'm asking your professional help.
+My name is Abner Gerald--Abner L. Gerald--perhaps you know my standing,
+and that I'm able to--"
+
+"Oh, it isn't a question of that! I shall be glad to do anything I can,"
+Lanfear said, with a little pang which he tried to keep silent in
+orienting himself anew towards the girl, whose loveliness he had felt
+before he had felt her piteousness.
+
+"But before you go further I ought to say that you must have been
+thinking of my uncle, the first Matthew Lanfear, when you spoke of my
+reputation; I haven't got any yet; I've only got my uncle's name."
+
+"Oh!" Mr. Gerald said, disappointedly, but after a blank moment he
+apparently took courage. "You're in the same line, though?"
+
+"If you mean the psychopathic line, without being exactly an alienist,
+well, yes," Lanfear admitted.
+
+"That's exactly what I mean," the elder said, with renewed hopefulness.
+"I'm quite willing to risk myself with a man of the same name as Dr.
+Lanfear. I should like," he said, hurrying on, as if to override any
+further reluctance of Lanfear's, "to tell you her story, and then--"
+
+"By all means," Lanfear consented, and he put on an air of professional
+deference, while the older man began with a face set for the task.
+
+"It's a long story, or it's a short story, as you choose to make it.
+We'll make it long, if necessary, later, but now I'll make it short.
+Five months ago my wife was killed before my daughter's eyes--"
+
+He stopped; Lanfear breathed a gentle "Oh!" and Gerald blurted out:
+
+"Accident--grade crossing--Don't!" he winced at the kindness in
+Lanfear's eyes, and panted on. "That's over! What happened to _her_--to
+my daughter--was that she fainted from the shock. When she woke--it was
+more like a sleep than a swoon--she didn't remember what had happened."
+Lanfear nodded, with a gravely interested face. "She didn't remember
+anything that had ever happened before. She knew me, because I was there
+with her; but she didn't know that she ever had a mother, because she
+was not there with her. You see?"
+
+"I can imagine," Lanfear assented.
+
+"The whole of her life before the--accident was wiped out as to the
+facts, as completely as if it had never been; and now every day, every
+hour, every minute, as it passes, goes with that past. But her
+faculties--"
+
+"Yes?" Lanfear prompted in the pause which Mr. Gerald made.
+
+"Her intellect--the working powers of her mind, apart from anything like
+remembering, are as perfect as if she were in full possession of her
+memory. I believe," the father said, with a pride that had its pathos,
+"no one can talk with her and not feel that she has a beautiful mind,
+that she can think better than most girls of her age. She reads, or she
+lets me read to her, and until it has time to fade, she appreciates it
+all more fully than I do. At Genoa, where I took her to the palaces for
+the pictures, I saw that she had kept her feeling for art. When she
+plays--you will hear her play--it is like composing the music for
+herself; she does not seem to remember the pieces, she seems to
+improvise them. You understand?"
+
+Lanfear said that he understood, for he could not disappoint the
+expectation of the father's boastful love: all that was left him of the
+ambitions he must once have had for his child.
+
+The poor, little, stout, unpicturesque elderly man got up and began to
+walk to and fro in the room which he had turned into with Lanfear, and
+to say, more to himself than to Lanfear, as if balancing one thing
+against another: "The merciful thing is that she has been saved from the
+horror and the sorrow. She knows no more of either than she knows of her
+mother's love for her. They were very much alike in looks and mind, and
+they were always together more like persons of the same age--sisters, or
+girl friends; but she has lost all knowledge of that, as of other
+things. And then there is the question whether she won't some time,
+sooner or later, come into both the horror and the sorrow." He stopped
+and looked at Lanfear. "She has these sudden fits of drowsiness, when
+she _must_ sleep; and I never see her wake from them without being
+afraid that she has wakened to everything--that she has got back into
+her full self, and taken up the terrible burden that my old shoulders
+are used to. What do you think?"
+
+Lanfear felt the appeal so keenly that in the effort to answer
+faithfully he was aware of being harsher than he meant. "That is a
+chance we can't forecast. But it is a chance. The fact that the
+drowsiness recurs periodically--"
+
+"It doesn't," the father pleaded. "We don't know when it will come on."
+
+"It scarcely matters. The periodicity wouldn't affect the possible
+result which you dread. I don't say that it is probable. But it's one
+of the possibilities. It has," Lanfear added, "its logic."
+
+"Ah, its logic!"
+
+"Its logic, yes. My business, of course, would be to restore her to
+health at any risk. So far as her mind is affected--"
+
+"Her mind is not affected!" the father retorted.
+
+"I beg your pardon--her memory--it might be restored with her physical
+health. You understand that? It is a chance; it might or it might not
+happen."
+
+The father was apparently facing a risk which he had not squarely faced
+before. "I suppose so," he faltered. After a moment he added, with more
+courage: "You must do the best you can, at any risk."
+
+Lanfear rose, too. He said, with returning kindness in his tones, if not
+his words: "I should like to study the case, Mr. Gerald. It's very
+interesting, and--and--if you'll forgive me--very touching."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+"If you decide to stay in San Remo, I will--Do you suppose I could get
+a room in this hotel? I don't like mine."
+
+"Why, I haven't any doubt you can. Shall we ask?"
+
+
+III
+
+It was from the Hotel Sardegna that Lanfear satisfied his conscience by
+pushing his search for climate on behalf of his friend's neurasthenic
+wife. He decided that Ospedaletti, with a milder air and more sheltered
+seat in its valley of palms, would be better for her than San Remo. He
+wrote his friend to that effect, and then there was no preoccupation to
+hinder him in his devotion to the case of Miss Gerald. He put the case
+first in the order of interest rather purposely, and even with a sense
+of effort, though he could not deny to himself that a like case related
+to a different personality might have been less absorbing. But he tried
+to keep his scientific duty to it pure of that certain painful pleasure
+which, as a young man not much over thirty, he must feel in the strange
+affliction of a young and beautiful girl.
+
+Though there was no present question of medicine, he could be installed
+near her, as the friend that her father insisted upon making him,
+without contravention of the social formalities. His care of her hardly
+differed from that of her father, except that it involved a closer and
+more premeditated study. They did not try to keep her from the sort of
+association which, in a large hotel of the type of the Sardegna, entails
+no sort of obligation to intimacy. They sat together at the long table,
+midway of the dining-room, which maintained the tradition of the old
+table-d'hôte against the small tables ranged along the walls. Gerald had
+an amiable old man's liking for talk, and Lanfear saw that he willingly
+escaped, among their changing companions, from the pressure of his
+anxieties. He left his daughter very much to Lanfear, during these
+excursions, but Lanfear was far from meaning to keep her to himself. He
+thought it better that she should follow her father in his forays among
+their neighbors, and he encouraged her to continue such talk with them
+as she might be brought into. He tried to guard her future encounters
+with them, so that she should not show more than a young girl's usual
+diffidence at a second meeting; and in the frequent substitution of one
+presence for another across the table, she was fairly safe.
+
+A natural light-heartedness, of which he had glimpses from the first,
+returned to her. One night, at the dance given by some of the guests to
+some others, she went through the gayety in joyous triumph. She danced
+mostly with Lanfear, but she had other partners, and she won a pleasing
+popularity by the American quality of her waltzing. Lanfear had already
+noted that her forgetfulness was not always so constant or so inclusive
+as her father had taught him to expect; Mr. Gerald's statement had been
+the large, general fact from which there was sometimes a shrinking in
+the particulars. While the warmth of an agreeable experience lasted, her
+mind kept record of it, slight or full; if the experience were
+unpleasant the memory was more apt to fade at once. After that dance she
+repeated to her father the little compliments paid her, and told him,
+laughing, they were to reward him for sitting up so late as her
+chaperon. Emotions persisted in her consciousness as the tremor lasts in
+a smitten cord, but events left little trace. She retained a sense of
+personalities; she was lastingly sensible of temperaments; but names
+were nothing to her. She could not tell her father who had said the nice
+things to her, and their joint study of her dancing-card did not help
+them out.
+
+Her relation to Lanfear, though it might be a subject of international
+scrutiny, was hardly a subject of censure. He was known as Dr. Lanfear,
+but he was not at first known as her physician; he was conjectured her
+cousin or something like that; he might even be her betrothed in the
+peculiar American arrangement of such affairs. Personally people saw in
+him a serious-looking young man, better dressed and better mannered than
+they thought most Americans, and unquestionably handsomer, with his
+Spanish skin and eyes, and his brown beard of the Vandyke cut which was
+then already beginning to be rather belated.
+
+Other Americans in the hotel were few and transitory; and if the English
+had any mind about Miss Gerald different from their mind about other
+girls, it would be perhaps to the effect that she was quite mad; by this
+they would mean that she was a little odd; but for the rest they had
+apparently no mind about her. With the help of one of the English ladies
+her father had replaced the homesick Irish maid whom he had sent back to
+New York from Genoa, with an Italian, and in the shelter of her gay
+affection and ignorant sympathy Miss Gerald had a security supplemented
+by the easy social environment. If she did not look very well, she did
+not differ from most other American women in that; and if she seemed to
+confide herself more severely to the safe-keeping of her physician, that
+was the way of all women patients.
+
+Whether the Bells found the spectacle of depravity at Monte Carlo more
+attractive than the smiling face of nature at San Remo or not, they did
+not return, but sent for their baggage from their hotel, and were not
+seen again by the Geralds. Lanfear's friend with the invalid wife wrote
+from Ospedaletti, with apologies which inculpated him for the
+disappointment, that she had found the air impossible in a single day,
+and they were off for Cannes. Lanfear and the Geralds, therefore,
+continued together in the hotel without fear or obligation to others,
+and in an immunity in which their right to breakfast exclusively in that
+pavilion on the garden wall was almost explicitly conceded. No one,
+after a few mornings of tacit possession, would have disputed their
+claim, and there, day after day, in the mild monotony of the December
+sunshine, they sat and drank their coffee, and talked of the sights
+which the peasants in the street, and the tourists in the promenade
+beyond it, afforded. The rows of stumpy palms which separated the road
+from the walk were not so high but that they had the whole lift of the
+sea to the horizon where it lost itself in a sky that curved blue as
+turquoise to the zenith overhead. The sun rose from its morning bath on
+the left, and sank to its evening bath on the right, and in making its
+climb of the spacious arc between, shed a heat as great as that of
+summer, but not the heat of summer, on the pretty world of villas and
+hotels, towered over by the olive-gray slopes of the pine-clad heights
+behind and above them. From these tops a fine, keen cold fell with the
+waning afternoon, which sharpened through the sunset till the dusk; but
+in the morning the change was from the chill to the glow, and they could
+sit in their pavilion, under the willowy droop of the eucalyptus-trees
+which have brought the Southern Pacific to the Riviera, with increasing
+comfort.
+
+In the restlessness of an elderly man, Gerald sometimes left the young
+people to their intolerable delays over their coffee, and walked off
+into the little stone and stucco city below, or went and sat with his
+cigar on one of the benches under the palm-lined promenade, which the
+pale northern consumptives shared with the swarthy peasant girls resting
+from their burdens, and the wrinkled grandmothers of their race
+passively or actively begging from the strangers.
+
+While she kept her father in sight it seemed that Miss Gerald could
+maintain her hold of his identity, and one morning she said, with the
+tender fondness for him which touched Lanfear: "When he sits there among
+those sick people and poor people, then he knows they are in the world."
+
+She turned with a question graver in her look than usual, and he said:
+"Yes, we might help them oftener if we could remember that their misery
+was going on all the time, like some great natural process, day or dark,
+heat or cold, which seems to stop when we stop thinking of it. Nothing,
+for us, at least, exists unless it is recalled to us."
+
+"Yes," she said, in her turn, "I have noticed that. But don't you
+sometimes--sometimes"--she knit her forehead, as if to keep her thought
+from escaping--"have a feeling as if what you were doing, or saying, or
+seeing, had all happened before, just as it is now?"
+
+"Oh yes; that occurs to every one."
+
+"But don't you--don't you have hints of things, of ideas, as if you had
+known them, in some previous existence--"
+
+She stopped, and Lanfear recognized, with a kind of impatience, the
+experience which young people make much of when they have it, and
+sometimes pretend to when they have merely heard of it. But there could
+be no pose or pretence in her. He smilingly suggested:
+
+ "'For something is, or something seems,
+ Like glimpses of forgotten dreams.'
+
+These weird impressions are no more than that, probably."
+
+"Ah, I don't believe it," the girl said. "They are too real for that.
+They come too often, and they make me feel as if they would come more
+fully, some time. If there was a life before this--do you believe there
+was?--they may be things that happened there. Or they may be things that
+will happen in a life after this. You believe in _that_, don't you?"
+
+"In a life after this, or their happening in it?"
+
+"Well, both."
+
+Lanfear evaded her, partly. "They could be premonitions, prophecies, of
+a future life, as easily as fragmentary records of a past life. I
+suppose we do not begin to be immortal merely after death."
+
+"No." She lingered out the word in dreamy absence, as if what they had
+been saying had already passed from her thought.
+
+"But, Miss Gerald," Lanfear ventured, "have these impressions of yours
+grown more definite--fuller, as you say--of late?"
+
+"My impressions?" She frowned at him, as if the look of interest, more
+intense than usual in his eyes, annoyed her. "I don't know what you
+mean."
+
+Lanfear felt bound to follow up her lead, whether she wished it or not.
+"A good third of our lives here is passed in sleep. I'm not always sure
+that we are right in treating the mental--for certainly they are
+mental--experiences of that time as altogether trivial, or
+insignificant."
+
+She seemed to understand now, and she protested: "But I don't mean
+dreams. I mean things that really happened, or that really will happen."
+
+"Like something you can give me an instance of? Are they painful things,
+or pleasant, mostly?"
+
+She hesitated. "They are things that you know happen to other people,
+but you can't believe would ever happen to you."
+
+"Do they come when you are just drowsing, or just waking from a drowse?"
+
+"They are not dreams," she said, almost with vexation.
+
+"Yes, yes, I understand," he hesitated to retrieve himself. "But _I_
+have had floating illusions, just before I fell asleep, or when I was
+sensible of not being quite awake, which seemed to differ from dreams.
+They were not so dramatic, but they were more pictorial; they were more
+visual than the things in dreams."
+
+"Yes," she assented. "They are something like that. But I should not
+call them illusions."
+
+"No. And they represent scenes, events?"
+
+"You said yourself they were not dramatic."
+
+"I meant, represent pictorially."
+
+"No; they are like the landscape that flies back from your train or
+towards it. I can't explain it," she ended, rising with what he felt a
+displeasure in his pursuit.
+
+
+IV
+
+He reported what had passed to her father when Mr. Gerald came back from
+his stroll into the town, with his hands full of English papers; Gerald
+had even found a New York paper at the news-stand; and he listened with
+an apparent postponement of interest.
+
+"I think," Lanfear said, "that she has some shadowy recollection, or
+rather that the facts come to her in a jarred, confused way--the
+elements of pictures, not pictures. But I am afraid that my inquiry has
+offended her."
+
+"I guess not," Gerald said, dryly, as if annoyed. "What makes you think
+so?"
+
+"Merely her manner. And I don't know that anything is to be gained by
+such an inquiry."
+
+"Perhaps not," Gerald allowed, with an inattention which vexed Lanfear
+in his turn.
+
+The elderly man looked up, from where he sat provisionally in the hotel
+veranda, into Lanfear's face; Lanfear had remained standing. "_I_ don't
+believe she's offended. Or she won't be long. One thing, she'll forget
+it."
+
+He was right enough, apparently. Miss Gerald came out of the hotel door
+towards them, smiling equally for both, with the indefinable difference
+between cognition and recognition habitual in her look. She was dressed
+for a walk, and she seemed to expect them to go with her. She beamed
+gently upon Lanfear; there was no trace of umbrage in her sunny gayety.
+Her face had, as always, its lurking pathos, but in its appeal to
+Lanfear now there were only trust and the wish of pleasing him.
+
+They started side by side for their walk, while her father drove beside
+them in one of the little public carriages, mounting to the Berigo Road,
+through a street of the older San Remo, and issuing on a bare little
+piazza looking towards the walls and roofs of the mediaeval city,
+clustered together like cliff-dwellings, and down on the gardens that
+fell from the villas and the hotels. A parapet kept the path on the
+roadside nearest the declivities, and from point to point benches were
+put for the convenient enjoyment of the prospect. Mr. Gerald preferred
+to take his pleasure from the greater elevation of the seat in his
+victoria; his daughter and Lanfear leaned on the wall, and looked up to
+the sky and out to the sea, both of the same blue.
+
+The palms and eucalyptus-trees darkened about the villas; the bits of
+vineyard, in their lingering crimson or lingering gold, and the orchards
+of peaches and persimmons enriched with the varying reds of their
+ripening leaves and fruits the enchanting color scheme. The rose and
+geranium hedges were in bloom; the feathery green of the pepper-trees
+was warmed by the red-purple of their grape-like clusters of blossoms;
+the perfume of lemon flowers wandered vaguely upwards from some point
+which they could not fix.
+
+Nothing of all the beauty seemed lost upon the girl, so bereft that she
+could enjoy no part of it from association. Lanfear observed that she
+was not fatigued by any such effort as he was always helplessly making
+to match what he saw with something he had seen before. Now, when this
+effort betrayed itself, she said, smiling: "How strange it is that you
+see things for what they are like, and not for what they are!"
+
+"Yes, it's a defect, I'm afraid, sometimes. Perhaps--"
+
+"Perhaps what?" she prompted him in the pause he made.
+
+"Nothing. I was wondering whether in some other possible life our
+consciousness would not be more independent of what we have been than it
+seems to be here." She looked askingly at him. "I mean whether there
+shall not be something absolute in our existence, whether it shall not
+realize itself more in each experience of the moment, and not be always
+seeking to verify itself from the past."
+
+"Isn't that what you think is the way with me already?" She turned upon
+him smiling, and he perceived that in her New York version of a Parisian
+costume, with her lace hat of summer make and texture and the vivid
+parasol she twirled upon her shoulder, she was not only a very pretty
+girl, but a fashionable one. There was something touching in the fact,
+and a little bewildering. To the pretty girl, the fashionable girl, he
+could have answered with a joke, but the stricken intelligence had a
+claim to his seriousness. Now, especially, he noted what had from time
+to time urged itself upon his perception. If the broken ties which once
+bound her to the past were beginning to knit again, her recovery
+otherwise was not apparent. As she stood there her beauty had signally
+the distinction of fragility, the delicacy of shattered nerves in which
+there was yet no visible return to strength. A feeling, which had
+intimated itself before, a sense as of being in the presence of a
+disembodied spirit, possessed him, and brought, in its contradiction of
+an accepted theory, a suggestion that was destined to become conviction.
+He had always said to himself that there could be no persistence of
+personality, of character, of identity, of consciousness, except through
+memory; yet here, to the last implication of temperament, they all
+persisted. The soul that was passing in its integrity through time
+without the helps, the crutches, of remembrance by which his own
+personality supported itself, why should not it pass so through eternity
+without that loss of identity which was equivalent to annihilation?
+
+Her waiting eyes recalled him from his inquiry, and with an effort he
+answered, "Yes, I think you do have your being here and now, Miss
+Gerald, to an unusual degree."
+
+"And you don't think that is wrong?"
+
+"Wrong? Why? How?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know." She looked round, and her eye fell upon her father
+waiting for them in his carriage beside the walk. The sight supplied her
+with the notion which Lanfear perceived would not have occurred
+otherwise. "Then why doesn't papa want me to remember things?"
+
+"I don't know," Lanfear temporized. "Doesn't he?"
+
+"I can't always tell. Should--should _you_ wish me to remember more than
+I do?"
+
+"I?"
+
+She looked at him with entreaty. "Do you think it would make my father
+happier if I did?"
+
+"That I can't say," Lanfear answered. "People are often the sadder for
+what they remember. If I were your father--Excuse me! I don't mean
+anything so absurd. But in his place--"
+
+He stopped, and she said, as if she were satisfied with his broken
+reply: "It is very curious. When I look at him--when I am with him--I
+know him; but when he is away, I don't remember him." She seemed rather
+interested in the fact than distressed by it; she even smiled.
+
+"And me," he ventured, "is it the same with regard to me?"
+
+She did not say; she asked, smiling: "Do you remember me when I am
+away?"
+
+"Yes!" he answered. "As perfectly as if you were with me. I can see you,
+hear you, feel the touch of your hand, your dress--Good heavens!" he
+added to himself under his breath. "What am I saying to this poor
+child!"
+
+In the instinct of escaping from himself he started forward, and she
+moved with him. Mr. Gerald's watchful driver followed them with the
+carriage.
+
+"That is very strange," she said, lightly. "Is it so with you about
+everyone?"
+
+"No," he replied, briefly, almost harshly. He asked, abruptly: "Miss
+Gerald, are there any times when you know people in their absence?"
+
+"Just after I wake from a nap--yes. But it doesn't last. That is, it
+seems to me it doesn't. I'm not sure."
+
+As they followed the winding of the pleasant way, with the villas on the
+slopes above and on the slopes below, she began to talk of them, and to
+come into that knowledge of each which formed her remembrance of them
+from former knowledge of them, but which he knew would fade when she
+passed them.
+
+The next morning, when she came down unwontedly late to breakfast in
+their pavilion, she called gayly:
+
+"Dr. Lanfear! It _is_ Dr. Lanfear?"
+
+"I should be sorry if it were not, since you seem to expect it, Miss
+Gerald."
+
+"Oh, I just wanted to be sure. Hasn't my father been here, yet?" It was
+the first time she had shown herself aware of her father except in his
+presence, as it was the first time she had named Lanfear to his face.
+
+He suppressed a remote stir of anxiety, and answered: "He went to get
+his newspapers; he wished you not to wait. I hope you slept well?"
+
+"Splendidly. But I was very tired last night; I don't know why,
+exactly."
+
+"We had rather a long walk."
+
+"Did we have a walk yesterday?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it was _so_! I thought I had dreamed it. I was beginning to
+remember something, and my father asked me what it was, and then I
+couldn't remember. Do you believe I shall keep on remembering?"
+
+"I don't see why you shouldn't."
+
+"Should you wish me to?" she asked, in evident, however unconscious,
+recurrence to their talk of the day before.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+She sighed. "I don't know. If it's like some of those dreams or gleams.
+Is remembering pleasant?"
+
+Lanfear thought for a moment. Then he said, in the honesty he thought
+best to use with her: "For the most part I should say it was painful.
+Life is tolerable enough while it passes, but when it is past, what
+remains seems mostly to hurt and humiliate. I don't know why we should
+remember so insistently the foolish things and wrong things we do, and
+not recall the times when we acted, without an effort, wisely and
+rightly." He thought he had gone too far, and he hedged a little. "I
+don't mean that we _can't_ recall those times. We can and do, to console
+and encourage ourselves; but they don't recur, without our willing, as
+the others do."
+
+She had poured herself a cup of coffee, and she played with the spoon in
+her saucer while she seemed to listen. But she could not have been
+listening, for when she put down her spoon and leaned back in her chair,
+she said: "In those dreams the things come from such a very far way
+back, and they don't belong to a life that is like this. They belong to
+a life like what you hear the life after this is. We are the same as we
+are here; but the things are different. We haven't the same rules, the
+same wishes--I can't explain."
+
+"You mean that we are differently conditioned?"
+
+"Yes. And if you can understand, I feel as if I remembered long back of
+this, and long forward of this. But one can't remember forward!"
+
+"That wouldn't be remembrance; no, it would be prescience; and your
+consciousness here, as you were saying yesterday, is through knowing,
+not remembering."
+
+She stared at him. "Was that yesterday? I thought it was--to-morrow."
+She rubbed her hand across her forehead as people do when they wish to
+clear their minds. Then she sighed deeply. "It tires me so. And yet I
+can't help trying." A light broke over her face at the sound of a step
+on the gravel walk near by, and she said, laughing, without looking
+round: "That is papa! I knew it was his step."
+
+
+V
+
+Such return of memory as she now had was like memory in what we call the
+lower lives. It increased, fluctuantly, with an ebb in which it almost
+disappeared, but with a flow that in its advance carried it beyond its
+last flood-tide mark. After the first triumph in which she could address
+Lanfear by his name, and could greet her father as her father, there
+were lapses in which she knew them as before, without naming them.
+Except mechanically to repeat the names of other people when reminded of
+them, she did not pass beyond cognition to recognition. Events still
+left no trace upon her; or if they did she was not sure whether they
+were things she had dreamed or experienced. But her memory grew stronger
+in the region where the bird knows its way home to the nest, or the bee
+to the hive. She had an unerring instinct for places where she had once
+been, and she found her way to them again without the help from the
+association which sometimes failed Lanfear. Their walks were always
+taken with her father's company in his carriage, but they sometimes left
+him at a point of the Berigo Road, and after a long détour among the
+vineyards and olive orchards of the heights above, rejoined him at
+another point they had agreed upon with him. One afternoon, when Lanfear
+had climbed the rough pave of the footways with her to one of the
+summits, they stopped to rest on the wall of a terrace, where they sat
+watching the changing light on the sea, through a break in the trees.
+The shadows surprised them on their height, and they had to make their
+way among them over the farm paths and by the dry beds of the torrents
+to the carriage road far below. They had been that walk only once
+before, and Lanfear failed of his reckoning, except the downward course
+which must bring them out on the high-road at last. But Miss Gerald's
+instinct saved them where his reason failed. She did not remember, but
+she knew the way, and she led him on as if she were inventing it, or as
+if it had been indelibly traced upon her mind and she had only to follow
+the mystical lines within to be sure of her course. She confessed to
+being very tired, and each step must have increased her fatigue, but
+each step seemed to clear her perception of the next to be taken.
+
+Suddenly, when Lanfear was blaming himself for bringing all this upon
+her, and then for trusting to her guidance, he recognized a certain
+peasant's house, and in a few moments they had descended the
+olive-orchard terraces to a broken cistern in the clear twilight beyond
+the dusk. She suddenly halted him. "There, there! It happened
+then--now--this instant!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"That feeling of being here before! There is the curb of the old
+cistern; and the place where the terrace wall is broken; and the path up
+to the vineyard--Don't you feel it, too?" she demanded, with a
+joyousness which had no pleasure for him.
+
+"Yes, certainly. We were here last week. We went up the path to the
+farm-house to get some water."
+
+"Yes, now I am remembering--remembering!" She stood with eagerly parted
+lips, and glancing quickly round with glowing eyes, whose light faded in
+the same instant. "No!" she said, mournfully, "it's gone."
+
+A sound of wheels in the road ceased, and her father's voice called:
+"Don't you want to take my place, and let me walk awhile, Nannie?"
+
+"No. You come to me, papa. Something very strange has happened;
+something you will be surprised at. Hurry!" She seemed to be joking, as
+he was, while she beckoned him impatiently towards her.
+
+He had left his carriage, and he came up with a heavy man's quickened
+pace. "Well, what is the wonderful thing?" he panted out.
+
+She stared blankly at him, without replying, and they silently made
+their way to Mr. Gerald's carriage.
+
+"I lost the way, and Miss Gerald found it," Lanfear explained, as he
+helped her to the place beside her father.
+
+She said nothing, and almost with sinking into the seat, she sank into
+that deep slumber which from time to time overtook her.
+
+"I didn't know we had gone so far--or rather that we had waited so long
+before we started down the hills," Lanfear apologized in an involuntary
+whisper.
+
+"Oh, it's all right," her father said, trying to adjust the girl's
+fallen head to his shoulder. "Get in and help me--"
+
+Lanfear obeyed, and lent a physician's skilled aid, which left the
+cumbrous efforts of her father to the blame he freely bestowed on them.
+"You'll have to come here on the other side," he said. "There's room
+enough for all three. Or, hold on! Let me take your place." He took the
+place in front, and left her to Lanfear's care, with the trust which was
+the physician's right, and with a sense of the girl's dependence in
+which she was still a child to him.
+
+They did not speak till well on the way home. Then the father leaned
+forward and whispered huskily: "Do you think she's as strong as she
+was?"
+
+Lanfear waited, as if thinking the facts over. He murmured back: "No.
+She's better. She's not so strong."
+
+"Yes," the father murmured. "I understand."
+
+What Gerald understood by Lanfear's words might not have been their
+meaning, but what Lanfear meant was that there was now an interfusion of
+the past and present in her daily experience. She still did not
+remember, but she had moments in which she hovered upon such knowledge
+of what had happened as she had of actual events. When she was stronger
+she seemed farther from this knowledge; when she was weaker she was
+nearer it. So it seemed to him in that region where he could be sure of
+his own duty when he looked upon it singly as concern for her health. No
+inquiry for the psychological possibilities must be suffered to divide
+his effort for her physical recovery, though there might come with this
+a cessation of the timeless dream-state in which she had her being, and
+she might sharply realize the past, as the anaesthete realizes his
+return to agony from insensibility. The quality of her mind was as
+different from the thing called culture as her manner from convention. A
+simplicity beyond the simplicity of childhood was one with a poetic
+color in her absolute ideas. But this must cease with her restoration to
+the strength in which she could alone come into full and clear
+self-consciousness. So far as Lanfear could give reality to his
+occupation with her disability, he was ministering to a mind diseased;
+not to "rase out its written trouble," but if possible to restore the
+obliterated record, and enable her to spell its tragic characters. If he
+could, he would have shrunk from this office; but all the more because
+he specially had to do with the mystical side of medicine, he always
+tried to keep his relation to her free from personal feeling, and his
+aim single and matter-of-fact.
+
+It was hard to do this; and there was a glamour in the very
+topographical and meteorological environment. The autumn was a long
+delight in which the constant sea, the constant sky, knew almost as
+little variance as the unchanging Alps. The days passed in a procession
+of sunny splendor, neither hot nor cold, nor of the temper of any
+determinate season, unless it were an abiding spring-time. The flowers
+bloomed, and the grass kept green in a reverie of May. But one afternoon
+of January, while Lanfear was going about in a thin coat and panama hat,
+a soft, fresh wind began to blow from the east. It increased till
+sunset, and then fell. In the morning he looked out on a world in which
+the spring had stiffened overnight into winter. A thick frost painted
+the leaves and flowers; icicles hung from pipes and vents; the frozen
+streams flashed back from their arrested flow the sun as it shone from
+the cold heaven, and blighted and blackened the hedges of geranium and
+rose, the borders of heliotrope, the fields of pinks. The leaves of the
+bananas hung limp about their stems; the palms rattled like skeletons in
+the wind when it began to blow again over the shrunken landscape.
+
+
+VI
+
+The caprice of a climate which vaunted itself perpetual summer was a
+godsend to all the strangers strong enough to bear it without suffering.
+For the sick an indoor life of huddling about the ineffectual fires of
+the south began, and lasted for the fortnight that elapsed before the
+Riviera got back its advertised temperature. Miss Gerald had drooped in
+the milder weather; but the cold braced and lifted her, and with its
+help she now pushed her walks farther, and was eager every day for some
+excursion to the little towns that whitened along the shores, or the
+villages that glimmered from the olive-orchards of the hills. Once she
+said to Lanfear, when they were climbing through the brisk, clear air:
+"It seems to me as if I had been here before. Have I?"
+
+"No. This is the first time."
+
+She said no more, but seemed disappointed in his answer, and he
+suggested: "Perhaps it is the cold that reminds you of our winters at
+home, and makes you feel that the scene is familiar."
+
+"Yes, that is it!" she returned, joyously. "Was there snow, there, like
+that on the mountains yonder?"
+
+"A good deal more, I fancy. That will be gone in a few days, and at
+home, you know, our snow lasts for weeks."
+
+"Then that is what I was thinking of," she said, and she ran strongly
+and lightly forward. "Come!"
+
+When the harsh weather passed and the mild climate returned there was no
+lapse of her strength. A bloom, palely pink as the flowers that began to
+flush the almond-trees, came upon her delicate beauty, a light like that
+of the lengthening days dawned in her eyes. She had an instinct for the
+earliest violets among the grass under the olives; she was first to hear
+the blackcaps singing in the garden-tops; and nothing that was novel in
+her experience seemed alien to it. This was the sum of what Lanfear got
+by the questioning which he needlessly tried to keep indirect. She knew
+that she was his patient, and in what manner, and she had let him divine
+that her loss of memory was suffering as well as deprivation. She had
+not merely the fatigue which we all undergo from the effort to recall
+things, and which sometimes reaches exhaustion; but there was apparently
+in the void of her oblivion a perpetual rumor of events, names,
+sensations, like--Lanfear felt that he inadequately conjectured--the
+subjective noises which are always in the ears of the deaf. Sometimes,
+in the distress of it, she turned to him for help, and when he was able
+to guess what she was striving for, a radiant relief and gratitude
+transfigured her face. But this could not last, and he learned to note
+how soon the stress and tension of her effort returned. His compassion
+for her at such times involved a temptation, or rather a question, which
+he had to silence by a direct effort of his will. Would it be worse,
+would it be greater anguish for her to know at once the past that now
+tormented her consciousness with its broken and meaningless
+reverberations? Then he realized that it was impossible to help her even
+through the hazard of telling her what had befallen; that no such effect
+as was to be desired could be anticipated from the outside.
+
+If he turned to her father for counsel or instruction, or even a
+participation in his responsibility, he was met by an optimistic
+patience which exasperated him, if it did not complicate the case. Once,
+when Lanfear forbearingly tried to share with him his anxiety for the
+effect of a successful event, he was formed to be outright, and remind
+him, in so many words, that the girl's restoration might be through
+anguish which he could not measure.
+
+Gerald faltered aghast; then he said: "It mustn't come to that; you
+mustn't let it."
+
+"How do you expect me to prevent it?" Lanfear demanded, in his vexation.
+
+Gerald caught his breath. "If she gets well, she will remember?"
+
+"I don't say that. It seems probable. Do you wish her being to remain
+bereft of one-half its powers?"
+
+"Oh, how do I know what I want?" the poor man groaned. "I only know that
+I trust you entirely, Doctor Lanfear. Whatever you think best will be
+best and wisest, no matter what the outcome is."
+
+He got away from Lanfear with these hopeless words, and again Lanfear
+perceived that the case was left wholly to him. His consolation was the
+charm of the girl's companionship, the delight of a nature knowing
+itself from moment to moment as if newly created. For her, as nearly as
+he could put the fact into words, the actual moment contained the past
+and the future as well as the present. When he saw in her the
+persistence of an exquisite personality independent of the means by
+which he realized his own continuous identity, he sometimes felt as if
+in the presence of some angel so long freed from earthly allegiance that
+it had left all record behind, as we leave here the records of our first
+years. If an echo of the past reached her, it was apt to be trivial and
+insignificant, like those unimportant experiences of our remotest
+childhood, which remain to us from a world outlived.
+
+It was not an insipid perfection of character which reported itself in
+these celestial terms, and Lanfear conjectured that angelic immortality,
+if such a thing were, could not imply perfection except at the cost of
+one-half of human character. When the girl wore a dress that she saw
+pleased him more than another, there was a responsive pleasure in her
+eyes, which he could have called vanity if he would; and she had at
+times a wilfulness which he could have accused of being obstinacy. She
+showed a certain jealousy of any experiences of his apart from her own,
+not because they included others, but because they excluded her. He was
+aware of an involuntary vigilance in her, which could not leave his
+motives any more than his actions unsearched. But in her conditioning
+she could not repent; she could only offer him at some other time the
+unconscious reparation of her obedience. The self-criticism which the
+child has not learned she had forgotten, but in her oblivion the wish to
+please existed as perfectly as in the ignorance of childhood.
+
+This, so far as he could ever put into words, was the interior of the
+world where he dwelt apart with her. Its exterior continued very like
+that of other worlds where two young people have their being. Now and
+then a more transitory guest at the Grand Hotel Sardegna perhaps fancied
+it the iridescent orb which takes the color of the morning sky, and is
+destined, in the course of nature, to the danger of collapse in which
+planetary space abounds. Some rumor of this could not fail to reach
+Lanfear, but he ignored it as best he could in always speaking gravely
+of Miss Gerald as his patient, and authoritatively treating her as such.
+He convinced some of these witnesses against their senses; for the
+others, he felt that it mattered little what they thought, since, if it
+reached her, it could not pierce her isolation for more than the instant
+in which the impression from absent things remained to her.
+
+A more positive embarrassment, of a kind Lanfear was not prepared for,
+beset him in an incident which would have been more touching if he had
+been less singly concerned for the girl. A pretty English boy, with the
+dawn of a peachy bloom on his young cheeks, and an impulsiveness
+commoner with English youth than our own, talked with Miss Gerald one
+evening and the next day sent her an armful of flowers with his card. He
+followed this attention with a call at her father's apartment, and after
+Miss Gerald seemed to know him, and they had, as he told Lanfear, a
+delightful time together, she took up his card from the table where it
+was lying, and asked him if he could tell her who that gentleman was.
+The poor fellow's inference was that she was making fun of him, and he
+came to Lanfear, as an obvious friend of the family, for an explanation.
+He reported the incident, with indignant tears standing in his eyes:
+"What did she mean by it? If she took my flowers, she must have known
+that--that--they--And to pretend to forget my name! Oh, I say, it's too
+bad! She could have got rid of me without that. Girls have ways enough,
+you know."
+
+"Yes, yes," Lanfear assented, slowly, to gain time. "I can assure you
+that Miss Gerald didn't mean anything that could wound you. She isn't
+very well--she's rather odd--"
+
+"Do you mean that she's out of her mind? She can talk as well as any
+one--better!"
+
+"No, not that. But she's often in pain--greatly in pain when she can't
+recall a name, and I've no doubt she was trying to recall yours with the
+help of your card. She would be the last in the world to be indifferent
+to your feelings. I imagine she scarcely knew what she was doing at the
+moment."
+
+"Then, do you think--do you suppose--it would be any good my trying to
+see her again? If she wouldn't be indifferent to my feelings, do you
+think there would be any hope--Really, you know, I would give anything
+to believe that my feelings wouldn't offend her. You understand me?"
+
+"Perhaps I do."
+
+"I've never met a more charming girl and--she isn't engaged, is she? She
+isn't engaged to you? I don't mean to press the question, but it's a
+question of life and death with me, you know."
+
+Lanfear thought he saw his way out of the coil. "I can tell you, quite
+as frankly as you ask, that Miss Gerald isn't engaged to _me_."
+
+"Then it's somebody else--somebody in America! Well, I hope she'll be
+happy; _I_ never shall." He offered his hand to Lanfear. "I'm off."
+
+"Oh, here's the doctor, now," a voice said behind them where they stood
+by the garden wall, and they turned to confront Gerald with his
+daughter.
+
+"Why! Are you going?" she said to the Englishman, and she put out her
+hand to him.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Evers is going." Lanfear came to the rescue.
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry," the girl said, and the youth responded.
+
+"That's very good of you. I--good-by! I hope you'll be very happy--I--"
+He turned abruptly away, and ran into the hotel.
+
+"What has he been crying for?" Miss Gerald asked, turning from a long
+look after him.
+
+Lanfear did not know quite what to say; but he hazarded saying: "He was
+hurt that you had forgotten him when he came to see you this afternoon."
+
+"Did he come to see me?" she asked; and Lanfear exchanged looks of
+anxiety, pain, and reassurance with her father. "I am so sorry. Shall I
+go after him and tell him?"
+
+"No; I explained; he's all right," Lanfear said.
+
+"You want to be careful, Nannie," her father added, "about people's
+feelings when you meet them, and afterwards seem not to know them."
+
+"But I _do_ know them, papa," she remonstrated.
+
+"You want to be careful," her father repeated.
+
+"I will--I will, indeed." Her lips quivered, and the tears came, which
+Lanfear had to keep from flowing by what quick turn he could give to
+something else.
+
+An obscure sense of the painful incident must have lingered with her
+after its memory had perished. One afternoon when Lanfear and her father
+went with her to the military concert in the sycamore-planted piazza
+near the Vacherie Suisse, where they often came for a cup of tea, she
+startled them by bowing gayly to a young lieutenant of engineers
+standing there with some other officers, and making the most of the
+prospect of pretty foreigners which the place afforded. The lieutenant
+returned the bow with interest, and his eyes did not leave their party
+as long as they remained. Within the bounds of deference for her, it was
+evident that his comrades were joking about the honor done him by this
+charming girl. When the Geralds started homeward Lanfear was aware of a
+trio of officers following them, not conspicuously, but unmistakably;
+and after that, he could not start on his walks with Miss Gerald and her
+father without the sense that the young lieutenant was hovering
+somewhere in their path, waiting in the hopes of another bow from her.
+The officer was apparently not discouraged by his failure to win
+recognition from her, and what was amounting to annoyance for Lanfear
+reached the point where he felt he must share it with her father. He had
+nearly as much trouble in imparting it to him as he might have had with
+Miss Gerald herself. He managed, but when he required her father to put
+a stop to it he perceived that Gerald was as helpless as she would have
+been. He first wished to verify the fact from its beginning with her,
+but this was not easy.
+
+"Nannie," he said, "why did you bow to that officer the other day?"
+
+"What officer, papa? When?"
+
+"You know; there by the band-stand, at the Swiss Dairy."
+
+She stared blankly at him, and it was clear that it was all as if it had
+not been with her. He insisted, and then she said: "Perhaps I thought I
+knew him, and was afraid I should hurt his feelings if I didn't
+recognize him. But I don't remember it at all." The curves of her mouth
+drooped, and her eyes grieved, so that her father had not the heart to
+say more. She left them, and when he was alone with Lanfear he said:
+
+"You see how it is!"
+
+"Yes, I saw how it was before. But what do you wish to do?"
+
+"Do you mean that he will keep it up?"
+
+"Decidedly, he'll keep it up. He has every right to from his point of
+view."
+
+"Oh, well, then, my dear fellow, you must stop it, somehow. You'll know
+how to do it."
+
+"I?" said Lanfear, indignantly; but his vexation was not so great that
+he did not feel a certain pleasure in fulfilling this strangest part of
+his professional duty, when at the beginning of their next excursion he
+put Miss Gerald into the victoria with her father and fell back to the
+point at which he had seen the lieutenant waiting to haunt their farther
+progress. He put himself plumply in front of the officer and demanded in
+very blunt Italian: "What do you want?"
+
+The lieutenant stared him over with potential offence, in which his
+delicately pencilled mustache took the shape of a light sneer, and
+demanded in his turn, in English much better than Lanfear's Italian:
+"What right have you to ask?"
+
+"The right of Miss Gerald's physician. She is an invalid in my charge."
+
+A change quite indefinable except as the visible transition from coxcomb
+to gentleman passed over the young lieutenant's comely face. "An
+invalid?" he faltered.
+
+"Yes," Lanfear began; and then, with a rush of confidence which the
+change in the officer's face justified, "one very strangely, very
+tragically afflicted. Since she saw her mother killed in an accident a
+year ago she remembers nothing. She bowed to you because she saw you
+looking at her, and supposed you must be an acquaintance. May I assure
+you that you are altogether mistaken?"
+
+The lieutenant brought his heels together, and bent low. "I beg her
+pardon with all my heart. I am very, very sorry. I will do anything I
+can. I would like to stop that. May I bring my mother to call on Miss
+Gerald?"
+
+He offered his hand, and Lanfear wrung it hard, a lump of gratitude in
+his throat choking any particular utterance, while a fine shame for his
+late hostile intention covered him.
+
+When the lieutenant came, with all possible circumstance, bringing the
+countess, his mother, Mr. Gerald overwhelmed them with hospitality of
+every form. The Italian lady responded effusively, and more sincerely
+cooed and murmured her compassionate interest in his daughter. Then all
+parted the best of friends; but when it was over, Miss Gerald did not
+know what it had been about. She had not remembered the lieutenant or
+her father's vexation, or any phase of the incident which was now
+closed. Nothing remained of it but the lieutenant's right, which he
+gravely exercised, of saluting them respectfully whenever he met them.
+
+
+VII
+
+Earlier, Lanfear had never allowed himself to be far out of call from
+Miss Gerald's father, especially during the daytime slumbers into which
+she fell, and from which they both always dreaded her awakening. But as
+the days went on and the event continued the same he allowed himself
+greater range. Formerly the three went their walks or drives together,
+but now he sometimes went alone. In these absences he found relief from
+the stress of his constant vigilance; he was able to cast off the bond
+which enslaves the physician to his patient, and which he must ignore at
+times for mere self-preservation's sake; but there was always a lurking
+anxiety, which, though he refused to let it define itself to him,
+shortened the time and space he tried to put between them.
+
+One afternoon in April, when he left her sleeping, he was aware of
+somewhat recklessly placing himself out of reach in a lonely excursion
+to a village demolished by the earthquake of 1887, and abandoned
+himself, in the impressions and incidents of his visit to the ruin, to a
+luxury of impersonal melancholy which the physician cannot often allow
+himself. At last, his care found him, and drove him home full of a
+sharper fear than he had yet felt since the first days. But Mr. Gerald
+was tranquilly smoking under a palm in the hotel garden, and met him
+with an easy smile. "She woke once, and said she had had such a pleasant
+dream. Now she's off again. Do you think we'd better wake her for
+dinner? I suppose she's getting up her strength in this way. Her
+sleeping so much is a good symptom, isn't it?"
+
+Lanfear smiled forlornly; neither of them, in view of the possible
+eventualities, could have said what result they wished the symptoms to
+favor. But he said: "Decidedly I wouldn't wake her"; and he spent a
+night of restless sleep penetrated by a nervous expectation which the
+morning, when it came, rather mockingly defeated.
+
+Miss Gerald appeared promptly at breakfast in their pavilion, with a
+fresher and gayer look than usual, and to her father's "Well, Nannie,
+you _have_ had a nap, this time," she answered, smiling:
+
+"Have I? It isn't afternoon, is it?"
+
+"No, it's morning. You've napped it all night."
+
+She said: "I can't tell whether I've been asleep or not, sometimes; but
+now I know I have been; and I feel so rested. Where are we going
+to-day?"
+
+She turned to Lanfear while her father answered: "I guess the doctor
+won't want to go very far, to-day, after his expedition yesterday
+afternoon."
+
+"Ah," she said, "I _knew_ you had been somewhere! Was it very far? Are
+you too tired?"
+
+"It was rather far, but I'm not tired. I shouldn't advise Possana,
+though."
+
+"Possana?" she repeated. "What is Possana?"
+
+He told her, and then at a jealous look in her eyes he added an account
+of his excursion. He heightened, if anything, its difficulties, in
+making light of them as no difficulties for him, and at the end she
+said, gently: "Shall we go this morning?"
+
+"Let the doctor rest this morning, Nannie," her father interrupted,
+whimsically, but with what Lanfear knew to be an inner yielding to her
+will. "Or if you won't let _him_, let _me_. I don't want to go anywhere
+this morning."
+
+Lanfear thought that he did not wish her to go at all, and hoped that by
+the afternoon she would have forgotten Possana. She sighed, but in her
+sigh there was no concession. Then, with the chance of a returning
+drowse to save him from openly thwarting her will, he merely suggested:
+"There's plenty of time in the afternoon; the days are so long now; and
+we can get the sunset from the hills."
+
+"Yes, that will be nice," she said, but he perceived that she did not
+assent willingly; and there was an effect of resolution in the readiness
+with which she appeared dressed for the expedition after luncheon. She
+clearly did not know where they were going, but when she turned to
+Lanfear with her look of entreaty, he had not the heart to join her
+father in any conspiracy against her. He beckoned the carriage which had
+become conscious in its eager driver from the moment she showed herself
+at the hotel door, and they set out.
+
+When they had left the higher level of the hotel and began their clatter
+through the long street of the town, Lanfear noted that she seemed to
+feel as much as himself the quaintness of the little city, rising on one
+hand, with its narrow alleys under successive arches between the high,
+dark houses, to the hills, and dropping on the other to sea from the
+commonplace of the principal thoroughfare, with its pink and white and
+saffron hotels and shops. Beyond the town their course lay under villa
+walls, covered with vines and topped by pavilions, and opening finally
+along a stretch of the old Cornice road.
+
+"But this," she said, at a certain point, "is where we were yesterday!"
+
+"This is where the doctor was yesterday," her father said, behind his
+cigar.
+
+"And wasn't I with you?" she asked Lanfear.
+
+He said, playfully: "To-day you are. I mustn't be selfish and have you
+every day."
+
+"Ah, you are laughing at me; but I know I was here yesterday."
+
+Her father set his lips in patience, and Lanfear did not insist.
+
+They had halted at this point because, across a wide valley on the
+shoulder of an approaching height, the ruined village of Possana showed,
+and lower down and nearer the seat the new town which its people had
+built when they escaped from the destruction of their world-old home.
+
+World-old it all was, with reference to the human life of it; but the
+spring-time was immortally young in the landscape. Over the expanses of
+green and brown fields, and hovering about the gray and white cottages,
+was a mist of peach and cherry blossoms. Above these the hoar olives
+thickened, and the vines climbed from terrace to terrace. The valley
+narrowed inland, and ceased in the embrace of the hills drawing
+mysteriously together in the distances.
+
+"I think we've got the best part of it here, Miss Gerald," Lanfear broke
+the common silence by saying. "You couldn't see much more of Possana
+after you got there."
+
+"Besides," her father ventured a pleasantry which jarred on the younger
+man, "if you were there with the doctor yesterday, you won't want to
+make the climb again to-day. Give it up, Nannie!"
+
+"Oh no," she said, "I can't give it up."
+
+"Well, then, we must go on, I suppose. Where do we begin our climb?"
+
+Lanfear explained that he had been obliged to leave his carriage at the
+foot of the hill, and climb to Possana Nuova by the donkey-paths of the
+peasants. He had then walked to the ruins of Possana Vecchia, but he
+suggested that they might find donkeys to carry them on from the new
+town.
+
+"Well, I hope so," Mr. Gerald grumbled. But at Possana Nuova no
+saddle-donkeys were to be had, and he announced, at the café where they
+stopped for the negotiation, that he would wait for the young people to
+go on to Possana Vecchia, and tell him about it when they got back. In
+the meantime he would watch the game of ball, which, in the piazza
+before the café, appeared to have engaged the energies of the male
+population. Lanfear was still inwardly demurring, when a stalwart
+peasant girl came in and announced that she had one donkey which they
+could have with her own services driving it. She had no saddle, but
+there was a pad on which the young lady could ride.
+
+"Oh, well, take it for Nannie," Mr. Gerald directed; "only don't be gone
+too long."
+
+They set out with Miss Gerald reclining in the kind of litter which the
+donkey proved to be equipped with. Lanfear went beside her, the peasant
+girl came behind, and at times ran forward to instruct them in the
+points they seemed to be looking at. For the most part the landscape
+opened beneath them, but in the azure distances it climbed into Alpine
+heights which the recent snows had now left to the gloom of their pines.
+On the slopes of the nearer hills little towns clung, here and there;
+closer yet farm-houses showed themselves among the vines and olives.
+
+It was very simple, as the life in it must always have been; and Lanfear
+wondered if the elemental charm of the scene made itself felt by his
+companion as they climbed the angles of the inclines, in a silence
+broken only by the picking of the donkey's hoofs on the rude mosaic of
+the pavement, and the panting of the peasant girl at its heels. On the
+top of the last upward stretch they stopped for the view, and Miss
+Gerald asked abruptly: "Why were you so sad?"
+
+"When was I sad?" he asked, in turn.
+
+"I don't know. Weren't you sad?"
+
+"When I was here yesterday, you mean?" She smiled on his fortunate
+guess, and he said: "Oh, I don't know. It might have begun with
+thinking--
+
+ 'Of old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago.'
+
+You know the pirates used to come sailing over the peaceful sea yonder
+from Africa, to harry these coasts, and carry off as many as they could
+capture into slavery in Tunis and Algiers. It was a long, dumb kind of
+misery that scarcely made an echo in history, but it haunted my fancy
+yesterday, and I saw these valleys full of the flight and the pursuit
+which used to fill them, up to the walls of the villages, perched on the
+heights where men could have built only for safety. Then, I got to
+thinking of other things--"
+
+"And thinking of things in the past always makes you sad," she said, in
+pensive reflection. "If it were not for the wearying of always trying to
+remember, I don't believe I should want my memory back. And of course to
+be like other people," she ended with a sigh.
+
+It was on his tongue to say that he would not have her so; but he
+checked himself, and said, lamely enough: "Perhaps you will be like
+them, sometime."
+
+She startled him by answering irrelevantly: "You know my mother is dead.
+She died a long while ago; I suppose I must have been very little."
+
+She spoke as if the fact scarcely concerned her, and Lanfear drew a
+breath of relief in his surprise. He asked, at another tangent: "What
+made you think I was sad yesterday?"
+
+"Oh, I knew, somehow. I think that I always know when you are sad; I
+can't tell you how, but I feel it."
+
+"Then I must cheer up," Lanfear said. "If I could only see you strong
+and well, Miss Gerald, like this girl--"
+
+They both looked at the peasant, and she laughed in sympathy with their
+smiling, and beat the donkey a little for pleasure; it did not mind.
+
+"But you will be--you will be! We must hurry on, now, or your father
+will be getting anxious."
+
+They pushed forward on the road, which was now level and wider than it
+had been. As they drew near the town, whose ruin began more and more to
+reveal itself in the roofless walls and windowless casements, they saw a
+man coming towards them, at whose approach Lanfear instinctively put
+himself forward. The man did not look at them, but passed, frowning
+darkly, and muttering and gesticulating.
+
+Miss Gerald turned in her litter and followed him with a long gaze. The
+peasant girl said gayly in Italian: "He is mad; the earthquake made him
+mad," and urged the donkey forward.
+
+Lanfear, in the interest of science, habitually forbade himself the
+luxury of anything like foreboding, but now, with the passing of the
+madman, he felt distinctively a lift from his spirit. He no longer
+experienced the vague dread which had followed him towards Possana, and
+made him glad of any delay that kept them from it.
+
+They entered the crooked, narrow street leading abruptly from the open
+country without any suburban hesitation into the heart of the ruin,
+which kept a vivid image of uninterrupted mediaeval life. There, till
+within the actual generation, people had dwelt, winter and summer, as
+they had dwelt from the beginning of Christian times, with nothing to
+intimate a domestic or civic advance. This street must have been the
+main thoroughfare, for stone-paved lanes, still narrower, wound from it
+here and there, while it kept a fairly direct course to the little
+piazza on a height in the midst of the town. Two churches and a simple
+town house partly enclosed it with their seamed and shattered façades.
+The dwellings here were more ruinous than on the thoroughfare, and some
+were tumbled in heaps. But Lanfear pushed open the door of one of the
+churches, and found himself in an interior which, except that it was
+roofless, could not have been greatly changed since the people had
+flocked into it to pray for safety from the earthquake. The high altar
+stood unshaken; around the frieze a succession of stucco cherubs
+perched, under the open sky, in celestial security.
+
+He had learned to look for the unexpected in Miss Gerald, and he could
+not have said that it was with surprise he now found her as capable of
+the emotions which the place inspired, as himself. He made sure of
+saying: "The earthquake, you know," and she responded with compassion:
+
+"Oh yes; and perhaps that poor man was here, praying with the rest, when
+it happened. How strange it must all have seemed to them, here where
+they lived so safely always! They thought such a dreadful thing could
+happen to others, but not to them. That is the way!"
+
+It seemed to Lanfear once more that she was on the verge of the
+knowledge so long kept from her. But she went confidently on like a
+sleepwalker who saves himself from dangers that would be death to him in
+waking. She spoke of the earthquake as if she had been reading or
+hearing of it; but he doubted if, with her broken memory, this could be
+so. It was rather as if she was exploring his own mind in the way of
+which he had more than once been sensible, and making use of his
+memory. From time to time she spoke of remembering, but he knew that
+this was as the blind speak of seeing.
+
+He was anxious to get away, and at last they came out to where they had
+left the peasant girl waiting beside her donkey. She was not there, and
+after trying this way and that in the tangle of alleys, Lanfear decided
+to take the thoroughfare which they had come up by and trust to the
+chance of finding her at its foot. But he failed even of his search for
+the street: he came out again and again at the point he had started
+from.
+
+"What is the matter?" she asked at the annoyance he could not keep out
+of his face.
+
+He laughed. "Oh, merely that we're lost. But we will wait here till that
+girl chooses to come back for us. Only it's getting late, and Mr.
+Gerald--"
+
+"Why, I know the way down," she said, and started quickly in a direction
+which, as they kept it, he recognized as the route by which he had
+emerged from the town the day before. He had once more the sense of his
+memory being used by her, as if being blind, she had taken his hand for
+guidance, or as if being herself disabled from writing, she had directed
+a pen in his grasp to form the words she desired to put down. In some
+mystical sort the effect was hers, but the means was his.
+
+They found the girl waiting with the donkey by the roadside beyond the
+last house. She explained that, not being able to follow them into the
+church with her donkey, she had decided to come where they found her and
+wait for them there.
+
+"Does no one at all live here?" Lanfear asked, carelessly.
+
+"Among the owls and the spectres? I would not pass a night here for a
+lemonade! My mother," she went on, with a natural pride in the event,
+"was lost in the earthquake. They found her with me before her breast,
+and her arms stretched out keeping the stones away." She vividly
+dramatized the fact. "I was alive, but she was dead."
+
+"Tell her," Miss Gerald said, "that my mother is dead, too."
+
+"Ah, poor little thing!" the girl said, when the message was delivered,
+and she put her beast in motion, chattering gayly to Miss Gerald in the
+bond of their common orphanhood.
+
+The return was down-hill, and they went back in half the time it had
+taken them to come. But even with this speed they were late, and the
+twilight was deepening when the last turn of their road brought them in
+sight of the new village. There a wild noise of cries for help burst
+upon the air, mixed with the shrill sound of maniac gibbering. They saw
+a boy running towards the town, and nearer them a man struggling with
+another, whom he had caught about the middle, and was dragging towards
+the side of the road where it dropped, hundreds of feet, into the gorge
+below.
+
+The donkey-girl called out: "Oh, the madman! He is killing the signor!"
+
+Lanfear shouted. The madman flung Gerald to the ground, and fled
+shrieking. Miss Gerald had leaped from her seat, and followed Lanfear as
+he ran forward to the prostrate form. She did not look at it, but within
+a few paces she clutched her hands in her hair, and screamed out: "Oh,
+my mother is killed!" and sank, as if sinking down into the earth, in a
+swoon.
+
+"No, no; it's all right, Nannie! Look after her, Lanfear! I'm not hurt.
+I let myself go in that fellow's hands, and I fell softly. It was a
+good thing he didn't drop me over the edge." Gerald gathered himself up
+nimbly enough, and lent Lanfear his help with the girl. The situation
+explained itself, almost without his incoherent additions, to the effect
+that he had become anxious, and had started out with the boy for a
+guide, to meet them, and had met the lunatic, who suddenly attacked him.
+While he talked, Lanfear was feeling the girl's pulse, and now and then
+putting his ear to her heart. With a glance at her father: "You're
+bleeding, Mr. Gerald," he said.
+
+"So I am," the old man answered, smiling, as he wiped a red stream from
+his face with his handkerchief. "But I am not hurt--"
+
+"Better let me tie it up," Lanfear said, taking the handkerchief from
+him. He felt the unselfish quality in a man whom he had not always
+thought heroic, and he bound the gash above his forehead with a
+reverence mingling with his professional gentleness. The donkey-girl had
+not ceased to cry out and bless herself, but suddenly, as her care was
+needed in getting Miss Gerald back to the litter, she became a part of
+the silence in which the procession made its way slowly into Possana
+Nuova, Lanfear going on one side, and Mr. Gerald on the other to support
+his daughter in her place. There was a sort of muted outcry of the whole
+population awaiting them at the door of the locanda where they had
+halted before, and which now had the distinction of offering them
+shelter in a room especially devoted to the poor young lady, who still
+remained in her swoon.
+
+When the landlord could prevail with his fellow-townsmen and townswomen
+to disperse in her interest, and had imposed silence upon his customers
+indoors, Lanfear began his vigil beside his patient in as great quiet
+as he could anywhere have had. Once during the evening the public
+physician of the district looked in, but he agreed with Lanfear that
+nothing was to be done which he was not doing in his greater experience
+of the case. From time to time Gerald had suggested sending for some San
+Remo physician in consultation. Lanfear had always approved, and then
+Gerald had not persisted. He was strongly excited, and anxious not so
+much for his daughter's recovery from her swoon, which he did not doubt,
+as for the effect upon her when she should have come to herself.
+
+It was this which he wished to discuss, sitting fallen back into his
+chair, or walking up and down the room, with his head bound with a
+bloody handkerchief, and looking, with a sort of alien picturesqueness,
+like a kindly brigand.
+
+Lanfear did not leave his place beside the bed where the girl lay, white
+and still as if dead. An inexpressible compassion for the poor man
+filled his heart. Whatever the event should be, it would be tragical for
+him. "Go to sleep, Mr. Gerald," he said. "Your waking can do no good. I
+will keep watch, and if need be, I'll call you. Try to make yourself
+easy on that couch."
+
+"I shall not sleep," the old man answered. "How could I?" Nevertheless,
+he adjusted himself to the hard pillows of the lounge where he had been
+sitting and drowsed among them. He woke just before dawn with a start.
+"I thought she had come to, and knew everything! What a nightmare! Did I
+groan? Is there any change?"
+
+Lanfear, sitting by the bed, in the light of the wasting candle, which
+threw a grotesque shadow of him on the wall, shook his head. After a
+moment he asked: "How long did you tell me her swoon had lasted after
+the accident to her mother?"
+
+"I don't think she recovered consciousness for two days, and then she
+remembered nothing. What do you think are the chances of her remembering
+now?"
+
+"I don't know. But there's a kind of psychopathic logic--If she lost her
+memory through one great shock, she might find it through another."
+
+"Yes, yes!" the father said, rising and walking to and fro, in his
+anguish. "That was what I thought--what I was afraid of. If I could die
+myself, and save her from living through it--I don't know what I'm
+saying! But if--but if--if she could somehow be kept from it a little
+longer! But she can't, she can't! She must know it now when she wakes."
+
+Lanfear had put up his hand, and taken the girl's slim wrist quietly
+between his thumb and finger, holding it so while her father talked on.
+
+"I suppose it's been a sort of weakness--a sort of wickedness--in me to
+wish to keep it from her; but I _have_ wished that, doctor; you must
+have seen it, and I can't deny it. We ought to bear what is sent us in
+this world, and if we escape we must pay for our escape. It has cost her
+half her being, I know it; but it hasn't cost her her reason, and I'm
+afraid for that, if she comes into her memory now. Still, you must
+do--But no one can do anything either to hinder or to help!"
+
+He was talking in a husky undertone, and brokenly, incoherently. He made
+an appeal, which Lanfear seemed not to hear, where he remained immovable
+with his hand on the girl's pulse.
+
+"Do you think I am to blame for wishing her never to know it, though
+without it she must remain deprived of one whole side of life? Do you
+think my wishing that can have had anything to do with keeping her--But
+this faint _may_ pass and she may wake from it just as she has been. It
+is logical that she should remember; but is it certain that she will?"
+
+A murmur, so very faint as to be almost no sound at all, came like a
+response from the girl's lips, and she all but imperceptibly stirred.
+Her father neither heard nor saw, but Lanfear started forward. He made a
+sudden clutch at the girl's wrist with the hand that had not left it and
+then remained motionless. "She will never remember now--here."
+
+He fell on his knees beside the bed and began to sob. "Oh, my dearest!
+My poor girl! My love!" still keeping her wrist in his hand, and laying
+his head tenderly on her arm. Suddenly he started, with a shout: "The
+pulse!" and fell forward, crushing his ear against her heart, and
+listened with bursts of: "It's beating! She isn't dead! She's alive!"
+Then he lifted her in his arms, and it was in his embrace that she
+opened her eyes, and while she clung to him, entreated:
+
+"My father! Where is he?"
+
+A dread fell upon both the men, blighting the joy with which they
+welcomed her back to life. She took her father's head between her hands,
+and kissed his bruised face. "I thought you were dead; and I thought
+that mamma--" She stopped, and they waited breathless. "But that was
+long ago, wasn't it?"
+
+"Yes," her father eagerly assented. "Very long ago."
+
+"I remember," she sighed. "I thought that I was killed, too. Was it
+_all_ a dream?" Her father and Lanfear looked at each other. Which
+should speak? "This is Doctor Lanfear, isn't it?" she asked, with a dim
+smile. "And I'm not dreaming now, am I?" He had released her from his
+arms, but she held his hand fast. "I know it is you, and papa; and yes,
+I remember everything. That terrible pain of forgetting is gone! It's
+beautiful! But did he hurt you badly, papa? I saw him, and I wanted to
+call to you. But mamma--"
+
+However the change from the oblivion of the past had been operated, it
+had been mercifully wrought. As far as Lanfear could note it, in the
+rapture of the new revelation to her which it scarcely needed words to
+establish, the process was a gradual return from actual facts to the
+things of yesterday and then to the things of the day before, and so
+back to the tragedy in which she had been stricken. There was no sudden
+burst of remembrance, but a slow unveiling of the reality in which her
+spirit was mystically fortified against it. At times it seemed to him
+that the effect was accomplished in her by supernatural agencies such
+as, he remembered once somewhere reading, attend the souls of those
+lately dead, and explore their minds till every thought and deed of
+their earthly lives, from the last to the first, is revealed to them out
+of an inner memory which can never, any jot or tittle, perish. It was as
+if this had remained in her intact from the blow that shattered her
+outer remembrance. When the final, long-dreaded horror was reached, it
+was already a sorrow of the past, suffered and accepted with the
+resignation which is the close of grief, as of every other passion.
+
+Love had come to her help in the time of her need, but not love alone
+helped her live back to the hour of that supreme experience and beyond
+it. In the absorbing interest of her own renascence, the shock, more
+than the injury which her father had undergone, was ignored, if not
+neglected. Lanfear had not, indeed, neglected it; but he could not help
+ignoring it in his happiness, as he remembered afterwards in the
+self-reproach which he would not let the girl share with him. Nothing,
+he realized, could have availed if everything had been done which he did
+not do; but it remained a pang with him that he had so dimly felt his
+duty to the gentle old man, even while he did it. Gerald lived to
+witness his daughter's perfect recovery of the self so long lost to her;
+he lived, with a joy more explicit than their own, to see her the wife
+of the man to whom she was dearer than love alone could have made her.
+He lived beyond that time, rejoicing, if it may be so said, in the fond
+memories of her mother which he had been so long forbidden by her
+affliction to recall. Then, after the spring of the Riviera had whitened
+into summer, and San Remo hid, as well as it could, its sunny glare
+behind its pines and palms, Gerald suffered one long afternoon through
+the heat till the breathless evening, and went early to bed. He had been
+full of plans for spending the rest of the summer at the little place in
+New England where his daughter knew that her mother lay. In the morning
+he did not wake.
+
+"He gave his life that I might have mine!" she lamented in the first
+wild grief.
+
+"No, don't say that, Nannie," her husband protested, calling her by the
+pet name which her father always used. "He is dead; but if we owe each
+other to his loss, it is because he was given, not because he gave
+himself."
+
+"Oh, I know, I know!" she wailed. "But he would gladly have given
+himself for me."
+
+That, perhaps, Lanfear could not have denied, and he had no wish to do
+so. He had a prescience of happiness for her which the future did not
+belie; and he divined that a woman must not be forbidden the extremes
+within which she means to rest her soul.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE EIDOLONS OF BROOKS ALFORD
+
+
+I should like to give the story of Alford's experiences just as Wanhope
+told it, sitting with us before the glowing hearth in the Turkish room,
+one night after the other diners at our club had gone away to digest
+their dinners at the theatre, or in their bachelor apartments up-town,
+or on the late trains which they were taking north, south, and west; or
+had hurried back to their offices to spend the time stolen from rest in
+overwork for which their famished nerves would duly revenge themselves.
+It was undoubtedly overwork which preceded Alford's experiences if it
+did not cause them, for he was pretty well broken from it when he took
+himself off in the early summer, to put the pieces together as best he
+could by the seaside. But this was a fact which Wanhope was not obliged
+to note to us, and there were certain other commonplaces of our
+knowledge of Alford which he could omit without omitting anything
+essential to our understanding of the facts which he dealt with so
+delicately, so electly, almost affectionately, coaxing each point into
+the fittest light, and then lifting his phrase from it, and letting it
+stand alone in our consciousness. I remember particularly how he touched
+upon the love-affair which was supposed to have so much to do with
+Alford's break-up, and how he dismissed it to its proper place in the
+story. As he talked on, with scarcely an interruption either from the
+eager credulity of Rulledge or the doubt of Minver, I heard with a
+sensuous comfort--I can use no other word--the far-off click of the
+dishes in the club kitchen, putting away till next day, with the musical
+murmur of a smitten glass or the jingle of a dropped spoon. But if I
+should try to render his words, I should spoil their impression in the
+vain attempt, and I feel that it is best to give the story as best I can
+in words of my own, so far from responsive to the requisitions of the
+occult incident.
+
+The first intimation Alford had of the strange effect, which from first
+to last was rather an obsession than a possession of his, was after a
+morning of idle satisfaction spent in watching the target practice from
+the fort in the neighborhood of the little fishing-village where he was
+spending the summer. The target was two or three miles out in the open
+water beyond the harbor, and he found his pleasure in watching the smoke
+of the gun for that discrete interval before the report reached him, and
+then for that somewhat longer interval before he saw the magnificent
+splash of the shot which, as it plunged into the sea, sent a fan-shaped
+fountain thirty or forty feet into the air. He did not know and he did
+not care whether the target was ever hit or not. That fact was no part
+of his concern. His affair was to watch the burst of smoke from the fort
+and then to watch the upward gush of water, almost as light and vaporous
+to the eye, where the ball struck. He did not miss one of the shots
+fired during the forenoon, and when he met the other people who sat down
+with him at the midday dinner in the hotel, his talk with them was
+naturally of the morning's practice. They one and all declared it a
+great nuisance, and said that it had shattered their nerves terribly,
+which was not perhaps so strange, since they were all women. But when
+they asked him in his quality of nervous wreck whether he had not
+suffered from the prolonged and repeated explosions, too, he found
+himself able to say no, that he had enjoyed every moment of the firing.
+He added that he did not believe he had even noticed the noise after the
+first shot, he was so wholly taken with the beauty of the fountain-burst
+from the sea which followed; and as he spoke the fan-like spray rose and
+expanded itself before his eyes, quite blotting out the visage of a
+young widow across the table. In his swift recognition of the fact and
+his reflection upon it, he realized that the effect was quite as if he
+had been looking at some intense light, almost as if he had been looking
+at the sun, and that the illusion which had blotted out the agreeable
+reality opposite was of the quality of those flying shapes which repeat
+themselves here, there, and everywhere that one looks, after lifting the
+gaze from a dazzling object. When his consciousness had duly registered
+this perception, there instantly followed a recognition of the fact that
+the eidolon now filling his vision was not the effect of the dazzled
+eyes, but of a mental process, of thinking how the thing which it
+reported had looked.
+
+By the time Alford had co-ordinated this reflection with the other, the
+eidolon had faded from the lady's face, which again presented itself in
+uninterrupted loveliness with the added attraction of a distinct pout.
+
+"Well, Mr. Alford!" she bantered him.
+
+"Oh, I beg your pardon! I was thinking--"
+
+"Not of what I was saying," she broke in, laughingly, forgivingly.
+
+"No, I certainly wasn't," he assented, with such a sense of approaching
+creepiness in his experience that when she challenged him to say what
+he _was_ thinking of, he could not, or would not; she professed to
+believe that he would not.
+
+In the joking that followed he soon lost the sense of approaching
+creepiness, and began to be proud of what had happened to him as out of
+the ordinary, as a species of psychological ecstasy almost of spiritual
+value. From time to time he tried, by thinking of the splash and upward
+gush from the cannon-shot's plunge in the sea, to recall the vision, but
+it would not come again, and at the end of an afternoon somewhat
+distraughtly spent he decided to put the matter away, as one of the odd
+things of no significance which happen in life and must be dealt with as
+mysteries none the less trifling because they are inexplicable.
+
+"Well, you've got over it?" the widow joked him as he drew up towards
+her, smiling from her rocker on the veranda after supper. At first, all
+the women in the hotel had petted him; but with their own cares and
+ailments to reclaim them they let the invalid fall to the peculiar
+charge of the childless widow who had nothing else to do, and was so
+well and strong that she could look after the invalid Professor of
+Archaeology (at the Champlain University) without the fatigues they must
+feel.
+
+"Yes, I've got over it," he said.
+
+"And what was it?" she boldly pursued.
+
+He was about to say, and then he could not.
+
+"You won't tell?"
+
+"Not yet," he answered. He added, after a moment, "I don't believe I
+can."
+
+"Because it's confidential?"
+
+"No; not exactly that. Because it's impossible."
+
+"Oh, that's simple enough. I understand exactly what you mean. Well, if
+ever it becomes less difficult, remember that I should always like to
+know. It seemed a little--personal."
+
+"How in the world?"
+
+"Well, when one is stared at in that way--"
+
+"Did I stare?"
+
+"Don't you _always_ stare? But in this case you stared as if there was
+something wrong with my hair."
+
+"There wasn't," Alford protested, simple-heartedly. Then he recollected
+his sophistication to say: "Unless its being of that particular shade
+between brown and red was wrong."
+
+"Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford! After that I _must_ believe you."
+
+They talked on the veranda till the night fell, and then they came in
+among the lamps, in the parlor, and she sat down with a certain
+provisionality, putting herself sideways on a light chair by a window,
+and as she chatted and laughed with one cheek towards him she now and
+then beat the back of her chair with her open hand. The other people
+were reading or severely playing cards, and they, too, kept their tones
+down to a respectful level, while she lingered, and when she rose and
+said good-night he went out and took some turns on the veranda before
+going up to bed. She was certainly, he realized, a very pretty woman,
+and very graceful and very amusing, and though she probably knew all
+about it, she was the franker and honester for her knowledge.
+
+He had arrived at this conclusion just as he turned the switch of the
+electric light inside his door, and in the first flash of the carbon
+film he saw her sitting beside the window in such a chair as she had
+taken and in the very pose which she had kept in the parlor. Her
+half-averted face was lit as from laughing, and she had her hand lifted
+as if to beat the back of her chair.
+
+"Good Heavens, Mrs. Yarrow!" he said, in a sort of whispered shout,
+while he mechanically closed the door behind him as if to keep the fact
+to himself. "What in the world are you doing here?"
+
+Then she was not there. Nothing was there; not even a chair beside the
+window.
+
+Alford dropped weakly into the only chair in the room, which stood next
+the door by the head of his bed, and abandoned himself a helpless prey
+to the logic of the events.
+
+It was at this point, which I have been able to give in Wanhope's exact
+words, that, in the ensuing pause, Rulledge asked, as if he thought some
+detail might be denied him: "And what was the logic of the events?"
+
+Minver gave a fleering laugh. "Don't be premature, Rulledge. If you have
+the logic now, you will spoil everything. You can't have the moral until
+you've had the whole story. Go on, Wanhope. You're so much more
+interesting than usual that I won't ask how you got hold of all these
+compromising minutiae."
+
+"Of course," Wanhope returned, "they're not for the general ear. I go
+rather further, for the sake of the curious fact, than I should be
+warranted in doing if I did not know my audience so well."
+
+We joined in a murmur of gratification, and he went on to say that
+Alford's first coherent thought was that he was dreaming one of those
+unwarranted dreams in which we make our acquaintance privy to all sorts
+of strange incidents. Then he knew that he was not dreaming, and that
+his eye had merely externated a mental vision, as in the case of the
+cannon-shot splash of which he had seen the phantom as soon as it was
+mentioned. He remembered afterwards asking himself in a sort of terror
+how far it was going to go with him; how far his thought was going to
+report itself objectively hereafter, and what were the reasonable
+implications of his abnormal experiences. He did not know just how long
+he sat by his bedside trying to think, only to have his conclusions whir
+away like a flock of startled birds when he approached them. He went to
+bed because he was exhausted rather than because he was sleepy, but he
+could not recall a moment of wakefulness after his head touched the
+pillow.
+
+He woke surprisingly refreshed, but at the belated breakfast where he
+found Mrs. Yarrow still lingering he thought her looking not well. She
+confessed, listlessly, that she had not rested well. She was not sure,
+she said, whether the sea air agreed with her; she might try the
+mountains a little later. She was not inclined to talk, and that day he
+scarcely spoke with her except in commonplaces at the table. They had no
+return to the little mystery they had mocked together the day before.
+
+More days passed, and Alford had no recurrence of his visions. His
+acquaintance with Mrs. Yarrow made no further advance; there was no one
+else in the hotel who interested him, and he bored himself. At the same
+time his recovery seemed retarded; he lost tone, and after a fortnight
+he ran up to talk himself over with his doctor in Boston. He rather
+thought he would mention his eidolons, and ask if they were at all
+related to the condition of his nerves. It was a keen disappointment,
+but it ought not to have been a surprise, for him to find that his
+doctor was off on his summer vacation. The caretaker who opened the door
+to Alford named a young physician in the same block of Marlborough
+Street who had his doctor's practice for the summer, but Alford had not
+the heart to go to this alternate.
+
+He started down to his hotel on a late afternoon train that would bring
+him to the station after dusk, and before he reached it the lamps had
+been lighted in his car. Alford sat in a sparsely peopled smoker, where
+he had found a place away from the crowd in the other coaches, and
+looked out of the window into the reflected interior of his car, which
+now and then thinned away and let him see the weeds and gravel of the
+railroad banks, with the bushes that topped them and the woods that
+backed them. The train at one point stopped rather suddenly and then
+went on, for no reason that he ever cared to inquire; but as it slowly
+moved forward again he was reminded of something he had seen one night
+in going to New York just before the train drew into Springfield. It had
+then made such another apparently reasonless stop; but before it resumed
+its course Alford saw from his window a group of trainmen, and his own
+Pullman conductor with his lantern on his arm, bending over the figure
+of a man defined in his dark clothing against the snow of the bank where
+he lay propped. His face was waxen white, and Alford noted how
+particularly black the mustache looked traversing the pallid visage. He
+never knew whether the man was killed or merely stunned; you learn
+nothing with certainty of such things on trains; but now, as he thought
+of the incident, its eidolon showed itself outside of his mind, and
+followed him in every detail, even to a snowy stretch of the embankment,
+until the increasing speed of the train seemed to sweep it back out of
+sight.
+
+Alford turned his eyes to the interior of the smoker, which, except for
+two or three dozing commuters and a noisy euchre-party, had been empty
+of everything but the fumes and stale odors of tobacco, and found it
+swarming with visions, the eidolons of everything he remembered from his
+past life. Whatever had once strongly impressed itself upon his nerves
+was reported there again as instantly as he thought of it. It was
+largely a whirling chaos, a kaleidoscopic jumble of facts; but from time
+to time some more memorable and important experience visualized itself
+alone. Such was the death-bed of the little sister whom he had been
+wakened, a child, to see going to heaven, as they told him. Such was the
+pathetic, foolish face of the girl whom long ago he had made believe he
+cared for, and then had abruptly broken with: he saw again, with
+heartache, her silly, tender amaze when he said he was going away. Such
+was the look of mute astonishment, of gentle reproach, in the eyes of
+the friend, now long dead, whom in a moment of insensate fury he had
+struck on the mouth, and who put his hand to his bleeding lips as he
+bent that gaze of wonder and bewilderment upon him. But it was not alone
+the dreadful impressions that reported themselves. There were others, as
+vivid, which came back in the original joyousness: the face of his
+mother looking up at him from the crowd on a day of college triumph when
+he was delivering the valedictory of his class; the collective gayety of
+the whole table on a particularly delightful evening at his dining-club;
+his own image in the glass as he caught sight of it on coming home
+accepted by the woman who afterwards jilted him; the transport which
+lighted up his father's visage when he stepped ashore from the vessel
+which had been rumored lost, and he could be verified by the senses as
+still alive; the comical, bashful ecstasy of the good fellow, his
+ancient chum, in telling him he had had a son born the night before, and
+the mother was doing well, and how he laughed and danced, and skipped
+into the air.
+
+The smoker was full of these eidolons and of others which came and went
+with constant vicissitude. But what was of a greater weirdness than
+seeing them within it was seeing them without in that reflection of the
+interior which travelled with it through the summer night, and repeated
+it, now dimly, now brilliantly, in every detail. Alford sat in a daze,
+with a smile which he was aware of, fixed and stiff as if in plaster, on
+his face, and with his gaze bent on this or that eidolon, and then on
+all of them together. He was not so much afraid of them as of being
+noticed by the other passengers in the smoker, to whom he knew he might
+look very queer. He said to himself that he was making the whole thing,
+but the very subjectivity was what filled him with a deep and hopeless
+dread. At last the train ceased its long leaping through the dark, and
+with its coming to a stand the whole illusion vanished. He heard a gay
+voice which he knew bidding some one good-bye who was getting into the
+car just back of the smoker, and as he descended to the platform he
+almost walked into the arms of Mrs. Yarrow.
+
+"Why, Mr. Alford! We had given you up. We thought you wouldn't come back
+till to-morrow--or perhaps ever. What in the world will you do for
+supper? The kitchen fires were out ages ago!"
+
+In the light of the station electrics she beamed upon him, and he felt
+glad at heart, as if he had been saved from something, a mortal danger
+or a threatened shame. But he could not speak at once; his teeth closed
+with tetanic force upon each other. Later, as they walked to the hotel,
+through the warm, soft night in which the south wind was roaming the
+starless heavens for rain, he found his voice, and although he felt that
+he was speaking unnaturally, he made out to answer the lively questions
+with which she pelted him too thickly to expect them to be answered
+severally. She told him all the news of the day, and when she began on
+yesterday's news she checked herself with a laugh and said she had
+forgotten that he had only been gone since morning. "But now," she said,
+"you see how you've been missed--how _any_ man must be missed in a hotel
+full of women."
+
+She took charge of him when they got to the house, and said if he would
+go boldly into the dining-room, where they detected, as they approached,
+one lamp scantly shining from the else darkened windows, she would beard
+the lioness in her den, by which she meant the cook in the kitchen, and
+see what she could get him for supper. Apparently she could get nothing
+warm, for when a reluctant waitress appeared it was with such a chilly
+refection on her tray that Alford, though he was not very hungry,
+returned from interrogating the obscurity for eidolons, and shivered at
+it. At the same time the swing-door of the long, dim room opened to
+admit a gush of the outer radiance on which Mrs. Yarrow drifted in with
+a chafing-dish in one hand and a tea-basket in the other. She floated
+tiltingly towards him like, he thought, a pretty little ship, and sent a
+cheery hail before.
+
+"I've been trying to get somebody to join you at a premature
+Welsh-rarebit and a belated cup of tea, but I can't tear one of the
+tabbies from their cards or the kittens from their gambols in the
+amusement-hall in the basement. Do you mind so very much having it
+alone? Because you'll have to, whether you do or not. Unless you call me
+company, when I'm merely cook."
+
+She put her utensils on the table beside the forbidding tray the
+waitress had left, and helped lift herself by pressing one hand on the
+top of a chair towards the electric, which she flashed up to keep the
+dismal lamp in countenance. Alford let her do it. He durst not, he
+felt, stir from his place, lest any movement should summon back the
+eidolons; and now in the sudden glare of light he shyly, slyly searched
+the room for them. Not one, fair or foul, showed itself, and slowly he
+felt a great weight lifting from his heart. In its place there sprang up
+a joyous gratitude towards Mrs. Yarrow, who had saved him from them,
+from himself. An inexpressible tenderness filled his breast; the tears
+rose to his eyes; a soft glow enveloped his whole being, a warmth of
+hope, a freshness of life renewed, encompassed him. He wished to take
+her in his arms, to tell her how he loved her; and as she bustled about,
+lighting the lamp of her chafing-dish, and kindling the little
+spirit-stove she had brought with her to make tea, he let his gaze dwell
+upon every pose, every motion of her with a glad hunger in which no
+smallest detail was lost. He now believed that without her he must die,
+without her he could not wish to live.
+
+"Jove," Rulledge broke in at this point of Wanhope's story, which I am
+telling again so badly, "I think Alford was in luck."
+
+Minver gave a harsh cackle. "The only thing Rulledge finds fault with in
+this club is 'the lack of woman's nursing and the lack of woman's
+tears.' Nothing is wanting to his enjoyment of his victuals but the fact
+that they are not served by a neat-handed Phyllis, like Alford's."
+
+Rulledge glanced towards Wanhope, and innocently inquired, "Was that her
+first name?"
+
+Minver burst into a scream, and Rulledge looked red and silly for having
+given himself away; but he made an excursion to the buffet outside, and
+returned with a sandwich with which he supported himself stolidly under
+Minver's derision, until Wanhope came to his relief by resuming his
+story, or rather his study, of Alford's strange experience.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow first gave Alford his tea, as being of a prompter brew than
+the rarebit, but she was very quick and apt with that, too; and pretty
+soon she leaned forward, and in the glow from the lamp under the
+chafing-dish, which spiritualized her charming face with its thin
+radiance, puffed the flame out with her pouted lips, and drew back with
+a long-sighed "There! That will make you see your grandmother, if
+anything will."
+
+"My grandmother?" Alford repeated.
+
+"Yes. Wouldn't you like to?" Mrs.. Yarrow asked, pouring the thick
+composition over the toast (rescued stone-cold from the frigid tray) on
+Alford's plate. "I'm sure I should like to see mine--dear old gran! Not
+that I ever saw her--either of her--or should know how she looked. Did
+you ever see yours--either of her?" she pursued, impulsively.
+
+"Oh yes," Alford answered, looking intently at her, but with so little
+speculation in the eyes he glared so with that he knew her to be uneasy
+under them.
+
+She laughed a little, and stayed her hand on the bail of the teapot.
+"Which of her?"
+
+"Oh, both!"
+
+"And--and--did she look so much like _me_?" she said, with an added
+laugh, that he perceived had an hysterical note in it. "You're letting
+your rarebit get cold!"
+
+He laughed himself, now, a great laugh of relaxation, of relief. "Not
+the least in the world! She was not exactly a phantom of delight."
+
+"Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford. Now, it's your tea's getting cold."
+
+They laughed together, and he gave himself to his victual with a relish
+that she visibly enjoyed. When that question of his grandmother had been
+pushed he thought of an awful experience of his childhood, which left on
+his infant mind an indelible impression, a scar, to remain from the
+original wound forever. He had been caught in a lie, the first he could
+remember, but by no means the last, by many immemorable thousands. His
+poor little wickedness had impugned the veracity of both these terrible
+old ladies, who, habitually at odds with each other, now united, for
+once, against him. He could always see himself, a mean little
+blubbering-faced rascal, stealing guilty looks of imploring at their
+faces, set unmercifully against him, one in sorrow and one in anger,
+requiring his mother to whip him, and insisting till he was led, loudly
+roaring, into the parlor, and there made a liar of for all time, so far
+as fear could do it.
+
+When Mrs. Yarrow asked if he had ever seen his grandmother he expected
+instantly to see her, in duplicate, and as a sole refuge, but with
+little hope that it would save him, he kept his eyes fast on hers, and
+to his unspeakable joy it did avail. No other face, of sorrow or of
+anger, rose between them. For the time his thought was quit of its
+consequence; no eidolon outwardly repeated his inward vision. A warm
+gush of gratitude seemed to burst from his heart, and to bathe his whole
+being, and then to flow in a tide of ineffable tenderness towards Mrs.
+Yarrow, and involve her and bear them together heavenward. It was not
+passion, it was not love, he perceived well enough; it was the utterance
+of a vital conviction that she had saved him from an overwhelming
+subjective horror, and that in her sweet objectivity there was a
+security and peace to be found nowhere else.
+
+He greedily ate every atom of his rarebit, he absorbed every drop of
+the moisture in the teapot, so that when she shook it and shook it, and
+then tried to pour something from it, there was no slightest dribble at
+the spout. But they lingered, talking and laughing, and perhaps they
+might never have left the place if the hard handmaiden who had brought
+the tea-tray had not first tried putting her head in at the swing-door
+from the kitchen, and then, later, come boldly in and taken the tray
+away.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow waited self-respectfully for her disappearance, and then she
+said, "I'm afraid that was a hint, Mr. Alford."
+
+"It seemed like one," he owned.
+
+They went out together, gayly chatting, but she would not encourage the
+movement he made towards the veranda. She remained firmly attached to
+the newel-post of the stairs, and at the first chance he gave her she
+said good-night and bounded lightly upward. At the turn of the stairs
+she stopped and looked laughing down at him over the rail. "I hope you
+won't see your grandmother."
+
+"Oh, not a bit of it," he called back. He felt that he failed to give
+his reply the quality of epigram, but he was not unhappy in his failure.
+
+Many light-hearted days followed this joyous evening. No eidolons
+haunted Alford's horizon, perhaps because Mrs. Yarrow filled his whole
+heaven. She was very constantly with him, guiding his wavering steps up
+the hill of recovery, which he climbed with more and more activity, and
+keeping him company in those valleys of relapse into which he now and
+then fell back from the difficult steeps. It came to be tacitly, or at
+least passively, conceded by the other ladies that she had somehow
+earned the exclusive right to what had once been the common charge; or
+that if one of their number had a claim to keep Mr. Alford from killing
+himself by all sorts of imprudences, which in his case amounted to
+impieties, it was certainly Mrs. Yarrow. They did not put this in terms,
+but they felt it and acted it.
+
+She was all the safer guardian for a delicate invalid because she
+loathed manly sports so entirely that she did not even pretend to like
+them, as most women, poor things, think themselves obliged to do. In her
+hands there was no danger that he would be tempted to excesses in golf.
+She was really afraid of all boats, but she was willing to go out with
+him in the sail-boat of a superannuated skipper, because to sit talking
+in the stern and stoop for the vagaries of the boom in tacking was such
+good exercise. She would join him in fishing from the rotting pier, but
+with no certainty which was a cunner and which was a sculpin, when she
+caught it, and with an equal horror of both the nasty, wriggling things.
+When they went a walk together, her notion of a healthful tramp was to
+find a nice place among the sweet-fern or the pine-needles, and sit down
+in it and talk, or make a lap, to which he could bring the berries he
+gathered for her to arrange in the shallow leaf-trays she pinned
+together with twigs. She really preferred a rocking-chair on the veranda
+to anything else; but if he wished to go to those other excesses, she
+would go with him, to keep him out of mischief.
+
+There could be only one credible reading of the situation, but Alford
+let the summer pass in this pleasant dreaming without waking up till too
+late to the pleasanter reality. It will seem strange enough, but it is
+true, that it was no part of his dream to fancy that Mrs. Yarrow was in
+love with him. He knew very well, long before the end, that he was in
+love with her; but, remaining in the dark otherwise, he considered only
+himself in forbearing verbally to make love to her.
+
+"Well!" Rulledge snarled at this point, "he _was_ a chump."
+
+Wanhope at the moment opposed nothing directly to the censure, but said
+that something pathetically reproachful in Mrs. Yarrow's smiling looks
+penetrated to Alford as she nodded gayly from the car window to him in
+the little group which had assembled to see her off at the station when
+she left, by no means the first of their happy hotel circle to go.
+
+"Somebody," Rulledge burst out again, "ought to have kicked him."
+
+"What's become," Minver asked, "of all the dear maids and widows that
+you've failed to marry at the end of each summer, Rulledge?"
+
+The satire involved flattery so sweet that Rulledge could not perhaps
+wish to make any retort. He frowned sternly, and said, with a face
+averted from Minver: "Go on, Wanhope!"
+
+Wanhope here permitted himself a philosophical excursion in which I will
+not accompany him. It was apparently to prepare us for the dramatic fact
+which followed, and which I suppose he was trying rather to work away
+from than work up to. It included some facts which he had failed to
+touch on before, and which led to a discussion very interesting in
+itself, but of a range too great for the limits I am trying to keep
+here. It seems that Alford had been stayed from declaring his love not
+only because he doubted of its nature, but also because he questioned
+whether a man in his broken health had any right to offer himself to a
+woman, and because from a yet finer scruple he hesitated in his poverty
+to ask the hand of a rich woman. On the first point, we were pretty well
+agreed, but on the second we divided again, especially Rulledge and
+Minver, who held, the one, that his hesitation did Alford honor, and
+quite relieved him from the imputation of being a chump; and the other
+that he was an ass to keep quiet for any such silly reason. Minver
+contended that every woman had a right, whether rich or poor, to the man
+who loved her; and, moreover, there were now so many rich women that, if
+they were not allowed to marry poor men, their chances of marriage were
+indefinitely reduced. What better could a widow do with the money she
+had inherited from a husband she probably did not love than give it to a
+man like Alford--or to an ass like Alford, Minver corrected himself.
+
+His _reductio ad absurdum_ allowed Wanhope to resume with a laugh, and
+say that Alford waited at the station in the singleness to which the
+tactful dispersion of the others had left him, and watched the train
+rapidly dwindle in the perspective, till an abrupt turn of the road
+carried it out of sight. Then he lifted his eyes with a long sigh, and
+looked round. Everywhere he saw Mrs. Yarrow's smiling face with that
+inner pathos. It swarmed upon him from all points; and wherever he
+turned it repeated itself in the distances like that succession of faces
+you see when you stand between two mirrors.
+
+It was not merely a lapse from his lately hopeful state with Alford, it
+was a collapse. The man withered and dwindled away, till he felt that he
+must audibly rattle in his clothes as he walked by people. He did not
+walk much. Mostly he remained shrunken in the arm-chair where he used to
+sit beside Mrs. Yarrow's rocker, and the ladies, the older and the
+older-fashioned, who were "sticking it out" at the hotel till it should
+close on the 15th of September, observed him, some compassionately,
+some censoriously, but all in the same conviction.
+
+"It's plain to be seen what ails Mr. Alford, _now_."
+
+"Well, I guess it _is_."
+
+"_I_ guess so."
+
+"I _guess_ it is."
+
+"Seems kind of heartless, her going and leaving him so."
+
+"Like a sick kitten!"
+
+"Well, I should say as _much_."
+
+"Your eyes bother you, Mr. Alford?" one of them chanted, breaking from
+their discussion of him to appeal directly to him. He was rubbing his
+eyes, to relieve himself for the moment from the intolerable affliction
+of those swarming eidolons, which, whenever he thought of this thing or
+that, thickened about him. They now no longer displaced one another, but
+those which came first remained fadedly beside or behind the fresher
+appearances, like the earlier rainbow which loses depth and color when a
+later arch defines itself.
+
+"Yes," he said, glad of the subterfuge. "They annoy me a good deal of
+late."
+
+"You want to get fitted for a good pair of glasses. I kept letting it
+go, when I first began to get old-sighted."
+
+Another lady came to Alford's rescue. "I guess Mr. Alford has no need to
+get fitted for old sight yet a while. You got little spidery
+things--specks and dots--in your eyes?"
+
+"Yes--multitudes," he said, hopelessly.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you what: you want to build up. That was the way with
+me, and the oculist said it was from getting all run down. I built up,
+and the first thing I knew my sight was as clear as a bell. You want to
+build up."
+
+"You want to go to the mountains," a third interposed. "That's where
+Mrs. Yarrow's gone, and I guess it'll do her more good than sticking it
+out here would ever have done."
+
+Alford would have been glad enough to go to the mountains, but with
+those illusions hovering closer and closer about him, he had no longer
+the courage, the strength. He had barely enough of either to get away to
+Boston. He found his doctor this time, after winning and losing the
+wager he made himself that he would not have returned to town yet, and
+the good-fortune was almost too much for his shaken nerves. The cordial
+of his friend's greeting--they had been chums at Harvard--completed his
+overthrow. As he sank upon the professional sofa, where so many other
+cases had been diagnosticated, he broke into tears. "Hello, old fellow!"
+the doctor said, encouragingly, and more tenderly than he would have
+dealt with some women. "What's up?"
+
+"Jim," Alford found voice to say, "I'm afraid I'm losing my mind."
+
+The doctor smiled provisionally. "Well, that's _one_ of the signs you're
+not. Can you say how?"
+
+"Oh yes. In a minute," Alford sobbed, and when he had got the better of
+himself he told his friend the whole story. In the direct examination he
+suppressed Mrs. Yarrow's part, but when the doctor, who had listened
+with smiling seriousness, began to cross-examine him with the question,
+"And you don't remember that any outside influence affected the
+recurrence of the illusions, or did anything to prevent it?" Alford
+answered promptly: "Oh yes. There was a woman who did."
+
+"A woman? What sort of a woman?"
+
+Alford told.
+
+"That is very curious," the doctor said. "I know a man who used to have
+a distressing dream. He broke it up by telling his wife about it every
+morning after he had dreamt it."
+
+"Unluckily, she isn't my wife," Alford said, gloomily.
+
+"But when she was with you, you got rid of the illusions?"
+
+"At first, I used to see hers; then I stopped seeing any."
+
+"Did you ever tell her of them?"
+
+"No; I didn't."
+
+"Never tell anybody?"
+
+"No one but you."
+
+"And do you see them now?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you think, because you've told me of them?"
+
+"It seems so."
+
+The doctor was silent for a marked space. Then he asked, smiling: "Well,
+why not?"
+
+"Why not what?"
+
+"Tell your wife."
+
+"How, my wife?"
+
+"By marriage."
+
+Alford looked dazed. "Do you mean Mrs. Yarrow?"
+
+"If that's her name, and she's a widow."
+
+"And do you think it would be the fair thing for a man on the verge of
+insanity--a physical and mental wreck--to ask a woman to marry him?"
+
+"In your case, yes. In the first place, you're not so bad as all that.
+You need nothing but rest for your body and change for your mind. I
+believe you'll get rid of your illusions as soon as you form the habit
+of speaking of them promptly when they begin to trouble you. You ought
+to speak of them to some one. You can't always have me around, and Mrs.
+Yarrow would be the next best thing."
+
+"She's rich, and you know what I am. I'll have to borrow the money to
+rest on, I'm so poor."
+
+"Not if you marry it."
+
+Alford rose, somewhat more vigorously than he had sat down. But that day
+he did not go beyond ascertaining that Mrs. Yarrow was in town. He found
+out the fact from the maid at her door, who said that she was nearly
+always at home after dinner, and, without waiting for the evening of
+another day, Alford went to call upon her.
+
+She said, coming down to him in a rather old-fashioned, impersonal
+drawing-room which looked distinctly as if it had been left to her: "I
+was so glad to get your card. When did you leave Woodbeach?"
+
+"Mrs. Yarrow," he returned, as if that were the answer, "I think I owe
+you an explanation."
+
+"Pay it!" she bantered, putting out her hand.
+
+"I'm so poverty-stricken that I don't know whether I can. Did you ever
+notice anything odd about me?"
+
+His directness seemed to have a right to directness from her. "I noticed
+that you stared a good deal--or used to. But people _do_ stare."
+
+"I stared because I saw things."
+
+"Saw things?"
+
+"I saw whatever I thought of. Whatever came into my mind was externated
+in a vision."
+
+She smiled, he could not make out whether uneasily or not. "It sounds
+rather creepy, doesn't it? But it's very interesting."
+
+"That's what the doctor said; I've been to see him this morning. May I
+tell you about my visions? They're not so creepy as they sound, I
+believe, and I don't think they'll keep you awake."
+
+"Yes, do," she said. "I should like of all things to hear about them.
+Perhaps I've been one of them."
+
+"You have."
+
+"Oh! Isn't that rather personal?"
+
+"I hope not offensively."
+
+He went on to tell her, with even greater fulness than he had told the
+doctor. She listened with the interest women take in anything weird, and
+with a compassion for him which she did not conceal so perfectly but
+that he saw it. At the end he said: "You may wonder that I come to you
+with all this, which must sound like the ravings of a madman."
+
+"No--no," she hesitated.
+
+"I came because I wished you to know everything about me
+before--before--I wouldn't have come, you'll believe me, if I hadn't had
+the doctor's assurance that my trouble was merely a part of my being
+physically out of kilter, and had nothing to do with my sanity--Good
+Heavens! What am I saying? But the thought has tormented me so! And in
+the midst of it I've allowed myself to--Mrs. Yarrow, I love you. Don't
+you know that?"
+
+Alford may have had a divided mind in this declaration, but after that
+one word Mrs. Yarrow had no mind for anything else. He went on.
+
+"I'm not only sick--so sick that I sha'n't be able to do any work for a
+year at least--but I'm poor, so poor that I can't afford to be sick."
+
+She lifted her eyes and looked at him, where she sat oddly aloof from
+those possessions of hers, to which she seemed so little related, and
+said, with a smile quivering at the corners of her pretty mouth, "I
+don't see what that has to do with it."
+
+"What do you mean?" He stared at her hard.
+
+"Am I in duplicate or triplicate, this time?"
+
+"No, you're only one, and there's none like you! I could never see any
+one else while I looked at you!" he cried, only half aware of his
+poetry, and meaning what he said very literally.
+
+But she took only the poetry. "I shouldn't wish you to," she said, and
+she laughed.
+
+He could not believe yet in his good-fortune. His countenance fell. "I'm
+afraid I don't understand, or that you don't. It doesn't seem as if I
+could get to the end of my unworthiness, which isn't voluntary. It seems
+altogether too base. I can't let you say what you do, if you mean it,
+till you know that I come to you in despair as well as in love. You
+saved me from the fear I was in, again and again, and I believe that
+without you I shall--Ah, it seems very base! But the doctor--If I could
+always tell some one--if I could tell _you_ when these things were
+obsessing me--haunting me--they would cease--"
+
+Mrs. Yarrow rose, with rather a piteous smile. "Then, I am a
+prescription!" She hoped, woman-like, that she was solely a passion; but
+is any woman worth having, ever solely a passion?
+
+"Don't!" Alford implored, rising too. "Don't, in mercy, take it that
+way! It's only that I wish you to know everything that's in me; to know
+how utterly helpless and worthless I am. You needn't have a pang in
+throwing such a thing away."
+
+She put out her hand to him, but at arm's-length. "I sha'n't throw you
+away--at least, not to-night. I want to think." It was a way of saying
+she wished him to go, and he had no desire to stay. He asked if he might
+come again, and she said, "Oh yes."
+
+"To-morrow?"
+
+"Not to-morrow, perhaps. When I send. Was it _young_ Doctor Enderby?"
+
+They had rather a sad, dry parting; and when her door closed upon him he
+felt that it had shut him out forever. His shame and his defeat were so
+great that he did not think of his eidolons, and they did not come to
+trouble him. He woke in the morning, asking himself, bitterly, if he
+were cured already. His humiliation was such that he closed his eyes to
+the light, and wished he might never again open them to it.
+
+The question that Mrs. Yarrow had to ask Dr. Enderby was not the
+question he had instantly forecast for her when she put aside her veil
+in his office and told him who she was. She did not seem anxious to be
+assured of Alford's mental condition, or as to any risks in marrying
+him. Her inquiry was much more psychological; it was almost impersonal,
+and yet Dr. Enderby thought she looked as if she had been crying.
+
+She had a difficulty in formulating her question, and when it came it
+was almost a speculation.
+
+"Women," she said, a little hoarsely, "have no right, I suppose, to
+expect the ideal in life. The best they can do seems to be to make the
+real look like it."
+
+Dr. Enderby reflected. "Well, yes. But I don't know that I ever put it
+to myself in just those terms."
+
+Then she remarked, as if that were the next thing: "You've known Mr.
+Alford a long time."
+
+"We were at school together, and we shared the same rooms in Harvard."
+
+"He is very sincere," she added, as if this were relevant.
+
+"He's a man who likes to have a little worse than the worst known about
+him. One might say he was excessively sincere." Enderby divined that
+Alford had been bungling the matter, and he was willing to help him out
+if he could.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow fixed dimly beautiful eyes upon him. "I don't know," she
+said, "why it wouldn't be ideal--as much ideal as anything--to give
+one's self absolutely to--to--a duty--or not duty, exactly; I don't mean
+that. Especially," she added, showing a light through the mist, "if one
+wanted to do it."
+
+Then he knew she had made up her mind, and though on some accounts he
+would have liked to laugh with her, on other accounts he felt that he
+owed it to her to be serious.
+
+"If women could not fulfil the ideal in that way--if they did not
+constantly do it--there would be no marriages for love."
+
+"Do you think so?" she asked, with a shaking voice. "But men--men are
+ideal, too."
+
+"Not as women are--except now and then some fool like Alford." Now,
+indeed, he laughed, and he began to praise Alford from his heart, so
+delicately, so tenderly, so reverently, that Mrs. Yarrow laughed too
+before he was done, and cried a little, and when she rose to leave she
+could not speak; but clung to his hand, on turning away, and so flung it
+from behind her with a gesture that Enderby thought pretty.
+
+At this point, Wanhope stopped as if that were the end.
+
+"And did she let Alford come to see her again?" Rulledge, at once
+romantic and literal, demanded.
+
+"Oh yes. At any rate, they were married that fall. They are--I believe
+he's pursuing his archaeological studies there--living in Athens."
+
+"Together?" Minver smoothly inquired.
+
+At this expression of cynicism Rulledge gave him a look that would have
+incinerated another. Wanhope went out with Minver, and then, after a
+moment's daze, Rulledge exclaimed: "Jove! I forgot to ask him whether
+it's stopped Alford's illusions!"
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+A MEMORY THAT WORKED OVERTIME
+
+
+Minver's brother took down from the top of the low bookshelf a small
+painting on panel, which he first studied in the obverse, and then
+turned and contemplated on the back with the same dreamy smile. "I don't
+see how that got _here_," he said, absently.
+
+"Well," Minver returned, "you don't expect _me_ to tell you, except on
+the principle that any one would naturally know more about anything of
+yours than you would." He took it from his brother and looked at the
+front of it. "It isn't bad. It's pretty good!" He turned it round. "Why,
+it's one of old Blakey's! How did _you_ come by it?"
+
+"Stole it, probably," Minver's brother said, still thoughtfully. Then
+with an effect of recollecting: "No, come to think of it," he added,
+"Blakey gave it to me." The Minvers played these little comedies
+together, quite as much to satisfy their tenderness for each other as to
+give their friends pleasure. "Think you're the only painter that gets me
+to take his truck as a gift? He gave it to me, let's see, about ten
+years ago, when he was trying to make a die of it, and failed; I thought
+he would succeed. But it's been in my wife's room nearly ever since, and
+what I can't understand is what she's doing with it down here."
+
+"Probably to make trouble for you, somehow," Minver suggested.
+
+"No, I don't think it's _that_, quite," his brother returned, with a
+false air of scrupulosity, which was part of their game with each other.
+He looked some more at the picture, and then he glanced from it at me.
+"There's a very curious story connected with that sketch."
+
+"Oh, well, tell it," Minver said. "Tell it! I suppose I can stand it
+again. Acton's never heard it, I believe. But you needn't make a show of
+sparing him. I _couldn't_ stand that."
+
+"I certainly haven't heard the story," I said, "and if I had I would be
+too polite to own it."
+
+Minver's brother looked towards the open door over his shoulder, and
+Minver interpreted for him: "She's not coming. I'll give you due
+warning."
+
+"It was before we were married, but not much before, and the picture was
+a sort of wedding present for my wife, though Blakey made a show of
+giving it to me. Said he had painted it for me, because he had a
+prophetic soul, and felt in his bones that I was going to want a picture
+of the place where I first met her. You see, it's the little villa her
+mother had taken that winter on the Viale Petrarca, just outside of
+Florence. It _was_ the first place I met her, but not the last."
+
+"Don't be obvious," Minver ordered.
+
+His brother did not mind him. "I thought it was mighty nice of Blakey.
+He was barking away, all the time he was talking, and when he wasn't
+coughing he was so hoarse he could hardly speak above a whisper; but he
+kept talking on, and wishing me happy, and fending off my gratitude,
+while he was finding a piece of manila paper to wrap the sketch in, and
+then hunting for a piece of string to tie it. When he handed it to me at
+last, he gasped out: 'I don't mind her knowing that I partly meant it as
+the place where _she_ first met _you_, too. I'm not ashamed of it as a
+bit of color. Anyway, I sha'n't live to do anything better.'
+
+"'Oh, yes, you will,' I came back in that lying way we think is kind
+with dying people. I suppose it is; anyway, it turned out all right with
+Blakey, as he'll testify if you look him up when you go to Florence. By
+the way, he lives in that villa _now_."
+
+"No?" I said. "How charming!"
+
+Minver's brother went on: "I made up my mind to be awfully careful of
+that picture, and not let it out of my hand till I left it with 'her'
+mother, to be put among the other wedding presents that were
+accumulating at their house in Exeter Street. So I held it on my lap
+going in by train from Lexington, where Blakey lived, and when I got out
+at the old Lowell Depot--North Station, now--and got into the little
+tinkle-tankle horse-car that took me up to where I was to get the Back
+Bay car--Those were the prehistoric times before trolleys, and there
+were odds in horse-cars. We considered the blue-painted Back Bay cars
+very swell. _You_ remember them?" he asked Minver.
+
+"Not when I can help it," Minver answered. "When I broke with Boston,
+and went to New York, I burnt my horse-cars behind me, and never wanted
+to know what they looked like, one from another."
+
+"Well, as I was saying," Minver's brother went on, without regarding his
+impatriotism, "when I got into the horse-car at the depot, I rushed for
+a corner seat, and I put the picture, with its face next the car-end,
+between me and the wall, and kept my hand on it; and when I changed to
+the Back Bay car, I did the same thing. There was a florist's just
+there, and I couldn't resist some Mayflowers in the window; I was in
+that condition, you know, when flowers seemed to be made for her, and I
+had to take her own to her wherever I found them. I put the bunch
+between my knees, and kept one hand on it, while I kept my other hand on
+the picture at my side. I was feeling first-rate, and when General
+Filbert got in after we started, and stood before me hanging by a strap
+and talking down to me, I had the decency to propose giving him my seat,
+as he was about ten years older."
+
+"Sure?" Minver asked.
+
+"Well, say fifteen. I don't pretend to be a chicken, and never did. But
+he wouldn't hear of it. Said I had a bundle, and winked at the bunch of
+Mayflowers. We had such a jolly talk that I let the car carry me a block
+by and had to get out at Gloucester and run back to Exeter. I rang, and,
+when the maid came to the door, there I stood with nothing but the
+Mayflowers in my hand."
+
+"Good _coup de théâtre_," Minver jeered. "Curtain?"
+
+His brother disdained reply, or was too much absorbed in his tale to
+think of any. "When the girl opened the door and I discovered my fix I
+burst out, 'Good Lord!' and I stuck the bunch of flowers at her, and
+turned and ran. I suppose I must have had some notion of overtaking the
+car with my picture in it. But the best I could do was to let the next
+one overtake me several blocks down Marlborough Street, and carry me to
+the little jumping-off station on Westchester Park, as we used to call
+it in those days, at the end of the Back Bay line.
+
+"As I pushed into the railroad office, I bet myself that the picture
+would not be there, and, sure enough, I won."
+
+"You were always a lucky dog," Minver said.
+
+"But the man in charge was very encouraging, and said it was sure to be
+turned in; and he asked me what time the car had passed the corner of
+Gloucester Street. I happened to know, and then he said, Oh yes, that
+conductor was a substitute, and he wouldn't be on again till morning;
+then he would be certain to bring the picture with him. I was not to
+worry, for it would be all right. Nothing left in the Back Bay cars was
+ever lost; the character of the abutters was guarantee for that, and
+they were practically the only passengers. The conductors and the
+drivers were as honest as the passengers, and I could consider myself in
+the hands of friends.
+
+"He was so reassuring that I went away smiling at my fears, and
+promising to be round bright and early, as soon, the official
+suggested--the morrow being Sunday--as soon as the men and horses had
+had their baked beans.
+
+"Still, after dinner, I had a lurking anxiety, which I turned into a
+friendly impulse to go and call on Mrs. Filbert, whom I really owed a
+bread-and-butter visit, and who, I knew, would not mind my coming in the
+evening. The general, she said, had been telling her of our pleasant
+chat in the car, and would be glad to smoke his after-dinner cigar with
+me, and why wouldn't I come into the library?
+
+"We were so very jolly together, all three, that I made light of my
+misadventure about the picture. The general inquired about the flowers
+first. He remembered the flowers perfectly, and hoped they were
+acceptable; he thought he remembered the picture, too, now I mentioned
+it; but he would not have noticed it so much, there by my side, with my
+hand on it. I would be sure to get it. He gave several instances,
+personal to him and his friends, of recoveries of lost articles; it was
+really astonishing how careful the horse-car people were, especially on
+the Back Bay line. I would find my picture all right at the Westchester
+Park station in the morning; never fear.
+
+"I feared so little that I slept well, and even overslept; and I went to
+get my picture quite confidently, and I could hardly believe it had not
+been turned in yet, though the station-master told me so. The substitute
+conductor had not seen it, but more than likely it was at the stables,
+where the cleaners would have found it in the car and turned it in. He
+was as robustly cheerful about it as ever, and offered to send an
+inquiry by the next car; but I said, Why shouldn't I go myself; and he
+said that was a good idea. So I went, and it was well I did, for my
+picture was not there, and I had saved time by going. It was not there,
+but the head man said I need not worry a mite about it; I was certain to
+get it sooner or later; it would be turned in, to a dead certainty. We
+became rather confidential, and I went so far as to explain about
+wanting to make my inquiries very quietly on Blakey's account: he would
+be annoyed if he heard of its loss, and it might react unfavorably on
+his health.
+
+"The head man said that was so; and he would tell me what I wanted to
+do: I wanted to go to the Company's General Offices in Milk Street, and
+tell them about it. That was where everything went as a last resort, and
+he would bet any money that I would see my picture there the first thing
+I got inside the door. I thanked him with the fervor I thought he
+merited, and said I would go at once.
+
+"'Well,' he said, 'you don't want to go to-day, you know. The offices
+are not open Sunday. And to-morrow's a holiday. But you're all right.
+You'll find your picture there, don't you have any doubts about it.'
+
+"That was my next to last Sunday supper with my wife, before she became
+my wife, at her mother's house, and I went to the feast with as little
+gayety as I suppose any young man ever carried to a supper of the kind.
+I was told, afterwards, that my behavior up to a certain point was so
+suggestive either of secret crime or of secret regret, that the only
+question was whether they should have in the police or I should be given
+back my engagement ring and advised to go. Luckily I ceased to bear my
+anguish just in time.
+
+"The fact is, I could not stand it any longer, and as soon as I was
+alone with her I made a clean breast of it; partially clean, that is: I
+suppose a fellow never tells _all_ to a girl, if he truly loves her."
+Minver's brother glanced round at us and gathered the harvest of our
+approving smiles. "I said to her, 'I've been having a wedding present.'
+'Well,' she said, 'you've come as near having no use for a wedding
+present as anybody _I_ know. Was having a wedding present what made you
+so gloomy at supper? Who gave it to you, anyway?' 'Old Blakey.' 'A
+painting?' 'Yes--a sketch.' 'What of?' This was where I qualified. I
+said: 'Oh, just one of those Sorrento things of his.' You see, if I told
+her that it was the villa where we first met, and then said I had left
+it in the horse-car, she would take it as proof positive that I did not
+really care anything about her or I never could have forgotten it."
+
+"You were wise as far as you went," Minver said. "Go on."
+
+"Well, I told her the whole story circumstantially: how I had kept the
+sketch religiously in my lap in the train, and then held it down with my
+hand all the while beside me in the first horse-car, and did the same
+thing in the Back Bay car I changed to; and felt of it the whole time I
+was talking with General Filbert, and then left it there when I got out
+to leave the flowers at her door, when the awful fact came over me like
+a flash. 'Yes,' she said, 'Norah said you poked the flowers at her
+without a word, and she had to guess they were for me.'
+
+"I had got my story pretty glib by this time; I had reeled it off with
+increasing particulars to the Westchester Park station-master, and the
+head man at the stables, and General Filbert, and I was so
+letter-perfect that I had a vision of the whole thing, especially of my
+talking with the general while I kept my hand on the picture--and then
+all was dark.
+
+"At the end she said we must advertise for the picture. I said it would
+kill Blakey if he saw it; and she said: No matter, _let_ it kill him; it
+would show him that we valued his gift, and were moving heaven and earth
+to find it; and, at any rate, it would kill _me_ if I kept myself in
+suspense. I said I should not care for that; but with her sympathy I
+guessed I could live through the night, and I was sure I should find the
+thing at the Milk Street office in the morning.
+
+"'Why,' said she, 'to-morrow it'll be shut!' and then I didn't really
+know what to say, and I agreed to drawing up an advertisement then and
+there, so as not to lose an instant's time after I had been at the Milk
+Street office on Tuesday and found the picture had not been turned in.
+She said I could dictate the advertisement and she would write it down,
+and she asked: 'Which one of his Sorrento things was it? You must
+describe it exactly, you know.' That made me feel awfully, and I said I
+was not going to have my next-to-last Sunday evening with her spoiled by
+writing advertisements; and I got away, somehow, with all sorts of
+comforting reassurances from her. I could see that she was feigning them
+to encourage me.
+
+"The next morning, I simply could not keep away from the Milk Street
+office, and my unreasonable impatience was rewarded by finding it at
+least ajar, if not open. There was the nicest kind of a young fellow
+there, and he said he was not officially present; but what could he do
+for me? Then I told him the whole story, with details I had not thought
+of before; and he was just as enthusiastic about my getting my picture
+as the Westchester Park station-master or the head man of the stables.
+It was morally certain to be turned in, the first thing in the morning;
+but he would take a description of it, and send out inquiries to all the
+conductors and drivers and car-cleaners, and make a special thing of it.
+He entered into the spirit of the affair, and I felt that I had such a
+friend in him that I confided a little more and hinted at the double
+interest I had in the picture. I didn't pretend that it was one of
+Blakey's Sorrento things, but I gave him a full and true description of
+it, with its length, breadth, and thickness, in exact measure."
+
+Here Minver's brother stopped and lost himself in contemplation of the
+sketch, as he held it at arm's-length.
+
+"Well, did you get your picture?" I prompted, after a moment.
+
+"Oh yes," he said, with a quick turn towards me. "This is it. A District
+Messenger brought it round the first thing Tuesday morning. He brought
+it," Minver's brother added, with a certain effectiveness, "from the
+florist's, where I had stopped to get those Mayflowers. I had left it
+there."
+
+"You've told it very well, this time, Joe," Minver said. "But Acton here
+is waiting for the psychology. Poor old Wanhope ought to be here," he
+added to me. He looked about for a match to light his pipe, and his
+brother jerked his head in the direction of the chimney.
+
+"Box on the mantel. Yes," he sighed, "that was really something very
+curious. You see, I had invented the whole history of the case from the
+time I got into the Back Bay car with my flowers. Absolutely nothing had
+happened of all I had remembered till I got out of the car. I did not
+put the picture beside me at the end of the car; I did not keep my hand
+on it while I talked with General Filbert; I did not leave it behind me
+when I left the car. Nothing of the kind happened. I had already left it
+at the florist's, and that whole passage of experience which was so
+vividly and circumstantially stamped in my memory that I related it four
+or five times over, and would have made oath to every detail of it, was
+pure invention, or, rather, it was something less positive: the reflex
+of the first half of my horse-car experience, when I really did put the
+picture in the corner next me, and did keep my hand on it."
+
+"Very strange," I was beginning, but just then the door opened and Mrs.
+Minver came in, and I was presented.
+
+She gave me a distracted hand, as she said to her husband: "Have you
+been telling the story about that picture again?" He was still holding
+it. "Silly!"
+
+She was a mighty pretty woman, but full of vim and fun and sense.
+
+"It's one of the most curious freaks of memory I ever heard of, Mrs.
+Minver," I said.
+
+Then she showed that she was proud of it, though she had called him
+silly. "Have you told," she demanded of her husband, "how oddly your
+memory behaved about the subject of the picture, too?"
+
+"I have again eaten that particular piece of humble-pie," Minver's
+brother replied.
+
+"Well," she said to me, "_I_ think he was simply so possessed with the
+awfulness of having lost the picture that all the rest took place
+prophetically, but unconsciously."
+
+"By a species of inverted presentiment?" I suggested.
+
+"Yes," she assented, slowly, as if the formulation were new to her, but
+not unacceptable. "Something of that kind. I never heard of anybody else
+having it."
+
+Minver had got his pipe alight, and was enjoying it. "_I_ think Joe was
+simply off his nut, for the time being."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+A CASE OF METAPHANTASMIA
+
+
+The stranger was a guest of Halson's, and Halson himself was a
+comparative stranger, for he was of recent election to our dining-club,
+and was better known to Minver than to the rest of our little group,
+though one could not be sure that he was very well known to Minver. The
+stranger had been dining with Halson, and we had found the two smoking
+together, with their cups of black coffee at their elbows, before the
+smouldering fire in the Turkish room when we came in from dinner--my
+friend Wanhope the psychologist, Rulledge the sentimentalist, Minver the
+painter, and myself. It struck me for the first time that a fire on the
+hearth was out of keeping with a Turkish room, but I felt that the cups
+of black coffee restored the lost balance in some measure.
+
+Before we had settled into our wonted places--in fact, almost as we
+entered--Halson looked over his shoulder and said: "Mr. Wanhope, I want
+you to hear this story of my friend's. Go on, Newton--or, rather, go
+back and begin again--and I'll introduce you afterwards."
+
+The stranger made a becoming show of deprecation. He said he did not
+think the story would bear immediate repetition, or was even worth
+telling once, but, if we had nothing better to do, perhaps we might do
+worse than hear it; the most he could say for it was that the thing
+really happened. He wore a large, drooping, gray mustache, which, with
+the imperial below it, quite hid his mouth, and gave him, somehow, a
+martial effect, besides accurately dating him of the period between the
+latest sixties and earliest seventies, when his beard would have been
+black; I liked his mustache not being stubbed in the modern manner, but
+allowed to fall heavily over his lips, and then branch away from the
+corners of his mouth as far as it would. He lighted the cigar which
+Halson gave him, and, blowing the bitten-off tip towards the fire,
+began:
+
+"It was about that time when we first had a ten-o'clock night train from
+Boston to New York. Train used to start at nine, and lag along round by
+Springfield, and get into the old Twenty-sixth Street Station here at
+six in the morning, where they let you sleep as long as you liked. They
+call you up now at half-past five, and, if you don't turn out, they haul
+you back to Mott Haven, or New Haven, I'm not sure which. I used to go
+into Boston and turn in at the old Worcester Depot, as we called it
+then, just about the time the train began to move, and I usually got a
+fine night's rest in the course of the nine or ten hours we were on the
+way to New York; it didn't seem quite the same after we began saying
+Albany Depot: shortened up the run, somehow.
+
+[Illustration: "NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY
+MARK"]
+
+"But that night I wasn't very sleepy, and the porter had got the place
+so piping hot with the big stoves, one at each end of the car, to keep
+the good, old-fashioned Christmas cold out, that I thought I should be
+more comfortable with a smoke before I went to bed; and, anyhow, I could
+get away from the heat better in the smoking-room. I hated to be leaving
+home on Christmas Eve, for I never had done that before, and I hated to
+be leaving my wife alone with the children and the two girls in our
+little house in Cambridge. Before I started in on the old horse-car for
+Boston, I had helped her to tuck the young ones in and to fill the
+stockings hung along the wall over the register--the nearest we could
+come to a fireplace--and I thought those stockings looked very weird,
+five of them, dangling lumpily down, and I kept seeing them, and her
+sitting up sewing in front of them, and afraid to go to bed on account
+of burglars. I suppose she was shyer of burglars than any woman ever was
+that had never seen a sign of them. She was always calling me up, to go
+down-stairs and put them out, and I used to wander all over the house,
+from attic to cellar, in my nighty, with a lamp in one hand and a poker
+in the other, so that no burglar could have missed me if he had wanted
+an easy mark. I always kept a lamp and a poker handy."
+
+The stranger heaved a sigh as of fond reminiscence, and looked round for
+the sympathy which in our company of bachelors he failed of; even the
+sympathetic Rulledge failed of the necessary experience to move him in
+compassionate response.
+
+"Well," the stranger went on, a little damped perhaps by his failure,
+but supported apparently by the interest of the fact in hand, "I had the
+smoking-room to myself for a while, and then a fellow put his head in
+that I thought I knew after I had thought I didn't know him. He dawned
+on me more and more, and I had to acknowledge to myself, by and by, that
+it was a man named Melford, whom I used to room with in Holworthy at
+Harvard; that is, we had an apartment of two bedrooms and a study; and I
+suppose there were never two fellows knew less of each other than we did
+at the end of our four years together. I can't say what Melford knew of
+me, but the most I knew of Melford was his particular brand of
+nightmare."
+
+Wanhope gave the first sign of his interest in the matter. He took his
+cigar from his lips, and softly emitted an "Ah!"
+
+Rulledge went further and interrogatively repeated the word "Nightmare?"
+
+"Nightmare," the stranger continued, firmly. "The curious thing about it
+was that I never exactly knew the subject of his nightmare, and a more
+curious thing yet was Melford himself never knew it, when I woke him up.
+He said he couldn't make out anything but a kind of scraping in a
+door-lock. His theory was that in his childhood it had been a much
+completer thing, but that the circumstances had broken down in a sort of
+decadence, and now there was nothing left of it but that scraping in the
+door-lock, like somebody trying to turn a misfit key. I used to throw
+things at his door, and once I tried a cold-water douche from the
+pitcher, when he was very hard to waken; but that was rather brutal, and
+after a while I used to let him roar himself awake; he would always do
+it, if I trusted to nature; and before our junior year was out I got so
+that I could sleep through, pretty calmly; I would just say to myself
+when he fetched me to the surface with a yell, 'That's Melford
+dreaming,' and doze off sweetly."
+
+"Jove!" Rulledge said, "I don't see how you could stand it."
+
+"There's everything in habit, Rulledge," Minver put in. "Perhaps our
+friend only dreamt that he heard a dream."
+
+"That's quite possible," the stranger owned, politely. "But the case is
+superficially as I state it. However, it was all past, long ago, when I
+recognized Melford in the smoking-room that night: it must have been ten
+or a dozen years. I was wearing a full beard then, and so was he; we
+wore as much beard as we could in those days. I had been through the
+war since college, and he had been in California, most of the time, and,
+as he told me, he had been up north, in Alaska, just after we bought it,
+and hurt his eyes--had snow-blindness--and he wore spectacles. In fact,
+I had to do most of the recognizing, but after we found out who we were
+we were rather comfortable; and I liked him better than I remembered to
+have liked him in our college days. I don't suppose there was ever much
+harm in him; it was only my grudge about his nightmare. We talked along
+and smoked along for about an hour, and I could hear the porter outside,
+making up the berths, and the train rumbled away towards Framingham, and
+then towards Worcester, and I began to be sleepy, and to think I would
+go to bed myself; and just then the door of the smoking-room opened, and
+a young girl put in her face a moment, and said: 'Oh, I beg your pardon.
+I thought it was the stateroom,' and then she shut the door, and I
+realized that she looked like a girl I used to know."
+
+The stranger stopped, and I fancied from a note in his voice that this
+girl was perhaps like an early love. We silently waited for him to
+resume how and when he would. He sighed, and after an appreciable
+interval he began again. "It is curious how things are related to one
+another. My wife had never seen her, and yet, somehow, this girl that
+looked like the one I mean brought my mind back to my wife with a quick
+turn, after I had forgotten her in my talk with Melford for the time
+being. I thought how lonely she was in that little house of ours in
+Cambridge, on rather an outlying street, and I knew she was thinking of
+me, and hating to have me away on Christmas Eve, which isn't such a
+lively time after you're grown up and begin to look back on a good many
+other Christmas Eves, when you were a child yourself; in fact, I don't
+know a dismaler night in the whole year. I stepped out on the platform
+before I began to turn in, for a mouthful of the night air, and I found
+it was spitting snow--a regular Christmas Eve of the true pattern; and I
+didn't believe, from the business feel of those hard little pellets,
+that it was going to stop in a hurry, and I thought if we got into New
+York on time we should be lucky. The snow made me think of a night when
+my wife was sure there were burglars in the house; and in fact I heard
+their tramping on the stairs myself--thump, thump, thump, and then a
+stop, and then down again. Of course it was the slide and thud of the
+snow from the roof of the main part of the house to the roof of the
+kitchen, which was in an L, a story lower, but it was as good an
+imitation of burglars as I want to hear at one o'clock in the morning;
+and the recollection of it made me more anxious about my wife, not
+because I believed she was in danger, but because I knew how frightened
+she must be.
+
+"When I went back into the car, that girl passed me on the way to her
+stateroom, and I concluded that she was the only woman on board, and her
+friends had taken the stateroom for her, so that she needn't feel
+strange. I usually go to bed in a sleeper as I do in my own house, but
+that night I somehow couldn't. I got to thinking of accidents, and I
+thought how disagreeable it would be to turn out into the snow in my
+nighty. I ended by turning in with my clothes on, all except my coat;
+and, in spite of the red-hot stoves, I wasn't any too warm. I had a
+berth in the middle of the car, and just as I was parting my curtains to
+lie down, old Melford came to take the lower berth opposite. It made me
+laugh a little, and I was glad of the relief. 'Why, hello, Melford,'
+said I. 'This is like the old Holworthy times.' 'Yes, isn't it?' said
+he, and then I asked something that I had kept myself from asking all
+through our talk in the smoking-room, because I knew he was rather
+sensitive about it, or used to be. 'Do you ever have that regulation
+nightmare of yours nowadays, Melford? He gave a laugh, and said: 'I
+haven't had it, I suppose, once in ten years. What made you think of
+it?' I said: 'Oh, I don't know. It just came into my mind. Well,
+good-night, old fellow. I hope you'll rest well,' and suddenly I began
+to feel light-hearted again, and I went to sleep as gayly as ever I did
+in my life."
+
+The stranger paused again, and Wanhope said: "Those swift transitions of
+mood are very interesting. Of course they occur in that remote region of
+the mind where all incidents and sensations are of one quality, and
+things of the most opposite character unite in a common origin. No one
+that I remember has attempted to trace such effects to their causes, and
+then back again from their causes, which would be much more important."
+
+"Yes, I dare say," Minver put in. "But if they all amount to the same
+thing in the end, what difference would it make?"
+
+"It would perhaps establish the identity of good and evil," Wanhope
+suggested.
+
+"Oh, the sinners are convinced of that already," Minver said, while
+Rulledge glanced quickly from one to the other.
+
+The stranger looked rather dazed, and Rulledge said: "Well, I don't
+suppose that was the conclusion of the whole matter?"
+
+"Oh no," the stranger answered, "that was only the beginning of the
+conclusion. I didn't go to sleep at once, though I felt so much at
+peace. In fact, Melford beat me, and I could hear him far in advance,
+steaming and whistling away, in a style that I recalled as
+characteristic, over a space of intervening years that I hadn't
+definitely summed up yet. It made me think of a night near Narragansett
+Bay, where two friends of mine and I had had a mighty good dinner at a
+sort of wild club-house, and had hurried into our bunks, each one so as
+to get the start of the others, for the fellows that were left behind
+knew they had no chance of sleep after the first began to get in his
+work. I laughed, and I suppose I must have gone to sleep almost
+simultaneously, for I don't recollect anything afterwards till I was
+wakened by a kind of muffled bellow, that I remembered only too well. It
+was the unfailing sign of Melford's nightmare.
+
+"I was ready to swear, and I was ashamed for the fellow who had no more
+self-control than that: when a fellow snores, or has a nightmare, you
+always think first off that he needn't have had it if he had tried. As
+usual, I knew Melford didn't know what his nightmare was about, and that
+made me madder still, to have him bellowing into the air like that, with
+no particular aim. All at once there came a piercing scream from the
+stateroom, and then I knew that the girl there had heard Melford and
+been scared out of a year's growth."
+
+The stranger made a little break, and Wanhope asked, "Could you make out
+what she screamed, or was it quite inarticulate?"
+
+"It was plain enough, and it gave me a clew, somehow, to what Melford's
+nightmare was about. She was calling out, 'Help! help! help! Burglars!'
+till I thought she would raise the roof of the car."
+
+"And did she wake anybody?" Rulledge inquired.
+
+"That was the strange part of it. Not a soul stirred, and after the
+first burst the girl seemed to quiet down again and yield the floor to
+Melford, who kept bellowing steadily away. I was so furious that I
+reached out across the aisle to shake him, but the attempt was too much
+for me. I lost my balance and fell out of my berth onto the floor. You
+may imagine the state of mind I was in. I gathered myself up and pulled
+Melford's curtains open and was just going to fall on him tooth and
+nail, when I was nearly taken off my feet again by an apparition: well,
+it looked like an apparition, but it was a tall fellow in his
+nighty--for it was twenty years before pajamas--and he had a small dark
+lantern in his hand, such as we used to carry in those days so as to
+read in our berths when we couldn't sleep. He was gritting his teeth,
+and growling between them: 'Out o' this! Out o' this! I'm going to shoot
+to kill, you blasted thieves!' I could see by the strange look in his
+eyes that he was sleep-walking, and I didn't wait to see if he had a
+pistol. I popped in behind the curtains, and found myself on top of
+another fellow, for I had popped into the wrong berth in my confusion.
+The man started up and yelled: 'Oh, don't kill me! There's my watch on
+the stand, and all the money in the house is in my pantaloons pocket.
+The silver's in the sideboard down-stairs, and it's plated, anyway.'
+Then I understood what his complaint was, and I rolled onto the floor
+again. By that time every man in the car was out of his berth, too,
+except Melford, who was devoting himself strictly to business; and every
+man was grabbing some other, and shouting, 'Police!' or 'Burglars!' or
+'Help!' or 'Murder!' just as the fancy took him."
+
+"Most extraordinary!" Wanhope commented as the stranger paused for
+breath.
+
+In the intensity of our interest, we had crowded close upon him, except
+Minver, who sat with his head thrown back, and that cynical cast in his
+eye which always exasperated Rulledge; and Halson, who stood smiling
+proudly, as if the stranger's story did him as his sponsor credit
+personally.
+
+"Yes," the stranger owned, "but I don't know that there wasn't something
+more extraordinary still. From time to time the girl in the stateroom
+kept piping up, with a shriek for help. She had got past the burglar
+stage, but she wanted to be saved, anyhow, from some danger which she
+didn't specify. It went through me that it was very strange nobody
+called the porter, and I set up a shout of 'Porter!' on my own account.
+I decided that if there were burglars the porter was the man to put them
+out, and that if there were no burglars the porter could relieve our
+groundless fears. Sure enough, he came rushing in, as soon as I called
+for him, from the little corner by the smoking-room where he was
+blacking boots between dozes. He was wide enough awake, if having his
+eyes open meant that, and he had a shoe on one hand and a shoe-brush in
+the other. But he merely joined in the general up-roar and shouted for
+the police."
+
+"Excuse me," Wanhope interposed. "I wish to be clear as to the facts.
+You had reasoned it out that the porter could quiet the tumult?"
+
+"Never reasoned anything out so clearly in my life."
+
+"But what was your theory of the situation? That your friend, Mr.
+Melford, had a nightmare in which he was dreaming of burglars?"
+
+"I hadn't a doubt of it."
+
+"And that by a species of dream-transference the nightmare was
+communicated to the young lady in the stateroom?"
+
+"Well--yes."
+
+"And that her call for help and her cry of burglars acted as a sort of
+hypnotic suggestion with the other sleepers, and they began to be
+afflicted with the same nightmare?"
+
+"I don't know that I ever put it to myself so distinctly, but it appears
+to me now that I must have reached some such conclusion."
+
+"That is very interesting, very interesting indeed. I beg your pardon.
+Please go on," Wanhope courteously entreated.
+
+"I don't remember just where I was," the stranger faltered.
+
+Rulledge returned with an accuracy which obliged us all: "'The porter
+merely joined in the general uproar and shouted for the police.'"
+
+"Oh yes," the stranger assented. "Then I didn't know what to do, for a
+minute. The porter was a pretty thick-headed darky, but he was
+lion-hearted; and his idea was to lay hold of a burglar wherever he
+could find him. There were plenty of burglars in the aisle there, or
+people that were afraid of burglars, and they seemed to think the porter
+had a good idea. They had hold of one another already, and now began to
+pull up and down the aisles in a way that reminded me of the
+old-fashioned mesmeric lecturers, when they told their subjects that
+they were this or that, and set them to acting the part. I remembered
+how once when the mesmerist gave out that they were at a horse--race,
+and his subjects all got astride of their chairs, and galloped up and
+down the hall like a lot of little boys on laths. I thought of that now,
+and although it was rather a serious business, for I didn't know what
+minute they would come to blows, I couldn't help laughing. The sight was
+weird enough. Every one looked like a somnambulist as he pulled and
+hauled. The young lady in the stateroom was doing her full share. She
+was screaming, 'Won't somebody let me out?' and hammering on the door. I
+guess it was her screaming and hammering that brought the conductor at
+last, or maybe he just came round in the course of nature to take up the
+tickets. It was before the time when they took the tickets at the gate,
+and you used to stick them into a little slot at the side of your berth,
+and the conductor came along and took them in the night, somewhere
+between Worcester and Springfield, I should say."
+
+"I remember," Rulledge assented, but very carefully, so as not to
+interrupt the flow of the narrative. "Used to wake up everybody in the
+car."
+
+"Exactly," the stranger said. "But this time they were all wide awake to
+receive him, or fast asleep, and dreaming their roles. He came along
+with the wire of his lantern over his arm, the way the old-time
+conductors did, and calling out, 'Tickets!' just as if it was broad day,
+and he believed every man was trying to beat his way to New York. The
+oddest thing about it was that the sleep-walkers all stopped their
+pulling and hauling a moment, and each man reached down to the little
+slot alongside of his berth and handed over his ticket. Then they took
+hold and began pulling and hauling again. I suppose the conductor asked
+what the matter was; but I couldn't hear him, and I couldn't make out
+exactly what he did say. But the passengers understood, and they all
+shouted 'Burglars!' and that girl in the stateroom gave a shriek that
+you could have heard from one end of the train to the other, and
+hammered on the door, and wanted to be let out.
+
+"It seemed to take the conductor by surprise, and he faced towards the
+stateroom and let the lantern slip off his arm, and it dropped onto the
+floor and went out; I remember thinking what a good thing it didn't set
+the car on fire. But there in the dark--for the car lamps went out at
+the same time with the lantern--I could hear those fellows pulling and
+hauling up and down the aisle and scuffling over the floor, and through
+all Melford bellowing away, like an orchestral accompaniment to a combat
+in Wagner opera, but getting quieter and quieter till his bellow died
+away altogether. At the same time the row in the aisle of the car
+stopped, and there was perfect silence, and I could hear the snow
+rattling against my window. Then I went off into a sound sleep, and
+never woke till we got into New York."
+
+The stranger seemed to have reached the end of his story, or at least to
+have exhausted the interest it had for him, and he smoked on, holding
+his knee between his hands and looking thoughtfully into the fire.
+
+He had left us rather breathless, or, better said, blank, and each
+looked at the other for some initiative; then we united in looking at
+Wanhope; that is, Rulledge and I did. Minver rose and stretched himself
+with what I must describe as a sardonic yawn; Halson had stolen away
+before the end, as one to whom the end was known. Wanhope seemed by no
+means averse to the inquiry delegated to him, but only to be formulating
+its terms. At last he said:
+
+"I don't remember hearing of any case of this kind before.
+Thought-transference is a sufficiently ascertained phenomenon--the
+insistence of a conscious mind upon a certain fact until it penetrates
+the unconscious mind of another and is adopted as its own. But in the
+dream state the mind seems passive, and becomes the prey of this or that
+self-suggestion, without the power of imparting it to another dreaming
+mind. Yet here we have positive proof of such an effect. It appears that
+the victim of a particularly terrific nightmare was able to share its
+horrors--or rather unable _not_ to share them--with a whole sleeping-car
+full of people whose brains helplessly took up the same theme, and
+dreamed it, as we may say, to the same conclusions. I said proof, but of
+course we can't accept a single instance as establishing a scientific
+certainty. I don't question the veracity of Mr.--"
+
+"Newton," the stranger suggested.
+
+"Newton's experience," Wanhope continued, "but we must wait for a good
+many cases of the kind before we can accept what I may call
+metaphantasmia as being equally established with thought-transference.
+If we could it would throw light upon a whole series of most curious
+phenomena, as, for instance, the privity of a person dreamed about to
+the incident created by the dreamer."
+
+"That would be rather dreadful, wouldn't it?" I ventured. "We do dream
+such scandalous, such compromising things about people."
+
+"All that," Wanhope gently insisted, "could have nothing to do with the
+fact. That alone is to be considered in an inquiry of the kind. One is
+never obliged to tell one's dreams. I wonder"--he turned to the
+stranger, who sat absently staring into the fire--"if you happened to
+speak to your friend about his nightmare in the morning, and whether he
+was by any chance aware of the participation of the others in it?"
+
+"I certainly spoke to him pretty plainly when we got into New York."
+
+"And what did he say?"
+
+"He said he had never slept better in his life, and he couldn't remember
+having a trace of nightmare. He said he heard _me_ groaning at one time,
+but I stopped just as he woke, and so he didn't rouse me as he thought
+of doing. It was at Hartford, and he went to sleep again, and slept
+through without a break."
+
+"And what was your conclusion from that?" Wanhope asked.
+
+"That he was lying, I should say," Rulledge replied for the stranger.
+
+Wanhope still waited, and the stranger said, "I suppose one conclusion
+might be that I had dreamed the whole thing myself."
+
+"Then you wish me to infer," the psychologist pursued, "that the entire
+incident was a figment of your sleeping brain? That there was no sort of
+sleeping thought-transference, no metaphantasmia, no--Excuse me. Do you
+remember verifying your impression of being between Worcester and
+Springfield when the affair occurred, by looking at your watch, for
+instance?"
+
+The stranger suddenly pulled out his watch at the word. "Good Heavens!"
+he called out. "It's twenty minutes of eleven, and I have to take the
+eleven-o'clock train to Boston. I must bid you good-evening, gentlemen.
+I've just time to get it if I can catch a cab. Good-night, good-night. I
+hope if you come to Boston--eh--Good-night! Sometimes," he called over
+his shoulder, "I've thought it might have been that girl in the
+stateroom that started the dreaming."
+
+He had wrung our hands one after another, and now he ran out of the
+room.
+
+Rulledge said, in appeal to Wanhope: "I don't see how his being the
+dreamer invalidates the case, if his dreams affected the others."
+
+"Well," Wanhope answered, thoughtfully, "that depends."
+
+"And what do you think of its being the girl in the stateroom?"
+
+"That would be very interesting."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+EDITHA
+
+
+The air was thick with the war feeling, like the electricity of a storm
+which has not yet burst. Editha sat looking out into the hot spring
+afternoon, with her lips parted, and panting with the intensity of the
+question whether she could let him go. She had decided that she could
+not let him stay, when she saw him at the end of the still leafless
+avenue, making slowly up towards the house, with his head down and his
+figure relaxed. She ran impatiently out on the veranda, to the edge of
+the steps, and imperatively demanded greater haste of him with her will
+before she called aloud to him: "George!"
+
+He had quickened his pace in mystical response to her mystical urgence,
+before he could have heard her; now he looked up and answered, "Well?"
+
+"Oh, how united we are!" she exulted, and then she swooped down the
+steps to him. "What is it?" she cried.
+
+"It's war," he said, and he pulled her up to him and kissed her.
+
+She kissed him back intensely, but irrelevantly, as to their passion,
+and uttered from deep in her throat. "How glorious!"
+
+"It's war," he repeated, without consenting to her sense of it; and she
+did not know just what to think at first. She never knew what to think
+of him; that made his mystery, his charm. All through their courtship,
+which was contemporaneous with the growth of the war feeling, she had
+been puzzled by his want of seriousness about it. He seemed to despise
+it even more than he abhorred it. She could have understood his
+abhorring any sort of bloodshed; that would have been a survival of his
+old life when he thought he would be a minister, and before he changed
+and took up the law. But making light of a cause so high and noble
+seemed to show a want of earnestness at the core of his being. Not but
+that she felt herself able to cope with a congenital defect of that
+sort, and make his love for her save him from himself. Now perhaps the
+miracle was already wrought in him. In the presence of the tremendous
+fact that he announced, all triviality seemed to have gone out of him;
+she began to feel that. He sank down on the top step, and wiped his
+forehead with his handkerchief, while she poured out upon him her
+question of the origin and authenticity of his news.
+
+All the while, in her duplex emotioning, she was aware that now at the
+very beginning she must put a guard upon herself against urging him, by
+any word or act, to take the part that her whole soul willed him to
+take, for the completion of her ideal of him. He was very nearly perfect
+as he was, and he must be allowed to perfect himself. But he was
+peculiar, and he might very well be reasoned out of his peculiarity.
+Before her reasoning went her emotioning: her nature pulling upon his
+nature, her womanhood upon his manhood, without her knowing the means
+she was using to the end she was willing. She had always supposed that
+the man who won her would have done something to win her; she did not
+know what, but something. George Gearson had simply asked her for her
+love, on the way home from a concert, and she gave her love to him,
+without, as it were, thinking. But now, it flashed upon her, if he could
+do something worthy to _have_ won her--be a hero, _her_ hero--it would
+be even better than if he had done it before asking her; it would be
+grander. Besides, she had believed in the war from the beginning.
+
+"But don't you see, dearest," she said, "that it wouldn't have come to
+this if it hadn't been in the order of Providence? And I call any war
+glorious that is for the liberation of people who have been struggling
+for years against the cruelest oppression. Don't you think so, too?"
+
+"I suppose so," he returned, languidly. "But war! Is it glorious to
+break the peace of the world?"
+
+"That ignoble peace! It was no peace at all, with that crime and shame
+at our very gates." She was conscious of parroting the current phrases
+of the newspapers, but it was no time to pick and choose her words. She
+must sacrifice anything to the high ideal she had for him, and after a
+good deal of rapid argument she ended with the climax: "But now it
+doesn't matter about the how or why. Since the war has come, all that is
+gone. There are no two sides any more. There is nothing now but our
+country."
+
+He sat with his eyes closed and his head leant back against the veranda,
+and he remarked, with a vague smile, as if musing aloud, "Our
+country--right or wrong."
+
+"Yes, right or wrong!" she returned, fervidly. "I'll go and get you some
+lemonade." She rose rustling, and whisked away; when she came back with
+two tall glasses of clouded liquid on a tray, and the ice clucking in
+them, he still sat as she had left him, and she said, as if there had
+been no interruption: "But there is no question of wrong in this case.
+I call it a sacred war. A war for liberty and humanity, if ever there
+was one. And I know you will see it just as I do, yet."
+
+He took half the lemonade at a gulp, and he answered as he set the glass
+down: "I know you always have the highest ideal. When I differ from you
+I ought to doubt myself."
+
+A generous sob rose in Editha's throat for the humility of a man, so
+very nearly perfect, who was willing to put himself below her.
+
+Besides, she felt, more subliminally, that he was never so near slipping
+through her fingers as when he took that meek way.
+
+"You shall not say that! Only, for once I happen to be right." She
+seized his hand in her two hands, and poured her soul from her eyes into
+his. "Don't you think so?" she entreated him.
+
+[Illustration: "'YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!'"]
+
+He released his hand and drank the rest of his lemonade, and she added,
+"Have mine, too," but he shook his head in answering, "I've no business
+to think so, unless I act so, too."
+
+Her heart stopped a beat before it pulsed on with leaps that she felt in
+her neck. She had noticed that strange thing in men: they seemed to feel
+bound to do what they believed, and not think a thing was finished when
+they said it, as girls did. She knew what was in his mind, but she
+pretended not, and she said, "Oh, I am not sure," and then faltered.
+
+He went on as if to himself, without apparently heeding her: "There's
+only one way of proving one's faith in a thing like this."
+
+She could not say that she understood, but she did understand.
+
+He went on again. "If I believed--if I felt as you do about this
+war--Do you wish me to feel as you do?"
+
+Now she was really not sure; so she said: "George, I don't know what you
+mean."
+
+He seemed to muse away from her as before.
+
+"There is a sort of fascination in it. I suppose that at the bottom of
+his heart every man would like at times to have his courage tested, to
+see how he would act."
+
+"How can you talk in that ghastly way?"
+
+"It _is_ rather morbid. Still, that's what it comes to, unless you're
+swept away by ambition or driven by conviction. I haven't the conviction
+or the ambition, and the other thing is what it comes to with me. I
+ought to have been a preacher, after all; then I couldn't have asked it
+of myself, as I must, now I'm a lawyer. And you believe it's a holy war,
+Editha?" he suddenly addressed her. "Oh, I know you do! But you wish me
+to believe so, too?"
+
+She hardly knew whether he was mocking or not, in the ironical way he
+always had with her plainer mind. But the only thing was to be outspoken
+with him.
+
+"George, I wish you to believe whatever you think is true, at any and
+every cost. If I've tried to talk you into anything, I take it all
+back."
+
+"Oh, I know that, Editha. I know how sincere you are, and how--I wish I
+had your undoubting spirit! I'll think it over; I'd like to believe as
+you do. But I don't, now; I don't, indeed. It isn't this war alone;
+though this seems peculiarly wanton and needless; but it's every war--so
+stupid; it makes me sick. Why shouldn't this thing have been settled
+reasonably?"
+
+"Because," she said, very throatily again, "God meant it to be war."
+
+"You think it was God? Yes, I suppose that is what people will say."
+
+"Do you suppose it would have been war if God hadn't meant it?"
+
+"I don't know. Sometimes it seems as if God had put this world into
+men's keeping to work it as they pleased."
+
+"Now, George, that is blasphemy."
+
+"Well, I won't blaspheme. I'll try to believe in your pocket
+Providence," he said, and then he rose to go.
+
+"Why don't you stay to dinner?" Dinner at Balcom's Works was at one
+o'clock.
+
+"I'll come back to supper, if you'll let me. Perhaps I shall bring you a
+convert."
+
+"Well, you may come back, on that condition."
+
+"All right. If I don't come, you'll understand."
+
+He went away without kissing her, and she felt it a suspension of their
+engagement. It all interested her intensely; she was undergoing a
+tremendous experience, and she was being equal to it. While she stood
+looking after him, her mother came out through one of the long windows
+onto the veranda, with a catlike softness and vagueness.
+
+"Why didn't he stay to dinner?"
+
+"Because--because--war has been declared," Editha pronounced, without
+turning.
+
+Her mother said, "Oh, my!" and then said nothing more until she had sat
+down in one of the large Shaker chairs and rocked herself for some time.
+Then she closed whatever tacit passage of thought there had been in her
+mind with the spoken words: "Well, I hope _he_ won't go."
+
+"And _I_ hope he _will_," the girl said, and confronted her mother with
+a stormy exaltation that would have frightened any creature less
+unimpressionable than a cat.
+
+Her mother rocked herself again for an interval of cogitation. What she
+arrived at in speech was: "Well, I guess you've done a wicked thing,
+Editha Balcom."
+
+The girl said, as she passed indoors through the same window her mother
+had come out by: "I haven't done anything--yet."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In her room, she put together all her letters and gifts from Gearson,
+down to the withered petals of the first flower he had offered, with
+that timidity of his veiled in that irony of his. In the heart of the
+packet she enshrined her engagement ring which she had restored to the
+pretty box he had brought it her in. Then she sat down, if not calmly
+yet strongly, and wrote:
+
+ "GEORGE:--I understood when you left me. But I think we had better
+ emphasize your meaning that if we cannot be one in everything we
+ had better be one in nothing. So I am sending these things for your
+ keeping till you have made up your mind.
+
+ "I shall always love you, and therefore I shall never marry any one
+ else. But the man I marry must love his country first of all, and
+ be able to say to me,
+
+ "'I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ Loved I not honor more.'
+
+ "There is no honor above America with me. In this great hour there
+ is no other honor.
+
+ "Your heart will make my words clear to you. I had never expected
+ to say so much, but it has come upon me that I must say the utmost.
+
+ EDITHA."
+
+She thought she had worded her letter well, worded it in a way that
+could not be bettered; all had been implied and nothing expressed.
+
+She had it ready to send with the packet she had tied with red, white,
+and blue ribbon, when it occurred to her that she was not just to him,
+that she was not giving him a fair chance. He had said he would go and
+think it over, and she was not waiting. She was pushing, threatening,
+compelling. That was not a woman's part. She must leave him free, free,
+free. She could not accept for her country or herself a forced
+sacrifice.
+
+In writing her letter she had satisfied the impulse from which it
+sprang; she could well afford to wait till he had thought it over. She
+put the packet and the letter by, and rested serene in the consciousness
+of having done what was laid upon her by her love itself to do, and yet
+used patience, mercy, justice.
+
+She had her reward. Gearson did not come to tea, but she had given him
+till morning, when, late at night there came up from the village the
+sound of a fife and drum, with a tumult of voices, in shouting, singing,
+and laughing. The noise drew nearer and nearer; it reached the street
+end of the avenue; there it silenced itself, and one voice, the voice
+she knew best, rose over the silence. It fell; the air was filled with
+cheers; the fife and drum struck up, with the shouting, singing, and
+laughing again, but now retreating; and a single figure came hurrying up
+the avenue.
+
+She ran down to meet her lover and clung to him. He was very gay, and he
+put his arm round her with a boisterous laugh. "Well, you must call me
+Captain now; or Cap, if you prefer; that's what the boys call me. Yes,
+we've had a meeting at the town-hall, and everybody has volunteered; and
+they selected me for captain, and I'm going to the war, the big war, the
+glorious war, the holy war ordained by the pocket Providence that
+blesses butchery. Come along; let's tell the whole family about it. Call
+them from their downy beds, father, mother, Aunt Hitty, and all the
+folks!"
+
+But when they mounted the veranda steps he did not wait for a larger
+audience; he poured the story out upon Editha alone.
+
+"There was a lot of speaking, and then some of the fools set up a shout
+for me. It was all going one way, and I thought it would be a good joke
+to sprinkle a little cold water on them. But you can't do that with a
+crowd that adores you. The first thing I knew I was sprinkling hell-fire
+on them. 'Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of war.' That was the style.
+Now that it had come to the fight, there were no two parties; there was
+one country, and the thing was to fight to a finish as quick as
+possible. I suggested volunteering then and there, and I wrote my name
+first of all on the roster. Then they elected me--that's all. I wish I
+had some ice-water."
+
+She left him walking up and down the veranda, while she ran for the
+ice-pitcher and a goblet, and when she came back he was still walking up
+and down, shouting the story he had told her to her father and mother,
+who had come out more sketchily dressed than they commonly were by day.
+He drank goblet after goblet of the ice-water without noticing who was
+giving it, and kept on talking, and laughing through his talk wildly.
+"It's astonishing," he said, "how well the worse reason looks when you
+try to make it appear the better. Why, I believe I was the first convert
+to the war in that crowd to-night! I never thought I should like to kill
+a man; but now I shouldn't care; and the smokeless powder lets you see
+the man drop that you kill. It's all for the country! What a thing it is
+to have a country that _can't_ be wrong, but if it is, is right,
+anyway!"
+
+Editha had a great, vital thought, an inspiration. She set down the
+ice-pitcher on the veranda floor, and ran up-stairs and got the letter
+she had written him. When at last he noisily bade her father and mother,
+"Well, goodnight. I forgot I woke you up; I sha'n't want any sleep
+myself," she followed him down the avenue to the gate. There, after the
+whirling words that seemed to fly away from her thoughts and refuse to
+serve them, she made a last effort to solemnize the moment that seemed
+so crazy, and pressed the letter she had written upon him.
+
+"What's this?" he said. "Want me to mail it?"
+
+"No, no. It's for you. I wrote it after you went this morning. Keep
+it--keep it--and read it sometime--" She thought, and then her
+inspiration came: "Read it if ever you doubt what you've done, or fear
+that I regret your having done it. Read it after you've started."
+
+They strained each other in embraces that seemed as ineffective as their
+words, and he kissed her face with quick, hot breaths that were so
+unlike him, that made her feel as if she had lost her old lover and
+found a stranger in his place. The stranger said: "What a gorgeous
+flower you are, with your red hair, and your blue eyes that look black
+now, and your face with the color painted out by the white moonshine!
+Let me hold you under the chin, to see whether I love blood, you
+tiger-lily!" Then he laughed Gearson's laugh, and released her, scared
+and giddy. Within her wilfulness she had been frightened by a sense of
+subtler force in him, and mystically mastered as she had never been
+before.
+
+She ran all the way back to the house, and mounted the steps panting.
+Her mother and father were talking of the great affair. Her mother said:
+"Wa'n't Mr. Gearson in rather of an excited state of mind? Didn't you
+think he acted curious?"
+
+"Well, not for a man who'd just been elected captain and had set 'em up
+for the whole of Company A," her father chuckled back.
+
+"What in the world do you mean, Mr. Balcom? Oh! There's Editha!" She
+offered to follow the girl indoors.
+
+"Don't come, mother!" Editha called, vanishing.
+
+Mrs. Balcom remained to reproach her husband. "I don't see much of
+anything to laugh at."
+
+"Well, it's catching. Caught it from Gearson. I guess it won't be much
+of a war, and I guess Gearson don't think so, either. The other fellows
+will back down as soon as they see we mean it. I wouldn't lose any sleep
+over it. I'm going back to bed, myself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gearson came again next afternoon, looking pale and rather sick, but
+quite himself, even to his languid irony. "I guess I'd better tell you,
+Editha, that I consecrated myself to your god of battles last night by
+pouring too many libations to him down my own throat. But I'm all right
+now. One has to carry off the excitement, somehow."
+
+"Promise me," she commanded, "that you'll never touch it again!"
+
+"What! Not let the cannikin clink? Not let the soldier drink? Well, I
+promise."
+
+"You don't belong to yourself now; you don't even belong to _me_. You
+belong to your country, and you have a sacred charge to keep yourself
+strong and well for your country's sake. I have been thinking, thinking
+all night and all day long."
+
+"You look as if you had been crying a little, too," he said, with his
+queer smile.
+
+"That's all past. I've been thinking, and worshipping _you_. Don't you
+suppose I know all that you've been through, to come to this? I've
+followed you every step from your old theories and opinions."
+
+"Well, you've had a long row to hoe."
+
+"And I know you've done this from the highest motives--"
+
+"Oh, there won't be much pettifogging to do till this cruel war is--"
+
+"And you haven't simply done it for my sake. I couldn't respect you if
+you had."
+
+"Well, then we'll say I haven't. A man that hasn't got his own respect
+intact wants the respect of all the other people he can corner. But we
+won't go into that. I'm in for the thing now, and we've got to face our
+future. My idea is that this isn't going to be a very protracted
+struggle; we shall just scare the enemy to death before it comes to a
+fight at all. But we must provide for contingencies, Editha. If anything
+happens to me--"
+
+"Oh, George!" She clung to him, sobbing.
+
+"I don't want you to feel foolishly bound to my memory. I should hate
+that, wherever I happened to be."
+
+"I am yours, for time and eternity--time and eternity." She liked the
+words; they satisfied her famine for phrases.
+
+"Well, say eternity; that's all right; but time's another thing; and I'm
+talking about time. But there is something! My mother! If anything
+happens--"
+
+She winced, and he laughed. "You're not the bold soldier-girl of
+yesterday!" Then he sobered. "If anything happens, I want you to help my
+mother out. She won't like my doing this thing. She brought me up to
+think war a fool thing as well as a bad thing. My father was in the
+Civil War; all through it; lost his arm in it." She thrilled with the
+sense of the arm round her; what if that should be lost? He laughed as
+if divining her: "Oh, it doesn't run in the family, as far as I know!"
+Then he added, gravely: "He came home with misgivings about war, and
+they grew on him. I guess he and mother agreed between them that I was
+to be brought up in his final mind about it; but that was before my
+time. I only knew him from my mother's report of him and his opinions; I
+don't know whether they were hers first; but they were hers last. This
+will be a blow to her. I shall have to write and tell her--"
+
+He stopped, and she asked: "Would you like me to write, too, George?"
+
+"I don't believe that would do. No, I'll do the writing. She'll
+understand a little if I say that I thought the way to minimize it was
+to make war on the largest possible scale at once--that I felt I must
+have been helping on the war somehow if I hadn't helped keep it from
+coming, and I knew I hadn't; when it came, I had no right to stay out of
+it."
+
+Whether his sophistries satisfied him or not, they satisfied her. She
+clung to his breast, and whispered, with closed eyes and quivering lips:
+"Yes, yes, yes!"
+
+"But if anything should happen, you might go to her and see what you
+could do for her. You know? It's rather far off; she can't leave her
+chair--"
+
+"Oh, I'll go, if it's the ends of the earth! But nothing will happen!
+Nothing _can_! I--"
+
+She felt herself lifted with his rising, and Gearson was saying, with
+his arm still round her, to her father: "Well, we're off at once, Mr.
+Balcom. We're to be formally accepted at the capital, and then bunched
+up with the rest somehow, and sent into camp somewhere, and got to the
+front as soon as possible. We all want to be in the van, of course;
+we're the first company to report to the Governor. I came to tell
+Editha, but I hadn't got round to it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She saw him again for a moment at the capital, in the station, just
+before the train started southward with his regiment. He looked well, in
+his uniform, and very soldierly, but somehow girlish, too, with his
+clean-shaven face and slim figure. The manly eyes and the strong voice
+satisfied her, and his preoccupation with some unexpected details of
+duty flattered her. Other girls were weeping and bemoaning themselves,
+but she felt a sort of noble distinction in the abstraction, the almost
+unconsciousness, with which they parted. Only at the last moment he
+said: "Don't forget my mother. It mayn't be such a walk-over as I
+supposed," and he laughed at the notion.
+
+He waved his hand to her as the train moved off--she knew it among a
+score of hands that were waved to other girls from the platform of the
+car, for it held a letter which she knew was hers. Then he went inside
+the car to read it, doubtless, and she did not see him again. But she
+felt safe for him through the strength of what she called her love. What
+she called her God, always speaking the name in a deep voice and with
+the implication of a mutual understanding, would watch over him and keep
+him and bring him back to her. If with an empty sleeve, then he should
+have three arms instead of two, for both of hers should be his for life.
+She did not see, though, why she should always be thinking of the arm
+his father had lost.
+
+There were not many letters from him, but they were such as she could
+have wished, and she put her whole strength into making hers such as she
+imagined he could have wished, glorifying and supporting him. She wrote
+to his mother glorifying him as their hero, but the brief answer she got
+was merely to the effect that Mrs. Gearson was not well enough to write
+herself, and thanking her for her letter by the hand of some one who
+called herself "Yrs truly, Mrs. W.J. Andrews."
+
+Editha determined not to be hurt, but to write again quite as if the
+answer had been all she expected. Before it seemed as if she could have
+written, there came news of the first skirmish, and in the list of the
+killed, which was telegraphed as a trifling loss on our side, was
+Gearson's name. There was a frantic time of trying to make out that it
+might be, must be, some other Gearson; but the name and the company and
+the regiment and the State were too definitely given.
+
+Then there was a lapse into depths out of which it seemed as if she
+never could rise again; then a lift into clouds far above all grief,
+black clouds, that blotted out the sun, but where she soared with him,
+with George--George! She had the fever that she expected of herself, but
+she did not die in it; she was not even delirious, and it did not last
+long. When she was well enough to leave her bed, her one thought was of
+George's mother, of his strangely worded wish that she should go to her
+and see what she could do for her. In the exaltation of the duty laid
+upon her--it buoyed her up instead of burdening her--she rapidly
+recovered.
+
+Her father went with her on the long railroad journey from northern New
+York to western Iowa; he had business out at Davenport, and he said he
+could just as well go then as any other time; and he went with her to
+the little country town where George's mother lived in a little house
+on the edge of the illimitable cornfields, under trees pushed to a top
+of the rolling prairie. George's father had settled there after the
+Civil War, as so many other old soldiers had done; but they were Eastern
+people, and Editha fancied touches of the East in the June rose
+overhanging the front door, and the garden with early summer flowers
+stretching from the gate of the paling fence.
+
+It was very low inside the house, and so dim, with the closed blinds,
+that they could scarcely see one another: Editha tall and black in her
+crapes which filled the air with the smell of their dyes; her father
+standing decorously apart with his hat on his forearm, as at funerals; a
+woman rested in a deep arm-chair, and the woman who had let the
+strangers in stood behind the chair.
+
+The seated woman turned her head round and up, and asked the woman
+behind her chair: "_Who_ did you say?"
+
+Editha, if she had done what she expected of herself, would have gone
+down on her knees at the feet of the seated figure and said, "I am
+George's Editha," for answer.
+
+But instead of her own voice she heard that other woman's voice, saying:
+"Well, I don't know as I _did_ get the name just right. I guess I'll
+have to make a little more light in here," and she went and pushed two
+of the shutters ajar.
+
+Then Editha's father said, in his public will-now-address-a-few-remarks
+tone: "My name is Balcom, ma'am--Junius H. Balcom, of Balcom's Works,
+New York; my daughter--"
+
+"Oh!" the seated woman broke in, with a powerful voice, the voice that
+always surprised Editha from Gearson's slender frame. "Let me see you.
+Stand round where the light can strike on your face," and Editha dumbly
+obeyed. "So, you're Editha Balcom," she sighed.
+
+"Yes," Editha said, more like a culprit than a comforter.
+
+"What did you come for?" Mrs. Gearson asked.
+
+Editha's face quivered and her knees shook. "I came--because--because
+George--" She could go no further.
+
+"Yes," the mother said, "he told me he had asked you to come if he got
+killed. You didn't expect that, I suppose, when you sent him."
+
+"I would rather have died myself than done it!" Editha said, with more
+truth in her deep voice than she ordinarily found in it. "I tried to
+leave him free--"
+
+"Yes, that letter of yours, that came back with his other things, left
+him free."
+
+Editha saw now where George's irony came from.
+
+"It was not to be read before--unless--until--I told him so," she
+faltered.
+
+"Of course, he wouldn't read a letter of yours, under the circumstances,
+till he thought you wanted him to. Been sick?" the woman abruptly
+demanded.
+
+"Very sick," Editha said, with self-pity.
+
+"Daughter's life," her father interposed, "was almost despaired of, at
+one time."
+
+Mrs. Gearson gave him no heed. "I suppose you would have been glad to
+die, such a brave person as you! I don't believe _he_ was glad to die.
+He was always a timid boy, that way; he was afraid of a good many
+things; but if he was afraid he did what he made up his mind to. I
+suppose he made up his mind to go, but I knew what it cost him by what
+it cost me when I heard of it. I had been through _one_ war before.
+When you sent him you didn't expect he would get killed."
+
+The voice seemed to compassionate Editha, and it was time. "No," she
+huskily murmured.
+
+"No, girls don't; women don't, when they give their men up to their
+country. They think they'll come marching back, somehow, just as gay as
+they went, or if it's an empty sleeve, or even an empty pantaloon, it's
+all the more glory, and they're so much the prouder of them, poor
+things!"
+
+The tears began to run down Editha's face; she had not wept till then;
+but it was now such a relief to be understood that the tears came.
+
+"No, you didn't expect him to get killed," Mrs. Gearson repeated, in a
+voice which was startlingly like George's again. "You just expected him
+to kill some one else, some of those foreigners, that weren't there
+because they had any say about it, but because they had to be there,
+poor wretches--conscripts, or whatever they call 'em. You thought it
+would be all right for my George, _your_ George, to kill the sons of
+those miserable mothers and the husbands of those girls that you would
+never see the faces of." The woman lifted her powerful voice in a
+psalmlike note. "I thank my God he didn't live to do it! I thank my God
+they killed him first, and that he ain't livin' with their blood on his
+hands!" She dropped her eyes, which she had raised with her voice, and
+glared at Editha. "What you got that black on for?" She lifted herself
+by her powerful arms so high that her helpless body seemed to hang limp
+its full length. "Take it off, take it off, before I tear it from your
+back!"
+
+[Illustration: "SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. 'WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON
+FOR?'"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The lady who was passing the summer near Balcom's Works was sketching
+Editha's beauty, which lent itself wonderfully to the effects of a
+colorist. It had come to that confidence which is rather apt to grow
+between artist and sitter, and Editha had told her everything.
+
+"To think of your having such a tragedy in your life!" the lady said.
+She added: "I suppose there are people who feel that way about war. But
+when you consider the good this war has done--how much it has done for
+the country! I can't understand such people, for my part. And when you
+had come all the way out there to console her--got up out of a sick-bed!
+Well!"
+
+"I think," Editha said, magnanimously, "she wasn't quite in her right
+mind; and so did papa."
+
+"Yes," the lady said, looking at Editha's lips in nature and then at her
+lips in art, and giving an empirical touch to them in the picture. "But
+how dreadful of her! How perfectly--excuse me--how _vulgar_!"
+
+A light broke upon Editha in the darkness which she felt had been
+without a gleam of brightness for weeks and months. The mystery that had
+bewildered her was solved by the word; and from that moment she rose
+from grovelling in shame and self-pity, and began to live again in the
+ideal.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+BRAYBRIDGE'S OFFER
+
+
+We had ordered our dinners and were sitting in the Turkish room at the
+club, waiting to be called, each in his turn, to the dining-room. It was
+always a cosey place, whether you found yourself in it with cigars and
+coffee after dinner, or with whatever liquid or solid appetizer you
+preferred in the half-hour or more that must pass before dinner after
+you had made out your menu. It intimated an exclusive possession in the
+three or four who happened first to find themselves together in it, and
+it invited the philosophic mind to contemplation more than any other
+spot in the club.
+
+Our rather limited little down-town dining-club was almost a celibate
+community at most times. A few husbands and fathers joined us at lunch;
+but at dinner we were nearly always a company of bachelors, dropping in
+an hour or so before we wished to dine, and ordering from a bill of fare
+what we liked. Some dozed away in the intervening time; some read the
+evening papers or played chess; I preferred the chance society of the
+Turkish room. I could be pretty sure of finding Wanhope there in these
+sympathetic moments, and where Wanhope was there would probably be
+Rulledge, passively willing to listen and agree, and Minver ready to
+interrupt and dispute. I myself liked to look in and linger for either
+the reasoning or the bickering, as it happened, and now, seeing the
+three there together, I took a provisional seat behind the painter, who
+made no sign of knowing I was present. Rulledge was eating a caviar
+sandwich, which he had brought from the afternoon tea-table near by, and
+he greedily incited Wanhope to go on, in the polite pause which the
+psychologist had let follow on my appearance, with what he was saying. I
+was not surprised to find that his talk related to a fact just then
+intensely interesting to the few, rapidly becoming the many, who were
+privy to it; though Wanhope had the air of stooping to it from a higher
+range of thinking.
+
+"I shouldn't have supposed, somehow," he said, with a knot of
+deprecation between his fine eyes, "that he would have had the pluck."
+
+"Perhaps he hadn't," Minver suggested.
+
+Wanhope waited for a thoughtful moment of censure eventuating in
+toleration. "You mean that she--"
+
+"I don't see why you say that, Minver," Rulledge interposed,
+chivalrously, with his mouth full of sandwich.
+
+"I didn't say it," Minver contradicted.
+
+"You implied it; and I don't think it's fair. It's easy enough to build
+up a report of that kind on the half-knowledge of rumor which is all
+that any outsider can have in the case."
+
+"So far," Minver said, with unbroken tranquillity, "as any such edifice
+has been erected, you are the architect, Rulledge. I shouldn't think you
+would like to go round insinuating that sort of thing. Here is Acton,"
+and he now acknowledged my presence with a backward twist of his head,
+"on the alert for material already. You ought to be more careful where
+Acton is, Rulledge."
+
+"It would be great copy if it were true," I owned.
+
+Wanhope regarded us all three, in this play of our qualities, with the
+scientific impartiality of a bacteriologist in the study of a culture
+offering some peculiar incidents. He took up a point as remote as might
+be from the personal appeal. "It is curious how little we know of such
+matters, after all the love-making and marrying in life and all the
+inquiry of the poets and novelists." He addressed himself in this turn
+of his thought, half playful, half earnest, to me, as if I united with
+the functions of both a responsibility for their shortcomings.
+
+"Yes," Minver said, facing about towards me. "How do you excuse yourself
+for your ignorance in matters where you're always professionally making
+such a bluff of knowledge? After all the marriages you have brought
+about in literature, can you say positively and specifically how they
+are brought about in life?"
+
+"No, I can't," I admitted. "I might say that a writer of fiction is a
+good deal like a minister who continually marries people without knowing
+why."
+
+"No, you couldn't, my dear fellow," the painter retorted. "It's part of
+your swindle to assume that you _do_ know why. You ought to find out."
+
+Wanhope interposed concretely, or as concretely as he could: "The
+important thing would always be to find which of the lovers the
+confession, tacit or explicit, began with."
+
+"Acton ought to go round and collect human documents bearing on the
+question. He ought to have got together thousands of specimens from
+nature. He ought to have gone to all the married couples he knew, and
+asked them just how their passion was confessed; he ought to have sent
+out printed circulars, with tabulated questions. Why don't you do it,
+Acton?"
+
+I returned, as seriously as could have been expected:
+
+"Perhaps it would be thought rather intimate. People don't like to talk
+of such things."
+
+"They're ashamed," Minver declared. "The lovers don't either of them, in
+a given case, like to let others know how much the woman had to do with
+making the offer, and how little the man."
+
+Minver's point provoked both Wanhope and myself to begin a remark at the
+same time. We begged each other's pardon, and Wanhope insisted that I
+should go on.
+
+"Oh, merely this," I said. "I don't think they're so much ashamed as
+that they have forgotten the different stages. You were going to say--?"
+
+"Very much what you said. It's astonishing how people forget the vital
+things and remember trifles. Or perhaps as we advance from stage to
+stage what once seemed the vital things turn to trifles. Nothing can be
+more vital in the history of a man and a woman than how they became
+husband and wife, and yet not merely the details, but the main fact,
+would seem to escape record if not recollection. The next generations
+knows nothing of it."
+
+"That appears to let Acton out," Minver said. "But how do _you_ know
+what you were saying, Wanhope?"
+
+"I've ventured to make some inquiries in that region at one time. Not
+directly, of course. At second and third hand. It isn't inconceivable,
+if we conceive of a life after this, that a man should forget, in its
+more important interests and occupations, just how he quitted this
+world, or at least the particulars of the article of death. Of course,
+we must suppose a good portion of eternity to have elapsed." Wanhope
+continued, dreamily, with a deep breath almost equivalent to something
+so unscientific as a sigh: "Women are charming, and in nothing more
+than the perpetual challenge they form for us. They are born defying us
+to match ourselves with them."
+
+"Do you mean that Miss Hazelwood--" Rulledge began, but Minver's laugh
+arrested him.
+
+"Nothing so concrete, I'm afraid," Wanhope gently returned. "I mean, to
+match them in graciousness, in loveliness, in all the agile contests of
+spirit and plays of fancy. It's pathetic to see them caught up into
+something more serious in that other game, which they are so good at."
+
+"They seem rather to like it, though, some of them, if you mean the game
+of love," Minver said. "Especially when they're not in earnest about
+it."
+
+"Oh, there are plenty of spoiled women," Wanhope admitted. "But I don't
+mean flirting. I suppose that the average unspoiled woman is rather
+frightened than otherwise when she knows that a man is in love with
+her."
+
+"Do you suppose she always knows it first?" Rulledge asked.
+
+"You may be sure," Minver answered for Wanhope, "that if she didn't know
+it, _he_ never would." Then Wanhope answered for himself:
+
+"I think that generally she sees it coming. In that sort of wireless
+telegraphy, that reaching out of two natures through space towards each
+other, her more sensitive apparatus probably feels the appeal of his
+before he is conscious of having made any appeal."
+
+"And her first impulse is to escape the appeal?" I suggested.
+
+"Yes," Wanhope admitted, after a thoughtful reluctance.
+
+"Even when she is half aware of having invited it?"
+
+"If she is not spoiled she is never aware of having invited it. Take
+the case in point; we won't mention any names. She is sailing through
+time, through youthful space, with her electrical lures, the natural
+equipment of every charming woman, all out, and suddenly, somewhere from
+the unknown, she feels the shock of a response in the gulfs of air where
+there had been no life before. But she can't be said to have knowingly
+searched the void for any presence."
+
+"Oh, I'm not sure about that, Professor," Minver put in. "Go a little
+slower, if you expect me to follow you."
+
+"It's all a mystery, the most beautiful mystery of life," Wanhope
+resumed. "I don't believe I could make out the case as I feel it to be."
+
+"Braybridge's part of the case is rather plain, isn't it?" I invited
+him.
+
+"I'm not sure of that. No man's part of any case is plain, if you look
+at it carefully. The most that you can say of Braybridge is that he is
+rather a simple nature. But nothing," the psychologist added, with one
+of his deep breaths, "is so complex as a simple nature."
+
+"Well," Minver contended, "Braybridge is plain, if his case isn't."
+
+"Plain? Is he plain?" Wanhope asked, as if asking himself.
+
+"My dear fellow, you agnostics doubt everything!"
+
+"I should have said picturesque. Picturesque, with the sort of
+unbeautifulness that takes the fancy of women more than Greek
+proportion. I think it would require a girl peculiarly feminine to feel
+the attraction of such a man--the fascination of his being grizzled and
+slovenly and rugged. She would have to be rather a wild, shy girl to do
+that, and it would have to be through her fear of him that she would
+divine his fear of her. But what I have heard is that they met under
+rather exceptional circumstances. It was at a house in the Adirondacks,
+where Braybridge was, somewhat in the quality of a bull in a china-shop.
+He was lugged in by the host, as an old friend, and was suffered by the
+hostess as a friend quite too old for her. At any rate, as I heard (and
+I don't vouch for the facts, all of them), Braybridge found himself at
+odds with the gay young people who made up the hostess's end of the
+party, and was watching for a chance to--"
+
+Wanhope cast about for the word, and Minver supplied it--"Pull out."
+
+"Yes. But when he had found it Miss Hazelwood took it from him."
+
+"I don't understand," Rulledge said.
+
+"When he came in to breakfast, the third morning, prepared with an
+excuse for cutting his week down to the dimensions it had reached, he
+saw her sitting alone at the table. She had risen early as a consequence
+of having arrived late the night before; and when Braybridge found
+himself in for it, he forgot that he meant to go away, and said
+good-morning, as if they knew each other. Their hostess found them
+talking over the length of the table in a sort of mutual fright, and
+introduced them. But it's rather difficult reporting a lady verbatim at
+second hand. I really had the facts from Welkin, who had them from his
+wife. The sum of her impressions was that Braybridge and Miss Hazelwood
+were getting a kind of comfort out of their mutual terror because one
+was as badly frightened as the other. It was a novel experience for
+both. Ever seen her?"
+
+We looked at one another. Minver said: "I never wanted to paint any one
+so much. It was at the spring show of the American Artists. There was a
+jam of people; but this girl--I've understood it was she--looked as
+much alone as if there were nobody else there. She might have been a
+startled doe in the North Woods suddenly coming out on a
+twenty-thousand-dollar camp, with a lot of twenty-million-dollar people
+on the veranda."
+
+"And you wanted to do her as The Startled Doe," I said. "Good selling
+name."
+
+"Don't reduce it to the vulgarity of fiction. I admit it would be a
+selling name."
+
+"Go on, Wanhope," Rulledge puffed impatiently. "Though I don't see how
+there could be another soul in the universe as constitutionally scared
+of men as Braybridge is of women."
+
+"In the universe nothing is wasted, I suppose. Everything has its
+complement, its response. For every bashful man, there must be a bashful
+woman," Wanhope returned.
+
+"Or a bold one," Minver suggested.
+
+"No; the response must be in kind to be truly complemental. Through the
+sense of their reciprocal timidity they divine that they needn't be
+afraid."
+
+"Oh! _That's_ the way you get out of it!"
+
+"Well?" Rulledge urged.
+
+"I'm afraid," Wanhope modestly confessed, "that from this point I shall
+have to be largely conjectural. Welkin wasn't able to be very definite,
+except as to moments, and he had his data almost altogether from his
+wife. Braybridge had told him overnight that he thought of going, and he
+had said he mustn't think of it; but he supposed Braybridge had spoken
+of it to Mrs. Welkin, and he began by saying to his wife that he hoped
+she had refused to hear of Braybridge's going. She said she hadn't heard
+of it, but now she would refuse without hearing, and she didn't give
+Braybridge any chance to protest. If people went in the middle of their
+week, what would become of other people? She was not going to have the
+equilibrium of her party disturbed, and that was all about it. Welkin
+thought it was odd that Braybridge didn't insist; and he made a long
+story of it. But the grain of wheat in his bushel of chaff was that Miss
+Hazelwood seemed to be fascinated by Braybridge from the first. When
+Mrs. Welkin scared him into saying that he would stay his week out, the
+business practically was done. They went picnicking that day in each
+other's charge; and after Braybridge left he wrote back to her, as Mrs.
+Welkin knew from the letters that passed through her hands, and--Well,
+their engagement has come out, and--" Wanhope paused, with an air that
+was at first indefinite, and then definitive.
+
+"You don't mean," Rulledge burst out in a note of deep wrong, "that
+that's all you know about it?"
+
+"Yes, that's all I know," Wanhope confessed, as if somewhat surprised
+himself at the fact.
+
+"Well!"
+
+Wanhope tried to offer the only reparation in his power. "I can
+conjecture--we can all conjecture--"
+
+He hesitated; then: "Well, go on with your conjecture," Rulledge said,
+forgivingly.
+
+"Why--" Wanhope began again; but at that moment a man who had been
+elected the year before, and then gone off on a long absence, put his
+head in between the dull-red hangings of the doorway. It was Halson,
+whom I did not know very well, but liked better than I knew. His eyes
+were dancing with what seemed the inextinguishable gayety of his
+temperament, rather than any present occasion, and his smile carried his
+little mustache well away from his handsome teeth. "Private?"
+
+"Come in! come in!" Minver called to him. "Thought you were in Japan?"
+
+"My dear fellow," Halson answered, "you must brush up your contemporary
+history. It's more than a fortnight since I was in Japan." He shook
+hands with me, and I introduced him to Rulledge and Wanhope. He said at
+once: "Well, what is it? Question of Braybridge's engagement? It's
+humiliating to a man to come back from the antipodes and find the nation
+absorbed in a parochial problem like that. Everybody I've met here
+to-night has asked me, the first thing, if I'd heard of it, and if I
+knew how it could have happened."
+
+"And do you?" Rulledge asked.
+
+"I can give a pretty good guess," Halson said, running his merry eyes
+over our faces.
+
+"Anybody can give a good guess," Rulledge said. "Wanhope is doing it
+now."
+
+"Don't let me interrupt." Halson turned to him politely.
+
+"Not at all. I'd rather hear your guess, if you know Braybridge better
+than I," Wanhope said.
+
+"Well," Halson compromised, "perhaps I've known him longer." He asked,
+with an effect of coming to business: "Where were you?"
+
+"Tell him, Rulledge," Minver ordered, and Rulledge apparently asked
+nothing better. He told him, in detail, all we knew from any source,
+down to the moment of Wanhope's arrested conjecture.
+
+"He did leave you at an anxious point, didn't he?" Halson smiled to the
+rest of us at Rulledge's expense, and then said: "Well, I think I can
+help you out a little. Any of you know the lady?"
+
+"By sight, Minver does," Rulledge answered for us. "Wants to paint her."
+
+"Of course," Halson said, with intelligence. "But I doubt if he'd find
+her as paintable as she looks, at first. She's beautiful, but her charm
+is spiritual."
+
+"Sometimes we try for that," the painter interposed.
+
+"And sometimes you get it. But you'll allow it's difficult. That's all I
+meant. I've known her--let me see--for twelve years, at least; ever
+since I first went West. She was about eleven then, and her father was
+bringing her up on the ranch. Her aunt came along by and by and took her
+to Europe--mother dead before Hazelwood went out there. But the girl was
+always homesick for the ranch; she pined for it; and after they had kept
+her in Germany three or four years they let her come back and run wild
+again--wild as a flower does, or a vine, not a domesticated animal."
+
+"Go slow, Halson. This is getting too much for the romantic Rulledge."
+
+"Rulledge can bear up against the facts, I guess, Minver," Halson said,
+almost austerely. "Her father died two years ago, and then she _had_ to
+come East, for her aunt simply _wouldn't_ live on the ranch. She brought
+her on here, and brought her out; I was at the coming-out tea; but the
+girl didn't take to the New York thing at all; I could see it from the
+start; she wanted to get away from it with me, and talk about the
+ranch."
+
+"She felt that she was with the only genuine person among those
+conventional people."
+
+Halson laughed at Minver's thrust, and went on amiably: "I don't suppose
+that till she met Braybridge she was ever quite at her ease with any
+man--or woman, for that matter. I imagine, as you've done, that it was
+his fear of her that gave her courage. She met him on equal terms. Isn't
+that it?"
+
+Wanhope assented to the question referred to him with a nod.
+
+"And when they got lost from the rest of the party at that picnic--"
+
+"Lost?" Rulledge demanded.
+
+"Why, yes. Didn't you know? But I ought to go back. They said there
+never was anything prettier than the way she unconsciously went for
+Braybridge the whole day. She wanted him, and she was a child who wanted
+things frankly when she did want them. Then his being ten or fifteen
+years older than she was, and so large and simple, made it natural for a
+shy girl like her to assort herself with him when all the rest were
+assorting themselves, as people do at such things. The consensus of
+testimony is that she did it with the most transparent unconsciousness,
+and--"
+
+"Who are your authorities?" Minver asked; Rulledge threw himself back on
+the divan and beat the cushions with impatience.
+
+"Is it essential to give them?"
+
+"Oh no. I merely wondered. Go on."
+
+"The authorities are all right. She had disappeared with him before the
+others noticed. It was a thing that happened; there was no design in it;
+that would have been out of character. They had got to the end of the
+wood-road, and into the thick of the trees where there wasn't even a
+trail, and they walked round looking for a way out till they were turned
+completely. They decided that the only way was to keep walking, and by
+and by they heard the sound of chopping. It was some Canucks clearing a
+piece of the woods, and when she spoke to them in French they gave them
+full directions, and Braybridge soon found the path again."
+
+Halson paused, and I said: "But that isn't all?"
+
+"Oh no." He continued thoughtfully silent for a little while before he
+resumed. "The amazing thing is that they got lost again, and that when
+they tried going back to the Canucks they couldn't find the way."
+
+"Why didn't they follow the sound of the chopping?" I asked.
+
+"The Canucks had stopped, for the time being. Besides, Braybridge was
+rather ashamed, and he thought if they went straight on they would be
+sure to come out somewhere. But that was where he made a mistake. They
+couldn't go on straight; they went round and round, and came on their
+own footsteps--or hers, which he recognized from the narrow tread and
+the dint of the little heels in the damp places."
+
+Wanhope roused himself with a kindling eye. "That is very interesting,
+the movement in a circle of people who have lost their way. It has often
+been observed, but I don't know that it has ever been explained.
+Sometimes the circle is smaller, sometimes it is larger, but I believe
+it is always a circle."
+
+"Isn't it," I queried, "like any other error in life? We go round and
+round, and commit the old sins over again."
+
+"That is very interesting," Wanhope allowed.
+
+"But do lost people really always walk in a vicious circle?" Minver
+asked.
+
+Rulledge would not let Wanhope answer. "Go on, Halson," he said.
+
+Halson roused himself from the revery in which he was sitting with
+glazed eyes. "Well, what made it a little more anxious was that he had
+heard of bears on that mountain, and the green afternoon light among the
+trees was perceptibly paling. He suggested shouting, but she wouldn't
+let him; she said it would be ridiculous if the others heard them, and
+useless if they didn't. So they tramped on till--till the accident
+happened."
+
+"The accident!" Rulledge exclaimed, in the voice of our joint emotion.
+
+"He stepped on a loose stone and turned his foot," Halson explained. "It
+wasn't a sprain, luckily, but it hurt enough. He turned so white that
+she noticed it, and asked him what was the matter. Of course that shut
+his mouth the closer, but it morally doubled his motive, and he kept
+himself from crying out till the sudden pain of the wrench was over. He
+said merely that he thought he had heard something, and he had an awful
+ringing in his ears; but he didn't mean that, and he started on again.
+The worst was trying to walk without limping, and to talk cheerfully and
+encouragingly with that agony tearing at him. But he managed somehow,
+and he was congratulating himself on his success when he tumbled down in
+a dead faint."
+
+"Oh, come now!" Minver protested.
+
+"It _is_ like an old-fashioned story, where things are operated by
+accident instead of motive, isn't it?" Halson smiled with radiant
+recognition.
+
+"Fact will always imitate fiction, if you give her time enough," I said.
+
+"Had they got back to the other picnickers?" Rulledge asked, with a
+tense voice.
+
+"In sound, but not in sight of them. She wasn't going to bring him into
+camp in that state; besides, she couldn't. She got some water out of the
+trout-brook they'd been fishing--more water than trout in it--and
+sprinkled his face, and he came to, and got on his legs just in time to
+pull on to the others, who were organizing a search-party to go after
+them. From that point on she dropped Braybridge like a hot coal; and as
+there was nothing of the flirt in her, she simply kept with the women,
+the older girls, and the tabbies, and left Braybridge to worry along
+with the secret of his turned ankle. He doesn't know how he ever got
+home alive; but he did, somehow, manage to reach the wagons that had
+brought them to the edge of the woods, and then he was all right till
+they got to the house. But still she said nothing about his accident,
+and he couldn't; and he pleaded an early start for town the next
+morning, and got off to bed as soon as he could."
+
+"I shouldn't have thought he could have stirred in the morning,"
+Rulledge employed Halson's pause to say.
+
+"Well, this beaver _had_ to," Halson said. "He was not the only early
+riser. He found Miss Hazelwood at the station before him."
+
+"What!" Rulledge shouted. I confess the fact rather roused me, too; and
+Wanhope's eyes kindled with a scientific pleasure.
+
+"She came right towards him. 'Mr. Braybridge,' says she, 'I couldn't let
+you go without explaining my very strange behavior. I didn't choose to
+have these people laughing at the notion of _my_ having played the part
+of your preserver. It was bad enough being lost with you; I couldn't
+bring you into ridicule with them by the disproportion they'd have felt
+in my efforts for you after you turned your foot. So I simply had to
+ignore the incident. Don't you see?' Braybridge glanced at her, and he
+had never felt so big and bulky before, or seen her so slender and
+little. He said, 'It _would_ have seemed rather absurd,' and he broke
+out and laughed, while she broke down and cried, and asked him to
+forgive her, and whether it had hurt him very much; and said she knew he
+could bear to keep it from the others by the way he had kept it from her
+till he fainted. She implied that he was morally as well as physically
+gigantic, and it was as much as he could do to keep from taking her in
+his arms on the spot."
+
+"It would have been edifying to the groom that had driven her to the
+station," Minver cynically suggested.
+
+"Groom nothing!" Halson returned with spirit. "She paddled herself
+across the lake, and walked from the boat-landing to the station."
+
+"Jove!" Rulledge exploded in uncontrollable enthusiasm.
+
+"She turned round as soon as she had got through with her hymn of
+praise--it made Braybridge feel awfully flat--and ran back through the
+bushes to the boat-landing, and--that was the last he saw of her till he
+met her in town this fall."
+
+"And when--and when--did he offer himself?" Rulledge entreated,
+breathlessly. "How--"
+
+"Yes, that's the point, Halson," Minver interposed. "Your story is all
+very well, as far as it goes; but Rulledge here has been insinuating
+that it was Miss Hazelwood who made the offer, and he wants you to bear
+him out."
+
+Rulledge winced at the outrage, but he would not stay Halson's answer
+even for the sake of righting himself.
+
+"I _have_ heard," Minver went on, "that Braybridge insisted on paddling
+the canoe back to the other shore for her, and that it was on the way
+that he offered himself." We others stared at Minver in astonishment.
+Halson glanced covertly towards him with his gay eyes. "Then that wasn't
+true?"
+
+"How did you hear it?" Halson asked.
+
+"Oh, never mind. Is it true?"
+
+"Well, I know there's that version," Halson said, evasively. "The
+engagement is only just out, as you know. As to the offer--the when and
+the how--I don't know that I'm exactly at liberty to say."
+
+"I don't see why," Minver urged. "You might stretch a point for
+Rulledge's sake."
+
+Halson looked down, and then he glanced at Minver after a furtive
+passage of his eye over Rulledge's intense face. "There was something
+rather nice happened after--But, really, now!"
+
+"Oh, go on!" Minver called out in contempt of his scruple.
+
+"I haven't the right--Well, I suppose I'm on safe ground here? It won't
+go any further, of course; and it _was_ so pretty! After she had pushed
+off in her canoe, you know, Braybridge--he'd followed her down to the
+shore of the lake--found her handkerchief in a bush where it had caught,
+and he held it up, and called out to her. She looked round and saw it,
+and called back: 'Never mind. I can't return for it now.' Then
+Braybridge plucked up his courage, and asked if he might keep it, and
+she said 'Yes,' over her shoulder, and then she stopped paddling, and
+said: 'No, no, you mustn't, you mustn't! You can send it to me.' He
+asked where, and she said: 'In New York--in the fall--at the
+Walholland.' Braybridge never knew how he dared, but he shouted after
+her--she was paddling on again--'May I _bring_ it?' and she called over
+her shoulder again, without fully facing him, but her profile was
+enough: 'If you can't get any one to bring it for you.' The words barely
+reached him, but he'd have caught them if they'd been whispered; and he
+watched her across the lake and into the bushes, and then broke for his
+train. He was just in time."
+
+Halson beamed for pleasure upon us, and even Minver said: "Yes, that's
+rather nice." After a moment he added: "Rulledge thinks she put it
+there."
+
+"You're too bad, Minver," Halson protested. "The charm of the whole
+thing was her perfect innocence. She isn't capable of the slightest
+finesse. I've known her from a child, and I know what I say."
+
+"That innocence of girlhood," Wanhope said, "is very interesting. It's
+astonishing how much experience it survives. Some women carry it into
+old age with them. It's never been scientifically studied--"
+
+"Yes," Minver allowed. "There would be a fortune for the novelist who
+could work a type of innocence for all it was worth. Here's Acton always
+dealing with the most rancid flirtatiousness, and missing the sweetness
+and beauty of a girlhood which does the cheekiest things without knowing
+what it's about, and fetches down its game whenever it shuts its eyes
+and fires at nothing. But I don't see how all this touches the point
+that Rulledge makes, or decides which finally made the offer."
+
+"Well, hadn't the offer already been made?"
+
+"But how?"
+
+"Oh, in the usual way."
+
+"What is the usual way?"
+
+"I thought everybody knew _that_. Of course, it was _from_ Braybridge
+finally, but I suppose it's always six of one and half a dozen of the
+other in these cases, isn't it? I dare say he couldn't get any one to
+take her the handkerchief. My dinner?" Halson looked up at the silent
+waiter, who had stolen upon us and was bowing towards him.
+
+"Look here, Halson," Minver detained him, "how is it none of the rest of
+us have heard all those details?"
+
+"_I_ don't know where you've been, Minver. Everybody knows the main
+facts," Halson said, escaping.
+
+Wanhope observed, musingly: "I suppose he's quite right about the
+reciprocality of the offer, as we call it. There's probably, in
+ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, a perfect understanding before
+there's an explanation. In many cases the offer and the acceptance must
+really be tacit."
+
+"Yes," I ventured, "and I don't know why we're so severe with women when
+they seem to take the initiative. It's merely, after all, the call of
+the maiden bird, and there's nothing lovelier or more endearing in
+nature than that."
+
+"Maiden bird is good, Acton," Minver approved. "Why don't you institute
+a class of fiction where the love-making is all done by the maiden
+birds, as you call them--or the widow birds? It would be tremendously
+popular with both sexes. It would lift an immense responsibility off the
+birds who've been expected to shoulder it heretofore if it could be
+introduced into real life."
+
+Rulledge fetched a long, simple-hearted sigh. "Well, it's a charming
+story. How well he told it!"
+
+The waiter came again, and this time signalled to Minver.
+
+"Yes," he said, as he rose. "What a pity you can't believe a word Halson
+says."
+
+"Do you mean--" we began simultaneously.
+
+"That he built the whole thing from the ground up, with the start that
+we had given him. Why, you poor things! Who could have told him how it
+all happened? Braybridge? Or the girl? As Wanhope began by saying,
+people don't speak of their love-making, even when they distinctly
+remember it."
+
+"Yes, but see here, Minver!" Rulledge said, with a dazed look. "If it's
+all a fake of his, how came _you_ to have heard of Braybridge paddling
+the canoe back for her?"
+
+"That was the fake that tested the fake. When he adopted it, I _knew_ he
+was lying, because I was lying myself. And then the cheapness of the
+whole thing! I wonder that didn't strike you. It's the stuff that a
+thousand summer-girl stories have been spun out of. Acton might have
+thought he was writing it!"
+
+He went away, leaving us to a blank silence, till Wanhope managed to
+say: "That inventive habit of mind is very curious. It would be
+interesting to know just how far it imposes on the inventor himself--how
+much he believes of his own fiction."
+
+"I don't see," Rulledge said, gloomily, "why they're so long with my
+dinner." Then he burst out: "I believe every word Halson said! If
+there's any fake in the thing, it's the fake that Minver owned to."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+THE CHICK OF THE EASTER EGG
+
+
+The old fellow who told that story of dream-transference on a
+sleeping-car at Christmas-time was again at the club on Easter Eve.
+Halson had put him up for the winter, under the easy rule we had, and he
+had taken very naturally to the Turkish room for his after-dinner coffee
+and cigar. We all rather liked him, though it was Minver's pose to be
+critical of the simple friendliness with which he made himself at home
+among us, and to feign a wish that there were fewer trains between
+Boston and New York, so that old Newton (that was his name) could have a
+better chance of staying away. But we noticed that Minver was always a
+willing listener to Newton's talk, and that he sometimes hospitably
+offered to share his tobacco with the Bostonian. When brought to book
+for his inconsistency by Rulledge, he said he was merely welcoming the
+new blood, if not young blood, that Newton was infusing into our body,
+which had grown anaemic on Wanhope's psychology and Rulledge's romance;
+or, anyway, it was a change.
+
+Newton now began by saying abruptly, in a fashion he had, "We used to
+hear a good deal in Boston about your Easter Parade here in New York. Do
+you still keep it up?"
+
+No one else answering, Minver replied, presently, "I believe it is still
+going on. I understand that it's composed mostly of milliners out to
+see one another's new hats, and generous Jewesses who are willing to
+contribute the 'dark and bright' of the beauty in which they walk to the
+observance of an alien faith. It's rather astonishing how the synagogue
+takes to the feasts of the church. If it were not for that, I don't know
+what would become of Christmas."
+
+"What do you mean by their walking in beauty?" Rulledge asked over his
+shoulder.
+
+"I shall never have the measure of your ignorance, Rulledge. You don't
+even know Byron's lines on Hebrew loveliness?
+
+ "'She walks in beauty like the night
+ Of cloudless climes and starry skies,
+ And all that's best of dark and bright
+ Meets in her aspect and her eyes.'"
+
+"Pretty good," Rulledge assented. "And they _are_ splendid, sometimes.
+But what has the Easter Parade got to do with it?" he asked Newton.
+
+"Oh, only what everything has with everything else. I was thinking of
+Easter-time long ago and far away, and naturally I thought of Easter now
+and here. I saw your Parade once, and it seemed to me one of the great
+social spectacles. But you can't keep anything in New York, if it's
+good; if it's bad, you can."
+
+"You come from Boston, I think you said, Mr. Newton," Minver breathed
+blandly through his smoke.
+
+"Oh, I'm not a _real_ Bostonian," our guest replied. "I'm not abusing
+you on behalf of a city that I'm a native proprietor of. If I were, I
+shouldn't perhaps make your decadent Easter Parade my point of attack,
+though I think it's a pity to let it spoil. I came from a part of the
+country where we used to make a great deal of Easter, when we were boys,
+at least so far as eggs went. I don't know whether the grown people
+observed the day then, and I don't know whether the boys keep it now; I
+haven't been back at Easter-time for several generations. But when I was
+a boy it was a serious thing. In that soft Southwestern latitude the
+grass had pretty well greened up by Easter, even when it came in March,
+and grass colors eggs a very nice yellow; it used to worry me that it
+didn't color them green. When the grass hadn't got along far enough,
+winter wheat would do as well. I don't remember what color onion husks
+would give; but we used onion husks, too. Some mothers would let the
+boys get logwood from the drug-store, and that made the eggs a fine,
+bold purplish black. But the greatest egg of all was a calico egg, that
+you got by coaxing your grandmother (your mother's mother) or your aunt
+(your mother's sister) to sew up in a tight cover of brilliant calico.
+When that was boiled long enough the colors came off in a perfect
+pattern on the egg. Very few boys could get such eggs; when they did,
+they put them away in bureau drawers till they ripened and the mothers
+smelt them, and threw them out of the window as quickly as possible.
+Always, after breakfast, Easter Morning, we came out on the street and
+fought eggs. We pitted the little ends of the eggs against one another,
+and the fellow whose egg cracked the other fellow's egg won it, and he
+carried it off. I remember grass and wheat colored eggs in such trials
+of strength, and onion and logwood colored eggs; but never calico eggs;
+_they_ were too precious to be risked; it would have seemed wicked.
+
+"I don't know," the Boston man went musingly on, "why I should remember
+these things so relentlessly; I've forgotten all the important things
+that happened to me then; but perhaps these were the important things.
+Who knows? I only know I've always had a soft spot in my heart for
+Easter, not so much because of the calico eggs, perhaps, as because of
+the grandmothers and the aunts. I suppose the simple life is full of
+such aunts and grandmothers still; but you don't find them in hotel
+apartments, or even in flats consisting of seven large, light rooms and
+bath." We all recognized the language of the advertisements, and laughed
+in sympathy with our guest, who perhaps laughed out of proportion with a
+pleasantry of that size.
+
+When he had subdued his mirth, he resumed at a point apparently very
+remote from that where he had started.
+
+"There was one of those winters in Cambridge, where I lived then, that
+seemed tougher than any other we could remember, and they were all
+pretty tough winters there in those times. There were forty snowfalls
+between Thanksgiving and Fast Day--you don't know what Fast Day is in
+New York, and we didn't, either, as far as the fasting went--and the
+cold kept on and on till we couldn't, or said we couldn't, stand it any
+longer. So, along about the middle of March somewhere, we picked up the
+children and started south. In those days New York seemed pretty far
+south to us; and when we got here we found everything on wheels that we
+had left on runners in Boston. But the next day it began to snow, and we
+said we must go a little farther to meet the spring. I don't know
+exactly what it was made us pitch on Bethlehem, Pennsylvania; but we had
+a notion we should find it interesting, and, at any rate, a total change
+from our old environment. We had been reading something about the
+Moravians, and we knew that it was the capital of Moravianism, with the
+largest Moravian congregation in the world; I think it was Longfellow's
+'Hymn of the Moravian Nuns' that set us to reading about the sect; and
+we had somehow heard that the Sun Inn, at Bethlehem, was the finest
+old-fashioned public house anywhere. At any rate, we had the faith of
+our youthful years, and we put out for Bethlehem.
+
+"We arrived just at dusk, but not so late that we couldn't see the
+hospitable figure of a man coming out of the Sun to meet us at the
+omnibus door and to shake hands with each of us. It was the very
+pleasantest and sweetest welcome we ever had at a public house; and
+though we found the Sun a large, modern hotel, we easily accepted the
+landlord's assurance that the old Inn was built up inside of the hotel,
+just as it was when Washington stayed in it; and after a mighty good
+supper we went to our rooms, which were piping warm from two good
+base-burner stoves. It was not exactly the vernal air we had expected of
+Bethlehem when we left New York; but you can't have everything in this
+world, and, with the snowbanks along the streets outside, we were very
+glad to have the base-burners.
+
+"We went to bed pretty early, and I fell into one of those exemplary
+sleeps that begin with no margin of waking after your head touches the
+pillow, or before that, even, and I woke from a dream of heavenly music
+that translated itself into the earthly notes of bugles. It made me sit
+up with the instant realization that we had arrived in Bethlehem on
+Easter Eve, and that this was Easter Morning. We had read of the
+beautiful observance of the feast by the Moravians, and, while I was
+hurrying on my clothes beside my faithful base-burner, I kept quite
+superfluously wondering at myself for not having thought of it, and so
+made sure of being called. I had waked just in time, though I hadn't
+deserved to do so, and ought, by right, to have missed it all. I tried
+to make my wife come with me; but after the family is of a certain size
+a woman, if she is a real woman, thinks her husband can see things for
+her, and generally sends him out to reconnoitre and report. Besides, my
+wife couldn't have left the children without waking them, to tell them
+she was going, and then all five of them would have wanted to come with
+us, including the baby; and we should have had no end of a time
+convincing them of the impossibility. We were a good deal bound up in
+the children, and we hated to lie to them when we could possibly avoid
+it. So I went alone.
+
+"I asked the night porter, who was still on duty, the way I wanted to
+take, but there were so many people in the streets going the same
+direction that I couldn't have missed it, anyhow; and pretty soon we
+came to the old Moravian cemetery, which was in the heart of the town;
+and there we found most of the Moravian congregation drawn up on three
+sides of the square, waiting and facing the east, which was beginning to
+redden. Of all the cemeteries I have seen, that was the most beautiful,
+because it was the simplest and humblest. Generally a cemetery is a
+dreadful place, with headstones and footstones and shafts and tombs
+scattered about, and looking like a field full of granite and marble
+stumps from the clearing of a petrified forest. But here all the
+memorial tablets lay flat with the earth. None of the dead were assumed
+to be worthier of remembrance than another; they all rested at regular
+intervals, with their tablets on their breasts, like shields, in their
+sleep after the battle of life. I was thinking how right and wise this
+was, and feeling the purity of the conception like a quality of the
+keen, clear air of the morning, which seemed to be breathing straight
+from the sky, when suddenly the sun blazed up from the horizon like a
+fire, and the instant it appeared the horns of the band began to blow
+and the people burst into a hymn--a thousand voices, for all I know. It
+was the sublimest thing I ever heard, and I don't know that there's
+anything to match it for dignity and solemnity in any religious rite. It
+made the tears come, for I thought how those people were of a church of
+missionaries and martyrs from the beginning, and I felt as if I were
+standing in sight and hearing of the first Christians after Christ. It
+was as if He were risen there 'in the midst of them.'"
+
+Rulledge looked round on the rest of us, with an air of acquiring merit
+from the Bostonian's poetry, but Minver's gravity was proof against the
+chance of mocking Rulledge, and I think we all felt alike. Wanhope
+seemed especially interested, though he said nothing.
+
+"When I went home I told my wife about it as well as I could, but,
+though she entered into the spirit of it, she was rather preoccupied.
+The children had all wakened, as they did sometimes, in a body, and were
+storming joyfully around the rooms, as if it were Christmas; and she was
+trying to get them dressed. 'Do tell them what Easter is like; they've
+never seen it kept before,' she said; and I tried to do so, while I took
+a hand, as a young father will, and tried to get them into their
+clothes. I don't think I dwelt much on the religious observance of the
+day, but I dug up some of my profane associations with it in early life,
+and told them about coloring eggs, and fighting them, and all that;
+there in New England, in those days, they had never seen or heard of
+such a thing as an Easter egg.
+
+"I don't think my reminiscences quieted them much. They were all on
+fire--the oldest hoy and girl, and the twins, and even the two-year-old
+that we called the baby--to go out and buy some eggs and get the
+landlord to let them color them in the hotel kitchen. I had a deal of
+ado to make them wait till after breakfast, but I managed, somehow; and
+when we had finished--it was a mighty good Pennsylvania breakfast, such
+as we could eat with impunity in those halcyon days: rich coffee, steak,
+sausage, eggs, applebutter, buckwheat cakes and maple syrup--we got
+their out-door togs on them, while they were all stamping and shouting
+round and had to be caught and overcoated, and fur-capped and hooded
+simultaneously, and managed to get them into the street together. Ever
+been in Bethlehem?"
+
+We all had to own our neglect of this piece of travel; and Newton, after
+a moment of silent forgiveness, said:
+
+"Well, I don't know how it is now, but twenty-five or thirty years ago
+it was the most interesting town in America. It wasn't the old Moravian
+community that it had been twenty-five years before that, when none but
+Moravians could buy property there; but it was like the Sun Hotel, and
+just as that had grown round and over the old Sun Inn, the prosperous
+manufacturing town, with its iron-foundries and zinc-foundries, and all
+the rest of it, had grown round and over the original Moravian village.
+If you wanted a breath of perfect strangeness, with an American quality
+in it at the same time, you couldn't have gone to any place where you
+could have had it on such terms as you could in Bethlehem. I can't begin
+to go into details, but one thing was hearing German spoken everywhere
+in the street: not the German of Germany, but the Pennsylvania German,
+with its broad vowels and broken-down grammatical forms, and its English
+vocables and interjections, which you caught in the sentences which came
+to you, like _av coorse_, and _yes_ and _no_ for _ja_ and _nein_. There
+were stores where they spoke no English, and others where they made a
+specialty of it; and I suppose when we sallied out that bright Sunday
+morning, with the baby holding onto a hand of each of us between us, and
+the twins going in front with their brother and sister, we were almost
+as foreign as we should have been in a village on the Rhine or the Elbe.
+
+"We got a little acquainted with the people, after awhile, and I heard
+some stories of the country folks that I thought were pretty good. One
+was about an old German farmer on whose land a prospecting metallurgist
+found zinc ore; the scientific man brought him the bright yellow button
+by which the zinc proved its existence in its union with copper, and the
+old fellow asked in an awestricken whisper: 'Is it a gold-mine?' 'No,
+no. Guess again.' 'Then it's a _brass-mine_!' But before they began to
+find zinc there in the lovely Lehigh Valley--you can stand by an open
+zinc-mine and look down into it where the rock and earth are left
+standing, and you seem to be looking down into a range of sharp mountain
+peaks and pinnacles--it was the richest farming region in the whole fat
+State of Pennsylvania; and there was a young farmer who owned a vast
+tract of it, and who went to fetch home a young wife from Philadelphia
+way, somewhere. He drove there and back in his own buggy, and when he
+reached the top overlooking the valley, with his bride, he stopped his
+horse, and pointed with his whip. 'There,' he said, 'as far as the sky
+is blue, it's all ours!' I thought that was fine."
+
+"Fine?" I couldn't help bursting out; "it's a stroke of poetry."
+
+Minver cut in: "The thrifty Acton making a note of it for future use in
+literature."
+
+"Eh!" Newton queried. "Oh! I don't mind. You're welcome to it, Mr.
+Acton. It's a pity somebody shouldn't use it, and of course _I_ can't."
+
+"Acton will send you a copy with the usual forty-per-cent. discount and
+ten off for cash," the painter said.
+
+They had their little laugh at my expense, and then Newton took up his
+tale again. "Well, as I was saying--By the way, what _was_ I saying?"
+
+The story-loving Rulledge remembered. "You went out with your wife and
+children for Easter eggs."
+
+"Oh yes. Thank you. Well, of course, in a town geographically American,
+the shops were all shut on Sunday, and we couldn't buy even an Easter
+egg on Easter Sunday. But one of the stores had the shade of its
+show-window up, and the children simply glued themselves to it in such a
+fascination that we could hardly unstick them. That window was full of
+all kinds of Easter things--I don't remember what all; but there were
+Easter eggs in every imaginable color and pattern, and besides these
+there were whole troops of toy rabbits. I had forgotten that the natural
+offspring of Easter eggs is rabbits; but I took a brace, and remembered
+the fact and announced it to the children. They immediately demanded an
+explanation, with all sorts of scientific particulars, which I gave
+them, as reckless of the truth as I thought my wife would suffer without
+contradicting me. I had to say that while Easter eggs mostly hatched
+rabbits, there were instances in which they hatched other things, as,
+for instance, handfuls of eagles and half-eagles and double-eagles,
+especially in the case of the golden eggs that the goose laid. They knew
+all about that goose; but I had to tell them what those unfamiliar
+pieces of American coinage were, and promise to give them one each when
+they grew up, if they were good. That only partially satisfied them, and
+they wanted to know specifically what other kinds of things Easter eggs
+would hatch if properly treated. Each one had a preference; the baby
+always preferred what the last one said; and _she_ wanted an ostrich,
+the same as her big brother; he was seven then.
+
+"I don't really know how we lived through the day; I mean the children,
+for my wife and I went to the Moravian church, and had a good long
+Sunday nap in the afternoon, while the children were pining for Monday
+morning, when they could buy eggs and begin to color them, so that they
+could hatch just the right kind of Easter things. When I woke up I had
+to fall in with a theory they had agreed to between them that any kind
+of two-legged or four-legged chick that hatched from an Easter egg would
+wear the same color, or the same kind of spots or stripes, that the egg
+had.
+
+"I found that they had arranged to have calico eggs, and they were going
+to have their mother cover them with the same sort of cotton prints that
+I had said my grandmother and aunts used, and they meant to buy the
+calico in the morning at the same time that they bought the eggs. We had
+some tin vessels of water on our stoves to take the dryness out of the
+hot air, and they had decided that they would boil their eggs in these,
+and not trouble the landlord for the use of his kitchen.
+
+"There was nothing in this scheme wanting but their mother's consent--I
+agreed to it on the spot--but when she understood that they each
+expected to have two eggs apiece, with one apiece for us, she said she
+never could cover a dozen eggs in the world, and that the only way would
+be for them to go in the morning with us, and choose each the handsomest
+egg they could out of the eggs in that shop-window. They met this
+proposition rather blankly at first; but on reflection the big brother
+said it would be a shame to spoil mamma's Easter by making her work all
+day, and besides it would keep till that night, anyway, before they
+could begin to have any fun with their eggs; and then the rest all said
+the same thing, ending with the baby: and accepted the inevitable with
+joy, and set about living through the day as well as they could.
+
+"They had us up pretty early the next morning--that is, they had me up;
+their mother said that I had brought it on myself, and richly deserved
+it for exciting their imaginations, and I had to go out with the two
+oldest and the twins to choose the eggs; we got off from the baby by
+promising to let her have two, and she didn't understand very well,
+anyway, and was awfully sleepy. We were a pretty long time choosing the
+six eggs, and I don't remember now just what they were; but they were
+certainly joyous eggs; and--By the way, I don't know why I'm boring a
+brand of hardened bachelors like you with all these domestic details?"
+
+"Oh, don't mind _us_," Minver responded to his general appeal. "We may
+not understand the feelings of a father, but we are all mothers at
+heart, especially Rulledge. Go on. It's very exciting," he urged, not
+very ironically, and Newton went on.
+
+"Well, I don't believe I could say just how the havoc began. They put
+away their eggs very carefully after they had made their mother admire
+them, and shown the baby how hers were the prettiest, and they each
+said in succession that they must be very precious of them, for if you
+shook an egg, or anything, it wouldn't hatch; and it was their plan to
+take these home and set an unemployed pullet, belonging to the big
+brother, to hatching them in the coop that he had built of laths for her
+in the back yard with his own hands. But long before the afternoon was
+over, the evil one had entered Eden, and tempted the boy to try fighting
+eggs with these treasured specimens, as I had told we boys used to fight
+eggs in my town in the southwest. He held a conquering course through
+the encounter with three eggs, but met his Waterloo with a regular
+Blücher belonging to the baby. Then he instantly changed sides; and
+smashed his Blücher against the last egg left. By that time all the
+other children were in tears, the baby roaring powerfully in ignorant
+sympathy, and the victor steeped in silent gloom. His mother made him
+gather up the ruins from the floor, and put them in the stove, and she
+took possession of the victorious egg, and said she would keep it till
+we got back to Cambridge herself, and not let one of them touch it. I
+can tell you it was a tragical time. I wanted to go out and buy them
+another set of eggs, and spring them for a surprise on them in the
+morning, after they had suffered enough that night. But she said that if
+I dared to dream of such a thing--which would be the ruin of the
+children's character, by taking away the consequences of their
+folly--she should do, she did not know what, to me. Of course she was
+right, and I gave in, and helped the children forget all about it, so
+that by the time we got back to Cambridge I had forgotten about it
+myself.
+
+"I don't know what it was reminded the boy of that remaining Easter egg
+unless it was the sight of the unemployed pullet in her coop, which he
+visited the first thing; and I don't know how he managed to wheedle his
+mother out of it; but the first night after I came home from
+business--it was rather late and the children had gone to bed--she told
+me that ridiculous boy, as she called him in self-exculpation, had
+actually put the egg under his pullet, and all the children were wild to
+see what it would hatch. 'And now,' she said, severely, 'what are you
+going to do? You have filled their heads with those ideas, and I suppose
+you will have to invent some nonsense or other to fool them, and make
+them believe that it has hatched a giraffe, or an elephant, or
+something; they won't be satisfied with anything less.' I said we should
+have to try something smaller, for I didn't think we could manage a
+chick of that size on our lot; and that I should trust in Providence.
+Then she said it was all very well to laugh; and that I couldn't get out
+of it that way, and I needn't think it.
+
+"I didn't, much. But the children understood that it took three weeks
+for an egg to hatch, and anyway the pullet was so intermittent in her
+attentions to the Easter egg, only sitting on it at night, or when held
+down by hand in the day, that there was plenty of time. One evening when
+I came out from Boston, I was met by a doleful deputation at the front
+gate, with the news that when the coop was visited that morning after
+breakfast--they visited the coop every morning before they went to
+school--the pullet was found perched on a cross-bar in a high state of
+nerves, and the shell of the Easter egg broken and entirely eaten out.
+Probably a rat had got in and done it, or, more hopefully, a mink, such
+as used to attack eggs in the town where I was a boy. We went out and
+viewed the wreck, as a first step towards a better situation; and
+suddenly a thought struck me. 'Children,' I said, 'what did you really
+expect that egg to hatch, anyway?' They looked askance at one another,
+and at last the boy said: 'Well, you know, papa, an egg that's been
+cooked--' And then we all laughed together, and I knew they had been
+making believe as much as I had, and no more expected the impossible of
+a boiled egg than I did."
+
+"That was charming!" Wanhope broke out. "There is nothing more
+interesting than the way children join in hypnotizing themselves with
+the illusions which their parents think _they_ have created without
+their help. In fact, it is very doubtful whether at any age we have any
+illusions except those of our own creation; we--"
+
+"Let him go on, Wanhope," Minver dictated; and Newton continued.
+
+"It was rather nice. I asked them if their mother knew about the egg;
+and they said that of course they couldn't help telling her; and I said:
+'Well, then, I'll tell you what: we must make her believe that the chick
+hatched out and got away--' The boy stopped me: 'Do you think that would
+be exactly true, papa?' 'Well, not _exactly_ true; but it's only for the
+time being. We can tell her the exact truth afterwards,' and then I laid
+my plan before them. They said it was perfectly splendid, and would be
+the greatest kind of joke on mamma, and one that she would like as much
+as anybody. The thing was to keep it from her till it was done, and they
+all promised that they wouldn't tell; but I could see that they were
+bursting with the secret the whole evening.
+
+"The next day was Saturday, when I always went home early, and I had the
+two oldest children come in with the second-girl, who left them to take
+lunch with me. They had chocolate and ice-cream, and after lunch we
+went around to a milliner's shop in West Street, where my wife and I had
+stopped a long five minutes the week before we went to Bethlehem,
+adoring an Easter bonnet that we saw in the window. I wanted her to buy
+it; but she said, No, if we were going that expensive journey, we
+couldn't afford it, and she must do without, that spring. I showed it to
+them, and 'Now, children,' I said, 'what do you think of that for the
+chick that your Easter egg hatched?' And they said it was the most
+beautiful bonnet they had ever seen, and it would just exactly suit
+mamma. But I saw they were holding something back, and I said, sharply,
+'Well?' and they both guiltily faltered out: 'The _bird_, you know,
+papa,' and I remembered that they belonged to the society of Bird
+Defenders, who in that day were pledged against the decorative use of
+dead birds or killing them for anything but food. 'Why, confound it,' I
+said, 'the bird is the very thing that makes it an Easter-egg chick!'
+but I saw that their honest little hearts were troubled, and I said
+again: 'Confound it! Let's go in and hear what the milliner has to say.'
+Well, the long and short of it was that the milliner tried a bunch of
+forget-me-nots over the bluebird that we all agreed was a thousand times
+better, and that if it were substituted would only cost three dollars
+more, and we took our Easter-egg chick home in a blaze of glory, the
+children carrying the bandbox by the string between them.
+
+"Of course we had a great time opening it, and their mother acted her
+part so well that I knew she was acting, and after the little ones were
+in bed I taxed her with it. 'Know? Of course I knew!' she said. 'Did you
+think they would let you _deceive_ me? They're true New-Englanders, and
+they told me all about it last night, when I was saying their prayers
+with them.' 'Well,' I said, 'they let you deceive _me_; they must be
+true Westerners, too, for they didn't tell me a word of your knowing.' I
+rather had her there, but she said: 'Oh, you goose--' We were young
+people in those days, and goose meant everything. But, really, I'm
+ashamed of getting off all this to you hardened bachelors, as I said
+before--"
+
+"If you tell many more such stories in this club," Minver said,
+severely, "you won't leave a bachelor in it. And Rulledge will be the
+first to get married."
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Between The Dark And The Daylight
+by William Dean Howells
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Between the Dark and the Daylight: Romances, by W.D. Howells</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Between The Dark And The Daylight
+by William Dean Howells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Between The Dark And The Daylight
+
+Author: William Dean Howells
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2004 [EBook #12100]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BETWEEN THE DARK AND THE DAYLIGHT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Beginners Projects, Ben Beasley and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust1l.jpg" name="illust1"><img src="images/illust1m.jpg" title="THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT" alt="[Illustration: THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT]" style="width: 450px; height: 760px" /></a><br /><span style="font-size: 0.75em; font-variant: small-caps" class="nonprinting">(&#8220;<a href="#illust1ref">their joint study...</a>")</span></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h1 class="title">Between the Dark and the Daylight</h1>
+
+<h1 class="subtitle">Romances</h1>
+
+<h1 class="authorship">by<br />
+W.D. Howells</h1>
+<h1 class="date">1907</h1>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+<div>
+<span style="font-size: 0.625em">CHAP.</span>
+<ol class="contents">
+<li><a href="#chapter1">A Sleep and a Forgetting</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter2">The Eidolons of Brooks Alford</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter3">A Memory that Worked Overtime</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter4">A Case of Metaphantasmia</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter5">Editha</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter6">Braybridge&#8217;s Offer</a></li>
+<li><a href="#chapter7">The Chick of the Easter Egg</a></li>
+</ol>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+<ul class="illustrations">
+<li><a href="#illust1">Their joint study of her dancing-card did not
+help them out</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust2">A lively matron, of as youthful a temperament as
+the lively girls she brought in her train, burst upon them</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust3">&#8220;She shook her head, and said,...
+&#8216;Nobody has been here, except&#8212;&#8217;&#8221;</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust4">&#8220;No burglar could have missed me if he had
+wanted an easy mark&#8221;</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust5">&#8220;&#8216;You shall not say
+that!&#8217;&#8221;</a></li>
+
+<li><a href="#illust6">&#8220;She glared at editha. &#8216;What you got
+that black on for?&#8217;&#8221;</a></li> </ul>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter1" id="chapter1">I</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">A Sleep and a Forgetting</h2>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Matthew Lanfear had stopped off, between Genoa and Nice, at San Remo
+in the interest of a friend who had come over on the steamer with him,
+and who wished him to test the air before settling there for the winter
+with an invalid wife. She was one of those neurasthenics who really
+carry their climate&#8212;always a bad one&#8212;with them, but she had
+set her mind on San Remo; and Lanfear was willing to pass a few days in
+the place making the observations which he felt pretty sure would be
+adverse.</p>
+
+<p>His train was rather late, and the sunset was fading from the French
+sky beyond the Italian shore when he got out of his car and looked round
+for a porter to take his valise. His roving eye lighted on the anxious
+figure, which as fully as the anxious face, of a short, stout, elderly
+man expressed a sort of distraction, as he stood loaded down with
+umbrellas, bags, bundles, and wraps, and seemed unable to arrest the
+movements of a tall young girl, with a travelling-shawl trailing from
+her arm, who had the effect of escaping from him towards a bench beside
+the door of the waiting-room. When she reached it, in spite of his
+appeals, she sat down with an absent air, and looked as far withdrawn
+from the bustle of the platform and from the snuffling train as if on
+some quiet garden seat along with her own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>In his fat frenzy, which Lanfear felt to be pathetic, the old
+gentleman glanced at him, and then abruptly demanded: &#8220;Are you an
+American?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We knew each other abroad in some mystical way, and Lanfear did not
+try to deny the fact.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, then,&#8221; the stranger said, as if the fact made
+everything right, &#8220;will you kindly tell my daughter, on that bench
+by the door yonder&#8221;&#8212;he pointed with a bag, and dropped a
+roll of rugs from under his arm&#8212;&#8220;that I&#8217;ll be with her
+as soon as I&#8217;ve looked after the trunks? Tell her not to move till
+I come. Heigh! Here! Take hold of these, will you?&#8221; He caught the
+sleeve of a <em>facchino</em> who came wandering by, and heaped him with
+his burdens, and then pushed ahead of the man in the direction of the
+baggage-room with a sort of mastery of the situation which struck
+Lanfear as springing from desperation rather than experience.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear stood a moment hesitating. Then a glance at the girl on the
+bench, drooping a little forward in freeing her face from the veil that
+hung from her pretty hat, together with a sense of something quaintly
+charming in the confidence shown him on such purely compatriotic
+grounds, decided him to do just what he had been asked. The girl had got
+her veil up by this time, and as he came near, she turned from looking
+at the sunset over the stretch of wall beyond the halting train, and met
+his dubious face with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It <em>is</em> beautiful, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; she said.
+&#8220;I know I shall get well, here, if they have such sunsets every
+day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There was something so convincingly normal in her expression that
+Lanfear dismissed a painful conjecture. &#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221;
+he said. &#8220;I am afraid there&#8217;s some mistake. I haven&#8217;t
+the pleasure&#8212;You must excuse me, but your father wished me to ask
+you to wait here for him till he had got his baggage&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My father?&#8221; the girl stopped him with a sort of a
+frowning perplexity in the stare she gave him. &#8220;My father
+isn&#8217;t here!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; Lanfear said. &#8220;I must have
+misunderstood. A gentleman who got out of the train with you&#8212;a
+short, stout gentleman with gray hair&#8212;I understood him to say you
+were his daughter&#8212;requested me to bring this
+message&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl shook her head. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know him. It must be a
+mistake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The mistake is mine, no doubt. It may have been some one else
+whom he pointed out, and I have blundered. I&#8217;m very sorry if I
+seem to have intruded&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What place is this?&#8221; the girl asked, without noticing
+his excuses.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;San Remo,&#8221; Lanfear answered. &#8220;If you didn&#8217;t
+intend to stop here, your train will be leaving in a moment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I meant to get off, I suppose,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t believe I&#8217;m going any farther.&#8221; She leaned back
+against the bars of the bench, and put up one of her slim arms along the
+top.</p>
+
+<p>There was something wrong. Lanfear now felt that, in spite of her
+perfect tranquillity and self-possession; perhaps because of it. He had
+no business to stay there talking with her, but he had not quite the
+right to leave her, though practically he had got his dismissal, and
+apparently she was quite capable of taking care of herself, or could
+have been so in a country where any woman&#8217;s defencelessness was
+not any man&#8217;s advantage. He could not go away without some effort
+to be of use.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Can I help you in
+calling a carriage; or looking after your hand-baggage&#8212;it will be
+getting dark&#8212;perhaps your maid&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My <em>maid!</em>&#8221; The girl frowned again, with a
+measure of the amazement which she showed when he mentioned her father.
+&#8220;<em>I</em> have no maid!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear blurted desperately out: &#8220;You are alone? You
+came&#8212;you are going to stay here&#8212;alone?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Quite alone,&#8221; she said, with a passivity in which there
+was no resentment, and no feeling unless it were a certain color of
+dignity. Almost at the same time, with a glance beside and beyond him,
+she called out joyfully: &#8220;Ah, there you are!&#8221; and Lanfear
+turned, and saw scuffling and heard puffing towards them the short,
+stout elderly gentleman who had sent him to her. &#8220;I knew you would
+come before long!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I thought it was pretty long, myself,&#8221; the
+gentleman said, and then he courteously referred himself to Lanfear.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid this gentleman has found it rather long, too;
+but I couldn&#8217;t manage it a moment sooner.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear said: &#8220;Not at all. I wish I could have been of any use
+to&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My daughter&#8212;Miss Gerald, Mr.&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Lanfear&#8212;Dr. Lanfear,&#8221; he said, accepting the
+introduction; and the girl bowed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, doctor, eh?&#8221; the father said, with a certain
+impression. &#8220;Going to stop here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A few days,&#8221; Lanfear answered, making way for the
+forward movement which the others began.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, well! I&#8217;m very much obliged to you, very much,
+indeed; and I&#8217;m sure my daughter is.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl said, &#8220;Oh yes, indeed,&#8221; rather indifferently,
+and then as they passed him, while he stood lifting his hat, she turned
+radiantly on him. &#8220;Thank you, ever so much!&#8221; she said, with
+the gentle voice which he had already thought charming.</p>
+
+<p>The father called back: &#8220;I hope we shall meet again. We are
+going to the Sardegna.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear had been going to the Sardegna himself, but while he bowed he
+now decided upon another hotel.</p>
+
+<p>The mystery, whatever it was, that the brave, little, fat father was
+carrying off so bluffly, had clearly the morbid quality of unhealth in
+it, and Lanfear could not give himself freely to a young pleasure in the
+girl&#8217;s dark beauty of eyes and hair, her pale, irregular, piquant
+face, her slender figure and flowing walk. He was in the presence of
+something else, something that appealed to his scientific side, to that
+which was humane more than that which was human in him, and abashed him
+in the other feeling. Unless she was out of her mind there was no way of
+accounting for her behavior, except by some caprice which was itself
+scarcely short of insanity. She must have thought she knew him when he
+approached, and when she addressed him those first words; but when he
+had tried to set her right she had not changed; and why had she denied
+her father, and then hailed him with joy when he came back to her? She
+had known that she intended to stop at San Remo, but she had not known
+where she had stopped when she asked what place it was. She was
+consciously an invalid of some sort, for she spoke of getting well under
+sunsets like that which had now waned, but what sort of invalid was
+she?</p>
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>Lanfear&#8217;s question persisted through the night, and it helped,
+with the coughing in the next room, to make a bad night for him. None of
+the hotels in San Remo receive consumptive patients, but none are
+without somewhere a bronchial cough. If it is in the room next yours it
+keeps you awake, but it is not pulmonary; you may comfort yourself in
+your vigils with that fact. Lanfear, however, fancied he had got a poor
+dinner, and in the morning he did not like his coffee. He thought he had
+let a foolish scruple keep him from the Grand Hotel Sardegna, and he
+walked down towards it along the palm-flanked promenade, in the gay
+morning light, with the tideless sea on the other hand lapping the rough
+beach beyond the lines of the railroad which borders it. On his way he
+met files of the beautiful Ligurian women, moving straight under the
+burdens balanced on their heads, or bestriding the donkeys laden with
+wine-casks in the roadway, or following beside the carts which the
+donkeys drew. Ladies of all nations, in the summer fashions of London,
+Berlin, St. Petersburg, Paris, and New York thronged the path. The sky
+was of a blue so deep, so liquid that it seemed to him he could scoop it
+in his hand and pour it out again like water. Seaward, he glanced at the
+fishing-boats lying motionless in the offing, and the coastwise steamer
+that runs between Nice and Genoa trailing a thin plume of smoke between
+him and their white sails. With the more definite purpose of making sure
+of the Grand Hotel Sardegna, he scanned the different villa slopes that
+showed their level lines of white and yellow and dull pink through the
+gray tropical greenery on the different levels of the hills. He was duly
+rewarded by the sight of the bold legend topping its cornice, and when
+he let his eye descend the garden to a little pavilion on the wall
+overlooking the road, he saw his acquaintances of the evening before
+making a belated breakfast. The father recognized Lanfear first and
+spoke to his daughter, who looked up from her coffee and down towards
+him where he wavered, lifting his hat, and bowed smiling to him. He had
+no reason to cross the roadway towards the white stairway which climbed
+from it to the hotel grounds, but he did so. The father leaned out over
+the wall, and called down to him: &#8220;Won&#8217;t you come up and
+join us, doctor?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, yes!&#8221; Lanfear consented, and in another moment he
+was shaking hands with the girl, to whom, he noticed, her father named
+him again. He had in his glad sense of her white morning dress and her
+hat of green-leafed lace, a feeling that she was somehow meeting him as
+a friend of indefinite date in an intimacy unconditioned by any past or
+future time. Her pleasure in his being there was as frank as her
+father&#8217;s, and there was a pretty trust of him in every word and
+tone which forbade misinterpretation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was just talking about you, doctor,&#8221; the father began,
+&#8220;and saying what a pity you hadn&#8217;t come to our hotel.
+It&#8217;s a capital place.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<em>I&#8217;ve</em> been thinking it was a pity I went to
+mine,&#8221; Lanfear returned, &#8220;though I&#8217;m in San Remo for
+such a short time it&#8217;s scarcely worth while to change.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, perhaps if you came here, you might stay longer. I guess
+we&#8217;re booked for the winter, Nannie?&#8221; He referred the
+question to his daughter, who asked Lanfear if he would not have some
+coffee.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was going to say I had had my coffee, but I&#8217;m not sure
+it <em>was</em> coffee,&#8221; Lanfear began, and he consented, with
+some demur, banal enough, about the trouble.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, that&#8217;s right, then, and no trouble at all,&#8221;
+Mr. Gerald broke in upon him. &#8220;Here comes a fellow looking for a
+chance to bring you some,&#8221; and he called to a waiter wandering
+distractedly about with a &#8220;Heigh!&#8221; that might have been
+offensive from a less obviously inoffensive man. &#8220;Can you get our
+friend here a cup and saucer, and some of this good coffee?&#8221; he
+asked, as the waiter approached.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, certainly, sir,&#8221; the man answered in careful
+English. &#8220;Is it not, perhaps, Mr. and Misses Gerald?&#8221; he
+smilingly insinuated, offering some cards.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Miss Gerald,&#8221; the father corrected him as he took the
+cards. &#8220;Why, hello, Nannie! Here are the Bells! Where are
+they?&#8221; he demanded of the waiter. &#8220;Bring them here, and a
+lot more cups and saucers. Or, hold on! I&#8217;d better go myself,
+Nannie, hadn&#8217;t I? Of course! You get the crockery, waiter. Where
+did you say they were?&#8221; He bustled up from his chair, without
+waiting for a distinct reply, and apologized to Lanfear in hurrying
+away. &#8220;You&#8217;ll excuse me, doctor! I&#8217;ll be back in half
+a minute. Friends of ours that came over on the same boat. I must see
+them, of course, but I don&#8217;t believe they&#8217;ll stay. Nannie,
+don&#8217;t let Dr. Lanfear get away. I want to have some talk with him.
+You tell him he&#8217;d better come to the Sardegna, here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear and Miss Gerald sat a moment in the silence which is apt to
+follow with young people when they are unexpectedly left to themselves.
+She kept absently pushing the cards her father had given her up and down
+on the table between her thumb and forefinger, and Lanfear noted the
+translucence of her long, thin hand in the sunshine striking across the
+painted iron surface of the garden movable. The translucence had a
+pathos for his intelligence which the pensive tilt of her head enhanced.
+She stopped toying with the cards, and looked at the addresses on
+them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What strange things names are!&#8221; she said, as if musing
+on the fact, with a sigh which he thought disproportioned to the depth
+of her remark.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They seem rather irrelevant at times,&#8221; he admitted, with
+a smile. &#8220;They&#8217;re mere tags, labels, which can be attached
+to one as well as another; they seem to belong equally to
+anybody.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is what I always say to myself,&#8221; she agreed, with
+more interest than he found explicable.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But finally,&#8221; he returned, &#8220;they&#8217;re all
+that&#8217;s left us, if they&#8217;re left themselves. They are the
+only signs to the few who knew us that we ever existed. They stand for
+our characters, our personality, our mind, our soul.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She said, &#8220;That is very true,&#8221; and then she suddenly gave
+him the cards. &#8220;Do you know these people?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I? I thought they were friends of yours,&#8221; he replied,
+astonished.</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust2l.jpg" name="illust2"><img src="images/illust2m.jpg" title="A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE LIVELY GIRLS SHE BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM" alt="[Illustration: A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE LIVELY GIRLS SHE BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM]" style="width: 450px; height: 723px" /></a></div>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is what papa thinks,&#8221; Miss Gerald said, and while
+she sat dreamily absent, a rustle of skirts and a flutter of voices
+pierced from the surrounding shrubbery, and then a lively matron, of as
+youthful a temperament as the lively girls she brought in her train,
+burst upon them, and Miss Gerald was passed from one embrace to another
+until all four had kissed her. She returned their greeting, and shared,
+in her quieter way, their raptures at their encounter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Such a hunt as we&#8217;ve had for you!&#8221; the matron
+shouted. &#8220;We&#8217;ve been up-stairs and down-stairs and in my
+lady&#8217;s chamber, all over the hotel. Where&#8217;s your father? Ah,
+they did get our cards to you!&#8221; and by that token Lanfear knew
+that these ladies were the Bells. He had stood up in a sort of
+expectancy, but Miss Gerald did not introduce him, and a shadow of
+embarrassment passed over the party which she seemed to feel least,
+though he fancied a sort of entreaty in the glance that she let pass
+over him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose he&#8217;s gone to look for <em>us!</em>&#8221; Mrs.
+Bell saved the situation with a protecting laugh. Miss Gerald colored
+intelligently, and Lanfear could not let Mrs. Bell&#8217;s implication
+pass.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If it is Mrs. Bell,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I can answer that
+he has. I met you at Magnolia some years ago, Mrs. Bell. Dr.
+Lanfear.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I beg your pardon, Dr. Lanfear,&#8221; Miss Gerald said.
+&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t think&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of my tag, my label?&#8221; he laughed back. &#8220;It
+isn&#8217;t very distinctly lettered.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bell was not much minding them jointly. She was singling Lanfear
+out for the expression of her pleasure in seeing him again, and
+recalling the incidents of her summer at Magnolia before, it seemed, any
+of her girls were out. She presented them collectively, and the eldest
+of them charmingly reminded Lanfear that he had once had the magnanimity
+to dance with her when she sat, in a little girl&#8217;s forlorn despair
+of being danced with, at one of those desolate hops of the good old
+Osprey House.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes; and now,&#8221; her mother followed, &#8220;we
+can&#8217;t wait a moment longer, if we&#8217;re to get our train for
+Monte Carlo, girls. We&#8217;re not going to play, doctor,&#8221; she
+made time to explain, &#8220;but we are going to look on. Will you tell
+your father, dear,&#8221; she said, taking the girl&#8217;s hands
+caressingly in hers, and drawing her to her motherly bosom, &#8220;that
+we found you, and did our best to find him? We can&#8217;t wait
+now&#8212;our carriage is champing the bit at the foot of the
+stairs&#8212;but we&#8217;re coming back in a week, and then we&#8217;ll
+do our best to look you up again.&#8221; She included Lanfear in her
+good-bye, and all her girls said good-bye in the same way, and with a
+whisking of skirts and twitter of voices they vanished through the
+shrubbery, and faded into the general silence and general sound like a
+bevy of birds which had swept near and passed by.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Gerald sank quietly into her place, and sat as if nothing had
+happened, except that she looked a little paler to Lanfear, who remained
+on foot trying to piece together their interrupted t&#234;te-&#224;-t&#234;te, but not
+succeeding, when her father reappeared, red and breathless, and wiping
+his forehead. &#8220;Have they been here, Nannie?&#8221; he asked.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve been following them all over the place, and the
+<i>portier</i> told me just now that he had seen a party of ladies coming
+down this way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He got it all out, not so clearly as those women had got everything
+in, Lanfear reflected, but unmistakably enough as to the fact, and he
+looked at his daughter as he repeated: &#8220;Haven&#8217;t the Bells
+been here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust3l.jpg" name="illust3"><img src="images/illust3m.jpg" title="&#8220;SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... &#8216;NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE, EXCEPT&#8212;&#8217;&#8221;" alt="[Illustration: &#8220;SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... &#8216;NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE, EXCEPT&#8212;&#8217;&#8221;]" style="width: 599px; height: 450px" /></a></div>
+
+<p>She shook her head, and said, with her delicate quiet: &#8220;Nobody
+has been here, except&#8212;&#8221; She glanced at Lanfear, who smiled,
+but saw no opening for himself in the strange situation. Then she said:
+&#8220;I think I will go and lie down a while, now, papa. I&#8217;m
+rather tired. Good-bye,&#8221; she said, giving Lanfear her hand; it
+felt limp and cold; and then she turned to her father again.
+&#8220;Don&#8217;t you come, papa! I can get back perfectly well by
+myself. Stay with&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I will go with you,&#8221; her father said, &#8220;and if Dr.
+Lanfear doesn&#8217;t mind coming&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Certainly I will come,&#8221; Lanfear said, and he passed to
+the girl&#8217;s right; she had taken her father&#8217;s arm; but he
+wished to offer more support if it were needed. When they had climbed to
+the open flowery space before the hotel, she seemed aware of the groups
+of people about. She took her hand from her father&#8217;s arm, as if
+unwilling to attract their notice by seeming to need its help, and swept
+up the gravelled path between him and Lanfear, with her flowing
+walk.</p>
+
+<p>Her father fell back, as they entered the hotel door, and murmured to
+Lanfear: &#8220;Will you wait till I come down?&#8221; ... &#8220;I
+wanted to tell you about my daughter,&#8221; he explained, when he came
+back after the quarter of an hour which Lanfear had found rather
+intense. &#8220;It&#8217;s useless to pretend you wouldn&#8217;t have
+noticed&#8212;Had nobody been with you after I left you, down
+there?&#8221; He twisted his head in the direction of the pavilion,
+where they had been breakfasting.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes; Mrs. Bell and her daughters,&#8221; Lanfear answered,
+simply.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course! Why do you suppose my daughter denied it?&#8221;
+Mr. Gerald asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose she&#8212;had her reasons,&#8221; Lanfear answered,
+lamely enough.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No <em>reason</em>, I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221; Mr. Gerald said,
+and he broke out hopelessly: &#8220;She has her mind sound enough, but
+not&#8212;not her memory. She had forgotten that they were there! Are
+you going to stay in San Remo?&#8221; he asked, with an effect of
+interrupting himself, as if in the wish to put off something, or to make
+the ground sure before he went on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why,&#8221; Lanfear said, &#8220;I hadn&#8217;t thought of it.
+I stopped&#8212;I was going to Nice&#8212;to test the air for a friend
+who wishes to bring his invalid wife here, if I approve&#8212;but I have
+just been asking myself why I should go to Nice when I could stay at San
+Remo. The place takes my fancy. I&#8217;m something of an invalid
+myself&#8212;at least I&#8217;m on my vacation&#8212;and I find a charm
+in it, if nothing better. Perhaps a charm is enough. It used to be, in
+primitive medicine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was talking to what he felt was not an undivided attention in Mr.
+Gerald, who said, &#8220;I&#8217;m glad of it,&#8221; and then added:
+&#8220;I should like to consult you professionally. I know your
+reputation in New York&#8212;though I&#8217;m not a New-Yorker
+myself&#8212;and I don&#8217;t know any of the doctors here. I suppose
+I&#8217;ve done rather a wild thing in coming off the way I have, with
+my daughter; but I felt that I must do something, and I hoped&#8212;I
+felt as if it were getting away from our trouble. It&#8217;s most
+fortunate my meeting you, if you can look into the case, and help me out
+with a nurse, if she&#8217;s needed, and all that!&#8221; To a certain
+hesitation in Lanfear&#8217;s face, he added: &#8220;Of course,
+I&#8217;m asking your professional help. My name is Abner
+Gerald&#8212;Abner L. Gerald&#8212;perhaps you know my standing, and
+that I&#8217;m able to&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it isn&#8217;t a question of that! I shall be glad to do
+anything I can,&#8221; Lanfear said, with a little pang which he tried
+to keep silent in orienting himself anew towards the girl, whose
+loveliness he had felt before he had felt her piteousness.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But before you go further I ought to say that you must have
+been thinking of my uncle, the first Matthew Lanfear, when you spoke of
+my reputation; I haven&#8217;t got any yet; I&#8217;ve only got my
+uncle&#8217;s name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; Mr. Gerald said, disappointedly, but after a blank
+moment he apparently took courage. &#8220;You&#8217;re in the same line,
+though?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you mean the psychopathic line, without being exactly an
+alienist, well, yes,&#8221; Lanfear admitted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s exactly what I mean,&#8221; the elder said, with
+renewed hopefulness. &#8220;I&#8217;m quite willing to risk myself with
+a man of the same name as Dr. Lanfear. I should like,&#8221; he said,
+hurrying on, as if to override any further reluctance of
+Lanfear&#8217;s, &#8220;to tell you her story, and
+then&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By all means,&#8221; Lanfear consented, and he put on an air
+of professional deference, while the older man began with a face set for
+the task.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a long story, or it&#8217;s a short story, as you
+choose to make it. We&#8217;ll make it long, if necessary, later, but
+now I&#8217;ll make it short. Five months ago my wife was killed before
+my daughter&#8217;s eyes&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stopped; Lanfear breathed a gentle &#8220;Oh!&#8221; and Gerald
+blurted out:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Accident&#8212;grade crossing&#8212;Don&#8217;t!&#8221; he
+winced at the kindness in Lanfear&#8217;s eyes, and panted on.
+&#8220;That&#8217;s over! What happened to <em>her</em>&#8212;to my
+daughter&#8212;was that she fainted from the shock. When she
+woke&#8212;it was more like a sleep than a swoon&#8212;she didn&#8217;t
+remember what had happened.&#8221; Lanfear nodded, with a gravely
+interested face. &#8220;She didn&#8217;t remember anything that had ever
+happened before. She knew me, because I was there with her; but she
+didn&#8217;t know that she ever had a mother, because she was not there
+with her. You see?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can imagine,&#8221; Lanfear assented.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The whole of her life before the&#8212;accident was wiped out
+as to the facts, as completely as if it had never been; and now every
+day, every hour, every minute, as it passes, goes with that past. But
+her faculties&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; Lanfear prompted in the pause which Mr. Gerald
+made.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Her intellect&#8212;the working powers of her mind, apart from
+anything like remembering, are as perfect as if she were in full
+possession of her memory. I believe,&#8221; the father said, with a
+pride that had its pathos, &#8220;no one can talk with her and not feel
+that she has a beautiful mind, that she can think better than most girls
+of her age. She reads, or she lets me read to her, and until it has time
+to fade, she appreciates it all more fully than I do. At Genoa, where I
+took her to the palaces for the pictures, I saw that she had kept her
+feeling for art. When she plays&#8212;you will hear her play&#8212;it is
+like composing the music for herself; she does not seem to remember the
+pieces, she seems to improvise them. You understand?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear said that he understood, for he could not disappoint the
+expectation of the father&#8217;s boastful love: all that was left him
+of the ambitions he must once have had for his child.</p>
+
+<p>The poor, little, stout, unpicturesque elderly man got up and began
+to walk to and fro in the room which he had turned into with Lanfear,
+and to say, more to himself than to Lanfear, as if balancing one thing
+against another: &#8220;The merciful thing is that she has been saved
+from the horror and the sorrow. She knows no more of either than she
+knows of her mother&#8217;s love for her. They were very much alike in
+looks and mind, and they were always together more like persons of the
+same age&#8212;sisters, or girl friends; but she has lost all knowledge
+of that, as of other things. And then there is the question whether she
+won&#8217;t some time, sooner or later, come into both the horror and
+the sorrow.&#8221; He stopped and looked at Lanfear. &#8220;She has
+these sudden fits of drowsiness, when she <em>must</em> sleep; and I
+never see her wake from them without being afraid that she has wakened
+to everything&#8212;that she has got back into her full self, and taken
+up the terrible burden that my old shoulders are used to. What do you
+think?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear felt the appeal so keenly that in the effort to answer
+faithfully he was aware of being harsher than he meant. &#8220;That is a
+chance we can&#8217;t forecast. But it is a chance. The fact that the
+drowsiness recurs periodically&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It doesn&#8217;t,&#8221; the father pleaded. &#8220;We
+don&#8217;t know when it will come on.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It scarcely matters. The periodicity wouldn&#8217;t affect the
+possible result which you dread. I don&#8217;t say that it is probable.
+But it&#8217;s one of the possibilities. It has,&#8221; Lanfear added,
+&#8220;its logic.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, its logic!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Its logic, yes. My business, of course, would be to restore
+her to health at any risk. So far as her mind is
+affected&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Her mind is not affected!&#8221; the father retorted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon&#8212;her memory&#8212;it might be restored
+with her physical health. You understand that? It is a chance; it might
+or it might not happen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The father was apparently facing a risk which he had not squarely
+faced before. &#8220;I suppose so,&#8221; he faltered. After a moment he
+added, with more courage: &#8220;You must do the best you can, at any
+risk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear rose, too. He said, with returning kindness in his tones, if
+not his words: &#8220;I should like to study the case, Mr. Gerald.
+It&#8217;s very interesting, and&#8212;and&#8212;if you&#8217;ll forgive
+me&#8212;very touching.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thank you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you decide to stay in San Remo, I will&#8212;Do you
+suppose I could get a room in this hotel? I don&#8217;t like
+mine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, I haven&#8217;t any doubt you can. Shall we
+ask?&#8221;</p>
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>It was from the Hotel Sardegna that Lanfear satisfied his conscience
+by pushing his search for climate on behalf of his friend&#8217;s
+neurasthenic wife. He decided that Ospedaletti, with a milder air and
+more sheltered seat in its valley of palms, would be better for her than
+San Remo. He wrote his friend to that effect, and then there was no
+preoccupation to hinder him in his devotion to the case of Miss Gerald.
+He put the case first in the order of interest rather purposely, and
+even with a sense of effort, though he could not deny to himself that a
+like case related to a different personality might have been less
+absorbing. But he tried to keep his scientific duty to it pure of that
+certain painful pleasure which, as a young man not much over thirty, he
+must feel in the strange affliction of a young and beautiful girl.</p>
+
+<p>Though there was no present question of medicine, he could be
+installed near her, as the friend that her father insisted upon making
+him, without contravention of the social formalities. His care of her
+hardly differed from that of her father, except that it involved a
+closer and more premeditated study. They did not try to keep her from
+the sort of association which, in a large hotel of the type of the
+Sardegna, entails no sort of obligation to intimacy. They sat together
+at the long table, midway of the dining-room, which maintained the
+tradition of the old table-d&#8217;h&#244;te against the small tables ranged
+along the walls. Gerald had an amiable old man&#8217;s liking for talk,
+and Lanfear saw that he willingly escaped, among their changing
+companions, from the pressure of his anxieties. He left his daughter
+very much to Lanfear, during these excursions, but Lanfear was far from
+meaning to keep her to himself. He thought it better that she should
+follow her father in his forays among their neighbors, and he encouraged
+her to continue such talk with them as she might be brought into. He
+tried to guard her future encounters with them, so that she should not
+show more than a young girl&#8217;s usual diffidence at a second
+meeting; and in the frequent substitution of one presence for another
+across the table, she was fairly safe.</p>
+
+<p>A natural light-heartedness, of which he had glimpses from the first,
+returned to her. One night, at the dance given by some of the guests to
+some others, she went through the gayety in joyous triumph. She danced
+mostly with Lanfear, but she had other partners, and she won a pleasing
+popularity by the American quality of her waltzing. Lanfear had already
+noted that her forgetfulness was not always so constant or so inclusive
+as her father had taught him to expect; Mr. Gerald&#8217;s statement had
+been the large, general fact from which there was sometimes a shrinking
+in the particulars. While the warmth of an agreeable experience lasted,
+her mind kept record of it, slight or full; if the experience were
+unpleasant the memory was more apt to fade at once. After that dance she
+repeated to her father the little compliments paid her, and told him,
+laughing, they were to reward him for sitting up so late as her
+chaperon. Emotions persisted in her consciousness as the tremor lasts in
+a smitten cord, but events left little trace. She retained a sense of
+personalities; she was lastingly sensible of temperaments; but names
+were nothing to her. She could not tell her father who had said the nice
+things to her, and <a name="illust1ref" id="illust1ref">their joint study of her
+dancing-card did not help them out</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Her relation to Lanfear, though it might be a subject of
+international scrutiny, was hardly a subject of censure. He was known as
+Dr. Lanfear, but he was not at first known as her physician; he was
+conjectured her cousin or something like that; he might even be her
+betrothed in the peculiar American arrangement of such affairs.
+Personally people saw in him a serious-looking young man, better dressed
+and better mannered than they thought most Americans, and unquestionably
+handsomer, with his Spanish skin and eyes, and his brown beard of the
+Vandyke cut which was then already beginning to be rather belated.</p>
+
+<p>Other Americans in the hotel were few and transitory; and if the
+English had any mind about Miss Gerald different from their mind about
+other girls, it would be perhaps to the effect that she was quite mad;
+by this they would mean that she was a little odd; but for the rest they
+had apparently no mind about her. With the help of one of the English
+ladies her father had replaced the homesick Irish maid whom he had sent
+back to New York from Genoa, with an Italian, and in the shelter of her
+gay affection and ignorant sympathy Miss Gerald had a security
+supplemented by the easy social environment. If she did not look very
+well, she did not differ from most other American women in that; and if
+she seemed to confide herself more severely to the safe-keeping of her
+physician, that was the way of all women patients.</p>
+
+<p>Whether the Bells found the spectacle of depravity at Monte Carlo
+more attractive than the smiling face of nature at San Remo or not, they
+did not return, but sent for their baggage from their hotel, and were
+not seen again by the Geralds. Lanfear&#8217;s friend with the invalid
+wife wrote from Ospedaletti, with apologies which inculpated him for the
+disappointment, that she had found the air impossible in a single day,
+and they were off for Cannes. Lanfear and the Geralds, therefore,
+continued together in the hotel without fear or obligation to others,
+and in an immunity in which their right to breakfast exclusively in that
+pavilion on the garden wall was almost explicitly conceded. No one,
+after a few mornings of tacit possession, would have disputed their
+claim, and there, day after day, in the mild monotony of the December
+sunshine, they sat and drank their coffee, and talked of the sights
+which the peasants in the street, and the tourists in the promenade
+beyond it, afforded. The rows of stumpy palms which separated the road
+from the walk were not so high but that they had the whole lift of the
+sea to the horizon where it lost itself in a sky that curved blue as
+turquoise to the zenith overhead. The sun rose from its morning bath on
+the left, and sank to its evening bath on the right, and in making its
+climb of the spacious arc between, shed a heat as great as that of
+summer, but not the heat of summer, on the pretty world of villas and
+hotels, towered over by the olive-gray slopes of the pine-clad heights
+behind and above them. From these tops a fine, keen cold fell with the
+waning afternoon, which sharpened through the sunset till the dusk; but
+in the morning the change was from the chill to the glow, and they could
+sit in their pavilion, under the willowy droop of the eucalyptus-trees
+which have brought the Southern Pacific to the Riviera, with increasing
+comfort.</p>
+
+<p>In the restlessness of an elderly man, Gerald sometimes left the
+young people to their intolerable delays over their coffee, and walked
+off into the little stone and stucco city below, or went and sat with
+his cigar on one of the benches under the palm-lined promenade, which
+the pale northern consumptives shared with the swarthy peasant girls
+resting from their burdens, and the wrinkled grandmothers of their race
+passively or actively begging from the strangers.</p>
+
+<p>While she kept her father in sight it seemed that Miss Gerald could
+maintain her hold of his identity, and one morning she said, with the
+tender fondness for him which touched Lanfear: &#8220;When he sits there
+among those sick people and poor people, then he knows they are in the
+world.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She turned with a question graver in her look than usual, and he
+said: &#8220;Yes, we might help them oftener if we could remember that
+their misery was going on all the time, like some great natural process,
+day or dark, heat or cold, which seems to stop when we stop thinking of
+it. Nothing, for us, at least, exists unless it is recalled to
+us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she said, in her turn, &#8220;I have noticed that.
+But don&#8217;t you sometimes&#8212;sometimes&#8221;&#8212;she knit her
+forehead, as if to keep her thought from escaping&#8212;&#8220;have a
+feeling as if what you were doing, or saying, or seeing, had all
+happened before, just as it is now?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes; that occurs to every one.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But don&#8217;t you&#8212;don&#8217;t you have hints of
+things, of ideas, as if you had known them, in some previous
+existence&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She stopped, and Lanfear recognized, with a kind of impatience, the
+experience which young people make much of when they have it, and
+sometimes pretend to when they have merely heard of it. But there could
+be no pose or pretence in her. He smilingly suggested:</p>
+
+<p class="poetry">&#8220;&#8216;For something is, or something seems,
+<br />Like glimpses of forgotten dreams.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 0em">These weird impressions are no more than
+that, probably.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, I don&#8217;t believe it,&#8221; the girl said.
+&#8220;They are too real for that. They come too often, and they make me
+feel as if they would come more fully, some time. If there was a life
+before this&#8212;do you believe there was?&#8212;they may be things
+that happened there. Or they may be things that will happen in a life
+after this. You believe in <em>that</em>, don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In a life after this, or their happening in it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, both.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear evaded her, partly. &#8220;They could be premonitions,
+prophecies, of a future life, as easily as fragmentary records of a past
+life. I suppose we do not begin to be immortal merely after
+death.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221; She lingered out the word in dreamy absence, as if
+what they had been saying had already passed from her thought.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But, Miss Gerald,&#8221; Lanfear ventured, &#8220;have these
+impressions of yours grown more definite&#8212;fuller, as you
+say&#8212;of late?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My impressions?&#8221; She frowned at him, as if the look of
+interest, more intense than usual in his eyes, annoyed her. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t know what you mean.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear felt bound to follow up her lead, whether she wished it or
+not. &#8220;A good third of our lives here is passed in sleep. I&#8217;m
+not always sure that we are right in treating the mental&#8212;for
+certainly they are mental&#8212;experiences of that time as altogether
+trivial, or insignificant.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She seemed to understand now, and she protested: &#8220;But I
+don&#8217;t mean dreams. I mean things that really happened, or that
+really will happen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Like something you can give me an instance of? Are they
+painful things, or pleasant, mostly?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated. &#8220;They are things that you know happen to other
+people, but you can&#8217;t believe would ever happen to you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do they come when you are just drowsing, or just waking from a
+drowse?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They are not dreams,&#8221; she said, almost with
+vexation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes, I understand,&#8221; he hesitated to retrieve
+himself. &#8220;But <em>I</em> have had floating illusions, just before
+I fell asleep, or when I was sensible of not being quite awake, which
+seemed to differ from dreams. They were not so dramatic, but they were
+more pictorial; they were more visual than the things in
+dreams.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she assented. &#8220;They are something like that.
+But I should not call them illusions.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. And they represent scenes, events?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You said yourself they were not dramatic.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I meant, represent pictorially.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; they are like the landscape that flies back from your
+train or towards it. I can&#8217;t explain it,&#8221; she ended, rising
+with what he felt a displeasure in his pursuit.</p>
+
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>He reported what had passed to her father when Mr. Gerald came back
+from his stroll into the town, with his hands full of English papers;
+Gerald had even found a New York paper at the news-stand; and he
+listened with an apparent postponement of interest.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; Lanfear said, &#8220;that she has some shadowy
+recollection, or rather that the facts come to her in a jarred, confused
+way&#8212;the elements of pictures, not pictures. But I am afraid that
+my inquiry has offended her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess not,&#8221; Gerald said, dryly, as if annoyed.
+&#8220;What makes you think so?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Merely her manner. And I don&#8217;t know that anything is to
+be gained by such an inquiry.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps not,&#8221; Gerald allowed, with an inattention which
+vexed Lanfear in his turn.</p>
+
+<p>The elderly man looked up, from where he sat provisionally in the
+hotel veranda, into Lanfear&#8217;s face; Lanfear had remained standing.
+&#8220;<em>I</em> don&#8217;t believe she&#8217;s offended. Or she
+won&#8217;t be long. One thing, she&#8217;ll forget it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was right enough, apparently. Miss Gerald came out of the hotel
+door towards them, smiling equally for both, with the indefinable
+difference between cognition and recognition habitual in her look. She
+was dressed for a walk, and she seemed to expect them to go with her.
+She beamed gently upon Lanfear; there was no trace of umbrage in her
+sunny gayety. Her face had, as always, its lurking pathos, but in its
+appeal to Lanfear now there were only trust and the wish of pleasing
+him.</p>
+
+<p>They started side by side for their walk, while her father drove
+beside them in one of the little public carriages, mounting to the
+Berigo Road, through a street of the older San Remo, and issuing on a
+bare little piazza looking towards the walls and roofs of the mediaeval
+city, clustered together like cliff-dwellings, and down on the gardens
+that fell from the villas and the hotels. A parapet kept the path on the
+roadside nearest the declivities, and from point to point benches were
+put for the convenient enjoyment of the prospect. Mr. Gerald preferred
+to take his pleasure from the greater elevation of the seat in his
+victoria; his daughter and Lanfear leaned on the wall, and looked up to
+the sky and out to the sea, both of the same blue.</p>
+
+<p>The palms and eucalyptus-trees darkened about the villas; the bits of
+vineyard, in their lingering crimson or lingering gold, and the orchards
+of peaches and persimmons enriched with the varying reds of their
+ripening leaves and fruits the enchanting color scheme. The rose and
+geranium hedges were in bloom; the feathery green of the pepper-trees
+was warmed by the red-purple of their grape-like clusters of blossoms;
+the perfume of lemon flowers wandered vaguely upwards from some point
+which they could not fix.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing of all the beauty seemed lost upon the girl, so bereft that
+she could enjoy no part of it from association. Lanfear observed that
+she was not fatigued by any such effort as he was always helplessly
+making to match what he saw with something he had seen before. Now, when
+this effort betrayed itself, she said, smiling: &#8220;How strange it is
+that you see things for what they are like, and not for what they
+are!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s a defect, I&#8217;m afraid, sometimes.
+Perhaps&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps what?&#8221; she prompted him in the pause he
+made.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nothing. I was wondering whether in some other possible life
+our consciousness would not be more independent of what we have been
+than it seems to be here.&#8221; She looked askingly at him. &#8220;I
+mean whether there shall not be something absolute in our existence,
+whether it shall not realize itself more in each experience of the
+moment, and not be always seeking to verify itself from the
+past.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t that what you think is the way with me
+already?&#8221; She turned upon him smiling, and he perceived that in
+her New York version of a Parisian costume, with her lace hat of summer
+make and texture and the vivid parasol she twirled upon her shoulder,
+she was not only a very pretty girl, but a fashionable one. There was
+something touching in the fact, and a little bewildering. To the pretty
+girl, the fashionable girl, he could have answered with a joke, but the
+stricken intelligence had a claim to his seriousness. Now, especially,
+he noted what had from time to time urged itself upon his perception. If
+the broken ties which once bound her to the past were beginning to knit
+again, her recovery otherwise was not apparent. As she stood there her
+beauty had signally the distinction of fragility, the delicacy of
+shattered nerves in which there was yet no visible return to strength. A
+feeling, which had intimated itself before, a sense as of being in the
+presence of a disembodied spirit, possessed him, and brought, in its
+contradiction of an accepted theory, a suggestion that was destined to
+become conviction. He had always said to himself that there could be no
+persistence of personality, of character, of identity, of consciousness,
+except through memory; yet here, to the last implication of temperament,
+they all persisted. The soul that was passing in its integrity through
+time without the helps, the crutches, of remembrance by which his own
+personality supported itself, why should not it pass so through eternity
+without that loss of identity which was equivalent to annihilation?</p>
+
+<p>Her waiting eyes recalled him from his inquiry, and with an effort he
+answered, &#8220;Yes, I think you do have your being here and now, Miss
+Gerald, to an unusual degree.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you don&#8217;t think that is wrong?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wrong? Why? How?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t know.&#8221; She looked round, and her eye
+fell upon her father waiting for them in his carriage beside the walk.
+The sight supplied her with the notion which Lanfear perceived would not
+have occurred otherwise. &#8220;Then why doesn&#8217;t papa want me to
+remember things?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; Lanfear temporized.
+&#8220;Doesn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t always tell. Should&#8212;should <em>you</em>
+wish me to remember more than I do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with entreaty. &#8220;Do you think it would make my
+father happier if I did?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That I can&#8217;t say,&#8221; Lanfear answered. &#8220;People
+are often the sadder for what they remember. If I were your
+father&#8212;Excuse me! I don&#8217;t mean anything so absurd. But in
+his place&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stopped, and she said, as if she were satisfied with his broken
+reply: &#8220;It is very curious. When I look at him&#8212;when I am
+with him&#8212;I know him; but when he is away, I don&#8217;t remember
+him.&#8221; She seemed rather interested in the fact than distressed by
+it; she even smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And me,&#8221; he ventured, &#8220;is it the same with regard
+to me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She did not say; she asked, smiling: &#8220;Do you remember me when I
+am away?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes!&#8221; he answered. &#8220;As perfectly as if you were
+with me. I can see you, hear you, feel the touch of your hand, your
+dress&#8212;Good heavens!&#8221; he added to himself under his breath.
+&#8220;What am I saying to this poor child!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In the instinct of escaping from himself he started forward, and she
+moved with him. Mr. Gerald&#8217;s watchful driver followed them with
+the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is very strange,&#8221; she said, lightly. &#8220;Is it
+so with you about everyone?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he replied, briefly, almost harshly. He asked,
+abruptly: &#8220;Miss Gerald, are there any times when you know people
+in their absence?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Just after I wake from a nap&#8212;yes. But it doesn&#8217;t
+last. That is, it seems to me it doesn&#8217;t. I&#8217;m not
+sure.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>As they followed the winding of the pleasant way, with the villas on
+the slopes above and on the slopes below, she began to talk of them, and
+to come into that knowledge of each which formed her remembrance of them
+from former knowledge of them, but which he knew would fade when she
+passed them.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, when she came down unwontedly late to breakfast in
+their pavilion, she called gayly:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dr. Lanfear! It <em>is</em> Dr. Lanfear?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I should be sorry if it were not, since you seem to expect it,
+Miss Gerald.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I just wanted to be sure. Hasn&#8217;t my father been
+here, yet?&#8221; It was the first time she had shown herself aware of
+her father except in his presence, as it was the first time she had
+named Lanfear to his face.</p>
+
+<p>He suppressed a remote stir of anxiety, and answered: &#8220;He went
+to get his newspapers; he wished you not to wait. I hope you slept
+well?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Splendidly. But I was very tired last night; I don&#8217;t
+know why, exactly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We had rather a long walk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did we have a walk yesterday?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then it was <em>so!</em> I thought I had dreamed it. I was
+beginning to remember something, and my father asked me what it was, and
+then I couldn&#8217;t remember. Do you believe I shall keep on
+remembering?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why you shouldn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Should you wish me to?&#8221; she asked, in evident, however
+unconscious, recurrence to their talk of the day before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She sighed. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know. If it&#8217;s like some of
+those dreams or gleams. Is remembering pleasant?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear thought for a moment. Then he said, in the honesty he thought
+best to use with her: &#8220;For the most part I should say it was
+painful. Life is tolerable enough while it passes, but when it is past,
+what remains seems mostly to hurt and humiliate. I don&#8217;t know why
+we should remember so insistently the foolish things and wrong things we
+do, and not recall the times when we acted, without an effort, wisely
+and rightly.&#8221; He thought he had gone too far, and he hedged a
+little. &#8220;I don&#8217;t mean that we <em>can&#8217;t</em> recall
+those times. We can and do, to console and encourage ourselves; but they
+don&#8217;t recur, without our willing, as the others do.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She had poured herself a cup of coffee, and she played with the spoon
+in her saucer while she seemed to listen. But she could not have been
+listening, for when she put down her spoon and leaned back in her chair,
+she said: &#8220;In those dreams the things come from such a very far
+way back, and they don&#8217;t belong to a life that is like this. They
+belong to a life like what you hear the life after this is. We are the
+same as we are here; but the things are different. We haven&#8217;t the
+same rules, the same wishes&#8212;I can&#8217;t explain.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You mean that we are differently conditioned?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. And if you can understand, I feel as if I remembered long
+back of this, and long forward of this. But one can&#8217;t remember
+forward!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That wouldn&#8217;t be remembrance; no, it would be
+prescience; and your consciousness here, as you were saying yesterday,
+is through knowing, not remembering.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She stared at him. &#8220;Was that yesterday? I thought it
+was&#8212;to-morrow.&#8221; She rubbed her hand across her forehead as
+people do when they wish to clear their minds. Then she sighed deeply.
+&#8220;It tires me so. And yet I can&#8217;t help trying.&#8221; A light
+broke over her face at the sound of a step on the gravel walk near by,
+and she said, laughing, without looking round: &#8220;That is papa! I
+knew it was his step.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<p>Such return of memory as she now had was like memory in what we call
+the lower lives. It increased, fluctuantly, with an ebb in which it
+almost disappeared, but with a flow that in its advance carried it
+beyond its last flood-tide mark. After the first triumph in which she
+could address Lanfear by his name, and could greet her father as her
+father, there were lapses in which she knew them as before, without
+naming them. Except mechanically to repeat the names of other people
+when reminded of them, she did not pass beyond cognition to recognition.
+Events still left no trace upon her; or if they did she was not sure
+whether they were things she had dreamed or experienced. But her memory
+grew stronger in the region where the bird knows its way home to the
+nest, or the bee to the hive. She had an unerring instinct for places
+where she had once been, and she found her way to them again without the
+help from the association which sometimes failed Lanfear. Their walks
+were always taken with her father&#8217;s company in his carriage, but
+they sometimes left him at a point of the Berigo Road, and after a long
+d&#233;tour among the vineyards and olive orchards of the heights above,
+rejoined him at another point they had agreed upon with him. One
+afternoon, when Lanfear had climbed the rough pave of the footways with
+her to one of the summits, they stopped to rest on the wall of a
+terrace, where they sat watching the changing light on the sea, through
+a break in the trees. The shadows surprised them on their height, and
+they had to make their way among them over the farm paths and by the dry
+beds of the torrents to the carriage road far below. They had been that
+walk only once before, and Lanfear failed of his reckoning, except the
+downward course which must bring them out on the high-road at last. But
+Miss Gerald&#8217;s instinct saved them where his reason failed. She did
+not remember, but she knew the way, and she led him on as if she were
+inventing it, or as if it had been indelibly traced upon her mind and
+she had only to follow the mystical lines within to be sure of her
+course. She confessed to being very tired, and each step must have
+increased her fatigue, but each step seemed to clear her perception of
+the next to be taken.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, when Lanfear was blaming himself for bringing all this upon
+her, and then for trusting to her guidance, he recognized a certain
+peasant&#8217;s house, and in a few moments they had descended the
+olive-orchard terraces to a broken cistern in the clear twilight beyond
+the dusk. She suddenly halted him. &#8220;There, there! It happened
+then&#8212;now&#8212;this instant!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That feeling of being here before! There is the curb of the
+old cistern; and the place where the terrace wall is broken; and the
+path up to the vineyard&#8212;Don&#8217;t you feel it, too?&#8221; she
+demanded, with a joyousness which had no pleasure for him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, certainly. We were here last week. We went up the path to
+the farm-house to get some water.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, now I am remembering&#8212;remembering!&#8221; She stood
+with eagerly parted lips, and glancing quickly round with glowing eyes,
+whose light faded in the same instant. &#8220;No!&#8221; she said,
+mournfully, &#8220;it&#8217;s gone.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A sound of wheels in the road ceased, and her father&#8217;s voice
+called: &#8220;Don&#8217;t you want to take my place, and let me walk
+awhile, Nannie?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. You come to me, papa. Something very strange has happened;
+something you will be surprised at. Hurry!&#8221; She seemed to be
+joking, as he was, while she beckoned him impatiently towards her.</p>
+
+<p>He had left his carriage, and he came up with a heavy man&#8217;s
+quickened pace. &#8220;Well, what is the wonderful thing?&#8221; he
+panted out.</p>
+
+<p>She stared blankly at him, without replying, and they silently made
+their way to Mr. Gerald&#8217;s carriage.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I lost the way, and Miss Gerald found it,&#8221; Lanfear
+explained, as he helped her to the place beside her father.</p>
+
+<p>She said nothing, and almost with sinking into the seat, she sank
+into that deep slumber which from time to time overtook her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know we had gone so far&#8212;or rather that we
+had waited so long before we started down the hills,&#8221; Lanfear
+apologized in an involuntary whisper.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s all right,&#8221; her father said, trying to
+adjust the girl&#8217;s fallen head to his shoulder. &#8220;Get in and
+help me&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear obeyed, and lent a physician&#8217;s skilled aid, which left
+the cumbrous efforts of her father to the blame he freely bestowed on
+them. &#8220;You&#8217;ll have to come here on the other side,&#8221; he
+said. &#8220;There&#8217;s room enough for all three. Or, hold on! Let
+me take your place.&#8221; He took the place in front, and left her to
+Lanfear&#8217;s care, with the trust which was the physician&#8217;s
+right, and with a sense of the girl&#8217;s dependence in which she was
+still a child to him.</p>
+
+<p>They did not speak till well on the way home. Then the father leaned
+forward and whispered huskily: &#8220;Do you think she&#8217;s as strong
+as she was?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear waited, as if thinking the facts over. He murmured back:
+&#8220;No. She&#8217;s better. She&#8217;s not so strong.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the father murmured. &#8220;I
+understand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>What Gerald understood by Lanfear&#8217;s words might not have been
+their meaning, but what Lanfear meant was that there was now an
+interfusion of the past and present in her daily experience. She still
+did not remember, but she had moments in which she hovered upon such
+knowledge of what had happened as she had of actual events. When she was
+stronger she seemed farther from this knowledge; when she was weaker she
+was nearer it. So it seemed to him in that region where he could be sure
+of his own duty when he looked upon it singly as concern for her health.
+No inquiry for the psychological possibilities must be suffered to
+divide his effort for her physical recovery, though there might come
+with this a cessation of the timeless dream-state in which she had her
+being, and she might sharply realize the past, as the anaesthete
+realizes his return to agony from insensibility. The quality of her mind
+was as different from the thing called culture as her manner from
+convention. A simplicity beyond the simplicity of childhood was one with
+a poetic color in her absolute ideas. But this must cease with her
+restoration to the strength in which she could alone come into full and
+clear self-consciousness. So far as Lanfear could give reality to his
+occupation with her disability, he was ministering to a mind diseased;
+not to &#8220;rase out its written trouble,&#8221; but if possible to
+restore the obliterated record, and enable her to spell its tragic
+characters. If he could, he would have shrunk from this office; but all
+the more because he specially had to do with the mystical side of
+medicine, he always tried to keep his relation to her free from personal
+feeling, and his aim single and matter-of-fact.</p>
+
+<p>It was hard to do this; and there was a glamour in the very
+topographical and meteorological environment. The autumn was a long
+delight in which the constant sea, the constant sky, knew almost as
+little variance as the unchanging Alps. The days passed in a procession
+of sunny splendor, neither hot nor cold, nor of the temper of any
+determinate season, unless it were an abiding spring-time. The flowers
+bloomed, and the grass kept green in a reverie of May. But one afternoon
+of January, while Lanfear was going about in a thin coat and panama hat,
+a soft, fresh wind began to blow from the east. It increased till
+sunset, and then fell. In the morning he looked out on a world in which
+the spring had stiffened overnight into winter. A thick frost painted
+the leaves and flowers; icicles hung from pipes and vents; the frozen
+streams flashed back from their arrested flow the sun as it shone from
+the cold heaven, and blighted and blackened the hedges of geranium and
+rose, the borders of heliotrope, the fields of pinks. The leaves of the
+bananas hung limp about their stems; the palms rattled like skeletons in
+the wind when it began to blow again over the shrunken landscape.</p>
+
+
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+<p>The caprice of a climate which vaunted itself perpetual summer was a
+godsend to all the strangers strong enough to bear it without suffering.
+For the sick an indoor life of huddling about the ineffectual fires of
+the south began, and lasted for the fortnight that elapsed before the
+Riviera got back its advertised temperature. Miss Gerald had drooped in
+the milder weather; but the cold braced and lifted her, and with its
+help she now pushed her walks farther, and was eager every day for some
+excursion to the little towns that whitened along the shores, or the
+villages that glimmered from the olive-orchards of the hills. Once she
+said to Lanfear, when they were climbing through the brisk, clear air:
+&#8220;It seems to me as if I had been here before. Have I?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. This is the first time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She said no more, but seemed disappointed in his answer, and he
+suggested: &#8220;Perhaps it is the cold that reminds you of our winters
+at home, and makes you feel that the scene is familiar.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that is it!&#8221; she returned, joyously. &#8220;Was
+there snow, there, like that on the mountains yonder?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A good deal more, I fancy. That will be gone in a few days,
+and at home, you know, our snow lasts for weeks.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then that is what I was thinking of,&#8221; she said, and she
+ran strongly and lightly forward. &#8220;Come!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>When the harsh weather passed and the mild climate returned there was
+no lapse of her strength. A bloom, palely pink as the flowers that began
+to flush the almond-trees, came upon her delicate beauty, a light like
+that of the lengthening days dawned in her eyes. She had an instinct for
+the earliest violets among the grass under the olives; she was first to
+hear the blackcaps singing in the garden-tops; and nothing that was
+novel in her experience seemed alien to it. This was the sum of what
+Lanfear got by the questioning which he needlessly tried to keep
+indirect. She knew that she was his patient, and in what manner, and she
+had let him divine that her loss of memory was suffering as well as
+deprivation. She had not merely the fatigue which we all undergo from
+the effort to recall things, and which sometimes reaches exhaustion; but
+there was apparently in the void of her oblivion a perpetual rumor of
+events, names, sensations, like&#8212;Lanfear felt that he inadequately
+conjectured&#8212;the subjective noises which are always in the ears of
+the deaf. Sometimes, in the distress of it, she turned to him for help,
+and when he was able to guess what she was striving for, a radiant
+relief and gratitude transfigured her face. But this could not last, and
+he learned to note how soon the stress and tension of her effort
+returned. His compassion for her at such times involved a temptation, or
+rather a question, which he had to silence by a direct effort of his
+will. Would it be worse, would it be greater anguish for her to know at
+once the past that now tormented her consciousness with its broken and
+meaningless reverberations? Then he realized that it was impossible to
+help her even through the hazard of telling her what had befallen; that
+no such effect as was to be desired could be anticipated from the
+outside.</p>
+
+<p>If he turned to her father for counsel or instruction, or even a
+participation in his responsibility, he was met by an optimistic
+patience which exasperated him, if it did not complicate the case. Once,
+when Lanfear forbearingly tried to share with him his anxiety for the
+effect of a successful event, he was formed to be outright, and remind
+him, in so many words, that the girl&#8217;s restoration might be
+through anguish which he could not measure.</p>
+
+<p>Gerald faltered aghast; then he said: &#8220;It mustn&#8217;t come to
+that; you mustn&#8217;t let it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How do you expect me to prevent it?&#8221; Lanfear demanded,
+in his vexation.</p>
+
+<p>Gerald caught his breath. &#8220;If she gets well, she will
+remember?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t say that. It seems probable. Do you wish her
+being to remain bereft of one-half its powers?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, how do I know what I want?&#8221; the poor man groaned.
+&#8220;I only know that I trust you entirely, Doctor Lanfear. Whatever
+you think best will be best and wisest, no matter what the outcome
+is.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He got away from Lanfear with these hopeless words, and again Lanfear
+perceived that the case was left wholly to him. His consolation was the
+charm of the girl&#8217;s companionship, the delight of a nature knowing
+itself from moment to moment as if newly created. For her, as nearly as
+he could put the fact into words, the actual moment contained the past
+and the future as well as the present. When he saw in her the
+persistence of an exquisite personality independent of the means by
+which he realized his own continuous identity, he sometimes felt as if
+in the presence of some angel so long freed from earthly allegiance that
+it had left all record behind, as we leave here the records of our first
+years. If an echo of the past reached her, it was apt to be trivial and
+insignificant, like those unimportant experiences of our remotest
+childhood, which remain to us from a world outlived.</p>
+
+<p>It was not an insipid perfection of character which reported itself
+in these celestial terms, and Lanfear conjectured that angelic
+immortality, if such a thing were, could not imply perfection except at
+the cost of one-half of human character. When the girl wore a dress that
+she saw pleased him more than another, there was a responsive pleasure
+in her eyes, which he could have called vanity if he would; and she had
+at times a wilfulness which he could have accused of being obstinacy.
+She showed a certain jealousy of any experiences of his apart from her
+own, not because they included others, but because they excluded her. He
+was aware of an involuntary vigilance in her, which could not leave his
+motives any more than his actions unsearched. But in her conditioning
+she could not repent; she could only offer him at some other time the
+unconscious reparation of her obedience. The self-criticism which the
+child has not learned she had forgotten, but in her oblivion the wish to
+please existed as perfectly as in the ignorance of childhood.</p>
+
+<p>This, so far as he could ever put into words, was the interior of the
+world where he dwelt apart with her. Its exterior continued very like
+that of other worlds where two young people have their being. Now and
+then a more transitory guest at the Grand Hotel Sardegna perhaps fancied
+it the iridescent orb which takes the color of the morning sky, and is
+destined, in the course of nature, to the danger of collapse in which
+planetary space abounds. Some rumor of this could not fail to reach
+Lanfear, but he ignored it as best he could in always speaking gravely
+of Miss Gerald as his patient, and authoritatively treating her as such.
+He convinced some of these witnesses against their senses; for the
+others, he felt that it mattered little what they thought, since, if it
+reached her, it could not pierce her isolation for more than the instant
+in which the impression from absent things remained to her.</p>
+
+<p>A more positive embarrassment, of a kind Lanfear was not prepared
+for, beset him in an incident which would have been more touching if he
+had been less singly concerned for the girl. A pretty English boy, with
+the dawn of a peachy bloom on his young cheeks, and an impulsiveness
+commoner with English youth than our own, talked with Miss Gerald one
+evening and the next day sent her an armful of flowers with his card. He
+followed this attention with a call at her father&#8217;s apartment, and
+after Miss Gerald seemed to know him, and they had, as he told Lanfear,
+a delightful time together, she took up his card from the table where it
+was lying, and asked him if he could tell her who that gentleman was.
+The poor fellow&#8217;s inference was that she was making fun of him,
+and he came to Lanfear, as an obvious friend of the family, for an
+explanation. He reported the incident, with indignant tears standing in
+his eyes: &#8220;What did she mean by it? If she took my flowers, she
+must have known that&#8212;that&#8212;they&#8212;And to pretend to
+forget my name! Oh, I say, it&#8217;s too bad! She could have got rid of
+me without that. Girls have ways enough, you know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes,&#8221; Lanfear assented, slowly, to gain time.
+&#8220;I can assure you that Miss Gerald didn&#8217;t mean anything that
+could wound you. She isn&#8217;t very well&#8212;she&#8217;s rather
+odd&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean that she&#8217;s out of her mind? She can talk as
+well as any one&#8212;better!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, not that. But she&#8217;s often in pain&#8212;greatly in
+pain when she can&#8217;t recall a name, and I&#8217;ve no doubt she was
+trying to recall yours with the help of your card. She would be the last
+in the world to be indifferent to your feelings. I imagine she scarcely
+knew what she was doing at the moment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then, do you think&#8212;do you suppose&#8212;it would be any
+good my trying to see her again? If she wouldn&#8217;t be indifferent to
+my feelings, do you think there would be any hope&#8212;Really, you
+know, I would give anything to believe that my feelings wouldn&#8217;t
+offend her. You understand me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps I do.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve never met a more charming girl and&#8212;she
+isn&#8217;t engaged, is she? She isn&#8217;t engaged to you? I
+don&#8217;t mean to press the question, but it&#8217;s a question of
+life and death with me, you know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear thought he saw his way out of the coil. &#8220;I can tell
+you, quite as frankly as you ask, that Miss Gerald isn&#8217;t engaged
+to <em>me</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then it&#8217;s somebody else&#8212;somebody in America! Well,
+I hope she&#8217;ll be happy; <em>I</em> never shall.&#8221; He offered
+his hand to Lanfear. &#8220;I&#8217;m off.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, here&#8217;s the doctor, now,&#8221; a voice said behind
+them where they stood by the garden wall, and they turned to confront
+Gerald with his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why! Are you going?&#8221; she said to the Englishman, and she
+put out her hand to him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Mr. Evers is going.&#8221; Lanfear came to the
+rescue.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m sorry,&#8221; the girl said, and the youth
+responded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s very good of you. I&#8212;good-by! I hope
+you&#8217;ll be very happy&#8212;I&#8212;&#8221; He turned abruptly
+away, and ran into the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What has he been crying for?&#8221; Miss Gerald asked, turning
+from a long look after him.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear did not know quite what to say; but he hazarded saying:
+&#8220;He was hurt that you had forgotten him when he came to see you
+this afternoon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did he come to see me?&#8221; she asked; and Lanfear exchanged
+looks of anxiety, pain, and reassurance with her father. &#8220;I am so
+sorry. Shall I go after him and tell him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; I explained; he&#8217;s all right,&#8221; Lanfear
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You want to be careful, Nannie,&#8221; her father added,
+&#8220;about people&#8217;s feelings when you meet them, and afterwards
+seem not to know them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I <em>do</em> know them, papa,&#8221; she
+remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You want to be careful,&#8221; her father repeated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I will&#8212;I will, indeed.&#8221; Her lips quivered, and the
+tears came, which Lanfear had to keep from flowing by what quick turn he
+could give to something else.</p>
+
+<p>An obscure sense of the painful incident must have lingered with her
+after its memory had perished. One afternoon when Lanfear and her father
+went with her to the military concert in the sycamore-planted piazza
+near the Vacherie Suisse, where they often came for a cup of tea, she
+startled them by bowing gayly to a young lieutenant of engineers
+standing there with some other officers, and making the most of the
+prospect of pretty foreigners which the place afforded. The lieutenant
+returned the bow with interest, and his eyes did not leave their party
+as long as they remained. Within the bounds of deference for her, it was
+evident that his comrades were joking about the honor done him by this
+charming girl. When the Geralds started homeward Lanfear was aware of a
+trio of officers following them, not conspicuously, but unmistakably;
+and after that, he could not start on his walks with Miss Gerald and her
+father without the sense that the young lieutenant was hovering
+somewhere in their path, waiting in the hopes of another bow from her.
+The officer was apparently not discouraged by his failure to win
+recognition from her, and what was amounting to annoyance for Lanfear
+reached the point where he felt he must share it with her father. He had
+nearly as much trouble in imparting it to him as he might have had with
+Miss Gerald herself. He managed, but when he required her father to put
+a stop to it he perceived that Gerald was as helpless as she would have
+been. He first wished to verify the fact from its beginning with her,
+but this was not easy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nannie,&#8221; he said, &#8220;why did you bow to that officer
+the other day?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What officer, papa? When?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You know; there by the band-stand, at the Swiss
+Dairy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She stared blankly at him, and it was clear that it was all as if it
+had not been with her. He insisted, and then she said: &#8220;Perhaps I
+thought I knew him, and was afraid I should hurt his feelings if I
+didn&#8217;t recognize him. But I don&#8217;t remember it at all.&#8221;
+The curves of her mouth drooped, and her eyes grieved, so that her
+father had not the heart to say more. She left them, and when he was
+alone with Lanfear he said:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You see how it is!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I saw how it was before. But what do you wish to
+do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean that he will keep it up?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Decidedly, he&#8217;ll keep it up. He has every right to from
+his point of view.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, then, my dear fellow, you must stop it, somehow.
+You&#8217;ll know how to do it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I?&#8221; said Lanfear, indignantly; but his vexation was not
+so great that he did not feel a certain pleasure in fulfilling this
+strangest part of his professional duty, when at the beginning of their
+next excursion he put Miss Gerald into the victoria with her father and
+fell back to the point at which he had seen the lieutenant waiting to
+haunt their farther progress. He put himself plumply in front of the
+officer and demanded in very blunt Italian: &#8220;What do you
+want?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The lieutenant stared him over with potential offence, in which his
+delicately pencilled mustache took the shape of a light sneer, and
+demanded in his turn, in English much better than Lanfear&#8217;s
+Italian: &#8220;What right have you to ask?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The right of Miss Gerald&#8217;s physician. She is an invalid
+in my charge.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A change quite indefinable except as the visible transition from
+coxcomb to gentleman passed over the young lieutenant&#8217;s comely
+face. &#8220;An invalid?&#8221; he faltered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Lanfear began; and then, with a rush of confidence
+which the change in the officer&#8217;s face justified, &#8220;one very
+strangely, very tragically afflicted. Since she saw her mother killed in
+an accident a year ago she remembers nothing. She bowed to you because
+she saw you looking at her, and supposed you must be an acquaintance.
+May I assure you that you are altogether mistaken?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The lieutenant brought his heels together, and bent low. &#8220;I beg
+her pardon with all my heart. I am very, very sorry. I will do anything
+I can. I would like to stop that. May I bring my mother to call on Miss
+Gerald?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He offered his hand, and Lanfear wrung it hard, a lump of gratitude
+in his throat choking any particular utterance, while a fine shame for
+his late hostile intention covered him.</p>
+
+<p>When the lieutenant came, with all possible circumstance, bringing
+the countess, his mother, Mr. Gerald overwhelmed them with hospitality
+of every form. The Italian lady responded effusively, and more sincerely
+cooed and murmured her compassionate interest in his daughter. Then all
+parted the best of friends; but when it was over, Miss Gerald did not
+know what it had been about. She had not remembered the lieutenant or
+her father&#8217;s vexation, or any phase of the incident which was now
+closed. Nothing remained of it but the lieutenant&#8217;s right, which
+he gravely exercised, of saluting them respectfully whenever he met
+them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+<p>Earlier, Lanfear had never allowed himself to be far out of call from
+Miss Gerald&#8217;s father, especially during the daytime slumbers into
+which she fell, and from which they both always dreaded her awakening.
+But as the days went on and the event continued the same he allowed
+himself greater range. Formerly the three went their walks or drives
+together, but now he sometimes went alone. In these absences he found
+relief from the stress of his constant vigilance; he was able to cast
+off the bond which enslaves the physician to his patient, and which he
+must ignore at times for mere self-preservation&#8217;s sake; but there
+was always a lurking anxiety, which, though he refused to let it define
+itself to him, shortened the time and space he tried to put between
+them.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon in April, when he left her sleeping, he was aware of
+somewhat recklessly placing himself out of reach in a lonely excursion
+to a village demolished by the earthquake of 1887, and abandoned
+himself, in the impressions and incidents of his visit to the ruin, to a
+luxury of impersonal melancholy which the physician cannot often allow
+himself. At last, his care found him, and drove him home full of a
+sharper fear than he had yet felt since the first days. But Mr. Gerald
+was tranquilly smoking under a palm in the hotel garden, and met him
+with an easy smile. &#8220;She woke once, and said she had had such a
+pleasant dream. Now she&#8217;s off again. Do you think we&#8217;d
+better wake her for dinner? I suppose she&#8217;s getting up her
+strength in this way. Her sleeping so much is a good symptom,
+isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear smiled forlornly; neither of them, in view of the possible
+eventualities, could have said what result they wished the symptoms to
+favor. But he said: &#8220;Decidedly I wouldn&#8217;t wake her&#8221;;
+and he spent a night of restless sleep penetrated by a nervous
+expectation which the morning, when it came, rather mockingly
+defeated.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Gerald appeared promptly at breakfast in their pavilion, with a
+fresher and gayer look than usual, and to her father&#8217;s
+&#8220;Well, Nannie, you <em>have</em> had a nap, this time,&#8221; she
+answered, smiling:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Have I? It isn&#8217;t afternoon, is it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, it&#8217;s morning. You&#8217;ve napped it all
+night.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She said: &#8220;I can&#8217;t tell whether I&#8217;ve been asleep or
+not, sometimes; but now I know I have been; and I feel so rested. Where
+are we going to-day?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She turned to Lanfear while her father answered: &#8220;I guess the
+doctor won&#8217;t want to go very far, to-day, after his expedition
+yesterday afternoon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I <em>knew</em> you had been
+somewhere! Was it very far? Are you too tired?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was rather far, but I&#8217;m not tired. I shouldn&#8217;t
+advise Possana, though.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Possana?&#8221; she repeated. &#8220;What is
+Possana?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He told her, and then at a jealous look in her eyes he added an
+account of his excursion. He heightened, if anything, its difficulties,
+in making light of them as no difficulties for him, and at the end she
+said, gently: &#8220;Shall we go this morning?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let the doctor rest this morning, Nannie,&#8221; her father
+interrupted, whimsically, but with what Lanfear knew to be an inner
+yielding to her will. &#8220;Or if you won&#8217;t let <em>him</em>, let
+<em>me</em>. I don&#8217;t want to go anywhere this morning.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear thought that he did not wish her to go at all, and hoped that
+by the afternoon she would have forgotten Possana. She sighed, but in
+her sigh there was no concession. Then, with the chance of a returning
+drowse to save him from openly thwarting her will, he merely suggested:
+&#8220;There&#8217;s plenty of time in the afternoon; the days are so
+long now; and we can get the sunset from the hills.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that will be nice,&#8221; she said, but he perceived that
+she did not assent willingly; and there was an effect of resolution in
+the readiness with which she appeared dressed for the expedition after
+luncheon. She clearly did not know where they were going, but when she
+turned to Lanfear with her look of entreaty, he had not the heart to
+join her father in any conspiracy against her. He beckoned the carriage
+which had become conscious in its eager driver from the moment she
+showed herself at the hotel door, and they set out.</p>
+
+<p>When they had left the higher level of the hotel and began their
+clatter through the long street of the town, Lanfear noted that she
+seemed to feel as much as himself the quaintness of the little city,
+rising on one hand, with its narrow alleys under successive arches
+between the high, dark houses, to the hills, and dropping on the other
+to sea from the commonplace of the principal thoroughfare, with its pink
+and white and saffron hotels and shops. Beyond the town their course lay
+under villa walls, covered with vines and topped by pavilions, and
+opening finally along a stretch of the old Cornice road.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But this,&#8221; she said, at a certain point, &#8220;is where
+we were yesterday!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This is where the doctor was yesterday,&#8221; her father
+said, behind his cigar.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And wasn&#8217;t I with you?&#8221; she asked Lanfear.</p>
+
+<p>He said, playfully: &#8220;To-day you are. I mustn&#8217;t be selfish
+and have you every day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, you are laughing at me; but I know I was here
+yesterday.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her father set his lips in patience, and Lanfear did not insist.</p>
+
+<p>They had halted at this point because, across a wide valley on the
+shoulder of an approaching height, the ruined village of Possana showed,
+and lower down and nearer the seat the new town which its people had
+built when they escaped from the destruction of their world-old
+home.</p>
+
+<p>World-old it all was, with reference to the human life of it; but the
+spring-time was immortally young in the landscape. Over the expanses of
+green and brown fields, and hovering about the gray and white cottages,
+was a mist of peach and cherry blossoms. Above these the hoar olives
+thickened, and the vines climbed from terrace to terrace. The valley
+narrowed inland, and ceased in the embrace of the hills drawing
+mysteriously together in the distances.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think we&#8217;ve got the best part of it here, Miss
+Gerald,&#8221; Lanfear broke the common silence by saying. &#8220;You
+couldn&#8217;t see much more of Possana after you got there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Besides,&#8221; her father ventured a pleasantry which jarred
+on the younger man, &#8220;if you were there with the doctor yesterday,
+you won&#8217;t want to make the climb again to-day. Give it up,
+Nannie!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh no,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I can&#8217;t give it
+up.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, then, we must go on, I suppose. Where do we begin our
+climb?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear explained that he had been obliged to leave his carriage at
+the foot of the hill, and climb to Possana Nuova by the donkey-paths of
+the peasants. He had then walked to the ruins of Possana Vecchia, but he
+suggested that they might find donkeys to carry them on from the new
+town.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I hope so,&#8221; Mr. Gerald grumbled. But at Possana
+Nuova no saddle-donkeys were to be had, and he announced, at the caf&#233;
+where they stopped for the negotiation, that he would wait for the young
+people to go on to Possana Vecchia, and tell him about it when they got
+back. In the meantime he would watch the game of ball, which, in the
+piazza before the caf&#233;, appeared to have engaged the energies of the
+male population. Lanfear was still inwardly demurring, when a stalwart
+peasant girl came in and announced that she had one donkey which they
+could have with her own services driving it. She had no saddle, but
+there was a pad on which the young lady could ride.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, take it for Nannie,&#8221; Mr. Gerald directed;
+&#8220;only don&#8217;t be gone too long.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They set out with Miss Gerald reclining in the kind of litter which
+the donkey proved to be equipped with. Lanfear went beside her, the
+peasant girl came behind, and at times ran forward to instruct them in
+the points they seemed to be looking at. For the most part the landscape
+opened beneath them, but in the azure distances it climbed into Alpine
+heights which the recent snows had now left to the gloom of their pines.
+On the slopes of the nearer hills little towns clung, here and there;
+closer yet farm-houses showed themselves among the vines and olives.</p>
+
+<p>It was very simple, as the life in it must always have been; and
+Lanfear wondered if the elemental charm of the scene made itself felt by
+his companion as they climbed the angles of the inclines, in a silence
+broken only by the picking of the donkey&#8217;s hoofs on the rude
+mosaic of the pavement, and the panting of the peasant girl at its
+heels. On the top of the last upward stretch they stopped for the view,
+and Miss Gerald asked abruptly: &#8220;Why were you so sad?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When was I sad?&#8221; he asked, in turn.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. Weren&#8217;t you sad?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When I was here yesterday, you mean?&#8221; She smiled on his
+fortunate guess, and he said: &#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t know. It might
+have begun with thinking&#8212;</p>
+
+<p class="poetry">&#8216;Of old, unhappy, far-off things, <br />And
+battles long ago.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 0em">You know the pirates used to come sailing
+over the peaceful sea yonder from Africa, to harry these coasts, and
+carry off as many as they could capture into slavery in Tunis and
+Algiers. It was a long, dumb kind of misery that scarcely made an echo
+in history, but it haunted my fancy yesterday, and I saw these valleys
+full of the flight and the pursuit which used to fill them, up to the
+walls of the villages, perched on the heights where men could have built
+only for safety. Then, I got to thinking of other
+things&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And thinking of things in the past always makes you
+sad,&#8221; she said, in pensive reflection. &#8220;If it were not for
+the wearying of always trying to remember, I don&#8217;t believe I
+should want my memory back. And of course to be like other
+people,&#8221; she ended with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>It was on his tongue to say that he would not have her so; but he
+checked himself, and said, lamely enough: &#8220;Perhaps you will be
+like them, sometime.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She startled him by answering irrelevantly: &#8220;You know my mother
+is dead. She died a long while ago; I suppose I must have been very
+little.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She spoke as if the fact scarcely concerned her, and Lanfear drew a
+breath of relief in his surprise. He asked, at another tangent:
+&#8220;What made you think I was sad yesterday?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I knew, somehow. I think that I always know when you are
+sad; I can&#8217;t tell you how, but I feel it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then I must cheer up,&#8221; Lanfear said. &#8220;If I could
+only see you strong and well, Miss Gerald, like this
+girl&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They both looked at the peasant, and she laughed in sympathy with
+their smiling, and beat the donkey a little for pleasure; it did not
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you will be&#8212;you will be! We must hurry on, now, or
+your father will be getting anxious.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They pushed forward on the road, which was now level and wider than
+it had been. As they drew near the town, whose ruin began more and more
+to reveal itself in the roofless walls and windowless casements, they
+saw a man coming towards them, at whose approach Lanfear instinctively
+put himself forward. The man did not look at them, but passed, frowning
+darkly, and muttering and gesticulating.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Gerald turned in her litter and followed him with a long gaze.
+The peasant girl said gayly in Italian: &#8220;He is mad; the earthquake
+made him mad,&#8221; and urged the donkey forward.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear, in the interest of science, habitually forbade himself the
+luxury of anything like foreboding, but now, with the passing of the
+madman, he felt distinctively a lift from his spirit. He no longer
+experienced the vague dread which had followed him towards Possana, and
+made him glad of any delay that kept them from it.</p>
+
+<p>They entered the crooked, narrow street leading abruptly from the
+open country without any suburban hesitation into the heart of the ruin,
+which kept a vivid image of uninterrupted mediaeval life. There, till
+within the actual generation, people had dwelt, winter and summer, as
+they had dwelt from the beginning of Christian times, with nothing to
+intimate a domestic or civic advance. This street must have been the
+main thoroughfare, for stone-paved lanes, still narrower, wound from it
+here and there, while it kept a fairly direct course to the little
+piazza on a height in the midst of the town. Two churches and a simple
+town house partly enclosed it with their seamed and shattered fa&#231;ades.
+The dwellings here were more ruinous than on the thoroughfare, and some
+were tumbled in heaps. But Lanfear pushed open the door of one of the
+churches, and found himself in an interior which, except that it was
+roofless, could not have been greatly changed since the people had
+flocked into it to pray for safety from the earthquake. The high altar
+stood unshaken; around the frieze a succession of stucco cherubs
+perched, under the open sky, in celestial security.</p>
+
+<p>He had learned to look for the unexpected in Miss Gerald, and he
+could not have said that it was with surprise he now found her as
+capable of the emotions which the place inspired, as himself. He made
+sure of saying: &#8220;The earthquake, you know,&#8221; and she
+responded with compassion:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes; and perhaps that poor man was here, praying with the
+rest, when it happened. How strange it must all have seemed to them,
+here where they lived so safely always! They thought such a dreadful
+thing could happen to others, but not to them. That is the
+way!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Lanfear once more that she was on the verge of the
+knowledge so long kept from her. But she went confidently on like a
+sleepwalker who saves himself from dangers that would be death to him in
+waking. She spoke of the earthquake as if she had been reading or
+hearing of it; but he doubted if, with her broken memory, this could be
+so. It was rather as if she was exploring his own mind in the way of
+which he had more than once been sensible, and making use of his memory.
+From time to time she spoke of remembering, but he knew that this was as
+the blind speak of seeing.</p>
+
+<p>He was anxious to get away, and at last they came out to where they
+had left the peasant girl waiting beside her donkey. She was not there,
+and after trying this way and that in the tangle of alleys, Lanfear
+decided to take the thoroughfare which they had come up by and trust to
+the chance of finding her at its foot. But he failed even of his search
+for the street: he came out again and again at the point he had started
+from.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What is the matter?&#8221; she asked at the annoyance he could
+not keep out of his face.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. &#8220;Oh, merely that we&#8217;re lost. But we will wait
+here till that girl chooses to come back for us. Only it&#8217;s getting
+late, and Mr. Gerald&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, I know the way down,&#8221; she said, and started quickly
+in a direction which, as they kept it, he recognized as the route by
+which he had emerged from the town the day before. He had once more the
+sense of his memory being used by her, as if being blind, she had taken
+his hand for guidance, or as if being herself disabled from writing, she
+had directed a pen in his grasp to form the words she desired to put
+down. In some mystical sort the effect was hers, but the means was
+his.</p>
+
+<p>They found the girl waiting with the donkey by the roadside beyond
+the last house. She explained that, not being able to follow them into
+the church with her donkey, she had decided to come where they found her
+and wait for them there.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Does no one at all live here?&#8221; Lanfear asked,
+carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Among the owls and the spectres? I would not pass a night here
+for a lemonade! My mother,&#8221; she went on, with a natural pride in
+the event, &#8220;was lost in the earthquake. They found her with me
+before her breast, and her arms stretched out keeping the stones
+away.&#8221; She vividly dramatized the fact. &#8220;I was alive, but
+she was dead.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell her,&#8221; Miss Gerald said, &#8220;that my mother is
+dead, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, poor little thing!&#8221; the girl said, when the message
+was delivered, and she put her beast in motion, chattering gayly to Miss
+Gerald in the bond of their common orphanhood.</p>
+
+<p>The return was down-hill, and they went back in half the time it had
+taken them to come. But even with this speed they were late, and the
+twilight was deepening when the last turn of their road brought them in
+sight of the new village. There a wild noise of cries for help burst
+upon the air, mixed with the shrill sound of maniac gibbering. They saw
+a boy running towards the town, and nearer them a man struggling with
+another, whom he had caught about the middle, and was dragging towards
+the side of the road where it dropped, hundreds of feet, into the gorge
+below.</p>
+
+<p>The donkey-girl called out: &#8220;Oh, the madman! He is killing the
+signor!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear shouted. The madman flung Gerald to the ground, and fled
+shrieking. Miss Gerald had leaped from her seat, and followed Lanfear as
+he ran forward to the prostrate form. She did not look at it, but within
+a few paces she clutched her hands in her hair, and screamed out:
+&#8220;Oh, my mother is killed!&#8221; and sank, as if sinking down into
+the earth, in a swoon.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, no; it&#8217;s all right, Nannie! Look after her, Lanfear!
+I&#8217;m not hurt. I let myself go in that fellow&#8217;s hands, and I
+fell softly. It was a good thing he didn&#8217;t drop me over the
+edge.&#8221; Gerald gathered himself up nimbly enough, and lent Lanfear
+his help with the girl. The situation explained itself, almost without
+his incoherent additions, to the effect that he had become anxious, and
+had started out with the boy for a guide, to meet them, and had met the
+lunatic, who suddenly attacked him. While he talked, Lanfear was feeling
+the girl&#8217;s pulse, and now and then putting his ear to her heart.
+With a glance at her father: &#8220;You&#8217;re bleeding, Mr.
+Gerald,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So I am,&#8221; the old man answered, smiling, as he wiped a
+red stream from his face with his handkerchief. &#8220;But I am not
+hurt&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Better let me tie it up,&#8221; Lanfear said, taking the
+handkerchief from him. He felt the unselfish quality in a man whom he
+had not always thought heroic, and he bound the gash above his forehead
+with a reverence mingling with his professional gentleness. The
+donkey-girl had not ceased to cry out and bless herself, but suddenly,
+as her care was needed in getting Miss Gerald back to the litter, she
+became a part of the silence in which the procession made its way slowly
+into Possana Nuova, Lanfear going on one side, and Mr. Gerald on the
+other to support his daughter in her place. There was a sort of muted
+outcry of the whole population awaiting them at the door of the locanda
+where they had halted before, and which now had the distinction of
+offering them shelter in a room especially devoted to the poor young
+lady, who still remained in her swoon.</p>
+
+<p>When the landlord could prevail with his fellow-townsmen and
+townswomen to disperse in her interest, and had imposed silence upon his
+customers indoors, Lanfear began his vigil beside his patient in as
+great quiet as he could anywhere have had. Once during the evening the
+public physician of the district looked in, but he agreed with Lanfear
+that nothing was to be done which he was not doing in his greater
+experience of the case. From time to time Gerald had suggested sending
+for some San Remo physician in consultation. Lanfear had always
+approved, and then Gerald had not persisted. He was strongly excited,
+and anxious not so much for his daughter&#8217;s recovery from her
+swoon, which he did not doubt, as for the effect upon her when she
+should have come to herself.</p>
+
+<p>It was this which he wished to discuss, sitting fallen back into his
+chair, or walking up and down the room, with his head bound with a
+bloody handkerchief, and looking, with a sort of alien picturesqueness,
+like a kindly brigand.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear did not leave his place beside the bed where the girl lay,
+white and still as if dead. An inexpressible compassion for the poor man
+filled his heart. Whatever the event should be, it would be tragical for
+him. &#8220;Go to sleep, Mr. Gerald,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Your waking
+can do no good. I will keep watch, and if need be, I&#8217;ll call you.
+Try to make yourself easy on that couch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall not sleep,&#8221; the old man answered. &#8220;How
+could I?&#8221; Nevertheless, he adjusted himself to the hard pillows of
+the lounge where he had been sitting and drowsed among them. He woke
+just before dawn with a start. &#8220;I thought she had come to, and
+knew everything! What a nightmare! Did I groan? Is there any
+change?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear, sitting by the bed, in the light of the wasting candle,
+which threw a grotesque shadow of him on the wall, shook his head. After
+a moment he asked: &#8220;How long did you tell me her swoon had lasted
+after the accident to her mother?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think she recovered consciousness for two days,
+and then she remembered nothing. What do you think are the chances of
+her remembering now?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. But there&#8217;s a kind of psychopathic
+logic&#8212;If she lost her memory through one great shock, she might
+find it through another.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes!&#8221; the father said, rising and walking to and
+fro, in his anguish. &#8220;That was what I thought&#8212;what I was
+afraid of. If I could die myself, and save her from living through
+it&#8212;I don&#8217;t know what I&#8217;m saying! But if&#8212;but
+if&#8212;if she could somehow be kept from it a little longer! But she
+can&#8217;t, she can&#8217;t! She must know it now when she
+wakes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lanfear had put up his hand, and taken the girl&#8217;s slim wrist
+quietly between his thumb and finger, holding it so while her father
+talked on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose it&#8217;s been a sort of weakness&#8212;a sort of
+wickedness&#8212;in me to wish to keep it from her; but I <em>have</em>
+wished that, doctor; you must have seen it, and I can&#8217;t deny it.
+We ought to bear what is sent us in this world, and if we escape we must
+pay for our escape. It has cost her half her being, I know it; but it
+hasn&#8217;t cost her her reason, and I&#8217;m afraid for that, if she
+comes into her memory now. Still, you must do&#8212;But no one can do
+anything either to hinder or to help!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was talking in a husky undertone, and brokenly, incoherently. He
+made an appeal, which Lanfear seemed not to hear, where he remained
+immovable with his hand on the girl&#8217;s pulse.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you think I am to blame for wishing her never to know it,
+though without it she must remain deprived of one whole side of life? Do
+you think my wishing that can have had anything to do with keeping
+her&#8212;But this faint <em>may</em> pass and she may wake from it just
+as she has been. It is logical that she should remember; but is it
+certain that she will?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A murmur, so very faint as to be almost no sound at all, came like a
+response from the girl&#8217;s lips, and she all but imperceptibly
+stirred. Her father neither heard nor saw, but Lanfear started forward.
+He made a sudden clutch at the girl&#8217;s wrist with the hand that had
+not left it and then remained motionless. &#8220;She will never remember
+now&#8212;here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He fell on his knees beside the bed and began to sob. &#8220;Oh, my
+dearest! My poor girl! My love!&#8221; still keeping her wrist in his
+hand, and laying his head tenderly on her arm. Suddenly he started, with
+a shout: &#8220;The pulse!&#8221; and fell forward, crushing his ear
+against her heart, and listened with bursts of: &#8220;It&#8217;s
+beating! She isn&#8217;t dead! She&#8217;s alive!&#8221; Then he lifted
+her in his arms, and it was in his embrace that she opened her eyes, and
+while she clung to him, entreated:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My father! Where is he?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A dread fell upon both the men, blighting the joy with which they
+welcomed her back to life. She took her father&#8217;s head between her
+hands, and kissed his bruised face. &#8220;I thought you were dead; and
+I thought that mamma&#8212;&#8221; She stopped, and they waited
+breathless. &#8220;But that was long ago, wasn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; her father eagerly assented. &#8220;Very long
+ago.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I remember,&#8221; she sighed. &#8220;I thought that I was
+killed, too. Was it <em>all</em> a dream?&#8221; Her father and Lanfear
+looked at each other. Which should speak? &#8220;This is Doctor Lanfear,
+isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; she asked, with a dim smile. &#8220;And I&#8217;m
+not dreaming now, am I?&#8221; He had released her from his arms, but
+she held his hand fast. &#8220;I know it is you, and papa; and yes, I
+remember everything. That terrible pain of forgetting is gone!
+It&#8217;s beautiful! But did he hurt you badly, papa? I saw him, and I
+wanted to call to you. But mamma&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>However the change from the oblivion of the past had been operated,
+it had been mercifully wrought. As far as Lanfear could note it, in the
+rapture of the new revelation to her which it scarcely needed words to
+establish, the process was a gradual return from actual facts to the
+things of yesterday and then to the things of the day before, and so
+back to the tragedy in which she had been stricken. There was no sudden
+burst of remembrance, but a slow unveiling of the reality in which her
+spirit was mystically fortified against it. At times it seemed to him
+that the effect was accomplished in her by supernatural agencies such
+as, he remembered once somewhere reading, attend the souls of those
+lately dead, and explore their minds till every thought and deed of
+their earthly lives, from the last to the first, is revealed to them out
+of an inner memory which can never, any jot or tittle, perish. It was as
+if this had remained in her intact from the blow that shattered her
+outer remembrance. When the final, long-dreaded horror was reached, it
+was already a sorrow of the past, suffered and accepted with the
+resignation which is the close of grief, as of every other passion.</p>
+
+<p>Love had come to her help in the time of her need, but not love alone
+helped her live back to the hour of that supreme experience and beyond
+it. In the absorbing interest of her own renascence, the shock, more
+than the injury which her father had undergone, was ignored, if not
+neglected. Lanfear had not, indeed, neglected it; but he could not help
+ignoring it in his happiness, as he remembered afterwards in the
+self-reproach which he would not let the girl share with him. Nothing,
+he realized, could have availed if everything had been done which he did
+not do; but it remained a pang with him that he had so dimly felt his
+duty to the gentle old man, even while he did it. Gerald lived to
+witness his daughter&#8217;s perfect recovery of the self so long lost
+to her; he lived, with a joy more explicit than their own, to see her
+the wife of the man to whom she was dearer than love alone could have
+made her. He lived beyond that time, rejoicing, if it may be so said, in
+the fond memories of her mother which he had been so long forbidden by
+her affliction to recall. Then, after the spring of the Riviera had
+whitened into summer, and San Remo hid, as well as it could, its sunny
+glare behind its pines and palms, Gerald suffered one long afternoon
+through the heat till the breathless evening, and went early to bed. He
+had been full of plans for spending the rest of the summer at the little
+place in New England where his daughter knew that her mother lay. In the
+morning he did not wake.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He gave his life that I might have mine!&#8221; she lamented
+in the first wild grief.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, don&#8217;t say that, Nannie,&#8221; her husband
+protested, calling her by the pet name which her father always used.
+&#8220;He is dead; but if we owe each other to his loss, it is because
+he was given, not because he gave himself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I know, I know!&#8221; she wailed. &#8220;But he would
+gladly have given himself for me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That, perhaps, Lanfear could not have denied, and he had no wish to
+do so. He had a prescience of happiness for her which the future did not
+belie; and he divined that a woman must not be forbidden the extremes
+within which she means to rest her soul.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter2" id="chapter2">II</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">The Eidolons of Brooks Alford</h2>
+
+
+<p>I should like to give the story of Alford&#8217;s experiences just as
+Wanhope told it, sitting with us before the glowing hearth in the
+Turkish room, one night after the other diners at our club had gone away
+to digest their dinners at the theatre, or in their bachelor apartments
+up-town, or on the late trains which they were taking north, south, and
+west; or had hurried back to their offices to spend the time stolen from
+rest in overwork for which their famished nerves would duly revenge
+themselves. It was undoubtedly overwork which preceded Alford&#8217;s
+experiences if it did not cause them, for he was pretty well broken from
+it when he took himself off in the early summer, to put the pieces
+together as best he could by the seaside. But this was a fact which
+Wanhope was not obliged to note to us, and there were certain other
+commonplaces of our knowledge of Alford which he could omit without
+omitting anything essential to our understanding of the facts which he
+dealt with so delicately, so electly, almost affectionately, coaxing
+each point into the fittest light, and then lifting his phrase from it,
+and letting it stand alone in our consciousness. I remember particularly
+how he touched upon the love-affair which was supposed to have so much
+to do with Alford&#8217;s break-up, and how he dismissed it to its
+proper place in the story. As he talked on, with scarcely an
+interruption either from the eager credulity of Rulledge or the doubt of
+Minver, I heard with a sensuous comfort&#8212;I can use no other
+word&#8212;the far-off click of the dishes in the club kitchen, putting
+away till next day, with the musical murmur of a smitten glass or the
+jingle of a dropped spoon. But if I should try to render his words, I
+should spoil their impression in the vain attempt, and I feel that it is
+best to give the story as best I can in words of my own, so far from
+responsive to the requisitions of the occult incident.</p>
+
+<p>The first intimation Alford had of the strange effect, which from
+first to last was rather an obsession than a possession of his, was
+after a morning of idle satisfaction spent in watching the target
+practice from the fort in the neighborhood of the little fishing-village
+where he was spending the summer. The target was two or three miles out
+in the open water beyond the harbor, and he found his pleasure in
+watching the smoke of the gun for that discrete interval before the
+report reached him, and then for that somewhat longer interval before he
+saw the magnificent splash of the shot which, as it plunged into the
+sea, sent a fan-shaped fountain thirty or forty feet into the air. He
+did not know and he did not care whether the target was ever hit or not.
+That fact was no part of his concern. His affair was to watch the burst
+of smoke from the fort and then to watch the upward gush of water,
+almost as light and vaporous to the eye, where the ball struck. He did
+not miss one of the shots fired during the forenoon, and when he met the
+other people who sat down with him at the midday dinner in the hotel,
+his talk with them was naturally of the morning&#8217;s practice. They
+one and all declared it a great nuisance, and said that it had shattered
+their nerves terribly, which was not perhaps so strange, since they were
+all women. But when they asked him in his quality of nervous wreck
+whether he had not suffered from the prolonged and repeated explosions,
+too, he found himself able to say no, that he had enjoyed every moment
+of the firing. He added that he did not believe he had even noticed the
+noise after the first shot, he was so wholly taken with the beauty of
+the fountain-burst from the sea which followed; and as he spoke the
+fan-like spray rose and expanded itself before his eyes, quite blotting
+out the visage of a young widow across the table. In his swift
+recognition of the fact and his reflection upon it, he realized that the
+effect was quite as if he had been looking at some intense light, almost
+as if he had been looking at the sun, and that the illusion which had
+blotted out the agreeable reality opposite was of the quality of those
+flying shapes which repeat themselves here, there, and everywhere that
+one looks, after lifting the gaze from a dazzling object. When his
+consciousness had duly registered this perception, there instantly
+followed a recognition of the fact that the eidolon now filling his
+vision was not the effect of the dazzled eyes, but of a mental process,
+of thinking how the thing which it reported had looked.</p>
+
+<p>By the time Alford had co-ordinated this reflection with the other,
+the eidolon had faded from the lady&#8217;s face, which again presented
+itself in uninterrupted loveliness with the added attraction of a
+distinct pout.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, Mr. Alford!&#8221; she bantered him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I beg your pardon! I was thinking&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not of what I was saying,&#8221; she broke in, laughingly,
+forgivingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I certainly wasn&#8217;t,&#8221; he assented, with such a
+sense of approaching creepiness in his experience that when she
+challenged him to say what he <em>was</em> thinking of, he could not, or
+would not; she professed to believe that he would not.</p>
+
+<p>In the joking that followed he soon lost the sense of approaching
+creepiness, and began to be proud of what had happened to him as out of
+the ordinary, as a species of psychological ecstasy almost of spiritual
+value. From time to time he tried, by thinking of the splash and upward
+gush from the cannon-shot&#8217;s plunge in the sea, to recall the
+vision, but it would not come again, and at the end of an afternoon
+somewhat distraughtly spent he decided to put the matter away, as one of
+the odd things of no significance which happen in life and must be dealt
+with as mysteries none the less trifling because they are
+inexplicable.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve got over it?&#8221; the widow joked him as
+he drew up towards her, smiling from her rocker on the veranda after
+supper. At first, all the women in the hotel had petted him; but with
+their own cares and ailments to reclaim them they let the invalid fall
+to the peculiar charge of the childless widow who had nothing else to
+do, and was so well and strong that she could look after the invalid
+Professor of Archaeology (at the Champlain University) without the
+fatigues they must feel.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I&#8217;ve got over it,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what was it?&#8221; she boldly pursued.</p>
+
+<p>He was about to say, and then he could not.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You won&#8217;t tell?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not yet,&#8221; he answered. He added, after a moment,
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe I can.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Because it&#8217;s confidential?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; not exactly that. Because it&#8217;s
+impossible.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s simple enough. I understand exactly what you
+mean. Well, if ever it becomes less difficult, remember that I should
+always like to know. It seemed a little&#8212;personal.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How in the world?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, when one is stared at in that way&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did I stare?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you <em>always</em> stare? But in this case you
+stared as if there was something wrong with my hair.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There wasn&#8217;t,&#8221; Alford protested, simple-heartedly.
+Then he recollected his sophistication to say: &#8220;Unless its being
+of that particular shade between brown and red was wrong.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford! After that I <em>must</em> believe
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They talked on the veranda till the night fell, and then they came in
+among the lamps, in the parlor, and she sat down with a certain
+provisionality, putting herself sideways on a light chair by a window,
+and as she chatted and laughed with one cheek towards him she now and
+then beat the back of her chair with her open hand. The other people
+were reading or severely playing cards, and they, too, kept their tones
+down to a respectful level, while she lingered, and when she rose and
+said good-night he went out and took some turns on the veranda before
+going up to bed. She was certainly, he realized, a very pretty woman,
+and very graceful and very amusing, and though she probably knew all
+about it, she was the franker and honester for her knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>He had arrived at this conclusion just as he turned the switch of the
+electric light inside his door, and in the first flash of the carbon
+film he saw her sitting beside the window in such a chair as she had
+taken and in the very pose which she had kept in the parlor. Her
+half-averted face was lit as from laughing, and she had her hand lifted
+as if to beat the back of her chair.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good Heavens, Mrs. Yarrow!&#8221; he said, in a sort of
+whispered shout, while he mechanically closed the door behind him as if
+to keep the fact to himself. &#8220;What in the world are you doing
+here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then she was not there. Nothing was there; not even a chair beside
+the window.</p>
+
+<p>Alford dropped weakly into the only chair in the room, which stood
+next the door by the head of his bed, and abandoned himself a helpless
+prey to the logic of the events.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this point, which I have been able to give in
+Wanhope&#8217;s exact words, that, in the ensuing pause, Rulledge asked,
+as if he thought some detail might be denied him: &#8220;And what was
+the logic of the events?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver gave a fleering laugh. &#8220;Don&#8217;t be premature,
+Rulledge. If you have the logic now, you will spoil everything. You
+can&#8217;t have the moral until you&#8217;ve had the whole story. Go
+on, Wanhope. You&#8217;re so much more interesting than usual that I
+won&#8217;t ask how you got hold of all these compromising
+minutiae.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; Wanhope returned, &#8220;they&#8217;re not
+for the general ear. I go rather further, for the sake of the curious
+fact, than I should be warranted in doing if I did not know my audience
+so well.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We joined in a murmur of gratification, and he went on to say that
+Alford&#8217;s first coherent thought was that he was dreaming one of
+those unwarranted dreams in which we make our acquaintance privy to all
+sorts of strange incidents. Then he knew that he was not dreaming, and
+that his eye had merely externated a mental vision, as in the case of
+the cannon-shot splash of which he had seen the phantom as soon as it
+was mentioned. He remembered afterwards asking himself in a sort of
+terror how far it was going to go with him; how far his thought was
+going to report itself objectively hereafter, and what were the
+reasonable implications of his abnormal experiences. He did not know
+just how long he sat by his bedside trying to think, only to have his
+conclusions whir away like a flock of startled birds when he approached
+them. He went to bed because he was exhausted rather than because he was
+sleepy, but he could not recall a moment of wakefulness after his head
+touched the pillow.</p>
+
+<p>He woke surprisingly refreshed, but at the belated breakfast where he
+found Mrs. Yarrow still lingering he thought her looking not well. She
+confessed, listlessly, that she had not rested well. She was not sure,
+she said, whether the sea air agreed with her; she might try the
+mountains a little later. She was not inclined to talk, and that day he
+scarcely spoke with her except in commonplaces at the table. They had no
+return to the little mystery they had mocked together the day
+before.</p>
+
+<p>More days passed, and Alford had no recurrence of his visions. His
+acquaintance with Mrs. Yarrow made no further advance; there was no one
+else in the hotel who interested him, and he bored himself. At the same
+time his recovery seemed retarded; he lost tone, and after a fortnight
+he ran up to talk himself over with his doctor in Boston. He rather
+thought he would mention his eidolons, and ask if they were at all
+related to the condition of his nerves. It was a keen disappointment,
+but it ought not to have been a surprise, for him to find that his
+doctor was off on his summer vacation. The caretaker who opened the door
+to Alford named a young physician in the same block of Marlborough
+Street who had his doctor&#8217;s practice for the summer, but Alford
+had not the heart to go to this alternate.</p>
+
+<p>He started down to his hotel on a late afternoon train that would
+bring him to the station after dusk, and before he reached it the lamps
+had been lighted in his car. Alford sat in a sparsely peopled smoker,
+where he had found a place away from the crowd in the other coaches, and
+looked out of the window into the reflected interior of his car, which
+now and then thinned away and let him see the weeds and gravel of the
+railroad banks, with the bushes that topped them and the woods that
+backed them. The train at one point stopped rather suddenly and then
+went on, for no reason that he ever cared to inquire; but as it slowly
+moved forward again he was reminded of something he had seen one night
+in going to New York just before the train drew into Springfield. It had
+then made such another apparently reasonless stop; but before it resumed
+its course Alford saw from his window a group of trainmen, and his own
+Pullman conductor with his lantern on his arm, bending over the figure
+of a man defined in his dark clothing against the snow of the bank where
+he lay propped. His face was waxen white, and Alford noted how
+particularly black the mustache looked traversing the pallid visage. He
+never knew whether the man was killed or merely stunned; you learn
+nothing with certainty of such things on trains; but now, as he thought
+of the incident, its eidolon showed itself outside of his mind, and
+followed him in every detail, even to a snowy stretch of the embankment,
+until the increasing speed of the train seemed to sweep it back out of
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>Alford turned his eyes to the interior of the smoker, which, except
+for two or three dozing commuters and a noisy euchre-party, had been
+empty of everything but the fumes and stale odors of tobacco, and found
+it swarming with visions, the eidolons of everything he remembered from
+his past life. Whatever had once strongly impressed itself upon his
+nerves was reported there again as instantly as he thought of it. It was
+largely a whirling chaos, a kaleidoscopic jumble of facts; but from time
+to time some more memorable and important experience visualized itself
+alone. Such was the death-bed of the little sister whom he had been
+wakened, a child, to see going to heaven, as they told him. Such was the
+pathetic, foolish face of the girl whom long ago he had made believe he
+cared for, and then had abruptly broken with: he saw again, with
+heartache, her silly, tender amaze when he said he was going away. Such
+was the look of mute astonishment, of gentle reproach, in the eyes of
+the friend, now long dead, whom in a moment of insensate fury he had
+struck on the mouth, and who put his hand to his bleeding lips as he
+bent that gaze of wonder and bewilderment upon him. But it was not alone
+the dreadful impressions that reported themselves. There were others, as
+vivid, which came back in the original joyousness: the face of his
+mother looking up at him from the crowd on a day of college triumph when
+he was delivering the valedictory of his class; the collective gayety of
+the whole table on a particularly delightful evening at his dining-club;
+his own image in the glass as he caught sight of it on coming home
+accepted by the woman who afterwards jilted him; the transport which
+lighted up his father&#8217;s visage when he stepped ashore from the
+vessel which had been rumored lost, and he could be verified by the
+senses as still alive; the comical, bashful ecstasy of the good fellow,
+his ancient chum, in telling him he had had a son born the night before,
+and the mother was doing well, and how he laughed and danced, and
+skipped into the air.</p>
+
+<p>The smoker was full of these eidolons and of others which came and
+went with constant vicissitude. But what was of a greater weirdness than
+seeing them within it was seeing them without in that reflection of the
+interior which travelled with it through the summer night, and repeated
+it, now dimly, now brilliantly, in every detail. Alford sat in a daze,
+with a smile which he was aware of, fixed and stiff as if in plaster, on
+his face, and with his gaze bent on this or that eidolon, and then on
+all of them together. He was not so much afraid of them as of being
+noticed by the other passengers in the smoker, to whom he knew he might
+look very queer. He said to himself that he was making the whole thing,
+but the very subjectivity was what filled him with a deep and hopeless
+dread. At last the train ceased its long leaping through the dark, and
+with its coming to a stand the whole illusion vanished. He heard a gay
+voice which he knew bidding some one good-bye who was getting into the
+car just back of the smoker, and as he descended to the platform he
+almost walked into the arms of Mrs. Yarrow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, Mr. Alford! We had given you up. We thought you
+wouldn&#8217;t come back till to-morrow&#8212;or perhaps ever. What in
+the world will you do for supper? The kitchen fires were out ages
+ago!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In the light of the station electrics she beamed upon him, and he
+felt glad at heart, as if he had been saved from something, a mortal
+danger or a threatened shame. But he could not speak at once; his teeth
+closed with tetanic force upon each other. Later, as they walked to the
+hotel, through the warm, soft night in which the south wind was roaming
+the starless heavens for rain, he found his voice, and although he felt
+that he was speaking unnaturally, he made out to answer the lively
+questions with which she pelted him too thickly to expect them to be
+answered severally. She told him all the news of the day, and when she
+began on yesterday&#8217;s news she checked herself with a laugh and
+said she had forgotten that he had only been gone since morning.
+&#8220;But now,&#8221; she said, &#8220;you see how you&#8217;ve been
+missed&#8212;how <em>any</em> man must be missed in a hotel full of
+women.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She took charge of him when they got to the house, and said if he
+would go boldly into the dining-room, where they detected, as they
+approached, one lamp scantly shining from the else darkened windows, she
+would beard the lioness in her den, by which she meant the cook in the
+kitchen, and see what she could get him for supper. Apparently she could
+get nothing warm, for when a reluctant waitress appeared it was with
+such a chilly refection on her tray that Alford, though he was not very
+hungry, returned from interrogating the obscurity for eidolons, and
+shivered at it. At the same time the swing-door of the long, dim room
+opened to admit a gush of the outer radiance on which Mrs. Yarrow
+drifted in with a chafing-dish in one hand and a tea-basket in the
+other. She floated tiltingly towards him like, he thought, a pretty
+little ship, and sent a cheery hail before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been trying to get somebody to join you at a
+premature Welsh-rarebit and a belated cup of tea, but I can&#8217;t tear
+one of the tabbies from their cards or the kittens from their gambols in
+the amusement-hall in the basement. Do you mind so very much having it
+alone? Because you&#8217;ll have to, whether you do or not. Unless you
+call me company, when I&#8217;m merely cook.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She put her utensils on the table beside the forbidding tray the
+waitress had left, and helped lift herself by pressing one hand on the
+top of a chair towards the electric, which she flashed up to keep the
+dismal lamp in countenance. Alford let her do it. He durst not, he felt,
+stir from his place, lest any movement should summon back the eidolons;
+and now in the sudden glare of light he shyly, slyly searched the room
+for them. Not one, fair or foul, showed itself, and slowly he felt a
+great weight lifting from his heart. In its place there sprang up a
+joyous gratitude towards Mrs. Yarrow, who had saved him from them, from
+himself. An inexpressible tenderness filled his breast; the tears rose
+to his eyes; a soft glow enveloped his whole being, a warmth of hope, a
+freshness of life renewed, encompassed him. He wished to take her in his
+arms, to tell her how he loved her; and as she bustled about, lighting
+the lamp of her chafing-dish, and kindling the little spirit-stove she
+had brought with her to make tea, he let his gaze dwell upon every pose,
+every motion of her with a glad hunger in which no smallest detail was
+lost. He now believed that without her he must die, without her he could
+not wish to live.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jove,&#8221; Rulledge broke in at this point of
+Wanhope&#8217;s story, which I am telling again so badly, &#8220;I think
+Alford was in luck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver gave a harsh cackle. &#8220;The only thing Rulledge finds
+fault with in this club is &#8216;the lack of woman&#8217;s nursing and
+the lack of woman&#8217;s tears.&#8217; Nothing is wanting to his
+enjoyment of his victuals but the fact that they are not served by a
+neat-handed Phyllis, like Alford&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge glanced towards Wanhope, and innocently inquired, &#8220;Was
+that her first name?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver burst into a scream, and Rulledge looked red and silly for
+having given himself away; but he made an excursion to the buffet
+outside, and returned with a sandwich with which he supported himself
+stolidly under Minver&#8217;s derision, until Wanhope came to his relief
+by resuming his story, or rather his study, of Alford&#8217;s strange
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Yarrow first gave Alford his tea, as being of a prompter brew
+than the rarebit, but she was very quick and apt with that, too; and
+pretty soon she leaned forward, and in the glow from the lamp under the
+chafing-dish, which spiritualized her charming face with its thin
+radiance, puffed the flame out with her pouted lips, and drew back with
+a long-sighed &#8220;There! That will make you see your grandmother, if
+anything will.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My grandmother?&#8221; Alford repeated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. Wouldn&#8217;t you like to?&#8221; Mrs.. Yarrow asked,
+pouring the thick composition over the toast (rescued stone-cold from
+the frigid tray) on Alford&#8217;s plate. &#8220;I&#8217;m sure I should
+like to see mine&#8212;dear old gran! Not that I ever saw
+her&#8212;either of her&#8212;or should know how she looked. Did you
+ever see yours&#8212;either of her?&#8221; she pursued, impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; Alford answered, looking intently at her, but
+with so little speculation in the eyes he glared so with that he knew
+her to be uneasy under them.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed a little, and stayed her hand on the bail of the teapot.
+&#8220;Which of her?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, both!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And&#8212;and&#8212;did she look so much like
+<em>me?</em>&#8221; she said, with an added laugh, that he perceived had
+an hysterical note in it. &#8220;You&#8217;re letting your rarebit get
+cold!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He laughed himself, now, a great laugh of relaxation, of relief.
+&#8220;Not the least in the world! She was not exactly a phantom of
+delight.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford. Now, it&#8217;s your tea&#8217;s
+getting cold.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They laughed together, and he gave himself to his victual with a
+relish that she visibly enjoyed. When that question of his grandmother
+had been pushed he thought of an awful experience of his childhood,
+which left on his infant mind an indelible impression, a scar, to remain
+from the original wound forever. He had been caught in a lie, the first
+he could remember, but by no means the last, by many immemorable
+thousands. His poor little wickedness had impugned the veracity of both
+these terrible old ladies, who, habitually at odds with each other, now
+united, for once, against him. He could always see himself, a mean
+little blubbering-faced rascal, stealing guilty looks of imploring at
+their faces, set unmercifully against him, one in sorrow and one in
+anger, requiring his mother to whip him, and insisting till he was led,
+loudly roaring, into the parlor, and there made a liar of for all time,
+so far as fear could do it.</p>
+
+<p>When Mrs. Yarrow asked if he had ever seen his grandmother he
+expected instantly to see her, in duplicate, and as a sole refuge, but
+with little hope that it would save him, he kept his eyes fast on hers,
+and to his unspeakable joy it did avail. No other face, of sorrow or of
+anger, rose between them. For the time his thought was quit of its
+consequence; no eidolon outwardly repeated his inward vision. A warm
+gush of gratitude seemed to burst from his heart, and to bathe his whole
+being, and then to flow in a tide of ineffable tenderness towards Mrs.
+Yarrow, and involve her and bear them together heavenward. It was not
+passion, it was not love, he perceived well enough; it was the utterance
+of a vital conviction that she had saved him from an overwhelming
+subjective horror, and that in her sweet objectivity there was a
+security and peace to be found nowhere else.</p>
+
+<p>He greedily ate every atom of his rarebit, he absorbed every drop of
+the moisture in the teapot, so that when she shook it and shook it, and
+then tried to pour something from it, there was no slightest dribble at
+the spout. But they lingered, talking and laughing, and perhaps they
+might never have left the place if the hard handmaiden who had brought
+the tea-tray had not first tried putting her head in at the swing-door
+from the kitchen, and then, later, come boldly in and taken the tray
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Yarrow waited self-respectfully for her disappearance, and then
+she said, &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid that was a hint, Mr.
+Alford.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It seemed like one,&#8221; he owned.</p>
+
+<p>They went out together, gayly chatting, but she would not encourage
+the movement he made towards the veranda. She remained firmly attached
+to the newel-post of the stairs, and at the first chance he gave her she
+said good-night and bounded lightly upward. At the turn of the stairs
+she stopped and looked laughing down at him over the rail. &#8220;I hope
+you won&#8217;t see your grandmother.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, not a bit of it,&#8221; he called back. He felt that he
+failed to give his reply the quality of epigram, but he was not unhappy
+in his failure.</p>
+
+<p>Many light-hearted days followed this joyous evening. No eidolons
+haunted Alford&#8217;s horizon, perhaps because Mrs. Yarrow filled his
+whole heaven. She was very constantly with him, guiding his wavering
+steps up the hill of recovery, which he climbed with more and more
+activity, and keeping him company in those valleys of relapse into which
+he now and then fell back from the difficult steeps. It came to be
+tacitly, or at least passively, conceded by the other ladies that she
+had somehow earned the exclusive right to what had once been the common
+charge; or that if one of their number had a claim to keep Mr. Alford
+from killing himself by all sorts of imprudences, which in his case
+amounted to impieties, it was certainly Mrs. Yarrow. They did not put
+this in terms, but they felt it and acted it.</p>
+
+<p>She was all the safer guardian for a delicate invalid because she
+loathed manly sports so entirely that she did not even pretend to like
+them, as most women, poor things, think themselves obliged to do. In her
+hands there was no danger that he would be tempted to excesses in golf.
+She was really afraid of all boats, but she was willing to go out with
+him in the sail-boat of a superannuated skipper, because to sit talking
+in the stern and stoop for the vagaries of the boom in tacking was such
+good exercise. She would join him in fishing from the rotting pier, but
+with no certainty which was a cunner and which was a sculpin, when she
+caught it, and with an equal horror of both the nasty, wriggling things.
+When they went a walk together, her notion of a healthful tramp was to
+find a nice place among the sweet-fern or the pine-needles, and sit down
+in it and talk, or make a lap, to which he could bring the berries he
+gathered for her to arrange in the shallow leaf-trays she pinned
+together with twigs. She really preferred a rocking-chair on the veranda
+to anything else; but if he wished to go to those other excesses, she
+would go with him, to keep him out of mischief.</p>
+
+<p>There could be only one credible reading of the situation, but Alford
+let the summer pass in this pleasant dreaming without waking up till too
+late to the pleasanter reality. It will seem strange enough, but it is
+true, that it was no part of his dream to fancy that Mrs. Yarrow was in
+love with him. He knew very well, long before the end, that he was in
+love with her; but, remaining in the dark otherwise, he considered only
+himself in forbearing verbally to make love to her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221; Rulledge snarled at this point, &#8220;he
+<em>was</em> a chump.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope at the moment opposed nothing directly to the censure, but
+said that something pathetically reproachful in Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s
+smiling looks penetrated to Alford as she nodded gayly from the car
+window to him in the little group which had assembled to see her off at
+the station when she left, by no means the first of their happy hotel
+circle to go.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Somebody,&#8221; Rulledge burst out again, &#8220;ought to
+have kicked him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s become,&#8221; Minver asked, &#8220;of all the
+dear maids and widows that you&#8217;ve failed to marry at the end of
+each summer, Rulledge?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The satire involved flattery so sweet that Rulledge could not perhaps
+wish to make any retort. He frowned sternly, and said, with a face
+averted from Minver: &#8220;Go on, Wanhope!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope here permitted himself a philosophical excursion in which I
+will not accompany him. It was apparently to prepare us for the dramatic
+fact which followed, and which I suppose he was trying rather to work
+away from than work up to. It included some facts which he had failed to
+touch on before, and which led to a discussion very interesting in
+itself, but of a range too great for the limits I am trying to keep
+here. It seems that Alford had been stayed from declaring his love not
+only because he doubted of its nature, but also because he questioned
+whether a man in his broken health had any right to offer himself to a
+woman, and because from a yet finer scruple he hesitated in his poverty
+to ask the hand of a rich woman. On the first point, we were pretty well
+agreed, but on the second we divided again, especially Rulledge and
+Minver, who held, the one, that his hesitation did Alford honor, and
+quite relieved him from the imputation of being a chump; and the other
+that he was an ass to keep quiet for any such silly reason. Minver
+contended that every woman had a right, whether rich or poor, to the man
+who loved her; and, moreover, there were now so many rich women that, if
+they were not allowed to marry poor men, their chances of marriage were
+indefinitely reduced. What better could a widow do with the money she
+had inherited from a husband she probably did not love than give it to a
+man like Alford&#8212;or to an ass like Alford, Minver corrected
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>His <i>reductio ad absurdum</i> allowed Wanhope to resume with a laugh,
+and say that Alford waited at the station in the singleness to which the
+tactful dispersion of the others had left him, and watched the train
+rapidly dwindle in the perspective, till an abrupt turn of the road
+carried it out of sight. Then he lifted his eyes with a long sigh, and
+looked round. Everywhere he saw Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s smiling face with
+that inner pathos. It swarmed upon him from all points; and wherever he
+turned it repeated itself in the distances like that succession of faces
+you see when you stand between two mirrors.</p>
+
+<p>It was not merely a lapse from his lately hopeful state with Alford,
+it was a collapse. The man withered and dwindled away, till he felt that
+he must audibly rattle in his clothes as he walked by people. He did not
+walk much. Mostly he remained shrunken in the arm-chair where he used to
+sit beside Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s rocker, and the ladies, the older and the
+older-fashioned, who were &#8220;sticking it out&#8221; at the hotel
+till it should close on the 15th of September, observed him, some
+compassionately, some censoriously, but all in the same conviction.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s plain to be seen what ails Mr. Alford,
+<em>now</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I guess it <em>is</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<em>I</em> guess so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I <em>guess</em> it is.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Seems kind of heartless, her going and leaving him
+so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Like a sick kitten!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I should say as <em>much</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Your eyes bother you, Mr. Alford?&#8221; one of them chanted,
+breaking from their discussion of him to appeal directly to him. He was
+rubbing his eyes, to relieve himself for the moment from the intolerable
+affliction of those swarming eidolons, which, whenever he thought of
+this thing or that, thickened about him. They now no longer displaced
+one another, but those which came first remained fadedly beside or
+behind the fresher appearances, like the earlier rainbow which loses
+depth and color when a later arch defines itself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, glad of the subterfuge. &#8220;They annoy
+me a good deal of late.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You want to get fitted for a good pair of glasses. I kept
+letting it go, when I first began to get old-sighted.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Another lady came to Alford&#8217;s rescue. &#8220;I guess Mr. Alford
+has no need to get fitted for old sight yet a while. You got little
+spidery things&#8212;specks and dots&#8212;in your eyes?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes&#8212;multitudes,&#8221; he said, hopelessly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll tell you what: you want to build up. That was
+the way with me, and the oculist said it was from getting all run down.
+I built up, and the first thing I knew my sight was as clear as a bell.
+You want to build up.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You want to go to the mountains,&#8221; a third interposed.
+&#8220;That&#8217;s where Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s gone, and I guess
+it&#8217;ll do her more good than sticking it out here would ever have
+done.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford would have been glad enough to go to the mountains, but with
+those illusions hovering closer and closer about him, he had no longer
+the courage, the strength. He had barely enough of either to get away to
+Boston. He found his doctor this time, after winning and losing the
+wager he made himself that he would not have returned to town yet, and
+the good-fortune was almost too much for his shaken nerves. The cordial
+of his friend&#8217;s greeting&#8212;they had been chums at
+Harvard&#8212;completed his overthrow. As he sank upon the professional
+sofa, where so many other cases had been diagnosticated, he broke into
+tears. &#8220;Hello, old fellow!&#8221; the doctor said, encouragingly,
+and more tenderly than he would have dealt with some women.
+&#8220;What&#8217;s up?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jim,&#8221; Alford found voice to say, &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid
+I&#8217;m losing my mind.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor smiled provisionally. &#8220;Well, that&#8217;s
+<em>one</em> of the signs you&#8217;re not. Can you say how?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes. In a minute,&#8221; Alford sobbed, and when he had got
+the better of himself he told his friend the whole story. In the direct
+examination he suppressed Mrs. Yarrow&#8217;s part, but when the doctor,
+who had listened with smiling seriousness, began to cross-examine him
+with the question, &#8220;And you don&#8217;t remember that any outside
+influence affected the recurrence of the illusions, or did anything to
+prevent it?&#8221; Alford answered promptly: &#8220;Oh yes. There was a
+woman who did.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A woman? What sort of a woman?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford told.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is very curious,&#8221; the doctor said. &#8220;I know a
+man who used to have a distressing dream. He broke it up by telling his
+wife about it every morning after he had dreamt it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Unluckily, she isn&#8217;t my wife,&#8221; Alford said,
+gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But when she was with you, you got rid of the
+illusions?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;At first, I used to see hers; then I stopped seeing
+any.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did you ever tell her of them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; I didn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Never tell anybody?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No one but you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And do you see them now?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you think, because you&#8217;ve told me of them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It seems so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor was silent for a marked space. Then he asked, smiling:
+&#8220;Well, why not?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why not what?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell your wife.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How, my wife?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By marriage.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford looked dazed. &#8220;Do you mean Mrs. Yarrow?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If that&#8217;s her name, and she&#8217;s a widow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And do you think it would be the fair thing for a man on the
+verge of insanity&#8212;a physical and mental wreck&#8212;to ask a woman
+to marry him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In your case, yes. In the first place, you&#8217;re not so bad
+as all that. You need nothing but rest for your body and change for your
+mind. I believe you&#8217;ll get rid of your illusions as soon as you
+form the habit of speaking of them promptly when they begin to trouble
+you. You ought to speak of them to some one. You can&#8217;t always have
+me around, and Mrs. Yarrow would be the next best thing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s rich, and you know what I am. I&#8217;ll have to
+borrow the money to rest on, I&#8217;m so poor.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not if you marry it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford rose, somewhat more vigorously than he had sat down. But that
+day he did not go beyond ascertaining that Mrs. Yarrow was in town. He
+found out the fact from the maid at her door, who said that she was
+nearly always at home after dinner, and, without waiting for the evening
+of another day, Alford went to call upon her.</p>
+
+<p>She said, coming down to him in a rather old-fashioned, impersonal
+drawing-room which looked distinctly as if it had been left to her:
+&#8220;I was so glad to get your card. When did you leave
+Woodbeach?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mrs. Yarrow,&#8221; he returned, as if that were the answer,
+&#8220;I think I owe you an explanation.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pay it!&#8221; she bantered, putting out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m so poverty-stricken that I don&#8217;t know whether
+I can. Did you ever notice anything odd about me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His directness seemed to have a right to directness from her.
+&#8220;I noticed that you stared a good deal&#8212;or used to. But
+people <em>do</em> stare.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I stared because I saw things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Saw things?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I saw whatever I thought of. Whatever came into my mind was
+externated in a vision.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She smiled, he could not make out whether uneasily or not. &#8220;It
+sounds rather creepy, doesn&#8217;t it? But it&#8217;s very
+interesting.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what the doctor said; I&#8217;ve been to see him
+this morning. May I tell you about my visions? They&#8217;re not so
+creepy as they sound, I believe, and I don&#8217;t think they&#8217;ll
+keep you awake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, do,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I should like of all things
+to hear about them. Perhaps I&#8217;ve been one of them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You have.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! Isn&#8217;t that rather personal?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope not offensively.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He went on to tell her, with even greater fulness than he had told
+the doctor. She listened with the interest women take in anything weird,
+and with a compassion for him which she did not conceal so perfectly but
+that he saw it. At the end he said: &#8220;You may wonder that I come to
+you with all this, which must sound like the ravings of a
+madman.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No&#8212;no,&#8221; she hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I came because I wished you to know everything about me
+before&#8212;before&#8212;I wouldn&#8217;t have come, you&#8217;ll
+believe me, if I hadn&#8217;t had the doctor&#8217;s assurance that my
+trouble was merely a part of my being physically out of kilter, and had
+nothing to do with my sanity&#8212;Good Heavens! What am I saying? But
+the thought has tormented me so! And in the midst of it I&#8217;ve
+allowed myself to&#8212;Mrs. Yarrow, I love you. Don&#8217;t you know
+that?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Alford may have had a divided mind in this declaration, but after
+that one word Mrs. Yarrow had no mind for anything else. He went on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not only sick&#8212;so sick that I
+sha&#8217;n&#8217;t be able to do any work for a year at least&#8212;but
+I&#8217;m poor, so poor that I can&#8217;t afford to be sick.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her eyes and looked at him, where she sat oddly aloof from
+those possessions of hers, to which she seemed so little related, and
+said, with a smile quivering at the corners of her pretty mouth,
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t see what that has to do with it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; He stared at her hard.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Am I in duplicate or triplicate, this time?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you&#8217;re only one, and there&#8217;s none like you! I
+could never see any one else while I looked at you!&#8221; he cried,
+only half aware of his poetry, and meaning what he said very
+literally.</p>
+
+<p>But she took only the poetry. &#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t wish you
+to,&#8221; she said, and she laughed.</p>
+
+<p>He could not believe yet in his good-fortune. His countenance fell.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid I don&#8217;t understand, or that you
+don&#8217;t. It doesn&#8217;t seem as if I could get to the end of my
+unworthiness, which isn&#8217;t voluntary. It seems altogether too base.
+I can&#8217;t let you say what you do, if you mean it, till you know
+that I come to you in despair as well as in love. You saved me from the
+fear I was in, again and again, and I believe that without you I
+shall&#8212;Ah, it seems very base! But the doctor&#8212;If I could
+always tell some one&#8212;if I could tell <em>you</em> when these
+things were obsessing me&#8212;haunting me&#8212;they would
+cease&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Yarrow rose, with rather a piteous smile. &#8220;Then, I am a
+prescription!&#8221; She hoped, woman-like, that she was solely a
+passion; but is any woman worth having, ever solely a passion?</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t!&#8221; Alford implored, rising too.
+&#8220;Don&#8217;t, in mercy, take it that way! It&#8217;s only that I
+wish you to know everything that&#8217;s in me; to know how utterly
+helpless and worthless I am. You needn&#8217;t have a pang in throwing
+such a thing away.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She put out her hand to him, but at arm&#8217;s-length. &#8220;I
+sha&#8217;n&#8217;t throw you away&#8212;at least, not to-night. I want
+to think.&#8221; It was a way of saying she wished him to go, and he had
+no desire to stay. He asked if he might come again, and she said,
+&#8220;Oh yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;To-morrow?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not to-morrow, perhaps. When I send. Was it <em>young</em>
+Doctor Enderby?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They had rather a sad, dry parting; and when her door closed upon him
+he felt that it had shut him out forever. His shame and his defeat were
+so great that he did not think of his eidolons, and they did not come to
+trouble him. He woke in the morning, asking himself, bitterly, if he
+were cured already. His humiliation was such that he closed his eyes to
+the light, and wished he might never again open them to it.</p>
+
+<p>The question that Mrs. Yarrow had to ask Dr. Enderby was not the
+question he had instantly forecast for her when she put aside her veil
+in his office and told him who she was. She did not seem anxious to be
+assured of Alford&#8217;s mental condition, or as to any risks in
+marrying him. Her inquiry was much more psychological; it was almost
+impersonal, and yet Dr. Enderby thought she looked as if she had been
+crying.</p>
+
+<p>She had a difficulty in formulating her question, and when it came it
+was almost a speculation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Women,&#8221; she said, a little hoarsely, &#8220;have no
+right, I suppose, to expect the ideal in life. The best they can do
+seems to be to make the real look like it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Enderby reflected. &#8220;Well, yes. But I don&#8217;t know that
+I ever put it to myself in just those terms.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then she remarked, as if that were the next thing:
+&#8220;You&#8217;ve known Mr. Alford a long time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We were at school together, and we shared the same rooms in
+Harvard.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He is very sincere,&#8221; she added, as if this were
+relevant.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s a man who likes to have a little worse than the
+worst known about him. One might say he was excessively sincere.&#8221;
+Enderby divined that Alford had been bungling the matter, and he was
+willing to help him out if he could.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Yarrow fixed dimly beautiful eyes upon him. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+know,&#8221; she said, &#8220;why it wouldn&#8217;t be ideal&#8212;as
+much ideal as anything&#8212;to give one&#8217;s self absolutely
+to&#8212;to&#8212;a duty&#8212;or not duty, exactly; I don&#8217;t mean
+that. Especially,&#8221; she added, showing a light through the mist,
+&#8220;if one wanted to do it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then he knew she had made up her mind, and though on some accounts he
+would have liked to laugh with her, on other accounts he felt that he
+owed it to her to be serious.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If women could not fulfil the ideal in that way&#8212;if they
+did not constantly do it&#8212;there would be no marriages for
+love.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you think so?&#8221; she asked, with a shaking voice.
+&#8220;But men&#8212;men are ideal, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not as women are&#8212;except now and then some fool like
+Alford.&#8221; Now, indeed, he laughed, and he began to praise Alford
+from his heart, so delicately, so tenderly, so reverently, that Mrs.
+Yarrow laughed too before he was done, and cried a little, and when she
+rose to leave she could not speak; but clung to his hand, on turning
+away, and so flung it from behind her with a gesture that Enderby
+thought pretty.</p>
+
+<p>At this point, Wanhope stopped as if that were the end.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And did she let Alford come to see her again?&#8221; Rulledge,
+at once romantic and literal, demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes. At any rate, they were married that fall. They
+are&#8212;I believe he&#8217;s pursuing his archaeological studies
+there&#8212;living in Athens.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Together?&#8221; Minver smoothly inquired.</p>
+
+<p>At this expression of cynicism Rulledge gave him a look that would
+have incinerated another. Wanhope went out with Minver, and then, after
+a moment&#8217;s daze, Rulledge exclaimed: &#8220;Jove! I forgot to ask
+him whether it&#8217;s stopped Alford&#8217;s illusions!&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter3" id="chapter3">III</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">A Memory that Worked Overtime</h2>
+
+
+<p>Minver&#8217;s brother took down from the top of the low bookshelf a
+small painting on panel, which he first studied in the obverse, and then
+turned and contemplated on the back with the same dreamy smile. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t see how that got <em>here</em>,&#8221; he said,
+absently.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Minver returned, &#8220;you don&#8217;t expect
+<em>me</em> to tell you, except on the principle that any one would
+naturally know more about anything of yours than you would.&#8221; He
+took it from his brother and looked at the front of it. &#8220;It
+isn&#8217;t bad. It&#8217;s pretty good!&#8221; He turned it round.
+&#8220;Why, it&#8217;s one of old Blakey&#8217;s! How did <em>you</em>
+come by it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Stole it, probably,&#8221; Minver&#8217;s brother said, still
+thoughtfully. Then with an effect of recollecting: &#8220;No, come to
+think of it,&#8221; he added, &#8220;Blakey gave it to me.&#8221; The
+Minvers played these little comedies together, quite as much to satisfy
+their tenderness for each other as to give their friends pleasure.
+&#8220;Think you&#8217;re the only painter that gets me to take his
+truck as a gift? He gave it to me, let&#8217;s see, about ten years ago,
+when he was trying to make a die of it, and failed; I thought he would
+succeed. But it&#8217;s been in my wife&#8217;s room nearly ever since,
+and what I can&#8217;t understand is what she&#8217;s doing with it down
+here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Probably to make trouble for you, somehow,&#8221; Minver
+suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s <em>that</em>,
+quite,&#8221; his brother returned, with a false air of scrupulosity,
+which was part of their game with each other. He looked some more at the
+picture, and then he glanced from it at me. &#8220;There&#8217;s a very
+curious story connected with that sketch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, tell it,&#8221; Minver said. &#8220;Tell it! I
+suppose I can stand it again. Acton&#8217;s never heard it, I believe.
+But you needn&#8217;t make a show of sparing him. I
+<em>couldn&#8217;t</em> stand that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I certainly haven&#8217;t heard the story,&#8221; I said,
+&#8220;and if I had I would be too polite to own it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver&#8217;s brother looked towards the open door over his
+shoulder, and Minver interpreted for him: &#8220;She&#8217;s not coming.
+I&#8217;ll give you due warning.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was before we were married, but not much before, and the
+picture was a sort of wedding present for my wife, though Blakey made a
+show of giving it to me. Said he had painted it for me, because he had a
+prophetic soul, and felt in his bones that I was going to want a picture
+of the place where I first met her. You see, it&#8217;s the little villa
+her mother had taken that winter on the Viale Petrarca, just outside of
+Florence. It <em>was</em> the first place I met her, but not the
+last.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be obvious,&#8221; Minver ordered.</p>
+
+<p>His brother did not mind him. &#8220;I thought it was mighty nice of
+Blakey. He was barking away, all the time he was talking, and when he
+wasn&#8217;t coughing he was so hoarse he could hardly speak above a
+whisper; but he kept talking on, and wishing me happy, and fending off
+my gratitude, while he was finding a piece of manila paper to wrap the
+sketch in, and then hunting for a piece of string to tie it. When he
+handed it to me at last, he gasped out: &#8216;I don&#8217;t mind her
+knowing that I partly meant it as the place where <em>she</em> first met
+<em>you</em>, too. I&#8217;m not ashamed of it as a bit of color.
+Anyway, I sha&#8217;n&#8217;t live to do anything better.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Oh, yes, you will,&#8217; I came back in that lying way
+we think is kind with dying people. I suppose it is; anyway, it turned
+out all right with Blakey, as he&#8217;ll testify if you look him up
+when you go to Florence. By the way, he lives in that villa
+<em>now</em>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No?&#8221; I said. &#8220;How charming!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver&#8217;s brother went on: &#8220;I made up my mind to be
+awfully careful of that picture, and not let it out of my hand till I
+left it with &#8216;her&#8217; mother, to be put among the other wedding
+presents that were accumulating at their house in Exeter Street. So I
+held it on my lap going in by train from Lexington, where Blakey lived,
+and when I got out at the old Lowell Depot&#8212;North Station,
+now&#8212;and got into the little tinkle-tankle horse-car that took me
+up to where I was to get the Back Bay car&#8212;Those were the
+prehistoric times before trolleys, and there were odds in horse-cars. We
+considered the blue-painted Back Bay cars very swell. <em>You</em>
+remember them?&#8221; he asked Minver.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not when I can help it,&#8221; Minver answered. &#8220;When I
+broke with Boston, and went to New York, I burnt my horse-cars behind
+me, and never wanted to know what they looked like, one from
+another.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, as I was saying,&#8221; Minver&#8217;s brother went on,
+without regarding his impatriotism, &#8220;when I got into the horse-car
+at the depot, I rushed for a corner seat, and I put the picture, with
+its face next the car-end, between me and the wall, and kept my hand on
+it; and when I changed to the Back Bay car, I did the same thing. There
+was a florist&#8217;s just there, and I couldn&#8217;t resist some
+Mayflowers in the window; I was in that condition, you know, when
+flowers seemed to be made for her, and I had to take her own to her
+wherever I found them. I put the bunch between my knees, and kept one
+hand on it, while I kept my other hand on the picture at my side. I was
+feeling first-rate, and when General Filbert got in after we started,
+and stood before me hanging by a strap and talking down to me, I had the
+decency to propose giving him my seat, as he was about ten years
+older.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sure?&#8221; Minver asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, say fifteen. I don&#8217;t pretend to be a chicken, and
+never did. But he wouldn&#8217;t hear of it. Said I had a bundle, and
+winked at the bunch of Mayflowers. We had such a jolly talk that I let
+the car carry me a block by and had to get out at Gloucester and run
+back to Exeter. I rang, and, when the maid came to the door, there I
+stood with nothing but the Mayflowers in my hand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good <i>coup de th&#233;&#226;tre</i>,&#8221; Minver jeered.
+&#8220;Curtain?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His brother disdained reply, or was too much absorbed in his tale to
+think of any. &#8220;When the girl opened the door and I discovered my
+fix I burst out, &#8216;Good Lord!&#8217; and I stuck the bunch of
+flowers at her, and turned and ran. I suppose I must have had some
+notion of overtaking the car with my picture in it. But the best I could
+do was to let the next one overtake me several blocks down Marlborough
+Street, and carry me to the little jumping-off station on Westchester
+Park, as we used to call it in those days, at the end of the Back Bay
+line.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;As I pushed into the railroad office, I bet myself that the
+picture would not be there, and, sure enough, I won.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You were always a lucky dog,&#8221; Minver said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But the man in charge was very encouraging, and said it was
+sure to be turned in; and he asked me what time the car had passed the
+corner of Gloucester Street. I happened to know, and then he said, Oh
+yes, that conductor was a substitute, and he wouldn&#8217;t be on again
+till morning; then he would be certain to bring the picture with him. I
+was not to worry, for it would be all right. Nothing left in the Back
+Bay cars was ever lost; the character of the abutters was guarantee for
+that, and they were practically the only passengers. The conductors and
+the drivers were as honest as the passengers, and I could consider
+myself in the hands of friends.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He was so reassuring that I went away smiling at my fears, and
+promising to be round bright and early, as soon, the official
+suggested&#8212;the morrow being Sunday&#8212;as soon as the men and
+horses had had their baked beans.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Still, after dinner, I had a lurking anxiety, which I turned
+into a friendly impulse to go and call on Mrs. Filbert, whom I really
+owed a bread-and-butter visit, and who, I knew, would not mind my coming
+in the evening. The general, she said, had been telling her of our
+pleasant chat in the car, and would be glad to smoke his after-dinner
+cigar with me, and why wouldn&#8217;t I come into the library?</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We were so very jolly together, all three, that I made light
+of my misadventure about the picture. The general inquired about the
+flowers first. He remembered the flowers perfectly, and hoped they were
+acceptable; he thought he remembered the picture, too, now I mentioned
+it; but he would not have noticed it so much, there by my side, with my
+hand on it. I would be sure to get it. He gave several instances,
+personal to him and his friends, of recoveries of lost articles; it was
+really astonishing how careful the horse-car people were, especially on
+the Back Bay line. I would find my picture all right at the Westchester
+Park station in the morning; never fear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I feared so little that I slept well, and even overslept; and
+I went to get my picture quite confidently, and I could hardly believe
+it had not been turned in yet, though the station-master told me so. The
+substitute conductor had not seen it, but more than likely it was at the
+stables, where the cleaners would have found it in the car and turned it
+in. He was as robustly cheerful about it as ever, and offered to send an
+inquiry by the next car; but I said, Why shouldn&#8217;t I go myself;
+and he said that was a good idea. So I went, and it was well I did, for
+my picture was not there, and I had saved time by going. It was not
+there, but the head man said I need not worry a mite about it; I was
+certain to get it sooner or later; it would be turned in, to a dead
+certainty. We became rather confidential, and I went so far as to
+explain about wanting to make my inquiries very quietly on
+Blakey&#8217;s account: he would be annoyed if he heard of its loss, and
+it might react unfavorably on his health.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The head man said that was so; and he would tell me what I
+wanted to do: I wanted to go to the Company&#8217;s General Offices in
+Milk Street, and tell them about it. That was where everything went as a
+last resort, and he would bet any money that I would see my picture
+there the first thing I got inside the door. I thanked him with the
+fervor I thought he merited, and said I would go at once.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Well,&#8217; he said, &#8216;you don&#8217;t want to go
+to-day, you know. The offices are not open Sunday. And to-morrow&#8217;s
+a holiday. But you&#8217;re all right. You&#8217;ll find your picture
+there, don&#8217;t you have any doubts about it.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was my next to last Sunday supper with my wife, before
+she became my wife, at her mother&#8217;s house, and I went to the feast
+with as little gayety as I suppose any young man ever carried to a
+supper of the kind. I was told, afterwards, that my behavior up to a
+certain point was so suggestive either of secret crime or of secret
+regret, that the only question was whether they should have in the
+police or I should be given back my engagement ring and advised to go.
+Luckily I ceased to bear my anguish just in time.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The fact is, I could not stand it any longer, and as soon as I
+was alone with her I made a clean breast of it; partially clean, that
+is: I suppose a fellow never tells <em>all</em> to a girl, if he truly
+loves her.&#8221; Minver&#8217;s brother glanced round at us and
+gathered the harvest of our approving smiles. &#8220;I said to her,
+&#8216;I&#8217;ve been having a wedding present.&#8217;
+&#8216;Well,&#8217; she said, &#8216;you&#8217;ve come as near having no
+use for a wedding present as anybody <em>I</em> know. Was having a
+wedding present what made you so gloomy at supper? Who gave it to you,
+anyway?&#8217; &#8216;Old Blakey.&#8217; &#8216;A painting?&#8217;
+&#8216;Yes&#8212;a sketch.&#8217; &#8216;What of?&#8217; This was where
+I qualified. I said: &#8216;Oh, just one of those Sorrento things of
+his.&#8217; You see, if I told her that it was the villa where we first
+met, and then said I had left it in the horse-car, she would take it as
+proof positive that I did not really care anything about her or I never
+could have forgotten it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You were wise as far as you went,&#8221; Minver said.
+&#8220;Go on.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I told her the whole story circumstantially: how I had
+kept the sketch religiously in my lap in the train, and then held it
+down with my hand all the while beside me in the first horse-car, and
+did the same thing in the Back Bay car I changed to; and felt of it the
+whole time I was talking with General Filbert, and then left it there
+when I got out to leave the flowers at her door, when the awful fact
+came over me like a flash. &#8216;Yes,&#8217; she said, &#8216;Norah
+said you poked the flowers at her without a word, and she had to guess
+they were for me.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I had got my story pretty glib by this time; I had reeled it
+off with increasing particulars to the Westchester Park station-master,
+and the head man at the stables, and General Filbert, and I was so
+letter-perfect that I had a vision of the whole thing, especially of my
+talking with the general while I kept my hand on the picture&#8212;and
+then all was dark.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;At the end she said we must advertise for the picture. I said
+it would kill Blakey if he saw it; and she said: No matter, <em>let</em>
+it kill him; it would show him that we valued his gift, and were moving
+heaven and earth to find it; and, at any rate, it would kill <em>me</em>
+if I kept myself in suspense. I said I should not care for that; but
+with her sympathy I guessed I could live through the night, and I was
+sure I should find the thing at the Milk Street office in the
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Why,&#8217; said she, &#8216;to-morrow it&#8217;ll be
+shut!&#8217; and then I didn&#8217;t really know what to say, and I
+agreed to drawing up an advertisement then and there, so as not to lose
+an instant&#8217;s time after I had been at the Milk Street office on
+Tuesday and found the picture had not been turned in. She said I could
+dictate the advertisement and she would write it down, and she asked:
+&#8216;Which one of his Sorrento things was it? You must describe it
+exactly, you know.&#8217; That made me feel awfully, and I said I was
+not going to have my next-to-last Sunday evening with her spoiled by
+writing advertisements; and I got away, somehow, with all sorts of
+comforting reassurances from her. I could see that she was feigning them
+to encourage me.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The next morning, I simply could not keep away from the Milk
+Street office, and my unreasonable impatience was rewarded by finding it
+at least ajar, if not open. There was the nicest kind of a young fellow
+there, and he said he was not officially present; but what could he do
+for me? Then I told him the whole story, with details I had not thought
+of before; and he was just as enthusiastic about my getting my picture
+as the Westchester Park station-master or the head man of the stables.
+It was morally certain to be turned in, the first thing in the morning;
+but he would take a description of it, and send out inquiries to all the
+conductors and drivers and car-cleaners, and make a special thing of it.
+He entered into the spirit of the affair, and I felt that I had such a
+friend in him that I confided a little more and hinted at the double
+interest I had in the picture. I didn&#8217;t pretend that it was one of
+Blakey&#8217;s Sorrento things, but I gave him a full and true
+description of it, with its length, breadth, and thickness, in exact
+measure.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Here Minver&#8217;s brother stopped and lost himself in contemplation
+of the sketch, as he held it at arm&#8217;s-length.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, did you get your picture?&#8221; I prompted, after a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; he said, with a quick turn towards me.
+&#8220;This is it. A District Messenger brought it round the first thing
+Tuesday morning. He brought it,&#8221; Minver&#8217;s brother added,
+with a certain effectiveness, &#8220;from the florist&#8217;s, where I
+had stopped to get those Mayflowers. I had left it there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve told it very well, this time, Joe,&#8221; Minver
+said. &#8220;But Acton here is waiting for the psychology. Poor old
+Wanhope ought to be here,&#8221; he added to me. He looked about for a
+match to light his pipe, and his brother jerked his head in the
+direction of the chimney.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Box on the mantel. Yes,&#8221; he sighed, &#8220;that was
+really something very curious. You see, I had invented the whole history
+of the case from the time I got into the Back Bay car with my flowers.
+Absolutely nothing had happened of all I had remembered till I got out
+of the car. I did not put the picture beside me at the end of the car; I
+did not keep my hand on it while I talked with General Filbert; I did
+not leave it behind me when I left the car. Nothing of the kind
+happened. I had already left it at the florist&#8217;s, and that whole
+passage of experience which was so vividly and circumstantially stamped
+in my memory that I related it four or five times over, and would have
+made oath to every detail of it, was pure invention, or, rather, it was
+something less positive: the reflex of the first half of my horse-car
+experience, when I really did put the picture in the corner next me, and
+did keep my hand on it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very strange,&#8221; I was beginning, but just then the door
+opened and Mrs. Minver came in, and I was presented.</p>
+
+<p>She gave me a distracted hand, as she said to her husband:
+&#8220;Have you been telling the story about that picture again?&#8221;
+He was still holding it. &#8220;Silly!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She was a mighty pretty woman, but full of vim and fun and sense.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s one of the most curious freaks of memory I ever
+heard of, Mrs. Minver,&#8221; I said.</p>
+
+<p>Then she showed that she was proud of it, though she had called him
+silly. &#8220;Have you told,&#8221; she demanded of her husband,
+&#8220;how oddly your memory behaved about the subject of the picture,
+too?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have again eaten that particular piece of humble-pie,&#8221;
+Minver&#8217;s brother replied.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; she said to me, &#8220;<em>I</em> think he was
+simply so possessed with the awfulness of having lost the picture that
+all the rest took place prophetically, but unconsciously.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By a species of inverted presentiment?&#8221; I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she assented, slowly, as if the formulation were
+new to her, but not unacceptable. &#8220;Something of that kind. I never
+heard of anybody else having it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver had got his pipe alight, and was enjoying it.
+&#8220;<em>I</em> think Joe was simply off his nut, for the time
+being.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter4" id="chapter4">IV</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">A Case of Metaphantasmia</h2>
+
+
+<p>The stranger was a guest of Halson&#8217;s, and Halson himself was a
+comparative stranger, for he was of recent election to our dining-club,
+and was better known to Minver than to the rest of our little group,
+though one could not be sure that he was very well known to Minver. The
+stranger had been dining with Halson, and we had found the two smoking
+together, with their cups of black coffee at their elbows, before the
+smouldering fire in the Turkish room when we came in from
+dinner&#8212;my friend Wanhope the psychologist, Rulledge the
+sentimentalist, Minver the painter, and myself. It struck me for the
+first time that a fire on the hearth was out of keeping with a Turkish
+room, but I felt that the cups of black coffee restored the lost balance
+in some measure.</p>
+
+<p>Before we had settled into our wonted places&#8212;in fact, almost as
+we entered&#8212;Halson looked over his shoulder and said: &#8220;Mr.
+Wanhope, I want you to hear this story of my friend&#8217;s. Go on,
+Newton&#8212;or, rather, go back and begin again&#8212;and I&#8217;ll
+introduce you afterwards.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger made a becoming show of deprecation. He said he did not
+think the story would bear immediate repetition, or was even worth
+telling once, but, if we had nothing better to do, perhaps we might do
+worse than hear it; the most he could say for it was that the thing
+really happened. He wore a large, drooping, gray mustache, which, with
+the imperial below it, quite hid his mouth, and gave him, somehow, a
+martial effect, besides accurately dating him of the period between the
+latest sixties and earliest seventies, when his beard would have been
+black; I liked his mustache not being stubbed in the modern manner, but
+allowed to fall heavily over his lips, and then branch away from the
+corners of his mouth as far as it would. He lighted the cigar which
+Halson gave him, and, blowing the bitten-off tip towards the fire,
+began:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was about that time when we first had a ten-o&#8217;clock
+night train from Boston to New York. Train used to start at nine, and
+lag along round by Springfield, and get into the old Twenty-sixth Street
+Station here at six in the morning, where they let you sleep as long as
+you liked. They call you up now at half-past five, and, if you
+don&#8217;t turn out, they haul you back to Mott Haven, or New Haven,
+I&#8217;m not sure which. I used to go into Boston and turn in at the
+old Worcester Depot, as we called it then, just about the time the train
+began to move, and I usually got a fine night&#8217;s rest in the course
+of the nine or ten hours we were on the way to New York; it didn&#8217;t
+seem quite the same after we began saying Albany Depot: shortened up the
+run, somehow.</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust4l.jpg" name="illust4"><img src="images/illust4m.jpg" title="&#8220;NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY MARK&#8221;" alt="[Illustration: &#8220;NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY MARK&#8221;]" style="width: 300px; height: 709px" /></a></div>
+
+<p>&#8220;But that night I wasn&#8217;t very sleepy, and the porter had
+got the place so piping hot with the big stoves, one at each end of the
+car, to keep the good, old-fashioned Christmas cold out, that I thought
+I should be more comfortable with a smoke before I went to bed; and,
+anyhow, I could get away from the heat better in the smoking-room. I
+hated to be leaving home on Christmas Eve, for I never had done that
+before, and I hated to be leaving my wife alone with the children and
+the two girls in our little house in Cambridge. Before I started in on
+the old horse-car for Boston, I had helped her to tuck the young ones in
+and to fill the stockings hung along the wall over the
+register&#8212;the nearest we could come to a fireplace&#8212;and I
+thought those stockings looked very weird, five of them, dangling
+lumpily down, and I kept seeing them, and her sitting up sewing in front
+of them, and afraid to go to bed on account of burglars. I suppose she
+was shyer of burglars than any woman ever was that had never seen a sign
+of them. She was always calling me up, to go down-stairs and put them
+out, and I used to wander all over the house, from attic to cellar, in
+my nighty, with a lamp in one hand and a poker in the other, so that no
+burglar could have missed me if he had wanted an easy mark. I always
+kept a lamp and a poker handy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger heaved a sigh as of fond reminiscence, and looked round
+for the sympathy which in our company of bachelors he failed of; even
+the sympathetic Rulledge failed of the necessary experience to move him
+in compassionate response.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; the stranger went on, a little damped perhaps by
+his failure, but supported apparently by the interest of the fact in
+hand, &#8220;I had the smoking-room to myself for a while, and then a
+fellow put his head in that I thought I knew after I had thought I
+didn&#8217;t know him. He dawned on me more and more, and I had to
+acknowledge to myself, by and by, that it was a man named Melford, whom
+I used to room with in Holworthy at Harvard; that is, we had an
+apartment of two bedrooms and a study; and I suppose there were never
+two fellows knew less of each other than we did at the end of our four
+years together. I can&#8217;t say what Melford knew of me, but the most
+I knew of Melford was his particular brand of nightmare.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope gave the first sign of his interest in the matter. He took
+his cigar from his lips, and softly emitted an &#8220;Ah!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge went further and interrogatively repeated the word
+&#8220;Nightmare?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nightmare,&#8221; the stranger continued, firmly. &#8220;The
+curious thing about it was that I never exactly knew the subject of his
+nightmare, and a more curious thing yet was Melford himself never knew
+it, when I woke him up. He said he couldn&#8217;t make out anything but
+a kind of scraping in a door-lock. His theory was that in his childhood
+it had been a much completer thing, but that the circumstances had
+broken down in a sort of decadence, and now there was nothing left of it
+but that scraping in the door-lock, like somebody trying to turn a
+misfit key. I used to throw things at his door, and once I tried a
+cold-water douche from the pitcher, when he was very hard to waken; but
+that was rather brutal, and after a while I used to let him roar himself
+awake; he would always do it, if I trusted to nature; and before our
+junior year was out I got so that I could sleep through, pretty calmly;
+I would just say to myself when he fetched me to the surface with a
+yell, &#8216;That&#8217;s Melford dreaming,&#8217; and doze off
+sweetly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jove!&#8221; Rulledge said, &#8220;I don&#8217;t see how you
+could stand it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s everything in habit, Rulledge,&#8221; Minver put
+in. &#8220;Perhaps our friend only dreamt that he heard a
+dream.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s quite possible,&#8221; the stranger owned,
+politely. &#8220;But the case is superficially as I state it. However,
+it was all past, long ago, when I recognized Melford in the smoking-room
+that night: it must have been ten or a dozen years. I was wearing a full
+beard then, and so was he; we wore as much beard as we could in those
+days. I had been through the war since college, and he had been in
+California, most of the time, and, as he told me, he had been up north,
+in Alaska, just after we bought it, and hurt his eyes&#8212;had
+snow-blindness&#8212;and he wore spectacles. In fact, I had to do most
+of the recognizing, but after we found out who we were we were rather
+comfortable; and I liked him better than I remembered to have liked him
+in our college days. I don&#8217;t suppose there was ever much harm in
+him; it was only my grudge about his nightmare. We talked along and
+smoked along for about an hour, and I could hear the porter outside,
+making up the berths, and the train rumbled away towards Framingham, and
+then towards Worcester, and I began to be sleepy, and to think I would
+go to bed myself; and just then the door of the smoking-room opened, and
+a young girl put in her face a moment, and said: &#8216;Oh, I beg your
+pardon. I thought it was the stateroom,&#8217; and then she shut the
+door, and I realized that she looked like a girl I used to
+know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger stopped, and I fancied from a note in his voice that
+this girl was perhaps like an early love. We silently waited for him to
+resume how and when he would. He sighed, and after an appreciable
+interval he began again. &#8220;It is curious how things are related to
+one another. My wife had never seen her, and yet, somehow, this girl
+that looked like the one I mean brought my mind back to my wife with a
+quick turn, after I had forgotten her in my talk with Melford for the
+time being. I thought how lonely she was in that little house of ours in
+Cambridge, on rather an outlying street, and I knew she was thinking of
+me, and hating to have me away on Christmas Eve, which isn&#8217;t such
+a lively time after you&#8217;re grown up and begin to look back on a
+good many other Christmas Eves, when you were a child yourself; in fact,
+I don&#8217;t know a dismaler night in the whole year. I stepped out on
+the platform before I began to turn in, for a mouthful of the night air,
+and I found it was spitting snow&#8212;a regular Christmas Eve of the
+true pattern; and I didn&#8217;t believe, from the business feel of
+those hard little pellets, that it was going to stop in a hurry, and I
+thought if we got into New York on time we should be lucky. The snow
+made me think of a night when my wife was sure there were burglars in
+the house; and in fact I heard their tramping on the stairs
+myself&#8212;thump, thump, thump, and then a stop, and then down again.
+Of course it was the slide and thud of the snow from the roof of the
+main part of the house to the roof of the kitchen, which was in an L, a
+story lower, but it was as good an imitation of burglars as I want to
+hear at one o&#8217;clock in the morning; and the recollection of it
+made me more anxious about my wife, not because I believed she was in
+danger, but because I knew how frightened she must be.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When I went back into the car, that girl passed me on the way
+to her stateroom, and I concluded that she was the only woman on board,
+and her friends had taken the stateroom for her, so that she
+needn&#8217;t feel strange. I usually go to bed in a sleeper as I do in
+my own house, but that night I somehow couldn&#8217;t. I got to thinking
+of accidents, and I thought how disagreeable it would be to turn out
+into the snow in my nighty. I ended by turning in with my clothes on,
+all except my coat; and, in spite of the red-hot stoves, I wasn&#8217;t
+any too warm. I had a berth in the middle of the car, and just as I was
+parting my curtains to lie down, old Melford came to take the lower
+berth opposite. It made me laugh a little, and I was glad of the relief.
+&#8216;Why, hello, Melford,&#8217; said I. &#8216;This is like the old
+Holworthy times.&#8217; &#8216;Yes, isn&#8217;t it?&#8217; said he, and
+then I asked something that I had kept myself from asking all through
+our talk in the smoking-room, because I knew he was rather sensitive
+about it, or used to be. &#8216;Do you ever have that regulation
+nightmare of yours nowadays, Melford? He gave a laugh, and said:
+&#8217;I haven&#8217;t had it, I suppose, once in ten years. What made
+you think of it?&#8217; I said: &#8216;Oh, I don&#8217;t know. It just
+came into my mind. Well, good-night, old fellow. I hope you&#8217;ll
+rest well,&#8217; and suddenly I began to feel light-hearted again, and
+I went to sleep as gayly as ever I did in my life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger paused again, and Wanhope said: &#8220;Those swift
+transitions of mood are very interesting. Of course they occur in that
+remote region of the mind where all incidents and sensations are of one
+quality, and things of the most opposite character unite in a common
+origin. No one that I remember has attempted to trace such effects to
+their causes, and then back again from their causes, which would be much
+more important.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I dare say,&#8221; Minver put in. &#8220;But if they all
+amount to the same thing in the end, what difference would it
+make?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It would perhaps establish the identity of good and
+evil,&#8221; Wanhope suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, the sinners are convinced of that already,&#8221; Minver
+said, while Rulledge glanced quickly from one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger looked rather dazed, and Rulledge said: &#8220;Well, I
+don&#8217;t suppose that was the conclusion of the whole
+matter?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh no,&#8221; the stranger answered, &#8220;that was only the
+beginning of the conclusion. I didn&#8217;t go to sleep at once, though
+I felt so much at peace. In fact, Melford beat me, and I could hear him
+far in advance, steaming and whistling away, in a style that I recalled
+as characteristic, over a space of intervening years that I hadn&#8217;t
+definitely summed up yet. It made me think of a night near Narragansett
+Bay, where two friends of mine and I had had a mighty good dinner at a
+sort of wild club-house, and had hurried into our bunks, each one so as
+to get the start of the others, for the fellows that were left behind
+knew they had no chance of sleep after the first began to get in his
+work. I laughed, and I suppose I must have gone to sleep almost
+simultaneously, for I don&#8217;t recollect anything afterwards till I
+was wakened by a kind of muffled bellow, that I remembered only too
+well. It was the unfailing sign of Melford&#8217;s nightmare.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was ready to swear, and I was ashamed for the fellow who had
+no more self-control than that: when a fellow snores, or has a
+nightmare, you always think first off that he needn&#8217;t have had it
+if he had tried. As usual, I knew Melford didn&#8217;t know what his
+nightmare was about, and that made me madder still, to have him
+bellowing into the air like that, with no particular aim. All at once
+there came a piercing scream from the stateroom, and then I knew that
+the girl there had heard Melford and been scared out of a year&#8217;s
+growth.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger made a little break, and Wanhope asked, &#8220;Could you
+make out what she screamed, or was it quite inarticulate?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was plain enough, and it gave me a clew, somehow, to what
+Melford&#8217;s nightmare was about. She was calling out, &#8216;Help!
+help! help! Burglars!&#8217; till I thought she would raise the roof of
+the car.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And did she wake anybody?&#8221; Rulledge inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was the strange part of it. Not a soul stirred, and after
+the first burst the girl seemed to quiet down again and yield the floor
+to Melford, who kept bellowing steadily away. I was so furious that I
+reached out across the aisle to shake him, but the attempt was too much
+for me. I lost my balance and fell out of my berth onto the floor. You
+may imagine the state of mind I was in. I gathered myself up and pulled
+Melford&#8217;s curtains open and was just going to fall on him tooth
+and nail, when I was nearly taken off my feet again by an apparition:
+well, it looked like an apparition, but it was a tall fellow in his
+nighty&#8212;for it was twenty years before pajamas&#8212;and he had a
+small dark lantern in his hand, such as we used to carry in those days
+so as to read in our berths when we couldn&#8217;t sleep. He was
+gritting his teeth, and growling between them: &#8216;Out o&#8217; this!
+Out o&#8217; this! I&#8217;m going to shoot to kill, you blasted
+thieves!&#8217; I could see by the strange look in his eyes that he was
+sleep-walking, and I didn&#8217;t wait to see if he had a pistol. I
+popped in behind the curtains, and found myself on top of another
+fellow, for I had popped into the wrong berth in my confusion. The man
+started up and yelled: &#8216;Oh, don&#8217;t kill me! There&#8217;s my
+watch on the stand, and all the money in the house is in my pantaloons
+pocket. The silver&#8217;s in the sideboard down-stairs, and it&#8217;s
+plated, anyway.&#8217; Then I understood what his complaint was, and I
+rolled onto the floor again. By that time every man in the car was out
+of his berth, too, except Melford, who was devoting himself strictly to
+business; and every man was grabbing some other, and shouting,
+&#8216;Police!&#8217; or &#8216;Burglars!&#8217; or &#8216;Help!&#8217;
+or &#8216;Murder!&#8217; just as the fancy took him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Most extraordinary!&#8221; Wanhope commented as the stranger
+paused for breath.</p>
+
+<p>In the intensity of our interest, we had crowded close upon him,
+except Minver, who sat with his head thrown back, and that cynical cast
+in his eye which always exasperated Rulledge; and Halson, who stood
+smiling proudly, as if the stranger&#8217;s story did him as his sponsor
+credit personally.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the stranger owned, &#8220;but I don&#8217;t know
+that there wasn&#8217;t something more extraordinary still. From time to
+time the girl in the stateroom kept piping up, with a shriek for help.
+She had got past the burglar stage, but she wanted to be saved, anyhow,
+from some danger which she didn&#8217;t specify. It went through me that
+it was very strange nobody called the porter, and I set up a shout of
+&#8216;Porter!&#8217; on my own account. I decided that if there were
+burglars the porter was the man to put them out, and that if there were
+no burglars the porter could relieve our groundless fears. Sure enough,
+he came rushing in, as soon as I called for him, from the little corner
+by the smoking-room where he was blacking boots between dozes. He was
+wide enough awake, if having his eyes open meant that, and he had a shoe
+on one hand and a shoe-brush in the other. But he merely joined in the
+general up-roar and shouted for the police.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Excuse me,&#8221; Wanhope interposed. &#8220;I wish to be
+clear as to the facts. You had reasoned it out that the porter could
+quiet the tumult?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Never reasoned anything out so clearly in my life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But what was your theory of the situation? That your friend,
+Mr. Melford, had a nightmare in which he was dreaming of
+burglars?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hadn&#8217;t a doubt of it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And that by a species of dream-transference the
+nightmare was communicated to the young lady in the
+stateroom?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well&#8212;yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And that her call for help and her cry of burglars acted as a
+sort of hypnotic suggestion with the other sleepers, and they began to
+be afflicted with the same nightmare?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know that I ever put it to myself so distinctly,
+but it appears to me now that I must have reached some such
+conclusion.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is very interesting, very interesting indeed. I beg your
+pardon. Please go on,&#8221; Wanhope courteously entreated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t remember just where I was,&#8221; the stranger
+faltered.</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge returned with an accuracy which obliged us all:
+&#8220;&#8216;The porter merely joined in the general uproar and shouted
+for the police.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; the stranger assented. &#8220;Then I
+didn&#8217;t know what to do, for a minute. The porter was a pretty
+thick-headed darky, but he was lion-hearted; and his idea was to lay
+hold of a burglar wherever he could find him. There were plenty of
+burglars in the aisle there, or people that were afraid of burglars, and
+they seemed to think the porter had a good idea. They had hold of one
+another already, and now began to pull up and down the aisles in a way
+that reminded me of the old-fashioned mesmeric lecturers, when they told
+their subjects that they were this or that, and set them to acting the
+part. I remembered how once when the mesmerist gave out that they were
+at a horse&#8212;race, and his subjects all got astride of their chairs,
+and galloped up and down the hall like a lot of little boys on laths. I
+thought of that now, and although it was rather a serious business, for
+I didn&#8217;t know what minute they would come to blows, I
+couldn&#8217;t help laughing. The sight was weird enough. Every one
+looked like a somnambulist as he pulled and hauled. The young lady in
+the stateroom was doing her full share. She was screaming,
+&#8216;Won&#8217;t somebody let me out?&#8217; and hammering on the
+door. I guess it was her screaming and hammering that brought the
+conductor at last, or maybe he just came round in the course of nature
+to take up the tickets. It was before the time when they took the
+tickets at the gate, and you used to stick them into a little slot at
+the side of your berth, and the conductor came along and took them in
+the night, somewhere between Worcester and Springfield, I should
+say.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I remember,&#8221; Rulledge assented, but very carefully, so
+as not to interrupt the flow of the narrative. &#8220;Used to wake up
+everybody in the car.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Exactly,&#8221; the stranger said. &#8220;But this time they
+were all wide awake to receive him, or fast asleep, and dreaming their
+roles. He came along with the wire of his lantern over his arm, the way
+the old-time conductors did, and calling out, &#8216;Tickets!&#8217;
+just as if it was broad day, and he believed every man was trying to
+beat his way to New York. The oddest thing about it was that the
+sleep-walkers all stopped their pulling and hauling a moment, and each
+man reached down to the little slot alongside of his berth and handed
+over his ticket. Then they took hold and began pulling and hauling
+again. I suppose the conductor asked what the matter was; but I
+couldn&#8217;t hear him, and I couldn&#8217;t make out exactly what he
+did say. But the passengers understood, and they all shouted
+&#8216;Burglars!&#8217; and that girl in the stateroom gave a shriek
+that you could have heard from one end of the train to the other, and
+hammered on the door, and wanted to be let out.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It seemed to take the conductor by surprise, and he faced
+towards the stateroom and let the lantern slip off his arm, and it
+dropped onto the floor and went out; I remember thinking what a good
+thing it didn&#8217;t set the car on fire. But there in the
+dark&#8212;for the car lamps went out at the same time with the
+lantern&#8212;I could hear those fellows pulling and hauling up and down
+the aisle and scuffling over the floor, and through all Melford
+bellowing away, like an orchestral accompaniment to a combat in Wagner
+opera, but getting quieter and quieter till his bellow died away
+altogether. At the same time the row in the aisle of the car stopped,
+and there was perfect silence, and I could hear the snow rattling
+against my window. Then I went off into a sound sleep, and never woke
+till we got into New York.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger seemed to have reached the end of his story, or at least
+to have exhausted the interest it had for him, and he smoked on, holding
+his knee between his hands and looking thoughtfully into the fire.</p>
+
+<p>He had left us rather breathless, or, better said, blank, and each
+looked at the other for some initiative; then we united in looking at
+Wanhope; that is, Rulledge and I did. Minver rose and stretched himself
+with what I must describe as a sardonic yawn; Halson had stolen away
+before the end, as one to whom the end was known. Wanhope seemed by no
+means averse to the inquiry delegated to him, but only to be formulating
+its terms. At last he said:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t remember hearing of any case of this kind
+before. Thought-transference is a sufficiently ascertained
+phenomenon&#8212;the insistence of a conscious mind upon a certain fact
+until it penetrates the unconscious mind of another and is adopted as
+its own. But in the dream state the mind seems passive, and becomes the
+prey of this or that self-suggestion, without the power of imparting it
+to another dreaming mind. Yet here we have positive proof of such an
+effect. It appears that the victim of a particularly terrific nightmare
+was able to share its horrors&#8212;or rather unable <em>not</em> to
+share them&#8212;with a whole sleeping-car full of people whose brains
+helplessly took up the same theme, and dreamed it, as we may say, to the
+same conclusions. I said proof, but of course we can&#8217;t accept a
+single instance as establishing a scientific certainty. I don&#8217;t
+question the veracity of Mr.&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Newton,&#8221; the stranger suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Newton&#8217;s experience,&#8221; Wanhope continued,
+&#8220;but we must wait for a good many cases of the kind before we can
+accept what I may call metaphantasmia as being equally established with
+thought-transference. If we could it would throw light upon a whole
+series of most curious phenomena, as, for instance, the privity of a
+person dreamed about to the incident created by the dreamer.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That would be rather dreadful, wouldn&#8217;t it?&#8221; I
+ventured. &#8220;We do dream such scandalous, such compromising things
+about people.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;All that,&#8221; Wanhope gently insisted, &#8220;could have
+nothing to do with the fact. That alone is to be considered in an
+inquiry of the kind. One is never obliged to tell one&#8217;s dreams. I
+wonder&#8221;&#8212;he turned to the stranger, who sat absently staring
+into the fire&#8212;&#8220;if you happened to speak to your friend about
+his nightmare in the morning, and whether he was by any chance aware of
+the participation of the others in it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I certainly spoke to him pretty plainly when we got into New
+York.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what did he say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He said he had never slept better in his life, and he
+couldn&#8217;t remember having a trace of nightmare. He said he heard
+<em>me</em> groaning at one time, but I stopped just as he woke, and so
+he didn&#8217;t rouse me as he thought of doing. It was at Hartford, and
+he went to sleep again, and slept through without a break.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what was your conclusion from that?&#8221; Wanhope
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That he was lying, I should say,&#8221; Rulledge replied for
+the stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope still waited, and the stranger said, &#8220;I suppose one
+conclusion might be that I had dreamed the whole thing
+myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then you wish me to infer,&#8221; the psychologist pursued,
+&#8220;that the entire incident was a figment of your sleeping brain?
+That there was no sort of sleeping thought-transference, no
+metaphantasmia, no&#8212;Excuse me. Do you remember verifying your
+impression of being between Worcester and Springfield when the affair
+occurred, by looking at your watch, for instance?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger suddenly pulled out his watch at the word. &#8220;Good
+Heavens!&#8221; he called out. &#8220;It&#8217;s twenty minutes of
+eleven, and I have to take the eleven-o&#8217;clock train to Boston. I
+must bid you good-evening, gentlemen. I&#8217;ve just time to get it if
+I can catch a cab. Good-night, good-night. I hope if you come to
+Boston&#8212;eh&#8212;Good-night! Sometimes,&#8221; he called over his
+shoulder, &#8220;I&#8217;ve thought it might have been that girl in the
+stateroom that started the dreaming.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He had wrung our hands one after another, and now he ran out of the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge said, in appeal to Wanhope: &#8220;I don&#8217;t see how his
+being the dreamer invalidates the case, if his dreams affected the
+others.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Wanhope answered, thoughtfully, &#8220;that
+depends.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what do you think of its being the girl in the
+stateroom?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That would be very interesting.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter5" id="chapter5">V</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">Editha</h2>
+
+
+<p>The air was thick with the war feeling, like the electricity of a
+storm which has not yet burst. Editha sat looking out into the hot
+spring afternoon, with her lips parted, and panting with the intensity
+of the question whether she could let him go. She had decided that she
+could not let him stay, when she saw him at the end of the still
+leafless avenue, making slowly up towards the house, with his head down
+and his figure relaxed. She ran impatiently out on the veranda, to the
+edge of the steps, and imperatively demanded greater haste of him with
+her will before she called aloud to him: &#8220;George!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He had quickened his pace in mystical response to her mystical
+urgence, before he could have heard her; now he looked up and answered,
+&#8220;Well?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, how united we are!&#8221; she exulted, and then she
+swooped down the steps to him. &#8220;What is it?&#8221; she cried.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s war,&#8221; he said, and he pulled her up to him
+and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>She kissed him back intensely, but irrelevantly, as to their passion,
+and uttered from deep in her throat. &#8220;How glorious!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s war,&#8221; he repeated, without consenting to her
+sense of it; and she did not know just what to think at first. She never
+knew what to think of him; that made his mystery, his charm. All through
+their courtship, which was contemporaneous with the growth of the war
+feeling, she had been puzzled by his want of seriousness about it. He
+seemed to despise it even more than he abhorred it. She could have
+understood his abhorring any sort of bloodshed; that would have been a
+survival of his old life when he thought he would be a minister, and
+before he changed and took up the law. But making light of a cause so
+high and noble seemed to show a want of earnestness at the core of his
+being. Not but that she felt herself able to cope with a congenital
+defect of that sort, and make his love for her save him from himself.
+Now perhaps the miracle was already wrought in him. In the presence of
+the tremendous fact that he announced, all triviality seemed to have
+gone out of him; she began to feel that. He sank down on the top step,
+and wiped his forehead with his handkerchief, while she poured out upon
+him her question of the origin and authenticity of his news.</p>
+
+<p>All the while, in her duplex emotioning, she was aware that now at
+the very beginning she must put a guard upon herself against urging him,
+by any word or act, to take the part that her whole soul willed him to
+take, for the completion of her ideal of him. He was very nearly perfect
+as he was, and he must be allowed to perfect himself. But he was
+peculiar, and he might very well be reasoned out of his peculiarity.
+Before her reasoning went her emotioning: her nature pulling upon his
+nature, her womanhood upon his manhood, without her knowing the means
+she was using to the end she was willing. She had always supposed that
+the man who won her would have done something to win her; she did not
+know what, but something. George Gearson had simply asked her for her
+love, on the way home from a concert, and she gave her love to him,
+without, as it were, thinking. But now, it flashed upon her, if he could
+do something worthy to <em>have</em> won her&#8212;be a hero,
+<em>her</em> hero&#8212;it would be even better than if he had done it
+before asking her; it would be grander. Besides, she had believed in the
+war from the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But don&#8217;t you see, dearest,&#8221; she said, &#8220;that
+it wouldn&#8217;t have come to this if it hadn&#8217;t been in the order
+of Providence? And I call any war glorious that is for the liberation of
+people who have been struggling for years against the cruelest
+oppression. Don&#8217;t you think so, too?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose so,&#8221; he returned, languidly. &#8220;But war!
+Is it glorious to break the peace of the world?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That ignoble peace! It was no peace at all, with that crime
+and shame at our very gates.&#8221; She was conscious of parroting the
+current phrases of the newspapers, but it was no time to pick and choose
+her words. She must sacrifice anything to the high ideal she had for
+him, and after a good deal of rapid argument she ended with the climax:
+&#8220;But now it doesn&#8217;t matter about the how or why. Since the
+war has come, all that is gone. There are no two sides any more. There
+is nothing now but our country.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He sat with his eyes closed and his head leant back against the
+veranda, and he remarked, with a vague smile, as if musing aloud,
+&#8220;Our country&#8212;right or wrong.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, right or wrong!&#8221; she returned, fervidly.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll go and get you some lemonade.&#8221; She rose
+rustling, and whisked away; when she came back with two tall glasses of
+clouded liquid on a tray, and the ice clucking in them, he still sat as
+she had left him, and she said, as if there had been no interruption:
+&#8220;But there is no question of wrong in this case. I call it a
+sacred war. A war for liberty and humanity, if ever there was one. And I
+know you will see it just as I do, yet.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He took half the lemonade at a gulp, and he answered as he set the
+glass down: &#8220;I know you always have the highest ideal. When I
+differ from you I ought to doubt myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A generous sob rose in Editha&#8217;s throat for the humility of a
+man, so very nearly perfect, who was willing to put himself below
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, she felt, more subliminally, that he was never so near
+slipping through her fingers as when he took that meek way.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You shall not say that! Only, for once I happen to be
+right.&#8221; She seized his hand in her two hands, and poured her soul
+from her eyes into his. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you think so?&#8221; she
+entreated him.</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust5l.jpg" name="illust5"><img src="images/illust5m.jpg" title="&#8220;&#8216;YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!&#8217;&#8221;" alt="[Illustration: &#8220;&#8216;YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!&#8217;&#8221;]" style="width: 450px; height: 759px" /></a></div>
+
+<p>He released his hand and drank the rest of his lemonade, and she
+added, &#8220;Have mine, too,&#8221; but he shook his head in answering,
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve no business to think so, unless I act so,
+too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her heart stopped a beat before it pulsed on with leaps that she felt
+in her neck. She had noticed that strange thing in men: they seemed to
+feel bound to do what they believed, and not think a thing was finished
+when they said it, as girls did. She knew what was in his mind, but she
+pretended not, and she said, &#8220;Oh, I am not sure,&#8221; and then
+faltered.</p>
+
+<p>He went on as if to himself, without apparently heeding her:
+&#8220;There&#8217;s only one way of proving one&#8217;s faith in a
+thing like this.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She could not say that she understood, but she did understand.</p>
+
+<p>He went on again. &#8220;If I believed&#8212;if I felt as you do
+about this war&#8212;Do you wish me to feel as you do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Now she was really not sure; so she said: &#8220;George, I
+don&#8217;t know what you mean.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to muse away from her as before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There is a sort of fascination in it. I suppose that at the
+bottom of his heart every man would like at times to have his courage
+tested, to see how he would act.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How can you talk in that ghastly way?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It <em>is</em> rather morbid. Still, that&#8217;s what it
+comes to, unless you&#8217;re swept away by ambition or driven by
+conviction. I haven&#8217;t the conviction or the ambition, and the
+other thing is what it comes to with me. I ought to have been a
+preacher, after all; then I couldn&#8217;t have asked it of myself, as I
+must, now I&#8217;m a lawyer. And you believe it&#8217;s a holy war,
+Editha?&#8221; he suddenly addressed her. &#8220;Oh, I know you do! But
+you wish me to believe so, too?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She hardly knew whether he was mocking or not, in the ironical way he
+always had with her plainer mind. But the only thing was to be outspoken
+with him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;George, I wish you to believe whatever you think is true, at
+any and every cost. If I&#8217;ve tried to talk you into anything, I
+take it all back.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I know that, Editha. I know how sincere you are, and
+how&#8212;I wish I had your undoubting spirit! I&#8217;ll think it over;
+I&#8217;d like to believe as you do. But I don&#8217;t, now; I
+don&#8217;t, indeed. It isn&#8217;t this war alone; though this seems
+peculiarly wanton and needless; but it&#8217;s every war&#8212;so
+stupid; it makes me sick. Why shouldn&#8217;t this thing have been
+settled reasonably?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Because,&#8221; she said, very throatily again, &#8220;God
+meant it to be war.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You think it was God? Yes, I suppose that is what people will
+say.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you suppose it would have been war if God hadn&#8217;t
+meant it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. Sometimes it seems as if God had put this
+world into men&#8217;s keeping to work it as they pleased.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now, George, that is blasphemy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I won&#8217;t blaspheme. I&#8217;ll try to believe in
+your pocket Providence,&#8221; he said, and then he rose to go.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why don&#8217;t you stay to dinner?&#8221; Dinner at
+Balcom&#8217;s Works was at one o&#8217;clock.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll come back to supper, if you&#8217;ll let me.
+Perhaps I shall bring you a convert.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, you may come back, on that condition.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;All right. If I don&#8217;t come, you&#8217;ll
+understand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He went away without kissing her, and she felt it a suspension of
+their engagement. It all interested her intensely; she was undergoing a
+tremendous experience, and she was being equal to it. While she stood
+looking after him, her mother came out through one of the long windows
+onto the veranda, with a catlike softness and vagueness.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t he stay to dinner?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Because&#8212;because&#8212;war has been declared,&#8221;
+Editha pronounced, without turning.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother said, &#8220;Oh, my!&#8221; and then said nothing more
+until she had sat down in one of the large Shaker chairs and rocked
+herself for some time. Then she closed whatever tacit passage of thought
+there had been in her mind with the spoken words: &#8220;Well, I hope
+<em>he</em> won&#8217;t go.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And <em>I</em> hope he <em>will</em>,&#8221; the girl said,
+and confronted her mother with a stormy exaltation that would have
+frightened any creature less unimpressionable than a cat.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother rocked herself again for an interval of cogitation. What
+she arrived at in speech was: &#8220;Well, I guess you&#8217;ve done a
+wicked thing, Editha Balcom.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl said, as she passed indoors through the same window her
+mother had come out by: &#8220;I haven&#8217;t done
+anything&#8212;yet.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>In her room, she put together all her letters and gifts from Gearson,
+down to the withered petals of the first flower he had offered, with
+that timidity of his veiled in that irony of his. In the heart of the
+packet she enshrined her engagement ring which she had restored to the
+pretty box he had brought it her in. Then she sat down, if not calmly
+yet strongly, and wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="letter">
+<p> &#8220;GEORGE:&#8212;I understood when you left me. But I think we
+ had better emphasize your meaning that if we cannot be one in
+ everything we had better be one in nothing. So I am sending these
+ things for your keeping till you have made up your mind.</p>
+
+<p> &#8220;I shall always love you, and therefore I shall never marry
+ any one else. But the man I marry must love his country first of
+ all, and be able to say to me,</p>
+
+<p class="poetry">&#8220;&#8216;I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ <br />Loved I not honor more.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p> &#8220;There is no honor above America with me. In this great hour
+ there is no other honor.</p>
+
+<p> &#8220;Your heart will make my words clear to you. I had never
+ expected to say so much, but it has come upon me that I must say the
+ utmost.</p>
+
+<p> EDITHA.&#8221;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>She thought she had worded her letter well, worded it in a way that
+could not be bettered; all had been implied and nothing expressed.</p>
+
+<p>She had it ready to send with the packet she had tied with red,
+white, and blue ribbon, when it occurred to her that she was not just to
+him, that she was not giving him a fair chance. He had said he would go
+and think it over, and she was not waiting. She was pushing,
+threatening, compelling. That was not a woman&#8217;s part. She must
+leave him free, free, free. She could not accept for her country or
+herself a forced sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>In writing her letter she had satisfied the impulse from which it
+sprang; she could well afford to wait till he had thought it over. She
+put the packet and the letter by, and rested serene in the consciousness
+of having done what was laid upon her by her love itself to do, and yet
+used patience, mercy, justice.</p>
+
+<p>She had her reward. Gearson did not come to tea, but she had given
+him till morning, when, late at night there came up from the village the
+sound of a fife and drum, with a tumult of voices, in shouting, singing,
+and laughing. The noise drew nearer and nearer; it reached the street
+end of the avenue; there it silenced itself, and one voice, the voice
+she knew best, rose over the silence. It fell; the air was filled with
+cheers; the fife and drum struck up, with the shouting, singing, and
+laughing again, but now retreating; and a single figure came hurrying up
+the avenue.</p>
+
+<p>She ran down to meet her lover and clung to him. He was very gay, and
+he put his arm round her with a boisterous laugh. &#8220;Well, you must
+call me Captain now; or Cap, if you prefer; that&#8217;s what the boys
+call me. Yes, we&#8217;ve had a meeting at the town-hall, and everybody
+has volunteered; and they selected me for captain, and I&#8217;m going
+to the war, the big war, the glorious war, the holy war ordained by the
+pocket Providence that blesses butchery. Come along; let&#8217;s tell
+the whole family about it. Call them from their downy beds, father,
+mother, Aunt Hitty, and all the folks!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But when they mounted the veranda steps he did not wait for a larger
+audience; he poured the story out upon Editha alone.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There was a lot of speaking, and then some of the fools set up
+a shout for me. It was all going one way, and I thought it would be a
+good joke to sprinkle a little cold water on them. But you can&#8217;t
+do that with a crowd that adores you. The first thing I knew I was
+sprinkling hell-fire on them. &#8216;Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of
+war.&#8217; That was the style. Now that it had come to the fight, there
+were no two parties; there was one country, and the thing was to fight
+to a finish as quick as possible. I suggested volunteering then and
+there, and I wrote my name first of all on the roster. Then they elected
+me&#8212;that&#8217;s all. I wish I had some ice-water.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She left him walking up and down the veranda, while she ran for the
+ice-pitcher and a goblet, and when she came back he was still walking up
+and down, shouting the story he had told her to her father and mother,
+who had come out more sketchily dressed than they commonly were by day.
+He drank goblet after goblet of the ice-water without noticing who was
+giving it, and kept on talking, and laughing through his talk wildly.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s astonishing,&#8221; he said, &#8220;how well the worse
+reason looks when you try to make it appear the better. Why, I believe I
+was the first convert to the war in that crowd to-night! I never thought
+I should like to kill a man; but now I shouldn&#8217;t care; and the
+smokeless powder lets you see the man drop that you kill. It&#8217;s all
+for the country! What a thing it is to have a country that
+<em>can&#8217;t</em> be wrong, but if it is, is right,
+anyway!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Editha had a great, vital thought, an inspiration. She set down the
+ice-pitcher on the veranda floor, and ran up-stairs and got the letter
+she had written him. When at last he noisily bade her father and mother,
+&#8220;Well, good-night. I forgot I woke you up; I sha&#8217;n&#8217;t
+want any sleep myself,&#8221; she followed him down the avenue to the
+gate. There, after the whirling words that seemed to fly away from her
+thoughts and refuse to serve them, she made a last effort to solemnize
+the moment that seemed so crazy, and pressed the letter she had written
+upon him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s this?&#8221; he said. &#8220;Want me to mail
+it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, no. It&#8217;s for you. I wrote it after you went this
+morning. Keep it&#8212;keep it&#8212;and read it sometime&#8212;&#8221;
+She thought, and then her inspiration came: &#8220;Read it if ever you
+doubt what you&#8217;ve done, or fear that I regret your having done it.
+Read it after you&#8217;ve started.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They strained each other in embraces that seemed as ineffective as
+their words, and he kissed her face with quick, hot breaths that were so
+unlike him, that made her feel as if she had lost her old lover and
+found a stranger in his place. The stranger said: &#8220;What a gorgeous
+flower you are, with your red hair, and your blue eyes that look black
+now, and your face with the color painted out by the white moonshine!
+Let me hold you under the chin, to see whether I love blood, you
+tiger-lily!&#8221; Then he laughed Gearson&#8217;s laugh, and released
+her, scared and giddy. Within her wilfulness she had been frightened by
+a sense of subtler force in him, and mystically mastered as she had
+never been before.</p>
+
+<p>She ran all the way back to the house, and mounted the steps panting.
+Her mother and father were talking of the great affair. Her mother said:
+&#8220;Wa&#8217;n&#8217;t Mr. Gearson in rather of an excited state of
+mind? Didn&#8217;t you think he acted curious?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, not for a man who&#8217;d just been elected captain and
+had set &#8217;em up for the whole of Company A,&#8221; her father
+chuckled back.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What in the world do you mean, Mr. Balcom? Oh! There&#8217;s
+Editha!&#8221; She offered to follow the girl indoors.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t come, mother!&#8221; Editha called, vanishing.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Balcom remained to reproach her husband. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+see much of anything to laugh at.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, it&#8217;s catching. Caught it from Gearson. I guess it
+won&#8217;t be much of a war, and I guess Gearson don&#8217;t think so,
+either. The other fellows will back down as soon as they see we mean it.
+I wouldn&#8217;t lose any sleep over it. I&#8217;m going back to bed,
+myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Gearson came again next afternoon, looking pale and rather sick, but
+quite himself, even to his languid irony. &#8220;I guess I&#8217;d
+better tell you, Editha, that I consecrated myself to your god of
+battles last night by pouring too many libations to him down my own
+throat. But I&#8217;m all right now. One has to carry off the
+excitement, somehow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Promise me,&#8221; she commanded, &#8220;that you&#8217;ll
+never touch it again!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What! Not let the cannikin clink? Not let the soldier drink?
+Well, I promise.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t belong to yourself now; you don&#8217;t even
+belong to <em>me</em>. You belong to your country, and you have a sacred
+charge to keep yourself strong and well for your country&#8217;s sake. I
+have been thinking, thinking all night and all day long.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You look as if you had been crying a little, too,&#8221; he
+said, with his queer smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all past. I&#8217;ve been thinking, and
+worshipping <em>you</em>. Don&#8217;t you suppose I know all that
+you&#8217;ve been through, to come to this? I&#8217;ve followed you
+every step from your old theories and opinions.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve had a long row to hoe.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And I know you&#8217;ve done this from the highest
+motives&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, there won&#8217;t be much pettifogging to do till this
+cruel war is&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you haven&#8217;t simply done it for my sake. I
+couldn&#8217;t respect you if you had.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, then we&#8217;ll say I haven&#8217;t. A man that
+hasn&#8217;t got his own respect intact wants the respect of all the
+other people he can corner. But we won&#8217;t go into that. I&#8217;m
+in for the thing now, and we&#8217;ve got to face our future. My idea is
+that this isn&#8217;t going to be a very protracted struggle; we shall
+just scare the enemy to death before it comes to a fight at all. But we
+must provide for contingencies, Editha. If anything happens to
+me&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, George!&#8221; She clung to him, sobbing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want you to feel foolishly bound to my memory. I
+should hate that, wherever I happened to be.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am yours, for time and eternity&#8212;time and
+eternity.&#8221; She liked the words; they satisfied her famine for
+phrases.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, say eternity; that&#8217;s all right; but time&#8217;s
+another thing; and I&#8217;m talking about time. But there is something!
+My mother! If anything happens&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She winced, and he laughed. &#8220;You&#8217;re not the bold
+soldier-girl of yesterday!&#8221; Then he sobered. &#8220;If anything
+happens, I want you to help my mother out. She won&#8217;t like my doing
+this thing. She brought me up to think war a fool thing as well as a bad
+thing. My father was in the Civil War; all through it; lost his arm in
+it.&#8221; She thrilled with the sense of the arm round her; what if
+that should be lost? He laughed as if divining her: &#8220;Oh, it
+doesn&#8217;t run in the family, as far as I know!&#8221; Then he added,
+gravely: &#8220;He came home with misgivings about war, and they grew on
+him. I guess he and mother agreed between them that I was to be brought
+up in his final mind about it; but that was before my time. I only knew
+him from my mother&#8217;s report of him and his opinions; I don&#8217;t
+know whether they were hers first; but they were hers last. This will be
+a blow to her. I shall have to write and tell her&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stopped, and she asked: &#8220;Would you like me to write, too,
+George?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe that would do. No, I&#8217;ll do the
+writing. She&#8217;ll understand a little if I say that I thought the
+way to minimize it was to make war on the largest possible scale at
+once&#8212;that I felt I must have been helping on the war somehow if I
+hadn&#8217;t helped keep it from coming, and I knew I hadn&#8217;t; when
+it came, I had no right to stay out of it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Whether his sophistries satisfied him or not, they satisfied her. She
+clung to his breast, and whispered, with closed eyes and quivering lips:
+&#8220;Yes, yes, yes!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But if anything should happen, you might go to her and see
+what you could do for her. You know? It&#8217;s rather far off; she
+can&#8217;t leave her chair&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;ll go, if it&#8217;s the ends of the earth! But
+nothing will happen! Nothing <em>can!</em> I&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She felt herself lifted with his rising, and Gearson was saying, with
+his arm still round her, to her father: &#8220;Well, we&#8217;re off at
+once, Mr. Balcom. We&#8217;re to be formally accepted at the capital,
+and then bunched up with the rest somehow, and sent into camp somewhere,
+and got to the front as soon as possible. We all want to be in the van,
+of course; we&#8217;re the first company to report to the Governor. I
+came to tell Editha, but I hadn&#8217;t got round to it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>She saw him again for a moment at the capital, in the station, just
+before the train started southward with his regiment. He looked well, in
+his uniform, and very soldierly, but somehow girlish, too, with his
+clean-shaven face and slim figure. The manly eyes and the strong voice
+satisfied her, and his preoccupation with some unexpected details of
+duty flattered her. Other girls were weeping and bemoaning themselves,
+but she felt a sort of noble distinction in the abstraction, the almost
+unconsciousness, with which they parted. Only at the last moment he
+said: &#8220;Don&#8217;t forget my mother. It mayn&#8217;t be such a
+walk-over as I supposed,&#8221; and he laughed at the notion.</p>
+
+<p>He waved his hand to her as the train moved off&#8212;she knew it
+among a score of hands that were waved to other girls from the platform
+of the car, for it held a letter which she knew was hers. Then he went
+inside the car to read it, doubtless, and she did not see him again. But
+she felt safe for him through the strength of what she called her love.
+What she called her God, always speaking the name in a deep voice and
+with the implication of a mutual understanding, would watch over him and
+keep him and bring him back to her. If with an empty sleeve, then he
+should have three arms instead of two, for both of hers should be his
+for life. She did not see, though, why she should always be thinking of
+the arm his father had lost.</p>
+
+<p>There were not many letters from him, but they were such as she could
+have wished, and she put her whole strength into making hers such as she
+imagined he could have wished, glorifying and supporting him. She wrote
+to his mother glorifying him as their hero, but the brief answer she got
+was merely to the effect that Mrs. Gearson was not well enough to write
+herself, and thanking her for her letter by the hand of some one who
+called herself &#8220;Yrs truly, Mrs. W.J. Andrews.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Editha determined not to be hurt, but to write again quite as if the
+answer had been all she expected. Before it seemed as if she could have
+written, there came news of the first skirmish, and in the list of the
+killed, which was telegraphed as a trifling loss on our side, was
+Gearson&#8217;s name. There was a frantic time of trying to make out
+that it might be, must be, some other Gearson; but the name and the
+company and the regiment and the State were too definitely given.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a lapse into depths out of which it seemed as if she
+never could rise again; then a lift into clouds far above all grief,
+black clouds, that blotted out the sun, but where she soared with him,
+with George&#8212;George! She had the fever that she expected of
+herself, but she did not die in it; she was not even delirious, and it
+did not last long. When she was well enough to leave her bed, her one
+thought was of George&#8217;s mother, of his strangely worded wish that
+she should go to her and see what she could do for her. In the
+exaltation of the duty laid upon her&#8212;it buoyed her up instead of
+burdening her&#8212;she rapidly recovered.</p>
+
+<p>Her father went with her on the long railroad journey from northern
+New York to western Iowa; he had business out at Davenport, and he said
+he could just as well go then as any other time; and he went with her to
+the little country town where George&#8217;s mother lived in a little
+house on the edge of the illimitable cornfields, under trees pushed to a
+top of the rolling prairie. George&#8217;s father had settled there
+after the Civil War, as so many other old soldiers had done; but they
+were Eastern people, and Editha fancied touches of the East in the June
+rose overhanging the front door, and the garden with early summer
+flowers stretching from the gate of the paling fence.</p>
+
+<p>It was very low inside the house, and so dim, with the closed blinds,
+that they could scarcely see one another: Editha tall and black in her
+crapes which filled the air with the smell of their dyes; her father
+standing decorously apart with his hat on his forearm, as at funerals; a
+woman rested in a deep arm-chair, and the woman who had let the
+strangers in stood behind the chair.</p>
+
+<p>The seated woman turned her head round and up, and asked the woman
+behind her chair: &#8220;<em>Who</em> did you say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Editha, if she had done what she expected of herself, would have gone
+down on her knees at the feet of the seated figure and said, &#8220;I am
+George&#8217;s Editha,&#8221; for answer.</p>
+
+<p>But instead of her own voice she heard that other woman&#8217;s
+voice, saying: &#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t know as I <em>did</em> get the
+name just right. I guess I&#8217;ll have to make a little more light in
+here,&#8221; and she went and pushed two of the shutters ajar.</p>
+
+<p>Then Editha&#8217;s father said, in his public
+will-now-address-a-few-remarks tone: &#8220;My name is Balcom,
+ma&#8217;am&#8212;Junius H. Balcom, of Balcom&#8217;s Works, New York;
+my daughter&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; the seated woman broke in, with a powerful voice,
+the voice that always surprised Editha from Gearson&#8217;s slender
+frame. &#8220;Let me see you. Stand round where the light can strike on
+your face,&#8221; and Editha dumbly obeyed. &#8220;So, you&#8217;re
+Editha Balcom,&#8221; she sighed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Editha said, more like a culprit than a
+comforter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What did you come for?&#8221; Mrs. Gearson asked.</p>
+
+<p>Editha&#8217;s face quivered and her knees shook. &#8220;I
+came&#8212;because&#8212;because George&#8212;&#8221; She could go no
+further.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the mother said, &#8220;he told me he had asked
+you to come if he got killed. You didn&#8217;t expect that, I suppose,
+when you sent him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I would rather have died myself than done it!&#8221; Editha
+said, with more truth in her deep voice than she ordinarily found in it.
+&#8220;I tried to leave him free&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that letter of yours, that came back with his other
+things, left him free.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Editha saw now where George&#8217;s irony came from.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was not to be read before&#8212;unless&#8212;until&#8212;I
+told him so,&#8221; she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course, he wouldn&#8217;t read a letter of yours, under the
+circumstances, till he thought you wanted him to. Been sick?&#8221; the
+woman abruptly demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very sick,&#8221; Editha said, with self-pity.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Daughter&#8217;s life,&#8221; her father interposed,
+&#8220;was almost despaired of, at one time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Gearson gave him no heed. &#8220;I suppose you would have been
+glad to die, such a brave person as you! I don&#8217;t believe
+<em>he</em> was glad to die. He was always a timid boy, that way; he was
+afraid of a good many things; but if he was afraid he did what he made
+up his mind to. I suppose he made up his mind to go, but I knew what it
+cost him by what it cost me when I heard of it. I had been through
+<em>one</em> war before. When you sent him you didn&#8217;t expect he
+would get killed.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The voice seemed to compassionate Editha, and it was time.
+&#8220;No,&#8221; she huskily murmured.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, girls don&#8217;t; women don&#8217;t, when they give their
+men up to their country. They think they&#8217;ll come marching back,
+somehow, just as gay as they went, or if it&#8217;s an empty sleeve, or
+even an empty pantaloon, it&#8217;s all the more glory, and
+they&#8217;re so much the prouder of them, poor things!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The tears began to run down Editha&#8217;s face; she had not wept
+till then; but it was now such a relief to be understood that the tears
+came.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you didn&#8217;t expect him to get killed,&#8221; Mrs.
+Gearson repeated, in a voice which was startlingly like George&#8217;s
+again. &#8220;You just expected him to kill some one else, some of those
+foreigners, that weren&#8217;t there because they had any say about it,
+but because they had to be there, poor wretches&#8212;conscripts, or
+whatever they call &#8217;em. You thought it would be all right for my
+George, <em>your</em> George, to kill the sons of those miserable
+mothers and the husbands of those girls that you would never see the
+faces of.&#8221; The woman lifted her powerful voice in a psalmlike
+note. &#8220;I thank my God he didn&#8217;t live to do it! I thank my
+God they killed him first, and that he ain&#8217;t livin&#8217; with
+their blood on his hands!&#8221; She dropped her eyes, which she had
+raised with her voice, and glared at Editha. &#8220;What you got that
+black on for?&#8221; She lifted herself by her powerful arms so high
+that her helpless body seemed to hang limp its full length. &#8220;Take
+it off, take it off, before I tear it from your back!&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class="illustration"><a href="images/illust6l.jpg" name="illust6"><img src="images/illust6m.jpg" title="&#8220;SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. &#8216;WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON FOR?&#8217;&#8221;" alt="[Illustration: &#8220;SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. &#8216;WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON FOR?&#8217;&#8221;]" style="width: 450px; height: 773px" /></a></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The lady who was passing the summer near Balcom&#8217;s Works was
+sketching Editha&#8217;s beauty, which lent itself wonderfully to the
+effects of a colorist. It had come to that confidence which is rather
+apt to grow between artist and sitter, and Editha had told her
+everything.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;To think of your having such a tragedy in your life!&#8221;
+the lady said. She added: &#8220;I suppose there are people who feel
+that way about war. But when you consider the good this war has
+done&#8212;how much it has done for the country! I can&#8217;t
+understand such people, for my part. And when you had come all the way
+out there to console her&#8212;got up out of a sick-bed!
+Well!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; Editha said, magnanimously, &#8220;she
+wasn&#8217;t quite in her right mind; and so did papa.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the lady said, looking at Editha&#8217;s lips in
+nature and then at her lips in art, and giving an empirical touch to
+them in the picture. &#8220;But how dreadful of her! How
+perfectly&#8212;excuse me&#8212;how <em>vulgar!</em>&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A light broke upon Editha in the darkness which she felt had been
+without a gleam of brightness for weeks and months. The mystery that had
+bewildered her was solved by the word; and from that moment she rose
+from grovelling in shame and self-pity, and began to live again in the
+ideal.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter6" id="chapter6">VI</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">Braybridge&#8217;s Offer</h2>
+
+
+<p>We had ordered our dinners and were sitting in the Turkish room at
+the club, waiting to be called, each in his turn, to the dining-room. It
+was always a cosey place, whether you found yourself in it with cigars
+and coffee after dinner, or with whatever liquid or solid appetizer you
+preferred in the half-hour or more that must pass before dinner after
+you had made out your menu. It intimated an exclusive possession in the
+three or four who happened first to find themselves together in it, and
+it invited the philosophic mind to contemplation more than any other
+spot in the club.</p>
+
+<p>Our rather limited little down-town dining-club was almost a celibate
+community at most times. A few husbands and fathers joined us at lunch;
+but at dinner we were nearly always a company of bachelors, dropping in
+an hour or so before we wished to dine, and ordering from a bill of fare
+what we liked. Some dozed away in the intervening time; some read the
+evening papers or played chess; I preferred the chance society of the
+Turkish room. I could be pretty sure of finding Wanhope there in these
+sympathetic moments, and where Wanhope was there would probably be
+Rulledge, passively willing to listen and agree, and Minver ready to
+interrupt and dispute. I myself liked to look in and linger for either
+the reasoning or the bickering, as it happened, and now, seeing the
+three there together, I took a provisional seat behind the painter, who
+made no sign of knowing I was present. Rulledge was eating a caviar
+sandwich, which he had brought from the afternoon tea-table near by, and
+he greedily incited Wanhope to go on, in the polite pause which the
+psychologist had let follow on my appearance, with what he was saying. I
+was not surprised to find that his talk related to a fact just then
+intensely interesting to the few, rapidly becoming the many, who were
+privy to it; though Wanhope had the air of stooping to it from a higher
+range of thinking.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t have supposed, somehow,&#8221; he said, with
+a knot of deprecation between his fine eyes, &#8220;that he would have
+had the pluck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps he hadn&#8217;t,&#8221; Minver suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope waited for a thoughtful moment of censure eventuating in
+toleration. &#8220;You mean that she&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why you say that, Minver,&#8221; Rulledge
+interposed, chivalrously, with his mouth full of sandwich.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t say it,&#8221; Minver contradicted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You implied it; and I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s fair.
+It&#8217;s easy enough to build up a report of that kind on the
+half-knowledge of rumor which is all that any outsider can have in the
+case.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So far,&#8221; Minver said, with unbroken tranquillity,
+&#8220;as any such edifice has been erected, you are the architect,
+Rulledge. I shouldn&#8217;t think you would like to go round insinuating
+that sort of thing. Here is Acton,&#8221; and he now acknowledged my
+presence with a backward twist of his head, &#8220;on the alert for
+material already. You ought to be more careful where Acton is,
+Rulledge.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It would be great copy if it were true,&#8221; I owned.</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope regarded us all three, in this play of our qualities, with
+the scientific impartiality of a bacteriologist in the study of a
+culture offering some peculiar incidents. He took up a point as remote
+as might be from the personal appeal. &#8220;It is curious how little we
+know of such matters, after all the love-making and marrying in life and
+all the inquiry of the poets and novelists.&#8221; He addressed himself
+in this turn of his thought, half playful, half earnest, to me, as if I
+united with the functions of both a responsibility for their
+shortcomings.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Minver said, facing about towards me. &#8220;How
+do you excuse yourself for your ignorance in matters where you&#8217;re
+always professionally making such a bluff of knowledge? After all the
+marriages you have brought about in literature, can you say positively
+and specifically how they are brought about in life?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I can&#8217;t,&#8221; I admitted. &#8220;I might say that
+a writer of fiction is a good deal like a minister who continually
+marries people without knowing why.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you couldn&#8217;t, my dear fellow,&#8221; the painter
+retorted. &#8220;It&#8217;s part of your swindle to assume that you
+<em>do</em> know why. You ought to find out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope interposed concretely, or as concretely as he could:
+&#8220;The important thing would always be to find which of the lovers
+the confession, tacit or explicit, began with.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Acton ought to go round and collect human documents bearing on
+the question. He ought to have got together thousands of specimens from
+nature. He ought to have gone to all the married couples he knew, and
+asked them just how their passion was confessed; he ought to have sent
+out printed circulars, with tabulated questions. Why don&#8217;t you do
+it, Acton?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>I returned, as seriously as could have been expected:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps it would be thought rather intimate. People
+don&#8217;t like to talk of such things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re ashamed,&#8221; Minver declared. &#8220;The
+lovers don&#8217;t either of them, in a given case, like to let others
+know how much the woman had to do with making the offer, and how little
+the man.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver&#8217;s point provoked both Wanhope and myself to begin a
+remark at the same time. We begged each other&#8217;s pardon, and
+Wanhope insisted that I should go on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, merely this,&#8221; I said. &#8220;I don&#8217;t think
+they&#8217;re so much ashamed as that they have forgotten the different
+stages. You were going to say&#8212;?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very much what you said. It&#8217;s astonishing how people
+forget the vital things and remember trifles. Or perhaps as we advance
+from stage to stage what once seemed the vital things turn to trifles.
+Nothing can be more vital in the history of a man and a woman than how
+they became husband and wife, and yet not merely the details, but the
+main fact, would seem to escape record if not recollection. The next
+generations knows nothing of it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That appears to let Acton out,&#8221; Minver said. &#8220;But
+how do <em>you</em> know what you were saying, Wanhope?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve ventured to make some inquiries in that region at
+one time. Not directly, of course. At second and third hand. It
+isn&#8217;t inconceivable, if we conceive of a life after this, that a
+man should forget, in its more important interests and occupations, just
+how he quitted this world, or at least the particulars of the article of
+death. Of course, we must suppose a good portion of eternity to have
+elapsed.&#8221; Wanhope continued, dreamily, with a deep breath almost
+equivalent to something so unscientific as a sigh: &#8220;Women are
+charming, and in nothing more than the perpetual challenge they form for
+us. They are born defying us to match ourselves with them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean that Miss Hazelwood&#8212;&#8221; Rulledge began,
+but Minver&#8217;s laugh arrested him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nothing so concrete, I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221; Wanhope gently
+returned. &#8220;I mean, to match them in graciousness, in loveliness,
+in all the agile contests of spirit and plays of fancy. It&#8217;s
+pathetic to see them caught up into something more serious in that other
+game, which they are so good at.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They seem rather to like it, though, some of them, if you mean
+the game of love,&#8221; Minver said. &#8220;Especially when
+they&#8217;re not in earnest about it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, there are plenty of spoiled women,&#8221; Wanhope
+admitted. &#8220;But I don&#8217;t mean flirting. I suppose that the
+average unspoiled woman is rather frightened than otherwise when she
+knows that a man is in love with her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you suppose she always knows it first?&#8221; Rulledge
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You may be sure,&#8221; Minver answered for Wanhope,
+&#8220;that if she didn&#8217;t know it, <em>he</em> never would.&#8221;
+Then Wanhope answered for himself:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think that generally she sees it coming. In that sort of
+wireless telegraphy, that reaching out of two natures through space
+towards each other, her more sensitive apparatus probably feels the
+appeal of his before he is conscious of having made any
+appeal.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And her first impulse is to escape the appeal?&#8221; I
+suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Wanhope admitted, after a thoughtful
+reluctance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Even when she is half aware of having invited it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If she is not spoiled she is never aware of having invited it.
+Take the case in point; we won&#8217;t mention any names. She is sailing
+through time, through youthful space, with her electrical lures, the
+natural equipment of every charming woman, all out, and suddenly,
+somewhere from the unknown, she feels the shock of a response in the
+gulfs of air where there had been no life before. But she can&#8217;t be
+said to have knowingly searched the void for any presence.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m not sure about that, Professor,&#8221; Minver
+put in. &#8220;Go a little slower, if you expect me to follow
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all a mystery, the most beautiful mystery of
+life,&#8221; Wanhope resumed. &#8220;I don&#8217;t believe I could make
+out the case as I feel it to be.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Braybridge&#8217;s part of the case is rather plain,
+isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; I invited him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not sure of that. No man&#8217;s part of any case is
+plain, if you look at it carefully. The most that you can say of
+Braybridge is that he is rather a simple nature. But nothing,&#8221; the
+psychologist added, with one of his deep breaths, &#8220;is so complex
+as a simple nature.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Minver contended, &#8220;Braybridge is plain, if
+his case isn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Plain? Is he plain?&#8221; Wanhope asked, as if asking
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My dear fellow, you agnostics doubt everything!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I should have said picturesque. Picturesque, with the sort of
+unbeautifulness that takes the fancy of women more than Greek
+proportion. I think it would require a girl peculiarly feminine to feel
+the attraction of such a man&#8212;the fascination of his being grizzled
+and slovenly and rugged. She would have to be rather a wild, shy girl to
+do that, and it would have to be through her fear of him that she would
+divine his fear of her. But what I have heard is that they met under
+rather exceptional circumstances. It was at a house in the Adirondacks,
+where Braybridge was, somewhat in the quality of a bull in a china-shop.
+He was lugged in by the host, as an old friend, and was suffered by the
+hostess as a friend quite too old for her. At any rate, as I heard (and
+I don&#8217;t vouch for the facts, all of them), Braybridge found
+himself at odds with the gay young people who made up the
+hostess&#8217;s end of the party, and was watching for a chance
+to&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope cast about for the word, and Minver supplied
+it&#8212;&#8220;Pull out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. But when he had found it Miss Hazelwood took it from
+him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand,&#8221; Rulledge said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When he came in to breakfast, the third morning, prepared with
+an excuse for cutting his week down to the dimensions it had reached, he
+saw her sitting alone at the table. She had risen early as a consequence
+of having arrived late the night before; and when Braybridge found
+himself in for it, he forgot that he meant to go away, and said
+good-morning, as if they knew each other. Their hostess found them
+talking over the length of the table in a sort of mutual fright, and
+introduced them. But it&#8217;s rather difficult reporting a lady
+verbatim at second hand. I really had the facts from Welkin, who had
+them from his wife. The sum of her impressions was that Braybridge and
+Miss Hazelwood were getting a kind of comfort out of their mutual terror
+because one was as badly frightened as the other. It was a novel
+experience for both. Ever seen her?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We looked at one another. Minver said: &#8220;I never wanted to paint
+any one so much. It was at the spring show of the American Artists.
+There was a jam of people; but this girl&#8212;I&#8217;ve understood it
+was she&#8212;looked as much alone as if there were nobody else there.
+She might have been a startled doe in the North Woods suddenly coming
+out on a twenty-thousand-dollar camp, with a lot of
+twenty-million-dollar people on the veranda.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you wanted to do her as The Startled Doe,&#8221; I said.
+&#8220;Good selling name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t reduce it to the vulgarity of fiction. I admit it
+would be a selling name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Go on, Wanhope,&#8221; Rulledge puffed impatiently.
+&#8220;Though I don&#8217;t see how there could be another soul in the
+universe as constitutionally scared of men as Braybridge is of
+women.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In the universe nothing is wasted, I suppose. Everything has
+its complement, its response. For every bashful man, there must be a
+bashful woman,&#8221; Wanhope returned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Or a bold one,&#8221; Minver suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; the response must be in kind to be truly complemental.
+Through the sense of their reciprocal timidity they divine that they
+needn&#8217;t be afraid.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! <em>That&#8217;s</em> the way you get out of
+it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; Rulledge urged.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221; Wanhope modestly confessed,
+&#8220;that from this point I shall have to be largely conjectural.
+Welkin wasn&#8217;t able to be very definite, except as to moments, and
+he had his data almost altogether from his wife. Braybridge had told him
+overnight that he thought of going, and he had said he mustn&#8217;t
+think of it; but he supposed Braybridge had spoken of it to Mrs. Welkin,
+and he began by saying to his wife that he hoped she had refused to hear
+of Braybridge&#8217;s going. She said she hadn&#8217;t heard of it, but
+now she would refuse without hearing, and she didn&#8217;t give
+Braybridge any chance to protest. If people went in the middle of their
+week, what would become of other people? She was not going to have the
+equilibrium of her party disturbed, and that was all about it. Welkin
+thought it was odd that Braybridge didn&#8217;t insist; and he made a
+long story of it. But the grain of wheat in his bushel of chaff was that
+Miss Hazelwood seemed to be fascinated by Braybridge from the first.
+When Mrs. Welkin scared him into saying that he would stay his week out,
+the business practically was done. They went picnicking that day in each
+other&#8217;s charge; and after Braybridge left he wrote back to her, as
+Mrs. Welkin knew from the letters that passed through her hands,
+and&#8212;Well, their engagement has come out, and&#8212;&#8221; Wanhope
+paused, with an air that was at first indefinite, and then
+definitive.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean,&#8221; Rulledge burst out in a note of
+deep wrong, &#8220;that that&#8217;s all you know about it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s all I know,&#8221; Wanhope confessed, as if
+somewhat surprised himself at the fact.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope tried to offer the only reparation in his power. &#8220;I can
+conjecture&#8212;we can all conjecture&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated; then: &#8220;Well, go on with your conjecture,&#8221;
+Rulledge said, forgivingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why&#8212;&#8221; Wanhope began again; but at that moment a
+man who had been elected the year before, and then gone off on a long
+absence, put his head in between the dull-red hangings of the doorway.
+It was Halson, whom I did not know very well, but liked better than I
+knew. His eyes were dancing with what seemed the inextinguishable gayety
+of his temperament, rather than any present occasion, and his smile
+carried his little mustache well away from his handsome teeth.
+&#8220;Private?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come in! come in!&#8221; Minver called to him. &#8220;Thought
+you were in Japan?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My dear fellow,&#8221; Halson answered, &#8220;you must brush
+up your contemporary history. It&#8217;s more than a fortnight since I
+was in Japan.&#8221; He shook hands with me, and I introduced him to
+Rulledge and Wanhope. He said at once: &#8220;Well, what is it? Question
+of Braybridge&#8217;s engagement? It&#8217;s humiliating to a man to
+come back from the antipodes and find the nation absorbed in a parochial
+problem like that. Everybody I&#8217;ve met here to-night has asked me,
+the first thing, if I&#8217;d heard of it, and if I knew how it could
+have happened.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And do you?&#8221; Rulledge asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can give a pretty good guess,&#8221; Halson said, running
+his merry eyes over our faces.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Anybody can give a good guess,&#8221; Rulledge said.
+&#8220;Wanhope is doing it now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t let me interrupt.&#8221; Halson turned to him
+politely.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not at all. I&#8217;d rather hear your guess, if you know
+Braybridge better than I,&#8221; Wanhope said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Halson compromised, &#8220;perhaps I&#8217;ve
+known him longer.&#8221; He asked, with an effect of coming to business:
+&#8220;Where were you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell him, Rulledge,&#8221; Minver ordered, and Rulledge
+apparently asked nothing better. He told him, in detail, all we knew
+from any source, down to the moment of Wanhope&#8217;s arrested
+conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He did leave you at an anxious point, didn&#8217;t he?&#8221;
+Halson smiled to the rest of us at Rulledge&#8217;s expense, and then
+said: &#8220;Well, I think I can help you out a little. Any of you know
+the lady?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By sight, Minver does,&#8221; Rulledge answered for us.
+&#8220;Wants to paint her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; Halson said, with intelligence. &#8220;But I
+doubt if he&#8217;d find her as paintable as she looks, at first.
+She&#8217;s beautiful, but her charm is spiritual.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sometimes we try for that,&#8221; the painter interposed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And sometimes you get it. But you&#8217;ll allow it&#8217;s
+difficult. That&#8217;s all I meant. I&#8217;ve known her&#8212;let me
+see&#8212;for twelve years, at least; ever since I first went West. She
+was about eleven then, and her father was bringing her up on the ranch.
+Her aunt came along by and by and took her to Europe&#8212;mother dead
+before Hazelwood went out there. But the girl was always homesick for
+the ranch; she pined for it; and after they had kept her in Germany
+three or four years they let her come back and run wild again&#8212;wild
+as a flower does, or a vine, not a domesticated animal.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Go slow, Halson. This is getting too much for the romantic
+Rulledge.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Rulledge can bear up against the facts, I guess,
+Minver,&#8221; Halson said, almost austerely. &#8220;Her father died two
+years ago, and then she <em>had</em> to come East, for her aunt simply
+<em>wouldn&#8217;t</em> live on the ranch. She brought her on here, and
+brought her out; I was at the coming-out tea; but the girl didn&#8217;t
+take to the New York thing at all; I could see it from the start; she
+wanted to get away from it with me, and talk about the ranch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She felt that she was with the only genuine person among those
+conventional people.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halson laughed at Minver&#8217;s thrust, and went on amiably:
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t suppose that till she met Braybridge she was ever
+quite at her ease with any man&#8212;or woman, for that matter. I
+imagine, as you&#8217;ve done, that it was his fear of her that gave her
+courage. She met him on equal terms. Isn&#8217;t that it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope assented to the question referred to him with a nod.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And when they got lost from the rest of the party at that
+picnic&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Lost?&#8221; Rulledge demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, yes. Didn&#8217;t you know? But I ought to go back. They
+said there never was anything prettier than the way she unconsciously
+went for Braybridge the whole day. She wanted him, and she was a child
+who wanted things frankly when she did want them. Then his being ten or
+fifteen years older than she was, and so large and simple, made it
+natural for a shy girl like her to assort herself with him when all the
+rest were assorting themselves, as people do at such things. The
+consensus of testimony is that she did it with the most transparent
+unconsciousness, and&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who are your authorities?&#8221; Minver asked; Rulledge threw
+himself back on the divan and beat the cushions with impatience.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Is it essential to give them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh no. I merely wondered. Go on.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The authorities are all right. She had disappeared with him
+before the others noticed. It was a thing that happened; there was no
+design in it; that would have been out of character. They had got to the
+end of the wood-road, and into the thick of the trees where there
+wasn&#8217;t even a trail, and they walked round looking for a way out
+till they were turned completely. They decided that the only way was to
+keep walking, and by and by they heard the sound of chopping. It was
+some Canucks clearing a piece of the woods, and when she spoke to them
+in French they gave them full directions, and Braybridge soon found the
+path again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halson paused, and I said: &#8220;But that isn&#8217;t
+all?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh no.&#8221; He continued thoughtfully silent for a little
+while before he resumed. &#8220;The amazing thing is that they got lost
+again, and that when they tried going back to the Canucks they
+couldn&#8217;t find the way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t they follow the sound of the chopping?&#8221;
+I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Canucks had stopped, for the time being. Besides,
+Braybridge was rather ashamed, and he thought if they went straight on
+they would be sure to come out somewhere. But that was where he made a
+mistake. They couldn&#8217;t go on straight; they went round and round,
+and came on their own footsteps&#8212;or hers, which he recognized from
+the narrow tread and the dint of the little heels in the damp
+places.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope roused himself with a kindling eye. &#8220;That is very
+interesting, the movement in a circle of people who have lost their way.
+It has often been observed, but I don&#8217;t know that it has ever been
+explained. Sometimes the circle is smaller, sometimes it is larger, but
+I believe it is always a circle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t it,&#8221; I queried, &#8220;like any other error
+in life? We go round and round, and commit the old sins over
+again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That is very interesting,&#8221; Wanhope allowed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But do lost people really always walk in a vicious
+circle?&#8221; Minver asked.</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge would not let Wanhope answer. &#8220;Go on, Halson,&#8221;
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>Halson roused himself from the revery in which he was sitting with
+glazed eyes. &#8220;Well, what made it a little more anxious was that he
+had heard of bears on that mountain, and the green afternoon light among
+the trees was perceptibly paling. He suggested shouting, but she
+wouldn&#8217;t let him; she said it would be ridiculous if the others
+heard them, and useless if they didn&#8217;t. So they tramped on
+till&#8212;till the accident happened.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The accident!&#8221; Rulledge exclaimed, in the voice of our
+joint emotion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He stepped on a loose stone and turned his foot,&#8221; Halson
+explained. &#8220;It wasn&#8217;t a sprain, luckily, but it hurt enough.
+He turned so white that she noticed it, and asked him what was the
+matter. Of course that shut his mouth the closer, but it morally doubled
+his motive, and he kept himself from crying out till the sudden pain of
+the wrench was over. He said merely that he thought he had heard
+something, and he had an awful ringing in his ears; but he didn&#8217;t
+mean that, and he started on again. The worst was trying to walk without
+limping, and to talk cheerfully and encouragingly with that agony
+tearing at him. But he managed somehow, and he was congratulating
+himself on his success when he tumbled down in a dead faint.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, come now!&#8221; Minver protested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It <em>is</em> like an old-fashioned story, where things are
+operated by accident instead of motive, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; Halson
+smiled with radiant recognition.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fact will always imitate fiction, if you give her time
+enough,&#8221; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Had they got back to the other picnickers?&#8221; Rulledge
+asked, with a tense voice.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In sound, but not in sight of them. She wasn&#8217;t going to
+bring him into camp in that state; besides, she couldn&#8217;t. She got
+some water out of the trout-brook they&#8217;d been fishing&#8212;more
+water than trout in it&#8212;and sprinkled his face, and he came to, and
+got on his legs just in time to pull on to the others, who were
+organizing a search-party to go after them. From that point on she
+dropped Braybridge like a hot coal; and as there was nothing of the
+flirt in her, she simply kept with the women, the older girls, and the
+tabbies, and left Braybridge to worry along with the secret of his
+turned ankle. He doesn&#8217;t know how he ever got home alive; but he
+did, somehow, manage to reach the wagons that had brought them to the
+edge of the woods, and then he was all right till they got to the house.
+But still she said nothing about his accident, and he couldn&#8217;t;
+and he pleaded an early start for town the next morning, and got off to
+bed as soon as he could.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t have thought he could have stirred in the
+morning,&#8221; Rulledge employed Halson&#8217;s pause to say.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, this beaver <em>had</em> to,&#8221; Halson said.
+&#8220;He was not the only early riser. He found Miss Hazelwood at the
+station before him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What!&#8221; Rulledge shouted. I confess the fact rather
+roused me, too; and Wanhope&#8217;s eyes kindled with a scientific
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She came right towards him. &#8216;Mr. Braybridge,&#8217; says
+she, &#8216;I couldn&#8217;t let you go without explaining my very
+strange behavior. I didn&#8217;t choose to have these people laughing at
+the notion of <em>my</em> having played the part of your preserver. It
+was bad enough being lost with you; I couldn&#8217;t bring you into
+ridicule with them by the disproportion they&#8217;d have felt in my
+efforts for you after you turned your foot. So I simply had to ignore
+the incident. Don&#8217;t you see?&#8217; Braybridge glanced at her, and
+he had never felt so big and bulky before, or seen her so slender and
+little. He said, &#8216;It <em>would</em> have seemed rather
+absurd,&#8217; and he broke out and laughed, while she broke down and
+cried, and asked him to forgive her, and whether it had hurt him very
+much; and said she knew he could bear to keep it from the others by the
+way he had kept it from her till he fainted. She implied that he was
+morally as well as physically gigantic, and it was as much as he could
+do to keep from taking her in his arms on the spot.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It would have been edifying to the groom that had driven her
+to the station,&#8221; Minver cynically suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Groom nothing!&#8221; Halson returned with spirit. &#8220;She
+paddled herself across the lake, and walked from the boat-landing to the
+station.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jove!&#8221; Rulledge exploded in uncontrollable
+enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She turned round as soon as she had got through with her hymn
+of praise&#8212;it made Braybridge feel awfully flat&#8212;and ran back
+through the bushes to the boat-landing, and&#8212;that was the last he
+saw of her till he met her in town this fall.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And when&#8212;and when&#8212;did he offer himself?&#8221;
+Rulledge entreated, breathlessly. &#8220;How&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s the point, Halson,&#8221; Minver interposed.
+&#8220;Your story is all very well, as far as it goes; but Rulledge here
+has been insinuating that it was Miss Hazelwood who made the offer, and
+he wants you to bear him out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge winced at the outrage, but he would not stay Halson&#8217;s
+answer even for the sake of righting himself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I <em>have</em> heard,&#8221; Minver went on, &#8220;that
+Braybridge insisted on paddling the canoe back to the other shore for
+her, and that it was on the way that he offered himself.&#8221; We
+others stared at Minver in astonishment. Halson glanced covertly towards
+him with his gay eyes. &#8220;Then that wasn&#8217;t true?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How did you hear it?&#8221; Halson asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, never mind. Is it true?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I know there&#8217;s that version,&#8221; Halson said,
+evasively. &#8220;The engagement is only just out, as you know. As to
+the offer&#8212;the when and the how&#8212;I don&#8217;t know that
+I&#8217;m exactly at liberty to say.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why,&#8221; Minver urged. &#8220;You might
+stretch a point for Rulledge&#8217;s sake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halson looked down, and then he glanced at Minver after a furtive
+passage of his eye over Rulledge&#8217;s intense face. &#8220;There was
+something rather nice happened after&#8212;But, really, now!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, go on!&#8221; Minver called out in contempt of his
+scruple.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t the right&#8212;Well, I suppose I&#8217;m on
+safe ground here? It won&#8217;t go any further, of course; and it
+<em>was</em> so pretty! After she had pushed off in her canoe, you know,
+Braybridge&#8212;he&#8217;d followed her down to the shore of the
+lake&#8212;found her handkerchief in a bush where it had caught, and he
+held it up, and called out to her. She looked round and saw it, and
+called back: &#8216;Never mind. I can&#8217;t return for it now.&#8217;
+Then Braybridge plucked up his courage, and asked if he might keep it,
+and she said &#8216;Yes,&#8217; over her shoulder, and then she stopped
+paddling, and said: &#8216;No, no, you mustn&#8217;t, you mustn&#8217;t!
+You can send it to me.&#8217; He asked where, and she said: &#8216;In
+New York&#8212;in the fall&#8212;at the Walholland.&#8217; Braybridge
+never knew how he dared, but he shouted after her&#8212;she was paddling
+on again&#8212;&#8216;May I <em>bring</em> it?&#8217; and she called
+over her shoulder again, without fully facing him, but her profile was
+enough: &#8216;If you can&#8217;t get any one to bring it for
+you.&#8217; The words barely reached him, but he&#8217;d have caught
+them if they&#8217;d been whispered; and he watched her across the lake
+and into the bushes, and then broke for his train. He was just in
+time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halson beamed for pleasure upon us, and even Minver said: &#8220;Yes,
+that&#8217;s rather nice.&#8221; After a moment he added:
+&#8220;Rulledge thinks she put it there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re too bad, Minver,&#8221; Halson protested.
+&#8220;The charm of the whole thing was her perfect innocence. She
+isn&#8217;t capable of the slightest finesse. I&#8217;ve known her from
+a child, and I know what I say.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That innocence of girlhood,&#8221; Wanhope said, &#8220;is
+very interesting. It&#8217;s astonishing how much experience it
+survives. Some women carry it into old age with them. It&#8217;s never
+been scientifically studied&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Minver allowed. &#8220;There would be a fortune
+for the novelist who could work a type of innocence for all it was
+worth. Here&#8217;s Acton always dealing with the most rancid
+flirtatiousness, and missing the sweetness and beauty of a girlhood
+which does the cheekiest things without knowing what it&#8217;s about,
+and fetches down its game whenever it shuts its eyes and fires at
+nothing. But I don&#8217;t see how all this touches the point that
+Rulledge makes, or decides which finally made the offer.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, hadn&#8217;t the offer already been made?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But how?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, in the usual way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What is the usual way?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I thought everybody knew <em>that</em>. Of course, it was
+<em>from</em> Braybridge finally, but I suppose it&#8217;s always six of
+one and half a dozen of the other in these cases, isn&#8217;t it? I dare
+say he couldn&#8217;t get any one to take her the handkerchief. My
+dinner?&#8221; Halson looked up at the silent waiter, who had stolen
+upon us and was bowing towards him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Look here, Halson,&#8221; Minver detained him, &#8220;how is
+it none of the rest of us have heard all those details?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<em>I</em> don&#8217;t know where you&#8217;ve been, Minver.
+Everybody knows the main facts,&#8221; Halson said, escaping.</p>
+
+<p>Wanhope observed, musingly: &#8220;I suppose he&#8217;s quite right
+about the reciprocality of the offer, as we call it. There&#8217;s
+probably, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, a perfect understanding
+before there&#8217;s an explanation. In many cases the offer and the
+acceptance must really be tacit.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I ventured, &#8220;and I don&#8217;t know why
+we&#8217;re so severe with women when they seem to take the initiative.
+It&#8217;s merely, after all, the call of the maiden bird, and
+there&#8217;s nothing lovelier or more endearing in nature than
+that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Maiden bird is good, Acton,&#8221; Minver approved. &#8220;Why
+don&#8217;t you institute a class of fiction where the love-making is
+all done by the maiden birds, as you call them&#8212;or the widow birds?
+It would be tremendously popular with both sexes. It would lift an
+immense responsibility off the birds who&#8217;ve been expected to
+shoulder it heretofore if it could be introduced into real
+life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge fetched a long, simple-hearted sigh. &#8220;Well, it&#8217;s
+a charming story. How well he told it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The waiter came again, and this time signalled to Minver.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, as he rose. &#8220;What a pity you
+can&#8217;t believe a word Halson says.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean&#8212;&#8221; we began simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That he built the whole thing from the ground up, with the
+start that we had given him. Why, you poor things! Who could have told
+him how it all happened? Braybridge? Or the girl? As Wanhope began by
+saying, people don&#8217;t speak of their love-making, even when they
+distinctly remember it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but see here, Minver!&#8221; Rulledge said, with a dazed
+look. &#8220;If it&#8217;s all a fake of his, how came <em>you</em> to
+have heard of Braybridge paddling the canoe back for her?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was the fake that tested the fake. When he adopted it, I
+<em>knew</em> he was lying, because I was lying myself. And then the
+cheapness of the whole thing! I wonder that didn&#8217;t strike you.
+It&#8217;s the stuff that a thousand summer-girl stories have been spun
+out of. Acton might have thought he was writing it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He went away, leaving us to a blank silence, till Wanhope managed to
+say: &#8220;That inventive habit of mind is very curious. It would be
+interesting to know just how far it imposes on the inventor
+himself&#8212;how much he believes of his own fiction.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see,&#8221; Rulledge said, gloomily, &#8220;why
+they&#8217;re so long with my dinner.&#8221; Then he burst out: &#8220;I
+believe every word Halson said! If there&#8217;s any fake in the thing,
+it&#8217;s the fake that Minver owned to.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="chapter7" id="chapter7">VII</a></h2>
+
+<h2 class="chaptertitle">The Chick of the Easter Egg</h2>
+
+
+<p>The old fellow who told that story of dream-transference on a
+sleeping-car at Christmas-time was again at the club on Easter Eve.
+Halson had put him up for the winter, under the easy rule we had, and he
+had taken very naturally to the Turkish room for his after-dinner coffee
+and cigar. We all rather liked him, though it was Minver&#8217;s pose to
+be critical of the simple friendliness with which he made himself at
+home among us, and to feign a wish that there were fewer trains between
+Boston and New York, so that old Newton (that was his name) could have a
+better chance of staying away. But we noticed that Minver was always a
+willing listener to Newton&#8217;s talk, and that he sometimes
+hospitably offered to share his tobacco with the Bostonian. When brought
+to book for his inconsistency by Rulledge, he said he was merely
+welcoming the new blood, if not young blood, that Newton was infusing
+into our body, which had grown anaemic on Wanhope&#8217;s psychology and
+Rulledge&#8217;s romance; or, anyway, it was a change.</p>
+
+<p>Newton now began by saying abruptly, in a fashion he had, &#8220;We
+used to hear a good deal in Boston about your Easter Parade here in New
+York. Do you still keep it up?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>No one else answering, Minver replied, presently, &#8220;I believe it
+is still going on. I understand that it&#8217;s composed mostly of
+milliners out to see one another&#8217;s new hats, and generous Jewesses
+who are willing to contribute the &#8216;dark and bright&#8217; of the
+beauty in which they walk to the observance of an alien faith.
+It&#8217;s rather astonishing how the synagogue takes to the feasts of
+the church. If it were not for that, I don&#8217;t know what would
+become of Christmas.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean by their walking in beauty?&#8221; Rulledge
+asked over his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall never have the measure of your ignorance, Rulledge.
+You don&#8217;t even know Byron&#8217;s lines on Hebrew loveliness?</p>
+
+<p class="poetry">&#8220;&#8216;She walks in beauty like the night
+<br /><span style="padding-left: 2em">Of cloudless climes and starry
+ skies,</span>
+<br />And all that&#8217;s best of dark and bright
+<br /><span style="padding-left: 2em">Meets in her aspect and her
+ eyes.&#8217;&#8221;</span></p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pretty good,&#8221; Rulledge assented. &#8220;And they
+<em>are</em> splendid, sometimes. But what has the Easter Parade got to
+do with it?&#8221; he asked Newton.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, only what everything has with everything else. I was
+thinking of Easter-time long ago and far away, and naturally I thought
+of Easter now and here. I saw your Parade once, and it seemed to me one
+of the great social spectacles. But you can&#8217;t keep anything in New
+York, if it&#8217;s good; if it&#8217;s bad, you can.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You come from Boston, I think you said, Mr. Newton,&#8221;
+Minver breathed blandly through his smoke.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m not a <em>real</em> Bostonian,&#8221; our guest
+replied. &#8220;I&#8217;m not abusing you on behalf of a city that
+I&#8217;m a native proprietor of. If I were, I shouldn&#8217;t perhaps
+make your decadent Easter Parade my point of attack, though I think
+it&#8217;s a pity to let it spoil. I came from a part of the country
+where we used to make a great deal of Easter, when we were boys, at
+least so far as eggs went. I don&#8217;t know whether the grown people
+observed the day then, and I don&#8217;t know whether the boys keep it
+now; I haven&#8217;t been back at Easter-time for several generations.
+But when I was a boy it was a serious thing. In that soft Southwestern
+latitude the grass had pretty well greened up by Easter, even when it
+came in March, and grass colors eggs a very nice yellow; it used to
+worry me that it didn&#8217;t color them green. When the grass
+hadn&#8217;t got along far enough, winter wheat would do as well. I
+don&#8217;t remember what color onion husks would give; but we used
+onion husks, too. Some mothers would let the boys get logwood from the
+drug-store, and that made the eggs a fine, bold purplish black. But the
+greatest egg of all was a calico egg, that you got by coaxing your
+grandmother (your mother&#8217;s mother) or your aunt (your
+mother&#8217;s sister) to sew up in a tight cover of brilliant calico.
+When that was boiled long enough the colors came off in a perfect
+pattern on the egg. Very few boys could get such eggs; when they did,
+they put them away in bureau drawers till they ripened and the mothers
+smelt them, and threw them out of the window as quickly as possible.
+Always, after breakfast, Easter Morning, we came out on the street and
+fought eggs. We pitted the little ends of the eggs against one another,
+and the fellow whose egg cracked the other fellow&#8217;s egg won it,
+and he carried it off. I remember grass and wheat colored eggs in such
+trials of strength, and onion and logwood colored eggs; but never calico
+eggs; <em>they</em> were too precious to be risked; it would have seemed
+wicked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; the Boston man went musingly on,
+&#8220;why I should remember these things so relentlessly; I&#8217;ve
+forgotten all the important things that happened to me then; but perhaps
+these were the important things. Who knows? I only know I&#8217;ve
+always had a soft spot in my heart for Easter, not so much because of
+the calico eggs, perhaps, as because of the grandmothers and the aunts.
+I suppose the simple life is full of such aunts and grandmothers still;
+but you don&#8217;t find them in hotel apartments, or even in flats
+consisting of seven large, light rooms and bath.&#8221; We all
+recognized the language of the advertisements, and laughed in sympathy
+with our guest, who perhaps laughed out of proportion with a pleasantry
+of that size.</p>
+
+<p>When he had subdued his mirth, he resumed at a point apparently very
+remote from that where he had started.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There was one of those winters in Cambridge, where I lived
+then, that seemed tougher than any other we could remember, and they
+were all pretty tough winters there in those times. There were forty
+snowfalls between Thanksgiving and Fast Day&#8212;you don&#8217;t know
+what Fast Day is in New York, and we didn&#8217;t, either, as far as the
+fasting went&#8212;and the cold kept on and on till we couldn&#8217;t,
+or said we couldn&#8217;t, stand it any longer. So, along about the
+middle of March somewhere, we picked up the children and started south.
+In those days New York seemed pretty far south to us; and when we got
+here we found everything on wheels that we had left on runners in
+Boston. But the next day it began to snow, and we said we must go a
+little farther to meet the spring. I don&#8217;t know exactly what it
+was made us pitch on Bethlehem, Pennsylvania; but we had a notion we
+should find it interesting, and, at any rate, a total change from our
+old environment. We had been reading something about the Moravians, and
+we knew that it was the capital of Moravianism, with the largest
+Moravian congregation in the world; I think it was Longfellow&#8217;s
+&#8216;Hymn of the Moravian Nuns&#8217; that set us to reading about the
+sect; and we had somehow heard that the Sun Inn, at Bethlehem, was the
+finest old-fashioned public house anywhere. At any rate, we had the
+faith of our youthful years, and we put out for Bethlehem.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We arrived just at dusk, but not so late that we
+couldn&#8217;t see the hospitable figure of a man coming out of the Sun
+to meet us at the omnibus door and to shake hands with each of us. It
+was the very pleasantest and sweetest welcome we ever had at a public
+house; and though we found the Sun a large, modern hotel, we easily
+accepted the landlord&#8217;s assurance that the old Inn was built up
+inside of the hotel, just as it was when Washington stayed in it; and
+after a mighty good supper we went to our rooms, which were piping warm
+from two good base-burner stoves. It was not exactly the vernal air we
+had expected of Bethlehem when we left New York; but you can&#8217;t
+have everything in this world, and, with the snowbanks along the streets
+outside, we were very glad to have the base-burners.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We went to bed pretty early, and I fell into one of those
+exemplary sleeps that begin with no margin of waking after your head
+touches the pillow, or before that, even, and I woke from a dream of
+heavenly music that translated itself into the earthly notes of bugles.
+It made me sit up with the instant realization that we had arrived in
+Bethlehem on Easter Eve, and that this was Easter Morning. We had read
+of the beautiful observance of the feast by the Moravians, and, while I
+was hurrying on my clothes beside my faithful base-burner, I kept quite
+superfluously wondering at myself for not having thought of it, and so
+made sure of being called. I had waked just in time, though I
+hadn&#8217;t deserved to do so, and ought, by right, to have missed it
+all. I tried to make my wife come with me; but after the family is of a
+certain size a woman, if she is a real woman, thinks her husband can see
+things for her, and generally sends him out to reconnoitre and report.
+Besides, my wife couldn&#8217;t have left the children without waking
+them, to tell them she was going, and then all five of them would have
+wanted to come with us, including the baby; and we should have had no
+end of a time convincing them of the impossibility. We were a good deal
+bound up in the children, and we hated to lie to them when we could
+possibly avoid it. So I went alone.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I asked the night porter, who was still on duty, the way I
+wanted to take, but there were so many people in the streets going the
+same direction that I couldn&#8217;t have missed it, anyhow; and pretty
+soon we came to the old Moravian cemetery, which was in the heart of the
+town; and there we found most of the Moravian congregation drawn up on
+three sides of the square, waiting and facing the east, which was
+beginning to redden. Of all the cemeteries I have seen, that was the
+most beautiful, because it was the simplest and humblest. Generally a
+cemetery is a dreadful place, with headstones and footstones and shafts
+and tombs scattered about, and looking like a field full of granite and
+marble stumps from the clearing of a petrified forest. But here all the
+memorial tablets lay flat with the earth. None of the dead were assumed
+to be worthier of remembrance than another; they all rested at regular
+intervals, with their tablets on their breasts, like shields, in their
+sleep after the battle of life. I was thinking how right and wise this
+was, and feeling the purity of the conception like a quality of the
+keen, clear air of the morning, which seemed to be breathing straight
+from the sky, when suddenly the sun blazed up from the horizon like a
+fire, and the instant it appeared the horns of the band began to blow
+and the people burst into a hymn&#8212;a thousand voices, for all I
+know. It was the sublimest thing I ever heard, and I don&#8217;t know
+that there&#8217;s anything to match it for dignity and solemnity in any
+religious rite. It made the tears come, for I thought how those people
+were of a church of missionaries and martyrs from the beginning, and I
+felt as if I were standing in sight and hearing of the first Christians
+after Christ. It was as if He were risen there &#8216;in the midst of
+them.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rulledge looked round on the rest of us, with an air of acquiring
+merit from the Bostonian&#8217;s poetry, but Minver&#8217;s gravity was
+proof against the chance of mocking Rulledge, and I think we all felt
+alike. Wanhope seemed especially interested, though he said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When I went home I told my wife about it as well as I could,
+but, though she entered into the spirit of it, she was rather
+preoccupied. The children had all wakened, as they did sometimes, in a
+body, and were storming joyfully around the rooms, as if it were
+Christmas; and she was trying to get them dressed. &#8216;Do tell them
+what Easter is like; they&#8217;ve never seen it kept before,&#8217; she
+said; and I tried to do so, while I took a hand, as a young father will,
+and tried to get them into their clothes. I don&#8217;t think I dwelt
+much on the religious observance of the day, but I dug up some of my
+profane associations with it in early life, and told them about coloring
+eggs, and fighting them, and all that; there in New England, in those
+days, they had never seen or heard of such a thing as an Easter egg.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think my reminiscences quieted them much. They
+were all on fire&#8212;the oldest hoy and girl, and the twins, and even
+the two-year-old that we called the baby&#8212;to go out and buy some
+eggs and get the landlord to let them color them in the hotel kitchen. I
+had a deal of ado to make them wait till after breakfast, but I managed,
+somehow; and when we had finished&#8212;it was a mighty good
+Pennsylvania breakfast, such as we could eat with impunity in those
+halcyon days: rich coffee, steak, sausage, eggs, applebutter, buckwheat
+cakes and maple syrup&#8212;we got their out-door togs on them, while
+they were all stamping and shouting round and had to be caught and
+overcoated, and fur-capped and hooded simultaneously, and managed to get
+them into the street together. Ever been in Bethlehem?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We all had to own our neglect of this piece of travel; and Newton,
+after a moment of silent forgiveness, said:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t know how it is now, but twenty-five or
+thirty years ago it was the most interesting town in America. It
+wasn&#8217;t the old Moravian community that it had been twenty-five
+years before that, when none but Moravians could buy property there; but
+it was like the Sun Hotel, and just as that had grown round and over the
+old Sun Inn, the prosperous manufacturing town, with its iron-foundries
+and zinc-foundries, and all the rest of it, had grown round and over the
+original Moravian village. If you wanted a breath of perfect
+strangeness, with an American quality in it at the same time, you
+couldn&#8217;t have gone to any place where you could have had it on
+such terms as you could in Bethlehem. I can&#8217;t begin to go into
+details, but one thing was hearing German spoken everywhere in the
+street: not the German of Germany, but the Pennsylvania German, with its
+broad vowels and broken-down grammatical forms, and its English vocables
+and interjections, which you caught in the sentences which came to you,
+like <i>av coorse</i>, and <i>yes</i> and <i>no</i> for <i>ja</i> and <i>nein</i>. There were
+stores where they spoke no English, and others where they made a
+specialty of it; and I suppose when we sallied out that bright Sunday
+morning, with the baby holding onto a hand of each of us between us, and
+the twins going in front with their brother and sister, we were almost
+as foreign as we should have been in a village on the Rhine or the
+Elbe.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We got a little acquainted with the people, after awhile, and
+I heard some stories of the country folks that I thought were pretty
+good. One was about an old German farmer on whose land a prospecting
+metallurgist found zinc ore; the scientific man brought him the bright
+yellow button by which the zinc proved its existence in its union with
+copper, and the old fellow asked in an awestricken whisper: &#8216;Is it
+a gold-mine?&#8217; &#8216;No, no. Guess again.&#8217; &#8216;Then
+it&#8217;s a <em>brass-mine</em>!&#8217; But before they began to find
+zinc there in the lovely Lehigh Valley&#8212;you can stand by an open
+zinc-mine and look down into it where the rock and earth are left
+standing, and you seem to be looking down into a range of sharp mountain
+peaks and pinnacles&#8212;it was the richest farming region in the whole
+fat State of Pennsylvania; and there was a young farmer who owned a vast
+tract of it, and who went to fetch home a young wife from Philadelphia
+way, somewhere. He drove there and back in his own buggy, and when he
+reached the top overlooking the valley, with his bride, he stopped his
+horse, and pointed with his whip. &#8216;There,&#8217; he said,
+&#8216;as far as the sky is blue, it&#8217;s all ours!&#8217; I thought
+that was fine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fine?&#8221; I couldn&#8217;t help bursting out;
+&#8220;it&#8217;s a stroke of poetry.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Minver cut in: &#8220;The thrifty Acton making a note of it for
+future use in literature.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Eh!&#8221; Newton queried. &#8220;Oh! I don&#8217;t mind.
+You&#8217;re welcome to it, Mr. Acton. It&#8217;s a pity somebody
+shouldn&#8217;t use it, and of course <em>I</em> can&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Acton will send you a copy with the usual forty-per-cent.
+discount and ten off for cash,&#8221; the painter said.</p>
+
+<p>They had their little laugh at my expense, and then Newton took up
+his tale again. &#8220;Well, as I was saying&#8212;By the way, what
+<em>was</em> I saying?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The story-loving Rulledge remembered. &#8220;You went out with your
+wife and children for Easter eggs.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes. Thank you. Well, of course, in a town geographically
+American, the shops were all shut on Sunday, and we couldn&#8217;t buy
+even an Easter egg on Easter Sunday. But one of the stores had the shade
+of its show-window up, and the children simply glued themselves to it in
+such a fascination that we could hardly unstick them. That window was
+full of all kinds of Easter things&#8212;I don&#8217;t remember what
+all; but there were Easter eggs in every imaginable color and pattern,
+and besides these there were whole troops of toy rabbits. I had
+forgotten that the natural offspring of Easter eggs is rabbits; but I
+took a brace, and remembered the fact and announced it to the children.
+They immediately demanded an explanation, with all sorts of scientific
+particulars, which I gave them, as reckless of the truth as I thought my
+wife would suffer without contradicting me. I had to say that while
+Easter eggs mostly hatched rabbits, there were instances in which they
+hatched other things, as, for instance, handfuls of eagles and
+half-eagles and double-eagles, especially in the case of the golden eggs
+that the goose laid. They knew all about that goose; but I had to tell
+them what those unfamiliar pieces of American coinage were, and promise
+to give them one each when they grew up, if they were good. That only
+partially satisfied them, and they wanted to know specifically what
+other kinds of things Easter eggs would hatch if properly treated. Each
+one had a preference; the baby always preferred what the last one said;
+and <em>she</em> wanted an ostrich, the same as her big brother; he was
+seven then.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t really know how we lived through the day; I mean
+the children, for my wife and I went to the Moravian church, and had a
+good long Sunday nap in the afternoon, while the children were pining
+for Monday morning, when they could buy eggs and begin to color them, so
+that they could hatch just the right kind of Easter things. When I woke
+up I had to fall in with a theory they had agreed to between them that
+any kind of two-legged or four-legged chick that hatched from an Easter
+egg would wear the same color, or the same kind of spots or stripes,
+that the egg had.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I found that they had arranged to have calico eggs, and they
+were going to have their mother cover them with the same sort of cotton
+prints that I had said my grandmother and aunts used, and they meant to
+buy the calico in the morning at the same time that they bought the
+eggs. We had some tin vessels of water on our stoves to take the dryness
+out of the hot air, and they had decided that they would boil their eggs
+in these, and not trouble the landlord for the use of his kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There was nothing in this scheme wanting but their
+mother&#8217;s consent&#8212;I agreed to it on the spot&#8212;but when
+she understood that they each expected to have two eggs apiece, with one
+apiece for us, she said she never could cover a dozen eggs in the world,
+and that the only way would be for them to go in the morning with us,
+and choose each the handsomest egg they could out of the eggs in that
+shop-window. They met this proposition rather blankly at first; but on
+reflection the big brother said it would be a shame to spoil
+mamma&#8217;s Easter by making her work all day, and besides it would
+keep till that night, anyway, before they could begin to have any fun
+with their eggs; and then the rest all said the same thing, ending with
+the baby: and accepted the inevitable with joy, and set about living
+through the day as well as they could.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They had us up pretty early the next morning&#8212;that is,
+they had me up; their mother said that I had brought it on myself, and
+richly deserved it for exciting their imaginations, and I had to go out
+with the two oldest and the twins to choose the eggs; we got off from
+the baby by promising to let her have two, and she didn&#8217;t
+understand very well, anyway, and was awfully sleepy. We were a pretty
+long time choosing the six eggs, and I don&#8217;t remember now just
+what they were; but they were certainly joyous eggs; and&#8212;By the
+way, I don&#8217;t know why I&#8217;m boring a brand of hardened
+bachelors like you with all these domestic details?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t mind <em>us</em>,&#8221; Minver responded to
+his general appeal. &#8220;We may not understand the feelings of a
+father, but we are all mothers at heart, especially Rulledge. Go on.
+It&#8217;s very exciting,&#8221; he urged, not very ironically, and
+Newton went on.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t believe I could say just how the havoc
+began. They put away their eggs very carefully after they had made their
+mother admire them, and shown the baby how hers were the prettiest, and
+they each said in succession that they must be very precious of them,
+for if you shook an egg, or anything, it wouldn&#8217;t hatch; and it
+was their plan to take these home and set an unemployed pullet,
+belonging to the big brother, to hatching them in the coop that he had
+built of laths for her in the back yard with his own hands. But long
+before the afternoon was over, the evil one had entered Eden, and
+tempted the boy to try fighting eggs with these treasured specimens, as
+I had told we boys used to fight eggs in my town in the southwest. He
+held a conquering course through the encounter with three eggs, but met
+his Waterloo with a regular Bl&#252;cher belonging to the baby. Then he
+instantly changed sides; and smashed his Bl&#252;cher against the last egg
+left. By that time all the other children were in tears, the baby
+roaring powerfully in ignorant sympathy, and the victor steeped in
+silent gloom. His mother made him gather up the ruins from the floor,
+and put them in the stove, and she took possession of the victorious
+egg, and said she would keep it till we got back to Cambridge herself,
+and not let one of them touch it. I can tell you it was a tragical time.
+I wanted to go out and buy them another set of eggs, and spring them for
+a surprise on them in the morning, after they had suffered enough that
+night. But she said that if I dared to dream of such a thing&#8212;which
+would be the ruin of the children&#8217;s character, by taking away the
+consequences of their folly&#8212;she should do, she did not know what,
+to me. Of course she was right, and I gave in, and helped the children
+forget all about it, so that by the time we got back to Cambridge I had
+forgotten about it myself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what it was reminded the boy of that
+remaining Easter egg unless it was the sight of the unemployed pullet in
+her coop, which he visited the first thing; and I don&#8217;t know how
+he managed to wheedle his mother out of it; but the first night after I
+came home from business&#8212;it was rather late and the children had
+gone to bed&#8212;she told me that ridiculous boy, as she called him in
+self-exculpation, had actually put the egg under his pullet, and all the
+children were wild to see what it would hatch. &#8216;And now,&#8217;
+she said, severely, &#8216;what are you going to do? You have filled
+their heads with those ideas, and I suppose you will have to invent some
+nonsense or other to fool them, and make them believe that it has
+hatched a giraffe, or an elephant, or something; they won&#8217;t be
+satisfied with anything less.&#8217; I said we should have to try
+something smaller, for I didn&#8217;t think we could manage a chick of
+that size on our lot; and that I should trust in Providence. Then she
+said it was all very well to laugh; and that I couldn&#8217;t get out of
+it that way, and I needn&#8217;t think it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t, much. But the children understood that it took
+three weeks for an egg to hatch, and anyway the pullet was so
+intermittent in her attentions to the Easter egg, only sitting on it at
+night, or when held down by hand in the day, that there was plenty of
+time. One evening when I came out from Boston, I was met by a doleful
+deputation at the front gate, with the news that when the coop was
+visited that morning after breakfast&#8212;they visited the coop every
+morning before they went to school&#8212;the pullet was found perched on
+a cross-bar in a high state of nerves, and the shell of the Easter egg
+broken and entirely eaten out. Probably a rat had got in and done it,
+or, more hopefully, a mink, such as used to attack eggs in the town
+where I was a boy. We went out and viewed the wreck, as a first step
+towards a better situation; and suddenly a thought struck me.
+&#8216;Children,&#8217; I said, &#8216;what did you really expect that
+egg to hatch, anyway?&#8217; They looked askance at one another, and at
+last the boy said: &#8216;Well, you know, papa, an egg that&#8217;s been
+cooked&#8212;&#8217; And then we all laughed together, and I knew they
+had been making believe as much as I had, and no more expected the
+impossible of a boiled egg than I did.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was charming!&#8221; Wanhope broke out. &#8220;There is
+nothing more interesting than the way children join in hypnotizing
+themselves with the illusions which their parents think <em>they</em>
+have created without their help. In fact, it is very doubtful whether at
+any age we have any illusions except those of our own creation;
+we&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let him go on, Wanhope,&#8221; Minver dictated; and Newton
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was rather nice. I asked them if their mother knew about
+the egg; and they said that of course they couldn&#8217;t help telling
+her; and I said: &#8216;Well, then, I&#8217;ll tell you what: we must
+make her believe that the chick hatched out and got away&#8212;&#8217;
+The boy stopped me: &#8216;Do you think that would be exactly true,
+papa?&#8217; &#8216;Well, not <em>exactly</em> true; but it&#8217;s only
+for the time being. We can tell her the exact truth afterwards,&#8217;
+and then I laid my plan before them. They said it was perfectly
+splendid, and would be the greatest kind of joke on mamma, and one that
+she would like as much as anybody. The thing was to keep it from her
+till it was done, and they all promised that they wouldn&#8217;t tell;
+but I could see that they were bursting with the secret the whole
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The next day was Saturday, when I always went home early, and
+I had the two oldest children come in with the second-girl, who left
+them to take lunch with me. They had chocolate and ice-cream, and after
+lunch we went around to a milliner&#8217;s shop in West Street, where my
+wife and I had stopped a long five minutes the week before we went to
+Bethlehem, adoring an Easter bonnet that we saw in the window. I wanted
+her to buy it; but she said, No, if we were going that expensive
+journey, we couldn&#8217;t afford it, and she must do without, that
+spring. I showed it to them, and &#8216;Now, children,&#8217; I said,
+&#8216;what do you think of that for the chick that your Easter egg
+hatched?&#8217; And they said it was the most beautiful bonnet they had
+ever seen, and it would just exactly suit mamma. But I saw they were
+holding something back, and I said, sharply, &#8216;Well?&#8217; and
+they both guiltily faltered out: &#8216;The <em>bird</em>, you know,
+papa,&#8217; and I remembered that they belonged to the society of Bird
+Defenders, who in that day were pledged against the decorative use of
+dead birds or killing them for anything but food. &#8216;Why, confound
+it,&#8217; I said, &#8216;the bird is the very thing that makes it an
+Easter-egg chick!&#8217; but I saw that their honest little hearts were
+troubled, and I said again: &#8216;Confound it! Let&#8217;s go in and
+hear what the milliner has to say.&#8217; Well, the long and short of it
+was that the milliner tried a bunch of forget-me-nots over the bluebird
+that we all agreed was a thousand times better, and that if it were
+substituted would only cost three dollars more, and we took our
+Easter-egg chick home in a blaze of glory, the children carrying the
+bandbox by the string between them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course we had a great time opening it, and their mother
+acted her part so well that I knew she was acting, and after the little
+ones were in bed I taxed her with it. &#8216;Know? Of course I
+knew!&#8217; she said. &#8216;Did you think they would let you
+<em>deceive</em> me? They&#8217;re true New-Englanders, and they told me
+all about it last night, when I was saying their prayers with
+them.&#8217; &#8216;Well,&#8217; I said, &#8216;they let you deceive
+<em>me;</em> they must be true Westerners, too, for they didn&#8217;t
+tell me a word of your knowing.&#8217; I rather had her there, but she
+said: &#8216;Oh, you goose&#8212;&#8217; We were young people in those
+days, and goose meant everything. But, really, I&#8217;m ashamed of
+getting off all this to you hardened bachelors, as I said
+before&#8212;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you tell many more such stories in this club,&#8221; Minver
+said, severely, &#8220;you won&#8217;t leave a bachelor in it. And
+Rulledge will be the first to get married.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>The End</h2>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Between The Dark And The Daylight
+by William Dean Howells
+
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@@ -0,0 +1,5864 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Between The Dark And The Daylight
+by William Dean Howells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Between The Dark And The Daylight
+
+Author: William Dean Howells
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2004 [EBook #12100]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BETWEEN THE DARK AND THE DAYLIGHT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Beginners Projects, Ben Beasley and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER
+DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT]
+
+BETWEEN THE DARK
+AND THE DAYLIGHT
+
+Romances
+
+BY
+W.D. HOWELLS
+1907
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAP.
+I. A SLEEP AND A FORGETTING
+II. THE EIDOLONS OF BROOKS ALFORD
+III. A MEMORY THAT WORKED OVERTIME
+IV. A CASE OF METAPHANTASMIA
+V. EDITHA
+VI. BRAYBRIDGE'S OFFER
+VII. THE CHICK OF THE EASTER EGG
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+THEIR JOINT STUDY OF HER DANCING-CARD DID NOT HELP THEM OUT
+
+A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE LIVELY GIRLS SHE
+BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM
+
+"SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... 'NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE, EXCEPT--'"
+
+"NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY MARK"
+
+"'YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!'"
+
+"SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. 'WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON FOR?'"
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+A SLEEP AND A FORGETTING
+
+
+I
+
+Matthew Lanfear had stopped off, between Genoa and Nice, at San Remo in
+the interest of a friend who had come over on the steamer with him, and
+who wished him to test the air before settling there for the winter with
+an invalid wife. She was one of those neurasthenics who really carry
+their climate--always a bad one--with them, but she had set her mind on
+San Remo; and Lanfear was willing to pass a few days in the place making
+the observations which he felt pretty sure would be adverse.
+
+His train was rather late, and the sunset was fading from the French sky
+beyond the Italian shore when he got out of his car and looked round for
+a porter to take his valise. His roving eye lighted on the anxious
+figure, which as fully as the anxious face, of a short, stout, elderly
+man expressed a sort of distraction, as he stood loaded down with
+umbrellas, bags, bundles, and wraps, and seemed unable to arrest the
+movements of a tall young girl, with a travelling-shawl trailing from
+her arm, who had the effect of escaping from him towards a bench beside
+the door of the waiting-room. When she reached it, in spite of his
+appeals, she sat down with an absent air, and looked as far withdrawn
+from the bustle of the platform and from the snuffling train as if on
+some quiet garden seat along with her own thoughts.
+
+In his fat frenzy, which Lanfear felt to be pathetic, the old gentleman
+glanced at him, and then abruptly demanded: "Are you an American?"
+
+We knew each other abroad in some mystical way, and Lanfear did not try
+to deny the fact.
+
+"Oh, well, then," the stranger said, as if the fact made everything
+right, "will you kindly tell my daughter, on that bench by the door
+yonder"--he pointed with a bag, and dropped a roll of rugs from under
+his arm--"that I'll be with her as soon as I've looked after the trunks?
+Tell her not to move till I come. Heigh! Here! Take hold of these, will
+you?" He caught the sleeve of a _facchino_ who came wandering by, and
+heaped him with his burdens, and then pushed ahead of the man in the
+direction of the baggage-room with a sort of mastery of the situation
+which struck Lanfear as springing from desperation rather than
+experience.
+
+Lanfear stood a moment hesitating. Then a glance at the girl on the
+bench, drooping a little forward in freeing her face from the veil that
+hung from her pretty hat, together with a sense of something quaintly
+charming in the confidence shown him on such purely compatriotic
+grounds, decided him to do just what he had been asked. The girl had got
+her veil up by this time, and as he came near, she turned from looking
+at the sunset over the stretch of wall beyond the halting train, and met
+his dubious face with a smile.
+
+"It _is_ beautiful, isn't it?" she said. "I know I shall get well, here,
+if they have such sunsets every day."
+
+There was something so convincingly normal in her expression that
+Lanfear dismissed a painful conjecture. "I beg your pardon," he said.
+"I am afraid there's some mistake. I haven't the pleasure--You must
+excuse me, but your father wished me to ask you to wait here for him
+till he had got his baggage--"
+
+"My father?" the girl stopped him with a sort of a frowning perplexity
+in the stare she gave him. "My father isn't here!"
+
+"I beg your pardon," Lanfear said. "I must have misunderstood. A
+gentleman who got out of the train with you--a short, stout gentleman
+with gray hair--I understood him to say you were his daughter--requested
+me to bring this message--"
+
+The girl shook her head. "I don't know him. It must be a mistake."
+
+"The mistake is mine, no doubt. It may have been some one else whom he
+pointed out, and I have blundered. I'm very sorry if I seem to have
+intruded--"
+
+"What place is this?" the girl asked, without noticing his excuses.
+
+"San Remo," Lanfear answered. "If you didn't intend to stop here, your
+train will be leaving in a moment."
+
+"I meant to get off, I suppose," she said. "I don't believe I'm going
+any farther." She leaned back against the bars of the bench, and put up
+one of her slim arms along the top.
+
+There was something wrong. Lanfear now felt that, in spite of her
+perfect tranquillity and self-possession; perhaps because of it. He had
+no business to stay there talking with her, but he had not quite the
+right to leave her, though practically he had got his dismissal, and
+apparently she was quite capable of taking care of herself, or could
+have been so in a country where any woman's defencelessness was not any
+man's advantage. He could not go away without some effort to be of use.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said. "Can I help you in calling a carriage; or
+looking after your hand-baggage--it will be getting dark--perhaps your
+maid--"
+
+"My _maid_!" The girl frowned again, with a measure of the amazement
+which she showed when he mentioned her father. "_I_ have no maid!"
+
+Lanfear blurted desperately out: "You are alone? You came--you are going
+to stay here--alone?"
+
+"Quite alone," she said, with a passivity in which there was no
+resentment, and no feeling unless it were a certain color of dignity.
+Almost at the same time, with a glance beside and beyond him, she called
+out joyfully: "Ah, there you are!" and Lanfear turned, and saw scuffling
+and heard puffing towards them the short, stout elderly gentleman who
+had sent him to her. "I knew you would come before long!"
+
+"Well, I thought it was pretty long, myself," the gentleman said, and
+then he courteously referred himself to Lanfear. "I'm afraid this
+gentleman has found it rather long, too; but I couldn't manage it a
+moment sooner."
+
+Lanfear said: "Not at all. I wish I could have been of any use to--"
+
+"My daughter--Miss Gerald, Mr.--"
+
+"Lanfear--Dr. Lanfear," he said, accepting the introduction; and the
+girl bowed.
+
+"Oh, doctor, eh?" the father said, with a certain impression. "Going to
+stop here?"
+
+"A few days," Lanfear answered, making way for the forward movement
+which the others began.
+
+"Well, well! I'm very much obliged to you, very much, indeed; and I'm
+sure my daughter is."
+
+The girl said, "Oh yes, indeed," rather indifferently, and then as they
+passed him, while he stood lifting his hat, she turned radiantly on him.
+"Thank you, ever so much!" she said, with the gentle voice which he had
+already thought charming.
+
+The father called back: "I hope we shall meet again. We are going to the
+Sardegna."
+
+Lanfear had been going to the Sardegna himself, but while he bowed he
+now decided upon another hotel.
+
+The mystery, whatever it was, that the brave, little, fat father was
+carrying off so bluffly, had clearly the morbid quality of unhealth in
+it, and Lanfear could not give himself freely to a young pleasure in the
+girl's dark beauty of eyes and hair, her pale, irregular, piquant face,
+her slender figure and flowing walk. He was in the presence of something
+else, something that appealed to his scientific side, to that which was
+humane more than that which was human in him, and abashed him in the
+other feeling. Unless she was out of her mind there was no way of
+accounting for her behavior, except by some caprice which was itself
+scarcely short of insanity. She must have thought she knew him when he
+approached, and when she addressed him those first words; but when he
+had tried to set her right she had not changed; and why had she denied
+her father, and then hailed him with joy when he came back to her? She
+had known that she intended to stop at San Remo, but she had not known
+where she had stopped when she asked what place it was. She was
+consciously an invalid of some sort, for she spoke of getting well under
+sunsets like that which had now waned, but what sort of invalid was she?
+
+
+II
+
+Lanfear's question persisted through the night, and it helped, with the
+coughing in the next room, to make a bad night for him. None of the
+hotels in San Remo receive consumptive patients, but none are without
+somewhere a bronchial cough. If it is in the room next yours it keeps
+you awake, but it is not pulmonary; you may comfort yourself in your
+vigils with that fact. Lanfear, however, fancied he had got a poor
+dinner, and in the morning he did not like his coffee. He thought he had
+let a foolish scruple keep him from the Grand Hotel Sardegna, and he
+walked down towards it along the palm-flanked promenade, in the gay
+morning light, with the tideless sea on the other hand lapping the rough
+beach beyond the lines of the railroad which borders it. On his way he
+met files of the beautiful Ligurian women, moving straight under the
+burdens balanced on their heads, or bestriding the donkeys laden with
+wine-casks in the roadway, or following beside the carts which the
+donkeys drew. Ladies of all nations, in the summer fashions of London,
+Berlin, St. Petersburg, Paris, and New York thronged the path. The sky
+was of a blue so deep, so liquid that it seemed to him he could scoop it
+in his hand and pour it out again like water. Seaward, he glanced at the
+fishing-boats lying motionless in the offing, and the coastwise steamer
+that runs between Nice and Genoa trailing a thin plume of smoke between
+him and their white sails. With the more definite purpose of making sure
+of the Grand Hotel Sardegna, he scanned the different villa slopes that
+showed their level lines of white and yellow and dull pink through the
+gray tropical greenery on the different levels of the hills. He was duly
+rewarded by the sight of the bold legend topping its cornice, and when
+he let his eye descend the garden to a little pavilion on the wall
+overlooking the road, he saw his acquaintances of the evening before
+making a belated breakfast. The father recognized Lanfear first and
+spoke to his daughter, who looked up from her coffee and down towards
+him where he wavered, lifting his hat, and bowed smiling to him. He had
+no reason to cross the roadway towards the white stairway which climbed
+from it to the hotel grounds, but he did so. The father leaned out over
+the wall, and called down to him: "Won't you come up and join us,
+doctor?"
+
+"Why, yes!" Lanfear consented, and in another moment he was shaking
+hands with the girl, to whom, he noticed, her father named him again. He
+had in his glad sense of her white morning dress and her hat of
+green-leafed lace, a feeling that she was somehow meeting him as a
+friend of indefinite date in an intimacy unconditioned by any past or
+future time. Her pleasure in his being there was as frank as her
+father's, and there was a pretty trust of him in every word and tone
+which forbade misinterpretation.
+
+"I was just talking about you, doctor," the father began, "and saying
+what a pity you hadn't come to our hotel. It's a capital place."
+
+"_I've_ been thinking it was a pity I went to mine," Lanfear returned,
+"though I'm in San Remo for such a short time it's scarcely worth while
+to change."
+
+"Well, perhaps if you came here, you might stay longer. I guess we're
+booked for the winter, Nannie?" He referred the question to his
+daughter, who asked Lanfear if he would not have some coffee.
+
+"I was going to say I had had my coffee, but I'm not sure it _was_
+coffee," Lanfear began, and he consented, with some demur, banal enough,
+about the trouble.
+
+"Well, that's right, then, and no trouble at all," Mr. Gerald broke in
+upon him. "Here comes a fellow looking for a chance to bring you some,"
+and he called to a waiter wandering distractedly about with a "Heigh!"
+that might have been offensive from a less obviously inoffensive man.
+"Can you get our friend here a cup and saucer, and some of this good
+coffee?" he asked, as the waiter approached.
+
+"Yes, certainly, sir," the man answered in careful English. "Is it not,
+perhaps, Mr. and Misses Gerald?" he smilingly insinuated, offering some
+cards.
+
+"Miss Gerald," the father corrected him as he took the cards. "Why,
+hello, Nannie! Here are the Bells! Where are they?" he demanded of the
+waiter. "Bring them here, and a lot more cups and saucers. Or, hold on!
+I'd better go myself, Nannie, hadn't I? Of course! You get the crockery,
+waiter. Where did you say they were?" He bustled up from his chair,
+without waiting for a distinct reply, and apologized to Lanfear in
+hurrying away. "You'll excuse me, doctor! I'll be back in half a minute.
+Friends of ours that came over on the same boat. I must see them, of
+course, but I don't believe they'll stay. Nannie, don't let Dr. Lanfear
+get away. I want to have some talk with him. You tell him he'd better
+come to the Sardegna, here."
+
+Lanfear and Miss Gerald sat a moment in the silence which is apt to
+follow with young people when they are unexpectedly left to themselves.
+She kept absently pushing the cards her father had given her up and down
+on the table between her thumb and forefinger, and Lanfear noted the
+translucence of her long, thin hand in the sunshine striking across the
+painted iron surface of the garden movable. The translucence had a
+pathos for his intelligence which the pensive tilt of her head enhanced.
+She stopped toying with the cards, and looked at the addresses on them.
+
+"What strange things names are!" she said, as if musing on the fact,
+with a sigh which he thought disproportioned to the depth of her
+remark.
+
+"They seem rather irrelevant at times," he admitted, with a smile.
+"They're mere tags, labels, which can be attached to one as well as
+another; they seem to belong equally to anybody."
+
+"That is what I always say to myself," she agreed, with more interest
+than he found explicable.
+
+"But finally," he returned, "they're all that's left us, if they're left
+themselves. They are the only signs to the few who knew us that we ever
+existed. They stand for our characters, our personality, our mind, our
+soul."
+
+She said, "That is very true," and then she suddenly gave him the cards.
+"Do you know these people?"
+
+"I? I thought they were friends of yours," he replied, astonished.
+
+[Illustration: A LIVELY MATRON, OF AS YOUTHFUL A TEMPERAMENT AS THE
+LIVELY GIRLS SHE BROUGHT IN HER TRAIN, BURST UPON THEM]
+
+"That is what papa thinks," Miss Gerald said, and while she sat dreamily
+absent, a rustle of skirts and a flutter of voices pierced from the
+surrounding shrubbery, and then a lively matron, of as youthful a
+temperament as the lively girls she brought in her train, burst upon
+them, and Miss Gerald was passed from one embrace to another until all
+four had kissed her. She returned their greeting, and shared, in her
+quieter way, their raptures at their encounter.
+
+"Such a hunt as we've had for you!" the matron shouted. "We've been
+up-stairs and down-stairs and in my lady's chamber, all over the hotel.
+Where's your father? Ah, they did get our cards to you!" and by that
+token Lanfear knew that these ladies were the Bells. He had stood up in
+a sort of expectancy, but Miss Gerald did not introduce him, and a
+shadow of embarrassment passed over the party which she seemed to feel
+least, though he fancied a sort of entreaty in the glance that she let
+pass over him.
+
+"I suppose he's gone to look for _us_!" Mrs. Bell saved the situation
+with a protecting laugh. Miss Gerald colored intelligently, and Lanfear
+could not let Mrs. Bell's implication pass.
+
+"If it is Mrs. Bell," he said, "I can answer that he has. I met you at
+Magnolia some years ago, Mrs. Bell. Dr. Lanfear."
+
+"Oh, I beg your pardon, Dr. Lanfear," Miss Gerald said. "I couldn't
+think--"
+
+"Of my tag, my label?" he laughed back. "It isn't very distinctly
+lettered."
+
+Mrs. Bell was not much minding them jointly. She was singling Lanfear
+out for the expression of her pleasure in seeing him again, and
+recalling the incidents of her summer at Magnolia before, it seemed, any
+of her girls were out. She presented them collectively, and the eldest
+of them charmingly reminded Lanfear that he had once had the magnanimity
+to dance with her when she sat, in a little girl's forlorn despair of
+being danced with, at one of those desolate hops of the good old Osprey
+House.
+
+"Yes; and now," her mother followed, "we can't wait a moment longer, if
+we're to get our train for Monte Carlo, girls. We're not going to play,
+doctor," she made time to explain, "but we are going to look on. Will
+you tell your father, dear," she said, taking the girl's hands
+caressingly in hers, and drawing her to her motherly bosom, "that we
+found you, and did our best to find him? We can't wait now--our carriage
+is champing the bit at the foot of the stairs--but we're coming back in
+a week, and then we'll do our best to look you up again." She included
+Lanfear in her good-bye, and all her girls said good-bye in the same
+way, and with a whisking of skirts and twitter of voices they vanished
+through the shrubbery, and faded into the general silence and general
+sound like a bevy of birds which had swept near and passed by.
+
+Miss Gerald sank quietly into her place, and sat as if nothing had
+happened, except that she looked a little paler to Lanfear, who remained
+on foot trying to piece together their interrupted tete-a-tete, but not
+succeeding, when her father reappeared, red and breathless, and wiping
+his forehead. "Have they been here, Nannie?" he asked. "I've been
+following them all over the place, and the _portier_ told me just now
+that he had seen a party of ladies coming down this way."
+
+He got it all out, not so clearly as those women had got everything in,
+Lanfear reflected, but unmistakably enough as to the fact, and he looked
+at his daughter as he repeated: "Haven't the Bells been here?"
+
+[Illustration: "SHE SHOOK HER HEAD, AND SAID,... 'NOBODY HAS BEEN HERE,
+EXCEPT--'"]
+
+She shook her head, and said, with her delicate quiet: "Nobody has been
+here, except--" She glanced at Lanfear, who smiled, but saw no opening
+for himself in the strange situation. Then she said: "I think I will go
+and lie down a while, now, papa. I'm rather tired. Good-bye," she said,
+giving Lanfear her hand; it felt limp and cold; and then she turned to
+her father again. "Don't you come, papa! I can get back perfectly well
+by myself. Stay with--"
+
+"I will go with you," her father said, "and if Dr. Lanfear doesn't mind
+coming--"
+
+"Certainly I will come," Lanfear said, and he passed to the girl's
+right; she had taken her father's arm; but he wished to offer more
+support if it were needed. When they had climbed to the open flowery
+space before the hotel, she seemed aware of the groups of people about.
+She took her hand from her father's arm, as if unwilling to attract
+their notice by seeming to need its help, and swept up the gravelled
+path between him and Lanfear, with her flowing walk.
+
+Her father fell back, as they entered the hotel door, and murmured to
+Lanfear: "Will you wait till I come down?" ... "I wanted to tell you
+about my daughter," he explained, when he came back after the quarter of
+an hour which Lanfear had found rather intense. "It's useless to pretend
+you wouldn't have noticed--Had nobody been with you after I left you,
+down there?" He twisted his head in the direction of the pavilion, where
+they had been breakfasting.
+
+"Yes; Mrs. Bell and her daughters," Lanfear answered, simply.
+
+"Of course! Why do you suppose my daughter denied it?" Mr. Gerald asked.
+
+"I suppose she--had her reasons," Lanfear answered, lamely enough.
+
+"No _reason_, I'm afraid," Mr. Gerald said, and he broke out hopelessly:
+"She has her mind sound enough, but not--not her memory. She had
+forgotten that they were there! Are you going to stay in San Remo?" he
+asked, with an effect of interrupting himself, as if in the wish to put
+off something, or to make the ground sure before he went on.
+
+"Why," Lanfear said, "I hadn't thought of it. I stopped--I was going to
+Nice--to test the air for a friend who wishes to bring his invalid wife
+here, if I approve--but I have just been asking myself why I should go
+to Nice when I could stay at San Remo. The place takes my fancy. I'm
+something of an invalid myself--at least I'm on my vacation--and I find
+a charm in it, if nothing better. Perhaps a charm is enough. It used to
+be, in primitive medicine."
+
+He was talking to what he felt was not an undivided attention in Mr.
+Gerald, who said, "I'm glad of it," and then added: "I should like to
+consult you professionally. I know your reputation in New York--though
+I'm not a New-Yorker myself--and I don't know any of the doctors here. I
+suppose I've done rather a wild thing in coming off the way I have,
+with my daughter; but I felt that I must do something, and I hoped--I
+felt as if it were getting away from our trouble. It's most fortunate my
+meeting you, if you can look into the case, and help me out with a
+nurse, if she's needed, and all that!" To a certain hesitation in
+Lanfear's face, he added: "Of course, I'm asking your professional help.
+My name is Abner Gerald--Abner L. Gerald--perhaps you know my standing,
+and that I'm able to--"
+
+"Oh, it isn't a question of that! I shall be glad to do anything I can,"
+Lanfear said, with a little pang which he tried to keep silent in
+orienting himself anew towards the girl, whose loveliness he had felt
+before he had felt her piteousness.
+
+"But before you go further I ought to say that you must have been
+thinking of my uncle, the first Matthew Lanfear, when you spoke of my
+reputation; I haven't got any yet; I've only got my uncle's name."
+
+"Oh!" Mr. Gerald said, disappointedly, but after a blank moment he
+apparently took courage. "You're in the same line, though?"
+
+"If you mean the psychopathic line, without being exactly an alienist,
+well, yes," Lanfear admitted.
+
+"That's exactly what I mean," the elder said, with renewed hopefulness.
+"I'm quite willing to risk myself with a man of the same name as Dr.
+Lanfear. I should like," he said, hurrying on, as if to override any
+further reluctance of Lanfear's, "to tell you her story, and then--"
+
+"By all means," Lanfear consented, and he put on an air of professional
+deference, while the older man began with a face set for the task.
+
+"It's a long story, or it's a short story, as you choose to make it.
+We'll make it long, if necessary, later, but now I'll make it short.
+Five months ago my wife was killed before my daughter's eyes--"
+
+He stopped; Lanfear breathed a gentle "Oh!" and Gerald blurted out:
+
+"Accident--grade crossing--Don't!" he winced at the kindness in
+Lanfear's eyes, and panted on. "That's over! What happened to _her_--to
+my daughter--was that she fainted from the shock. When she woke--it was
+more like a sleep than a swoon--she didn't remember what had happened."
+Lanfear nodded, with a gravely interested face. "She didn't remember
+anything that had ever happened before. She knew me, because I was there
+with her; but she didn't know that she ever had a mother, because she
+was not there with her. You see?"
+
+"I can imagine," Lanfear assented.
+
+"The whole of her life before the--accident was wiped out as to the
+facts, as completely as if it had never been; and now every day, every
+hour, every minute, as it passes, goes with that past. But her
+faculties--"
+
+"Yes?" Lanfear prompted in the pause which Mr. Gerald made.
+
+"Her intellect--the working powers of her mind, apart from anything like
+remembering, are as perfect as if she were in full possession of her
+memory. I believe," the father said, with a pride that had its pathos,
+"no one can talk with her and not feel that she has a beautiful mind,
+that she can think better than most girls of her age. She reads, or she
+lets me read to her, and until it has time to fade, she appreciates it
+all more fully than I do. At Genoa, where I took her to the palaces for
+the pictures, I saw that she had kept her feeling for art. When she
+plays--you will hear her play--it is like composing the music for
+herself; she does not seem to remember the pieces, she seems to
+improvise them. You understand?"
+
+Lanfear said that he understood, for he could not disappoint the
+expectation of the father's boastful love: all that was left him of the
+ambitions he must once have had for his child.
+
+The poor, little, stout, unpicturesque elderly man got up and began to
+walk to and fro in the room which he had turned into with Lanfear, and
+to say, more to himself than to Lanfear, as if balancing one thing
+against another: "The merciful thing is that she has been saved from the
+horror and the sorrow. She knows no more of either than she knows of her
+mother's love for her. They were very much alike in looks and mind, and
+they were always together more like persons of the same age--sisters, or
+girl friends; but she has lost all knowledge of that, as of other
+things. And then there is the question whether she won't some time,
+sooner or later, come into both the horror and the sorrow." He stopped
+and looked at Lanfear. "She has these sudden fits of drowsiness, when
+she _must_ sleep; and I never see her wake from them without being
+afraid that she has wakened to everything--that she has got back into
+her full self, and taken up the terrible burden that my old shoulders
+are used to. What do you think?"
+
+Lanfear felt the appeal so keenly that in the effort to answer
+faithfully he was aware of being harsher than he meant. "That is a
+chance we can't forecast. But it is a chance. The fact that the
+drowsiness recurs periodically--"
+
+"It doesn't," the father pleaded. "We don't know when it will come on."
+
+"It scarcely matters. The periodicity wouldn't affect the possible
+result which you dread. I don't say that it is probable. But it's one
+of the possibilities. It has," Lanfear added, "its logic."
+
+"Ah, its logic!"
+
+"Its logic, yes. My business, of course, would be to restore her to
+health at any risk. So far as her mind is affected--"
+
+"Her mind is not affected!" the father retorted.
+
+"I beg your pardon--her memory--it might be restored with her physical
+health. You understand that? It is a chance; it might or it might not
+happen."
+
+The father was apparently facing a risk which he had not squarely faced
+before. "I suppose so," he faltered. After a moment he added, with more
+courage: "You must do the best you can, at any risk."
+
+Lanfear rose, too. He said, with returning kindness in his tones, if not
+his words: "I should like to study the case, Mr. Gerald. It's very
+interesting, and--and--if you'll forgive me--very touching."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+"If you decide to stay in San Remo, I will--Do you suppose I could get
+a room in this hotel? I don't like mine."
+
+"Why, I haven't any doubt you can. Shall we ask?"
+
+
+III
+
+It was from the Hotel Sardegna that Lanfear satisfied his conscience by
+pushing his search for climate on behalf of his friend's neurasthenic
+wife. He decided that Ospedaletti, with a milder air and more sheltered
+seat in its valley of palms, would be better for her than San Remo. He
+wrote his friend to that effect, and then there was no preoccupation to
+hinder him in his devotion to the case of Miss Gerald. He put the case
+first in the order of interest rather purposely, and even with a sense
+of effort, though he could not deny to himself that a like case related
+to a different personality might have been less absorbing. But he tried
+to keep his scientific duty to it pure of that certain painful pleasure
+which, as a young man not much over thirty, he must feel in the strange
+affliction of a young and beautiful girl.
+
+Though there was no present question of medicine, he could be installed
+near her, as the friend that her father insisted upon making him,
+without contravention of the social formalities. His care of her hardly
+differed from that of her father, except that it involved a closer and
+more premeditated study. They did not try to keep her from the sort of
+association which, in a large hotel of the type of the Sardegna, entails
+no sort of obligation to intimacy. They sat together at the long table,
+midway of the dining-room, which maintained the tradition of the old
+table-d'hote against the small tables ranged along the walls. Gerald had
+an amiable old man's liking for talk, and Lanfear saw that he willingly
+escaped, among their changing companions, from the pressure of his
+anxieties. He left his daughter very much to Lanfear, during these
+excursions, but Lanfear was far from meaning to keep her to himself. He
+thought it better that she should follow her father in his forays among
+their neighbors, and he encouraged her to continue such talk with them
+as she might be brought into. He tried to guard her future encounters
+with them, so that she should not show more than a young girl's usual
+diffidence at a second meeting; and in the frequent substitution of one
+presence for another across the table, she was fairly safe.
+
+A natural light-heartedness, of which he had glimpses from the first,
+returned to her. One night, at the dance given by some of the guests to
+some others, she went through the gayety in joyous triumph. She danced
+mostly with Lanfear, but she had other partners, and she won a pleasing
+popularity by the American quality of her waltzing. Lanfear had already
+noted that her forgetfulness was not always so constant or so inclusive
+as her father had taught him to expect; Mr. Gerald's statement had been
+the large, general fact from which there was sometimes a shrinking in
+the particulars. While the warmth of an agreeable experience lasted, her
+mind kept record of it, slight or full; if the experience were
+unpleasant the memory was more apt to fade at once. After that dance she
+repeated to her father the little compliments paid her, and told him,
+laughing, they were to reward him for sitting up so late as her
+chaperon. Emotions persisted in her consciousness as the tremor lasts in
+a smitten cord, but events left little trace. She retained a sense of
+personalities; she was lastingly sensible of temperaments; but names
+were nothing to her. She could not tell her father who had said the nice
+things to her, and their joint study of her dancing-card did not help
+them out.
+
+Her relation to Lanfear, though it might be a subject of international
+scrutiny, was hardly a subject of censure. He was known as Dr. Lanfear,
+but he was not at first known as her physician; he was conjectured her
+cousin or something like that; he might even be her betrothed in the
+peculiar American arrangement of such affairs. Personally people saw in
+him a serious-looking young man, better dressed and better mannered than
+they thought most Americans, and unquestionably handsomer, with his
+Spanish skin and eyes, and his brown beard of the Vandyke cut which was
+then already beginning to be rather belated.
+
+Other Americans in the hotel were few and transitory; and if the English
+had any mind about Miss Gerald different from their mind about other
+girls, it would be perhaps to the effect that she was quite mad; by this
+they would mean that she was a little odd; but for the rest they had
+apparently no mind about her. With the help of one of the English ladies
+her father had replaced the homesick Irish maid whom he had sent back to
+New York from Genoa, with an Italian, and in the shelter of her gay
+affection and ignorant sympathy Miss Gerald had a security supplemented
+by the easy social environment. If she did not look very well, she did
+not differ from most other American women in that; and if she seemed to
+confide herself more severely to the safe-keeping of her physician, that
+was the way of all women patients.
+
+Whether the Bells found the spectacle of depravity at Monte Carlo more
+attractive than the smiling face of nature at San Remo or not, they did
+not return, but sent for their baggage from their hotel, and were not
+seen again by the Geralds. Lanfear's friend with the invalid wife wrote
+from Ospedaletti, with apologies which inculpated him for the
+disappointment, that she had found the air impossible in a single day,
+and they were off for Cannes. Lanfear and the Geralds, therefore,
+continued together in the hotel without fear or obligation to others,
+and in an immunity in which their right to breakfast exclusively in that
+pavilion on the garden wall was almost explicitly conceded. No one,
+after a few mornings of tacit possession, would have disputed their
+claim, and there, day after day, in the mild monotony of the December
+sunshine, they sat and drank their coffee, and talked of the sights
+which the peasants in the street, and the tourists in the promenade
+beyond it, afforded. The rows of stumpy palms which separated the road
+from the walk were not so high but that they had the whole lift of the
+sea to the horizon where it lost itself in a sky that curved blue as
+turquoise to the zenith overhead. The sun rose from its morning bath on
+the left, and sank to its evening bath on the right, and in making its
+climb of the spacious arc between, shed a heat as great as that of
+summer, but not the heat of summer, on the pretty world of villas and
+hotels, towered over by the olive-gray slopes of the pine-clad heights
+behind and above them. From these tops a fine, keen cold fell with the
+waning afternoon, which sharpened through the sunset till the dusk; but
+in the morning the change was from the chill to the glow, and they could
+sit in their pavilion, under the willowy droop of the eucalyptus-trees
+which have brought the Southern Pacific to the Riviera, with increasing
+comfort.
+
+In the restlessness of an elderly man, Gerald sometimes left the young
+people to their intolerable delays over their coffee, and walked off
+into the little stone and stucco city below, or went and sat with his
+cigar on one of the benches under the palm-lined promenade, which the
+pale northern consumptives shared with the swarthy peasant girls resting
+from their burdens, and the wrinkled grandmothers of their race
+passively or actively begging from the strangers.
+
+While she kept her father in sight it seemed that Miss Gerald could
+maintain her hold of his identity, and one morning she said, with the
+tender fondness for him which touched Lanfear: "When he sits there among
+those sick people and poor people, then he knows they are in the world."
+
+She turned with a question graver in her look than usual, and he said:
+"Yes, we might help them oftener if we could remember that their misery
+was going on all the time, like some great natural process, day or dark,
+heat or cold, which seems to stop when we stop thinking of it. Nothing,
+for us, at least, exists unless it is recalled to us."
+
+"Yes," she said, in her turn, "I have noticed that. But don't you
+sometimes--sometimes"--she knit her forehead, as if to keep her thought
+from escaping--"have a feeling as if what you were doing, or saying, or
+seeing, had all happened before, just as it is now?"
+
+"Oh yes; that occurs to every one."
+
+"But don't you--don't you have hints of things, of ideas, as if you had
+known them, in some previous existence--"
+
+She stopped, and Lanfear recognized, with a kind of impatience, the
+experience which young people make much of when they have it, and
+sometimes pretend to when they have merely heard of it. But there could
+be no pose or pretence in her. He smilingly suggested:
+
+ "'For something is, or something seems,
+ Like glimpses of forgotten dreams.'
+
+These weird impressions are no more than that, probably."
+
+"Ah, I don't believe it," the girl said. "They are too real for that.
+They come too often, and they make me feel as if they would come more
+fully, some time. If there was a life before this--do you believe there
+was?--they may be things that happened there. Or they may be things that
+will happen in a life after this. You believe in _that_, don't you?"
+
+"In a life after this, or their happening in it?"
+
+"Well, both."
+
+Lanfear evaded her, partly. "They could be premonitions, prophecies, of
+a future life, as easily as fragmentary records of a past life. I
+suppose we do not begin to be immortal merely after death."
+
+"No." She lingered out the word in dreamy absence, as if what they had
+been saying had already passed from her thought.
+
+"But, Miss Gerald," Lanfear ventured, "have these impressions of yours
+grown more definite--fuller, as you say--of late?"
+
+"My impressions?" She frowned at him, as if the look of interest, more
+intense than usual in his eyes, annoyed her. "I don't know what you
+mean."
+
+Lanfear felt bound to follow up her lead, whether she wished it or not.
+"A good third of our lives here is passed in sleep. I'm not always sure
+that we are right in treating the mental--for certainly they are
+mental--experiences of that time as altogether trivial, or
+insignificant."
+
+She seemed to understand now, and she protested: "But I don't mean
+dreams. I mean things that really happened, or that really will happen."
+
+"Like something you can give me an instance of? Are they painful things,
+or pleasant, mostly?"
+
+She hesitated. "They are things that you know happen to other people,
+but you can't believe would ever happen to you."
+
+"Do they come when you are just drowsing, or just waking from a drowse?"
+
+"They are not dreams," she said, almost with vexation.
+
+"Yes, yes, I understand," he hesitated to retrieve himself. "But _I_
+have had floating illusions, just before I fell asleep, or when I was
+sensible of not being quite awake, which seemed to differ from dreams.
+They were not so dramatic, but they were more pictorial; they were more
+visual than the things in dreams."
+
+"Yes," she assented. "They are something like that. But I should not
+call them illusions."
+
+"No. And they represent scenes, events?"
+
+"You said yourself they were not dramatic."
+
+"I meant, represent pictorially."
+
+"No; they are like the landscape that flies back from your train or
+towards it. I can't explain it," she ended, rising with what he felt a
+displeasure in his pursuit.
+
+
+IV
+
+He reported what had passed to her father when Mr. Gerald came back from
+his stroll into the town, with his hands full of English papers; Gerald
+had even found a New York paper at the news-stand; and he listened with
+an apparent postponement of interest.
+
+"I think," Lanfear said, "that she has some shadowy recollection, or
+rather that the facts come to her in a jarred, confused way--the
+elements of pictures, not pictures. But I am afraid that my inquiry has
+offended her."
+
+"I guess not," Gerald said, dryly, as if annoyed. "What makes you think
+so?"
+
+"Merely her manner. And I don't know that anything is to be gained by
+such an inquiry."
+
+"Perhaps not," Gerald allowed, with an inattention which vexed Lanfear
+in his turn.
+
+The elderly man looked up, from where he sat provisionally in the hotel
+veranda, into Lanfear's face; Lanfear had remained standing. "_I_ don't
+believe she's offended. Or she won't be long. One thing, she'll forget
+it."
+
+He was right enough, apparently. Miss Gerald came out of the hotel door
+towards them, smiling equally for both, with the indefinable difference
+between cognition and recognition habitual in her look. She was dressed
+for a walk, and she seemed to expect them to go with her. She beamed
+gently upon Lanfear; there was no trace of umbrage in her sunny gayety.
+Her face had, as always, its lurking pathos, but in its appeal to
+Lanfear now there were only trust and the wish of pleasing him.
+
+They started side by side for their walk, while her father drove beside
+them in one of the little public carriages, mounting to the Berigo Road,
+through a street of the older San Remo, and issuing on a bare little
+piazza looking towards the walls and roofs of the mediaeval city,
+clustered together like cliff-dwellings, and down on the gardens that
+fell from the villas and the hotels. A parapet kept the path on the
+roadside nearest the declivities, and from point to point benches were
+put for the convenient enjoyment of the prospect. Mr. Gerald preferred
+to take his pleasure from the greater elevation of the seat in his
+victoria; his daughter and Lanfear leaned on the wall, and looked up to
+the sky and out to the sea, both of the same blue.
+
+The palms and eucalyptus-trees darkened about the villas; the bits of
+vineyard, in their lingering crimson or lingering gold, and the orchards
+of peaches and persimmons enriched with the varying reds of their
+ripening leaves and fruits the enchanting color scheme. The rose and
+geranium hedges were in bloom; the feathery green of the pepper-trees
+was warmed by the red-purple of their grape-like clusters of blossoms;
+the perfume of lemon flowers wandered vaguely upwards from some point
+which they could not fix.
+
+Nothing of all the beauty seemed lost upon the girl, so bereft that she
+could enjoy no part of it from association. Lanfear observed that she
+was not fatigued by any such effort as he was always helplessly making
+to match what he saw with something he had seen before. Now, when this
+effort betrayed itself, she said, smiling: "How strange it is that you
+see things for what they are like, and not for what they are!"
+
+"Yes, it's a defect, I'm afraid, sometimes. Perhaps--"
+
+"Perhaps what?" she prompted him in the pause he made.
+
+"Nothing. I was wondering whether in some other possible life our
+consciousness would not be more independent of what we have been than it
+seems to be here." She looked askingly at him. "I mean whether there
+shall not be something absolute in our existence, whether it shall not
+realize itself more in each experience of the moment, and not be always
+seeking to verify itself from the past."
+
+"Isn't that what you think is the way with me already?" She turned upon
+him smiling, and he perceived that in her New York version of a Parisian
+costume, with her lace hat of summer make and texture and the vivid
+parasol she twirled upon her shoulder, she was not only a very pretty
+girl, but a fashionable one. There was something touching in the fact,
+and a little bewildering. To the pretty girl, the fashionable girl, he
+could have answered with a joke, but the stricken intelligence had a
+claim to his seriousness. Now, especially, he noted what had from time
+to time urged itself upon his perception. If the broken ties which once
+bound her to the past were beginning to knit again, her recovery
+otherwise was not apparent. As she stood there her beauty had signally
+the distinction of fragility, the delicacy of shattered nerves in which
+there was yet no visible return to strength. A feeling, which had
+intimated itself before, a sense as of being in the presence of a
+disembodied spirit, possessed him, and brought, in its contradiction of
+an accepted theory, a suggestion that was destined to become conviction.
+He had always said to himself that there could be no persistence of
+personality, of character, of identity, of consciousness, except through
+memory; yet here, to the last implication of temperament, they all
+persisted. The soul that was passing in its integrity through time
+without the helps, the crutches, of remembrance by which his own
+personality supported itself, why should not it pass so through eternity
+without that loss of identity which was equivalent to annihilation?
+
+Her waiting eyes recalled him from his inquiry, and with an effort he
+answered, "Yes, I think you do have your being here and now, Miss
+Gerald, to an unusual degree."
+
+"And you don't think that is wrong?"
+
+"Wrong? Why? How?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know." She looked round, and her eye fell upon her father
+waiting for them in his carriage beside the walk. The sight supplied her
+with the notion which Lanfear perceived would not have occurred
+otherwise. "Then why doesn't papa want me to remember things?"
+
+"I don't know," Lanfear temporized. "Doesn't he?"
+
+"I can't always tell. Should--should _you_ wish me to remember more than
+I do?"
+
+"I?"
+
+She looked at him with entreaty. "Do you think it would make my father
+happier if I did?"
+
+"That I can't say," Lanfear answered. "People are often the sadder for
+what they remember. If I were your father--Excuse me! I don't mean
+anything so absurd. But in his place--"
+
+He stopped, and she said, as if she were satisfied with his broken
+reply: "It is very curious. When I look at him--when I am with him--I
+know him; but when he is away, I don't remember him." She seemed rather
+interested in the fact than distressed by it; she even smiled.
+
+"And me," he ventured, "is it the same with regard to me?"
+
+She did not say; she asked, smiling: "Do you remember me when I am
+away?"
+
+"Yes!" he answered. "As perfectly as if you were with me. I can see you,
+hear you, feel the touch of your hand, your dress--Good heavens!" he
+added to himself under his breath. "What am I saying to this poor
+child!"
+
+In the instinct of escaping from himself he started forward, and she
+moved with him. Mr. Gerald's watchful driver followed them with the
+carriage.
+
+"That is very strange," she said, lightly. "Is it so with you about
+everyone?"
+
+"No," he replied, briefly, almost harshly. He asked, abruptly: "Miss
+Gerald, are there any times when you know people in their absence?"
+
+"Just after I wake from a nap--yes. But it doesn't last. That is, it
+seems to me it doesn't. I'm not sure."
+
+As they followed the winding of the pleasant way, with the villas on the
+slopes above and on the slopes below, she began to talk of them, and to
+come into that knowledge of each which formed her remembrance of them
+from former knowledge of them, but which he knew would fade when she
+passed them.
+
+The next morning, when she came down unwontedly late to breakfast in
+their pavilion, she called gayly:
+
+"Dr. Lanfear! It _is_ Dr. Lanfear?"
+
+"I should be sorry if it were not, since you seem to expect it, Miss
+Gerald."
+
+"Oh, I just wanted to be sure. Hasn't my father been here, yet?" It was
+the first time she had shown herself aware of her father except in his
+presence, as it was the first time she had named Lanfear to his face.
+
+He suppressed a remote stir of anxiety, and answered: "He went to get
+his newspapers; he wished you not to wait. I hope you slept well?"
+
+"Splendidly. But I was very tired last night; I don't know why,
+exactly."
+
+"We had rather a long walk."
+
+"Did we have a walk yesterday?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it was _so_! I thought I had dreamed it. I was beginning to
+remember something, and my father asked me what it was, and then I
+couldn't remember. Do you believe I shall keep on remembering?"
+
+"I don't see why you shouldn't."
+
+"Should you wish me to?" she asked, in evident, however unconscious,
+recurrence to their talk of the day before.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+She sighed. "I don't know. If it's like some of those dreams or gleams.
+Is remembering pleasant?"
+
+Lanfear thought for a moment. Then he said, in the honesty he thought
+best to use with her: "For the most part I should say it was painful.
+Life is tolerable enough while it passes, but when it is past, what
+remains seems mostly to hurt and humiliate. I don't know why we should
+remember so insistently the foolish things and wrong things we do, and
+not recall the times when we acted, without an effort, wisely and
+rightly." He thought he had gone too far, and he hedged a little. "I
+don't mean that we _can't_ recall those times. We can and do, to console
+and encourage ourselves; but they don't recur, without our willing, as
+the others do."
+
+She had poured herself a cup of coffee, and she played with the spoon in
+her saucer while she seemed to listen. But she could not have been
+listening, for when she put down her spoon and leaned back in her chair,
+she said: "In those dreams the things come from such a very far way
+back, and they don't belong to a life that is like this. They belong to
+a life like what you hear the life after this is. We are the same as we
+are here; but the things are different. We haven't the same rules, the
+same wishes--I can't explain."
+
+"You mean that we are differently conditioned?"
+
+"Yes. And if you can understand, I feel as if I remembered long back of
+this, and long forward of this. But one can't remember forward!"
+
+"That wouldn't be remembrance; no, it would be prescience; and your
+consciousness here, as you were saying yesterday, is through knowing,
+not remembering."
+
+She stared at him. "Was that yesterday? I thought it was--to-morrow."
+She rubbed her hand across her forehead as people do when they wish to
+clear their minds. Then she sighed deeply. "It tires me so. And yet I
+can't help trying." A light broke over her face at the sound of a step
+on the gravel walk near by, and she said, laughing, without looking
+round: "That is papa! I knew it was his step."
+
+
+V
+
+Such return of memory as she now had was like memory in what we call the
+lower lives. It increased, fluctuantly, with an ebb in which it almost
+disappeared, but with a flow that in its advance carried it beyond its
+last flood-tide mark. After the first triumph in which she could address
+Lanfear by his name, and could greet her father as her father, there
+were lapses in which she knew them as before, without naming them.
+Except mechanically to repeat the names of other people when reminded of
+them, she did not pass beyond cognition to recognition. Events still
+left no trace upon her; or if they did she was not sure whether they
+were things she had dreamed or experienced. But her memory grew stronger
+in the region where the bird knows its way home to the nest, or the bee
+to the hive. She had an unerring instinct for places where she had once
+been, and she found her way to them again without the help from the
+association which sometimes failed Lanfear. Their walks were always
+taken with her father's company in his carriage, but they sometimes left
+him at a point of the Berigo Road, and after a long detour among the
+vineyards and olive orchards of the heights above, rejoined him at
+another point they had agreed upon with him. One afternoon, when Lanfear
+had climbed the rough pave of the footways with her to one of the
+summits, they stopped to rest on the wall of a terrace, where they sat
+watching the changing light on the sea, through a break in the trees.
+The shadows surprised them on their height, and they had to make their
+way among them over the farm paths and by the dry beds of the torrents
+to the carriage road far below. They had been that walk only once
+before, and Lanfear failed of his reckoning, except the downward course
+which must bring them out on the high-road at last. But Miss Gerald's
+instinct saved them where his reason failed. She did not remember, but
+she knew the way, and she led him on as if she were inventing it, or as
+if it had been indelibly traced upon her mind and she had only to follow
+the mystical lines within to be sure of her course. She confessed to
+being very tired, and each step must have increased her fatigue, but
+each step seemed to clear her perception of the next to be taken.
+
+Suddenly, when Lanfear was blaming himself for bringing all this upon
+her, and then for trusting to her guidance, he recognized a certain
+peasant's house, and in a few moments they had descended the
+olive-orchard terraces to a broken cistern in the clear twilight beyond
+the dusk. She suddenly halted him. "There, there! It happened
+then--now--this instant!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"That feeling of being here before! There is the curb of the old
+cistern; and the place where the terrace wall is broken; and the path up
+to the vineyard--Don't you feel it, too?" she demanded, with a
+joyousness which had no pleasure for him.
+
+"Yes, certainly. We were here last week. We went up the path to the
+farm-house to get some water."
+
+"Yes, now I am remembering--remembering!" She stood with eagerly parted
+lips, and glancing quickly round with glowing eyes, whose light faded in
+the same instant. "No!" she said, mournfully, "it's gone."
+
+A sound of wheels in the road ceased, and her father's voice called:
+"Don't you want to take my place, and let me walk awhile, Nannie?"
+
+"No. You come to me, papa. Something very strange has happened;
+something you will be surprised at. Hurry!" She seemed to be joking, as
+he was, while she beckoned him impatiently towards her.
+
+He had left his carriage, and he came up with a heavy man's quickened
+pace. "Well, what is the wonderful thing?" he panted out.
+
+She stared blankly at him, without replying, and they silently made
+their way to Mr. Gerald's carriage.
+
+"I lost the way, and Miss Gerald found it," Lanfear explained, as he
+helped her to the place beside her father.
+
+She said nothing, and almost with sinking into the seat, she sank into
+that deep slumber which from time to time overtook her.
+
+"I didn't know we had gone so far--or rather that we had waited so long
+before we started down the hills," Lanfear apologized in an involuntary
+whisper.
+
+"Oh, it's all right," her father said, trying to adjust the girl's
+fallen head to his shoulder. "Get in and help me--"
+
+Lanfear obeyed, and lent a physician's skilled aid, which left the
+cumbrous efforts of her father to the blame he freely bestowed on them.
+"You'll have to come here on the other side," he said. "There's room
+enough for all three. Or, hold on! Let me take your place." He took the
+place in front, and left her to Lanfear's care, with the trust which was
+the physician's right, and with a sense of the girl's dependence in
+which she was still a child to him.
+
+They did not speak till well on the way home. Then the father leaned
+forward and whispered huskily: "Do you think she's as strong as she
+was?"
+
+Lanfear waited, as if thinking the facts over. He murmured back: "No.
+She's better. She's not so strong."
+
+"Yes," the father murmured. "I understand."
+
+What Gerald understood by Lanfear's words might not have been their
+meaning, but what Lanfear meant was that there was now an interfusion of
+the past and present in her daily experience. She still did not
+remember, but she had moments in which she hovered upon such knowledge
+of what had happened as she had of actual events. When she was stronger
+she seemed farther from this knowledge; when she was weaker she was
+nearer it. So it seemed to him in that region where he could be sure of
+his own duty when he looked upon it singly as concern for her health. No
+inquiry for the psychological possibilities must be suffered to divide
+his effort for her physical recovery, though there might come with this
+a cessation of the timeless dream-state in which she had her being, and
+she might sharply realize the past, as the anaesthete realizes his
+return to agony from insensibility. The quality of her mind was as
+different from the thing called culture as her manner from convention. A
+simplicity beyond the simplicity of childhood was one with a poetic
+color in her absolute ideas. But this must cease with her restoration to
+the strength in which she could alone come into full and clear
+self-consciousness. So far as Lanfear could give reality to his
+occupation with her disability, he was ministering to a mind diseased;
+not to "rase out its written trouble," but if possible to restore the
+obliterated record, and enable her to spell its tragic characters. If he
+could, he would have shrunk from this office; but all the more because
+he specially had to do with the mystical side of medicine, he always
+tried to keep his relation to her free from personal feeling, and his
+aim single and matter-of-fact.
+
+It was hard to do this; and there was a glamour in the very
+topographical and meteorological environment. The autumn was a long
+delight in which the constant sea, the constant sky, knew almost as
+little variance as the unchanging Alps. The days passed in a procession
+of sunny splendor, neither hot nor cold, nor of the temper of any
+determinate season, unless it were an abiding spring-time. The flowers
+bloomed, and the grass kept green in a reverie of May. But one afternoon
+of January, while Lanfear was going about in a thin coat and panama hat,
+a soft, fresh wind began to blow from the east. It increased till
+sunset, and then fell. In the morning he looked out on a world in which
+the spring had stiffened overnight into winter. A thick frost painted
+the leaves and flowers; icicles hung from pipes and vents; the frozen
+streams flashed back from their arrested flow the sun as it shone from
+the cold heaven, and blighted and blackened the hedges of geranium and
+rose, the borders of heliotrope, the fields of pinks. The leaves of the
+bananas hung limp about their stems; the palms rattled like skeletons in
+the wind when it began to blow again over the shrunken landscape.
+
+
+VI
+
+The caprice of a climate which vaunted itself perpetual summer was a
+godsend to all the strangers strong enough to bear it without suffering.
+For the sick an indoor life of huddling about the ineffectual fires of
+the south began, and lasted for the fortnight that elapsed before the
+Riviera got back its advertised temperature. Miss Gerald had drooped in
+the milder weather; but the cold braced and lifted her, and with its
+help she now pushed her walks farther, and was eager every day for some
+excursion to the little towns that whitened along the shores, or the
+villages that glimmered from the olive-orchards of the hills. Once she
+said to Lanfear, when they were climbing through the brisk, clear air:
+"It seems to me as if I had been here before. Have I?"
+
+"No. This is the first time."
+
+She said no more, but seemed disappointed in his answer, and he
+suggested: "Perhaps it is the cold that reminds you of our winters at
+home, and makes you feel that the scene is familiar."
+
+"Yes, that is it!" she returned, joyously. "Was there snow, there, like
+that on the mountains yonder?"
+
+"A good deal more, I fancy. That will be gone in a few days, and at
+home, you know, our snow lasts for weeks."
+
+"Then that is what I was thinking of," she said, and she ran strongly
+and lightly forward. "Come!"
+
+When the harsh weather passed and the mild climate returned there was no
+lapse of her strength. A bloom, palely pink as the flowers that began to
+flush the almond-trees, came upon her delicate beauty, a light like that
+of the lengthening days dawned in her eyes. She had an instinct for the
+earliest violets among the grass under the olives; she was first to hear
+the blackcaps singing in the garden-tops; and nothing that was novel in
+her experience seemed alien to it. This was the sum of what Lanfear got
+by the questioning which he needlessly tried to keep indirect. She knew
+that she was his patient, and in what manner, and she had let him divine
+that her loss of memory was suffering as well as deprivation. She had
+not merely the fatigue which we all undergo from the effort to recall
+things, and which sometimes reaches exhaustion; but there was apparently
+in the void of her oblivion a perpetual rumor of events, names,
+sensations, like--Lanfear felt that he inadequately conjectured--the
+subjective noises which are always in the ears of the deaf. Sometimes,
+in the distress of it, she turned to him for help, and when he was able
+to guess what she was striving for, a radiant relief and gratitude
+transfigured her face. But this could not last, and he learned to note
+how soon the stress and tension of her effort returned. His compassion
+for her at such times involved a temptation, or rather a question, which
+he had to silence by a direct effort of his will. Would it be worse,
+would it be greater anguish for her to know at once the past that now
+tormented her consciousness with its broken and meaningless
+reverberations? Then he realized that it was impossible to help her even
+through the hazard of telling her what had befallen; that no such effect
+as was to be desired could be anticipated from the outside.
+
+If he turned to her father for counsel or instruction, or even a
+participation in his responsibility, he was met by an optimistic
+patience which exasperated him, if it did not complicate the case. Once,
+when Lanfear forbearingly tried to share with him his anxiety for the
+effect of a successful event, he was formed to be outright, and remind
+him, in so many words, that the girl's restoration might be through
+anguish which he could not measure.
+
+Gerald faltered aghast; then he said: "It mustn't come to that; you
+mustn't let it."
+
+"How do you expect me to prevent it?" Lanfear demanded, in his vexation.
+
+Gerald caught his breath. "If she gets well, she will remember?"
+
+"I don't say that. It seems probable. Do you wish her being to remain
+bereft of one-half its powers?"
+
+"Oh, how do I know what I want?" the poor man groaned. "I only know that
+I trust you entirely, Doctor Lanfear. Whatever you think best will be
+best and wisest, no matter what the outcome is."
+
+He got away from Lanfear with these hopeless words, and again Lanfear
+perceived that the case was left wholly to him. His consolation was the
+charm of the girl's companionship, the delight of a nature knowing
+itself from moment to moment as if newly created. For her, as nearly as
+he could put the fact into words, the actual moment contained the past
+and the future as well as the present. When he saw in her the
+persistence of an exquisite personality independent of the means by
+which he realized his own continuous identity, he sometimes felt as if
+in the presence of some angel so long freed from earthly allegiance that
+it had left all record behind, as we leave here the records of our first
+years. If an echo of the past reached her, it was apt to be trivial and
+insignificant, like those unimportant experiences of our remotest
+childhood, which remain to us from a world outlived.
+
+It was not an insipid perfection of character which reported itself in
+these celestial terms, and Lanfear conjectured that angelic immortality,
+if such a thing were, could not imply perfection except at the cost of
+one-half of human character. When the girl wore a dress that she saw
+pleased him more than another, there was a responsive pleasure in her
+eyes, which he could have called vanity if he would; and she had at
+times a wilfulness which he could have accused of being obstinacy. She
+showed a certain jealousy of any experiences of his apart from her own,
+not because they included others, but because they excluded her. He was
+aware of an involuntary vigilance in her, which could not leave his
+motives any more than his actions unsearched. But in her conditioning
+she could not repent; she could only offer him at some other time the
+unconscious reparation of her obedience. The self-criticism which the
+child has not learned she had forgotten, but in her oblivion the wish to
+please existed as perfectly as in the ignorance of childhood.
+
+This, so far as he could ever put into words, was the interior of the
+world where he dwelt apart with her. Its exterior continued very like
+that of other worlds where two young people have their being. Now and
+then a more transitory guest at the Grand Hotel Sardegna perhaps fancied
+it the iridescent orb which takes the color of the morning sky, and is
+destined, in the course of nature, to the danger of collapse in which
+planetary space abounds. Some rumor of this could not fail to reach
+Lanfear, but he ignored it as best he could in always speaking gravely
+of Miss Gerald as his patient, and authoritatively treating her as such.
+He convinced some of these witnesses against their senses; for the
+others, he felt that it mattered little what they thought, since, if it
+reached her, it could not pierce her isolation for more than the instant
+in which the impression from absent things remained to her.
+
+A more positive embarrassment, of a kind Lanfear was not prepared for,
+beset him in an incident which would have been more touching if he had
+been less singly concerned for the girl. A pretty English boy, with the
+dawn of a peachy bloom on his young cheeks, and an impulsiveness
+commoner with English youth than our own, talked with Miss Gerald one
+evening and the next day sent her an armful of flowers with his card. He
+followed this attention with a call at her father's apartment, and after
+Miss Gerald seemed to know him, and they had, as he told Lanfear, a
+delightful time together, she took up his card from the table where it
+was lying, and asked him if he could tell her who that gentleman was.
+The poor fellow's inference was that she was making fun of him, and he
+came to Lanfear, as an obvious friend of the family, for an explanation.
+He reported the incident, with indignant tears standing in his eyes:
+"What did she mean by it? If she took my flowers, she must have known
+that--that--they--And to pretend to forget my name! Oh, I say, it's too
+bad! She could have got rid of me without that. Girls have ways enough,
+you know."
+
+"Yes, yes," Lanfear assented, slowly, to gain time. "I can assure you
+that Miss Gerald didn't mean anything that could wound you. She isn't
+very well--she's rather odd--"
+
+"Do you mean that she's out of her mind? She can talk as well as any
+one--better!"
+
+"No, not that. But she's often in pain--greatly in pain when she can't
+recall a name, and I've no doubt she was trying to recall yours with the
+help of your card. She would be the last in the world to be indifferent
+to your feelings. I imagine she scarcely knew what she was doing at the
+moment."
+
+"Then, do you think--do you suppose--it would be any good my trying to
+see her again? If she wouldn't be indifferent to my feelings, do you
+think there would be any hope--Really, you know, I would give anything
+to believe that my feelings wouldn't offend her. You understand me?"
+
+"Perhaps I do."
+
+"I've never met a more charming girl and--she isn't engaged, is she? She
+isn't engaged to you? I don't mean to press the question, but it's a
+question of life and death with me, you know."
+
+Lanfear thought he saw his way out of the coil. "I can tell you, quite
+as frankly as you ask, that Miss Gerald isn't engaged to _me_."
+
+"Then it's somebody else--somebody in America! Well, I hope she'll be
+happy; _I_ never shall." He offered his hand to Lanfear. "I'm off."
+
+"Oh, here's the doctor, now," a voice said behind them where they stood
+by the garden wall, and they turned to confront Gerald with his
+daughter.
+
+"Why! Are you going?" she said to the Englishman, and she put out her
+hand to him.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Evers is going." Lanfear came to the rescue.
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry," the girl said, and the youth responded.
+
+"That's very good of you. I--good-by! I hope you'll be very happy--I--"
+He turned abruptly away, and ran into the hotel.
+
+"What has he been crying for?" Miss Gerald asked, turning from a long
+look after him.
+
+Lanfear did not know quite what to say; but he hazarded saying: "He was
+hurt that you had forgotten him when he came to see you this afternoon."
+
+"Did he come to see me?" she asked; and Lanfear exchanged looks of
+anxiety, pain, and reassurance with her father. "I am so sorry. Shall I
+go after him and tell him?"
+
+"No; I explained; he's all right," Lanfear said.
+
+"You want to be careful, Nannie," her father added, "about people's
+feelings when you meet them, and afterwards seem not to know them."
+
+"But I _do_ know them, papa," she remonstrated.
+
+"You want to be careful," her father repeated.
+
+"I will--I will, indeed." Her lips quivered, and the tears came, which
+Lanfear had to keep from flowing by what quick turn he could give to
+something else.
+
+An obscure sense of the painful incident must have lingered with her
+after its memory had perished. One afternoon when Lanfear and her father
+went with her to the military concert in the sycamore-planted piazza
+near the Vacherie Suisse, where they often came for a cup of tea, she
+startled them by bowing gayly to a young lieutenant of engineers
+standing there with some other officers, and making the most of the
+prospect of pretty foreigners which the place afforded. The lieutenant
+returned the bow with interest, and his eyes did not leave their party
+as long as they remained. Within the bounds of deference for her, it was
+evident that his comrades were joking about the honor done him by this
+charming girl. When the Geralds started homeward Lanfear was aware of a
+trio of officers following them, not conspicuously, but unmistakably;
+and after that, he could not start on his walks with Miss Gerald and her
+father without the sense that the young lieutenant was hovering
+somewhere in their path, waiting in the hopes of another bow from her.
+The officer was apparently not discouraged by his failure to win
+recognition from her, and what was amounting to annoyance for Lanfear
+reached the point where he felt he must share it with her father. He had
+nearly as much trouble in imparting it to him as he might have had with
+Miss Gerald herself. He managed, but when he required her father to put
+a stop to it he perceived that Gerald was as helpless as she would have
+been. He first wished to verify the fact from its beginning with her,
+but this was not easy.
+
+"Nannie," he said, "why did you bow to that officer the other day?"
+
+"What officer, papa? When?"
+
+"You know; there by the band-stand, at the Swiss Dairy."
+
+She stared blankly at him, and it was clear that it was all as if it had
+not been with her. He insisted, and then she said: "Perhaps I thought I
+knew him, and was afraid I should hurt his feelings if I didn't
+recognize him. But I don't remember it at all." The curves of her mouth
+drooped, and her eyes grieved, so that her father had not the heart to
+say more. She left them, and when he was alone with Lanfear he said:
+
+"You see how it is!"
+
+"Yes, I saw how it was before. But what do you wish to do?"
+
+"Do you mean that he will keep it up?"
+
+"Decidedly, he'll keep it up. He has every right to from his point of
+view."
+
+"Oh, well, then, my dear fellow, you must stop it, somehow. You'll know
+how to do it."
+
+"I?" said Lanfear, indignantly; but his vexation was not so great that
+he did not feel a certain pleasure in fulfilling this strangest part of
+his professional duty, when at the beginning of their next excursion he
+put Miss Gerald into the victoria with her father and fell back to the
+point at which he had seen the lieutenant waiting to haunt their farther
+progress. He put himself plumply in front of the officer and demanded in
+very blunt Italian: "What do you want?"
+
+The lieutenant stared him over with potential offence, in which his
+delicately pencilled mustache took the shape of a light sneer, and
+demanded in his turn, in English much better than Lanfear's Italian:
+"What right have you to ask?"
+
+"The right of Miss Gerald's physician. She is an invalid in my charge."
+
+A change quite indefinable except as the visible transition from coxcomb
+to gentleman passed over the young lieutenant's comely face. "An
+invalid?" he faltered.
+
+"Yes," Lanfear began; and then, with a rush of confidence which the
+change in the officer's face justified, "one very strangely, very
+tragically afflicted. Since she saw her mother killed in an accident a
+year ago she remembers nothing. She bowed to you because she saw you
+looking at her, and supposed you must be an acquaintance. May I assure
+you that you are altogether mistaken?"
+
+The lieutenant brought his heels together, and bent low. "I beg her
+pardon with all my heart. I am very, very sorry. I will do anything I
+can. I would like to stop that. May I bring my mother to call on Miss
+Gerald?"
+
+He offered his hand, and Lanfear wrung it hard, a lump of gratitude in
+his throat choking any particular utterance, while a fine shame for his
+late hostile intention covered him.
+
+When the lieutenant came, with all possible circumstance, bringing the
+countess, his mother, Mr. Gerald overwhelmed them with hospitality of
+every form. The Italian lady responded effusively, and more sincerely
+cooed and murmured her compassionate interest in his daughter. Then all
+parted the best of friends; but when it was over, Miss Gerald did not
+know what it had been about. She had not remembered the lieutenant or
+her father's vexation, or any phase of the incident which was now
+closed. Nothing remained of it but the lieutenant's right, which he
+gravely exercised, of saluting them respectfully whenever he met them.
+
+
+VII
+
+Earlier, Lanfear had never allowed himself to be far out of call from
+Miss Gerald's father, especially during the daytime slumbers into which
+she fell, and from which they both always dreaded her awakening. But as
+the days went on and the event continued the same he allowed himself
+greater range. Formerly the three went their walks or drives together,
+but now he sometimes went alone. In these absences he found relief from
+the stress of his constant vigilance; he was able to cast off the bond
+which enslaves the physician to his patient, and which he must ignore at
+times for mere self-preservation's sake; but there was always a lurking
+anxiety, which, though he refused to let it define itself to him,
+shortened the time and space he tried to put between them.
+
+One afternoon in April, when he left her sleeping, he was aware of
+somewhat recklessly placing himself out of reach in a lonely excursion
+to a village demolished by the earthquake of 1887, and abandoned
+himself, in the impressions and incidents of his visit to the ruin, to a
+luxury of impersonal melancholy which the physician cannot often allow
+himself. At last, his care found him, and drove him home full of a
+sharper fear than he had yet felt since the first days. But Mr. Gerald
+was tranquilly smoking under a palm in the hotel garden, and met him
+with an easy smile. "She woke once, and said she had had such a pleasant
+dream. Now she's off again. Do you think we'd better wake her for
+dinner? I suppose she's getting up her strength in this way. Her
+sleeping so much is a good symptom, isn't it?"
+
+Lanfear smiled forlornly; neither of them, in view of the possible
+eventualities, could have said what result they wished the symptoms to
+favor. But he said: "Decidedly I wouldn't wake her"; and he spent a
+night of restless sleep penetrated by a nervous expectation which the
+morning, when it came, rather mockingly defeated.
+
+Miss Gerald appeared promptly at breakfast in their pavilion, with a
+fresher and gayer look than usual, and to her father's "Well, Nannie,
+you _have_ had a nap, this time," she answered, smiling:
+
+"Have I? It isn't afternoon, is it?"
+
+"No, it's morning. You've napped it all night."
+
+She said: "I can't tell whether I've been asleep or not, sometimes; but
+now I know I have been; and I feel so rested. Where are we going
+to-day?"
+
+She turned to Lanfear while her father answered: "I guess the doctor
+won't want to go very far, to-day, after his expedition yesterday
+afternoon."
+
+"Ah," she said, "I _knew_ you had been somewhere! Was it very far? Are
+you too tired?"
+
+"It was rather far, but I'm not tired. I shouldn't advise Possana,
+though."
+
+"Possana?" she repeated. "What is Possana?"
+
+He told her, and then at a jealous look in her eyes he added an account
+of his excursion. He heightened, if anything, its difficulties, in
+making light of them as no difficulties for him, and at the end she
+said, gently: "Shall we go this morning?"
+
+"Let the doctor rest this morning, Nannie," her father interrupted,
+whimsically, but with what Lanfear knew to be an inner yielding to her
+will. "Or if you won't let _him_, let _me_. I don't want to go anywhere
+this morning."
+
+Lanfear thought that he did not wish her to go at all, and hoped that by
+the afternoon she would have forgotten Possana. She sighed, but in her
+sigh there was no concession. Then, with the chance of a returning
+drowse to save him from openly thwarting her will, he merely suggested:
+"There's plenty of time in the afternoon; the days are so long now; and
+we can get the sunset from the hills."
+
+"Yes, that will be nice," she said, but he perceived that she did not
+assent willingly; and there was an effect of resolution in the readiness
+with which she appeared dressed for the expedition after luncheon. She
+clearly did not know where they were going, but when she turned to
+Lanfear with her look of entreaty, he had not the heart to join her
+father in any conspiracy against her. He beckoned the carriage which had
+become conscious in its eager driver from the moment she showed herself
+at the hotel door, and they set out.
+
+When they had left the higher level of the hotel and began their clatter
+through the long street of the town, Lanfear noted that she seemed to
+feel as much as himself the quaintness of the little city, rising on one
+hand, with its narrow alleys under successive arches between the high,
+dark houses, to the hills, and dropping on the other to sea from the
+commonplace of the principal thoroughfare, with its pink and white and
+saffron hotels and shops. Beyond the town their course lay under villa
+walls, covered with vines and topped by pavilions, and opening finally
+along a stretch of the old Cornice road.
+
+"But this," she said, at a certain point, "is where we were yesterday!"
+
+"This is where the doctor was yesterday," her father said, behind his
+cigar.
+
+"And wasn't I with you?" she asked Lanfear.
+
+He said, playfully: "To-day you are. I mustn't be selfish and have you
+every day."
+
+"Ah, you are laughing at me; but I know I was here yesterday."
+
+Her father set his lips in patience, and Lanfear did not insist.
+
+They had halted at this point because, across a wide valley on the
+shoulder of an approaching height, the ruined village of Possana showed,
+and lower down and nearer the seat the new town which its people had
+built when they escaped from the destruction of their world-old home.
+
+World-old it all was, with reference to the human life of it; but the
+spring-time was immortally young in the landscape. Over the expanses of
+green and brown fields, and hovering about the gray and white cottages,
+was a mist of peach and cherry blossoms. Above these the hoar olives
+thickened, and the vines climbed from terrace to terrace. The valley
+narrowed inland, and ceased in the embrace of the hills drawing
+mysteriously together in the distances.
+
+"I think we've got the best part of it here, Miss Gerald," Lanfear broke
+the common silence by saying. "You couldn't see much more of Possana
+after you got there."
+
+"Besides," her father ventured a pleasantry which jarred on the younger
+man, "if you were there with the doctor yesterday, you won't want to
+make the climb again to-day. Give it up, Nannie!"
+
+"Oh no," she said, "I can't give it up."
+
+"Well, then, we must go on, I suppose. Where do we begin our climb?"
+
+Lanfear explained that he had been obliged to leave his carriage at the
+foot of the hill, and climb to Possana Nuova by the donkey-paths of the
+peasants. He had then walked to the ruins of Possana Vecchia, but he
+suggested that they might find donkeys to carry them on from the new
+town.
+
+"Well, I hope so," Mr. Gerald grumbled. But at Possana Nuova no
+saddle-donkeys were to be had, and he announced, at the cafe where they
+stopped for the negotiation, that he would wait for the young people to
+go on to Possana Vecchia, and tell him about it when they got back. In
+the meantime he would watch the game of ball, which, in the piazza
+before the cafe, appeared to have engaged the energies of the male
+population. Lanfear was still inwardly demurring, when a stalwart
+peasant girl came in and announced that she had one donkey which they
+could have with her own services driving it. She had no saddle, but
+there was a pad on which the young lady could ride.
+
+"Oh, well, take it for Nannie," Mr. Gerald directed; "only don't be gone
+too long."
+
+They set out with Miss Gerald reclining in the kind of litter which the
+donkey proved to be equipped with. Lanfear went beside her, the peasant
+girl came behind, and at times ran forward to instruct them in the
+points they seemed to be looking at. For the most part the landscape
+opened beneath them, but in the azure distances it climbed into Alpine
+heights which the recent snows had now left to the gloom of their pines.
+On the slopes of the nearer hills little towns clung, here and there;
+closer yet farm-houses showed themselves among the vines and olives.
+
+It was very simple, as the life in it must always have been; and Lanfear
+wondered if the elemental charm of the scene made itself felt by his
+companion as they climbed the angles of the inclines, in a silence
+broken only by the picking of the donkey's hoofs on the rude mosaic of
+the pavement, and the panting of the peasant girl at its heels. On the
+top of the last upward stretch they stopped for the view, and Miss
+Gerald asked abruptly: "Why were you so sad?"
+
+"When was I sad?" he asked, in turn.
+
+"I don't know. Weren't you sad?"
+
+"When I was here yesterday, you mean?" She smiled on his fortunate
+guess, and he said: "Oh, I don't know. It might have begun with
+thinking--
+
+ 'Of old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago.'
+
+You know the pirates used to come sailing over the peaceful sea yonder
+from Africa, to harry these coasts, and carry off as many as they could
+capture into slavery in Tunis and Algiers. It was a long, dumb kind of
+misery that scarcely made an echo in history, but it haunted my fancy
+yesterday, and I saw these valleys full of the flight and the pursuit
+which used to fill them, up to the walls of the villages, perched on the
+heights where men could have built only for safety. Then, I got to
+thinking of other things--"
+
+"And thinking of things in the past always makes you sad," she said, in
+pensive reflection. "If it were not for the wearying of always trying to
+remember, I don't believe I should want my memory back. And of course to
+be like other people," she ended with a sigh.
+
+It was on his tongue to say that he would not have her so; but he
+checked himself, and said, lamely enough: "Perhaps you will be like
+them, sometime."
+
+She startled him by answering irrelevantly: "You know my mother is dead.
+She died a long while ago; I suppose I must have been very little."
+
+She spoke as if the fact scarcely concerned her, and Lanfear drew a
+breath of relief in his surprise. He asked, at another tangent: "What
+made you think I was sad yesterday?"
+
+"Oh, I knew, somehow. I think that I always know when you are sad; I
+can't tell you how, but I feel it."
+
+"Then I must cheer up," Lanfear said. "If I could only see you strong
+and well, Miss Gerald, like this girl--"
+
+They both looked at the peasant, and she laughed in sympathy with their
+smiling, and beat the donkey a little for pleasure; it did not mind.
+
+"But you will be--you will be! We must hurry on, now, or your father
+will be getting anxious."
+
+They pushed forward on the road, which was now level and wider than it
+had been. As they drew near the town, whose ruin began more and more to
+reveal itself in the roofless walls and windowless casements, they saw a
+man coming towards them, at whose approach Lanfear instinctively put
+himself forward. The man did not look at them, but passed, frowning
+darkly, and muttering and gesticulating.
+
+Miss Gerald turned in her litter and followed him with a long gaze. The
+peasant girl said gayly in Italian: "He is mad; the earthquake made him
+mad," and urged the donkey forward.
+
+Lanfear, in the interest of science, habitually forbade himself the
+luxury of anything like foreboding, but now, with the passing of the
+madman, he felt distinctively a lift from his spirit. He no longer
+experienced the vague dread which had followed him towards Possana, and
+made him glad of any delay that kept them from it.
+
+They entered the crooked, narrow street leading abruptly from the open
+country without any suburban hesitation into the heart of the ruin,
+which kept a vivid image of uninterrupted mediaeval life. There, till
+within the actual generation, people had dwelt, winter and summer, as
+they had dwelt from the beginning of Christian times, with nothing to
+intimate a domestic or civic advance. This street must have been the
+main thoroughfare, for stone-paved lanes, still narrower, wound from it
+here and there, while it kept a fairly direct course to the little
+piazza on a height in the midst of the town. Two churches and a simple
+town house partly enclosed it with their seamed and shattered facades.
+The dwellings here were more ruinous than on the thoroughfare, and some
+were tumbled in heaps. But Lanfear pushed open the door of one of the
+churches, and found himself in an interior which, except that it was
+roofless, could not have been greatly changed since the people had
+flocked into it to pray for safety from the earthquake. The high altar
+stood unshaken; around the frieze a succession of stucco cherubs
+perched, under the open sky, in celestial security.
+
+He had learned to look for the unexpected in Miss Gerald, and he could
+not have said that it was with surprise he now found her as capable of
+the emotions which the place inspired, as himself. He made sure of
+saying: "The earthquake, you know," and she responded with compassion:
+
+"Oh yes; and perhaps that poor man was here, praying with the rest, when
+it happened. How strange it must all have seemed to them, here where
+they lived so safely always! They thought such a dreadful thing could
+happen to others, but not to them. That is the way!"
+
+It seemed to Lanfear once more that she was on the verge of the
+knowledge so long kept from her. But she went confidently on like a
+sleepwalker who saves himself from dangers that would be death to him in
+waking. She spoke of the earthquake as if she had been reading or
+hearing of it; but he doubted if, with her broken memory, this could be
+so. It was rather as if she was exploring his own mind in the way of
+which he had more than once been sensible, and making use of his
+memory. From time to time she spoke of remembering, but he knew that
+this was as the blind speak of seeing.
+
+He was anxious to get away, and at last they came out to where they had
+left the peasant girl waiting beside her donkey. She was not there, and
+after trying this way and that in the tangle of alleys, Lanfear decided
+to take the thoroughfare which they had come up by and trust to the
+chance of finding her at its foot. But he failed even of his search for
+the street: he came out again and again at the point he had started
+from.
+
+"What is the matter?" she asked at the annoyance he could not keep out
+of his face.
+
+He laughed. "Oh, merely that we're lost. But we will wait here till that
+girl chooses to come back for us. Only it's getting late, and Mr.
+Gerald--"
+
+"Why, I know the way down," she said, and started quickly in a direction
+which, as they kept it, he recognized as the route by which he had
+emerged from the town the day before. He had once more the sense of his
+memory being used by her, as if being blind, she had taken his hand for
+guidance, or as if being herself disabled from writing, she had directed
+a pen in his grasp to form the words she desired to put down. In some
+mystical sort the effect was hers, but the means was his.
+
+They found the girl waiting with the donkey by the roadside beyond the
+last house. She explained that, not being able to follow them into the
+church with her donkey, she had decided to come where they found her and
+wait for them there.
+
+"Does no one at all live here?" Lanfear asked, carelessly.
+
+"Among the owls and the spectres? I would not pass a night here for a
+lemonade! My mother," she went on, with a natural pride in the event,
+"was lost in the earthquake. They found her with me before her breast,
+and her arms stretched out keeping the stones away." She vividly
+dramatized the fact. "I was alive, but she was dead."
+
+"Tell her," Miss Gerald said, "that my mother is dead, too."
+
+"Ah, poor little thing!" the girl said, when the message was delivered,
+and she put her beast in motion, chattering gayly to Miss Gerald in the
+bond of their common orphanhood.
+
+The return was down-hill, and they went back in half the time it had
+taken them to come. But even with this speed they were late, and the
+twilight was deepening when the last turn of their road brought them in
+sight of the new village. There a wild noise of cries for help burst
+upon the air, mixed with the shrill sound of maniac gibbering. They saw
+a boy running towards the town, and nearer them a man struggling with
+another, whom he had caught about the middle, and was dragging towards
+the side of the road where it dropped, hundreds of feet, into the gorge
+below.
+
+The donkey-girl called out: "Oh, the madman! He is killing the signor!"
+
+Lanfear shouted. The madman flung Gerald to the ground, and fled
+shrieking. Miss Gerald had leaped from her seat, and followed Lanfear as
+he ran forward to the prostrate form. She did not look at it, but within
+a few paces she clutched her hands in her hair, and screamed out: "Oh,
+my mother is killed!" and sank, as if sinking down into the earth, in a
+swoon.
+
+"No, no; it's all right, Nannie! Look after her, Lanfear! I'm not hurt.
+I let myself go in that fellow's hands, and I fell softly. It was a
+good thing he didn't drop me over the edge." Gerald gathered himself up
+nimbly enough, and lent Lanfear his help with the girl. The situation
+explained itself, almost without his incoherent additions, to the effect
+that he had become anxious, and had started out with the boy for a
+guide, to meet them, and had met the lunatic, who suddenly attacked him.
+While he talked, Lanfear was feeling the girl's pulse, and now and then
+putting his ear to her heart. With a glance at her father: "You're
+bleeding, Mr. Gerald," he said.
+
+"So I am," the old man answered, smiling, as he wiped a red stream from
+his face with his handkerchief. "But I am not hurt--"
+
+"Better let me tie it up," Lanfear said, taking the handkerchief from
+him. He felt the unselfish quality in a man whom he had not always
+thought heroic, and he bound the gash above his forehead with a
+reverence mingling with his professional gentleness. The donkey-girl had
+not ceased to cry out and bless herself, but suddenly, as her care was
+needed in getting Miss Gerald back to the litter, she became a part of
+the silence in which the procession made its way slowly into Possana
+Nuova, Lanfear going on one side, and Mr. Gerald on the other to support
+his daughter in her place. There was a sort of muted outcry of the whole
+population awaiting them at the door of the locanda where they had
+halted before, and which now had the distinction of offering them
+shelter in a room especially devoted to the poor young lady, who still
+remained in her swoon.
+
+When the landlord could prevail with his fellow-townsmen and townswomen
+to disperse in her interest, and had imposed silence upon his customers
+indoors, Lanfear began his vigil beside his patient in as great quiet
+as he could anywhere have had. Once during the evening the public
+physician of the district looked in, but he agreed with Lanfear that
+nothing was to be done which he was not doing in his greater experience
+of the case. From time to time Gerald had suggested sending for some San
+Remo physician in consultation. Lanfear had always approved, and then
+Gerald had not persisted. He was strongly excited, and anxious not so
+much for his daughter's recovery from her swoon, which he did not doubt,
+as for the effect upon her when she should have come to herself.
+
+It was this which he wished to discuss, sitting fallen back into his
+chair, or walking up and down the room, with his head bound with a
+bloody handkerchief, and looking, with a sort of alien picturesqueness,
+like a kindly brigand.
+
+Lanfear did not leave his place beside the bed where the girl lay, white
+and still as if dead. An inexpressible compassion for the poor man
+filled his heart. Whatever the event should be, it would be tragical for
+him. "Go to sleep, Mr. Gerald," he said. "Your waking can do no good. I
+will keep watch, and if need be, I'll call you. Try to make yourself
+easy on that couch."
+
+"I shall not sleep," the old man answered. "How could I?" Nevertheless,
+he adjusted himself to the hard pillows of the lounge where he had been
+sitting and drowsed among them. He woke just before dawn with a start.
+"I thought she had come to, and knew everything! What a nightmare! Did I
+groan? Is there any change?"
+
+Lanfear, sitting by the bed, in the light of the wasting candle, which
+threw a grotesque shadow of him on the wall, shook his head. After a
+moment he asked: "How long did you tell me her swoon had lasted after
+the accident to her mother?"
+
+"I don't think she recovered consciousness for two days, and then she
+remembered nothing. What do you think are the chances of her remembering
+now?"
+
+"I don't know. But there's a kind of psychopathic logic--If she lost her
+memory through one great shock, she might find it through another."
+
+"Yes, yes!" the father said, rising and walking to and fro, in his
+anguish. "That was what I thought--what I was afraid of. If I could die
+myself, and save her from living through it--I don't know what I'm
+saying! But if--but if--if she could somehow be kept from it a little
+longer! But she can't, she can't! She must know it now when she wakes."
+
+Lanfear had put up his hand, and taken the girl's slim wrist quietly
+between his thumb and finger, holding it so while her father talked on.
+
+"I suppose it's been a sort of weakness--a sort of wickedness--in me to
+wish to keep it from her; but I _have_ wished that, doctor; you must
+have seen it, and I can't deny it. We ought to bear what is sent us in
+this world, and if we escape we must pay for our escape. It has cost her
+half her being, I know it; but it hasn't cost her her reason, and I'm
+afraid for that, if she comes into her memory now. Still, you must
+do--But no one can do anything either to hinder or to help!"
+
+He was talking in a husky undertone, and brokenly, incoherently. He made
+an appeal, which Lanfear seemed not to hear, where he remained immovable
+with his hand on the girl's pulse.
+
+"Do you think I am to blame for wishing her never to know it, though
+without it she must remain deprived of one whole side of life? Do you
+think my wishing that can have had anything to do with keeping her--But
+this faint _may_ pass and she may wake from it just as she has been. It
+is logical that she should remember; but is it certain that she will?"
+
+A murmur, so very faint as to be almost no sound at all, came like a
+response from the girl's lips, and she all but imperceptibly stirred.
+Her father neither heard nor saw, but Lanfear started forward. He made a
+sudden clutch at the girl's wrist with the hand that had not left it and
+then remained motionless. "She will never remember now--here."
+
+He fell on his knees beside the bed and began to sob. "Oh, my dearest!
+My poor girl! My love!" still keeping her wrist in his hand, and laying
+his head tenderly on her arm. Suddenly he started, with a shout: "The
+pulse!" and fell forward, crushing his ear against her heart, and
+listened with bursts of: "It's beating! She isn't dead! She's alive!"
+Then he lifted her in his arms, and it was in his embrace that she
+opened her eyes, and while she clung to him, entreated:
+
+"My father! Where is he?"
+
+A dread fell upon both the men, blighting the joy with which they
+welcomed her back to life. She took her father's head between her hands,
+and kissed his bruised face. "I thought you were dead; and I thought
+that mamma--" She stopped, and they waited breathless. "But that was
+long ago, wasn't it?"
+
+"Yes," her father eagerly assented. "Very long ago."
+
+"I remember," she sighed. "I thought that I was killed, too. Was it
+_all_ a dream?" Her father and Lanfear looked at each other. Which
+should speak? "This is Doctor Lanfear, isn't it?" she asked, with a dim
+smile. "And I'm not dreaming now, am I?" He had released her from his
+arms, but she held his hand fast. "I know it is you, and papa; and yes,
+I remember everything. That terrible pain of forgetting is gone! It's
+beautiful! But did he hurt you badly, papa? I saw him, and I wanted to
+call to you. But mamma--"
+
+However the change from the oblivion of the past had been operated, it
+had been mercifully wrought. As far as Lanfear could note it, in the
+rapture of the new revelation to her which it scarcely needed words to
+establish, the process was a gradual return from actual facts to the
+things of yesterday and then to the things of the day before, and so
+back to the tragedy in which she had been stricken. There was no sudden
+burst of remembrance, but a slow unveiling of the reality in which her
+spirit was mystically fortified against it. At times it seemed to him
+that the effect was accomplished in her by supernatural agencies such
+as, he remembered once somewhere reading, attend the souls of those
+lately dead, and explore their minds till every thought and deed of
+their earthly lives, from the last to the first, is revealed to them out
+of an inner memory which can never, any jot or tittle, perish. It was as
+if this had remained in her intact from the blow that shattered her
+outer remembrance. When the final, long-dreaded horror was reached, it
+was already a sorrow of the past, suffered and accepted with the
+resignation which is the close of grief, as of every other passion.
+
+Love had come to her help in the time of her need, but not love alone
+helped her live back to the hour of that supreme experience and beyond
+it. In the absorbing interest of her own renascence, the shock, more
+than the injury which her father had undergone, was ignored, if not
+neglected. Lanfear had not, indeed, neglected it; but he could not help
+ignoring it in his happiness, as he remembered afterwards in the
+self-reproach which he would not let the girl share with him. Nothing,
+he realized, could have availed if everything had been done which he did
+not do; but it remained a pang with him that he had so dimly felt his
+duty to the gentle old man, even while he did it. Gerald lived to
+witness his daughter's perfect recovery of the self so long lost to her;
+he lived, with a joy more explicit than their own, to see her the wife
+of the man to whom she was dearer than love alone could have made her.
+He lived beyond that time, rejoicing, if it may be so said, in the fond
+memories of her mother which he had been so long forbidden by her
+affliction to recall. Then, after the spring of the Riviera had whitened
+into summer, and San Remo hid, as well as it could, its sunny glare
+behind its pines and palms, Gerald suffered one long afternoon through
+the heat till the breathless evening, and went early to bed. He had been
+full of plans for spending the rest of the summer at the little place in
+New England where his daughter knew that her mother lay. In the morning
+he did not wake.
+
+"He gave his life that I might have mine!" she lamented in the first
+wild grief.
+
+"No, don't say that, Nannie," her husband protested, calling her by the
+pet name which her father always used. "He is dead; but if we owe each
+other to his loss, it is because he was given, not because he gave
+himself."
+
+"Oh, I know, I know!" she wailed. "But he would gladly have given
+himself for me."
+
+That, perhaps, Lanfear could not have denied, and he had no wish to do
+so. He had a prescience of happiness for her which the future did not
+belie; and he divined that a woman must not be forbidden the extremes
+within which she means to rest her soul.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE EIDOLONS OF BROOKS ALFORD
+
+
+I should like to give the story of Alford's experiences just as Wanhope
+told it, sitting with us before the glowing hearth in the Turkish room,
+one night after the other diners at our club had gone away to digest
+their dinners at the theatre, or in their bachelor apartments up-town,
+or on the late trains which they were taking north, south, and west; or
+had hurried back to their offices to spend the time stolen from rest in
+overwork for which their famished nerves would duly revenge themselves.
+It was undoubtedly overwork which preceded Alford's experiences if it
+did not cause them, for he was pretty well broken from it when he took
+himself off in the early summer, to put the pieces together as best he
+could by the seaside. But this was a fact which Wanhope was not obliged
+to note to us, and there were certain other commonplaces of our
+knowledge of Alford which he could omit without omitting anything
+essential to our understanding of the facts which he dealt with so
+delicately, so electly, almost affectionately, coaxing each point into
+the fittest light, and then lifting his phrase from it, and letting it
+stand alone in our consciousness. I remember particularly how he touched
+upon the love-affair which was supposed to have so much to do with
+Alford's break-up, and how he dismissed it to its proper place in the
+story. As he talked on, with scarcely an interruption either from the
+eager credulity of Rulledge or the doubt of Minver, I heard with a
+sensuous comfort--I can use no other word--the far-off click of the
+dishes in the club kitchen, putting away till next day, with the musical
+murmur of a smitten glass or the jingle of a dropped spoon. But if I
+should try to render his words, I should spoil their impression in the
+vain attempt, and I feel that it is best to give the story as best I can
+in words of my own, so far from responsive to the requisitions of the
+occult incident.
+
+The first intimation Alford had of the strange effect, which from first
+to last was rather an obsession than a possession of his, was after a
+morning of idle satisfaction spent in watching the target practice from
+the fort in the neighborhood of the little fishing-village where he was
+spending the summer. The target was two or three miles out in the open
+water beyond the harbor, and he found his pleasure in watching the smoke
+of the gun for that discrete interval before the report reached him, and
+then for that somewhat longer interval before he saw the magnificent
+splash of the shot which, as it plunged into the sea, sent a fan-shaped
+fountain thirty or forty feet into the air. He did not know and he did
+not care whether the target was ever hit or not. That fact was no part
+of his concern. His affair was to watch the burst of smoke from the fort
+and then to watch the upward gush of water, almost as light and vaporous
+to the eye, where the ball struck. He did not miss one of the shots
+fired during the forenoon, and when he met the other people who sat down
+with him at the midday dinner in the hotel, his talk with them was
+naturally of the morning's practice. They one and all declared it a
+great nuisance, and said that it had shattered their nerves terribly,
+which was not perhaps so strange, since they were all women. But when
+they asked him in his quality of nervous wreck whether he had not
+suffered from the prolonged and repeated explosions, too, he found
+himself able to say no, that he had enjoyed every moment of the firing.
+He added that he did not believe he had even noticed the noise after the
+first shot, he was so wholly taken with the beauty of the fountain-burst
+from the sea which followed; and as he spoke the fan-like spray rose and
+expanded itself before his eyes, quite blotting out the visage of a
+young widow across the table. In his swift recognition of the fact and
+his reflection upon it, he realized that the effect was quite as if he
+had been looking at some intense light, almost as if he had been looking
+at the sun, and that the illusion which had blotted out the agreeable
+reality opposite was of the quality of those flying shapes which repeat
+themselves here, there, and everywhere that one looks, after lifting the
+gaze from a dazzling object. When his consciousness had duly registered
+this perception, there instantly followed a recognition of the fact that
+the eidolon now filling his vision was not the effect of the dazzled
+eyes, but of a mental process, of thinking how the thing which it
+reported had looked.
+
+By the time Alford had co-ordinated this reflection with the other, the
+eidolon had faded from the lady's face, which again presented itself in
+uninterrupted loveliness with the added attraction of a distinct pout.
+
+"Well, Mr. Alford!" she bantered him.
+
+"Oh, I beg your pardon! I was thinking--"
+
+"Not of what I was saying," she broke in, laughingly, forgivingly.
+
+"No, I certainly wasn't," he assented, with such a sense of approaching
+creepiness in his experience that when she challenged him to say what
+he _was_ thinking of, he could not, or would not; she professed to
+believe that he would not.
+
+In the joking that followed he soon lost the sense of approaching
+creepiness, and began to be proud of what had happened to him as out of
+the ordinary, as a species of psychological ecstasy almost of spiritual
+value. From time to time he tried, by thinking of the splash and upward
+gush from the cannon-shot's plunge in the sea, to recall the vision, but
+it would not come again, and at the end of an afternoon somewhat
+distraughtly spent he decided to put the matter away, as one of the odd
+things of no significance which happen in life and must be dealt with as
+mysteries none the less trifling because they are inexplicable.
+
+"Well, you've got over it?" the widow joked him as he drew up towards
+her, smiling from her rocker on the veranda after supper. At first, all
+the women in the hotel had petted him; but with their own cares and
+ailments to reclaim them they let the invalid fall to the peculiar
+charge of the childless widow who had nothing else to do, and was so
+well and strong that she could look after the invalid Professor of
+Archaeology (at the Champlain University) without the fatigues they must
+feel.
+
+"Yes, I've got over it," he said.
+
+"And what was it?" she boldly pursued.
+
+He was about to say, and then he could not.
+
+"You won't tell?"
+
+"Not yet," he answered. He added, after a moment, "I don't believe I
+can."
+
+"Because it's confidential?"
+
+"No; not exactly that. Because it's impossible."
+
+"Oh, that's simple enough. I understand exactly what you mean. Well, if
+ever it becomes less difficult, remember that I should always like to
+know. It seemed a little--personal."
+
+"How in the world?"
+
+"Well, when one is stared at in that way--"
+
+"Did I stare?"
+
+"Don't you _always_ stare? But in this case you stared as if there was
+something wrong with my hair."
+
+"There wasn't," Alford protested, simple-heartedly. Then he recollected
+his sophistication to say: "Unless its being of that particular shade
+between brown and red was wrong."
+
+"Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford! After that I _must_ believe you."
+
+They talked on the veranda till the night fell, and then they came in
+among the lamps, in the parlor, and she sat down with a certain
+provisionality, putting herself sideways on a light chair by a window,
+and as she chatted and laughed with one cheek towards him she now and
+then beat the back of her chair with her open hand. The other people
+were reading or severely playing cards, and they, too, kept their tones
+down to a respectful level, while she lingered, and when she rose and
+said good-night he went out and took some turns on the veranda before
+going up to bed. She was certainly, he realized, a very pretty woman,
+and very graceful and very amusing, and though she probably knew all
+about it, she was the franker and honester for her knowledge.
+
+He had arrived at this conclusion just as he turned the switch of the
+electric light inside his door, and in the first flash of the carbon
+film he saw her sitting beside the window in such a chair as she had
+taken and in the very pose which she had kept in the parlor. Her
+half-averted face was lit as from laughing, and she had her hand lifted
+as if to beat the back of her chair.
+
+"Good Heavens, Mrs. Yarrow!" he said, in a sort of whispered shout,
+while he mechanically closed the door behind him as if to keep the fact
+to himself. "What in the world are you doing here?"
+
+Then she was not there. Nothing was there; not even a chair beside the
+window.
+
+Alford dropped weakly into the only chair in the room, which stood next
+the door by the head of his bed, and abandoned himself a helpless prey
+to the logic of the events.
+
+It was at this point, which I have been able to give in Wanhope's exact
+words, that, in the ensuing pause, Rulledge asked, as if he thought some
+detail might be denied him: "And what was the logic of the events?"
+
+Minver gave a fleering laugh. "Don't be premature, Rulledge. If you have
+the logic now, you will spoil everything. You can't have the moral until
+you've had the whole story. Go on, Wanhope. You're so much more
+interesting than usual that I won't ask how you got hold of all these
+compromising minutiae."
+
+"Of course," Wanhope returned, "they're not for the general ear. I go
+rather further, for the sake of the curious fact, than I should be
+warranted in doing if I did not know my audience so well."
+
+We joined in a murmur of gratification, and he went on to say that
+Alford's first coherent thought was that he was dreaming one of those
+unwarranted dreams in which we make our acquaintance privy to all sorts
+of strange incidents. Then he knew that he was not dreaming, and that
+his eye had merely externated a mental vision, as in the case of the
+cannon-shot splash of which he had seen the phantom as soon as it was
+mentioned. He remembered afterwards asking himself in a sort of terror
+how far it was going to go with him; how far his thought was going to
+report itself objectively hereafter, and what were the reasonable
+implications of his abnormal experiences. He did not know just how long
+he sat by his bedside trying to think, only to have his conclusions whir
+away like a flock of startled birds when he approached them. He went to
+bed because he was exhausted rather than because he was sleepy, but he
+could not recall a moment of wakefulness after his head touched the
+pillow.
+
+He woke surprisingly refreshed, but at the belated breakfast where he
+found Mrs. Yarrow still lingering he thought her looking not well. She
+confessed, listlessly, that she had not rested well. She was not sure,
+she said, whether the sea air agreed with her; she might try the
+mountains a little later. She was not inclined to talk, and that day he
+scarcely spoke with her except in commonplaces at the table. They had no
+return to the little mystery they had mocked together the day before.
+
+More days passed, and Alford had no recurrence of his visions. His
+acquaintance with Mrs. Yarrow made no further advance; there was no one
+else in the hotel who interested him, and he bored himself. At the same
+time his recovery seemed retarded; he lost tone, and after a fortnight
+he ran up to talk himself over with his doctor in Boston. He rather
+thought he would mention his eidolons, and ask if they were at all
+related to the condition of his nerves. It was a keen disappointment,
+but it ought not to have been a surprise, for him to find that his
+doctor was off on his summer vacation. The caretaker who opened the door
+to Alford named a young physician in the same block of Marlborough
+Street who had his doctor's practice for the summer, but Alford had not
+the heart to go to this alternate.
+
+He started down to his hotel on a late afternoon train that would bring
+him to the station after dusk, and before he reached it the lamps had
+been lighted in his car. Alford sat in a sparsely peopled smoker, where
+he had found a place away from the crowd in the other coaches, and
+looked out of the window into the reflected interior of his car, which
+now and then thinned away and let him see the weeds and gravel of the
+railroad banks, with the bushes that topped them and the woods that
+backed them. The train at one point stopped rather suddenly and then
+went on, for no reason that he ever cared to inquire; but as it slowly
+moved forward again he was reminded of something he had seen one night
+in going to New York just before the train drew into Springfield. It had
+then made such another apparently reasonless stop; but before it resumed
+its course Alford saw from his window a group of trainmen, and his own
+Pullman conductor with his lantern on his arm, bending over the figure
+of a man defined in his dark clothing against the snow of the bank where
+he lay propped. His face was waxen white, and Alford noted how
+particularly black the mustache looked traversing the pallid visage. He
+never knew whether the man was killed or merely stunned; you learn
+nothing with certainty of such things on trains; but now, as he thought
+of the incident, its eidolon showed itself outside of his mind, and
+followed him in every detail, even to a snowy stretch of the embankment,
+until the increasing speed of the train seemed to sweep it back out of
+sight.
+
+Alford turned his eyes to the interior of the smoker, which, except for
+two or three dozing commuters and a noisy euchre-party, had been empty
+of everything but the fumes and stale odors of tobacco, and found it
+swarming with visions, the eidolons of everything he remembered from his
+past life. Whatever had once strongly impressed itself upon his nerves
+was reported there again as instantly as he thought of it. It was
+largely a whirling chaos, a kaleidoscopic jumble of facts; but from time
+to time some more memorable and important experience visualized itself
+alone. Such was the death-bed of the little sister whom he had been
+wakened, a child, to see going to heaven, as they told him. Such was the
+pathetic, foolish face of the girl whom long ago he had made believe he
+cared for, and then had abruptly broken with: he saw again, with
+heartache, her silly, tender amaze when he said he was going away. Such
+was the look of mute astonishment, of gentle reproach, in the eyes of
+the friend, now long dead, whom in a moment of insensate fury he had
+struck on the mouth, and who put his hand to his bleeding lips as he
+bent that gaze of wonder and bewilderment upon him. But it was not alone
+the dreadful impressions that reported themselves. There were others, as
+vivid, which came back in the original joyousness: the face of his
+mother looking up at him from the crowd on a day of college triumph when
+he was delivering the valedictory of his class; the collective gayety of
+the whole table on a particularly delightful evening at his dining-club;
+his own image in the glass as he caught sight of it on coming home
+accepted by the woman who afterwards jilted him; the transport which
+lighted up his father's visage when he stepped ashore from the vessel
+which had been rumored lost, and he could be verified by the senses as
+still alive; the comical, bashful ecstasy of the good fellow, his
+ancient chum, in telling him he had had a son born the night before, and
+the mother was doing well, and how he laughed and danced, and skipped
+into the air.
+
+The smoker was full of these eidolons and of others which came and went
+with constant vicissitude. But what was of a greater weirdness than
+seeing them within it was seeing them without in that reflection of the
+interior which travelled with it through the summer night, and repeated
+it, now dimly, now brilliantly, in every detail. Alford sat in a daze,
+with a smile which he was aware of, fixed and stiff as if in plaster, on
+his face, and with his gaze bent on this or that eidolon, and then on
+all of them together. He was not so much afraid of them as of being
+noticed by the other passengers in the smoker, to whom he knew he might
+look very queer. He said to himself that he was making the whole thing,
+but the very subjectivity was what filled him with a deep and hopeless
+dread. At last the train ceased its long leaping through the dark, and
+with its coming to a stand the whole illusion vanished. He heard a gay
+voice which he knew bidding some one good-bye who was getting into the
+car just back of the smoker, and as he descended to the platform he
+almost walked into the arms of Mrs. Yarrow.
+
+"Why, Mr. Alford! We had given you up. We thought you wouldn't come back
+till to-morrow--or perhaps ever. What in the world will you do for
+supper? The kitchen fires were out ages ago!"
+
+In the light of the station electrics she beamed upon him, and he felt
+glad at heart, as if he had been saved from something, a mortal danger
+or a threatened shame. But he could not speak at once; his teeth closed
+with tetanic force upon each other. Later, as they walked to the hotel,
+through the warm, soft night in which the south wind was roaming the
+starless heavens for rain, he found his voice, and although he felt that
+he was speaking unnaturally, he made out to answer the lively questions
+with which she pelted him too thickly to expect them to be answered
+severally. She told him all the news of the day, and when she began on
+yesterday's news she checked herself with a laugh and said she had
+forgotten that he had only been gone since morning. "But now," she said,
+"you see how you've been missed--how _any_ man must be missed in a hotel
+full of women."
+
+She took charge of him when they got to the house, and said if he would
+go boldly into the dining-room, where they detected, as they approached,
+one lamp scantly shining from the else darkened windows, she would beard
+the lioness in her den, by which she meant the cook in the kitchen, and
+see what she could get him for supper. Apparently she could get nothing
+warm, for when a reluctant waitress appeared it was with such a chilly
+refection on her tray that Alford, though he was not very hungry,
+returned from interrogating the obscurity for eidolons, and shivered at
+it. At the same time the swing-door of the long, dim room opened to
+admit a gush of the outer radiance on which Mrs. Yarrow drifted in with
+a chafing-dish in one hand and a tea-basket in the other. She floated
+tiltingly towards him like, he thought, a pretty little ship, and sent a
+cheery hail before.
+
+"I've been trying to get somebody to join you at a premature
+Welsh-rarebit and a belated cup of tea, but I can't tear one of the
+tabbies from their cards or the kittens from their gambols in the
+amusement-hall in the basement. Do you mind so very much having it
+alone? Because you'll have to, whether you do or not. Unless you call me
+company, when I'm merely cook."
+
+She put her utensils on the table beside the forbidding tray the
+waitress had left, and helped lift herself by pressing one hand on the
+top of a chair towards the electric, which she flashed up to keep the
+dismal lamp in countenance. Alford let her do it. He durst not, he
+felt, stir from his place, lest any movement should summon back the
+eidolons; and now in the sudden glare of light he shyly, slyly searched
+the room for them. Not one, fair or foul, showed itself, and slowly he
+felt a great weight lifting from his heart. In its place there sprang up
+a joyous gratitude towards Mrs. Yarrow, who had saved him from them,
+from himself. An inexpressible tenderness filled his breast; the tears
+rose to his eyes; a soft glow enveloped his whole being, a warmth of
+hope, a freshness of life renewed, encompassed him. He wished to take
+her in his arms, to tell her how he loved her; and as she bustled about,
+lighting the lamp of her chafing-dish, and kindling the little
+spirit-stove she had brought with her to make tea, he let his gaze dwell
+upon every pose, every motion of her with a glad hunger in which no
+smallest detail was lost. He now believed that without her he must die,
+without her he could not wish to live.
+
+"Jove," Rulledge broke in at this point of Wanhope's story, which I am
+telling again so badly, "I think Alford was in luck."
+
+Minver gave a harsh cackle. "The only thing Rulledge finds fault with in
+this club is 'the lack of woman's nursing and the lack of woman's
+tears.' Nothing is wanting to his enjoyment of his victuals but the fact
+that they are not served by a neat-handed Phyllis, like Alford's."
+
+Rulledge glanced towards Wanhope, and innocently inquired, "Was that her
+first name?"
+
+Minver burst into a scream, and Rulledge looked red and silly for having
+given himself away; but he made an excursion to the buffet outside, and
+returned with a sandwich with which he supported himself stolidly under
+Minver's derision, until Wanhope came to his relief by resuming his
+story, or rather his study, of Alford's strange experience.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow first gave Alford his tea, as being of a prompter brew than
+the rarebit, but she was very quick and apt with that, too; and pretty
+soon she leaned forward, and in the glow from the lamp under the
+chafing-dish, which spiritualized her charming face with its thin
+radiance, puffed the flame out with her pouted lips, and drew back with
+a long-sighed "There! That will make you see your grandmother, if
+anything will."
+
+"My grandmother?" Alford repeated.
+
+"Yes. Wouldn't you like to?" Mrs.. Yarrow asked, pouring the thick
+composition over the toast (rescued stone-cold from the frigid tray) on
+Alford's plate. "I'm sure I should like to see mine--dear old gran! Not
+that I ever saw her--either of her--or should know how she looked. Did
+you ever see yours--either of her?" she pursued, impulsively.
+
+"Oh yes," Alford answered, looking intently at her, but with so little
+speculation in the eyes he glared so with that he knew her to be uneasy
+under them.
+
+She laughed a little, and stayed her hand on the bail of the teapot.
+"Which of her?"
+
+"Oh, both!"
+
+"And--and--did she look so much like _me_?" she said, with an added
+laugh, that he perceived had an hysterical note in it. "You're letting
+your rarebit get cold!"
+
+He laughed himself, now, a great laugh of relaxation, of relief. "Not
+the least in the world! She was not exactly a phantom of delight."
+
+"Oh, thank you, Mr. Alford. Now, it's your tea's getting cold."
+
+They laughed together, and he gave himself to his victual with a relish
+that she visibly enjoyed. When that question of his grandmother had been
+pushed he thought of an awful experience of his childhood, which left on
+his infant mind an indelible impression, a scar, to remain from the
+original wound forever. He had been caught in a lie, the first he could
+remember, but by no means the last, by many immemorable thousands. His
+poor little wickedness had impugned the veracity of both these terrible
+old ladies, who, habitually at odds with each other, now united, for
+once, against him. He could always see himself, a mean little
+blubbering-faced rascal, stealing guilty looks of imploring at their
+faces, set unmercifully against him, one in sorrow and one in anger,
+requiring his mother to whip him, and insisting till he was led, loudly
+roaring, into the parlor, and there made a liar of for all time, so far
+as fear could do it.
+
+When Mrs. Yarrow asked if he had ever seen his grandmother he expected
+instantly to see her, in duplicate, and as a sole refuge, but with
+little hope that it would save him, he kept his eyes fast on hers, and
+to his unspeakable joy it did avail. No other face, of sorrow or of
+anger, rose between them. For the time his thought was quit of its
+consequence; no eidolon outwardly repeated his inward vision. A warm
+gush of gratitude seemed to burst from his heart, and to bathe his whole
+being, and then to flow in a tide of ineffable tenderness towards Mrs.
+Yarrow, and involve her and bear them together heavenward. It was not
+passion, it was not love, he perceived well enough; it was the utterance
+of a vital conviction that she had saved him from an overwhelming
+subjective horror, and that in her sweet objectivity there was a
+security and peace to be found nowhere else.
+
+He greedily ate every atom of his rarebit, he absorbed every drop of
+the moisture in the teapot, so that when she shook it and shook it, and
+then tried to pour something from it, there was no slightest dribble at
+the spout. But they lingered, talking and laughing, and perhaps they
+might never have left the place if the hard handmaiden who had brought
+the tea-tray had not first tried putting her head in at the swing-door
+from the kitchen, and then, later, come boldly in and taken the tray
+away.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow waited self-respectfully for her disappearance, and then she
+said, "I'm afraid that was a hint, Mr. Alford."
+
+"It seemed like one," he owned.
+
+They went out together, gayly chatting, but she would not encourage the
+movement he made towards the veranda. She remained firmly attached to
+the newel-post of the stairs, and at the first chance he gave her she
+said good-night and bounded lightly upward. At the turn of the stairs
+she stopped and looked laughing down at him over the rail. "I hope you
+won't see your grandmother."
+
+"Oh, not a bit of it," he called back. He felt that he failed to give
+his reply the quality of epigram, but he was not unhappy in his failure.
+
+Many light-hearted days followed this joyous evening. No eidolons
+haunted Alford's horizon, perhaps because Mrs. Yarrow filled his whole
+heaven. She was very constantly with him, guiding his wavering steps up
+the hill of recovery, which he climbed with more and more activity, and
+keeping him company in those valleys of relapse into which he now and
+then fell back from the difficult steeps. It came to be tacitly, or at
+least passively, conceded by the other ladies that she had somehow
+earned the exclusive right to what had once been the common charge; or
+that if one of their number had a claim to keep Mr. Alford from killing
+himself by all sorts of imprudences, which in his case amounted to
+impieties, it was certainly Mrs. Yarrow. They did not put this in terms,
+but they felt it and acted it.
+
+She was all the safer guardian for a delicate invalid because she
+loathed manly sports so entirely that she did not even pretend to like
+them, as most women, poor things, think themselves obliged to do. In her
+hands there was no danger that he would be tempted to excesses in golf.
+She was really afraid of all boats, but she was willing to go out with
+him in the sail-boat of a superannuated skipper, because to sit talking
+in the stern and stoop for the vagaries of the boom in tacking was such
+good exercise. She would join him in fishing from the rotting pier, but
+with no certainty which was a cunner and which was a sculpin, when she
+caught it, and with an equal horror of both the nasty, wriggling things.
+When they went a walk together, her notion of a healthful tramp was to
+find a nice place among the sweet-fern or the pine-needles, and sit down
+in it and talk, or make a lap, to which he could bring the berries he
+gathered for her to arrange in the shallow leaf-trays she pinned
+together with twigs. She really preferred a rocking-chair on the veranda
+to anything else; but if he wished to go to those other excesses, she
+would go with him, to keep him out of mischief.
+
+There could be only one credible reading of the situation, but Alford
+let the summer pass in this pleasant dreaming without waking up till too
+late to the pleasanter reality. It will seem strange enough, but it is
+true, that it was no part of his dream to fancy that Mrs. Yarrow was in
+love with him. He knew very well, long before the end, that he was in
+love with her; but, remaining in the dark otherwise, he considered only
+himself in forbearing verbally to make love to her.
+
+"Well!" Rulledge snarled at this point, "he _was_ a chump."
+
+Wanhope at the moment opposed nothing directly to the censure, but said
+that something pathetically reproachful in Mrs. Yarrow's smiling looks
+penetrated to Alford as she nodded gayly from the car window to him in
+the little group which had assembled to see her off at the station when
+she left, by no means the first of their happy hotel circle to go.
+
+"Somebody," Rulledge burst out again, "ought to have kicked him."
+
+"What's become," Minver asked, "of all the dear maids and widows that
+you've failed to marry at the end of each summer, Rulledge?"
+
+The satire involved flattery so sweet that Rulledge could not perhaps
+wish to make any retort. He frowned sternly, and said, with a face
+averted from Minver: "Go on, Wanhope!"
+
+Wanhope here permitted himself a philosophical excursion in which I will
+not accompany him. It was apparently to prepare us for the dramatic fact
+which followed, and which I suppose he was trying rather to work away
+from than work up to. It included some facts which he had failed to
+touch on before, and which led to a discussion very interesting in
+itself, but of a range too great for the limits I am trying to keep
+here. It seems that Alford had been stayed from declaring his love not
+only because he doubted of its nature, but also because he questioned
+whether a man in his broken health had any right to offer himself to a
+woman, and because from a yet finer scruple he hesitated in his poverty
+to ask the hand of a rich woman. On the first point, we were pretty well
+agreed, but on the second we divided again, especially Rulledge and
+Minver, who held, the one, that his hesitation did Alford honor, and
+quite relieved him from the imputation of being a chump; and the other
+that he was an ass to keep quiet for any such silly reason. Minver
+contended that every woman had a right, whether rich or poor, to the man
+who loved her; and, moreover, there were now so many rich women that, if
+they were not allowed to marry poor men, their chances of marriage were
+indefinitely reduced. What better could a widow do with the money she
+had inherited from a husband she probably did not love than give it to a
+man like Alford--or to an ass like Alford, Minver corrected himself.
+
+His _reductio ad absurdum_ allowed Wanhope to resume with a laugh, and
+say that Alford waited at the station in the singleness to which the
+tactful dispersion of the others had left him, and watched the train
+rapidly dwindle in the perspective, till an abrupt turn of the road
+carried it out of sight. Then he lifted his eyes with a long sigh, and
+looked round. Everywhere he saw Mrs. Yarrow's smiling face with that
+inner pathos. It swarmed upon him from all points; and wherever he
+turned it repeated itself in the distances like that succession of faces
+you see when you stand between two mirrors.
+
+It was not merely a lapse from his lately hopeful state with Alford, it
+was a collapse. The man withered and dwindled away, till he felt that he
+must audibly rattle in his clothes as he walked by people. He did not
+walk much. Mostly he remained shrunken in the arm-chair where he used to
+sit beside Mrs. Yarrow's rocker, and the ladies, the older and the
+older-fashioned, who were "sticking it out" at the hotel till it should
+close on the 15th of September, observed him, some compassionately,
+some censoriously, but all in the same conviction.
+
+"It's plain to be seen what ails Mr. Alford, _now_."
+
+"Well, I guess it _is_."
+
+"_I_ guess so."
+
+"I _guess_ it is."
+
+"Seems kind of heartless, her going and leaving him so."
+
+"Like a sick kitten!"
+
+"Well, I should say as _much_."
+
+"Your eyes bother you, Mr. Alford?" one of them chanted, breaking from
+their discussion of him to appeal directly to him. He was rubbing his
+eyes, to relieve himself for the moment from the intolerable affliction
+of those swarming eidolons, which, whenever he thought of this thing or
+that, thickened about him. They now no longer displaced one another, but
+those which came first remained fadedly beside or behind the fresher
+appearances, like the earlier rainbow which loses depth and color when a
+later arch defines itself.
+
+"Yes," he said, glad of the subterfuge. "They annoy me a good deal of
+late."
+
+"You want to get fitted for a good pair of glasses. I kept letting it
+go, when I first began to get old-sighted."
+
+Another lady came to Alford's rescue. "I guess Mr. Alford has no need to
+get fitted for old sight yet a while. You got little spidery
+things--specks and dots--in your eyes?"
+
+"Yes--multitudes," he said, hopelessly.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you what: you want to build up. That was the way with
+me, and the oculist said it was from getting all run down. I built up,
+and the first thing I knew my sight was as clear as a bell. You want to
+build up."
+
+"You want to go to the mountains," a third interposed. "That's where
+Mrs. Yarrow's gone, and I guess it'll do her more good than sticking it
+out here would ever have done."
+
+Alford would have been glad enough to go to the mountains, but with
+those illusions hovering closer and closer about him, he had no longer
+the courage, the strength. He had barely enough of either to get away to
+Boston. He found his doctor this time, after winning and losing the
+wager he made himself that he would not have returned to town yet, and
+the good-fortune was almost too much for his shaken nerves. The cordial
+of his friend's greeting--they had been chums at Harvard--completed his
+overthrow. As he sank upon the professional sofa, where so many other
+cases had been diagnosticated, he broke into tears. "Hello, old fellow!"
+the doctor said, encouragingly, and more tenderly than he would have
+dealt with some women. "What's up?"
+
+"Jim," Alford found voice to say, "I'm afraid I'm losing my mind."
+
+The doctor smiled provisionally. "Well, that's _one_ of the signs you're
+not. Can you say how?"
+
+"Oh yes. In a minute," Alford sobbed, and when he had got the better of
+himself he told his friend the whole story. In the direct examination he
+suppressed Mrs. Yarrow's part, but when the doctor, who had listened
+with smiling seriousness, began to cross-examine him with the question,
+"And you don't remember that any outside influence affected the
+recurrence of the illusions, or did anything to prevent it?" Alford
+answered promptly: "Oh yes. There was a woman who did."
+
+"A woman? What sort of a woman?"
+
+Alford told.
+
+"That is very curious," the doctor said. "I know a man who used to have
+a distressing dream. He broke it up by telling his wife about it every
+morning after he had dreamt it."
+
+"Unluckily, she isn't my wife," Alford said, gloomily.
+
+"But when she was with you, you got rid of the illusions?"
+
+"At first, I used to see hers; then I stopped seeing any."
+
+"Did you ever tell her of them?"
+
+"No; I didn't."
+
+"Never tell anybody?"
+
+"No one but you."
+
+"And do you see them now?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you think, because you've told me of them?"
+
+"It seems so."
+
+The doctor was silent for a marked space. Then he asked, smiling: "Well,
+why not?"
+
+"Why not what?"
+
+"Tell your wife."
+
+"How, my wife?"
+
+"By marriage."
+
+Alford looked dazed. "Do you mean Mrs. Yarrow?"
+
+"If that's her name, and she's a widow."
+
+"And do you think it would be the fair thing for a man on the verge of
+insanity--a physical and mental wreck--to ask a woman to marry him?"
+
+"In your case, yes. In the first place, you're not so bad as all that.
+You need nothing but rest for your body and change for your mind. I
+believe you'll get rid of your illusions as soon as you form the habit
+of speaking of them promptly when they begin to trouble you. You ought
+to speak of them to some one. You can't always have me around, and Mrs.
+Yarrow would be the next best thing."
+
+"She's rich, and you know what I am. I'll have to borrow the money to
+rest on, I'm so poor."
+
+"Not if you marry it."
+
+Alford rose, somewhat more vigorously than he had sat down. But that day
+he did not go beyond ascertaining that Mrs. Yarrow was in town. He found
+out the fact from the maid at her door, who said that she was nearly
+always at home after dinner, and, without waiting for the evening of
+another day, Alford went to call upon her.
+
+She said, coming down to him in a rather old-fashioned, impersonal
+drawing-room which looked distinctly as if it had been left to her: "I
+was so glad to get your card. When did you leave Woodbeach?"
+
+"Mrs. Yarrow," he returned, as if that were the answer, "I think I owe
+you an explanation."
+
+"Pay it!" she bantered, putting out her hand.
+
+"I'm so poverty-stricken that I don't know whether I can. Did you ever
+notice anything odd about me?"
+
+His directness seemed to have a right to directness from her. "I noticed
+that you stared a good deal--or used to. But people _do_ stare."
+
+"I stared because I saw things."
+
+"Saw things?"
+
+"I saw whatever I thought of. Whatever came into my mind was externated
+in a vision."
+
+She smiled, he could not make out whether uneasily or not. "It sounds
+rather creepy, doesn't it? But it's very interesting."
+
+"That's what the doctor said; I've been to see him this morning. May I
+tell you about my visions? They're not so creepy as they sound, I
+believe, and I don't think they'll keep you awake."
+
+"Yes, do," she said. "I should like of all things to hear about them.
+Perhaps I've been one of them."
+
+"You have."
+
+"Oh! Isn't that rather personal?"
+
+"I hope not offensively."
+
+He went on to tell her, with even greater fulness than he had told the
+doctor. She listened with the interest women take in anything weird, and
+with a compassion for him which she did not conceal so perfectly but
+that he saw it. At the end he said: "You may wonder that I come to you
+with all this, which must sound like the ravings of a madman."
+
+"No--no," she hesitated.
+
+"I came because I wished you to know everything about me
+before--before--I wouldn't have come, you'll believe me, if I hadn't had
+the doctor's assurance that my trouble was merely a part of my being
+physically out of kilter, and had nothing to do with my sanity--Good
+Heavens! What am I saying? But the thought has tormented me so! And in
+the midst of it I've allowed myself to--Mrs. Yarrow, I love you. Don't
+you know that?"
+
+Alford may have had a divided mind in this declaration, but after that
+one word Mrs. Yarrow had no mind for anything else. He went on.
+
+"I'm not only sick--so sick that I sha'n't be able to do any work for a
+year at least--but I'm poor, so poor that I can't afford to be sick."
+
+She lifted her eyes and looked at him, where she sat oddly aloof from
+those possessions of hers, to which she seemed so little related, and
+said, with a smile quivering at the corners of her pretty mouth, "I
+don't see what that has to do with it."
+
+"What do you mean?" He stared at her hard.
+
+"Am I in duplicate or triplicate, this time?"
+
+"No, you're only one, and there's none like you! I could never see any
+one else while I looked at you!" he cried, only half aware of his
+poetry, and meaning what he said very literally.
+
+But she took only the poetry. "I shouldn't wish you to," she said, and
+she laughed.
+
+He could not believe yet in his good-fortune. His countenance fell. "I'm
+afraid I don't understand, or that you don't. It doesn't seem as if I
+could get to the end of my unworthiness, which isn't voluntary. It seems
+altogether too base. I can't let you say what you do, if you mean it,
+till you know that I come to you in despair as well as in love. You
+saved me from the fear I was in, again and again, and I believe that
+without you I shall--Ah, it seems very base! But the doctor--If I could
+always tell some one--if I could tell _you_ when these things were
+obsessing me--haunting me--they would cease--"
+
+Mrs. Yarrow rose, with rather a piteous smile. "Then, I am a
+prescription!" She hoped, woman-like, that she was solely a passion; but
+is any woman worth having, ever solely a passion?
+
+"Don't!" Alford implored, rising too. "Don't, in mercy, take it that
+way! It's only that I wish you to know everything that's in me; to know
+how utterly helpless and worthless I am. You needn't have a pang in
+throwing such a thing away."
+
+She put out her hand to him, but at arm's-length. "I sha'n't throw you
+away--at least, not to-night. I want to think." It was a way of saying
+she wished him to go, and he had no desire to stay. He asked if he might
+come again, and she said, "Oh yes."
+
+"To-morrow?"
+
+"Not to-morrow, perhaps. When I send. Was it _young_ Doctor Enderby?"
+
+They had rather a sad, dry parting; and when her door closed upon him he
+felt that it had shut him out forever. His shame and his defeat were so
+great that he did not think of his eidolons, and they did not come to
+trouble him. He woke in the morning, asking himself, bitterly, if he
+were cured already. His humiliation was such that he closed his eyes to
+the light, and wished he might never again open them to it.
+
+The question that Mrs. Yarrow had to ask Dr. Enderby was not the
+question he had instantly forecast for her when she put aside her veil
+in his office and told him who she was. She did not seem anxious to be
+assured of Alford's mental condition, or as to any risks in marrying
+him. Her inquiry was much more psychological; it was almost impersonal,
+and yet Dr. Enderby thought she looked as if she had been crying.
+
+She had a difficulty in formulating her question, and when it came it
+was almost a speculation.
+
+"Women," she said, a little hoarsely, "have no right, I suppose, to
+expect the ideal in life. The best they can do seems to be to make the
+real look like it."
+
+Dr. Enderby reflected. "Well, yes. But I don't know that I ever put it
+to myself in just those terms."
+
+Then she remarked, as if that were the next thing: "You've known Mr.
+Alford a long time."
+
+"We were at school together, and we shared the same rooms in Harvard."
+
+"He is very sincere," she added, as if this were relevant.
+
+"He's a man who likes to have a little worse than the worst known about
+him. One might say he was excessively sincere." Enderby divined that
+Alford had been bungling the matter, and he was willing to help him out
+if he could.
+
+Mrs. Yarrow fixed dimly beautiful eyes upon him. "I don't know," she
+said, "why it wouldn't be ideal--as much ideal as anything--to give
+one's self absolutely to--to--a duty--or not duty, exactly; I don't mean
+that. Especially," she added, showing a light through the mist, "if one
+wanted to do it."
+
+Then he knew she had made up her mind, and though on some accounts he
+would have liked to laugh with her, on other accounts he felt that he
+owed it to her to be serious.
+
+"If women could not fulfil the ideal in that way--if they did not
+constantly do it--there would be no marriages for love."
+
+"Do you think so?" she asked, with a shaking voice. "But men--men are
+ideal, too."
+
+"Not as women are--except now and then some fool like Alford." Now,
+indeed, he laughed, and he began to praise Alford from his heart, so
+delicately, so tenderly, so reverently, that Mrs. Yarrow laughed too
+before he was done, and cried a little, and when she rose to leave she
+could not speak; but clung to his hand, on turning away, and so flung it
+from behind her with a gesture that Enderby thought pretty.
+
+At this point, Wanhope stopped as if that were the end.
+
+"And did she let Alford come to see her again?" Rulledge, at once
+romantic and literal, demanded.
+
+"Oh yes. At any rate, they were married that fall. They are--I believe
+he's pursuing his archaeological studies there--living in Athens."
+
+"Together?" Minver smoothly inquired.
+
+At this expression of cynicism Rulledge gave him a look that would have
+incinerated another. Wanhope went out with Minver, and then, after a
+moment's daze, Rulledge exclaimed: "Jove! I forgot to ask him whether
+it's stopped Alford's illusions!"
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+A MEMORY THAT WORKED OVERTIME
+
+
+Minver's brother took down from the top of the low bookshelf a small
+painting on panel, which he first studied in the obverse, and then
+turned and contemplated on the back with the same dreamy smile. "I don't
+see how that got _here_," he said, absently.
+
+"Well," Minver returned, "you don't expect _me_ to tell you, except on
+the principle that any one would naturally know more about anything of
+yours than you would." He took it from his brother and looked at the
+front of it. "It isn't bad. It's pretty good!" He turned it round. "Why,
+it's one of old Blakey's! How did _you_ come by it?"
+
+"Stole it, probably," Minver's brother said, still thoughtfully. Then
+with an effect of recollecting: "No, come to think of it," he added,
+"Blakey gave it to me." The Minvers played these little comedies
+together, quite as much to satisfy their tenderness for each other as to
+give their friends pleasure. "Think you're the only painter that gets me
+to take his truck as a gift? He gave it to me, let's see, about ten
+years ago, when he was trying to make a die of it, and failed; I thought
+he would succeed. But it's been in my wife's room nearly ever since, and
+what I can't understand is what she's doing with it down here."
+
+"Probably to make trouble for you, somehow," Minver suggested.
+
+"No, I don't think it's _that_, quite," his brother returned, with a
+false air of scrupulosity, which was part of their game with each other.
+He looked some more at the picture, and then he glanced from it at me.
+"There's a very curious story connected with that sketch."
+
+"Oh, well, tell it," Minver said. "Tell it! I suppose I can stand it
+again. Acton's never heard it, I believe. But you needn't make a show of
+sparing him. I _couldn't_ stand that."
+
+"I certainly haven't heard the story," I said, "and if I had I would be
+too polite to own it."
+
+Minver's brother looked towards the open door over his shoulder, and
+Minver interpreted for him: "She's not coming. I'll give you due
+warning."
+
+"It was before we were married, but not much before, and the picture was
+a sort of wedding present for my wife, though Blakey made a show of
+giving it to me. Said he had painted it for me, because he had a
+prophetic soul, and felt in his bones that I was going to want a picture
+of the place where I first met her. You see, it's the little villa her
+mother had taken that winter on the Viale Petrarca, just outside of
+Florence. It _was_ the first place I met her, but not the last."
+
+"Don't be obvious," Minver ordered.
+
+His brother did not mind him. "I thought it was mighty nice of Blakey.
+He was barking away, all the time he was talking, and when he wasn't
+coughing he was so hoarse he could hardly speak above a whisper; but he
+kept talking on, and wishing me happy, and fending off my gratitude,
+while he was finding a piece of manila paper to wrap the sketch in, and
+then hunting for a piece of string to tie it. When he handed it to me at
+last, he gasped out: 'I don't mind her knowing that I partly meant it as
+the place where _she_ first met _you_, too. I'm not ashamed of it as a
+bit of color. Anyway, I sha'n't live to do anything better.'
+
+"'Oh, yes, you will,' I came back in that lying way we think is kind
+with dying people. I suppose it is; anyway, it turned out all right with
+Blakey, as he'll testify if you look him up when you go to Florence. By
+the way, he lives in that villa _now_."
+
+"No?" I said. "How charming!"
+
+Minver's brother went on: "I made up my mind to be awfully careful of
+that picture, and not let it out of my hand till I left it with 'her'
+mother, to be put among the other wedding presents that were
+accumulating at their house in Exeter Street. So I held it on my lap
+going in by train from Lexington, where Blakey lived, and when I got out
+at the old Lowell Depot--North Station, now--and got into the little
+tinkle-tankle horse-car that took me up to where I was to get the Back
+Bay car--Those were the prehistoric times before trolleys, and there
+were odds in horse-cars. We considered the blue-painted Back Bay cars
+very swell. _You_ remember them?" he asked Minver.
+
+"Not when I can help it," Minver answered. "When I broke with Boston,
+and went to New York, I burnt my horse-cars behind me, and never wanted
+to know what they looked like, one from another."
+
+"Well, as I was saying," Minver's brother went on, without regarding his
+impatriotism, "when I got into the horse-car at the depot, I rushed for
+a corner seat, and I put the picture, with its face next the car-end,
+between me and the wall, and kept my hand on it; and when I changed to
+the Back Bay car, I did the same thing. There was a florist's just
+there, and I couldn't resist some Mayflowers in the window; I was in
+that condition, you know, when flowers seemed to be made for her, and I
+had to take her own to her wherever I found them. I put the bunch
+between my knees, and kept one hand on it, while I kept my other hand on
+the picture at my side. I was feeling first-rate, and when General
+Filbert got in after we started, and stood before me hanging by a strap
+and talking down to me, I had the decency to propose giving him my seat,
+as he was about ten years older."
+
+"Sure?" Minver asked.
+
+"Well, say fifteen. I don't pretend to be a chicken, and never did. But
+he wouldn't hear of it. Said I had a bundle, and winked at the bunch of
+Mayflowers. We had such a jolly talk that I let the car carry me a block
+by and had to get out at Gloucester and run back to Exeter. I rang, and,
+when the maid came to the door, there I stood with nothing but the
+Mayflowers in my hand."
+
+"Good _coup de theatre_," Minver jeered. "Curtain?"
+
+His brother disdained reply, or was too much absorbed in his tale to
+think of any. "When the girl opened the door and I discovered my fix I
+burst out, 'Good Lord!' and I stuck the bunch of flowers at her, and
+turned and ran. I suppose I must have had some notion of overtaking the
+car with my picture in it. But the best I could do was to let the next
+one overtake me several blocks down Marlborough Street, and carry me to
+the little jumping-off station on Westchester Park, as we used to call
+it in those days, at the end of the Back Bay line.
+
+"As I pushed into the railroad office, I bet myself that the picture
+would not be there, and, sure enough, I won."
+
+"You were always a lucky dog," Minver said.
+
+"But the man in charge was very encouraging, and said it was sure to be
+turned in; and he asked me what time the car had passed the corner of
+Gloucester Street. I happened to know, and then he said, Oh yes, that
+conductor was a substitute, and he wouldn't be on again till morning;
+then he would be certain to bring the picture with him. I was not to
+worry, for it would be all right. Nothing left in the Back Bay cars was
+ever lost; the character of the abutters was guarantee for that, and
+they were practically the only passengers. The conductors and the
+drivers were as honest as the passengers, and I could consider myself in
+the hands of friends.
+
+"He was so reassuring that I went away smiling at my fears, and
+promising to be round bright and early, as soon, the official
+suggested--the morrow being Sunday--as soon as the men and horses had
+had their baked beans.
+
+"Still, after dinner, I had a lurking anxiety, which I turned into a
+friendly impulse to go and call on Mrs. Filbert, whom I really owed a
+bread-and-butter visit, and who, I knew, would not mind my coming in the
+evening. The general, she said, had been telling her of our pleasant
+chat in the car, and would be glad to smoke his after-dinner cigar with
+me, and why wouldn't I come into the library?
+
+"We were so very jolly together, all three, that I made light of my
+misadventure about the picture. The general inquired about the flowers
+first. He remembered the flowers perfectly, and hoped they were
+acceptable; he thought he remembered the picture, too, now I mentioned
+it; but he would not have noticed it so much, there by my side, with my
+hand on it. I would be sure to get it. He gave several instances,
+personal to him and his friends, of recoveries of lost articles; it was
+really astonishing how careful the horse-car people were, especially on
+the Back Bay line. I would find my picture all right at the Westchester
+Park station in the morning; never fear.
+
+"I feared so little that I slept well, and even overslept; and I went to
+get my picture quite confidently, and I could hardly believe it had not
+been turned in yet, though the station-master told me so. The substitute
+conductor had not seen it, but more than likely it was at the stables,
+where the cleaners would have found it in the car and turned it in. He
+was as robustly cheerful about it as ever, and offered to send an
+inquiry by the next car; but I said, Why shouldn't I go myself; and he
+said that was a good idea. So I went, and it was well I did, for my
+picture was not there, and I had saved time by going. It was not there,
+but the head man said I need not worry a mite about it; I was certain to
+get it sooner or later; it would be turned in, to a dead certainty. We
+became rather confidential, and I went so far as to explain about
+wanting to make my inquiries very quietly on Blakey's account: he would
+be annoyed if he heard of its loss, and it might react unfavorably on
+his health.
+
+"The head man said that was so; and he would tell me what I wanted to
+do: I wanted to go to the Company's General Offices in Milk Street, and
+tell them about it. That was where everything went as a last resort, and
+he would bet any money that I would see my picture there the first thing
+I got inside the door. I thanked him with the fervor I thought he
+merited, and said I would go at once.
+
+"'Well,' he said, 'you don't want to go to-day, you know. The offices
+are not open Sunday. And to-morrow's a holiday. But you're all right.
+You'll find your picture there, don't you have any doubts about it.'
+
+"That was my next to last Sunday supper with my wife, before she became
+my wife, at her mother's house, and I went to the feast with as little
+gayety as I suppose any young man ever carried to a supper of the kind.
+I was told, afterwards, that my behavior up to a certain point was so
+suggestive either of secret crime or of secret regret, that the only
+question was whether they should have in the police or I should be given
+back my engagement ring and advised to go. Luckily I ceased to bear my
+anguish just in time.
+
+"The fact is, I could not stand it any longer, and as soon as I was
+alone with her I made a clean breast of it; partially clean, that is: I
+suppose a fellow never tells _all_ to a girl, if he truly loves her."
+Minver's brother glanced round at us and gathered the harvest of our
+approving smiles. "I said to her, 'I've been having a wedding present.'
+'Well,' she said, 'you've come as near having no use for a wedding
+present as anybody _I_ know. Was having a wedding present what made you
+so gloomy at supper? Who gave it to you, anyway?' 'Old Blakey.' 'A
+painting?' 'Yes--a sketch.' 'What of?' This was where I qualified. I
+said: 'Oh, just one of those Sorrento things of his.' You see, if I told
+her that it was the villa where we first met, and then said I had left
+it in the horse-car, she would take it as proof positive that I did not
+really care anything about her or I never could have forgotten it."
+
+"You were wise as far as you went," Minver said. "Go on."
+
+"Well, I told her the whole story circumstantially: how I had kept the
+sketch religiously in my lap in the train, and then held it down with my
+hand all the while beside me in the first horse-car, and did the same
+thing in the Back Bay car I changed to; and felt of it the whole time I
+was talking with General Filbert, and then left it there when I got out
+to leave the flowers at her door, when the awful fact came over me like
+a flash. 'Yes,' she said, 'Norah said you poked the flowers at her
+without a word, and she had to guess they were for me.'
+
+"I had got my story pretty glib by this time; I had reeled it off with
+increasing particulars to the Westchester Park station-master, and the
+head man at the stables, and General Filbert, and I was so
+letter-perfect that I had a vision of the whole thing, especially of my
+talking with the general while I kept my hand on the picture--and then
+all was dark.
+
+"At the end she said we must advertise for the picture. I said it would
+kill Blakey if he saw it; and she said: No matter, _let_ it kill him; it
+would show him that we valued his gift, and were moving heaven and earth
+to find it; and, at any rate, it would kill _me_ if I kept myself in
+suspense. I said I should not care for that; but with her sympathy I
+guessed I could live through the night, and I was sure I should find the
+thing at the Milk Street office in the morning.
+
+"'Why,' said she, 'to-morrow it'll be shut!' and then I didn't really
+know what to say, and I agreed to drawing up an advertisement then and
+there, so as not to lose an instant's time after I had been at the Milk
+Street office on Tuesday and found the picture had not been turned in.
+She said I could dictate the advertisement and she would write it down,
+and she asked: 'Which one of his Sorrento things was it? You must
+describe it exactly, you know.' That made me feel awfully, and I said I
+was not going to have my next-to-last Sunday evening with her spoiled by
+writing advertisements; and I got away, somehow, with all sorts of
+comforting reassurances from her. I could see that she was feigning them
+to encourage me.
+
+"The next morning, I simply could not keep away from the Milk Street
+office, and my unreasonable impatience was rewarded by finding it at
+least ajar, if not open. There was the nicest kind of a young fellow
+there, and he said he was not officially present; but what could he do
+for me? Then I told him the whole story, with details I had not thought
+of before; and he was just as enthusiastic about my getting my picture
+as the Westchester Park station-master or the head man of the stables.
+It was morally certain to be turned in, the first thing in the morning;
+but he would take a description of it, and send out inquiries to all the
+conductors and drivers and car-cleaners, and make a special thing of it.
+He entered into the spirit of the affair, and I felt that I had such a
+friend in him that I confided a little more and hinted at the double
+interest I had in the picture. I didn't pretend that it was one of
+Blakey's Sorrento things, but I gave him a full and true description of
+it, with its length, breadth, and thickness, in exact measure."
+
+Here Minver's brother stopped and lost himself in contemplation of the
+sketch, as he held it at arm's-length.
+
+"Well, did you get your picture?" I prompted, after a moment.
+
+"Oh yes," he said, with a quick turn towards me. "This is it. A District
+Messenger brought it round the first thing Tuesday morning. He brought
+it," Minver's brother added, with a certain effectiveness, "from the
+florist's, where I had stopped to get those Mayflowers. I had left it
+there."
+
+"You've told it very well, this time, Joe," Minver said. "But Acton here
+is waiting for the psychology. Poor old Wanhope ought to be here," he
+added to me. He looked about for a match to light his pipe, and his
+brother jerked his head in the direction of the chimney.
+
+"Box on the mantel. Yes," he sighed, "that was really something very
+curious. You see, I had invented the whole history of the case from the
+time I got into the Back Bay car with my flowers. Absolutely nothing had
+happened of all I had remembered till I got out of the car. I did not
+put the picture beside me at the end of the car; I did not keep my hand
+on it while I talked with General Filbert; I did not leave it behind me
+when I left the car. Nothing of the kind happened. I had already left it
+at the florist's, and that whole passage of experience which was so
+vividly and circumstantially stamped in my memory that I related it four
+or five times over, and would have made oath to every detail of it, was
+pure invention, or, rather, it was something less positive: the reflex
+of the first half of my horse-car experience, when I really did put the
+picture in the corner next me, and did keep my hand on it."
+
+"Very strange," I was beginning, but just then the door opened and Mrs.
+Minver came in, and I was presented.
+
+She gave me a distracted hand, as she said to her husband: "Have you
+been telling the story about that picture again?" He was still holding
+it. "Silly!"
+
+She was a mighty pretty woman, but full of vim and fun and sense.
+
+"It's one of the most curious freaks of memory I ever heard of, Mrs.
+Minver," I said.
+
+Then she showed that she was proud of it, though she had called him
+silly. "Have you told," she demanded of her husband, "how oddly your
+memory behaved about the subject of the picture, too?"
+
+"I have again eaten that particular piece of humble-pie," Minver's
+brother replied.
+
+"Well," she said to me, "_I_ think he was simply so possessed with the
+awfulness of having lost the picture that all the rest took place
+prophetically, but unconsciously."
+
+"By a species of inverted presentiment?" I suggested.
+
+"Yes," she assented, slowly, as if the formulation were new to her, but
+not unacceptable. "Something of that kind. I never heard of anybody else
+having it."
+
+Minver had got his pipe alight, and was enjoying it. "_I_ think Joe was
+simply off his nut, for the time being."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+A CASE OF METAPHANTASMIA
+
+
+The stranger was a guest of Halson's, and Halson himself was a
+comparative stranger, for he was of recent election to our dining-club,
+and was better known to Minver than to the rest of our little group,
+though one could not be sure that he was very well known to Minver. The
+stranger had been dining with Halson, and we had found the two smoking
+together, with their cups of black coffee at their elbows, before the
+smouldering fire in the Turkish room when we came in from dinner--my
+friend Wanhope the psychologist, Rulledge the sentimentalist, Minver the
+painter, and myself. It struck me for the first time that a fire on the
+hearth was out of keeping with a Turkish room, but I felt that the cups
+of black coffee restored the lost balance in some measure.
+
+Before we had settled into our wonted places--in fact, almost as we
+entered--Halson looked over his shoulder and said: "Mr. Wanhope, I want
+you to hear this story of my friend's. Go on, Newton--or, rather, go
+back and begin again--and I'll introduce you afterwards."
+
+The stranger made a becoming show of deprecation. He said he did not
+think the story would bear immediate repetition, or was even worth
+telling once, but, if we had nothing better to do, perhaps we might do
+worse than hear it; the most he could say for it was that the thing
+really happened. He wore a large, drooping, gray mustache, which, with
+the imperial below it, quite hid his mouth, and gave him, somehow, a
+martial effect, besides accurately dating him of the period between the
+latest sixties and earliest seventies, when his beard would have been
+black; I liked his mustache not being stubbed in the modern manner, but
+allowed to fall heavily over his lips, and then branch away from the
+corners of his mouth as far as it would. He lighted the cigar which
+Halson gave him, and, blowing the bitten-off tip towards the fire,
+began:
+
+"It was about that time when we first had a ten-o'clock night train from
+Boston to New York. Train used to start at nine, and lag along round by
+Springfield, and get into the old Twenty-sixth Street Station here at
+six in the morning, where they let you sleep as long as you liked. They
+call you up now at half-past five, and, if you don't turn out, they haul
+you back to Mott Haven, or New Haven, I'm not sure which. I used to go
+into Boston and turn in at the old Worcester Depot, as we called it
+then, just about the time the train began to move, and I usually got a
+fine night's rest in the course of the nine or ten hours we were on the
+way to New York; it didn't seem quite the same after we began saying
+Albany Depot: shortened up the run, somehow.
+
+[Illustration: "NO BURGLAR COULD HAVE MISSED ME IF HE HAD WANTED AN EASY
+MARK"]
+
+"But that night I wasn't very sleepy, and the porter had got the place
+so piping hot with the big stoves, one at each end of the car, to keep
+the good, old-fashioned Christmas cold out, that I thought I should be
+more comfortable with a smoke before I went to bed; and, anyhow, I could
+get away from the heat better in the smoking-room. I hated to be leaving
+home on Christmas Eve, for I never had done that before, and I hated to
+be leaving my wife alone with the children and the two girls in our
+little house in Cambridge. Before I started in on the old horse-car for
+Boston, I had helped her to tuck the young ones in and to fill the
+stockings hung along the wall over the register--the nearest we could
+come to a fireplace--and I thought those stockings looked very weird,
+five of them, dangling lumpily down, and I kept seeing them, and her
+sitting up sewing in front of them, and afraid to go to bed on account
+of burglars. I suppose she was shyer of burglars than any woman ever was
+that had never seen a sign of them. She was always calling me up, to go
+down-stairs and put them out, and I used to wander all over the house,
+from attic to cellar, in my nighty, with a lamp in one hand and a poker
+in the other, so that no burglar could have missed me if he had wanted
+an easy mark. I always kept a lamp and a poker handy."
+
+The stranger heaved a sigh as of fond reminiscence, and looked round for
+the sympathy which in our company of bachelors he failed of; even the
+sympathetic Rulledge failed of the necessary experience to move him in
+compassionate response.
+
+"Well," the stranger went on, a little damped perhaps by his failure,
+but supported apparently by the interest of the fact in hand, "I had the
+smoking-room to myself for a while, and then a fellow put his head in
+that I thought I knew after I had thought I didn't know him. He dawned
+on me more and more, and I had to acknowledge to myself, by and by, that
+it was a man named Melford, whom I used to room with in Holworthy at
+Harvard; that is, we had an apartment of two bedrooms and a study; and I
+suppose there were never two fellows knew less of each other than we did
+at the end of our four years together. I can't say what Melford knew of
+me, but the most I knew of Melford was his particular brand of
+nightmare."
+
+Wanhope gave the first sign of his interest in the matter. He took his
+cigar from his lips, and softly emitted an "Ah!"
+
+Rulledge went further and interrogatively repeated the word "Nightmare?"
+
+"Nightmare," the stranger continued, firmly. "The curious thing about it
+was that I never exactly knew the subject of his nightmare, and a more
+curious thing yet was Melford himself never knew it, when I woke him up.
+He said he couldn't make out anything but a kind of scraping in a
+door-lock. His theory was that in his childhood it had been a much
+completer thing, but that the circumstances had broken down in a sort of
+decadence, and now there was nothing left of it but that scraping in the
+door-lock, like somebody trying to turn a misfit key. I used to throw
+things at his door, and once I tried a cold-water douche from the
+pitcher, when he was very hard to waken; but that was rather brutal, and
+after a while I used to let him roar himself awake; he would always do
+it, if I trusted to nature; and before our junior year was out I got so
+that I could sleep through, pretty calmly; I would just say to myself
+when he fetched me to the surface with a yell, 'That's Melford
+dreaming,' and doze off sweetly."
+
+"Jove!" Rulledge said, "I don't see how you could stand it."
+
+"There's everything in habit, Rulledge," Minver put in. "Perhaps our
+friend only dreamt that he heard a dream."
+
+"That's quite possible," the stranger owned, politely. "But the case is
+superficially as I state it. However, it was all past, long ago, when I
+recognized Melford in the smoking-room that night: it must have been ten
+or a dozen years. I was wearing a full beard then, and so was he; we
+wore as much beard as we could in those days. I had been through the
+war since college, and he had been in California, most of the time, and,
+as he told me, he had been up north, in Alaska, just after we bought it,
+and hurt his eyes--had snow-blindness--and he wore spectacles. In fact,
+I had to do most of the recognizing, but after we found out who we were
+we were rather comfortable; and I liked him better than I remembered to
+have liked him in our college days. I don't suppose there was ever much
+harm in him; it was only my grudge about his nightmare. We talked along
+and smoked along for about an hour, and I could hear the porter outside,
+making up the berths, and the train rumbled away towards Framingham, and
+then towards Worcester, and I began to be sleepy, and to think I would
+go to bed myself; and just then the door of the smoking-room opened, and
+a young girl put in her face a moment, and said: 'Oh, I beg your pardon.
+I thought it was the stateroom,' and then she shut the door, and I
+realized that she looked like a girl I used to know."
+
+The stranger stopped, and I fancied from a note in his voice that this
+girl was perhaps like an early love. We silently waited for him to
+resume how and when he would. He sighed, and after an appreciable
+interval he began again. "It is curious how things are related to one
+another. My wife had never seen her, and yet, somehow, this girl that
+looked like the one I mean brought my mind back to my wife with a quick
+turn, after I had forgotten her in my talk with Melford for the time
+being. I thought how lonely she was in that little house of ours in
+Cambridge, on rather an outlying street, and I knew she was thinking of
+me, and hating to have me away on Christmas Eve, which isn't such a
+lively time after you're grown up and begin to look back on a good many
+other Christmas Eves, when you were a child yourself; in fact, I don't
+know a dismaler night in the whole year. I stepped out on the platform
+before I began to turn in, for a mouthful of the night air, and I found
+it was spitting snow--a regular Christmas Eve of the true pattern; and I
+didn't believe, from the business feel of those hard little pellets,
+that it was going to stop in a hurry, and I thought if we got into New
+York on time we should be lucky. The snow made me think of a night when
+my wife was sure there were burglars in the house; and in fact I heard
+their tramping on the stairs myself--thump, thump, thump, and then a
+stop, and then down again. Of course it was the slide and thud of the
+snow from the roof of the main part of the house to the roof of the
+kitchen, which was in an L, a story lower, but it was as good an
+imitation of burglars as I want to hear at one o'clock in the morning;
+and the recollection of it made me more anxious about my wife, not
+because I believed she was in danger, but because I knew how frightened
+she must be.
+
+"When I went back into the car, that girl passed me on the way to her
+stateroom, and I concluded that she was the only woman on board, and her
+friends had taken the stateroom for her, so that she needn't feel
+strange. I usually go to bed in a sleeper as I do in my own house, but
+that night I somehow couldn't. I got to thinking of accidents, and I
+thought how disagreeable it would be to turn out into the snow in my
+nighty. I ended by turning in with my clothes on, all except my coat;
+and, in spite of the red-hot stoves, I wasn't any too warm. I had a
+berth in the middle of the car, and just as I was parting my curtains to
+lie down, old Melford came to take the lower berth opposite. It made me
+laugh a little, and I was glad of the relief. 'Why, hello, Melford,'
+said I. 'This is like the old Holworthy times.' 'Yes, isn't it?' said
+he, and then I asked something that I had kept myself from asking all
+through our talk in the smoking-room, because I knew he was rather
+sensitive about it, or used to be. 'Do you ever have that regulation
+nightmare of yours nowadays, Melford? He gave a laugh, and said: 'I
+haven't had it, I suppose, once in ten years. What made you think of
+it?' I said: 'Oh, I don't know. It just came into my mind. Well,
+good-night, old fellow. I hope you'll rest well,' and suddenly I began
+to feel light-hearted again, and I went to sleep as gayly as ever I did
+in my life."
+
+The stranger paused again, and Wanhope said: "Those swift transitions of
+mood are very interesting. Of course they occur in that remote region of
+the mind where all incidents and sensations are of one quality, and
+things of the most opposite character unite in a common origin. No one
+that I remember has attempted to trace such effects to their causes, and
+then back again from their causes, which would be much more important."
+
+"Yes, I dare say," Minver put in. "But if they all amount to the same
+thing in the end, what difference would it make?"
+
+"It would perhaps establish the identity of good and evil," Wanhope
+suggested.
+
+"Oh, the sinners are convinced of that already," Minver said, while
+Rulledge glanced quickly from one to the other.
+
+The stranger looked rather dazed, and Rulledge said: "Well, I don't
+suppose that was the conclusion of the whole matter?"
+
+"Oh no," the stranger answered, "that was only the beginning of the
+conclusion. I didn't go to sleep at once, though I felt so much at
+peace. In fact, Melford beat me, and I could hear him far in advance,
+steaming and whistling away, in a style that I recalled as
+characteristic, over a space of intervening years that I hadn't
+definitely summed up yet. It made me think of a night near Narragansett
+Bay, where two friends of mine and I had had a mighty good dinner at a
+sort of wild club-house, and had hurried into our bunks, each one so as
+to get the start of the others, for the fellows that were left behind
+knew they had no chance of sleep after the first began to get in his
+work. I laughed, and I suppose I must have gone to sleep almost
+simultaneously, for I don't recollect anything afterwards till I was
+wakened by a kind of muffled bellow, that I remembered only too well. It
+was the unfailing sign of Melford's nightmare.
+
+"I was ready to swear, and I was ashamed for the fellow who had no more
+self-control than that: when a fellow snores, or has a nightmare, you
+always think first off that he needn't have had it if he had tried. As
+usual, I knew Melford didn't know what his nightmare was about, and that
+made me madder still, to have him bellowing into the air like that, with
+no particular aim. All at once there came a piercing scream from the
+stateroom, and then I knew that the girl there had heard Melford and
+been scared out of a year's growth."
+
+The stranger made a little break, and Wanhope asked, "Could you make out
+what she screamed, or was it quite inarticulate?"
+
+"It was plain enough, and it gave me a clew, somehow, to what Melford's
+nightmare was about. She was calling out, 'Help! help! help! Burglars!'
+till I thought she would raise the roof of the car."
+
+"And did she wake anybody?" Rulledge inquired.
+
+"That was the strange part of it. Not a soul stirred, and after the
+first burst the girl seemed to quiet down again and yield the floor to
+Melford, who kept bellowing steadily away. I was so furious that I
+reached out across the aisle to shake him, but the attempt was too much
+for me. I lost my balance and fell out of my berth onto the floor. You
+may imagine the state of mind I was in. I gathered myself up and pulled
+Melford's curtains open and was just going to fall on him tooth and
+nail, when I was nearly taken off my feet again by an apparition: well,
+it looked like an apparition, but it was a tall fellow in his
+nighty--for it was twenty years before pajamas--and he had a small dark
+lantern in his hand, such as we used to carry in those days so as to
+read in our berths when we couldn't sleep. He was gritting his teeth,
+and growling between them: 'Out o' this! Out o' this! I'm going to shoot
+to kill, you blasted thieves!' I could see by the strange look in his
+eyes that he was sleep-walking, and I didn't wait to see if he had a
+pistol. I popped in behind the curtains, and found myself on top of
+another fellow, for I had popped into the wrong berth in my confusion.
+The man started up and yelled: 'Oh, don't kill me! There's my watch on
+the stand, and all the money in the house is in my pantaloons pocket.
+The silver's in the sideboard down-stairs, and it's plated, anyway.'
+Then I understood what his complaint was, and I rolled onto the floor
+again. By that time every man in the car was out of his berth, too,
+except Melford, who was devoting himself strictly to business; and every
+man was grabbing some other, and shouting, 'Police!' or 'Burglars!' or
+'Help!' or 'Murder!' just as the fancy took him."
+
+"Most extraordinary!" Wanhope commented as the stranger paused for
+breath.
+
+In the intensity of our interest, we had crowded close upon him, except
+Minver, who sat with his head thrown back, and that cynical cast in his
+eye which always exasperated Rulledge; and Halson, who stood smiling
+proudly, as if the stranger's story did him as his sponsor credit
+personally.
+
+"Yes," the stranger owned, "but I don't know that there wasn't something
+more extraordinary still. From time to time the girl in the stateroom
+kept piping up, with a shriek for help. She had got past the burglar
+stage, but she wanted to be saved, anyhow, from some danger which she
+didn't specify. It went through me that it was very strange nobody
+called the porter, and I set up a shout of 'Porter!' on my own account.
+I decided that if there were burglars the porter was the man to put them
+out, and that if there were no burglars the porter could relieve our
+groundless fears. Sure enough, he came rushing in, as soon as I called
+for him, from the little corner by the smoking-room where he was
+blacking boots between dozes. He was wide enough awake, if having his
+eyes open meant that, and he had a shoe on one hand and a shoe-brush in
+the other. But he merely joined in the general up-roar and shouted for
+the police."
+
+"Excuse me," Wanhope interposed. "I wish to be clear as to the facts.
+You had reasoned it out that the porter could quiet the tumult?"
+
+"Never reasoned anything out so clearly in my life."
+
+"But what was your theory of the situation? That your friend, Mr.
+Melford, had a nightmare in which he was dreaming of burglars?"
+
+"I hadn't a doubt of it."
+
+"And that by a species of dream-transference the nightmare was
+communicated to the young lady in the stateroom?"
+
+"Well--yes."
+
+"And that her call for help and her cry of burglars acted as a sort of
+hypnotic suggestion with the other sleepers, and they began to be
+afflicted with the same nightmare?"
+
+"I don't know that I ever put it to myself so distinctly, but it appears
+to me now that I must have reached some such conclusion."
+
+"That is very interesting, very interesting indeed. I beg your pardon.
+Please go on," Wanhope courteously entreated.
+
+"I don't remember just where I was," the stranger faltered.
+
+Rulledge returned with an accuracy which obliged us all: "'The porter
+merely joined in the general uproar and shouted for the police.'"
+
+"Oh yes," the stranger assented. "Then I didn't know what to do, for a
+minute. The porter was a pretty thick-headed darky, but he was
+lion-hearted; and his idea was to lay hold of a burglar wherever he
+could find him. There were plenty of burglars in the aisle there, or
+people that were afraid of burglars, and they seemed to think the porter
+had a good idea. They had hold of one another already, and now began to
+pull up and down the aisles in a way that reminded me of the
+old-fashioned mesmeric lecturers, when they told their subjects that
+they were this or that, and set them to acting the part. I remembered
+how once when the mesmerist gave out that they were at a horse--race,
+and his subjects all got astride of their chairs, and galloped up and
+down the hall like a lot of little boys on laths. I thought of that now,
+and although it was rather a serious business, for I didn't know what
+minute they would come to blows, I couldn't help laughing. The sight was
+weird enough. Every one looked like a somnambulist as he pulled and
+hauled. The young lady in the stateroom was doing her full share. She
+was screaming, 'Won't somebody let me out?' and hammering on the door. I
+guess it was her screaming and hammering that brought the conductor at
+last, or maybe he just came round in the course of nature to take up the
+tickets. It was before the time when they took the tickets at the gate,
+and you used to stick them into a little slot at the side of your berth,
+and the conductor came along and took them in the night, somewhere
+between Worcester and Springfield, I should say."
+
+"I remember," Rulledge assented, but very carefully, so as not to
+interrupt the flow of the narrative. "Used to wake up everybody in the
+car."
+
+"Exactly," the stranger said. "But this time they were all wide awake to
+receive him, or fast asleep, and dreaming their roles. He came along
+with the wire of his lantern over his arm, the way the old-time
+conductors did, and calling out, 'Tickets!' just as if it was broad day,
+and he believed every man was trying to beat his way to New York. The
+oddest thing about it was that the sleep-walkers all stopped their
+pulling and hauling a moment, and each man reached down to the little
+slot alongside of his berth and handed over his ticket. Then they took
+hold and began pulling and hauling again. I suppose the conductor asked
+what the matter was; but I couldn't hear him, and I couldn't make out
+exactly what he did say. But the passengers understood, and they all
+shouted 'Burglars!' and that girl in the stateroom gave a shriek that
+you could have heard from one end of the train to the other, and
+hammered on the door, and wanted to be let out.
+
+"It seemed to take the conductor by surprise, and he faced towards the
+stateroom and let the lantern slip off his arm, and it dropped onto the
+floor and went out; I remember thinking what a good thing it didn't set
+the car on fire. But there in the dark--for the car lamps went out at
+the same time with the lantern--I could hear those fellows pulling and
+hauling up and down the aisle and scuffling over the floor, and through
+all Melford bellowing away, like an orchestral accompaniment to a combat
+in Wagner opera, but getting quieter and quieter till his bellow died
+away altogether. At the same time the row in the aisle of the car
+stopped, and there was perfect silence, and I could hear the snow
+rattling against my window. Then I went off into a sound sleep, and
+never woke till we got into New York."
+
+The stranger seemed to have reached the end of his story, or at least to
+have exhausted the interest it had for him, and he smoked on, holding
+his knee between his hands and looking thoughtfully into the fire.
+
+He had left us rather breathless, or, better said, blank, and each
+looked at the other for some initiative; then we united in looking at
+Wanhope; that is, Rulledge and I did. Minver rose and stretched himself
+with what I must describe as a sardonic yawn; Halson had stolen away
+before the end, as one to whom the end was known. Wanhope seemed by no
+means averse to the inquiry delegated to him, but only to be formulating
+its terms. At last he said:
+
+"I don't remember hearing of any case of this kind before.
+Thought-transference is a sufficiently ascertained phenomenon--the
+insistence of a conscious mind upon a certain fact until it penetrates
+the unconscious mind of another and is adopted as its own. But in the
+dream state the mind seems passive, and becomes the prey of this or that
+self-suggestion, without the power of imparting it to another dreaming
+mind. Yet here we have positive proof of such an effect. It appears that
+the victim of a particularly terrific nightmare was able to share its
+horrors--or rather unable _not_ to share them--with a whole sleeping-car
+full of people whose brains helplessly took up the same theme, and
+dreamed it, as we may say, to the same conclusions. I said proof, but of
+course we can't accept a single instance as establishing a scientific
+certainty. I don't question the veracity of Mr.--"
+
+"Newton," the stranger suggested.
+
+"Newton's experience," Wanhope continued, "but we must wait for a good
+many cases of the kind before we can accept what I may call
+metaphantasmia as being equally established with thought-transference.
+If we could it would throw light upon a whole series of most curious
+phenomena, as, for instance, the privity of a person dreamed about to
+the incident created by the dreamer."
+
+"That would be rather dreadful, wouldn't it?" I ventured. "We do dream
+such scandalous, such compromising things about people."
+
+"All that," Wanhope gently insisted, "could have nothing to do with the
+fact. That alone is to be considered in an inquiry of the kind. One is
+never obliged to tell one's dreams. I wonder"--he turned to the
+stranger, who sat absently staring into the fire--"if you happened to
+speak to your friend about his nightmare in the morning, and whether he
+was by any chance aware of the participation of the others in it?"
+
+"I certainly spoke to him pretty plainly when we got into New York."
+
+"And what did he say?"
+
+"He said he had never slept better in his life, and he couldn't remember
+having a trace of nightmare. He said he heard _me_ groaning at one time,
+but I stopped just as he woke, and so he didn't rouse me as he thought
+of doing. It was at Hartford, and he went to sleep again, and slept
+through without a break."
+
+"And what was your conclusion from that?" Wanhope asked.
+
+"That he was lying, I should say," Rulledge replied for the stranger.
+
+Wanhope still waited, and the stranger said, "I suppose one conclusion
+might be that I had dreamed the whole thing myself."
+
+"Then you wish me to infer," the psychologist pursued, "that the entire
+incident was a figment of your sleeping brain? That there was no sort of
+sleeping thought-transference, no metaphantasmia, no--Excuse me. Do you
+remember verifying your impression of being between Worcester and
+Springfield when the affair occurred, by looking at your watch, for
+instance?"
+
+The stranger suddenly pulled out his watch at the word. "Good Heavens!"
+he called out. "It's twenty minutes of eleven, and I have to take the
+eleven-o'clock train to Boston. I must bid you good-evening, gentlemen.
+I've just time to get it if I can catch a cab. Good-night, good-night. I
+hope if you come to Boston--eh--Good-night! Sometimes," he called over
+his shoulder, "I've thought it might have been that girl in the
+stateroom that started the dreaming."
+
+He had wrung our hands one after another, and now he ran out of the
+room.
+
+Rulledge said, in appeal to Wanhope: "I don't see how his being the
+dreamer invalidates the case, if his dreams affected the others."
+
+"Well," Wanhope answered, thoughtfully, "that depends."
+
+"And what do you think of its being the girl in the stateroom?"
+
+"That would be very interesting."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+EDITHA
+
+
+The air was thick with the war feeling, like the electricity of a storm
+which has not yet burst. Editha sat looking out into the hot spring
+afternoon, with her lips parted, and panting with the intensity of the
+question whether she could let him go. She had decided that she could
+not let him stay, when she saw him at the end of the still leafless
+avenue, making slowly up towards the house, with his head down and his
+figure relaxed. She ran impatiently out on the veranda, to the edge of
+the steps, and imperatively demanded greater haste of him with her will
+before she called aloud to him: "George!"
+
+He had quickened his pace in mystical response to her mystical urgence,
+before he could have heard her; now he looked up and answered, "Well?"
+
+"Oh, how united we are!" she exulted, and then she swooped down the
+steps to him. "What is it?" she cried.
+
+"It's war," he said, and he pulled her up to him and kissed her.
+
+She kissed him back intensely, but irrelevantly, as to their passion,
+and uttered from deep in her throat. "How glorious!"
+
+"It's war," he repeated, without consenting to her sense of it; and she
+did not know just what to think at first. She never knew what to think
+of him; that made his mystery, his charm. All through their courtship,
+which was contemporaneous with the growth of the war feeling, she had
+been puzzled by his want of seriousness about it. He seemed to despise
+it even more than he abhorred it. She could have understood his
+abhorring any sort of bloodshed; that would have been a survival of his
+old life when he thought he would be a minister, and before he changed
+and took up the law. But making light of a cause so high and noble
+seemed to show a want of earnestness at the core of his being. Not but
+that she felt herself able to cope with a congenital defect of that
+sort, and make his love for her save him from himself. Now perhaps the
+miracle was already wrought in him. In the presence of the tremendous
+fact that he announced, all triviality seemed to have gone out of him;
+she began to feel that. He sank down on the top step, and wiped his
+forehead with his handkerchief, while she poured out upon him her
+question of the origin and authenticity of his news.
+
+All the while, in her duplex emotioning, she was aware that now at the
+very beginning she must put a guard upon herself against urging him, by
+any word or act, to take the part that her whole soul willed him to
+take, for the completion of her ideal of him. He was very nearly perfect
+as he was, and he must be allowed to perfect himself. But he was
+peculiar, and he might very well be reasoned out of his peculiarity.
+Before her reasoning went her emotioning: her nature pulling upon his
+nature, her womanhood upon his manhood, without her knowing the means
+she was using to the end she was willing. She had always supposed that
+the man who won her would have done something to win her; she did not
+know what, but something. George Gearson had simply asked her for her
+love, on the way home from a concert, and she gave her love to him,
+without, as it were, thinking. But now, it flashed upon her, if he could
+do something worthy to _have_ won her--be a hero, _her_ hero--it would
+be even better than if he had done it before asking her; it would be
+grander. Besides, she had believed in the war from the beginning.
+
+"But don't you see, dearest," she said, "that it wouldn't have come to
+this if it hadn't been in the order of Providence? And I call any war
+glorious that is for the liberation of people who have been struggling
+for years against the cruelest oppression. Don't you think so, too?"
+
+"I suppose so," he returned, languidly. "But war! Is it glorious to
+break the peace of the world?"
+
+"That ignoble peace! It was no peace at all, with that crime and shame
+at our very gates." She was conscious of parroting the current phrases
+of the newspapers, but it was no time to pick and choose her words. She
+must sacrifice anything to the high ideal she had for him, and after a
+good deal of rapid argument she ended with the climax: "But now it
+doesn't matter about the how or why. Since the war has come, all that is
+gone. There are no two sides any more. There is nothing now but our
+country."
+
+He sat with his eyes closed and his head leant back against the veranda,
+and he remarked, with a vague smile, as if musing aloud, "Our
+country--right or wrong."
+
+"Yes, right or wrong!" she returned, fervidly. "I'll go and get you some
+lemonade." She rose rustling, and whisked away; when she came back with
+two tall glasses of clouded liquid on a tray, and the ice clucking in
+them, he still sat as she had left him, and she said, as if there had
+been no interruption: "But there is no question of wrong in this case.
+I call it a sacred war. A war for liberty and humanity, if ever there
+was one. And I know you will see it just as I do, yet."
+
+He took half the lemonade at a gulp, and he answered as he set the glass
+down: "I know you always have the highest ideal. When I differ from you
+I ought to doubt myself."
+
+A generous sob rose in Editha's throat for the humility of a man, so
+very nearly perfect, who was willing to put himself below her.
+
+Besides, she felt, more subliminally, that he was never so near slipping
+through her fingers as when he took that meek way.
+
+"You shall not say that! Only, for once I happen to be right." She
+seized his hand in her two hands, and poured her soul from her eyes into
+his. "Don't you think so?" she entreated him.
+
+[Illustration: "'YOU SHALL NOT SAY THAT!'"]
+
+He released his hand and drank the rest of his lemonade, and she added,
+"Have mine, too," but he shook his head in answering, "I've no business
+to think so, unless I act so, too."
+
+Her heart stopped a beat before it pulsed on with leaps that she felt in
+her neck. She had noticed that strange thing in men: they seemed to feel
+bound to do what they believed, and not think a thing was finished when
+they said it, as girls did. She knew what was in his mind, but she
+pretended not, and she said, "Oh, I am not sure," and then faltered.
+
+He went on as if to himself, without apparently heeding her: "There's
+only one way of proving one's faith in a thing like this."
+
+She could not say that she understood, but she did understand.
+
+He went on again. "If I believed--if I felt as you do about this
+war--Do you wish me to feel as you do?"
+
+Now she was really not sure; so she said: "George, I don't know what you
+mean."
+
+He seemed to muse away from her as before.
+
+"There is a sort of fascination in it. I suppose that at the bottom of
+his heart every man would like at times to have his courage tested, to
+see how he would act."
+
+"How can you talk in that ghastly way?"
+
+"It _is_ rather morbid. Still, that's what it comes to, unless you're
+swept away by ambition or driven by conviction. I haven't the conviction
+or the ambition, and the other thing is what it comes to with me. I
+ought to have been a preacher, after all; then I couldn't have asked it
+of myself, as I must, now I'm a lawyer. And you believe it's a holy war,
+Editha?" he suddenly addressed her. "Oh, I know you do! But you wish me
+to believe so, too?"
+
+She hardly knew whether he was mocking or not, in the ironical way he
+always had with her plainer mind. But the only thing was to be outspoken
+with him.
+
+"George, I wish you to believe whatever you think is true, at any and
+every cost. If I've tried to talk you into anything, I take it all
+back."
+
+"Oh, I know that, Editha. I know how sincere you are, and how--I wish I
+had your undoubting spirit! I'll think it over; I'd like to believe as
+you do. But I don't, now; I don't, indeed. It isn't this war alone;
+though this seems peculiarly wanton and needless; but it's every war--so
+stupid; it makes me sick. Why shouldn't this thing have been settled
+reasonably?"
+
+"Because," she said, very throatily again, "God meant it to be war."
+
+"You think it was God? Yes, I suppose that is what people will say."
+
+"Do you suppose it would have been war if God hadn't meant it?"
+
+"I don't know. Sometimes it seems as if God had put this world into
+men's keeping to work it as they pleased."
+
+"Now, George, that is blasphemy."
+
+"Well, I won't blaspheme. I'll try to believe in your pocket
+Providence," he said, and then he rose to go.
+
+"Why don't you stay to dinner?" Dinner at Balcom's Works was at one
+o'clock.
+
+"I'll come back to supper, if you'll let me. Perhaps I shall bring you a
+convert."
+
+"Well, you may come back, on that condition."
+
+"All right. If I don't come, you'll understand."
+
+He went away without kissing her, and she felt it a suspension of their
+engagement. It all interested her intensely; she was undergoing a
+tremendous experience, and she was being equal to it. While she stood
+looking after him, her mother came out through one of the long windows
+onto the veranda, with a catlike softness and vagueness.
+
+"Why didn't he stay to dinner?"
+
+"Because--because--war has been declared," Editha pronounced, without
+turning.
+
+Her mother said, "Oh, my!" and then said nothing more until she had sat
+down in one of the large Shaker chairs and rocked herself for some time.
+Then she closed whatever tacit passage of thought there had been in her
+mind with the spoken words: "Well, I hope _he_ won't go."
+
+"And _I_ hope he _will_," the girl said, and confronted her mother with
+a stormy exaltation that would have frightened any creature less
+unimpressionable than a cat.
+
+Her mother rocked herself again for an interval of cogitation. What she
+arrived at in speech was: "Well, I guess you've done a wicked thing,
+Editha Balcom."
+
+The girl said, as she passed indoors through the same window her mother
+had come out by: "I haven't done anything--yet."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In her room, she put together all her letters and gifts from Gearson,
+down to the withered petals of the first flower he had offered, with
+that timidity of his veiled in that irony of his. In the heart of the
+packet she enshrined her engagement ring which she had restored to the
+pretty box he had brought it her in. Then she sat down, if not calmly
+yet strongly, and wrote:
+
+ "GEORGE:--I understood when you left me. But I think we had better
+ emphasize your meaning that if we cannot be one in everything we
+ had better be one in nothing. So I am sending these things for your
+ keeping till you have made up your mind.
+
+ "I shall always love you, and therefore I shall never marry any one
+ else. But the man I marry must love his country first of all, and
+ be able to say to me,
+
+ "'I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ Loved I not honor more.'
+
+ "There is no honor above America with me. In this great hour there
+ is no other honor.
+
+ "Your heart will make my words clear to you. I had never expected
+ to say so much, but it has come upon me that I must say the utmost.
+
+ EDITHA."
+
+She thought she had worded her letter well, worded it in a way that
+could not be bettered; all had been implied and nothing expressed.
+
+She had it ready to send with the packet she had tied with red, white,
+and blue ribbon, when it occurred to her that she was not just to him,
+that she was not giving him a fair chance. He had said he would go and
+think it over, and she was not waiting. She was pushing, threatening,
+compelling. That was not a woman's part. She must leave him free, free,
+free. She could not accept for her country or herself a forced
+sacrifice.
+
+In writing her letter she had satisfied the impulse from which it
+sprang; she could well afford to wait till he had thought it over. She
+put the packet and the letter by, and rested serene in the consciousness
+of having done what was laid upon her by her love itself to do, and yet
+used patience, mercy, justice.
+
+She had her reward. Gearson did not come to tea, but she had given him
+till morning, when, late at night there came up from the village the
+sound of a fife and drum, with a tumult of voices, in shouting, singing,
+and laughing. The noise drew nearer and nearer; it reached the street
+end of the avenue; there it silenced itself, and one voice, the voice
+she knew best, rose over the silence. It fell; the air was filled with
+cheers; the fife and drum struck up, with the shouting, singing, and
+laughing again, but now retreating; and a single figure came hurrying up
+the avenue.
+
+She ran down to meet her lover and clung to him. He was very gay, and he
+put his arm round her with a boisterous laugh. "Well, you must call me
+Captain now; or Cap, if you prefer; that's what the boys call me. Yes,
+we've had a meeting at the town-hall, and everybody has volunteered; and
+they selected me for captain, and I'm going to the war, the big war, the
+glorious war, the holy war ordained by the pocket Providence that
+blesses butchery. Come along; let's tell the whole family about it. Call
+them from their downy beds, father, mother, Aunt Hitty, and all the
+folks!"
+
+But when they mounted the veranda steps he did not wait for a larger
+audience; he poured the story out upon Editha alone.
+
+"There was a lot of speaking, and then some of the fools set up a shout
+for me. It was all going one way, and I thought it would be a good joke
+to sprinkle a little cold water on them. But you can't do that with a
+crowd that adores you. The first thing I knew I was sprinkling hell-fire
+on them. 'Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of war.' That was the style.
+Now that it had come to the fight, there were no two parties; there was
+one country, and the thing was to fight to a finish as quick as
+possible. I suggested volunteering then and there, and I wrote my name
+first of all on the roster. Then they elected me--that's all. I wish I
+had some ice-water."
+
+She left him walking up and down the veranda, while she ran for the
+ice-pitcher and a goblet, and when she came back he was still walking up
+and down, shouting the story he had told her to her father and mother,
+who had come out more sketchily dressed than they commonly were by day.
+He drank goblet after goblet of the ice-water without noticing who was
+giving it, and kept on talking, and laughing through his talk wildly.
+"It's astonishing," he said, "how well the worse reason looks when you
+try to make it appear the better. Why, I believe I was the first convert
+to the war in that crowd to-night! I never thought I should like to kill
+a man; but now I shouldn't care; and the smokeless powder lets you see
+the man drop that you kill. It's all for the country! What a thing it is
+to have a country that _can't_ be wrong, but if it is, is right,
+anyway!"
+
+Editha had a great, vital thought, an inspiration. She set down the
+ice-pitcher on the veranda floor, and ran up-stairs and got the letter
+she had written him. When at last he noisily bade her father and mother,
+"Well, goodnight. I forgot I woke you up; I sha'n't want any sleep
+myself," she followed him down the avenue to the gate. There, after the
+whirling words that seemed to fly away from her thoughts and refuse to
+serve them, she made a last effort to solemnize the moment that seemed
+so crazy, and pressed the letter she had written upon him.
+
+"What's this?" he said. "Want me to mail it?"
+
+"No, no. It's for you. I wrote it after you went this morning. Keep
+it--keep it--and read it sometime--" She thought, and then her
+inspiration came: "Read it if ever you doubt what you've done, or fear
+that I regret your having done it. Read it after you've started."
+
+They strained each other in embraces that seemed as ineffective as their
+words, and he kissed her face with quick, hot breaths that were so
+unlike him, that made her feel as if she had lost her old lover and
+found a stranger in his place. The stranger said: "What a gorgeous
+flower you are, with your red hair, and your blue eyes that look black
+now, and your face with the color painted out by the white moonshine!
+Let me hold you under the chin, to see whether I love blood, you
+tiger-lily!" Then he laughed Gearson's laugh, and released her, scared
+and giddy. Within her wilfulness she had been frightened by a sense of
+subtler force in him, and mystically mastered as she had never been
+before.
+
+She ran all the way back to the house, and mounted the steps panting.
+Her mother and father were talking of the great affair. Her mother said:
+"Wa'n't Mr. Gearson in rather of an excited state of mind? Didn't you
+think he acted curious?"
+
+"Well, not for a man who'd just been elected captain and had set 'em up
+for the whole of Company A," her father chuckled back.
+
+"What in the world do you mean, Mr. Balcom? Oh! There's Editha!" She
+offered to follow the girl indoors.
+
+"Don't come, mother!" Editha called, vanishing.
+
+Mrs. Balcom remained to reproach her husband. "I don't see much of
+anything to laugh at."
+
+"Well, it's catching. Caught it from Gearson. I guess it won't be much
+of a war, and I guess Gearson don't think so, either. The other fellows
+will back down as soon as they see we mean it. I wouldn't lose any sleep
+over it. I'm going back to bed, myself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gearson came again next afternoon, looking pale and rather sick, but
+quite himself, even to his languid irony. "I guess I'd better tell you,
+Editha, that I consecrated myself to your god of battles last night by
+pouring too many libations to him down my own throat. But I'm all right
+now. One has to carry off the excitement, somehow."
+
+"Promise me," she commanded, "that you'll never touch it again!"
+
+"What! Not let the cannikin clink? Not let the soldier drink? Well, I
+promise."
+
+"You don't belong to yourself now; you don't even belong to _me_. You
+belong to your country, and you have a sacred charge to keep yourself
+strong and well for your country's sake. I have been thinking, thinking
+all night and all day long."
+
+"You look as if you had been crying a little, too," he said, with his
+queer smile.
+
+"That's all past. I've been thinking, and worshipping _you_. Don't you
+suppose I know all that you've been through, to come to this? I've
+followed you every step from your old theories and opinions."
+
+"Well, you've had a long row to hoe."
+
+"And I know you've done this from the highest motives--"
+
+"Oh, there won't be much pettifogging to do till this cruel war is--"
+
+"And you haven't simply done it for my sake. I couldn't respect you if
+you had."
+
+"Well, then we'll say I haven't. A man that hasn't got his own respect
+intact wants the respect of all the other people he can corner. But we
+won't go into that. I'm in for the thing now, and we've got to face our
+future. My idea is that this isn't going to be a very protracted
+struggle; we shall just scare the enemy to death before it comes to a
+fight at all. But we must provide for contingencies, Editha. If anything
+happens to me--"
+
+"Oh, George!" She clung to him, sobbing.
+
+"I don't want you to feel foolishly bound to my memory. I should hate
+that, wherever I happened to be."
+
+"I am yours, for time and eternity--time and eternity." She liked the
+words; they satisfied her famine for phrases.
+
+"Well, say eternity; that's all right; but time's another thing; and I'm
+talking about time. But there is something! My mother! If anything
+happens--"
+
+She winced, and he laughed. "You're not the bold soldier-girl of
+yesterday!" Then he sobered. "If anything happens, I want you to help my
+mother out. She won't like my doing this thing. She brought me up to
+think war a fool thing as well as a bad thing. My father was in the
+Civil War; all through it; lost his arm in it." She thrilled with the
+sense of the arm round her; what if that should be lost? He laughed as
+if divining her: "Oh, it doesn't run in the family, as far as I know!"
+Then he added, gravely: "He came home with misgivings about war, and
+they grew on him. I guess he and mother agreed between them that I was
+to be brought up in his final mind about it; but that was before my
+time. I only knew him from my mother's report of him and his opinions; I
+don't know whether they were hers first; but they were hers last. This
+will be a blow to her. I shall have to write and tell her--"
+
+He stopped, and she asked: "Would you like me to write, too, George?"
+
+"I don't believe that would do. No, I'll do the writing. She'll
+understand a little if I say that I thought the way to minimize it was
+to make war on the largest possible scale at once--that I felt I must
+have been helping on the war somehow if I hadn't helped keep it from
+coming, and I knew I hadn't; when it came, I had no right to stay out of
+it."
+
+Whether his sophistries satisfied him or not, they satisfied her. She
+clung to his breast, and whispered, with closed eyes and quivering lips:
+"Yes, yes, yes!"
+
+"But if anything should happen, you might go to her and see what you
+could do for her. You know? It's rather far off; she can't leave her
+chair--"
+
+"Oh, I'll go, if it's the ends of the earth! But nothing will happen!
+Nothing _can_! I--"
+
+She felt herself lifted with his rising, and Gearson was saying, with
+his arm still round her, to her father: "Well, we're off at once, Mr.
+Balcom. We're to be formally accepted at the capital, and then bunched
+up with the rest somehow, and sent into camp somewhere, and got to the
+front as soon as possible. We all want to be in the van, of course;
+we're the first company to report to the Governor. I came to tell
+Editha, but I hadn't got round to it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She saw him again for a moment at the capital, in the station, just
+before the train started southward with his regiment. He looked well, in
+his uniform, and very soldierly, but somehow girlish, too, with his
+clean-shaven face and slim figure. The manly eyes and the strong voice
+satisfied her, and his preoccupation with some unexpected details of
+duty flattered her. Other girls were weeping and bemoaning themselves,
+but she felt a sort of noble distinction in the abstraction, the almost
+unconsciousness, with which they parted. Only at the last moment he
+said: "Don't forget my mother. It mayn't be such a walk-over as I
+supposed," and he laughed at the notion.
+
+He waved his hand to her as the train moved off--she knew it among a
+score of hands that were waved to other girls from the platform of the
+car, for it held a letter which she knew was hers. Then he went inside
+the car to read it, doubtless, and she did not see him again. But she
+felt safe for him through the strength of what she called her love. What
+she called her God, always speaking the name in a deep voice and with
+the implication of a mutual understanding, would watch over him and keep
+him and bring him back to her. If with an empty sleeve, then he should
+have three arms instead of two, for both of hers should be his for life.
+She did not see, though, why she should always be thinking of the arm
+his father had lost.
+
+There were not many letters from him, but they were such as she could
+have wished, and she put her whole strength into making hers such as she
+imagined he could have wished, glorifying and supporting him. She wrote
+to his mother glorifying him as their hero, but the brief answer she got
+was merely to the effect that Mrs. Gearson was not well enough to write
+herself, and thanking her for her letter by the hand of some one who
+called herself "Yrs truly, Mrs. W.J. Andrews."
+
+Editha determined not to be hurt, but to write again quite as if the
+answer had been all she expected. Before it seemed as if she could have
+written, there came news of the first skirmish, and in the list of the
+killed, which was telegraphed as a trifling loss on our side, was
+Gearson's name. There was a frantic time of trying to make out that it
+might be, must be, some other Gearson; but the name and the company and
+the regiment and the State were too definitely given.
+
+Then there was a lapse into depths out of which it seemed as if she
+never could rise again; then a lift into clouds far above all grief,
+black clouds, that blotted out the sun, but where she soared with him,
+with George--George! She had the fever that she expected of herself, but
+she did not die in it; she was not even delirious, and it did not last
+long. When she was well enough to leave her bed, her one thought was of
+George's mother, of his strangely worded wish that she should go to her
+and see what she could do for her. In the exaltation of the duty laid
+upon her--it buoyed her up instead of burdening her--she rapidly
+recovered.
+
+Her father went with her on the long railroad journey from northern New
+York to western Iowa; he had business out at Davenport, and he said he
+could just as well go then as any other time; and he went with her to
+the little country town where George's mother lived in a little house
+on the edge of the illimitable cornfields, under trees pushed to a top
+of the rolling prairie. George's father had settled there after the
+Civil War, as so many other old soldiers had done; but they were Eastern
+people, and Editha fancied touches of the East in the June rose
+overhanging the front door, and the garden with early summer flowers
+stretching from the gate of the paling fence.
+
+It was very low inside the house, and so dim, with the closed blinds,
+that they could scarcely see one another: Editha tall and black in her
+crapes which filled the air with the smell of their dyes; her father
+standing decorously apart with his hat on his forearm, as at funerals; a
+woman rested in a deep arm-chair, and the woman who had let the
+strangers in stood behind the chair.
+
+The seated woman turned her head round and up, and asked the woman
+behind her chair: "_Who_ did you say?"
+
+Editha, if she had done what she expected of herself, would have gone
+down on her knees at the feet of the seated figure and said, "I am
+George's Editha," for answer.
+
+But instead of her own voice she heard that other woman's voice, saying:
+"Well, I don't know as I _did_ get the name just right. I guess I'll
+have to make a little more light in here," and she went and pushed two
+of the shutters ajar.
+
+Then Editha's father said, in his public will-now-address-a-few-remarks
+tone: "My name is Balcom, ma'am--Junius H. Balcom, of Balcom's Works,
+New York; my daughter--"
+
+"Oh!" the seated woman broke in, with a powerful voice, the voice that
+always surprised Editha from Gearson's slender frame. "Let me see you.
+Stand round where the light can strike on your face," and Editha dumbly
+obeyed. "So, you're Editha Balcom," she sighed.
+
+"Yes," Editha said, more like a culprit than a comforter.
+
+"What did you come for?" Mrs. Gearson asked.
+
+Editha's face quivered and her knees shook. "I came--because--because
+George--" She could go no further.
+
+"Yes," the mother said, "he told me he had asked you to come if he got
+killed. You didn't expect that, I suppose, when you sent him."
+
+"I would rather have died myself than done it!" Editha said, with more
+truth in her deep voice than she ordinarily found in it. "I tried to
+leave him free--"
+
+"Yes, that letter of yours, that came back with his other things, left
+him free."
+
+Editha saw now where George's irony came from.
+
+"It was not to be read before--unless--until--I told him so," she
+faltered.
+
+"Of course, he wouldn't read a letter of yours, under the circumstances,
+till he thought you wanted him to. Been sick?" the woman abruptly
+demanded.
+
+"Very sick," Editha said, with self-pity.
+
+"Daughter's life," her father interposed, "was almost despaired of, at
+one time."
+
+Mrs. Gearson gave him no heed. "I suppose you would have been glad to
+die, such a brave person as you! I don't believe _he_ was glad to die.
+He was always a timid boy, that way; he was afraid of a good many
+things; but if he was afraid he did what he made up his mind to. I
+suppose he made up his mind to go, but I knew what it cost him by what
+it cost me when I heard of it. I had been through _one_ war before.
+When you sent him you didn't expect he would get killed."
+
+The voice seemed to compassionate Editha, and it was time. "No," she
+huskily murmured.
+
+"No, girls don't; women don't, when they give their men up to their
+country. They think they'll come marching back, somehow, just as gay as
+they went, or if it's an empty sleeve, or even an empty pantaloon, it's
+all the more glory, and they're so much the prouder of them, poor
+things!"
+
+The tears began to run down Editha's face; she had not wept till then;
+but it was now such a relief to be understood that the tears came.
+
+"No, you didn't expect him to get killed," Mrs. Gearson repeated, in a
+voice which was startlingly like George's again. "You just expected him
+to kill some one else, some of those foreigners, that weren't there
+because they had any say about it, but because they had to be there,
+poor wretches--conscripts, or whatever they call 'em. You thought it
+would be all right for my George, _your_ George, to kill the sons of
+those miserable mothers and the husbands of those girls that you would
+never see the faces of." The woman lifted her powerful voice in a
+psalmlike note. "I thank my God he didn't live to do it! I thank my God
+they killed him first, and that he ain't livin' with their blood on his
+hands!" She dropped her eyes, which she had raised with her voice, and
+glared at Editha. "What you got that black on for?" She lifted herself
+by her powerful arms so high that her helpless body seemed to hang limp
+its full length. "Take it off, take it off, before I tear it from your
+back!"
+
+[Illustration: "SHE GLARED AT EDITHA. 'WHAT YOU GOT THAT BLACK ON
+FOR?'"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The lady who was passing the summer near Balcom's Works was sketching
+Editha's beauty, which lent itself wonderfully to the effects of a
+colorist. It had come to that confidence which is rather apt to grow
+between artist and sitter, and Editha had told her everything.
+
+"To think of your having such a tragedy in your life!" the lady said.
+She added: "I suppose there are people who feel that way about war. But
+when you consider the good this war has done--how much it has done for
+the country! I can't understand such people, for my part. And when you
+had come all the way out there to console her--got up out of a sick-bed!
+Well!"
+
+"I think," Editha said, magnanimously, "she wasn't quite in her right
+mind; and so did papa."
+
+"Yes," the lady said, looking at Editha's lips in nature and then at her
+lips in art, and giving an empirical touch to them in the picture. "But
+how dreadful of her! How perfectly--excuse me--how _vulgar_!"
+
+A light broke upon Editha in the darkness which she felt had been
+without a gleam of brightness for weeks and months. The mystery that had
+bewildered her was solved by the word; and from that moment she rose
+from grovelling in shame and self-pity, and began to live again in the
+ideal.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+BRAYBRIDGE'S OFFER
+
+
+We had ordered our dinners and were sitting in the Turkish room at the
+club, waiting to be called, each in his turn, to the dining-room. It was
+always a cosey place, whether you found yourself in it with cigars and
+coffee after dinner, or with whatever liquid or solid appetizer you
+preferred in the half-hour or more that must pass before dinner after
+you had made out your menu. It intimated an exclusive possession in the
+three or four who happened first to find themselves together in it, and
+it invited the philosophic mind to contemplation more than any other
+spot in the club.
+
+Our rather limited little down-town dining-club was almost a celibate
+community at most times. A few husbands and fathers joined us at lunch;
+but at dinner we were nearly always a company of bachelors, dropping in
+an hour or so before we wished to dine, and ordering from a bill of fare
+what we liked. Some dozed away in the intervening time; some read the
+evening papers or played chess; I preferred the chance society of the
+Turkish room. I could be pretty sure of finding Wanhope there in these
+sympathetic moments, and where Wanhope was there would probably be
+Rulledge, passively willing to listen and agree, and Minver ready to
+interrupt and dispute. I myself liked to look in and linger for either
+the reasoning or the bickering, as it happened, and now, seeing the
+three there together, I took a provisional seat behind the painter, who
+made no sign of knowing I was present. Rulledge was eating a caviar
+sandwich, which he had brought from the afternoon tea-table near by, and
+he greedily incited Wanhope to go on, in the polite pause which the
+psychologist had let follow on my appearance, with what he was saying. I
+was not surprised to find that his talk related to a fact just then
+intensely interesting to the few, rapidly becoming the many, who were
+privy to it; though Wanhope had the air of stooping to it from a higher
+range of thinking.
+
+"I shouldn't have supposed, somehow," he said, with a knot of
+deprecation between his fine eyes, "that he would have had the pluck."
+
+"Perhaps he hadn't," Minver suggested.
+
+Wanhope waited for a thoughtful moment of censure eventuating in
+toleration. "You mean that she--"
+
+"I don't see why you say that, Minver," Rulledge interposed,
+chivalrously, with his mouth full of sandwich.
+
+"I didn't say it," Minver contradicted.
+
+"You implied it; and I don't think it's fair. It's easy enough to build
+up a report of that kind on the half-knowledge of rumor which is all
+that any outsider can have in the case."
+
+"So far," Minver said, with unbroken tranquillity, "as any such edifice
+has been erected, you are the architect, Rulledge. I shouldn't think you
+would like to go round insinuating that sort of thing. Here is Acton,"
+and he now acknowledged my presence with a backward twist of his head,
+"on the alert for material already. You ought to be more careful where
+Acton is, Rulledge."
+
+"It would be great copy if it were true," I owned.
+
+Wanhope regarded us all three, in this play of our qualities, with the
+scientific impartiality of a bacteriologist in the study of a culture
+offering some peculiar incidents. He took up a point as remote as might
+be from the personal appeal. "It is curious how little we know of such
+matters, after all the love-making and marrying in life and all the
+inquiry of the poets and novelists." He addressed himself in this turn
+of his thought, half playful, half earnest, to me, as if I united with
+the functions of both a responsibility for their shortcomings.
+
+"Yes," Minver said, facing about towards me. "How do you excuse yourself
+for your ignorance in matters where you're always professionally making
+such a bluff of knowledge? After all the marriages you have brought
+about in literature, can you say positively and specifically how they
+are brought about in life?"
+
+"No, I can't," I admitted. "I might say that a writer of fiction is a
+good deal like a minister who continually marries people without knowing
+why."
+
+"No, you couldn't, my dear fellow," the painter retorted. "It's part of
+your swindle to assume that you _do_ know why. You ought to find out."
+
+Wanhope interposed concretely, or as concretely as he could: "The
+important thing would always be to find which of the lovers the
+confession, tacit or explicit, began with."
+
+"Acton ought to go round and collect human documents bearing on the
+question. He ought to have got together thousands of specimens from
+nature. He ought to have gone to all the married couples he knew, and
+asked them just how their passion was confessed; he ought to have sent
+out printed circulars, with tabulated questions. Why don't you do it,
+Acton?"
+
+I returned, as seriously as could have been expected:
+
+"Perhaps it would be thought rather intimate. People don't like to talk
+of such things."
+
+"They're ashamed," Minver declared. "The lovers don't either of them, in
+a given case, like to let others know how much the woman had to do with
+making the offer, and how little the man."
+
+Minver's point provoked both Wanhope and myself to begin a remark at the
+same time. We begged each other's pardon, and Wanhope insisted that I
+should go on.
+
+"Oh, merely this," I said. "I don't think they're so much ashamed as
+that they have forgotten the different stages. You were going to say--?"
+
+"Very much what you said. It's astonishing how people forget the vital
+things and remember trifles. Or perhaps as we advance from stage to
+stage what once seemed the vital things turn to trifles. Nothing can be
+more vital in the history of a man and a woman than how they became
+husband and wife, and yet not merely the details, but the main fact,
+would seem to escape record if not recollection. The next generations
+knows nothing of it."
+
+"That appears to let Acton out," Minver said. "But how do _you_ know
+what you were saying, Wanhope?"
+
+"I've ventured to make some inquiries in that region at one time. Not
+directly, of course. At second and third hand. It isn't inconceivable,
+if we conceive of a life after this, that a man should forget, in its
+more important interests and occupations, just how he quitted this
+world, or at least the particulars of the article of death. Of course,
+we must suppose a good portion of eternity to have elapsed." Wanhope
+continued, dreamily, with a deep breath almost equivalent to something
+so unscientific as a sigh: "Women are charming, and in nothing more
+than the perpetual challenge they form for us. They are born defying us
+to match ourselves with them."
+
+"Do you mean that Miss Hazelwood--" Rulledge began, but Minver's laugh
+arrested him.
+
+"Nothing so concrete, I'm afraid," Wanhope gently returned. "I mean, to
+match them in graciousness, in loveliness, in all the agile contests of
+spirit and plays of fancy. It's pathetic to see them caught up into
+something more serious in that other game, which they are so good at."
+
+"They seem rather to like it, though, some of them, if you mean the game
+of love," Minver said. "Especially when they're not in earnest about
+it."
+
+"Oh, there are plenty of spoiled women," Wanhope admitted. "But I don't
+mean flirting. I suppose that the average unspoiled woman is rather
+frightened than otherwise when she knows that a man is in love with
+her."
+
+"Do you suppose she always knows it first?" Rulledge asked.
+
+"You may be sure," Minver answered for Wanhope, "that if she didn't know
+it, _he_ never would." Then Wanhope answered for himself:
+
+"I think that generally she sees it coming. In that sort of wireless
+telegraphy, that reaching out of two natures through space towards each
+other, her more sensitive apparatus probably feels the appeal of his
+before he is conscious of having made any appeal."
+
+"And her first impulse is to escape the appeal?" I suggested.
+
+"Yes," Wanhope admitted, after a thoughtful reluctance.
+
+"Even when she is half aware of having invited it?"
+
+"If she is not spoiled she is never aware of having invited it. Take
+the case in point; we won't mention any names. She is sailing through
+time, through youthful space, with her electrical lures, the natural
+equipment of every charming woman, all out, and suddenly, somewhere from
+the unknown, she feels the shock of a response in the gulfs of air where
+there had been no life before. But she can't be said to have knowingly
+searched the void for any presence."
+
+"Oh, I'm not sure about that, Professor," Minver put in. "Go a little
+slower, if you expect me to follow you."
+
+"It's all a mystery, the most beautiful mystery of life," Wanhope
+resumed. "I don't believe I could make out the case as I feel it to be."
+
+"Braybridge's part of the case is rather plain, isn't it?" I invited
+him.
+
+"I'm not sure of that. No man's part of any case is plain, if you look
+at it carefully. The most that you can say of Braybridge is that he is
+rather a simple nature. But nothing," the psychologist added, with one
+of his deep breaths, "is so complex as a simple nature."
+
+"Well," Minver contended, "Braybridge is plain, if his case isn't."
+
+"Plain? Is he plain?" Wanhope asked, as if asking himself.
+
+"My dear fellow, you agnostics doubt everything!"
+
+"I should have said picturesque. Picturesque, with the sort of
+unbeautifulness that takes the fancy of women more than Greek
+proportion. I think it would require a girl peculiarly feminine to feel
+the attraction of such a man--the fascination of his being grizzled and
+slovenly and rugged. She would have to be rather a wild, shy girl to do
+that, and it would have to be through her fear of him that she would
+divine his fear of her. But what I have heard is that they met under
+rather exceptional circumstances. It was at a house in the Adirondacks,
+where Braybridge was, somewhat in the quality of a bull in a china-shop.
+He was lugged in by the host, as an old friend, and was suffered by the
+hostess as a friend quite too old for her. At any rate, as I heard (and
+I don't vouch for the facts, all of them), Braybridge found himself at
+odds with the gay young people who made up the hostess's end of the
+party, and was watching for a chance to--"
+
+Wanhope cast about for the word, and Minver supplied it--"Pull out."
+
+"Yes. But when he had found it Miss Hazelwood took it from him."
+
+"I don't understand," Rulledge said.
+
+"When he came in to breakfast, the third morning, prepared with an
+excuse for cutting his week down to the dimensions it had reached, he
+saw her sitting alone at the table. She had risen early as a consequence
+of having arrived late the night before; and when Braybridge found
+himself in for it, he forgot that he meant to go away, and said
+good-morning, as if they knew each other. Their hostess found them
+talking over the length of the table in a sort of mutual fright, and
+introduced them. But it's rather difficult reporting a lady verbatim at
+second hand. I really had the facts from Welkin, who had them from his
+wife. The sum of her impressions was that Braybridge and Miss Hazelwood
+were getting a kind of comfort out of their mutual terror because one
+was as badly frightened as the other. It was a novel experience for
+both. Ever seen her?"
+
+We looked at one another. Minver said: "I never wanted to paint any one
+so much. It was at the spring show of the American Artists. There was a
+jam of people; but this girl--I've understood it was she--looked as
+much alone as if there were nobody else there. She might have been a
+startled doe in the North Woods suddenly coming out on a
+twenty-thousand-dollar camp, with a lot of twenty-million-dollar people
+on the veranda."
+
+"And you wanted to do her as The Startled Doe," I said. "Good selling
+name."
+
+"Don't reduce it to the vulgarity of fiction. I admit it would be a
+selling name."
+
+"Go on, Wanhope," Rulledge puffed impatiently. "Though I don't see how
+there could be another soul in the universe as constitutionally scared
+of men as Braybridge is of women."
+
+"In the universe nothing is wasted, I suppose. Everything has its
+complement, its response. For every bashful man, there must be a bashful
+woman," Wanhope returned.
+
+"Or a bold one," Minver suggested.
+
+"No; the response must be in kind to be truly complemental. Through the
+sense of their reciprocal timidity they divine that they needn't be
+afraid."
+
+"Oh! _That's_ the way you get out of it!"
+
+"Well?" Rulledge urged.
+
+"I'm afraid," Wanhope modestly confessed, "that from this point I shall
+have to be largely conjectural. Welkin wasn't able to be very definite,
+except as to moments, and he had his data almost altogether from his
+wife. Braybridge had told him overnight that he thought of going, and he
+had said he mustn't think of it; but he supposed Braybridge had spoken
+of it to Mrs. Welkin, and he began by saying to his wife that he hoped
+she had refused to hear of Braybridge's going. She said she hadn't heard
+of it, but now she would refuse without hearing, and she didn't give
+Braybridge any chance to protest. If people went in the middle of their
+week, what would become of other people? She was not going to have the
+equilibrium of her party disturbed, and that was all about it. Welkin
+thought it was odd that Braybridge didn't insist; and he made a long
+story of it. But the grain of wheat in his bushel of chaff was that Miss
+Hazelwood seemed to be fascinated by Braybridge from the first. When
+Mrs. Welkin scared him into saying that he would stay his week out, the
+business practically was done. They went picnicking that day in each
+other's charge; and after Braybridge left he wrote back to her, as Mrs.
+Welkin knew from the letters that passed through her hands, and--Well,
+their engagement has come out, and--" Wanhope paused, with an air that
+was at first indefinite, and then definitive.
+
+"You don't mean," Rulledge burst out in a note of deep wrong, "that
+that's all you know about it?"
+
+"Yes, that's all I know," Wanhope confessed, as if somewhat surprised
+himself at the fact.
+
+"Well!"
+
+Wanhope tried to offer the only reparation in his power. "I can
+conjecture--we can all conjecture--"
+
+He hesitated; then: "Well, go on with your conjecture," Rulledge said,
+forgivingly.
+
+"Why--" Wanhope began again; but at that moment a man who had been
+elected the year before, and then gone off on a long absence, put his
+head in between the dull-red hangings of the doorway. It was Halson,
+whom I did not know very well, but liked better than I knew. His eyes
+were dancing with what seemed the inextinguishable gayety of his
+temperament, rather than any present occasion, and his smile carried his
+little mustache well away from his handsome teeth. "Private?"
+
+"Come in! come in!" Minver called to him. "Thought you were in Japan?"
+
+"My dear fellow," Halson answered, "you must brush up your contemporary
+history. It's more than a fortnight since I was in Japan." He shook
+hands with me, and I introduced him to Rulledge and Wanhope. He said at
+once: "Well, what is it? Question of Braybridge's engagement? It's
+humiliating to a man to come back from the antipodes and find the nation
+absorbed in a parochial problem like that. Everybody I've met here
+to-night has asked me, the first thing, if I'd heard of it, and if I
+knew how it could have happened."
+
+"And do you?" Rulledge asked.
+
+"I can give a pretty good guess," Halson said, running his merry eyes
+over our faces.
+
+"Anybody can give a good guess," Rulledge said. "Wanhope is doing it
+now."
+
+"Don't let me interrupt." Halson turned to him politely.
+
+"Not at all. I'd rather hear your guess, if you know Braybridge better
+than I," Wanhope said.
+
+"Well," Halson compromised, "perhaps I've known him longer." He asked,
+with an effect of coming to business: "Where were you?"
+
+"Tell him, Rulledge," Minver ordered, and Rulledge apparently asked
+nothing better. He told him, in detail, all we knew from any source,
+down to the moment of Wanhope's arrested conjecture.
+
+"He did leave you at an anxious point, didn't he?" Halson smiled to the
+rest of us at Rulledge's expense, and then said: "Well, I think I can
+help you out a little. Any of you know the lady?"
+
+"By sight, Minver does," Rulledge answered for us. "Wants to paint her."
+
+"Of course," Halson said, with intelligence. "But I doubt if he'd find
+her as paintable as she looks, at first. She's beautiful, but her charm
+is spiritual."
+
+"Sometimes we try for that," the painter interposed.
+
+"And sometimes you get it. But you'll allow it's difficult. That's all I
+meant. I've known her--let me see--for twelve years, at least; ever
+since I first went West. She was about eleven then, and her father was
+bringing her up on the ranch. Her aunt came along by and by and took her
+to Europe--mother dead before Hazelwood went out there. But the girl was
+always homesick for the ranch; she pined for it; and after they had kept
+her in Germany three or four years they let her come back and run wild
+again--wild as a flower does, or a vine, not a domesticated animal."
+
+"Go slow, Halson. This is getting too much for the romantic Rulledge."
+
+"Rulledge can bear up against the facts, I guess, Minver," Halson said,
+almost austerely. "Her father died two years ago, and then she _had_ to
+come East, for her aunt simply _wouldn't_ live on the ranch. She brought
+her on here, and brought her out; I was at the coming-out tea; but the
+girl didn't take to the New York thing at all; I could see it from the
+start; she wanted to get away from it with me, and talk about the
+ranch."
+
+"She felt that she was with the only genuine person among those
+conventional people."
+
+Halson laughed at Minver's thrust, and went on amiably: "I don't suppose
+that till she met Braybridge she was ever quite at her ease with any
+man--or woman, for that matter. I imagine, as you've done, that it was
+his fear of her that gave her courage. She met him on equal terms. Isn't
+that it?"
+
+Wanhope assented to the question referred to him with a nod.
+
+"And when they got lost from the rest of the party at that picnic--"
+
+"Lost?" Rulledge demanded.
+
+"Why, yes. Didn't you know? But I ought to go back. They said there
+never was anything prettier than the way she unconsciously went for
+Braybridge the whole day. She wanted him, and she was a child who wanted
+things frankly when she did want them. Then his being ten or fifteen
+years older than she was, and so large and simple, made it natural for a
+shy girl like her to assort herself with him when all the rest were
+assorting themselves, as people do at such things. The consensus of
+testimony is that she did it with the most transparent unconsciousness,
+and--"
+
+"Who are your authorities?" Minver asked; Rulledge threw himself back on
+the divan and beat the cushions with impatience.
+
+"Is it essential to give them?"
+
+"Oh no. I merely wondered. Go on."
+
+"The authorities are all right. She had disappeared with him before the
+others noticed. It was a thing that happened; there was no design in it;
+that would have been out of character. They had got to the end of the
+wood-road, and into the thick of the trees where there wasn't even a
+trail, and they walked round looking for a way out till they were turned
+completely. They decided that the only way was to keep walking, and by
+and by they heard the sound of chopping. It was some Canucks clearing a
+piece of the woods, and when she spoke to them in French they gave them
+full directions, and Braybridge soon found the path again."
+
+Halson paused, and I said: "But that isn't all?"
+
+"Oh no." He continued thoughtfully silent for a little while before he
+resumed. "The amazing thing is that they got lost again, and that when
+they tried going back to the Canucks they couldn't find the way."
+
+"Why didn't they follow the sound of the chopping?" I asked.
+
+"The Canucks had stopped, for the time being. Besides, Braybridge was
+rather ashamed, and he thought if they went straight on they would be
+sure to come out somewhere. But that was where he made a mistake. They
+couldn't go on straight; they went round and round, and came on their
+own footsteps--or hers, which he recognized from the narrow tread and
+the dint of the little heels in the damp places."
+
+Wanhope roused himself with a kindling eye. "That is very interesting,
+the movement in a circle of people who have lost their way. It has often
+been observed, but I don't know that it has ever been explained.
+Sometimes the circle is smaller, sometimes it is larger, but I believe
+it is always a circle."
+
+"Isn't it," I queried, "like any other error in life? We go round and
+round, and commit the old sins over again."
+
+"That is very interesting," Wanhope allowed.
+
+"But do lost people really always walk in a vicious circle?" Minver
+asked.
+
+Rulledge would not let Wanhope answer. "Go on, Halson," he said.
+
+Halson roused himself from the revery in which he was sitting with
+glazed eyes. "Well, what made it a little more anxious was that he had
+heard of bears on that mountain, and the green afternoon light among the
+trees was perceptibly paling. He suggested shouting, but she wouldn't
+let him; she said it would be ridiculous if the others heard them, and
+useless if they didn't. So they tramped on till--till the accident
+happened."
+
+"The accident!" Rulledge exclaimed, in the voice of our joint emotion.
+
+"He stepped on a loose stone and turned his foot," Halson explained. "It
+wasn't a sprain, luckily, but it hurt enough. He turned so white that
+she noticed it, and asked him what was the matter. Of course that shut
+his mouth the closer, but it morally doubled his motive, and he kept
+himself from crying out till the sudden pain of the wrench was over. He
+said merely that he thought he had heard something, and he had an awful
+ringing in his ears; but he didn't mean that, and he started on again.
+The worst was trying to walk without limping, and to talk cheerfully and
+encouragingly with that agony tearing at him. But he managed somehow,
+and he was congratulating himself on his success when he tumbled down in
+a dead faint."
+
+"Oh, come now!" Minver protested.
+
+"It _is_ like an old-fashioned story, where things are operated by
+accident instead of motive, isn't it?" Halson smiled with radiant
+recognition.
+
+"Fact will always imitate fiction, if you give her time enough," I said.
+
+"Had they got back to the other picnickers?" Rulledge asked, with a
+tense voice.
+
+"In sound, but not in sight of them. She wasn't going to bring him into
+camp in that state; besides, she couldn't. She got some water out of the
+trout-brook they'd been fishing--more water than trout in it--and
+sprinkled his face, and he came to, and got on his legs just in time to
+pull on to the others, who were organizing a search-party to go after
+them. From that point on she dropped Braybridge like a hot coal; and as
+there was nothing of the flirt in her, she simply kept with the women,
+the older girls, and the tabbies, and left Braybridge to worry along
+with the secret of his turned ankle. He doesn't know how he ever got
+home alive; but he did, somehow, manage to reach the wagons that had
+brought them to the edge of the woods, and then he was all right till
+they got to the house. But still she said nothing about his accident,
+and he couldn't; and he pleaded an early start for town the next
+morning, and got off to bed as soon as he could."
+
+"I shouldn't have thought he could have stirred in the morning,"
+Rulledge employed Halson's pause to say.
+
+"Well, this beaver _had_ to," Halson said. "He was not the only early
+riser. He found Miss Hazelwood at the station before him."
+
+"What!" Rulledge shouted. I confess the fact rather roused me, too; and
+Wanhope's eyes kindled with a scientific pleasure.
+
+"She came right towards him. 'Mr. Braybridge,' says she, 'I couldn't let
+you go without explaining my very strange behavior. I didn't choose to
+have these people laughing at the notion of _my_ having played the part
+of your preserver. It was bad enough being lost with you; I couldn't
+bring you into ridicule with them by the disproportion they'd have felt
+in my efforts for you after you turned your foot. So I simply had to
+ignore the incident. Don't you see?' Braybridge glanced at her, and he
+had never felt so big and bulky before, or seen her so slender and
+little. He said, 'It _would_ have seemed rather absurd,' and he broke
+out and laughed, while she broke down and cried, and asked him to
+forgive her, and whether it had hurt him very much; and said she knew he
+could bear to keep it from the others by the way he had kept it from her
+till he fainted. She implied that he was morally as well as physically
+gigantic, and it was as much as he could do to keep from taking her in
+his arms on the spot."
+
+"It would have been edifying to the groom that had driven her to the
+station," Minver cynically suggested.
+
+"Groom nothing!" Halson returned with spirit. "She paddled herself
+across the lake, and walked from the boat-landing to the station."
+
+"Jove!" Rulledge exploded in uncontrollable enthusiasm.
+
+"She turned round as soon as she had got through with her hymn of
+praise--it made Braybridge feel awfully flat--and ran back through the
+bushes to the boat-landing, and--that was the last he saw of her till he
+met her in town this fall."
+
+"And when--and when--did he offer himself?" Rulledge entreated,
+breathlessly. "How--"
+
+"Yes, that's the point, Halson," Minver interposed. "Your story is all
+very well, as far as it goes; but Rulledge here has been insinuating
+that it was Miss Hazelwood who made the offer, and he wants you to bear
+him out."
+
+Rulledge winced at the outrage, but he would not stay Halson's answer
+even for the sake of righting himself.
+
+"I _have_ heard," Minver went on, "that Braybridge insisted on paddling
+the canoe back to the other shore for her, and that it was on the way
+that he offered himself." We others stared at Minver in astonishment.
+Halson glanced covertly towards him with his gay eyes. "Then that wasn't
+true?"
+
+"How did you hear it?" Halson asked.
+
+"Oh, never mind. Is it true?"
+
+"Well, I know there's that version," Halson said, evasively. "The
+engagement is only just out, as you know. As to the offer--the when and
+the how--I don't know that I'm exactly at liberty to say."
+
+"I don't see why," Minver urged. "You might stretch a point for
+Rulledge's sake."
+
+Halson looked down, and then he glanced at Minver after a furtive
+passage of his eye over Rulledge's intense face. "There was something
+rather nice happened after--But, really, now!"
+
+"Oh, go on!" Minver called out in contempt of his scruple.
+
+"I haven't the right--Well, I suppose I'm on safe ground here? It won't
+go any further, of course; and it _was_ so pretty! After she had pushed
+off in her canoe, you know, Braybridge--he'd followed her down to the
+shore of the lake--found her handkerchief in a bush where it had caught,
+and he held it up, and called out to her. She looked round and saw it,
+and called back: 'Never mind. I can't return for it now.' Then
+Braybridge plucked up his courage, and asked if he might keep it, and
+she said 'Yes,' over her shoulder, and then she stopped paddling, and
+said: 'No, no, you mustn't, you mustn't! You can send it to me.' He
+asked where, and she said: 'In New York--in the fall--at the
+Walholland.' Braybridge never knew how he dared, but he shouted after
+her--she was paddling on again--'May I _bring_ it?' and she called over
+her shoulder again, without fully facing him, but her profile was
+enough: 'If you can't get any one to bring it for you.' The words barely
+reached him, but he'd have caught them if they'd been whispered; and he
+watched her across the lake and into the bushes, and then broke for his
+train. He was just in time."
+
+Halson beamed for pleasure upon us, and even Minver said: "Yes, that's
+rather nice." After a moment he added: "Rulledge thinks she put it
+there."
+
+"You're too bad, Minver," Halson protested. "The charm of the whole
+thing was her perfect innocence. She isn't capable of the slightest
+finesse. I've known her from a child, and I know what I say."
+
+"That innocence of girlhood," Wanhope said, "is very interesting. It's
+astonishing how much experience it survives. Some women carry it into
+old age with them. It's never been scientifically studied--"
+
+"Yes," Minver allowed. "There would be a fortune for the novelist who
+could work a type of innocence for all it was worth. Here's Acton always
+dealing with the most rancid flirtatiousness, and missing the sweetness
+and beauty of a girlhood which does the cheekiest things without knowing
+what it's about, and fetches down its game whenever it shuts its eyes
+and fires at nothing. But I don't see how all this touches the point
+that Rulledge makes, or decides which finally made the offer."
+
+"Well, hadn't the offer already been made?"
+
+"But how?"
+
+"Oh, in the usual way."
+
+"What is the usual way?"
+
+"I thought everybody knew _that_. Of course, it was _from_ Braybridge
+finally, but I suppose it's always six of one and half a dozen of the
+other in these cases, isn't it? I dare say he couldn't get any one to
+take her the handkerchief. My dinner?" Halson looked up at the silent
+waiter, who had stolen upon us and was bowing towards him.
+
+"Look here, Halson," Minver detained him, "how is it none of the rest of
+us have heard all those details?"
+
+"_I_ don't know where you've been, Minver. Everybody knows the main
+facts," Halson said, escaping.
+
+Wanhope observed, musingly: "I suppose he's quite right about the
+reciprocality of the offer, as we call it. There's probably, in
+ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, a perfect understanding before
+there's an explanation. In many cases the offer and the acceptance must
+really be tacit."
+
+"Yes," I ventured, "and I don't know why we're so severe with women when
+they seem to take the initiative. It's merely, after all, the call of
+the maiden bird, and there's nothing lovelier or more endearing in
+nature than that."
+
+"Maiden bird is good, Acton," Minver approved. "Why don't you institute
+a class of fiction where the love-making is all done by the maiden
+birds, as you call them--or the widow birds? It would be tremendously
+popular with both sexes. It would lift an immense responsibility off the
+birds who've been expected to shoulder it heretofore if it could be
+introduced into real life."
+
+Rulledge fetched a long, simple-hearted sigh. "Well, it's a charming
+story. How well he told it!"
+
+The waiter came again, and this time signalled to Minver.
+
+"Yes," he said, as he rose. "What a pity you can't believe a word Halson
+says."
+
+"Do you mean--" we began simultaneously.
+
+"That he built the whole thing from the ground up, with the start that
+we had given him. Why, you poor things! Who could have told him how it
+all happened? Braybridge? Or the girl? As Wanhope began by saying,
+people don't speak of their love-making, even when they distinctly
+remember it."
+
+"Yes, but see here, Minver!" Rulledge said, with a dazed look. "If it's
+all a fake of his, how came _you_ to have heard of Braybridge paddling
+the canoe back for her?"
+
+"That was the fake that tested the fake. When he adopted it, I _knew_ he
+was lying, because I was lying myself. And then the cheapness of the
+whole thing! I wonder that didn't strike you. It's the stuff that a
+thousand summer-girl stories have been spun out of. Acton might have
+thought he was writing it!"
+
+He went away, leaving us to a blank silence, till Wanhope managed to
+say: "That inventive habit of mind is very curious. It would be
+interesting to know just how far it imposes on the inventor himself--how
+much he believes of his own fiction."
+
+"I don't see," Rulledge said, gloomily, "why they're so long with my
+dinner." Then he burst out: "I believe every word Halson said! If
+there's any fake in the thing, it's the fake that Minver owned to."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+THE CHICK OF THE EASTER EGG
+
+
+The old fellow who told that story of dream-transference on a
+sleeping-car at Christmas-time was again at the club on Easter Eve.
+Halson had put him up for the winter, under the easy rule we had, and he
+had taken very naturally to the Turkish room for his after-dinner coffee
+and cigar. We all rather liked him, though it was Minver's pose to be
+critical of the simple friendliness with which he made himself at home
+among us, and to feign a wish that there were fewer trains between
+Boston and New York, so that old Newton (that was his name) could have a
+better chance of staying away. But we noticed that Minver was always a
+willing listener to Newton's talk, and that he sometimes hospitably
+offered to share his tobacco with the Bostonian. When brought to book
+for his inconsistency by Rulledge, he said he was merely welcoming the
+new blood, if not young blood, that Newton was infusing into our body,
+which had grown anaemic on Wanhope's psychology and Rulledge's romance;
+or, anyway, it was a change.
+
+Newton now began by saying abruptly, in a fashion he had, "We used to
+hear a good deal in Boston about your Easter Parade here in New York. Do
+you still keep it up?"
+
+No one else answering, Minver replied, presently, "I believe it is still
+going on. I understand that it's composed mostly of milliners out to
+see one another's new hats, and generous Jewesses who are willing to
+contribute the 'dark and bright' of the beauty in which they walk to the
+observance of an alien faith. It's rather astonishing how the synagogue
+takes to the feasts of the church. If it were not for that, I don't know
+what would become of Christmas."
+
+"What do you mean by their walking in beauty?" Rulledge asked over his
+shoulder.
+
+"I shall never have the measure of your ignorance, Rulledge. You don't
+even know Byron's lines on Hebrew loveliness?
+
+ "'She walks in beauty like the night
+ Of cloudless climes and starry skies,
+ And all that's best of dark and bright
+ Meets in her aspect and her eyes.'"
+
+"Pretty good," Rulledge assented. "And they _are_ splendid, sometimes.
+But what has the Easter Parade got to do with it?" he asked Newton.
+
+"Oh, only what everything has with everything else. I was thinking of
+Easter-time long ago and far away, and naturally I thought of Easter now
+and here. I saw your Parade once, and it seemed to me one of the great
+social spectacles. But you can't keep anything in New York, if it's
+good; if it's bad, you can."
+
+"You come from Boston, I think you said, Mr. Newton," Minver breathed
+blandly through his smoke.
+
+"Oh, I'm not a _real_ Bostonian," our guest replied. "I'm not abusing
+you on behalf of a city that I'm a native proprietor of. If I were, I
+shouldn't perhaps make your decadent Easter Parade my point of attack,
+though I think it's a pity to let it spoil. I came from a part of the
+country where we used to make a great deal of Easter, when we were boys,
+at least so far as eggs went. I don't know whether the grown people
+observed the day then, and I don't know whether the boys keep it now; I
+haven't been back at Easter-time for several generations. But when I was
+a boy it was a serious thing. In that soft Southwestern latitude the
+grass had pretty well greened up by Easter, even when it came in March,
+and grass colors eggs a very nice yellow; it used to worry me that it
+didn't color them green. When the grass hadn't got along far enough,
+winter wheat would do as well. I don't remember what color onion husks
+would give; but we used onion husks, too. Some mothers would let the
+boys get logwood from the drug-store, and that made the eggs a fine,
+bold purplish black. But the greatest egg of all was a calico egg, that
+you got by coaxing your grandmother (your mother's mother) or your aunt
+(your mother's sister) to sew up in a tight cover of brilliant calico.
+When that was boiled long enough the colors came off in a perfect
+pattern on the egg. Very few boys could get such eggs; when they did,
+they put them away in bureau drawers till they ripened and the mothers
+smelt them, and threw them out of the window as quickly as possible.
+Always, after breakfast, Easter Morning, we came out on the street and
+fought eggs. We pitted the little ends of the eggs against one another,
+and the fellow whose egg cracked the other fellow's egg won it, and he
+carried it off. I remember grass and wheat colored eggs in such trials
+of strength, and onion and logwood colored eggs; but never calico eggs;
+_they_ were too precious to be risked; it would have seemed wicked.
+
+"I don't know," the Boston man went musingly on, "why I should remember
+these things so relentlessly; I've forgotten all the important things
+that happened to me then; but perhaps these were the important things.
+Who knows? I only know I've always had a soft spot in my heart for
+Easter, not so much because of the calico eggs, perhaps, as because of
+the grandmothers and the aunts. I suppose the simple life is full of
+such aunts and grandmothers still; but you don't find them in hotel
+apartments, or even in flats consisting of seven large, light rooms and
+bath." We all recognized the language of the advertisements, and laughed
+in sympathy with our guest, who perhaps laughed out of proportion with a
+pleasantry of that size.
+
+When he had subdued his mirth, he resumed at a point apparently very
+remote from that where he had started.
+
+"There was one of those winters in Cambridge, where I lived then, that
+seemed tougher than any other we could remember, and they were all
+pretty tough winters there in those times. There were forty snowfalls
+between Thanksgiving and Fast Day--you don't know what Fast Day is in
+New York, and we didn't, either, as far as the fasting went--and the
+cold kept on and on till we couldn't, or said we couldn't, stand it any
+longer. So, along about the middle of March somewhere, we picked up the
+children and started south. In those days New York seemed pretty far
+south to us; and when we got here we found everything on wheels that we
+had left on runners in Boston. But the next day it began to snow, and we
+said we must go a little farther to meet the spring. I don't know
+exactly what it was made us pitch on Bethlehem, Pennsylvania; but we had
+a notion we should find it interesting, and, at any rate, a total change
+from our old environment. We had been reading something about the
+Moravians, and we knew that it was the capital of Moravianism, with the
+largest Moravian congregation in the world; I think it was Longfellow's
+'Hymn of the Moravian Nuns' that set us to reading about the sect; and
+we had somehow heard that the Sun Inn, at Bethlehem, was the finest
+old-fashioned public house anywhere. At any rate, we had the faith of
+our youthful years, and we put out for Bethlehem.
+
+"We arrived just at dusk, but not so late that we couldn't see the
+hospitable figure of a man coming out of the Sun to meet us at the
+omnibus door and to shake hands with each of us. It was the very
+pleasantest and sweetest welcome we ever had at a public house; and
+though we found the Sun a large, modern hotel, we easily accepted the
+landlord's assurance that the old Inn was built up inside of the hotel,
+just as it was when Washington stayed in it; and after a mighty good
+supper we went to our rooms, which were piping warm from two good
+base-burner stoves. It was not exactly the vernal air we had expected of
+Bethlehem when we left New York; but you can't have everything in this
+world, and, with the snowbanks along the streets outside, we were very
+glad to have the base-burners.
+
+"We went to bed pretty early, and I fell into one of those exemplary
+sleeps that begin with no margin of waking after your head touches the
+pillow, or before that, even, and I woke from a dream of heavenly music
+that translated itself into the earthly notes of bugles. It made me sit
+up with the instant realization that we had arrived in Bethlehem on
+Easter Eve, and that this was Easter Morning. We had read of the
+beautiful observance of the feast by the Moravians, and, while I was
+hurrying on my clothes beside my faithful base-burner, I kept quite
+superfluously wondering at myself for not having thought of it, and so
+made sure of being called. I had waked just in time, though I hadn't
+deserved to do so, and ought, by right, to have missed it all. I tried
+to make my wife come with me; but after the family is of a certain size
+a woman, if she is a real woman, thinks her husband can see things for
+her, and generally sends him out to reconnoitre and report. Besides, my
+wife couldn't have left the children without waking them, to tell them
+she was going, and then all five of them would have wanted to come with
+us, including the baby; and we should have had no end of a time
+convincing them of the impossibility. We were a good deal bound up in
+the children, and we hated to lie to them when we could possibly avoid
+it. So I went alone.
+
+"I asked the night porter, who was still on duty, the way I wanted to
+take, but there were so many people in the streets going the same
+direction that I couldn't have missed it, anyhow; and pretty soon we
+came to the old Moravian cemetery, which was in the heart of the town;
+and there we found most of the Moravian congregation drawn up on three
+sides of the square, waiting and facing the east, which was beginning to
+redden. Of all the cemeteries I have seen, that was the most beautiful,
+because it was the simplest and humblest. Generally a cemetery is a
+dreadful place, with headstones and footstones and shafts and tombs
+scattered about, and looking like a field full of granite and marble
+stumps from the clearing of a petrified forest. But here all the
+memorial tablets lay flat with the earth. None of the dead were assumed
+to be worthier of remembrance than another; they all rested at regular
+intervals, with their tablets on their breasts, like shields, in their
+sleep after the battle of life. I was thinking how right and wise this
+was, and feeling the purity of the conception like a quality of the
+keen, clear air of the morning, which seemed to be breathing straight
+from the sky, when suddenly the sun blazed up from the horizon like a
+fire, and the instant it appeared the horns of the band began to blow
+and the people burst into a hymn--a thousand voices, for all I know. It
+was the sublimest thing I ever heard, and I don't know that there's
+anything to match it for dignity and solemnity in any religious rite. It
+made the tears come, for I thought how those people were of a church of
+missionaries and martyrs from the beginning, and I felt as if I were
+standing in sight and hearing of the first Christians after Christ. It
+was as if He were risen there 'in the midst of them.'"
+
+Rulledge looked round on the rest of us, with an air of acquiring merit
+from the Bostonian's poetry, but Minver's gravity was proof against the
+chance of mocking Rulledge, and I think we all felt alike. Wanhope
+seemed especially interested, though he said nothing.
+
+"When I went home I told my wife about it as well as I could, but,
+though she entered into the spirit of it, she was rather preoccupied.
+The children had all wakened, as they did sometimes, in a body, and were
+storming joyfully around the rooms, as if it were Christmas; and she was
+trying to get them dressed. 'Do tell them what Easter is like; they've
+never seen it kept before,' she said; and I tried to do so, while I took
+a hand, as a young father will, and tried to get them into their
+clothes. I don't think I dwelt much on the religious observance of the
+day, but I dug up some of my profane associations with it in early life,
+and told them about coloring eggs, and fighting them, and all that;
+there in New England, in those days, they had never seen or heard of
+such a thing as an Easter egg.
+
+"I don't think my reminiscences quieted them much. They were all on
+fire--the oldest hoy and girl, and the twins, and even the two-year-old
+that we called the baby--to go out and buy some eggs and get the
+landlord to let them color them in the hotel kitchen. I had a deal of
+ado to make them wait till after breakfast, but I managed, somehow; and
+when we had finished--it was a mighty good Pennsylvania breakfast, such
+as we could eat with impunity in those halcyon days: rich coffee, steak,
+sausage, eggs, applebutter, buckwheat cakes and maple syrup--we got
+their out-door togs on them, while they were all stamping and shouting
+round and had to be caught and overcoated, and fur-capped and hooded
+simultaneously, and managed to get them into the street together. Ever
+been in Bethlehem?"
+
+We all had to own our neglect of this piece of travel; and Newton, after
+a moment of silent forgiveness, said:
+
+"Well, I don't know how it is now, but twenty-five or thirty years ago
+it was the most interesting town in America. It wasn't the old Moravian
+community that it had been twenty-five years before that, when none but
+Moravians could buy property there; but it was like the Sun Hotel, and
+just as that had grown round and over the old Sun Inn, the prosperous
+manufacturing town, with its iron-foundries and zinc-foundries, and all
+the rest of it, had grown round and over the original Moravian village.
+If you wanted a breath of perfect strangeness, with an American quality
+in it at the same time, you couldn't have gone to any place where you
+could have had it on such terms as you could in Bethlehem. I can't begin
+to go into details, but one thing was hearing German spoken everywhere
+in the street: not the German of Germany, but the Pennsylvania German,
+with its broad vowels and broken-down grammatical forms, and its English
+vocables and interjections, which you caught in the sentences which came
+to you, like _av coorse_, and _yes_ and _no_ for _ja_ and _nein_. There
+were stores where they spoke no English, and others where they made a
+specialty of it; and I suppose when we sallied out that bright Sunday
+morning, with the baby holding onto a hand of each of us between us, and
+the twins going in front with their brother and sister, we were almost
+as foreign as we should have been in a village on the Rhine or the Elbe.
+
+"We got a little acquainted with the people, after awhile, and I heard
+some stories of the country folks that I thought were pretty good. One
+was about an old German farmer on whose land a prospecting metallurgist
+found zinc ore; the scientific man brought him the bright yellow button
+by which the zinc proved its existence in its union with copper, and the
+old fellow asked in an awestricken whisper: 'Is it a gold-mine?' 'No,
+no. Guess again.' 'Then it's a _brass-mine_!' But before they began to
+find zinc there in the lovely Lehigh Valley--you can stand by an open
+zinc-mine and look down into it where the rock and earth are left
+standing, and you seem to be looking down into a range of sharp mountain
+peaks and pinnacles--it was the richest farming region in the whole fat
+State of Pennsylvania; and there was a young farmer who owned a vast
+tract of it, and who went to fetch home a young wife from Philadelphia
+way, somewhere. He drove there and back in his own buggy, and when he
+reached the top overlooking the valley, with his bride, he stopped his
+horse, and pointed with his whip. 'There,' he said, 'as far as the sky
+is blue, it's all ours!' I thought that was fine."
+
+"Fine?" I couldn't help bursting out; "it's a stroke of poetry."
+
+Minver cut in: "The thrifty Acton making a note of it for future use in
+literature."
+
+"Eh!" Newton queried. "Oh! I don't mind. You're welcome to it, Mr.
+Acton. It's a pity somebody shouldn't use it, and of course _I_ can't."
+
+"Acton will send you a copy with the usual forty-per-cent. discount and
+ten off for cash," the painter said.
+
+They had their little laugh at my expense, and then Newton took up his
+tale again. "Well, as I was saying--By the way, what _was_ I saying?"
+
+The story-loving Rulledge remembered. "You went out with your wife and
+children for Easter eggs."
+
+"Oh yes. Thank you. Well, of course, in a town geographically American,
+the shops were all shut on Sunday, and we couldn't buy even an Easter
+egg on Easter Sunday. But one of the stores had the shade of its
+show-window up, and the children simply glued themselves to it in such a
+fascination that we could hardly unstick them. That window was full of
+all kinds of Easter things--I don't remember what all; but there were
+Easter eggs in every imaginable color and pattern, and besides these
+there were whole troops of toy rabbits. I had forgotten that the natural
+offspring of Easter eggs is rabbits; but I took a brace, and remembered
+the fact and announced it to the children. They immediately demanded an
+explanation, with all sorts of scientific particulars, which I gave
+them, as reckless of the truth as I thought my wife would suffer without
+contradicting me. I had to say that while Easter eggs mostly hatched
+rabbits, there were instances in which they hatched other things, as,
+for instance, handfuls of eagles and half-eagles and double-eagles,
+especially in the case of the golden eggs that the goose laid. They knew
+all about that goose; but I had to tell them what those unfamiliar
+pieces of American coinage were, and promise to give them one each when
+they grew up, if they were good. That only partially satisfied them, and
+they wanted to know specifically what other kinds of things Easter eggs
+would hatch if properly treated. Each one had a preference; the baby
+always preferred what the last one said; and _she_ wanted an ostrich,
+the same as her big brother; he was seven then.
+
+"I don't really know how we lived through the day; I mean the children,
+for my wife and I went to the Moravian church, and had a good long
+Sunday nap in the afternoon, while the children were pining for Monday
+morning, when they could buy eggs and begin to color them, so that they
+could hatch just the right kind of Easter things. When I woke up I had
+to fall in with a theory they had agreed to between them that any kind
+of two-legged or four-legged chick that hatched from an Easter egg would
+wear the same color, or the same kind of spots or stripes, that the egg
+had.
+
+"I found that they had arranged to have calico eggs, and they were going
+to have their mother cover them with the same sort of cotton prints that
+I had said my grandmother and aunts used, and they meant to buy the
+calico in the morning at the same time that they bought the eggs. We had
+some tin vessels of water on our stoves to take the dryness out of the
+hot air, and they had decided that they would boil their eggs in these,
+and not trouble the landlord for the use of his kitchen.
+
+"There was nothing in this scheme wanting but their mother's consent--I
+agreed to it on the spot--but when she understood that they each
+expected to have two eggs apiece, with one apiece for us, she said she
+never could cover a dozen eggs in the world, and that the only way would
+be for them to go in the morning with us, and choose each the handsomest
+egg they could out of the eggs in that shop-window. They met this
+proposition rather blankly at first; but on reflection the big brother
+said it would be a shame to spoil mamma's Easter by making her work all
+day, and besides it would keep till that night, anyway, before they
+could begin to have any fun with their eggs; and then the rest all said
+the same thing, ending with the baby: and accepted the inevitable with
+joy, and set about living through the day as well as they could.
+
+"They had us up pretty early the next morning--that is, they had me up;
+their mother said that I had brought it on myself, and richly deserved
+it for exciting their imaginations, and I had to go out with the two
+oldest and the twins to choose the eggs; we got off from the baby by
+promising to let her have two, and she didn't understand very well,
+anyway, and was awfully sleepy. We were a pretty long time choosing the
+six eggs, and I don't remember now just what they were; but they were
+certainly joyous eggs; and--By the way, I don't know why I'm boring a
+brand of hardened bachelors like you with all these domestic details?"
+
+"Oh, don't mind _us_," Minver responded to his general appeal. "We may
+not understand the feelings of a father, but we are all mothers at
+heart, especially Rulledge. Go on. It's very exciting," he urged, not
+very ironically, and Newton went on.
+
+"Well, I don't believe I could say just how the havoc began. They put
+away their eggs very carefully after they had made their mother admire
+them, and shown the baby how hers were the prettiest, and they each
+said in succession that they must be very precious of them, for if you
+shook an egg, or anything, it wouldn't hatch; and it was their plan to
+take these home and set an unemployed pullet, belonging to the big
+brother, to hatching them in the coop that he had built of laths for her
+in the back yard with his own hands. But long before the afternoon was
+over, the evil one had entered Eden, and tempted the boy to try fighting
+eggs with these treasured specimens, as I had told we boys used to fight
+eggs in my town in the southwest. He held a conquering course through
+the encounter with three eggs, but met his Waterloo with a regular
+Bluecher belonging to the baby. Then he instantly changed sides; and
+smashed his Bluecher against the last egg left. By that time all the
+other children were in tears, the baby roaring powerfully in ignorant
+sympathy, and the victor steeped in silent gloom. His mother made him
+gather up the ruins from the floor, and put them in the stove, and she
+took possession of the victorious egg, and said she would keep it till
+we got back to Cambridge herself, and not let one of them touch it. I
+can tell you it was a tragical time. I wanted to go out and buy them
+another set of eggs, and spring them for a surprise on them in the
+morning, after they had suffered enough that night. But she said that if
+I dared to dream of such a thing--which would be the ruin of the
+children's character, by taking away the consequences of their
+folly--she should do, she did not know what, to me. Of course she was
+right, and I gave in, and helped the children forget all about it, so
+that by the time we got back to Cambridge I had forgotten about it
+myself.
+
+"I don't know what it was reminded the boy of that remaining Easter egg
+unless it was the sight of the unemployed pullet in her coop, which he
+visited the first thing; and I don't know how he managed to wheedle his
+mother out of it; but the first night after I came home from
+business--it was rather late and the children had gone to bed--she told
+me that ridiculous boy, as she called him in self-exculpation, had
+actually put the egg under his pullet, and all the children were wild to
+see what it would hatch. 'And now,' she said, severely, 'what are you
+going to do? You have filled their heads with those ideas, and I suppose
+you will have to invent some nonsense or other to fool them, and make
+them believe that it has hatched a giraffe, or an elephant, or
+something; they won't be satisfied with anything less.' I said we should
+have to try something smaller, for I didn't think we could manage a
+chick of that size on our lot; and that I should trust in Providence.
+Then she said it was all very well to laugh; and that I couldn't get out
+of it that way, and I needn't think it.
+
+"I didn't, much. But the children understood that it took three weeks
+for an egg to hatch, and anyway the pullet was so intermittent in her
+attentions to the Easter egg, only sitting on it at night, or when held
+down by hand in the day, that there was plenty of time. One evening when
+I came out from Boston, I was met by a doleful deputation at the front
+gate, with the news that when the coop was visited that morning after
+breakfast--they visited the coop every morning before they went to
+school--the pullet was found perched on a cross-bar in a high state of
+nerves, and the shell of the Easter egg broken and entirely eaten out.
+Probably a rat had got in and done it, or, more hopefully, a mink, such
+as used to attack eggs in the town where I was a boy. We went out and
+viewed the wreck, as a first step towards a better situation; and
+suddenly a thought struck me. 'Children,' I said, 'what did you really
+expect that egg to hatch, anyway?' They looked askance at one another,
+and at last the boy said: 'Well, you know, papa, an egg that's been
+cooked--' And then we all laughed together, and I knew they had been
+making believe as much as I had, and no more expected the impossible of
+a boiled egg than I did."
+
+"That was charming!" Wanhope broke out. "There is nothing more
+interesting than the way children join in hypnotizing themselves with
+the illusions which their parents think _they_ have created without
+their help. In fact, it is very doubtful whether at any age we have any
+illusions except those of our own creation; we--"
+
+"Let him go on, Wanhope," Minver dictated; and Newton continued.
+
+"It was rather nice. I asked them if their mother knew about the egg;
+and they said that of course they couldn't help telling her; and I said:
+'Well, then, I'll tell you what: we must make her believe that the chick
+hatched out and got away--' The boy stopped me: 'Do you think that would
+be exactly true, papa?' 'Well, not _exactly_ true; but it's only for the
+time being. We can tell her the exact truth afterwards,' and then I laid
+my plan before them. They said it was perfectly splendid, and would be
+the greatest kind of joke on mamma, and one that she would like as much
+as anybody. The thing was to keep it from her till it was done, and they
+all promised that they wouldn't tell; but I could see that they were
+bursting with the secret the whole evening.
+
+"The next day was Saturday, when I always went home early, and I had the
+two oldest children come in with the second-girl, who left them to take
+lunch with me. They had chocolate and ice-cream, and after lunch we
+went around to a milliner's shop in West Street, where my wife and I had
+stopped a long five minutes the week before we went to Bethlehem,
+adoring an Easter bonnet that we saw in the window. I wanted her to buy
+it; but she said, No, if we were going that expensive journey, we
+couldn't afford it, and she must do without, that spring. I showed it to
+them, and 'Now, children,' I said, 'what do you think of that for the
+chick that your Easter egg hatched?' And they said it was the most
+beautiful bonnet they had ever seen, and it would just exactly suit
+mamma. But I saw they were holding something back, and I said, sharply,
+'Well?' and they both guiltily faltered out: 'The _bird_, you know,
+papa,' and I remembered that they belonged to the society of Bird
+Defenders, who in that day were pledged against the decorative use of
+dead birds or killing them for anything but food. 'Why, confound it,' I
+said, 'the bird is the very thing that makes it an Easter-egg chick!'
+but I saw that their honest little hearts were troubled, and I said
+again: 'Confound it! Let's go in and hear what the milliner has to say.'
+Well, the long and short of it was that the milliner tried a bunch of
+forget-me-nots over the bluebird that we all agreed was a thousand times
+better, and that if it were substituted would only cost three dollars
+more, and we took our Easter-egg chick home in a blaze of glory, the
+children carrying the bandbox by the string between them.
+
+"Of course we had a great time opening it, and their mother acted her
+part so well that I knew she was acting, and after the little ones were
+in bed I taxed her with it. 'Know? Of course I knew!' she said. 'Did you
+think they would let you _deceive_ me? They're true New-Englanders, and
+they told me all about it last night, when I was saying their prayers
+with them.' 'Well,' I said, 'they let you deceive _me_; they must be
+true Westerners, too, for they didn't tell me a word of your knowing.' I
+rather had her there, but she said: 'Oh, you goose--' We were young
+people in those days, and goose meant everything. But, really, I'm
+ashamed of getting off all this to you hardened bachelors, as I said
+before--"
+
+"If you tell many more such stories in this club," Minver said,
+severely, "you won't leave a bachelor in it. And Rulledge will be the
+first to get married."
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Between The Dark And The Daylight
+by William Dean Howells
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