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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67406 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67406)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Husband’s Story, by David Graham
-Phillips
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Husband’s Story
-
-Author: David Graham Phillips
-
-Release Date: February 14, 2022 [eBook #67406]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by
- University of California libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUSBAND’S STORY ***
-
-
-
-
-
- _The_
- HUSBAND’S STORY
-
-
-
-
- The
- Husband’s Story
-
- A NOVEL
-
- BY
- DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS
-
- AUTHOR OF
- THE FASHIONABLE ADVENTURES OF
- JOSHUA CRAIG, OLD WIVES FOR NEW
- THE SECOND GENERATION, ETC.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1910, BY
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
-
- _Published September, 1910_
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
-THE HUSBAND’S STORY
-
-
-
-
-WHY
-
-
-Several years ago circumstances thrust me into a position in which it
-became possible for the friend who figures in these pages as Godfrey
-Loring to do me a favor. He, being both wise and kindly, never misses
-a good chance to put another under obligations. He did me the favor.
-I gratefully, if reluctantly, acquiesced. Now, after many days, he
-collects. When you shall have read what follows, you may utterly reject
-my extenuating plea that any and every point of view upon life is
-worthy of attention, even though it serve only to confirm us in our
-previous ideas and beliefs. You may say that I should have repudiated
-my debt, should have refused to edit and publish the manuscript he
-confided to me. You may say that the general racial obligation to
-mankind--and to womankind--takes precedence over a private and personal
-obligation. Unfortunately I happen to be not of the philanthropic
-temperament. My sense of the personal is strong; my sense of the
-general weak--that is to say, weak in comparison. If “Loring” had
-been within reach, I think I should have gone to him and pleaded for
-release. But as luck will have it, he is off yachting, to peep about
-in the remote inlets and islets of Australasia and the South Seas for
-several years.
-
-To aggravate my situation, in the letter accompanying the manuscript,
-after several pages of the discriminating praise most dear to a
-writer’s heart, he did me the supreme honor of saying that in his
-work he had “striven to copy as closely as might be your style and
-your methods--to help me to the hearing I want and to lighten your
-labors as editor.” I assure him and the public that in any event I
-should have done little editing of his curious production beyond such
-as a proofreader might have found necessary. As it is, I have done
-practically no editing at all. In form and in substance, from title to
-finis, the work is his. I am merely its sponsor--and in circumstances
-that would forbid me were I disposed to qualify my sponsorship with
-even so mild a disclaimer as reluctance.
-
-Have I said more than a loyal friend should? If so, on the other hand,
-have I not done all that a loyal friend could?
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-I am tempted to begin with our arrival in Fifth Avenue, New York City,
-in the pomp and circumstance befitting that region of regal splendor.
-I should at once catch the attention of the women; and my literary
-friends tell me that to make any headway with a story in America it is
-necessary to catch the women, because the men either do not read books
-at all or read only what they hear the women talking about. And I know
-well--none knows better--that our women of the book-buying class, and
-probably of all classes, love to amuse their useless idleness with
-books that help them to dream of wasting large sums of money upon
-luxuries and extravagances, upon entertaining grand people in grand
-houses and being entertained by them. They tell me, and I believe it,
-that our women abhor stories of middle-class life, abhor truth-telling
-stories of any kind, like only what assures them that the promptings of
-their own vanities and sentimental shams are true.
-
-But patience, gentle reader, you with the foolish, chimera-haunted
-brain, with the silly ideas of life, with the ignorance of human
-nature including your own self, with the love of sloppy and tawdry
-clap trap. Patience, gentle reader. While I shall begin humbly in
-the social scale, I shall not linger there long. I shall pass on to
-the surroundings of grandeur that entrance your snobbish soul. You
-will soon smell only fine perfumes, only the aromas of food cooked by
-expensive chefs. You will sit in drawing-rooms, lie in bedrooms as
-magnificent as the architects and decorators and other purveyors to
-the very rich have been able to concoct. You will be tasting the fine
-savors of fashionable names and titles recorded in Burke’s and the
-“Almanach de Gotha.” Patience, gentle reader, with your box of caramels
-and your hair in curl papers and your household work undone--patience!
-A feast awaits you.
-
-There has been much in the papers these last few years about the
-splendid families we--my wife and I--came of. Some time ago one of the
-English dukes--a nice chap with nothing to do and a quaint sense of
-humor--assembled on his estate for a sort of holiday and picnic all the
-members of his ancient and proud family who could be got together by
-several months of diligent search. It was a strange and awful throng
-that covered the lawns before the ducal castle on the appointed day.
-There was a handful of fairly presentable, more or less prosperous
-persons. But the most of the duke’s cousins, near and remote, were
-tramps, bartenders, jail birds, women of the town, field hands male
-and female, sewer cleaners, chimney sweeps, needlewomen, curates,
-small shopkeepers, and others of the species that are as a stench
-unto delicate, aristocratic nostrils. The duke was delighted with his
-picnic, pronounced it a huge success. But then His Grace had a sense of
-humor and was not an American aristocrat.
-
-All this by way of preparation for the admission that the branch of
-the Loring family from which I come and the branch of the Wheatlands
-family to which the girl I married belongs were far from magnificent,
-were no more imposing then, well, than the families of any of our
-American aristocrats. Like theirs, our genealogical tree, most
-imposingly printed and bound and proudly exhibited on a special stand
-in the library of our New York palace--that genealogical tree, for all
-its air of honesty, for all its documentary proofs, worm-eaten and
-age-stained, was like an artificial palm bedded in artificial moss.
-The truth is, aristocracy does not thrive in America, but only the
-pretense of it, and that must be kept alive by constant renewals. Both
-here and abroad I am constantly running across traces of illegitimacy,
-substitution, and other forms of genealogical flim-flam. But let that
-pass. Whoever is or is not aristocratic, certainly Godfrey Loring and
-Edna Wheatlands are not--or, rather, _were_ not.
-
-My father kept a dejected little grocery in Passaic, N. J. He did
-not become a “retired merchant and capitalist” until I was able to
-retire and capitalize him. Edna’s father was-- No, you guess wrong.
-Not a butcher, but--an undertaker!... Whew! I am glad to have these
-shameful secrets “off the chest,” as they say in the Bowery. He--this
-Wheatlands, undertaker to the poor and near-poor of the then village
-of Passaic--was a tall, thin man, with snow-white hair and a smooth,
-gaunt, gloomy face and the best funeral air I have ever seen. Edna has
-long since forgotten him; she has an admirable ability absolutely to
-forget anything she may for whatever reason deem it inconvenient to
-remember. What an aid to conscience is such a quality! But I have not
-forgotten old Weeping Willy Wheatlands, and I shall not forget him. It
-was he who loaned me my first capital, the one that-- But I must not
-anticipate.
-
-In those days Passaic was a lowly and a dreary village. Its best was
-cheap enough; its poorest was wretchedly squalid. The “seat” of the
-Lorings and the “seat” of the Wheatlands stood side by side on the
-mosquito beset banks of the river--two dingy frame cottages, a story
-and a half in height, two rooms deep. We Lorings had no money, for my
-father was an honest, innocent soul with a taste for talking what he
-thought was politics, though in fact he knew no more of the realities
-of politics, the game of pull Dick pull Devil for licenses to fleece
-a “free, proud and intelligent people”--he knew no more of that
-reality than--than the next honest soul you may hear driveling on that
-same subject. We had no money, but “Weeping Willie” had plenty--and
-saved it, blessings on him! I hate to think where I should be now,
-if he hadn’t hoarded! So, while our straightened way of living was
-compulsory, that of the Wheatlands was not. But this is unimportant;
-the main point is both families lived in the same humble way.
-
-If I thought “gentle reader” had patience and real imagination--and,
-yes, the real poetic instinct--I should give her an inventory of
-the furniture of those two cottages, and of the meager and patched
-draperies of the two Monday wash lines, as my mother and Edna’s
-mother--and Edna, too, when she grew big enough--decorated them, the
-while shrieking gossip back and forth across the low and battered board
-fence. But I shall not linger. It is as well. Those memories make me
-sad--put a choke in my throat and a mist before my eyes. Why? If you
-can’t guess, I could not in spoiling ten reams of paper explain it
-to you. One detail only, and I shall hasten on. Both families lived
-humbly, but we not quite so humbly as the Wheatlands family, because my
-mother was a woman of some neatness and energy while Ma Wheatlands was
-at or below the do-easy, slattern human average. _We_ had our regular
-Saturday bath--in the wash tub. _We_ did not ever eat off the stove.
-And while we were patched we were rarely ragged.
-
-In those days--even in those days--Edna was a “scrapper.” They call it
-an “energetic and resolute personality” now; it was called “scrappy”
-then, and scrappy it was. When I would be chopping wood or lugging
-in coal, so occupied that I did not dare pause, she would sit on the
-fence in her faded blue-dotted calico, and how she would give it to me!
-She knew how to say the thing that made me wild with the rage a child
-is ashamed to show. Yes, she loved to tease me, perhaps--really, I
-hope--because she knew I, in the bottom of my heart, loved to be teased
-by her, to be noticed in any way. And mighty pretty she looked then,
-with her mop of yellowish brown hair and her big golden brown eyes
-and her little face, whose every feature was tilted to the angle that
-gives precisely the most fascinating expression of pretty pertness, of
-precocious intelligence, or of devil-may-care audacity. She has always
-been a pretty woman, has Edna, and always will be, even in old age, I
-fancy. Her beauty, like her health, like that strong, supple body of
-hers, was built to last. What is the matter with the generations coming
-forward now? Why do they bloom only to wither? What has sapped their
-endurance? Are they brought up too soft? Is it the food? Is it the
-worn-out parents? Why am I, at forty, younger in looks and in strength
-and in taste for life than the youths of thirty? Why is Edna, not five
-years my junior, more attractive physically than girls of twenty-five
-or younger?
-
-But she was only eight or nine at the time of which I am writing.
-And she was fond of me then--really fond of me, though she denied it
-furiously when the other children taunted, and though she was always
-jeering at me, calling me awkward and homely. I don’t think I was
-notably either the one or the other, but for her to say so tended to
-throw the teasers off the track and also kept me in humble subjection.
-I knew she cared, because when we played kissing games she would never
-call me out, would call out every other boy, but if I called any other
-girl she would sulk and treat me as badly as she knew how. Also, while
-she had nothing but taunts and sarcasms for me she was always to be
-found in the Wheatlands’ back yard near the fence or on it whenever I
-was doing chores in our back yard.
-
-After two years in the High School I went to work in the railway office
-as a sort of assistant freight clerk. She kept on at school, went
-through the High School, graduated in a white dress with blue ribbons,
-and then sat down to wait for a husband. Her father and mother were
-sensible people. Heaven knows they had led a hard enough life to have
-good sense driven into them. But the tradition--the lady-tradition--was
-too strong for them. They were not ashamed to work, themselves. They
-would have been both ashamed and angry had it been suggested to them
-that their two boys should become idlers. But they never thought of
-putting their daughter to work at anything. After she graduated and
-became a young lady, she was not compelled--would hardly have been
-permitted--to do housework or sewing. You have seen the potted flower
-in the miserable tenement window--the representative of the life that
-neither toils nor spins, but simply exists in idle beauty. That potted
-bloom concentrates all the dreams, all the romantic and poetic fancies
-of the tenement family. I suppose Edna was some such treasured exotic
-possession to those toil-twisted old parents of hers. They wanted a
-flower in the house.
-
-Well, they had it. She certainly was a lovely girl, far too lovely
-to be spoiled by work. And if ever there was a scratch or a stain on
-those beautiful white hands of hers, it assuredly was not made by toil.
-She took music lessons-- Music lessons! How much of the ridiculous,
-pathetic gropings after culture is packed into those two words. Beyond
-question, everyone ought to know something about music; we should all
-know something about everything, especially about the things that
-peculiarly stand for civilization--science and art, literature and
-the drama. But how foolishly we are set at it! Instead of learning to
-understand and to appreciate music, we are taught to “beat the box” in
-a feeble, clumsy fashion, or to screech or whine when we have no voice
-worth the price of a single lesson. Edna took I don’t know how many
-lessons a week for I don’t know how many years. She learned nothing
-about music. She merely learned to strum on the piano. But, after all,
-the lessons attained their real object. They made Edna’s parents and
-Edna herself and all the neighbors feel that she was indeed a lady.
-She could not sew. She could not cook. She hadn’t any knowledge worth
-mention of any practical thing--therefore, had no knowledge at all;
-for, unless knowledge is firmly based upon and in the practical, it is
-not knowledge but that worst form of ignorance, misinformation. She
-didn’t know a thing that would help her as woman, wife, or mother. But
-she could play the piano!
-
-Some day some one will write something true on the subject of
-education. You remember the story of the girl from Lapland who applied
-for a place as servant in New York, and when they asked her what she
-could do, she said, “I can milk the reindeer.”
-
-I never hear the word education that I don’t think of that girl.
-One half of the time spent at school, to estimate moderately, and
-nine tenths of the time spent in college class rooms is given to
-things about as valuable to a citizen of this world as the Lap girl’s
-“education” to a New York domestic. If anyone tells you that those
-valueless things are culture, tell him that only an ignorance still
-becalmed in the dense mediæval fog would talk such twaddle; tell him
-that science has taught us what common sense has always shown, that
-there is no beauty divorced from use, that beauty is simply the
-perfect adaptation of the thing to be used to the purpose for which it
-is to be used. I am a business man, not a smug, shallow-pated failure
-teaching in an antiquated college. I abhor the word culture, as I abhor
-the word gentleman or the word lady, because of the company into which
-it has fallen. So, while I eagerly disclaim any taint of “culture,” I
-insist that I know what I’m talking about when I talk of education. And
-if I had not been too good-natured, my girl-- But I must keep to the
-story. “Gentle reader” wants a story; he--or she--does not want to try
-to think.
-
-It was pleasant to my ignorant ears to hear Edna playing sonatas and
-classical barcaroles and dead marches and all manner of loud and
-difficult pieces. Such sounds, issuing from the humble--and not too
-clean--Wheatlands house gave it an atmosphere of aristocracy, put
-tone into the whole neighborhood, elevated the Wheatlands family like
-a paper collar on the calico shirt of a farm hand. If we look at
-ourselves rightly, we poor smattering seekers after a little showy
-knowledge of one kind or another--a dibble of French, a dabble of
-Latin or Greek, a sputter of woozy so-called philosophy--how like the
-paper-collared farm hand we are, how like the Hottentot chief with a
-plug hat atop his naked brown body.
-
-But Edna pleased me, fully as much as she pleased herself, and
-that is saying a great deal. I wouldn’t have had her changed in
-the smallest particular. I was even glad she could get rid of her
-freckles--fascinating little beauty spots sprinkled upon her tip-tilted
-little nose!
-
-She was not so fond of me in those days. I had a rival. I am leaning
-back and laughing as I think of him. Charley Putney! He was clerk in
-a largish dry goods store. He is still a clerk there, I believe, and
-no doubt is still the same cheaply scented, heavily pomatumed clerkly
-swell he was in the days when I feared and hated him. The store used
-to close at six o’clock. About seven of summer evenings Charley would
-issue forth from his home to set the hearts of the girls to fluttering.
-They were all out, waiting. Down the street he would come with his hat
-set a little back to show the beautiful shine and part and roach of his
-hair. The air would become delicious (!) with bergamot, occasionally
-varied by German cologne or lemon verbena. What a jaunty, gay tie!
-What an elegant suit! And he wore a big seal ring, reputed to be real
-gold--and such lively socks! Down the street came Charley, all the
-girls palpitant. At which stoop or front gate would he stop?
-
-Often--only too often--it was at the front gate next ours. How I hated
-him!
-
-And the cap of the joke is that Edna nearly married him. In this land
-where the social stairs are crowded like Jacob’s Ladder with throngs
-ascending and descending, what a history it would make if the grown men
-and women of any generation should tell whom they _almost_ married!
-
-Yes, Edna came very near to marrying him. She was a lady. She did not
-know exactly what that meant. The high-life novels she read left her
-hazy on the subject, because to understand any given thing we must
-have knowledge that enables us to connect it with the things we already
-know. A snowball would be an unfathomable mystery to a savage living in
-an equatorial plain. A matter of politics or finance or sociology or
-real art, real literature, real philosophy, seems dull and meaningless
-to a woman or to the average mutton-brained man. But if you span the
-gap between knowledge of any subject and a woman’s or a man’s ignorance
-of that subject with however slender threads of connecting knowledge,
-she or he can at once bridge it and begin to reap the new fields. Edna
-could not find any thread whatever for the gap between herself and that
-fairy land of high life the novels told her about. In those days there
-was no high life in Passaic. I suppose there is now--or, at least,
-Passaic thinks there is--and in purely imaginary matters the delusion
-of possession is equal to, even better than, possession itself. So,
-with no high life to use as a measure, with only the instinct that her
-white smooth hands and her dresses modeled on the latest Paris fashions
-as illustrated in the monthly “Lady Book,” and her music lessons, her
-taste for what she then regarded as literature--with only her instinct
-that all these hallmarks must stamp her twenty-four carat lady, she
-had to look about her for a matching gentleman. And there was Charley,
-the one person within vision who suggested the superb heroes of the
-high-life novels. I will say to the credit of her good taste that
-she had her doubts about Charley. Indeed, if his sweet smell and his
-smooth love-making--Charley excelled as a love-maker, being the born
-ladies’ man--if the man, or, rather, the boy, himself had not won her
-heart, she would soon have tired of him and would have suspected his
-genuineness as a truly gentleman. But she fell in love with him.
-
-There was a long time during which I thought the reason she returned
-to me--or, rather, let me return to her--was because she fell out of
-love with him. Then there was a still longer time when I thought the
-reason was the fact that the very Saturday I got a raise to fourteen
-a week, he fell from twelve to eight. But latterly I have known the
-truth. How many of us know the truth, the down-at-the-bottom, absolute
-truth, about why she married us instead of the other fellow? Very few,
-I guess--or we’d be puffing our crops and flirting our feathers less
-cantily. She took up with me again because he dropped her. It was he
-that saved her, not she or I. Only a few months ago, her old mother,
-doddering on in senility, with memory dead except for early happenings,
-and these fresh and vivid, said: “And when I think how nigh Edny come
-to marryin’ up with that there loud-smelling dude of a Charley Putney!
-If he hadn’t ’a give her the go by, she’d sure ’a made a fool of
-herself--a wantin’ me and her paw to offer him money and a job in the
-undertakin’ store, to git him back. Lawsy me! What a narrer squeak fur
-Princess Edny!”
-
-Be patient, gentle reader! You shall soon be reading things that will
-efface the coarse impression my old mother-in-law’s language and all
-these franknesses about our beginnings must have made upon your refined
-and cultured nature. Swallow a caramel and be patient. But don’t skip
-these pages. If you should, you would miss the stimulating effect of
-contrast, not to speak of other benefits which I, probably vainly, hope
-to confer upon you.
-
-She didn’t love me. Looking back, I see that for many months she
-found it difficult to endure me. But it was necessary that she carry
-off--with the neighborhood rather than with me--her pretense of having
-cast off Charley because she preferred me. We can do wonders in the
-way of concealing wounded pride; we can do equal wonders in the way
-of preserving a reputation for unbroken victory. And I believe she
-honestly liked me. Perhaps she liked me even more than she liked her
-aromatic Charley; for, it by no means follows that we like best where
-we love most. I am loth to believe--I do not believe--that at so early
-an age, not quite seventeen, she could have received my caresses and
-returned them with plausibility enough to deceive me, unless she had
-genuinely liked me.
-
-And what a lucky fellow I thought myself! And how I patronized the
-perfumed man. And what a thrashing I gave him--poor, harmless, witless
-creature!--when I heard of his boastings that he had dropped Edna
-Wheatlands because he found Sally Simpson prettier and more _cultured_!
-
-I must have been a railway man born. At twenty-two--no, six months
-after my majority--I was jumped into a head clerkship at twelve
-hundred a year. Big pay for a youngster in those days; not so bad for
-a youngster even in these inflated years. When I brought Edna the news
-I think she began to love me. To her that salary was a halo, a golden
-halo round me--made me seem a superior person. She had long thought
-highly of my business abilities, for she was shrewd and had listened
-when the older people talked, and they were all for me as the likeliest
-young man of the neighborhood.
-
-“I’ve had another raise,” said I carelessly. We were sitting on her
-front porch, she upon the top step, I two steps down.
-
-“Another!” she said. “Why, the last was only two months ago.”
-
-“Yes, they’ve pushed me up to twelve hundred a year--a little more, for
-it’s twenty-five per.”
-
-“Gee!” she exclaimed, and I can see her pretty face now--all aglow,
-beaming a reverent admiration upon me.
-
-I rather thought I deserved it. But it has ever been one of my vanities
-to pretend to take my successes as matters of course, and even to
-depreciate them. They say the English invariably win in diplomacy
-because they act dissatisfied with what they get, never grumbling so
-sourly as when they capture the whole hog. I can believe it. That
-has been my policy, and it has worked rather well. Still, any policy
-works well if the man has the gift for success. “Twenty-five per,” I
-repeated, to impress it still more deeply upon her and to revel in the
-thrilling words. “Before I get through I’ll make them pay me what I’m
-worth.”
-
-“Do you think you’ll ever be making more than that?” exclaimed she,
-wonderingly.
-
-“I’ll be getting two thousand some day,” said I, far more confidently
-than I felt.
-
-“Oh--Godfrey!” she said softly.
-
-And as I looked at her I for the first time felt a certain peculiar
-thrill that comes only when the soul of the woman a man loves rushes
-forth to cling to his soul. In my life I have never had--and never
-shall have--a happier moment.
-
-Once more patience, gentle reader! I know this bit of sordidness--this
-glow of sentiment upon a vulgar material incident--disgusts your
-delicate soul. I am aware that you have a proper contempt for all the
-coarse details of life. You would not be _gentle_ reader if you hadn’t.
-You would be a plain man or woman, living busily and usefully, and
-making people happy in the plain ways in which the human animal finds
-happiness. You would not be devoting your days to making soul-food out
-of idealistic moonshine and dreaming of ways to dazzle yourself and
-your acquaintances into thinking you a superior person.
-
-“Do you know,” said my pretty Edna, advancing her bond at least halfway
-toward meeting mine, “do you know, I’ve had an instinct, a presentiment
-of this? I was dreaming it when I woke up this morning.”
-
-I’ve observed that every woman in her effort to prove herself “not like
-other girls” pretends to some occult or other equally supranatural
-quality. One dreams dreams. Another gets spirit messages. A third has
-seen ghosts. Another has a foot which sculptors have longed to model.
-A fifth has a note in her voice which the throat specialists pronounce
-unique in the human animal and occurring only in certain rare birds
-and Sarah Bernhardt. I met one not long ago who had several too many
-or too few skins, I forget which, and as a result was endowed with
-I cannot recall what nervous qualities quite peculiar to herself,
-and somehow most valuable and fascinating. In that early stage of
-her career my Edna was “hipped” upon a rather commonplace personal
-characteristic--the notion that she had premonitions, was a sort of
-seeress or prophetess. Later she dropped it for one less tiresome
-and overworked. But I recall that even in that time of my deepest
-infatuation I wished to hear as little as possible about the occult.
-Of all the shallow, foggy fakes that attract ignorant and miseducated
-people the occult is the most inexcusable and boring. A great many
-people, otherwise apparently rather sensible, seem honestly to believe
-in it. But, being sensible, they don’t have anything to do with it.
-They treat it as practical men treat the idiotic in the creeds and
-the impossible in the moral codes of the churches to which they
-belong--that is, they assent and proceed to dismiss and to forget.
-
-However, I was not much impressed by Edna’s attempt to dazzle me with
-her skill as a Sibyl. But I was deeply impressed by the awe-inspiring
-softness and shapeliness of her hand lying prisoner in mine. And I was
-moved to the uttermost by the kisses and embraces we exchanged in the
-gathering dusk. “I love you,” she murmured into my ecstatic ear. “You
-are so different from the other men round here.”
-
-I dilated with pride.
-
-“So far ahead of them in every way.”
-
-“Ahead of Charley Putney?” said I, jocose but jealous withal.
-
-She laughed with a delightful look of contemptuous scorn in her cute
-face. “Oh, _he_!” she scoffed. “He’s getting only eight a week, and
-he’ll never get any more.”
-
-“Not if his boss has sense,” said I, thinking myself judicial. “But
-let’s talk about ourselves. We can be married now.”
-
-I advanced this timidly, for being a truly-in-love lover I was a little
-afraid of her, a little uncertain of this priceless treasure. But she
-answered promptly, “Yes, I was thinking of that.”
-
-“Let’s do it right away,” proposed I.
-
-“Oh, not for several weeks. It wouldn’t be proper.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-She couldn’t explain. She only knew that there was something indecent
-about haste in such matters, that the procedure must be slow and
-orderly and stately. “We’ll marry the first of next month,” she finally
-decided, and I joyfully acquiesced.
-
-Some of my readers--both of the gentle and of the other kind--may
-be surprised that a girl of seventeen should be so self-assured, so
-independent. They must remember that she was a daughter of the people;
-and among the people a girl of seventeen was, and I suppose still is,
-ready for marriage, ready and resolved to decide all important matters
-for herself. At seventeen Edna, in self-poise and in experience,
-judgment and all the other mature qualities, was the equal of the
-carefully sheltered girl of twenty-five or more. She may have been
-brought up a lady, may have been in all essential ways as useless as
-the most admired of that weariful and worthless class. But the very
-nature of her surroundings, in that simple household and that simple
-community, had given her a certain practical education. And I may say
-here that to it she owes all she is to-day. Do not forget this, gentle
-reader, as you read about her and as she dazzles you. As you look at
-the gorgeous hardy rose do not forget that such spring only from the
-soil, develop only in the open.
-
-That very evening we began to look for a home. As soon as we were
-outside her front gate she turned in the direction of the better part
-of the town. Nor did she pause or so much as glance at a house until
-we were clear of the neighborhood in which we had always lived, and
-were among houses much superior. I admired, and I still admire, this
-significant move of hers. It was the gesture of progress, of ambition.
-It was splendidly American. I myself should have been content to settle
-down near our fathers and mothers, among the people we knew. I should
-no doubt have been better satisfied to keep up the mode of living to
-which we had been used all our lives. The time would have come when I
-should have reached out for more comfort and for luxury. But it was
-natural that she should develop in this direction before I did. She
-had read her novels and her magazines, had the cultured woman’s innate
-fondness for dress and show, had had nothing but those kinds of things
-to think about; I had been too busy trying to make money to have any
-time for getting ideas about spending it.
-
-No; while her motive in seeking better things than we had known was in
-the main a vanity and a sham, her action had as much _initial_ good in
-it as if her motive had been sensible and helpful. And back of the
-motive lay an instinct for getting up in the world that has been the
-redeeming and preserving trait in her character. It was this instinct
-that ought to have made her the fit wife for an ambitious and advancing
-man. You will presently see how this fine and useful instinct was
-perverted by vanity and false education and the pernicious example of
-other women.
-
-“The rents are much higher in this neighborhood,” said I, with a
-doubtful but admiring look round at the pretty houses and their
-well-ordered grounds.
-
-“Of course,” said she. “But maybe we can find something. Anyway, it
-won’t do any harm to look.”
-
-“No, indeed,” I assented, for I liked the idea myself. This better
-neighborhood _looked_ more like her than her own, seemed to her lover’s
-eyes exactly suited to her beauty and her stylishness--for the “Lady
-Book” was teaching her to make herself far more attractive to the eye
-than were the other girls over in our part of town. I still puzzle at
-why Charley Putney gave her up; the only plausible theory seems to be
-that she was so sick in love with him that she wearied him. The most
-attractive girl in the world, if she dotes on a young man too ardently,
-will turn his stomach, and alarm his delicate sense of feminine
-propriety.
-
-As we walked on, she with an elate and proud air, she said: “How
-different it smells over here!”
-
-At first I didn’t understand what she meant. But, as I thought of
-her remark, the meaning came. And I believe that was the beginning
-of my dissatisfaction with what I had all my life had in the way of
-surroundings. I have since observed that the sense of smell is blunt,
-is almost latent, in people of the lower orders, and that it becomes
-more acute and more sensitive as we ascend in the social scale. Up to
-that time my ambition to rise had been rather indefinite--a desire
-to make money which everyone seemed to think was the highest aim in
-life--and also an instinct to beat the other fellows working with me.
-Now it became definite. I began to smell. I wanted to get away from
-unpleasant smells. I do not mean that this was a resolution, all in
-the twinkling of an eye. I simply mean that, as everything must have a
-beginning, that remark of hers was for me the beginning of a long and
-slow but steady process of what may be called civilizing.
-
-Presently she said: “If we couldn’t afford a house, we might take one
-of the flats.”
-
-“But I’m afraid you’d be lonesome, away off from everybody we know.”
-
-She tossed her head. “A good lonesome,” said she. “I’m tired of
-_common_ people. I was reading about reincarnations the other day.”
-
-“Good Lord!” laughed I. “What are they?”
-
-She explained--as well as she could--probably as well as anybody could.
-I admired her learning but the thing itself did not interest me. “I
-guess there must be something in it,” she went on. “I’m sure in a
-former life I was something a lot different from what I am now.”
-
-“Oh, you’re all right,” I assured her, putting my arm round her in the
-friendly darkness of a row of sidewalk elms.
-
-When we had indulged in an interlude of love-making, she returned to
-the original subject. “I wonder how much rent we could afford to pay,”
-said she.
-
-“They say the rent ought never to be more per month than the income is
-per week.”
-
-“Then we could pay twenty-five a month.”
-
-That seemed to me a lot to pay--and, indeed, it was. But she did not
-inherit Weeping Willie’s tightness; and she had never had money to
-spend or any training in either making or spending money. That is
-to say, she was precisely as ignorant of the main business of life
-as is the rest of American womanhood under our ridiculous system of
-education. So, twenty-five dollars a month rent meant nothing to her.
-“We can’t do anything to-night,” said she. “But I’ve got my days free,
-and I’ll look at different places, and when I find several to choose
-from we can come in the evening or on Sunday and decide.”
-
-This suited me exactly. We dismissed the matter, hunted out a shady
-nook, and sat down to enjoy ourselves after the manner of young
-lovers on a fine night. Never before had she given herself freely to
-love. I know now it was because never before had she loved me. I was
-deliriously happy that night, and I am sure she was too. She no less
-than I had the ardent temperament that goes with the ambitious nature;
-and now that she was idealizing me into the man who could lead her to
-the fairy lands she dreamed of, she gave me her whole heart.
-
-It was the beginning of what was beyond question the happiest period of
-both our lives. I have a dim old photograph of us two taken about that
-time. At a glance you see it is the picture of two young people of the
-working class--two green, unformed creatures, badly dressed and gawkily
-self-conscious. But there is a look in her face--and in mine-- To be
-quite honest, I’m glad I don’t look like that now. I wouldn’t go back
-if I could. Nevertheless-- How we loved each other!--and how happy we
-were!
-
-I feel that I weary you, gentle reader. There is in my sentiment too
-much about wages and flat rents and the smells that come from people
-who work hard and live in poor places and eat badly cooked strong food.
-But that is not my fault. It is life. And if you believe that your and
-your romancers’ tawdry imaginings are better than life--well, you may
-not be so wise or so exalted as you fancy.
-
-The upshot of our inspecting places to live and haggling over prices
-was that we took a flat in the best quarter of Passaic--the top and
-in those elevatorless days the cheapest flat in the house. We were to
-pay forty dollars a month--a stiff rent that caused excitement in our
-neighborhood and set my mother and her father to denouncing us as a
-pair of fools bent upon ruin. I thought so, myself. But I could have
-denied Edna nothing at that time, and I made up my mind that by working
-harder than ever at the railway office I would compel another raise.
-When I told my mother about this secret resolve of mine, she said:
-
-“If you do get more money, Godfrey, don’t tell Edna. She’s a fool.
-She’ll keep your nose to the grindstone all your life if you ain’t
-careful. It takes a better money-maker than you’re likely to be to hold
-up against that kind of a woman.”
-
-“Oh, she’s like all girls,” said I.
-
-“That’s just it,” replied my mother. “That’s why I ain’t got no use for
-women. Look what poor managers they are. Look how they idle and waste
-and run into debt.”
-
-“But there’s a lot to be said against the men, too. Saloons, for
-instance.”
-
-“And talkin’ politics with loafers,” said my father’s wife bitterly.
-
-“I guess the trouble with men and women is they’re too human,” said I,
-who had inherited something of the philosopher from my father. “And,
-mother, a man’s got to get married--and he’s got to marry a woman.”
-
-“Yes, I suppose he has,” she grudgingly assented. “Mighty poor
-providers most of the men is, and mighty poor use the women make of
-what little the men brings home. But about you and Edny Wheatlands--
-You ought to do better’n her, Godfrey. You’re caught by her looks and
-her style and her education. None of them things makes a good wife.”
-
-“I certainly wouldn’t marry a girl that didn’t have them--all three.”
-
-“But there’s something more,” insisted mother.
-
-“One woman can’t have everything,” said I.
-
-“No, but she can have what I mean--and she’s not much good to a man
-without it. If you’re set on marrying her wait till _you’re_ ready,
-anyhow. _She_ never will be.”
-
-“What do you mean, mother?”
-
-“Wait till you’ve got money in the savings bank. Wait till you’ve got
-used to having money. Then maybe you’ll be able to put a bit on a
-spendthrift wife even if you are crazy about her. You’re making a wrong
-start with her, Godfrey. You’re giving her the upper hand, and that’s
-bad for women like her--mighty bad.”
-
-It was from my mother that I get my ability at business. She and I
-often had sensible talks, and her advice started me right in the
-railroad office and kept me right until I knew my way. So I did not
-become angry at her plain speaking, but appreciated its good sense,
-even though I thought her prejudiced against my Edna. However, I had
-not the least impulse to put off the marriage. My one wish was to
-hasten it. Never before or since was time so leisurely. But the day
-dragged itself up at last, and we were married in church, at what
-seemed to us then enormous expense. There was a dinner afterward at
-which everyone ate and drank too much--a coarse and common scene which
-I will spare gentle reader. Edna and I went up to New York City for a
-Friday to Monday honeymoon. But we were back to spend Sunday night in
-our grand forty-dollar flat. On Monday morning I went to work again--a
-married man, an important person in the community.
-
-Never has any height I have attained or seen since equalled the
-grandeur of that forty-dollar flat. My common sense tells me that it
-was a small and poor affair. I remember, for example, that the bathroom
-was hardly big enough to turn round in. I recall that I have sat by the
-window in the parlor and without rising have reached a paper on a table
-at the other end of the room. But these hard facts in no way interfere
-with or correct the flat as my imagination persists in picturing
-it. What vistas of rooms!--what high ceilings--what woodwork--and
-plumbing!--and what magnificent furniture! Edna’s father, in a moment
-of generosity, told her he would pay for the outfitting of the
-household. And being in the undertaking business he could get discounts
-on furniture and even on kitchen utensils. Edna did the selecting.
-I thought everything wonderful and, as I have said, my imagination
-refuses to recreate the place as it actually was. But I recall that
-there was a brave show of red and of plush, and we all know what that
-means. Whether her “Lady Book” had miseducated her or her untrained
-eyes, excited by the gaudiness she saw when she went shopping, had
-beguiled her from the counsels of the “Lady Book,” I do not know. But I
-am sure, as I recall red and plush, that our first home was the typical
-horror inhabited by the extravagant working-class family.
-
-No matter. There we were in Arcadia. For a time her restless soaring
-fancy, wearied perhaps by its audacious flight to this lofty perch
-of red and plush and forty dollars a month, folded its wings and
-was content. For a time her pride and satisfaction in the luxurious
-newness overcame her distaste and disdain and moved her to keep things
-spotless. I recall the perfume of cleanness that used to delight my
-nostrils at my evening homecoming, and then the intoxicating perfume of
-Edna herself--the aroma of healthy young feminine beauty. We loved each
-other, simply, passionately, in the old-fashioned way. With the growth
-of intelligence, with the realization on the part of men that her keep
-is a large part of the reason in the woman’s mind if not in her heart
-for marrying and loving, there has come a decline and decay of the
-former reverence and awe of man toward woman. Also, the men nowadays
-know more about the mystery of woman, know everything about it, where
-not so many years ago a pure woman was to a man a real religious
-mystery. Her physical being, the clothes she wore underneath, the
-supposedly sweet and clean thoughts, nobler than his, that dwelt in the
-temple of her soul--these things surrounded a girl with an atmosphere
-of thrilling enigma for the youth who won from her lips and from the
-church the right to explore.
-
-All that has passed, or almost passed. I am one of those who believe
-that what has come, or, rather, is coming, to take its place is
-better, finer, nobler. But the old order had its charm. What a charm
-for me!--who had never known any woman well, who had dreamed of her
-passionately but purely and respectfully. There was much of pain--of
-shyness, fear of offending her higher nature, uneasiness lest I should
-be condemned and cast out--in those early days of married life. But
-it was a sweet sort of pain. And when we began to understand each
-other--to be human, though still on our best behavior--when we found
-that we were congenial, were happy together in ways undreamed of, life
-seemed to be paying not like the bankrupt it usually is when the time
-for redeeming its promises comes but like a benevolent prodigal, like
-a lottery whose numbers all draw capital prizes. I admit the truth of
-much the pessimists have to say against Life. But one thing I must
-grant it. When in its rare generous moments it relents, it does know
-how to play the host at the feast--how to spread the board, how to fill
-the flagons and to keep them filled, how to scatter the wreaths and
-the garlands, how to select the singers and the dancers who help the
-banqueters make merry. When I remember my honeymoon, I almost forgive
-you, Life, for the shabby tricks you have played me.
-
-Now I can conceive a honeymoon that would last on and on, not in the
-glory and feverish joy of its first period, but in a substantial and
-satisfying human happiness. But not a honeymoon with a wife who is no
-more fitted to be a wife than the office boy is fitted to step in and
-take the president’s job. Patience, gentle reader! I know how this
-sudden shriek of discord across the amorous strains of the honeymoon
-music must have jarred your nerves. But be patient and I will explain.
-
-Except ourselves, every other family in the house, in the neighborhood,
-had at least one servant. We had none. If Edna had been at all
-economical we might have kept a cook and pinched along. But Edna spent
-carelessly all the money I gave her, and I gave her all there was. A
-large part of it went for finery for her personal adornment, trash of
-which she soon tired--much of it she disliked as soon as it came home
-and she tried it on without the saleslady to flatter and confuse. I--in
-a good-natured way, for I really felt perfectly good-humored about
-it--remonstrated with her for letting everybody rob her, for getting so
-little for her money. She took high ground. Such things were beneath
-her attention. If I had wanted a wife of that dull, pinch-penny kind
-I’d certainly not have married her, a talented, educated woman, bent
-on improving her mind and her position in the world. And that seemed
-reasonable. Still, the money was going, the bills were piling up, and I
-did not know what to do.
-
-And--she did the cooking. I think I have already said that she had
-not learned to cook. How she and her mother expected her to get along
-as a poor clerk’s wife I can’t imagine. The worst of it was, she
-believed she could cook. That is the way with women. They look down on
-housekeeping, on the practical side of life, as too coarse and low to
-be worthy their attention. They say all that sort of thing is easy, is
-like the toil of a day laborer. They say anybody could do it. And they
-really believe so. Men, no matter how high their position, weary and
-bore themselves every day, because they must, with routine tasks beside
-which dishwashing has charm and variety. Yet women shirk their proper
-and necessary share of life’s burden, pretending that it is beneath
-them.
-
-Edna, typical woman, thought she could cook and keep house because
-she, so superior, could certainly do inferior work if she chose. But
-after that first brief spurt of enthusiasm, of daily conference with
-the “Lady Book’s Complete Housekeeper’s Guide,” the flat was badly
-kept--was really horribly kept--was worse than either her home or
-mine before we had been living there many months. It took on much the
-same odor. It looked worse, as tawdry finery, when mussy and dirty,
-is more repulsive than a plain toilet gone back. I did not especially
-mind that. But her cooking-- I had not been accustomed to anything
-especially good in the way of cooking. Mother was the old-fashioned
-fryer, and you know those fryers always served the vegetables soggy. I
-could have eaten exceedingly poor stuff without complaining or feeling
-like complaining. But the stuff she was soon flinging angrily upon the
-slovenly table I could not eat. She ate it, enough of it to keep alive,
-and it didn’t seem to do her any harm. How many women have you known
-who were judges of things to eat? Do you understand how women continue
-to eat the messes they put into their pretty mouths, and keep alive?
-
-I could not eat Edna’s cooking. I ate bread, cold meats and the like
-from the delicatessen shop. When the meal happened to be of her own
-preparing I dropped into the habit of slipping away after a pretense
-at eating, to get breakfast or dinner or supper in a restaurant--the
-cheapest kind of restaurant, but I ate there with relish. And never
-once did I murmur to Edna. I loved her too well; also, I am by nature a
-tolerant, even-tempered person, hating strife, avoiding the harsh word.
-In fact, my timidity in that respect has been my chief weakness, has
-cost me dear again and again. But----
-
-After ten months of married life Edna fell ill. All you married men
-will prick up your ears at that. Why is it that bread winners somehow
-contrive to keep on their feet most of the time, little though they
-know as to caring for their health, reckless though they are in
-eating and drinking? Why is it that married women--unless they have
-to work--spend so much time in sick bed or near it? They say we in
-America have more than nine times as many doctors proportionately to
-population as any other country. The doctors live off of our women--our
-idle, overeating, lazy women who will not work, who will not walk,
-who are always getting something the matter with them. Of course the
-doctors--parasites upon parasites--fake up all kinds of lies, many of
-them malicious slanders against the husbands, to excuse their patients
-and to keep them patients. But what is the truth?
-
-Edna, who read all the time she was not plotting to get acquainted with
-our neighbors--they looked down upon us and wished to have nothing to
-do with us--Edna who ate quantities of candy between meals and ate at
-meals rich things she bought of confectioners and bakers--Edna fell ill
-and frightened me almost out of my senses. I understand it now. But I
-did not understand then. I believed, as do all ignorant people--both
-the obviously ignorant and the ignorant who pass for enlightened--I
-believed sickness to be a mysterious accident, like earthquakes and
-lightning strokes, a hit-or-miss blow from nowhere in particular. So I
-was all sympathy and terror.
-
-She got well. She looked as well as ever. But she said she was not
-strong. “And Godfrey, we simply have got to keep a girl. I’ve borne up
-bravely. But I can’t stand it any longer. You see for yourself, the
-rough work and the strain of housekeeping are too much for me.”
-
-“Very well,” said I. The bills, including the doctor’s and drug bills,
-were piling up. We were more than a thousand dollars in debt. But I
-said: “Very well. You are right.” We men do not realize that there
-are two distinct and equal expressions of strength. The strength of
-bulk, that is often deceptive in that it looks stronger than it is; the
-strength of fiber, that is always deceptive in that it is stronger than
-it looks. In a general way, man has the strength of bulk, woman the
-strength of fiber. So man looks on woman’s appearance of fragility and
-fancies her weak and himself the stronger. I looked at Edna, and said:
-“Very well. We must have a girl to help.”
-
-I shan’t linger upon this part of my story. I am tempted to linger,
-but, after all, it is the commonplace of American life, familiar to
-all, though understood apparently by only a few. Why do more than
-ninety per cent of our small business men fail? Why are the savings
-banks accounts of our working classes a mere fraction of those of the
-working classes of other countries? And so on, and so on. But I see
-your impatience, gentle reader, with these matters so “inartistic.” We
-sank deeper and deeper in debt. Edna’s health did not improve. The girl
-we hired had lived with better class people; she despised us, shirked
-her work, and Edna did not know how to manage her. If the head of the
-household is incompetent and indifferent, a servant only aggravates the
-mess, and the more servants the greater the mess. All Edna’s interest
-was for her music, her novels, her social advancement, and her dreams
-of being a grand lady. These dreams had returned with increased power;
-they took complete possession of her. They soured her disposition,
-made her irritable, usually blue or cross, only at long intervals
-loving and sweet. No, perhaps the dreams were not responsible.
-Perhaps--probably--the real cause was the upset state of her health
-through the absurd idle life she led. Idle and lonely. For she would
-not go with whom she could, she could not go with whom she would.
-
-“I’m sick of sitting alone,” said she. “No wonder I can’t get well.”
-
-“Let’s go back near the old folks,” suggested I. “Our friends won’t
-come to see us in this part of the town. They feel uncomfortable.”
-
-“I should think they would!” cried she. “And if they came I’d see to it
-that they were so uncomfortable that they would never come again.”
-
-I worked hard. My salary went up to fifteen hundred, to two thousand,
-to twenty-five hundred. “Now,” said Edna, “perhaps you’ll get hands
-that won’t look like a laboring man’s. How can I hope to make nice
-friends when I’ve a husband with broken finger nails?”
-
-Our expenses continued to outrun my salary, but I was not especially
-worried, for I began to realize that I had the money-making talent.
-Three children were born; only the first--Margot--lived. Looking back
-upon those six years of our married life, I see after the first year
-only a confused repellent mess of illness, nurses, death, doctors,
-quarrels with servants, untidy rooms and clothes, slovenly, peevish
-wife, with myself watching it all in a dazed, helpless way, thinking it
-must be the normal, natural order of domestic life--which, indeed, it
-is in America--and wondering where and how it was to end.
-
-I recall going home one afternoon late, to find Edna yawning
-listlessly over some book in a magazine culture series. Her hair hung
-every which way, her wrapper was torn and stained. Her skin had the
-musty look that suggests unpleasant conditions both without and within.
-Margot, dirty, pimply from too much candy, sat on the floor squalling.
-
-“Take the child away,” cried Edna, at sight of me. “I thought you’d
-never come. A little more of this and I’ll kill myself. What is there
-to live for, anyhow?”
-
-Silent and depressed, I took Margot for a walk. And as I wandered along
-sadly I was full of pity for Edna, and felt that somehow the blame was
-wholly mine for the wretched plight of our home life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When I was twenty-eight and Edna twenty-three, I had a series of rapid
-promotions which landed me in New York in the position of assistant
-traffic superintendent. My salary was eight thousand a year.
-
-It so happened--coincidence and nothing else--that those eighteen
-months of quick advance for me also marked a notable change in Edna.
-
-There are some people--many people--so obsessed of the know-it-all
-vanity that they can learn nothing. Nor are all these people preachers,
-doctors, and teachers, gentle reader. Then there is another species
-who pretend to know all, who are chary of admitting to learning or
-needing to learn anything, however small, yet who behind their pretense
-toil at improving themselves as a hungry mouse gnaws at the wall of
-the cheese box. Of this species was Edna. As she was fond of being
-mysterious about her thoughts and intentions, she never told me what
-set her going again after that long lethargy. Perhaps it was some woman
-whom she had a sudden opportunity thoroughly to study, some woman who
-knew and lived the ideas Edna had groped for in vain. Perhaps it was
-a novel she read or articles in her magazines. It doesn’t matter. I
-never asked her; I had learned that wild horses would not drag from her
-a confession of where she had got an idea, because such a confession
-would to her notion detract from her own glory. However, the essential
-fact is that she suddenly roused and set to work as she had never
-worked before--went at it like a prospector who, after toiling now
-hard and now discouragedly for years, strikes by accident a rich vein
-of gold. Edna showed in every move that she not hoped, not believed,
-but knew she was at last on the right track. She began to take care,
-scrupulous care, of her person--the minute intelligent care she has
-ever since been expanding and improving upon, has never since relaxed,
-and never will relax. Also she began to plan and to move definitely
-in the matter of taking care of Margot--to look after her speech, her
-manners, her food, her person, especially, perhaps, the last. Margot’s
-teeth, Margot’s hair, Margot’s walk, Margot’s feet and hands and skin,
-the shape of her nose, the set of her ears--all these things she talked
-about and fussed with as agitatedly as about her own self.
-
-Edna became a crank on the subject of food--what is called a crank
-by the unthinking, of whom, by the way, I was to my lasting regret
-one until a few years ago. For a year or two her moves in this
-important direction were blundering, intermittent, and not always
-successful--small wonder when there is really no reliable information
-to be had, the scientists being uncertain and the doctors grossly
-ignorant. But gradually she evolved and lived upon a “beauty diet.”
-Margot, of course, had to do the same. She took exercises morning and
-night, took long and regular walks for the figure and skin and to put
-clearness and brightness into the eyes. I believe she and Margot, with
-occasional lapses, keep up their regimen to this day.
-
-The house was as slattern as ever. The diet and comfort and health
-of the family bread-winner were no more the subject of thought and
-care than--well, than the next husband’s to his wife. She gave some
-attention--intelligent and valuable attention, I cheerfully concede--to
-improving my speech, manners, and dress. But beyond that the revolution
-affected only her and her daughter. Them it affected amazingly. In
-three or four months the change in their appearance was literally
-beyond belief. Edna’s beauty and style came back--no, burst forth in an
-entirely new kind of radiance and fascination. As for little Margot,
-she transformed from homeliness, from the scrawny pasty look of bad
-health, from bad temper, into as neat and sweet and pretty a little
-lady as could be found anywhere.
-
-You, gentle reader, who are ever ready to slop over with some
-kind of sentimentality because in your shallowness you regard
-sentimentality--not sentiment, for of that you know nothing, but
-sentimentality--as the most important thing in the world, just as
-a child regards sickeningly rich cake as the finest food in the
-world--you, gentle reader, have already made up your mind why Edna
-thus suddenly awakened, or, rather, reawakened. “Aha,” you are saying.
-“Served him good and right. She found some one who appreciated her.”
-That guess of yours shows how little you know about Edna or the Edna
-kind of human being. The people who do things in this world, except in
-our foolish American novels, do because they must. They may do better
-or worse under the influence of love, which is full as often a drag as
-a spur. But they do not _do_ because of love. I shall not argue this. I
-shrink from gratuitously inviting an additional vial of wrath from the
-ladies, who resent being told how worthless they in their indolence and
-self-complacence permit themselves to be and how small a positive part
-they now play in the world drama. I should have said nothing at all
-about the matter, were it not that I wish to be strictly just to Edna,
-and she, being wholly the ambitious woman, has always had and still has
-a deep horror of scandal, intrigue, irregularity, and unconventionality
-of every sort.
-
-It was necessary that we move to a place more convenient to my
-business headquarters in New York City. A few weeks after I got the
-eight thousand a year, Edna, and little Margot and I went to Brooklyn
-to live--took a really charming house in Bedford Avenue, with large
-grounds around it. And once more we were happy. It seemed to me we had
-started afresh.
-
-And we had.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Why did we go to Brooklyn?
-
-By the time Edna and I had been married six years I learned many things
-about her inmost self. I was not at all analytic or critical as to
-matters at home. I used my intelligence in my own business; I assumed
-that my wife had intelligence and that she used it in her business--her
-part of our joint business. I believed the reason her part of it went
-badly was solely the natural conditions of life beyond her control. A
-railroad, a factory could be run smoothly; a family and a household
-were different matters. And I admired my wife as much as I loved her,
-and regarded her as a wonderful woman, which, indeed, in certain
-respects she was.
-
-But I had discovered in her several weaknesses. Some of these I knew;
-others I did not permit myself to know that I knew. For example, I
-was perfectly aware that she was not so truthful as one might be. But
-I did not let myself admit that she was not always unconscious of
-her own deviations from the truth. I had gained enough experience of
-life to learn that lying is practically a universal weakness. So I
-did not especially mind it in her, often found it amusing. I had not
-then waked up to the fact that, as a rule, women systematically lie to
-their husbands about big things and little, and that those women who
-profess to be too proud to lie, do their lying by indirections, such as
-omissions, half truths, and misleading silences. I am not criticising.
-Self-respect, real personal pride, I have discovered in spite of the
-reading matter of all kinds about the past, is a modern development,
-is still in embryo; and those of us who profess to be the proudest are
-either the most ignorant of ourselves or the most hypocritical.
-
-But back to my acquaintance with my wife’s character. When I told her
-we should have to live nearer my work, my new work, than Passaic, she
-promptly said:
-
-“Let’s go to Brooklyn.”
-
-“Why not to New York?” said I. “At least until I get thoroughly
-trained, I want to be close to the office.”
-
-“But there’s Margot,” said she. “Margot must have a place to play in.
-And we couldn’t afford such a place in New York. I can’t let her run
-about the streets or go to public schools. She’d pick up all sorts of
-low, coarse associates and habits.”
-
-“Then let’s go to some town opposite--across the Hudson. If we can’t
-live on Manhattan Island, and I think you’re right about Margot, why,
-let’s live where living is cheap. We ought to be saving some money.”
-
-“I hate these Jersey towns,” said Edna petulantly. “I don’t think
-Margot would get the right sort of social influences in them.”
-
-As soon as she said “social influences” I should have understood the
-whole business. The only person higher up on the social ladder with
-whom Edna had been able to scrape intimate acquaintance in Passaic was
-a dowdy, tawdry chatterbox of a woman--I forget her name--who talked
-incessantly of the fashionable people she knew in Brooklyn--how she had
-gone there a stranger, had joined St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, and had
-at once become a social favorite, invited to “the very best houses,
-my dear; such lovely homes,” and associated with “the most charming
-cultured people,” and so on and on--you know the rest of the humbug.
-
-Now, one of the discoveries about my wife which I but half understood
-and made light of, had been that she was mad, literally mad, on the
-subject of social climbing. That means she was possessed of the disease
-imported into this country from England, where it has raged for upward
-of half a century--the disease of being bent upon associating by hook
-or by crook with people whose strongest desire seems to be not to
-associate with you. This plague does not spare the male population--by
-no means. But it rages in and ravages the female population almost to
-a woman. Our women take incidental interest or no interest in their
-homes, in their husbands, in their children. Their hearts are centered
-upon social position, and, of course, the money-squandering necessary
-to attaining or to keeping it. The women who are “in” spend all their
-time, whatever they may seem to be about, in spitting upon and kicking
-the faces of the women who are trying to get “in.” The women who are
-trying to get “in” spend their whole time in smiling and cringing
-and imploring and plotting and, when it seems expedient, threatening
-and compelling. Probe to the bottom--if you have acuteness enough,
-which you probably haven’t--probe to the bottom any of the present-day
-activities of the American woman, I care not what it may be, and you
-will discover the bacillus of social position biting merrily away
-at her. If she goes to church or to a lecture or a concert--if she
-goes calling or stays at home--if she joins a suffrage movement or a
-tenement reform propaganda, or refuses to join--if she dresses noisily
-or plainly--if she shuns society or seeks it, if she keeps house or
-leaves housekeeping to servants, roaches, and mice--if she cares for or
-neglects her children--if she pets her husband or displaces him with
-another--no matter what she does, it is at the behest of the poison
-flowing through brain and vein from the social-position bacillus. She
-thinks by doing whatever she does she will somehow make her position
-more brilliant or less insecure, or, having no position at all, will
-gain one.
-
-And the men? They pay the bills. Sometimes reluctantly, again eagerly;
-sometimes ignorantly, again with full knowledge. The men--they pay the
-bills.
-
-Now you know better far than I knew at the time why our happy little
-family went to Brooklyn, took the house in Bedford Avenue which we
-could ill afford if we were to save any money, and joined St. Mary’s.
-
-A couple of years after we were married my wife stopped me when I was
-telling her what had happened at the office that day, as was my habit.
-“You ought to leave all those things outside when you come home,” said
-she.
-
-She had read this in a book somewhere, I guess. It was a new idea to
-me. “Why should I?” said I.
-
-“Home is a place for happiness, with all the sordidness shut out,”
-explained she. “Those sordid things ought not to touch our life
-together.”
-
-This sounded all right. “It seemed to me,” stammered I, apologetically,
-“that my career, the way I was getting on, that our bread and butter--
-Well, I thought we ought to kind of talk it over together.”
-
-“Oh, I do sympathize with you,” said, or rather quoted, she. “But my
-place is to soothe and smooth away the cares of business. You ought to
-try not to think of them at home.”
-
-“But what _would_ I think about?” cried I, much perplexed. “Why, my
-business is all I’ve got. It’s the most important thing in the world to
-us. It means our living. At least that’s the way the thing looks to me.”
-
-“You ought to think at home about the higher side of life--the
-intellectual side.”
-
-“But my business _is_ my intellectual side,” I said. “And I can’t for
-the life of me see why thinking about things that don’t advance us and
-don’t pay the bills is better than thinking about things that do.” It
-seemed to me that this looking on my business as something to be left
-on the mud-scraper at the entrance indicated a false idea of it got
-somewhere. So I added somewhat warmly: “There’s nothing low or bad
-about my business.” And that was the truth at the time.
-
-“I don’t know anything about it,” replied she with the gentle patience
-of her superior refinement and education. “And I don’t want to know.
-Those things don’t interest me. And I think, Godfrey”--very sweetly,
-with her cheek against mine--“the reason husbands and wives often grow
-apart is that the husband gives his whole mind to his business and
-doesn’t develop the higher side of his nature--the side that appeals to
-a woman and satisfies her.”
-
-This touched my sense of humor mildly. “My father gives his mind to one
-of those high sides,” said I, “and we nearly starved to death.”
-
-“Your father!” exclaimed she in derisive disgust.
-
-“My father,” said I cheerfully, “he does nothing but read, talk, and
-think politics.”
-
-“Politics! _That_ isn’t on the higher side. Women don’t care anything
-about _that_.”
-
-“Well, what do they care about?” I inquired.
-
-“About music and literature--and those artistic things.”
-
-“Oh, those things are all right,” said I. “But I don’t see that it
-takes any more brains or any better brains to paint a picture or sing a
-song or write a novel than it does to run a railroad--or to plan one.
-If you’d try to understand business, dear,” I urged, “you might find
-it as interesting and as intellectual as anything that doesn’t help us
-make a living. Anyhow, I’ve simply got to give my brains to my work.
-You go ahead and attend to the higher side for the family. I’ll stick
-to the job that butters the bread and keeps the rain off.”
-
-She was patient with me, but I saw she didn’t approve. However, as I
-knew she’d approve still less if I failed to provide for her and the
-two young ones--there were two at that time--I let the matter drop and
-held to the common-sense course. I hadn’t the faintest notion of the
-seriousness of that little talk of ours. And it was well I hadn’t, for
-to have made her realize her folly I’d have had to start in and educate
-her--uneducate her and then reëducate her. I don’t blame the women. I
-feel sorry for them. When I hear them talk about the lack of sympathy
-between themselves and American men, about the low ideals and the
-sordid talk the men indulge in, how dull it is, how different from the
-inspiring, cultured talk a woman hears among the aristocrats abroad,
-said aristocrats being supported in helpless idleness throughout their
-useless lives, often by hard-earned American dollars--when I hear this
-pitiful balderdash from fair lips, I grow sad. The American woman
-fancies she is growing away from the American man. The truth is that
-while she is sitting still, playing with a lapful of the artificial
-flowers of fake culture, like a poor doodle-wit, the American man is
-growing away from her. She knows nothing of value; she can do nothing
-of value. She has nothing to offer the American man but her physical
-charms, for he has no time or taste for playing with artificial flowers
-when the world’s important work is to be done. So the poor creature
-grows more isolated, more neglected, less respected, and less sought,
-except in a physical way. And all the while she hugs to her bosom the
-delusion that she is the great soul high sorrowful. The world moves;
-many are the penalties for the nation or the race or the sex that does
-not move with it, or does not move quickly enough. I feel sorry for the
-American woman--unless she has a father who will leave her rich or a
-husband who will give her riches.
-
-I feel some of my readers saying that I must have been most unfortunate
-in the women I have known. Perhaps. But may it not be that those
-commiserating readers have been rarely fortunate in their feminine
-acquaintances?--or in lack of insight?
-
-Now you probably not only know why we went to Brooklyn, but also
-what we did after we got there. I have not forgotten my promise to
-gentle reader. I shall not linger many moments in Brooklyn. True, it
-is superior to Passaic, at least to the part of Passaic in which I
-constrained gentle reader to tarry a minute or two. But it is still far
-from the promised heights.
-
-My wife owes a vast deal to Brooklyn. As she haughtily ignores the
-debt, would deny it if publicly charged, I shall pay it for her.
-Brooklyn was her finishing school. It made her what she is.
-
-In the last year or so we spent in Passaic there had been, as I have
-hinted, a marked outward change in all three of us. The least, or
-rather the least abrupt, change had been in me. Associated in business
-with a more prosperous and better-dressed and better-educated class of
-men, I had gradually picked up the sort of knowledge a man needs to fit
-himself for the inevitably changing social conditions accompanying a
-steady advance in material prosperity. I was as quick to learn one kind
-of useful thing as another. And just as I learned how to fill larger
-and larger positions and how to make money out of the chances that
-come to a man situated where money is to be made, so I learned how to
-dress like a man of the better class, how to speak a less slangy and
-a less ungrammatical English, how to use my mind in thinking and in
-discussing a thousand subjects not directly related to my business.
-
-If my wife had been interested in any of the important things of the
-world, I could have been of the greatest assistance to her and she
-to me. And we should have grown ever closer together in sympathetic
-companionship. But although she had a good mind--a superior mind--she
-cared about nothing but the things that interest foolish women and
-still more foolish men--for a man who cares about splurge and show and
-social position and such nonsense is less excusable, is more foolish,
-than a woman of the same sort. Women have the excuse of lack of serious
-occupation, but what excuse has a man? Still, she was not idle--not for
-a minute. She was, on the contrary, in her way as busy as I. From time
-to time she would say to me enigmatically: “You don’t appreciate it,
-but I am preparing myself to help you fill the station your business
-ability will win us a chance at.” It seemed to me that I was doing
-that alone. For what was necessary to fill that station but higher and
-higher skill as a man of affairs?
-
-When we had made our entry in Brooklyn and had seated ourselves in
-the state in Bedford Avenue which she had decided for, she showed
-that she felt immensely proud of herself. We took the house furnished
-throughout--nicely furnished in a substantial way, for it had been the
-home of one of the old Brooklyn mercantile families.
-
-“It’s good enough to start with,” said she, casting a critical glance
-round the sober, homelike dining room. “I shan’t make any changes till
-I look about me.”
-
-“We couldn’t be better off,” said I. “Everything is perfectly
-comfortable.” And in fact neither she nor I had ever before known what
-comfort was. Looking at that house--merely looking at it and puzzling
-out the uses of the various things to us theretofore unknown--was about
-as important in the way of education as learning to read is to a child.
-
-“It’s good enough for Brooklyn,” said she. She regarded me with her
-patient, tender expression of the superior intelligence. “You haven’t
-much imagination or ambition, Godfrey,” she went on. “But fortunately
-_I_ have. And do be careful not to betray us before the servants I’m
-engaging.”
-
-The show part of the house continued to look about as it had when we
-took possession. But the living part went to pieces rapidly. We had
-many servants. We spent much money--so much that, if I had not been
-speculating in various ways, we should have soon gone under. But the
-results were miserably poor. My wife left everything to her servants
-and devoted herself to her social career. The ex-Brooklyn society woman
-at Passaic had not deceived her. No sooner had she joined St. Mary’s
-than she began to have friends--friends of a far higher social rank
-than she had ever even seen at close range before. They were elegant
-people indeed--the wives of the heads of departments in big stores, the
-families of bank officers and lawyers and doctors. There were even a
-few rather rich people. My wife was in ecstasy for a year or two. And
-she improved rapidly in looks, in dress, in manners, in speech, in all
-ways except in disposition and character.
-
-Except in disposition and character. As we grow older and rise in the
-world, there is always a deterioration both in disposition and in
-character. A man’s disposition grows sharper through dealing with,
-and having to deal sharply with, incompetence. The character tends
-to harden as he is forced to make the unpleasant and often not too
-scrupulous moves necessary to getting himself forward toward success.
-Also, the way everyone tries to use a successful man makes him more and
-more acute in penetrating to the real motives of his fellow beings,
-more and more inclined to take up men for what he can get out of them
-and drop them when he has squeezed out all the advantage--in brief,
-to treat them precisely as they treat him. But the whole object in
-having a home, a wife, a family, is defeated if the man has not there
-a something that checks the tendencies to cynicism and coldness which
-active life not merely encourages but even compels.
-
-There was no occasion for Edna’s becoming vixenish and hard. It was
-altogether due to the idiotic and worthless social climbing. She had
-a swarm of friends, yet not a single friend. She cultivated people
-socially, and they cultivated her, not for the natural and kindly and
-elevating reasons, but altogether for the detestable purposes of that
-ghastly craze for social position. Edna was bitter against me for a
-long time, never again became fully reconciled, because I soon flatly
-refused to have anything to do with it.
-
-“They will think there’s something wrong about you, and about me, if
-you don’t come with me,” pleaded she.
-
-“I need my strength for my business,” said I. “And what do I care
-whether they think well or ill of me? They don’t give us any money.”
-
-“You are _so_ sordid!” cried she. “Sometimes I’m almost tempted to give
-up, and not try to be somebody and to make somebodies of Margot and
-you.”
-
-“I wish you would,” said I. “Why shouldn’t we live quietly and mind our
-own business and be happy?”
-
-“How fortunate it is for Margot that she has a mother with ambition and
-pride!”
-
-“Well--no matter. But please do get another cook. This one is, if
-anything, worse than the last--except when we have company.”
-
-We were forever changing cooks. The food that came on our table was
-something atrocious. I heard the same complaint from all my married
-associates at the office, even from the higher officials who were
-rich men and lived in great state. They, too, had American wives. In
-the markets and shops I saw as I passed along all sorts of attractive
-things to eat, and of real quality. I wondered why we never had those
-things on our table. Heaven knows we spent money enough. The time came
-when I got a clew to the mystery.
-
-One day Edna said: “I’ve been doing my housekeeping altogether by
-telephone. I think I’ll stop it, except on rainy days and when I don’t
-feel well.”
-
-By telephone! I laughed to myself. No wonder we had poor stuff and
-paid the highest prices for it. I thought a while, then to satisfy
-my curiosity began to ask questions, very cautiously, for Edna was
-extremely touchy, as we all are in matters where in our hearts we know
-we are in the wrong. “Do you remember what kind of range we have in our
-kitchen?” I asked.
-
-“I?” exclaimed she disgustedly. “Certainly not. I haven’t been down to
-the kitchen since we first moved into this house. I’ve something better
-to do than to meddle with the servants.”
-
-“Naturally,” said I soothingly. And I didn’t let her see how her
-confession amused me. What if a man tried to run his business in that
-fashion! And ordering by telephone! Why, it was an invitation to the
-tradespeople to swindle us in every way. But I said nothing.
-
-As usually either it was bad weather or Edna was not feeling well, or
-was in a rush to keep some social engagement, the ordering for the
-house continued to be done by telephone, when it was not left entirely
-to the discretion of the servants. One morning it so happened that she
-and I left the house at the same time. Said she:
-
-“I’m on my way to do the marketing. It’s a terrible nuisance, and I
-know so little about those things. But it’s coming to be regarded as
-fashionable for a woman to do her own marketing. Some of the best
-families--people with their own carriages and servants in livery--some
-of the swellest ladies in Brooklyn do it now. It’s a fad from across
-the river.”
-
-“You must be careful not to overtax yourself,” said I.
-
-And I said it quite seriously, for in those days of my innocence I was
-worried about her, thought her a poor overworked angel, was glad I had
-the money to relieve her from the worst tasks and to leave her free to
-amuse herself and to take care of her health! I had not yet started in
-the direction of ridding myself of the masculine delusion that woman
-is a delicate creature by nature if she happens to be a lady--and of
-course I knew my Edna was a lady through and through. It was many a
-year before I learned the truth--why ladies are always ailing and why
-they can do nothing but wear fine clothes and sit in parlors or in
-carriages when they are not sitting at indigestible food, and amuse
-themselves and pity themselves for being condemned to live with coarse,
-uninteresting American men.
-
-Yes, I was sincere in urging her to take care how she adopted so
-laborious a fad as doing her own marketing. She went on:
-
-“If I had a carriage it wouldn’t be so bad.”
-
-She said this sweetly enough and with no suggestion of reproach. Just
-the sigh of a lady’s soul at the hardness of life’s conditions. But
-I, loving her, felt as if I were somehow to blame. “You shall have a
-carriage before many years,” said I. “That’s one of the things I’ve
-been working for.”
-
-She gave me a look that made me feel proud I had her to live for. “I
-hope I’ll be here to enjoy it,” sighed she.
-
-I walked sad and silent by her side, profoundly impressed and depressed
-by that hint as to her feeble health. I know now it was sheer pretense
-with her, the more easily to manage me and to cover her shortcomings. I
-ought to have realized it then. But what man does? She certainly did
-not look ill, for she was not one of those who were always stuffing
-themselves at teas and lunches, and talked of a walk of five blocks
-as hard exercise! She had learned how to keep health and beauty. What
-intelligence it shows, that she was able to grasp so difficult a
-matter; and what splendid persistence that she was able to carry out a
-mode of life so disagreeable to self-indulgence. If her intelligence
-and her persistence could have been turned to use! Presently we were
-at the butcher shop. I paused in the doorway while she engaged in her
-arduous labor. Here is the conversation:
-
-“Good morning, Mr. Toomey.” (Very gracious; the lady speaking to the
-trades person.)
-
-“Good morning, ma’am.” (Fat little butcher touching cracked and
-broken-nailed hand to hat respectfully.)
-
-“That lamb you sent yesterday was very tough.”
-
-“Sorry, ma’am. But those kind of things will happen, you know.” (Most
-flatteringly humble of manner.)
-
-“Yes, I know. Do your best. I’m sure you try to please. Send me--let me
-see--say, two chickens for broiling. You’ll pick out nice ones?”
-
-“Yes, indeed, ma’am. I’ll attend to it myself.”
-
-“And something for the servants. You know what they like.”
-
-“Yes, ma’am. I’ll attend to it.”
-
-“And you’ll not overcharge, will you?”
-
-“I, ma’am? I’ve been dealing with ladies for twenty years, right here,
-ma’am. I never have overcharged.”
-
-“I know. All the ladies tell me you’re honest. I feel safe with you.
-Let me see, there were some other things. But I’m in a hurry. The cook
-will tell your boy when he takes what I’ve ordered. You’ll be sure to
-give me the best?”
-
-“I’d not dare send anything else to _you_, ma’am.” (Groveling.)
-
-A gracious smile, a gracious nod, and Edna rejoined me. Innocent as
-I was, and under the spell that blinds the American man where the
-American woman is concerned, I could not but be upset by this example
-of how our house was run--an example that all in an instant brought
-to my mind and enabled me to understand a score, a hundred similar
-examples. There was I, toiling away to make money, earning every dollar
-by the hardest kind of mental labor, struggling to rise, to make our
-fortune, and each day my wife was tossing carelessly out of the windows
-into the street a large part of my earnings. I did not know what to do
-about it.
-
-Edna’s next stop was at the grocer’s. I had not the courage to halt
-and listen. I knew it would be a repetition of the grotesque interview
-with the butcher. And she undoubtedly a clever woman--alert, improving.
-What a mystery! I went on to my office. That day, without giving my
-acquaintances there an inkling of what was in my mind, I made inquiries
-into how their wives spent the money that went for food--the most
-important item in the spending of incomes under ten or twelve thousand
-a year. In every case the wife or the mother did the marketing by
-telephone. All the men except one took the ignorance and incompetence
-of the management of the household expenses as a matter of course. One
-man grumbled a little. I remember he said: “No wonder it’s hard for the
-men to save anything. The women waste most of it on the table, paying
-double prices for poor stuff. I tell you, Loring, the American woman
-is responsible for the dishonesty of American commercial life. They
-are always nagging at the man for more and more money to spend, and in
-spending it they tempt the merchants, the clerks, their own servants,
-everyone within range, to become swindlers and thieves.”
-
-“Oh, nonsense,” said I. “You’re a pessimist. The American woman is all
-right. Where’d you find her equal for intelligence and charm?”
-
-“She may be intelligent,” said he. “She doesn’t use it on anything
-worth while, except roping in some poor sucker to put up _for_ her and
-to put up _with_ her. And she may have charm, but not for a man who has
-cut his matrimonial eye teeth.”
-
-I laughed at Van Dyck--that was my grumbling friend’s name. And I soon
-dropped the subject from my mind. It has never been my habit to waste
-time in thinking about things when the thinking could not possibly
-lead anywhere. You may say I ought to have interfered, forced my wife
-to come to her senses, compelled her to learn her business. Which
-shows that you know little about the nature of the American woman.
-If I had taken that course, she would have hated me, she would have
-done no better, and she would have scorned me as a sordid haggler over
-small sums of money who was trying to spoil with the vulgarities of
-commercial life the beauties of the home. No, I instinctively knew
-enough not to interfere.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But let us take a long leap forward to the day when I became president
-of the railroad, having made myself a rich man by judicious gambling
-with eight thousand dollars loaned me by father Wheatlands. He was a
-rich man, and in the way to become very rich, and he had no heir but
-Edna after the drowning of her two brothers under a sailboat in Newark
-Bay. Margot was in a fashionable school over in New York. My wife and
-I, still a young couple and she beautiful--my wife and I were as happy
-as any married couple can be where they let each other alone and the
-husband gives the wife all the money she wishes and leaves her free to
-spend it as she pleases.
-
-When I told her of my good fortune, and the sudden and large betterment
-of our finances, she said with a curious lighting of the eyes, a
-curious strengthening of the chin:
-
-“Now--for New York!”
-
-“New York?” said I. “What does that mean?”
-
-“We are going to live in New York,” replied she.
-
-“But we do live in New York. Brooklyn is part of New York.”
-
-“Legally I suppose it is,” replied she. “But morally and æsthetically,
-socially, and in every other civilized way, my dear Godfrey, it is part
-of the backwoods. I can hardly wait to get away.”
-
-“Why, I thought you were happy here!” exclaimed I, marveling, used
-though I was to her keeping her own counsel strictly about the matters
-that most interested her. “You’ve certainly acted as if you loved it.”
-
-“I didn’t _mind_ it at first,” conceded she. “But for two or three
-years I have _loathed_ it, and everybody that lives in it.”
-
-I was amazed at this last sally. “Oh, come now, Edna,” cried I, “you’ve
-got lots of friends here--lots and lots of them.”
-
-I was thinking of the dozen or so women whom she called and who called
-her by the first name, women she was with early and late. Women she was
-daily playing bridge with-- Bridge! I have a friend who declares that
-bridge is ruining the American home, and I see his point, but I think
-he doesn’t look deep enough. If it weren’t bridge it would be something
-else. Bridge is a striking example, but only a single example, of the
-results of feminine folly and idleness that all flow from the same
-cause. However, let us go back to my talk with Edna. She met my protest
-in behalf of her friends with a contemptuous:
-
-“I don’t know a soul who isn’t _frightfully_ common.”
-
-“They’re the same sort of people we are.”
-
-“Not the same sort that _I_ am,” declared she proudly. “And not the
-sort Margot and you are going to be. You’ll see. You don’t know about
-these things. But fortunately I do.”
-
-“You don’t seriously mean that you want to leave this splendid old
-house----”
-
-“Splendid? It’s hardly fit to live in. Of course, we had to endure it
-while we were poor and obscure. But now it won’t do at all.”
-
-“And go away from all these people you’ve worked so hard to get in
-with--all these friends--go away among strangers. _I_ don’t mind. But
-what would _you_ do? How’d you pass the days?”
-
-“These vulgar people bore me to death,” declared she. “I’ve been
-advancing, if you have stood still. Thank God, _I’ve_ got ambition.”
-
-“Heaven knows they’ve never been _my_ friends,” said I. “But I must say
-they seem nice enough people, as people go. What’s the matter with ’em?”
-
-“They’re common,” said she with the languor of one explaining when he
-feels he will not be understood. “They’re tiresome.”
-
-“I’ll admit they’re tiresome,” said I. “That’s why I’ve kept away from
-them. But I doubt if they’re more tiresome than people generally. The
-fact is, my dear, people are all tiresome. That’s why they can’t amuse
-themselves or each other, but have to be amused--have to hire the
-clever people of all sorts to entertain them. Instead of asking people
-here to bore us and to be bored, why not send them seats at a theater
-or orders for a first-class meal at a first-class restaurant?”
-
-“I suppose you think that’s funny,” said my wife. She had no sense of
-humor, and the suggestion of a jest irritated her.
-
-“Yes, it does strike me as funny,” I admitted. “But there’s sense in
-it, too.... I’m sure you don’t want to abandon your friends here.
-Why make ourselves uncomfortable all over again?” I took a serious
-persuasive tone. “Edna, we’re beginning to get used to the more stylish
-way of living we took up when we left Passaic and came here to live. Is
-it sensible to branch out again into the untried and the unknown? Will
-we be any wiser or any happier? You can shine as the big star now in
-this circle of friends. You like to run things socially. Here’s your
-chance.”
-
-“How could I get any pleasure out of running things socially in St.
-Mary’s?” demanded she. “I’ve outgrown it. It seems vulgar and common to
-me. It is vulgar and common.”
-
-“What does that mean?” I asked innocently.
-
-“If you don’t understand, I can’t tell you,” replied she tartly.
-“Surely you must see that your wife and your daughter are superior to
-these people round here.”
-
-“I don’t compare my wife and daughter with other people,” said I. “To
-me they’re superior to anybody and everybody else in the world. I often
-wish we lived ’way off in the country somewhere. I’m sure we’d be
-happier with only each other. We’re putting on too much style to suit
-me, even now.”
-
-“I see you living in the country,” laughed she. “You’d come down about
-once a week or month.”
-
-I couldn’t deny the truth in her accusation. I felt it ought to have
-been that my wife and I were so sympathetic, so interested in the same
-things, that we were absorbed in each other. But the facts were against
-it. We really had almost nothing in common. I admired her beauty and
-also her intelligence and energy, though I thought them misdirected.
-She, I think, liked me in the primitive way of a woman with a man. And
-she admired my ability to make money, though she thought it rather a
-low form of intellectual excellence. However, as she found it extremely
-useful, she admired me for it in a way. I have seen much of the
-aristocratic temperament that despises money, but I have yet to see an
-aristocrat who wasn’t greedier than the greediest money-grubber--and
-I must say it is hard to conceive anything lower than the spirit
-that grabs the gift and despises the giver. But then, some day, when
-thinking is done more clearly, we shall all see that aristocracy and
-its spirit is the lowest level of human nature, is simply a deep-seated
-survival of barbarism. However, Edna and I appealed to and satisfied
-each other in one way; beyond that our congeniality abruptly ended.
-Looking back, I see now that talking _with_ her was never a pleasure,
-nor was it a pleasure to her to talk _with_ me. I irritated her; she
-bored me.
-
-How rarely in our country do you find a woman who is an interesting
-companion for a man, except as female and male pair or survey the
-prospect of pairing? And it matters not what line of activity the man
-is taking--business, politics, literature, art, philanthropy even. The
-women are eternally talking about their superiority to the business
-man; but do they get along any better with an artist--unless he is
-cultivating the woman for the sake of an order for a picture? Is there
-any line of serious endeavor in which an American woman is interesting
-and helpful and companionable to a man? I can get along very well with
-an artist. I have one friend who is a writer of novels, another who
-is a writer of plays, a third who is a sculptor. They are interested
-in my work, and I in theirs. We talk together on a basis of equal
-interest, and we give each other ideas. Can any American woman say the
-same? I don’t inquire anticipating a negative answer. I simply put the
-question. But I suspect the answer would put a pin in the bubble of
-the American woman’s pretense of superior culture. She is fooled by
-her vanity, I fear, and by her sex attraction, and by the influence of
-the money her despised father or husband gives her. There’s a reason
-why America is notoriously the land of bachelor husbands--and that
-reason is not the one the women and foreign fortune hunters assert.
-The American man lets the case go by default against him, not because
-he couldn’t answer, nor yet because he is polite, but _because he is
-indifferent_.
-
-But my wife was talking about her projected assault upon New York. “I
-really must be an extraordinary woman,” said she. “How I have fought
-all these years to raise myself, with you dragging at me to keep me
-down.”
-
-“I?” protested her unhappy husband. “Why, dear, I’ve never opposed you
-in any way. And I’ve tried to do what I could to help you. You must
-admit the money’s been useful.”
-
-“Oh, you’ve never been mean about money,” conceded she. “But you don’t
-sympathize with a single one of my ideals.”
-
-“I want you to have whatever you want,” said I. “And anything I can do
-to get it for you, or to help you get it, I stand ready to do.”
-
-“Yes, I know, Godfrey, dear,” said she, giving me a long hug and a
-kiss. “No woman ever had a more generous husband than I have.”
-
-I naturally attached more importance to this burst of enthusiasm then
-than I do now. And it is as well that I was thus simple-minded. How
-little pleasure we would get, to be sure, if, when we are praised
-or loved by anybody because we do that person a kindness, we paused
-to analyze and saw the shallow selfishness of such praise or such
-love. After all, it’s only human nature to like those who do as we
-ask them and to dislike those who don’t; and I am not quarreling with
-human nature--or with any other of the unchangeable conditions of the
-universe. My own love for Edna--what was it but the natural result of
-my getting what I wanted from her, all I wanted? I really troubled
-myself little about her incompetence and extravagance and craze for
-social position. No doubt to this day I should be-- But I am again
-anticipating.
-
-“Generous? Nonsense,” said I. “It isn’t generous to try to make you
-happy. That’s my one chance of being happy myself. A busy man’s got to
-have peace at home. If he hasn’t he’s like a soldier attacked rear and
-front at the same time.”
-
-“I know you don’t care where we live,” she went on. “And for Margot’s
-sake we’ve simply got to move to New York.”
-
-“Oh, you want her to stay at home of nights, instead of living at the
-school. Why didn’t you speak of that first?”
-
-“Not at all,” cried she. “How slow you are! No; for the present, even
-if we do live in New York, I think it best for Margot to keep on
-living at the school. She’s barely started there. I want her training
-to be thorough. And while I’m learning as fast as I can, I am not
-competent to teach her. I know, of course. But I haven’t had the chance
-to practice. So I can’t teach her.”
-
-“Teach her what?” I inquired.
-
-“To be a lady--a practical, expert lady,” replied Edna. “That’s what
-she’s going to Miss Ryper’s school for. And when she comes out she’ll
-be the equal of girls who have generations of culture and breeding
-behind them.”
-
-“God bless me!” cried I, laughing. “This Ryper woman must be a wonder.”
-
-“She is,” declared Edna. “It was a great favor, her letting Margot into
-the school.”
-
-“Oh, I remember,” said I. “She couldn’t do it until I got two of the
-directors of the road to insist on it. But I guess that was merely a
-bluff of hers to squeeze us for a few hundreds extra.”
-
-“Not at all,” Edna assured me. “You are _so_ ignorant, Godfrey. Please
-do be careful not to say those coarse things before people.”
-
-“As you please,” said I, cheerfully, for I was used to this kind of
-calling down. “All the same, the Ryper lady is hot for the dough.”
-
-Edna shivered. She detested slang--continued to detest and avoid it
-even after she learned that it was fashionable. “Miss Ryper guards
-her list of pupils as their mothers guard their visiting lists,” said
-she. “But now she likes Margot. The dear child has been elected to
-the most exclusive fraternity. Every girl in it has to wear hand-made
-underclothes and has to have had at least a father, a grandfather, and
-a great grandfather.” Edna laughed with pride at her own cleverness
-before she went on. “Margot came to me when she was proposed, and cried
-as if her little heart would break. She said she didn’t know anything
-about her grandfather and great grandfather. But I hadn’t forgotten to
-arrange that. I think of everything.”
-
-“Oh, that was easy enough,” said I. “Your grandfather was a tailor and
-mine was in the grocery business like father.”
-
-Edna looked round in terror. “Sh!” she exclaimed. “Servants always
-listen.” She went to the door--we were in the small upstairs sitting
-room--opened it suddenly, looked into the hall, closed the door,
-and returned to a chair nearer the lounge on which I was stretched
-comfortably smoking.
-
-“What’s the matter?” said I.
-
-“No one was there,” said she. “Haven’t I told you never to speak of--of
-those horrible things?”
-
-“But Margot----”
-
-“Margot doesn’t know. She must _never_ know! Poor child, she is so
-sensitive, it would make her ill.”
-
-I lapsed into gloomy silence. I had not liked the way Edna had been
-acting about her parents and mine ever since we came to Brooklyn. But I
-had been busy, and was averse to meddling.
-
-“I gave Margot for the benefit of the girls a genealogy I’ve gotten
-up,” she went on. “You know all genealogies are more or less faked, and
-I’ve no doubt hers is every bit as genuine as those of half the girls
-over there. I fixed ours so that it would take a lot of inquiry to
-expose it. And Margot got into the fraternity.”
-
-“Are the hand-made underclothes fake too?” said I.
-
-“Oh, no. _They_ had to be genuine. I’ve never let Margot wear any other
-kind since I learned about those things. There’s nothing that gives a
-child such a sense of ladylikeness and superiority as to feel she’s
-dressed right from the skin out.”
-
-“Well, school’s a different sort of a place from what it was in our
-day,” said I. The picture my wife had drawn amused me, but I somehow
-did not exactly like it. My mind was too little interested in the
-direction of the things that absorbed Edna for me to be able to put
-into any sort of shape the thoughts vaguely moving about in the
-shadows. “I’ll bet,” I went on, “poor Margot doesn’t have as good a
-time as we had.”
-
-“She’d hate that kind of a time,” said Edna.
-
-I laughed and laid my hand in her lap. Her hand stole into it. I
-watched her lovely face--the sweet, dreamy expression. “What are you
-thinking?” said I softly, hopeful of romance--what _I_ call romance.
-
-“I was thinking how low and awful we used to be,” replied she, “and how
-splendidly we are getting away from it.”
-
-I laughed, for I was used to cold water on my romance. “All the same,”
-insisted I, “Margot would envy us if she knew.”
-
-“She’d hate it,” Edna repeated. “She’s going to be an improvement on
-_us_.”
-
-“Not on you,” I protested.
-
-She looked at me with tender sparkling eyes, the same lovely
-light-brown eyes that had fascinated me as a boy. Brown eyes for a
-woman, always! But they must not be of the heavy commonplace shades of
-brown like a deer’s or a cow’s. They must have light shades in them,
-tints verging toward blue or green. Said Edna: “I’m doing my best to
-fit myself. And before I get through, Godfrey, I think I’ll go far.”
-
-“Sure you will,” said I, with no disposition to turn the cold douche
-on _her_ kind of romance. What an idiot I was about her, to be sure! I
-went on: “And I’ll see that you have the money to grease the toboggan
-slide and make the going easy.”
-
-She talked on happily and confidingly: “Yes, it’s best to leave Margot
-another year as a boarder at Miss Ryper’s. By that time we’ll be
-established over in New York, and we’ll have a proper place for her to
-receive her friends. And perhaps we’ll have a few friends of our own.”
-
-“Swell friends, eh?”
-
-“Please don’t say swell, dear,” corrected she. “It’s such a common
-word.”
-
-“I’ve heard _you_ say it,” I protested.
-
-“But I don’t any more. I’ve learned better. And now I’ve taught you
-better.”
-
-“Anything you like. Anybody you like,” said I. When Edna and I were
-together, with our hands clasped, I was always completely under her
-spell. She could do what she pleased with me, so long, of course, as
-she didn’t interfere in my end of the firm. And I may add that she
-never did; she hadn’t the faintest notion what I was about. They say
-there are thousands of American women in the cities who know their
-husbands’ places of business only as street and telephone numbers.
-My wife was one of that kind. Oh, yes, from the standpoint of those
-who insist that business and home should be separate, we were a model
-couple.
-
-“There’s another matter I want to talk over with you, Godfrey,” she
-went on.
-
-“That’s a lovely dress you’re wearing,” said I. “It goes so well with
-your skin and your hair.”
-
-She was delighted, and was moved to rise and look at herself in the
-long mirror. She gave herself an approving glance, but not more
-approving than what she saw merited. A long, slim beautiful figure;
-a dress that set it off. A lovely young tip-tilted face, the face of
-a girl with fresh, clear eyes and skin, the whitest, evenest sharp
-teeth--and such hair!--such quantities of hair attractively arranged.
-
-From herself she glanced at me. “No one’d ever think what we came from,
-would they?” said she fondly and proudly. “Oh, Godfrey, it makes me
-so happy that we _look_ the part. We belong where we’re going. The
-good blood away back in the family is coming out. And Margot-- I’ve
-always called her the little duchess--and she looks it and feels it.”
-Dreamily, “Maybe she will be some day.”
-
-“Why, she’s a baby,” cried I. For I didn’t like to see that my baby was
-growing up.
-
-“She’s nearly fourteen,” said Edna. She was looking at herself again.
-“Would you ever think _I_ had a daughter fourteen years old?” said
-she, making a laughing, saucy face at me.
-
-I got up and kissed her. “You don’t look as old as you did when I
-married you,” said I, and it was only a slight exaggeration.
-
-When we sat again, she was snuggled into my lap with her head against
-my shoulder. She was immensely fond of being petted. They say this is
-no sign of a loving nature, that cats, the least loving of all pets,
-are fondest of petting. I have no opinion on the subject.
-
-“What was it you wanted to talk about?” said I. “Money?”
-
-“No, indeed,” laughed she.
-
-“I supposed so, as that’s the only matter in which I have any influence
-in this family.”
-
-“Come to think of it,” said she, “it _is_ money--in a way. It’s
-about--our parents.” She gave a deep sigh. “Godfrey, they hang over me
-like a nightmare!”
-
-Her tragic seriousness amused me. “Oh, cheer up,” said I, kissing her.
-“They certainly don’t fit in with our stylishness. But they’re away off
-there in Passaic, and bother us as little as we bother them. The truth
-is, Edna, we’ve not acted right. We’ve been selfish--spending all our
-prosperity on ourselves. Of course, they’ve got everything they really
-want, but--well----”
-
-“That’s exactly it,” said she eagerly. “My conscience has been hurting
-me. We ought to--to-- It wouldn’t cost much to make them perfectly
-comfortable--so they’d not have to work--and could get away from the
-grocery--and the--and the”--she hesitated before saying “father’s
-business,” as if nerving herself to pronounce words of shame. And when
-she did finally force out the evading “father’s business,” it was with
-such an accent that I couldn’t help laughing outright.
-
-“Undertaking’s a good-paying business,” said I. “We certainly ought to
-be grateful to it. It supplied the eight thousand dollars that gave me
-the chance to buy half the rolling mill. And you know the rolling mill
-was the start of our fortune.”
-
-“Do you think father could be induced to retire?” she asked.
-
-“Never,” said I. “Your father’s a rich man, for Passaic. He’s got two
-hundred thousand at least hived away in tenements that pay from twenty
-to thirty-five per cent. And his business now brings in ten to fifteen
-thousand a year straight along.”
-
-“You can make _your_ father retire?”
-
-I laughed. “Poor dad! I’ve been keeping him from being retired by the
-sheriff. He’s squeezing out a bare living. He’d be delighted to stop
-and have all his time for talking politics and religion.”
-
-“You could buy them a nice place a little way out in the country, on
-some quiet road. I’m sure your mother and your old maid sister would
-love it.”
-
-“Perhaps,” said I. “If it wasn’t _too_ quiet.”
-
-“But it must be quiet. And we’ll induce my father and mother to buy a
-place near by.”
-
-“Your father’ll not give up the business.”
-
-“I’ve thought it all out,” said Edna, whose mind was equal to whatever
-task she gave it. “You must get some one to offer him a price he simply
-can’t refuse, and make a condition that he shall not go into business
-again. Aren’t those things done?”
-
-I was somewhat surprised, but not much, at the knowledge of business
-this displayed. “Why!--Why!” laughed I. “And you pretend to know
-nothing about business!”
-
-She was in a sensible, loving mood that day. So she said with a quiet
-little laugh: “I make it a point to know anything that’s useful to me.
-I don’t know much about business. Why should I bother with it? I’ve got
-confidence in you.”
-
-It was not the first time I had got a peep into her mind and had
-seen how she looked on everyone, including me, as a wheel in her
-machine, and never interfered unless the wheel didn’t work to suit
-her. I laughed delightedly. There was something charmingly feminine,
-thought I, about this point of view so upside down. “Yes, I guess your
-father’ll jump for the bait you suggest,” said I. “But why disturb him?
-He loves his undertaking.”
-
-She shivered.
-
-“And he’ll be miserable idling about.”
-
-“Oh, I guess he’ll get along all right,” said she, with sarcasm and
-with truth. “He’ll devote himself to suing his tenants and counting his
-money.... Godfrey, you simply must get those people in Passaic out of
-our way. I’ve been a little nervous over here, though I knew that none
-of these dreadful people we associate with has anything better in the
-way of family than us, and some have a lot worse. Oh, it’s _frightful_
-to have parents one’s ashamed of!”
-
-I think I blushed. I’m sure I looked away to avoid seeing her
-expression. “It’s frightful to be ashamed of one’s parents,” said I.
-
-“Now don’t be hypocritical,” cried she. “You know perfectly well you
-are ashamed of your parents, as I am of mine.”
-
-“I’ll admit,” said I, “that if they showed up at the office, I’d be
-a bit upset and would feel apologetic. But I’m ashamed of myself for
-feeling that way.”
-
-“If you only realized about things,” said she, which was her phrase for
-hitting at me as lacking in refined instincts, “you’d not be ashamed of
-yourself, but would frankly suffer. They are a disgrace to us.”
-
-“They’re honest people, well meaning, and as good as the best in every
-essential way,” said I. “Believe me, Edna, the fault isn’t in them.
-It’s in us. Suppose you found some day that Margot was ashamed of you
-and me.”
-
-“But she’ll not be,” retorted Edna. “I for one will see to it that she
-has no cause to be anything but proud.”
-
-I couldn’t but admit that there were two sides to the problem of our
-parents. It was shameful to be ashamed of them. But it was also human.
-I couldn’t--and can’t--utterly damn in Edna a fault, a vulgar weakness,
-I myself had, and almost everyone I knew. No doubt, gentle reader,
-you are scandalized and disgusted. But one of my objects in relating
-this whole story is to scandalize and to disgust you. You have had too
-much consideration at the hands of writers--you and your hypocritical
-virtues and your hysterical nerves. If you are an American, you are
-probably far in advance of your parents in worldly knowledge, in
-education, in every way except perhaps manly and womanly self-respect.
-For along with your progress has come an infection of snobbishness and
-toadyism that seems in some mysterious way inseparable from higher
-civilization. So be shocked and disgusted with Edna and me, and don’t
-turn your hypocritical eyes inward on your own secret thoughts and
-actions about your own humble parents. Above all, don’t learn from
-this horrifying episode a decenter mode of thinking and feeling--_and_
-acting.
-
-“We must get them out of the way before we move to New York,” said
-Edna. “Ever since Margot began at Mrs. Ryper’s I’ve been on pins and
-needles. You don’t know how malicious fashionable people are. Why, some
-of them who have nothing to do might at any time run out to Passaic and
-see for themselves.”
-
-Edna was sitting up in my lap, gazing at me with wide harassed-looking
-eyes. I burst out laughing. “They might take a camera along, and get
-some snapshots,” I suggested.
-
-Edna’s face contracted with horror and her form grew limp and weak.
-“My God!” she cried. “So they might. Godfrey, we must attend to it at
-once.”
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-I have never been able to come to a satisfactory verdict as to the
-intelligence of the human race. Is it stupid, or is it, rather,
-sluggish? Is it unable to think, or does it refuse to think? Does it
-believe the follies it pretends to believe and usually acts upon, or is
-it the victim of its own willful prejudices and hypocrisies? Never have
-I decided that a certain man or woman was practically witless, but that
-he or she has confounded me by saying or doing something indicating
-shrewdness or even wisdom.
-
-The women are especially difficult to judge. Take Edna, for example.
-
-It was impossible to interest her in anything worth while. But as to
-the things in which she was interested, none could have thought more
-clearly or keenly, or could have acted with more vigor and effect. I
-have often made serious blunders--inexcusable blunders--in managing
-my own affairs. To go no further, my management of my family would
-have convicted me of imbecility before any court not made up of
-good-natured, indifferent, woman-worshiping, woman-despising American
-husbands. Yes, I have made the stupidest blunders in all creation. But
-I cannot recall a single notable blunder made by Edna in the matters
-which alone she deemed worthy of her attention. She decided what she
-wanted. She moved upon it by the best route, whether devious or direct
-or a combination of the two. And she always got it.
-
-You may say her success was due to the fact that her objects were
-trivial. But if you will think a moment, you will appreciate that a
-thing’s triviality does not necessarily make it easy to attain. As much
-energy and skill may be shown in winning a sham battle as in winning a
-real. Still, I suppose minds are cast in molds of various sizes, and
-one cast in a small mold can deal only with the small. And I guess
-that, from whatever cause, the minds of women are of diverse kinds of
-smaller molds. Perhaps this is the result of bad education. Perhaps
-better education will correct it. I do not know. I can speak only of
-what is--of Edna as she is and always has been.
-
-Having made up her mind to fell the genealogical tree, that an
-artificial one might be stood up in its place, she lost no time in
-getting into action.
-
-It was on the Sunday following our talk--the earliest possible
-day--that she took me for the first visit we had made our parents
-in nearly three years. We had sent them presents. We had written
-them letters. We had received painfully composed and ungrammatical
-replies--these received both for Edna and myself at my office, because
-she feared the servants would pry into periodically arriving exhibits
-of illiteracy. We had written them of coming and bringing Margot with
-us. We had received suggestions of their coming to see us, which Edna
-had evaded by such excuses as that we were moving or that she or
-Margot was not well or that the cook had abruptly deserted. The world
-outside Passaic was a vague place to our old fathers and mothers. Their
-own immediate affairs kept them busy. So with no sense of deliberate
-alienation on their side and small and mildly intermittent sense of it
-on our side, the months and the years passed without our seeing one
-another.
-
-Edna announced to me the intended visit only an hour before we started.
-It was a habit of hers--a clever habit, too--never to take anyone into
-her confidence about her plans until the right moment--that is, the
-moment when execution was so near at hand that discussion would seem
-futile. At a quarter before nine on that Sunday morning she said:
-
-“Don’t dress for church. This is a good day to make that trip to
-Passaic.”
-
-“We’ll go by Miss Ryper’s for Margot,” said I. “How the old people will
-stare when they see her!”
-
-Edna looked at me as if I had suddenly uncovered unmistakable evidence
-of my insanity. Then I who had clean forgot her foolish notions
-remembered. “But why not?” I urged. “It will give them so much
-pleasure.”
-
-“Trash!” ejaculated she. “They don’t care a rap about her. They can’t,
-as they’ve not seen her since she was a baby. And Margot would suffer
-horribly. I think it would be wicked to give a sweet, happy young girl
-a horrible shock.”
-
-This grotesque view of the effect of the sight of grandparents upon a
-grandchild struck me as amusing. But there was no echo of my laughter
-in the disgusted face of my wife. I sobered and said: “Yes, it would
-give her a shock. We’ve made a mistake, bringing her up in that way.”
-
-“Too late to discuss it now,” said Edna.
-
-“I suppose so,” I could not but agree. “I guess the mischief’s done
-beyond repair.”
-
-Said Edna: “Have you any sense of--of them being _your_ father and
-mother?”
-
-“Rather,” said I. “My childhood is very vivid to me, and not at all
-disagreeable.”
-
-“It seems to me like a bad dream--unreal, and to be forgotten as
-quickly as I can.”
-
-She said this with a fine, spiritual look in her eyes, and I must say
-that Edna, refined, delicately beautiful, fashionably dressed, speaking
-her English with an elegant accent, did not suggest fusty-dusty,
-queer-looking Weeping Willie with his hearse and funeral coaches, his
-embalming apparatus and general appearance of animated casket, nor yet
-fat, sloppy Ma Wheatlands, always in faded wrappers and with holes cut
-in her shoes for her bunions.
-
-“Wear your oldest business suit,” said Edna, coming back to earth from
-the contemplation of her own elevation and grandeur. “I shall dress as
-quietly as I dare. We mustn’t arouse the suspicions of the servants.”
-
-Edna’s fooleries amused me. I didn’t then appreciate the dangers of
-tolerating and laughing at the bad habits of a fascinating child.
-If I had, little good I’d have accomplished, I suspect. However, I
-got myself up as Edna directed, and when I saw how it irritated her
-I stopped making such remarks as: “Shall I wear a collar? Hadn’t I
-better sneak out the back way and join you at the ferry?” I should
-have liked to get some fun out of our doings; that would have taken
-at least the saw edge off my feelings of self-contempt. I am not fond
-of hypocrisy, yet for that one occasion I should have welcomed the
-familiar human shamming and faking in such matters. But Edna would put
-the thing through like one of her father’s funerals. As we, in what
-was practically disguise, issued forth, she said loudly enough for the
-cocking ear of a maid who chanced to be in the front hall:
-
-“Anyhow, the country dust won’t spoil these clothes. I’m so glad it’s
-clear. How charming the woods will look.”
-
-Just enough to deceive. Edna expanded upon her cleverness in never
-saying too much, because saying too much always started people,
-especially servants, to thinking. But she abruptly checked her flow of
-self-praise as we seated ourselves in the ferry and she looked about.
-There, not a dozen seats away, loomed our cook! Yes, no mistake, it was
-our Mary, “gotten up regardless” for a Sunday outing.
-
-“Do you see Mary?” said my wife.
-
-“She’s the most conspicuous female in sight,” said I. “She’s a credit
-to us.”
-
-“I must have been mad,” groaned Edna, “to give her a holiday! Always
-the way. I never do a generous, kind-hearted thing that I don’t have to
-pay for it.”
-
-“I don’t follow you,” said I.
-
-“She hates us,” explained Edna. “Cooks--Irish cooks--invariably hate
-the families they draw wages from. She’s dogging us.”
-
-“Nonsense,” said I. “She probably hasn’t even seen us.”
-
-But Edna was not listening; she was contriving. “We must let her leave
-the boat ahead of us. Pretend not to see her.”
-
-I obeyed orders. In the Jersey City train shed we, lagging behind, saw
-her take a train bound for a different destination from ours. Much
-relieved, Edna led the way to the Passaic train. Hardly were we seated
-when in at the door of the coach hurried our Mary, excited and blown.
-She came beaming down the aisle. Edna saluted her graciously and calmly.
-
-“I got in the wrong train,” said Mary. “It’d never have took me
-nowheres near my cousin in Passaic.”
-
-Edna’s composure was admirable. Said I, when Mary had passed on, “Now
-what, my dear?”
-
-“You see she _is_ dogging us,” replied Edna. “I’ve not a doubt she
-knows all about us.”
-
-“I don’t _think_ she’s got a camera,” said I. “Still, they make them
-very small nowadays.”
-
-“We shall have to go on in the train, and return home from the station
-beyond,” said Edna.
-
-“Do as you like,” said I. “But as for me, I get off at Passaic and go
-to see the old folks.”
-
-“Please stop your joking,” said Edna. “If you had any pride you
-couldn’t joke.”
-
-“I am serious,” said I. “I shall go to see mother and father.”
-
-“No doubt her cousin lives in the same part of the slums,” said Edna.
-“Oh, it is _hideous_!”
-
-I don’t know what possessed me--whether a fit of indigestion and
-obstinacy or a sudden access of sense of decency as I approached my old
-home. Whatever it was, it moved me to say: “My dear, this nonsense has
-gone far enough. We will do what we set out to do.”
-
-“Not I,” said Edna.
-
-“Then I’ll drop off at Passaic alone, and hire a trap, and give Mary
-a seat in it as far as her cousin’s. I’m not proud of my parents, the
-more shame to me. But there’s a limit to my ability to degrade myself.”
-
-Edna and I had not lived together all those years without her learning
-the tone I use when I will not be trifled with. She did not argue. She
-sat silent and pale beside me. When the train stopped at Passaic she
-followed me from the car. Mary descended ahead of us and moved off at
-as brisk a pace as tight corsets and stiff new shoes would permit, in a
-direction exactly opposite that we were to take.
-
-“Aren’t you glad we didn’t go on?” said I, eager to make it up.
-
-She made no reply. She maintained haughty and injured silence until we
-were within sight of the houses. Then she said curtly:
-
-“I’ll do the talking about our plans for them.”
-
-“That’ll be best,” said I, most conciliatory.
-
-I had not intended to say this. There had been a half-formed resolution
-in my mind to oppose those plans. But her anger roused in me such a
-desire to pacify her that I promptly yielded, where, I must in honesty
-confess, I was little short of indifferent. American husbands have the
-reputation of being the most docile and the worst henpecked men in
-the world. All foreigners say so, and our women believe it. In fact,
-nothing could be further from the truth. The docility of American
-husbands is the good nature of indifference. A friend of mine has the
-habit of saying that his most valued and most valuable possession is
-his long list of things he cares not a rap about. It is a typically
-American and luminous remark. The men of other nations agitate over
-trifles, love to have the sense of being master at home--usually their
-one and only chance for a free swing at the joyous feeling of being
-boss. The American man, absorbed in his important work at office or
-factory, and not caring especially about anything else, lets thieving
-politicians rule in public affairs, lets foolish, incompetent women
-rule in domestic affairs. He has a half-conscious philosophy that he
-is shrewd enough, if he attends to his business, to make money faster
-than they can take it away from him, and that, if he does not attend to
-his business only, he will have nothing either for thieving politician
-and spendthrift wife or for himself. If you wish to discover how little
-there is in the notion of his docility, meddle with something he really
-cares about. Many a political rascal, many a shiftless wife, has done
-it and has gotten a highly disagreeable surprise.
-
-Perhaps what I saw had as much to do with my tame acquiescence in my
-wife’s projects as my desire to have peace between her and me, when
-peace meant yielding what only a vague and feeble filial impulse moved
-me to contest. I had what I thought was a clear and vivid memory of my
-natal place and Edna’s--how the two houses looked, how small and shabby
-they were, how mean their surroundings, how plain their interiors. But
-as we drove up I discovered that memory had been pleasantly deceiving
-me. Could these squalid hovels, these tiny, hideous boxes set in two
-dismal weedy oblongs of unkempt yards--could these be our old homes?
-And the bent old laboring man and his wife--we had drawn up in front of
-my home--could they be _my_ father and _my_ mother?
-
-A feeling of sickness, of nausea came over me. Not from repulsion for
-my parents--thank God, I had not sunk that low. But from abhorrence
-of myself, so degraded by the “higher world” into which prosperity
-and Edna’s ambitions had dragged me that I could look down upon the
-gentle old man and the patient, loving old woman to whom I owed life
-and a fair start in the world. My blood burned and my eyes sank as they
-greeted me, their homely old hands trembling, their mouths distorted
-by emotion and age and missing teeth. I turned away while they were
-kissing Edna, for I felt I should hate her and loathe myself if I saw
-the expression that must be in her face.
-
-“There are my father and mother!” she cried in a suffocating voice. And
-we three Lorings were watching her hurry across the yard and through
-the gap in the fence between the two places. My sister came forward.
-We kissed each other as awkwardly as two strangers. I looked at her
-dazedly. Mary, our cook, was an imposing looking lady beside this
-thin-haired, coarse-featured old maid. In embarrassed silence we four
-entered the house. I am not tall nor in the least fat, yet I had an
-uncontrollable impulse to stoop and to squeeze as I entered the squat
-and narrow doorway. That miserable little “parlor!”
-
-As we sat silent my roving glance at last sought my mother’s face. Oh,
-the faces, the masks, with which freakish and so often savagely ironic
-fate covers and hides our souls, making fair seem foul and foul seem
-fair, making beauty repellent and ugliness seem beautiful. Suddenly
-through that plain, time- and toil-scarred mask, through those dim,
-sunken eyes, I saw her soul--her mother’s heart--looking at me. And the
-tears poured into my eyes. “Mother!” I sobbed in a choking voice, and
-I put my arms round her and nestled against her heart, a boy again--a
-bad boy with a streak of good in him. I felt how proud she--they
-all--were of me, the son and brother, who had gone forth and fulfilled
-the universal American dream of getting up in the world. I hoped, I
-prayed that they would not realize what a poor creature I was, with my
-snobbish shame.
-
-There was an awkward, rambling attempt at talk. But we had nothing
-to talk about--nothing in common. I happened to think of our not
-having brought Margot; how shameful it was, yet how glad I felt, and
-how self-contemptuous for being glad. To break that awful silence I
-enlarged upon Margot--her beauty, her cleverness.
-
-“She must be like Polly”--my sister’s name was Polly--“like Polly was
-at her age,” observed my mother.
-
-I looked at Polly Ann, in whose faded face and withered form--faded and
-withered though she was not yet forty, was in fact but seven or eight
-years older than I. Like Polly! I could speak no more of Margot, the
-delicate loveliness of a rare, carefully reared hot-house exotic. Yes,
-exotic; for the girls and the women brought up in the super-refinements
-of prosperous class silliness seem foreign to this world--and are.
-
-A few minutes that seemed hours, and Edna came in, her father and
-mother limping and hobbling in her train. Edna was sickly pale and her
-eyelids refused to rise. I shook hands with old Willie Wheatlands,
-hesitated, then kissed the fat, sallow, swinging cheek of my
-mother-in-law. Said Edna in a hard, forced voice:
-
-“I’ve explained that Margot isn’t well and that we’ve got to get
-back----”
-
-“Mercy me!” cried my mother. “Ain’t you going to stay to supper?”
-
-Supper! It was only half-past twelve. Supper could not be until five or
-half-past. We had been there half an hour and already conversation was
-exhausted and time had become motionless.
-
-“We intended to,” said Edna. “But Margot wasn’t at all well when we
-left. We simply can’t stay away long. We’d not have come, but we felt
-we’d never get here if we kept on letting things interfere.”
-
-“You didn’t leave Margy _alone_?” demanded Edna’s mother.
-
-“Almost,” said Edna. “Only a--a servant.”
-
-“Oh, you keep a nurse girl, too,” said Polly. “I thought Edna didn’t
-look as if she did any of her own work.”
-
-“Yes, I have a--a girl, in addition to the cook,” replied Edna,
-flushing as she thus denied three of her five servants--flushing not
-because of the denial, but because in her confession she had almost
-forgotten about the numerous excuses based on the cook. “Godfrey has
-been doing very well, and we felt we could afford it.”
-
-“Better get rid of her,” advised old Willie sourly. “And of the cook,
-too. Servant girls is mighty wasteful.”
-
-“And she’ll teach Margy badness,” said my mother. “Them servants is
-full of poison. Even if yer pa’d had money I’d never have allowed no
-servant round my children, no more’n a snake in the cradle. I hope
-she’s a good Christian, and not a Catholic?”
-
-“She’s all right,” declared Edna nervously. “But we’ll have to be going
-soon.”
-
-“Yes; that there girl might git drunk,” said Mrs. Wheatlands.
-
-“And set fire to the house maybe,” said my mother. “I heard of a case
-just last week.”
-
-“I wish you hadn’t said that,” cried Edna, her tones of protest more
-like jubilation. “I’ll be wretched until I’m home again.”
-
-Mother told in detail and with rising excitement the story of the
-drunken nurse girl who had burned up herself and her charges, a pair
-of lovely twins. From that moment our families were anxious for us to
-go. The three women could see the girl drunk and the house burning.
-The two grandfathers, while less imaginative, were almost as uneasy.
-Besides, no doubt our families found us full as tiring as we found them.
-
-“But before we go,” said Edna, in a business-like tone, “there’s one
-thing we wanted to talk about. Godfrey has had--that is, he has done
-very well in business. And of course our first thought--one of our
-first thoughts--was what could we do for you all down here. We hate to
-think of your living in this unhealthful part of the town. We want to
-see you settled in some healthful place, up in the hills.”
-
-We were watching the faces of our five kinsfolk. We could make nothing
-of their expression. It was heavy, dull--mere listening, without a hint
-of even comprehension behind.
-
-“We thought you, father, and Mr.--father Loring--might look round and
-find a nice farm with a big comfortable house--plenty big enough for
-you all--and Godfrey will buy it, and will pay for a man and a woman to
-look after you. He has done well, as I said, and he can afford it. In
-fact, they’ve made him president of the railroad.”
-
-My father, my mother, and my sister exchanged glances. A long, awed
-silence. Old Willie spoke in his squeaky, stingy voice: “I can’t leave
-my business. I ain’t footless like Loring there. _My_ business pays.”
-
-“You can sell it,” said Edna. “You know you ought to retire. You were
-telling me how bad your health had been.”
-
-“Nobody else couldn’t make nothing like what I make out of it. The men
-growing up nowadays ain’t no account. The no-account women with heads
-full of foolishness leads ’em off.”
-
-Edna agreed with him, pointed out that he’d have to give up soon
-anyhow, appealed to his cupidity for real estate by expanding upon the
-size and value of the farm I was willing to give him. She made a strong
-impression. The women were converted by the prospect of having help
-with the work. My father had long dreamed of a home in the country. He
-had not the imagination to picture how he would be bored, away from the
-loafers with whom he talked politics and religion. “And,” said Edna,
-“you’ll have horses and things to ride in, so you can go where you
-please whenever you please.”
-
-We had roused them. We had dazzled them. It was plain that if a
-purchaser could be found for the Wheatlands undertaking business, Edna
-would carry her point. “Godfrey will look for somebody to take the
-business,” said she to her father. “I want you and Father Loring to
-start out to-morrow morning, and not stop till you’ve found a farm.”
-
-I understood an uncertain gleam in old Willie’s eyes. “About the
-price,” said I, speaking for the first time, “I’m willing to pay
-twenty-five thousand down for the place alone, and as I’ll pay cash,
-you ought to be able on mortgage to get a farm--or two or three
-adjoining farms--that would cost twice that.”
-
-The two families were dumbfounded.
-
-“I know I can trust you, Mr. Wheatlands, to get the money’s worth.”
-
-“Buy a big place,” said Edna, of the unexpected timely shrewdnesses.
-“Go back from the main roads where land’s so dear.”
-
-Wheatlands nodded. “That’s a good idea,” said he. “There’ll be plenty
-of roads after a while.”
-
-Edna was ready to depart. “Then it’s settled?” said she.
-
-Her father nodded. “I’m willing to see what can be done. But I’d rather
-not have Ben Loring along. He’d interfere with a good bargain.”
-
-“Yes, you go alone, Willie,” said my father. “Anyhow, I’ve got to ’tend
-store. I can’t afford a boy any more.”
-
-The mention of the, to them, enormous sum of money had put them in a
-state of awe as to Edna and me. It saddened me to observe how quickly
-the weed of snobbishness, whose seeds are in all human nature, sprang
-up and dominated the whole garden. They lost the sense of our blood
-kinship with them. They felt that we, able to dispense such splendid
-largess, were of a superior order of being. And I saw that my and
-Edna’s feeling of strangeness toward them was intimacy beside the
-feeling of strangeness toward us which they now had. In my dealings
-with my fellow beings I have often noted this sort of thing--that the
-snobbishness of those who look down is a weak and hesitating impulse
-which would soon die out but for the encouragement it gets from the
-snobbishness of those who look up. I read somewhere, “Caste is made by
-those who look up, not by those who look down.” That is a great truth,
-and like most great, simple, obvious truths is usually overlooked.
-
-Looking back I see that my own first decisive impulse toward the caste
-feeling came that day, came when my people and Edna’s, discovering that
-we were rich, began to treat us as lower class treats upper class.
-
-My mother had been scrutinizing me for signs of the majesty of wealth.
-“Why don’t you wear a beard, or leastways a mustache, Godfrey?” she
-finally inquired. “Then you wouldn’t seem so boyish like.”
-
-“I used to wear a mustache,” said I, “but I cut it off because--I don’t
-recall why.”
-
-In fact I did recall. I noted one day that I had a good mouth and
-better teeth than most men have. And it came to me how absurd it was
-to hang a bunch of hair from my upper lip to trail in the soup and to
-embalm the odors of past cigars for the discomfort of my nose. Edna
-kept after me for a time to let it grow again. But reading in some
-novel she regarded as authoritative that mustaches were “common,” she
-desisted. And I found my boyish appearance highly useful. It led men to
-underestimate me--a signal advantage in the contests of wit against wit
-in which I daily engaged with a view to wrenching a fortune for myself
-away from my fellow men.
-
-My mother went on to urge me to make my face look older and more
-formidable. Now that she had learned what a grand person I was she
-feared others would not realize it. Edna, who, as I have said,
-was shrewdness personified where her own interests were involved,
-immediately saw the dangerous bearings of this newly aroused vanity
-of our kin. “I forgot to caution you,” said she, “not to mention our
-prosperity. If we were talked about now, it might be lost entirely.
-The only reason Godfrey and I came to you so soon with the news of it
-was because we wanted to do something for you right away. And we knew
-we could trust you not to get us into trouble. Don’t talk about us. If
-you hear people talking, if they ask you questions, pretend you don’t
-understand and don’t know. You see, it may be spies from our enemies.”
-
-One glance round that circle of eager faces was enough to convince that
-Edna had made precisely the impression she desired. I could see that my
-mother and old Weeping Willie, the shrewd of the five--the two to whom
-Edna and I owed most by inheritance--were prepared to deny knowing us
-if that would aid in safeguarding the precious prosperity. My father
-and sister were obviously disappointed that they could not go about
-boasting of our magnificence and getting from the neighbors the envy
-and respect due the near relations of a plutocrat. But there was no
-danger of their being indiscreet; Edna could breathe freely. And when
-the two families were tucked away in the midst of a large and secluded
-farm, she could tell what genealogical stories she pleased without fear
-of being confounded by the truth.
-
-By three o’clock we were back in Brooklyn. Edna felt and looked
-triumphant. The crowning of the day’s work had been small but
-significant. A heavy rain storm that came up while we were on the way
-back must have made the servants think we had cut short our woodland
-outing. As we were going to bed that might Edna roused herself from
-deep study and broke a long silence with, “I hesitated whether to tell
-them you had become president of the road.”
-
-I had noted that seeming slip of hers, so unlike her cautious reticence.
-
-“Then I remembered they’d be sure to see it in the papers,” continued
-she. “And I decided it was best to tell and quiet them.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-While the old folks were industriously settling themselves in the
-New Jersey woods-- Here let me relieve my mind by saying a few words
-in mitigation of the unfilial and snobbish conduct of Edna and me. I
-admit we deserve nothing but condemnation. I admit I am more to blame
-than she because I could have compelled her to act better toward our
-families, though of course I could not have changed her feelings--or my
-own, for that matter. But, as often happens in this world, the thing
-that was in motive shameful turned out well. We and our families had
-grown hopelessly apart. Intercourse with them could not but have been
-embarrassing and uncomfortable for both sides. When we got them the
-farm, got them away from the malarial and squalid part of Passaic into
-a healthful region where they lived in much better health and in a
-comfort they could appreciate, we did the best possible thing for them,
-as well as for ourselves. Do not think for a moment that because I am
-ashamed of my snobbish motives I am therefore advocating the keeping
-up of irksome and absurd ties merely out of wormy sentimentality. It
-has always seemed to me, when we have but the one chance at life, the
-one chance to make the best of our talents and opportunities, that
-only moral or mental weakness, or both, would waste the one chance in
-the bondage of outworn ties. When one has outgrown any association,
-lop it off relentlessly, say I. If the living lets the dying cling to
-it, the dying does not live but the living dies. If you are associated
-with anyone in any way--business, social, ties of affection, whatever
-you please--and if you do not wish to lose that one, then keep yourself
-alive and abreast of him or her. And if you let yourself begin to decay
-and find yourself cut away, whose is the fault, if fault there be?
-We--Edna and I--perhaps did not do all we might to make our outgrown
-families happy; I say perhaps, though I am by no means sure that we did
-not do all that was in our power, for they certainly would have got no
-pleasure out of seeing more of two people so uncongenial to them in
-every respect. At any rate, we did not leave our families to starve or
-to suffer. Hard though my charming, lovely wife was, I cannot conceive
-her sinking to that depth. On the whole, I feel that we could honestly
-say we took the right course with them. That is, we helped them without
-hindering ourselves. We did the right thing, though not in the right
-way.
-
-While our families were choosing a farm, were fixing up the buildings
-to suit their needs and tastes, were moving themselves from their
-ancient haunts, Edna was as industriously busy making far deeper
-inroads on the new prosperity. She was planning the conquest of New
-York.
-
-Every day in the year many a suddenly enriched family is busy about
-the same enterprise. Families from the less fashionable parts of the
-city moving to the fashionable parts. Families from other cities and
-towns--east, west, north, and south--advancing to social conquest under
-the leadership of mammas and daughters tired of shining in obscure,
-monotonous, and unappreciative places. There are I forget how many
-thousands of millionaires on Manhattan Island; enough, I know, with the
-near millionaires and those living like millionaires, to make a city of
-three or four hundred thousand, not including servants and parasites.
-Not all of these have the fashionable craze; at least, they haven’t
-it in its worst form--the form in which it possessed my wife. All the
-acute sufferers must find suitable lodgments near Fifth Avenue if not
-in it.
-
-Now New York is ever ready to receive and to “trim” the arriving
-millionaire. It has all kinds of houses and apartments to meet the
-peculiarities of his--or, rather, of his wife’s and daughter’s--notions
-of grandeur. It has a multitude of purveyors of furnishings and
-decorations likewise designed to catch crude and grandiose tastes. My
-wife was busy with these gentry.
-
-“Don’t you think we’d better go a little slow?” said I. “Why not live
-in a hotel on Manhattan and look about us?”
-
-I had respect for my wife’s capacity at the woman side of the game;
-she had thoroughly drilled me to more than generous appreciation of
-it. But at the same time I was not so blinded by her charm for me or
-so convinced by her insistent and plausible egotism that I had not
-noted certain minor failures of hers due to her ignorance of the art
-of spending money. She was clever at learning. But often her vanity
-lured her into fancying she knew, when in fact her education in that
-particular direction was all miseducation. She dressed much more
-giddily in our first years in Brooklyn than she did afterwards. And in
-the later years she made still further discoveries as to dress that
-resulted in another revolution, away from quietness, not toward the
-gaudy but toward smartness--that curious quality which makes a woman’s
-toilet conspicuous without the least suggestion of the loud.
-
-However, Edna scorned my suggestion that she make haste slowly. She
-had long been engaged in a thorough study of the mode of life in
-millionairedom. Newspapers, Sunday supplements, magazines, and society
-novels had helped her. She had examined the exteriors of the famous
-palaces. She had got into the drawing-rooms and ballrooms of two or
-three palaces by way of high-priced charity tickets. She had in one
-instance roamed into sitting rooms, bedrooms, bathrooms until caught
-and led back by some vigilant and unbribable servant. I wonder if she
-ever recalls that adventure now! Probably not. I think I have recorded
-her ability absolutely to forget whatever it pleases her not to
-remember. She had been educating herself, so when I suggested caution,
-she replied:
-
-“Don’t you fret, Godfrey. I know what I’m about. I’ll get what we’ve
-got to have.”
-
-And I’ll concede that she did--also, that I thought it overwhelmingly
-grand at the time. It was a house in a fashionable side street,
-between Madison avenue and Fifth--a magnificent house built for exactly
-such a family as mine. That is, it was built entirely for show and not
-at all for comfort; it fairly bristled with the luxuries and “modern
-conveniences,” but most of them were of the sort that looks comfortable
-but is not. The rent was some preposterous sum--thirty-five or forty
-thousand a year. We had room enough for the housing of nearly a hundred
-people, counting servants as people, which I believe is not the custom.
-It was fitted throughout in the fashion which those clever leeches who
-think out and sell luxuries have in all ages imposed upon the rich man
-because it means money in their pockets. Once in a while you find a
-rich man who has the courage to live as he pleases, but most of them
-live as the fashion commands. And many of them have no idea that there
-is any less comfortless and less foolish way to live. You imagine,
-gentle reader, that people with money live in beauty and comfort. You
-imagine that you could do it also if you had but the wealth. Believe
-me, you deceive yourself. Beyond question a certain amount of money is
-necessary to the getting of attractive and comfortable surroundings.
-But there is another, an equally indispensable and a far rarer factor.
-That factor, gentle reader, is intelligence--knowledge of the resources
-of civilization, knowledge of the realities as to comfort, luxury, and
-taste.
-
-I am tempted to linger upon the details of the extravagance of that
-first big establishment of Edna’s. It was so astounding and so
-ridiculous. I saw that she had delivered us and our fortune over
-to hordes of crafty, thirsty bloodsuckers--merchants, tradesmen,
-servants. But her heart was set upon it, and all other rich people were
-living in that same way. “You want to do the right thing by Margot,
-don’t you?” said she.
-
-“By you and Margot,” said I. “Go ahead. I guess I can find the money.”
-
-I shan’t here go into the ways I discovered or invented for finding
-that money. They were not too scrupulous, but neither were they
-commercially dishonorable. I must smile there. Being of an inquiring
-and jocose mind I have often tried to find an action that, in the
-opinion of the most eminent commercial authorities, was absolutely
-dishonorable. Never yet have I found a single action, however wrong
-and even criminal in general, that they would not declare in certain
-circumstances perfectly honorable. And those “certain circumstances”
-could always be boiled down to the one circumstance--needing the money.
-
-I can’t recall exactly how many servants we had to wait on us two, but
-it was about thirty-five. I remember hearing my wife say one month that
-our meat bill alone was about a thousand dollars. For a time I fancied
-we were living more grandly than anyone else in town. But it soon
-revealed itself to me that, as things went with “our class,” we were
-leading rather a simple life. Certainly nothing we did marked us out
-from the others in that region. The sum totals suggested that servants
-stood at the front windows all day long tossing money into the street.
-But nothing of the kind occurred. You would have said we ate the finest
-food in wholesale quantities. Yet never did I get a notably good meal
-at my own house. The coffee was always poor. The fruit was below the
-average of sidewalk stands. We often had cold-storage fowls and fish
-on the table. We paid for the best; I’m sure we paid for it many times
-over. We got--what one always gets when the wife is too intellectual
-and too busy to attend to her business. But I assure you it was grandly
-served. The linen and the dishes were royal, the servants were in
-liveries of impressive color and form--though I could have wished that
-my wife had been as sensitive to odors as I was, and had compelled
-some of those magnificent gentry to do a little bathing. Throughout
-the establishment the same superb scale was maintained. We lived like
-the rest of the millionaires, neither better nor worse. We lived in
-grandeur and discomfort. But my wife was ecstatic, and I was therefore
-content. Yes, we were very grand. And, as in Brooklyn, the glasses
-came to the table with a certain sour odor not alluring as you lifted
-them to drink--the odor that causes an observant man or woman to say,
-“Aha--dirty rags in this perfect lady’s kitchen--dirty rags and all
-that goes with them.” But only a snarling cynic would complain of these
-vulgar trifles. There’s always at least a fly leg in the ointment.
-
-“Didn’t I tell you I knew what I was about?” said Edna triumphantly.
-
-“You did,” said I.
-
-“Haven’t we got what we wanted?”
-
-“We have,” said I, perhaps somewhat abruptly, for I was just then
-wondering how the devil we were going to keep it.
-
-“And if it hadn’t been for me,” proceeded she “we’d still be living in
-_Brooklyn_!”
-
-“Or in Passaic,” said I.
-
-“Don’t _speak_ of Passaic,” she cried. “I’m trying to forget it.”
-
-“We were very happy then,” said I.
-
-“_I_ was miserable,” retorted she.
-
-“I could find it in my heart to wish we weren’t _always_ attended by
-servants,” said I. “I almost never see you alone.”
-
-“What a bourgeois you are,” laughed she. Then--after a thorough glance
-round to make sure housekeeper or maid or lackey wasn’t on watch--she
-patted my cheek and kissed me, and added: “But you do make me happy.
-I’m _so_ proud of you! No matter what I want I’m never afraid to buy
-it, for I know you can get all the money you want to.”
-
-I winced. Said I: “I’m afraid you’d not be proud of some of the ways I
-get the money.”
-
-She frowned. “Don’t talk business, please,” she said. “You know we
-never have in all our married life. You’ve always respected my position
-as your wife. All business is low--is mere sordidness.”
-
-“Yes, it’s all low,” said I. “Sometimes I think all living is low as
-well. Edna”--I put my arm round her--“don’t you ever feel that we’d be
-_really_ happy, that we’d get something genuine out of life--if you and
-Margot and I----”
-
-She stopped my mouth with a kiss. “You never will grow up to your
-station, darling.”
-
-I said no more. Indeed, it was on hastiest impulse that I had said so
-much, an impulse sprung from a mood of depression.
-
-The cause of that mood was a nasty reverse in Wall Street. It had
-rudely halted me in my triumphant way toward the security of the man of
-many millions. It had set me to wavering uncertainly, with the chances
-about even for resuming the march and for tumbling into the abyss of a
-discreditable bankruptcy.
-
-There are in New York two well-defined classes of the rich--the
-permanently rich and the precariously rich. The permanently rich are
-those who by the vastness of their wealth or by the strength of their
-business and social connections cannot possibly be dislodged from the
-plutocracy. The precariously rich are those who have much money and are
-making more, but are not strong enough to survive a series of typhoons,
-and are without the support of indissoluble business and social
-connections. My friend G----, for example, head of the famous banking
-house, associated in business and by marriage with half the permanent
-plutocracy, was practically bankrupt in the late panic. Had he been a
-man of ordinary position he would have gone into bankruptcy, and, I
-more than suspect, into jail. But his fellow plutocrats dared not let
-him drop, much as they would have liked to see his arrogance brought
-low, much as they longed to divide among themselves his holdings of
-gilt-edged securities; if he had gone down it would have made the whole
-financial world tremble. He was saved. On the other hand, my friend
-J----, richer actually, was ruined, was plucked by his associates, was
-finally jailed for doing precisely the things every man of finance did
-over and over again in that same period of stress--for, what invariably
-happens to moral codes in periods of stress?
-
-I was at that time--but not now, gentle reader, so cheer up and read
-on--I was at that time in the class not of the permanently but of the
-precariously rich. And through a miscalculation I had laid myself open
-to the dangers that lie in wait for the man short of ready cash. The
-miscalculation was as to the extravagance of my wife’s undertakings.
-She, against my express request, had contracted without consulting or
-telling me several enormous bills. It is idle to say she ought not have
-done this. I knew her well; I should have been on guard. I had begun
-my married life wrong, as the young man very much in love is apt to
-do; so, to hold her love and liking, I had to keep on giving her taste
-for spending money free rein. If I had not, she would have thought me
-small and mean, would have made life at home exceedingly uncomfortable
-for me, for I am not of those men who can take from a woman what they
-wish whether she wishes to give or not. So the whole fault was mine.
-When the storm broke, in the light of its first terrific flash that
-illuminated for me every part of my affairs, I discovered that I was
-not prepared as I had been imagining. The big bills of my wife were
-presented, for the merchants knew I was heavily interested in the
-stocks that were tobogganing. Those bills had to be paid, and paid
-at once, or it would run like wildfire uptown and down that I was in
-difficulties; and when a man is known to be in financial difficulties,
-how the birds and beasts of prey from eagles and lions to buzzards and
-jackals do come flapping and loping!
-
-There followed several anxious days and nights. On one of those
-nights I rose from beside my wife--we still slept together--and went
-into the adjoining room. I turned on an electric light and began for
-the thousandth time, I dare say, to look at the critical papers and
-to grope for the desperate “way out.” I was startled by my wife’s
-voice--sleepy, peevish:
-
-“Do turn out that light and come to bed, Godfrey. You know how it
-disturbs me for you to get up in the night. And I’ve such a hard day
-before me to-morrow with the upholsterers and curtain people.”
-
-I obediently turned off the light. As I was about to throw myself into
-bed and draw the covers over me, a broad beam from the moon flooded
-the face of a portrait on the opposite wall--the face of my daughter
-Margot. I sat on the edge of the bed and looked at that face--pure,
-sweet, with the same elevated expression her mother had in these days
-of refinement and climbing. Said I to Edna:
-
-“Are you asleep, dear?”
-
-“No,” she answered crossly. “I’m waiting for you to quiet down.”
-
-“Then--let me talk to you a few minutes.”
-
-“Oh, please!” she cried, flinging herself to the far edge of the bed.
-“You have no consideration for me--none at all.”
-
-“Listen,” I said. “I’m face to face with ruin.”
-
-She did not move or speak, but I could feel her intense attention.
-
-“If I let matters take their course I can save my reputation and my
-official position. But for many years we’ll have to live quietly--about
-as we did in Brooklyn.”
-
-“I _can’t_ do that,” cried she. “The fall would kill me. You know
-how proud I am.... Just as I had everything ready for us to get into
-society! Godfrey, how could you! And I thought you were clever at
-business.”
-
-I could not see her, nor she me, except in dimmest outline. I said:
-“But we’d have each other and Margot. And my salary isn’t so small, as
-salaries go.”
-
-“Isn’t there _any_ way to avoid it?” She was sitting up in bed, her
-nervous fingers upon my arm. “You must _think_, Godfrey. You mustn’t
-play Margot and me this horrible trick. You mustn’t give up so easily.
-You must think--think--_think_!”
-
-“I have,” said I. “I’ve not slept for three days and nights. There’s no
-way--no honest way.”
-
-“Then there _is_ a way!” she cried.
-
-“But not an honest one.”
-
-She laughed scornfully. “And you pretend to love me! When my life and
-Margot’s happiness are at stake you talk like a Sunday-school boy.”
-
-“Yes,” said I. “And I’ve been thinking more or less that way lately for
-the first time in years. It wasn’t long after I started when I cut my
-business eye teeth. I found out that as the game lay I’d not get far
-if I stuck to the old maxims of the copy book and the Sunday school.
-Except by accident nobody ever got rich who followed them. To get
-rich you’ve got to make a lot of people work for you and work cheap,
-and you’ve got to sell what they make as dear as you can. Success in
-business means taking advantage of the ignorance or the necessities of
-your fellow men, or both.”
-
-“Don’t waste time talking that kind of nonsense,” said she impatiently.
-“It doesn’t mean anything to me--or to anybody, I guess. The thing
-for you to do is to put your mind on the real thing--how to save your
-family and yourself.”
-
-“That’s what I’m talking about,” said I. “I’m talking about saving
-myself and my family. As I told you, my troubles--the first business
-troubles I’ve ever had--have set me to thinking. I’ve not been doing
-right all these years. It’s true, everybody does as I’ve been doing.
-It’s true I’ve been more generous and more considerate than most men
-with opportunities and the sense to see them. But I’ve been doing
-wrong.”
-
-I paused, hoping for some sign of sympathy. None came. I went on:
-
-“And I’ve been wondering these last few days if by doing it I haven’t
-been ruining myself and my family--not financially, but in more
-important ways. Edna, what’s the sense in this life we’re leading? What
-will be the end of it all? Is there any decency or happiness in it?
-Haven’t we been going backward instead of forward?”
-
-All the time I was talking I could feel she was not listening. When I
-finished she said: “Godfrey, what is this way you can escape by?”
-
-“I can sell out my partners in the deals that have gone bad.”
-
-“Perhaps they’re selling _you_ out,” she instantly suggested. “Why, of
-course they are doing that very thing!--while _you_ are driveling about
-honesty like a backwoods hypocrite of a church deacon.”
-
-“No, they’re not selling me out,” said I.
-
-“How do you know?” cried she.
-
-“I caught them at that trick in a former deal and in the early stages
-of this one. And I fixed things so that, while they have to trust me, I
-don’t trust them.”
-
-She laughed mockingly. “Godfrey, I think your mind must be going. You
-talking about sacrificing your fortune and your wife and your child
-for men who’ve tried to ruin you--men who are even now thinking out
-some scheme for doing it.... Suppose you saved yourself and let them
-go--what then? Wouldn’t you be rich? And when you were secure again
-couldn’t you pay them back what they lost if you were still foolish
-enough to think it necessary?”
-
-It was not the first time she had astonished me with the depth of her
-practical insight--and her skill at logic--when she cared to use her
-mind. “I had thought of saving myself and paying back afterwards,” said
-I. “But I’m not sure I’d save myself. It’s simply my one chance.”
-
-“Then you’ve got to take that chance,” said she.
-
-“I didn’t expect you to talk like this,” said I. “The only reason I
-haven’t spoken of my troubles before was that I feared you’d forbid me
-to do what I was being tempted to do.”
-
-And that was the truth about my feeling. I had always heard--and
-had firmly believed--that woman was somehow the exemplar of ideal
-morality, that it was she who kept men from being worse than they were,
-that the evil being done by men pursuing success was done without the
-knowledge of their pure, idealist wives and mothers and daughters. I
-can’t account for my stupidity in this respect. Had I not on every side
-the spectacle that gave the lie to the shallow pretense of feminine
-moral superiority? Was it not the women, with their insatiable appetite
-for luxury and splurge; was it not the women, with their incessant
-demands for money and ever more money; was it not the women, with their
-profound immorality of any and every class that earns nothing and
-simply spends; was it not the women, the _ladies_, who were edging on
-the men to get money, no matter how? For whom were the grand houses,
-the expensive hotels, the exorbitant flimsy clothing, the costly
-jewelry, the equipages, the opera boxes, the senseless, spendthrift
-squandering upon the degrading vanities of social position?
-
-I laughed somewhat cynically. “No wonder you’ve always refused to learn
-anything about business,” said I. “It’s a habit among big business men
-to refuse to know anything as to the details of a large transaction
-that can be carried through only by dirty work. If we don’t know, we
-can pretend that the dirty work isn’t being done by or for us--isn’t
-being done at all.”
-
-“Now you are getting coarse,” said my wife. “Do you know what I think
-of you?” I could not see her expression, but the voice always betrays
-if there is insincerity, because we do not deal enough with the
-blind to learn to deceive perfectly with the voice. Her tones were
-absolutely sincere as she answered her own question: “I think it is
-cowardly of you to come to me with your business troubles. If you were
-brave you’d simply have quietly done whatever was necessary to save
-your family. Yes, it is cowardly!”
-
-“I didn’t mean it as cowardice,” said I, admiring but irritated by this
-characteristic adroitness. “In the stories and the plays that give such
-thrills, the husband, in the crisis and tempted to do wrong, appeals to
-his wife. And they are brought closer together, and she helps him to do
-right, and everything ends happily.” Again I laughed good-humoredly.
-“It doesn’t seem to be turning out that way, does it, dear? My heavenly
-picture of you and Margot and me living modestly and making up in love
-what we lack in luxury--it doesn’t attract you?”
-
-She said in her patient, superior tone: “I suppose you never will
-understand me or my ideals. What you’ve been doing in annoying me
-with your business, it’s as if when I was giving a dinner I assembled
-my guests and compelled them to watch all the preparations for the
-dinner--the killing of the lambs and the fish and the birds, the
-cleaning, all those ugly and low things. Bringing business into the
-home and the social life, it’s like bringing the kitchen into the
-drawing-room.”
-
-The obvious answer to this shallow but plausible and attractive
-cleverness of hers did not come to me then. If it had I’d not have
-spoken it. For of what use to argue with the human animal, female
-or male, about its dearest selfishnesses and vanities? Of what use
-to point out to human self-complacence, greediness and hypocrisy
-that a “refined” and “cultured” existence of ease and luxury can be
-obtained only by the theft and murder of dishonest business--that for
-one man to be vastly rich thousands of men must somehow be robbed and
-oppressed, even though the rich man himself directly does no robbing
-and oppressing? If I have sucking pig for dinner, I kill sucking pig as
-surely as if my hand wielded the knife of the butcher. But the human
-race finds it convenient and comfortable not to think so. Therefore,
-let us not bother our heads about it.
-
-At that period of my career I had not thought things out so thoroughly
-as I have since--in these days when events have compelled me to open my
-eyes and to see. In my hypocrisy, in my eagerness to save myself, I was
-not loth to take refuge behind the advice given by my wife partly in
-genuine ignorance of business, partly in pretended ignorance of it.
-
-Said I: “I suppose you’re right. I ought to think only of my family.
-Heaven knows, my rascal friends aren’t thinking in my interest. If I
-don’t do it, no one will. There’s no disputing that--eh?”
-
-No reply. She was asleep--or, rather, was pretending to be asleep. The
-matter had been settled, why discuss it further? Why expose herself
-longer than unavoidable to the danger of being unable to be, or to
-pretend to be, ignorant of business, of the foundation upon which her
-splendid, cultured structure of ambition proudly reared?
-
-Often in her sleep her hand would seek mine, and when it was
-comfortably nestled she would give a little sigh of content that
-thrilled me through and through. Her hand now stole into mine and the
-sigh of content came softly from her lips. “My love,” I murmured,
-kissing her cheek before I lay down. How could I for a minute have
-considered any course that would have made her unhappy, that might have
-lessened, perhaps destroyed, her love for me?
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-It is hardly necessary to say that I threw overboard my partners and
-saved myself. Indeed, I emerged from the crisis--liberally bespattered
-with mud, it is true--but richer than when I entered it. Since I was
-doing the act that was the supreme proof of my possessing the courage
-and the skill for leadership in business--since I was definitely
-breaking with the old-fashioned morality--I felt it was the part of
-wisdom to do the thing so thoroughly, so profitably, that instead of
-being execrated I should be admired. There were attacks on me in the
-newspapers; there were painful interviews with my partners--not so
-painful to me as they would have been had I not been able to remind
-them of their own unsuccessful treacheries and to enforce the spoken
-reminder with the documentary proof. But on the whole I came off
-excellently well--as who does not that “gets away with the goods?”
-
-In these days of increased intelligence and consequent lessened
-hypocrisy, the big business man is the object of only perfunctory
-hypocrisies from outraged morality. It has been discovered that the
-farmer watering his milk or the grocer using solder-“mended” scales
-is as bad as the man who “reorganizes” a railway or manipulates a
-stock--is worse actually because the massed mischief of the million
-little business rascals is greater than the sensational misdeeds of
-the few great rascals. It has been discovered that human nature is
-good or bad only according to the opportunities and necessities, not
-according to abstract moral standards. And the cry is no longer, “Kill
-the scoundrel,” but, “That fellow had the sense to outwit us. We must
-learn from him how to sharpen our wits so that we won’t let ourselves
-be robbed.” A healthful sign this, that masses of men are ceasing from
-twaddle about vague ideals and are educating themselves in practical
-horse sense. It may be that some day the honest husbandman will learn
-to guard his granary not only against the robber with the sack in the
-dark of the morn, but also against the rats and mice who pilfer ten
-bushels to every one that is stolen. Of one thing I am certain--until
-men learn to take heed in the small, they will remain easy prey in the
-large.
-
-Far from doing me harm, my bold stroke was of the greatest
-benefit--from the standpoint of material success, and that is the
-only point of view I am here considering. It did me as much good with
-the world as it has done me with you, gentle reader. For while you
-are exclaiming against my wickedness you are in your secret heart
-confessing that if I had chosen the ideally honest course, had retired
-to obscurity and poverty, you would have approved--and would have lost
-interest in me. Why, if I had chosen that ideal course, I doubt not I
-should have lost my railway position. My directors would have waxed
-enthusiastic over my “old-fashioned honesty,” and would have looked
-round for another and shrewder and stronger man to whom to intrust the
-management of their railway--which would not pay dividends were it run
-along the lines of old-fashioned honesty. The outburst of denunciation
-soon spent itself, like a summer storm beating the giant cliffs of a
-mountain. Of what use to rage futilely against my splendid immovable
-fortune? The attacks, the talk about my bold stroke, the exaggerations
-of the size of the fortune I had made, all served to attract attention
-to me, to make me a formidable and an interesting figure. I leaped from
-obscurity into fame and power--and I had the money to maintain the
-position I had won.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Long before, indeed as soon as we moved to Manhattan, my wife had
-joined fashionable and exclusive Holy Cross Church and had plunged
-straightway into its charity work. A highly important part of her
-Brooklyn education had been got in St. Mary’s, in learning how to do
-charity work and how to make it count socially. Edna genuinely loved
-charity work. She loved to patronize, loved to receive those fawning
-blessings and handkissings which city poverty becomes adept at giving
-the rich it lives off of. The poor family understands perfectly that
-the rich visit and help not through mere empty sentimental nonsense of
-brotherhood, but to have their vanities tickled in exchange for the
-graciousness of their condescending presence and for the money they
-lay out. As the poor want the money and have no objection to paying
-for it with that cheap and plentiful commodity, cringing--scantily
-screening mockery and contempt--rich and poor meet most comfortably in
-our cities. Not New York alone, but any center of population, for human
-nature is the same, city and country, San Francisco, Bangor--Pekin or
-Paris, for that matter.
-
-There is a shallow fashion of describing this or that as peculiarly New
-York, usually snobbishness or domestic unhappiness or wealth worship,
-dishonest business men or worthless wives. It is time to have done
-with such nonsense. New York is in no way peculiar, nor is any other
-place, beyond trifling surface differences. New York is nothing but
-the epitome of the whole country, just as Chicago is. If you wish
-to understand America, study New York or Chicago, our two universal
-cities. There you find in one place and in admirable perspective a
-complete museum of specimens of what is scattered over three and a
-half million square miles. For, don’t forget, New York is not the few
-blocks of fashionable district alone. It is four million people of all
-conditions, tastes, and activities. And the dominant force of struggle
-for money and fashion is no more dominant in New York than it is in
-the rest of America. New York is more truly representative of America
-than is Chicago, for in Chicago the Eastern and Southern elements are
-lacking and the Western element is strong out of proportion.
-
-I was telling of my wife’s blossoming as Lady Bountiful in search
-not of a heavenly crown, but of what human Lady Bountiful always
-seeks--social position. Charity covers a multitude of sins; the
-greatest of them is hypocrisy. I have yet to see a charitable man
-or woman or child whose chief and only noteworthy object was not
-self-glorification. The people who believe in brotherhood do not go in
-for charity. They wish to abolish poverty, whereas charity revels in
-poverty and seeks to increase it, to change it from miserable poverty
-which might die into comfortable pauperism which can live on, and
-fester and breed on, and fawn on and give vanity ever more and more
-exquisite titillations. Holy Cross, my wife’s new spiritual guide, was
-past master of the pauper-making and pauper-utilizing arts. Its rector
-and his staff of slimy sycophants had the small standing army of its
-worthy poor trained to perfection. When my wife went down among them,
-she returned home with face aglow and eyes heavenly. What a treat those
-wretches had given her! And in the first blush of her enthusiasm she
-dispensed lavishly, where the older members of the church exacted the
-full measure of titillation for every dollar invested and awarded extra
-sums only to some novelty in lickspittling or toadeating.
-
-Were I not sure I should quite wear out the forbearance of gentle
-reader, I should linger to describe this marvelous charity plant for
-providing idle or social-position-hunting rich women with spiritual
-pleasures-- I had almost said debaucheries, but that would be intruding
-my private and perhaps prejudiced opinion. I have no desire to
-irritate, much less shake the faith of, those who believe in Holy Cross
-and its “uplift” work. And I don’t suppose Holy Cross does any great
-amount of harm. The poor who prostitute themselves to its purposes are
-weak things, beyond redemption. As for the rich who waste time and
-money there, would they not simply waste elsewhere were there no Holy
-Cross?
-
-My wife was, at that time, a very ignorant woman, thinly covered with
-a veneer of what I now know was a rather low grade of culture. That
-veneer impressed me. It had impressed our Brooklyn friends of St.
-Mary’s. But I fancy it must have looked cheap to expert eyes. Where her
-surpassing shrewdness showed itself was in that she herself recognized
-her own shortcomings. Rare and precious is the vanity that comforts and
-sustains without self-deception. She knew she wasn’t the real thing,
-knew she had not yet got hold of the real thing. And when she began to
-move about, cautiously and quietly, in Holy Cross, she realized that at
-last she was in the presence of the real thing.
-
-My big responsibilities, my associations in finance, had been giving
-me a superb training in worldly wisdom. I think I had almost as strong
-a natural aptitude for “catching on” to the better thing in speech and
-manner and in dress as had Edna. It is not self-flattery for me to
-say that up to the Holy Cross period I was further advanced than she.
-Certainly I ought to have been, for a man has a much better opportunity
-than a woman, and one of the essentials of equipment for great affairs
-is ability to observe accurately the little no less than the large.
-Looking back, I recall things which lead me to suspect that Edna saw my
-superiority in certain matters most important to her, and was irritated
-by it. However that may be, a few months in Holy Cross and she had
-grasped the essentials of the social art as I, or any other masculine
-man, never could grasp it. And her veneer of “middle-class” culture
-disappeared under a thick and enduring coating of the best New York
-manner.
-
-“What has become of _you_?” I said to her. “I haven’t seen you in
-weeks.”
-
-“I don’t understand,” said she, ruffling as she always did when she
-suspected me of indulging in my coarse and detestable sense of humor.
-
-“Why, you don’t act like yourself at all,” said I. “Even when we’re
-alone you give the uncomfortable sense of dressed-up--not as if _you_
-were ‘dressed-up,’ but as if _I_ were. I feel like a plowboy before a
-princess.”
-
-She was delighted!
-
-“You,” I went on, “are now exactly like the rest of those women in
-Holy Cross. I suppose it’s all right to look and talk and act that way
-before people. At least, I’ve no objection if it pleases you. But for
-heaven’s sake, Edna, don’t spoil our privacy with it. The queen doesn’t
-wear her coronation robes all the time.”
-
-“I’m sure I don’t know what you mean,” said she.
-
-“Don’t you?” cried I, laughing. “What a charming fraud you are!” And
-I seized her in my arms and kissed her. And she seemed to yield and
-to return my caresses. But I was uncomfortable. She would not drop
-that new manner. The incident seems trifling enough; perhaps it was
-trifling. But it stands out in my memory. It marks the change in our
-relationship. I recall it all distinctly--how she looked, how young and
-charming and cold, what she was wearing, the delicate simple dress
-that ought to have made her most alluring to me, yet made me feel as if
-she were indeed alluring, but not for _me_. A subtle difference there,
-but abysmal; the difference between the woman who tries to make herself
-attractive for the sake of her husband and the woman who makes toilets
-in the conscious or half-conscious longing successfully to prostitute
-herself to the eyes of the public. I recall every detail of that
-incident; yet I have only the vaguest recollection of our beginning to
-occupy separate bedrooms. By that time the feeling of alienation must
-have grown so strong that I took the radical change in our habits as
-the matter of course.
-
-Many are the women, in all parts of the earth, who have sought to climb
-into the world of fashion by the broad and apparently easy stairway
-of charity. But most of them have failed because they were unaware
-of the secret of that stairway, an unsuspected secret which I shall
-proceed to point out. It seems, as I have said, a particularly easy
-stairway--broad, roomy, with invalid steps. It is, in fact, a moving
-stairway so cunningly contrived that she--it is usually she--who
-ascends keeps in the same place. She goes up, but at exactly her
-ascending rate the stairway goes down. She sees other women making
-apparently no more effort than she ascending rapidly, and presently
-entering the earthly heaven at the top. Yet there she stands, marking
-time, moving not one inch upward, and there she will stand until she
-wearies, relaxes her efforts, and finds herself rapidly descending.
-But how do the women who ascend accomplish it? I do not know. You must
-ask them. I only know the cause of the failure of the women who do
-not ascend. If I knew why the others succeeded I should not tell it. I
-would not deprive fashionable women of the joy of occupying a difficult
-height from which they can indulge themselves in the happiness of
-sneering and spitting down at their lowlier sisters. And I have no
-sympathy with the aspirations or the humiliations of those lowlier
-sisters.
-
-My energetic and aspiring wife presently found herself on this
-stairway, with no hint as to its secret, much less as to the way
-of overcoming its peculiarity. She toiled daily in Holy Cross. She
-subscribed to everything, she helped in everything. She was the proud
-recipient of the rector’s loud praises as his “most devoted, least
-worldly, most spiritual helper.” But--not an invitation of the kind
-she wanted. Everyone was “just lovely” to her. Whenever any charitable
-or spiritual matter was to be discussed, no matter how grand and
-exclusive the house in which the discussion was to be held, there was
-my wife in a place of honor, eagerly consulted--and urged to subscribe.
-But nothing unworldly. They understood how spiritual she was, did
-those sweet, good people. They knew Saint Edna wished no social
-frivolities--no dinners or theater parties, no bridge or dancing.
-
-She was a wise lady. She hid her burning impatience. She smiled
-and purred when she yearned to scowl and scratch. She waited, and
-prayed for some lucky accident that would swing her across the
-invisible, apparently nonexistent but actually impassable dead line.
-She had expected snubs and cold shoulders. Never a snub, never a
-cold shoulder. Always smiles and gracious handshakings and amiable
-familiarities, but those always of the kind that serve to accentuate
-caste distinction instead of removing it. For the first time in her
-life, I think, she was completely stumped. She could combat obstacles.
-She might even have found a way to fight fog. But how ridiculous to
-make struggles and thrust out fists when there is nothing but empty,
-sunny air!
-
-She held church lunches and dinners at our house--of course, had me on
-duty at the dinners. All in vain. The distinction between the spiritual
-and the temporal remained in force. The grand people came, acted as if
-they were delighted, complimented her on her house, on her hospitality,
-went away, to invite her to similar dreary functions at their houses.
-And my, how it did cost her! No wonder Holy Cross made a pet of her and
-elected me to the board of vestrymen.
-
-Once in a while she would find something in her net, so slyly cast, so
-softly drawn. She would have a wild spasm of joy; then the something
-would turn out to be another climber like herself. Those climbers
-avoided each other as devils dodge the font of holy water. The climber
-she would have caught would be one who, ignorant of the intricacies of
-New York society, was under the impression that the Mrs. Godfrey Loring
-so conspicuous in Holy Cross must be a social personage. They would
-examine each other--at a series of joyous entertainments each would
-provide for the other, would discover their mutual mistake--and-- You
-know the contemptuous toss with which the fisherman rids himself of a
-bloater; you know the hysterical leap of the released bloater back into
-the water.
-
-But how it was funny! My wife did not take me into her confidence as to
-her social struggles. She maintained with me the same sweet, elegant
-exterior of spiritual placidity with which she faced the rest of the
-world. Nevertheless, in a dim sort of way I had some notion of what
-she was about--though, as I was presently to discover, I was wholly
-mistaken in my idea of her progress.
-
-“What has happened to Mrs. Lestrange?” I said to her one evening at
-dinner. “Is she ill?”
-
-She cast a quick, nervous glance in the direction of the butler. I,
-looking at him by way of a mirror, thought I saw upon his aristocratic
-countenance a faint trace of that insolent secret glee which fills
-servants when their betters are humiliated before them. “Mrs.
-Lestrange?” she said carelessly. “Oh, I see her now and then.”
-
-“But you’ve been inseparable until lately,” said I. “A quarrel, I
-suppose?”
-
-“Not at all,” said my wife tartly.
-
-And she shifted abruptly to another subject. When I went to the little
-study adjoining my sitting room to smoke she came with me. There she
-said:
-
-“Please don’t mention Mrs. Lestrange before the servants again.”
-
-“Why, what’s up?” said I. “Did she turn out to be a crook?”
-
-“Heavens, no! How coarse you are, Godfrey. Simply that I was terribly
-mistaken in her.”
-
-“She looked like a confidence woman or a madam,” said I. “Didn’t you
-tell me she was a howling swell?”
-
-“I thought she was,” said my wife, and I knew something important was
-coming; only that theory would account for her admitting she had made
-a mistake. “And in a way she was. But they caught her several years
-ago taking money to get some dreadful low Western people into society.
-Since then she’s asked--she herself--because she’s well connected and
-amusing. But she can’t help anyone else.”
-
-“Oh, I see,” said I. “And you don’t feel strong enough socially as yet
-to be able to afford the luxury of her friendship.”
-
-“Strong enough!” said Edna with intense bitterness. “I have no position
-at all--none whatever.”
-
-I was surprised, for until that moment I had been assuming she was on
-or near the top of the wave, moving swiftly toward triumphant success.
-“You want too much,” said I. “You’ve really got all there is to get.
-At that last reception of yours you had all the heavy swells. My valet
-told me so.”
-
-“Reception to raise funds for the orphanage,” said Edna with a vicious
-sneer--the unloveliest expression I had ever seen on her lovely
-face--and I had seen not a few unlovely expressions there in our many
-married years, some of them extremely trying years. “I tell you I am
-nobody socially. They take my money for their rotten old charities.
-They use me for their tiresome church work--and they do nothing for
-me--nothing! How I _hate_ them!”
-
-I sat smoking my cigar and watching her face. It was a wonderfully
-young face. Not that she was so old; on the contrary, she was still
-young in years. I call her face wonderfully young because it had that
-look of inexhaustible, eternal youth which is rare even in the faces
-of boys and girls. But that evening I was not thinking so much of her
-youth and her beauty as of a certain expression of hardness, of evil
-passions rampant--envy and hatred and jealousy, savage disappointment
-over defeats in sordid battles.
-
-“Edna,” said I, hesitatingly, “why don’t you drop all that? Can’t you
-see there’s nothing in it? You’re tempting the worst things in your
-nature to grow and destroy all that’s good and sweet--all that makes
-you--and me--happy. People aren’t necessary to us. And if you must have
-friends, surely _all_ the attractive people in New York aren’t in that
-little fashionable set. Judging from what I’ve seen of them, they’re a
-lot of bores.”
-
-“They look bored here,” retorted she. “And no wonder! They come as a
-Christian duty.”
-
-I laughed. “Now, honestly, are those fashionable people the best
-educated, the best in any way--any real way? I’ve talked with the men,
-and the younger ones--the ones that go in for society--are unspeakable
-rotters. I wouldn’t have them about.”
-
-Edna’s eyes flashed, and her form quivered in a gust of hysterical
-fury--the breaking of long-pent passion, of anger and despair, taking
-me as an excuse for vent. “Oh, it’s terrible to be married to a man who
-_always_ misunderstands!--one who can’t sympathize!” cried she. It was
-a remark she often made, but never before had she put so much energy,
-so much bitterness into it.
-
-“What do I misunderstand?” I asked, more hurt than I cared to show.
-“Where don’t I sympathize?”
-
-“Let’s not talk about it!” exclaimed she. “If I weren’t a remarkable
-woman I’d have given up long ago--I’d give up now.”
-
-Before you smile at her egotism, gentle reader, please remember that
-husband and wife were talking alone; also that with a few pitiful
-exceptions all human beings think surpassingly well of themselves, and
-do not hesitate to express that good opinion privately. I guess there’s
-more lying done about lack of egotism and of vanity generally than
-about all other matters put together.
-
-Said I: “You are indeed a wonder, dear. In this country one sees many
-astonishing transformations. But I doubt if there have been many equal
-to the transformation of the girl I married into the girl who’s sitting
-before me.”
-
-“And what good has it done me?” demanded she. “How I’ve worked away at
-myself--inside and out--and all for nothing!”
-
-“You’ve still got _me_,” said I jovially, yet in earnest too. “Lots of
-women lose their husbands. I’ve never had a single impulse to wander.”
-
-In the candor of that intimacy she gave me a most unflattering look--a
-look a woman does well not to cast at a man unless she is more
-absolutely sure of him than anyone can be of anything in this uncertain
-world. I laughed as if I thought she meant that look as a jest; I put
-the look away in my memory with a mark on it that meant “to be taken
-out and examined at leisure.” But she was absorbed in her chagrin over
-her social failure; she probably hardly realized I was there.
-
-“Well, what’s the next move?” inquired I presently.
-
-“You’ve got to help,” replied she--and I knew this was what she had
-been revolving in her mind all evening.
-
-“Anything that doesn’t take me away from business, or keep me up too
-late to fit myself for the next day.”
-
-“Business--always business,” said she, in deepest disgust. “Do you
-_never_ think of anything else?”
-
-“My business and my family--that’s my life,” said I.
-
-“Not your family,” replied she. “You care nothing about them.”
-
-“Edna,” I said sharply, “that is unjust and untrue.”
-
-“Oh, you give them money, if that’s what you mean,” said she
-disdainfully.
-
-“And I give them love,” said I. “The trouble is I give so freely that
-you don’t value it.”
-
-“Oh, you are a good husband,” said she carelessly. “But I want you to
-take an interest.”
-
-“In your social climbing?”
-
-“How insulting you are!” she cried, with flashing eyes. “I am trying to
-claim the position we are entitled to, and you speak of me as if I were
-one of those vulgar pushers.”
-
-“I beg your pardon,” said I humbly. “I was merely joking.”
-
-“I’ve often told you that your idea of humor was revolting.”
-
-I felt distressed for her in her chagrin and despair. I was ready to
-bear almost anything she might see fit to inflict. “What do you want me
-to do?” I asked. “Whatever it is, I’ll do it. Do you need more money?”
-
-“I need help--real help,” said she.
-
-“Money’s god over the realm of fashion, the same as it is over that
-of--of religion--of politics--or anything you please. And luckily I’ve
-got that little god in my employ, my dear.”
-
-“If you are so powerful,” said she, “put me into fashionable
-society--make these people receive me and come to my house.”
-
-“But they do,” I reminded her.
-
-“I mean _socially_,” cried she. “_Can’t_ I make you understand? Why are
-business men so dumb at anything else? Compel these people to take me
-as one of them.”
-
-“Now, Edna, my dear,” protested I, “be reasonable. How can I do that?”
-
-“Easily, if you’ve got real power,” rejoined she. “It’s been done
-often, I’ve found out lately. At least half the leaders in society
-got in originally by compelling it. But you, going round among men
-intimately--you must know it--must have known all along. If you’d
-been the right sort of man I’d not have to humiliate myself by asking
-you--by saying these dreadful things.” Her eyes were flashing and her
-bosom was heaving. “Women have hated men for less. But I must bear
-my cross. You insist on degrading me. Very well. I’ll let myself be
-degraded. I’ll say the things a decent man would not ask a woman to
-say----”
-
-“Edna, darling,” I pleaded. “Honestly, I don’t understand. You’ll have
-to tell me. And it’s not degrading. We have no secrets from each other.
-We who love each other can say anything to each other--anything. What
-do you wish me to do?”
-
-“Use your power over the men. Frighten them into ordering their wives
-to invite us and to accept our invitations. You do business with a lot
-of the men, don’t you?”
-
-“Yes,” said I.
-
-“You can benefit or injure them, as you please, can’t you?--can take
-money away from them--can put them in the way of making it?”
-
-“Yes,” said I; “to a certain extent.”
-
-“And how do you use this power?”
-
-“In building up great enterprises. I am founding a city just now, for
-instance, where there was nothing but a swamp beside a lake, and----”
-
-“In making more and more money for yourself,” she cut in, “you think
-only of yourself.”
-
-“And you--what do _you_ think of?” said I.
-
-“Not of myself,” cried she indignantly. “Never of myself. Of Margot.
-Of you. Of the family. I am working to build _us_ up--to make _us_
-somebody and not mere low money grubbers.”
-
-I did not see it from her point of view. But I was not inclined to
-aggravate her excitement and anger.
-
-“Why shouldn’t you use your powers for some unselfish purpose?” she
-went on. “Why not try to have higher ambition?”
-
-I observed her narrowly. She was sincere.
-
-“I want you to help me--for Margot’s sake, for your own sake,” she went
-on in a kind of exaltation. “Margot is coming on. She’ll be out in less
-than three years. We’ve got to make a position for her.”
-
-“I thought, up there at Miss Ryper’s she was----”
-
-“That shows how little interest you take!” cried Edna. “Don’t you know
-what is happening? Why, already the fashionable girls at her school are
-beginning to shy off from her----”
-
-“Don’t be absurd!” laughed I. “That simply could not be. She’s lovely,
-sweet, attractive in every way. Any girls anywhere would be proud to
-have her as a friend.”
-
-“How _can_ you be so ignorant of the world!” cried Edna in a frenzy
-of exasperation. “Oh, you’ll drive me mad with your stupidity! Can’t
-you realize how _low_ fashionable people are. The girls who were
-her friends so long as they were all mere children are now taking a
-positive delight in snubbing her, because she’s so pretty and will be
-an heiress. It gives them a sense of power to treat her as an inferior,
-to make her suffer.”
-
-I flung away the cigar and sat up in the chair. “How long has this been
-going on?” I demanded.
-
-“Nearly a year,” replied my wife. “It began as soon as she lost her
-childishness and developed toward a woman. I’m glad I’ve roused you
-at last. So long as she was a mere baby they liked her--invited her
-to their children’s parties--came to hers. But now they’re dropping
-her. Oh, it’s maddening! They are so sweet and smooth, the vile little
-daughters of vile mothers!”
-
-“Incredible!” said I. “Surely not those sweet, well-mannered girls
-I’ve seen here at her parties? _They_ couldn’t do that sort of thing.
-Why, what do those babies know about social position and such nonsense?”
-
-“What do they know? What _don’t_ they know?” cried Edna, trembling
-with rage at her humiliation and at my incredulity. “You _are_ an
-innocent! There ought to be a new proverb--innocent as a married man.
-Why, nowadays the children begin their social training in the cradle.
-They soon learn to know a nurse or a butler from a lady or a gentleman
-before they learn to walk. They hear the servants talk. They hear their
-parents talk. Except innocent you everyone nowadays thinks and talks
-about these things.”
-
-“But Margot--our Margot--she doesn’t know!” I said with conviction.
-
-Edna laughed harshly. “Know? What kind of mother do you think I am? Of
-course she knows. Haven’t I been teaching her ever since she began to
-talk? Why do you suppose I’ve always called her the little duchess?”
-
-“She suggests a superior little person,” said I, groping vaguely.
-
-“She suggests a superior person because I gave her that name and
-brought her up to look and act and feel the part. She expects to be a
-real duchess some day--” Edna reared proudly, and her voice rang out
-confidently as she added--“and she shall be!”
-
-I stared at her. It seemed to me she must be out of her mind. Oh, I was
-indeed innocent, gentle reader.
-
-“I’ve always treated her as a duchess, and have made the servants do
-it, and have trained her to treat them as if she were a duchess.” A
-proud smile came into her face, transforming it suddenly back to its
-loveliness. “The first time I ever read about a duchess--read, knowing
-what I was reading about--I decided that I would have a daughter and
-that she should be a duchess.”
-
-At any previous time such a sally would have made me laugh. But not
-then, for I saw that she meant it profoundly, and for the first time I
-was realizing what had been going on in my family, all unsuspected by
-me.
-
-“But first,” proceeded Edna, “she shall have the highest social
-position in New York. And you must help if I am to succeed.” The
-fury burst into her face again. “Those little wretches, snubbing
-her!--dropping her! I’ll make them pay for it.”
-
-“Do you mean to tell me that Margot realizes all this?” said I.
-
-“Poor child, she’s wretched about it. Only yesterday she said to me:
-‘Mamma, is it true that you and papa are very common, and that we
-haven’t anything but a lot of stolen money? One of the girls got mad at
-me because I was so good-looking and so proud, and taunted me with it.’”
-
-“Incredible!” said I, dazed.
-
-“She’s horribly unhappy,” Edna went on. “And it cuts her to the heart
-to be losing all her dearest friends. I did my duty and taught her
-which girls to cultivate, and she was intimate only with the right sort
-of New York girls.”
-
-“I expect she has been indiscreet,” said I. “They’ve found out why she
-made friends with them and----”
-
-“You will drive me crazy!” cried Edna. “_Can’t_ you understand? All
-the mothers and the governesses--all the grown people in respectable
-families teach the children. Those mothers who don’t teach it directly
-see that it’s taught by the governesses, or else select the proper
-friends for their little girls and see that they drop any who aren’t
-proper.”
-
-I dropped back in my chair. I was stunned. It seemed to me I had never
-heard anything quite so infamous in my life. And as I reflected on what
-she had said I wondered that I had not realized it before. I recalled
-a hundred significant facts that had come out in talks I had had with
-men, women, and children in this fashionable world from which we were
-excluded, yet with which we were in constant and close communication.
-
-“The question is, what are _you_ going to do,” proceeded Edna.
-
-I shook my head, probably looking as dazed as I felt.
-
-“What does that headshake mean?” demanded she.
-
-“_You_--taught _Margot_ to be a--a--like those other girls?” said I.
-
-“Oh, you fool!” cried Edna. And in excuse for her, please remember I
-had ever been a dotingly bored slave of hers--as uxorious a husband
-as you ever saw--and therefore inevitably despised, for women have so
-little intelligence that they despise a man who loves them and lets
-them rule. “You fool!” she repeated. “Yes, I brought her up like a
-lady--taught her to cultivate nice things and nice people. What should
-I teach her? To associate with common people? To drop back toward
-where we came from--where _you_ belong?”
-
-“Yes, I guess I do,” said I.
-
-Up to that time I had interested myself in only one aspect of human
-nature--the aspect that concerned me as a business man. But from that
-time I began to study the human animal in all his--and her--aspects.
-And it was not long before I learned what that animal is forced to
-become when exposed to the powerful thrusts and temptings of wealth
-and social position. In our alternations of pride and humility we
-habitually take undue credit or give undue blame to ourselves for what
-is wholly the result of circumstance. The truth is, we are like flocks
-of birds in a high wind. Some of us fly more steadily than others,
-some are quite beaten down, others seem almost self-directing; but
-all, great and small, weak and strong, are controlled by the wind, and
-those who make the best showing are those who adapt themselves most
-skillfully to the will of the wind.
-
-At the time when Edna and I were talking I had not become a
-philosopher. I was in the primitive stages of development in which most
-men and nearly all women remain their whole lives through--the stage in
-which you live, gentle reader, with your shallow mistaken notions of
-what is and your shallower mistaken notions of what ought to be. So, as
-Edna uncovered herself to me, I shrank in horror. It was fortunate--for
-her, at least--that I had always trained myself never to make hasty
-speeches. My expertness in that habit has probably been the principal
-cause of my business success, of my ability to outwit even abler men
-than myself. I did not yield to the impulse to burst out against her.
-I compressed my lips and silently watched as she lifted the veil over
-our family life and revealed to me the truth about it.
-
-“What are you going to do?” she asked impatiently, yet with a certain
-uneasiness born no doubt of a something in my manner that made her
-vaguely afraid, for while she knew I was her slave and despised me, as
-I was to learn, for being so weak before a mere woman, she also knew
-that, outside of her domain, I was not her slave nor anybody’s, but
-planned and executed at the pleasure of my own will.
-
-“I don’t know what I’m going to do,” said I slowly. “I must think. All
-this is new to me.”
-
-“If you haven’t any pride in yourself, or in me,” said she, “still you
-surely must have pride for Margot.”
-
-“I think so,” said I.
-
-“If you could know how they have made the poor child suffer!”
-
-I made no reply, nor did I encourage her to talk further. In fact, when
-she began again I stopped her with: “I’ve heard enough, my dear. And
-I’ve some important business to attend to.”
-
-She, preparing to leave me alone with my papers, came and put her
-arms round my neck and pressed her cheek against mine. I think she
-was uneasy about the posture of the affair in my mind--feared stupid
-commercial I could not appreciate these vital things of life. I suspect
-my tranquil reception of her caresses did not tend to allay her
-uneasiness. Never before had she failed to interest me in her physical
-self; and the only reason she then failed was that in the general
-upsetting of all my ideas of what my family life was there had been
-tossed up to the surface an undefined suspicion of her sincerity as a
-wife. I was not altogether blind as to the relations of men and women,
-as to the fact that women often coolly played upon the passions of men
-for their own purposes of money getting in its various forms. My wife
-was right in her sneer at the innocence of married men. But there are
-exceptions, and a woman with a husband intelligent in every way except
-in seeing through women would do well to take care how she tempts his
-intelligence to shake off its indifference in that respect.
-
-The next morning I was breakfasting alone as usual. No, gentle reader,
-I am not girding at my poor wife as you hastily accuse. I am sure I do
-not deceive myself when I say I never was of those men who fuss about
-trifles. Thank heaven, as soon as we had a servant my wife kept away
-from breakfast. It was one of the things I loved her for. If I had
-been married to a woman who appeared at breakfast looking lovely and
-smiling sweetly, I should have become a bad-tempered tyrant. I want no
-sentimentalities in the early-morning hours. I wake up uncomfortable
-and sour, and I quarrel with myself and look about for trouble until I
-have had something to eat and coffee. Further in the same direction, I
-took particular pleasure in my wife’s small personal slovenlinesses,
-in her curl papers, in her occasional overlaying of her face with cold
-cream and the like, in her careless negligee worn in her own rooms.
-There is, I guess, no nature so prodigal that it has not some small
-economies. Edna had, probably still has, a fondness for wearing out
-thoroughly, in secluded privacy, house dresses, underclothes, and night
-gowns.
-
-It took nothing from my delight in her beauty that she was not
-invariably beautiful. I’ve rarely seen her lovely early in the morning.
-Who is? I should have taken habitual early-morning loveliness as a
-personal insult. I’ve seen her homely all day long, and for several
-days at a time. She was as attractive to me than as at her most
-beautiful. I detest monotony. Thank heaven, she was never monotonous
-to look at; one rather expects _mental_ monotony in women unless one
-is a fool. I didn’t mind her times of homeliness, because she could be
-so far, far the opposite of homely. I did not mind her way of getting
-herself up in odds and ends, mussily, but, mind you, never after the
-Passaic days unclean--never! I did not mind her dishevelments because,
-when she set out to dress, she did it so bang up well. She was born
-with a talent for dress; she rapidly developed it into an art. You know
-what I mean. You’ve seen the girl with hardly five dollars’ worth of
-clothing on her, including the hat, yet making the woman from the best
-dressmaker in Paris look a frump.
-
-I never had to join the innumerable and pitiful army of men who give
-the woman their money to squander upon bad fits and bad taste, and are
-bowed down with shame when they have to issue forth with her. I can
-honestly say, and Edna will bear me out, that I gave her money freely.
-No doubt the reason in part was I found it so easy to make money that
-I was indifferent to extravagance. But the chief reason, I believe,
-was Edna’s skill at dress. The woman who is physically alluring to her
-husband, and who knows how to dress, rarely has difficulty in getting
-money from him, though he be a miser. But, gentle lady reader, can you
-in your heart blame a man for grudging his earnings to a woman who
-isn’t fit to dress and who doesn’t know how, either?
-
-As I had begun to tell when I interrupted myself, I was breakfasting
-alone the morning after that memorable talk with Edna, and Margot came
-down to glance in for a smile at me on her way to school.
-
-In theory Margot was still classed as a child, and would be so classed
-for two years longer. In fact she was, and had been for two years and
-more, a full-fledged young lady. That is the way American children of
-the rank for which my wife was training Margot are being brought up
-nowadays. She had her own apartment, dressing room and bath, sitting
-room, reception room--as many rooms as my wife and I had altogether
-when we began married life, and about four times the room. As for
-luxury, a comparison would be ridiculous. Also Margot had her own staff
-of servants--companion, maid, maid’s assistant--and her own automobile
-with chauffeur, used by no one else. It would be hard to find more
-helpless creatures than these young aspirants to aristocracy. And they
-prided themselves upon their ignorance of the realities, and their
-mothers, often with hypocritical pretense of distress, boasted it. At
-that time I thought it amusing. The serious side of it was entirely out
-of my range. We American men of the comfortable and luxurious classes
-are addicted to the habit of regarding our wives and children as
-toys, as mere sources of amusement not to be taken seriously. It isn’t
-strange that the children should not mind this, but what a commentary
-upon the real mentality of the women that they tolerate and encourage
-it! Our women are always, with a fine show of earnestness, demanding
-that they be taken seriously. But woe unto the man who believes them
-in earnest and tries to treat them as his equals instead of as dainty
-toys, odalisques. How he will be denounced, hated, and, if proper
-alimony can be got, divorced!
-
-Margot’s parties differed in no respect from grown-up parties, except
-that there were restrictions in the matter of hours and also as to the
-serving of drinks. For, I believe my wife did not follow the extreme
-of fashionable custom, but forbade wines and punch at these parties.
-In this matter, as in the matter of using slang and in many others,
-she held that only people of long-established social position, people
-with what is called tradition, could safely make excursions beyond the
-bounds of conventionality; that it was safest, wisest for people like
-herself to stay well within the bounds, to be prim even, and so to
-avoid any possible criticism as vulgar. A very shrewd woman was Edna.
-If her intelligence had been equal to her shrewdness and energy, and if
-she had possessed a gleam of the sense of humor! However----
-
-In no essential respect did Margot’s routine of life differ from
-that of her mother--and her mother’s routine of inane and worthless
-time-killing was modeled exactly upon that of all the fashionable
-women and apers of fashionable women. Edna did a vast amount of
-studying, with and without teachers. It was all shallow and showy.
-Margot’s studies were also beneath contempt. I amused myself from time
-to time by inquiring--with pretense of gravity--into what they were
-teaching her at the Ryper school for the turning out of fashionable
-womanhood. Such a mess of trash! She was learning much about social
-usages, from how to sit in a carriage--a rare art that, I assure you,
-gentle reader--to how to receive guests at a large dinner. She was
-studying some of the vulgarities--science, history, literature, and the
-like--but in no vulgar way. She would get only the thinnest smatter
-of talkable stuff about them--nothing “unsettling,” nothing that
-might possibly rouse the mind to think or distract the attention from
-the “high” things of life. She was dabbling in music, in drawing, in
-several similar costly fripperies. And the sum total of expense!--well,
-no wonder Miss Ryper was fast becoming as rich as some of the asteroids
-in the plutocracy she adored.
-
-I regarded Margot’s education as a species of joke. It never occurred
-to me that our pretty baby had the right to be educated to become a
-wife and a mother. And why should it have occurred to me? Where is that
-being done? Who is thinking of it? In all the oceans of twaddle about
-the elevation of woman where is there a drop of good sense about _real_
-education? You say I was criminally negligent as to my daughter’s
-education. But how about your own? The truth is, we all still look upon
-education as a frill, an ornament. We never think of it, whether for
-our sons or for our daughters, as nothing more or less than teaching a
-human being how to live. It is high time to end this idiotic ignorant
-exaltation of tomfoolery into culture!
-
-Poor Margot! How the little girls in plain clothes--and machine-made
-underwear--must have envied her as she swept along in her limousine,
-dressed with that enormously costly simplicity which only the rich
-can afford. No wonder many of the other girls at the Ryper school
-hated her. For, her mother was in one respect unlike most of the
-fashionable mothers who are too busy doing things not worth doing to
-attend to their children. Her mother gave her loving care, spent many
-hours--of anxious thought, no doubt--in planning to make her the most
-luxurious, the most helpless, the most envied girl in the school. We
-hear unendingly about the good that love does in the world. Not too
-much--no, indeed! But at the same time might it not be well if we also
-heard about the harm love can do--and does? How many sons and daughters
-have been ruined by loving parents! How many husbands have been wrecked
-by the flatteries and the assiduities of loving wives! How many wives
-have been lured to decay and destruction by the over-indulgent love of
-their husbands! What we need in this world is not more sentiment, but
-more intelligence. Sentiment is a force that rushes far and crazily
-in _both_ directions, gentle reader, unless it has well-balanced
-intelligence to guide it.
-
-Margot, smiling in the doorway of the breakfast room, put me at once
-into a less somber humor. She was tall and slim--an inch taller than
-her mother and with the same supple, well-proportioned figure. She
-had her mother’s small, tip-tilted face and luminous eyes, but they
-were of an intense dark gray that gave her an expression of poetic
-thoughtfulness and mystery. Whiter or more perfectly formed teeth I
-have never seen. In former days children’s teeth were neglected. But
-my wife, with her peculiar reach for all matters having to do with
-appearances, had learned the modern methods of caring for the body when
-Margot was still in the period when the body is almost as formable as
-sculptor’s clay. Thus Margot’s teeth had been looked after and made
-perfect and kept so. Her hair hung loose upon her shoulders like a
-wonderful changeable veil of golden brown. Often at first glance you
-are dazzled by these carefully fed and carefully groomed children of
-the rich, only to note at the second glance that the best showing has
-been made of precious little in the way of natural charm. But this was
-not true of Margot. The longer you looked, and the more attentively,
-the finer she seemed to be--like a rare perfect specimen from a
-connoisseur’s greenhouses. There’s no doubt about it, Edna did know
-the physical side of life. She would have got notable results even had
-we been poor. As it was, with all the money she cared to spend, she
-performed what looked like miracles.
-
-“Come and kiss me, Margot,” said I.
-
-She obeyed, with a charming air of restrained eagerness that is
-regarded as ladylike. “My car is waiting,” said she. “I’m late.”
-
-“Is that Therese”--her maid--“out in the hall waiting to go with you?”
-
-“Yes. Miss Parnell”--her companion--“has a headache, poor creature!”
-
-Margot had caught to perfection the refined, elegant, fashionable tone
-of speaking of the servile classes. Though I was in a critical mood
-that morning, I was not critical of my beloved little Margot, and her
-airs entertained me as much as ever. Said I:
-
-“Sit down, little duchess”--the familiar name slipped out
-unconsciously--“and talk to me a few minutes.”
-
-“But I’m shockingly late, papa,” pleaded she.
-
-“No matter. I’ll telephone Miss Ryper, if you wish.” To the butler, who
-was serving me: “Sackville, go tell Therese that I’m detaining Miss
-Margot. And close the door behind you.”
-
-Sackville retired. Margot seated herself with alacrity. She did not
-like her useless school any better than other children like more
-or less useful schools. “Are you taking me to the theater Saturday
-afternoon, as you promised?” said she. “And do get a box and let me ask
-two of the girls.”
-
-“Certainly,” said I. “If I can’t go, Miss Parnell will chaperon you.”
-
-“No, I want you, papa. It’s so nice to have a man.”
-
-“How are you getting on at school? Not with the studies”--I laughed
-at the absurdity of calling her fiddle-faddle studies--“but with the
-girls?”
-
-Her face clouded. “Has mamma told you?”
-
-“Told me what?”
-
-She hesitated.
-
-“Go on, dear,” said I. “What’s the trouble?”
-
-“Oh, it’s always the same thing,” she sighed, with a grown-up air
-that was both humorous and pathetic. “Some of the girls are down on
-me--about--about social position. You see, we don’t go _socially_ with
-their families.”
-
-“Why should we?” said I. “We don’t know them nor they us. Naturally,
-they don’t care anything about us, nor we about them.”
-
-She hung her head. “But I want to go with them,” said she doggedly.
-
-“Why?” said I.
-
-“Because--because--it’s the proper thing to do. If you don’t go with
-them everybody looks down on you.” She lifted her head, and her
-flashing eyes reminded me of her mother. “It makes me just _wild_ to be
-looked down on.”
-
-“I should say so,” said I. “Those little girls at Miss Ryper’s must
-be an ill-bred lot. We must take you away from there and put you in a
-school with nice girls.”
-
-“Oh, no, father!” she cried in a panic. “Those girls are the
-_nicest_--the only nice girls in any school in New York. All the other
-schools look up to ours. I’d cry my eyes out in any other school.”
-
-“Why?” said I.
-
-“I’d feel--_low_.” Her eyes had filled and her cheeks were flushed.
-“I’d be out of place except among the richest and most aristocratic
-girls.”
-
-“But you don’t like them,” said I gently. I began to feel a sensation
-of sickness at the heart.
-
-“I _hate_ them!” cried she with passionate energy. “But I want to stay
-on there and _make_ them be friendly with me. I’ve got too much pride,
-papa, to run away.”
-
-“Pride,” said I, and my tone must have been sad. “That isn’t pride,
-dear. You ought to choose your friends by liking. You ought to feel
-above girls with such cheap ideas.”
-
-“But I’m not above them,” protested she. “And I couldn’t like any girl
-I’d be ashamed to be seen with, unless she were a sort of servant. Oh,
-papa, you don’t appreciate how proud I am.”
-
-“Proud of what, dear? Of your parents? Of yourself?”
-
-She hung her head.
-
-“Of what, dear?” I urged.
-
-“It hurts me not to be treated as--as the inside clique of girls in
-our secret society treat each other.” She was almost crying. “They
-don’t even call me by my first name any more. They speak to me as Miss
-Loring--and _so_ politely--exactly as I speak to Miss Parnell or one of
-the teachers or a servant. Oh, I’m so proud! I’d love to be like Gracie
-Fortescue. She speaks even to Miss Ryper as I would to Miss Parnell.”
-
-My digestion wasn’t any too good, even in those days. My whole
-breakfast suddenly went wrong--turned to poison inside me, I suppose.
-A hot wave of rage against I knew not whom or what rolled up into my
-brain. I pushed away my plate abruptly. “Run along, child,” I said in a
-hoarse voice I did not recognize as my own.
-
-She threw her arms round my neck with a gesture and an expression that
-made me realize how close a copy of her mother she was. “You wouldn’t
-take me away from my school, would you, papa dear?” she pleaded.
-
-“All I want is to make you happy,” said I, patting and stroking that
-thick and lovely veil of flowing hair.
-
-She assumed that I meant she was to stay on with the viperous Ryper
-brood, and went away almost happy. She had awakened to the fact that
-there were fates even worse than being snubbed and addressed like a
-teacher or a companion or a servant or some other lower animal--yes,
-far worse fates. For instance, not being able to feel that she was,
-on whatever degrading terms, at least associated with the adored
-fashionables.
-
-That evening when my wife again accompanied me to my study, after
-dinner, I said to her:
-
-“I’ve been turning over our talk last night. I haven’t been able to
-reach a conclusion as yet, except on one point. I can’t help you
-socially in the way you suggested.”
-
-I glanced at her as I said this. She was looking at me. Her pale,
-intense expression fascinated me.
-
-“I don’t think you have thought about it fully,” said she slowly.
-
-“Yes,” said I, with my utmost deliberateness; “and my decision is
-final.”
-
-She rose, stood beside her chair, rubbing her hand softly along the top
-of the back. “Very well,” said she quietly. And she left me alone.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-In refusing Edna her heart’s desire thus promptly and tersely I had an
-object. I assumed she would protest and argue; in the discussion that
-would follow some light might come to me, utterly befogged as to what
-course to take about my family affairs. I knew something should be
-done--something quick and drastic. But what? It was no new experience
-to me to be faced with complex and well-nigh impossible situations.
-My business life had been a succession of such experiences. And
-while I had learned much as to handling them, I had also learned how
-dangerous it is to rush in recklessly and to begin action before one
-has discovered what to do--and what _not_ to do. The world is full of
-Hasty Hals and Hatties who pride themselves on their emergency minds,
-on knowing just what to do in any situation the instant it arises; and
-fine spectacles they are, lying buried and broken amid the ruins they
-have aggravated if not created.
-
-How recover my wife? How rescue my daughter? I could think of no
-plan--of no beginning toward a plan. And when Edna, by receiving my
-refusal in cold silence, defeated my hope of a possibly illuminating
-discussion, I did not know which way to turn.
-
-Why had I refused to help her in the way she suggested? Not on moral
-grounds, gentle reader. There I should have been as free from scruple
-as you yourself would have been, as you perhaps have been in your
-social climbing or maneuvering in your native town, wherever it is.
-Nor yet through fear of failure. I did not know the social game, but
-I did know something of human nature. And I had found out that the
-triumphant class, far from being the gentlest and most civilized, as
-its dominant position in civilization would indicate, was in fact the
-most barbarous, was saturated with the raw savage spirit of the right
-of might. I am speaking of actualities, not of pretenses--of deeds,
-not of words. To find a class approaching it in frank savagery of
-will and action you would have to descend through the social strata
-until you came to the class that wields the blackjack and picks
-pockets and dynamites safes. The triumphant class became triumphant
-not by refinement and courtesy and consideration, but by defiance of
-those fundamentals of civilization--by successful defiance of them.
-It remained the triumphant class by keeping that primal savagery
-of nature. As soon as any member of it began to grow tame--gentle,
-considerate, except where consideration for others would increase his
-own wealth and power, became really a disciple of the sweet gospel he
-professed and urged upon others--just so soon did he begin to lose his
-wealth into the strong unscrupulous hands ever reaching for it--and
-with waning wealth naturally power and prestige waned.
-
-No, I did not refuse because I thought the triumphant class would
-contemptuously repel any attempt to carry its social doors by assault.
-I saw plainly enough that I could compel enough of these society
-leaders to receive my wife and daughters to insure their position. You
-have seen swine gathered about a trough, comfortably swilling; you have
-seen a huge porker come running with angry squeal to join the banquet.
-You have observed how rudely, how fiercely he is resented and fought
-off by the others. This, until he by biting and thrusting has made a
-place for himself; then the fact that he is an intruder and the method
-of his getting a place are forgotten, and the swilling goes peacefully
-forward. So it is, gentle reader, though it horrifies your hypocrisy to
-be told it, so do human beings conduct themselves round a financial or
-political or social swill trough. I should have had small difficulty
-in biting and kicking a satisfactory place for Edna and Margot at the
-social swill trough; I should have had no difficulty at all in keeping
-it for them. But----
-
-You will be incredulous, gentle reader, devoured of snobbishness and
-dazzled by what you have heard and read of the glories of fashionable
-society in the metropolis. You will be incredulous, because you, too,
-like the overwhelming majority of the comfortable classes in this great
-democracy--and many of the not so comfortable classes as well--because
-you, too, are infected of the mania for looking about for some one who
-refuses to associate with you on the ground that you are “common,”
-and for straightway making it your heart’s dearest desire to compel
-that person to associate with you. You will be incredulous when I tell
-you my sole reason was my hatred and horror of what seemed to me the
-degrading, vulgar, and rotten longings that filled my wife and that had
-infected my daughter. That hatred and horror had thrown me into a state
-of mind I did not dare confess to myself. You are incredulous; but
-perhaps you will admit I may be truthful when I explain that the reason
-for my moral and sentimental revolt was perhaps in large part my dense
-ignorance of the whole society side of life.
-
-No doubt in the Passaic public school of my boyhood there had been as
-much snobbishness as there is in Fifth Avenue. But I had somehow never
-happened to notice it. It must have been there; it must be elemental
-in human nature; how else account for my wife? We hear more about the
-snobbishness of Fifth Avenue than we do about the snobbishness of the
-tenements. But that is solely because Fifth Avenue is more conspicuous.
-Also, Fifth Avenue, supposedly educated, supposedly broadened by
-knowledge and taste, has no excuse for petty vanities that belong only
-to the ignorant. And if Fifth Avenue were really educated, really had
-knowledge and taste, it could not be snobbish. However, my busy life
-had never been touched by social snobbishness. I preferred to know
-and to associate with men better educated and richer than I, but for
-excellent practical reasons--because from such men I could get the
-knowledge and the wealth I needed. But I would not have wasted a moment
-of my precious time upon the men most exalted in fashionable life--the
-ignorant incompetents who had inherited their wealth. They seemed
-ridiculous and worthless to me, a man of thought and action.
-
-So, the sudden exposure of my wife’s and my little girl’s disease gave
-me a shock hardly to be measured by the man or woman used all his life
-to the social craze. It was much as if I had suddenly seen upon their
-bared bosoms the disgusting ravages of cancer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As I could not devise any line of action that, however faintly,
-promised results, I kept away from home. I absorbed myself in some new
-enterprises that filled my evenings, which I spent at my club with the
-men I drew into them. At the mention of club, gentle reader, I see your
-ears pricking. You are wondering what sort of club _I_ belonged to. I
-shall explain.
-
-It was the Amsterdam Club. You may have seen and gawked at its vast and
-imposing red sandstone front in middle Fifth Avenue. As you drove by in
-the “rubber-neck” wagon, the man with the megaphone may have shouted:
-“The Amsterdam Club, otherwise known as the Palace of Plutocracy. The
-total wealth of its members is one tenth of the total wealth of the
-United States. Every great millionaire in New York City belongs to it.
-The reason you see no one in the magnificent windows is because the
-plutocrats are afraid of cranks with pistol or bomb.” And you stared
-and envied and craned your neck backward as the sight-seeing car rolled
-on. A fairly accurate description of my club. But you will calm as I
-go on to tell you the inside truth about it. It was built to provide
-a club for those rich men of New York who had no social position, and
-so could not be admitted to the fashionable clubs. It was not built by
-those outcasts for whom it was intended, but by the rich men of the
-fashionable world. They did not build it out of pity nor yet out of
-generosity, but for freedom and convenience.
-
-You must know that the rich, both the fashionables and the excludeds,
-are intimately associated in business. Now, in the days before the
-Amsterdam Club, if a rich fashionable wished to talk business out of
-office hours with a rich unfashionable, he had to take him to his
-home or to his club, one or the other. You will readily appreciate
-that either course involved disagreeable complications. The rich
-unfashionable would say: “Why am I not invited to this snob’s house
-_socially_? Why does not this hound see that I am elected to his
-elegant club? I’ll teach this wrinkle-snout how to spit at me.
-I’ll slip a stiletto into his back, damn him.” As the number of
-rich unfashionables increased, as the number of stealthy financial
-stilettoings for social insult grew and swelled, the demand for a
-“way out” became more clamorous and panicky. The final result was
-the Amsterdam Club--perhaps by inspiration, perhaps by accident. And
-so it has come to pass that now, when a rich fashionable wishes to
-talk finance with a rich pariah, he does not have to run the risk of
-defiling his home or his exclusive club. With the gracious cordiality
-wherefor aristocracy is famed in song and story, he says: “Let us go
-to _our_ club”--for, the rich fashionables see to it that every rich
-pariah is elected to the Amsterdam immediately he becomes a person of
-financial consequence. And I fancy that not one in ten of the rich
-pariah members dreams how he is being insulted and tricked. All, or
-nearly all, imagine they are elected by favor of the great fashionable
-plutocrats to about the most exclusive club in New York. Also, not one
-in a dozen of the fashionable members appreciates how he is degrading
-himself--for, to my quaint mind, the snob degrades only himself.
-
-Well! Not many months after we moved from Brooklyn to Manhattan I
-was elected to the Amsterdam--I, in serene ignorance of the trick
-that was being played upon me by my sponsors, associates in large
-financial deals and members of several exclusive really fashionable
-clubs. They pulled regretful faces as they talked of the “long waiting
-lists at most of the clubs.” They brightened as they spoke of the
-Amsterdam--“the finest and, take it all round, the most satisfactory
-of the whole bunch, old man. And we believe we’ve got pull enough to
-put you in there pretty soon. We’ll work it, somehow.” If I had known
-the shrivel-hearted trick behind their genial friendliness, I should
-not have minded, should probably have laughed. For, human littlenesses
-do not irritate me; and I have a vanity--I prefer to call it a
-pride--that lifts me out of their reach. I am of the one aristocracy
-that is truly exclusive, the only one that needs no artificial
-barriers to keep it so. But I shall not bore you, gentle reader, by
-explaining about it. You are interested only in the aristocracies of
-rank and title and wealth that are nothing but the tawdry realization
-of the tawdry fancies of the yokel among his kine and the scullery
-maid among her pots. For, who but a tossed-up yokel or scullery maid
-would indulge in such vulgarities as sitting upon a gold throne or
-living in a draughty, cheerless palace or seeking to make himself
-more ridiculous by aggravating his littleness with a title, like the
-ass in the lion’s skin? Did it ever occur to you, gentle reader, that
-aristocracy is essentially common, essentially vulgar? To a large
-vision the distinction between king and carpenter, between the man with
-a million dollars and the million men with one dollar looks trivial and
-unimportant. Only a squat and squinting soul in a cellar and blinking
-through the twilight could discover agitating differences of rank
-between Fifth Avenue and Grand Street, between first floor front and
-attic rear, between flesh ripening to rot in silk and flesh ripening
-to rot in cotton. To an infinitesimal insect an infinite gulf yawns
-between the molecules of a razor’s edge.
-
-I often found my club a convenience, for in those busiest days of my
-financial career I had much private conferring--or conspiring, if you
-choose. Never had I found it so convenient as when for the first time
-there was pain and shrinking at the thought of going home, of seeing
-my wife and Margot. My Margot! When she was a baby how proudly I had
-wheeled her along the sidewalks of Passaic in the showy perambulator
-we bought for her--and the twenty-five dollars it cost loomed mighty
-big even to Edna. And in Brooklyn, what happy Sundays Edna and I had
-had with her, when I would hire a buggy at the livery stable round the
-corner and we would go out for the day to some Long Island woods; or
-when we would take her down to the respectable end of Coney Island to
-dig in the sand and to wade after the receding tide. My Margot! No
-longer mine; never again to be mine.
-
-One evening I had an appointment at the Amsterdam with a Western
-millionaire, Charles Murdock, whom I had interested in a Canada railway
-to tap a Hudson Bay spruce forest. He was having trouble with his
-wife and something of it had come out in the afternoon newspapers. At
-the last moment his secretary--who, by the way, afterwards married
-the divorced Mrs. Murdock--telephoned that Murdock could not keep
-his engagement to dine. I looked about for some one to help me eat
-the dinner I had ordered. There are never many disengaged men in the
-Amsterdam. The fashionable rich come only when they have business with
-the pariahs. The pariahs prefer their own houses or the barrooms and
-cafés of the big hotels. I therefore thought myself lucky when I found
-Bob Armitage sulking in a huge leather chair and got him to share my
-dinner. Armitage was one of my railway directors. He had helped me
-carry through the big stroke that made me, had joined in half a dozen
-of my enterprises in all of which I had been successful. There was no
-man of my acquaintance I knew and liked so well as Armitage. Yet it had
-so happened that we had never talked much with each other, except about
-business.
-
-It promised to be a silent dinner. He was as deep in his thoughts as
-I was in mine--and our faces showed that neither of us was cogitating
-anything cheerful. On impulse I suddenly said:
-
-“Bob, do you know about fashionable New York society?”
-
-I knew that he did; that is to say, I had often heard he was one of
-the heavy swells, having all three titles to fashion--wealth, birth,
-and marriage. But I now pretended ignorance of the fact; when you wish
-to inform yourself thoroughly on a subject you should always select an
-expert, tell him you know nothing and bid him enlighten you from the
-alphabet up.
-
-“Why do you ask?” said Armitage. “Do you want to get in? I had a notion
-you didn’t care for society--you and your wife.”
-
-Armitage didn’t go to Holy Cross, but to St. Bartholomew’s. So he had
-never known of my wife’s activities, knew only the sort of man I was.
-
-“Oh, I forgot,” he went on. “You’ve a daughter almost grown. I suppose
-you want her looked after. All right. I’ll attend to it for you. Your
-wife won’t mind my wife’s calling? I’d have sent her long ago--in fact,
-I apologize for not having done it. But I hate the fashionable crowd.
-They bore me. However, your wife may like them. Women usually do.”
-
-It was at my lips to thank him and decline his offer. Then it flashed
-into my mind that perhaps my one hope of getting back my wife and
-daughter, of restoring them to sanity, lay in letting them have what
-they wanted. Another sort of man might have deluded himself with the
-notion that he could set his foot down, stamp out revolt, compel his
-family to do as he willed. But I happen not to be of that instinctively
-tyrannical and therefore inherently stupid temperament.
-
-Armitage ate in silence for a few moments, then said:
-
-“I’ll have you elected to the Federal Club.”
-
-“This club is all I need,” said I.
-
-He smiled sardonically. I didn’t understand that smile then, because I
-didn’t know anything about caste in New York. “You let me look after
-you,” said he. “You’re a child in the social game.”
-
-“I’ve no objection to remaining so,” said I.
-
-“Quite right. There’s nothing in it,” said he. “But you must remember
-you’re living in a world of rather cheap fools, and they are impressed
-by that nothing. On the other side of the Atlantic the social prizes
-have a large substantial value. Over here the value’s small. Still it’s
-something. You wouldn’t refuse even a trading stamp, would you?”
-
-I laughed. “I refuse nothing,” said I. “I take whatever’s offered me.
-If I find I don’t want it, why, what’s easier than to throw it away?”
-
-“Then I’ll put you in the Federal Club. You could have made me do it,
-if you had happened to want it. So, why shouldn’t I do it anyhow, in
-appreciation of your forbearance? You don’t realize, but I’m doing for
-you what about two thirds of the members of this club would lick my
-boots to get me to do for them.”
-
-“I had no idea the taste for shoe polish was so general here,” said I.
-
-“It’s a human taste, my dear Loring,” replied he. “It’s as common as
-the taste for bread. All the men have it. As for the women they like
-nothing so well. Having one’s boots licked is the highest human joy.
-Next comes licking boots.”
-
-“You don’t believe that?” said I, for his tone was almost too bitter
-for jest.
-
-“You aren’t acquainted with your kind, old man,” retorted he.
-
-“I don’t know the kind you know,” said I. And then I remembered my wife
-and my daughter. There must be truth in what Armitage had said; for,
-my beautiful wife and my sweet daughter, both looking so proud--surely
-they could not be rare exceptions in their insensibility to what seemed
-to me elemental self-respect.
-
-“You don’t know your kind,” he went on, “because you don’t indulge in
-cringing and don’t encourage it. You’re like the cold, pure-minded
-woman who goes through the world imagining it a chaste and austere
-place because her very face silences and awes sensuality. You are part
-of the small advance guard of a race that is to come.” He grinned
-satirically. “Perhaps you’ll drop out in the next few months. We’ll
-see.”
-
-When the silence was again broken, it was broken by me. “Do you know a
-school kept by a woman named Ryper?” I inquired.
-
-“Sure I do,” replied he. He gave me a shrewd laughing glance. “The
-daughter isn’t learning anything?”
-
-“Nothing but mischief,” said I.
-
-“That’s what Ryper’s for. But what does it matter? Why should a woman
-learn anything? They’re of no consequence. The less a man has to do
-with them the better off he will be.”
-
-“They’re of the highest consequence,” said I bitterly. “They have the
-control of the coming generation.”
-
-“And a hell of a generation it’s to be,” cried he, suddenly rousing
-from the state of bored apathy in which he seemed to pass most of his
-time. “You’ve got me started on the subject that’s a craze with me. I
-have only one strong feeling--and that is my contempt for woman--the
-American woman. I’m not speaking about the masses. They don’t count.
-They never did. They never will. No one counts until he gets some
-education and some property. I suppose the women of the masses do as
-well as could be expected. But how about the women of the classes
-with education and property? Do you know why the world advances so
-slowly?--why the upper classes are always tumbling back and everything
-has to be begun all over again?”
-
-“I’ve a suspicion,” said I. “Because the men are fools about the women.”
-
-“The sex question!” cried Armitage. “That’s the only question worth
-agitating about. Until it’s settled--or begins to be settled--and
-settled right, it’s useless to attempt anything else. The men climb
-up. The women they take on their backs become a heavier and heavier
-burden--and down they both drop--and the children with them. Selfish,
-vain, extravagant mothers, crazy about snobbishness, bringing up their
-children in extravagance, ignorance and snobbishness--that’s America
-to-day!”
-
-“The men are fools about the women, and they let the women make fools
-of themselves.”
-
-“The men are fools--but not about the women,” said Armitage. “How much
-time and thought for your family have you averaged daily in the last
-ten years?”
-
-“I’ve been busy,” said I. “I’ve had to look out for the bread and
-butter, you know.”
-
-“Exactly!” exclaimed he, in triumph. “You think you’re fond of your
-family. No doubt you are. But the bottom truth is you’re indifferent to
-your family. I can prove it in a sentence: You attend to anything you
-care about; and you haven’t attended to them.”
-
-I stared at him like a man dazzled by a sudden light--which, in fact, I
-was.
-
-“Guilty or not guilty?” said he, laughing.
-
-“Guilty,” said I.
-
-“The American man, too busy to be bothered, turns the American woman
-loose--gives her absolute freedom. And what is she? A child in
-education, a child in experience, a child in taste. He turns her loose,
-bids her do as she likes--and, up to the limit of his ability gives
-her all the money she wants. He prefers her a child. Her childishness
-rests his tired brain. And he doesn’t mind if she’s a little
-mischievous--that makes her more amusing.”
-
-“You are married--have children,” said I, too serious to bother about
-tact. “How is it with you?”
-
-He laughed cynically. “Don’t speak of my family,” said he. “I tried the
-other way. But I’ve given up--several years ago. What can _one_ do in a
-crazy crowd?”
-
-“Not much,” confessed I, deeply depressed.
-
-“The women stampede each other,” he went on. “Besides, no American
-woman--none that I know--has been brought up with education enough
-to enable her to make a life for herself, even when the man tries to
-help her. To like an occupation, to do anything at it, you’ve got
-to understand it. Being a husband and father is an occupation, the
-most important one in the world for a man. Being a wife and mother is
-an occupation--the most important one in the world for a woman. Are
-American men and women brought up to those occupations--trained in
-them--prepared for them? The most they know is a smatter at the pastime
-of lover and mistress--and they’re none too adept at that.”
-
-“I believe,” said I, “that in my whole life I’ve never learned so much
-in so short a time.”
-
-“It’ll do you no good to have learned,” rejoined Armitage. “It will
-only make you sad or bitter, according to your mood. Or, perhaps some
-day you may reach my plane of indifference--and be amused.”
-
-“Nothing is hopeless,” said I.
-
-“The American woman is hopeless,” said he. “Her vanity is
-triple-plated, copper-riveted. She’s hopeless so long as the American
-man will give her the money to buy flattery at home and abroad; for,
-so long as you can buy flattery, you never find out the truth about
-yourself. And the American man will give her the money as long as he
-can, because it buys him peace and freedom. He doesn’t want to be
-bothered with the American woman--except when he’s in a certain mood
-that doesn’t last long.”
-
-“There are exceptions,” said I--not clear as to what I meant.
-
-“Yes--there are exceptions,” said he. “There are American men who spend
-time with the American woman. And what does she do to them? Look at
-the poor asses!--neglecting their business, letting their minds go to
-seed. They don’t make her wise. She makes them foolish--as foolish as
-herself--and her children.”
-
-You may perhaps imagine into what a state this talk of Armitage’s threw
-me. He was talking generalities. But every word he spoke went straight
-home to me. He had torn the coverings from my inmost family life, had
-exposed its soul, naked and ugly, to my fascinated gaze.
-
-He finished dinner, lighted a cigarette--sat back watching me with a
-mysterious smile, half amused, wholly sympathetic, upon his handsome
-face, younger than his forty-five years--for he was considerably older
-than I. I was hardly more than barely conscious of that look of his, or
-of his presence. Suddenly I struck my fist with violence upon the arm
-of my chair. And I said:
-
-“I _will_ do something! It is _not_ hopeless!”
-
-He shook his head slowly, at the same time exhaling a cloud of smoke.
-“I tried, Godfrey,” said he, “and I had a better chance of success
-than you could possibly have. For my wife had been brought up by a
-sensible father and mother in a sensible way, and she had been used to
-fashionable society all her life and, when I married her, seemed to
-have proved herself immune. A few years and--” His cynical smile may
-not have been genuine. “She leads the simpletons. But you’ll see for
-yourself.”
-
-“When you know what to do, and feel as you do,” said I, “why did you
-suggest our going into your society?”
-
-“It isn’t mine,” laughed he. “It’s my wife’s. It doesn’t belong to the
-men. It belongs to the women.”
-
-“Into your wife’s society?” persisted I.
-
-“Why did I suggest it? Because I wished to please you, and I know you
-like to please your wife. And she’s an American woman--therefore,
-society mad. She has her daughter at the Ryper joint, hasn’t she?”
-
-I sat morosely silent.
-
-“Oh, come now! Cheer up!” cried he, with laughing irony. “After all,
-you can’t blame the American woman. She has no training for the career
-of woman. She has no training for any serious career. She’s got to do
-something, hasn’t she? Well, what is there open to her but the career
-of lady? That doesn’t call for brains or for education or for taste.
-The dressmaker and milliner supply the toilet. The architect and
-decorator and housekeeper and staff supply the grand background. Father
-or husband supplies the cash. A dip into a novel or book of culture
-essays supplies the gibble-gabble. A nice easy profession, is lady--and
-universally admired and envied. No, Loring, it isn’t fair to blame her.”
-
-We strolled down Fifth Avenue. After he had watched the stream of
-elegant carriages and automobiles, some of the too elegant automobiles
-having their interiors brightly lighted that the passersby might not
-fail to see the elaborate toilets of the occupants--after he had
-observed this procession of extravagance and vanity, with only an
-occasional derisive laugh or “Look there! Don’t miss that lady!” he
-burst out again in his pleasantly ironical tone:
-
-“How fat the women are getting!--the automobile women! And how the
-candy shops are multiplying. Candy and automobiles!--and culture. Let
-us not forget culture.”
-
-“No, indeed,” said I grimly. “Let’s not forget the culture.”
-
-“I was telling my wife yesterday,” said Armitage, “what culture is.
-It is talking in language that means nothing about things that mean
-less than nothing. But watch the ladies stream by, all got up in their
-gorgeous raiment and jewels. What have they ever done, what are they
-doing, that entitles them to so much more than their poor sisters
-scuffling along on the sidewalk here?”
-
-“They’ve talked and are talking about culture,” said I. “And don’t
-forget charity.”
-
-“Ah--charity!” cried he gayly. “Thank you. I see we understand each
-other.” He linked his arm affectionately in mine. “Charity! It’s
-the other half of a lady’s occupation. Charity! Having no fancy for
-attending to her own business, she meddles in the business of the
-poor, tempting them to become liars and paupers. Your fine lady is a
-professional patronizer. She has no usefulness to contribute to the
-world. So, she patronizes--the arts with her culture--the poor with
-her charity, and the human race with her snobbishness.”
-
-He was so amused by his train of thought that he lapsed into silence
-the more fully to enjoy it; for, every thought has its shadings that
-cannot be expressed in words yet give the keenest enjoyment. When he
-spoke again, it was to repeat:
-
-“And what have these ladies done to entitle them to this luxury? Are
-they, perchance, being paid for giving to the world, and for inspiring,
-the noble sons and daughters who drive coaches and marry titles?”
-
-“But what do we men do? What do _I_ do--that entitles me to so much
-more than that chap perched on the hansom? I often think of it. Don’t
-you?”
-
-“Never,” laughed Armitage. “I never claw my own sore spots. There’s
-no fun in that. Always claw the other fellow’s. There’s a laugh and
-distraction for your own troubles in seeing him wince.”
-
-“Is that why you’ve been clawing mine?” said I.
-
-We were pausing before his big house, at the corner of the Avenue. “If
-I have been I didn’t know it,” said he. He glanced up at his windows
-with a satirical smile. “This evening I’ve been breaking my rule and
-clawing at my own.” He put out his hand. “Let the social business take
-its course,” advised he with impressive friendliness. “You and I can’t
-make the world over. To fight against the inevitable merely increases
-everyone’s discomfort.”
-
-“Perhaps you’re right,” said I.
-
-I agreed with his conclusion that it was best to let things alone,
-though I reached that conclusion by a different route. I had in mind my
-forlorn hope of good results from a homeopathic treatment. I saw how
-impossible it was to undo the practically completed training of a grown
-girl. I appreciated the absurdity of an attempt radically to change
-Edna’s character--an absurdity as great as an attempt to make her a
-foot taller or to alter the color of her eyes. The one hope, it seemed
-to me--and I still think I was right--was that, when they had social
-position, when there should no longer be excuse for fretting lest some
-one were thinking them common, they might calm down toward some sort of
-sanity.
-
-Bear in mind, please, that at the time I did not have the situation,
-nor any idea of it, and of how to deal with it, definitely and clearly
-in mind. I was groping, was seeing dimly, was not even sure that I saw
-at all. I was like a thousand other busy American men who, after years
-of absorption in affairs, are abruptly and rudely awakened to the fact
-that there is something wrong at home where they had been flattering
-themselves everything was all right.
-
-The things Armitage had said occupied my mind, almost to the exclusion
-of my business. The longer I revolved them, the better I understood the
-situation at home. I could not but wonder what wretched catastrophe in
-his domestic life had made him so insultingly bitter against women. I
-felt that he was unfair to them; any judgment that condemned a class
-for possessing universal human weakness must be unfair. At the same
-time I believed he had excuse for being unfair--the excuse of a man
-whose domestic life is in ruins. I began to see toward the bottom of
-the woman question--the nature and the cause of the crisis through
-which women were passing.
-
-The modern world, as I had read history enough to know, had suddenly
-and completely revolutionized the conditions of life. The male sex,
-though poorly where at all equipped to meet the new conditions, still
-was compelled to meet them after a fashion. A river that for ages has
-moved quietly along in a deep bed, all in a night swells to many times
-its former size and plays havoc with the surrounding country. That
-was a fairly good figure for the new life science and machinery had
-suddenly forced upon the human race. The men living in the inundated
-region--where floods were unknown, where appliances, even ideas
-for combating them did not exist--the men, hastily, hysterically,
-incompetently, but with resolution and persistence, because forced by
-dire necessity, would proceed to deal with that vast new river. Just so
-were the men of our day dealing with the life of steam and electricity,
-of ancient landmarks of religion and morality swept away or shifted, of
-ancient industrial and social relations turned upside down and inside
-out. The men were coping with the situation after a fashion. But the
-women?
-
-These unfortunate creatures, faced with the new conditions, were in
-their greater ignorance and incapacity and helplessness, trying to
-live as if nothing had occurred!--as if the old order still existed.
-And the men, partly through ignorance, partly through preoccupation
-with the new order, partly through indifference and contempt veiled
-as consideration for the weaker sex, were encouraging them in their
-fatal folly. Was it strange that the women were deceived, remained
-unconscious of their peril? No, it was on the contrary inevitable. When
-men, though working away under and at the new conditions, still talked
-as if the old conditions prevailed, when preachers still preached that
-way, and orators still eulogized the thing that was dead and buried as
-if it lived and reigned, when in order to find out the change you had
-to disregard the speech, the professions, the confident assertions of
-all mankind and observe closely their actions only--when there was this
-universal unawareness and unpreparedness, how could the poor women be
-condemned?
-
-I could not but admit to myself that in his account of the doings of
-the women Armitage was only slightly if at all exaggerating. But with
-my more judicial temperament that had won me fortune and leadership
-while hardly more than a youth, I could not join him in damning the
-women for their folly and idleness and uselessness.
-
-So, the immediate result of Armitage’s talk was a gentler and
-thoroughly tolerant frame of mind toward my wife, both as to herself
-and as to what she had done to our daughter. After all, I had for wife
-only the typical woman--and a rarely sweet and charming example of
-the type. And my daughter was no worse, perhaps was better, than the
-average girl of her age and position. What did I think I had--or ought
-to have--in the way of wife and daughter, anyhow? What was this vague,
-sentimental dream of family life? If I were by some magic to find
-myself possessed of the sort of family I thought I wanted, wouldn’t I
-be more dissatisfied than at present? When I had a wife and a daughter
-who _looked_ so well and did nothing but what everyone around me
-regarded as right and proper, was I not unjust in my discontent?
-
-I had not seen Edna or Margot for several days before my talk with
-Bob Armitage. I did not see Edna for several days afterwards, though
-I dined at home every evening and did not go out after dinner. I was
-debating how to make overtures toward a reconciliation when she came
-into my study. She had an air of coldness and constraint--the air of
-the woman who is inflicting severe punishment upon an offending husband
-by withholding herself from him. She said:
-
-“Mrs. Robert Armitage has asked me to dine on Thursday evening.”
-
-I replied hesitatingly: “Thursday-- I’ve an engagement for Thursday--a
-dinner.”
-
-In her agitation she did not note that I had not finished. Dropping her
-coldness, she flashed out fiercely:
-
-“We’ve simply _got_ to accept! It’s our chance. We may not have it
-again. It’s what I’ve been waiting for ever since we moved to this
-house. And I can’t go alone. Oh, how selfish you are! You never think
-of anything but your own comfort. And you can’t or won’t realize any of
-the higher things of life for which I’m striving. It is too horrible!”
-
-If any male reader of this story has known a woman who was, up to a
-certain time, always able to rouse a strong emotion in him--of love
-or anger, of pleasure or pain--a woman toward whom he could not be
-lukewarm, and if that reader can recall the day on which he faced that
-woman in a situation of stress and found himself calm and patient and
-kind toward her----
-
-I was surprised to find that Edna was not moving me. Her loveliness
-did not stir a single tiny flame of passion. Her abuse did not excite
-resentment or dread. “Just a moment, my dear,” said I with the
-tranquillity of a judge. “I was trying to say that I would break my
-engagement.”
-
-I saw that she did not believe me but imagined her outburst had
-terrified and cowed me into submission. How dispassionately I observed
-and judged!
-
-“Accept, if you wish,” I went on. “I like Armitage. We’ve been friends
-for years.”
-
-“Why didn’t you tell me so?” demanded she. “Why have you been plotting
-against me all this time?”
-
-“You forbade me to speak of business,” said I. “So I have never spoken
-of my business friends.”
-
-Her anger against me was almost beyond control. If she had been a lady
-born, if she had not had a past to live down, a childhood of vulgar
-surroundings and actions, she would have given way and abused like a
-fish wife. A lady born dares excesses of passion that a made lady,
-with her deep reverence for the ladylike, would shrink from. She said
-through clinched teeth:
-
-“I find out that Mrs. Armitage, the leader of the younger set, the
-most fashionable woman in New York, has been eager to know me for a
-long time. And _you_ have been preventing it!”
-
-“How?” said I, amused, but not showing it.
-
-“She called here the other day. She was as friendly as could be. We
-became friends at once. She said that for months she had been at her
-husband to get her leave to call on me, but that he and you, between
-you, had neglected to arrange it.”
-
-I saw how this notion of the matter delighted her, and that the truth
-would enrage her, would make her dislike me more than ever. So, I held
-my peace and thought, for the first time, I believe, how tiresome a
-woman without a sense of humor could become--how tryingly tiresome.
-
-“She and I are going to do a lot of things together,” continued Edna in
-the same intense humorless way. “I always knew that if I got a chance
-to talk with one of those women who could appreciate me, I’d have no
-further trouble. I knew I was wasting time on those religious fakirs
-and frumps, but I was always hoping that through them I’d somehow meet
-a woman of my own sort. Now I’ve met her, and something tells me I’ll
-have no further trouble.”
-
-“Probably you’re right,” said I.
-
-“How it infuriates me,” she went on, “to think I’d have been spared
-all the humiliations and heartaches I’ve suffered, if you had used
-your influence with Robert Armitage months--years ago. But no--you
-don’t want me to get on. You wanted to stick in the mud. So I had to
-suffer--and Margot, too.”
-
-“Well, it’s all right now,” said I, probably as indifferently as I
-felt. Why had God seen fit to create women without the sense of humor?
-Perhaps to save men from falling altogether under their rule.
-
-“The sufferings of that poor child!” cried Edna. “And the very day
-after Mrs. Armitage came, Gracie Fortescue asked her to a party, and
-all the girls have taken her up. Gracie Fortescue is a niece of Hilda
-Armitage. Her brother married a Fortescue.”
-
-“Really?” said I. “And Margot is happy?”
-
-“No thanks to you,” retorted Edna sourly.
-
-“Well, plunge in, my dear,” said I, beginning to examine the papers
-before me on the desk. “Only--spare me as much as possible. I need all
-my time and strength for my work.”
-
-“But you’ll have to go with me to dinners, and to the opera
-occasionally. I can’t do this thing altogether alone.”
-
-“Say I’m an invalid. Say I’m away. They don’t want me, anyhow. Armitage
-doesn’t go with his wife.”
-
-“But that’s different,” cried she in a fever. “_She_ has always had
-social position. It doesn’t matter if people do talk scandal about her.
-_I_ can’t afford to cause gossip.”
-
-“Why should they gossip? But no matter. I don’t want to worry with
-that--that higher life, let us call it. Or to be worried with it. Do
-the best you can for me. I’m a man’s man--always have been--always
-shall be. If you’ve got to have a man to take you about, dig up one
-somewhere. I’m willing to pay him well.”
-
-“Always money!” exclaimed she in deep disgust.
-
-I laughed. “Not a bad thing, money,” said I.
-
-“It would never have got me Mrs. Armitage’s friendship,” said she
-loftily.
-
-“You think so?” said I amiably. “All right, if it pleases you.
-But--take my advice, my dear--enjoy yourself to the limit with
-highfaluting _talk_ about the worthlessness of money and that sort
-of rot. But don’t for a minute lose your point of view and convince
-yourself.”
-
-“Thank God I’ve got a vein of refinement, of idealism in my nature,”
-said Edna. “I wouldn’t have as sordid an opinion of human nature as you
-have for anything in the world.”
-
-“You can afford not to have it, my dear,” said I. “So long as I know
-the truth, and so make the necessary money to keep us going, you are
-free to indulge your lovely delusions. Have your beautiful, unmercenary
-friendship with Mrs. Armitage and the other ladies. I’ll continue
-to make it financially worth their husbands’ while to encourage the
-friendships.”
-
-“I thought so!” cried she. “You believe Mrs. Armitage has taken me up
-for business reasons.”
-
-“If you had been some poor woman--” I began mildly.
-
-“Don’t be absurd!” cried my wife. “How could there be an equal and
-true friendship between Mrs. Armitage and a woman with none of the
-surroundings of a lady, and with no means of gratifying the tastes
-of a lady? But that doesn’t mean that Mrs. Armitage is a low, sordid
-woman. She has a beautiful nature. Money is merely the background of
-high society. It simply gives ladies and gentlemen the opportunity
-to set the standards of dress and manners and taste. And of course
-they’re careful whom they associate with. Who wants to be annoyed
-by adventurers and climbers and all sorts of dreadful mercenary,
-self-seeking people?”
-
-“Who, indeed?” said I.
-
-It gently appealed to my sense of the ridiculous, to see my wife thus
-changed in a twinkling into a defender and exponent of fashionable
-society. It was so deliciously feminine, as fantastically humorless,
-her sincere belief in the poppycock she was reeling off--the twaddle
-with which Mrs. Armitage had doubtless stuffed her. The sordidness,
-the vulgarity, the meanness, the petty cruelty, the snobbishness of
-fashionable people--all forgotten in a moment, hastily covered deep
-with the gilt and the tinsel of hypocritical virtues. What an amusing
-ass the human animal is! How stupidly unconscious of its own motives!
-How eagerly it attributes to itself all kinds of high motives for the
-ordinary, or scrubby, or downright mean actions--and attributes the
-same motives to its fellow asses, to make its own pretenses the more
-plausible! An amusing ass--but it would be more amusing if it were not
-so monotonously solemn, but laughed at itself occasionally.
-
-However----
-
-The atmosphere of our home now steadily improved. The servants
-began to respect us, where they had despised and had scarcely
-troubled themselves to conceal their contempt. The cook sent up
-more attractive--though I fear even less digestible--dishes. The
-butler addressed me with a gratifying servility. The maids developed
-unexpected talents, showing acquaintance with the needs and customs
-of a fashionable household. The housekeeper’s soul dropped from its
-theretofore insolently erect posture to all fours, and she attended
-to her duties. Edna became sweet and gracious. Margot grew merry and
-affectionate. All the result of Mrs. Armitage. We had been pariahs; we
-were of the elect.
-
-I saw and felt the change distinctly at the time. But it is only in
-retrospect that I take the full measure--get its full humor--and pathos.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That Armitage dinner was _the_ event of Edna’s life. She had been born;
-she had married; she had given birth--all memorable and important
-occurrences. But this formal début in fashionable society topped
-them as the peak tops the foothills. Having seen her quivering and
-hysterical excitement when we were leaving the house, I feared a
-breakdown. I marveled at her apparent calmness and ease as we entered
-the dining room of the Armitages. Never had she looked so well. If Mrs.
-Armitage had not been a self-satisfied beauty of the dark type she
-might have demolished Edna’s dream in its very realizing. But no doubt
-Edna, the shrewd, had duly measured Hilda Armitage and had discovered
-that it was safe to make her proud of the woman she had taken under
-protection and patronage.
-
-There were but a dozen people in all at the dinner. It did not seem
-to be much of an affair. The drawing-room was plain--nothing gaudy,
-nothing costly looking. Our own dining room was much grander--to
-our then uneducated taste. The guests were--just people--simple,
-good-natured mortals, perfectly at their ease and putting us at our
-ease. You would have wondered, after five minutes of that company,
-how anyone could possibly find any difficulty in getting intimately
-acquainted with them. But, as Edna knew at a glance, she and I were in
-the midst of the innermost and smallest circle of the many circles one
-within another that make up New York fashionable society. If on the
-recommendation of the Armitages we should have the good fortune to be
-accepted by that circle of circles, that circle within the circles,
-there would be nothing of a social nature left for us to conquer in New
-York. I was ignorant of all this at the time; had I known, I imagine
-I should have remained tranquil. But Edna knew at a glance; she had
-been studying these matters for years. It shows what force of character
-she had that she conducted herself as if it were the most ordinary and
-familiar occasion of her life. She had always said, even away back in
-the days of the grand forty-dollars-a-month flat in Passaic, that she
-belonged at the social top. She was undoubtedly right. The way she
-acted when she arrived there proved it.
-
-You do not often have the chance, gentle reader, to get so well
-acquainted with any human being as I have enabled you to get with Edna.
-Probably you do not even know yourself so well. Therefore I suspect
-that you have a wholly false notion of her--think her in every way much
-worse relatively than she was. Through your novels and through the
-reports your dim eyes bring to your narrow and shallow mind, you have
-acquired certain habits of judging your fellow beings.
-
-You attach inflated importance to their unimportant surface
-qualities--physical appearance, pleasant voice and manner--and to their
-amiable little hypocrisies of apparent sweetness and generosity and
-friendliness. You do not see the real person--the human being. You,
-being by training a hypocrite and a believer in hypocrisies, scorn
-human beings. Now I prefer them to the sort of people with whom you
-and your false literature populate the world. In making you acquainted
-with Edna--and the others in my story--I have not introduced you to bad
-people, monsters, but to real beings of usual types, probably on the
-whole superior to your smug self in all the good qualities. Had you
-seen Edna in the Armitage house that evening you would have thought her
-as incapable of calculation and snobbishness as--well, as any of the
-others in that company whose whole lives were made up of calculation
-and snobbishness. She--and they--looked so refined and elevated.
-She--and they--talked so high-mindedly. I, who knew almost nothing at
-that time except business, was listener rather than talker; and you may
-be sure such a man as I, having such ignorance as mine to cover up, had
-in years of practice become somewhat adept in that saving art for the
-intelligent ignorant. But Edna----
-
-She, the most expert of smatterers, fairly shone. With her beauty and
-vivacity, her eloquent eyes and dazzling smile, and exquisite bare
-shoulders, to aid her, she created an impression of brilliancy.
-
-“You had a good time?” said I, when we were in the motor for the home
-journey.
-
-“I never had as good a time in my life,” she exclaimed, her voice
-tremulous with ecstasy. “Did I look well?”
-
-“Never so well,” said I. “And you made a hit.”
-
-“I was careful to cultivate the women,” said she. “I’ve got to get the
-women.”
-
-“You’ve got them,” I declared sincerely.
-
-“You’re sure I didn’t make some of them jealous? Did you see any signs?”
-
-“They liked you,” said I.
-
-“I had to play my cards well,” pursued she. “It was a difficult
-position. I was far and away the best looking woman there, with the
-possible exception of Mrs. Armitage. Did you hear her call me Edna?”
-
-“You and Mrs. Armitage look well together. You are of about the same
-figure, and the contrast of coloring is very good.”
-
-“That’s why we took to each other so quickly. Each of us sets off the
-other.”
-
-“How did you like Armitage?” I asked.
-
-“Oh, well enough,” said she indifferently. “I hardly noticed him--or
-the other men. I had my game to play. The men don’t count in the social
-game. It’s the women. I shall be nervous until I find out whether I
-really got them. They are such cats!--so mean and sly and jealous. I
-_detest_ women!”
-
-“I prefer men, myself,” said I.
-
-“Men!” She laughed scornfully. “I think men are intolerable--American
-men. They say foreigners are better. But American men--they know
-nothing but dull business or politics. They have no breadth--no
-idealism. The women are far superior to the men.”
-
-I laughed. “No doubt you women are too good for us,” said I carelessly.
-“We’re grateful that you don’t scorn us too much even to accept our
-money.”
-
-“How coarse that is! Don’t spoil the happiest evening of my life.”
-
-We were at home, so she could escape from me. And I, for my part, was
-as glad to be quit of her society as she could possibly have been to
-get rid of me. I was beginning to realize that her conversation bored
-me, that it had always bored me, that it was her sex and only her sex
-that interested me. And latterly even this had lost its charm. Why?
-
-I have observed--and perhaps you have observed it, too--that people
-of wealth and position, unless they have very striking individuality
-indeed, are usually utterly devoid of charm. It is difficult to become
-interested in them, to establish any sort of sympathetic current.
-And you will notice that fashionable functions are dull, essentially
-dull; that the animation is artificial, is supplied from without by an
-orchestra or entertainers, and fails to infect the company. It was long
-before I discovered the explanation for this. I at first thought it was
-the stupidity that comes from a surfeit of the luxuries and pleasures.
-But I am now convinced that this familiar explanation is not the true
-one; that the true one is the excessive, the really preposterous
-self-centeredness of people of rank and wealth. From waking until
-sleeping they are surrounded by hirelings and sycophants who think
-and talk only of them. Thus the rich man or woman gets into the habit
-of concentrating upon self. Now the essence of charm is giving--giving
-oneself out in sympathetic interest in one’s fellows. How can people,
-all whose faculties are trained to work in upon themselves--how can
-they have charm? An egotist, one who _talks_ only of himself, may have
-charm because he gives you the impression that he is trying to please
-you, that he thinks you so important that he wishes you to be sensible
-of his importance. But the egotist who, whatever he _talks_, _thinks_
-only of himself--he is not only dull and bored but also a diffuser
-of dullness and boredom. And that is how their servants and their
-sycophants make the rich and the fashionable so dreary.
-
-I imagine some such effect as this was being produced upon my wife
-by her surroundings of luxury. I think that may account for her long
-decreasing charm for me. At any rate, soon after she was well launched
-on her Elysian sea of fashion--that is to say, soon after she ceased to
-have any check of social seeking to restrain her from centering all her
-thoughts and actions upon herself, she lost the last bit of her charm
-for me. She became radiantly beautiful. Her face took on a serene and
-refinedly assured expression that made her extravagantly admired on
-every hand. She became gracious to me and almost as sweet as she had
-been before we moved to New York. She even let me see that, if I so
-desired, she would condescend to be on terms of wifely affection with
-me again. But I did not so desire. I liked her. I admired her energy,
-her toilets, and, quite impersonally, her aristocratic beauty. But
-I was content to be a bachelor, and I was grateful when she began to
-relieve me of the tediousness of going about in her train.
-
-My substitute was an architect, Leon MacIlvane by name--a handsome
-young fellow of about my wife’s age, though he thought her much
-younger, despite Margot’s age and appearance. With his poetic dark eyes
-and classic features, and rich, deep voice, MacIlvane had long been
-a favorite with the young married women of the Armitage set. He was
-indeed a valuable asset. The rich unmarried men were not especially
-interesting; also, they were needed by the marriageable girls.
-MacIlvane, not a marrying man and never making any mother uneasy by so
-much as an interested glance at a daughter intended for a rich husband,
-devoted himself to married women.
-
-“I do not care for girls,” he said to me. “They are too colorless.”
-
-“Why bother with women at all?” said I. “Aren’t they all colorless?
-What do they know about life? What experience have they had?”
-
-“An intelligent woman’s mind is the complement of an intelligent man’s
-mind,” said he, as if this trite old fallacy were a brilliant discovery
-of his own making. “Women stimulate me, give me ideas.”
-
-“Oh, I see,” said I practically. “Business. Yes, an architect does deal
-chiefly with the women.”
-
-“I didn’t mean that,” said he, showing as much anger as he dared show
-the husband of the woman to whom he had attached himself.
-
-“Where’s the harm in it?” said I encouragingly. “You’ve got to make a
-living--haven’t you? It’s good sense for a business man to cultivate
-his customers.”
-
-He, the poseur and the small man, hated this plain truthful way of
-dealing with his profession. Like all chaps of that kidney he thought
-only of himself and of appearances, and sought to degrade a noble
-profession to the base uses of his vanity. In fact, he had begun with
-my wife because of the orders he hoped to get--for, he suspected
-that once she looked about her in the fashionable world from the new
-viewpoint of a fashionable person, she would want changes in her house
-to make it less vividly grand. He believed she would let Hilda Armitage
-educate her; and Hilda, unlike most of her friends, liked the quiet
-kinds of ostentation and costliness. And he guessed correctly. He was
-well paid for undertaking to replace me as escort--so far as I could
-be replaced without causing scandal--and, thank heaven, that was very
-far in the New York of busy and bored husbands, detesting the gaudy
-gaddings their wives loved.
-
-Soon he was serving my wife for other reasons than pay. I saw something
-of him from time to time, and I presently began to note a change in his
-manner toward me--a formal politeness, an exaggeration of courtesy. I
-spoke to Armitage about it. Armitage and I had become the most intimate
-of friends--knocked about together in the evenings, were more closely
-associated than ever in business.
-
-“Bob,” said I to Armitage, “what ails that ass, MacIlvane? He treats
-me as if he were in love with my wife.”
-
-Armitage laughed. “That’s it,” said he. “My wife’s spaniel, Courtleigh,
-who writes poetry, treats me the same way. Get any anonymous letters
-yet?”
-
-“Two,” said I.
-
-“Servants,” said he. “I suppose you burnt them? You didn’t show them to
-your wife?”
-
-“Heavens, no,” replied I. “Why unsettle her? Why upset a pleasant
-arrangement? My wife finds MacIlvane useful. I find him invaluable. He
-saves me hours of time. He spares me hours of boredom.”
-
-“My feeling about Courtleigh,” said Armitage. “And both those chaps are
-comfortably trustworthy.”
-
-“I hadn’t thought of MacIlvane in that way,” said I. “I know my
-wife--and that’s enough.”
-
-Armitage reflected with an amused smile on his face. Finally, he
-said: “I don’t suppose there ever were since the world began so
-thoroughly trustworthy women as these American women of the fashionable
-crowd--those that have very rich husbands--and only those, of course,
-are really fashionable. They may flirt a little, but never anything
-serious--never anything that’d give their husbands an excuse for
-throwing them out--and lose them their big houses and big incomes and
-social leadership.”
-
-I had not thought of these aspects of the matter. I based my feeling of
-security solely on my knowledge of my wife’s intense self-absorption.
-All the springs of sentiment--except the shallow spring of highfaluting
-talk--had dried up in her. She would listen to MacIlvane’s flatteries
-as long as he cared to pour them out. But if he ever tried to get her
-to think of _him_, she would feel outraged.
-
-“I suppose,” pursued Armitage, “we’d be tremendously amused if we
-could overhear those chaps talking to our wives about us. They don’t
-dare presume to the extent of mentioning our names. But they hand
-out generalities of roasting--how stupid most American men are, how
-superior the women are, what a tragic condescension for a wonderful
-American woman to have to live with a man who couldn’t appreciate her.”
-
-I nodded and laughed.
-
-“Nothing a woman loves so much--an American woman with a little
-miseducation befogging her mind and fooling her as to its limited
-extent--nothing she so dearly loves as to hear that she has a
-great intellect and a great soul, complex, mysterious, beyond the
-comprehension of the vulgar male clods about her. That’s why they
-like foreigners. You ought to watch those foreign chaps flatter our
-women--make perfect fools of them.”
-
-But I had no desire to watch women in any circumstances. I had no
-active resentment against them as had Armitage. I simply wished to
-be let alone, to be free to pursue my ambitions and my ideas of
-self-development. I had ceased to feel about Margot. I was merely glad
-she was not a boy; for I felt that if she were a boy, I should have
-to assert myself and do some drastic and disagreeable--and almost
-certainly disastrous--disciplining in my family.
-
-About a year and a half after my wife achieved her ambition, I began to
-feel that she was spiritually bearing down upon me in pursuance of some
-new secret plan.
-
-During the year and a half she had been playing the fashionable social
-game with the strenuous enthusiasm which only a woman--I had almost
-said only an American woman--seems able to inject into the pursuit
-of objects that are of no consequences whatsoever. And, in spite of
-the useful MacIlvane I had been compelled to assist her far more than
-was to my liking. I went about enough to get a thorough insight into
-fashionableness--and a profound distaste for it. Of the many phases,
-ludicrous, repellent, despicable, pitiful, there was one that made a
-deep impression upon me. It amazed me to find that the “best” class
-of people was, if possible, more vulgarly snobbish than the class
-from which I had come--even than the “Brooklyn bounders.” I could
-not comprehend--I cannot comprehend--how those who have had the best
-opportunities are no more intelligent, no broader of mind than those
-who have had no opportunities at all. The ignorance, the narrowness of
-the men and women of the comfortable classes!--the laziness of their
-minds!--the shallow cant about literature, art and the like! Really,
-intelligence, activity of mind, seems confined to the few who are
-pushing upward; and the masses of mankind in all classes seem contented
-each class with its own peculiar wallow of ignorance.
-
-But to Edna’s secret plan. If you are a married man you will at once
-understand what I mean when I speak of having a vague sensation of
-being borne down upon. She said nothing; she did nothing. But I knew
-she was making ready to ask something to which she believed she could
-get my consent only by the use of all her tact and skill and charm--for
-she did not know her charms had ceased to charm, but thought them more
-potent than ever. I waited with patience and composure; and in due time
-she began cautious open approaches.
-
-“Margot is almost ready to come out,” said she.
-
-“Money?” said I, smiling.
-
-She rebuked this coarseness amiably. “_Everybody_ isn’t _always_
-thinking of money, dear,” said she.
-
-“But why talk to _me_ about anything else? That’s my only department in
-the family.”
-
-She deigned a smile for my pleasantry, then went on in her usual
-serious way: “I wish to consult you about her education.”
-
-“Oh--finish as you’ve begun,” said I. “I suppose it’s the best that can
-be done for a girl.”
-
-“But I can’t find what I want,” said she, with an expression of sweet
-maternal solicitude. “I’ve always been determined Margot should have
-the best education any girl in the whole world could get.”
-
-“Go ahead,” said I. “See that she gets it.”
-
-“She shall have the perfect equipment of a lady--of a woman of the
-world,” continued Edna, with growing enthusiasm. “She has the beauty to
-set it off--and we can afford to give it to her. I am willing to make
-any sacrifices that may be necessary.”
-
-I pricked up my ears. I always do when anyone, male or female, uses
-that word sacrifice. I know a piece of selfishness is coming.
-
-“As I was saying,” pursued Edna, with the serene look of the
-self-confident woman who is taking her husband in firm, strong hands,
-“I have been unable to find what I want for her. Mrs. Armitage tells me
-I’ll not find it except in Paris.”
-
-“Well--why not go to Paris?” said I.
-
-Did you ever lift an empty box that you thought full and heavy? My wife
-looked as if she had just done that exceedingly uncomfortable thing.
-“But I don’t see-- I--I-- It would be a terrible sacrifice to have to
-go and live in Paris,” stammered she.
-
-“Then don’t do it,” said I.
-
-“But I must think of Margot!” exclaimed she hastily.
-
-“Oh, Margot seems to be stepping along all right. She’ll never miss
-what she doesn’t know about.”
-
-“But you must realize, dear, what an education she’d get in Paris. And
-I suppose it would do me good, too. It’s a shame that I don’t speak
-French. Everyone except me speaks it. They all had French governesses
-when they were children.”
-
-“Some of them had--and some hadn’t,” said I. “Armitage has told me
-things about your friends that make me suspect they’re doing fully as
-much bluffing as we are.”
-
-She winced, and sighed the sigh of the lady patient with a low husband.
-“Then you think I ought to go?” said she.
-
-“I think you ought to do as you like,” said I. “I always have thought
-so. I always shall.”
-
-“And,” continued she absently, “the society over there must be
-charming. Really, I need the education as much as Margot does. I do
-surprisingly well, considering what my early opportunities were.”
-
-“I’ve never once heard you give yourself away,” said I.
-
-“I’m not that stupid,” replied she. “But--a while in France--on the
-Continent--and in England perhaps----”
-
-“How long would you be gone?” interrupted I, to show her that all this
-beating round Robin’s barn was superfluous.
-
-She gave me a coquettish look: “How long could you spare me?”
-
-“I can’t tell till I’ve tried,” said I, with a gallant smile--but with
-no move toward her. You women who would be wise, distrust the gallantry
-that is content with speech and look.
-
-“You understand,” pursued she, “if I started this thing I’d put it
-through--no matter how much I missed you or how homesick I was over
-there.”
-
-“You always do put things through,” said I admiringly. “When have you
-planned to start?”
-
-“I haven’t planned at all, as yet,” replied she--and I saw she thought
-I had set a trap for her, and was delighted with herself for having
-dodged it. Certainly never was there a husband with whom indirection
-was more unnecessary. Yet she would not realize this, partly because
-she had never bothered to discover what manner of man I was, partly
-because she had one of those natures that move only by secrecy and
-indirection.
-
-“Do you expect me to go over with you?” inquired I.
-
-“I only wish you would!” exclaimed she, but I distrusted her enthusiasm.
-
-“Couldn’t MacIlvane take you over and settle you?”
-
-Her face clouded. Her lip curled slightly. “I don’t like him as I did,”
-said she. “I’ve found out he’s ridiculously vain and egotistical.”
-
-I laughed outright.
-
-“What is it?” inquired she, elevating her eyebrows. She had always
-disapproved my sense of humor.
-
-“So he’s been making love to you--eh?” said I.
-
-“No, indeed!” cried she, bridling haughtily. “He’d not dare. But I saw
-he was beginning to presume in that direction, and I checked him.”
-
-“Oh, he’s harmless,” said I. “Keep friendly with him. He’d be the very
-person to settle you in Paris. He lived there several years.”
-
-“It would cause scandal,” said she. “If you can’t go, I can do well
-enough alone, I’m sure.”
-
-“I’d only be in the way,” said I. “Let me know when you wish to go, and
-I’ll try to arrange it. But I can’t get away for at least three months.”
-
-“That would be too late,” said she. “Margot must be started at once.
-She hasn’t any too much time before her coming out. Also, Mrs. Armitage
-is sailing in two weeks, and she would be a great help.”
-
-“Then you have decided to sail in two weeks?” said I, adding before
-she had time to get beyond a gathering frown of protest, “That suits
-me. I’ll make my own plans accordingly.”
-
-And in two weeks they sailed, I watching the big ship creep out of dock
-and drop slowly down the river. Armitage and I drove away from the pier
-together. We were in such high spirits that we had champagne with our
-lunch.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Armitage and I were together every day. He attracted me for the
-usual reason of congeniality, and also because he was giving me a
-liberal education. I have never cared for books or, with two or three
-exceptions, for book men. About both there is for me an atmosphere of
-staleness, of tedium. I prefer to get what is in the few worth-while
-books through the medium of some clear and original mind--such a mind
-as Armitage had. He ought to have been a great man. No, he was a great
-man; what I mean to say is that his talents ought to have won his
-greatness recognition. He did not lack capacity or energy; he showed a
-high degree of both in the management and increase of his fortune. He
-lacked that species of vanity, I guess it is, which spurs a man to make
-himself conspicuous. Also he had a kind of laziness, and chose to be
-active only in the way that was easiest and most agreeable for him--the
-making of money.
-
-His father had been rich, and his grandfather; his great grandfather
-had been one of the richest men in Revolutionary times. His father
-was regarded as a crank because he had imagination, and therefore
-despised the conventional ideas of his own generation; to be regarded
-as thoroughly sane and sensible, you must be careful to be neither,
-but to pattern yourself painstakingly upon the particular form
-of feeble-mindedness and conventional silliness current in your
-time. Armitage’s father resolved that his son should not have his
-individuality clipped and moulded and patterned by college and caste
-into the familiar type of upper-class man. So Armitage went to public
-school, graduated from it into a factory, then into an office, himself
-earned the money to carry out the ambitions for study and travel with
-which his father had inspired him.
-
-I think there was nothing worth the knowing about which Armitage had
-not accurate essential information--books, plays, pictures, music,
-literature, history, economics, science, medicine, law, finance. He
-was a good shot and a good horseman, could run an automobile, take it
-to pieces, put it together again. He was a practical mechanic and a
-practical railroad man. He had a successful model farm. “It doesn’t
-take long to learn the essentials about anything,” said he, “if you
-will only put your whole mind on it and not let up till you’ve got what
-you want. And the trouble with most people--why, they are narrow and
-ignorant and incompetent--it isn’t lack of mind, but lack of interest.
-They have no curiosity.” Nor was my friend Armitage a smatterer. He
-didn’t try to _do_ everything; he contented himself with knowledge, and
-_did_ only one thing--made money out of railroads.
-
-When he saw that I really wished to be educated, he amused himself by
-educating me. Not in a formal way, of course; but simply talking along,
-about whatever happened to come up. I have never known a man to get
-anywhere, who did not have an excellent memory. Lack of memory--which
-means lack of the habit and power of giving attention--is the cause of
-more failures than all other defects put together. If you don’t believe
-it, test the failures you know; perhaps you might even test your own
-not too successful self. I had an unusual memory; and I don’t think
-Armitage or anyone ever told me anything worth knowing that I did not
-stick to it and keep it where I could use it instantly.
-
-Several months after his wife and mine departed, we were walking in the
-park one afternoon--the usual tramp round the upper reservoir to reduce
-or to keep in condition. He said in the most casual way:
-
-“My wife is coming next week, and will get her divorce at once.”
-
-Taking my cue from his manner I showed even less surprise then I felt.
-“This is the first I’ve heard of it,” said I.
-
-“Really?” said he carelessly. “Everyone knows.” He laughed to himself.
-“She is to marry Lord Blankenship--the Earl of Blankenship.”
-
-“And the children?” said I.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders. “I don’t know. Her people will look
-after them. She has spoiled them beyond repair. I have no interest
-in them--nor they in me.” After a little tramping in silence, he
-halted and rested his hands on the railing and looked away across the
-lakelike reservoir, its surface tossed up into white caps by the
-wind. “I loved her when we were married,” said he. “That caused all
-the mischief. I let her do as she pleased. She was a fine girl--good
-family but poor. She pretended to be in sympathy with my ideas.” His
-lip curled in good-humored contempt. “I believed in her enthusiasm.
-My father--wonderfully sane old man--warned me she was only after our
-money, but I wouldn’t listen. Tried to quarrel with him. He wouldn’t
-have it--gave me my way. It’s not strange I believed in her. She looked
-all that’s high-minded--and delicate--and what they call aristocratic.
-Well, it _is_ aristocratic--the reality of aristocracy.”
-
-“Perhaps she was sincere,” said I, out of the depths of my own
-experience, “perhaps she honestly imagined she liked and wanted the
-sort of life you pictured. We are all hypocrites, but most of us are
-unconscious hypocrites.”
-
-“No doubt she did deceive herself--in part at least,” he admitted. “For
-a year or so after our marriage she kept up the bluff. I didn’t catch
-on--didn’t find her out--until we began to differ about bringing up the
-children. Even then, I loved her so that I let her have her way until
-it was too late.”
-
-“But,” said I, “don’t you owe it to them to----”
-
-He interrupted with an impatient, “Didn’t I try? But it was hopeless.
-To succeed in this day, I’d have had to take the children away off
-into the woods, with the chances that even there the servants I’d
-be compelled to have would spoil them--would keep them reminded of
-the rotten snobbishness they’ve been taught.” He laughed at me with
-mocking irony. “You have a daughter,” said he. “What about her?”
-
-“I was thinking of your boy,” said I.
-
-He frowned and looked away. After a long pause--“Hopeless--hopeless,”
-said he. “Believe me--hopeless. The boy is like her. No, I’ll have to
-begin all over again.”
-
-I gave an inquiring look.
-
-“Marry again,” explained he. “Another sort of woman, and keep her
-and her children away from this world of ours. I’d like to try the
-experiment. But--” He laughed apologetically. “I’m afraid I love
-the city and its amusements too well. I’m not as determined nor as
-ardent as I once was. What does it matter, anyway? So long as we are
-comfortable and well amused, why should we bother?” After a silence,
-“Another mistake I made--the initial mistake--was in giving her a
-fortune. She is almost as well fixed as I am. Don’t make that mistake,
-Godfrey.”
-
-“I’ve already done it,” said I. “And I shall never be sorry that I
-did. I gave my wife the first large sum I made, and I’ve added to it
-from time to time. I wanted her and Margot to be safe, no matter what
-happened to me.”
-
-“A mistake,” he said. “A sad mistake. I know how you felt. I felt the
-same way. But there’s something worse than the more or less sentimental
-aversion to being loved and considered merely for the money they can
-get out of you and can’t get without you.”
-
-“Nothing worse,” I declared.
-
-“Yes,” he replied. “It’s worse to give a foolish woman the power to
-make a fool of herself, of her children, and of you.”
-
-“That is bad, I’ll admit,” said I. “But the other is worse--at least to
-me.”
-
-“You’d refuse to make a child behave itself, through the selfish fear
-that it would hate you for doing so.”
-
-I laughed. “You know my weakness, I see,” said I.
-
-“There’s the foolish American husband and father. No wonder all the
-classes that ought to be leaders in development and civilization are
-leaders only in luxury and folly.”
-
-“Oh, let them have a good time--what they call a good time,” said I.
-“As you said a moment ago, it doesn’t matter.”
-
-“If it only were a good time--to be ignorant and snobbish and lazy, to
-drive instead of walking, to eat and drink instead of thinking, to be
-waited upon instead of getting the education and the happiness that
-come from serving others. Don’t laugh at me. After all, while you and
-I--all our sort of men--are greedy, selfish grabbers, making thousands
-work for us, still we do build up big enterprises, we do set things to
-moving, and we do teach men the discipline of regular work by forcing
-them to work for us at more or less useful things.”
-
-No doubt you, gentle reader, have fallen asleep over this conversation.
-I understand perfectly that it is beyond you; for you have no
-conception of the deep underlying principles of the relations of men
-and men or men and women. But there may be among my readers a few who
-will see interest and importance in this talk with Armitage. It is
-time the writers of stories concerned themselves with the realities of
-life instead of with the showy and sensational things that obscure or
-hide the realities. What would you think of the physiologist who issued
-a treatise on physiology with no mention or account of the blood? Yet
-you read stories about what purports to be life with no mention or
-account of money--this, when in any society money is the all-important
-factor. Put aside, if you can, the prejudices of your miseducation and
-æsthetics, of your false culture and your false refinement, open your
-mind, _think_, and you will see that I am right.
-
-When we were well down toward the end of the Park, Armitage said:
-“Pardon me a direct question. Have you and your wife separated?”
-
-“No,” said I. “She has gone abroad to round out Margot’s education--and
-her own.”
-
-“You know what that means?”
-
-“In a general way,” replied I. “I’m letting them amuse themselves. They
-don’t need me, nor I them. Perhaps when they come back--” I did not
-finish my sentence.
-
-He laughed. “That means you don’t really care what happens when they
-come back.”
-
-My smile was an admission of the correctness of his guess. We dropped
-our domestic affairs and took up the matters that were more interesting
-and more important to us.
-
-If you have good sight, unimpaired eyes, you go about assuming--when
-you think of it at all--that good sight is the rule in the world and
-impaired eyes the exception. But let your sight begin to fail, let
-your eyes become darkened, and soon you discover that you are one of
-thousands--that good sight is the exception, that almost everyone
-has something the matter with his eyes. The reason human beings know
-so little about human nature, the reason the sentimental flapdoodle
-about human virtues, in the present not very far-advanced stage of
-human evolution, is so widely believed and doubt of it so indignantly
-denounced as cynicism, lies in the fact that the average human being is
-ignorant of the afflictions of his own soul. This would be pleasant and
-harmless enough, and to destroy the delusion would be wickedly cruel,
-were it not that the only way to cure ailments of whatever sort is to
-diagnose them. What hope is there for the man devoured of a fever who
-fancies and insists that he is healthy? What hope is there for the man
-who eats pleasant-tasting slow poison under the impression that it is
-food? What a quaint notion it is that the truth, the sole source of
-health and happiness, is bad for some people, chiefly for those sick
-unto death through the falsehoods of ignorance and vanity! We humans
-are like the animal that claws and bites the surgeon who is trying to
-set its broken leg.
-
-But I am wandering a little. Discover that you have any ailment of
-body or of soul, and you soon discover how widespread that ailment is.
-You do not even appreciate how widespread, incessant, and poignant are
-the ravages of death until your own family and friends begin to die
-off. I had no notion of the extent of the social or domestic malady
-of abandoned husbands and fathers until I became one of that curious
-class.
-
-Among the masses there is the great and growing pestilence of abandoned
-wives--husbands, worn out by the uncertainties of the laboring man’s
-income, and disgusted with the incompetence of their wives and with the
-exasperations of the badly brought up children--such husbands flying by
-tens of thousands to escape what they cannot cure or endure. Among the
-classes, from the plutocracy down to and through the small merchants
-and professional men, I now discovered that there was a corresponding
-and reversed disease--the abandoned husband.
-
-The husband and father, working hard and presently accumulating enough
-for ease in his particular station of life, suddenly finds himself
-supporting, with perhaps all the money he can scrape together, a
-distant and completely detached family. He mails his money regularly,
-and with a fidelity that will appear grotesque, noble, or pitiful
-according to the point of view. In return he gets occasional letters
-from the loved ones--perfunctory these letters somehow sound, or would
-sound to the critical, though they are liberally sprinkled with loving,
-even fawning phrases, such as “dear, sweet papa” and “darling husband.”
-Where are “the loved ones?” If the family home is in a small town or
-country, they are in New York or some other city of America usually. If
-the family home is in the city, they are abroad. What are they doing?
-Sacrificing themselves! Especially poor wife and mother. She would
-infinitely prefer being at home with beloved husband. But she must
-not be selfish. She must carry her part of their common burden. While
-_he_ toils to provide for the children, _she_ toils in the loneliness
-or unhappiness of New York or Paris or Rome or Dresden or Genoa. And
-what is she toiling at in those desert places? Why, at educating the
-children!
-
-Sometimes it’s music. Sometimes it’s painting. Again it’s “finishing,”
-whatever that may mean, or plain, vague “education.” There was a time
-when men of any sort could be instantly abashed, silenced and abased by
-the mere pronouncing of the word education. That happy day for mental
-fakers is nearing its close. Now, at the sound of the sacred word many
-a sensible, practical man has the courage to put on a grin. I have been
-credited with saying that a revival of the declining child-bearing
-among American women might be looked for, now that they have found the
-usefulness of children as an excuse for escape from home and husband.
-I admit having said this, but I meant it as a jest. However, there
-is truth in the jest. I don’t especially blame the women. Why should
-they stay at home when they have no sympathy with the things that
-necessarily engross the husband? Why stay at home when it bores them
-even to see that the servants carry on the house decently? Why stay at
-home when they simply show there from day to day how little they know
-about housekeeping? Why stay at home when there is an amiable fool
-willing to mail them his money, while they amuse themselves gadding
-about Europe or some big city of America?
-
-Abandoned wives at the one end of the social scale, abandoned husbands
-at the other end. Please note that in both cases the deep underlying
-cause is the same--money. Too little money, and the husband flies; too
-much money, and it is the wife who breaks up the family.
-
-As soon as I discovered, by being elected to membership, the existence
-of the universal order of abandoned husbands I took the liveliest
-interest in it. I was eager to learn whether there was another fool
-quite so foolish as myself, also whether the other fools were aware of
-their own folly. I found that most of them were rather proud of their
-membership, indulged in a ludicrous cocking of the comb and waggling of
-the wattles when they spoke of “my family over on the other side for a
-few years,” or of “my wife, poor woman, exiled in Paris to cultivate my
-daughter’s voice,” or of “my invalid wife--she has to live in the south
-of France. It’s a sad trial to us both.”
-
-Then--but this came much later--I discovered that these credulous,
-money-mailing fools, including myself, were not quite so imbecile, as
-a class, as they seemed to be. I discovered that they were secretly,
-often unconsciously, glad to be rid of their uncongenial families,
-and regarded any money they mailed as money well spent. They toiled
-cheerfully at distasteful tasks to get the wherewithal to keep their
-loved ones far, far away!
-
-The absence of Edna and Margot was an enormous relief to me. Edna was
-constantly annoying me to accompanying her to places to which I did
-not care to go. I like the theatre and I rather like some operas,
-but when I go to either it is for the sake of the performance. Going
-with Edna and her friends meant a tedious social function. We arrived
-late; we did not hear the play or the opera. As for the purely social
-functions, they were intolerable. Perhaps I should not have been so
-unhappy had I been the kind of man who likes to talk for the sake of
-hearing his own voice. Women are attentive listeners when the man who
-is talking is worth flattering. But I talk only for purpose, and when I
-listen I wish it to be to some purpose also. So, Edna, always urging me
-to do something distasteful or giving me the sense that she was about
-to ask me, or was irritated against me for being “disobliging”--Edna
-made me uncomfortable, increasingly uncomfortable as I grew more
-intelligent, more critical, more discriminating. As for Margot, I could
-not talk with her ten minutes without seeing protrude from her sweet
-loveliness some vulgarity of snobbishness. It irritated me to hear her
-speak to a servant. I had to rebuke her privately several times for
-the tone she used in addressing her governess or my secretary--this
-when her mother and all her mother’s friends used precisely the same
-repellent “gracious” tone in the same circumstances. I saw that she,
-sometimes instinctively, again deliberately tried to hide her real self
-from me, that I was making a hypocrite of her. Any sort of frankness or
-sympathy between her and me was impossible.
-
-A few weeks after their departure I closed the house. It came to me
-that I need endure its discomforts no longer, that I could get rid of
-those smelly, dull-witted, low-minded foreign animals, that I need
-not endure food sent up from a kitchen as to which I had from time to
-time disgusting proofs that it was not clean. I closed the house and
-left the mice and roaches and other insects to such short provender
-as would be provided by caretaker and family. I took an apartment in a
-first-class hotel.
-
-When Armitage got clear of his wife he took the adjoining apartment.
-And how comfortable and how cheerful we were!
-
-The women with their incompetence and indifference have about destroyed
-the American home. To get good service, to have capable people
-assisting you, you must yourself be capable. The incapacity of the
-“ladies” has driven good servants out of the business of domestic
-service, has left in it only the worthless and unreliable creatures
-who now take care of the homes. If you find any part of the laboring
-class deteriorating, don’t blame them. To do that is to get nowhere,
-is to be unjust and shallow to boot. Instead, look at the employers of
-that labor. Every time, you will find the fault is there, just as an
-ill-mannered or a bad child means unfaithful parents. The masses of
-mankind must have leadership, guidance, example. My experience has been
-that they respond when the dominating classes do their duty--that is,
-pay proper wages, demand good service, _and know what good service is_.
-
-What a relief and a joy that hotel was! Armitage and I had our own
-cook, and so could have the simple dishes we liked. We attended to the
-marketing--and both knew what sort of meat and vegetables and fruit to
-buy, and were not long trifled with by our butcher, our grocer, and our
-dairyman, spoiled though they were by the ladies. And our apartments
-were clean--really clean, and after the first few weeks our servants
-were contented, and abandoned the evil ways slip-shod mistresses had
-got them into. Pushing my inquiries, I found that not only our hotel,
-but every first-class hotel in the fashionable district was filled with
-the remnants of shattered homes--husbands who had compelled their wives
-to give up the expensive and dirty attempts at housekeeping; husbands
-who had abandoned their families in country homes or in other cities
-and towns and had, surreptitiously or boldly, returned to bachelor
-bliss; husbands who had been abandoned by their families, none of these
-last cases being more heart-breaking than Armitage’s or my own. The
-story ran that he was on the verge of melancholia because his beautiful
-wife had cast him off. There was no more truth in this than there would
-have been in a tale of my lonely grief. Had it not been for Armitage,
-pointing out to me the truth, I might have fancied myself a deserted
-unfortunate. It would not have been an isolated instance of a human
-being not knowing when he is well off.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I did not see my family again until the following spring. Business
-compelled me to go abroad, and they had come over to London for the
-season.
-
-When I descended from the train at Euston, a little confused by the
-strangeness, I saw my wife a few yards down the platform. Beside her
-stood a tall, beautiful young woman, whom I did not instantly recognize
-as my daughter. Both were dressed with the perfection of taste and of
-detail that has made the American woman famous throughout the world. I
-like well-dressed women--and well-dressed men, too. I should certainly
-have been convicted of poor taste had I not been dazzled by those two
-charming examples of fashion and style. They looked like two lovely
-sisters, the elder not more than five or six years in advance of the
-younger. I was a youthful-looking man, myself--except, perhaps, when
-I was in the midst of affairs and took on the air of responsibility
-that cannot appear in the face of youth. But no one would have believed
-there were so few years between Edna and me. Nor was she in the least
-made-up. The youth was genuinely there.
-
-That meeting must have impressed the by-standers, who were observing
-the two women with admiring interest. I felt a glow of enthusiasm at
-sight of these elegant beauties. I was proud to be able to claim them.
-As for them, they became radiant the instant they saw me.
-
-“Godfrey!” cried Edna loudly, rushing toward me.
-
-“Papa--dear old papa!” cried Margot, waving her arms in a pretty
-gesture of impatient adoration while her mother was detaining me from
-her embrace.
-
-“Well--well!” cried I. “What a pair of girls! My, but you’re tearing it
-off!”
-
-They laughed gayly, and hugged and kissed me all over again. For a
-moment I felt that I had been missed--and that I had missed them. A
-good-looking, shortish and shy young man, dressed and groomed in the
-attractive English upper-class way of exquisiteness with no sacrifice
-of manliness, was now brought forward.
-
-“Lord Crossley--my husband,” said Edna.
-
-“Pleased, I’m sure,” murmured the young man, giving me his hand with an
-awkwardness that was somehow not awkward--or, rather, that conveyed a
-subtle impression of good breeding. “Now that you’ve got him--or that
-he’s got you,” proceeded he, “I’ll toddle along.”
-
-My wife gave him her hand carelessly. “Until dinner,” she said.
-
-Margot shook hands with him, and nodded and smiled. When he was gone
-I observed the carriage near which we were standing--and I knew at
-once that it was my wife’s carriage. It was a grand car of state, yet
-quiet and simple. I often looked at it afterwards, trying to puzzle
-out how it contrived to convey two exactly opposite impressions. I
-could never solve the mystery. On the lofty box sat the most perfect
-model of a coachman I had seen up to that time. Beside the open door
-in the shallow, loftily hung body of the carriage stood an equally
-perfect footman. I was soon to get used to that marvelous English
-ability at specializing men--a system by which a man intended for a
-certain career is arrested in every other kind of growth, except only
-that which tends to make him more perfect for his purpose. Observing
-an English coachman, or valet or butler or what not, you say, “Here is
-a remarkably clever man.” Yet you soon find out that he is practically
-imbecile in every other respect but his specialty.
-
-We entered the carriage, I sitting opposite the ladies--and most
-uncomfortable I was; for the carriage was designed to show off its
-occupants, and to look well in it they had to know precisely how to
-sit, which I did not. No one noticed me, however. There was too much
-pleasure to be got out of observing Edna and Margot, who were looking
-like duchesses out of a storybook. I knew they were delightfully
-conscious of the sensation they were making, yet they talked and
-laughed as if they were alone in their own sitting room--a trick which
-is part of that “education” of which you have heard something, and will
-hear still more. The conversation seemed easy. In fact, it was only
-animated. It was a fair specimen of that whole mode of life. You have
-seen the wonderful peaches that come to New York from South Africa
-early in the winter--have delighted in their exquisite perfection of
-color and form. But have you ever tasted them? I would as lief eat
-sawdust; I would rather eat it--for, of sawdust I should expect nothing.
-
-“That young man is the Marquis of Crossley,” said my wife.
-
-I liked to hear her pronounce a title in private. It gave you the sense
-of something that tasted fine--made you envy her the sensation she was
-getting. “Who is he?” said I.
-
-Margot laughed naïvely--an entrancing display of white teeth and
-rose-lined mouth. “Marquis of Crossley, papa,” she said. “That’s
-all--and quite enough it is.”
-
-“I don’t know much about the big men in England,” said I. “He looked
-rather young to amount to very much.”
-
-“He’s as old as you are,” said Edna, a flash of ill-humor appearing and
-vanishing.
-
-I was astonished. “I thought him a boy,” said I.
-
-“He’s one of the greatest nobles in England--one of the greatest in
-Europe,” said Edna--and I saw Margot’s eyes sparkling.
-
-“He seemed a nice fellow,” said I amiably. “How you have grown, Margot!”
-
-“Hasn’t she, though!” cried my wife. “Aren’t you proud of her?”
-
-“I’m proud of you both,” said I. “You make me feel old and dingy.”
-
-“You’ve been working too hard, poor dear,” said Edna tenderly. “If you
-only would stay over here and learn the art of leisure.”
-
-“I’m afraid I’d be dismally bored,” said I.
-
-I had heard much about the art of loafing as practiced by Europeans,
-and I had not been attracted by what I had heard. It was inconceivable
-to me that intelligent grown men could pass their time at things about
-equal to marbles and tops. But I suppose I am abnormal, as they allege.
-Many men seem to look on mental effort of any kind as toilsome, and
-seize the first opportunity to return to the mindless frolickings of
-the beasts of the field. To me mental effort is a keen pleasure. And I
-must add I can’t help thinking it is to everybody who has real brains.
-
-The conversation would have died in distressing agony had it
-not been for the indomitable pluck of my wife. She struggled
-desperately--perhaps may even have deceived herself into thinking
-that she was glad to see me and that the carriage was the scene of a
-happy reunion. But I, who had a thorough training in quickly sizing up
-situations, saw the truth--that I was a rank outsider, to both wife and
-daughter; that they were strangers to me. I began to debate what was
-the shortest time I could decently stop in London.
-
-“We are to be presented at Court next week,” said Edna.
-
-Margot’s eyes were again sparkling. It was the sort of look the
-novelists put on the sweet young girl’s face when she sees her lover
-coming.
-
-“Yes--next week--next Thursday,” said Edna. “And so another of the
-little duchess’s dreams is coming true.”
-
-“Is it exciting?” said I to Margot. Somehow reference to the “little
-duchess” irritated me.
-
-“Rather!” exclaimed Margot, fairly glowing with ecstasy. “You put
-on the most wonderful dress, and you drive in a long, long line of
-wonderful carriages, with all the women in wonderful dresses. And
-you go into the palace through lines and lines of gorgeous liveries
-and uniforms--and you wait in a huge grand room for an hour or so,
-frightened to death--and then you walk into the next room and make the
-courtesy you have been practicing for weeks--and you pass on.”
-
-“Good!” cried I. “What then?”
-
-“Why you go home, half dead from the nervous shock. Oh, it’s wonderful!”
-
-It seemed to me--for I was becoming somewhat critical, as is the habit
-in moods of irritation--it seemed to me that Margot’s elaborate and
-costly education might have included the acquiring of a more extensive
-vocabulary. That word wonderful was beginning to get on my nerves.
-Still, this was hyper-criticism. A lovely woman does not need a
-vocabulary, or anything else but a lovely dress and plenty of money to
-provide background. “Yes--it must be--wonderful,” said I.
-
-“We’ve been working at it for weeks, mamma and I,” continued she. “I’m
-sure we shall do well. I can hardly wait. Just fancy! I’m to meet the
-_king_ and the _queen_!”
-
-I saw that Edna was in the same ecstatic trance. I leaned back and
-tried to distract myself with the novelty of London houses and crowds.
-It may be you understand the mingling of pity, contempt, anger, and
-amusement that filled my breast. If you do not understand, explanation
-would merely weary you. I was no longer proud of my beautiful family;
-I wished to get away from them, to forget them. Edna and Margot
-chatted on and on about the king and queen, about the various titled
-people they knew or hoped to know, about the thrills of aristocratic
-society. I tried not to listen. After a while I said, with I hope not
-unsuccessful attempt at amiability:
-
-“I’m sorry I shan’t be here to witness your triumph.”
-
-Across Edna’s face swept a flash of vivid--I had almost said
-vicious--annoyance. “You’re not going before the drawing-room at
-Buckingham Palace!” cried she.
-
-“I’ll have to,” said I.
-
-“But you can’t!” protested Margot, tears of vexation in her eyes.
-“Everyone will think it’s dreadfully queer.”
-
-“Don’t fret about that, my dear,” replied I lightly. “I know how it is
-over here. So long as you’ve got the cash they’ll never ask a question.
-We Americans mean money to them--and that’s all.”
-
-“Oh, papa!” cried Margot.
-
-“Don’t put such ideas into the child’s head, Godfrey,” said my wife,
-restraining herself in a most ladylike manner.
-
-“She knows,” said I. “So do you. Money is everything with aristocracies
-everywhere. They must live luxuriously without work. That can’t be done
-without money--lots of money. So aristocrats seriously think of nothing
-else, whatever they may talk.”
-
-“You’ll have a better opinion of them when you know them,” said Edna,
-once more serene and sweetly friendly.
-
-“I don’t think badly of them,” I replied. “I admire their cleverness.
-But you mustn’t ask me to respect them. They hardly expect it. They
-don’t respect themselves. If they did, they’d not be stealing, but
-working.”
-
-Margot listened with lowered eyes. I saw that she was ashamed of and
-for me. Edna concealed her feelings better. She forced an amiable
-smile. “I don’t know much about these things,” she said politely.
-“But, Godfrey, you mustn’t desert us, at least not until after the
-drawing-room. I’ve told our ambassador you’re to be here, and he has
-gone to no end of trouble to arrange for you.”
-
-“Howard?” said I. “That pup! I despise him. He’s a rotten old snob.
-They tell me his toadyism turns the stomach of even the English. He’s a
-disgrace to our country. But I suppose he’s little if any worse than
-most of our ambassadors over here. They’ve all bought their jobs to
-gratify their own and their wives’ taste for shoe polish.”
-
-This speech so depressed the ladies that their last remnant of vivacity
-fled, not to return. You are sympathizing with them, gentle reader,
-and they are welcome to your sympathy. We drove in silence the rest
-of the way to the hotel in Piccadilly, where they were installed in
-pompous luxury and had made equally luxurious provision for me. When I
-was alone with my valet I reasoned myself out of the grouchy mood into
-which the evidences of my family’s fresh access of folly had thrown
-me. To quarrel with them, to be irritated against them, was about as
-unreasonable as attacking a black man for not being white. I had long
-since realized, as the result of much experience and reflection, that
-character is no more to be changed than any other inborn quality.
-My wife had been born an aristocrat, and had brought into the world
-an aristocratic daughter. She was to be blamed neither for the one
-thing nor for the other. And it ill became my pretensions to superior
-intellect to gird at her and at Margot. The thing for me to do was to
-let them alone--keep away.
-
-At dinner, which was served in our apartment, I took a different tone
-with them, and they met me more than half way. So cheered was my lovely
-daughter that after dinner she perched on the arm of my chair and
-ventured to bring up the dangerous subject. Said she:
-
-“You’re not going to be mean to me and run away, are you, papa?”
-
-Looking at Edna, but addressing Margot, I replied: “Your mother will
-tell you that it’s best. We three never can agree in our ideas of
-things. I’m an irritation. I spoil your pleasure.”
-
-“No--no, indeed!” cried the girl. “I’ve been looking forward to your
-coming. I’ve been telling everybody how handsome and superior you are.
-And I want them to see for themselves.”
-
-Most pleasant to hear from such rare prettiness, and most sincerely
-spoken.
-
-“So many of the American men in society over here are common,”
-proceeded she, “and even those who aren’t so very common somehow seem
-so. They are down on their knees before titles, and they act--like
-servants. Even Mr. Howard-- He oughtn’t to show his feelings so
-plainly. Of course we all feel impressed and honored by being taken up
-by real titled people of old families, but it’s such bad form to show,
-and it interferes with getting on. When I’m talking to Lord Crossley
-about that drawing-room, I act as if it were nothing.”
-
-“I see you are being well educated,” said I, laughing.
-
-“Oh, yes. Mamma and I have worked. We’ve not had an idle moment.”
-
-“I believe you,” said I.
-
-“You _will_ stay, papa--won’t you?”
-
-I shook my head. But it was no longer the positive gesture. My
-besetting sin, my good nature, had possession of me. Remember, it was
-after dinner, and my beautiful daughter was caressing my cheek and was
-pleading in a voice whose modulations had been cultivated by the best
-masters in Paris.
-
-“But I don’t want people to think I was deceiving them about my papa.”
-
-“I’m willing to be exhibited to a select few in the next two or three
-days,” I conceded. “They will tell the others.”
-
-And with that they had to be content. In the faint hope of inducing me
-to change my mind, Edna--the devoid of the sense of humor--took me to
-a tailor’s and had me shown pictures and models of the court costume I
-would wear. But I remained firm. A sense of humor would have warned her
-that a person of my sort would have an aversion to liveries of every
-kind, to any costume that stamps a man as one of a class. I am perhaps
-foolishly jealous of my own individuality. But I cannot help it. A
-king in his robes, a general in his uniform--except in battle where
-it’s as necessary and useful as night shirt or pajamas in bed--any
-sort of livery seems pitiful and contemptible to me. I will wear the
-distinguishing dress of the human race and the male sex, but further
-than that classification I refuse to move. Also, what business had I,
-citizen of a democracy whose chief idea is the barbarism and silliness
-of aristocracy--what business had I going to see a king and a queen?
-I should have felt that I was aiding them in the triumph of dragging
-democracy at their chariot wheels. No, I would not go to levees and
-drawing-rooms. You may say I showed myself an absurd extremist. Well,
-perhaps so. But, as it seems to be necessary to go to one extreme
-or the other, I prefer the extreme of exaggerated and vainglorious
-self-respect.
-
-“The king and queen are no doubt nice people,” said I to Margot. “But
-if I meet them, it must be on terms of equality--and for some purpose
-less inane than exchanging a few set phrases.”
-
-Edna and Margot seemed to feel that they had, on the whole, a
-presentable specimen of male relative to exhibit; for they made the
-most of the four days I gave them. Through Hilda Armitage, now Lady
-Blankenship, and much freshened up by the more congenial atmosphere,
-they had got in with the set that is the least easy of access to
-Americans--though, of course, it is not actually difficult for any
-American with plenty of money and a willingness to spend and good
-guidance in how to spend. And I must admit I enjoyed myself in those
-four days. The women were, for the most part, rather slow, though I
-recall two who had real intelligence, and I don’t think there was a
-single one quite so devoid of knowledge of important subjects as our
-boasted “bright” American women. The men were distinctly attractive.
-They had information, they had breadth--the thing the upper-class
-men of America often lack. Also, they were entirely free from that
-ill-at-easeness about their own and their neighbor’s position in
-society which makes the American upper classes tiresome and ridiculous.
-
-It amused me to observe the Americans in this environment. Both our
-women and our men seemed uneasy, small, pinched. You could distinguish
-the American man instantly by his pinched, tight expression of an
-upper servant out for a holiday. I could feel the same thing in our
-women, but I doubt not their looks and dress and vivacity concealed
-it from the Englishmen. Anyhow, women are used to being nothing in
-themselves, to taking rank and form from their surroundings. While
-with us it seems to be true that the women are wholly responsible for
-social position with all its nonsense, the deeper truth is that they
-owe everything to the possessions of their fathers or husbands. Without
-that backing they would be nothing. Everything must ultimately rest
-upon a substantiality. In themselves, unsupported, the women’s swollen
-pretensions would vanish into thin air.
-
-Lord Crossley was to have dined with us my first evening in London, but
-was prevented by suddenly arising business in the country. Next day
-he came to lunch, and I at once saw that he was after Margot hammer
-and tongs. I discovered it not by the way he treated her, but by his
-attitude toward her mother and me. He seemed a thoroughly satisfactory
-young man in every way, and I especially liked his frankness and
-simplicity. Edna had devoted a large part of a long sight-seeing tour
-with me to an account of his grandeur in the British aristocracy.
-Having had experience at that time of the American brand of aristocracy
-only, I was ignorant of the European kinds that have the aristocratic
-instinct in the most acute form--the ingrowing form. I know now that
-our own sort, unpleasant and unsightly though it is, cannot compare in
-malignance, in littleness and meanness of soul with the European sort.
-Just as the noisy blowhard is a modest fellow and harmless, and on
-acquaintance lovable in comparison with the silent, brooding egotist,
-just so is the American aristocrat in comparison with the European.
-An American aristocrat has been known to forget himself and be human.
-I recall no instance of that sort in an European born and bred to the
-notion that his flesh and blood are of a subtler material than the
-flesh and blood of most men. However, as I was saying, at the time of
-my first visit to Europe I knew nothing of these matters, and Lord
-Crossley seemed to me a simple, ingenuous young man, most attractively
-boyish for his years.
-
-“That chap wants to marry Margot,” said I to Edna when we were alone
-later in the afternoon.
-
-“I think so,” said she. “Several young men wish to marry her. But she
-is in no hurry. She’s not nineteen yet, and she would like a duke.”
-
-“To be sure,” said I. “But she may not be able to love a duke.”
-
-“I never heard of a girl who wouldn’t love a duke if she got the
-chance,” said Edna. “There are only five--English dukes, I mean--who
-are eligible. Margot has met three of them--and one, the Duke of
-Brestwell, has taken quite a fancy to her.” Carelessly, but with
-nervous anxiety underneath, “You wouldn’t have any objection?”
-
-“I? Why?”
-
-“Oh--you are so--so peculiar in some ways.”
-
-“Anyone who pleases Margot will suit me,” said I.
-
-“We were afraid you’d be prejudiced against titles. You’ve been with
-that eccentric Mr. Armitage so much--and you always have been against
-the sort of things Margot and I like.”
-
-“I’ve no objection to titles,” said I. “In fact, I think Margot will be
-happier if she marries a title. You’ve educated her so well that she’ll
-never see the man or think of him.”
-
-“How little you know her!” cried Edna, pathetically. “And how unjust
-to me your prejudices make you. I’ve brought her up to be all
-refinement--all sentiment--all heart. She looks only at the highest and
-best.”
-
-“At the duke,” said I.
-
-“Certainly at the duke,” said she. “Her tastes are for the life where a
-woman can show her beauty of soul to the best advantage and can do the
-most good. There is no career for a woman in America. But over here a
-woman married into the aristocracy has a real career.”
-
-“At what?” said I.
-
-“As a recognized social leader. As a leader in charities and all sorts
-of good movements.”
-
-“Ah, I see,” said I--and there I stopped, for I had learned not to
-argue with my wife--or with anyone else, male or female--when the
-subject is sheer twaddle. “Yes, I think Margot would do well to marry
-over here and to have a dazzling career. I’m sure she’d never get tired
-of this--pardon me--treadmill. I observe that it’s better organized
-than the imitation one we have over in ‘the States.’”
-
-“I should say!” cried Edna. “You’ve no idea how cheap and common the
-best you have in New York is beside the social life here. I’ve been
-here only a year, but already there have been the greatest changes in
-me. Don’t you notice?”
-
-“I do,” said I. “And I can honestly say you have changed for the
-better. You’ve learned to cover it up.”
-
-She looked inquiringly at me, but I did not care to explain what the
-“it” was that she had learned to cover. A slight flush appeared in
-her cheeks, and I knew intuitively that she thought I was alluding to
-her humble origin. I did not disabuse her mind of this impression.
-She would have been angry had I explained that I meant her social
-ambitions which I thought vulgar and she thought refined. Both she
-and Margot, except in occasional unguarded moments in privacy, had
-indeed vastly improved in manners. They had learned the trick of the
-aristocrats they associated with--the trick of affecting simplicity and
-equality and quietly confident ease. There was a notable difference,
-and altogether in their favor, between their manners and the manners
-of the former Mrs. Armitage and other American women. Whatever might
-justly be said in the way of criticism of my wife, it assuredly could
-not be said that she was lacking in agility at “catching on.” Armitage
-once said to me, “Your wife is a marvelous woman. I never saw or heard
-of her making a break.” This tribute can be appreciated only when you
-recall whence she sprung--and how much of her origin remained with
-her--necessarily--through all her climbings and soarings.
-
-“You prefer it over here?” said I--we were still driving.
-
-“If it weren’t for you, I’d never go back,” said she.
-
-“For me?” said I. “Oh, don’t bother about me.”
-
-“But I do,” replied she sweetly. And her hand covertly stole into mine
-for a moment. “Sometimes I get so homesick, Godfrey, that’s it all I
-can do to fight off the impulse to take the first steamer.”
-
-I tried to look as a man should on hearing such pleasant and
-praiseworthy sentiments from the wife of his bosom.
-
-“You’ve acted cold and--and reserved with me,” she went on. “I wanted
-to come to you last night. But I hadn’t the courage. You are such a
-mixture of tenderness and--and aloofness. You have the power to make
-even me feel like a stranger.”
-
-“I’m sure I don’t mean to be that way,” said I, thoroughly
-uncomfortable.
-
-“Margot was speaking of it,” proceeded Edna. “She said--poor
-affectionate child--that she hardly dared put her arms round you and
-kiss you. You oughtn’t to repulse the child that way, Godfrey. She
-has a tender, loving heart. And she adores you. She and I talk of you
-a long time every day. I’d insist on it as a matter of duty--for I’d
-not let your child forget you. But I don’t need to insist. She refers
-everything to you, and whenever she’s unusually happy, she always says:
-‘If papa could only be enjoying this with us!’”
-
-I saw that she had worked herself up into a state of excitement.
-My good sense told me that there was no genuineness in either her
-affection or Margot’s. But I had no doubt they both thought themselves
-genuine. And that was quite enough to give me, the easy-going American
-slob of a husband and father, an acute attack of guilty conscience. The
-upshot was----
-
-But you who have an impressionable heart and a keen sense of your own
-shortcomings can guess what it was. Edna and I resumed the relations
-of affectionate husband and wife for the rest of my--brief--stop in
-London. I remained several days longer than I had intended--stayed
-on because I did not wish to hurt her feelings. And I bought her
-and Margot all sorts of jewelry and gew-gaws, largely increased her
-personal fortune, did not utter a word that would ruffle either of
-them. And I left them convinced that I was going only because business
-not to be neglected compelled.
-
-They say that the hypocrite wife is a common occurrence. I wonder if
-the hypocrite husband is rare. I wonder if there are not more instances
-than this one of the husband and the wife playing a cross game of
-hypocrisy, with each fancying the other deceived?
-
-So busy was I with my own laborings to deceive my wife as to the true
-state of my feelings toward her that not until I was halfway across
-the Atlantic did I happen to think the obvious thought. You, gentle
-reader, have not thought it. But perhaps some more intelligent species
-of reader has. In mid-Atlantic, I suddenly thought: “Why she--she and
-Margot--were playing a game--the same game. For what purpose?”
-
-It was not many months before I found out.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-That summer Armitage was spending the week ends out on Long Island
-at the country place of his sister, Mrs. Kirkwood. He kept his
-yacht in the tiny harbor there and made short cruises in the
-Sound and up the New England coast. Naturally I often went with
-him. Those parties usually amused me. He knew a dozen interesting
-people--working people--such as Boris Raphael, the painter, and his
-wife, the architect, the Horace Armstrongs who had been divorced and
-remarried, a novelist named Beechman who wrote about the woods and
-lived in the wilderness in the Southwest most of the year, Susan Lenox
-the actress--several others of the same kind. Then there was his
-sister--Mary Kirkwood.
-
-For a reason which will presently appear I have not before spoken of
-Mrs. Kirkwood, though I had known her longer than I had known Armitage.
-Her husband had been treasurer of the road when I was an under Vice
-President. He speculated in the road’s funds and it so happened that,
-when he was about to be caught, I was the only man who could save him
-from exposure. Instead of asking me directly, he sent his wife to me.
-I can see her now as she was that day--pale, haggard, but with that
-perfect composure which deceives the average human being into thinking,
-“Here is a person without nerves.” She told me the whole story in
-the manner of one relating a matter in which he has a sympathetic but
-remote interest. She made not the smallest attempt to work upon my
-feelings, to move me to pity. “And,” she ended, “if you will help him
-cover up the shortage, it will be made good and he will resign. I shall
-see to it that he does not take another position of trust.”
-
-“Why didn’t he come to me, himself?” said I. “Why did he send you?”
-
-She looked at me--a steady gaze from a pair of melancholy gray eyes. “I
-cannot answer that,” said she.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” stammered I; for I guessed the answer to my
-question even as I was asking it. I knew the man--an arrogant coward,
-with the vanity to lure him into doing preposterous things and wilting
-weakness the instant trouble began to gather. “You wish me to save
-him?” I said, still confused and not knowing how to meet the situation.
-
-“I am asking rather for myself,” replied she. “I married him against
-my father’s wishes and warning. I have not loved him since the second
-month of our marriage. If he should be exposed, I think the disgrace
-would kill me.” Her lip curled in self-scorn. “A queer kind of pride,
-isn’t it?” she said. “To be able to live through the real shame, and to
-shrink only from the false.”
-
-“I’ll do it,” said I, with a sudden complete change of intention. “That
-is, if you promise me he will resign and not try to get a similar
-position elsewhere.”
-
-“I promise,” said she, rising, to show that she was taking not a moment
-more of my time than was unavoidable. “And I thank you”--and that was
-all.
-
-I kept my part of the agreement; she kept hers. In about two years she
-divorced him because he was flagrantly untrue to her. He married the
-woman and supported her and himself on the allowance Mary Kirkwood
-made him as soon as her father’s death let her into her share of the
-property. When I saw her again--one night at dinner at her brother’s
-house, before his wife divorced him--we met as if we were entire
-strangers. Neither of us made the remotest allusion to that first
-meeting.
-
-Going down to her house with Armitage often and being with her on the
-yacht for days together, I became fairly well acquainted with her,
-although she maintained the reserve which she did not increase for a
-stranger or drop even with her brother. You felt as if her personality
-were a large and interesting house, with room after room worth
-seeing, most attractive--but that no one ever was admitted beyond the
-drawing-room, not for a glimpse.
-
-Don’t picture her as of the somber sort of person. A real tragedy
-can befall only a person with a highly sensitive nature. Such
-persons always have sense of proportion and sense of humor. They do
-not exaggerate themselves; they see the amusing side of the antics
-of the human animal. So they do not pull long faces and swathe
-themselves in yards of crêpe and try to create an impression of
-dark and gloomy sorrow. They do not find woe a luxury; they know it
-in its grim horror. They strive to get the joy out of life. So,
-looking at Mary Kirkwood, you would never have suspected a secret
-of sadness, a blighted life. As her reserve did not come from
-self-consciousness--either the self-consciousness of haughtiness or
-that of shyness and greenness--you did not even suspect reserve until
-you had known her long and had tried in vain to get as well acquainted
-with her as you thought you were at first. I imagine that in our talk
-in my office about her husband I got further into the secret of her
-than anyone else ever had.
-
-One detail I shall put by itself, so important does it seem to me.
-She had a keen sense of humor. It was not merely passive, merely
-appreciation, as the sense of humor is apt to be in women--where it
-exists at all. It was also active; she said droll and even witty
-things. When her sense of humor was aroused, her eyes were bewitching.
-
-What did she look like? The women all wish to know this; for, being
-fond of the evanescent triumphs over the male which beauty of face
-or form gives, and as a rule having experience only of those petty
-victories, they fancy that looks are the important factor, the
-all-important factor. In fact, the real conquests of women are not won
-by looks. Beauty, or, rather, physical charm of some kind, is the lure
-that draws the desired male within range. If after pausing a while he
-finds nothing more, he is off again.
-
-Perhaps, probably, my experience with Edna has made me more indifferent
-to looks than the average man who has never realized his longing to
-possess a physically beautiful woman. However that may be, Mary
-Kirkwood certainly had no cause to complain that Nature had not
-been generous to her in the matter of looks. She was tall, she was
-slender. She had a delicate oval face, a skin that was clear and
-smooth and dark with the much prized olive tints in it. She had a
-beautiful long neck, a great quantity of almost black hair. Her nose
-suggested pride, her mouth mockery, her eyes sincerity. She was the
-kind of woman who exercises a powerful physical fascination over men,
-and at the same time makes them afraid to show their feelings. Women
-like that tantalize with visions of what they could and would give
-the man they loved, but make each man feel that it would be idle for
-him to hope. In character she was very different from her cynical,
-mocking brother--was, I imagine, more like her father. Mentally the
-resemblance between the brother and sister was strong--but she took
-pains to conceal how much she knew, where he found his chief pleasure
-in “showing off.” I feel I have fallen pitifully short of doing her
-justice in this description. But who can put into words such a subtlety
-as charm? She had it--for men. Women did not like her--nor she them. I
-state this without fear of prejudicing either women or men against her.
-Why is it, by the way, that to say a man does not like men and is not
-liked by them is to damn him utterly, while to say that a woman neither
-likes nor is liked by her own sex is rather to speak in her favor? You
-cry indignantly, “Not true!” gentle reader. But--do _you_ know what is
-true and what not true? And, if you did, would you confess it, even to
-yourself?
-
-You are proceeding to revenge yourself upon me. You are saying, “_Now_
-we know _why_ he was indifferent to his beautiful wife and to his
-lovely daughter!--_Now_ we understand that fit of guilty conscience in
-London!”
-
-Do you know? Perhaps. I am not sure. I am not conscious of any especial
-interest in Mary Kirkwood until after I came back from London. I
-had seen her but a few times. We had never talked so long as five
-consecutive minutes, and then we had talked commonplaces. Not the
-commonplaces of fashionable people, but the commonplaces of intelligent
-people. There’s an enormous difference.
-
-The first time my memory records her with the vividness of moving
-pictures is, of course, at that meeting in my office. The next time is
-a few days after my return from London. I had been surfeited both in
-London and on the steamer with the inane amateurs at life, the shallow
-elegant dabblers in it, interesting themselves only in coaching,
-bridge, and similar pastimes worthy an asylum for the feeble-minded. I
-went down to the Kirkwood place with Armitage. As his sister was not in
-the house we set out for a walk through the grounds to find her. At the
-outer edge of the gardens a workman told us that if we would follow a
-path through the swampy woods we could not miss her.
-
-The path was the roughest kind of a trail. Our journey was beset with
-swarms of insects, most of them mosquitoes in savage humor. It lay
-along the course of a sluggish narrow stream that looked malarious
-and undoubtedly was. “Landscape gardening is one of Mary’s fads,”
-explained her brother. “She has been planning to tackle this swamp for
-several years. Now she is at it.”
-
-In the depths of the morass we came upon her. She was in man’s
-clothes--laboring man’s clothes. Her face and neck were protected by
-veils, her hands by gloves. She was toiling away with a gang of men at
-clearing the ground where the drains were to center in an artificial
-lake. Armitage called several times before she heard. Then she dropped
-her ax and came forward to meet us. There was certainly nothing of what
-is usually regarded as feminine allure about her. Yet never had I seen
-a woman more fascinating. There undoubtedly was charm in her face and
-in her strong, slender figure. But I believe the real charm of charms
-for me was the spectacle of a woman usefully employed. A woman actually
-doing something. A woman!
-
-After the greeting she said: “The only way I can get the men to work
-in this pesthole is by working with them.” She smiled merrily. “One
-doesn’t look so well as in a fresh tennis suit wielding a racket. But I
-can’t bear doing things that have no results.”
-
-“My father insisted on bringing us up in the commonest way and with the
-commonest tastes,” said Armitage, “and Mary has remained even less the
-lady than I am the gentleman.”
-
-As the mosquitoes were tearing us to pieces Mrs. Kirkwood ordered us
-back to the house. Before we were out of sight she was leading on her
-gang and wielding the ax again. At dinner she appeared in all the
-radiance and grace of the beautiful woman with fondness for and taste
-in dress. She explained to me her plan--how swamp and sluggish, rotting
-brook were to be transformed into a wooded park with a swift, clear
-stream and a succession of cascades. I may add, she carried out the
-plan, and the results were even beyond what my imagination pictured as
-she talked.
-
-This first view of her life in the country set me to observing her
-closely--perhaps more closely and from a different standpoint than a
-man usually observes a woman. In all she did I saw the same rare and
-fascinating imagination--the only kind of imagination worth while. Of
-all its stupidities and follies none so completely convicts the human
-race of shallowness and bad taste as its notions of what is romantic
-and idealistic. The more elegant the human animal flatters itself it
-is, the poorer are its ideals--that is, the further removed from the
-practical and the useful. So, you rarely find a woman with so much true
-poetry, true romance, true imagination as to keep house well. But Mary
-Kirkwood kept house as a truly great artist paints a picture, as a
-truly great composer creates an opera. In all her house there was not a
-trace of the crude, costly luxury that rivals the squalor and bareness
-of poverty in repulsiveness to people of sense and taste. But what
-comfort! What splendid cooking, what perfection of service. The chairs
-and sofas, the beds, the linen, the hundred and one small but important
-devices for facilitating the material side of life, and so putting mind
-and spirit in the mood for their best-- But I despair of making you
-realize. I should have to catalogue, describe, contrast through page
-after page. And when I had finished, those who understand what the
-phrase art of living means would have read only what they already know,
-while those who do not understand that phrase would be convulsed with
-the cackling laughter that is the tribute of mush-brain to intellect.
-
-Observing Mary Kirkwood I discovered a great truth about the woman
-question: the crudest indictment of the intellect of woman is the
-crude, archaic, futile, and unimaginative way in which is carried on
-the part of life that is woman’s peculiar work--or, rather, is messed,
-muddled, slopped, and neglected. No doubt this is not their fault. But
-it soon will be if they don’t bestir themselves. Already there are
-American men not a few who apologize for having married as a folly of
-their green and silly youth.
-
-So, gentle reader, though my enthusiasm tempts me to describe Mary
-Kirkwood’s housekeeping in detail, I shall spare you. You would not
-read. You would not understand if you did.
-
-The first time she and I approached the confidential was on an August
-evening when we were alone on the upper deck of the yacht. The others
-were in the cabin playing bridge. We had been sitting there perhaps an
-hour when she rose.
-
-“Don’t go,” said I.
-
-“I thought you wished to be alone,” said she.
-
-“Why did you think that?”
-
-“Your way of answering me. You’ve been almost curt.”
-
-“I’m sorry. I can’t promise to talk if you stay. But I hate to be left
-alone with my thoughts.”
-
-“I understand,” said she. And she seated herself beside the rail, and
-with my assistance lighted a cigarette.
-
-There was a moon somewhere above the awning which gave us a roof. By
-the dim, uncertain light I could make out her features. It seemed to
-me she was staying as much on her own account as on mine--because she,
-too, wished not to be alone with her thoughts. I had not in a long time
-seen her in a frankly serious mood.
-
-“How much better off a man is than a woman,” said I. “A man has his
-career to think about, while a woman usually has only herself.”
-
-“Only herself,” echoed she absently. “And if one is able to think,
-oneself is an unsatisfactory subject.”
-
-“Extremely,” said I. “Faults, follies, failures.”
-
-For a time I watched the faintly glowing end of her cigarette and the
-slim fingers that held it gracefully. Then she said:
-
-“Do you believe in a future life?”
-
-“Does anyone feel _sure_ of any life but this?”
-
-“Then this is one’s only chance to get what one wants--what’s worth
-while.”
-
-“What _is_ worth while?” I inquired, feeling the charm of her quiet,
-sweet voice issuing upon the magical stillness. “What _is_ worth while?”
-
-She laughed softly. “What one wants.”
-
-“And what do _you_ want?”
-
-She drew her white scarf closer about her bare shoulders, smiled
-queerly out over the lazily rippling waters. “Love and children,” she
-said. “I’m a normal woman.”
-
-That amused me. “Normal? Why, you’re unique--eccentric. Most women
-want money--and yet more money--and yet more money--for more and more
-and always more show.”
-
-“You must want the same thing,” retorted she. “You’re too sensible not
-to know you can’t possibly do any good to others with money. So you
-must want it for your own selfish purposes. It’s every bit as much for
-show when you have it tucked away in large masses for people to gape at
-as if you were throwing it round as the women do.... If anything, your
-passion is cruder than theirs.”
-
-“I think I make money,” said I, “for the same reasons that a hen lays
-eggs or a cow gives milk--because I can’t help it; because I can’t do
-anything else and must do something.”
-
-“Did you ever try to do anything else?”
-
-“No,” I admitted. Then I added, “I never had the chance.”
-
-“True,” she said reflectively. “A hen can’t give milk and a cow can’t
-lay eggs.”
-
-“For some time,” I went on, “I’ve been trying to find something else
-to do. Something interesting. No, not exactly that either. I must find
-some way of reviving my interest in life. The things I am doing would
-be interesting enough if I could be interested in anything at all. But
-I’m not.”
-
-She nodded slowly. “I’m in the same state,” said she. “I’ve about
-decided what to do.”
-
-“Yes?” said I encouragingly.
-
-“Marry again,” replied she.
-
-I laughed outright. “That’s very unoriginal,” said I. “It puts you in
-with the rest of the women. Marrying is all _they_ can think of doing.”
-
-“But you don’t quite understand,” said she. “_I_ want children. I
-am thinking of selecting some trustworthy man with good physical
-and mental qualities. I have had experience. I ought to be able to
-judge--and not being in love with him I shall not be so likely to
-make a mistake. I shall marry, and the children will give me love and
-occupation. You may laugh, but I tell you the only occupation worthy of
-a man or a woman is bringing up children. All the rest--for men as well
-as for women--is--is like a hen laying eggs to rot in the weeds....
-Bringing up children to develop us, to give us a chance to make them an
-improvement on ourselves. That’s the best.”
-
-As the full meaning of what she had said unfolded I was filled with
-astonishment. How clear and simple--how true. Why had I not seen this
-long ago--why had it been necessary to have it pointed out by another?
-“I believe--yes, I’m sure--that’s what I’ve been groping for,” I said
-to her.
-
-“I thought you’d understand,” said she, and most flattering was her
-tone of pleasure at my obvious admiration.
-
-Thus our friendship was born.
-
-I could not but envy her freedom to seek to satisfy the longing I thus
-discovered in my own heart. So strongly did the mood for confidence
-possess me that only my long and hard training in self-restraint held
-me from the disloyalty of speaking my thoughts. I said:
-
-“It’s dismal to grow old with no ties in the oncoming generation. The
-sense of the utter futility of life would weigh more and more heavily.
-I’m surprised that you’ve realized it so young.”
-
-“A woman realizes it earlier than a man,” she reminded me. “For a woman
-has no career to interfere and prevent her seeing the truth.”
-
-A woman! Rather, a rare occasional Mary Kirkwood. Most women never
-looked beyond the gratification of the crudest, easiest vanities and
-appetites. “Yes, you are right,” I continued. “You ought to marry--as
-soon as you can. The man isn’t important, except in the ways you
-spoke of. So far as man and woman love is concerned, that quickly
-passes--where it ever exists at all. But the bond of father, mother,
-and children is enduring--at least, I’m sure _you_ would make it so.”
-
-We sat lost in thought for some time--I reflecting moodily upon my own
-baffled and now seemingly hopeless longing, she probably busy with the
-ideas suggested in her next speech.
-
-“The main trouble is money,” said she. “Except for that my husband
-would have been all right. When we first met he did not know my family
-had wealth. He thought I belonged to another and poor branch. And I
-think he cared for me, and would have been the man I sought but for the
-money. It roused a dormant side of his nature, and everything went to
-pieces.”
-
-“Then, marry a rich man,” I suggested.
-
-She shook her head. “I don’t know a single rich man--except _possibly_
-my brother--who isn’t obsessed about money. The rich have a craving to
-be richer that’s worse than the desire of the poor to be rich.... I
-don’t know what to do. I couldn’t bring up children in the atmosphere
-of wealth and caste and show--the sort of atmosphere a man or woman
-crazy about money insists on creating. My father was right. He was a
-really wise man. I owe to him every good instinct and good idea I have.”
-
-“But you must have seen some man who promised well. I think you
-can trust to your judgment. You mustn’t defeat your one chance for
-happiness by overcaution.”
-
-Again she was silent for several minutes. Then she said, with a queer
-laugh and an embarrassed movement: “I have seen such a man--lately. I
-like him. I think I could like him more than a little. I’ve an idea he
-might care for me if I’d let him. But--I don’t know.”
-
-I saw that she longed to confide, but wished to be questioned. “Here on
-the yacht?” said I.
-
-She nodded.
-
-“Beechman?”
-
-She laughed shyly yet with amusement.
-
-“That was an easy guess,” said I. “He’s the only man of us free to
-marry.”
-
-“What do you think of him?”
-
-“The very man I’d say,” replied I. “He’s good to look at--clever,
-healthy, and honest. He isn’t money-mad. He could make quite a splurge
-with what he has, yet he doesn’t. He is a serious man--does not let
-them tempt him into fashionable society or any other kind.”
-
-“What are the objections?” said she. “My father trained us to look for
-the rotten spots, as he called them. He said one ought to hunt them out
-and examine them carefully. Then if, in spite of them, the thing still
-looked good, why there was a chance of its being worth taking.”
-
-“That’s precisely my way of proceeding in business,” said I. “It’s a
-pity it isn’t used in every part of life--from marketing up to choosing
-a friend or a husband.”
-
-“Well, what are the ‘rotten spots’ in Mr. Beechman?”
-
-“I haven’t looked for them,” said I. “No doubt they’re there, but as
-they’re not obvious they may be unimportant.”
-
-“Can’t you think of _any_?”
-
-She was laughing, and so was I. Poor Beechman, down in the cabin
-absorbed in bridge, how amazed he’d have been if he could have heard!
-In my mind’s eye I was looking him over--a tall, fair man with good
-smooth-shaven features.
-
-“He’s getting bald rather rapidly for a man of thirty or thereabouts,”
-said I.
-
-“I don’t like baldness,” said she. “But I can endure it.”
-
-“He is distinctly vain of his looks and his strength. But he has cause
-to be.”
-
-“All men are physically vain,” said she. “And they can’t help it,
-because it is the hereditary quality of the male from fishes and
-reptiles up.”
-
-“He’s inclined to be opinionated, and his point of view is narrow.”
-
-“I think I might hope to educate him out of that,” said she. “I can be
-tactful.”
-
-“It’s certainly not a serious objection.”
-
-“Any other spots?”
-
-“He has a certain--a certain--lack of vigor. It’s a thing I’ve observed
-in all professional men, except those of the first rank, those who are
-really men of action.”
-
-She nodded. “I was waiting for that,” said she. “It’s the thing that
-has made me hesitate.” She laughed outright. “What a conceited speech!
-But I’m exposing myself fully to you.”
-
-“Why not?” said I.
-
-“I am picking him to pieces as if I thought myself perfection. As a
-matter of fact, I know he’d fly from me if he saw me as I am.” She
-reflected, laughed quietly. “But he never would know me as I am. An
-unconventional woman--if she’s sensible--only shows enough of her
-variation from the pattern to make herself interesting--never enough to
-be alarming.”
-
-“You are unconventional?”
-
-“You didn’t suspect it?”
-
-“No. You smoke cigarettes--but that has ceased to be unconventional.”
-
-“I rather thought you had a favorable opinion of my intelligence,” said
-she.
-
-“So I have,” said I. “To be perfectly frank, you seemed to me to have
-as good a mind as your brother.”
-
-“That is flattering,” said she, immensely pleased, and with reason.
-“Well, if you thought so favorably of my intelligence, how could you
-believe me conventional?”
-
-“I see,” said I. “No one who thinks can be conventional.”
-
-“Conventionality,” said she, “was invented to save some people the
-trouble of thinking and to prevent others from being outrageous through
-trying to think when they’ve nothing to think with.”
-
-“That is worth remembering and repeating,” laughed I. “Personally,
-I’m deeply grateful for conventionality. You see, I came up from the
-bottom, and I find it satisfactory to be able to refer to the rules in
-all the things I knew nothing about.”
-
-“My brother says the most remarkable thing about you--and your wife--
-Do you mind my telling you?”
-
-“Go on,” said I.
-
-“He says most people who come up are alternately hopeless barbarians
-and hopelessly conventional, but that you took the right course. You
-learned to be conventional--learned the rules--before you ventured to
-try to make personal variations in them.”
-
-“I’m slow to risk variations,” said I. “Most of the efforts in that
-direction are--eccentric. And I detest eccentricity as much as I like
-originality.”
-
-“If Mr. Beechman were only a little less conventional!” sighed she.
-“I’m afraid he’d be rather--” She hesitated.
-
-“Tiresome?” I ventured to suggest.
-
-“Tiresome,” she assented. “But--there would be the children. Do you
-think he’d try to interfere with me there?”
-
-“You’ll never know that until you’ve married him,” said I.
-
-“It’s a pity he has an occupation that would keep him round the house
-most of the time,” said she. “That’s a trial to a woman. She’s always
-being interrupted when she wishes to be free.”
-
-“You mustn’t expect too much,” said I. “I think the children will be
-_your_ children.”
-
-She did not reply in words. But a sudden strengthening of her
-expression made me feel that I was getting a glimpse of her father.
-
-We talked no more of Beechman or of any personalities related to this
-story. When the bridge party broke up and a supper was served on deck,
-she and Beechman sat together. And I gathered from the sounds coming
-from their direction that he was making progress. My spirits gradually
-oozed away and I sat glumly pretending to listen while Mrs. Raphael
-talked to me. Usually she interested me because she talked what she
-knew and knew things worth while. But that night I heard scarcely a
-word she said. When the party, one by one, began to go below, Mrs.
-Kirkwood joined me and found an opportunity to say, aside:
-
-“Won’t you talk with Mr. Beechman--and tell me your honest opinion? You
-know I can’t afford to make another mistake. And I’m in earnest.”
-
-I stood silent, smoking and staring out toward the dim Connecticut
-shore.
-
-“It wouldn’t be unfair to him,” she urged. “You’re not especially his
-friend. I can’t ask anyone else, and I believe in your judgment.”
-
-“If I advised you, I’d be taking a heavy responsibility,” said I.
-
-“I’m not that kind--you know I’m not,” replied she. “I don’t ask
-advice, to have some one to blame if things go wrong. Of course, if
-there’s a reason why you can’t very well help me-- Maybe you already
-know something against him?--something you’ve no right to tell?”
-
-“Nothing,” said I, emphatically. “And I don’t believe there is anything
-against him.” Then, on an impulse of fairness and to wipe out the
-suspicion of Beechman I had unwittingly created, I said: “Really,
-there’s no reason why I shouldn’t size him up and give you my opinion.
-I’ll do my best.”
-
-She thanked me with a fine lighting up of the eyes. And the warm
-friendly pressure of her hand lingered after she had long been below
-and was no doubt asleep.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What was my reason for hesitating? You have guessed it, but you think
-I do not intend to admit. You are deceived there. I admit frankly. I
-felt unable to advise her because I found that I was in love with her,
-myself. Yes, I was in love, and for the first time in my life. The
-latest time of falling in love is always the first. As we become older
-and more experienced, better acquainted with the world, with ourselves,
-with what we want and do not want--in a word, as we _grow_, the meaning
-of love grows. And each time we love, we see, as we look back over
-the previous times, that what we thought was love was in fact simply
-educational.
-
-So, when I say I had never loved until I loved Mary Kirkwood, I am
-speaking a truth which is worth thinking about. I had reached the
-age, the stage of physical and mental development, at which a man’s
-capacities are at their largest--at which I could give love and could
-appreciate love that was given to me. And I, who could not ask or hope
-love from her, gave her all the love I had to give. Gave because I
-could not help giving. Who, seeing the best, can help wanting it?
-
-But for my promise to her I should have left the yacht early the
-following morning. As it was I stayed on, with my mind made up to keep
-my word. Did I stay because of my promise? Did I stay because I loved
-her? I do not know. Who can fathom the real motive in such a situation
-as that? I can only say that I sought Beechman’s society and did my
-best to take his measure. It had been so long my habit to judge men
-without regard to my personal feeling about them that, perhaps in spite
-of myself, I saw this man as he was, not as I should have liked him
-to be. I found that I had underestimated him. I had been prejudiced
-by his taking himself too seriously--a form of vanity which I happen
-particularly to detest. Also his sense of humor was different from
-mine--a fact that had misled me into thinking he had no sense of humor.
-I had thought--shall I say hoped?--that I would find him a man she
-could respect but could not love. I was forced to abandon this idea.
-So far as a man can judge another for a woman, he could succeed with
-almost any heart-free woman. I wondered that Mary Kirkwood should be
-uncertain about him. I might have drawn comfort from her having done
-so, had I not known how she dreaded making a second mistake.
-
-That day and the next, when I was not with him, she was. I shan’t
-attempt to tell my emotions. That sort of thing seems absurd to all
-the world but the one who is suffering. Besides, the fact that I was a
-married man would alienate the sympathies of all respectable readers.
-Not that I am yearning for sympathy. Those who have read thus far may
-have possibly gathered that I am not one of those who live on sympathy
-and wither and die without it. The only sympathy human beings seem able
-to give one another, I have discovered, is a species of self-complacent
-pity; and while it may not be exactly a stone, it is certainly a most
-inferior quality of bread.
-
-The third morning I sought her out. She made a picture of strong, slim
-young womanhood to cause the heart--at least, my heart--to ache, as she
-leaned against the rail in her blue-trimmed white linen dress showing
-her lovely throat. Said I, avoiding her eyes: “I’m off for the shore,
-and I wish to report before leaving.”
-
-“Ashore!” she cried. “Why, you were to have gone on to Bar Harbor and
-back again.”
-
-“Business--always business.”
-
-“I’m disappointed,” said she, and I saw with a furtive glance that her
-face had quite lost its brightness.
-
-“I’m glad of that, at least,” said I with a successful enough attempt
-at lightness; for, as I have never been the sort of man in whom
-women expect to find sentimentalism, signs of embarrassment or other
-agitation would be attributed to any other source before the heart.
-
-“I’ve lost interest in the trip,” she declared.
-
-I forced a smile. “Beechman isn’t going.”
-
-“Oh, that’s different,” said she, with a certain frank impatience.
-“You’re the one person I can really talk to.... Can’t you stay?”
-
-I did not let my face betray me. I waited before speaking until I was
-sure of my voice. “Impossible,” I said, perhaps rather curtly--for,
-mind you, I wished to deal honestly with her, and was not trying to
-hint my love while pretending to hide it. I know there is a notion
-that love cannot be controlled. But the kind of love that can’t be
-controlled is a selfish, greedy appetite and not love at all. When
-the man doesn’t control his love the woman may be sure he is thinking
-of himself only, of her merely as a possible means of pleasure--is
-thinking of her as the hungry hunter thinks of the fine fat rabbit.
-Said I:
-
-“Now for my report on Beechman.”
-
-But she would not let me escape. “Why are you short with me?” she
-asked. “Have I offended you?”
-
-“No, indeed,” said I. “You’ve been everything that’s kind and friendly.”
-
-“The very idea of losing your friendship frightens me,” she went on.
-“I’ve a feeling for you--a feeling of--of intimacy”--she flushed
-rosily--“that I have for no one else in the world. Oh, I don’t expect
-you to return it. No doubt I seem insignificant to you. Almost anyone
-would want your friendship. You are sure you aren’t leaving because you
-are bored?”
-
-“Absolutely sure. If I could explain my reason for going you would see
-that I must. But I can’t explain. So you’ll be glad to hear that I find
-Beechman even more of a man than I thought.”
-
-She looked at me apologetically. “You’ll think me foolish, but since
-I’ve begun to try to like him better I’ve been--almost--not liking him.”
-
-I am sure I beamed with delight. For, there are limits--very narrow
-ones--to unselfishness in the most considerate love. And I am not
-able to pose as more than feebly unselfish. “That isn’t fair to him,”
-I said, with more enthusiasm in my words than in my tone. “I’ve been
-judging him as carefully as I know how, and I must in honesty say he is
-a rare man. You’ll not find many like him.”
-
-“Don’t tell me he’s worthy,” she cried, “or I shall loathe him.”
-
-“And he cares for you,” I said.
-
-“Did he tell you so?”
-
-“I think he would have if I had encouraged him.... I liked the way he
-spoke of you, and”--I hesitated, could not hold back the words--“and
-I am not easy to please there.” Those words were certainly far from
-confession, were the mildest form of indiscretion. Still, so determined
-was I to be square, and so guilty did I feel, that they sounded like a
-contemptible attempt stealthily to make love to her.
-
-“Thank you,” she said gently. And her suddenly swimming eyes and tender
-voice reminded me how alone she was and how bitter her experience had
-been and how she deserved happiness.
-
-I felt ashamed of myself. “I hope you will be happy,” I said, perhaps
-rather huskily. “Anyone who tried to prevent it would deserve to be
-killed.”
-
-She looked at me with such a steady, penetrating gaze that I feared I
-had betrayed myself. In fact, I knew I had. I glanced at my watch, put
-out my hand. “I hate to go,” I said, in the tone of one man to another.
-“But I must.” And as we shook hands, I repeated, “I know you will be
-happy.”
-
-She laughed nervously; she, too, had become ill at ease. “You make me
-feel engaged,” she said with an attempt at mockery.
-
-As the launch touched the shore I looked back. She was leaning on the
-rail, Beechman beside her. He was talking, but I felt sure she was not
-listening. As I looked she waved her hand. I lifted my hat and hurried
-away. And I learned the meaning of that word desolation.
-
-Do not think, because I have not raved, talked of the moon and stars,
-poetized about my soul states, that therefore I did not love her. The
-banquet of life spread so richly for me seemed a ghastly mockery. What
-shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?
-I had lost my soul. I had discovered how I might have been happy,
-and at the same time I had discovered that it could never be--never.
-And always before me she stood in her radiant youth--intelligent, so
-capable, splendidly sincere--the woman I loved, the woman I felt I
-could have made love me.
-
-There was my temptation--the feeling, the conviction that I could
-win her love. She had confessed to a friendship for me different from
-any she had for anyone else in the world. If I were willing to take
-advantage of her trust, of her liking, of her longing for love and
-of my knowledge of it--if I were to let her see how utterly I loved
-her--I could surely win her. There were times when I said to myself:
-“You--even as you are--can make her happier than anyone else could. She
-would prefer what you can give her to what she will get from Beechman.
-Your love gives you the right to make her happy. You are letting
-foolish conventional notions blind you to what is really right. If you
-had acted in business in that fashion, you would not have got far. Yet
-in the supreme crisis of your life you let yourself be frightened off
-by a bogy of conventional morality.”
-
-Perhaps I was giving myself sound advice there. I do not know. I
-only know that I put the temptation behind me and went to work. The
-sentimental readers will not forgive me. So be it. I am a plain man,
-rather old-fashioned--prim, I believe it is called--in my ideas, not at
-all the ladies’ man. And I did not want to harm her. I loved her.
-
-I went to work. The sort of people who are ever on the lookout for some
-excuse for going to pieces, and the world is well sprinkled with them,
-eagerly seize on disappointment in love as precisely what they were
-seeking. At the risk of being thought cold and hard, I will say that
-it is extremely fortunate for Joan that she escaped the Darby who goes
-smash for disappointed love of her. If Joan had yielded to him, Darby
-would simply have been put to the trouble of finding another pretext
-for throwing up his job and taking to drink. I confess it did not occur
-to me to give up and fall to boozing and brooding. I should not have
-dared do that; for, you see, I was really in love--not with myself, but
-with Mary Kirkwood. I went to work. I filled my days and my evenings
-with business engagements that compelled both my time and my thought.
-I took on an extra secretary. I started to build a railway. I laid out
-an addition to the manufacturing city I had founded. I organized a
-farm for teaching city slum boys to be farmers. I engaged in several
-entirely new mining and manufacturing enterprises. The result was that
-when I went to bed, I slept; and when they awakened me in the morning
-my brain was at work before my head was well off the pillow. And
-still-- You can distract your mind from the aching tooth, but it aches
-on.
-
-All this time I was receiving weekly letters from Edna and Margot--long
-and loving letters. I read them, and you may possibly imagine I was
-filled with shame and remorse. Not at all. My wife and my daughter
-had rather exaggerated my vanity. Only vanity could gull a husband
-and father in my position into fancying himself the object of such
-luxuriant affection as those letters professed. If you have lies to
-tell, take my advice and don’t _write_ them. I can’t explain the
-mystery, but a lie which, spoken and heard, passes out and passes in
-as smoothly as a greased shuttle in its greased groove, becomes a
-glaring falsehood when set down in black and white. The only effect of
-those letters upon me was to make my sick heart the sadder with the
-realization of what I had missed in losing Mary Kirkwood.
-
-And I kept wondering what it was that Edna and Margot were slathering
-me for.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In September I got the key to the mystery. The necessity of floating
-some bonds took me abroad again. I found my family ensconced in
-beautiful luxury in an apartment in Paris. You drove out the Champs
-Elysées. Not far from the President’s palace you drove in at great
-doors--not gates, but doors--in a plain, unpretentious-looking house
-wall. You were in a superb garden of whose existence you had no hint
-from the street. Magnificent bronze inner doors--powdered and velveted
-lackeys--a majestic stairway leading to lofty and gorgeous corridors
-and salons. Really my wife, with the aid of those clever European
-professors of the aristocratic art, had educated herself amazingly.
-On every side there were evidences of her good taste in furniture, in
-tapestries, in wall coverings, in pictures. It was not the taste of a
-home maker, but it was unquestionably good taste. It was not the sort
-of taste I liked, but not to admire it would have been to lack the
-sense of harmony in line and color. And let me add in justice to her,
-it was her own taste. There is no mistaking the difference between the
-luxury that is merely bought and the luxury that is created.
-
-I submitted with what grace I could muster to the exuberant hypocrisies
-of that greeting. But I got to business with all speed. “In the note
-I found in London you said you had a surprise for me,” I said to Edna.
-“What is it?”
-
-“How impatient you are,” laughed she. “Just like a child.”
-
-Whether because the fashions of the day happened to be peculiarly
-becoming or because she had actually improved, she now had the
-loveliness more exquisite than I had ever seen in woman. No doubt her
-piquant face had charm for most people; for me it had none whatever.
-I knew too well what lay beneath--or, rather, what was not there, for
-like most human beings her defects of character were not so much the
-presence of the vices as the lack of the virtues.
-
-“I’ve been waiting for that surprise several months,” said I. “Your
-letters and Margot’s showed that some shock was coming.”
-
-“Shock? No, indeed!” And she and Margot laughed gayly. “It isn’t
-altogether a surprise,” she went on. “Can’t you guess?”
-
-I looked at Margot. “Ah!” I said. “Margot is engaged.”
-
-Margot ran across the room and kissed me. “Oh, I’m so happy, papa!” she
-cried.
-
-“Is it the duke?” I asked.
-
-She made a wry face. “He was horrid!” she said. “I couldn’t _endure_
-him.”
-
-“So you had to fall back on the marquis?”
-
-Neither of the women liked this way of putting the matter. It suggested
-that I knew the painful truth of the failure of the ducal campaign. But
-they were not to be put out of humor. “You liked him yourself, papa,”
-said Margot.
-
-I was abstractedly thinking how I had no sense of her being my
-daughter or of Edna being my wife. You would say that after all we
-three had been through together, from Passaic up, it would be a sheer
-impossibility for there ever to be a sense of strangeness between us.
-But there is no limit to the power of the human soul to cut itself off;
-intimacy is hard to maintain, isolation--alas--is the natural state.
-I looked on them as strangers; I could feel that, in spite of their
-clever, resolute forcing, in spite of the hypocrisy of love for me
-which each doubtless maintained at all times with the other, still they
-could scarcely hide their feeling that I was a strange man come in from
-the street.
-
-“Yes, I liked Crossley,” said I. “I think he’ll make you a good
-husband.”
-
-“He is _mad_ about her!” said Edna. “There was a while this summer when
-he thought he had lost her, and he all but went out of his mind.”
-
-To look at her was to believe it; for, a lovelier girl was never
-displayed in all her physical perfection by a more discriminating
-mother.
-
-“When is the wedding to be?” said I.
-
-There was a brief, surcharged silence--no more than a pause. Then Edna
-said indifferently, “As soon as the settlements are arranged.”
-
-“Oh--is he settling something on her?” said I, with pretended
-innocence. “I’m glad of that. There’s been too much of the other sort
-of thing.”
-
-Margot came to the rescue with a charming laugh. “Poor Hugh!” she said.
-“He hasn’t anything but mortgages.”
-
-“Um--I see,” said I glumly--and I observed intense anxiety behind the
-smiles in those two pairs of beautiful eyes. “How much have we got to
-pay for him?”
-
-Edna looked reproachfully at me. “Margot,” said she, “you’d better go
-tell them to serve lunch in fifteen minutes.”
-
-“Nonsense,” said I cheerfully. “Let her stay. What’s the use of this
-hypocrisy? She knows he cares no more about her than she cares about
-him--that it’s simply a matter of buying and selling. If she doesn’t
-know it, if she’s letting her vanity bamboozle her----”
-
-“Godfrey--please!” implored Edna. “Don’t smirch the child’s romance.
-She and Hugh love each other. If she were poor, he’d marry her just the
-same.”
-
-“Has he offered to go ahead, regardless of settlements?” I asked.
-
-“Of course not, papa,” flashed Margot. “Things aren’t done that way
-over here.”
-
-“Oh, yes, they are,” replied I. “Romantic love matches occur every day.
-Even royalty throws up its rights, to marry a chorus girl. But when
-there’s a fat American goose to pluck and eat, why, they pluck and eat
-it. I’m the goose, my dear--not you.”
-
-“You don’t understand,” murmured Margot.
-
-“I wish I didn’t,” said I. “And I wish you didn’t have to understand.
-If possible I want to arrange matters with him so that he’ll always
-treat you decently.”
-
-“But, Godfrey,” cried Edna in a panic, “you can’t talk money to _him_.”
-
-“Why not?” said I. “He’s _thinking_ money. Why shouldn’t he talk it?”
-
-“He knows nothing about those things, papa----”
-
-I laughed.
-
-“You’ll ruin everything!” cried my wife. “You’ll make us the
-laughingstock of Europe!”
-
-“We Americans of the rich class are that already,” replied I.
-
-Edna must have given her daughter some secret signal, for she abruptly
-and hastily left the room, closing the door behind her. I shrugged
-my shoulders, settled back on the exquisitely upholstered and carved
-sofa on which I had seated myself. Looking round I said, “This is a
-beautiful room. You’ve certainly arranged a fitting background for
-yourself and Margot.”
-
-But she was not listening. She was watching her fingers slowly twist
-and untwist the delicate little lace handkerchief. At last she said:
-“Godfrey, I’ve never asked a favor of you. I’ve given my whole life to
-advancing your interests--to making our child a perfect lady--and to
-placing her in a dazzling position.”
-
-“Yes,” said I. “You have worked hard--and you’ve made your tricks.”
-
-“I’ve played my hand well--as you have yours,” said she, accepting my
-rather unrefined figure with good grace. “I began to make Margot’s
-career before she was born. The first time I saw her little face, I
-murmured to myself, ‘Little Duchess.’ Now, you understand why I brought
-her up so carefully.”
-
-“Oh,” said I, looking at her with new interest. “That was it?” I who
-knew what a futile, purposeless, easily discouraged breed the human
-race is could not but admire this woman. If her intelligence had only
-been equal to her will, what might she not have accomplished!
-
-“I have never lost sight of it for a moment,” said she. “In the early
-days--for a time--when we were seemingly so hopelessly obscure, and
-I was too ignorant to learn which way to turn--for a while I was
-discouraged. But I never gave up--never! And step by step I’ve trained
-her for the grand position as a leader of European society she was one
-day to occupy--for, I knew that if she led Europe she would be leader
-at home, too. Over there they’re merely a feeble, crude echo of Europe.”
-
-“Socially,” said I.
-
-“That’s all we’re talking about,” replied she. “That’s all there is
-worth talking about. What else have you been piling up money for?...
-What else?”
-
-I could think of no reply. I was silent. What else, indeed?
-
-“I kept her away from other children,” Edna went on. “After she could
-talk I never trusted her to nurses until we could afford fashionable
-servants. I got her the right sort of governesses--so that she should
-speak French, Italian, and German, and should have a well-bred English
-accent for her own language. I even trained her in the children’s
-stories she read--had her read only the fairy tales and the other
-stories that would fill her mind with ideas of nobility and titles and
-the high things of life.”
-
-“The high things of life,” said I.
-
-She made an impressive gesture--she looked like a beautiful young
-empress. “Let’s not cant,” said she. “Those _are_ the high things
-of life. Ask any person you meet in America--young or old, high or
-low--ask him which he’d rather be--a prince, duke, marquis, or a saint,
-scientist, statesman. What would he answer?”
-
-I laughed. “That he’d rather be a millionaire,” said I.
-
-“A millionaire with a title--with established social position at the
-very top--that couldn’t be taken away. That’s the truth, Godfrey.”
-
-“I’ll not contradict you,” said I.
-
-“And,” she went on, “I’ve brought up our daughter so that she could
-realize the highest ambition within our reach. Haven’t I brought her up
-well?”
-
-“Perfectly, for the purpose,” said I.
-
-“When we came over here, I examined the ground carefully. I was at
-first inclined to one of the big Continental titles. They are much
-older, much more high sounding than the English titles--and so far as
-birth goes they mean something, while the English titles mean really
-nothing at all. The English aristocracy isn’t an aristocracy of birth.”
-
-“That’s, no doubt, the reason why it still has some say in affairs,”
-said I.
-
-“Its talk about birth is almost entirely sham,” proceeded she, not
-interested in my irrelevant comment. “But I found that it was the most
-substantial aristocracy, the only one that was respected everywhere,
-just as the English money circulates everywhere. And it’s the only
-one that makes much of an impression at home. We are so ignorant that
-we think England is all that it pretends to be--the powerful part of
-Europe. Of course, it isn’t, but--no matter. I decided for an English
-title.”
-
-“And Margot?”
-
-“I have brought her up to respect my judgment,” said Edna.
-
-“I wonder what will become of her,” said I, reflectively, “when she
-hasn’t you at her elbow to tell her what to do.... But why a marquis?
-Why not a duke?”
-
-She smiled, blushed a little. “The only duke we could have got--and he
-was a nice young fellow--but he was in love with an English girl of
-wealth--and he wanted too much to change to an American. Is that frank
-enough to suit you?”
-
-“If you’d only keep to that key,” said I.
-
-“He wanted double the American dowry that he was willing to take with
-an English girl.”
-
-“His being in love with another girl might have made it unpleasant for
-Margot,” I suggested.
-
-“That wouldn’t have amounted to anything,” replied she. “Over here the
-right sort of people bring up their children as I brought up Margot--to
-give their hearts where their hands should go. They are not shallow and
-selfish. They think of the family dignity and honor before they think
-of their personal feelings.”
-
-“That’s interesting--and new--at least to me,” said I.
-
-“You have been judging these things without knowing, Godfrey,” said
-she. “You have attacked me for narrowness, when in fact you were the
-narrow one.”
-
-“Yes? What next?” said I.
-
-“I found that the Massingfords--that’s the family name of the Marquis
-of Crossley--I found they ranked higher as a family than any of the
-ducal families except one. Of course I don’t include the royal dukes.”
-
-“Of course not,” said I gravely.
-
-“I might possibly have got one of the royal dukes--if not in England,
-then here on the Continent. But I decided-- You see, Godfrey, I looked
-into everything.”
-
-“You certainly have been thorough,” said I. “I should have said it was
-impossible in so short a time.”
-
-“But it wasn’t difficult. All the Americans over here are well informed
-about these things.”
-
-“I can readily believe it,” said I. “But why did you turn down the poor
-royal dukes?”
-
-“Because the other women would have made it dreadfully uncomfortable
-for Margot. They’d have hated her for taking precedence over them by
-such a long distance. Then, too--the dowry. I was afraid you couldn’t
-afford the dowry--or wouldn’t think the title worth the money. Indeed,
-I didn’t think so, myself.”
-
-“A royal duke comes high?”
-
-“The least dowry would be seventy-five million francs.”
-
-“Fifteen million dollars!” I exclaimed. “Whew!”
-
-“Mrs. Sinkers tried to get one for her daughter for ten millions--all
-she could scrape together. They agreed to a morganatic marriage for
-that, but not a full marriage. So, she and poor Martha gave it up.
-Martha’s heart is broken. The duke made love to her so wonderfully. I
-can’t imagine what Mrs. Sinkers was about, to allow such a thing before
-the affair was settled. Poor Martha was so excited that she would have
-accepted the morganatic marriage--she ranking merely as the duke’s
-head mistress. But while he was willing to take other mistresses for
-nothing, and even to pay them, he wouldn’t take _her_ for less than
-fifty million francs.”
-
-“Poor Martha!” said I.
-
-“I was too wise to trifle with royal dukes,” pursued Edna, so
-interested in her own narrative and so eager to show how sagacious she
-had been that she forgot her pose and her doubts as to my sympathies.
-“I weighed the advantages and disadvantages of about a dozen eligible
-men. Only three stood the test, and it finally narrowed down to
-Crossley. Margot was so happy when I told her. She wanted to love
-him--and now she is loving him.”
-
-A long pause while Edna calmed down to earth from her European
-soarings, and while I, too, returned to the normal from an excursion in
-the opposite direction. “How much does he want?” said I. “Let’s get to
-bed rock.”
-
-“He loves her so that he is willing, so I hear-- Of course, nothing has
-been said-- You will not believe how refined and----”
-
-“How much?” interrupted I.
-
-Edna winced at my rudeness, then again presented an unruffled front of
-happy loving serenity. “Enough to pay off the mortgages and to provide
-them with a suitable income.”
-
-“How much?” I persisted, laughing.
-
-She looked tenderly remonstrant. “I don’t know, Godfrey----”
-
-“You know _about_ how much. What’s the figure--the price of this marked
-down marquis?”
-
-“I should say the whole thing would not cost more than three or four
-million dollars.”
-
-“Three--or four.” I laughed aloud. “Not much difference there. Now
-which is it--three or four?”
-
-“Perhaps nearer four. Margot must have a _good_ income.”
-
-“To be sure,” said I.
-
-“The whole object would be defeated if she hadn’t the means----”
-
-“The money,” I suggested. “Why use these evasive words? We’re talking a
-plain subject. Let’s use its language.”
-
-“The money, then,” acquiesced she, resolutely good-humored. “If she
-hadn’t the money to make a proper appearance.”
-
-“Naturally, to lead in society you must lead in spending money....
-Well--it can’t be done.”
-
-She paled, half started from her chair, sank back again. There was a
-long silence. Then she said, “You have never been cruel, Godfrey. You
-won’t be cruel now. You won’t destroy my life work. You won’t shatter
-Margot’s happiness.”
-
-“The whole thing is--is nauseating to me,” said I.
-
-Her short, pretty upper lip quivered. Her eyes filled. “If you didn’t
-approve, dear, why didn’t you stop me long ago? Why did you let me go
-on until there was no turning back?”
-
-I was silent. There seemed to be no answer to that.
-
-“Did you do it purposely, Godfrey?” said she, with melancholy eyes upon
-me. “Did you lure us on, so that you could crush us at one stroke?”
-
-I was silent.
-
-“I can’t believe that of you. I won’t believe it until you compel me
-to.”
-
-“As I understand it,” said I, “you propose that I hand over to this
-young man four million----”
-
-“Only about half of it, Godfrey,” cried she, reviving. “The other half
-would be Margot’s--for her own income.”
-
-“Then that I hand over to this amiable, insignificant young foreigner
-two million dollars to induce him to consent to the degradation of
-marrying my daughter--to have him going about, saying in effect, ‘It is
-true, she is only one of those low Americans, but don’t forget that I
-got two million dollars for stooping.’ Is that the proposition?”
-
-“You know it isn’t!” cried she. “He doesn’t feel that he is degrading
-himself. He feels proud of winning her--the most beautiful, the best
-mannered girl in London. But it’d be simply impossible for them to
-marry without the money. _I_ shouldn’t want it. They would be wretched.
-You talk like a sentimental schoolboy, Godfrey. How could two refined,
-sensitive people such as Hugh and Margot, used to every luxury, used
-to being foremost in society--how could they be happy without the
-means----”
-
-“The money,” I corrected blandly.
-
-“Without the money needed to maintain their position as marquis and
-marchioness of Crossley?”
-
-I nodded assent.
-
-“He has only about five thousand--twenty-five thousand of our money--a
-year. That is ridiculous for a marquis. He has to keep all his houses
-closed and run as economically as possible. Even then they cost him
-nearly seventy-five thousand dollars a year to maintain.”
-
-“And he has only twenty-five thousand!”
-
-“I meant twenty-five thousand over and above. He has that to live on.
-And, poor fellow, he is dropping every year deeper and deeper into
-debt. So much is expected of a marquis.”
-
-“But not honesty, apparently,” said I.
-
-“You mustn’t judge these people by our commercial standards,” she
-gently rebuked.
-
-“I forgot,” said I penitently.
-
-“And the poor fellow does love Margot so!”
-
-“Um,” said I. “Have you ever happened to hear of a Miss Townley--Jupey
-Townley?”
-
-A flash of annoyance flitted over Edna’s lovely, delicate countenance.
-
-“I see you have,” said I. “You were, indeed, thorough. Permit me to
-compliment you, my dear.”
-
-“I am glad Hugh hasn’t been a saint.”
-
-“Isn’t,” said I.
-
-“That’s all in the past,” declared she.
-
-“I saw them in a box at a London music hall night before last,” said I.
-“They were-- They had been drinking.”
-
-But Edna was not daunted. “You are a man of the world, Godfrey. Don’t
-pretend to be narrow.”
-
-“When a man loves a woman----”
-
-“Love is very different from that sort of thing, and you know it.”
-
-“Has Margot heard----”
-
-“Godfrey!” cried Edna, in horror. “Do you think I would permit _my_
-daughter--_our_ daughter--to know such things! Why, her mind is as
-pure----”
-
-I could not restrain a gesture of disgust. “You women!” I cried,
-rising. “Pure! Pure--God in Heaven, pure!”
-
-Her look of dazed astonishment, obviously sincere, helped me to get
-back my composure. I sat down again. “I beg your pardon,” I said. “I
-didn’t mean to interrupt.”
-
-“Even if you men have no purity yourselves, you ought to believe in it
-in women,” said she, with an injured air.
-
-“Yes, indeed,” I agreed heartily. “I congratulate you on being able to
-make such generous allowances for masculine frailty.”
-
-“You are sarcastic,” said she coldly.
-
-“No matter. It certainly does not damage the title--perhaps adds to its
-luster.”
-
-“It’s hereditary in their family to be wild up to marriage, and then to
-settle down and serve the state in some distinguished position.”
-
-“Oh--in that case--” said I ironically.
-
-“Margot and her husband and her children will have your money some
-day,” pursued she. “Why not give it to her now, when it will get her
-happiness?”
-
-That impressed me. “I have not said I would not consent to this
-marriage,” I reminded her. “As a matter of fact, I’m in favor of it. I
-can see no future for Margot in America----”
-
-“No, indeed,” cried Edna eagerly. “She simply couldn’t marry over
-there. She’d be wretched.”
-
-“But I feel it is my duty-- Rather late in the day for me to talk about
-duty toward my daughter, after neglecting it all these years. Still, I
-ought to see to it that she has the best possible chance for a smooth
-married life. It’s only common prudence to take all precautions--isn’t
-it?”
-
-“All _sensible_ precautions,” said she.
-
-“You know how many of these foreign ‘alliances,’ as they’re called,
-have turned out badly.”
-
-“They get a good many divorces in the states,” she suggested smilingly.
-“One to every twelve marriages, I read the other day.”
-
-I admitted that she had made an effective retort. “The truth is,” said
-I, “American women aren’t brought up for domestic life. So, whether
-they marry at home or abroad they have trouble.”
-
-“Men resent their independence,” said Edna.
-
-“It may be so,” said I. Of what use to point out to her that the
-trouble lay in the women’s demanding to be supported and refusing to
-do anything to earn their support? All I said was: “I suspect a good
-many husbands think the marriage contract too one-sided--binding only
-them and not their wives. But the trouble with the ‘alliances’ can’t be
-that.”
-
-“It’s because Europeans look on the wife as a kind of head servant. But
-Hugh isn’t that sort.”
-
-“We’ll know more as to that when we hear what Margot says after she’s
-been married a few years,” said I. “The point to settle now is how to
-bind him to good behavior so far as it can be done in advance. He may
-be deeply in love with Margot. He may stay in love with her. But in
-the circumstances it’s wise to assume that he wants only her money and
-that, if he gets it, he’ll treat her badly.”
-
-My wife’s silence was encouraging.
-
-“If he had plenty of money he might even goad her into releasing
-him--and might marry again.”
-
-My wife was obviously impressed. “Yes--that has been done,” said she.
-“Of course, if Margot should have an heir right away. But----”
-
-She looked at me as if trying to decide whether she could trust me with
-a confidence. She evidently decided in my favor, for she went on to say:
-
-“On the other hand--Margot is a peculiar girl. No--many women have the
-same peculiarity. They can’t be trusted with power over their husbands.
-If she had all the money in her own name and he were dependent on
-her-- Godfrey, I’m sure there’d be trouble.”
-
-Once more she was astonishing me with her clear judgment in matters
-as to which I should have thought her hopelessly prejudiced. “But _I_
-can be trusted,” said I. “The plan I had in mind was to take over the
-mortgages and guarantee a sufficient income.”
-
-She shook her head. “He won’t consent,” said she. “His solicitors will
-insist on better terms than that.”
-
-“Now you see why I want to talk to him directly. I don’t purpose to be
-hampered by that old trick of the principal hidden behind a go-between.”
-
-“There’s no other way,” said Edna. “They’re too clever to yield that.”
-
-“He needs money badly.”
-
-“But he won’t marry unless he’s actually to get it,” replied she.
-“Almost every American who has married a daughter over here has
-tried to make a business bargain--at least, a bargain not altogether
-one-sided. Not one of them has succeeded. These Europeans have been
-handling the dowry and settlement question too many centuries.”
-
-“I see,” said I affably. “If we want what they’ve got, we have to take
-it on their terms.”
-
-It was most satisfactory, talking with her now that she consented to
-speak and listen to good sense. I was at once in a more amiable frame
-of mind, although I knew she had descended from her high horse only
-because she was shrewd enough to see it was the one way to get me to do
-as she wished.
-
-“I will hide behind a go-between myself,” said I.
-
-“Any English lawyer would simply play into the hands of the other side.
-At least, so Hilda was telling me.”
-
-“Is she happy?”
-
-“Very.”
-
-“When’s her husband coming back?”
-
-“Not for a year or so, I believe. Lord Blankenship cares more for big
-game and for exploring than for anything else.”
-
-“An ideal marriage,” said I. “She brought him the money he wanted. He
-brought her the title she wanted. And they don’t annoy each other. He
-devotes himself to sport, she to society. These aristocratic people,
-with their simple, vulgar wants that are so easily gratified--how they
-are to be envied!”
-
-Edna was observing me furtively, uneasily. I pretended not to notice.
-I went on: “Now, if they wanted the difficult things--things like love
-and companionship and congeniality--they might be wretched. When a
-child cries for a stick of candy or a tinsel-covered rattle--for money
-or social position--why, it’s easily pacified. But if it cries for the
-moon and the stars--” I laughed softly, enjoying her wonder as much as
-my own fancies.
-
-After a while she said, with some constraint: “You see a great deal of
-Armitage?”
-
-“We console each other,” said I, with mild raillery.
-
-“Have you been going out much?”
-
-“I’m very busy.”
-
-“In one of your letters-- Those rare little notes of yours! You are
-cruelly neglectful, Godfrey-- In one of them you spoke of a week end
-or so on Armitage’s yacht. You and he don’t go off alone?”
-
-“Oh, no. Some literary and artistic people usually are aboard.”
-
-“I didn’t know you cared for that sort.”
-
-“They’re interesting enough.”
-
-“I suppose they’re friends of Mrs. Kirkwood’s,” pursued Edna. “She’s
-like her brother--affects to despise fashionable society. Their
-pretenses always amused me.”
-
-“They are sincere people,” said I. “They don’t pretend. That’s why I
-like them.”
-
-“I notice that Armitage belongs to every fashionable club in New
-York--and to some over here,” said Edna with a smile that was as shrewd
-as her observation. “Also, that he manages to find time to appear at
-the most exclusive parties during the season.”
-
-I had observed this same peculiarity. While I refused to draw from it
-the inference she drew--and was undeniably justified in drawing--I had
-been tempted to do so. It irritated me to see her finger upon the weak
-spot in Armitage’s profession of freedom from snobbishness.
-
-“And Mary Kirkwood,” pursued Edna, “she’s the same sort of fakir. Only,
-being a woman, she does it more deceptively than he.”
-
-“She goes nowhere,” said I.
-
-“But she revels in the fact that she _could_ go anywhere. So, she
-fooled you--did she?” Edna laughed merrily at my ill-concealed
-discomfiture. “But then you know so little about women.”
-
-“I confess I’ve never seen in her the least sign of snobbishness or
-of interest in fashionable foolishness,” said I, with what I flatter
-myself was a fair attempt at the impartial air.
-
-“That in itself ought to have opened your eyes,” said Edna. “Whenever
-you see anyone, dear, with no sign of a weakness that everybody in the
-world has, you may be sure you are seeing a fraud.”
-
-“Because _you_ have a weakness, dear,” said I--as pleasant and as acid
-as she, “you must not imagine it is universal.”
-
-“But _you_ have that weakness, too.”
-
-“Really?”
-
-“Did you or did you not join the fashionable clubs Armitage put you up
-at?”
-
-I had to laugh at myself.
-
-“Are you or are you not proud of the fact that your best friend,
-Armitage, is a fashionable person? Would you be as proud of him if he
-were only welcome in middle-class houses?”
-
-“I’m ashamed to say there’s something in that,” said I. “Not much, but
-something.”
-
-“Yet you believed Mary Kirkwood!” ended Edna.
-
-“I thought little about it,” said I. “And I still believe that she is
-sincere--that she has no snobbishness in her.”
-
-“You like her?”
-
-“So far as I know her--yes.” My answer was an attempt to meet and
-parry a suspicion I felt in Edna’s mind. And it was fairly successful;
-fairly--for no one ever yet completely dislodged a suspicion. We
-cannot see into each other’s minds. We know, from what is going on in
-our own minds, that the human mind is capable of any vagary. Once we
-have applied this general principle to a specific person, once we have
-become definitely aware that there are in that person’s mind things of
-which we have no knowledge--from that time forth suspicion of them is
-in us, and is ready to grow, to flourish.
-
-I had no difficulty in shifting to the subject of the marriage. “I’ll
-cable for my lawyer,” said I. “If anyone can beat this game, Fred
-Norman can.”
-
-“Yes--send for him,” said Edna. “He is canny--and a man of _our_ world.”
-
-“I’m going back to London to-night--” I went on.
-
-“To-night!” she exclaimed. Her eyes filled with tears. “Godfrey--is
-this treating us right?”
-
-I looked at her intently. “Don’t fake with me,” said I quietly. “It
-isn’t necessary.”
-
-“What _do_ you mean?” cried she.
-
-“I mean, I understand perfectly that you care nothing about me,
-except as the source of the money you need in amusing yourself. As
-you see in my manner, I am not wildly agitated by that fact. So far
-as I’m concerned, there’s no reason why we should make each other
-uncomfortable.”
-
-“What _is_ the matter with you, Godfrey?” she said, with large widening
-eyes gazing at me. “You have changed entirely.”
-
-“As you have,” said I, admiring her shrewdness, and afraid of it.
-“You’ve been educating. So have I. Mine has been slower than yours and
-along different lines. But it, too, has been thorough.”
-
-She was not satisfied, though I’m confident my tone and manner betrayed
-nothing. Said she: “Some bad woman has been poisoning you against
-Margot and me.”
-
-“As you please,” said I, too wary to be drawn into that discussion.
-I realized I had said entirely too much. Relying upon her intense
-vanity, her profound belief in her power over me, I had gone too far.
-“My business takes me to London to-night. I’ll probably be there until
-Norman arrives. Then we’ll come over.”
-
-“Don’t you want us in London with you?” said Edna.
-
-“You are comfortably settled here,” replied I. “Why disturb yourselves?”
-
-She knew how to read me. She saw I was not in a dangerous mood, as
-she had begun to fear. She said: “We _did_ intend to stay in Paris a
-month or six weeks. We have a charming circle of friends among the
-old families here. I wish you’d stop on, Godfrey. The people are
-attractive, and the social life is most interesting.”
-
-“Not to me,” said I. “You forget I’m a Hooligan. Besides, you don’t
-need me. There’s your advantage through being young and lovely and
-rich. You can get plenty of men to escort you about. It’s only the old
-and ugly married women who really need their husbands. Well--I’ll be
-ready when you are forced to fall back on me. Nothing like having in
-reserve a faithful Dobbin.”
-
-She looked hurt. “How _can_ you joke about sacred things,” she
-reproached.
-
-I laughed her seriousness aside. “Yes, I’ll be waiting, ready to be
-your companion, the confidant of your rheumatism and gout, when all the
-others have fled. Meanwhile, my dear, I’ll have my frisk.”
-
-“Godfrey!”
-
-It amused me to see how bitter to her was the taste of the medicine she
-had been forcing upon me so self-complacently. It amused me to watch
-the confusion into which these new and unsuspected aspects of myself
-was throwing her.
-
-Said I: “I’m glad you’re as generous toward me as I’ve been toward you.
-That’s why we’ve avoided the Armitage sort of smash-up.”
-
-When I left Paris that night I’ll engage she was thinking about me as
-she had never thought in her whole self-centered, American-female life.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-My cable to Norman was answered the next day but one by a note from
-him, stopping in the same hotel. I shall not detail the negotiations
-that followed--the long and stormy scenes between him and Dawkins,
-solicitor to the Marquis of Crossley. It is sufficient to say that
-Norman had the novel sensation of being beaten on every point. Not
-outwitted, for he had wit enough and to spare for any contest of
-cunning; but beaten by the centuries-old precedents and customs and
-requirements in matters of dower and settlement. The mercenary marriage
-is an ancient habit of the human race; in fact, the scientists have
-proved that it began with marriage itself, that there was no marriage
-in the civilized sense until there was property to marry for. Perhaps
-the mercenary marriage is not so recent in America as our idyllists
-declare. Do we not read that the father of his country married solely
-for money an almost feeble-minded woman whom everybody knew he did
-not love? And, inasmuch as marriage is first of all a business--the
-business of providing for the material needs and wants of two and
-their children--may it not barely be possible that the unqualifiedly
-sentimental view of marriage can be--perhaps has been--overdone? In
-America, where the marriage for sentiment prevails to an extent unknown
-anywhere else in the world--is not the institution of marriage there
-in its most uneasy state? And may not that be the reason?
-
-What a world of twaddle it is! If men and women could only learn to
-build their ideals on the firm foundation--the only firm foundation--of
-the practical instead of upon the quicksand of lies and pretenses,
-wouldn’t the tower climb less shakily, if more slowly, toward the stars?
-
-You may be sure there was nothing of the stars in those talks between
-Norman and Dawkins--or in my talks with Norman--or in Crossley’s talks
-with Dawkins. Crossley had had me looked up--had discovered as much
-about my finances as it is possible to discover about the private
-business of an American. He had got the usual exaggerated estimate of
-my wealth, and he was resolved that he would not be cheated of a single
-dollar he might wring from me. From my standpoint it was obvious that
-he and Margot must have plenty of money or they could not be happy.
-All I desired was to prevent him from feeling financially free--and
-therefore under the aristocratic code, morally free--to show and to
-act, after marriage, the contempt I knew he felt for all things and
-persons American--except the dollars, which could be exchanged into
-sovereigns. I fought hard, but he stood fast. Either Margot must lose
-him or I must give him about what he asked--a fortune in his own right
-for him. If I choose I could dower her; but as to dowering him he would
-not permit the question of alternative to be raised.
-
-“All right,” said I at last to Norman. “Give them their minimum.”
-
-He was astounded, was furious--and as he is not the ordinary
-lick-spittle lawyer but a man of arrogant independence, he did not
-hesitate to let me see that his anger--and scorn--were for myself. “Do
-you mean that?” he said.
-
-“Yes,” replied I carelessly--as if I were now indifferent about the
-whole business. “My girl wants his title. And why let a question of
-money come between her and happiness?”
-
-“I can’t refrain from saying, Loring, that I’d not have believed this
-of you.”
-
-“She’s not fit to live in America,” said I. “Her mother hasn’t educated
-her for it. American mothers don’t educate their daughters nowadays to
-be wives of American men. Honestly, do you know an American man able to
-do for himself who would be foolish enough to marry that sort of girl?”
-
-His silence was assent.
-
-“You see. I’ve got to buy her a husband--that is, a title--over here.
-This offering seems as good as there is in the market--at the price.
-So--why not?”
-
-“That’s one view of it,” said he coldly.
-
-I laid my hand on his shoulder. “Come now--be sensible,” said I. “What
-else can I do?”
-
-“It would be an impertinence for me to say,” replied he.
-
-“I can guess,” said I. “You needn’t trouble yourself to say it. You
-evidently don’t know the circumstances. And I may add that so long as
-I’ve got to buy Margot a title I might as well buy her a good one.”
-
-He eyed me sharply. But I did not take him into my confidence--nor
-shall I confide in you at present, gentle reader. I did not even let
-him see that I was holding back anything. I went on with good-humored
-raillery:
-
-“I’m doing better than Hanley or Vanderveld or Pattison or any of the
-others who’ve dealt in these markets. For a marquis Crossley is selling
-cheap. He’s far from penniless, you know. It’s simply that he wants
-more money. Why, really, old man, it’s what’s called a love match. They
-always call it a love match when the nobleman isn’t absolutely on his
-uppers.”
-
-“You are certainly a philosopher, Loring,” said Norman, anxious, I saw,
-to finish and drop the affair.
-
-“And I became one in the usual way--necessity,” said I. “I’m as eager
-to have this thing dispatched as you are. I want to get out to sea,
-where perhaps the stench of aristocracy will blow out of my nostrils,
-and stay out of them till I reach the other shore. Then I’ll get it
-again. It blows down the bay to meet the incoming ships.”
-
-“Yes, we’re pretty bad,” admitted Norman. “Not so bad as we used to
-be, but pretty bad.” He laughed. “They accuse us of loving money. Why,
-we are mere beginners at it. We haven’t learned how to idle or how to
-spend money except in crude, tiresome ways. And to love money deeply
-you must know how to idle and how to spend. Money’s _the_ passion with
-these people. How they do need it!”
-
-Neither shall I linger over the details of the engagement and the
-wedding. For all that was important about either I refer you to
-the newspapers of London and New York. They gave everything that
-makes a snob’s eyes glisten and a snob’s mouth water. My wife has
-somewhere--she knows exactly where--a scrapbook, and my daughter has
-another of the same kind. Those scrapbooks are strongly bound and the
-pages are of the heaviest time- and wear-resisting paper. In them are
-pasted columns on columns of lists of titles, of descriptions of jewels
-and dresses, of enumerations of wedding gifts. Margot received things
-costing small fortunes from people she barely knew well enough to
-invite. They gave in the hope--the good hope--of gaining the valuable
-favor of the Marchioness of Crossley, a great lady by reason of her
-title, a greater lady by reason of the ancientness of the Massingford
-family, and at the top and summit of greatness by reason of her wealth.
-
-That last item, by the way, was vastly overestimated. Everyone assumed
-that Crossley had sold much more dearly. No one but those intimately
-concerned dreamed what a bargain I had got.
-
-You may be picturing a sordid affair, redolent of the stenches of
-commercialism. If you are, gentle reader, you are showing yourself
-unworthy of your own soulfulness, unworthy of the elegant society
-into which I have introduced you. I have been giving simply the plain
-facts--a mere skeleton upon which you, versed in society columns
-and society novels, and skilled in the art of hiding ugly truths
-under pretty lies, may readily drape the flesh and the garments of
-sentimentality and snobbishness. You will then have the truth as it
-appeared to the world--a handsome, manly groom, every inch of him
-the patrician; a wondrous lovely, innocent, pure young bride, looking
-the worthy mate of the great noble she had won with her beauty and
-her sweetness; a background of magnificent houses and equipages,
-of grand society people, of lackeys in livery without number; an
-atmosphere of luxury, refinement, perfumed with the fairest flowers
-and the most delicate artificial scents. You are seeing also the high
-and noble motives of all concerned--the joy of parents in a daughter
-sentimentally wooed and won to happiness; the generous and kindly
-feelings of all the friends; the lavish and affectionate overflowing of
-costly gifts; above all, the ecstatic young couple wrapped up in their
-love for each other. Flesh up and beautify the skeleton to your taste,
-gentle reader. You will not go amiss.
-
-I must linger a moment on the happiness of my daughter. It was too
-spiritual to be of this earth. As soon as the miserable, unimportant
-money matters were settled, and her mother gave her full leave to love,
-she threw herself into it with all the ardor of the heroine of a novel.
-She had two diamond hearts made--at the most fashionable jewelers in
-Paris, you may be sure. Upon the inside of the one she kept she had
-engraved, under his picture, “From Hugh to Margot.” In the one she gave
-him there surrounded her picture in diamond inlay, “To Hugh from his
-dear love Margot.”
-
-Each was to wear the heart round the neck until death. Again and again
-I caught her dreaming over hers, sometimes with tears in her limpid
-eyes. Again and again I caught her scribbling, “Margot, Marchioness
-of Crossley, Viscountess Brear, Countess of Felday and Noth, Baroness
-de Selve,” and so on through a list of titles which gentle reader will
-find in “Burke’s” and the “Almanach de Gotha.”
-
-And she had a reverent way of looking at him and a tender way of
-touching him. Her mother, you will believe, spared neither expense nor
-pains in getting together the trousseau. But Margot was not satisfied.
-“Not nearly fine enough for _his_ bride,” she would say. “I’m _so_
-afraid he’ll be disappointed.” Then the tears would spring. “Oh, mamma!
-If he should be disappointed in me!”
-
-“Not so bad as if you were to be disappointed in him,” I put in with no
-other motive than to cheer her up.
-
-But it only shocked her. “In Hugh!” she exclaimed, meaning in Cecil
-Robert Grunleigh Percival Hugh Massingford, Marquis of Crossley, etc.
-“_I_ disappointed in _him_! Oh, papa! You don’t _realize_!”
-
-“No, I suppose not,” said I, getting myself away as speedily as my legs
-would carry me.
-
-Through these joyous scenes of youth and love and luxury I moved
-gloomily--restless, bitter, tormented by self-reproaches and by
-thoughts of the woman I loved. What Edna had said about her, though
-I knew it was by way of precautionary cattishness, put into my mind
-the inevitable suspicion--no, not actual suspicion, but germ of
-suspicion--the almost harmless germ from which the most poisonous
-suspicions may develop. I went round and round my mental image of Mary
-Kirkwood. I viewed it from all angles. But I could not find a trace of
-the flaw Edna had asserted. I analyzed her with all the analytical
-skill I possessed, and that, I flatter myself, is not a little. No one
-who has not the faculty of analysis ever gets anywhere; no one who has
-that faculty ever escapes the charge of cynicism. Shallow people--the
-sort that make such a charge--will regard it as proof of my utter
-cynicism, my absolute lack of sentiment, that I was able to analyze the
-woman I loved, or pretended I loved. But I assure you, gentle reader,
-that not even love and passion suspend the habitual processes of a
-good mind. The reason you have read the contrary so often is because
-precious few writers about men of the superior sort have the capacity
-to comprehend the intellects they try to picture. To the man of large
-affairs, the average--and many a one above the average--biography or
-novel about a great man reads like the attempt of a straddle bug to
-give his fellow straddle bugs an account of an elephant.
-
-I was the only inharmonious figure in that round of festivals. But no
-one observed me. I simply got the reputation of being a man of reserve,
-a thinker rather than a talker--as if there ever lived a thinker
-who did not overflow with torrents of talk like a spring fed from a
-glacier; but, of course, the spring flows only when The conditions
-are favorable, not when it is ice-bound. I was not even interested in
-observing. There is a monotony about the actions of fashionable people
-that soon reduces a spectator of agile mind to stupor. The same thing
-over and over again, with variations so slight that only a nit-wit
-would be interested in them-- Could there be a worse indictment of
-the intelligence of the human race than that so large a part of its
-presumably most intelligent classes engage in the social farce, which
-is an example of aimless activity about on a level with a dog’s chasing
-its own tail?
-
-But Edna----
-
-As I look back on those weeks of days, each one crowded like a ragbag
-with rubbish, the figure of Edna stands out radiant. You would never
-have thought her the mother of the bride--or, indeed, a mother at all.
-A woman who for many years leads a virginal or almost virginal life
-gets back the vestal air of the unmarried girl. This air had returned
-to Edna. She had it as markedly as had Margot. It was most becoming
-to her piquant style of beauty, giving it the allure of the height
-that invites ascent and capture, yet has never been desecrated. And
-how she did enjoy the grandeur--the great names, the gorgeous presents
-of curiously and costlily wrought gold and silver and crystal, and
-precious stones, the succession of panoramas of ultra-fashionable life,
-with herself and Margot always the center.
-
-I used to stand aside and watch her and feel as if I were hypnotized
-into vivid hallucinations. I recalled the incidents of our early
-life--Brooklyn, the Passaic flat, the squat and squalid homes of our
-childhood. I recalled our people--hers and mine--tucked away in homely
-obscurity among the New Jersey hills. But by no effort of mind could I
-associate her with these realities. She had literally been born again.
-I looked at the other Americans of humble beginnings--and there were
-not a few of them in that society. All had retained some traces of
-their origin, had some characteristics that made it not difficult to
-connect their present with their past. But not Edna.
-
-At the wedding--in the most fashionable church in the West End--Margot
-looked weary and rather old, gone slightly stale from too long and
-hard preliminary training. Edna was at her best--delicate, fragile,
-radiant. How the other women hated her for that time-defying beauty of
-hers! Many of the women of her still youthful age retained much of the
-physical attractiveness of youth. But there was not another one who
-was not beginning to show the effects of dissipation--of too much food
-and wine and cigarettes, of lives devoid of elevating sensations, of
-minds used only for petty, mean thoughts. But Edna seemed in the flower
-of that period when the secrets of the soul have as yet made no marks
-upon the countenance. You would have said she was a merry and romantic
-girl. I could not fathom that mystery. I cannot fathom it now. Its clew
-must be in her truly amazing powers of self-deception and also in that
-unique capacity of hers for forgetting the thing, no matter what, that
-is disagreeable to remember.
-
-When we were at last alone, with the young couple off for the yacht
-Lord Shangway had loaned them for the honeymoon, with the last guest
-gone and the last powdered flunkey vanished--when she and I were alone,
-she settled herself with a sigh and said:
-
-“I wish I could make it begin all over again!”
-
-“You must be built of steel,” said I.
-
-“I am supremely happy,” said she, “and have been for weeks. Nothing
-agrees with me so thoroughly as happiness.”
-
-I looked at her scrutinizingly. No, she was not the least tired; she
-was as fresh as if that moment risen from a long sleep in the air of
-seashore or mountains.
-
-She went on: “I’m going over to Paris to-morrow. I’ve a lot of
-engagements there. And I must get some clothes. I’ve worn out all I
-brought with me.”
-
-“Worn out” meant worn once or at most twice; for in a society where
-everyone is seeing everyone else all the time a woman with a reputation
-for dress cannot afford to reappear in clothes once seen. In some
-circles this would sound delightfully prodigal, in others delightfully
-impossible, and perhaps in still others delightfully criminal. But then
-all that sort of thing is relative--like everything else in the world.
-
-“Won’t you come along?” said she in a perfunctory tone.
-
-“No, thanks,” I replied. “I’m off for Russia with a party of bankers to
-look at some mining properties.”
-
-“I thought you were returning to New York?”
-
-“Not for several months,” said I.
-
-“How can you stay away so long from your beloved America?”
-
-“Business--always business.”
-
-She eyed me somewhat as one eyes a strange, mildly interesting
-specimen. “Well--you must enjoy it, or you wouldn’t keep at it year in
-and year out.”
-
-“One has to pass the time,” said I.
-
-“How does Mary Kirkwood pass the time?”
-
-This unexpected and--except sub-consciously--accidental question,
-staggered me for an instant. “I don’t know much about it,” said I. “She
-has a house--and she looks after it, herself. She reads, I believe.
-She has gardens--and they use up a lot of time. Then she rides.”
-
-Edna yawned. “It sounds dull,” she said. “But domestic people are
-always dull. And she is certainly domestic. I wonder why she doesn’t
-marry again.”
-
-I was silent.
-
-“Are any men attentive to her? It seems to me I heard something about a
-novelist--some poor man who is after her money.”
-
-I was choking with rage and jealousy.
-
-“Did you see any such man about?”
-
-I contrived to compose myself for a calm reply. “No one answering to
-your description,” said I.
-
-“Do you like her?”
-
-“You asked me that once before,” said I.
-
-“Oh--I forgot. It seems to me you and she would have exactly suited
-each other. You like domestic women. That is, you think you do. Really,
-you’d probably fly from a woman of that sort.”
-
-“And a woman of the other sort would fly from me,” said I, laughing.
-
-She looked at me thoughtfully. “You must admit you’re not easy to get
-on with--except at a distance,” observed she. “But men of positive
-individuality are never easy to get on with. A big tree blights all the
-little trees and bushes that try to grow in its neighborhood.... No,
-Godfrey dear, you weren’t made for domestic life--you and I. Domestic
-life is successful only where there are two very small and very much
-alike. People like us have to live alone.”
-
-I rose abruptly. There was for me a sound in that “alone” like the slam
-of a graveyard gate.
-
-“You never will appreciate me--how satisfactory I’ve been,” she went
-on, “until you marry again.”
-
-“I must make my final arrangements for Russia,” said I.
-
-“Shall I see you in the morning? I’m leaving rather early.”
-
-“Probably not,” said I.
-
-“Then we’ll meet when you come back. We’ll visit Margot at Sothewell
-Abbey.” She rose, drew herself to her full height with a graceful
-gesture of triumph. “Don’t you honestly rather like it, being the
-father of a Marchioness?”
-
-I could not speak. I looked at her.
-
-“How solemn you are!” laughed she. “Well, good-by, dear.” And she held
-out her hand and turned her face upward for me to kiss her lips.
-
-“Oh, I’ll probably see you in the morning,” I said, “or to-night.” And
-away I went.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From Russia I drifted to India, intending to return home by the
-Pacific. At Bombay I met Lord Blankenship, and he persuaded me to cross
-to East Africa. I found him a companion exactly to my taste. He was a
-silent chap having nothing to think about and nothing to think with--a
-typical and model product of the aristocratic education that completes
-a man as a sculptor completes an image, and prepares him to stand in
-his appointed niche until decay tumbles him down as rubbish. I had lost
-all my former passion for talking and listening. I wished to confine
-myself--my thoughts--to the trivial matters of the senses, to lingering
-over and tinkering with the physical details of life. The silent and
-vacant Blankenship set me a perfect example, one easy to fall into the
-habit of following.
-
-At Paris, I picked up my private secretary, Markham, and resumed
-attention to my affairs. I had arranged for things to go on without me,
-when I set out for East Africa. I found that my guess as to how they
-would go had been correct. For a month or so there was confusion--the
-confusion that is inevitable when a man who has attended to everything
-abruptly throws up his leadership. Then the affairs in which he fancied
-himself indispensable begin to move as well as if he were at the
-throttle--perhaps better. The most substantial result of my neglect
-seemed to be that I had become much richer, had more than recovered
-what my purchase of a son-in-law had cost me.
-
-Markham, who had been at Cairo two months, had got himself engaged to
-be married. For several years I had been promising him a good position,
-that is to say, one more fitting a grown man of real capacity. But he
-made himself so useful that I put off redeeming my promise and eased my
-conscience and quieted his ambition with a succession of increases of
-salary. Now, however, I could no longer delay releasing him. So I must
-go back to New York, to find some one to take his place. Blankenship
-was wavering between a trip through West Africa and going to America
-with me, on the chance of my accompanying him on a shooting trip
-through British Columbia. He decided to stick to me, and as I had
-grown thoroughly used to having him about I was rather glad. It is
-astonishing how much comfort one can get out of the society of a silent
-man, when one feels that he is a good fellow and a devoted friend.
-
-I telegraphed Edna that I would be unable to come to London, where she
-then was. But she defeated my plan for not seeing her. When I reached
-Paris there she was waiting for me at the Ritz. She had a swarm of
-French, Italians, and English about her--I believe there were some
-Germans or Austrians, also. I refused to be annoyed with them, and we
-dined quietly with Blankenship, Markham, and a pretty little Countess
-de Salevac to act us buffers between us. I tried to avoid being left
-alone with her, but she would not have it so. She insisted on my coming
-to her sitting room after the others had gone.
-
-“I know you are tired,” said she, “but I shan’t detain you long.”
-
-“Please don’t,” said I. “The journey has knocked me out. I’ve not slept
-for two nights.”
-
-“It’s a shame to worry you----”
-
-I made for the door. “Not to-night--no worries. They’ll keep until
-to-morrow.”
-
-“No, Godfrey dear,” she said. “I must tell you at once. There is
-serious trouble between Margot and Hugh.”
-
-“Why, they haven’t been married a year.”
-
-“He has been treating her shamefully from the outset. In fact, he cut
-short the honeymoon to hurry back to that music-hall person.”
-
-“The one I saw him with?”
-
-“Yes--the same one--that notorious Jupey What’s-her-name. Isn’t it
-dreadful! Margot’s pride is up in arms. Nothing I say will quiet her.”
-
-“Um,” said I.
-
-“She refuses to understand that over here husbands are allowed a--a----”
-
-“Latitude,” I suggested.
-
-“More latitude than in America. I have talked with Hugh, too. He
-is--very difficult. Really, he isn’t at all as he seemed. He is a--he
-is horribly coarse.”
-
-“People who think of nothing but how to get money without work and how
-to spend it without usefulness are apt to be coarse, when you probe
-through to the reality of them.”
-
-“He is--defiant,” pursued she, too femininely practical to have
-interest in or patience with philosophy. “He-- Godfrey, he says he
-hates her. He won’t speak to her. And there’s no prospect of an heir.
-He says he wants to get rid of her.”
-
-These successive admissions of a worse and worse mess were forced from
-her by my air of indifference. “What has _she_ done?” I asked.
-
-“Done? I don’t understand----”
-
-“What has she done to drive him to extremes?”
-
-“Godfrey!” she cried in a shocked tone. “_You_--taking sides against
-your daughter--your only child! Have you no paternal feeling, either?”
-
-“Not much,” said I. “You see, I’ve seen little of Margot--not enough
-to get acquainted with her. And you educated her so that we are
-uncongenial. No--since you set me to thinking, I find I haven’t much
-paternal feeling for her. I used to have in Passaic, when I wheeled her
-about the streets on Sundays.”
-
-I paused to enjoy the shame my wife was struggling with.
-
-“But soon after we moved to Brooklyn----”
-
-Edna winced and shivered.
-
-“You sent her away to begin to be a lady. And a lady she is--and ladies
-are not daughters--are not women even.”
-
-“You must help me, Godfrey,” said Edna, after a strained silence.
-“Margot is wretched, and a dreadful scandal may break out in time.
-Already people are talking. Margot is ashamed to show herself in
-public. She thinks everyone is laughing at her.”
-
-“No doubt she’s right,” said I. “A woman who loses her husband on the
-honeymoon is likely to be laughed at.... What did she do?”
-
-“Why do you persist in saying that?” cried she, so irritated that she
-could not altogether restrain herself. “Your dislike of women has
-become a mania with you.”
-
-“But I don’t dislike them,” replied I. “On the contrary, I like
-them--like them so well that their worthlessness angers me like the
-treachery of a friend. And I believe so much in their power that, when
-things go wrong, I blame them. They have dominion over the men and over
-the children. And whenever they use their powers it is to make fools of
-the men and weaklings of the children. I don’t know which is the worse
-influence--the wishy-washy, unpractical, preacher morality of the good
-woman or the lazy, idle, irresponsible dissipation of the--the ladies
-and near-ladies and lady-climbers and lady-imitators.”
-
-“But this has nothing to do with poor Margot!” exclaimed she
-impatiently.
-
-“Everything to do with her,” replied I. “Still--it’s a spilt pail of
-milk. As for the present--and future-- How can I do anything to help
-her?”
-
-“You can’t, if you condemn her unheard.”
-
-“I don’t condemn her. I am simply recognizing that there are two sides
-to this quarrel. And I assure you, you only make matters worse when you
-interfere without recognizing that fact. So I say again, what did _she_
-do?”
-
-My wife calmed slightly and replied: “He says she made him ridiculous
-with the airs she put on.”
-
-I laughed. “After the education you gave her?”
-
-“That’s right! Blame me!”
-
-“And aren’t you to be blamed?” urged I. “Didn’t you have full charge of
-her from the time she was born? Couldn’t you have made what you pleased
-of her? Didn’t you make what you pleased of her?”
-
-Edna tossed her head indignantly. “I never taught her to be a vulgar
-snob.”
-
-“Why, I thought that was her whole education.”
-
-Edna ignored this interruption. “It’s all very well for the women of
-noble families to act the snob,” pursued she. “Lots of them do, and no
-one criticises. But Margot ought to have had sense enough to realize
-that she, a mere American, couldn’t afford to do it. I warned her that
-her cue was sweetness and an air of equality. I told her that her
-title in itself would keep people at their proper distance. But she
-lost her head.”
-
-“Then the thing for her to do is to behave herself.”
-
-“It’s too late, I’m afraid. The tide has turned against her. All the
-women--especially the titled English women of good family--were against
-her--hated her--were ready to stab her in the back. And her haughtiness
-and condescension gave them the chance.”
-
-“Well, what do you propose? To give him more money?”
-
-Edna showed none of her familiar scorn of sordid things. She reflected,
-said uncertainly: “I wonder would that do any good?”
-
-“To win anyone give them what they most want,” said I. “What do your
-friends over here want above everything and anything?”
-
-“Perhaps you are right,” confessed she. Consider, gentle reader, what
-this confession involved, how it exposed the rotten insincerity of
-all her and her fine friends’ pretenses. “Yes, I guess you’re right,
-Godfrey.” She pressed her hands to her temples. “It simply _must_ be
-straightened out. I am quite distracted. I can’t afford to lose sleep
-and to be harrowed up. Those things mean ruin to a woman’s looks.
-And what _would_ I do if she were flung back on my hands in this
-disgraceful fashion!”
-
-“You want me to go to London?”
-
-“Godfrey, you _must_ go. You must see her, and him, too.”
-
-“I was thinking it would be enough to see him. But perhaps you’re
-right.”
-
-“She is clean mad,” cried Edna, with sudden fury against her daughter.
-“She doesn’t appreciate the peril of her position. One minute she’s
-all for groveling. The next she talks like an idiot about her rank and
-power. Oh, she is a fool--a _fool_! I always knew she was--though I
-wouldn’t admit it to myself. You never will know what a time I’ve had
-training her to hide it enough to make a pleasing appearance. She is a
-brainless fool.”
-
-“A fool, but not brainless,” said I. “Her education made her a fool and
-paralyzed her brain. You see, she didn’t have the advantages you had
-in your early training. In your early days you had the chance to learn
-something--the useful things that have saved you from the consequences
-of such folly as you’ve taught her.”
-
-“What nonsense!” cried Edna in disgust. “But we mustn’t quarrel. I’m
-agitated enough already. You will go to London?”
-
-“Yes,” said I, after reflecting. “I’ll go.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“To-morrow.”
-
-“And I’ll go with you.”
-
-“No,” said I firmly. “Either I manage this affair alone or I have
-nothing to do with it.”
-
-“But, Godfrey, there are so many things about these people that you
-don’t understand. And you----”
-
-“I understand the essential thing,” said I. “And that is their mania
-for money.”
-
-She was on the verge of hysteria--afraid I would not go, afraid of what
-I would do if I did go. “But they have to be handled carefully,” she
-urged. “If you put them in a position where their pride won’t let them
-take the--the money----”
-
-“Trust me,” said I. “Go to bed, sleep soundly, and trust me.”
-
-I stood. She suddenly flung herself against my breast and began to
-sob on my shoulder. “You are hard and cold,” she said. “You have no
-sympathy with me--no feeling for anything but business. But somehow--in
-spite of it all--I have such a sense of your strength and your honesty.”
-
-I laughed rather awkwardly, patted her shoulder, helped her to a chair.
-“There are times when a coarse, common American business man of a
-husband has his uses--and advantages,” I said lightly. “I’ll telegraph
-you how things are going.”
-
-She dried her eyes, looked at me in a puzzled way. “You always repulse
-me,” she said.
-
-“I appreciate your kindness in remembering to toss a few crumbs to the
-starving man,” laughed I. “They are precious crumbs, no doubt, and more
-than he deserves. But--please don’t do it. He hates that sort of thing.
-You are free to act as you feel like acting. I’ll do as much for you
-and Margot without the crumbs as with them.”
-
-“How hard you are, Godfrey! How you have always misunderstood me!”
-
-“That’s right,” said I amiably. “I’m too coarse for such a fine nature.
-Well--good night.”
-
-I took myself hastily away to bed; and at ten the next morning I
-departed for London.
-
-I decided to see Margot first. She was at Sothewell Abbey, about an
-hour by express from Paddington. You perhaps know Sothewell Abbey
-through the pictures and descriptions. And it is indeed an imposing
-pile of old masonry seated in the midst of a park of surpassing beauty.
-As soon as I entered the ancient gates for the two-mile drive to the
-Abbey, I saw signs that my money was in action. When I first visited
-it, the lodge was in sad disrepair, the gates were about to fall to
-pieces and the vista of the drive was unkempt. Now, all was changed.
-The servile pair who came out to open for me, and made me fear they
-would drop down on their bellies and crawl before me, were neatly and
-properly dressed, in strong contrast to their former appearance.
-
-The exterior of the house, which had been most “romantic” but obviously
-the front of poverty and decay, looked much better--not younger I
-hasten to assure you, quiet reader, but somewhat like a hairless,
-toothless old man when he gets a nice white wig on his pate and a set
-of good false teeth on his shriveled gums. I saw gardeners at work--and
-plenty there was for them to do. Within, I saw evidences of a more
-adequate staff of servants; but the great halls were dreary and bare
-and dingy. That was a cold summer in England, even colder than the
-summer usually is. So, the enormous house was literally uninhabitable,
-like all the European palaces, city and country, that I have been in.
-I can fancy what such a place must be in winter with no way of heating
-it but open fireplaces, and not many of them. I can’t conceive any
-sane American, used to comfort in the way of steam heat, spending
-a winter in the English country. I know it is done by Americans
-reputedly sane; but if those at home knew what Europe in winter
-meant--the old-fashioned “romantic” Europe--they would not believe
-their expatriated countrymen sane in sacrificing comfort and health to
-vanity. Yes, I believe they would; for, do not they, at home, make the
-same imbecile sacrifices to vanity in other ways?
-
-“Take me to some small warm room,” said I to Margot, “before I catch my
-death of cold.” This the instant I was within doors and felt in my very
-marrow the clammy chill of that picturesque vaulted hall.
-
-“There isn’t any warm room in the house,” replied she.
-
-“How about the kitchen?” said I.
-
-She looked alarmed--being her mother’s own daughter, in lack of the
-sense of humor as in many other ways. She said hastily: “The upstairs
-rooms are a little better.”
-
-“They couldn’t be worse. These rooms are cold storage.”
-
-“I’m getting used to it,” said she. “One doesn’t mind it so much after
-a while.”
-
-Her nose was red and swollen, and her voice husky. She had a frightful
-cold at that very moment. “Why don’t you get out of here and go to a
-decent modern hotel in town?” said I.
-
-“Give up possession!” cried she in horror. “He might not let me come
-back.”
-
-It was too ridiculous. “Possession of what?” said I.
-
-“Oh, _papa_!” cried she, in despair and shame at my coarse stupidity.
-
-“Possession of what?” I repeated. “Of a dirty, dingy old cold-storage
-plant. Why should you want to come back? Put on your wraps and let’s
-fly to town by the next train.”
-
-She burst into tears. “I’d rather die!” she sobbed. “I _won’t_ give up
-my position. I am Marchioness of Crossley and I belong here.”
-
-“All right,” said I. “Let’s try the smaller rooms.”
-
-She led me up a vast stairway--it would have thrilled your soul,
-gentle reader. Think how it sounds, put into the fitting language--
-“The beautiful young Marchioness conducted her father up the ancient
-and magnificent stairway that rose from the spacious mediæval hall and
-swept in a curve of wonderfully wrought stone work, dating from the
-thirteenth century, to the upper chambers of the majestic old abbey.” I
-hurried her as fast as I could, for we both were sneezing and a hideous
-draught like the breath of death was streaming from somewhere. I don’t
-mind looking at pictures of abbeys and the like; but when I read of the
-grandeur of living in that sort of place, I laugh. The men who built
-them did as well as they could in the age they lived in. But what shall
-be said of men who dwell in them now, when infinitely better is to be
-had?
-
-Those upper chambers! Cold, clammy, draughty--the furniture and
-hangings old and dowdy. And my daughter’s room! Like a squalid,
-decrepit tenement flat. Yes, squalid; for the rugs and draperies were
-dirty, were stained and frayed. There was a distinct tenement odor.
-
-“Isn’t it fascinating?” said she, gazing round with sparkling eyes.
-
-“Where’s the fire?” said I.
-
-She led me to a smelly, low-ceilinged little room, like a segment out
-of a hovel. It was her boudoir, she informed me. In one wall, in a
-dinky fireplace burned a handful of fire.
-
-“Is that it?” said I. “Is that all?”
-
-“You must remember, papa,” said she proudly, “that this isn’t a
-_modern_ house.”
-
-“Ring for a servant,” said I. “This overcoat of mine is too light. I
-must have wraps if I’m to sit here. And you’d better get out your furs
-and put them on.”
-
-“The servants’d think me mad,” said she. “Must you have a coat?”
-
-“No--that spread will do,” said I. And I jerked it from the sofa and
-flung it round my shoulders. “I don’t want to upset your establishment.
-Good God, I had no idea people with any money at all anywhere on earth
-lived like this. If you’re going to stay here, you must put in steam
-heat.”
-
-“Oh, we couldn’t do that, papa dear,” said she with a plaintive
-mingling of shame for me and apology for the tradition against sense
-and health.
-
-“Let’s get to business, Margot,” said I. “Sit in the fireplace--that’s
-right. What’s the trouble? Your mother has explained--has told all she
-knew. I’ve come to find what the quarrel is _really_ about.”
-
-“Has she told you of that woman?”
-
-“Why did he go back to her?”
-
-She began to sob. “Oh, the hideous things he said to me! I
-didn’t dream a gentleman could talk like that. He called me a low
-American--said he was ashamed of me--said he was going to get rid of me
-at any cost, said----”
-
-“But what had you _done_!” interrupted I.
-
-“Nothing!” she cried, lifting her flushed face. “Absolutely
-nothing--except worship him.”
-
-“What had you done?” I repeated. As she started to rise I restrained
-her. “Stay in the fireplace. What was the beginning of the row--the
-very beginning?”
-
-Her eyes wavered, but she said: “Nothing, papa!” though less vigorously.
-
-“It was about money,” said I. “It always is--in all ranks of society.
-The beginnings of the quarrels have money at the bottom of them.
-Now--tell me!”
-
-She was silent.
-
-“I can’t help you unless you do.”
-
-“Oh, it was so sordid!” cried she. “And I thought him high above those
-things.”
-
-“No one that’s human is,” said I. “Any person who wears pants or skirts
-that have to be paid for is not above money.”
-
-“He wanted me to turn over to him all I had,” said she. “Think of that!”
-
-“I might have known,” said I.
-
-“He said it was beneath his dignity as an English gentleman to have a
-wife independent of him. And, do you know, papa, I was so infatuated
-that I almost yielded. I could see his point of view. And I’d have been
-glad to come to him for every cent. Only--” She stopped short.
-
-“Only what?” I urged.
-
-“I heard about that other woman. And his way of treating me-- He said
-it was the proper way for a marquis to treat his marchioness. And I
-liked the dignity and the beauty of it all, when others were about. But
-it seemed to me that when we were alone-- Oh, papa, I can’t tell you
-these things.”
-
-“Never mind,” said I. “I understand.”
-
-“And I was--a little jealous, away down in my heart--and suspicious.
-And I was afraid he wanted the money to spend on _her_.”
-
-“Um,” said I. “You didn’t tell your mother this?”
-
-“She hates sordidness of every kind,” said Margot. “And I hadn’t the
-courage. Besides, I’m sure mamma would have advised me to let him
-have his way. She wouldn’t sympathize with the--the weak side of my
-character.”
-
-I was interested. Could it be that Edna’s daughter had a “weak”--a
-human side? Could it be that her education and her mode of life had not
-altogether killed the natural and made her soul a garden of artificial
-flowers only?
-
-“So, you want to be free from him?” said I.
-
-“Free from him!” cried she, aghast. “Give up my position? Oh,
-papa--never--_never_!”
-
-“But you don’t love him. Don’t come away from that fire!”
-
-She seated herself by the miserable smoky little blaze again. “He is my
-husband. I am his wife. I am the Marchioness of Crossley.” And she drew
-herself up with as much of an air as her cold and the contracted space
-in the chimney-piece permitted. Unluckily, the sudden gesture caused a
-current of air, and she sneezed once--twice--three times.
-
-“Better get those furs,” said I. “You want the man back?”
-
-“Yes, indeed. I must have him back.” She clasped her hands and wailed,
-“If I only had a son! Then--_then_ I’d show Hugh that he couldn’t
-trample on me. But he has me in his power now. If he casts me off
-I shan’t have any position at all. The women are down on me. They
-hate all the American women, except those who toady to them and give
-them money or jewelry or pay their bridge and dressmaker’s bills.
-And they’re only too glad of the chance to crush me. But they’ll not
-succeed!”
-
-“Why not?” said I dryly.
-
-She burst into tears. “Oh, I don’t know what to do! Papa, shall I give
-him the money?--sign over all my income to him and take only what he’ll
-allow me? And would he come back if I did?”
-
-“He would not,” said I.
-
-“Then--what _shall_ I do? Oh, what slaves we women are! Think of it,
-papa! He wants to make a _slave_ of me--said he didn’t believe in women
-gadding about and showing themselves off in costly dresses and causing
-scandalous talk--said my place was at home--looking after the house and
-that sort of thing!” She laughed wildly. “Like a low, common servant!
-And he--he free to carry on with that woman!”
-
-“You might teach him to stay at home, if you set him a good example,”
-suggested I.
-
-“But I don’t want to stay at home!” cried she. “I didn’t marry for
-that. I want to enjoy all the privileges of my rank.”
-
-“To be sure,” said I.
-
-“I wasn’t brought up to be like a low, middle-class woman, or a
-workingman’s wife.”
-
-“No, indeed,” said I. “You are a lady. You’re made, not to be of use in
-the world, but to enjoy yourself.”
-
-She seemed to find some cause for dissatisfaction in my enthusiastic
-tone. “Of course,” she said, “I shall do my duty as a member of the
-high nobility--lead in society and open bazars and visit the poor on
-our estate and--and all that.”
-
-“Yes, indeed,” said I. “And the world being what it is, there’s no
-reason why you shouldn’t.”
-
-“Do you think you can bring him back, papa?”
-
-“That depends on you,” said I warily.
-
-“I’ll do anything--anything. I’ll crawl to him, if he wants me to.
-After all, he _is_ the Marquis of Crossley, and I’m only an American
-nobody.”
-
-“That’s the proper spirit,” said I. “But you mustn’t show it to
-him _too_ plainly. Be moderate. A little pretense of dignity--of
-self-respect.”
-
-“I understand,” said she seriously--she was indeed Edna’s own daughter.
-“I’ll be as I was before we were married.” Her eyes flashed. “Oh, I can
-bide my time. When I have a son!”
-
-“Get ready and come up to town to-night,” said I, with a most
-unfatherly gruffness and curtness, I fear. “I’m off now to deal with
-him.”
-
-“Be careful not to wound his pride, papa,” she cautioned.
-
-“I realize the danger of that,” replied I. “Come to the Savoy. Be on
-hand, so I can get hold of you whenever I need you.”
-
-“Oh, papa _dear_!” she cried, and cast herself into my arms.
-
-I brushed my lips upon her crown of hair--it was false hair, that
-being the fashion of the day. “Try to make yourself as pretty as you
-can,” said I, releasing her and myself. “You’ll hear from me to-night
-or to-morrow, unless I’ve caught my death in this damp cave. You must
-leave it to the frogs, and snakes, and bats, and build yourself a
-decent house somewhere. You’ll die here.”
-
-“I’m afraid Hugh wouldn’t consent to _live_ anywhere but here. It’s
-the ancestral seat, you know. The Massingfords have lived here since
-forever and ever.”
-
-“Have died here, you mean. Have killed wives they wanted to get rid of,
-here.”
-
-She startled--looked excitedly at me. “Papa!” she exclaimed
-breathlessly. “Yes--I wouldn’t put it past him!”
-
-I laughed.
-
-She drew a long breath of relief. “Oh, you weren’t in earnest,” she
-said.
-
-“No,” replied I. “But--don’t live here.”
-
-“I shan’t,” said she firmly. “It’s dreadful for the looks. You’ve seen
-what so many of these English women look like.”
-
-“Like shriveled, frost-bitten apples,” said I. “They don’t die
-because they’re used to it. But it’s death for people accustomed to
-civilization. Not even the steady glow of pride in your title and
-position can keep you heated up enough to save you.”
-
-“Will you give Hugh a house, if he’ll consent?”
-
-“Yes.... Until to-night or to-morrow.”
-
-And I fled from the romantic old Abbey, but not soon enough to avoid
-what was threatening to be the cold of my life.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-The moment I was in London, and before that Sothewell Abbey cold had
-a chance to grip me, I went at it. Starve, stay in bed, and keep the
-air out for a day--that’s the way to put a cold out of business.
-Unless it be some occasional prodigy endowed with superhuman common
-sense and self-restraint, no one learns how to take care of his health
-except by experience. The doctors know precious little about disease;
-about health they know nothing--naturally, they have no interest in
-health. The average human being not only does not know how to take care
-of his health, but also does not wish to learn how; health involves
-self-denial, cutting down on food, drink, tobacco and the other joys
-of life. So he who wishes to avoid enormous payments in discomfort
-and pain for slight neglects and transgressions of physical laws has
-to work it out for himself. I’ve made several valuable discoveries in
-the science and art of living; about the most valuable of them is that
-every illness starts under cover of a cold. So I instantly take myself
-in hand whenever I begin to sneeze and to have chilly sensations or
-a catch in the throat. The result has been that since I was thirty I
-have not spent a cent on doctors or lost a day through illness, and
-I’ve eaten and drunk about as I pleased. I can see gentle reader’s
-expression of disdain at these confessions as to my care for health.
-You are welcome to your disdain, gentle reader. It is characteristic of
-your shallowness. You see, the chief difference between you and me is
-that I have imagination while you have not. And as I have imagination,
-illness makes to my mind a picture of revolting internal conditions
-which I can no more endure than I could endure having my outside
-unclean and frowzy.
-
-Margot, coming by a later train, sent me word that she was ill. She had
-called in a doctor. He poured some medicine--some poison--into her, of
-course, and so got her into the way of giving him an excuse for robbing
-her. In England doctors rank socially with butchers and bakers, rank
-scientifically with voodoo quacks and astrologers. They still look on
-a cold as a trifle, and treat it by feeding! The food and drugs she
-swallowed soon reduced Margot to the state where it was taking all
-the reserve force of her youth to save her from severe illness. I was
-entirely well the following day, and went to see her. The doctor--five
-guineas or twenty-five dollars a visit--was coming twice a day; his
-assistant--two guineas or ten dollars a visit--was coming four times a
-day. The Marchioness of Crossley, a rich American, was ill. Her social
-position and Dr. Sir Spratt Wallet’s rank as a practitioner together
-made it imperative that the illness be no ordinary affair. The second
-day he issued bulletins to the papers. I attempted to interfere in the
-treatment, but Margot would not have it.
-
-“She’s growing worse instead of better,” said I to Wallet.
-
-“Certainly, sir,” replied he. “That is the regular course with a
-cold.” And he stroked his whiskers and looked at me with dull,
-self-complacent, supercilious eyes. “The regular course, sir.”
-
-“In England, but not in America,” said I.
-
-“I dare say,” said he, with heavy politeness. Then, after a heavy
-pause, “her ladyship will be quite fit again in a week--quite fit.”
-
-As she was eating three strapping meals a day and taking rhinitis and
-another equally poisonous drug I had my doubts. But once you let a
-doctor in you are powerless. If you order him out without giving him an
-opportunity in his own good time to cure the mischief he has done the
-consequences may be serious. Not to linger over this incident in high
-life, Wallet made out of that cold a hundred guineas, not counting his
-commissions on the fees of his assistant, on the wages of a trained
-nurse, and on the stuff from the chemist. If Margot had been English
-born the bill would have been about one fourth that sum--for the same
-rank in society. Slay the Midianite! But that’s the rule the world
-over. When I am “trimmed” abroad I console myself with reflecting on
-the fate of the luckless foreigner visiting America. Europe trims us to
-the quick; but we trim to the bone; and when no foreigners are handy we
-keep in practice by trimming one another.
-
-Margot’s illness did not interfere with my efforts to right her
-matrimonial ship and set it in its course again. I had greatly modified
-my original plan. It involved my seeking the Marquis. My new plan was
-to compel him to seek me. I proceeded so successfully that on the
-morning of the third day of Margot’s “indisposition,” while I was at
-breakfast in my sitting room, Markham came in with a grin of triumph on
-his face. “You win,” he cried. “But you always do.”
-
-“Dawkins?”
-
-“Here’s his card.”
-
-“Let him up. No--wait.... Tell him I’ll see him in half an hour.”
-
-Gentle reader, you are about to learn why in that controversy over
-settlements _I_ abruptly abandoned the struggle and yielded everything.
-I worked with Markham at my mail and telegrams for three quarters of an
-hour before I let Dawkins in. I saw at a glance that my treatment of
-him had produced the effect I had hoped. He was a typical middle-class
-Englishman--but all middle-class Englishmen are typical. He was fattish
-and baldish and smug. He had a beef-and-beer face, ruddy and smooth
-except tufts of red-gray, curling whiskers before either ear. He had
-cold, shrewd, pious eyes--the eyes of the hypocrite who serves the
-Lord with every breath he draws, and gets a blessing upon every crime
-he commits before committing it. In my first interviews with him I,
-being new to England, had made the mistake of treating him as an
-equal, that is, as a human being. My respect for myself forbids me to
-meet any of my fellow-members of the human race in any other fashion.
-But experience has taught me that in doing business with a man, it
-is being absolutely necessary that you dominate him unless you are
-willing to have him dominate you, the most skillful care must be taken
-to impress him with your superiority. A certain amount of “side” is
-useful in America. A lot of it is imperative in England; and if you
-are dealing with an Englishman who feels that he is low, you dare not
-treat him as an equal or he at once imagines you are lower than he, and
-despicable--and you can do nothing with him.
-
-I had suffered, and so had my lawyer, Norman, for our American way of
-treating Dawkins. I appreciated my mistake afterwards, and resolved
-not to repeat it. I studied the manner of Crossley and Blankenship and
-the other upper-class men toward the middle and lower classes, and I
-learned to copy it, an accomplishment of which I am not proud, though
-common sense forbids me to be ashamed of it. Dawkins, entering with
-heels thoroughly cooled, made ready to put out his hand, but did so
-hesitatingly. He saw that his worst fears were realized, altered the
-handshaking gesture into a tug at his right whiskers. Nor did I offer
-him a seat, but simply looked at him pleasantly over the top of my
-newspaper and said:
-
-“Ah, Dawkins, is that you?”
-
-“Good morning, Mr. Loring. Hope you are well, sir,” said Dawkins, now
-squeezing awkwardly into his proper place.
-
-I half turned my back on him and dictated a note and a telegram to
-Markham. Then I glanced at Dawkins again. “Ah, Dawkins, yes--what were
-you saying?”
-
-“I would esteem it a favor, sir, if you would give me a few minutes of
-your time--alone.”
-
-“We are alone,” said I. “What is it?”
-
-The solicitor shifted his portly frame uneasily, smoothed his top hat
-with his gloved left hand, glanced dubiously at Markham. “The matter is
-confidential, sir--relating to--to the family.”
-
-“Mr. Markham knows more about my affairs than I do,” said I. “Don’t
-beat about the bush, Dawkins. I have no time to waste.”
-
-“Very well, sir. I beg your pardon. It concerns those bonds--the bonds
-you turned over to me in arranging the settlements.”
-
-“Yes. I remember. Great Lakes and Gulf bonds, were they not?”
-
-“Precisely, sir. You bound us to a stipulation that they were not to be
-converted for at least five years.”
-
-“That’s right,” said I. “In fact, I made it impossible for you to
-convert them.”
-
-A pained expression came into the face of Dawkins.
-
-“I believe I conceded everything else your client demanded,” pursued I.
-
-“But it now develops, sir,” said Dawkins, “that that was the only
-important thing.”
-
-“Really?” said I.
-
-“You have doubtless seen the papers these last few days--the stock
-market.”
-
-“Yes.... Yes--so the bonds _are_ dropping. That’s unfortunate.”
-
-“Dropping rapidly,” said Dawkins. “And there are rumors that Great
-Lakes and Gulf will soon be practically worthless.”
-
-“So I’ve read.”
-
-“I’ve come to ask you to release us. We wish to sell. We must sell. If
-we don’t the settlement on your son-in-law will be worthless.”
-
-I smiled agreeably. “As worthless as his promises to my daughter. As
-worthless as he is.”
-
-Dawkins was breathing heavily. His pious eyes were snapping with rage.
-He had prided himself on his astuteness. He had gloated over his
-shrewdness in outwitting Norman and me. And now he discovered that the
-boot was on the other leg. I had trapped him and put him and his client
-in my power.
-
-I leaned back comfortably and smiled. “Of course I know nothing about
-it, Dawkins, but I am willing to make a Yankee guess that the bonds
-will continue to drop until----”
-
-When my pause became unendurable, he said: “Yes, sir. Until when?”
-
-“Until I discover some signs of value in my son-in-law. Then he may
-discover some signs of value in the bonds. Our America is a peculiar
-country, Dawkins.”
-
-“Peculiar will do, sir,” said he with respectful insolence. “But I
-should have chosen another word.”
-
-I shook my head laughingly. “What bad losers you English are!” said I.
-“But--I’ll not detain you. Good morning, Dawkins.”
-
-“Then I am to understand, sir----”
-
-But I had my back squarely to him and was busy with Markham, who took
-his cue for the little comedy we were playing like the well-trained
-American business man that he was. Presently Markham said, “He’s gone,
-and I never saw a madder man get out of a room more awkwardly.”
-
-You, gentle reader, who know about as much of the science of
-managing men in practical life as you know of any other phase of the
-world-that-is--you, gentle reader, are shocked by my rudeness to a
-polite, well-educated, well-dressed Englishman. And you hope--and
-feel--that I overreached myself. But let me inform you--not for your
-instruction but for my own satisfaction--courtesy has to be used most
-sparingly. Human vanity is so monstrous that men eagerly read into
-politeness to them--the most ordinary politeness--evidence that their
-superiority is inspiring fear, awe and desire to conciliate them.
-You often hear men in high place severely criticised for being rude,
-short, arrogant, insulting. Do not condemn them too hastily. It may be
-that they were driven into this attitude toward their fellows by the
-disastrous consequences of courtesy. Be polite to a man and he will
-misunderstand. Be cool to him and he, thickly enveloped in his own good
-opinion of himself, will not feel it. Rudeness, overt and unmistakable,
-is often the one way to reach him and save not only yourself but also
-him from the consequences of his vanity. It is the instinct of big men
-to be big and simple and natural in their dealings with their fellows.
-The mass of little men with big vanities compels them to suppress this
-instinct; and by suppression it inevitably becomes in time crushed out
-of existence. How can one who is busy continue to show consideration
-for others if they, instead of showing a return consideration for him,
-take it as tribute to their importance and begin to rear and impose and
-trample?
-
-To cite my own relatively unimportant case, I have long had a
-reputation for coldness and meager civility in my business relations.
-I recall distinctly the desperate pressure of sheer imposition that
-led me to abandon my early openness to all comers at all times. And I
-admit that I did change; rather abruptly, too, for it suddenly came to
-me why I was slipping backwards. But looking only at my career _since_
-the change, when I think of the boredom I have endured, the folly I
-have permitted to waste my valuable time--when I recall the forbearance
-I have shown in sparing impudent and lazy incompetence where I might,
-yes, ought to have used the ax--when I think of my good-natured
-tolerance in face of extremest daily provocation, year after year,
-I marvel at myself and feel how unjust, how characteristically the
-verdict of little shallow men, is the attack on me as cold and
-unsympathetic. When I consider how the leaders of the human race have
-been tempted to tyranny, I cannot understand why history is able to
-record comparatively few real tyrants, most of them being homicidal
-lunatics like Nero, or success-crazed megalomaniacs like Napoleon,
-and almost none men of sanity. If the great of earth were as vain, as
-selfishly, as egotistically inconsiderate of the small as the small are
-of the great and of each other, would not the story of history have
-come to an end long ago for lack of surviving characters?
-
-Two days after Dawkins came Crossley. I knew that in America there is
-no one so easily frightened as a rich man who has inherited his wealth
-and does not know whether, if he lost it, he could make a living or
-not. All rich men are cowards, but that species is craven. I suspected
-that the same thing was true of the European type--the nobleman
-with the grotesque pose of disdain for money that convinces and
-captivates you, gentle reader, and your favorite authors. Crossley’s
-face instantly showed me that my suspicion was correct. He had been
-dissipating wildly for several weeks, but it did not account for the
-look in his eyes. If, gentle reader, you wish to learn the truth about
-the aristocracy you worship--which you do not--get an aristocrat
-where you can cut off or turn on his supply of cash at will. You will
-then discover that he who has a stiff neck also has supple knees--the
-stiffer the neck the suppler the knees.
-
-Crossley was a clever chap in his way; that is, he knew his business
-of idle spender of unearned money thoroughly. Another mode of putting
-it would be the commonplace and less exact if more alluring phrase
-“aristocrat to his finger tips.” There are many modes of cringing. He
-showed judgment and taste--judgment of me, taste in sparing himself--in
-his choice of the mode. With fright and wariness in his eyes--the look
-of readiness to go to any depths of self-abasement in gaining his
-end--he put a tone of manly, bluff, shamefaced contrition into his
-voice as he said:
-
-“Pardon my breaking in on you this way. I’ve just heard. Is _she_ very
-ill?”
-
-He meant he had just heard about the bonds. I knew he meant that, and
-he knew I knew it. But we were men of the world. “Not desperately
-ill,” said I. “Only about twenty guineas a day.”
-
-He smiled a faint but flattering appreciation of my humor, then resumed
-his gloomy anxiety and self-reproach. “But she _is_ ill. I read it in
-one of those screaming ha’penny rags and came as fast as ever I could.
-The truth is--well, we’ve had a bit of a row. Has she told you?”
-
-“Not much,” said I. “A little.”
-
-“I’ve acted the skunk, the howling skunk--and I want to-- Do you think
-she’ll see me?”
-
-“If you wish, I’ll find out.”
-
-“I’d be no end grateful,” said he with enthusiasm.
-
-She saw him as soon as she could make herself presentable--and her
-delay gave him a chance to tone up his nerves and to smooth out his
-face. That afternoon I was able to telegraph Edna that all was well
-The Crossleys were reconciled; Love had scored another of his famous
-triumphs. She came over the following day, but I had sailed for America
-a few hours before.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The day after my arrival in New York I saw Mary Kirkwood and Hartley
-Beechman lunching together at Delmonico’s. In those days that meant
-an engagement actual or impending--or, at least, a flirtation far
-advanced into the stage of loverlike intimacy. I was in the passageway
-looking through the glass and the screen of palms. I stood there long,
-noting every detail of her. She was well, perfectly well--of that much
-her eyes and her color assured me. Is there anything lovelier than
-a clear dark skin, tastefully set off by black-brown hair? Was she
-happy? I could not tell. Still in her face was that restless, expectant
-look--not unlike the expression of a child being shown a picture
-book and too impatient for the next page rightly to examine the one
-that is open. An intense interest in life, an intense vitality--that
-fascinating capacity to love, if she found the right man. And her
-beauty----
-
-Beauty she undoubtedly had. But charm does not lie in beauty--physical
-charm, I mean. There is a certain light in the eyes, a certain curve of
-cheek and throat, of bosom and arm--and the blood flames and rushes.
-She had charm for me. Her beauty impressed others; it was her charm
-that made her the one woman to me.
-
-Blankenship came to take me into the café where we were to lunch. I
-went with the meager consolation that while I had stood there she had
-given Beechman not a single glance with any suggestion of a feeling it
-would have wounded me to the quick to see. Should I speak to her? Did
-I dare risk the attempt? Would not speaking to her be merely a useless
-torment? After a long struggle that could have but one end, I said:
-“Excuse me,” rose and went to the palm room. They were gone; the waiter
-was clearing the table at which they had been sitting. I stared round
-dazedly, returned to Blankenship.
-
-“You’re not up to the mark--what?” said he.
-
-“New York doesn’t agree with me.”
-
-“I hate towns. They give you such dirty second-hand stuff to breathe.
-Let’s move on--what?”
-
-“To-morrow,” I said.
-
-But it seemed there was no place on earth for me. Don’t judge me so
-poorly as to think, or to imagine I thought, this was due wholly to
-Mary Kirkwood. I wish to be carefully, exactly accurate in this frank
-recital of a man’s point of view. She was responsible for my forlorn
-state to the extent that loving her had revealed to me the futility
-and failure of my own life and had made me see another sort of life
-that would have been possible with her, that was impossible without
-her--without love and comradeship. But loving her did not make my life
-empty; it was already empty, though I had not realized it. I understood
-now why the big business men, as soon as they reached security,
-cast about for some real interest. Most of them--nearly all--were
-as unfortunate in their family relations as I. They had trivial
-wives and trivial children--mere silly strutters and spenders. They
-sought interest in art, in science, in religion, in exploration, in
-philanthropy, in politics, in stamps and butterflies, in old books and
-antiques, in racing stables and prize fighting, in gambling, in drink,
-in women. Their craving was now mine. How to find an interest that
-would make life attractive to me, with Mary Kirkwood left out--there
-was my problem.
-
-While waiting for the solution, I followed Blankenship to the
-Northwest. The second day from New York, as he and I were walking
-up and down the platform during a halt--at St. Paul, I think it
-was--Hartley Beechman joined us.
-
-“Didn’t I see you in the café at Delmonico’s a few days ago?” said he.
-“I was getting my hat and stick in a rush. It certainly looked like
-your back.”
-
-“It was,” said I. And I was seized with a wild longing to escape from
-him and a wilder longing to hold on to him and to pour out question
-after question.
-
-“Mrs. Kirkwood and I were lunching together,” he went on. “We talked of
-you. I told her I thought I had seen you, and she said she heard you
-were in town and was much hurt because you hadn’t looked her up.”
-
-“I was merely passing through,” said I.
-
-“She has an enormous admiration for you,” continued he. “She says you
-have imagination--which means that she thinks you in the small class.
-You know the world divides into sheep and goats on imagination, with
-the mass in the have-not class. I believe it’s the true distinction
-between House of Have and House of Have-not.”
-
-“She is well?” said I.
-
-“Always. She knows how to take care of herself. I never knew a woman so
-sensible--and sensible means the reverse of what it’s usually supposed
-to mean when applied to a woman.”
-
-This hardly sounded like an engaged man talking of his fiancée. On the
-other hand, Beechman was a peculiar chap.
-
-“Does she still live in the country?”
-
-“Just now--yes. Last winter she kept house for Bob in New York.”
-
-But you will not be interested in how I drew from him bit by bit a
-hundred details of her life, stories of what she had said and done.
-I saw Beechman several hours every day until he left us at Seattle.
-Alternately I thought him merely her closest man friend and her
-accepted lover. At times I thought he was not quite sure, himself, in
-which position he stood. When we were having our last talk together I
-nerved myself and said:
-
-“I heard in London that she was to be married.”
-
-I felt him drawing in and shutting all doors and windows.
-
-“Have _you_ heard anything of it?” pursued I.
-
-“Oh, in the case of a woman like her,” replied he, “there’s always
-gossip about this man and that.”
-
-“She ought to marry.”
-
-“She _will_ marry.”
-
-I forced a smile, and, as we knew each other so well, I ventured: “You
-speak as one having authority.”
-
-“Don’t _you_ know she will?” parried he.
-
-“That sounds like evasion,” laughed I.
-
-“Not at all. She cannot escape. Some man will convince her--surely.”
-
-“But so far as you know, no man has?”
-
-His eyes were frankly mocking. “I did not say that,” said he.
-
-And I could get no further.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before I returned to New York in the autumn I had added a lot of far
-western enterprises to my already long list of occupations. Everything
-I touched seemed to succeed. Even my new secretary, Rossiter, proved
-better than Markham. Markham had an indifferent memory and a fondness
-for women that was trying. Rossiter forgot nothing and was as shy of
-the women, including the ladies, as was Lord Blankenship, who yawned
-and retreated at the very sight of a skirt. The news from England was
-altogether satisfactory. An heir was hoped for, and Crossley had become
-a devoted husband and was about to enter politics. This struck me as a
-huge joke, the more so because I knew that in England Crossley would
-be welcomed as a source of real strength to his party. It seemed to me
-amazing how England could stagger along when she was being managed by
-such men and was grateful for it. But when I spoke to Blankenship about
-it, he set me to thinking from a different standpoint.
-
-“My son-in-law is going into politics,” said I. “In America he couldn’t
-be elected dog-catcher.”
-
-“Oh, I fancy money will do most anything most anywhere,” said he.
-
-The news from Paris was equally good. Edna had settled there after a
-joyous summer going from country house to country house in Britain,
-and from château to château in France. She had seen one château which
-she wished me to buy, and she begged me to come over and inspect it.
-She did not explicitly say so, but I read between the lines that she
-was greatly strengthening her social position by giving out that she
-purposed buying a big place. You may imagine how much enthusiasm for
-her such an announcement would create among noble down-at-the-heel
-families eager to exchange unsalable old rook-roosts for American
-dollars. I could hear her talking--how subtly she would put forth the
-suggestion, how diplomatically she would discuss each worthless stone
-heap in turn--and how she would rake in the invitations so difficult to
-get unless one happens to know how, and so easy when one does know.
-
-But with my arrival in New York I had a reverse. A cable came from Edna
-saying that she was sailing at once and wished to see me.
-
-I could not imagine what she wanted, and I did not waste much time in
-making guesses. One evening, when Armitage and I were dining together
-in the Federal Club--Blankenship had sailed for home--the idea flashed
-into my mind that perhaps Edna wanted a divorce. Immediately I felt
-that I had hit upon the precise reason for her coming. You will have no
-difficulty in imagining what was the next idea in my train of thought.
-If she divorced me I should be free to marry whom I pleased!
-
-It was stupid of me, but in all my revolvings of my hopeless love for
-Mary Kirkwood never once had I thought of divorcing my wife. I cannot
-account for this lapse, except as an instance of the universal human
-failing for overlooking the obvious. There was no religious scruple
-in my early training to make me shy of divorce. On the contrary,
-my parents, like most old-fashioned Americans of faiths other than
-Episcopal and Catholic--and Episcopalians and Catholics were few in
-the old American stock, except in New York and Baltimore and South
-Carolina--most old-fashioned Americans believed that living together in
-wedlock without love was sin, that divorce was no mere necessary evil,
-but a religious rite as sacred as marriage itself. A house, they held,
-is either a House of Hate or a House of Love, and no one should remain
-in a House of Hate, and no child should be brought up there.
-
-No doubt, if Edna and I had been living under the same roof the
-idea of divorce would have taken form, actively definite form, long
-before. But we had no home to be a House of Hate. We did not hate
-each other; we bored each other. And as we were not poor, we lived
-far enough apart not to annoy each other in the least. I cheerfully
-paid any ransom she exacted for leaving me free--and you may be sure
-she was not inexpensive. She had her own fortune--and it gave her
-quite an income--but she husbanded that. She insisted upon state and
-equipage, not to mention such small matters as stockings at fifty
-dollars a pair and chemises at three hundred dollars apiece--for,
-she knew how lovely she was and demanded for her beautiful body the
-most beautiful garments that could be devised by French ingenuity at
-combining cost and simplicity. I was--by instinct rather than by avowed
-principles--thoroughly old-fashioned in my family ideas. Indeed, I
-still am; and I say this with no apology. It may be that woman will
-some day develop another and higher sphere for herself. But first she
-would do well--in my humbly heretical opinion--to learn to fill the
-sphere she now rattles round in like one dry pea in a ten-gallon can. I
-want to see a few more women up to the modern requirements for wife and
-mother. I want to see a few more women making a living without using
-their sex charms--a few less ’tending the typewriter with one eye
-while the other and busier is on the lookout for a husband. I believe
-in emancipation of women--in votes for women--in all that sort of
-thing. The one and only way to learn to swim is in the water. I am sick
-and tired of woman the irresponsible, woman the cozener and milker of
-man, woman the dead weight upon man, and drawing the pay of a housewife
-and shirking all a housewife’s duties. So, you see, I am the friend of
-woman--not of woman’s vanity and laziness and passion for parasiteism,
-but of woman’s education and self-respect and independence.
-
-I was thoroughly old-fashioned. My notion of wife was the independent,
-self-respecting equal of her husband. That is, I had the typical
-American husband’s ideal--the ideal that dates from the pioneer days
-of no property and of labor for all, the ideal the American man still
-lives up to, the one that enables woman to betray him. And, having this
-ideal, I never permitted myself--no, not even when I spoke to her the
-contrary in words--I never permitted myself to _feel_ that my wife was
-not in the main what she should be.
-
-If you have borne me company thus far, gentle reader, turn away
-now. For, dreadful things are coming. I said to Armitage: “Your
-sister--she’s still in the country?”
-
-“No, she’s abroad,” replied he. “She’s visiting friends in Budapest.
-Later on she’s to yacht in the East Mediterranean--she and the Horace
-Armstrongs and Beechman--and--” He gave several names I do not now
-recall.
-
-“Is she engaged to Beechman?” I asked carelessly, but the question was
-not one that could sound other than raw.
-
-He smiled--an expression I did not like. At first I thought it a rebuke
-to my impertinence. Afterwards I saw no such notion was in his mind.
-“Beechman? Good Lord, no.”
-
-“You are _sure_?”
-
-“Absolute. He’d not dare go in that direction with _her_.”
-
-“Why not?” said I.
-
-“Oh--well--you see-- She doesn’t care for him,” replied Armitage
-lamely. I was not liking him so well, now that I knew the world--his
-world--better and could judge its beliefs and its hypocrisies more
-accurately.
-
-“He’s an unusual man,” said I. “She might easily care for him.”
-
-“Well, she doesn’t,” retorted he irritably. “I happen to know she
-doesn’t.”
-
-I was convinced. Armitage’s tone said in effect that he had heard the
-rumor, had questioned her, had been assured that there was no basis for
-it.
-
-So, she was abroad--five or six days away. I could not go to her and
-make a beginning. Would I have gone if she had been within reach? I do
-not know. I rather think not. As I have said, I was old-fashioned; and
-the sort of love I felt for her, and my sense of what she had suffered
-at the hands of the first man she had trusted would have made me wait,
-I hope, until I was free. Still, love is insidiously compelling. Who
-can say what love would or would not beguile or goad him into doing?
-The old-fashioned man, always reminding himself that women haven’t an
-equal chance with men, was inclined to be considerate in his dealings
-with a woman. The new-fashioned man lets her look out for herself. I
-am not sure that he is wrong. Perhaps some who have read thus far will
-guess the reason for my doubt.
-
-You may imagine how impatiently I waited for Edna to arrive. I am
-afraid Rossiter found me difficult in those intervening days. Only
-the weak sort of men and women are easy for an intelligent person to
-live with. Men and women of positive character have their impossible
-moods. I made this remark to Mary Kirkwood on that yachting trip in
-the Sound. And her quick answer was: “Yes, that’s true. But everything
-worth while is difficult. Weathering the stormy days would have its
-compensations--and more.” What a woman! No wonder I loved her.
-
-When Edna finally arrived----
-
-What an arrival it was! She was attended by two maids, one French, the
-other Italian. She had trained them--she and their former fashionable
-mistresses--to treat her as if she was a royal person, requiring the
-most minute assistance, incapable even of ascertaining for herself
-whether it was daylight or dark, rain or shine. She was clad in the
-latest Paris fashions, adapted and improved for her own especial
-charms. She wore much jewelry, but nothing noisy. There never was
-anything noisy about her--any more than there is about a burst of
-sunshine that fills and floods the whole place, permeating everywhere
-and dominating everything. She talked by turns in English--with a
-superb British accent--in French that sounded Parisian and in Italian
-that seemed as liquid and swift as the Italian maid’s. It was a vast
-ship, and there were about a thousand passengers, and much luggage. To
-me, to all on the pier that day, there seemed to be but one landing and
-but one lot of luggage.
-
-How many trunks had she? Heaven only knows. The customs people were
-glad to expedite her after a glance at the exhibit imposing both in
-extent and in costliness. She affected a delightful, most aristocratic
-unconsciousness of the stir she was making, of the excited admiration
-of men, of the gaping or jeering envy of women. Yes, it was a great
-day, and as I accompanied her in the auto to the Plaza, I felt dowdy
-and insignificant--felt like a humble male menial, a courier or valet.
-
-“I did not fully appreciate your magnificence,” said I, “until I saw
-you on these humble shores.”
-
-“It is shocking here--isn’t it?” said she. “So incomplete, so crude. No
-wonder the ideals are low. The surroundings give no inspiration.”
-
-“None--except for work,” said I. “It’s a land for working people only.
-No doubt you’ll be going back soon?”
-
-“As soon as I can,” replied she. With a friendly but not tender smile:
-“As soon as you’ll let me.”
-
-The absence of her customary effusiveness confirmed my theory of her
-coming. I had thought all out with the utmost care. I felt it would be
-in every way unwise to let her see that I was eager for the divorce.
-She must open the subject. It had ever been my rule, when I wanted
-anything, so to maneuver that the other person should propose the
-exchange. It is the rule of successful operation in every department of
-life. Therefore, adhering strictly to my prearranged programme, I could
-only sit tight and wait.
-
-How she tried my patience! I was mad to have the preliminaries over,
-to have the divorce under way--mad, not with the hysterical impatience
-of those short-sighted people who mess their purposes through lack of
-self-restraint, but with the white-hot repressed patience of those who
-have their way in this world. Day followed day, and she did not speak.
-I gave up the evenings and a large part of the afternoons to her. I
-stayed on after dinner until there was no further excuse for lingering.
-I listened to her interminable recital of fashionable names, dates,
-gossip, adventure. A week of this, and just as my fortitude was wearing
-itself out and I had begun to debate opening the subject myself, she
-said:
-
-“I’ve been down looking at our house. Really it’s not half bad. Why
-shouldn’t we open it?”
-
-I did not know what to say. Was I mistaken in her purpose in coming?
-Or was this proposal to open the house the clever move of a clever
-gamester to force me to speak first?
-
-“This lovely weather!” she went on. “It’s a shame such a climate should
-be wasted upon such a vulgar city. When I think of the dreadful rains
-that infest Paris and the rains and fogs of London-- How they would
-glory in this sun and sparkling air.”
-
-To my notion New York was vastly more attractive than dreary London or
-rainy, sloppy Paris. But I made no defense of New York. I wished her
-to think it crude and tiresome.
-
-“And the fashionable society here,” she went on. “What a silly copy of
-the real thing over there!”
-
-“It must remind you of Passaic,” said I.
-
-She visibly shivered.
-
-I was suddenly seized of a base inspiration. In my despair I did not
-hesitate. Said I: “That reminds me. We must go over to see the old
-people.”
-
-“Oh, yes,” she murmured. “I’m so neglectful.”
-
-I felt--I saw--that I was on the right track at last. “When will you
-go?” I persisted. “Next Sunday?”
-
-“Perhaps,” said she faintly.
-
-“Yes, we’ll go Sunday. They fret because you never write.”
-
-“They are well?”
-
-“In splendid health. There’s no reason why all four of them shouldn’t
-outlive us.”
-
-“You--you go often?” she faltered.
-
-“I haven’t been for some time,” said I. “You see, I’ve been away.... If
-we opened the house, we could have them visit us. That would make up to
-them for the way we’ve acted.”
-
-She gazed at me in large-eyed horror. Suddenly she smiled with patient
-scorn and shrugged her shoulders. “Oh, I had forgotten your passion for
-jesting.”
-
-“I am in earnest,” said I--and I was indeed in the full flood of
-a virtuous penitence whose hypocrisy I did not detect until I was
-thinking about the matter afterwards. You, gentle reader, would in
-the same circumstances never have permitted yourself to discover the
-hypocrisy. I went on: “I’m ashamed of the way I’ve acted.”
-
-“They’ve got everything they need or want,” said Edna.
-
-“Material comfort,” replied I. “But haven’t parents a right to expect
-something more? And now that our social position is secure, we’ve no
-excuse for acting snobbishly.”
-
-I enjoyed this virtuous talk for itself; still more, I enjoyed teasing
-her. Her delicate, refined, ladylike nerves were aristocratically
-sensitive. Have you observed that peculiarity of lady nerves? A lady
-will live with the most shocking husband for luxury. She will endure
-the most degrading humiliations to get dresses, jewels, motor cars.
-She will crawl in the dirt to gain or to improve social position.
-She will, without a quiver, kiss her worst enemy, cut her dearest
-friends, in the furtherance of any ladylike purpose. But talk to her of
-self-respecting independence, of earning her own living, or of any of
-the homely decencies of life--of her ignorant old parents or unsightly
-poor relatives--and what a fairy princess of high-strung nerves she
-straightway becomes. Yes, Edna was a lady--a perfect lady, as perfect
-as if she had been born to it.
-
-To my surprise I had daunted her only for the day; the following
-afternoon she began again. “This heavenly weather!” she exclaimed. “It
-tempts me to stay on and on.”
-
-“I hope it will last over Sunday,” said I.
-
-She ignored the shaft, and went on with undiminished enthusiasm: “And
-really New York has improved. In some respects it can be compared to
-Paris--though, of course, it has no background. A city can be built in
-a generation or so. But to build up the country--that takes centuries.”
-
-“It’s building up rapidly,” said I. “You’ll be astonished Sunday by the
-change down where the old folks are. The Fosdicks have bought up twenty
-farms or so, and are making a park. I saw Amy Siersdorf not long ago
-and she spoke of having stopped at father’s place and got milk and corn
-bread.”
-
-“The fluffy little cat,” said Edna, not especially ruffled. “I shall
-snub her the first time we meet. But I was about to speak of our house.
-I am arranging to open it. Of course, Margot can’t come over _this_
-winter, but I don’t really need her. We owe it to our friends here to
-do something socially. I want to stop the gossip.”
-
-“The gossip?” said I.
-
-“The talk because we are not living together. It isn’t dangerous, but
-it’s uncomfortable. I believe people like us ought to maintain the best
-social traditions--ought to set a good example to the lower classes.”
-
-“Oh, bother!” said I as good-humoredly as I could. “We’ll do as we
-please. Otherwise, where’s the use in having money?”
-
-A pause which I felt was hopeful. Edna said with affected carelessness:
-“_You_ don’t think people have a right to--to divorce?”
-
-At last! My intuition had been correct! “Why not?” replied I, my tone
-as casual as hers. “Certainly, if they wish.”
-
-A long silence. Then she: “Sometimes I feel that way myself. When
-two people find that they’re uncongenial, that they’d be better
-off--happier--if free to go their separate ways and to realize to the
-full their own ideals of life-- Why not?”
-
-“Precisely my view,” said I.
-
-Again a long silence. She finally said: “Has it ever occurred to you,
-Godfrey, that you and I might be better off--apart?”
-
-I laughed. “It’s a good many years now since we were together,” replied
-I. “We might as well be divorced as living the way we do.”
-
-“It’s because I’ve been feeling those very things, that I’ve come
-back,” said she. “It seemed to me that, now I’ve fulfilled my duty to
-Margot, I ought to do my duty to you.”
-
-“That’s like you,” said I. “For you life is one long sacrifice.”
-
-If she scented irony she dissembled well. “Sacrifice is the woman’s
-part,” replied she sweetly.
-
-“No doubt,” I went on, “you’re willing to stay here where you’re
-unhappy, and for my sake to jam the house night after night with
-people you care nothing about, and disport yourself in splendor to
-make the world envy me. I appreciate your nobility of character, but I
-positively can’t allow it.”
-
-“We must do our duty,” said she. “Society expects certain things of us,
-and we must do them.”
-
-“Not I, my dear. Open the house if you like. But I stick to my bachelor
-apartment.”
-
-“Do you want me to go back to Europe?” said she with a fine show of
-quiet melancholy.
-
-“I want you to do as you please,” was my answer.
-
-“But unless I stay here, and you and I take our place in society
-together, I--” She hesitated. “Now that Margot is settled,” she went on
-desperately, “I am adrift. And--Godfrey, we _can’t_ go on as we are.”
-
-“I see that,” said I. “What do you propose?”
-
-“To stay in New York,” replied she, with the promptness of the skilled
-fencer. “To stay here and be the mistress of your establishment.”
-
-“My establishment is an apartment at Sherry’s.”
-
-“But that’s impossible!” remonstrated she.
-
-“Be calm, my dear. I don’t ask you to lead my kind of life.”
-
-“Then--what do you propose?” ventured she.
-
-I shrugged my shoulders and settled myself more comfortably in her
-luxurious motor. I gazed with absorbed interest at the bunch of orchids
-in the flower-holder.
-
-“I don’t see how we can continue neither free nor bound,” pursued she.
-
-“Whatever you like,” said I. “Only--no fashionable capering for me.”
-
-“Do you want me to get a divorce, Godfrey?” said she.
-
-“I want you to be happy,” said I. “Divorce has no terrors for me.
-Aren’t we practically divorced already?”
-
-“That’s true,” said she. “We never did have much in common.” Then she
-reddened--for, she could not quite forget those first days of our
-married life, before I got the money to feed her ambition. “You make
-me feel as if you were a--no, not a stranger, but only a friend.”
-
-“And we _are_ friends,” said I heartily. “And always shall be.” For I
-was beginning to like her, to take the amiably indifferent outsider’s
-view of her, now that she was freeing me.
-
-“Godfrey, do you want to marry again?” she asked with a sudden shrewd
-look straight into my eyes.
-
-I laughed easily. “That question might better come from me,” said I.
-“You will never be happy, I suppose, until you are the Duchess or
-Princess Something-or-other.”
-
-A flush stole over her small sweet face, making it lovelier than ever.
-“I never thought of such a thing,” she protested--but too energetically.
-
-“Nonsense,” said I. “You’ve dreamed it for years. Be honest with me,
-Edna.”
-
-“How could I dream it?” replied she. “It would take an awful lot of
-money.”
-
-“You have quite a bunch,” said I. “And if we parted, naturally I’d give
-you more.”
-
-Once again--but this time slowly--the searching gaze turned upon me.
-
-I bore it well. “You can’t live as I live,” I went on. “I won’t live
-as you live. You say that means divorce. I don’t think so. Many rich
-American couples live apart without divorce. I believe usually the
-reason is the wife has found she couldn’t get a large enough slice of
-the husband’s fortune, if she divorced him. Still, for whatever reason,
-they stay married. You don’t like the idea. So I say, if you want to
-go I’ll give you as much as I gave Margot--in addition to what you
-already have--and my blessing. I’ve some sentiment about the past, but
-it is as a past.”
-
-“I am--stunned,” said she. And I think her vanity was.
-
-“It’s what you want?” rejoined I.
-
-“You put me in a hard position, Godfrey. You give me no alternative but
-to accept.”
-
-“I am a hard man,” said I suavely.
-
-“You are really willing to let me go?”
-
-“You expected to have a difficult time persuading me?” laughed I.
-
-She looked at me reproachfully. “Do be serious, Godfrey, about these
-serious things.”
-
-“All right. What do you say, Edna? Yes or no?”
-
-“I must have time to think,” replied she. “This is a very solemn
-moment.”
-
-“Why fake?” said I pleasantly. “You have it all thought out.”
-
-“It is solemn to _me_, Godfrey.”
-
-“There’s nothing solemn about our married life. It’s a farce.”
-
-But she was searching for confirmation of her fear of some kind of
-trap. “You really mean that you wish to free me?” she said.
-
-“I mean precisely what I say,” replied I. “Freedom and the cash are
-yours for the asking. But you must ask, my dear. I’ll not have any more
-of your favorite comedy of making yourself out a martyr.”
-
-“You don’t know how you hurt me,” cried she. “But you always have hurt
-me--always. I know--” very gently--“that you didn’t mean to, but you
-haven’t understood.”
-
-“I did my best,” said I, with the pleasant smile of which she was so
-intolerant. “But what can be expected of a plain, coarse materialist of
-a business man?”
-
-“Yet you are generous in many ways,” mused she. “It’s simply that you
-can’t understand me.”
-
-“Perhaps it’s _you_ that don’t understand _me_,” said I.
-
-“What do you mean?” inquired she.
-
-“Oh, nothing,” I replied carelessly. How hope to make a vain woman,
-obsessed of the notion that she has a profound and mysterious soul when
-she simply has a fog-bank--how hope to make her see the truth about
-herself? “It isn’t worth explaining. Only--when you are free and you
-find some one who appreciates and sympathizes with that soul of yours,
-be careful to pay him well, and to keep on paying. You can always be
-flattered and fooled, if you pay for it. But if you don’t pay-- Look
-out. You may hear the truth.”
-
-“What a cynic you are!” she cried. “Thank God, I haven’t your low views
-of life.”
-
-“Keep your views, by all means,” said I. “But don’t forget my advice.
-You are lovely. You are charming. You dress beautifully and have good
-taste. But it’s the money, my dear, that causes the excitement about
-those charms and graces. Hold on to your principal, and spend your
-income freely but judiciously.”
-
-“If I could only convince you that there is something beside money in
-the world.”
-
-“Not for those to whom money is the breath of life,” replied I.
-
-When we returned to her hotel she urged me to come in for tea. We went
-into the greenroom, to listen to the music and to observe the crowds.
-There was a sprinkling of men, but two thirds were women--women of
-all classes and conditions, above the working class. Women obviously
-fashionable as well as rich. Women obviously only rich. Women living
-off men respectably. Women “trimming” here and there. An army of pretty
-women--well-cared-for bodies, attractive faces, inviting the various
-kinds of sensual attack from the subtlest to the frankest. This woman
-at the next table is rather cheaply dressed, except a gorgeous hat.
-That woman yonder has contrived to “trim” only a handsome set of
-furs; it looks grotesque with the rest of the costume. A third has a
-huge gilt bag as her sole claim to sisterhood with the throng of fair
-pampered parasites upon husbands, fathers, lovers. A charming and a
-useless throng. No, not charming, unless a man happens to be in the
-mood in which he succumbs to the trimming process with pleasure--and
-then, he would not think them altogether useless.
-
-“New York grows more and more like Europe,” said my wife, gazing around
-with shining eyes, and inhaling the heavily scented atmosphere with
-dilating nostrils. “More and more like Europe.”
-
-“More and more,” replied I. “Especially the women.”
-
-“Oh, they’re ahead of the European women,” said she.
-
-“So they are,” said I. “Yes--they beat the European women at it. But
-I’m not sure whether that’s because they are really cleverer, or merely
-because our men trim more readily.”
-
-She regarded me with an expression of mildly interested perplexity, as
-if she couldn’t imagine what was the “it” I was talking about. “You
-must admit they are lovely,” said she.
-
-“Admit it?” said I. “I proclaim it. If a man’s notion of dinner is only
-the dessert, he couldn’t do better.”
-
-She looked still more vague--one of her tricks when she wished to avoid
-or to ignore. “I never touch desserts,” said she.
-
-As I was leaving--for we were not dining together that evening--she
-said:
-
-“I shall think about your proposal.”
-
-I looked straight at her. “Tell me whether you will or will not confirm
-your own proposal,” said I. “And don’t delay too long. Unfinished
-business makes me nervous.”
-
-She returned my look with quiet composure. “I shall let you know
-to-morrow,” said she.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Among my acquaintances, both in and out of fashionable society, there
-were not a few jealous husbands. I knew one man who, in the evening,
-made his wife account for every moment of the day, and tell him in
-detail how she was going to spend the following day, and during
-business hours he called up irregularly on the telephone. He was not
-content with the effective system of espionage which a retinue of
-servants automatically establishes. Another man--to give a typical
-instance of each of the two types--hired detectives from time to time
-to watch his wife living abroad “for her health and to educate her
-children.” In a decently ordered society this sort of jealousy is
-rare. Only where the women are luxuriously supported parasites and the
-men are attaching but the one value to the women--the only value they
-possess for them--only there do you find this defiling jealousy the
-rule instead of the exception. Naturally, if the woman is mere property
-the man guards her as he guards the rest of his material possessions;
-and the woman who consents to be mere property probably needs guarding
-if she has qualities of desirability discoverable by other eyes than
-those of her overprizing owner.
-
-This jealousy was in the air of the offices and clubs I frequented.
-But it had somehow or other never infected me. Was I occupied too
-deeply with other matters? Was I indifferent? Did my own disinclination
-to dalliance make me slow to appreciate the large part dalliance now
-plays in American life? I do not know why I was free from jealousy.
-I only know that never once had my mind been shadowed by a sinister
-thought as to what my wife might be about, far away and free. Possibly
-my knowledge of her absorption in social ambition kept me quiet.
-Certainly a woman whose whole mind and heart are set upon social
-climbing is about the last person a seeker for dalliance would invest.
-
-I had never heard a word or a hint of a scandal about her--for the
-best of reasons; she did nothing to cause that kind of talk. But, how
-curious is coincidence! On the very evening of the day of our divorce
-discussion Edna had her first experience of scandal, and I immediately
-knew of it. After leaving her I went to the Federal Club, where I
-often took a hand in a rather stiff game of bridge before dinner. I
-drifted into the reading room, glanced idly at the long row of current
-magazines. In full view lay the weekly purveyor of social news, a
-paper I had not looked at half a dozen times in my life, and then only
-because some one had asked me to read a particular paragraph. The
-week’s issue of this scandal monger had just come in. I threw back
-the cover, let my glance drop upon the page. I was hardly aware that
-I was reading--for my thoughts were elsewhere--when I became vaguely
-conscious that the print had some relation to me. I reread it; it was a
-veiled attack upon Edna. All unsuspected by her husband--so the story
-ran--she had come to America to divorce him that she might marry a
-German nobleman of almost royal rank. A voice close beside me said:
-
-“What is it amuses you so in that dirty sheet?”
-
-It was Armitage. I started guiltily. Then my common sense asserted
-itself, and I pointed to the paragraph. When he had read it I said:
-
-“Who’s the German? I’m not well enough up on the nobility to be able to
-guess, though it’s probably plainly told.”
-
-“The Count von Biestrich,” said he.
-
-“Thanks,” said I, no wiser than before, and we went up to play bridge.
-
-A year or so before I might possibly have talked freely with Armitage;
-but the day of our closest intimacy had passed. He was still my
-intimate friend; I was his--with several large reservations. Why?
-Chiefly because when he passed the critical age his mind took the
-turn for the worse. At forty to forty-five a man begins to reap his
-harvest. Armitage had many and varied interests, but the one that
-affected his nature most profoundly was women. He mocked at them; he
-was always inventing or relating stories about them of the more or less
-gamey sort. But, somewhat like his pretensions of disdain for birth
-and fashion, his wordy scorn of women concealed a slavish weakness for
-them. After forty this began to disclose itself in his features. Their
-handsome intellectuality began to be marred by a sensual heaviness; and
-presently his wit degenerated toward a repellent coarseness. It takes
-delicate juggling to make filth attractive. After forty a man does well
-to be careful how he attempts it; for, after forty, the hand loses its
-lightness. I rather avoided Armitage; not that I was squeamish, but
-my sense of humor somehow rarely has responded to rude rootings and
-pawings in the garbage barrel.
-
-About an hour after dinner Edna called me to the telephone and asked me
-to come to her. I found her in high excitement, her color vivid, her
-manner nervous beyond its natural vivacity even as now expanded upon
-the best Continental models. “I got rid of my guests,” said she, “and
-sent for you as soon as I could. Have you heard?”
-
-“About von Biestrich?” said I.
-
-“It is hideous!--hideous!” she cried. “I who have kept my name
-unsullied--I who have----”
-
-“I’m sure of that,” I interrupted. “I’m dead tired and, if you’ll
-excuse me, I’ll go home.”
-
-She caught me by the arm. “Godfrey, you think this was what I had in
-mind. I swear to you----”
-
-“I’m sure you’ve been all that a wife is expected to be,” said I, in
-my usual manner of good-natured raillery. “And I’m also sure you would
-wait until you were free, and would deliberate very carefully before
-deciding----”
-
-“Godfrey, how can you!” cried she, in her most exaggerated tone for
-outraged spirituality. “Have you _no_ heart? Have you no respect for
-me--your wife, the mother of your daughter?”
-
-“Have I not said I did not suspect you?” remonstrated I. “Why so
-agitated, my dear? Do you wish to make me begin to suspect?”
-
-She shrank and began to cool down. “I’ve never had such an experience
-before,” she apologized. “I don’t know how to take it.”
-
-“It’s nothing--nothing,” I declared.
-
-“I give you my word of honor that if I were free I should not consider
-marrying that German.”
-
-“I believe you.” I put out a friendly hand. “Good night.”
-
-“This ends all talk of divorce,” said she.
-
-I dropped my hand. “I don’t see that the situation is changed in the
-least.”
-
-“That’s because you are not a woman,” replied she. “You can’t
-appreciate how I feel.”
-
-“You wished to be free before this paragraph appeared. You still wish
-to be free.”
-
-“Oh, _how_ can you be so insensible!” cried she, all unstrung again
-and, I could not but see, genuinely so. “I _never_ could face the
-scandal of a divorce. I didn’t realize. It would kill me. How _did_
-Hilda face it?--and all these other nice women? I should hide and never
-show my face again.”
-
-She was agitating me so wildly that I felt I could not much longer
-conceal it. “I must go,” said I, pretending to yawn. “Sleep on it.
-Perhaps to-morrow you’ll feel differently.”
-
-She tried to detain me, but I broke away and fled. To be almost free
-and then to have freedom snatched away! Not out of reach, but where it
-can be reached easily if one will simply stretch out his hand somewhat
-ruthlessly. By no means so ruthless as my wife had been a score of
-times in gaining her ends without regard to me. Why not be ruthless?
-Had she not been ruthless? Had she not given me the right to compel
-her to free me? More, did she not herself wish to be free? And was she
-not now restrained, not by consideration for me, not by any decent
-instinct whatsoever, but solely by a snobbish groveling fear of public
-opinion?--a senseless fear, too?
-
-We are constantly criticising people--by way of patting ourselves on
-the back--because they take what they want regardless of the feelings
-of others. A form of self-righteousness as shameless as common; for
-we happen not to fancy the things they show themselves inconsiderate
-and swinish about. But--when we really do want a thing--what then? How
-industrious we become in appeal to conscience--that most perfect of
-courtiers--to show us how just and right it is that we should have this
-thing _we_ want! Having set myself drastically to cure self-fooling
-years before--when first I realized how dangerous it is and how common
-a cause of failure and ruin--I was unable to conceal from myself the
-cruelty of forcing Edna to divorce me. My conscience--as sly a sophist
-and flatterer as yours, gentle reader--my conscience could not convince
-me. Cruel things I had never done--that is, not directly. Of course I,
-like all men of action, had again and again been compelled to do them
-indirectly. But not by my own direct act had I ever made any human
-being suffer. I would not begin now. I would not commit the stupidity
-of trying to found my happiness upon the wretchedness of another. I
-could feel the withering scorn that would blaze in Mary Kirkwood’s
-honest eyes if I should go to her after having freed myself by force,
-and she should find it out. I see your sarcastic smile, gentle reader,
-as I thus ingenuously confess the selfish fear that was the hidden
-spring of my virtue. Your smile betrays your shallowness. If you knew
-human nature you would know that all _real_ motives are selfish.
-The differences of character in human beings are not differences
-between selfish and unselfish. They are differences between petty,
-short-sighted selfishness and broad, far-sighted selfishness.
-
-When I saw Edna again she was still wavering. She had come to
-America with her mind made up for divorce, if I could by hook or by
-crook be induced to consent. She had been frightened by this attack
-upon her--frightened as only those who live a life of complete
-self-deception can be frightened by a sudden and public holding up of
-the mirror to reflect their naked selves. She was, of course, easily
-able to convince herself that her own motives in seeking a divorce
-were fine and high and self-martyring. But she could now see no way to
-convince others. In the public estimation she saw she would be classed
-with Lady Blankenship, with Mrs. Ramsdell, with all the other women who
-had got divorces to better themselves socially or financially.
-
-Instead of dying out the scandal grew. The daily papers took up the
-hints in the society journal’s veiled paragraph, had long cabled
-accounts of Count von Biestrich, of his attentions to Edna, told when
-and where they had been guests at the same châteaus and country houses,
-made it appear that they had been no better than they should be for
-nearly a year. Edna was prostrated.
-
-“There’s only one answer to these attacks,” she said to me. “You must
-give up your apartment and move to this hotel. We must open the house
-and live in it together and entertain together.”
-
-I was not unprepared. I had threshed out the whole matter with myself,
-had made my choice between the two courses open to me--or, rather, had
-forced myself to see the truth that there was in decency but the one
-course. “Very well,” said I to her--and that was all.
-
-I moved to the Plaza the same day; I was seen constantly with her; I
-did my best to show the world that all was serene between us. In fact,
-if you saw us during those scandal-clouded days you may have thought
-us a couple on a honeymoon. Behind the scenes we quarreled--about
-anything, about everything, about nothing--as people do when forced to
-play in public the farce of billing and cooing lovers. Especially if
-one of them has not the faintest glimmer of a sense of humor. But in
-public----
-
-The newspapers soon had to drop their campaign of slander by
-insinuation.
-
-So it came to pass that by the opening of the season Edna and I were
-installed in the big house, decidedly improved now thanks to the
-collecting both of ideas and of things she had done abroad. And we
-were giving all kinds of parties, with me taking part to an extent I
-should have laughed at beforehand as impossible. She had become so
-irritating to me that the mere sight of her put me in a rage. Have you
-ever been forced into intimate daily contact with a nature that is
-thoroughly artificial--after you have discovered its artificiality,
-its lack of sincerity, its vanity and pretense and sex trickery? There
-is, as we all know, in everyone of us a streak of artificiality, of
-self-consciousness, a fondness for posing to seem better than we are.
-But somewhere beneath the pose there is usually a core of sincerity, a
-genuine individuality, perhaps a poor thing but still a real thing. It
-may be there was this reality somewhere in Edna. I can only say that I
-was never granted a sight of it. And I rather suspect that she, like
-most of the fashion-rotted women and men, had lost by a process of
-atrophy through suppression and disuse the last fragment of reality.
-Had Gabriel’s trumpet sounded and the great light from the Throne
-revealed the secrets of all hearts, it would have penetrated in her to
-nothing but posing within posing.
-
-I shall get no sympathy from man or woman--or fellow-beast--after
-talking thus of a woman and a lady. It is the convention to speak
-gallant lies to and about women--and to treat them as if they were
-beneath contempt. So my habit of treating them well and speaking the
-truth about them will be condemned and denounced with the triple curse.
-Well--I shall try to live through it.
-
-Except in occasional outbursts when her rude candor toward me would
-anger me into retort in kind, I concealed my feeling about her. I knew
-it was just, yet I was ashamed of it. Our quarrels were all surface
-affairs--outbursts of irritation--the blowing off of surplus steam,
-not the bursting of the boiler and the wrecking of the machinery.
-If you happen to take into your employ any of the servants we had in
-those days--Edna’s maids or my valet or any other of the menials so
-placed that they could spy upon our innermost privacy--I am confident
-that in return for your adroit, searching questionings you will hear
-we were no more inharmonious than the usual married couple past the
-best-foot-foremost stage. I did not swear at her; she did not throw
-bric-à-brac at me. And once, I remember, when I had a bad headache she
-stayed home from the opera--on a Monday night, too--to read to me. It
-is true the new dress in which she had expected to show herself was not
-ready. But that is a detail for a cynic to linger upon.
-
-Three months of New York, and she was bored to extinction. I had
-confidently been expecting this. I watched the signs of it with
-gnawing anxiety, for I was very near to the end of my good behavior.
-If possible I wished to stay on and help her toward a rational frame
-of mind--one in which she would see that divorce was the only possible
-solution of our impossible situation. But I began to fear I should
-have to give up and fly--to hunt or to inspect western mines and
-railways. She was bored by the women; they seemed shallow dabblers in
-culture after the European women. She was offended by their nervousness
-about their position; it made them seem common in contrast with the
-Europeans, born swells and impregnably ensconced. She was bored by the
-men--by their fewness, by the insufferable dullness of those few--all
-of them feeble imitations of the European type of elegant loafer.
-
-“These men have no subtlety,” she cried. “They have no conversation.
-When they’re alone with a woman--you should hear them try to flatter.
-They are as different from the European men as--as----”
-
-“As a fence-painter from an artist,” I suggested.
-
-“Quite that,” said she, and I saw her making a mental note of the
-comparison for future use--one of her best tricks. “Really, I prefer
-the business men to them. But one cannot get the business men. What a
-country, where everyone who has any brains is at work!”
-
-“If you are unhappy here, why not go abroad?” said I amiably. “Margot
-is always waiting for you.”
-
-“But how _can_ I go abroad?” railed she. “There’ll be another outbreak
-of scandal. Was ever a woman so wretchedly placed! What _shall_ I do!
-If I had some one to advise me!”
-
-It was interesting to hear her, determined, self-reliant character
-though she was, thus confess to the universal weakness of the female
-sex. Women, not trained to act for themselves, can hardly overcome this
-fundamental defect. That is why you so often see an apparently, and
-probably, superior woman weaken and yield where a distinctly ordinary
-man would be strong and would march ahead. The trouble with Edna was
-that she had no definite man behind her, spurring her on to action. In
-all she had done from the beginning of our married life she had felt
-that she had me to fall back on, should emergency arise--an unconscious
-dependence, one she would have scornfully denied, but none the less
-real. In this affair there was no man to fall back on.
-
-I saw this. Yet I refrained from giving her the support she needed and
-all but asked. Her cry, “If I had some one to advise me,” meant, “If I
-had some one to give me the courage to act.” I knew what it meant. But
-eager though I was to be quit of her, I would not give her the thrust
-toward divorce that would have put into her the courage of anger and
-of the feeling that she was a martyr to my brutality. Why did I hold
-myself in check? Candidly, I do not know. I distrust the suggestion
-that it may have been due to essential goodness of heart. At any rate,
-I did restrain myself. She--naturally enough--misunderstood; and she
-proceeded to explain it to the gratifying of her vanity. I saw in her
-eyes, in her way of treating me, that she thought me her secret adorer,
-convinced of my unworthiness, of her god-to-mortal superiority; not
-daring openly to resist her desire to be free from me, but opposing
-it humbly, silently. I saw that she pitied me. Did this add to my
-anger? Not in the least. I have a perhaps queer sense of humor. I
-rather welcomed the chance to get a little amusement out of a situation
-otherwise dreary and infuriating.
-
-Curiously enough, it was Armitage who came to her rescue--and to mine.
-
-Bob had been in retirement several weeks, having himself rejuvenated
-by a beauty doctor. You are astonished, gentle reader, perhaps
-incredulous, that a man of his position--high both socially and
-financially--should stoop to such triviality--not a woman but a man.
-And the serious, masculine sort of man he was, I assure you. But you,
-being a confirmed accepter of the trash written and talked about human
-nature, do not appreciate what a power physical vanity is in the
-world. Of course, if you are a man, you know about your own carefully
-hid physical vanity. But you think it in yourself a virtue, quite
-natural, not a vanity at all. Bob Armitage was not vain enough to fail
-to see the beginning of the ravages of time and dissipation. Another
-man would have looked in the glass and would have seen a reflection
-ever handsomer as the years went by, would have discovered in the
-creases and crow’s-feet and lengthening wattles a superb beauty of
-manly strength of character showing at last in the face. Bob was not
-that sort of fool. He wished to fascinate the ladies; so, he strove
-to retain the fair insignia of youth as long as he possibly could. He
-knew as well as the next man that his wealth had value with the women
-far beyond any degree of beauty or charm. But like most men he wished
-to feel that he was at least not a “winner” in spite of his personal
-self; and his young good looks even helped toward the pleasantest of
-delusions--that he was loved for himself chiefly.
-
-The beauty doctor did well by him, I must say. He looked ten years
-younger, would have passed in artificial light for a youth of thirty
-or thereabouts. He reappeared in his haunts, freshened up mentally,
-too; for physical content reacts powerfully upon the mind, and while it
-is true that feeling young helps one to look young, it is truer that
-looking young compels one to feel young.
-
-With him came a Prince Frascatoni, head of one of the great families
-of Italy, one of the few that have retained German titles and estates
-from the days of the Holy Roman Empire. Frascatoni was sufficiently
-rich for all ordinary purposes, and could therefore pose as a traveler
-for pleasure with no matrimonial designs. He was, in fact, poor for
-a _grand seigneur_ and was on the same business in America that has
-attracted here every other visiting foreigner of rank--except those who
-come for political purposes, and those who come to shoot in the West.
-And those classes give our fashionable society as wide a berth as they
-would its middle-class prototype in their home countries.
-
-The first time I saw Frascatoni--when he and Armitage strolled into
-the reading room of the Federal Club together--I thought him about the
-handsomest and, in a certain way, the most distinguished-looking man
-I had ever seen. He was a black Italian--dark olive skin, coal-black
-hair, dark-gray eyes that seemed black or brown at a glance. They were
-weary-looking eyes; they gazed at you with the ineffable dreamy satiric
-repose of a sphinx who has seen the futile human procession march into
-the grave for countless centuries. He had a slow sweet smile, a manner
-made superior by the effacement of every trace of superiority. He had
-the quiet, leisurely voice of one used to being listened to attentively.
-
-“Loring--the Prince Frascatoni. Prince, I particularly wish you to know
-my friend Godfrey Loring. Don’t be deceived by his look of the honest
-simple youth into thinking him either young or unsophisticated.”
-
-The prince gave me his hand. As it had also been my habit ever since
-I learned the valuable trick merely to give my hand, the gesture
-was a draw. Neither had trapped the other into making an advance.
-We talked commonplaces of New York sky line, American energy and
-business enthusiasm for perhaps half an hour. Then we three and some
-one else, a professional cultivator of millionaires named Chassory,
-I believe, played bridge and afterwards dined together. It came out
-sometime during the evening that Frascatoni had met my wife in Rome
-and in Paris, and that he knew my son-in-law--not surprising, as the
-fashionable set is international, and is small enough to be acquainted
-all round.
-
-Armitage must have told him that my wife and I were not altogether
-inconsolable if we did not see too much of each other. For, the prince,
-taking Edna in to dinner a few nights later, laid siege at once. I
-recall noting how he would talk to her in his quiet, leisurely way
-until she looked at him; then, how his weary eyes would suddenly light
-up with interest--not with ardor--nothing so banal as that--but a
-fleeting gleam of interest that was more flattering than the ardor of
-another man would have been. As Frascatoni, an unusual type, attracted
-me, I saved myself from boredom by observing him all evening. And it
-was highly instructive in the art of winning--whether women or men--to
-see how he led her on to try to make that fascinating fugitive gleam
-reappear in his eyes. I afterwards discovered that he accompanied the
-gleam with a peculiar veiled caress of inflection in his calm, even
-voice--a trick that doubly reënforced the flattery of the gleam.
-
-“What a charming man Prince Frascatoni is,” said my wife, when our
-guests were gone.
-
-“Very,” said I. “If I were writing a novel I’d make him the hero--or
-the villain.”
-
-“He is one of the greatest nobles in Europe.”
-
-“He looks it and acts it,” said I.
-
-“Why, I thought him very simple and natural,” protested she.
-
-“Exactly,” said I. “So many of the nobles I’ve met looked and acted
-like frauds. They seemed afraid it wouldn’t be known that they were of
-the aristocracy.”
-
-“You are prejudiced,” said Edna.
-
-“Then why do I size up Frascatoni so well?”
-
-“You happen to like him.”
-
-“But I don’t,” replied I.
-
-“Of course not,” said Edna with sarcasm. “He isn’t in business.”
-
-“Precisely,” I answered. “He couldn’t do anything--build a railroad,
-run a factory, write a book, paint a picture. He and his kind are
-simply amateurs at life, and their pretense that they could be
-professionals if they chose ought to deceive nobody. He probably could
-ride a horse a little worse than a professional jockey, or handle a
-foil almost as well as a fencing master, or play on the piano or the
-violin passably. I don’t admire that sort of people, and I can’t like
-where I don’t admire.”
-
-Edna yawned and prepared to go up to her own rooms. “I hope he’ll stay
-a while,” said she. “And I hope he’ll let me see something of him. He’s
-the first ray of interest I’ve had this winter.”
-
-“You will see something of him,” said I. “He liked you.”
-
-“You think so?” said she, seating herself on the arm of a chair.
-
-“I know it. Unless he finds what he’s looking for, he’ll attach himself
-to you.”
-
-“What is he looking for?”
-
-“A very rich wife,” said I. “But she must be attractive as well as
-rich, Armitage tells me. Frascatoni doesn’t need money badly enough to
-annex a frump. And Armitage says that while Englishmen and Germans and
-the heiress-hunting sort of French don’t care a rap what the lady looks
-like, the Italians--of the old families--are rather particular--not
-exacting, but particular. Unless, of course, the fortune is huge.”
-
-Edna yawned again. That sort of talk either irritated or bored her.
-
-Frascatoni was constantly with her thenceforth--not pointedly or
-scandalously so; there are discreet ways of doing those things, and
-of discretion in all its forms the Italian was a supreme master. The
-game of man and woman had been his especial game from precocious and
-maddeningly handsome boyhood. He had learned both by being conquered
-and by conquering. They say--and I believe it--that of all the
-foreigners a clean Italian nobleman is the most fascinating.
-
-The Hungarian or Russian is a wild, barbaric love-maker, the German
-a wordy sentimentalist, the Englishman dominates and absorbs, the
-Frenchman knows how to flatter the most subtly, how to make the woman
-feel that life with him would be full of interest and charm. But the
-right sort of Italian combines the best of all these qualities, and
-adds to them the allure of the unfathomably mysterious. He constantly
-satisfies yet always baffles. He reveals himself, only to disclose in
-the inner wall of what seemed to be his innermost self a strangely
-carved door ajar.
-
-My first intimation of what Frascatoni was about came from my wife.
-Not words, of course, but actions. She abruptly ceased quarreling,
-rebuking, reproaching, scoffing. She soothed, sympathized, agreed. She
-became as sweet as she had formerly been. I was puzzled, and waited
-for light. It came with her next move. She began to talk of going back
-to Europe, to deplore that scandalmongers would not let her. She began
-to chaff me on my love of a bachelor’s life, on my dislike of married
-life. She said with reproachful, yet smiling gentleness, that I made
-her feel ashamed to stay on.
-
-“Admit,” said she, “that you’d be better pleased if I were in Guinea.”
-
-“You oughtn’t have given me so many years of freedom,” said I.
-
-“You’d have been glad if I had gone on and gotten a divorce,” pursued
-she.
-
-My drowsing soul startled and listened. “I was willing that you should
-do as you liked,” said I. “Divorce is a matter of more importance to
-the woman than to the man--just as marriage is.”
-
-“And it’s a sensible thing, too--isn’t it?”
-
-“Very,” said I.
-
-“Godfrey, would you honestly be willing?”
-
-“I’d not lay a straw in your way.”
-
-“What nonsense we’re talking!” cried she, with a nervous laugh. “And
-yet there’s no denying that we don’t get on together. I see how trying
-it is to you to have me about.”
-
-“And you want to be free and living abroad.”
-
-“I wonder how much I’d really mind the scandal,” pursued she. “I don’t
-care especially about these New York people. And at the worst what harm
-could they do _me_?”
-
-“None,” said I.
-
-“They could only talk. How they’d blame me!”
-
-“Behind your back, perhaps,” said I. “Unless they thought I was to
-blame--which is more likely.”
-
-“You talk of divorce as if it were nothing.”
-
-“It’s merely a means to an end,” said I. “You’ve got only the one life,
-you know.”
-
-“And I’m no longer so _dreadfully_ young. Though, I heard that Armitage
-said the other day he would never dream I was over twenty-eight if he
-didn’t know.”
-
-She laughed with the pleasure we all take in a compliment that is
-genuine; for she knew as well as did Armitage that she could pass for
-twenty-eight--and a radiant twenty-eight--even in her least lovely hour.
-
-“No one has youth to waste,” observed I. “In your heart you wish to be
-free--don’t you?”
-
-“We are not suited to each other, Godfrey,” said she with gentle
-friendliness.
-
-“There’s not a doubt of that,” said I.
-
-“Why should we spoil each other’s lives? I conceal it from you, but I
-am so unhappy here.”
-
-“You can’t blame _me_,” said I. “I’m not detaining you.”
-
-A long silence, then she said: “Suppose I were to consent--” I laughed,
-she reddened, corrected herself: “Suppose we were to decide to do
-it--what then?”
-
-“Why--a divorce,” said I.
-
-“Can’t those things be done quietly?”
-
-“Certainly. No publicity until the decree is entered and the papers
-sealed.”
-
-“Does that mean no scandal beyond just the fact?”
-
-“No scandal at all. Just the fact, and some newspaper comment.”
-
-“And we needn’t be here.”
-
-“Not then.”
-
-“Would it take long?”
-
-I reflected. “Let me see--if you begin action say within a month, the
-divorce would take-- I could have it pushed through in another month or
-so, and then--by next fall you’d be free.”
-
-“But doesn’t one have to have grounds for divorce, beside not wanting
-to be married?”
-
-“All that easily arranges itself,” said I.
-
-She lapsed into a deep study, I furtively watching her. I saw an
-expression of fright, at the daring of her thoughts, gather--fright,
-yet fascination, too. Said she in a low voice: “Godfrey, are you
-_serious_?”
-
-“Entirely so,” was my careless reply. “Aren’t you?”
-
-“I don’t know whether I am or not.... I am _wretched_ here!”
-
-“All you have to do is to say the word. We don’t in the least need each
-other, and mutual need is the only respectable excuse for marriage. And
-I must tell you, I’ll not stand for any more of this social nonsense
-that compels me to participate. I’m done.”
-
-She looked at me pityingly. Our season had been a brilliant success,
-yet I remained unconverted, coarsely unsympathetic. “If I should decide
-to--to do it--what then?”
-
-“Nothing. I’d go away. The rest would be for the lawyers.”
-
-She looked at me dazedly. “I’ll see--I’ll see,” she said, and went to
-her own part of the house.
-
-A week passed. Frascatoni sailed for home, sending by her his polite
-regrets at not having seen me before his departure. I waited,
-confident. I knew she had a definite goal at last, and, therefore,
-a definite purpose. Aside from the danger of frightening her back
-by showing my own eagerness there was the matter of property. I was
-willing to pay a good round price for freedom. I have always hated
-money wrangles; I had never had one with her, and I did not purpose to
-have. On the other hand, that is, on her side, she would have given me
-short shrift had it not been that she wished a slice of my fortune--and
-a generous slice--to add to her own. I’ve not a doubt that the fierce
-social campaign she put me through that winter was not so much for her
-own pleasure, though she delighted in it, as for goading me to demand
-a divorce, and, so, enable her to ease her conscience and to drive a
-better bargain.
-
-My seeming indifference, combined with her now trembling eagerness to
-be free and away, soon forced her hand. The break came on a Sunday
-afternoon. Life is so inartistic--that is, from the standpoint of the
-cheap novelists and playwrights with their dramatic claptrap. Here is
-how the grand crash was precipitated:
-
-Said I: “Well, I’m off for a few weeks’ fishing.”
-
-“You’re not starting now?” said she.
-
-“Day after to-morrow,” said I.
-
-“But I’ve made several engagements for you.”
-
-“Get a substitute,” said I. “No one will miss me.”
-
-“How inconsiderate you are!”
-
-“That’s pretty good--after all I’ve borne this winter.”
-
-“You are insufferable!” cried she.
-
-“Then--why suffer me?” said I coolly.
-
-“If you torture me much further, I won’t,” retorted she.
-
-“I think I’ll clear out to-night,” said I.
-
-“With people coming to dinner to-morrow! A big dinner!”
-
-“Yes--to-night,” said I. “I had forgotten to-morrow’s horrors.”
-
-“If I were free!”
-
-“That’s easy.”
-
-“Yes--I _will_ be free!”
-
-“I’ll send you a lawyer at eleven to-morrow morning.”
-
-She was pale and trembling. The quarrel was a mere pretense--a pretext
-so flimsy that each knew the other was not deceived by it. Her tones of
-anger, my tones of abrupt and contemptuous indifference were obviously
-false and forced. As I left the room I cast a furtive glance at her,
-saw that her daring was so terrifying her that she could hardly keep a
-plausible front of haughty anger.
-
-It was several hours before I could get away from the house, though I
-made all haste. Every moment I expected some word from her. But none
-came. I sent the lawyer the following morning. I was surprised when
-later in the day, by the necessary roundabout way, I learned that she
-had actually consented.
-
-She showed that she had made an exhaustive study of the subject, like
-the wise campaigner she was. She thoroughly understood how to proceed;
-for, she told her lawyer--the one of my lawyers whom I assigned to
-her--that my coldness to her had filled her with suspicion and that she
-wished detectives employed. She needed no coaching whatever; he found
-her prepared on every point.
-
-How far had matters gone between her and Frascatoni? Not so far as you
-imagine; but perhaps farther than I think. Both the husband and the
-world are poor judges in those affairs.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I shall pass over the suit. It was commonplace throughout. There has
-been much speculation as to the person named by my wife in the sealed
-papers. I can truthfully say that I know as little about that person
-as does the public. It is usually so, I believe, in these arranged
-suits. I did not appear at any of the hearings, all of them held
-secretly. Nor did Edna appear, though I believe that, to comply with
-the forms of law, she made some sort of deposition in the presence
-of the lawyers for both sides. It so happened that the first and
-only public step--the judge’s ordering of the decree of divorce--was
-published on the same day with the news of a big prize fight, a
-sensational murder, and a terrific earthquake. So, we got off with
-little public attention. At the time the law provided that a decree
-should not become valid for six months. We were nominally free; but
-actually neither could marry again for six months and meanwhile either
-of us could reopen the case--and she could by merely requesting put an
-end to it and restore her status as my wife. So, I was free--unless
-Edna should change her mind sometime within the six months.
-
-Edna was in London and I in Paris when the news came. Curiously enough,
-as I stood in the doorway of the Ritz restaurant, that evening, looking
-about for a table where I could dine alone, in came Prince Frascatoni
-with another Italian whose name I cannot recall. I bowed to Frascatoni.
-He said:
-
-“You are alone, sir?”
-
-“Unluckily, yes,” replied I.
-
-He introduced his companion and suggested that we three dine at the
-same table. “Why not share our dinner?” said he. “I can easily change
-my order. Perhaps you will go with us afterwards to some amusing little
-plays in a Montmartre theater?”
-
-I accepted the courteous invitation. The situation appealed to my
-sense of humor. Also I knew that Edna--toward whom I now felt most
-kindly--would be delighted to read in the papers: “Prince Frascatoni
-had as his guest at dinner last night Mr. Godfrey Loring.” It would
-put an immediate stop to any tendency to gossip. As the prince did not
-speak of my former wife I assumed that he had heard the news.
-
-When we were separating I said: “You will dine with me to-morrow night?”
-
-“Unfortunately I’m leaving town in the morning,” said he.
-
-I thought I could guess which way he was journeying. With perhaps a
-twinkle in my eyes, I said: “So soon? Well--thank you, and good-by--and
-good luck.”
-
-I thought I saw a sardonic smile flit over his face. He probably
-imagined I was in the dark as to his maneuverings and designs and
-smiled to himself as he thought, “How differently this American would
-be treating me if he knew!” Do not fancy, because Edna had no charm
-for me, I thought it strange she should have charm for other men.
-Nothing could be further from the truth. I appreciated her attractive
-points perhaps more than any other man possibly could. Also, I
-appreciated--and still appreciate--that another man would not be so
-peculiarly annoyed by her lack of any sense of humor as I was. Indeed,
-had not circumstances forced me into the acutely critical mood toward
-her, I doubt not I could have continued to bear with that lack, though
-it made conversation with her all but impossible and precipitated
-quarrels without number.
-
-Beyond question the strongest and most enduring hold a man can get
-upon a woman or a woman upon a man is the physical. We--even the least
-intellectual of us--are something more than physical; but the physical
-must be contented first, and must remain contented, because we are
-first of all physical. The physical is the fundamental; but it takes
-more than foundations to make a house. And a marriage such as ours was
-could not endure. Each of us had but the one charm for the other. It
-wore itself out like a fire that is not supplied with fuel.
-
-If I had not fallen in love with another woman, there might have
-remained a feeling for Edna that would have made me jealous, perhaps
-domineering toward her. As it was, I viewed her calmly; when I said
-“good luck” to Frascatoni, I meant it. I hoped he would make Edna
-happy, for, I wished her well.
-
-Through Armitage I had provided myself with Mary Kirkwood’s address--an
-apartment overlooking the Parc Monceau which she and Neva Armstrong had
-taken for the spring months. That very afternoon I went to leave cards.
-As I feared she was not at home. “But,” said Mrs. Armstrong, “you may
-find her walking in the park with Hartley Beechman.”
-
-“Oh, is he here?” said I.
-
-“Naturally,” replied she.
-
-You may picture me as suddenly dashed down by this word whose meaning
-there was no mistaking. If so, you have discovered little about me in
-these pages. Life had made me a competent judge of the situation that
-is really hopeless, the situation where to struggle is folly, and that
-situation which seems hopeless to the small of earth, accustomed to
-defeat in their desires, but seems only difficult to the other sort of
-human beings.
-
-“He has taken a studio over in the Latin quarter,” continued Mrs.
-Armstrong. “We are all going back together in July.”
-
-Mrs. Armstrong is an attractive woman--singularly so for one who
-is obviously wholly absorbed in her husband. She has the sort of
-personality her paintings prepare you to expect. But I had difficulty
-in concealing my impatience to get away. I strolled several times
-through the park, which is not large, before I finally came upon Mary
-and Beechman seated in one of the less-frequented paths. As I was
-moving directly toward them, both saw me at the same instant. Her
-welcoming smile was radiant. I did not notice his, but I assume it was
-more reserved.
-
-Never had I seen her looking so well. You may say what you please,
-but an American woman who knows how to dress, in touch with a French
-dressmaker who is rather artist than dressmaker, is the supreme
-combination for æsthetic beauty. Mrs. Kirkwood, of the ivory skin and
-the coal-black hair, was a thrilling sight to see in her white dress
-and big black hat, with that background of fresh spring foliage and
-late afternoon light. Her eyes and her smile, I noted for the first
-time, had somewhat the same quality as Frascatoni’s--the weary eyes,
-the slow sweet smile.
-
-“Mr. Loring!” she cried, rising and extending her hand impulsively. “I
-thought I was never to see you again.”
-
-I hid my emotion and greeted her, then Beechman, in my habitual manner
-which, they tell me, is the reverse of effusive. I suppose, when I am
-deeply moved, its lack of cordiality becomes even more pronounced.
-After a few minutes of the talk necessary among acquaintances who have
-not met in a long time Beechman rose.
-
-“You and Beechman will dine with me, I hope?” I said. “Mrs. Armstrong
-says she will go if you can.”
-
-It was arranged and, as the day was warm, d’Armenonville was fixed
-upon as the place. “Until half-past eight,” said Beechman as he left.
-Mary and I sat silent watching him walk away. A superb figure of
-young manhood, supremely fortunate in that his body was an adequate
-expression of a strong and simple nature.
-
-As he passed from view at the turn of the walk I transferred my gaze to
-her. Her eyes slowly lowered, and a faint flush came into her cheeks.
-Said I:
-
-“You saw the news--about me?”
-
-“Hartley and I were talking of it as you appeared.”
-
-“You were not surprised?”
-
-“Yes--and no,” replied she, with constraint and some confusion. “A year
-or so ago I--people thought--you and she had--had drifted apart. Then
-it looked as though you had come together again. It seemed the natural
-thing. She is beautiful and has so much charm.”
-
-“She was unhappy in America. She wished to be free.”
-
-Mary looked at me reflectively. “You are not--inconsolable, I see,”
-said she with a smile of faint raillery. “My brother has often told me
-about you--how indifferent you are to women. Perhaps that is why you
-are attractive to them.”
-
-“Am I?” said I. “I did not know it.”
-
-“You are terribly impersonal,” she went on laughingly. “Last summer
-I--well, I was not--that is, not exactly--trying to flirt with
-you. But your absolute unconsciousness of me as a woman was often
-very--baffling.”
-
-I laughed. “You thought that?”
-
-“How could I help seeing it? Why, you treated me precisely as if I were
-another man. Not that I didn’t like it, on the whole. A woman gets
-tired of being always on guard.” She smiled at herself. “That sounds
-horribly conceited. But you know what I mean. The men never lose a
-chance to practice. Then, too--well, if a woman has the reputation of
-being rich she need not flatter herself that it is her charms that do
-all the drawing.”
-
-“That’s the supreme curse of money--it all but cuts one off from love
-and friendship. Fortunately it, to a great extent, takes the place of
-them.”
-
-“I don’t like to hear you say that,” said she.
-
-“How many poor people get love and friendship?” replied I. “Isn’t
-it the truth that there is little--very, very little--real love
-or friendship in the world? All I meant was that money, and the
-independence and comfort and the counterfeit of affection it brings,
-are better than nothing at all.”
-
-“Oh, I see,” said she. “You are so sensible--and you don’t cant. That
-was why I liked to talk with you. At first I thought you cynical and
-hard. That’s the first impression plain good sense makes. We are used
-to hearing only shallow sentimentality.”
-
-“The unending flapdoodle,” said I.
-
-“Flapdoodle,” agreed she. “Then--I began to discover that you were
-anything but hard--that you looked at people as they are, and liked
-them for themselves, not for what they pretended to be. I was beginning
-to trust you--to venture timidly in the direction of being my natural
-self--when you left.”
-
-“Well--here I am again,” said I. “And we start in afresh.”
-
-She smiled with embarrassment. “Yes,” she said hesitatingly. “But the
-circumstances have changed somewhat.”
-
-I know full well now what I should have said. I should have replied,
-“Yes--we are both almost free--but soon will be altogether free--I
-in six months, you as soon as you break your engagement.” That would
-have been bold and intelligent--for it is always intelligent to make
-the issue clear at the earliest possible moment. But I did not speak.
-I remained silent. Why? Because as I was talking with her I was
-realizing that I had been deceiving myself in a curious fashion. I had
-been so concentratedly in love with her-- Gentle reader, I see the
-mocking smile on your shallowly sentimental face. You are ridiculing
-a love that could have such restraint as mine--that could bear with
-Edna, could wait, could refrain from any of the familiar much-admired
-impetuosities and follies. You cannot understand. In this day when men
-no longer regard or feel their responsibilities in taking a more or
-less helpless woman to wife, your sense of the decencies is utterly
-corrupted. But let me say that no matter how ardently and romantically
-a man may conduct himself, a woman would do well to take care how she
-trusts him if he has a bad or even a doubtful record as to his way of
-meeting his responsibilities of whatever sort. That kind of love may
-“listen good,” but it does not “live good.” However--as I was about
-to say when your smile interrupted me, my all-absorbing love for Mary
-Kirkwood had misled me into assuming, with no reason whatsoever, that
-she understood all, that she knew I was eager to come to her, and would
-come as soon as I could. You will say this was absurd. Granted. But
-is not a man in love always absurd? You will say it was egotistical.
-Granted. But is not a man in love always egotistical? It is not the
-realities but the delusions that keep us going; and in those long
-months of waiting, of hoping often against hope, I had to have a
-delusion to keep me going. But now, her friendly, simply friendly, way
-of talking to me made me see that I had her yet to win, that I could
-not speak out directly as I had planned. You, who probably know women
-well, may say that this was a mistake. Perhaps. Nevertheless _I_ could
-not have done otherwise.
-
-You will say that women do not know their own minds, but have to be
-told. I admit it. You will say my silence was timidity. I admit it.
-I could not talk of love to a woman until I was sure she wished to
-hear. I had the timidity of the man to whom woman and love are serious
-matters; the timidity unknown to the man who makes love to every
-passable female at whom he has a chance; the timidity which all women
-profess to approve, but which, I more than suspect, appeals only to
-the jaded palate of the woman who has long made love and passion her
-profession.
-
-As Beechman was busy with a novel I had everything my own way without
-strategy during those following days. There are a thousand attractive
-places to go in and near Paris, and I was resourceful in contriving
-excursions for the days when there was no chance of seeing only her.
-Almost every day the London papers or the Paris _Herald_ printed
-something about Edna and the brilliant season she was having in London;
-often not far away from her name in a list of guests was the name of
-Prince Frascatoni. My own activities, more Bohemian as was my taste
-and the taste of my friends--and I may say the taste of civilized and
-intelligent Paris--my activities were not recorded in the papers. I
-fancied they were unobserved. I was soon to be undeceived.
-
-I wonder who the people are that write anonymous letters--and give
-anonymous “tips” to society journals? Every once in a while by
-mischance--often by my having made a remark that was misinterpreted
-into something malicious or low, utterly foreign to my real meaning--I
-have had some fellow-being suddenly unveil a noisome corner in his or
-her soul for confidently awaited sympathy; and I have almost literally
-shrunk back in my horror at the cesspool of coarseness, or at the
-vicious envy. Have you had that experience? No doubt scattered among
-us ordinary folk, neither particularly good nor particularly bad,
-well rather than ill-disposed and amiable, if not too severely tried
-or tempted--no doubt, scattered among us there are not a few of these
-swine souls or snake souls, hid beneath a pleasant smile and fine
-raiment. And these are they who give off the foulness of the anonymous
-letters and the anonymous tip.
-
-In one of the minor London society papers appeared this paragraph which
-I am sure I quote word for word:
-
- “American Paris is much amused these beautifully fine spring days
- with the ardent love-making of a recently divorced railway ‘baron.’
- The lady is herself a divorcee of several years standing and is
- supposed to be engaged to a famous young literary man who is all
- unaware of what is going on.”
-
-I know of five copies of this journal that were mailed with the
-paragraph marked. The five were received by Edna, Margot, myself, Mary
-Kirkwood, and Hartley Beechman. I have often mentally gone through the
-list of my acquaintances in search of the person who was responsible
-for this thing. I have some extremely unpleasant characters in that
-list. But I have never been able to suspect who did it. Not improbably
-the guilty person is some one in other respects not a bad sort--for
-almost any given cut from that vast universal, human nature, contains
-something of everything.
-
-I had an engagement with Mary Kirkwood to walk in the Bois and have tea
-the afternoon of the day this paragraph reached me. When I arrived at
-her apartment she came down ready to go. Her costume was so lovely and
-I so delighted in her that I did not immediately note the heavy circles
-round her eyes nor the drawn expression of her mouth. I did not dream
-that she knew of the paragraph. I had read it and had dismissed it
-from my mind. The anonymous letter and the anonymous newspaper attack
-were old familiar stories to me, as they are to every man who attains
-distinction in active life. But as we drove toward the Bois I happened
-to catch a glimpse of her by way of the mirror in the frame of the
-taxi. I saw the evidence of suffering--and the wistful, weary look in
-her beautiful eyes.
-
-“What is it?” said I. “You have had bad news?”
-
-“Yes,” replied she.
-
-“Can I help?”
-
-“Don’t let’s talk of it now,” said she. “Wait until we are in the
-woods.”
-
-Soon after we passed the entrance gates we descended and rambled away
-over the not too even ground, along the indistinct paths under the
-fascinating little trees. It was a gorgeous, perfumed May day. You
-know the Bois--how lovely it is, how artfully it mingles the wild and
-the civilized, suggesting nature as a laughing nymph with tresses half
-bound, half free, with graceful young form half clad, half nude. We
-rambled on and on, and after half an hour seated ourselves where there
-were leaves and the slim graceful trunks on every side and the sound of
-falling water like the musical voice of the sunbeams.
-
-Mary drew a long sigh. “I feel better,” she said.
-
-I looked at her. “You _are_ better. You have shaken it off.”
-
-She met my gaze. “This is the last time,” she said. She looked away,
-repeated softly, thoughtfully, “the last time.”
-
-“The last time?”
-
-“We are not going to see each other any more. It is being
-misunderstood.”
-
-I glanced quickly at her, and I knew she had read the paragraph. “That
-miserable scandal sheet!” said I. “No one sees it--and if they did why
-should we notice anything so ridiculous?”
-
-She did not answer immediately. After a while she said: “Perhaps I
-ought not to say it, but--Hartley is sensitive. A copy of the paper got
-to him.”
-
-“One to me. One to you. One to him.”
-
-“No matter,” said she. “The mischief is done.”
-
-“You do not give up a friend lightly,” rejoined I. The time to speak
-was at hand; I welcomed it.
-
-“_He_ has asked me to give you up,” said she simply. “And I shall do
-it.”
-
-“But he has no right to ask such a thing,” protested I.
-
-“Yes--he has. He and I are engaged--you knew that?”
-
-“I imagined there was some sort of an engagement,” said I, still
-waiting for the right opening.
-
-“There is only one sort of engagement possible with me,” replied she,
-with a certain gentle reproach.
-
-“I know that,” said I. “But I remember the talk we had on the yacht.”
-
-A flush overspread her paleness for a moment. Then she rose from the
-little rustic iron chair. “We must go,” said she.
-
-“Wait,” said I. And I made a tactless, a stupid beginning: “You can’t
-deny that you do not love him.”
-
-She turned coldly away and walked on, I following. “I think I’ll not
-stop for tea,” she said. “Will you hail the first taxi we meet?”
-
-“You are offended--Mary?” I said. What a blundering fool love does make
-of a man!--unless he makes a fool of it.
-
-She shook her head. “No--not offended. But when a subject comes up
-about which we may not talk there is nothing to do but drop it.”
-
-In my desperation I reached for the right chord and struck it. “Do you
-know,” said I, “why I left the yacht abruptly?”
-
-She halted, gave me a swift, frightened glance. The color flooded her
-face, then fled.
-
-“Yes--that was why,” said I. “And--I’ve come as soon as I could.”
-
-“Oh, why, why didn’t you _tell_ me?” cried she. Then, before I could
-answer, “I don’t mean that. I understand.” Then, with a wild look
-around, “_What_ am I saying?”
-
-“I’ve come for you, Mary,” I went on. “And you are not going to rush
-into folly a second time--a greater folly. For--you do not love
-him--and you will care for me. You are right, we can’t discuss him--you
-and him. But we can, and must, discuss you and me.”
-
-“I shall not see you again,” said she, looking at me with tranquil eyes
-that would have daunted me had I not known her so well, understood her
-so well--which is only another way of saying, had I not loved her so
-well.
-
-“Why have you been seeing me day after day, when you knew that I loved
-you----”
-
-“I did not know it,” replied she. “I did not think I could move you in
-the least--beyond a friendly liking.”
-
-An inflection in her voice made me suddenly realize. “You came because
-it made you happy to come!” I cried triumphantly. I caught her hand.
-“You do care, Mary!”
-
-She drew her hand away resolutely. “I shall keep my promise,” she said
-coldly. “I wish to hear no more.”
-
-“You will not keep your promise. If necessary I’ll go to him and tell
-him--and he’ll release you.”
-
-She gave me a look that withered. “You--do a cowardly thing like that!”
-
-“No,” said I. “But _you_ will ask him to release you. You have no right
-to marry him. And I--I love you--and must live my life with you, or--I
-can think of nothing more futile and empty than life without you. And
-your life--would it not be futile and empty, Mary, if you tried to live
-it without me, when we might have been together? Together!--you and I!
-Mary, my love!”
-
-“Why do you say those things, Godfrey?” she cried passionately. “To
-make me wretched? To make it harder for me to do what I must?”
-
-“To make it impossible for you to do what you must not. Marry a man
-you don’t love--marry him when you love another! You’d be doing him
-the worst possible injury. No matter how much he loves you, he can
-recover from the blow of losing you. But the day to day horror of such
-a loveless marriage would destroy you both. He is a sensitive man. He
-would feel it, in spite of all your efforts to pretend. You--pretend!
-You could not do it.”
-
-“After what has passed between him and me--the promises we’ve
-exchanged--the plans we’ve made--there is no going back! I don’t wish
-to go back. I----”
-
-“Mary--I love you!” I cried. “I love you--and you love me. That’s the
-wall between you and any other man, between me and any other woman.”
-
-She had waved to a passing taxi. It swept into the edge of the drive.
-She opened the door. “You are not coming with me,” she said. “And I
-shall not see you again.”
-
-I laid my hand on her arm and forced her to meet my gaze. “You are
-hysterical now,” I said. “But you will be calm, and----”
-
-She gave me a cold smile--it would have deceived those who do not
-understand the temperaments that can conceal themselves. “I am
-perfectly calm, I assure you,” said she.
-
-“As you were the first time we ever met,” said I. “You’ve no
-right to marry any man but me, Mary. If you did you’d be wronging
-yourself--me--him most of all. That is the truth, and you will see it.”
-
-She dragged her arm away, burst into violent sobs, sank upon the seat
-of the cab. I hesitated--obeyed a right instinct, closed the door,
-gave her address to the ignoring chauffeur, stood watching the cab
-whisk away. I was shaking from head to foot. But I had no fear for the
-outcome. I knew that I had won--that _we_ had won.
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Rossiter--I believe I have mentioned the name of my new secretary--was
-lying in wait for me at the hotel entrance. He read me a telegram from
-Margot: Edna was ill, was not expected to live, begged me to come at
-once.
-
-I wrote to Mary Kirkwood--a brief repetition of what I had said to
-her--“of what I know both your intelligence and your heart are saying
-to you, dear.” I told her that Edna was desperately ill and had sent
-for me, and that I should be back as soon as I could get away. I went
-on to say many things such as a man deeply in love always says. No
-doubt it was a commonplace letter, as sincere love letters are apt
-to be; but because it was from my heart I felt that, for all the
-shortcomings, it would go to her heart. I admit I am not a facile
-love-maker. I have had little practice. And I suspect, those who are
-facile at love-making have got their facility by making love speeches
-so often when they were not in earnest that they cannot but have lost
-all capacity to be in earnest.
-
-Toward noon the next day Rossiter and I and my valet were set down at
-the little station of Kesson Wells, half an hour out from London in
-Surrey. We were in the midst of about as beautiful a country us I have
-seen. I am a narrow enough patriot not to take the most favorable
-view of things foreign. But I must admit that no other countryside can
-give one the sense of sheer loveliness that one gets in certain parts
-of England. I am glad we have nothing like it at home; for to have it
-means rainy weather most of the time, and serf labor, and landlord
-selfishly indifferent to the misery of the poor human creatures he
-works and robs. Still, I try to forget the way it came in the joy of
-the thing itself--as you, gentle reader, forget the suffering and death
-of the animals that make the artistic and delicious course dinners you
-eat.
-
-We were received with much ceremony at the station. My money was
-being exercised by those who knew how to do it. After a drive between
-perfumed and blossoming hedgerows and over a road as smooth and clean
-as a floor we came to Garton Hall, the place my son-in-law had leased
-until his new house should be ready. It was a modern house, as I
-noted with relief when we were still afar off, and while not large,
-was a most satisfactory embodiment of that often misused and often
-misunderstood word comfort. To live in the luxurious yet comfortable
-comfort obtainable in England only--indoors, in its steam-heated or
-Americanized portions--one must have English servants. I am glad we do
-not breed English servants in America; I am glad that when they are
-imported they soon cease to be the models of menial perfection they
-are at home. But when I am in England I revel in the English servant.
-To find him at his best you must see him serving in the establishment
-of a great noble. And my son-in-law was that; and the establishment
-over which Margot presided, but with which she was not permitted to
-interfere in the smallest detail because of her utter ignorance of all
-the “vulgarities” of life, as became a true lady of our quaint American
-brand--the establishment was a combination of the best of the city with
-the best of the country, a skillful mingling of the most attractive
-features of home, club, and hotel.
-
-My first question at the station had, of course, been as to Mrs.
-Loring. I was assured that her ladyship’s mother was somewhat better,
-but still awaiting the dangerous crisis of the fever. Margot, not a
-whit less girlish for her maternity, met me in the doorway, and had the
-nurse there with the boy--the Earl of Gorse. They said he looked like
-me--and he did, though I do not believe they thought so. Why should
-they say it? I was still a young man and might marry again. I fancy
-the same prudent instinct prompted them to give him Godfrey as one of
-his four or five names. Why do I think they did not believe he looked
-like me? Because all of them were ashamed of everything American. In
-the frequent quarrels between Margot and Hugh, he never failed to use
-the shaft that would surely pierce the heart of her vanity and rankle
-there--her low American birth, in such ghastly and grotesque contrast
-to the illustrious descent of her husband. She had an acid tongue
-when it came to quarreling; she could hurl taunts about his shifts
-to keep up appearances before he met her that made ugly and painful
-marks on his hide. She had discovered, probably by gossiping with some
-traitor servant, that he had been flouted by a rich English girl for
-a chauffeur--and you may be sure she put it to good use. But nothing
-she could say made him quiver as she quivered when he opened out on the
-subject of those “filthy bounders in the States.”
-
-Do not imagine, gentle reader, that my daughter was unhappily married.
-She would not have exchanged places with anyone but the wife of a duke;
-and Hugh--well, he needed the money. Nor should you think that they
-lived unhappily together. They saw little of each other alone; and in
-public they were as smiling and amiable with each other as--perhaps as
-you and your husband.
-
-A fine baby was the Earl of Gorse--one who in a decent environment
-would have grown up a sensible, useful person. But hardly, I feared,
-when he was already living in his own separate apartment, with his
-name--“The Earl of Gorse”--on a card beside the door, and with all the
-servants, including his mother, treating him as if he were of superior
-clay. This when he barely had his sight. They say a baby learns the
-utility of bawling at about three days old; I should say the germ of
-snobbishness would get to work very soon thereafter.
-
-You are waiting to hear what was the matter with Edna. No, it was not
-a fake illness to draw me within reach for some further trimming.
-She had indeed fallen dangerously ill--did not expect to live when
-Margot telegraphed me. It was an intestinal fever brought on by the
-excesses of the London season. I wonder when the biographers, poets,
-playwrights, novelists, and other gentry who give us the annals of the
-race will catch up with the progress of science? How long will it be
-before they stop telling us of germ and filth diseases as if they were
-the romantic physical expressions of soul states? There was a time when
-such blunders were excusable. Now, science has shown us that they are
-so much twaddle. So, gentle reader, I cannot gratify your taste for
-humbug and moonshine by telling you that Edna was stricken of remorse
-or of overjoy or of secret grief or of any other soul state whatever.
-The doctor bosh was, of course, nervous exhaustion. It always is if
-the patient is above the working class. The truth was that she fell
-ill, even as you and I. She ate and drank too much, both at and between
-meals, and did not take proper care of herself in any way. She wore
-dresses that were nearly nothing in cold carriages and draughty rooms,
-when she was laden with undigested food. Vulgar--isn’t it? Revolting
-for me to speak thus of a lady? But I am trying to tell the truth,
-gentle reader, not to increase your stock of slop and lies which you
-call “culture.” And if a lady will put herself in such a condition,
-why should it not be spoken of? Why go on lying about these things,
-and encouraging people to attribute to sensitive nerves and souls the
-consequences of gluttony, ignorance, and neglect?
-
-I am not criticising Edna for getting into such an internal physical
-state that a pestilence began to rage within her. The most intelligent
-of us is only too foolish and ignorant in these matters, thanks to
-stupid education from childhood up. And she has the added excuse of
-having been exposed to the temptations of a London season. She fell; it
-is hardly in human nature not to fall.
-
-You have been through a London season? It is a mad chase from food to
-food. You rise and hastily swallow a heavy English breakfast. You ride
-in the Row a while, ride toward a lunch table--and an English lunch,
-especially in the season, means a bigger dinner than any Frenchman or
-other highly civilized person ever willingly sat down to. Hardly is
-this long lunch over before it is time for tea--which means not merely
-tea, but toast, and sandwiches, and hot muffins, and many kinds of
-heavy cake, and often fruit or jam. Tea is to give you an appetite for
-the dinner that follows--and what a dinner! One rich, heavy course upon
-another, with drenchings of wine and a poisonous liqueur afterward.
-You sit about until this has settled a bit, then--on to supper! Not so
-formidable a meal as the dinner, but still what any reasonable person
-would call a square meal. Then to bed? By no means. On to a ball, where
-you eat and drink in desultory fashion until late supper is served.
-You roll heavily home to sleep. But hardly have your eyes closed when
-you are roused to eat again. It is breakfast time, and another day of
-stuffing has begun.
-
-Starvation, they tell me, is one of the regular causes of death in
-London. But that is in the East End. In the West End--and you, gentle
-reader, are interested only in that section--death, I’ll wager,
-reaps twenty from overfeeding to one he gets in the East End through
-underfeeding. Famine is a dreadful thing. But how characteristic of the
-shallowness of human beings it is that you can make a poetic horror
-out of famine, when no one would listen while you told the far more
-horrible truth of the frightful ravages of overfeeding, chief cause
-of all the diseases that torture and twist the human body, aging and
-killing it prematurely.
-
-Edna had been for many years most cautiously careful of her health. She
-loved her youth, her beautiful body. She fought against her natural
-fondness for food and wine. I fancy that, for this first season after
-freedom she relaxed her rules, and turned herself loose to “celebrate.”
-I know she must have had something of this sort in mind, because her
-French maid--I could not talk with the Italian--told me that madame had
-arranged an elaborate programme of “cures” on the Continent after the
-season. “And they were to be serious cures,” said she.
-
-Her illness took such a course of ups and downs, with death always
-hovering, that it was impossible for me to leave. I wrote Mary; I got
-no reply. I sent Rossiter to Paris; he reported that Mrs. Armstrong
-and Mrs. Kirkwood had left for the country, but that he could get no
-address.
-
-You probably picture me as scarcely able to restrain myself from acting
-like a madman. How little you know of me! Do you think I could have
-achieved my solid success before I reached forty-five years if I had
-been one of the little people who fret and fume against the inevitable?
-All men who amount to anything are violent men. Jesus, the model of
-serenity and patience, scourged the money changers from the temple.
-Washington, one more great exemplar of the majesty of repose, swore
-like a lunatic at the battle of Monmouth. These great ones simply
-had in the highest form the virtues that make for success in every
-department of leadership. Certainly, I am a violent man; but I have
-rarely been foolish enough to go crazy to no purpose.
-
-What could I do but wait? And over that beautiful, quiet country place
-floated the black cormorant, with wings outspread and hollow, burning
-eyes bent eagerly downward. I waited, not in fury, but oppressed by a
-deep melancholy. For the first time in my life I was thinking seriously
-of death. To any man no decisive event of life is so absolutely
-unimportant as his own death. I never have wasted, and never shall
-waste, a moment in thinking of my death. It may concern others, but how
-does it concern me? When it comes I shall not be there. The death of
-another, however--that is cause for reflection, for sadness. I knew,
-as did no one else, how intensely Edna loved life, how in her own way
-of strain and struggle she enjoyed it. And to me it was pitiful, this
-spectacle of her sudden arrest, her sudden mortal peril, as she was
-about to achieve the summit of her ambition.
-
-I wondered as to Frascatoni. I pictured him waiting, with those
-tranquil, weary eyes already looking about for another means to his aim
-of large fortune should this means fail. There I misjudged him; for,
-one day as I stood in a balcony overlooking the drive he came rushing
-up in a motor, and my first glance at his haggard face told me that
-he loved her. In a way it is small compliment to a woman to be loved
-by the fortune-hunting sort of man; for, he does not release himself
-until he has the permit of basest self-interest. But Frascatoni,
-having released himself, had fallen in love with all the frenzy of his
-super-refined, passionately imaginative nature.
-
-After a few minutes he drove away. I do not know what
-occurred--naturally, they would not speak of his call and I did not ask
-questions. I can imagine, however. She seemed better that day, and he
-must have gone away reassured. He was sending, every morning, enormous
-quantities of flowers; such skill and taste showed in the arranging
-that I am sure it was not the usual meaningless performance of rich
-people, who are always trying to make money-spending serve instead of
-thoughtful and delicate attention.
-
-Nearly a month dragged along before she was able to see me. As I have
-explained, her beauty was not dependent upon evanescent charms of
-contour and coloring, but was securely founded in the structure of her
-head and face and body. So, I saw lying weakly in the bed an emaciated
-but lovely Edna. Instantly, on sight of her, there came flooding back
-to me the memory of the birth of Margot, our first child--how Edna
-had looked when they let me go into the humble, almost squalid little
-bedroom in the flat of which we were so vain. She was looking exactly
-so in this bed of state, in this magnificent room with the evidences of
-wealth and rank and fashion on every side. She smiled faintly; one of
-the slim weak hands lying upon the cream-white silk coverlet moved. I
-bent and kissed it.
-
-“Thank you for being here,” she murmured, tears in her eyes. Her lips
-could scarcely utter the words.
-
-“You must not speak, your ladyship,” warned the nurse. To flatter
-Americans and to give themselves the comfortable feeling of gratified
-snobbishness English servants address us--or rather our women--as if we
-had titles.
-
-“You are to get well rapidly now,” I said.
-
-“You’ll stay until I can talk to you?”
-
-“Yes,” I said--what else could I say?
-
-They motioned me away. I had committed myself to several weeks more of
-that futile monotony--and I no longer had the restraint of the sense
-that she might die at any moment.
-
-Even had I been willing to break my promise I could not have done so;
-for she would have me in every morning and every afternoon to look at
-me, and they told me that if I were not there to reassure her, it would
-undoubtedly cause a change for the worse. I stayed on and wrote to Mary
-Kirkwood--all the time with the fear that my letters were not reaching
-her, but also with the unshakable conviction that she was mine. You
-smile at this as proof of my colossal vanity. Well, your smile convicts
-you of never having loved. The essence of love is congeniality.
-Appetite is the essence of passion--which, therefore, has no sense of
-or especial desire for mutuality. Passion is as common as any other
-physical appetite. Love is as rare as are souls generous enough to
-experience or to inspire it. The essence of love is congeniality--and
-I _knew_ there was a sympathy and understanding between me and Mary
-Kirkwood that made us lovers for all time.
-
-There came a day--how it burned into my memory!--when Edna was well
-enough to talk with me. Several days before and I saw that it was not
-far away, and I awaited it with fierce impatience; she would tell me
-why she had sent for me and I should be free to go. It was one of those
-soft gray days of alternating rain and sun that are the specialty of
-the British climate. Edna, with flowers everywhere in her sitting room,
-was half reclining in an invalid chair, all manner of rich, delicate
-silk and lace assistants to comfort, luxury and beauty adorning her
-or forming background for her lovely face and head. I do not think
-there is a detail of the room or of her appearance that I could not
-reproduce, though at the time I was unaware of anything but her
-voice--her words.
-
-I entered, seated myself in the broad low window opposite her. She
-looked at me a long time, a strange soft expression in her weary
-eyes--an expression that disquieted me. At last she said:
-
-“It is so good to be getting well.”
-
-“And you are getting well rapidly,” I said. “You have a wonderful
-constitution.”
-
-“You are glad I am better, Godfrey?”
-
-I laughed. “What a foolish question.”
-
-“I didn’t know,” said she. “I feared-- I have acted _so_ badly toward
-you.”
-
-“No indeed,” replied I. “Don’t worry about those things. I hope you
-feel as friendly toward me as I do toward you.”
-
-“But you have always been good to me--even when I haven’t deserved it.”
-
-This was most puzzling. Said I vaguely, “I guess we’ve both done the
-best we could. Do you want to tell me to-day why you sent for me? Or
-don’t you feel strong enough?”
-
-“Yes--I wish to tell you to-day. But--it isn’t easy to say. I’m very
-proud, Godfrey--and when I’ve been in the wrong it’s hard for me to
-admit.”
-
-“Oh, come now, Edna,” said I soothingly. “Let’s not rake up the past.
-It’s finished--and it has left no hard feeling--at least not in me.
-Don’t think of anything but of getting well.”
-
-She lay gazing out into the gentle rain with the sunshine glistening
-upon it. A few large tears rolled down her cheeks.
-
-“There’s nothing to be unhappy about,” said I. “You are far on the way
-to health. You are as lovely as ever. And you will get everything you
-want.”
-
-“Oh, it’s so hard to tell you!” she sighed.
-
-“Then don’t,” I urged. “If there’s anything I can do for you, let me
-know. I’ll be glad to do it.”
-
-She covered her eyes with her thin, beautiful hand. “Love me--love me,
-Godfrey--as you used to,” she sobbed.
-
-I was dumbfounded. It seemed to me I could not have heard aright. I
-stared at her until she lowered her hand and looked at me. Then I
-hastily glanced away.
-
-“I’m sorry for the way I’ve acted,” she went on. “I want you to take me
-back. That was why I sent for you.”
-
-I puzzled over this. Was she still out of her mind? Or was there some
-other and sane--and extremely practical--reason behind this strange
-turn?--for I could not for an instant imagine she was in sane and
-sober earnest.
-
-“You don’t believe me!” she cried. “No wonder. But it’s so, Godfrey. I
-want your love--I want _you_. Won’t you--won’t you--take me--back?”
-
-Her voice sounded pitifully sick and weak; and when I looked at her I
-could not but see that to refuse to humor her would be to endanger her
-life. I said:
-
-“Edna, this is an utter surprise for me--about the last thing I
-expected. I can’t grasp it--so suddenly. I--I-- Do you really mean it?”
-
-“I really mean it, dear,” she said earnestly.
-
-It was evident she, in her secret heart, was taking it for granted
-that her news would be welcome to me; that all she had to do in order
-to win me back as her devoted, enslaved husband was to announce her
-willingness to come. I have often marveled at this peculiar vanity of
-women--their deep, abiding belief in the power of their own charms--the
-all but impossibility of a man’s ever convincing a woman that he does
-not love her. They say hope is the hardiest of human emotions. I doubt
-it. I think vanity, especially the sex vanity both of men and of women,
-is far and away hardier than even hope. I saw she was assuming I would
-be delighted, deeply grateful, ardently responsive as soon as I should
-grasp the dazzling glad tidings. And she so ill and weak that I dared
-not speak at all frankly to her.
-
-She stretched out her hand for mine. I slowly took it, held it
-listlessly. I did not know what to do--what to say.
-
-“It is so good to have you again, dear,” she murmured. “Aren’t you
-going to kiss me?”
-
-“I don’t understand,” I muttered, dropping her hand and standing up to
-gaze out over the gardens. “I am stunned.”
-
-“I’ve been cruel to you,” she said with gracious humility. “Can you
-ever forgive me?”
-
-“There’s nothing to forgive. But--” There I halted.
-
-“I’ll make up for it, dear,” she went on, sweetly gracious. “I’m not
-surprised that you are stunned. You didn’t realize how I loved you. I
-didn’t myself. I couldn’t believe at first when I found out.”
-
-“You are not strong enough to talk about these things to-day,” said I.
-“We’ll wait until----”
-
-She interrupted my hesitating speech with a laugh full of gentle
-gayety. “You’re quite wrong,” said she. “I’m not out of my mind. I mean
-it, dear--and more. Oh, we shall be _so_ happy! You’ve been far too
-modest about yourself. You don’t appreciate what a fascinating man you
-are.”
-
-I’m sure I reddened violently. I sat, rose, sat again. “You’ve given me
-the shock of my life,” said I, with an embarrassed laugh. “I’ll have to
-think this over.” I rose.
-
-“No--don’t go yet,” said she, with the graciousness of a princess
-granting a longer interview. “Let me tell you all about it.”
-
-“Not to-day,” I pleaded. “You must be careful. You mustn’t overtax
-yourself.”
-
-“Oh, but _this_ does me good. Sit near me, Godfrey, and hold my hand
-while I tell you.”
-
-I felt like one closeted with an insane person and compelled to humor
-his caprices. I obediently shifted to a seat near her and took her hand.
-
-“You could never guess how it came about,” she went on.
-
-As she was looking inquiringly at me, I said, “No.”
-
-“It was very strange. For the first few weeks after the divorce--no,
-not the divorce--but the decree--for it isn’t a divorce yet, thank
-God!--for the first weeks I was happy--or thought I was. I went early
-and late. I had never been so gay. I acted like a girl just launched in
-society. I was in ecstasies over my freedom. Do you mind, dear? Does it
-hurt you for me to say these things?”
-
-“No--no,” said I. “Go on.”
-
-“How queer you are! But I suppose you are dazed, poor dear. Never mind!
-When I am better--stronger, I’ll soon convince you.” And she nodded and
-smiled at me. “Poor dear! How cruel I have been!”
-
-“Yes--we’ll wait till you are stronger,” stammered I, making a move to
-rise.
-
-“But I must tell you how it came about,” she said, detaining me. “All
-of a sudden--when I was at my gayest--I began to feel strange and
-sad--to dislike everyone and everything about me.”
-
-“It was the illness working in you,” said I.
-
-She gave the smile of gentle tolerance with which she received my
-attempts at humor when she was in an amiable mood. “How like you that
-is! But it wasn’t the illness at all. It was my inmost heart striving
-to force open its door and reveal its secret. Do be a little romantic,
-this once, dear.”
-
-“Well--and then?”
-
-“Then--a paragraph in one of the society papers. Some one sent it to me
-anonymously. Was it you, dear?--and did you do it to make me jealous?”
-
-She spoke as one who suddenly sees straight into a secret. “I didn’t,”
-said I hastily. “It never entered my head to think you cared a rap
-about me.”
-
-“Now, don’t tease me, Godfrey, dear. You must have been making all
-sorts of plans to win me back.”
-
-“You read the item in the paper?” suggested I.
-
-“Oh, yes--I must finish. I read it. And at first I shrugged my
-shoulders and said to myself I didn’t in the least care. But I couldn’t
-get the thing out of mind. Godfrey, I had always been too sure of you.
-You never seemed to be a single tiny bit interested in other women. So
-the thought of you and another woman had not once come to me. That item
-put it there. You--_my_ husband--_my_ Godfrey and another woman! It was
-like touching a match to powder. I went mad. I----”
-
-She was sitting up, her eyes wild, her voice trembling. “You must not
-excite yourself, Edna,” I said.
-
-“I went mad,” she repeated, so interested in her emotions that she
-probably did not hear me. “I rushed down to Margot. I fell ill. I made
-her telegraph for you. Oh, how I suffered until I knew you were here.
-If you hadn’t come right away I’d have cabled to my lawyer in New York
-to have the divorce set aside--or whatever they do. I can have it set
-aside any time up to the end of the six months, can’t I?”
-
-“Yes,” admitted I, though her tone of positive knowledge made my reply
-superfluous.
-
-She seemed instinctively to feel a suspicion--an explanation of her
-amazing about-face--that was slowly gathering in my bewildered mind.
-She drew from the folds of her negligee a note and handed it to me. She
-said:
-
-“I haven’t confessed the worst I had done. Read that.”
-
-“Never mind,” said I. “I don’t wish to know.”
-
-“But I wish you to know,” insisted she. “There mustn’t be anything dark
-between us.”
-
-I reluctantly opened the note and read. It was from Prince
-Frascatoni--not the cold bid for a break that my suspicion expected
-but a passionate appeal to her not to break their engagement and throw
-him over. I could by no reach of the imagination picture that calm,
-weary-eyed man of the world writing those lines--which shows how ill
-men understand each other where women are concerned.
-
-“He sent me that note the day I came here,” said she. “I did not answer
-it.” Her tone was supreme indifference--the peculiar cruelty of woman
-toward man when she does not care.
-
-“You were engaged to him?” said I--because I could think of nothing
-else to say.
-
-“Yes,” said she. Then with the chaste pride of the “good” woman, “But
-not until after the decree was granted. He would have declared himself
-in New York, but I wouldn’t permit _that_. At least, Godfrey, I never
-forgot with other men that I was your wife--or let them forget it. You
-believe me?”
-
-“I’m sure of it,” said I.
-
-She gazed dreamily into vacancy. “To think,” she mused, “that I
-imagined I could marry him--_any_ man! How little a woman knows her own
-heart. I always loved you. Godfrey, I don’t believe there is any such
-thing as divorce--not for a good woman. When she gives herself”--in a
-dreamy, musical voice, with a tender pressure of my hand--“it is for
-time and for eternity.”
-
-Never in all my life had I so welcomed anyone as I welcomed the
-interrupting nurse. I felt during the whole interview that I was under
-a strain; until I was in the open air and alone I did not realize how
-terrific the strain. I walked--on and on, like a madman--vaulting gates
-and fences, scrambling over hedges, plowing through gardens, leaping
-brooks--on and on, hour after hour. What should I do? What _could_ I
-do? Nothing but wait until she was out of danger, wait and study away
-at this incredible, impossible freak of hers--try to fathom it, if it
-was not the vagary of a diseased mind. I wished to believe it that,
-but I could not. There was nothing of insanity in her manner, and from
-beginning to end her story was coherent and plausible. Plausible, but
-not believable; for I had no more vanity about her loving me than has
-the next man when he does not want the love offered him and finds it
-inconvenient to credit, and so is in the frame of mind to see calmly
-and clearly.
-
-I wandered so far that I had to hire a conveyance at some village
-at which I halted toward nightfall. As soon as I was at the house I
-ordered my valet to pack, and wrote Edna a note saying that neglected
-business compelled me to bolt for London. “But I’ll be back,” I wrote,
-at the command of human decency. “I feel that I can go, as you are
-almost well.” Half an hour later I was in the train for London.
-
-A letter, feebly scrawled, came from her the next day but one--a brief
-loving note, saying that she understood and that I knew how eagerly she
-was looking forward to my return--“but don’t worry, dearest, about me.
-I shall soon be well, now that my conscience is clear and all is peace
-and love between us. I know how you hate to write letters, but you will
-telegraph me every day.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-How I got through those next few weeks I cannot tell. I had no sense of
-the reality of the world about me or of my own thoughts and actions.
-Every once in a while--sometimes when I was talking with the men
-whose company I sought, again when I was alone in bed and would start
-abruptly from sleep--I pinched myself or struck myself violently to
-see if I was awake. Edna’s letters were daily and long. I read them,
-stared at them, felt less certain than ever of my sanity or of my being
-awake. I sent her an occasional telegram, dictated to Rossiter--a vague
-sentence of congratulation on her better health or something of that
-kind. Soon this formality degenerated to a request to Rossiter: “And
-telegraph Mrs. Loring.” Or he would say, “Shall I send Mrs. Loring a
-telegram?” and I would reply, “Yes--do please.”
-
-It was obviously necessary that I should not see her before she was
-well enough to be talked to frankly. I invented excuses for staying
-away until my ability in that direction gave out. Then Rossiter, best
-of secretaries, divining my plight, came to the rescue. I gave him
-a free hand. He went too far, created in her predisposed mind the
-illusion that I was champing with impatience at the business that
-persisted in keeping me away from her. I do not blame him; he took the
-only possible course.
-
-At last she was completely restored. The doctors and nurses could find
-no pretext for lingering, and that in itself was proof positive of her
-health and strength. She was having her meals with the family, was
-attending to her correspondence, was alarmed because she was taking on
-flesh so rapidly. She began offering to join me in London. When she
-wrote that she was starting the next day I telegraphed her not to come;
-and, after four more days of delay on various excuses, I went down. I
-should have liked to postpone this interview a week or ten days. Again
-I see you smiling at me, posing as madly in love with Mary Kirkwood yet
-able to put off the joy of being free to go to her. But, gentle reader,
-you must not forget that I had first to deal with Edna. And, from what
-you have learned of her, do you think I was wise or foolish to wish to
-meet her only when she could not possibly prevent candor by pleading a
-remnant of invalidism?
-
-She was charmingly dressed to receive me, rushed forward before them
-all and flung her arms around my neck in a graceful, effusive fashion
-she had learned on the Continent. I received the shock as calmly
-as I could, noting the awkwardly concealed surprise of Margot and
-Hugh. We had lunch; she did most of the talking--a gay, happy-hearted
-rattling--the natural expression of a woman with not a care in the
-world. And I-- In spite of myself I felt like an executioner come to
-assassinate an unsuspicious and innocent victim. For the best side of
-her was to the fore, and all the unpleasant traits were so thoroughly
-concealed that they seemed to have been burned up in that terrible
-fever. I _knew_ they were still there, but I could not _feel_ it.
-
-When we were alone in her sitting room, she said:
-
-“Where’s your valet and your luggage?”
-
-“In London,” said I.
-
-“Oh, they’re coming on a later train.”
-
-“No,” said I, seizing this excellent opportunity. “I’m going back this
-afternoon.”
-
-She gave a cry of dismay. “Godfrey!” she exclaimed. “Isn’t it a shame!”
-Then, rushing to the bell, “I’ll have my things got ready. I’ll go back
-with you. You shan’t be left alone, dearest.”
-
-I seated myself. “Don’t ring,” I said. “Wait till we’ve talked the
-matter over.”
-
-“I see you can’t really believe--even yet,” cried she laughingly. “I
-must convince you.” And she rang the bell.
-
-“When your maid comes, send her away,” said I. “Don’t order her to
-pack. You can’t go with me.”
-
-She looked at me anxiously. “How solemn you are!” she cried. “Has
-something gone wrong in that business?”
-
-“Nothing,” said I. The maid came, was sent away. Edna moved toward me,
-would have sat in my lap or on the arm of my chair had I not prevented
-her by rising on the pretext of lighting a cigarette.
-
-“You are very--very--strange,” said she. Then advancing toward me and
-gazing into my face, “Godfrey, there wasn’t any truth in that item--was
-there?” She looked like a sweet, lovely slip of a girl, all tenderness
-and sincerity.
-
-“I’ve come to discuss our affairs--not malicious newspaper gossip,”
-said I, fighting for my usual manner of good-humored raillery. “First,
-tell me what is the meaning of this outburst of affection for me?
-Aren’t you satisfied with the settlements?”
-
-“Oh, Godfrey, what a cynic you are!” laughed she. Then with an air of
-earnestness that certainly was convincing, she said: “Can’t you _feel_
-that I love you?”
-
-“I cannot,” replied I blandly. “On the contrary, I _know_ that you care
-nothing about me. So let’s talk business as we always have.”
-
-She did not rave and vow and swear. She did not show the least
-excitement. She seated herself and, fixing upon me a look which I can
-only describe as tenacious, she said:
-
-“Whether you believe me or not, I love you. And I shall not give you
-up.”
-
-My internal agitation instantly cleared away. I am always nervous about
-crossing a bridge until my foot touches it; thenceforth I am too busy
-crossing to bother about myself. “Well--what do you propose?” said I.
-
-“To be your wife,” replied she. “To show you how sorry I am for the
-way I have acted, to show you by thinking only of making you happy.”
-
-“Yes? And what will you _do_ to make me happy?”
-
-“Look after your comfort--your home, Godfrey.”
-
-“But you don’t know about that sort of thing,” said I. “You know only
-how to make a house attractive to other people. You are far too fine
-for a private housekeeper.”
-
-“I shall learn,” said she sweetly. “Those things are not difficult.”
-
-I smiled at this unconscious confession of incapacity to learn the most
-difficult of all the arts. “You will practice on me, eh? Thank you--but
-no. You wouldn’t make me comfortable. You’d only harass yourself and
-deprive me of comfort--and for years. ‘Those things’ are less easy than
-you imagine. You are set in your ways, I in mine.”
-
-“You don’t realize,” protested she confidently. “You must be lonely,
-Godfrey. You need companionship--sympathy. I can give it to you
-now--for, I am awake at last. I know my own mind and heart.”
-
-I shook my head. “That sounds well, but what does it _mean_? Next
-door to nothing, my friend. You and I are not interested in the same
-things. We’ve nothing to talk about. I don’t know the things you
-know--the social, the fashionable side of life. You don’t know my side
-of life--and you couldn’t and wouldn’t learn enough to interest me.
-Any forced interest you might give would bore me. Pardon my frankness,
-but this is no time for polite falsehoods. The fact is we’ve outgrown
-each other. When we look out of our eyes, each of us sees an entirely
-different world; and neither of us cares about or even believes in the
-other’s world. We talk, only to irritate. We are absolutely and finally
-apart. It would be impossible for us to live together.”
-
-She waited until I finished. I doubt if she listened. It was her habit
-not to listen to what she did not wish to hear. “Godfrey--Godfrey!” she
-cried, battling with the sobs that rose, perhaps in spite of her. “Do I
-mean nothing to you--I who have been everything to you? Does the word
-wife mean nothing to you?”
-
-“You mean nothing to me,” replied I. “And I mean nothing to you. Let us
-not pretend to deceive ourselves.”
-
-“But you did care about me once,” she pleaded. “I am not old and faded.
-I still have all the charms I used to have--yes, and more. Isn’t that
-so, dear?”
-
-“You are more beautiful than you ever were,” said I. “But--you’ve
-gotten me out of the habit of you. And I couldn’t go back to it if I
-would.”
-
-She buried her face in her hands and wept.
-
-“At your old tricks,” said I impatiently. “It has always been your way
-to try to make me seem in the wrong. As a matter of fact, you lost
-years ago--lost before I did--all interest and taste for our life
-together. It was you who ended our married life, not I.”
-
-“Yes, it was all my fault,” she sobbed. “Forgive me, dear. Take me
-back. Don’t cast me off. I’ll be whatever you say--do whatever you
-wish. Only take me back!”
-
-I could not make an inch of progress toward the real motive behind this
-obviously sincere plea. As I sat silent, looking at her and puzzling,
-she began to hope that she had moved me. No--rather, she began to feel
-stronger in her deep rooted conviction that at bottom I loved her and
-had never wavered. She came across the room, dropped to her knees
-beside my chair and hid her face in my lap. Why is it that passion once
-extinguished can never light again? As she knelt there I appreciated
-all her physical charms; but I was appreciative with that critical
-calmness which is the absence of all feeling. I laid my hand on hers.
-
-“Edna,” I said, “what _is_ the meaning of this?”
-
-“I am telling you the truth, Godfrey,” replied she, lifting her
-gold-brown eyes to gaze at me. “As God is my judge, I am telling you
-the truth.”
-
-“No doubt you think you are,” said I diplomatically. “But your good
-sense must tell you that there’s something wrong.”
-
-“Yes--with you,” was her answer in a sad tone. “I hoped we could begin
-to be happy at once. I see now that I’ve got to win you back.”
-
-I concealed my panic behind an amused laugh. “I suppose I’ve misled
-you into forming this poor estimate of my intelligence where you are
-concerned,” said I. “You have thought all these years that, because I
-said nothing, I did not understand. The truth is, for many years I have
-understood you thoroughly, Edna. You doubt it. You say to yourself,
-‘If he had understood, he would have been furious and would not have
-allowed me to use him as a mere pocketbook.’”
-
-Up she started, wounded to the quick. “Godfrey!” she cried. “How you
-hurt! Oh, my dear--spare me. If you had such a low opinion of me, don’t
-tell me about it. Perhaps I deserve your contempt. God knows, I thought
-I was doing right. Don’t be harsh with me, dearest. I am only a woman,
-after all.”
-
-I shook my head smilingly. “Drop it,” said I. “You are entirely too
-strong a person to be able to hide behind a plea of weakness. I have
-let you use me for your own selfish pleasure all these years because
-I did not especially care. Also, it kept you away from me--which was
-highly agreeable to us both.”
-
-The anguish in her eyes, whether it was genuine or not, looked so
-sincere that I avoided her gaze.
-
-“But,” I went on, “I’m no longer in the mood to be used. You got
-through with me, as you thought, and divorced me and prepared to marry
-a man more to your liking----”
-
-“Godfrey--you needn’t be jealous of him--of anyone!”
-
-I made a gesture of resigned despair. Jealous! Her vanity rampant.
-It had seized upon an insignificant phrase and had found what it was
-eagerly looking for. “I am not jealous of him,” said I, “though it
-would be useless for me to try to convince you. Still, I repeat--I
-am not jealous. I was merely saying that you have cast me off, that
-I choose to regard your action as final, that I shall not let you
-fasten on me again simply because your selfishness and vanity happen to
-discover a new value in me. Do I make my position clear?”
-
-“I see I can’t convince you of what’s in my heart,” said she with sweet
-resignation. “I had no right to expect it--to hope for it. But my life
-will convince you, Godfrey. I shall win you back!”
-
-I retained my appearance of calmness. But I was the reverse of calm.
-I appreciated that she had me in her power. So far as I could judge,
-she was not after more money, but was under the spell of some form of
-hysteria that gave her the delusion of an actual desire to love me and
-to be loved by me. As she had a fortune in her own right, and a large
-one, I was without means of controlling her. I could not compel her to
-stick to her bargain and make the divorce legally final; and, even if I
-had been so disposed I had no ground for a divorce from her unless she
-should be consenting and assisting.
-
-“If you cared for another woman, I might despair,” she went on. “But
-you don’t. My heart tells me that you don’t.”
-
-Should I tell her? I strangled the impulse as it was born; my common
-sense lost no time in reminding me of the folly of that course.
-
-“I’ll be so utterly yours, Godfrey,” she went on, “that you’ll simply
-_have_ to love me.”
-
-I rose. “Let’s have no more of this nonsense,” said I. “Understand,
-once for all, Edna, the day when you can use me is past--gone forever.
-You are free--and so am I. We will annoy each other no more.”
-
-She faced me, her bosom heaving, her widening eyes scrutinizing me.
-And what I saw in them made me quail. For there shone the arch-fiend
-jealousy. “Godfrey!” she exclaimed at last. “It must be another woman!”
-
-I laughed--not pleasantly, I imagine. “Is there no end to your vanity?”
-said I.
-
-“Another woman,” she repeated dazedly. “If that weren’t true you
-couldn’t treat me harshly--you would want me back--would love me----”
-
-“If there were not another woman on earth, I would not go back to you,”
-said I.
-
-But what woman would believe that of a man--especially of one upon whom
-she had put her private brand? She said in the same slow ferocious way:
-“Some woman has hold of you--is getting ready to make a fool of you.”
-
-I laughed--nervously watching her mind dart from woman to woman of
-those we knew.
-
-“Ah--you can’t deceive me!” she cried. “Mary Kirkwood! She has been
-stealing you away from me. And you, a fool like all men where women are
-concerned, can’t see through her.” Edna laughed wildly. “But she has
-_me_ to reckon with now. I’ll show her!”
-
-“Mrs. Kirkwood is engaged to Hartley Beechman,” said I.
-
-“A nobody of a novelist,” said Edna. “That’s a mere blind. She’s after
-_you_. After _my_ husband--the man _I_ love! We’ll see!”
-
-Again I laughed--and I am sure my counterfeit of indifference was
-successful. “Have it your way,” said I. “But the fact remains that you
-and I are done with each other.”
-
-“I shall set aside the divorce,” said she.
-
-“As you please,” replied I, lighting a cigarette and preparing to leave
-the room. “If you are not content with the terms of settlement you can
-have more money. If that----”
-
-“Why _do_ I love you?” cried she, all softness and piteous appeal
-again. “You who are so base that you think only of money! What weakness
-for me to love you! Yet, God help me, I do--I do! Godfrey----”
-
-“I am going back to London,” said I.
-
-She stretched out her arms, and her face was a grief-stricken appeal
-for mercy. “You can’t be so cruel to me--your Edna.”
-
-I smiled mockingly at her and left the room.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-I have not been unaware of your anger and disgust with me, gentle
-reader, during the progress of the preceding scene. In real life--in
-your own life--you would have understood such a scene. But you are
-not in the habit of reading realities in books--real men, real women,
-real action. Everything is there toned down, put in what is called an
-artistic perspective. Well, I am not an artist, and perhaps I have no
-right to express an opinion upon matters of art. But I’ll venture. To
-me art means a point of view upon life; so, I see nothing artistic,
-nothing but more or less grotesque nonsense, in an art that is not a
-point of view but a false view. But to keep to Edna and myself.
-
-You think I should have been moist and mushy, should have taken her
-back, should have burdened myself for the rest of my days with her
-insincere and unsympathetic personality. You are saying: “But after
-all she loved him.” Even so--what does the word love mean when used
-by a person of her character? It means nothing but the narrowest,
-blighting selfishness. She had for years used me without any thought
-for or of my feelings, wishes, needs. When we moved into our grand New
-York house she gave me as a bedroom the noisiest room in the house,
-one overlooking the street where the rattling of carriages, cabs, and
-carts and the talk and laughter of pedestrians kept me awake until far
-into the night and roused me about four in the morning--this, when I
-was working with might and main all day long and needed every moment
-of rest I could get. Why did she give me that room? Because she wanted
-the only available quiet room--beside her own bedroom--for a dressing
-room! She said the light in the room she gave me was unfit to dress
-by! I thought nothing of all this at the time. It is characteristic of
-American wives to do these things; it is characteristic of American
-men to regard them as the matter of course. I cite the small but not
-insignificant incident to show the minuteness of her indifference
-to me. I have already given many of the larger though perhaps less
-important instances, and I could give scores, hundreds, in the same
-tenor. She professed to love me at that time--and she either had
-or simulated a very ardent passion. But that was not love, was it?
-Love is generous, is considerate, finds its highest pleasure of
-self-gratification in making the loved one happy. Such a conception of
-love never entered her head--and how many American women’s heads does
-it enter? How it amuses me to watch them as they absorb everything,
-give nothing, sit enthroned upon their vanities--and then wonder and
-grow sulky or sour when their husbands or lovers tire of the thankless
-task of loving them and turn away--or turn them away.
-
-If Edna had awakened to genuine love, gentle outraged reader, would
-she not have been overwhelmed with shame as she looked back upon her
-married life? Would she have come to me with the offer of her love
-as a queen with the offer of her crown? She would not have indulged
-in empty words; she would have tried to _do_ something by way of
-reparation. She would not have demanded that she be taken back; but,
-feeling that she had forfeited her rights, she would have tried to find
-out whether I would consent to take her back; and if she had found that
-I would not, she would have accepted her fate as her desert.
-
-In those circumstances do you think I could have laughed at her and
-remained firm? No one not a monster could have done that.
-
-But the thing she called love was not love at all, was merely as I
-described it to her--a newly discovered way of using me after she had
-thought all possible use for me exhausted. Such, gentle reader, is
-the simple truth. Yet because I had intelligence enough to see the
-truth and firmness enough not to be swayed by shallow and meaningless
-sentimentalities, you call me hard, harsh, cruel. One of your impulsive
-kindly souls would have taken her weeping to his arms, would have
-begun to live with her. And there the novel would have ended, with
-you, gentle reader, all tears and thrills. For, having no imagination,
-you would have been unable to picture the few weeks of cat-and-dog
-life after the “happy ending,” then the breaking apart in hatred and
-vindictiveness. But this is not an “artistic” novel. It is a story of
-life, a plain setting forth of actualities, in the hope that it may
-enable some men and women to understand life more clearly and to live
-their own lives more wisely and perhaps less mischievously.
-
-I went to my daughter. “Margot,” said I, “your mother threatens to try
-to stop the divorce. It is best for both her and me that we be free. I
-am determined not to live with her again, for I abominate the sort of
-life she and you lead. If you will do what you can to bring her to her
-senses, I will see that you don’t regret it.”
-
-Margot rather liked me, I believe. Not as a father; as a father I made
-her ashamed, like everything else American about her. But it was a
-resigned kind of shame, and she appreciated my money, my good nature
-about it and my services in bringing back her marquis and making
-possible her son the earl. I knew I could count on her active sympathy;
-for she would vastly prefer that her mother be the Princess Frascatoni.
-
-My mother, Mrs. Loring; my mother, the Princess Frascatoni. Pronounce
-those two phrases, gentle reader, and you will grasp my meaning.
-
-I was by no means sure she would have any influence with her mother,
-even though she was now the wife of one marquis and the mother of a
-marquis to be, with about half the high British peerage as relatives.
-But I was desperate, and a desperate man clutches at anything.
-
-“I think you are right, papa,” said she in her mother’s own grave sweet
-way. “You and mamma never have been suited to each other. Besides, I
-don’t want her away off in America where I never expect to be again.
-Some of the girls who have married here like to go back there and
-receive the flattery and the homage. But it seems cheap to me. I’m sure
-I don’t care what the Americans think of me. I’m not snobbish, as I
-used to be. I am English now--loyal English to the core.”
-
-“This is the place for your mother, too.” An idea occurred to me. “If
-I took your mother back with me, I would have my parents and hers live
-with us in a big place I’m going to buy in the country. You don’t know
-your grandparents well?”
-
-She was coloring deeply. She must have heard more than her mother
-dreamed she knew. “No, papa,” said she.
-
-“Your mother and I were disgracefully neglectful of them,” pursued I.
-“But I shall make up for it, as far as I can. I wish you would come
-over and visit us.”
-
-“I should like it, papa,” murmured she, ready to sink down with shame.
-
-“They are plain people,” I went on, “but they are good and honest--much
-ahead of these wretched parasites you’ve been brought up among.... Talk
-to your mother about them. Tell her what I have said.”
-
-She understood thoroughly; that is the sort of thing fashionable people
-always understand. “I shall, papa,” said she. And I could see her
-putting on a fetching air of sweet innocence and telling her mother.
-
-“And if she does not like it,” continued I--“can’t bear the scandal and
-ridicule among her fashionable friends--why, she can desert me. And
-that would give me ground for divorce.”
-
-“She would be dreadfully unhappy over there,” said Margot.
-
-“I am sure of it,” said I, and my accent was a guarantee.
-
-Should I see Edna again and picture our life together in the house of
-love she was bent upon? I decided against it. Margot’s pictures might
-lack the energy and detail of mine. They would more than make up in
-bringing home to her the awful reality, as she would believe Margot
-where she might suspect me of merely threatening what I would never
-carry out. So, off I went to London--to wait.
-
-About the hardest task in this world is inaction when every fiber of
-your being is clamorous for action. Yet I contrived to sit tight--for
-a week--for two weeks. I have always regarded myself as too impatient,
-too impetuous. And, beyond question, my natural tendency is to the
-precipitate. But looking back over my life I am astonished--and not a
-little pleased with myself--as I note how I have held myself in check,
-have confined my follies of rash haste to occasions when miscarriage
-was not a serious matter.
-
-Armitage came--on the way from St. Moritz to America. As soon as I
-could command the right tone, I said:
-
-“You’ve seen your sister and Mrs. Armstrong? How are they?”
-
-“All right,” replied he indifferently. “Motoring in Spain at present, I
-believe.”
-
-“Beechman--he’s with them?”
-
-“No. He’s somewhere hereabouts, I believe. I saw him in Hyde Park the
-other day--looking as seedy as if he were pulling out of an illness. I
-spoke and he stared and scowled and nodded--like the bounder that he
-is.”
-
-“You don’t care for him?” said I, rejoiced by this news of my rival’s
-seediness.
-
-“Oh, one doesn’t bother to like or dislike that sort of chap.” He said
-this in a supercilious manner--a manner he had never had in the earlier
-period of our acquaintance. How the inner man does poke through the
-surface when the veneer of youth wears thin!
-
-“For one who despises birth and wealth and rank,” said I, not without a
-certain malice, “you have a queer way of talking at times.”
-
-Armitage winced, changed the subject by saying: “And what the devil’s
-the matter with _you_? You’re looking anything but fit yourself.”
-
-“Oh--I’m up against it, as usual,” said I gloomily.
-
-He laughed. My pessimism was one of the jokes of my friends. But,
-having seen so much of the ravages of optimism--of the cheer-boys-cheer
-and always-look-at-the-bright-side sort of thing, I had given myself
-the habit of reckoning in the possibilities of disaster at full value
-when I made plans. Little people ought always to be optimistic. Then,
-their enthusiasm--_if_ directed by some big person--produces good
-results, where they would avail nothing could they see the dangers in
-advance. But big people must not be--and are not--optimists, whatever
-they may pretend. The big man must foresee all the chances against
-success. Then, if his judgment tells him there is still a chance for
-success, his courage of the big man will enable him to go firmly ahead,
-not blunderingly but wisely. The general must be pessimist. The private
-must be optimist; for if he were pessimist, if he saw what the general
-must see, he would be paralyzed with fear and doubt.
-
-“You’re always grumbling,” said Armitage. “Yet you’re the luckiest man
-I know.”
-
-“Perhaps that’s why,” replied I.
-
-He understood, nodded. “Doubtless,” said he.
-
-“What’s luck? Nothing but shrewd calculation. The fellow who can’t
-calculate soon loses any windfalls that may happen to blunder his way.
-But what’s the grouch now?”
-
-I was so helplessly befogged that I resolved to tell him.
-
-“My late wife is threatening not to release me,” said I.
-
-He smiled curiously. “But she hasn’t done it yet?”
-
-“Not yet,” replied I. “At least not up to eleven o’clock this morning,
-New York time.”
-
-“I don’t think she will,” said he.
-
-“Why?” demanded I.
-
-“You won’t let her, for one reason,” replied he.
-
-“You’re as fond of your freedom as I am. And nothing on earth
-could induce me to marry again. When women--English women--look
-at me I see them fairly twitching to get me where they can make
-free use of me. Yes--marriage has gone the way of everything else.
-Business--finance--politics--religion--they’ve all degenerated into so
-many means of graft. And art’s going the same way. And marriage--it’s
-the woman’s great and only graft. Our women look at marriage in two
-ways--how much can be got out of it, living with the man; how much will
-it net as alimony.”
-
-“You seemed rather positive that my late wife would not hold on to me?”
-persisted I.
-
-He eyed me sharply. “You really wish to be free?”
-
-“I am determined to be free.”
-
-“She’s a charming--a lovely woman,” said he.
-
-There was doubt of my candor in his eyes. It is all but impossible for
-a man rightly to judge any woman except her he has tired of or for
-some other reason does not want and cannot imagine himself wanting.
-The unpossessed woman has but the one value; the possessed woman must
-have other values--or she has none. Armitage could judge Edna only as
-female, unpossessed female. Said he:
-
-“She’s a charming--a lovely woman.”
-
-“Like the former Mrs. Armitage,” I reminded him.
-
-“So--so,” conceded he. “But I’ve always believed you were a fond
-husband at bottom.”
-
-“Dismiss it from your mind,” said I. “You are hesitating about telling
-me something. Say it!”
-
-With a certain nervousness he yielded to his love of gossip. “Prince
-Frascatoni--you know him?”
-
-I beamed in a reassuring smile. “My late wife’s chief admirer,” said I.
-“A fine fellow. I like him.”
-
-“He’s visiting down at--what’s the name of the place your son-in-law
-has taken?”
-
-“He is?” exclaimed I jubilantly. “When did he go?”
-
-“About a week, I hear.”
-
-“That looks encouraging, doesn’t it?” cried I.
-
-“It certainly does,” said he. “They say he was charging round town like
-a lunatic up to a few weeks ago----”
-
-“Two weeks ago,” said I.
-
-“But now he has calmed again--looks serene. I had a note from him this
-morning. I’m positive he’s content with the way the cards are falling.”
-
-The change in me was so radical that Armitage must have been
-convinced--for the moment. “If I only knew!” said I.
-
-“I can find out for you,” suggested he. “Your daughter has asked me
-down for the week end. I’ll sacrifice myself, if you wish.”
-
-“I’ll take your going as a special favor,” said I.
-
-“Besides,” he went on, “these Anglo-American menages interest me.
-American women are so brash with the men of their own country. I like
-to see them playing the part of meek upper servants. The only kind of
-wife to have is a grateful one. To get a grateful wife an American has
-to marry some poor creature, homely, neglected by everyone till he
-came along. Even then the odds are two to one she’ll go crazy about
-herself and despise him--because he stooped to her, if she can’t find
-any other excuse. But a titled foreigner-- An American girl is on her
-knees at once and stays there. He can abuse her--step on her--kill her
-almost--neglect her--waste her money. She is still humbly grateful.”
-
-“The worms have been known to turn,” protested I. For, while I could
-not deny the general truth of Armitage’s attack I felt he was whipped
-too far by bitterness that he, for lack of a title, could not command
-what these inferior men with titles had offered to them without the
-bother of asking.
-
-“Not a worm,” declared he. “No American woman ever divorced a title
-unless she was either in terror of her life or in terror of being
-robbed to the last penny and kicked out.”
-
-“Thank God all our women aren’t title crazy,” said I.
-
-“How do you know they aren’t?” retorted he. “Do you know one who has
-been tempted and has resisted?”
-
-I had to confess I did not.
-
-“Then you thanked God too soon. The truth is our women are brought up
-to be snobs, spenders--useless, vain parasites. Their systems are all
-ready to be infected with the title mania.”
-
-Armitage, on his favorite subject, talked and talked. I did not listen
-attentively--not so much because I did not like what he was saying or
-because I thought him prejudiced as because I knew him to be a secret
-snob of the thoroughgoing variety. I suspected that if things were
-reversed, if he could get a title by marriage and a position that would
-enable him to swagger and would make everyone bow and scrape, he would
-put the eagerest of the female title-hunters to the blush. It may be
-just and proper to criticise women for being what they are. But let us
-also hear in mind that it is not their fault but the fault of their
-training; also that the men do no better when they have the chance to
-live in idle vanity upon the labors of some one else.
-
-On the following Monday my emissary returned from Garton Hall full to
-the brim with news.
-
-But first he had again to assure himself that there was no pretense in
-my seeming anxiety to be free. I saw doubt of me in his eyes before he
-began his adroit cross-examination. I gave no sign that I knew what
-he was about; for in those cases the one chance of convincing is to
-submit to whatever tests may be applied. It was not unnatural that he
-should doubt, coming as he did direct from seeing and talking with the
-charming Edna. Men are habitually fools about women--not because women
-make fools of them but because they enjoy the sensation of making fools
-of themselves. That is a sensation much praised by poets, romancers,
-sentimentalists of all kinds; and because of this praise it has come
-to have a certain fictitious value, has come to be a cheap way for
-a man to imagine himself a devil of a fellow, a figure of romantic
-recklessness. There is no limit to which the passion for living up to
-a pose will not carry a man. Men have flung away their fortunes, their
-lives, for the sake of a pose; martyrs have burned at the stake for
-pose. So a man of experience even more than your ordinary brick-brained
-citizen is distrustful of his fellow men where women are concerned.
-And it is nothing against Armitage’s intelligence, nor any sign of his
-having a low estimate of my strength of mind, that he tried to make
-absolutely sure of me before proceeding.
-
-Then, too, there was Edna’s charm. Women--I mean, our fashionable and
-would-be fashionable American women of all classes, from Fifth Avenue
-to the Bowery, from Maine to the Pacific--women are parlor-bred--are
-bred to make an imposing surface impression. The best of them fool
-the most expert man, as Edna had been fooling Armitage during those
-two days down in the country. A man has to live with them to find
-them out. And often, our men, being extremely busy and kindly disposed
-toward their women and unobservant of them and uncritical of them, do
-not find them out for many years. The house is run badly, the money
-is wasted, the children are not brought up right. But the man lets it
-pass as “part of the game.” He tells himself that not much but good
-looks is to be expected of a woman; he buries himself still deeper in
-his business. Then-- If he is a successful man, along about forty when
-he has got up high enough to be able to relax from the labor of his
-career and thinks of enjoying himself, he tries to form an alliance
-for pleasure with his wife. And lo and behold, he discovers that he is
-married to a vain, superficial fool.
-
-There could have been no more delightful experience than passing a
-few days in the society of Edna. She had educated herself, admirably,
-thoroughly, for show. She could have fooled the fashionable man his
-whole life through, for one cannot see beyond the range of his own
-vision. She might have fooled many a serious man of the narrow type;
-an excellent shoemaker might easily be misled by a clever showy jack
-of all trades into thinking him a master of all trades so long as he
-avoided betraying his ignorance of shoemaking. But your successful
-American man of the highest type, having a broad range of practical
-interests, becomes a shrewd judge of human values. Thus, the American
-woman who can pass for brilliant in fashionable society at home
-or abroad cannot deceive the American man--for long. Not when he
-lives with her. No wonder she finds him coarse; who does not wince
-when vanity is stepped on or ignored? No wonder she thinks him
-uninteresting. A child would have an equally poor opinion of any person
-inexpert at catcher, marbles, and mud pies.
-
-Armitage, in a company of titled people, his nostrils full of his
-beloved, stealthily enjoyed perfumes of wealth and rank, was captivated
-by Edna. If he had stopped a week or so, his American shrewdness might
-have found her out, might have seen why I could view with unruffled
-sleeves, as the Chinese say, the loss of so lovely and lively a
-companion. But, stopping only for the week end, he became doubtful
-of my sincerity. I measured how deeply he had been deluded when he
-spoke of her keen sense of humor. Woman nature is too practical, too
-matter of fact for even the cleverest of them to have a real sense
-of humor--with now and then an exception, of course. Edna had not a
-glimmer of appreciation of either wit or humor. But only I, before
-whom she dropped all pretenses except those that were essential to her
-pose--only I knew this. Before the rest of the world, with the aid of
-her vivacity!--What an aid to women is vivacity!--how many of them it
-marries well!--With the aid of her vivacity she made a convincing show
-not only of appreciating humor and wit but also of having much of both.
-At precisely the right place she gave the proper, convincing, charming
-exhibition of dancing eyes and pearl-white teeth. And occasionally
-with a pretty liveliness she repeated as her own some witticism she
-had heard much applauded in another and remote company. But I do not
-blame you, ladies, for your inveterate and incessant posing. We men
-are determined to idealize and to be gulled, and you need us to pay for
-your luxury and your finery.
-
-I let Armitage probe on and on until my impatience for his news would
-suffer no further delay. I said:
-
-“I see you refuse to be convinced. So let it go at that, and tell me
-what you found out. Is she to marry Frascatoni?”
-
-“As I’ve been telling you, I believe she is in love with you, Loring.”
-
-“But is she going to free me?”
-
-“Unless you do something pretty soon, I’m afraid you’ll lose her.”
-
-It was too absurd that he, who had lived with one of these showy
-vivacious women, had found her out and had rid himself of her should be
-thus taken in by another of precisely the same kind. But that’s the way
-it is with men. They understand why they yawn at their own show piece;
-but they can’t appreciate that all show pieces in time produce the same
-effect.
-
-“There still remain three weeks before the day on which her lawyers
-must ask the judge to confirm the decree,” said I. “Do you think she
-will have them do it or not?”
-
-“Unless you get busy, old man----”
-
-“But I shall not get busy. I shall do everything I can to encourage her
-to stay free.”
-
-“Then you’ll lose her,” said he. “Frascatoni is mad about her, and he
-knows how to make an impression on a woman. It irritated me to see a
-damned dago carrying off such a prize--and you know I’m not prejudiced
-in favor of American women.”
-
-“I want to see her happy,” said I. “She will be happy with him--so, I
-hope he gets her.” I laughed mockingly. “She wouldn’t be happy with an
-American, Bob--not even with you.”
-
-He colored guiltily. “That idea never entered my head,” protested he.
-
-But I laughed the more. “And she wouldn’t have you, Bob,” I went on.
-“So, don’t put yourself in the way of being made uncomfortable.”
-
-He had enjoyed himself hugely. Not only was my former wife most
-entertaining, but also Margot. She had, beyond question, been
-beautifully educated for the part she was to take in life. Her
-manner--so Armitage assured me--was the perfection of gracious
-simplicity--the most exquisite exhibition of the perfect lady--“note
-how ladylike I am, yet how I treat you as if you were my equal.”
-Gracious--there’s the word that expresses the whole thing. And she
-had a quantity of bright parlor tricks--French recitation, a little
-ladylike singing in a pleasant plaintive soprano that gave people an
-excuse for saying: “She could have been a grand-opera star if she had
-cared to go in seriously for that sort of thing.” Also, a graceful
-skirt dance and a killing cake walk. She had an effective line of
-fashionable conversation, too--about books and pictures, analysis
-of soul states, mystic love theories--all the paraphernalia of a
-first-class heroine of a first-class society novel. And you, gentle
-reader, who know nothing, would never have dreamed that she knew
-nothing. You who are futile would not have seen how worthless she
-was--except to do skirt dances well enough for a drawing-room or to
-talk soul states well enough for a society novel.
-
-The more Armitage discoursed of the delights of his little visit the
-more nervous I became lest Edna should again change her mind and
-inflict me further. What he had said brought back my life with her in
-stinging vividness. I lived again the days of my self-deception, the
-darker days of my slow awakening, the black days of my full realization
-of the mess my life was, and of my feeling that there was no escape for
-me.
-
-“I will admit, Loring,” said Armitage, “that as women go our women are
-the best of all.”
-
-“Yes,” I assented, sincerely. “And they ought to be. America is the
-best place to grow men. Why shouldn’t it be the best place to grow
-women?”
-
-He did not pursue the subject. In his heart he disagreed with me, for
-he was wholly out of conceit with everything American. His pose had
-been the other way, and he shrank from uncovering himself.
-
-A day or so later I was crossing Green Park when I ran straight into
-Hartley Beechman. I smiled pleasantly, though not too cordially. He
-planted himself in front of me and stared with a tragic frown. I then
-noted that he verged on the unkempt, that he had skipped his morning
-shave and perhaps his bath. His stare was unmistakably offensive--the
-look of a man who is seeking a quarrel.
-
-“How’re you, Beechman?” said I, ignoring the signs of foul weather.
-“Armitage told me you were in town, but didn’t know your address.
-Stopping long?”
-
-“You are a scoundrel,” said he.
-
-I shrugged my shoulders. As I was much the larger and stronger man I
-could afford to do it. “So I’ve often heard,” said I. “Perhaps it’s
-true. What of it? Why should you think I cared to know your opinion of
-me?”
-
-“If I send you a challenge will you accept it?”
-
-I laughed. “No, I never pay the slightest attention to crank letters.”
-
-“You are a coward. You will not give me a chance to meet you on equal
-terms.”
-
-“I’ll take you over my knee and give you a spanking if you don’t behave
-yourself,” said I, and I pushed him out of my path and was passing on.
-
-“You took her away from me,” he jeered. “But it will do you no good.
-She is laughing at us both.”
-
-I strode away. I had heard enough to put me in high good humor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As the end of my wait upon the anxious seat drew into its last week, I
-fell into a state of deep depression. Too much eating and drinking was,
-of course, the cause. But I had to pass the time somehow; and what is
-there to do in London but eat and drink?
-
-Four days before the last, Rossiter came into my sitting room with
-the news that Edna was calling. There arose a nice question: Would I
-better send word I was out or see her? Because of my knowledge of her
-persistence where her interest was really engaged, I decided to see her
-and have done with. So in she came, vivacious, radiant--dressed for a
-scene in which she was to be heroine, as I saw at a glance.
-
-“Pray don’t think I’m going to repeat what I did the other day,” cried
-she by way of beginning. “I’m in quite another mood.”
-
-“So I see,” said I.
-
-“I was horribly ashamed and disgusted with myself afterwards,” she went
-on. “You must have thought me crazy. In fact, you did. You treated me
-as if I were.”
-
-“Won’t you sit?” said I, arranging a chair for her.
-
-She smiled mischievously at me as she seated herself. “You do know
-something about women,” said she. “You put this chair so that my face
-would be spared the strong light.” As she said this, she turned into
-the full strength of the light a face as free as a girl’s from wrinkles
-or any other sign of years. “You certainly do know something about
-women.”
-
-“Very little,” said I, for it was not a time to pause and poke a
-finger into the swelling bubble of woman’s baffling complexity and
-unfathomable mystery. “You’ve come to tell me what it was you wanted
-the other day?”
-
-She shook her head. She was wearing a charming hat--but her costumes
-were never indifferent and nearly always charming--a feat the more
-remarkable because she, being a timidly conventional woman, followed
-the fashions and ventured cautiously and never far in individual style.
-“You’re usually right, my dear,” said she, “in your guesses at people’s
-underlying motives. But you were mistaken that time. I wanted exactly
-what I said. I wanted _you_.”
-
-“Incredible,” laughed I.
-
-“Yes--it does sound so,” conceded she. “But it’s the truth. I had a
-queer attack--an attack of jealousy. I’d often heard of that sort of
-thing. I fancied myself above it. Perhaps that was why I fell such
-a foolish victim. But I’ve recovered completely.” And her eyes were
-mocking me as if she had a secret joke on me.
-
-“It couldn’t last long,” said I, to be saying something.
-
-“No, perhaps not,” replied she. “At any rate, as soon as I heard of
-Mary Kirkwood’s engagement I was cured--instantly cured.”
-
-“I told you she was engaged,” said I.
-
-“Oh, I don’t mean that Beechman person,” scoffed Edna. “She was simply
-amusing herself with him. A woman--a woman of our world--might have
-an affair with a man of that sort--as you men sometimes do with queer
-women. But she wouldn’t think of _marrying_ him. Marriage is a serious
-matter.”
-
-“Yes, indeed,” said I.
-
-“It’s a woman’s whole career,” pursued she. “It means not only her
-position, but the position of her children, too.”
-
-“Very serious,” said I.
-
-“No--I mean Mary’s engagement to Count von Tilzer-Borgfeldt.”
-
-“I hadn’t heard of it,” said I indifferently. There could be nothing in
-such a silly story.
-
-“Didn’t Bob Armitage tell you?”
-
-“Not yet,” said I. “But why should he?”
-
-“That’s queer,” mused she. “Perhaps he thought there might be a little
-something in the talk about you and Mary, and that it would be well not
-to stir things up.”
-
-“That might account for it,” I agreed.
-
-She was studying me closely. “I believe you really didn’t care about
-Mary,” continued she. “I confess I was astonished when I first heard
-that you did. She’s--” Edna laughed--“hardly up to _me_.”
-
-“Hardly,” said I.
-
-“But let’s not talk of her. I’ve forgotten all that. I’ve come to make
-a last proposal to you.”
-
-She was smiling, but I detected seriousness in her eyes, in her
-unsteady upper lip, in her hands trying not to move restlessly.
-
-“You don’t realize what a strong hold you have on me, Godfrey. Is it
-love? Is it habit? I don’t know. But I can’t shake it off. Don’t you
-think me strange, talking to you in this way?”
-
-“Why shouldn’t you?” said I.
-
-“It’s more like a woman who isn’t attractive to men.”
-
-“On the contrary,” said I. “You speak like a woman accustomed to deal
-with men according to her own good pleasure.”
-
-“How shrewd that is!” said she, with an admiring glance. “How shrewd
-you are! That’s what I miss in other men--in these men over here who
-have so much that I admire. But they--well, they give me the feeling
-that they are superficial. Do you think _I_ am superficial?”
-
-“How could I?” said I.
-
-“That’s an evasion,” laughed she. “You _do_ think so. And perhaps I am.
-A woman ought to be. A man looks after the serious side of life. The
-woman’s side is the lighter and graceful side--don’t you think so?”
-
-“That sounds plausible,” said I.
-
-“But I grow tired of superficial men. They give me the feeling
-that--well, that they couldn’t be relied on. And you are reliable,
-Godfrey. I feel about you that no matter what happened you’d be equal
-to it. And that’s why I don’t want to give you up.”
-
-I sat with my eyes down, as if I were listening and reflecting.
-
-“Since you’ve been over here long enough to--to broaden a little-- You
-don’t mind my saying you’ve broadened?”
-
-“It’s true,” said I.
-
-“I’ve fancied perhaps you might be seeing that I wasn’t altogether
-wrong in my ideas?”
-
-“Yes?” said I, as she hesitated.
-
-“Margot was telling me about some plans you had--for living on the
-other side. You weren’t in earnest?”
-
-I looked at her gravely. “Very much in earnest,” said I. “I shall never
-again, in any circumstances, live as we used to live.”
-
-She sank back in her chair, slowly turned her parasol round and round.
-“Then--it’s hopeless,” said she, with a sigh that was a sob also. And
-the look in the eyes she lifted to mine went straight to my heart. “I
-simply can’t stand America,” said she. “It reminds me of--” She rose
-impatiently. “If you only knew, Godfrey, how I _loathe_ my origin--the
-dreadful depth we came from--the commonness of it.” She shuddered.
-
-“Europe is the place for you,” said I.
-
-“Yes, it is,” cried she. “And we could be happy over here--if you’d
-only see it in the right light. Godfrey, I don’t want to--to change.
-Won’t you compromise?”
-
-“By conceding everything?” said I good-humoredly. “By becoming the
-bedraggled tail to your gay and giddy kite?”
-
-“You simply won’t reason about these things!” exclaimed she. “Yet they
-say men are reasonable!”
-
-“My dear Edna, I don’t ask you to make yourself wretched for _my_ sake.
-And I don’t purpose to be wretched for _your_ sake.”
-
-She sat down again. The brightness had faded from her. She looked older
-than I’d have believed she could. “Well--I see it’s useless,” she said
-finally. “And as I’ve got to stay over here, I simply must marry again.
-You understand that?”
-
-“Perfectly,” said I.
-
-“Don’t you care the least bit?” said she wistfully.
-
-“You wish me to be unhappy about it,” laughed I, “to gratify your
-vanity.”
-
-She sighed again.
-
-“You are content with the settlements?”
-
-“Oh, yes,” said she wearily.
-
-No doubt you, gentle reader, are now completely won over to her and
-think that the least I could in decency have done would have been
-to insist on her accepting half my fortune. I had no impulse toward
-that folly. There is a kind of wife who can justly claim that she is
-the equal partner in her husband’s wealth. But not the Edna kind. I
-had made my fortune in spite of her. Nor was I keen to give her any
-more money than I should be compelled; why turn over wealth to her to
-fritter away and to bolster the pretensions of a family of worthless
-Italian aristocrats?
-
-With a sudden darting look at me, she said: “You know Frascatoni. What
-do you think of him?”
-
-“A fine specimen,” said I. “A fascinating man.”
-
-She shrugged her shoulders. “Fascinating enough, I suppose. But--would
-you _trust_ him?”
-
-“I would not,” replied I. “Nor any other man. I have long since learned
-not to trust even myself. But I’d trust him as far as the next man--as
-far as it’s necessary to trust anyone.”
-
-She nodded in appreciation and agreement. “I believe he genuinely cares
-for me,” she said, adding with a melancholy look at me, “And it’s
-pleasant to be cared about.”
-
-“So I have heard,” said I.
-
-“You never wanted anyone to care about you,” said she. “You are
-independent of everything and everybody.”
-
-“That’s safest,” said I.
-
-She did not reply. After reflecting she burst out with, “You ought to
-have _made_ me, Godfrey--ought to have trained me to your taste. Women
-have to be _made_.”
-
-“Even if that had been possible in this case,” I observed, “I didn’t
-know enough.”
-
-Again she thought a long time; then with a sigh she said: “But it’s too
-late now. You’re right. It’s too late.”
-
-It puzzled me to note how much the world had taught her in some
-ways, and how little in others. But that is a familiar puzzle--the
-unexpected, startling ways in which knowledge juts out into ignorance
-and ignorance closes in upon knowledge, forming a coast line between
-the land of knowledge and the sea of ignorance more jagged than that
-of Alaska or Norway. The result is that each of us is a confused
-contention of wisdom and folly in which the imperious instincts of
-elemental passions and appetites, by their steady persistence, easily
-get their way.
-
-“Since I’ve begun to look at these foreign men seriously,” she went on,
-“to study them-- It’s one thing to size them up, as you say in America,
-with the idea that they’re mere outsiders--acquaintances--social
-friends. It’s very different to measure them with a view to serious
-relations. I’m not altogether a fool--even from your standpoint--am I,
-Godfrey?”
-
-“Distinctly not,” said I.
-
-“Since I’ve been _studying_ these upper-class men over here--I’ve
-changed my mind in some respects. I’m not a child, you know. I haven’t
-done what I’ve done without using some judgment of men and women.”
-She flooded me with a smile of gratitude. “I owe my judgment to you,
-Godfrey. You taught me.”
-
-“You never agreed with anything I said--when I did occasionally venture
-an opinion.”
-
-“Because a woman disagrees and scorns--it doesn’t follow that she isn’t
-convinced.”
-
-“You’ve changed your mind about these men?” said I, for my curiosity
-was aroused.
-
-“I find a lack in them. You’re right to a certain extent, Godfrey. They
-_are_ futile--the cleverest of them. Culture gives a great deal, of
-course.”
-
-“What?” said I.
-
-“It’s too long and involved to explain. And you don’t believe in it.”
-
-“I’m willing to,” said I. “But first, I’d like to know what it is, and
-second, I’d like to know what it _does_. I’ve never been able to get
-anything but words in answer to either question.”
-
-“Well, _I_ see that it gives a great deal. But I must admit that it
-takes away something--yes, much--strength from the mind and softness
-from the heart.”
-
-I was astonished at this admission from her--at the admission itself,
-at the fresh evidences of what a good natural mind she had. But I
-had no desire to discuss with her. I had long outgrown the folly of
-discussion with futile people. I was tempted to air my own views of
-this so-called culture--how it emasculated where it pretended to
-soften; how it discovered nothing, invented nothing, produced nothing,
-did not feed, or clothe, or shelter, or in any way contribute to the
-sane happiness of a human being; how it unfitted men and women for
-active life, made them pitiful spectators merely, scoffing or smiling
-superciliously at the battle. But I refrained. I knew she believed
-the rôle of spectator the only one worthy a lady or a gentleman--and
-certainly it is the only one either lady or gentleman could take
-without being exposed as ridiculous. I knew that her wise observations
-were clever conversation merely, after the manner of futile
-people--that when the time for action came her snobbishness dominated
-her.
-
-“I wish these men were not so--so----”
-
-“Good-for-nothing?” I suggested.
-
-She accepted the phrase, though she would have preferred one less
-mercilessly truthful.
-
-“You can’t find everything in one person,” said I.
-
-That kind of tame generality--lack of interest thinly veiled in a
-polite show of interest--kills conversation and sets a tarrying caller
-to moving where dead silence produces a nervous tendency to linger.
-Edna extended her arm, resting her hand upon the crook of her parasol
-in a gesture of approaching departure. Yet she seemed loth to go. She
-rose, but counterbalanced with:
-
-“You know, I suppose, that it’s likely to be Frascatoni?”
-
-I rose, replied indifferently, “So I hear.”
-
-She stood, smiling vaguely down at the gloved hand on the crook of the
-parasol. “If I were only younger--or more credulous,” said she. And I
-knew that there was a thin, sour after-taste to the sparkling wine of
-the prince’s love-making. I smiled--pleasant, noncommittal.
-
-“I ask too much of life,” said she impatiently. “Isn’t it irritating
-that I should become critical just as I am in a position to get
-everything I’ve longed for and worked for?”
-
-“Those moods pass,” said I.
-
-“No doubt,” said she. “Well--good-by.” She put out her hand with a
-radiant smile. “I’ll not annoy you any more.”
-
-My answering smile and pressure of the hand were friendly, but
-cautiously so, for I felt I was still on thin ice. I opened the door
-for her. We shook hands again. Our eyes met. I think it must have given
-each of us a shock to see in the other’s face the polite, distant look
-of strangers parting. How easy it is for two to become like one--and
-when they are, how impossible it seems that they could ever be aliens.
-How easy it is for two that are as one to become utter strangers; the
-sea is wide, and its currents curve rapidly away from each other.
-
-“Rossiter,” said I--he was at work in the anteroom, “take Mrs. Loring
-to her carriage, please.”
-
-So--she was gone; I was free!
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-
-Not a shadow of doubt lingered. She was gone; I was free. Her manner
-had been the manner of finality. Her reluctance and her sadness were
-little more than the convention of mourning which human beings feel
-compelled to display on mortuary occasions of all kinds. Beneath the
-crepe I saw a not discontented resignation, a conviction of the truth
-that life together was impossible for her and me.
-
-My male readers--those who have a thinking apparatus and use it--will
-probably wonder, as I did then, that she had overlooked certain obvious
-advantages to be gained through refusing to divorce me. She knew me
-well enough to be certain I would not compel her to go to America and
-live with me, but if she insisted would let her stay in Europe or
-wander where she pleased. This would have given her all the advantages
-of widowhood. Free, with plenty of money, she could have led her own
-life, without ever having to consult the conveniences and caprices of
-a husband. It seemed to me singularly stupid of her to resign this
-signal advantage, to tie herself to a husband she could not ignore, a
-husband she already saw would bore her, as poseurs invariably bore each
-other--to tie herself to such a man with no compensating advantage but
-a title. Indeed, so stupid did it seem that from the moment she began
-to waver about confirming the divorce I all but lost hope of freedom.
-
-My women readers will understand her. A man cannot appreciate how
-hampered a woman of the lady class is without a legitimate male
-attachment of some kind--a husband, a brother, or a father in constant
-attendance, ready for use the instant the need arises. Our whole
-society is built upon the theory that woman is the dependent, the
-appendage of man. Freedom is impossible for a woman, except at a price
-almost no woman voluntarily pays. To have any measure of freedom a
-woman must bind herself to some man, and the bondage has to be cruel
-indeed not to be preferable to the so-called freedom of the unattached
-female. Thus it was not altogether snobbishness, it may not have been
-chiefly snobbishness, that moved Edna to transfer herself to a husband
-who would be a more or less unpleasant actuality. She had to have a
-man. She wished to live abroad and to be in fashionable society. She
-chose shrewdly. I imagine, from several things she said, that she had
-measured Frascatoni with calm impartiality, had discovered many serious
-disadvantages in him as husband to a woman of her fondness for her own
-way. But estimating the disadvantages at their worst, the balance still
-tipped heavily toward him.
-
-I am glad I was not born a woman. I pity the women of our day, bred
-and educated in the tastes of men, yet compelled to be dependents, and
-certain of defeat in a finish contest with man.
-
-Though there was now no reasonable doubt of Edna’s having the decree of
-divorce made final, I, through overcaution or oversensitiveness as to
-Mary Kirkwood’s rights, or what motive you please, would not let myself
-leave London until a cable from my lawyers in New York informed me that
-the decree had been entered and that I was legally free. The newspapers
-had given much space to our affairs. It was assumed that I had come
-abroad “to make last desperate efforts to win back the beautiful and
-charming wife, the favorite of fashionable European society.” Stories
-had been published, giving in minute detail accounts of the bribes I
-had offered. And when the final decree was entered, my chagrin and fury
-were pictured vividly.
-
-I did nothing to discredit this, but, on the contrary, helped along the
-campaign for the preservation of the literary and journalistic fiction
-that the American woman is a kind of divine autocrat over mankind. If
-I had been so vain and so ungallant as to try to make the public see
-the truth I should have failed. You can discredit the truth to the
-foolish race of men; but you cannot discredit, nor even cast a shade
-of doubt upon, a generally accepted fiction of sentimentality. And of
-all the sentimental fictions that everyone slobbers over, but no one
-in his heart believes with the living and only valid faith of works,
-the fictions about woman are the most sacred. Further, how many men are
-there who believe that a man could get enough of a physically lovely
-woman, however trying she might be? Once in a while in a novel--not
-often, but once in a while--there are scenes portraying with some
-approach to fidelity what happens between a woman and a man who is
-of the sort that is attractive to women. Invariably such scenes are
-derided or denounced by the critics. Why? For an obvious reason. A
-critic is, to put it charitably, an average man. He has no insight; he
-must rely for his knowledge of life solely upon experience. Now what
-is the average man’s experience of women? He treats them in a certain
-dull, conventional way, and they treat him--as he invites and compels.
-So when he reads how women act toward a man who does not leave them
-cold or indifferent, who rouses in them some sensation other than
-wonder whether they would be able to stomach him as a husband, the
-critic scoffs and waxes wroth. The very idea that women might be less
-reserved, less queenly, less grudgingly gracious than woman has ever
-been to him sends shooting pains through his vanity--and toothache and
-sciatica are mild compared with the torturings of a pain-shotten vanity.
-
-Edna scored heavily in the newspapers. You would never have suspected
-it was her late husband’s money that had given her everything, that
-had made her throughout; for, what had she, and what was she, except
-a product of lavishly squandered money? Think about that carefully,
-gentle reader, before you damn me and commiserate her as in these pages
-a victim of my venomous malice.... She was the newspaper heroine of the
-hour. If she had been content with this-- But I shall not anticipate.
-
-My cable message from New York came at five o’clock. At half-past six,
-accompanied only by my valet, I was journeying toward Switzerland.
-
-Mrs. Kirkwood, I had learned from her brother, was at Territet, at the
-Hotel Excelsior, with the Horace Armstrongs. At four the following
-afternoon I descended at Montreux from the Milan express; at five, with
-travel stains removed, I was in the garden of the Excelsior having
-tea with Mrs. Armstrong and listening to her raptures over the Savoy
-Alps. Doubtless you know Mrs. Armstrong’s (Neva Carlin’s) work. Her
-portrait of Edna is famous, is one of the best examples I know of
-inside-outness. Edna does not like it, perhaps for that reason.
-
-Mary and Horace Armstrong had gone up to Caux. “But,” said Neva,
-“they’ll surely be back in a few minutes. Count von Tilzer-Borgfeldt is
-coming at half-past five.”
-
-I instantly recognized that name as the one Edna gave in telling me
-that Mary had gone shopping for a title and had invested. I had thought
-Edna’s jeer produced no effect upon me. I might have known better. My
-nature has, inevitably, been made morbidly suspicious by my business
-career. Also, I had found out Robert Armitage as a well-veneered snob,
-and this could not but have put me in an attitude of watchfulness
-toward his sister, so like him mentally. Also my investigations of
-that most important phenomenon of American life, the American woman,
-had compelled me to the conclusion that the disease of snobbishness
-had infected them all, with a few doubtful exceptions. So, without my
-realizing it, my mind was prepared to believe that Mary Kirkwood was
-like the rest. When Neva Armstrong pronounced the name Edna had given,
-there shot through me that horrible feeling of insufferable heat and
-insufferable cold which it would be useless to attempt to describe; for
-those who have felt it will understand at once, and those who have not
-could not be made to understand. And then I recalled Hartley Beechman’s
-jeer, “She’s laughing at us both.” But my voice was natural as I said:
-
-“Tilzer-Borgfeldt. That’s the chap she’s engaged to just now, isn’t it?”
-
-Mrs. Armstrong, who is a loyal friend, flushed angrily. “Mary isn’t
-that sort, and you know it, for you’ve known her a long time.”
-
-“Then she’s not engaged to him?” said I.
-
-“Yes, she is,” replied Neva. “And if you knew him, you’d not wonder at
-it. I don’t like foreigners, but if I weren’t bespoke I think I’d have
-to take Tilzer-Borgfeldt if he asked me.”
-
-“No doubt it’s a first-class title,” said I.
-
-“You know perfectly well, Godfrey Loring, that I don’t mean the title.”
-She happened to glance toward the entrance to the garden. “Here he
-comes now. You’ll judge for yourself.”
-
-Advancing toward us was a big, happy blond man of the pattern from
-which nine out of ten German upper-class men are cut. He had the
-expression of simple, unaffected joy natural to a big, healthy, happy
-blond youth looking forward to seeing his best girl. He had youth, good
-looks, unusual personal magnetism--and you will imagine what effect
-this produced upon my mood. I could not deny that Neva was right.
-Without a title this man would have all the chances in his favor when
-he went courting. He had not a trace of aristocratic futility.
-
-You would have admired the frank cordiality of my greeting. Instead of
-sitting down again I glanced at my watch and said:
-
-“Well, my time’s up. I shall have to go without seeing Horace and Mary.”
-
-“But you’ll come to dinner?” said Mrs. Armstrong.
-
-“I’m taking the first express back to Paris,” said I. “I found a
-telegram waiting for me at my hotel.”
-
-“Mary will be disappointed,” said Neva. “You’ll give Mrs. Loring my
-best?”
-
-I remembered that the English papers, with the news doubtless in it,
-would not reach Territet until late that evening or the following
-morning. But I could not well tell her what had occurred. “Good-by,”
-said I, shaking hands. “Tell them how sorry I was. I may see you all in
-Paris.”
-
-And away I went, with not an outward sign of my internal state. In less
-than half an hour I was in the Paris express.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I stopped at Paris a month. A letter came from her--a bulky letter. I
-tossed it unopened into the fire. A week, and a second letter came. It
-was not so bulky. I flung it unopened into the fire. About two weeks,
-and a third letter came. I got Rossiter to address an envelope to her.
-I inclosed her unopened letter in the envelope and mailed it. I was
-giving myself an exquisite pleasure, the keener because it was seasoned
-with exquisite pain.
-
-All this time I had been amusing my idle days in the usual fashion.
-My readers who lead quiet lives--the women who sit thinking what they
-would do if only they were men--the men who slip away occasionally
-for a scampish holiday, and return to their sober routine with the
-cheering impression that they have been most fearfully and wonderfully
-devilish--those women and those men will regret that I refrain from
-details of how I amused myself. But to my notion I have said enough
-when I have said “in the usual fashion.” It passed the time as probably
-nothing else in the circumstances would have passed such tenacious
-hours, every one lingering to be counted. But I confess I have never
-been virtuous enough to be especially raptured by so-called vice. No
-doubt those who divide actions into good and bad, using the good for
-steady diet and the bad for dessert, have advantages in enjoyment over
-those who simply regard things as interesting and uninteresting. For,
-curiously enough, on that latter basis of division practically all the
-things esteemed by most human beings as the delightful but devilish
-dessert of life fall into the class of more or less uninteresting. But
-for the stimulus of the notion that he is doing something courageously,
-daringly wicked, I doubt if any but a dull fellow would perpetrate
-vice enough to lift the most easily scandalized hands in the world.
-The trouble with vice is that it is so tiresome--and so bad for the
-health. And most of it is so vulgar. Drinking to excess and gambling,
-for instance. I have indulged in both at times, when hard pressed
-for ways to pass the time or when in those stupid moods of obstinate
-unreasonableness in which a man takes a savage pleasure in disgusting
-himself with himself. Drinking has a certain coarse appeal to the
-imagination--coarse and slight but definite. But gambling is sheer
-vulgarity. I have been called money-mad, because I have made money,
-finding it easy and occupying to attend to business. Yet never have I
-cared about money sufficiently to take the faintest interest in the
-gaming table. Gambling--all forms of it--is for those sordid creatures
-who love money, and who have no intelligent appreciation of its value.
-Gambling--all the vices, for that matter--is essentially aristocratic;
-for, as I believe I have explained, aristocracy analyzes into the
-quintessence of vulgarity. The two incompetent classes--the topmost
-and the bottommost--are steeped in vice, for the same reason of their
-incompetence to think or to act.
-
-A fourth letter, the bulkiest of all, came from Mary Kirkwood. A few
-hours before it was delivered a telegram came from her:
-
- “A letter is on the way. Godfrey, I beg you to read it. I love you.”
-
-I tore up the telegram, sent back the letter without opening it. You
-are denouncing me as inhuman, gentle reader. Perhaps you are right.
-But permit me to point out to you that, if I had not in my composition
-a vein of iron, I should never have risen from the mosquito-haunted
-flats of the Passaic. Also, gentle reader, if I had been a man of the
-ordinary sort would Mary Kirkwood have been sufficiently interested in
-me to send those letters and that telegram?
-
-A day or so after the return of her last letter I was seized--I can’t
-say why--with a longing to see my father and mother and sister, on that
-lonely farm out in New Jersey. I had never felt that desire since I
-first left home, but had made my few and brief visits out of a sense
-of duty--no, of shame. The thought of them gave me no sensation of
-horror, as it gave Edna and her daughter. When I remembered them it
-was simply as one remembers any random fact. They did not understand
-me; and in them there was nothing to understand. We had few subjects
-for conversation, and those not wildly interesting and soon exhausted.
-You will smile when I say I loved them. Yet it is the truth. We do not
-always love those we like to be with; we do not always like to be with
-those we love.
-
-There was nothing to detain me in Paris. The hours hung like guests
-who do not know how to take leave. So not many days elapsed between
-my seizure and my appearance at the spacious and comfortable stone
-farmhouse where the four old people were awaiting in a semi-comatose or
-dozing state what they firmly believed was a summons to a higher life.
-Their belief in it, like that of most religious people, was not strong
-enough to make them impatient to get it; still they believed, and found
-the belief a satisfactory way of employing such small part of their
-minds as remained awake.
-
-I had not seen them or their place in several years, so I was
-astonished by the changes. My sister Polly--a homely old maid--and
-Edna’s father had some glimmerings of enterprise. Polly took in and
-read several magazines, and from them gathered odds and ends of
-up-to-date ideas about dress, about furnishing, about gardens. With
-the valuable assistance of old Weeping Willie she had wrought a most
-creditable transformation. The old people now “looked like something,”
-as the saying is. And the place had a real smartness--both within and
-without.
-
-Polly--she was about eight years my senior, but looked old enough to be
-my mother--Polly watched me anxiously as I strolled and nosed about. My
-delight filled her with delight.
-
-“You’re not so ashamed of us, perhaps?” said she.
-
-“I never have been,” replied I. Nor did I put an accent on the personal
-pronoun that would have been a hint about somebody else’s feelings.
-
-“Well--you ought to have been,” said she. “We were mighty far behind
-even the tail of the procession.”
-
-“I’ll admit I like this better than the way we used to live in Passaic.
-Polly, you’ve got the best there is going. All the rest--all the luxury
-and other nonsense--is nothing but a source of unhappiness.”
-
-She did not answer. I noted a touching sadness in her expression.
-
-“You don’t agree with me?” said I.
-
-“Yes, I do,” replied she emphatically. “I wasn’t thinking of that.”
-
-“What have _you_ got to be unhappy about?”
-
-“You think I’m ungrateful to you,” said she, with quick sensitiveness.
-“But I’m not, Godfrey--indeed I’m not.”
-
-“Ungrateful?” I laughed. “Don’t talk nonsense.”
-
-“You’ve done all you could--all anyone could. And in a way I am happy.
-But----”
-
-“Yes?” I urged, as she hesitated.
-
-“Well, I’ve found out--looking back over my life--I’ve found out that
-I-- It seems to me I’ve got all the _tools_ of happiness, but nothing
-to _work on_. I keep thinking, ‘How happy I could be if I only had
-something to work on!’”
-
-I was silent. A shadow crept out of a black corner of my heart and cast
-a somberness and a chill over me.
-
-“You understand?” said she.
-
-I nodded.
-
-“I thought you would,” she went on. “Godfrey, I’ve often felt sorry for
-you--sorrier than I do for myself.” She laid her hand on my arm. “But
-you’re a man--a handsome, attractive, _young_ man. You’ll have only
-yourself to blame if you waste your life as mine’s been wasted.”
-
-“You don’t realize how lucky you’ve been,” said I, with a bitterness
-that surprised me. “You’ve at least escaped marriage.”
-
-“I wish to God I hadn’t,” cried she with an energy that startled me.
-There was a fierce look of pain in her eyes. “I thought you understood.
-But I see you don’t.”
-
-“What do you mean, Polly Ann?” said I gently.
-
-“The real unhappiness isn’t an unhappy marriage,” replied she. “It’s
-being not married at all--not having any children. You know what I
-am--an old maid. You think that means the same thing as old bachelor.
-Well, it don’t.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“An old bachelor--nine times out of ten that means simply an old,
-selfish, comfortable man. But an old maid-- The nature of woman’s
-different from the nature of man. A woman’s got to have a home--_her_
-home--her nest, with her children in it. And I’m an old maid. If I’d
-been a man--” She turned on me. “I’m ugly, ain’t I? You know I am.
-_I_ know it. Dress me up in men’s clothes and I’d be a good-looking
-person--as a man. But as a woman I’m ugly. If I’d have been a man I
-could have got a mighty nice, mighty nice-looking wife--one that’d have
-been grateful to me for taking her and would have cared for me. But as
-a woman I couldn’t get a husband.”
-
-“You can get a very good one,” said I. “Money--what would have bought
-you a wife as a man--what buys most men their wives--will buy you a
-husband. And he’ll be grateful and loving, so long as you manage the
-purse strings well--just as most wives are loving and grateful if their
-husbands don’t treat them too indulgently.”
-
-“It’s different, and you know it is,” retorted she. “Custom has made it
-different. And I’m ugly--and that’s fatal in a woman.”
-
-“Charm will beat beauty every time,” said I.
-
-“I’ve got no charm--none on the outside. And that’s where a woman’s
-charm has to be. No, I’ve thought out my case. It’s hopeless. I’m a
-born old maid. No man ever asked me to marry him. No man ever said a
-word of love to me. Do you know what that means, Godfrey?”
-
-I was silent. A choke in my throat made speech impossible.
-
-“Never a word of love,” she went on monotonously. “Yet I don’t suppose
-any woman ever wanted to hear it more. And no children. Yet I know
-no woman ever wanted them more. No, not adopted children--but my own
-flesh and blood. I’ve heard women complain of the burden of bearing a
-child. It made me wild to listen to them--the fools--the selfish fools!
-What wouldn’t I have given to have felt a child within me. Does it
-scandalize you to hear me talk like this?”
-
-“No,” said I. “No.”
-
-“It’s a wonder,” said she, with a grim smile. She was quieting down,
-was hiding the heart from which she had on impulse snatched the
-veil, was ashamed of her outburst. “A woman can talk about having a
-cancer, or a tumor, or any frightful disease inside her, and nobody’s
-modesty is shocked. But if she speaks of having a child within her--a
-wonderful, living human being--a lovely baby--why, it’s immodest!” She
-gave a scornful laugh. “What a world! What a world!”
-
-I looked at her and marveled. What a world, indeed!--where _this_
-was one of the sort of relatives of whom pushing arrived people were
-ashamed!
-
- * * * * *
-
-I think I forced myself to stay three days with them. I cannot recall;
-perhaps I left the second day. However that may be, I have the sense of
-a long, a very long visit. To one who has the city habit the country
-is oppressively deliberate even when it is interesting. It makes you
-realize how there is room, and to spare, for sixty minutes in an hour,
-for sixty seconds in each minute. The city entertains; the country
-compels you to seek entertainment, to make entertainment. People whose
-mentality tapers away from mediocrity grow old and dull rapidly in
-the country as soon as childhood’s torrential life begins to slacken.
-For men of thought the country ought to be ideal, I should say, once
-they formed its habit and lost the city habit of waiting in confident
-expectation of being amused. But for men of action like myself, for men
-whose whole life is dealing directly with their fellow men, to acquire
-the country habit is a matter of years, of a complete revolution.
-
-I brought a sore and a sick heart to the country. I took back to town
-one that was on the way toward the normal. And I owed the improvement
-not to the country directly, but to my sister. Polly Ann had reminded
-me of the futility of graveyard mooning, of its egotism and hypocrisy.
-She had reminded me that only the fool walks backward through life.
-I believed I had been guilty of the folly of blowing a bubble of
-delusion, pretending to myself that it was no bubble, but permanent,
-substantial, real. The bubble had burst, as bubbles must--had burst
-with a mocking and irritating dash of cold spray straight into my face.
-Well!--the sensible thing to do, the only thing to do, was to laugh and
-blow no more bubbles.
-
-I went back to finance; I busied myself to the uttermost of my capacity
-for work. But I could not uproot the idea Mary Kirkwood had set growing
-in my mind. I saw ever more clearly that my sister was eternally right.
-Some men might be successful bachelors. I could be fairly successful
-at that selfish and solitary profession for a few years, perhaps
-for ten or fifteen years longer. But I knew with the clearness of a
-vision trained to search the horizon of the future that the feeling
-of loneliness, of complete futility which already shadowed me, would
-become a black pall. I _must_ have companionship; and to companionship
-there is but the one way--the way of wife and children. A poor, an
-uncertain way; nevertheless the only way.
-
-You have, perhaps, observed the marriages of the rich. You have noted
-that every rich man and every rich woman is surrounded by a smaller
-or larger army of satellites--persons nominally their social equals,
-often distinctly their mental superiors, salaried persons, wearers of
-cast-off clothing, eaters of luncheons and dinners, permanent free
-lodgers, constant or occasional pensioners more or less disguised.
-Family life fails with the rich as it fails with the well off, or with
-the poor. But while other classes revert to the herd life, the life of
-clubs, saloons, teas, receptions, the rich take up the parasite-beset
-life, each rich person aloof with his or her particular circle of
-flatterers, attendants, coat-holders, joke-makers, and boot-lickers.
-
-Now it so happened that for me there could be no enduring of this
-standing apart in the meadow, switching my tail while parasites bit
-and tickled, buzzed and burrowed. Riches, like any other heavy and
-constantly growing responsibility, usually rob a man of his sense of
-humor and turn his thoughts in upon himself and make him a ridiculous
-ass of an egotist. They had not had that effect upon me. I can give no
-reason; I simply state the fact. So, with my sense of humor active,
-and my sense of proportion fairly well balanced, I could not give
-myself up to the dreary life custom assigns to the rich. I retained the
-normal human instincts.
-
-I had hoped to satisfy them to the uttermost with the aid of Mary
-Kirkwood. That hope had fallen dead. I must search on--not for the best
-conceivable, but for the best possible.
-
-You are not surprised at my lack of sentiment, gentle reader. By this
-time, I am sure, I could not surprise you with any exhibition of
-that or other depravity. But it confirms your conviction of my utter
-sordidness. So? Then you imagine, do you, that there are many love
-marriages in the world, leaving out of the count those in novels and
-in the twaddling gossip men and women repeat as the true heart stories
-of this and that person? Yes, I should say your intelligence was
-about rudimentary enough to give you such a false notion of life as
-it is lived. Marriages of passion there are a-plenty. Rarely, indeed,
-does a man become bill-payer to a woman for life--not to speak of the
-insurance--without having been more or less agitated by her physical
-charms; and usually the woman, eager to be married, whips up for him
-a return feeling that looks well, convinces the man and herself,
-and makes you, gentle reader, sigh and wipe your sloppy eyes. But
-love-marriage--that’s a wholly different matter. I should say it almost
-never occurs. Where love, a sentiment of slow and reluctant growth,
-does happen occasionally to come afterwards, because the two are really
-congenial, really mated--where love does come afterwards, it did not
-exist when the wedding bells rang. And I doubt not that love has grown
-as often, if not oftener, where the motives that led to the marriage
-were practical and even sordid than where they were the bright, swift
-fading, and in death most foul-smelling, flowers of passion.
-
-I was willing to buy a wife, if I could find a woman who promised
-to wear well, to improve on acquaintance, or, at least, not to
-deteriorate. And, beyond question, with my money I could have taken
-my pick. Almost any girl anywhere, engaged or unengaged, would have
-fallen in love with me as soon as she discovered my charms--of person
-and of purse. Yes, would have fallen in love, gentle reader. Don’t you
-know that a nice, pure girl always makes herself, or lets herself, fall
-in love, before she gives herself? And don’t you know that, except
-falling out of love--out of that kind of love--there’s nothing easier,
-especially for an inexperienced girl, than falling in love--in that
-kind of love?
-
-But where was I to find a woman with enough solid quality to give me a
-reasonable hope that she would aid me in my quest for family happiness?
-
-Do not denounce me, gentle reader. Epithet and hiss are not reply.
-Answer my question.
-
-You say there are millions of such girls. Yes? But where?
-
-You say there are millions of pure, sweet, charming girls, intelligent
-and domestic. Yes. No doubt. But how long would they remain so if
-tempted by wealth, by the example of all the money-mad, luxury-mad,
-society-mad women about them?
-
-Mind you, I did not want a stupid rotter, a cow, a sitter and lounger
-and taker on of fat and slougher off of intelligence. I did not want
-the lazy slattern who poses as domestic, who is fond of home in exactly
-the same way that a pig is fond of an alley wallow.
-
-You laugh at me. You say: “He is a conceited fool!--to think that _he_
-could attract and absorb an intelligent woman with a complex woman’s
-soul!” Not so, gentle reader. I did not wish to attract and to absorb
-her. As for the “complex woman’s soul,” the less I saw or heard of it,
-the better pleased I’d be. I simply wanted a woman who would join me in
-being attracted by and absorbed in family life.
-
-You are still smiling mockingly. But let me tell you a few secrets of
-wisdom and happiness. First--Friendship is divine, but intimacy is the
-devil himself--unless it is the intimacy of the family. Second--To love
-your neighbor as yourself, he must be and must remain your neighbor,
-that is to say, within hail, but not within touch. Third--Husband,
-wife, and children are the only natural intimates--intimate because
-they have the bond of common interest. The family that looks abroad
-for intimates has ceased to be a family. Finally--A man who has his
-wife and children for intimates has neither need nor time for other
-intimates; and unless a man’s wife and children are his intimates, he
-has, in fact, no wife and no children. Let me add, for the benefit
-of--perhaps of you and your husband, gentle reader--that the only
-career worth having is built upon and with efficient work; careers made
-with friendships, gaddings, pulls, and the like would better be left
-unmade.
-
-You are smiling still, in your smug, supercilious fashion--smiling
-at what you promptly call old-fashioned trite truisms. I am not
-sure that, after they have been thought about a while, they would
-seem old-fashioned or stale. Rather, I flatter myself, they are
-the statement of a new philosophy of life. For the old theory
-with which you are confusing these truths was that the family is
-the _social unit_. In fact, it is not; the only _social_ units
-are individuals--capable individuals. My theory, or rather my
-philosophy--for it is more than a theory--my philosophy is that the
-family is the _unit of happiness_. Society can--and does--get along
-fairly well with little or no happiness. But happiness is an excellent
-thing, nevertheless. And _I_ wanted it.
-
-Now, perhaps, you see why I was not looking forward with any exuberance
-of optimism to finding the woman whom I needed and wanted, and who
-needed and wanted me. Prompted by my experiences and guided somewhat
-by my shrewd and cynical friend Bob Armitage, I had been giving no
-small amount of spare time to observing and thinking about the American
-woman. And while I admired that charming lady and found her an amusing
-companion for an occasional leisure hour, I saw that she was not to be
-taken seriously by a serious person. She knew how to look well, how
-to make a good “front,” how to get perhaps a hundred dollars worth of
-pleasing surface results by squandering a thousand or two thousand
-dollars. As an ornament, a decoration, as a basket of rare inedible
-fruit to irradiate lovely costliness, she could not be beaten. As wife
-to a showy plutocrat, ignorant of the art of comfortable living, as
-head mistress to an European noble with servants trained to maintain
-his state in splendid and orderly discomfort, she would do excellently
-well. But not for the practical uses of sensible life. She had no
-training for them, no taste for them, no intention of adapting herself
-to them, whatever she might pretend in order to catch a bill-payer.
-
-Still, I did not despair. I dared not despair. If I had,
-loneliness--and heartache, yes, heartache--and my sense of present and
-future futility would have become intolerable. On the other hand, while
-there was every reason for haste--when happiness was my goal, and life
-is short and uncertain--I was resolved to be deliberate. If I should be
-deceived--perhaps by the girl’s honest self-deception--into choosing
-wrong, how she would hate me! For not again would, or could I let a
-woman use me as Edna had used me. A fool is a grown-up person who has
-never grown up. I had grown up--had become a definite person, knowing
-what I wanted and what I did not want. Such persons are hated by those
-who try in vain to use them. My one chance lay in finding a woman with
-the same definite tastes as mine. Only disaster could come through the
-woman who might marry me, pretending to agree with me and secretly
-resolved to “redeem” me once she got me firmly in her grasp.
-
-Armitage was back in New York, was eager to resume our old relations.
-But that could not be. I had outgrown him. And he, at the dangerous
-age, was allowing himself to harden into all the habits of the rich
-class and of middle life. Despite his efforts to conceal it, I saw
-that he had even reached the pass where a man of property regards a
-new idea as a menace to society. If it is a new invention, it may make
-some stock he owns worthless. If it is a new social or political idea
-it may make his laborers demand higher wages, or in some other way
-affect his dividends. And, of course, whenever a man speaks of a menace
-to society, he means a menace to himself whom he naturally regards as
-the most precious and vital thread in the social fabric. Compelled by
-my need for ideas to occupy me in supplement to the now thoroughly
-familiar and rather monotonous routine of investing and reinvesting,
-organizing and reorganizing, I was associating more and more with
-artists and writers of the sort who feel suffocated in the society of
-the merely rich.
-
-Material conditions force upon men inexorable modes of life. And every
-mode of life breeds a definite, distinct set of ideas. Men fancy
-themselves original because they suddenly discover certain ideas in
-their brains. As well might a hen who has just eaten hot bran fancy
-herself original because she laid an egg. The idea was not from the
-man, but from his material conditions--lawyer idea, politician idea,
-banker idea, anarchist idea, big or little merchant idea, dog-fighter
-idea, professor idea, preacher idea, and so on. I was fighting to
-escape this to me repellent molding process--and I was making headway.
-But poor Armitage was rapidly yielding; his struggle, I fear, had been
-in its best days in large part a brassy make-believe--the valor of the
-trumpet, not of the sword.
-
-He was a sorry sight. His once handsome face was taking on that petty,
-pinched, frost-bitten Fifth Avenue expression. And he had been driven
-for companionship into forming the familiar parasite circle. The chief
-figures in it were a decaying dandy of an old New York family who had
-been fawner and crumb snapper all his days, and a broken-down plutocrat
-who had squandered his fortune on fine women, fine wine, and fine food.
-The dandy gave Bob the fashionable gossip; the broken-down plutocrat
-gave him the gossip and scandal of the giddy part of town, also the
-latest gamey stories; also he--perhaps both--arranged for him the
-peculiar pleasures of the rich man with the palate that needs strong
-sensations to make it respond.
-
-Armitage was out of the question for me. Then----
-
-I drifted into the Amsterdam Club one evening--to write a note or send
-a telegram--and there sat Hartley Beechman. The instant he saw me he
-sprang up and made straight for me. His expression was puzzling, but
-not hostile--still, I was unobtrusively ready. Said he in a straight,
-frank fashion:
-
-“Loring, I want to apologize to you. I made a damned ass of myself
-in Green Park last summer. My excuse is that I was more than half
-crazy----”
-
-I put out my hand. “I half guessed at the time,” said I. “I know all
-about it now.”
-
-We looked at each other with the friendliness that has become the
-stronger by a mended break--for broken hearts and broken lives and
-broken friendships are much the stronger if the break mends. Said he:
-
-“One way of measuring the strength of a man is the length of the
-intervals between the times when he makes a fool of himself about a
-woman. My first came at eighteen, my next at thirty-eight. Not a bad
-showing, I flatter myself--eh?”
-
-“Uncommonly good,” said I.
-
-“And the second shall be the last.”
-
-“Optimism!” I warned him laughingly. “Beware of optimism!”
-
-“No. I shall write about women, but I’ll see no more of them. I’ve
-got hold of myself again. I’m as good as ever--better than ever,
-probably. But--it cost! And I’ll not pay that price again. For a while
-I thought it was you who had upset my happiness. Then--” He gave a
-loud, unnatural laugh--“That German purchase! I saw she had been simply
-playing with me. You know how fond women of that sort are of playing
-with romantic or sentimental ideas. But when it came to the test--why,
-she would have married only a fortune or a title.”
-
-I made no comment. He was saying only what I thought, what I believed
-true. But I hated to hear it.
-
-“I may wrong her,” pursued he reflectively. “Not altogether, but to a
-certain extent. I rather think the impulse to something saner and less
-vulgar was there--actually there.”
-
-As he was looking at me inquiringly I said: “I think so.”
-
-“But--nothing came of it. And there’s little in these fine impulses of
-which nothing comes.”
-
-“Little?” laughed I. “Why, they produce the most beautiful decorative
-effects. Life would be barren without them. What a repulsive sight
-the poor little human animal would be, grunting and grubbing about,
-thinking always of its beloved self--what a repulsive sight if it
-didn’t wear the flowers of high ideals in its ears--and the jewels of
-fine impulses ringed in its nose.”
-
-“_I_ think it would look better without them,” said he. “Less
-ridiculous--less contemptible.”
-
-“To you--yes. Because you’re like I am--coarse. But not to itself and
-its fellows.”
-
-“I’m going back to the woods to-morrow,” said he.
-
-“Better come on a yachting trip to South America with me,” said I.
-
-He flushed. “Thank you--but I can’t do that,” replied he. “I can’t
-afford it.”
-
-It was my turn to flush. “I beg your pardon,” I said. “I spoke without
-thinking--spoke on impulse. You are quite right.”
-
-“A man’s a fool or a sycophant who goes where he can’t pay his own
-way,” continued he. “I’ve come to realize that. I’ll do it no more.
-I’ll stick to my own class. I’ve been justly punished for blundering
-out of it. But not so severely punished as I should have been had my--”
-he smiled ironically--“my love affair prospered.”
-
-He thought for several minutes, then he said: “I wonder--when the clash
-came--would I have gone with her or she with me?”
-
-I did not reply.
-
-He pulled himself together, smiled mockingly at his own folly of
-lingering near the unsightly and not too aromatic corpse. “I must get
-into the woods and breathe it out of my system. Did you see the account
-of the arrangements for her approaching marriage in this evening’s
-paper? Nearly a page--and I read every line.”
-
-When he had finished his drink he rose and departed--and I have not
-talked with him since. He resumed his career; we all know how brilliant
-it is. As I have said before, I have no sympathy with the silly notion,
-bruited about by silly flabby people that women ruin the lives of
-strong men. Now and then a woman may be the proverbial last straw that
-breaks the camel’s back. But there’s a vast difference between woman
-the actuality, woman the mere last straw, and woman the vampire, the
-scarlet destroyer as portrayed in novels and so-called histories. Those
-mighty men, made or ruined by women--why do we never _see_ them, why do
-we only read about them?
-
-I resisted the temptation to follow Beechman’s example and read the
-newspaper account of Mary Kirkwood’s approaching apotheosis into the
-heaven that is the dream of all true American ladies. There is but
-one way to do a thing--and that is to do it. I had destroyed or sent
-back the letters; I had resisted the telegram. I could not yet bar my
-mind from wandering to her. But I could avoid leading it to her--and
-I did. So it was by accident that, the following week, I one morning
-let my eye take in the whole of a four-line newspaper paragraph before
-I realized what it was about. The purport was that the engagement
-between Count von Tilzer-Borgfeldt and Mrs. Kirkwood had been broken
-off because of a “failure to agree as to settlements.” This, in the
-same newspaper that contained two columns descriptive of the quietly
-gorgeous marriage of Frascatoni and Edna in my son-in-law’s new house
-near London.
-
-“Failure to agree as to settlements--” Faugh!
-
-I had calmed until all my anger against her was gone and I was thinking
-of her as merely human, as the result of her environment like everyone
-else. I believed now that where she had deceived me she had also
-deceived herself. And I saw as clearly as in the days of my infatuation
-that she and I had been made for each other, that our coming together
-had been one of those rare meetings of two who are entirely congenial.
-It filled me with sadness that fate had not been kind instead of
-sardonically cruel, had not brought us together ten years earlier,
-before the world had poisoned her originally simple and sincere nature.
-But how absurd to linger over impossible might-have-beens! I had gone
-as far as I cared to go in the company of those who have made fools of
-themselves for love.
-
-I believed I could trust myself with her in the same neighborhood. But
-I was not sure, and I would take no chance. A few days after I read of
-the broken engagement I departed on the yachting trip to South America.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-
-There were but two in my party--Dugdale, the playwright, and myself.
-A more amusing man than Dugdale never lived. He was amusing both
-consciously and unconsciously. A mountain of a man--bone and muscle,
-little fat. He had eyes that were large, but were so habitually
-squinted, the better to see every detail of everything, that they
-seemed small; and his expression, severe to the verge of savageness,
-changed the instant he spoke into childlike simplicity and good humor.
-He made money easily--large sums of money--for he had the talent for
-success. But he spent long before he made. I think it must have been
-his secret ambition to owe everybody in the world--except his friends.
-From a friend he never borrowed. The general belief was that he had
-never paid back a loan--and I have no reason to doubt it. What did he
-do with his borrowings? Loaned them to his friends who were hard up. If
-the list of those he owed was long, the list of those who owed him was
-longer. If he never paid back, neither was he ever paid.
-
-He could work at sea, or anywhere else--no doubt even in a balloon.
-On that trip he toiled prodigiously, crouched over a foolish little
-table in his cabin, smoking endless cigarettes and setting down with
-incredible rapidity illegible words in a tiny writing that contrasted
-grotesquely with the enormous hand holding the pencil. He labored
-altogether at night, after I had gone to bed. He was always astir
-before me. He slept unbelievably little, probably kept up on the
-quantities of whisky he drank. However that may be, he was as active by
-day physically as he was mentally by night. He was all over the boat,
-always finding something to do--something for me as well as for himself.
-
-The only terms on which Dugdale would consent to go were that I should
-keep him away from New York not less than two months, and that I
-should take no one else. I promptly assented to both conditions. It
-was not the first time he had put me under a heavy debt of gratitude
-for congenial society. We had made several long trips together, always
-with satisfaction on both sides. Whatever else you may think of me, I
-hope I have at least convinced you that I am not one of those rich men
-who rely for consideration upon their wealth. I believe I am one of the
-few rich men who can justly claim that distinction. When I ask a man
-less well off than I am to dine with me--or to accept my hospitality
-in any way--I ask him because I want him. And I do not either directly
-or indirectly try to make him feel that he is being honored. I would
-not ask the sort of man who feels honored by being in the society of
-bank accounts or of any other glittering symbols in substitute for
-good-fellowship.
-
-You will see, gentle reader, that my list was short indeed.
-
-It is one of the not few drawbacks of riches that they rouse the
-instinct of cupidity in nearly all human beings. The rich man
-glances round at a circle of constrained faces, each more or less
-unsuccessfully striving to veil from him the glistening eye and the
-watery lip of the gold hunger. Probably you know how pepsin is got for
-the market--how they pen pigs so that their snouts almost touch food
-which they can by no straining and struggling reach; how the unhappy
-creatures soon begin to drip, then to slobber, then to stream into
-the receiving trough under their jaws the pepsin which the sight of
-the food starts their stomachs to secreting. As I have looked at the
-parasite circles of some of my friends I have often been reminded of
-the pepsin pigs. Some of my friends like these displays, encourage them
-in every way, associate solely with pepsin pigs. I confess I have never
-acquired the least taste for that sort of entertainment.
-
-I have traveled the world over, and everywhere I have found men either
-industriously engaged in cringing or looking hopefully about for some
-one to cringe to them. Well--what of it?
-
-I owe Dugdale a debt I cannot hope to repay. He, a light-hearted
-philosopher, made me light-hearted. He kept my sense of humor and my
-sense of proportion constantly active. There is a stripe of philosopher
-of the light-hearted variety who lets his perception of the fundamental
-futility of life and all that therein is discourage him from everything
-but cynical laughter at himself and at the world. That sort is a
-shallow ass, fit company for no one but the bleary, blowsy wrecks to
-whose level he rapidly sinks. Dugdale--and I--were of the other school.
-We did not--at least, not habitually--exaggerate our own importance.
-It caused no swelling of the head in him that his name was known
-wherever people went to the theater, or in me that I usually had to be
-taken into account when they did anything important in finance. We did
-not measure the world or rank its inhabitants according to the silly
-standards in general use. But at the same time we appreciated that to
-work and to work well was the only sensible way to pass the few swift
-years assigned us.
-
-It takes a serious man to make even a good joke. A frivolous person can
-do nothing. That is why so many of our American women, and so many of
-the men, too, sink into insignificance as soon as the first freshness
-of youth is gone from them. Youth has charm simply as youth because it
-seems to be a brilliant promise. When the promise goes to protest the
-charm vanishes.
-
-I shall reserve what I saw and heard in South America for another
-volume, one of a different kind. I shall go forward to the following
-spring when I was once more in New York. Edna and her daughter--so
-I read in the newspapers--were living in fitting estate in a famous
-villa they had taken in the fashionable part of the south of France,
-“for the health of the two young sons of the marchioness.” Frascatoni
-was gambling at Monte Carlo, Crossley was at his government post in
-London. I could fill in the tiresome details for both the wives and the
-husbands--and so, probably, can you. While some business matters were
-settling, I was turning over in my mind plans for making a systematic
-search for a wife.
-
-I count on your amusement confidently, gentle reader. If you wished a
-fresh egg for your breakfast or a suit of clothes to be worn a few
-weeks and discarded, or an automobile, you would set about getting it
-with some attention to the best ways and means. But, saturated as you
-are with silly sentimentalities about marriage, you believe that the
-most important matter in the world--the matter which determines your
-own happiness or unhappiness and also the current of posterity--you
-believe that such a matter should be left to the lottery of chance!
-Well, I had long since abandoned that delusion, and I purposed to
-establish my life with as much thought and care as I gave all other
-matters.
-
-“A dull fellow,” you are saying. “No wonder his wife fled from him.”
-
-I do not wonder that you regard as dull anything that is intelligent.
-To ignorance intelligence must necessarily seem dull. When any subject
-of real interest is brought up, some silly, empty-headed pretty woman
-is sure to say, “How dull! Let’s talk of something interesting.” And
-there will always be a chorus of laughing assent--because the woman is
-pretty. So I accept your sneer at me with a certain pleasure. I wish
-to be thought dull by some people, including some women very good to
-look at. But out of vanity and in fairness to Edna I must acquit her of
-having thought me dull--after she had been about the world.
-
-One evening at the Federal Club I fell in with my old acquaintance,
-Sam Cauldwell, the fashionable physician. He was something more than
-that--or had been--but was too lazy to use his mind when his gift
-for sympathetic and flattering gab brought him in plenty of money.
-Cauldwell was a trained, thoroughgoing sycophant and snob. But he saw
-the humorous aspect of the gods he was on his knees before--and saw the
-humor of his being there. He knew the kind of man I was, and liked to
-take me aside and make sport of his deities for an hour over a bottle
-of wine. Also--he liked the idea of being, and of being seen, intimate
-with a man conspicuous for wealth and for the social position of his
-family--the ex-husband of a princess, the father of a marchioness.
-Gentle reader, if you wish to see human nature to its depth, you
-must occupy such a position as mine. Believe me, you are mistaken in
-thinking the traits you shamedly hide are unique. There are others like
-you--many others.
-
-Cauldwell was perhaps ten years older than I, but being a
-well-taken-care-of New Yorker, he passed for a young man--which,
-indeed, he was. I do not regard fifty as anything but young unless it
-insists upon another estimate by looking older than it really is. I
-shall assuredly be young at fifty, perhaps younger than I am now, for
-I take better care of my health every year--and I have health worth
-taking care of. But, as I was about to say, Cauldwell had a meditative
-look that night as we sat down to dinner together. And when he had
-drunk his third glass of champagne he said:
-
-“Loring, why the devil don’t you get married?”
-
-I felt that he had something especial to say to me. I answered
-indifferently, “Why don’t _you_?”
-
-“Very simple,” replied he. “Not rich enough. To marry in New York a man
-must be either a pauper or a Crœsus.”
-
-“Then marry a rich girl,” said I.
-
-“I’d have done it long ago if I could,” he confessed with a laugh. “But
-I’ve never been able to get at the girls who are rich enough. Their
-mammas guard them for plutocrats or titles. But you-- Really, it’s a
-shame for you to stay single. I know a dozen women who’re losing sleep
-longing for you--for themselves, or for some lovely young daughter.”
-
-“Pathetic,” said I.
-
-“I see that irritates you. Well--you needn’t be alarmed. You’re famed
-for being about the wariest bird in the preserves. And I know you don’t
-want that kind of woman. Why not take the kind you do want?”
-
-“Where is she?” said I.
-
-“I could name a dozen,” rejoined he. “But I shan’t name any. I have one
-in mind. A doctor has the best opportunity in the world to find out
-about women--about men, too--the truth about them.”
-
-I laughed. “If I wanted misinformation about human nature,” said I,
-“I’d go to a doctor--or a preacher. They’re the depositories of all the
-hysterical tommyrot, all the sentimental lies that vain women and men
-think out about themselves and their sex relations.”
-
-His smile was not a denial. “Yes, I’ve been rather credulous, I’ll
-admit,” said he. “And men and women do tell the most astounding
-whoppers about themselves. Especially women, having trouble with their
-husbands. I try not to believe, but I’m caught every once in a while.”
-
-A gleam in his eye made me wonder whether he wasn’t thinking of some
-yarn Edna had spun for him about me. Probably. There are precious few
-women, even among the fairly close-mouthed, who don’t take advantage
-of the family doctor to indulge in the passion for romancing.
-
-“But I wasn’t thinking of any confession,” he went on. “Several women
-have confessed a secret passion for you to me--with the hope that I’d
-help them. The woman I have in mind isn’t that sort. I don’t know that
-she cares anything about you. I only know that she’s exactly the woman
-for you.”
-
-“Interesting,” said I.
-
-“She’s young--unusually pretty--and in a distinguished way. She knows
-how to run a house as a home--and she’s about the only woman I know in
-our class who does. She’s got a good mind--not for a woman, but for
-anybody. And she needs a husband and children and a home.”
-
-He must have misunderstood the peculiar expression of my face, for he
-hastened on:
-
-“Not that she’s poor. On the contrary, she’s rich. I’d not recommend a
-poor girl to you. Poor girls can think of nothing but money--naturally.”
-
-“Everybody, rich and poor, thinks of money--naturally,” said I.
-
-“Guess you’re right,” laughed he. “But it _looks_ worse in a poor girl.”
-
-“I should say the opposite. A feeding glutton looks worse than a
-feeding famished man.”
-
-“At any rate--this woman I have in mind isn’t poor. That’s not a
-disadvantage, is it?”
-
-“Not a hopeless obstacle,” said I. “By the way, what _are_ her
-disadvantages?”
-
-“Well--she’s been married before.”
-
-“So have I,” said I.
-
-“But, on the other hand, she has no children.”
-
-“Neither have I,” said I, without thinking. I hastened to add, “My only
-child is married.”
-
-“And splendidly married,” said he with the snob’s enthusiasm.
-
-“To return to the lady,” said I dryly. “Why don’t you marry her
-yourself?”
-
-He had drunk several more glasses of the champagne. He laughed. “She
-wouldn’t look at _me_. She sees straight through me. She wants a
-man with domestic tastes. I’m about as fit for domestic life as a
-fire-engine horse for an old maid’s phæton.”
-
-“Well--who is it?” said I.
-
-“I’m afraid you’ll think she’s been at me to help her. But, on my
-honor, Loring, she isn’t that sort. We’ve talked of you. For some
-reason, ever since I’ve known her--well, I’ve never seen her without
-thinking of you. I often talk of you to her--not marrying talk--I’d not
-dare--but in a friendly sort of way. She listens--says nothing.”
-
-“But she is sickly,” said I.
-
-“Sickly?” he cried. He looked horrified and amazed. “Good Lord, what
-gave you that notion?”
-
-“You said you saw her often.”
-
-“Oh, I see. It was her brother who had the illness.”
-
-“All right. Bring her round and I’ll look her over,” said I carelessly.
-And I forced a change of subject.
-
-Had Mary Kirkwood been taking this agreeable, insidious doctor into
-her confidence? I did not know. I do not know. I have reasons for
-thinking he told the literal truth. And yet--women are queer about
-doctors. However, that’s a small matter. The thing that impressed me,
-that agitated me as he talked, was the picture he, by implication,
-was making of Mary Kirkwood, alone again, and evidently absolutely
-unattached--living alone in the country as when I first knew her.
-
-I tossed and fretted away most of the hours of that night with the
-result that at breakfast I resolved to leave town again, to put the
-width of the continent or of the ocean between me and temptation to
-folly. But one thing and another came up to detain me. It was perhaps
-ten days later that I, walking alone in the Park, as was my habit,
-found myself at a turning face to face with her. I don’t think my
-expression reflected credit upon my boasted self-control. As for her--I
-thought she was going to faint--and she is not one of the fainting
-kind. We gazed at each other in fright and embarrassment, and both
-had the same child’s impulse to turn and fly--one, of those sensible,
-natural instincts for the shortest way out of difficult situations that
-the cowardly conventionality of the grown-up estate makes it impossible
-to obey. But--we had to do something. So, we laughed.
-
-She put out her hand; I took it. “How well you are looking,” said
-I--and it was the truth.
-
-“You, too,” said she.
-
-I turned to walk with her. We strolled along cheerfully and
-contentedly, talking of the early spring, of flowers, and birds, and
-such neutral matters. I was fluent, she no less so. Our agitation
-disappeared; our sense of congeniality returned. Our acquaintance
-seemed to have lumped back to where it was before we had that first
-confidential talk together on the yacht. After perhaps an hour, as
-agreeable an hour as I ever spent, she said she must go home, as she
-had an engagement. On the way to the Sixty-fifth Street entrance the
-conversation lagged somewhat. We were both busily resolving the same
-thing--the matter of explanations. Now that I was seeing her again--a
-wholly different matter from inspecting my defaced and smirched and
-battered image of her--battered by the blows of my jealousy, and
-anger, and scorn--now that I was seeing _her_ again, I could not but
-see and feel that she was in reality a sweet and simple and attractive
-woman. No doubt she had her faults--as all of us have--grave faults of
-inheritance, of education, of environment. But who was I that I should
-sit in judgment on her? I realized that I had judged her unjustly so
-far as her treatment of me was concerned. Assuming that she was tainted
-with snobbishness, assuming that her defects were as bad as I had
-thought in my worst paroxysms, still that did not alter the charms and
-the fine qualities.
-
-“We are friends?” said I abruptly.
-
-“I hope so,” said she. She added: “I know so.”
-
-“Without discussion or explanation?”
-
-“That is best--don’t you think?” replied she. “I am--not--not proud of
-some things I did.”
-
-“Nor I, of some things I did.”
-
-“I should like to forget them--my own and yours.”
-
-“I, too. And explanations do not explain. Let sleeping dogs lie.”
-
-She smiled and nodded. She said:
-
-“The latter part of the week I’m going back to the country. Perhaps
-you’ll spend Saturday and Sunday there?”
-
-“Thank you,” said I. “Let me know at the Federal Club if your plans
-change.”
-
-At her door we shook hands, but both lingered. Said she:
-
-“I am glad we are friends again.”
-
-“It was inevitable,” I replied. “We _like_ each other too well not to
-have come round. Bitternesses and enmities are stupid.”
-
-“And sad,” said she.
-
-When we met again--at her house in the country--there was no
-constraint on either side. We knew that neither of us had the power to
-breach, much less to remove, the barrier between us. We ignored its
-existence--and were content.
-
-You may have observed that I have rarely been able to speak of Edna
-without resentment. I shall now tell you why:
-
-The friendship between Mary Kirkwood and me presently set the
-newspaper gossips to talking. Our engagement was announced again and
-again--the announcement always a pretext for rehashing the story of the
-matrimonial bankruptcy through which each had passed. But as we were
-above the reach of the missiles of the scandalmongers the worst that
-was printed produced only a slight and brief irritation. This until
-the Princess Frascatoni began her campaign of slander.
-
-I shall not go into it. I shall simply say that she ordered one of
-her hangers-on--one of the semi-literary parasites to be found in the
-train of every rich person--to attack Mary and me as keeping up an
-intrigue of long standing, the one that was the real cause of my wife’s
-divorcing me. When I read the first of these articles I believed, from
-certain details, that no one in the world but the Princess Frascatoni
-could have inspired it. But with my habitual caution I leashed my
-impetuous anger and did not condemn her until I had investigated. Is it
-not strange, is it not the irony of fate that in every serious crisis
-of my life, except one, I should have had coolness and self-control,
-and that the one exception should have been when I loved Mary Kirkwood
-and condemned her unheard? After all, I am not sure that love isn’t a
-kind of lunacy.
-
-Why did Edna engage in that campaign of slander? Why did she say
-to everyone from this side the most malicious, the most mendacious
-things about my relations with Mrs. Kirkwood--that she had ignored the
-intrigue as long as she could for the sake of her dear daughter; that
-it had driven her from New York, had forced her to get a divorce, and
-so on through the gamut of malignant lying? There may perhaps be a clew
-to the mystery in the failure of her second marriage--as a marriage,
-I mean; not, of course, as a social enterprise, for there it was a
-world-renowned success. If the clew is not in Edna’s emptiness of heart
-and boredom, then I can suggest no explanation. I imagine she had been
-hearing and reading the gossip about an impending marriage between
-Mrs. Kirkwood and me until she had concluded that there must be truth
-in it--and by outrageous slander she hoped to make it impossible.
-
-The first effect was as she had probably calculated. Mary and I avoided
-each other. Mary hid herself and would see no one. Armitage and I for
-a time kept up a pretense of close friendship, or, rather, publicly
-again pretended a friendship that had long since all but ceased. But
-when the talk both in the newspapers and among our acquaintances grew
-until the “at last uncovered scandal” was the chief topic of gossip, he
-and I almost stopped speaking. You may wonder why he or I or both of us
-did not “do something” to crush the absurd lie. Gentle reader, did you
-ever try to kill a scandal? It is done in novels and on the stage; but
-in life the silly ass who draws his sword and attacks a pestilent fog
-accomplishes nothing--beyond attracting more attention to the fog by
-his absurd and futile gesticulations. The world had made up its nasty
-little mind that the relations between Mary Kirkwood, divorced, and
-Godfrey Loring, divorced, were not, and for years had not been, what
-they should be. And the matter was settled. I think Armitage himself
-believed. I know Beechman believed, for he pointedly crossed the street
-to avoid speaking to me.
-
-I stood this for a month. Then I went down to Mary’s place on Long
-Island.
-
-You may imagine the excitement my coming caused among the honest
-yeomanry gathered at the station--those worthy folk who peep and pry
-into the business of their fashionable overlords, and are learning
-to cringe like English peasants. I found Mary setting out for a
-ride--through her own grounds; she was ashamed to venture abroad.
-I came upon her abruptly. Instead of the terror and aversion I had
-steeled myself to meet, I got a radiance of welcome that made my heart
-leap. But in an instant she had remembered and was almost in a panic.
-
-“Please send the groom away with the horse,” said I. “Let us walk up
-and down here before the house.”
-
-She hesitated, obeyed.
-
-The broad space before the house was laid out in hedges and blooming
-beds with a long, straight drive leading in one direction to the
-highroad, in the other direction to stable, carriage house, and garage.
-When we were securely alone I said:
-
-“Have you missed me?”
-
-“Our friendship meant a lot to me,” replied she.
-
-“I have discovered that it’s the principal thing in my life,” said I.
-
-We paced the length of the drive toward the lodge in silence. As we
-turned toward the house again I said:
-
-“I have chartered the largest yacht I could get--for a cruise round the
-world.”
-
-A pause, then she in a constrained voice: “When do you start?”
-
-“Immediately,” I answered. “Perhaps to-morrow.”
-
-She halted, leaned against a tree, and gazed out through the shrubbery.
-
-“You’ve not been well?” said I.
-
-“I never am, when I lose interest in life,” replied she. “You will be
-gone--long?”
-
-“Long,” said I. “Either we shall not see each other again for
-years--or--” I paused.
-
-After a wait of fully a minute she looked inquiringly at me.
-
-“Mary,” said I, “shall we take a motor launch and go over to
-Connecticut and be married?”
-
-She began to walk again, I keeping pace with her. “It’s the only
-sensible thing to do,” said I. “It’s the only way out of this mess. And
-to-morrow we’ll sail away and not come back until--until we are good
-and ready.”
-
-I waited a moment, then went on, and I had the feeling that I was
-saying what we were both thinking: “We’ve had the same experience--have
-been through the same bankruptcy. It has taught us, I think--I hope--I
-can’t be sure; human nature learns slowly and badly. But I see a good
-chance for us--not to be utterly and always blissfully happy, but to
-get far more out of life than either is getting--or could get alone.”
-
-As we turned at the group of outbuildings she looked at me and I at
-her--a look straight into each other’s souls. And then and there was
-born that which alone can make a marriage successful or a life worth
-the living. What is the difference between friendship and love? I had
-thought--and said--that love was friendship in bloom. But as Mary and I
-looked at each other, I knew the full truth. Love is friendship set on
-fire. We did not speak. We glanced hastily away. At the front door she
-halted. In a quiet, awed voice she said:
-
-“I’ll change from this riding suit.”
-
-And what did I say, gentle reader, to commemorate our standing upon
-holy ground? I did no better than she. With eyes uncertain and voice
-untrustworthy and hoarse I said:
-
-“And tell your maid to pack and go to town with the trunks--go to the
-landing at East Twenty-third Street. Can she be there by four or five
-this afternoon?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then I’ll see you at the bay--at the launch wharf--in half an hour?
-I’ve got to send off a telegram.”
-
-“In half an hour,” said she, and with a grave smile and a wave of her
-crop she disappeared into the house.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At seven that evening we steamed past Sandy Hook. At ten--after an
-almost silent dinner--we were on deck, leaning side by side at the
-rail, near the bow. We were alone on the calm and shining sea. No land
-in sight, not a steamer, not a sail--not a sign of human existence
-beyond the rail of our yacht. Her arm slipped within mine; my hand
-sought hers. Not a sail, not a streamer of smoke. Alone and free and
-together.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I forgive you, gentle reader. Go in peace.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-TITLES SELECTED FROM
-
-GROSSET & DUNLAP’S LIST
-
-May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap’s list.
-
-
-_THE SECOND WIFE._ By Thompson Buchanan. Illustrated by W. W. Fawcett.
-Harrison Fisher wrapper printed in four colors and gold.
-
-An intensely interesting story of a marital complication in a wealthy
-New York family involving the happiness of a beautiful young girl.
-
-
-_TESS OF THE STORM COUNTRY._ By Grace Miller White. Illustrated by
- Howard Chandler Christy.
-
-An amazingly vivid picture of low class life in a New
-York college town, with a heroine beautiful and noble, who makes
-a great sacrifice for love.
-
-
-_FROM THE VALLEY OF THE MISSING._ By Grace Miller White. Frontispiece
- and wrapper in colors by Penrhyn Stanlaws.
-
-Another story of “the storm country.” Two beautiful children
-are kidnapped from a wealthy home and appear many years
-after showing the effects of a deep, malicious scheme behind
-their disappearance.
-
-
-_THE LIGHTED MATCH._ By Charles Neville Buck. Illustrated by R. F.
- Schabelitz.
-
-A lovely princess travels incognito through the States and
-falls in love with an American man. There are ties that bind her
-to someone in her own home, and the great plot revolves round
-her efforts to work her way out.
-
-
-_MAUD BAXTER._ By C. C. Hotchkiss. Illustrated by Will Grefe.
-
-A romance both daring and delightful, involving an American
-girl and a young man who had been impressed into English
-service during the Revolution.
-
-
-_THE HIGHWAYMAN._ By Guy Rawlence. Illustrated by Will Grefe.
-
-A French beauty of mysterious antecedents wins the love
-of an Englishman of title. Developments of a startling character
-and a clever untangling of affairs hold the reader’s interest.
-
-
-_THE PURPLE STOCKINGS._ By Edward Salisbury Field. Illustrated in
- colors; marginal illustrations.
-
-A young New York business man, his pretty sweetheart,
-his sentimental stenographer, and his fashionable sister are all
-mixed up in a misunderstanding that surpasses anything in the
-way of comedy in years. A story with a laugh on every page.
-
-_Ask for complete free list of G. & D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction_
-
-
-
-
-A FEW OF
-GROSSET & DUNLAP’S
-Great Books at Little Prices
-
-
-WHEN A MAN MARRIES. By Mary Roberts Rinehart. Illustrated by Harrison
- Fisher and Mayo Bunker.
-
-A young artist, whose wife had recently divorced him, finds that
-a visit is due from his Aunt Selina, an elderly lady having ideas
-about things quite apart from the Bohemian set in which her
-nephew is a shining light. The way in which matters are temporarily
-adjusted forms the motif of the story.
-
-A farcical extravaganza, dramatised under the title of “Seven Days.”
-
-
-THE FASHIONABLE ADVENTURES OF JOSHUA CRAIG. By David Graham Phillips.
- Illustrated.
-
-A young westerner, uncouth and unconventional, appears in
-political and social life in Washington. He attains power in politics,
-and a young woman of the exclusive set becomes his wife, undertaking
-his education in social amenities.
-
-
-“DOC.” GORDON. By Mary E. Wilkins-Freeman. Illustrated by Frank T.
- Merrill.
-
-Against the familiar background of American town life, the
-author portrays a group of people strangely involved in a mystery.
-“Doc.” Gordon, the one physician of the place, D. Elliot, his
-assistant, a beautiful woman and her altogether charming daughter
-are all involved in the plot. A novel of great interest.
-
-
-HOLY ORDERS. By Marie Corelli.
-
-A dramatic story, in which is pictured a clergyman in touch with
-society people, stage favorites, simple, common village folk, powerful
-financiers and others, each presenting vital problems to this man “in
-holy orders”--problems that we are now struggling with in America.
-
-
-KATRINE. By Elinor Macartney Lane. With frontispiece.
-
-Katrine, the heroine of this story, is a lovely Irish girl, of lowly
-birth, but gifted with a beautiful voice.
-
-The narrative is based on the facts of an actual singer’s career,
-and the viewpoint throughout is a most exalted one.
-
-
-THE FORTUNES OF FIFI. By Molly Elliot Seawell. Illustrated by T. de
- Thulstrup.
-
-A story of life in France at the time of the first Napoleon. Fifi,
-a glad, mad little actress of eighteen, is the star performer in a third
-rate Parisian theatre. A story as dainty as a Watteau painting.
-
-
-SHE THAT HESITATES. By Harris Dickson. Illustrated by C. W. Relyea.
-
-The scene of this dashing romance shifts from Dresden to St.
-Petersburg in the reign of Peter the Great, and then to New Orleans.
-
-The hero is a French Soldier of Fortune, and the princess, who
-hesitates--but you must read the story to know how she that hesitates
-may be lost and yet saved.
-
-
-
-
-TITLES SELECTED FROM
-GROSSET & DUNLAP’S LIST
-
-REALISTIC, ENGAGING PICTURES OF LIFE
-
-
-THE GARDEN OF FATE. By Roy Norton. Illustrated by Joseph Clement Coll.
-
-The colorful romance of an American girl in Morocco, and
-of a beautiful garden, whose beauty and traditions of strange
-subtle happenings were closed to the world by a Sultan’s seal.
-
-
-THE MAN HIGHER UP. By Henry Russell Miller. Full page vignette
- illustrations by M. Leone Bracker.
-
-The story of a tenement waif who rose by his own ingenuity
-to the office of mayor of his native city. His experiences
-while “climbing,” make a most interesting example of the
-possibilities of human nature to rise above circumstances.
-
-
-THE KEY TO YESTERDAY. By Charles Neville Buck. Illustrated by R.
- Schabelitz.
-
-Robert Saxon, a prominent artist, has an accident, while in
-Paris, which obliterates his memory, and the only clue he has
-to his former life is a rusty key. What door in Paris will it
-unlock? He must know that before he woos the girl he loves.
-
-
-THE DANGER TRAIL. By James Oliver Curwood. Illustrated by Charles
- Livingston Bull.
-
-The danger trail is over the snow-smothered North. A
-young Chicago engineer, who is building a road through the
-Hudson Bay region, is involved in mystery, and is led into
-ambush by a young woman.
-
-
-THE GAY LORD WARING. By Houghton Townley. Illustrated by Will Grefe.
-
-A story of the smart hunting set in England. A gay young
-lord wins in love against his selfish and cowardly brother and
-apparently against fate itself.
-
-
-BY INHERITANCE. By Octave Thanet. Illustrated by Thomas Fogarty.
- Elaborate wrapper in colors.
-
-A wealthy New England spinster with the most elaborate
-plans for the education of the negro goes to visit her nephew
-in Arkansas, where she learns the needs of the colored race
-first hand and begins to lose her theories.
-
-
-
-
-A FEW OF
-GROSSET & DUNLAP’S
-Great Books at Little Prices
-
-
-QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. A Picture of New England Home Life. With
- illustrations by C. W. Reed, and Scenes Reproduced from the Play.
-
-One of the best New England stories ever written. It is
-full of homely human interest * * * there is a wealth of New
-England village character, scenes and incidents * * * forcibly,
-vividly and truthfully drawn. Few books have enjoyed a greater
-sale and popularity. Dramatized, it made the greatest rural play
-of recent times.
-
-
-THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. By Charles Felton Pidgin.
- Illustrated by Henry Roth.
-
-All who love honest sentiment, quaint and sunny humor,
-and homespun philosophy will find these “Further Adventures”
-a book after their own heart.
-
-
-HALF A CHANCE. By Frederic S. Isham. Illustrated by Herman Pfeifer.
-
-The thrill of excitement will keep the reader in a state of
-suspense, and he will become personally concerned from the
-start, as to the central character, a very real man who suffers,
-dares--and achieves!
-
-
-VIRGINIA OF THE AIR LANES. By Herbert Quick. Illustrated by William R.
- Leigh.
-
-The author has seized the romantic moment for the airship
-novel, and created the pretty story of “a lover and his lass”
-contending with an elderly relative for the monopoly of the
-skies. An exciting tale of adventure in midair.
-
-
-THE GAME AND THE CANDLE. By Eleanor M. Ingram. Illustrated by P. D.
- Johnson.
-
-The hero is a young American, who, to save his family from
-poverty, deliberately commits a felony. Then follow his capture
-and imprisonment, and his rescue by a Russian Grand Duke. A
-stirring story, rich in sentiment.
-
-
-
-
-THE NOVELS OF
-GEORGE BARR McCUTCHEON
-
-
-GRAUSTARK.
-
-A story of love behind a throne, telling how a young
-American met a lovely girl and followed her to a new and
-strange country. A thrilling, dashing narrative.
-
-
-BEVERLY OF GRAUSTARK.
-
-Beverly is a bewitching American girl who has gone to
-that stirring little principality--Graustark--to visit her friend
-the princess, and there has a romantic affair of her own.
-
-
-BREWSTER’S MILLIONS.
-
-A young man is required to spend _one_ million dollars in
-one year in order to inherit _seven_. How he does it forms the
-basis of a lively story.
-
-
-CASTLE CRANEYCROW.
-
-The story revolves round the abduction of a young American
-woman, her imprisonment in an old castle and the adventures
-created through her rescue.
-
-
-COWARDICE COURT.
-
-An amusing social feud in the Adirondacks in which an
-English girl is tempted into being a traitor by a romantic
-young American, forms the plot.
-
-
-THE DAUGHTER OF ANDERSON CROW.
-
-The story centers about the adopted daughter of the town
-marshal in a western village. Her parentage is shrouded in
-mystery, and the story concerns the secret that deviously
-works to the surface.
-
-
-THE MAN FROM BRODNEY’S.
-
-The hero meets a princess in a far-away island among
-fanatically hostile Musselmen. Romantic love-making amid
-amusing situations and exciting adventures.
-
-
-NEDRA.
-
-A young couple elope from Chicago to go to London
-traveling as brother and sister. They are shipwrecked and a
-strange mix-up occurs on account of it.
-
-
-THE SHERRODS.
-
-The scene is the Middle West and centers around a man
-who leads a double life. A most enthralling novel.
-
-
-TRUXTON KING.
-
-A handsome good-natured young fellow ranges on the
-earth looking for romantic adventures and is finally enmeshed
-in most complicated intrigues in Graustark.
-
-
-
-
-KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN’S
-STORIES OF PURE DELIGHT
-
-Full of originality and humor, kindliness and cheer
-
-
-_THE OLD PEABODY PEW._ Large Octavo. Decorative text pages, printed in
- two colors. Illustrations by Alice Barber Stephens.
-
-One of the prettiest romances that has ever come from this
-author’s pen is made to bloom on Christmas Eve in the sweet
-freshness of an old New England meeting house.
-
-
-_PENELOPE’S PROGRESS._ Attractive cover design in colors.
-
-Scotland is the background for the merry doings of three very
-clever and original American girls. Their adventures in adjusting
-themselves to the Scot and his land are full of humor.
-
-
-_PENELOPE’S IRISH EXPERIENCES._ Uniform In style _with “Penelope’s
- Progress.”_
-
-The trio of clever girls who rambled over Scotland cross the border
-to the Emerald Isle, and again they sharpen their wits against
-new conditions, and revel in the land of laughter and wit.
-
-
-_REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM._
-
-One of the most beautiful studies of childhood--Rebecca’s artistic,
-unusual and quaintly charming qualities stand out midst a circle
-of austere New Englanders. The stage version is making a phenomenal
-dramatic record.
-
-
-_NEW CHRONICLES OF REBECCA._ With illustrations by F. C. Yohn.
-
-Some more quaintly amusing chronicles that carry Rebecca
-through various stages to her eighteenth birthday.
-
-
-_ROSE O’ THE RIVER._ With illustrations by George Wright.
-
-The simple story of Rose, a country girl and Stephen a sturdy
-young farmer. The girl’s fancy for a city man interrupts their love
-and merges the story into an emotional strain where the reader follows
-the events with rapt attention.
-
-
-
-
-LOUIS TRACY’S
-CAPTIVATING AND EXHILARATING ROMANCES
-
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: David Graham Phillips</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 14, 2022 [eBook #67406]</p>
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-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1><i>The</i><br />
-HUSBAND&#8217;S STORY</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p class="ph2">The<br />
-Husband&#8217;s Story<br />
-
-<small>A NOVEL</small></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-<span class="large">DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS</span><br />
-<br />
-AUTHOR OF<br />
-THE FASHIONABLE ADVENTURES OF<br />
-JOSHUA CRAIG, OLD WIVES FOR NEW<br />
-THE SECOND GENERATION, ETC.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_logo.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>NEW YORK<br />
-<span class="large">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</span><br />
-PUBLISHERS</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1910, by</span><br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-<br />
-<i>Published September, 1910</i><br />
-<br />
-Printed in the United States of America<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-<p class="ph2">THE HUSBAND&#8217;S STORY</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">WHY</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Several</span> years ago circumstances thrust me into a
-position in which it became possible for the friend who
-figures in these pages as Godfrey Loring to do me a
-favor. He, being both wise and kindly, never misses a
-good chance to put another under obligations. He did
-me the favor. I gratefully, if reluctantly, acquiesced.
-Now, after many days, he collects. When you shall have
-read what follows, you may utterly reject my extenuating
-plea that any and every point of view upon life
-is worthy of attention, even though it serve only to
-confirm us in our previous ideas and beliefs. You may
-say that I should have repudiated my debt, should have
-refused to edit and publish the manuscript he confided
-to me. You may say that the general racial obligation
-to mankind&mdash;and to womankind&mdash;takes precedence over
-a private and personal obligation. Unfortunately I
-happen to be not of the philanthropic temperament.
-My sense of the personal is strong; my sense of the
-general weak&mdash;that is to say, weak in comparison. If
-&#8220;Loring&#8221; had been within reach, I think I should have
-gone to him and pleaded for release. But as luck will
-have it, he is off yachting, to peep about in the remote<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-inlets and islets of Australasia and the South Seas for
-several years.</p>
-
-<p>To aggravate my situation, in the letter accompanying
-the manuscript, after several pages of the discriminating
-praise most dear to a writer&#8217;s heart, he did me
-the supreme honor of saying that in his work he had
-&#8220;striven to copy as closely as might be your style and
-your methods&mdash;to help me to the hearing I want and
-to lighten your labors as editor.&#8221; I assure him and the
-public that in any event I should have done little editing
-of his curious production beyond such as a proofreader
-might have found necessary. As it is, I have
-done practically no editing at all. In form and in substance,
-from title to finis, the work is his. I am merely
-its sponsor&mdash;and in circumstances that would forbid me
-were I disposed to qualify my sponsorship with even
-so mild a disclaimer as reluctance.</p>
-
-<p>Have I said more than a loyal friend should? If so,
-on the other hand, have I not done all that a loyal friend
-could?</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">I</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I am</span> tempted to begin with our arrival in Fifth Avenue,
-New York City, in the pomp and circumstance befitting
-that region of regal splendor. I should at once
-catch the attention of the women; and my literary
-friends tell me that to make any headway with a story
-in America it is necessary to catch the women, because
-the men either do not read books at all or read
-only what they hear the women talking about. And I
-know well&mdash;none knows better&mdash;that our women of the
-book-buying class, and probably of all classes, love to
-amuse their useless idleness with books that help them
-to dream of wasting large sums of money upon luxuries
-and extravagances, upon entertaining grand people in
-grand houses and being entertained by them. They tell
-me, and I believe it, that our women abhor stories of
-middle-class life, abhor truth-telling stories of any kind,
-like only what assures them that the promptings of their
-own vanities and sentimental shams are true.</p>
-
-<p>But patience, gentle reader, you with the foolish,
-chimera-haunted brain, with the silly ideas of life, with
-the ignorance of human nature including your own self,
-with the love of sloppy and tawdry clap trap. Patience,
-gentle reader. While I shall begin humbly in the
-social scale, I shall not linger there long. I shall pass<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-on to the surroundings of grandeur that entrance your
-snobbish soul. You will soon smell only fine perfumes,
-only the aromas of food cooked by expensive chefs.
-You will sit in drawing-rooms, lie in bedrooms as magnificent
-as the architects and decorators and other purveyors
-to the very rich have been able to concoct. You
-will be tasting the fine savors of fashionable names and
-titles recorded in Burke&#8217;s and the &#8220;Almanach de
-Gotha.&#8221; Patience, gentle reader, with your box of caramels
-and your hair in curl papers and your household
-work undone&mdash;patience! A feast awaits you.</p>
-
-<p>There has been much in the papers these last few
-years about the splendid families we&mdash;my wife and I&mdash;came
-of. Some time ago one of the English dukes&mdash;a
-nice chap with nothing to do and a quaint sense of
-humor&mdash;assembled on his estate for a sort of holiday
-and picnic all the members of his ancient and proud
-family who could be got together by several months of
-diligent search. It was a strange and awful throng that
-covered the lawns before the ducal castle on the appointed
-day. There was a handful of fairly presentable,
-more or less prosperous persons. But the most of the
-duke&#8217;s cousins, near and remote, were tramps, bartenders,
-jail birds, women of the town, field hands male and
-female, sewer cleaners, chimney sweeps, needlewomen,
-curates, small shopkeepers, and others of the species
-that are as a stench unto delicate, aristocratic nostrils.
-The duke was delighted with his picnic, pronounced it
-a huge success. But then His Grace had a sense of
-humor and was not an American aristocrat.</p>
-
-<p>All this by way of preparation for the admission<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-that the branch of the Loring family from which I come
-and the branch of the Wheatlands family to which the
-girl I married belongs were far from magnificent, were
-no more imposing then, well, than the families of any
-of our American aristocrats. Like theirs, our genealogical
-tree, most imposingly printed and bound and
-proudly exhibited on a special stand in the library of
-our New York palace&mdash;that genealogical tree, for all
-its air of honesty, for all its documentary proofs, worm-eaten
-and age-stained, was like an artificial palm bedded
-in artificial moss. The truth is, aristocracy does not
-thrive in America, but only the pretense of it, and that
-must be kept alive by constant renewals. Both here and
-abroad I am constantly running across traces of illegitimacy,
-substitution, and other forms of genealogical flim-flam.
-But let that pass. Whoever is or is not aristocratic,
-certainly Godfrey Loring and Edna Wheatlands
-are not&mdash;or, rather, <i>were</i> not.</p>
-
-<p>My father kept a dejected little grocery in Passaic,
-N. J. He did not become a &#8220;retired merchant and capitalist&#8221;
-until I was able to retire and capitalize him.
-Edna&#8217;s father was&mdash; No, you guess wrong. Not a
-butcher, but&mdash;an undertaker!... Whew! I am glad
-to have these shameful secrets &#8220;off the chest,&#8221; as they
-say in the Bowery. He&mdash;this Wheatlands, undertaker
-to the poor and near-poor of the then village of Passaic&mdash;was
-a tall, thin man, with snow-white hair and a
-smooth, gaunt, gloomy face and the best funeral air I
-have ever seen. Edna has long since forgotten him; she
-has an admirable ability absolutely to forget anything
-she may for whatever reason deem it inconvenient to remember.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-What an aid to conscience is such a quality!
-But I have not forgotten old Weeping Willy Wheatlands,
-and I shall not forget him. It was he who loaned
-me my first capital, the one that&mdash; But I must not
-anticipate.</p>
-
-<p>In those days Passaic was a lowly and a dreary village.
-Its best was cheap enough; its poorest was
-wretchedly squalid. The &#8220;seat&#8221; of the Lorings and
-the &#8220;seat&#8221; of the Wheatlands stood side by side on the
-mosquito beset banks of the river&mdash;two dingy frame cottages,
-a story and a half in height, two rooms deep.
-We Lorings had no money, for my father was an honest,
-innocent soul with a taste for talking what he thought
-was politics, though in fact he knew no more of the realities
-of politics, the game of pull Dick pull Devil for
-licenses to fleece a &#8220;free, proud and intelligent people&#8221;&mdash;he
-knew no more of that reality than&mdash;than the next
-honest soul you may hear driveling on that same subject.
-We had no money, but &#8220;Weeping Willie&#8221; had
-plenty&mdash;and saved it, blessings on him! I hate to
-think where I should be now, if he hadn&#8217;t hoarded! So,
-while our straightened way of living was compulsory,
-that of the Wheatlands was not. But this is unimportant;
-the main point is both families lived in the same
-humble way.</p>
-
-<p>If I thought &#8220;gentle reader&#8221; had patience and real
-imagination&mdash;and, yes, the real poetic instinct&mdash;I should
-give her an inventory of the furniture of those two cottages,
-and of the meager and patched draperies of the
-two Monday wash lines, as my mother and Edna&#8217;s
-mother&mdash;and Edna, too, when she grew big enough&mdash;decorated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-them, the while shrieking gossip back and
-forth across the low and battered board fence. But I
-shall not linger. It is as well. Those memories make
-me sad&mdash;put a choke in my throat and a mist before my
-eyes. Why? If you can&#8217;t guess, I could not in spoiling
-ten reams of paper explain it to you. One detail only,
-and I shall hasten on. Both families lived humbly, but
-we not quite so humbly as the Wheatlands family, because
-my mother was a woman of some neatness and energy
-while Ma Wheatlands was at or below the do-easy,
-slattern human average. <i>We</i> had our regular Saturday
-bath&mdash;in the wash tub. <i>We</i> did not ever eat off the
-stove. And while we were patched we were rarely
-ragged.</p>
-
-<p>In those days&mdash;even in those days&mdash;Edna was a
-&#8220;scrapper.&#8221; They call it an &#8220;energetic and resolute
-personality&#8221; now; it was called &#8220;scrappy&#8221; then, and
-scrappy it was. When I would be chopping wood or
-lugging in coal, so occupied that I did not dare pause,
-she would sit on the fence in her faded blue-dotted calico,
-and how she would give it to me! She knew how to say
-the thing that made me wild with the rage a child is
-ashamed to show. Yes, she loved to tease me, perhaps&mdash;really,
-I hope&mdash;because she knew I, in the bottom
-of my heart, loved to be teased by her, to be noticed in
-any way. And mighty pretty she looked then, with her
-mop of yellowish brown hair and her big golden brown
-eyes and her little face, whose every feature was tilted
-to the angle that gives precisely the most fascinating
-expression of pretty pertness, of precocious intelligence,
-or of devil-may-care audacity. She has always been a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-pretty woman, has Edna, and always will be, even in
-old age, I fancy. Her beauty, like her health, like that
-strong, supple body of hers, was built to last. What
-is the matter with the generations coming forward now?
-Why do they bloom only to wither? What has sapped
-their endurance? Are they brought up too soft? Is it
-the food? Is it the worn-out parents? Why am I, at
-forty, younger in looks and in strength and in taste for
-life than the youths of thirty? Why is Edna, not five
-years my junior, more attractive physically than girls
-of twenty-five or younger?</p>
-
-<p>But she was only eight or nine at the time of which
-I am writing. And she was fond of me then&mdash;really
-fond of me, though she denied it furiously when the
-other children taunted, and though she was always jeering
-at me, calling me awkward and homely. I don&#8217;t
-think I was notably either the one or the other, but for
-her to say so tended to throw the teasers off the track
-and also kept me in humble subjection. I knew she
-cared, because when we played kissing games she would
-never call me out, would call out every other boy, but
-if I called any other girl she would sulk and treat me
-as badly as she knew how. Also, while she had nothing
-but taunts and sarcasms for me she was always to be
-found in the Wheatlands&#8217; back yard near the fence or
-on it whenever I was doing chores in our back yard.</p>
-
-<p>After two years in the High School I went to work
-in the railway office as a sort of assistant freight clerk.
-She kept on at school, went through the High School,
-graduated in a white dress with blue ribbons, and then
-sat down to wait for a husband. Her father and mother<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-were sensible people. Heaven knows they had led a
-hard enough life to have good sense driven into them.
-But the tradition&mdash;the lady-tradition&mdash;was too strong
-for them. They were not ashamed to work, themselves.
-They would have been both ashamed and angry had it
-been suggested to them that their two boys should become
-idlers. But they never thought of putting their
-daughter to work at anything. After she graduated
-and became a young lady, she was not compelled&mdash;would
-hardly have been permitted&mdash;to do housework or sewing.
-You have seen the potted flower in the miserable
-tenement window&mdash;the representative of the life that
-neither toils nor spins, but simply exists in idle beauty.
-That potted bloom concentrates all the dreams, all the
-romantic and poetic fancies of the tenement family. I
-suppose Edna was some such treasured exotic possession
-to those toil-twisted old parents of hers. They wanted
-a flower in the house.</p>
-
-<p>Well, they had it. She certainly was a lovely girl,
-far too lovely to be spoiled by work. And if ever there
-was a scratch or a stain on those beautiful white hands of
-hers, it assuredly was not made by toil. She took music
-lessons&mdash; Music lessons! How much of the ridiculous,
-pathetic gropings after culture is packed into those two
-words. Beyond question, everyone ought to know something
-about music; we should all know something about
-everything, especially about the things that peculiarly
-stand for civilization&mdash;science and art, literature and
-the drama. But how foolishly we are set at it! Instead
-of learning to understand and to appreciate music, we
-are taught to &#8220;beat the box&#8221; in a feeble, clumsy fashion,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-or to screech or whine when we have no voice worth
-the price of a single lesson. Edna took I don&#8217;t know how
-many lessons a week for I don&#8217;t know how many years.
-She learned nothing about music. She merely learned to
-strum on the piano. But, after all, the lessons attained
-their real object. They made Edna&#8217;s parents and Edna
-herself and all the neighbors feel that she was indeed
-a lady. She could not sew. She could not cook. She
-hadn&#8217;t any knowledge worth mention of any practical
-thing&mdash;therefore, had no knowledge at all; for, unless
-knowledge is firmly based upon and in the practical, it
-is not knowledge but that worst form of ignorance, misinformation.
-She didn&#8217;t know a thing that would help
-her as woman, wife, or mother. But she could play the
-piano!</p>
-
-<p>Some day some one will write something true on the
-subject of education. You remember the story of the
-girl from Lapland who applied for a place as servant
-in New York, and when they asked her what she could
-do, she said, &#8220;I can milk the reindeer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I never hear the word education that I don&#8217;t think
-of that girl. One half of the time spent at school, to
-estimate moderately, and nine tenths of the time spent
-in college class rooms is given to things about as valuable
-to a citizen of this world as the Lap girl&#8217;s &#8220;education&#8221;
-to a New York domestic. If anyone tells you
-that those valueless things are culture, tell him that only
-an ignorance still becalmed in the dense medi&aelig;val fog
-would talk such twaddle; tell him that science has taught
-us what common sense has always shown, that there is no
-beauty divorced from use, that beauty is simply the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-perfect adaptation of the thing to be used to the purpose
-for which it is to be used. I am a business man,
-not a smug, shallow-pated failure teaching in an antiquated
-college. I abhor the word culture, as I abhor
-the word gentleman or the word lady, because of the
-company into which it has fallen. So, while I eagerly
-disclaim any taint of &#8220;culture,&#8221; I insist that I know
-what I&#8217;m talking about when I talk of education. And
-if I had not been too good-natured, my girl&mdash; But I
-must keep to the story. &#8220;Gentle reader&#8221; wants a
-story; he&mdash;or she&mdash;does not want to try to think.</p>
-
-<p>It was pleasant to my ignorant ears to hear Edna
-playing sonatas and classical barcaroles and dead
-marches and all manner of loud and difficult pieces.
-Such sounds, issuing from the humble&mdash;and not too
-clean&mdash;Wheatlands house gave it an atmosphere of
-aristocracy, put tone into the whole neighborhood, elevated
-the Wheatlands family like a paper collar on the
-calico shirt of a farm hand. If we look at ourselves
-rightly, we poor smattering seekers after a little showy
-knowledge of one kind or another&mdash;a dibble of French,
-a dabble of Latin or Greek, a sputter of woozy so-called
-philosophy&mdash;how like the paper-collared farm hand we
-are, how like the Hottentot chief with a plug hat atop
-his naked brown body.</p>
-
-<p>But Edna pleased me, fully as much as she pleased
-herself, and that is saying a great deal. I wouldn&#8217;t
-have had her changed in the smallest particular. I was
-even glad she could get rid of her freckles&mdash;fascinating
-little beauty spots sprinkled upon her tip-tilted little
-nose!</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>She was not so fond of me in those days. I had a
-rival. I am leaning back and laughing as I think of
-him. Charley Putney! He was clerk in a largish dry
-goods store. He is still a clerk there, I believe, and no
-doubt is still the same cheaply scented, heavily pomatumed
-clerkly swell he was in the days when I feared
-and hated him. The store used to close at six o&#8217;clock.
-About seven of summer evenings Charley would issue
-forth from his home to set the hearts of the girls to fluttering.
-They were all out, waiting. Down the street
-he would come with his hat set a little back to show
-the beautiful shine and part and roach of his hair. The
-air would become delicious (!) with bergamot, occasionally
-varied by German cologne or lemon verbena.
-What a jaunty, gay tie! What an elegant suit! And
-he wore a big seal ring, reputed to be real gold&mdash;and
-such lively socks! Down the street came Charley, all
-the girls palpitant. At which stoop or front gate
-would he stop?</p>
-
-<p>Often&mdash;only too often&mdash;it was at the front gate
-next ours. How I hated him!</p>
-
-<p>And the cap of the joke is that Edna nearly married
-him. In this land where the social stairs are crowded
-like Jacob&#8217;s Ladder with throngs ascending and descending,
-what a history it would make if the grown men and
-women of any generation should tell whom they <i>almost</i>
-married!</p>
-
-<p>Yes, Edna came very near to marrying him. She
-was a lady. She did not know exactly what that meant.
-The high-life novels she read left her hazy on the subject,
-because to understand any given thing we must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-have knowledge that enables us to connect it with the
-things we already know. A snowball would be an unfathomable
-mystery to a savage living in an equatorial
-plain. A matter of politics or finance or sociology or
-real art, real literature, real philosophy, seems dull and
-meaningless to a woman or to the average mutton-brained
-man. But if you span the gap between knowledge
-of any subject and a woman&#8217;s or a man&#8217;s ignorance
-of that subject with however slender threads of connecting
-knowledge, she or he can at once bridge it and
-begin to reap the new fields. Edna could not find any
-thread whatever for the gap between herself and that
-fairy land of high life the novels told her about. In
-those days there was no high life in Passaic. I suppose
-there is now&mdash;or, at least, Passaic thinks there is&mdash;and
-in purely imaginary matters the delusion of possession
-is equal to, even better than, possession itself.
-So, with no high life to use as a measure, with only the
-instinct that her white smooth hands and her dresses
-modeled on the latest Paris fashions as illustrated in the
-monthly &#8220;Lady Book,&#8221; and her music lessons, her taste
-for what she then regarded as literature&mdash;with only her
-instinct that all these hallmarks must stamp her twenty-four
-carat lady, she had to look about her for a matching
-gentleman. And there was Charley, the one person
-within vision who suggested the superb heroes of the
-high-life novels. I will say to the credit of her good
-taste that she had her doubts about Charley. Indeed,
-if his sweet smell and his smooth love-making&mdash;Charley
-excelled as a love-maker, being the born ladies&#8217; man&mdash;if
-the man, or, rather, the boy, himself had not won her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-heart, she would soon have tired of him and would have
-suspected his genuineness as a truly gentleman. But
-she fell in love with him.</p>
-
-<p>There was a long time during which I thought the
-reason she returned to me&mdash;or, rather, let me return to
-her&mdash;was because she fell out of love with him. Then
-there was a still longer time when I thought the reason
-was the fact that the very Saturday I got a raise to fourteen
-a week, he fell from twelve to eight. But latterly
-I have known the truth. How many of us know the
-truth, the down-at-the-bottom, absolute truth, about
-why she married us instead of the other fellow? Very
-few, I guess&mdash;or we&#8217;d be puffing our crops and flirting
-our feathers less cantily. She took up with me again
-because he dropped her. It was he that saved her, not
-she or I. Only a few months ago, her old mother, doddering
-on in senility, with memory dead except for early
-happenings, and these fresh and vivid, said: &#8220;And
-when I think how nigh Edny come to marryin&#8217; up with
-that there loud-smelling dude of a Charley Putney! If
-he hadn&#8217;t &#8217;a give her the go by, she&#8217;d sure &#8217;a made a
-fool of herself&mdash;a wantin&#8217; me and her paw to offer him
-money and a job in the undertakin&#8217; store, to git him
-back. Lawsy me! What a narrer squeak fur Princess
-Edny!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Be patient, gentle reader! You shall soon be reading
-things that will efface the coarse impression my old
-mother-in-law&#8217;s language and all these franknesses about
-our beginnings must have made upon your refined and
-cultured nature. Swallow a caramel and be patient.
-But don&#8217;t skip these pages. If you should, you would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-miss the stimulating effect of contrast, not to speak of
-other benefits which I, probably vainly, hope to confer
-upon you.</p>
-
-<p>She didn&#8217;t love me. Looking back, I see that for
-many months she found it difficult to endure me. But it
-was necessary that she carry off&mdash;with the neighborhood
-rather than with me&mdash;her pretense of having cast
-off Charley because she preferred me. We can do wonders
-in the way of concealing wounded pride; we can do
-equal wonders in the way of preserving a reputation
-for unbroken victory. And I believe she honestly liked
-me. Perhaps she liked me even more than she liked her
-aromatic Charley; for, it by no means follows that we
-like best where we love most. I am loth to believe&mdash;I
-do not believe&mdash;that at so early an age, not quite seventeen,
-she could have received my caresses and returned
-them with plausibility enough to deceive me, unless she
-had genuinely liked me.</p>
-
-<p>And what a lucky fellow I thought myself! And
-how I patronized the perfumed man. And what a
-thrashing I gave him&mdash;poor, harmless, witless creature!&mdash;when
-I heard of his boastings that he had dropped
-Edna Wheatlands because he found Sally Simpson prettier
-and more <i>cultured</i>!</p>
-
-<p>I must have been a railway man born. At twenty-two&mdash;no,
-six months after my majority&mdash;I was jumped
-into a head clerkship at twelve hundred a year. Big
-pay for a youngster in those days; not so bad for a
-youngster even in these inflated years. When I brought
-Edna the news I think she began to love me. To her
-that salary was a halo, a golden halo round me&mdash;made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-me seem a superior person. She had long thought
-highly of my business abilities, for she was shrewd and
-had listened when the older people talked, and they were
-all for me as the likeliest young man of the neighborhood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve had another raise,&#8221; said I carelessly. We were
-sitting on her front porch, she upon the top step, I
-two steps down.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Another!&#8221; she said. &#8220;Why, the last was only
-two months ago.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, they&#8217;ve pushed me up to twelve hundred a
-year&mdash;a little more, for it&#8217;s twenty-five per.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee!&#8221; she exclaimed, and I can see her pretty face
-now&mdash;all aglow, beaming a reverent admiration upon me.</p>
-
-<p>I rather thought I deserved it. But it has ever
-been one of my vanities to pretend to take my successes
-as matters of course, and even to depreciate them. They
-say the English invariably win in diplomacy because
-they act dissatisfied with what they get, never grumbling
-so sourly as when they capture the whole hog. I can
-believe it. That has been my policy, and it has worked
-rather well. Still, any policy works well if the man has
-the gift for success. &#8220;Twenty-five per,&#8221; I repeated, to
-impress it still more deeply upon her and to revel in the
-thrilling words. &#8220;Before I get through I&#8217;ll make them
-pay me what I&#8217;m worth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you think you&#8217;ll ever be making more than
-that?&#8221; exclaimed she, wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be getting two thousand some day,&#8221; said I, far
-more confidently than I felt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;Godfrey!&#8221; she said softly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>And as I looked at her I for the first time felt a certain
-peculiar thrill that comes only when the soul of the
-woman a man loves rushes forth to cling to his soul.
-In my life I have never had&mdash;and never shall have&mdash;a
-happier moment.</p>
-
-<p>Once more patience, gentle reader! I know this bit
-of sordidness&mdash;this glow of sentiment upon a vulgar material
-incident&mdash;disgusts your delicate soul. I am aware
-that you have a proper contempt for all the coarse details
-of life. You would not be <i>gentle</i> reader if you
-hadn&#8217;t. You would be a plain man or woman, living
-busily and usefully, and making people happy in the
-plain ways in which the human animal finds happiness.
-You would not be devoting your days to making soul-food
-out of idealistic moonshine and dreaming of ways
-to dazzle yourself and your acquaintances into thinking
-you a superior person.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you know,&#8221; said my pretty Edna, advancing
-her bond at least halfway toward meeting mine, &#8220;do
-you know, I&#8217;ve had an instinct, a presentiment of this?
-I was dreaming it when I woke up this morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I&#8217;ve observed that every woman in her effort to prove
-herself &#8220;not like other girls&#8221; pretends to some occult
-or other equally supranatural quality. One dreams
-dreams. Another gets spirit messages. A third has
-seen ghosts. Another has a foot which sculptors have
-longed to model. A fifth has a note in her voice which
-the throat specialists pronounce unique in the human
-animal and occurring only in certain rare birds and
-Sarah Bernhardt. I met one not long ago who had
-several too many or too few skins, I forget which, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-as a result was endowed with I cannot recall what
-nervous qualities quite peculiar to herself, and somehow
-most valuable and fascinating. In that early stage of
-her career my Edna was &#8220;hipped&#8221; upon a rather commonplace
-personal characteristic&mdash;the notion that she
-had premonitions, was a sort of seeress or prophetess.
-Later she dropped it for one less tiresome and overworked.
-But I recall that even in that time of my deepest
-infatuation I wished to hear as little as possible
-about the occult. Of all the shallow, foggy fakes that
-attract ignorant and miseducated people the occult is
-the most inexcusable and boring. A great many people,
-otherwise apparently rather sensible, seem honestly to
-believe in it. But, being sensible, they don&#8217;t have anything
-to do with it. They treat it as practical men
-treat the idiotic in the creeds and the impossible in the
-moral codes of the churches to which they belong&mdash;that
-is, they assent and proceed to dismiss and to forget.</p>
-
-<p>However, I was not much impressed by Edna&#8217;s attempt
-to dazzle me with her skill as a Sibyl. But I was
-deeply impressed by the awe-inspiring softness and
-shapeliness of her hand lying prisoner in mine. And I
-was moved to the uttermost by the kisses and embraces
-we exchanged in the gathering dusk. &#8220;I love you,&#8221; she
-murmured into my ecstatic ear. &#8220;You are so different
-from the other men round here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I dilated with pride.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So far ahead of them in every way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ahead of Charley Putney?&#8221; said I, jocose but
-jealous withal.</p>
-
-<p>She laughed with a delightful look of contemptuous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-scorn in her cute face. &#8220;Oh, <i>he</i>!&#8221; she scoffed. &#8220;He&#8217;s
-getting only eight a week, and he&#8217;ll never get any
-more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not if his boss has sense,&#8221; said I, thinking myself
-judicial. &#8220;But let&#8217;s talk about ourselves. We can be
-married now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I advanced this timidly, for being a truly-in-love
-lover I was a little afraid of her, a little uncertain of
-this priceless treasure. But she answered promptly,
-&#8220;Yes, I was thinking of that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s do it right away,&#8221; proposed I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, not for several weeks. It wouldn&#8217;t be proper.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She couldn&#8217;t explain. She only knew that there was
-something indecent about haste in such matters, that
-the procedure must be slow and orderly and stately.
-&#8220;We&#8217;ll marry the first of next month,&#8221; she finally decided,
-and I joyfully acquiesced.</p>
-
-<p>Some of my readers&mdash;both of the gentle and of the
-other kind&mdash;may be surprised that a girl of seventeen
-should be so self-assured, so independent. They must
-remember that she was a daughter of the people; and
-among the people a girl of seventeen was, and I suppose
-still is, ready for marriage, ready and resolved to decide
-all important matters for herself. At seventeen
-Edna, in self-poise and in experience, judgment and all
-the other mature qualities, was the equal of the carefully
-sheltered girl of twenty-five or more. She may have
-been brought up a lady, may have been in all essential
-ways as useless as the most admired of that weariful
-and worthless class. But the very nature of her surroundings,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-in that simple household and that simple
-community, had given her a certain practical education.
-And I may say here that to it she owes all she is to-day.
-Do not forget this, gentle reader, as you read
-about her and as she dazzles you. As you look at the
-gorgeous hardy rose do not forget that such spring
-only from the soil, develop only in the open.</p>
-
-<p>That very evening we began to look for a home.
-As soon as we were outside her front gate she turned
-in the direction of the better part of the town. Nor
-did she pause or so much as glance at a house until we
-were clear of the neighborhood in which we had always
-lived, and were among houses much superior. I admired,
-and I still admire, this significant move of hers.
-It was the gesture of progress, of ambition. It was
-splendidly American. I myself should have been content
-to settle down near our fathers and mothers, among the
-people we knew. I should no doubt have been better
-satisfied to keep up the mode of living to which we had
-been used all our lives. The time would have come
-when I should have reached out for more comfort and for
-luxury. But it was natural that she should develop in
-this direction before I did. She had read her novels
-and her magazines, had the cultured woman&#8217;s innate
-fondness for dress and show, had had nothing but those
-kinds of things to think about; I had been too busy
-trying to make money to have any time for getting
-ideas about spending it.</p>
-
-<p>No; while her motive in seeking better things than
-we had known was in the main a vanity and a sham, her
-action had as much <i>initial</i> good in it as if her motive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-had been sensible and helpful. And back of the motive
-lay an instinct for getting up in the world that has
-been the redeeming and preserving trait in her character.
-It was this instinct that ought to have made
-her the fit wife for an ambitious and advancing man.
-You will presently see how this fine and useful instinct
-was perverted by vanity and false education and the pernicious
-example of other women.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The rents are much higher in this neighborhood,&#8221;
-said I, with a doubtful but admiring look round at the
-pretty houses and their well-ordered grounds.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said she. &#8220;But maybe we can find
-something. Anyway, it won&#8217;t do any harm to look.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, indeed,&#8221; I assented, for I liked the idea myself.
-This better neighborhood <i>looked</i> more like her than her
-own, seemed to her lover&#8217;s eyes exactly suited to her
-beauty and her stylishness&mdash;for the &#8220;Lady Book&#8221; was
-teaching her to make herself far more attractive to the
-eye than were the other girls over in our part of town.
-I still puzzle at why Charley Putney gave her up; the
-only plausible theory seems to be that she was so sick
-in love with him that she wearied him. The most attractive
-girl in the world, if she dotes on a young man too
-ardently, will turn his stomach, and alarm his delicate
-sense of feminine propriety.</p>
-
-<p>As we walked on, she with an elate and proud air,
-she said: &#8220;How different it smells over here!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At first I didn&#8217;t understand what she meant. But,
-as I thought of her remark, the meaning came. And I
-believe that was the beginning of my dissatisfaction with
-what I had all my life had in the way of surroundings.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-I have since observed that the sense of smell is blunt,
-is almost latent, in people of the lower orders, and that
-it becomes more acute and more sensitive as we ascend
-in the social scale. Up to that time my ambition to
-rise had been rather indefinite&mdash;a desire to make money
-which everyone seemed to think was the highest aim in
-life&mdash;and also an instinct to beat the other fellows working
-with me. Now it became definite. I began to smell.
-I wanted to get away from unpleasant smells. I do not
-mean that this was a resolution, all in the twinkling of
-an eye. I simply mean that, as everything must have
-a beginning, that remark of hers was for me the beginning
-of a long and slow but steady process of what
-may be called civilizing.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she said: &#8220;If we couldn&#8217;t afford a house,
-we might take one of the flats.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;m afraid you&#8217;d be lonesome, away off from
-everybody we know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She tossed her head. &#8220;A good lonesome,&#8221; said she.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m tired of <i>common</i> people. I was reading about reincarnations
-the other day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good Lord!&#8221; laughed I. &#8220;What are they?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She explained&mdash;as well as she could&mdash;probably as
-well as anybody could. I admired her learning but the
-thing itself did not interest me. &#8220;I guess there must be
-something in it,&#8221; she went on. &#8220;I&#8217;m sure in a former
-life I was something a lot different from what I am now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you&#8217;re all right,&#8221; I assured her, putting my
-arm round her in the friendly darkness of a row of sidewalk
-elms.</p>
-
-<p>When we had indulged in an interlude of love-making,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-she returned to the original subject. &#8220;I wonder
-how much rent we could afford to pay,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They say the rent ought never to be more per
-month than the income is per week.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then we could pay twenty-five a month.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That seemed to me a lot to pay&mdash;and, indeed, it was.
-But she did not inherit Weeping Willie&#8217;s tightness;
-and she had never had money to spend or any training
-in either making or spending money. That is to say,
-she was precisely as ignorant of the main business of
-life as is the rest of American womanhood under our
-ridiculous system of education. So, twenty-five dollars
-a month rent meant nothing to her. &#8220;We can&#8217;t do
-anything to-night,&#8221; said she. &#8220;But I&#8217;ve got my days
-free, and I&#8217;ll look at different places, and when I find
-several to choose from we can come in the evening or
-on Sunday and decide.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This suited me exactly. We dismissed the matter,
-hunted out a shady nook, and sat down to enjoy ourselves
-after the manner of young lovers on a fine night.
-Never before had she given herself freely to love. I
-know now it was because never before had she loved me.
-I was deliriously happy that night, and I am sure she
-was too. She no less than I had the ardent temperament
-that goes with the ambitious nature; and now that she
-was idealizing me into the man who could lead her to the
-fairy lands she dreamed of, she gave me her whole heart.</p>
-
-<p>It was the beginning of what was beyond question
-the happiest period of both our lives. I have a dim
-old photograph of us two taken about that time. At a
-glance you see it is the picture of two young people of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-the working class&mdash;two green, unformed creatures,
-badly dressed and gawkily self-conscious. But there is
-a look in her face&mdash;and in mine&mdash; To be quite honest,
-I&#8217;m glad I don&#8217;t look like that now. I wouldn&#8217;t go back
-if I could. Nevertheless&mdash; How we loved each other!&mdash;and
-how happy we were!</p>
-
-<p>I feel that I weary you, gentle reader. There is in
-my sentiment too much about wages and flat rents and
-the smells that come from people who work hard and
-live in poor places and eat badly cooked strong food.
-But that is not my fault. It is life. And if you believe
-that your and your romancers&#8217; tawdry imaginings are
-better than life&mdash;well, you may not be so wise or so exalted
-as you fancy.</p>
-
-<p>The upshot of our inspecting places to live and haggling
-over prices was that we took a flat in the best
-quarter of Passaic&mdash;the top and in those elevatorless
-days the cheapest flat in the house. We were to pay
-forty dollars a month&mdash;a stiff rent that caused excitement
-in our neighborhood and set my mother and her
-father to denouncing us as a pair of fools bent upon
-ruin. I thought so, myself. But I could have denied
-Edna nothing at that time, and I made up my mind that
-by working harder than ever at the railway office I
-would compel another raise. When I told my mother
-about this secret resolve of mine, she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you do get more money, Godfrey, don&#8217;t tell
-Edna. She&#8217;s a fool. She&#8217;ll keep your nose to the grindstone
-all your life if you ain&#8217;t careful. It takes a better
-money-maker than you&#8217;re likely to be to hold up against
-that kind of a woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>&#8220;Oh, she&#8217;s like all girls,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s just it,&#8221; replied my mother. &#8220;That&#8217;s why
-I ain&#8217;t got no use for women. Look what poor managers
-they are. Look how they idle and waste and run
-into debt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But there&#8217;s a lot to be said against the men, too.
-Saloons, for instance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And talkin&#8217; politics with loafers,&#8221; said my father&#8217;s
-wife bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess the trouble with men and women is they&#8217;re
-too human,&#8221; said I, who had inherited something of the
-philosopher from my father. &#8220;And, mother, a man&#8217;s
-got to get married&mdash;and he&#8217;s got to marry a woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I suppose he has,&#8221; she grudgingly assented.
-&#8220;Mighty poor providers most of the men is, and mighty
-poor use the women make of what little the men brings
-home. But about you and Edny Wheatlands&mdash; You
-ought to do better&#8217;n her, Godfrey. You&#8217;re caught by
-her looks and her style and her education. None of
-them things makes a good wife.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I certainly wouldn&#8217;t marry a girl that didn&#8217;t have
-them&mdash;all three.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But there&#8217;s something more,&#8221; insisted mother.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One woman can&#8217;t have everything,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, but she can have what I mean&mdash;and she&#8217;s not
-much good to a man without it. If you&#8217;re set on marrying
-her wait till <i>you&#8217;re</i> ready, anyhow. <i>She</i> never will
-be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you mean, mother?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wait till you&#8217;ve got money in the savings bank.
-Wait till you&#8217;ve got used to having money. Then maybe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-you&#8217;ll be able to put a bit on a spendthrift wife even
-if you are crazy about her. You&#8217;re making a wrong
-start with her, Godfrey. You&#8217;re giving her the upper
-hand, and that&#8217;s bad for women like her&mdash;mighty bad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was from my mother that I get my ability at business.
-She and I often had sensible talks, and her advice
-started me right in the railroad office and kept me right
-until I knew my way. So I did not become angry at
-her plain speaking, but appreciated its good sense, even
-though I thought her prejudiced against my Edna.
-However, I had not the least impulse to put off the marriage.
-My one wish was to hasten it. Never before
-or since was time so leisurely. But the day dragged
-itself up at last, and we were married in church, at
-what seemed to us then enormous expense. There was
-a dinner afterward at which everyone ate and drank
-too much&mdash;a coarse and common scene which I will spare
-gentle reader. Edna and I went up to New York City
-for a Friday to Monday honeymoon. But we were back
-to spend Sunday night in our grand forty-dollar flat.
-On Monday morning I went to work again&mdash;a married
-man, an important person in the community.</p>
-
-<p>Never has any height I have attained or seen since
-equalled the grandeur of that forty-dollar flat. My
-common sense tells me that it was a small and poor
-affair. I remember, for example, that the bathroom
-was hardly big enough to turn round in. I recall that
-I have sat by the window in the parlor and without
-rising have reached a paper on a table at the other end
-of the room. But these hard facts in no way interfere
-with or correct the flat as my imagination persists in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-picturing it. What vistas of rooms!&mdash;what high ceilings&mdash;what
-woodwork&mdash;and plumbing!&mdash;and what magnificent
-furniture! Edna&#8217;s father, in a moment of generosity,
-told her he would pay for the outfitting of the
-household. And being in the undertaking business he
-could get discounts on furniture and even on kitchen
-utensils. Edna did the selecting. I thought everything
-wonderful and, as I have said, my imagination
-refuses to recreate the place as it actually was. But I
-recall that there was a brave show of red and of plush,
-and we all know what that means. Whether her &#8220;Lady
-Book&#8221; had miseducated her or her untrained eyes, excited
-by the gaudiness she saw when she went shopping,
-had beguiled her from the counsels of the &#8220;Lady Book,&#8221;
-I do not know. But I am sure, as I recall red and plush,
-that our first home was the typical horror inhabited by
-the extravagant working-class family.</p>
-
-<p>No matter. There we were in Arcadia. For a time
-her restless soaring fancy, wearied perhaps by its audacious
-flight to this lofty perch of red and plush and
-forty dollars a month, folded its wings and was content.
-For a time her pride and satisfaction in the luxurious
-newness overcame her distaste and disdain and moved
-her to keep things spotless. I recall the perfume of
-cleanness that used to delight my nostrils at my evening
-homecoming, and then the intoxicating perfume of Edna
-herself&mdash;the aroma of healthy young feminine beauty.
-We loved each other, simply, passionately, in the old-fashioned
-way. With the growth of intelligence, with
-the realization on the part of men that her keep is a
-large part of the reason in the woman&#8217;s mind if not in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-her heart for marrying and loving, there has come a
-decline and decay of the former reverence and awe of
-man toward woman. Also, the men nowadays know
-more about the mystery of woman, know everything
-about it, where not so many years ago a pure woman
-was to a man a real religious mystery. Her physical
-being, the clothes she wore underneath, the supposedly
-sweet and clean thoughts, nobler than his, that dwelt
-in the temple of her soul&mdash;these things surrounded a
-girl with an atmosphere of thrilling enigma for the
-youth who won from her lips and from the church the
-right to explore.</p>
-
-<p>All that has passed, or almost passed. I am one
-of those who believe that what has come, or, rather, is
-coming, to take its place is better, finer, nobler. But
-the old order had its charm. What a charm for me!&mdash;who
-had never known any woman well, who had dreamed
-of her passionately but purely and respectfully. There
-was much of pain&mdash;of shyness, fear of offending her
-higher nature, uneasiness lest I should be condemned
-and cast out&mdash;in those early days of married life. But
-it was a sweet sort of pain. And when we began to understand
-each other&mdash;to be human, though still on our
-best behavior&mdash;when we found that we were congenial,
-were happy together in ways undreamed of, life seemed
-to be paying not like the bankrupt it usually is when
-the time for redeeming its promises comes but like a
-benevolent prodigal, like a lottery whose numbers all
-draw capital prizes. I admit the truth of much the
-pessimists have to say against Life. But one thing I
-must grant it. When in its rare generous moments it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-relents, it does know how to play the host at the feast&mdash;how
-to spread the board, how to fill the flagons and
-to keep them filled, how to scatter the wreaths and the
-garlands, how to select the singers and the dancers who
-help the banqueters make merry. When I remember
-my honeymoon, I almost forgive you, Life, for the
-shabby tricks you have played me.</p>
-
-<p>Now I can conceive a honeymoon that would last
-on and on, not in the glory and feverish joy of its first
-period, but in a substantial and satisfying human happiness.
-But not a honeymoon with a wife who is no
-more fitted to be a wife than the office boy is fitted to
-step in and take the president&#8217;s job. Patience, gentle
-reader! I know how this sudden shriek of discord across
-the amorous strains of the honeymoon music must have
-jarred your nerves. But be patient and I will explain.</p>
-
-<p>Except ourselves, every other family in the house,
-in the neighborhood, had at least one servant. We had
-none. If Edna had been at all economical we might
-have kept a cook and pinched along. But Edna spent
-carelessly all the money I gave her, and I gave her
-all there was. A large part of it went for finery for
-her personal adornment, trash of which she soon tired&mdash;much
-of it she disliked as soon as it came home and she
-tried it on without the saleslady to flatter and confuse.
-I&mdash;in a good-natured way, for I really felt perfectly
-good-humored about it&mdash;remonstrated with her for letting
-everybody rob her, for getting so little for her
-money. She took high ground. Such things were beneath
-her attention. If I had wanted a wife of that
-dull, pinch-penny kind I&#8217;d certainly not have married<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-her, a talented, educated woman, bent on improving her
-mind and her position in the world. And that seemed
-reasonable. Still, the money was going, the bills were
-piling up, and I did not know what to do.</p>
-
-<p>And&mdash;she did the cooking. I think I have already
-said that she had not learned to cook. How she and
-her mother expected her to get along as a poor clerk&#8217;s
-wife I can&#8217;t imagine. The worst of it was, she believed
-she could cook. That is the way with women. They
-look down on housekeeping, on the practical side of life,
-as too coarse and low to be worthy their attention.
-They say all that sort of thing is easy, is like the toil
-of a day laborer. They say anybody could do it. And
-they really believe so. Men, no matter how high their
-position, weary and bore themselves every day, because
-they must, with routine tasks beside which dishwashing
-has charm and variety. Yet women shirk their proper
-and necessary share of life&#8217;s burden, pretending that it
-is beneath them.</p>
-
-<p>Edna, typical woman, thought she could cook and
-keep house because she, so superior, could certainly do
-inferior work if she chose. But after that first brief
-spurt of enthusiasm, of daily conference with the &#8220;Lady
-Book&#8217;s Complete Housekeeper&#8217;s Guide,&#8221; the flat was
-badly kept&mdash;was really horribly kept&mdash;was worse than
-either her home or mine before we had been living there
-many months. It took on much the same odor. It
-looked worse, as tawdry finery, when mussy and dirty,
-is more repulsive than a plain toilet gone back. I did
-not especially mind that. But her cooking&mdash; I had
-not been accustomed to anything especially good in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-way of cooking. Mother was the old-fashioned fryer,
-and you know those fryers always served the vegetables
-soggy. I could have eaten exceedingly poor stuff
-without complaining or feeling like complaining. But
-the stuff she was soon flinging angrily upon the slovenly
-table I could not eat. She ate it, enough of it to keep
-alive, and it didn&#8217;t seem to do her any harm. How
-many women have you known who were judges of things
-to eat? Do you understand how women continue to eat
-the messes they put into their pretty mouths, and keep
-alive?</p>
-
-<p>I could not eat Edna&#8217;s cooking. I ate bread, cold
-meats and the like from the delicatessen shop. When
-the meal happened to be of her own preparing I dropped
-into the habit of slipping away after a pretense at eating,
-to get breakfast or dinner or supper in a restaurant&mdash;the
-cheapest kind of restaurant, but I ate there
-with relish. And never once did I murmur to Edna. I
-loved her too well; also, I am by nature a tolerant,
-even-tempered person, hating strife, avoiding the harsh
-word. In fact, my timidity in that respect has been
-my chief weakness, has cost me dear again and again.
-But&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>After ten months of married life Edna fell ill. All
-you married men will prick up your ears at that. Why
-is it that bread winners somehow contrive to keep on
-their feet most of the time, little though they know as
-to caring for their health, reckless though they are in
-eating and drinking? Why is it that married women&mdash;unless
-they have to work&mdash;spend so much time in sick
-bed or near it? They say we in America have more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-than nine times as many doctors proportionately to
-population as any other country. The doctors live off
-of our women&mdash;our idle, overeating, lazy women who will
-not work, who will not walk, who are always getting
-something the matter with them. Of course the doctors&mdash;parasites
-upon parasites&mdash;fake up all kinds of lies,
-many of them malicious slanders against the husbands,
-to excuse their patients and to keep them patients. But
-what is the truth?</p>
-
-<p>Edna, who read all the time she was not plotting to
-get acquainted with our neighbors&mdash;they looked down
-upon us and wished to have nothing to do with us&mdash;Edna
-who ate quantities of candy between meals and
-ate at meals rich things she bought of confectioners
-and bakers&mdash;Edna fell ill and frightened me almost out
-of my senses. I understand it now. But I did not
-understand then. I believed, as do all ignorant people&mdash;both
-the obviously ignorant and the ignorant who
-pass for enlightened&mdash;I believed sickness to be a mysterious
-accident, like earthquakes and lightning strokes,
-a hit-or-miss blow from nowhere in particular. So I
-was all sympathy and terror.</p>
-
-<p>She got well. She looked as well as ever. But she
-said she was not strong. &#8220;And Godfrey, we simply
-have got to keep a girl. I&#8217;ve borne up bravely. But
-I can&#8217;t stand it any longer. You see for yourself, the
-rough work and the strain of housekeeping are too much
-for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; said I. The bills, including the doctor&#8217;s
-and drug bills, were piling up. We were more
-than a thousand dollars in debt. But I said: &#8220;Very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-well. You are right.&#8221; We men do not realize that there
-are two distinct and equal expressions of strength. The
-strength of bulk, that is often deceptive in that it looks
-stronger than it is; the strength of fiber, that is always
-deceptive in that it is stronger than it looks. In a general
-way, man has the strength of bulk, woman the
-strength of fiber. So man looks on woman&#8217;s appearance
-of fragility and fancies her weak and himself the
-stronger. I looked at Edna, and said: &#8220;Very well. We
-must have a girl to help.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I shan&#8217;t linger upon this part of my story. I am
-tempted to linger, but, after all, it is the commonplace of
-American life, familiar to all, though understood apparently
-by only a few. Why do more than ninety per cent
-of our small business men fail? Why are the savings
-banks accounts of our working classes a mere fraction of
-those of the working classes of other countries? And so
-on, and so on. But I see your impatience, gentle reader,
-with these matters so &#8220;inartistic.&#8221; We sank deeper and
-deeper in debt. Edna&#8217;s health did not improve. The
-girl we hired had lived with better class people; she despised
-us, shirked her work, and Edna did not know
-how to manage her. If the head of the household is
-incompetent and indifferent, a servant only aggravates
-the mess, and the more servants the greater the mess.
-All Edna&#8217;s interest was for her music, her novels, her
-social advancement, and her dreams of being a grand
-lady. These dreams had returned with increased power;
-they took complete possession of her. They soured her
-disposition, made her irritable, usually blue or cross,
-only at long intervals loving and sweet. No, perhaps<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-the dreams were not responsible. Perhaps&mdash;probably&mdash;the
-real cause was the upset state of her health
-through the absurd idle life she led. Idle and lonely.
-For she would not go with whom she could, she could
-not go with whom she would.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sick of sitting alone,&#8221; said she. &#8220;No wonder
-I can&#8217;t get well.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s go back near the old folks,&#8221; suggested I.
-&#8220;Our friends won&#8217;t come to see us in this part of the
-town. They feel uncomfortable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should think they would!&#8221; cried she. &#8220;And if
-they came I&#8217;d see to it that they were so uncomfortable
-that they would never come again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I worked hard. My salary went up to fifteen hundred,
-to two thousand, to twenty-five hundred. &#8220;Now,&#8221;
-said Edna, &#8220;perhaps you&#8217;ll get hands that won&#8217;t look
-like a laboring man&#8217;s. How can I hope to make nice
-friends when I&#8217;ve a husband with broken finger nails?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Our expenses continued to outrun my salary, but I
-was not especially worried, for I began to realize that
-I had the money-making talent. Three children were
-born; only the first&mdash;Margot&mdash;lived. Looking back
-upon those six years of our married life, I see after the
-first year only a confused repellent mess of illness,
-nurses, death, doctors, quarrels with servants, untidy
-rooms and clothes, slovenly, peevish wife, with myself
-watching it all in a dazed, helpless way, thinking it must
-be the normal, natural order of domestic life&mdash;which,
-indeed, it is in America&mdash;and wondering where and how
-it was to end.</p>
-
-<p>I recall going home one afternoon late, to find Edna<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-yawning listlessly over some book in a magazine culture
-series. Her hair hung every which way, her wrapper
-was torn and stained. Her skin had the musty look
-that suggests unpleasant conditions both without and
-within. Margot, dirty, pimply from too much candy,
-sat on the floor squalling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Take the child away,&#8221; cried Edna, at sight of me.
-&#8220;I thought you&#8217;d never come. A little more of this and
-I&#8217;ll kill myself. What is there to live for, anyhow?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Silent and depressed, I took Margot for a walk.
-And as I wandered along sadly I was full of pity for
-Edna, and felt that somehow the blame was wholly mine
-for the wretched plight of our home life.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When I was twenty-eight and Edna twenty-three, I
-had a series of rapid promotions which landed me in
-New York in the position of assistant traffic superintendent.
-My salary was eight thousand a year.</p>
-
-<p>It so happened&mdash;coincidence and nothing else&mdash;that
-those eighteen months of quick advance for me also
-marked a notable change in Edna.</p>
-
-<p>There are some people&mdash;many people&mdash;so obsessed
-of the know-it-all vanity that they can learn nothing.
-Nor are all these people preachers, doctors, and teachers,
-gentle reader. Then there is another species who
-pretend to know all, who are chary of admitting to
-learning or needing to learn anything, however small,
-yet who behind their pretense toil at improving themselves
-as a hungry mouse gnaws at the wall of the
-cheese box. Of this species was Edna. As she was fond
-of being mysterious about her thoughts and intentions,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-she never told me what set her going again after that
-long lethargy. Perhaps it was some woman whom she
-had a sudden opportunity thoroughly to study, some
-woman who knew and lived the ideas Edna had groped
-for in vain. Perhaps it was a novel she read or articles
-in her magazines. It doesn&#8217;t matter. I never asked
-her; I had learned that wild horses would not drag from
-her a confession of where she had got an idea, because
-such a confession would to her notion detract from her
-own glory. However, the essential fact is that she suddenly
-roused and set to work as she had never worked
-before&mdash;went at it like a prospector who, after toiling
-now hard and now discouragedly for years, strikes by
-accident a rich vein of gold. Edna showed in every
-move that she not hoped, not believed, but knew she was
-at last on the right track. She began to take care,
-scrupulous care, of her person&mdash;the minute intelligent
-care she has ever since been expanding and improving
-upon, has never since relaxed, and never will relax. Also
-she began to plan and to move definitely in the matter
-of taking care of Margot&mdash;to look after her speech, her
-manners, her food, her person, especially, perhaps, the
-last. Margot&#8217;s teeth, Margot&#8217;s hair, Margot&#8217;s walk,
-Margot&#8217;s feet and hands and skin, the shape of her nose,
-the set of her ears&mdash;all these things she talked about and
-fussed with as agitatedly as about her own self.</p>
-
-<p>Edna became a crank on the subject of food&mdash;what
-is called a crank by the unthinking, of whom, by the
-way, I was to my lasting regret one until a few years
-ago. For a year or two her moves in this important
-direction were blundering, intermittent, and not always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-successful&mdash;small wonder when there is really no reliable
-information to be had, the scientists being uncertain and
-the doctors grossly ignorant. But gradually she
-evolved and lived upon a &#8220;beauty diet.&#8221; Margot, of
-course, had to do the same. She took exercises morning
-and night, took long and regular walks for the figure
-and skin and to put clearness and brightness into the
-eyes. I believe she and Margot, with occasional lapses,
-keep up their regimen to this day.</p>
-
-<p>The house was as slattern as ever. The diet and
-comfort and health of the family bread-winner were no
-more the subject of thought and care than&mdash;well, than
-the next husband&#8217;s to his wife. She gave some attention&mdash;intelligent
-and valuable attention, I cheerfully concede&mdash;to
-improving my speech, manners, and dress.
-But beyond that the revolution affected only her and
-her daughter. Them it affected amazingly. In three
-or four months the change in their appearance was
-literally beyond belief. Edna&#8217;s beauty and style came
-back&mdash;no, burst forth in an entirely new kind of radiance
-and fascination. As for little Margot, she transformed
-from homeliness, from the scrawny pasty look
-of bad health, from bad temper, into as neat and sweet
-and pretty a little lady as could be found anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>You, gentle reader, who are ever ready to slop over
-with some kind of sentimentality because in your shallowness
-you regard sentimentality&mdash;not sentiment, for
-of that you know nothing, but sentimentality&mdash;as the
-most important thing in the world, just as a child regards
-sickeningly rich cake as the finest food in the
-world&mdash;you, gentle reader, have already made up your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-mind why Edna thus suddenly awakened, or, rather, reawakened.
-&#8220;Aha,&#8221; you are saying. &#8220;Served him good
-and right. She found some one who appreciated her.&#8221;
-That guess of yours shows how little you know about
-Edna or the Edna kind of human being. The people
-who do things in this world, except in our foolish American
-novels, do because they must. They may do better
-or worse under the influence of love, which is full as
-often a drag as a spur. But they do not <i>do</i> because
-of love. I shall not argue this. I shrink from gratuitously
-inviting an additional vial of wrath from the
-ladies, who resent being told how worthless they in their
-indolence and self-complacence permit themselves to be
-and how small a positive part they now play in the
-world drama. I should have said nothing at all about
-the matter, were it not that I wish to be strictly just
-to Edna, and she, being wholly the ambitious woman,
-has always had and still has a deep horror of scandal,
-intrigue, irregularity, and unconventionality of every
-sort.</p>
-
-<p>It was necessary that we move to a place more convenient
-to my business headquarters in New York City.
-A few weeks after I got the eight thousand a year,
-Edna, and little Margot and I went to Brooklyn to
-live&mdash;took a really charming house in Bedford Avenue,
-with large grounds around it. And once more we were
-happy. It seemed to me we had started afresh.</p>
-
-<p>And we had.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">II</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Why</span> did we go to Brooklyn?</p>
-
-<p>By the time Edna and I had been married six years
-I learned many things about her inmost self. I was
-not at all analytic or critical as to matters at home. I
-used my intelligence in my own business; I assumed that
-my wife had intelligence and that she used it in her
-business&mdash;her part of our joint business. I believed
-the reason her part of it went badly was solely the
-natural conditions of life beyond her control. A railroad,
-a factory could be run smoothly; a family and a
-household were different matters. And I admired my
-wife as much as I loved her, and regarded her as a
-wonderful woman, which, indeed, in certain respects she
-was.</p>
-
-<p>But I had discovered in her several weaknesses.
-Some of these I knew; others I did not permit myself
-to know that I knew. For example, I was perfectly
-aware that she was not so truthful as one might
-be. But I did not let myself admit that she was not
-always unconscious of her own deviations from the
-truth. I had gained enough experience of life to learn
-that lying is practically a universal weakness. So I
-did not especially mind it in her, often found it amusing.
-I had not then waked up to the fact that, as a
-rule, women systematically lie to their husbands about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-big things and little, and that those women who profess
-to be too proud to lie, do their lying by indirections,
-such as omissions, half truths, and misleading
-silences. I am not criticising. Self-respect, real personal
-pride, I have discovered in spite of the reading
-matter of all kinds about the past, is a modern development,
-is still in embryo; and those of us who profess to
-be the proudest are either the most ignorant of ourselves
-or the most hypocritical.</p>
-
-<p>But back to my acquaintance with my wife&#8217;s character.
-When I told her we should have to live nearer
-my work, my new work, than Passaic, she promptly said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s go to Brooklyn.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not to New York?&#8221; said I. &#8220;At least until
-I get thoroughly trained, I want to be close to the
-office.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But there&#8217;s Margot,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Margot must
-have a place to play in. And we couldn&#8217;t afford such a
-place in New York. I can&#8217;t let her run about the streets
-or go to public schools. She&#8217;d pick up all sorts of low,
-coarse associates and habits.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then let&#8217;s go to some town opposite&mdash;across the
-Hudson. If we can&#8217;t live on Manhattan Island, and I
-think you&#8217;re right about Margot, why, let&#8217;s live where
-living is cheap. We ought to be saving some money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hate these Jersey towns,&#8221; said Edna petulantly.
-&#8220;I don&#8217;t think Margot would get the right sort of
-social influences in them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As soon as she said &#8220;social influences&#8221; I should
-have understood the whole business. The only person
-higher up on the social ladder with whom Edna had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-able to scrape intimate acquaintance in Passaic was a
-dowdy, tawdry chatterbox of a woman&mdash;I forget her
-name&mdash;who talked incessantly of the fashionable people
-she knew in Brooklyn&mdash;how she had gone there a stranger,
-had joined St. Mary&#8217;s Episcopal Church, and had
-at once become a social favorite, invited to &#8220;the very
-best houses, my dear; such lovely homes,&#8221; and associated
-with &#8220;the most charming cultured people,&#8221; and
-so on and on&mdash;you know the rest of the humbug.</p>
-
-<p>Now, one of the discoveries about my wife which I
-but half understood and made light of, had been that
-she was mad, literally mad, on the subject of social
-climbing. That means she was possessed of the disease
-imported into this country from England, where it has
-raged for upward of half a century&mdash;the disease of being
-bent upon associating by hook or by crook with people
-whose strongest desire seems to be not to associate with
-you. This plague does not spare the male population&mdash;by
-no means. But it rages in and ravages the female
-population almost to a woman. Our women take incidental
-interest or no interest in their homes, in their
-husbands, in their children. Their hearts are centered
-upon social position, and, of course, the money-squandering
-necessary to attaining or to keeping it. The
-women who are &#8220;in&#8221; spend all their time, whatever
-they may seem to be about, in spitting upon and kicking
-the faces of the women who are trying to get &#8220;in.&#8221;
-The women who are trying to get &#8220;in&#8221; spend their
-whole time in smiling and cringing and imploring and
-plotting and, when it seems expedient, threatening and
-compelling. Probe to the bottom&mdash;if you have acuteness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-enough, which you probably haven&#8217;t&mdash;probe to the
-bottom any of the present-day activities of the American
-woman, I care not what it may be, and you will
-discover the bacillus of social position biting merrily
-away at her. If she goes to church or to a lecture or
-a concert&mdash;if she goes calling or stays at home&mdash;if she
-joins a suffrage movement or a tenement reform propaganda,
-or refuses to join&mdash;if she dresses noisily or
-plainly&mdash;if she shuns society or seeks it, if she keeps
-house or leaves housekeeping to servants, roaches, and
-mice&mdash;if she cares for or neglects her children&mdash;if she
-pets her husband or displaces him with another&mdash;no
-matter what she does, it is at the behest of the poison
-flowing through brain and vein from the social-position
-bacillus. She thinks by doing whatever she does she
-will somehow make her position more brilliant or less
-insecure, or, having no position at all, will gain one.</p>
-
-<p>And the men? They pay the bills. Sometimes reluctantly,
-again eagerly; sometimes ignorantly, again
-with full knowledge. The men&mdash;they pay the bills.</p>
-
-<p>Now you know better far than I knew at the time
-why our happy little family went to Brooklyn, took
-the house in Bedford Avenue which we could ill afford
-if we were to save any money, and joined St. Mary&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>A couple of years after we were married my wife
-stopped me when I was telling her what had happened
-at the office that day, as was my habit. &#8220;You ought
-to leave all those things outside when you come home,&#8221;
-said she.</p>
-
-<p>She had read this in a book somewhere, I guess. It
-was a new idea to me. &#8220;Why should I?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>&#8220;Home is a place for happiness, with all the sordidness
-shut out,&#8221; explained she. &#8220;Those sordid things
-ought not to touch our life together.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This sounded all right. &#8220;It seemed to me,&#8221; stammered
-I, apologetically, &#8220;that my career, the way I
-was getting on, that our bread and butter&mdash; Well, I
-thought we ought to kind of talk it over together.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I do sympathize with you,&#8221; said, or rather
-quoted, she. &#8220;But my place is to soothe and smooth
-away the cares of business. You ought to try not to
-think of them at home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what <i>would</i> I think about?&#8221; cried I, much
-perplexed. &#8220;Why, my business is all I&#8217;ve got. It&#8217;s the
-most important thing in the world to us. It means our
-living. At least that&#8217;s the way the thing looks to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You ought to think at home about the higher side
-of life&mdash;the intellectual side.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But my business <i>is</i> my intellectual side,&#8221; I said.
-&#8220;And I can&#8217;t for the life of me see why thinking about
-things that don&#8217;t advance us and don&#8217;t pay the bills is
-better than thinking about things that do.&#8221; It seemed
-to me that this looking on my business as something
-to be left on the mud-scraper at the entrance indicated
-a false idea of it got somewhere. So I added somewhat
-warmly: &#8220;There&#8217;s nothing low or bad about my business.&#8221;
-And that was the truth at the time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know anything about it,&#8221; replied she with
-the gentle patience of her superior refinement and education.
-&#8220;And I don&#8217;t want to know. Those things
-don&#8217;t interest me. And I think, Godfrey&#8221;&mdash;very
-sweetly, with her cheek against mine&mdash;&#8220;the reason husbands<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-and wives often grow apart is that the husband
-gives his whole mind to his business and doesn&#8217;t develop
-the higher side of his nature&mdash;the side that appeals to
-a woman and satisfies her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This touched my sense of humor mildly. &#8220;My
-father gives his mind to one of those high sides,&#8221; said
-I, &#8220;and we nearly starved to death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your father!&#8221; exclaimed she in derisive disgust.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My father,&#8221; said I cheerfully, &#8220;he does nothing
-but read, talk, and think politics.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Politics! <i>That</i> isn&#8217;t on the higher side. Women
-don&#8217;t care anything about <i>that</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what do they care about?&#8221; I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About music and literature&mdash;and those artistic
-things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, those things are all right,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But I
-don&#8217;t see that it takes any more brains or any better
-brains to paint a picture or sing a song or write a
-novel than it does to run a railroad&mdash;or to plan one.
-If you&#8217;d try to understand business, dear,&#8221; I urged,
-&#8220;you might find it as interesting and as intellectual as
-anything that doesn&#8217;t help us make a living. Anyhow,
-I&#8217;ve simply got to give my brains to my work. You
-go ahead and attend to the higher side for the family.
-I&#8217;ll stick to the job that butters the bread and keeps the
-rain off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was patient with me, but I saw she didn&#8217;t approve.
-However, as I knew she&#8217;d approve still less if
-I failed to provide for her and the two young ones&mdash;there
-were two at that time&mdash;I let the matter drop and
-held to the common-sense course. I hadn&#8217;t the faintest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-notion of the seriousness of that little talk of ours.
-And it was well I hadn&#8217;t, for to have made her realize
-her folly I&#8217;d have had to start in and educate her&mdash;uneducate
-her and then re&euml;ducate her. I don&#8217;t blame the
-women. I feel sorry for them. When I hear them talk
-about the lack of sympathy between themselves and
-American men, about the low ideals and the sordid talk
-the men indulge in, how dull it is, how different from the
-inspiring, cultured talk a woman hears among the aristocrats
-abroad, said aristocrats being supported in
-helpless idleness throughout their useless lives, often by
-hard-earned American dollars&mdash;when I hear this pitiful
-balderdash from fair lips, I grow sad. The American
-woman fancies she is growing away from the American
-man. The truth is that while she is sitting still,
-playing with a lapful of the artificial flowers of fake
-culture, like a poor doodle-wit, the American man is
-growing away from her. She knows nothing of value;
-she can do nothing of value. She has nothing to offer
-the American man but her physical charms, for he has
-no time or taste for playing with artificial flowers
-when the world&#8217;s important work is to be done. So
-the poor creature grows more isolated, more neglected,
-less respected, and less sought, except in a physical
-way. And all the while she hugs to her bosom the
-delusion that she is the great soul high sorrowful. The
-world moves; many are the penalties for the nation or
-the race or the sex that does not move with it, or does
-not move quickly enough. I feel sorry for the American
-woman&mdash;unless she has a father who will leave her rich
-or a husband who will give her riches.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>I feel some of my readers saying that I must have
-been most unfortunate in the women I have known.
-Perhaps. But may it not be that those commiserating
-readers have been rarely fortunate in their feminine
-acquaintances?&mdash;or in lack of insight?</p>
-
-<p>Now you probably not only know why we went to
-Brooklyn, but also what we did after we got there. I
-have not forgotten my promise to gentle reader. I
-shall not linger many moments in Brooklyn. True, it
-is superior to Passaic, at least to the part of Passaic
-in which I constrained gentle reader to tarry a minute
-or two. But it is still far from the promised heights.</p>
-
-<p>My wife owes a vast deal to Brooklyn. As she
-haughtily ignores the debt, would deny it if publicly
-charged, I shall pay it for her. Brooklyn was her finishing
-school. It made her what she is.</p>
-
-<p>In the last year or so we spent in Passaic there had
-been, as I have hinted, a marked outward change in all
-three of us. The least, or rather the least abrupt,
-change had been in me. Associated in business with a
-more prosperous and better-dressed and better-educated
-class of men, I had gradually picked up the sort of
-knowledge a man needs to fit himself for the inevitably
-changing social conditions accompanying a steady advance
-in material prosperity. I was as quick to learn
-one kind of useful thing as another. And just as I
-learned how to fill larger and larger positions and how
-to make money out of the chances that come to a man
-situated where money is to be made, so I learned how to
-dress like a man of the better class, how to speak a less
-slangy and a less ungrammatical English, how to use<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-my mind in thinking and in discussing a thousand subjects
-not directly related to my business.</p>
-
-<p>If my wife had been interested in any of the important
-things of the world, I could have been of the
-greatest assistance to her and she to me. And we
-should have grown ever closer together in sympathetic
-companionship. But although she had a good mind&mdash;a
-superior mind&mdash;she cared about nothing but the
-things that interest foolish women and still more foolish
-men&mdash;for a man who cares about splurge and show
-and social position and such nonsense is less excusable,
-is more foolish, than a woman of the same sort.
-Women have the excuse of lack of serious occupation,
-but what excuse has a man? Still, she was not idle&mdash;not
-for a minute. She was, on the contrary, in her
-way as busy as I. From time to time she would say
-to me enigmatically: &#8220;You don&#8217;t appreciate it, but I
-am preparing myself to help you fill the station your
-business ability will win us a chance at.&#8221; It seemed to
-me that I was doing that alone. For what was necessary
-to fill that station but higher and higher skill as
-a man of affairs?</p>
-
-<p>When we had made our entry in Brooklyn and had
-seated ourselves in the state in Bedford Avenue which
-she had decided for, she showed that she felt immensely
-proud of herself. We took the house furnished
-throughout&mdash;nicely furnished in a substantial way,
-for it had been the home of one of the old Brooklyn
-mercantile families.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s good enough to start with,&#8221; said she, casting
-a critical glance round the sober, homelike dining<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-room. &#8220;I shan&#8217;t make any changes till I look about me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We couldn&#8217;t be better off,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Everything
-is perfectly comfortable.&#8221; And in fact neither she nor
-I had ever before known what comfort was. Looking
-at that house&mdash;merely looking at it and puzzling out
-the uses of the various things to us theretofore unknown&mdash;was
-about as important in the way of education as
-learning to read is to a child.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s good enough for Brooklyn,&#8221; said she. She
-regarded me with her patient, tender expression of the
-superior intelligence. &#8220;You haven&#8217;t much imagination
-or ambition, Godfrey,&#8221; she went on. &#8220;But fortunately
-<i>I</i> have. And do be careful not to betray us before the
-servants I&#8217;m engaging.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The show part of the house continued to look about
-as it had when we took possession. But the living part
-went to pieces rapidly. We had many servants. We
-spent much money&mdash;so much that, if I had not been
-speculating in various ways, we should have soon gone
-under. But the results were miserably poor. My wife
-left everything to her servants and devoted herself to
-her social career. The ex-Brooklyn society woman at
-Passaic had not deceived her. No sooner had she joined
-St. Mary&#8217;s than she began to have friends&mdash;friends of
-a far higher social rank than she had ever even seen
-at close range before. They were elegant people indeed&mdash;the
-wives of the heads of departments in big
-stores, the families of bank officers and lawyers and
-doctors. There were even a few rather rich people.
-My wife was in ecstasy for a year or two. And she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-improved rapidly in looks, in dress, in manners, in
-speech, in all ways except in disposition and character.</p>
-
-<p>Except in disposition and character. As we grow
-older and rise in the world, there is always a deterioration
-both in disposition and in character. A man&#8217;s disposition
-grows sharper through dealing with, and having
-to deal sharply with, incompetence. The character
-tends to harden as he is forced to make the unpleasant
-and often not too scrupulous moves necessary to getting
-himself forward toward success. Also, the way
-everyone tries to use a successful man makes him more
-and more acute in penetrating to the real motives of
-his fellow beings, more and more inclined to take up
-men for what he can get out of them and drop them
-when he has squeezed out all the advantage&mdash;in brief,
-to treat them precisely as they treat him. But the
-whole object in having a home, a wife, a family, is defeated
-if the man has not there a something that checks
-the tendencies to cynicism and coldness which active
-life not merely encourages but even compels.</p>
-
-<p>There was no occasion for Edna&#8217;s becoming vixenish
-and hard. It was altogether due to the idiotic and
-worthless social climbing. She had a swarm of friends,
-yet not a single friend. She cultivated people socially,
-and they cultivated her, not for the natural and kindly
-and elevating reasons, but altogether for the detestable
-purposes of that ghastly craze for social position.
-Edna was bitter against me for a long time, never again
-became fully reconciled, because I soon flatly refused to
-have anything to do with it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They will think there&#8217;s something wrong about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-you, and about me, if you don&#8217;t come with me,&#8221; pleaded
-she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I need my strength for my business,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;And what do I care whether they think well or ill of
-me? They don&#8217;t give us any money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are <i>so</i> sordid!&#8221; cried she. &#8220;Sometimes I&#8217;m
-almost tempted to give up, and not try to be somebody
-and to make somebodies of Margot and you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish you would,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Why shouldn&#8217;t we
-live quietly and mind our own business and be happy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How fortunate it is for Margot that she has a
-mother with ambition and pride!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well&mdash;no matter. But please do get another
-cook. This one is, if anything, worse than the last&mdash;except
-when we have company.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We were forever changing cooks. The food that
-came on our table was something atrocious. I heard
-the same complaint from all my married associates at
-the office, even from the higher officials who were rich
-men and lived in great state. They, too, had American
-wives. In the markets and shops I saw as I passed
-along all sorts of attractive things to eat, and of real
-quality. I wondered why we never had those things
-on our table. Heaven knows we spent money enough.
-The time came when I got a clew to the mystery.</p>
-
-<p>One day Edna said: &#8220;I&#8217;ve been doing my housekeeping
-altogether by telephone. I think I&#8217;ll stop it,
-except on rainy days and when I don&#8217;t feel well.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>By telephone! I laughed to myself. No wonder we
-had poor stuff and paid the highest prices for it. I
-thought a while, then to satisfy my curiosity began to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-ask questions, very cautiously, for Edna was extremely
-touchy, as we all are in matters where in our hearts
-we know we are in the wrong. &#8220;Do you remember
-what kind of range we have in our kitchen?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I?&#8221; exclaimed she disgustedly. &#8220;Certainly not.
-I haven&#8217;t been down to the kitchen since we first moved
-into this house. I&#8217;ve something better to do than to
-meddle with the servants.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Naturally,&#8221; said I soothingly. And I didn&#8217;t let
-her see how her confession amused me. What if a man
-tried to run his business in that fashion! And ordering
-by telephone! Why, it was an invitation to the tradespeople
-to swindle us in every way. But I said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>As usually either it was bad weather or Edna was
-not feeling well, or was in a rush to keep some social
-engagement, the ordering for the house continued to
-be done by telephone, when it was not left entirely to the
-discretion of the servants. One morning it so happened
-that she and I left the house at the same time. Said
-she:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m on my way to do the marketing. It&#8217;s a terrible
-nuisance, and I know so little about those things. But
-it&#8217;s coming to be regarded as fashionable for a woman
-to do her own marketing. Some of the best families&mdash;people
-with their own carriages and servants in livery&mdash;some
-of the swellest ladies in Brooklyn do it now. It&#8217;s
-a fad from across the river.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must be careful not to overtax yourself,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>And I said it quite seriously, for in those days of my
-innocence I was worried about her, thought her a poor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-overworked angel, was glad I had the money to relieve
-her from the worst tasks and to leave her free to amuse
-herself and to take care of her health! I had not yet
-started in the direction of ridding myself of the masculine
-delusion that woman is a delicate creature by
-nature if she happens to be a lady&mdash;and of course I
-knew my Edna was a lady through and through. It was
-many a year before I learned the truth&mdash;why ladies are
-always ailing and why they can do nothing but wear
-fine clothes and sit in parlors or in carriages when they
-are not sitting at indigestible food, and amuse themselves
-and pity themselves for being condemned to live
-with coarse, uninteresting American men.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, I was sincere in urging her to take care how
-she adopted so laborious a fad as doing her own marketing.
-She went on:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I had a carriage it wouldn&#8217;t be so bad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She said this sweetly enough and with no suggestion
-of reproach. Just the sigh of a lady&#8217;s soul at the hardness
-of life&#8217;s conditions. But I, loving her, felt as if
-I were somehow to blame. &#8220;You shall have a carriage
-before many years,&#8221; said I. &#8220;That&#8217;s one of the things
-I&#8217;ve been working for.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She gave me a look that made me feel proud I had
-her to live for. &#8220;I hope I&#8217;ll be here to enjoy it,&#8221; sighed
-she.</p>
-
-<p>I walked sad and silent by her side, profoundly impressed
-and depressed by that hint as to her feeble
-health. I know now it was sheer pretense with her, the
-more easily to manage me and to cover her shortcomings.
-I ought to have realized it then. But what man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-does? She certainly did not look ill, for she was not
-one of those who were always stuffing themselves at teas
-and lunches, and talked of a walk of five blocks as hard
-exercise! She had learned how to keep health and
-beauty. What intelligence it shows, that she was able
-to grasp so difficult a matter; and what splendid persistence
-that she was able to carry out a mode of life so
-disagreeable to self-indulgence. If her intelligence and
-her persistence could have been turned to use! Presently
-we were at the butcher shop. I paused in the
-doorway while she engaged in her arduous labor. Here
-is the conversation:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good morning, Mr. Toomey.&#8221; (Very gracious;
-the lady speaking to the trades person.)</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good morning, ma&#8217;am.&#8221; (Fat little butcher touching
-cracked and broken-nailed hand to hat respectfully.)</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That lamb you sent yesterday was very tough.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sorry, ma&#8217;am. But those kind of things will happen,
-you know.&#8221; (Most flatteringly humble of manner.)</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I know. Do your best. I&#8217;m sure you try to
-please. Send me&mdash;let me see&mdash;say, two chickens for
-broiling. You&#8217;ll pick out nice ones?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed, ma&#8217;am. I&#8217;ll attend to it myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And something for the servants. You know what
-they like.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, ma&#8217;am. I&#8217;ll attend to it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you&#8217;ll not overcharge, will you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I, ma&#8217;am? I&#8217;ve been dealing with ladies for twenty
-years, right here, ma&#8217;am. I never have overcharged.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>&#8220;I know. All the ladies tell me you&#8217;re honest. I
-feel safe with you. Let me see, there were some other
-things. But I&#8217;m in a hurry. The cook will tell your
-boy when he takes what I&#8217;ve ordered. You&#8217;ll be sure
-to give me the best?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d not dare send anything else to <i>you</i>, ma&#8217;am.&#8221;
-(Groveling.)</p>
-
-<p>A gracious smile, a gracious nod, and Edna rejoined
-me. Innocent as I was, and under the spell that
-blinds the American man where the American woman
-is concerned, I could not but be upset by this example
-of how our house was run&mdash;an example that all in an
-instant brought to my mind and enabled me to understand
-a score, a hundred similar examples. There was
-I, toiling away to make money, earning every dollar
-by the hardest kind of mental labor, struggling to rise,
-to make our fortune, and each day my wife was tossing
-carelessly out of the windows into the street a large
-part of my earnings. I did not know what to do
-about it.</p>
-
-<p>Edna&#8217;s next stop was at the grocer&#8217;s. I had not
-the courage to halt and listen. I knew it would be a
-repetition of the grotesque interview with the butcher.
-And she undoubtedly a clever woman&mdash;alert, improving.
-What a mystery! I went on to my office. That day,
-without giving my acquaintances there an inkling of
-what was in my mind, I made inquiries into how their
-wives spent the money that went for food&mdash;the most
-important item in the spending of incomes under ten or
-twelve thousand a year. In every case the wife or the
-mother did the marketing by telephone. All the men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-except one took the ignorance and incompetence of the
-management of the household expenses as a matter of
-course. One man grumbled a little. I remember he
-said: &#8220;No wonder it&#8217;s hard for the men to save anything.
-The women waste most of it on the table, paying
-double prices for poor stuff. I tell you, Loring,
-the American woman is responsible for the dishonesty of
-American commercial life. They are always nagging
-at the man for more and more money to spend, and in
-spending it they tempt the merchants, the clerks, their
-own servants, everyone within range, to become swindlers
-and thieves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, nonsense,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You&#8217;re a pessimist. The
-American woman is all right. Where&#8217;d you find her
-equal for intelligence and charm?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She may be intelligent,&#8221; said he. &#8220;She doesn&#8217;t
-use it on anything worth while, except roping in some
-poor sucker to put up <i>for</i> her and to put up <i>with</i> her.
-And she may have charm, but not for a man who has
-cut his matrimonial eye teeth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed at Van Dyck&mdash;that was my grumbling
-friend&#8217;s name. And I soon dropped the subject from
-my mind. It has never been my habit to waste time in
-thinking about things when the thinking could not possibly
-lead anywhere. You may say I ought to have
-interfered, forced my wife to come to her senses, compelled
-her to learn her business. Which shows that
-you know little about the nature of the American
-woman. If I had taken that course, she would have
-hated me, she would have done no better, and she would
-have scorned me as a sordid haggler over small sums<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-of money who was trying to spoil with the vulgarities
-of commercial life the beauties of the home. No, I
-instinctively knew enough not to interfere.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But let us take a long leap forward to the day
-when I became president of the railroad, having made
-myself a rich man by judicious gambling with eight
-thousand dollars loaned me by father Wheatlands. He
-was a rich man, and in the way to become very rich,
-and he had no heir but Edna after the drowning of
-her two brothers under a sailboat in Newark Bay.
-Margot was in a fashionable school over in New York.
-My wife and I, still a young couple and she beautiful&mdash;my
-wife and I were as happy as any married couple
-can be where they let each other alone and the husband
-gives the wife all the money she wishes and leaves her
-free to spend it as she pleases.</p>
-
-<p>When I told her of my good fortune, and the sudden
-and large betterment of our finances, she said with
-a curious lighting of the eyes, a curious strengthening
-of the chin:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now&mdash;for New York!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;New York?&#8221; said I. &#8220;What does that mean?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are going to live in New York,&#8221; replied she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But we do live in New York. Brooklyn is part
-of New York.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Legally I suppose it is,&#8221; replied she. &#8220;But morally
-and &aelig;sthetically, socially, and in every other civilized
-way, my dear Godfrey, it is part of the backwoods.
-I can hardly wait to get away.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>&#8220;Why, I thought you were happy here!&#8221; exclaimed
-I, marveling, used though I was to her keeping her own
-counsel strictly about the matters that most interested
-her. &#8220;You&#8217;ve certainly acted as if you loved it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t <i>mind</i> it at first,&#8221; conceded she. &#8220;But for
-two or three years I have <i>loathed</i> it, and everybody that
-lives in it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was amazed at this last sally. &#8220;Oh, come now,
-Edna,&#8221; cried I, &#8220;you&#8217;ve got lots of friends here&mdash;lots
-and lots of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was thinking of the dozen or so women whom she
-called and who called her by the first name, women she
-was with early and late. Women she was daily playing
-bridge with&mdash; Bridge! I have a friend who declares
-that bridge is ruining the American home, and I see his
-point, but I think he doesn&#8217;t look deep enough. If it
-weren&#8217;t bridge it would be something else. Bridge is a
-striking example, but only a single example, of the
-results of feminine folly and idleness that all flow from
-the same cause. However, let us go back to my talk
-with Edna. She met my protest in behalf of her friends
-with a contemptuous:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know a soul who isn&#8217;t <i>frightfully</i> common.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re the same sort of people we are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not the same sort that <i>I</i> am,&#8221; declared she
-proudly. &#8220;And not the sort Margot and you are going
-to be. You&#8217;ll see. You don&#8217;t know about these things.
-But fortunately I do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t seriously mean that you want to leave
-this splendid old house&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Splendid? It&#8217;s hardly fit to live in. Of course, we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-had to endure it while we were poor and obscure. But
-now it won&#8217;t do at all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And go away from all these people you&#8217;ve worked
-so hard to get in with&mdash;all these friends&mdash;go away
-among strangers. <i>I</i> don&#8217;t mind. But what would <i>you</i>
-do? How&#8217;d you pass the days?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;These vulgar people bore me to death,&#8221; declared
-she. &#8220;I&#8217;ve been advancing, if you have stood still.
-Thank God, <i>I&#8217;ve</i> got ambition.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Heaven knows they&#8217;ve never been <i>my</i> friends,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;But I must say they seem nice enough people,
-as people go. What&#8217;s the matter with &#8217;em?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re common,&#8221; said she with the languor of one
-explaining when he feels he will not be understood.
-&#8220;They&#8217;re tiresome.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll admit they&#8217;re tiresome,&#8221; said I. &#8220;That&#8217;s why
-I&#8217;ve kept away from them. But I doubt if they&#8217;re more
-tiresome than people generally. The fact is, my dear,
-people are all tiresome. That&#8217;s why they can&#8217;t amuse
-themselves or each other, but have to be amused&mdash;have
-to hire the clever people of all sorts to entertain them.
-Instead of asking people here to bore us and to be bored,
-why not send them seats at a theater or orders for a
-first-class meal at a first-class restaurant?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose you think that&#8217;s funny,&#8221; said my wife.
-She had no sense of humor, and the suggestion of a jest
-irritated her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, it does strike me as funny,&#8221; I admitted.
-&#8220;But there&#8217;s sense in it, too.... I&#8217;m sure you don&#8217;t
-want to abandon your friends here. Why make ourselves
-uncomfortable all over again?&#8221; I took a serious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-persuasive tone. &#8220;Edna, we&#8217;re beginning to get used
-to the more stylish way of living we took up when we
-left Passaic and came here to live. Is it sensible to
-branch out again into the untried and the unknown?
-Will we be any wiser or any happier? You can shine
-as the big star now in this circle of friends. You like
-to run things socially. Here&#8217;s your chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How could I get any pleasure out of running
-things socially in St. Mary&#8217;s?&#8221; demanded she. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-outgrown it. It seems vulgar and common to me. It
-is vulgar and common.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What does that mean?&#8221; I asked innocently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you don&#8217;t understand, I can&#8217;t tell you,&#8221; replied
-she tartly. &#8220;Surely you must see that your wife and
-your daughter are superior to these people round here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t compare my wife and daughter with other
-people,&#8221; said I. &#8220;To me they&#8217;re superior to anybody
-and everybody else in the world. I often wish we lived
-&#8217;way off in the country somewhere. I&#8217;m sure we&#8217;d be
-happier with only each other. We&#8217;re putting on too
-much style to suit me, even now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see you living in the country,&#8221; laughed she.
-&#8220;You&#8217;d come down about once a week or month.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I couldn&#8217;t deny the truth in her accusation. I felt
-it ought to have been that my wife and I were so sympathetic,
-so interested in the same things, that we were
-absorbed in each other. But the facts were against it.
-We really had almost nothing in common. I admired
-her beauty and also her intelligence and energy, though
-I thought them misdirected. She, I think, liked me in
-the primitive way of a woman with a man. And she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-admired my ability to make money, though she thought
-it rather a low form of intellectual excellence. However,
-as she found it extremely useful, she admired me
-for it in a way. I have seen much of the aristocratic
-temperament that despises money, but I have yet to see
-an aristocrat who wasn&#8217;t greedier than the greediest
-money-grubber&mdash;and I must say it is hard to conceive
-anything lower than the spirit that grabs the gift and
-despises the giver. But then, some day, when thinking
-is done more clearly, we shall all see that aristocracy
-and its spirit is the lowest level of human nature, is
-simply a deep-seated survival of barbarism. However,
-Edna and I appealed to and satisfied each other in one
-way; beyond that our congeniality abruptly ended.
-Looking back, I see now that talking <i>with</i> her was never
-a pleasure, nor was it a pleasure to her to talk <i>with</i> me.
-I irritated her; she bored me.</p>
-
-<p>How rarely in our country do you find a woman
-who is an interesting companion for a man, except as
-female and male pair or survey the prospect of pairing?
-And it matters not what line of activity the man
-is taking&mdash;business, politics, literature, art, philanthropy
-even. The women are eternally talking about
-their superiority to the business man; but do they get
-along any better with an artist&mdash;unless he is cultivating
-the woman for the sake of an order for a picture? Is
-there any line of serious endeavor in which an American
-woman is interesting and helpful and companionable to
-a man? I can get along very well with an artist. I
-have one friend who is a writer of novels, another who
-is a writer of plays, a third who is a sculptor. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-are interested in my work, and I in theirs. We talk
-together on a basis of equal interest, and we give each
-other ideas. Can any American woman say the same?
-I don&#8217;t inquire anticipating a negative answer. I simply
-put the question. But I suspect the answer would
-put a pin in the bubble of the American woman&#8217;s pretense
-of superior culture. She is fooled by her vanity,
-I fear, and by her sex attraction, and by the influence
-of the money her despised father or husband gives her.
-There&#8217;s a reason why America is notoriously the land
-of bachelor husbands&mdash;and that reason is not the one
-the women and foreign fortune hunters assert. The
-American man lets the case go by default against him,
-not because he couldn&#8217;t answer, nor yet because he is
-polite, but <i>because he is indifferent</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But my wife was talking about her projected assault
-upon New York. &#8220;I really must be an extraordinary
-woman,&#8221; said she. &#8220;How I have fought all these years
-to raise myself, with you dragging at me to keep me
-down.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I?&#8221; protested her unhappy husband. &#8220;Why,
-dear, I&#8217;ve never opposed you in any way. And I&#8217;ve
-tried to do what I could to help you. You must admit
-the money&#8217;s been useful.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you&#8217;ve never been mean about money,&#8221; conceded
-she. &#8220;But you don&#8217;t sympathize with a single
-one of my ideals.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want you to have whatever you want,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;And anything I can do to get it for you, or to help
-you get it, I stand ready to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I know, Godfrey, dear,&#8221; said she, giving me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-a long hug and a kiss. &#8220;No woman ever had a more
-generous husband than I have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I naturally attached more importance to this burst
-of enthusiasm then than I do now. And it is as well
-that I was thus simple-minded. How little pleasure we
-would get, to be sure, if, when we are praised or loved
-by anybody because we do that person a kindness, we
-paused to analyze and saw the shallow selfishness of
-such praise or such love. After all, it&#8217;s only human
-nature to like those who do as we ask them and to dislike
-those who don&#8217;t; and I am not quarreling with human
-nature&mdash;or with any other of the unchangeable conditions
-of the universe. My own love for Edna&mdash;what
-was it but the natural result of my getting what I
-wanted from her, all I wanted? I really troubled myself
-little about her incompetence and extravagance and
-craze for social position. No doubt to this day I should
-be&mdash; But I am again anticipating.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Generous? Nonsense,&#8221; said I. &#8220;It isn&#8217;t generous
-to try to make you happy. That&#8217;s my one chance
-of being happy myself. A busy man&#8217;s got to have
-peace at home. If he hasn&#8217;t he&#8217;s like a soldier attacked
-rear and front at the same time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know you don&#8217;t care where we live,&#8221; she went on.
-&#8220;And for Margot&#8217;s sake we&#8217;ve simply got to move to
-New York.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you want her to stay at home of nights, instead
-of living at the school. Why didn&#8217;t you speak of
-that first?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not at all,&#8221; cried she. &#8220;How slow you are! No;
-for the present, even if we do live in New York, I think<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-it best for Margot to keep on living at the school. She&#8217;s
-barely started there. I want her training to be thorough.
-And while I&#8217;m learning as fast as I can, I am
-not competent to teach her. I know, of course. But I
-haven&#8217;t had the chance to practice. So I can&#8217;t teach
-her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Teach her what?&#8221; I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To be a lady&mdash;a practical, expert lady,&#8221; replied
-Edna. &#8220;That&#8217;s what she&#8217;s going to Miss Ryper&#8217;s
-school for. And when she comes out she&#8217;ll be the equal
-of girls who have generations of culture and breeding
-behind them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;God bless me!&#8221; cried I, laughing. &#8220;This Ryper
-woman must be a wonder.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She is,&#8221; declared Edna. &#8220;It was a great favor,
-her letting Margot into the school.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I remember,&#8221; said I. &#8220;She couldn&#8217;t do it
-until I got two of the directors of the road to insist
-on it. But I guess that was merely a bluff of hers to
-squeeze us for a few hundreds extra.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not at all,&#8221; Edna assured me. &#8220;You are <i>so</i> ignorant,
-Godfrey. Please do be careful not to say those
-coarse things before people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As you please,&#8221; said I, cheerfully, for I was used
-to this kind of calling down. &#8220;All the same, the Ryper
-lady is hot for the dough.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna shivered. She detested slang&mdash;continued to
-detest and avoid it even after she learned that it was
-fashionable. &#8220;Miss Ryper guards her list of pupils as
-their mothers guard their visiting lists,&#8221; said she. &#8220;But
-now she likes Margot. The dear child has been elected<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-to the most exclusive fraternity. Every girl in it has
-to wear hand-made underclothes and has to have had
-at least a father, a grandfather, and a great grandfather.&#8221;
-Edna laughed with pride at her own cleverness
-before she went on. &#8220;Margot came to me when
-she was proposed, and cried as if her little heart would
-break. She said she didn&#8217;t know anything about her
-grandfather and great grandfather. But I hadn&#8217;t forgotten
-to arrange that. I think of everything.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that was easy enough,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Your grandfather
-was a tailor and mine was in the grocery business
-like father.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna looked round in terror. &#8220;Sh!&#8221; she exclaimed.
-&#8220;Servants always listen.&#8221; She went to the door&mdash;we
-were in the small upstairs sitting room&mdash;opened it suddenly,
-looked into the hall, closed the door, and returned
-to a chair nearer the lounge on which I was stretched
-comfortably smoking.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the matter?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No one was there,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Haven&#8217;t I told you
-never to speak of&mdash;of those horrible things?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But Margot&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot doesn&#8217;t know. She must <i>never</i> know!
-Poor child, she is so sensitive, it would make her ill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I lapsed into gloomy silence. I had not liked the
-way Edna had been acting about her parents and mine
-ever since we came to Brooklyn. But I had been busy,
-and was averse to meddling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I gave Margot for the benefit of the girls a genealogy
-I&#8217;ve gotten up,&#8221; she went on. &#8220;You know all
-genealogies are more or less faked, and I&#8217;ve no doubt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-hers is every bit as genuine as those of half the girls
-over there. I fixed ours so that it would take a lot of
-inquiry to expose it. And Margot got into the fraternity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are the hand-made underclothes fake too?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no. <i>They</i> had to be genuine. I&#8217;ve never let
-Margot wear any other kind since I learned about those
-things. There&#8217;s nothing that gives a child such a sense
-of ladylikeness and superiority as to feel she&#8217;s dressed
-right from the skin out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, school&#8217;s a different sort of a place from what
-it was in our day,&#8221; said I. The picture my wife had
-drawn amused me, but I somehow did not exactly like it.
-My mind was too little interested in the direction of the
-things that absorbed Edna for me to be able to put into
-any sort of shape the thoughts vaguely moving about
-in the shadows. &#8220;I&#8217;ll bet,&#8221; I went on, &#8220;poor Margot
-doesn&#8217;t have as good a time as we had.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;d hate that kind of a time,&#8221; said Edna.</p>
-
-<p>I laughed and laid my hand in her lap. Her hand
-stole into it. I watched her lovely face&mdash;the sweet,
-dreamy expression. &#8220;What are you thinking?&#8221; said I
-softly, hopeful of romance&mdash;what <i>I</i> call romance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was thinking how low and awful we used to be,&#8221;
-replied she, &#8220;and how splendidly we are getting away
-from it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed, for I was used to cold water on my romance.
-&#8220;All the same,&#8221; insisted I, &#8220;Margot would
-envy us if she knew.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;d hate it,&#8221; Edna repeated. &#8220;She&#8217;s going to
-be an improvement on <i>us</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>&#8220;Not on you,&#8221; I protested.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me with tender sparkling eyes, the
-same lovely light-brown eyes that had fascinated me as
-a boy. Brown eyes for a woman, always! But they
-must not be of the heavy commonplace shades of brown
-like a deer&#8217;s or a cow&#8217;s. They must have light shades
-in them, tints verging toward blue or green. Said
-Edna: &#8220;I&#8217;m doing my best to fit myself. And before I
-get through, Godfrey, I think I&#8217;ll go far.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure you will,&#8221; said I, with no disposition to turn
-the cold douche on <i>her</i> kind of romance. What an idiot
-I was about her, to be sure! I went on: &#8220;And I&#8217;ll see
-that you have the money to grease the toboggan slide
-and make the going easy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She talked on happily and confidingly: &#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s
-best to leave Margot another year as a boarder at Miss
-Ryper&#8217;s. By that time we&#8217;ll be established over in New
-York, and we&#8217;ll have a proper place for her to receive
-her friends. And perhaps we&#8217;ll have a few friends of
-our own.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Swell friends, eh?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t say swell, dear,&#8221; corrected she. &#8220;It&#8217;s
-such a common word.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve heard <i>you</i> say it,&#8221; I protested.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t any more. I&#8217;ve learned better. And
-now I&#8217;ve taught you better.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anything you like. Anybody you like,&#8221; said I.
-When Edna and I were together, with our hands clasped,
-I was always completely under her spell. She could do
-what she pleased with me, so long, of course, as she
-didn&#8217;t interfere in my end of the firm. And I may add<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-that she never did; she hadn&#8217;t the faintest notion what
-I was about. They say there are thousands of American
-women in the cities who know their husbands&#8217; places
-of business only as street and telephone numbers. My
-wife was one of that kind. Oh, yes, from the standpoint
-of those who insist that business and home should be
-separate, we were a model couple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s another matter I want to talk over with
-you, Godfrey,&#8221; she went on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a lovely dress you&#8217;re wearing,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;It goes so well with your skin and your hair.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was delighted, and was moved to rise and look
-at herself in the long mirror. She gave herself an approving
-glance, but not more approving than what she
-saw merited. A long, slim beautiful figure; a dress that
-set it off. A lovely young tip-tilted face, the face of a
-girl with fresh, clear eyes and skin, the whitest, evenest
-sharp teeth&mdash;and such hair!&mdash;such quantities of hair
-attractively arranged.</p>
-
-<p>From herself she glanced at me. &#8220;No one&#8217;d ever
-think what we came from, would they?&#8221; said she fondly
-and proudly. &#8220;Oh, Godfrey, it makes me so happy
-that we <i>look</i> the part. We belong where we&#8217;re going.
-The good blood away back in the family is coming out.
-And Margot&mdash; I&#8217;ve always called her the little duchess&mdash;and
-she looks it and feels it.&#8221; Dreamily, &#8220;Maybe
-she will be some day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, she&#8217;s a baby,&#8221; cried I. For I didn&#8217;t like to
-see that my baby was growing up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s nearly fourteen,&#8221; said Edna. She was looking
-at herself again. &#8220;Would you ever think <i>I</i> had a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-daughter fourteen years old?&#8221; said she, making a
-laughing, saucy face at me.</p>
-
-<p>I got up and kissed her. &#8220;You don&#8217;t look as old
-as you did when I married you,&#8221; said I, and it was only a
-slight exaggeration.</p>
-
-<p>When we sat again, she was snuggled into my lap
-with her head against my shoulder. She was immensely
-fond of being petted. They say this is no sign of a
-loving nature, that cats, the least loving of all pets, are
-fondest of petting. I have no opinion on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What was it you wanted to talk about?&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;Money?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, indeed,&#8221; laughed she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I supposed so, as that&#8217;s the only matter in which
-I have any influence in this family.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come to think of it,&#8221; said she, &#8220;it <i>is</i> money&mdash;in
-a way. It&#8217;s about&mdash;our parents.&#8221; She gave a deep
-sigh. &#8220;Godfrey, they hang over me like a nightmare!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her tragic seriousness amused me. &#8220;Oh, cheer up,&#8221;
-said I, kissing her. &#8220;They certainly don&#8217;t fit in with
-our stylishness. But they&#8217;re away off there in Passaic,
-and bother us as little as we bother them. The truth
-is, Edna, we&#8217;ve not acted right. We&#8217;ve been selfish&mdash;spending
-all our prosperity on ourselves. Of course,
-they&#8217;ve got everything they really want, but&mdash;well&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s exactly it,&#8221; said she eagerly. &#8220;My conscience
-has been hurting me. We ought to&mdash;to&mdash; It
-wouldn&#8217;t cost much to make them perfectly comfortable&mdash;so
-they&#8217;d not have to work&mdash;and could get away
-from the grocery&mdash;and the&mdash;and the&#8221;&mdash;she hesitated
-before saying &#8220;father&#8217;s business,&#8221; as if nerving herself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-to pronounce words of shame. And when she did
-finally force out the evading &#8220;father&#8217;s business,&#8221; it
-was with such an accent that I couldn&#8217;t help laughing
-outright.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Undertaking&#8217;s a good-paying business,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;We certainly ought to be grateful to it. It supplied
-the eight thousand dollars that gave me the chance to
-buy half the rolling mill. And you know the rolling
-mill was the start of our fortune.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you think father could be induced to retire?&#8221;
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Your father&#8217;s a rich man, for
-Passaic. He&#8217;s got two hundred thousand at least hived
-away in tenements that pay from twenty to thirty-five
-per cent. And his business now brings in ten to fifteen
-thousand a year straight along.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can make <i>your</i> father retire?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;Poor dad! I&#8217;ve been keeping him from
-being retired by the sheriff. He&#8217;s squeezing out a bare
-living. He&#8217;d be delighted to stop and have all his time
-for talking politics and religion.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You could buy them a nice place a little way out
-in the country, on some quiet road. I&#8217;m sure your
-mother and your old maid sister would love it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; said I. &#8220;If it wasn&#8217;t <i>too</i> quiet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But it must be quiet. And we&#8217;ll induce my father
-and mother to buy a place near by.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your father&#8217;ll not give up the business.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve thought it all out,&#8221; said Edna, whose mind
-was equal to whatever task she gave it. &#8220;You must
-get some one to offer him a price he simply can&#8217;t refuse,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-and make a condition that he shall not go into business
-again. Aren&#8217;t those things done?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was somewhat surprised, but not much, at the
-knowledge of business this displayed. &#8220;Why!&mdash;Why!&#8221;
-laughed I. &#8220;And you pretend to know nothing about
-business!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was in a sensible, loving mood that day. So she
-said with a quiet little laugh: &#8220;I make it a point to
-know anything that&#8217;s useful to me. I don&#8217;t know much
-about business. Why should I bother with it? I&#8217;ve
-got confidence in you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was not the first time I had got a peep into her
-mind and had seen how she looked on everyone, including
-me, as a wheel in her machine, and never interfered
-unless the wheel didn&#8217;t work to suit her. I laughed
-delightedly. There was something charmingly feminine,
-thought I, about this point of view so upside down.
-&#8220;Yes, I guess your father&#8217;ll jump for the bait you
-suggest,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But why disturb him? He loves
-his undertaking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shivered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And he&#8217;ll be miserable idling about.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I guess he&#8217;ll get along all right,&#8221; said she,
-with sarcasm and with truth. &#8220;He&#8217;ll devote himself to
-suing his tenants and counting his money.... Godfrey,
-you simply must get those people in Passaic out
-of our way. I&#8217;ve been a little nervous over here, though
-I knew that none of these dreadful people we associate
-with has anything better in the way of family than us,
-and some have a lot worse. Oh, it&#8217;s <i>frightful</i> to have
-parents one&#8217;s ashamed of!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>I think I blushed. I&#8217;m sure I looked away to avoid
-seeing her expression. &#8220;It&#8217;s frightful to be ashamed
-of one&#8217;s parents,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now don&#8217;t be hypocritical,&#8221; cried she. &#8220;You
-know perfectly well you are ashamed of your parents,
-as I am of mine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll admit,&#8221; said I, &#8220;that if they showed up at the
-office, I&#8217;d be a bit upset and would feel apologetic.
-But I&#8217;m ashamed of myself for feeling that way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you only realized about things,&#8221; said she, which
-was her phrase for hitting at me as lacking in refined
-instincts, &#8220;you&#8217;d not be ashamed of yourself, but would
-frankly suffer. They are a disgrace to us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re honest people, well meaning, and as good
-as the best in every essential way,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Believe
-me, Edna, the fault isn&#8217;t in them. It&#8217;s in us. Suppose
-you found some day that Margot was ashamed of you
-and me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But she&#8217;ll not be,&#8221; retorted Edna. &#8220;I for one will
-see to it that she has no cause to be anything but
-proud.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I couldn&#8217;t but admit that there were two sides to
-the problem of our parents. It was shameful to be
-ashamed of them. But it was also human. I couldn&#8217;t&mdash;and
-can&#8217;t&mdash;utterly damn in Edna a fault, a vulgar
-weakness, I myself had, and almost everyone I knew.
-No doubt, gentle reader, you are scandalized and disgusted.
-But one of my objects in relating this whole
-story is to scandalize and to disgust you. You have
-had too much consideration at the hands of writers&mdash;you
-and your hypocritical virtues and your hysterical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-nerves. If you are an American, you are probably far
-in advance of your parents in worldly knowledge, in
-education, in every way except perhaps manly and
-womanly self-respect. For along with your progress
-has come an infection of snobbishness and toadyism
-that seems in some mysterious way inseparable from
-higher civilization. So be shocked and disgusted with
-Edna and me, and don&#8217;t turn your hypocritical eyes
-inward on your own secret thoughts and actions about
-your own humble parents. Above all, don&#8217;t learn from
-this horrifying episode a decenter mode of thinking and
-feeling&mdash;<i>and</i> acting.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We must get them out of the way before we move
-to New York,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;Ever since Margot began
-at Mrs. Ryper&#8217;s I&#8217;ve been on pins and needles. You
-don&#8217;t know how malicious fashionable people are. Why,
-some of them who have nothing to do might at any time
-run out to Passaic and see for themselves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna was sitting up in my lap, gazing at me with
-wide harassed-looking eyes. I burst out laughing.
-&#8220;They might take a camera along, and get some snapshots,&#8221;
-I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>Edna&#8217;s face contracted with horror and her form
-grew limp and weak. &#8220;My God!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;So
-they might. Godfrey, we must attend to it at once.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">III</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I have</span> never been able to come to a satisfactory
-verdict as to the intelligence of the human race. Is it
-stupid, or is it, rather, sluggish? Is it unable to think,
-or does it refuse to think? Does it believe the follies
-it pretends to believe and usually acts upon, or is it
-the victim of its own willful prejudices and hypocrisies?
-Never have I decided that a certain man or woman was
-practically witless, but that he or she has confounded
-me by saying or doing something indicating shrewdness
-or even wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>The women are especially difficult to judge. Take
-Edna, for example.</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible to interest her in anything worth
-while. But as to the things in which she was interested,
-none could have thought more clearly or keenly,
-or could have acted with more vigor and effect. I have
-often made serious blunders&mdash;inexcusable blunders&mdash;in
-managing my own affairs. To go no further, my
-management of my family would have convicted me of
-imbecility before any court not made up of good-natured,
-indifferent, woman-worshiping, woman-despising
-American husbands. Yes, I have made the stupidest
-blunders in all creation. But I cannot recall a single
-notable blunder made by Edna in the matters which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-alone she deemed worthy of her attention. She decided
-what she wanted. She moved upon it by the best route,
-whether devious or direct or a combination of the two.
-And she always got it.</p>
-
-<p>You may say her success was due to the fact that
-her objects were trivial. But if you will think a moment,
-you will appreciate that a thing&#8217;s triviality does
-not necessarily make it easy to attain. As much energy
-and skill may be shown in winning a sham battle as in
-winning a real. Still, I suppose minds are cast in molds
-of various sizes, and one cast in a small mold can deal
-only with the small. And I guess that, from whatever
-cause, the minds of women are of diverse kinds of smaller
-molds. Perhaps this is the result of bad education.
-Perhaps better education will correct it. I do not
-know. I can speak only of what is&mdash;of Edna as she is
-and always has been.</p>
-
-<p>Having made up her mind to fell the genealogical
-tree, that an artificial one might be stood up in its place,
-she lost no time in getting into action.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the Sunday following our talk&mdash;the earliest
-possible day&mdash;that she took me for the first visit
-we had made our parents in nearly three years. We had
-sent them presents. We had written them letters. We
-had received painfully composed and ungrammatical replies&mdash;these
-received both for Edna and myself at my
-office, because she feared the servants would pry into
-periodically arriving exhibits of illiteracy. We had
-written them of coming and bringing Margot with us.
-We had received suggestions of their coming to see us,
-which Edna had evaded by such excuses as that we were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-moving or that she or Margot was not well or that the
-cook had abruptly deserted. The world outside Passaic
-was a vague place to our old fathers and mothers. Their
-own immediate affairs kept them busy. So with no sense
-of deliberate alienation on their side and small and
-mildly intermittent sense of it on our side, the months
-and the years passed without our seeing one another.</p>
-
-<p>Edna announced to me the intended visit only an
-hour before we started. It was a habit of hers&mdash;a
-clever habit, too&mdash;never to take anyone into her confidence
-about her plans until the right moment&mdash;that is,
-the moment when execution was so near at hand that
-discussion would seem futile. At a quarter before nine
-on that Sunday morning she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t dress for church. This is a good day to
-make that trip to Passaic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll go by Miss Ryper&#8217;s for Margot,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;How the old people will stare when they see her!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna looked at me as if I had suddenly uncovered
-unmistakable evidence of my insanity. Then I who had
-clean forgot her foolish notions remembered. &#8220;But
-why not?&#8221; I urged. &#8220;It will give them so much
-pleasure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Trash!&#8221; ejaculated she. &#8220;They don&#8217;t care a rap
-about her. They can&#8217;t, as they&#8217;ve not seen her since
-she was a baby. And Margot would suffer horribly.
-I think it would be wicked to give a sweet, happy young
-girl a horrible shock.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This grotesque view of the effect of the sight of
-grandparents upon a grandchild struck me as amusing.
-But there was no echo of my laughter in the disgusted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-face of my wife. I sobered and said: &#8220;Yes, it would
-give her a shock. We&#8217;ve made a mistake, bringing her
-up in that way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Too late to discuss it now,&#8221; said Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose so,&#8221; I could not but agree. &#8220;I guess the
-mischief&#8217;s done beyond repair.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Said Edna: &#8220;Have you any sense of&mdash;of them being
-<i>your</i> father and mother?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather,&#8221; said I. &#8220;My childhood is very vivid to
-me, and not at all disagreeable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It seems to me like a bad dream&mdash;unreal, and to
-be forgotten as quickly as I can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She said this with a fine, spiritual look in her eyes,
-and I must say that Edna, refined, delicately beautiful,
-fashionably dressed, speaking her English with an elegant
-accent, did not suggest fusty-dusty, queer-looking
-Weeping Willie with his hearse and funeral coaches, his
-embalming apparatus and general appearance of animated
-casket, nor yet fat, sloppy Ma Wheatlands, always
-in faded wrappers and with holes cut in her shoes
-for her bunions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wear your oldest business suit,&#8221; said Edna, coming
-back to earth from the contemplation of her own
-elevation and grandeur. &#8220;I shall dress as quietly as I
-dare. We mustn&#8217;t arouse the suspicions of the servants.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna&#8217;s fooleries amused me. I didn&#8217;t then appreciate
-the dangers of tolerating and laughing at the bad
-habits of a fascinating child. If I had, little good I&#8217;d
-have accomplished, I suspect. However, I got myself
-up as Edna directed, and when I saw how it irritated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-her I stopped making such remarks as: &#8220;Shall I wear
-a collar? Hadn&#8217;t I better sneak out the back way and
-join you at the ferry?&#8221; I should have liked to get
-some fun out of our doings; that would have taken at
-least the saw edge off my feelings of self-contempt. I
-am not fond of hypocrisy, yet for that one occasion I
-should have welcomed the familiar human shamming and
-faking in such matters. But Edna would put the thing
-through like one of her father&#8217;s funerals. As we, in
-what was practically disguise, issued forth, she said
-loudly enough for the cocking ear of a maid who chanced
-to be in the front hall:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anyhow, the country dust won&#8217;t spoil these
-clothes. I&#8217;m so glad it&#8217;s clear. How charming the
-woods will look.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Just enough to deceive. Edna expanded upon her
-cleverness in never saying too much, because saying too
-much always started people, especially servants, to
-thinking. But she abruptly checked her flow of self-praise
-as we seated ourselves in the ferry and she looked
-about. There, not a dozen seats away, loomed our
-cook! Yes, no mistake, it was our Mary, &#8220;gotten up
-regardless&#8221; for a Sunday outing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you see Mary?&#8221; said my wife.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s the most conspicuous female in sight,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;She&#8217;s a credit to us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must have been mad,&#8221; groaned Edna, &#8220;to give
-her a holiday! Always the way. I never do a generous,
-kind-hearted thing that I don&#8217;t have to pay for it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t follow you,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She hates us,&#8221; explained Edna. &#8220;Cooks&mdash;Irish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-cooks&mdash;invariably hate the families they draw wages
-from. She&#8217;s dogging us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nonsense,&#8221; said I. &#8220;She probably hasn&#8217;t even
-seen us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But Edna was not listening; she was contriving.
-&#8220;We must let her leave the boat ahead of us. Pretend
-not to see her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I obeyed orders. In the Jersey City train shed we,
-lagging behind, saw her take a train bound for a different
-destination from ours. Much relieved, Edna led
-the way to the Passaic train. Hardly were we seated
-when in at the door of the coach hurried our Mary,
-excited and blown. She came beaming down the aisle.
-Edna saluted her graciously and calmly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I got in the wrong train,&#8221; said Mary. &#8220;It&#8217;d
-never have took me nowheres near my cousin in
-Passaic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna&#8217;s composure was admirable. Said I, when
-Mary had passed on, &#8220;Now what, my dear?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see she <i>is</i> dogging us,&#8221; replied Edna. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-not a doubt she knows all about us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t <i>think</i> she&#8217;s got a camera,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Still,
-they make them very small nowadays.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We shall have to go on in the train, and return
-home from the station beyond,&#8221; said Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do as you like,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But as for me, I get
-off at Passaic and go to see the old folks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please stop your joking,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;If you
-had any pride you couldn&#8217;t joke.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am serious,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I shall go to see mother
-and father.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>&#8220;No doubt her cousin lives in the same part of the
-slums,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;Oh, it is <i>hideous</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I don&#8217;t know what possessed me&mdash;whether a fit of
-indigestion and obstinacy or a sudden access of sense
-of decency as I approached my old home. Whatever
-it was, it moved me to say: &#8220;My dear, this nonsense
-has gone far enough. We will do what we set out
-to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not I,&#8221; said Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I&#8217;ll drop off at Passaic alone, and hire a
-trap, and give Mary a seat in it as far as her cousin&#8217;s.
-I&#8217;m not proud of my parents, the more shame to me.
-But there&#8217;s a limit to my ability to degrade myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna and I had not lived together all those years
-without her learning the tone I use when I will not be
-trifled with. She did not argue. She sat silent and pale
-beside me. When the train stopped at Passaic she followed
-me from the car. Mary descended ahead of us
-and moved off at as brisk a pace as tight corsets and
-stiff new shoes would permit, in a direction exactly opposite
-that we were to take.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aren&#8217;t you glad we didn&#8217;t go on?&#8221; said I, eager
-to make it up.</p>
-
-<p>She made no reply. She maintained haughty and
-injured silence until we were within sight of the houses.
-Then she said curtly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do the talking about our plans for them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;ll be best,&#8221; said I, most conciliatory.</p>
-
-<p>I had not intended to say this. There had been a
-half-formed resolution in my mind to oppose those plans.
-But her anger roused in me such a desire to pacify her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-that I promptly yielded, where, I must in honesty confess,
-I was little short of indifferent. American husbands
-have the reputation of being the most docile and
-the worst henpecked men in the world. All foreigners
-say so, and our women believe it. In fact, nothing
-could be further from the truth. The docility of American
-husbands is the good nature of indifference. A
-friend of mine has the habit of saying that his most
-valued and most valuable possession is his long list of
-things he cares not a rap about. It is a typically
-American and luminous remark. The men of other
-nations agitate over trifles, love to have the sense of
-being master at home&mdash;usually their one and only
-chance for a free swing at the joyous feeling of being
-boss. The American man, absorbed in his important
-work at office or factory, and not caring especially
-about anything else, lets thieving politicians rule in
-public affairs, lets foolish, incompetent women rule
-in domestic affairs. He has a half-conscious philosophy
-that he is shrewd enough, if he attends to his
-business, to make money faster than they can take it
-away from him, and that, if he does not attend to his
-business only, he will have nothing either for thieving
-politician and spendthrift wife or for himself. If you
-wish to discover how little there is in the notion of his
-docility, meddle with something he really cares about.
-Many a political rascal, many a shiftless wife, has done
-it and has gotten a highly disagreeable surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps what I saw had as much to do with my
-tame acquiescence in my wife&#8217;s projects as my desire
-to have peace between her and me, when peace meant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-yielding what only a vague and feeble filial impulse
-moved me to contest. I had what I thought was a clear
-and vivid memory of my natal place and Edna&#8217;s&mdash;how
-the two houses looked, how small and shabby they were,
-how mean their surroundings, how plain their interiors.
-But as we drove up I discovered that memory had been
-pleasantly deceiving me. Could these squalid hovels,
-these tiny, hideous boxes set in two dismal weedy oblongs
-of unkempt yards&mdash;could these be our old homes? And
-the bent old laboring man and his wife&mdash;we had drawn
-up in front of my home&mdash;could they be <i>my</i> father and
-<i>my</i> mother?</p>
-
-<p>A feeling of sickness, of nausea came over me. Not
-from repulsion for my parents&mdash;thank God, I had not
-sunk that low. But from abhorrence of myself, so degraded
-by the &#8220;higher world&#8221; into which prosperity
-and Edna&#8217;s ambitions had dragged me that I could
-look down upon the gentle old man and the patient, loving
-old woman to whom I owed life and a fair start in
-the world. My blood burned and my eyes sank as they
-greeted me, their homely old hands trembling, their
-mouths distorted by emotion and age and missing teeth.
-I turned away while they were kissing Edna, for I felt
-I should hate her and loathe myself if I saw the expression
-that must be in her face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are my father and mother!&#8221; she cried in a
-suffocating voice. And we three Lorings were watching
-her hurry across the yard and through the gap in the
-fence between the two places. My sister came forward.
-We kissed each other as awkwardly as two strangers. I
-looked at her dazedly. Mary, our cook, was an imposing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-looking lady beside this thin-haired, coarse-featured
-old maid. In embarrassed silence we four entered the
-house. I am not tall nor in the least fat, yet I had an
-uncontrollable impulse to stoop and to squeeze as I
-entered the squat and narrow doorway. That miserable
-little &#8220;parlor!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As we sat silent my roving glance at last sought my
-mother&#8217;s face. Oh, the faces, the masks, with which
-freakish and so often savagely ironic fate covers and
-hides our souls, making fair seem foul and foul seem
-fair, making beauty repellent and ugliness seem beautiful.
-Suddenly through that plain, time- and toil-scarred
-mask, through those dim, sunken eyes, I saw
-her soul&mdash;her mother&#8217;s heart&mdash;looking at me. And the
-tears poured into my eyes. &#8220;Mother!&#8221; I sobbed in a
-choking voice, and I put my arms round her and nestled
-against her heart, a boy again&mdash;a bad boy with a streak
-of good in him. I felt how proud she&mdash;they all&mdash;were
-of me, the son and brother, who had gone forth and fulfilled
-the universal American dream of getting up in
-the world. I hoped, I prayed that they would not realize
-what a poor creature I was, with my snobbish
-shame.</p>
-
-<p>There was an awkward, rambling attempt at talk.
-But we had nothing to talk about&mdash;nothing in common.
-I happened to think of our not having brought Margot;
-how shameful it was, yet how glad I felt, and how self-contemptuous
-for being glad. To break that awful
-silence I enlarged upon Margot&mdash;her beauty, her cleverness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She must be like Polly&#8221;&mdash;my sister&#8217;s name was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-Polly&mdash;&#8220;like Polly was at her age,&#8221; observed my
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>I looked at Polly Ann, in whose faded face and
-withered form&mdash;faded and withered though she was not
-yet forty, was in fact but seven or eight years older than
-I. Like Polly! I could speak no more of Margot, the
-delicate loveliness of a rare, carefully reared hot-house
-exotic. Yes, exotic; for the girls and the women
-brought up in the super-refinements of prosperous class
-silliness seem foreign to this world&mdash;and are.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes that seemed hours, and Edna came
-in, her father and mother limping and hobbling in her
-train. Edna was sickly pale and her eyelids refused to
-rise. I shook hands with old Willie Wheatlands, hesitated,
-then kissed the fat, sallow, swinging cheek of my
-mother-in-law. Said Edna in a hard, forced voice:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve explained that Margot isn&#8217;t well and that
-we&#8217;ve got to get back&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mercy me!&#8221; cried my mother. &#8220;Ain&#8217;t you going
-to stay to supper?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Supper! It was only half-past twelve. Supper
-could not be until five or half-past. We had been there
-half an hour and already conversation was exhausted
-and time had become motionless.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We intended to,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;But Margot wasn&#8217;t
-at all well when we left. We simply can&#8217;t stay away
-long. We&#8217;d not have come, but we felt we&#8217;d never get
-here if we kept on letting things interfere.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You didn&#8217;t leave Margy <i>alone</i>?&#8221; demanded Edna&#8217;s
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Almost,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;Only a&mdash;a servant.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>&#8220;Oh, you keep a nurse girl, too,&#8221; said Polly. &#8220;I
-thought Edna didn&#8217;t look as if she did any of her own
-work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I have a&mdash;a girl, in addition to the cook,&#8221;
-replied Edna, flushing as she thus denied three of her
-five servants&mdash;flushing not because of the denial, but
-because in her confession she had almost forgotten
-about the numerous excuses based on the cook. &#8220;Godfrey
-has been doing very well, and we felt we could
-afford it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better get rid of her,&#8221; advised old Willie sourly.
-&#8220;And of the cook, too. Servant girls is mighty wasteful.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And she&#8217;ll teach Margy badness,&#8221; said my mother.
-&#8220;Them servants is full of poison. Even if yer pa&#8217;d had
-money I&#8217;d never have allowed no servant round my children,
-no more&#8217;n a snake in the cradle. I hope she&#8217;s a
-good Christian, and not a Catholic?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s all right,&#8221; declared Edna nervously. &#8220;But
-we&#8217;ll have to be going soon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; that there girl might git drunk,&#8221; said Mrs.
-Wheatlands.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And set fire to the house maybe,&#8221; said my mother.
-&#8220;I heard of a case just last week.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish you hadn&#8217;t said that,&#8221; cried Edna, her tones
-of protest more like jubilation. &#8220;I&#8217;ll be wretched until
-I&#8217;m home again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mother told in detail and with rising excitement the
-story of the drunken nurse girl who had burned up herself
-and her charges, a pair of lovely twins. From that
-moment our families were anxious for us to go. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-three women could see the girl drunk and the house
-burning. The two grandfathers, while less imaginative,
-were almost as uneasy. Besides, no doubt our families
-found us full as tiring as we found them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But before we go,&#8221; said Edna, in a business-like
-tone, &#8220;there&#8217;s one thing we wanted to talk about. Godfrey
-has had&mdash;that is, he has done very well in business.
-And of course our first thought&mdash;one of our first
-thoughts&mdash;was what could we do for you all down here.
-We hate to think of your living in this unhealthful part
-of the town. We want to see you settled in some healthful
-place, up in the hills.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We were watching the faces of our five kinsfolk.
-We could make nothing of their expression. It was
-heavy, dull&mdash;mere listening, without a hint of even comprehension
-behind.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We thought you, father, and Mr.&mdash;father Loring&mdash;might
-look round and find a nice farm with a big
-comfortable house&mdash;plenty big enough for you all&mdash;and
-Godfrey will buy it, and will pay for a man and a woman
-to look after you. He has done well, as I said, and he
-can afford it. In fact, they&#8217;ve made him president of
-the railroad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My father, my mother, and my sister exchanged
-glances. A long, awed silence. Old Willie spoke in his
-squeaky, stingy voice: &#8220;I can&#8217;t leave my business. I
-ain&#8217;t footless like Loring there. <i>My</i> business pays.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can sell it,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;You know you
-ought to retire. You were telling me how bad your
-health had been.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nobody else couldn&#8217;t make nothing like what I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-make out of it. The men growing up nowadays ain&#8217;t no
-account. The no-account women with heads full of foolishness
-leads &#8217;em off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna agreed with him, pointed out that he&#8217;d have
-to give up soon anyhow, appealed to his cupidity for
-real estate by expanding upon the size and value of the
-farm I was willing to give him. She made a strong impression.
-The women were converted by the prospect
-of having help with the work. My father had long
-dreamed of a home in the country. He had not the
-imagination to picture how he would be bored, away
-from the loafers with whom he talked politics and religion.
-&#8220;And,&#8221; said Edna, &#8220;you&#8217;ll have horses and
-things to ride in, so you can go where you please whenever
-you please.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We had roused them. We had dazzled them. It
-was plain that if a purchaser could be found for the
-Wheatlands undertaking business, Edna would carry her
-point. &#8220;Godfrey will look for somebody to take the
-business,&#8221; said she to her father. &#8220;I want you and
-Father Loring to start out to-morrow morning, and not
-stop till you&#8217;ve found a farm.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I understood an uncertain gleam in old Willie&#8217;s eyes.
-&#8220;About the price,&#8221; said I, speaking for the first time,
-&#8220;I&#8217;m willing to pay twenty-five thousand down for the
-place alone, and as I&#8217;ll pay cash, you ought to be able
-on mortgage to get a farm&mdash;or two or three adjoining
-farms&mdash;that would cost twice that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The two families were dumbfounded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know I can trust you, Mr. Wheatlands, to get
-the money&#8217;s worth.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>&#8220;Buy a big place,&#8221; said Edna, of the unexpected
-timely shrewdnesses. &#8220;Go back from the main roads
-where land&#8217;s so dear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Wheatlands nodded. &#8220;That&#8217;s a good idea,&#8221; said he.
-&#8220;There&#8217;ll be plenty of roads after a while.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna was ready to depart. &#8220;Then it&#8217;s settled?&#8221;
-said she.</p>
-
-<p>Her father nodded. &#8220;I&#8217;m willing to see what can
-be done. But I&#8217;d rather not have Ben Loring along.
-He&#8217;d interfere with a good bargain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, you go alone, Willie,&#8221; said my father.
-&#8220;Anyhow, I&#8217;ve got to &#8217;tend store. I can&#8217;t afford a
-boy any more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The mention of the, to them, enormous sum of money
-had put them in a state of awe as to Edna and me. It
-saddened me to observe how quickly the weed of snobbishness,
-whose seeds are in all human nature, sprang up
-and dominated the whole garden. They lost the sense
-of our blood kinship with them. They felt that we, able
-to dispense such splendid largess, were of a superior
-order of being. And I saw that my and Edna&#8217;s feeling
-of strangeness toward them was intimacy beside the
-feeling of strangeness toward us which they now had.
-In my dealings with my fellow beings I have often noted
-this sort of thing&mdash;that the snobbishness of those who
-look down is a weak and hesitating impulse which would
-soon die out but for the encouragement it gets from the
-snobbishness of those who look up. I read somewhere,
-&#8220;Caste is made by those who look up, not by those who
-look down.&#8221; That is a great truth, and like most great,
-simple, obvious truths is usually overlooked.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>Looking back I see that my own first decisive impulse
-toward the caste feeling came that day, came when my
-people and Edna&#8217;s, discovering that we were rich, began
-to treat us as lower class treats upper class.</p>
-
-<p>My mother had been scrutinizing me for signs of
-the majesty of wealth. &#8220;Why don&#8217;t you wear a beard,
-or leastways a mustache, Godfrey?&#8221; she finally inquired.
-&#8220;Then you wouldn&#8217;t seem so boyish like.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I used to wear a mustache,&#8221; said I, &#8220;but I cut it
-off because&mdash;I don&#8217;t recall why.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In fact I did recall. I noted one day that I had a
-good mouth and better teeth than most men have. And
-it came to me how absurd it was to hang a bunch of
-hair from my upper lip to trail in the soup and to
-embalm the odors of past cigars for the discomfort of
-my nose. Edna kept after me for a time to let it grow
-again. But reading in some novel she regarded as
-authoritative that mustaches were &#8220;common,&#8221; she desisted.
-And I found my boyish appearance highly useful.
-It led men to underestimate me&mdash;a signal advantage
-in the contests of wit against wit in which I daily
-engaged with a view to wrenching a fortune for myself
-away from my fellow men.</p>
-
-<p>My mother went on to urge me to make my face
-look older and more formidable. Now that she had
-learned what a grand person I was she feared others
-would not realize it. Edna, who, as I have said, was
-shrewdness personified where her own interests were involved,
-immediately saw the dangerous bearings of this
-newly aroused vanity of our kin. &#8220;I forgot to caution
-you,&#8221; said she, &#8220;not to mention our prosperity. If we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-were talked about now, it might be lost entirely. The
-only reason Godfrey and I came to you so soon with
-the news of it was because we wanted to do something
-for you right away. And we knew we could trust you
-not to get us into trouble. Don&#8217;t talk about us. If
-you hear people talking, if they ask you questions, pretend
-you don&#8217;t understand and don&#8217;t know. You see,
-it may be spies from our enemies.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>One glance round that circle of eager faces was
-enough to convince that Edna had made precisely the
-impression she desired. I could see that my mother
-and old Weeping Willie, the shrewd of the five&mdash;the two
-to whom Edna and I owed most by inheritance&mdash;were
-prepared to deny knowing us if that would aid in safeguarding
-the precious prosperity. My father and sister
-were obviously disappointed that they could not go
-about boasting of our magnificence and getting from
-the neighbors the envy and respect due the near relations
-of a plutocrat. But there was no danger of their
-being indiscreet; Edna could breathe freely. And when
-the two families were tucked away in the midst of a
-large and secluded farm, she could tell what genealogical
-stories she pleased without fear of being confounded by
-the truth.</p>
-
-<p>By three o&#8217;clock we were back in Brooklyn. Edna
-felt and looked triumphant. The crowning of the day&#8217;s
-work had been small but significant. A heavy rain
-storm that came up while we were on the way back
-must have made the servants think we had cut short
-our woodland outing. As we were going to bed that
-might Edna roused herself from deep study and broke<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-a long silence with, &#8220;I hesitated whether to tell them
-you had become president of the road.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I had noted that seeming slip of hers, so unlike her
-cautious reticence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I remembered they&#8217;d be sure to see it in the
-papers,&#8221; continued she. &#8220;And I decided it was best to
-tell and quiet them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>While the old folks were industriously settling themselves
-in the New Jersey woods&mdash; Here let me relieve
-my mind by saying a few words in mitigation of the
-unfilial and snobbish conduct of Edna and me. I admit
-we deserve nothing but condemnation. I admit I am
-more to blame than she because I could have compelled
-her to act better toward our families, though of course
-I could not have changed her feelings&mdash;or my own, for
-that matter. But, as often happens in this world, the
-thing that was in motive shameful turned out well.
-We and our families had grown hopelessly apart. Intercourse
-with them could not but have been embarrassing
-and uncomfortable for both sides. When we got them
-the farm, got them away from the malarial and squalid
-part of Passaic into a healthful region where they lived
-in much better health and in a comfort they could appreciate,
-we did the best possible thing for them, as well
-as for ourselves. Do not think for a moment that because
-I am ashamed of my snobbish motives I am therefore
-advocating the keeping up of irksome and absurd
-ties merely out of wormy sentimentality. It
-has always seemed to me, when we have but the one
-chance at life, the one chance to make the best of our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-talents and opportunities, that only moral or mental
-weakness, or both, would waste the one chance in the
-bondage of outworn ties. When one has outgrown any
-association, lop it off relentlessly, say I. If the living
-lets the dying cling to it, the dying does not live but
-the living dies. If you are associated with anyone in
-any way&mdash;business, social, ties of affection, whatever
-you please&mdash;and if you do not wish to lose that one,
-then keep yourself alive and abreast of him or her.
-And if you let yourself begin to decay and find yourself
-cut away, whose is the fault, if fault there be? We&mdash;Edna
-and I&mdash;perhaps did not do all we might to make
-our outgrown families happy; I say perhaps, though
-I am by no means sure that we did not do all that was
-in our power, for they certainly would have got no
-pleasure out of seeing more of two people so uncongenial
-to them in every respect. At any rate, we did
-not leave our families to starve or to suffer. Hard
-though my charming, lovely wife was, I cannot conceive
-her sinking to that depth. On the whole, I feel that
-we could honestly say we took the right course with
-them. That is, we helped them without hindering ourselves.
-We did the right thing, though not in the right
-way.</p>
-
-<p>While our families were choosing a farm, were fixing
-up the buildings to suit their needs and tastes, were
-moving themselves from their ancient haunts, Edna was
-as industriously busy making far deeper inroads on
-the new prosperity. She was planning the conquest of
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>Every day in the year many a suddenly enriched<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-family is busy about the same enterprise. Families from
-the less fashionable parts of the city moving to the
-fashionable parts. Families from other cities and towns&mdash;east,
-west, north, and south&mdash;advancing to social conquest
-under the leadership of mammas and daughters
-tired of shining in obscure, monotonous, and unappreciative
-places. There are I forget how many thousands
-of millionaires on Manhattan Island; enough, I know,
-with the near millionaires and those living like millionaires,
-to make a city of three or four hundred thousand,
-not including servants and parasites. Not all of these
-have the fashionable craze; at least, they haven&#8217;t it in
-its worst form&mdash;the form in which it possessed my wife.
-All the acute sufferers must find suitable lodgments near
-Fifth Avenue if not in it.</p>
-
-<p>Now New York is ever ready to receive and to
-&#8220;trim&#8221; the arriving millionaire. It has all kinds of
-houses and apartments to meet the peculiarities of his&mdash;or,
-rather, of his wife&#8217;s and daughter&#8217;s&mdash;notions of
-grandeur. It has a multitude of purveyors of furnishings
-and decorations likewise designed to catch crude
-and grandiose tastes. My wife was busy with these
-gentry.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you think we&#8217;d better go a little slow?&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;Why not live in a hotel on Manhattan and look
-about us?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I had respect for my wife&#8217;s capacity at the woman
-side of the game; she had thoroughly drilled me to more
-than generous appreciation of it. But at the same time
-I was not so blinded by her charm for me or so convinced
-by her insistent and plausible egotism that I had not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-noted certain minor failures of hers due to her ignorance
-of the art of spending money. She was clever at learning.
-But often her vanity lured her into fancying she
-knew, when in fact her education in that particular direction
-was all miseducation. She dressed much more
-giddily in our first years in Brooklyn than she did afterwards.
-And in the later years she made still further
-discoveries as to dress that resulted in another revolution,
-away from quietness, not toward the gaudy but
-toward smartness&mdash;that curious quality which makes a
-woman&#8217;s toilet conspicuous without the least suggestion
-of the loud.</p>
-
-<p>However, Edna scorned my suggestion that she
-make haste slowly. She had long been engaged in a
-thorough study of the mode of life in millionairedom.
-Newspapers, Sunday supplements, magazines, and society
-novels had helped her. She had examined the
-exteriors of the famous palaces. She had got into the
-drawing-rooms and ballrooms of two or three palaces
-by way of high-priced charity tickets. She had in one
-instance roamed into sitting rooms, bedrooms, bathrooms
-until caught and led back by some vigilant and
-unbribable servant. I wonder if she ever recalls that
-adventure now! Probably not. I think I have recorded
-her ability absolutely to forget whatever it pleases her
-not to remember. She had been educating herself, so
-when I suggested caution, she replied:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you fret, Godfrey. I know what I&#8217;m about.
-I&#8217;ll get what we&#8217;ve got to have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And I&#8217;ll concede that she did&mdash;also, that I thought
-it overwhelmingly grand at the time. It was a house<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-in a fashionable side street, between Madison avenue
-and Fifth&mdash;a magnificent house built for exactly such
-a family as mine. That is, it was built entirely for show
-and not at all for comfort; it fairly bristled with the
-luxuries and &#8220;modern conveniences,&#8221; but most of them
-were of the sort that looks comfortable but is not. The
-rent was some preposterous sum&mdash;thirty-five or forty
-thousand a year. We had room enough for the housing
-of nearly a hundred people, counting servants as people,
-which I believe is not the custom. It was fitted throughout
-in the fashion which those clever leeches who think
-out and sell luxuries have in all ages imposed upon the
-rich man because it means money in their pockets.
-Once in a while you find a rich man who has the courage
-to live as he pleases, but most of them live as the
-fashion commands. And many of them have no idea
-that there is any less comfortless and less foolish way
-to live. You imagine, gentle reader, that people with
-money live in beauty and comfort. You imagine that
-you could do it also if you had but the wealth. Believe
-me, you deceive yourself. Beyond question a certain
-amount of money is necessary to the getting of attractive
-and comfortable surroundings. But there is another,
-an equally indispensable and a far rarer factor.
-That factor, gentle reader, is intelligence&mdash;knowledge
-of the resources of civilization, knowledge of the realities
-as to comfort, luxury, and taste.</p>
-
-<p>I am tempted to linger upon the details of the extravagance
-of that first big establishment of Edna&#8217;s.
-It was so astounding and so ridiculous. I saw that she
-had delivered us and our fortune over to hordes of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-crafty, thirsty bloodsuckers&mdash;merchants, tradesmen,
-servants. But her heart was set upon it, and all other
-rich people were living in that same way. &#8220;You want
-to do the right thing by Margot, don&#8217;t you?&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By you and Margot,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Go ahead. I
-guess I can find the money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I shan&#8217;t here go into the ways I discovered or invented
-for finding that money. They were not too
-scrupulous, but neither were they commercially dishonorable.
-I must smile there. Being of an inquiring and
-jocose mind I have often tried to find an action that,
-in the opinion of the most eminent commercial authorities,
-was absolutely dishonorable. Never yet have I
-found a single action, however wrong and even criminal
-in general, that they would not declare in certain circumstances
-perfectly honorable. And those &#8220;certain
-circumstances&#8221; could always be boiled down to the one
-circumstance&mdash;needing the money.</p>
-
-<p>I can&#8217;t recall exactly how many servants we had to
-wait on us two, but it was about thirty-five. I remember
-hearing my wife say one month that our meat bill
-alone was about a thousand dollars. For a time I fancied
-we were living more grandly than anyone else in
-town. But it soon revealed itself to me that, as things
-went with &#8220;our class,&#8221; we were leading rather a simple
-life. Certainly nothing we did marked us out from the
-others in that region. The sum totals suggested that
-servants stood at the front windows all day long tossing
-money into the street. But nothing of the kind occurred.
-You would have said we ate the finest food in wholesale
-quantities. Yet never did I get a notably good meal at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-my own house. The coffee was always poor. The fruit
-was below the average of sidewalk stands. We often
-had cold-storage fowls and fish on the table. We paid
-for the best; I&#8217;m sure we paid for it many times over.
-We got&mdash;what one always gets when the wife is too
-intellectual and too busy to attend to her business. But
-I assure you it was grandly served. The linen and the
-dishes were royal, the servants were in liveries of impressive
-color and form&mdash;though I could have wished
-that my wife had been as sensitive to odors as I was,
-and had compelled some of those magnificent gentry to
-do a little bathing. Throughout the establishment the
-same superb scale was maintained. We lived like the
-rest of the millionaires, neither better nor worse. We
-lived in grandeur and discomfort. But my wife was
-ecstatic, and I was therefore content. Yes, we were very
-grand. And, as in Brooklyn, the glasses came to the
-table with a certain sour odor not alluring as you lifted
-them to drink&mdash;the odor that causes an observant man
-or woman to say, &#8220;Aha&mdash;dirty rags in this perfect
-lady&#8217;s kitchen&mdash;dirty rags and all that goes with them.&#8221;
-But only a snarling cynic would complain of these vulgar
-trifles. There&#8217;s always at least a fly leg in the
-ointment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t I tell you I knew what I was about?&#8221; said
-Edna triumphantly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You did,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Haven&#8217;t we got what we wanted?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have,&#8221; said I, perhaps somewhat abruptly, for
-I was just then wondering how the devil we were going
-to keep it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>&#8220;And if it hadn&#8217;t been for me,&#8221; proceeded she &#8220;we&#8217;d
-still be living in <i>Brooklyn</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Or in Passaic,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t <i>speak</i> of Passaic,&#8221; she cried. &#8220;I&#8217;m trying
-to forget it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We were very happy then,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>I</i> was miserable,&#8221; retorted she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I could find it in my heart to wish we weren&#8217;t <i>always</i>
-attended by servants,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I almost never
-see you alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a bourgeois you are,&#8221; laughed she. Then&mdash;after
-a thorough glance round to make sure housekeeper
-or maid or lackey wasn&#8217;t on watch&mdash;she patted
-my cheek and kissed me, and added: &#8220;But you do make
-me happy. I&#8217;m <i>so</i> proud of you! No matter what I
-want I&#8217;m never afraid to buy it, for I know you can
-get all the money you want to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I winced. Said I: &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid you&#8217;d not be proud
-of some of the ways I get the money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She frowned. &#8220;Don&#8217;t talk business, please,&#8221; she
-said. &#8220;You know we never have in all our married life.
-You&#8217;ve always respected my position as your wife. All
-business is low&mdash;is mere sordidness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s all low,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Sometimes I think all
-living is low as well. Edna&#8221;&mdash;I put my arm round her&mdash;&#8220;don&#8217;t
-you ever feel that we&#8217;d be <i>really</i> happy, that
-we&#8217;d get something genuine out of life&mdash;if you and
-Margot and I&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She stopped my mouth with a kiss. &#8220;You never
-will grow up to your station, darling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I said no more. Indeed, it was on hastiest impulse<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-that I had said so much, an impulse sprung from a
-mood of depression.</p>
-
-<p>The cause of that mood was a nasty reverse in Wall
-Street. It had rudely halted me in my triumphant way
-toward the security of the man of many millions. It
-had set me to wavering uncertainly, with the chances
-about even for resuming the march and for tumbling
-into the abyss of a discreditable bankruptcy.</p>
-
-<p>There are in New York two well-defined classes of
-the rich&mdash;the permanently rich and the precariously
-rich. The permanently rich are those who by the vastness
-of their wealth or by the strength of their business
-and social connections cannot possibly be dislodged
-from the plutocracy. The precariously rich are those
-who have much money and are making more, but are
-not strong enough to survive a series of typhoons,
-and are without the support of indissoluble business
-and social connections. My friend G&mdash;&mdash;, for example,
-head of the famous banking house, associated in
-business and by marriage with half the permanent plutocracy,
-was practically bankrupt in the late panic.
-Had he been a man of ordinary position he would have
-gone into bankruptcy, and, I more than suspect, into
-jail. But his fellow plutocrats dared not let him drop,
-much as they would have liked to see his arrogance
-brought low, much as they longed to divide among themselves
-his holdings of gilt-edged securities; if he had
-gone down it would have made the whole financial world
-tremble. He was saved. On the other hand, my friend
-J&mdash;&mdash;, richer actually, was ruined, was plucked by his
-associates, was finally jailed for doing precisely the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-things every man of finance did over and over again
-in that same period of stress&mdash;for, what invariably happens
-to moral codes in periods of stress?</p>
-
-<p>I was at that time&mdash;but not now, gentle reader, so
-cheer up and read on&mdash;I was at that time in the class
-not of the permanently but of the precariously rich.
-And through a miscalculation I had laid myself open to
-the dangers that lie in wait for the man short of ready
-cash. The miscalculation was as to the extravagance
-of my wife&#8217;s undertakings. She, against my express request,
-had contracted without consulting or telling me
-several enormous bills. It is idle to say she ought not
-have done this. I knew her well; I should have been on
-guard. I had begun my married life wrong, as the
-young man very much in love is apt to do; so, to hold
-her love and liking, I had to keep on giving her taste
-for spending money free rein. If I had not, she would
-have thought me small and mean, would have made life
-at home exceedingly uncomfortable for me, for I am
-not of those men who can take from a woman what
-they wish whether she wishes to give or not. So the
-whole fault was mine. When the storm broke, in the
-light of its first terrific flash that illuminated for me
-every part of my affairs, I discovered that I was not
-prepared as I had been imagining. The big bills of
-my wife were presented, for the merchants knew I was
-heavily interested in the stocks that were tobogganing.
-Those bills had to be paid, and paid at once, or it
-would run like wildfire uptown and down that I was in
-difficulties; and when a man is known to be in financial
-difficulties, how the birds and beasts of prey from eagles<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-and lions to buzzards and jackals do come flapping and
-loping!</p>
-
-<p>There followed several anxious days and nights. On
-one of those nights I rose from beside my wife&mdash;we still
-slept together&mdash;and went into the adjoining room. I
-turned on an electric light and began for the thousandth
-time, I dare say, to look at the critical papers and to
-grope for the desperate &#8220;way out.&#8221; I was startled by
-my wife&#8217;s voice&mdash;sleepy, peevish:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do turn out that light and come to bed, Godfrey.
-You know how it disturbs me for you to get up
-in the night. And I&#8217;ve such a hard day before me to-morrow
-with the upholsterers and curtain people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I obediently turned off the light. As I was about
-to throw myself into bed and draw the covers over me,
-a broad beam from the moon flooded the face of a portrait
-on the opposite wall&mdash;the face of my daughter
-Margot. I sat on the edge of the bed and looked at
-that face&mdash;pure, sweet, with the same elevated expression
-her mother had in these days of refinement and
-climbing. Said I to Edna:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you asleep, dear?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; she answered crossly. &#8220;I&#8217;m waiting for you
-to quiet down.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then&mdash;let me talk to you a few minutes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, please!&#8221; she cried, flinging herself to the far
-edge of the bed. &#8220;You have no consideration for me&mdash;none
-at all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen,&#8221; I said. &#8220;I&#8217;m face to face with ruin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did not move or speak, but I could feel her
-intense attention.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>&#8220;If I let matters take their course I can save my
-reputation and my official position. But for many
-years we&#8217;ll have to live quietly&mdash;about as we did in
-Brooklyn.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I <i>can&#8217;t</i> do that,&#8221; cried she. &#8220;The fall would kill
-me. You know how proud I am.... Just as I had
-everything ready for us to get into society! Godfrey,
-how could you! And I thought you were clever at
-business.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I could not see her, nor she me, except in dimmest
-outline. I said: &#8220;But we&#8217;d have each other and Margot.
-And my salary isn&#8217;t so small, as salaries go.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t there <i>any</i> way to avoid it?&#8221; She was sitting
-up in bed, her nervous fingers upon my arm. &#8220;You
-must <i>think</i>, Godfrey. You mustn&#8217;t play Margot and
-me this horrible trick. You mustn&#8217;t give up so easily.
-You must think&mdash;think&mdash;<i>think</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I&#8217;ve not slept for three days
-and nights. There&#8217;s no way&mdash;no honest way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then there <i>is</i> a way!&#8221; she cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But not an honest one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed scornfully. &#8220;And you pretend to love
-me! When my life and Margot&#8217;s happiness are at stake
-you talk like a Sunday-school boy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And I&#8217;ve been thinking more or
-less that way lately for the first time in years. It wasn&#8217;t
-long after I started when I cut my business eye teeth.
-I found out that as the game lay I&#8217;d not get far if I
-stuck to the old maxims of the copy book and the Sunday
-school. Except by accident nobody ever got rich
-who followed them. To get rich you&#8217;ve got to make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-a lot of people work for you and work cheap, and
-you&#8217;ve got to sell what they make as dear as you can.
-Success in business means taking advantage of the ignorance
-or the necessities of your fellow men, or both.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t waste time talking that kind of nonsense,&#8221;
-said she impatiently. &#8220;It doesn&#8217;t mean anything to
-me&mdash;or to anybody, I guess. The thing for you to do
-is to put your mind on the real thing&mdash;how to save your
-family and yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what I&#8217;m talking about,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I&#8217;m
-talking about saving myself and my family. As I told
-you, my troubles&mdash;the first business troubles I&#8217;ve ever
-had&mdash;have set me to thinking. I&#8217;ve not been doing
-right all these years. It&#8217;s true, everybody does as I&#8217;ve
-been doing. It&#8217;s true I&#8217;ve been more generous and
-more considerate than most men with opportunities and
-the sense to see them. But I&#8217;ve been doing wrong.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I paused, hoping for some sign of sympathy. None
-came. I went on:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;ve been wondering these last few days if by
-doing it I haven&#8217;t been ruining myself and my family&mdash;not
-financially, but in more important ways. Edna,
-what&#8217;s the sense in this life we&#8217;re leading? What will
-be the end of it all? Is there any decency or happiness
-in it? Haven&#8217;t we been going backward instead of
-forward?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>All the time I was talking I could feel she was not
-listening. When I finished she said: &#8220;Godfrey, what is
-this way you can escape by?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can sell out my partners in the deals that have
-gone bad.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>&#8220;Perhaps they&#8217;re selling <i>you</i> out,&#8221; she instantly
-suggested. &#8220;Why, of course they are doing that very
-thing!&mdash;while <i>you</i> are driveling about honesty like a
-backwoods hypocrite of a church deacon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, they&#8217;re not selling me out,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How do you know?&#8221; cried she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I caught them at that trick in a former deal and
-in the early stages of this one. And I fixed things so
-that, while they have to trust me, I don&#8217;t trust them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed mockingly. &#8220;Godfrey, I think your
-mind must be going. You talking about sacrificing
-your fortune and your wife and your child for men
-who&#8217;ve tried to ruin you&mdash;men who are even now thinking
-out some scheme for doing it.... Suppose you
-saved yourself and let them go&mdash;what then? Wouldn&#8217;t
-you be rich? And when you were secure again couldn&#8217;t
-you pay them back what they lost if you were still
-foolish enough to think it necessary?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was not the first time she had astonished me with
-the depth of her practical insight&mdash;and her skill at
-logic&mdash;when she cared to use her mind. &#8220;I had thought
-of saving myself and paying back afterwards,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;But I&#8217;m not sure I&#8217;d save myself. It&#8217;s simply my one
-chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you&#8217;ve got to take that chance,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t expect you to talk like this,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;The only reason I haven&#8217;t spoken of my troubles before
-was that I feared you&#8217;d forbid me to do what I was
-being tempted to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And that was the truth about my feeling. I had
-always heard&mdash;and had firmly believed&mdash;that woman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-was somehow the exemplar of ideal morality, that it
-was she who kept men from being worse than they were,
-that the evil being done by men pursuing success was
-done without the knowledge of their pure, idealist wives
-and mothers and daughters. I can&#8217;t account for my
-stupidity in this respect. Had I not on every side the
-spectacle that gave the lie to the shallow pretense of
-feminine moral superiority? Was it not the women,
-with their insatiable appetite for luxury and splurge;
-was it not the women, with their incessant demands for
-money and ever more money; was it not the women,
-with their profound immorality of any and every class
-that earns nothing and simply spends; was it not the
-women, the <i>ladies</i>, who were edging on the men to get
-money, no matter how? For whom were the grand
-houses, the expensive hotels, the exorbitant flimsy clothing,
-the costly jewelry, the equipages, the opera boxes,
-the senseless, spendthrift squandering upon the degrading
-vanities of social position?</p>
-
-<p>I laughed somewhat cynically. &#8220;No wonder you&#8217;ve
-always refused to learn anything about business,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;It&#8217;s a habit among big business men to refuse to
-know anything as to the details of a large transaction
-that can be carried through only by dirty work. If
-we don&#8217;t know, we can pretend that the dirty work isn&#8217;t
-being done by or for us&mdash;isn&#8217;t being done at all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now you are getting coarse,&#8221; said my wife. &#8220;Do
-you know what I think of you?&#8221; I could not see her
-expression, but the voice always betrays if there is insincerity,
-because we do not deal enough with the blind
-to learn to deceive perfectly with the voice. Her tones<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-were absolutely sincere as she answered her own question:
-&#8220;I think it is cowardly of you to come to me with
-your business troubles. If you were brave you&#8217;d simply
-have quietly done whatever was necessary to save your
-family. Yes, it is cowardly!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t mean it as cowardice,&#8221; said I, admiring
-but irritated by this characteristic adroitness. &#8220;In the
-stories and the plays that give such thrills, the husband,
-in the crisis and tempted to do wrong, appeals to his
-wife. And they are brought closer together, and she
-helps him to do right, and everything ends happily.&#8221;
-Again I laughed good-humoredly. &#8220;It doesn&#8217;t seem
-to be turning out that way, does it, dear? My heavenly
-picture of you and Margot and me living modestly and
-making up in love what we lack in luxury&mdash;it doesn&#8217;t
-attract you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She said in her patient, superior tone: &#8220;I suppose
-you never will understand me or my ideals. What
-you&#8217;ve been doing in annoying me with your business,
-it&#8217;s as if when I was giving a dinner I assembled my
-guests and compelled them to watch all the preparations
-for the dinner&mdash;the killing of the lambs and the
-fish and the birds, the cleaning, all those ugly and low
-things. Bringing business into the home and the social
-life, it&#8217;s like bringing the kitchen into the drawing-room.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The obvious answer to this shallow but plausible and
-attractive cleverness of hers did not come to me then.
-If it had I&#8217;d not have spoken it. For of what use to
-argue with the human animal, female or male, about its
-dearest selfishnesses and vanities? Of what use to point<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-out to human self-complacence, greediness and hypocrisy
-that a &#8220;refined&#8221; and &#8220;cultured&#8221; existence of ease
-and luxury can be obtained only by the theft and murder
-of dishonest business&mdash;that for one man to be vastly
-rich thousands of men must somehow be robbed and
-oppressed, even though the rich man himself directly
-does no robbing and oppressing? If I have sucking
-pig for dinner, I kill sucking pig as surely as if my
-hand wielded the knife of the butcher. But the human
-race finds it convenient and comfortable not to think so.
-Therefore, let us not bother our heads about it.</p>
-
-<p>At that period of my career I had not thought things
-out so thoroughly as I have since&mdash;in these days when
-events have compelled me to open my eyes and to see.
-In my hypocrisy, in my eagerness to save myself, I was
-not loth to take refuge behind the advice given by my
-wife partly in genuine ignorance of business, partly in
-pretended ignorance of it.</p>
-
-<p>Said I: &#8220;I suppose you&#8217;re right. I ought to think
-only of my family. Heaven knows, my rascal friends
-aren&#8217;t thinking in my interest. If I don&#8217;t do it, no one
-will. There&#8217;s no disputing that&mdash;eh?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>No reply. She was asleep&mdash;or, rather, was pretending
-to be asleep. The matter had been settled, why discuss
-it further? Why expose herself longer than unavoidable
-to the danger of being unable to be, or to
-pretend to be, ignorant of business, of the foundation
-upon which her splendid, cultured structure of ambition
-proudly reared?</p>
-
-<p>Often in her sleep her hand would seek mine, and
-when it was comfortably nestled she would give a little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-sigh of content that thrilled me through and through.
-Her hand now stole into mine and the sigh of content
-came softly from her lips. &#8220;My love,&#8221; I murmured,
-kissing her cheek before I lay down. How could I for
-a minute have considered any course that would have
-made her unhappy, that might have lessened, perhaps
-destroyed, her love for me?</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is hardly necessary to say that I threw overboard
-my partners and saved myself. Indeed, I emerged from
-the crisis&mdash;liberally bespattered with mud, it is true&mdash;but
-richer than when I entered it. Since I was doing
-the act that was the supreme proof of my possessing the
-courage and the skill for leadership in business&mdash;since I
-was definitely breaking with the old-fashioned morality&mdash;I
-felt it was the part of wisdom to do the thing so
-thoroughly, so profitably, that instead of being execrated
-I should be admired. There were attacks on me
-in the newspapers; there were painful interviews with
-my partners&mdash;not so painful to me as they would have
-been had I not been able to remind them of their own
-unsuccessful treacheries and to enforce the spoken reminder
-with the documentary proof. But on the whole
-I came off excellently well&mdash;as who does not that &#8220;gets
-away with the goods?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In these days of increased intelligence and consequent
-lessened hypocrisy, the big business man is the object of
-only perfunctory hypocrisies from outraged morality.
-It has been discovered that the farmer watering his milk
-or the grocer using solder-&#8220;mended&#8221; scales is as bad
-as the man who &#8220;reorganizes&#8221; a railway or manipulates<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-a stock&mdash;is worse actually because the massed mischief
-of the million little business rascals is greater than
-the sensational misdeeds of the few great rascals. It
-has been discovered that human nature is good or bad
-only according to the opportunities and necessities, not
-according to abstract moral standards. And the cry
-is no longer, &#8220;Kill the scoundrel,&#8221; but, &#8220;That fellow
-had the sense to outwit us. We must learn from him
-how to sharpen our wits so that we won&#8217;t let ourselves
-be robbed.&#8221; A healthful sign this, that masses of men
-are ceasing from twaddle about vague ideals and are
-educating themselves in practical horse sense. It may
-be that some day the honest husbandman will learn to
-guard his granary not only against the robber with
-the sack in the dark of the morn, but also against the
-rats and mice who pilfer ten bushels to every one that
-is stolen. Of one thing I am certain&mdash;until men learn
-to take heed in the small, they will remain easy prey in
-the large.</p>
-
-<p>Far from doing me harm, my bold stroke was of
-the greatest benefit&mdash;from the standpoint of material
-success, and that is the only point of view I am here
-considering. It did me as much good with the world as
-it has done me with you, gentle reader. For while you
-are exclaiming against my wickedness you are in your
-secret heart confessing that if I had chosen the ideally
-honest course, had retired to obscurity and poverty,
-you would have approved&mdash;and would have lost interest
-in me. Why, if I had chosen that ideal course, I doubt
-not I should have lost my railway position. My directors
-would have waxed enthusiastic over my &#8220;old-fashioned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-honesty,&#8221; and would have looked round for another
-and shrewder and stronger man to whom to
-intrust the management of their railway&mdash;which would
-not pay dividends were it run along the lines of old-fashioned
-honesty. The outburst of denunciation soon
-spent itself, like a summer storm beating the giant cliffs
-of a mountain. Of what use to rage futilely against
-my splendid immovable fortune? The attacks, the talk
-about my bold stroke, the exaggerations of the size
-of the fortune I had made, all served to attract attention
-to me, to make me a formidable and an interesting
-figure. I leaped from obscurity into fame and
-power&mdash;and I had the money to maintain the position
-I had won.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Long before, indeed as soon as we moved to Manhattan,
-my wife had joined fashionable and exclusive
-Holy Cross Church and had plunged straightway into
-its charity work. A highly important part of her
-Brooklyn education had been got in St. Mary&#8217;s, in
-learning how to do charity work and how to make it
-count socially. Edna genuinely loved charity work.
-She loved to patronize, loved to receive those fawning
-blessings and handkissings which city poverty becomes
-adept at giving the rich it lives off of. The poor family
-understands perfectly that the rich visit and help
-not through mere empty sentimental nonsense of
-brotherhood, but to have their vanities tickled in exchange
-for the graciousness of their condescending
-presence and for the money they lay out. As the poor
-want the money and have no objection to paying for it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-with that cheap and plentiful commodity, cringing&mdash;scantily
-screening mockery and contempt&mdash;rich and
-poor meet most comfortably in our cities. Not New
-York alone, but any center of population, for human
-nature is the same, city and country, San Francisco,
-Bangor&mdash;Pekin or Paris, for that matter.</p>
-
-<p>There is a shallow fashion of describing this or that
-as peculiarly New York, usually snobbishness or domestic
-unhappiness or wealth worship, dishonest business
-men or worthless wives. It is time to have done with
-such nonsense. New York is in no way peculiar, nor is
-any other place, beyond trifling surface differences.
-New York is nothing but the epitome of the whole country,
-just as Chicago is. If you wish to understand
-America, study New York or Chicago, our two universal
-cities. There you find in one place and in admirable
-perspective a complete museum of specimens of what is
-scattered over three and a half million square miles.
-For, don&#8217;t forget, New York is not the few blocks of
-fashionable district alone. It is four million people of
-all conditions, tastes, and activities. And the dominant
-force of struggle for money and fashion is no more
-dominant in New York than it is in the rest of America.
-New York is more truly representative of America than
-is Chicago, for in Chicago the Eastern and Southern elements
-are lacking and the Western element is strong
-out of proportion.</p>
-
-<p>I was telling of my wife&#8217;s blossoming as Lady Bountiful
-in search not of a heavenly crown, but of what
-human Lady Bountiful always seeks&mdash;social position.
-Charity covers a multitude of sins; the greatest of them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-is hypocrisy. I have yet to see a charitable man or
-woman or child whose chief and only noteworthy object
-was not self-glorification. The people who believe in
-brotherhood do not go in for charity. They wish to
-abolish poverty, whereas charity revels in poverty and
-seeks to increase it, to change it from miserable poverty
-which might die into comfortable pauperism which can
-live on, and fester and breed on, and fawn on and give
-vanity ever more and more exquisite titillations. Holy
-Cross, my wife&#8217;s new spiritual guide, was past master
-of the pauper-making and pauper-utilizing arts. Its
-rector and his staff of slimy sycophants had the small
-standing army of its worthy poor trained to perfection.
-When my wife went down among them, she returned
-home with face aglow and eyes heavenly. What a treat
-those wretches had given her! And in the first blush of
-her enthusiasm she dispensed lavishly, where the older
-members of the church exacted the full measure of titillation
-for every dollar invested and awarded extra sums
-only to some novelty in lickspittling or toadeating.</p>
-
-<p>Were I not sure I should quite wear out the forbearance
-of gentle reader, I should linger to describe
-this marvelous charity plant for providing idle or social-position-hunting
-rich women with spiritual pleasures&mdash; I
-had almost said debaucheries, but that would be intruding
-my private and perhaps prejudiced opinion.
-I have no desire to irritate, much less shake the faith
-of, those who believe in Holy Cross and its &#8220;uplift&#8221;
-work. And I don&#8217;t suppose Holy Cross does any great
-amount of harm. The poor who prostitute themselves
-to its purposes are weak things, beyond redemption.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-As for the rich who waste time and money there, would
-they not simply waste elsewhere were there no Holy
-Cross?</p>
-
-<p>My wife was, at that time, a very ignorant woman,
-thinly covered with a veneer of what I now know was a
-rather low grade of culture. That veneer impressed
-me. It had impressed our Brooklyn friends of St.
-Mary&#8217;s. But I fancy it must have looked cheap to
-expert eyes. Where her surpassing shrewdness showed
-itself was in that she herself recognized her own shortcomings.
-Rare and precious is the vanity that comforts
-and sustains without self-deception. She knew
-she wasn&#8217;t the real thing, knew she had not yet got
-hold of the real thing. And when she began to move
-about, cautiously and quietly, in Holy Cross, she realized
-that at last she was in the presence of the real thing.</p>
-
-<p>My big responsibilities, my associations in finance,
-had been giving me a superb training in worldly wisdom.
-I think I had almost as strong a natural aptitude
-for &#8220;catching on&#8221; to the better thing in speech
-and manner and in dress as had Edna. It is not self-flattery
-for me to say that up to the Holy Cross period
-I was further advanced than she. Certainly I ought
-to have been, for a man has a much better opportunity
-than a woman, and one of the essentials of equipment
-for great affairs is ability to observe accurately the little
-no less than the large. Looking back, I recall things
-which lead me to suspect that Edna saw my superiority
-in certain matters most important to her, and was irritated
-by it. However that may be, a few months in
-Holy Cross and she had grasped the essentials of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-social art as I, or any other masculine man, never could
-grasp it. And her veneer of &#8220;middle-class&#8221; culture
-disappeared under a thick and enduring coating of the
-best New York manner.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What has become of <i>you</i>?&#8221; I said to her. &#8220;I
-haven&#8217;t seen you in weeks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand,&#8221; said she, ruffling as she always
-did when she suspected me of indulging in my
-coarse and detestable sense of humor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, you don&#8217;t act like yourself at all,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;Even when we&#8217;re alone you give the uncomfortable
-sense of dressed-up&mdash;not as if <i>you</i> were &#8216;dressed-up,&#8217;
-but as if <i>I</i> were. I feel like a plowboy before a
-princess.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was delighted!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You,&#8221; I went on, &#8220;are now exactly like the rest of
-those women in Holy Cross. I suppose it&#8217;s all right to
-look and talk and act that way before people. At least,
-I&#8217;ve no objection if it pleases you. But for heaven&#8217;s
-sake, Edna, don&#8217;t spoil our privacy with it. The queen
-doesn&#8217;t wear her coronation robes all the time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure I don&#8217;t know what you mean,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you?&#8221; cried I, laughing. &#8220;What a charming
-fraud you are!&#8221; And I seized her in my arms and
-kissed her. And she seemed to yield and to return my
-caresses. But I was uncomfortable. She would not
-drop that new manner. The incident seems trifling
-enough; perhaps it was trifling. But it stands out in
-my memory. It marks the change in our relationship.
-I recall it all distinctly&mdash;how she looked, how young and
-charming and cold, what she was wearing, the delicate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-simple dress that ought to have made her most alluring
-to me, yet made me feel as if she were indeed alluring,
-but not for <i>me</i>. A subtle difference there, but abysmal;
-the difference between the woman who tries to make herself
-attractive for the sake of her husband and the woman
-who makes toilets in the conscious or half-conscious
-longing successfully to prostitute herself to the eyes of
-the public. I recall every detail of that incident; yet I
-have only the vaguest recollection of our beginning to
-occupy separate bedrooms. By that time the feeling of
-alienation must have grown so strong that I took the
-radical change in our habits as the matter of course.</p>
-
-<p>Many are the women, in all parts of the earth, who
-have sought to climb into the world of fashion by the
-broad and apparently easy stairway of charity. But
-most of them have failed because they were unaware of
-the secret of that stairway, an unsuspected secret
-which I shall proceed to point out. It seems, as I have
-said, a particularly easy stairway&mdash;broad, roomy, with
-invalid steps. It is, in fact, a moving stairway so cunningly
-contrived that she&mdash;it is usually she&mdash;who ascends
-keeps in the same place. She goes up, but at
-exactly her ascending rate the stairway goes down. She
-sees other women making apparently no more effort
-than she ascending rapidly, and presently entering the
-earthly heaven at the top. Yet there she stands, marking
-time, moving not one inch upward, and there she
-will stand until she wearies, relaxes her efforts, and
-finds herself rapidly descending. But how do the
-women who ascend accomplish it? I do not know. You
-must ask them. I only know the cause of the failure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-of the women who do not ascend. If I knew why the
-others succeeded I should not tell it. I would not deprive
-fashionable women of the joy of occupying a difficult
-height from which they can indulge themselves
-in the happiness of sneering and spitting down at
-their lowlier sisters. And I have no sympathy with
-the aspirations or the humiliations of those lowlier
-sisters.</p>
-
-<p>My energetic and aspiring wife presently found
-herself on this stairway, with no hint as to its secret,
-much less as to the way of overcoming its peculiarity.
-She toiled daily in Holy Cross. She subscribed to
-everything, she helped in everything. She was the
-proud recipient of the rector&#8217;s loud praises as his &#8220;most
-devoted, least worldly, most spiritual helper.&#8221; But&mdash;not
-an invitation of the kind she wanted. Everyone
-was &#8220;just lovely&#8221; to her. Whenever any charitable
-or spiritual matter was to be discussed, no matter how
-grand and exclusive the house in which the discussion
-was to be held, there was my wife in a place of honor,
-eagerly consulted&mdash;and urged to subscribe. But nothing
-unworldly. They understood how spiritual she was,
-did those sweet, good people. They knew Saint Edna
-wished no social frivolities&mdash;no dinners or theater parties,
-no bridge or dancing.</p>
-
-<p>She was a wise lady. She hid her burning impatience.
-She smiled and purred when she yearned to
-scowl and scratch. She waited, and prayed for some
-lucky accident that would swing her across the invisible,
-apparently nonexistent but actually impassable dead
-line. She had expected snubs and cold shoulders.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-Never a snub, never a cold shoulder. Always smiles
-and gracious handshakings and amiable familiarities,
-but those always of the kind that serve to accentuate
-caste distinction instead of removing it. For the first
-time in her life, I think, she was completely stumped.
-She could combat obstacles. She might even have
-found a way to fight fog. But how ridiculous to make
-struggles and thrust out fists when there is nothing
-but empty, sunny air!</p>
-
-<p>She held church lunches and dinners at our house&mdash;of
-course, had me on duty at the dinners. All in vain.
-The distinction between the spiritual and the temporal
-remained in force. The grand people came, acted as if
-they were delighted, complimented her on her house,
-on her hospitality, went away, to invite her to similar
-dreary functions at their houses. And my, how it did
-cost her! No wonder Holy Cross made a pet of her
-and elected me to the board of vestrymen.</p>
-
-<p>Once in a while she would find something in her net,
-so slyly cast, so softly drawn. She would have a wild
-spasm of joy; then the something would turn out to
-be another climber like herself. Those climbers avoided
-each other as devils dodge the font of holy water. The
-climber she would have caught would be one who, ignorant
-of the intricacies of New York society, was under
-the impression that the Mrs. Godfrey Loring so conspicuous
-in Holy Cross must be a social personage.
-They would examine each other&mdash;at a series of joyous
-entertainments each would provide for the other, would
-discover their mutual mistake&mdash;and&mdash; You know the
-contemptuous toss with which the fisherman rids himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-of a bloater; you know the hysterical leap of the
-released bloater back into the water.</p>
-
-<p>But how it was funny! My wife did not take me
-into her confidence as to her social struggles. She maintained
-with me the same sweet, elegant exterior of
-spiritual placidity with which she faced the rest of the
-world. Nevertheless, in a dim sort of way I had some
-notion of what she was about&mdash;though, as I was presently
-to discover, I was wholly mistaken in my idea of
-her progress.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What has happened to Mrs. Lestrange?&#8221; I said
-to her one evening at dinner. &#8220;Is she ill?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She cast a quick, nervous glance in the direction of
-the butler. I, looking at him by way of a mirror,
-thought I saw upon his aristocratic countenance a faint
-trace of that insolent secret glee which fills servants
-when their betters are humiliated before them. &#8220;Mrs.
-Lestrange?&#8221; she said carelessly. &#8220;Oh, I see her now
-and then.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you&#8217;ve been inseparable until lately,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;A quarrel, I suppose?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not at all,&#8221; said my wife tartly.</p>
-
-<p>And she shifted abruptly to another subject. When
-I went to the little study adjoining my sitting room to
-smoke she came with me. There she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t mention Mrs. Lestrange before the
-servants again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, what&#8217;s up?&#8221; said I. &#8220;Did she turn out to
-be a crook?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Heavens, no! How coarse you are, Godfrey.
-Simply that I was terribly mistaken in her.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>&#8220;She looked like a confidence woman or a madam,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;Didn&#8217;t you tell me she was a howling swell?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought she was,&#8221; said my wife, and I knew
-something important was coming; only that theory
-would account for her admitting she had made a mistake.
-&#8220;And in a way she was. But they caught her
-several years ago taking money to get some dreadful
-low Western people into society. Since then she&#8217;s
-asked&mdash;she herself&mdash;because she&#8217;s well connected and
-amusing. But she can&#8217;t help anyone else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I see,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And you don&#8217;t feel strong
-enough socially as yet to be able to afford the luxury
-of her friendship.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Strong enough!&#8221; said Edna with intense bitterness.
-&#8220;I have no position at all&mdash;none whatever.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was surprised, for until that moment I had been
-assuming she was on or near the top of the wave, moving
-swiftly toward triumphant success. &#8220;You want too
-much,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You&#8217;ve really got all there is to get.
-At that last reception of yours you had all the heavy
-swells. My valet told me so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Reception to raise funds for the orphanage,&#8221; said
-Edna with a vicious sneer&mdash;the unloveliest expression I
-had ever seen on her lovely face&mdash;and I had seen not a
-few unlovely expressions there in our many married
-years, some of them extremely trying years. &#8220;I tell
-you I am nobody socially. They take my money for
-their rotten old charities. They use me for their tiresome
-church work&mdash;and they do nothing for me&mdash;nothing!
-How I <i>hate</i> them!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I sat smoking my cigar and watching her face. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-was a wonderfully young face. Not that she was so
-old; on the contrary, she was still young in years. I
-call her face wonderfully young because it had that look
-of inexhaustible, eternal youth which is rare even in
-the faces of boys and girls. But that evening I was
-not thinking so much of her youth and her beauty as
-of a certain expression of hardness, of evil passions
-rampant&mdash;envy and hatred and jealousy, savage disappointment
-over defeats in sordid battles.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Edna,&#8221; said I, hesitatingly, &#8220;why don&#8217;t you drop
-all that? Can&#8217;t you see there&#8217;s nothing in it? You&#8217;re
-tempting the worst things in your nature to grow and
-destroy all that&#8217;s good and sweet&mdash;all that makes you&mdash;and
-me&mdash;happy. People aren&#8217;t necessary to us. And
-if you must have friends, surely <i>all</i> the attractive people
-in New York aren&#8217;t in that little fashionable set. Judging
-from what I&#8217;ve seen of them, they&#8217;re a lot of bores.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They look bored here,&#8221; retorted she. &#8220;And no
-wonder! They come as a Christian duty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;Now, honestly, are those fashionable
-people the best educated, the best in any way&mdash;any real
-way? I&#8217;ve talked with the men, and the younger ones&mdash;the
-ones that go in for society&mdash;are unspeakable rotters.
-I wouldn&#8217;t have them about.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna&#8217;s eyes flashed, and her form quivered in a gust
-of hysterical fury&mdash;the breaking of long-pent passion,
-of anger and despair, taking me as an excuse for vent.
-&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s terrible to be married to a man who <i>always</i>
-misunderstands!&mdash;one who can&#8217;t sympathize!&#8221; cried
-she. It was a remark she often made, but never before
-had she put so much energy, so much bitterness into it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>&#8220;What do I misunderstand?&#8221; I asked, more hurt
-than I cared to show. &#8220;Where don&#8217;t I sympathize?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s not talk about it!&#8221; exclaimed she. &#8220;If I
-weren&#8217;t a remarkable woman I&#8217;d have given up long ago&mdash;I&#8217;d
-give up now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Before you smile at her egotism, gentle reader,
-please remember that husband and wife were talking
-alone; also that with a few pitiful exceptions all human
-beings think surpassingly well of themselves, and do
-not hesitate to express that good opinion privately. I
-guess there&#8217;s more lying done about lack of egotism and
-of vanity generally than about all other matters put
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Said I: &#8220;You are indeed a wonder, dear. In this
-country one sees many astonishing transformations.
-But I doubt if there have been many equal to the transformation
-of the girl I married into the girl who&#8217;s sitting
-before me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what good has it done me?&#8221; demanded she.
-&#8220;How I&#8217;ve worked away at myself&mdash;inside and out&mdash;and
-all for nothing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve still got <i>me</i>,&#8221; said I jovially, yet in earnest
-too. &#8220;Lots of women lose their husbands. I&#8217;ve never
-had a single impulse to wander.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the candor of that intimacy she gave me a most
-unflattering look&mdash;a look a woman does well not to cast
-at a man unless she is more absolutely sure of him than
-anyone can be of anything in this uncertain world. I
-laughed as if I thought she meant that look as a jest;
-I put the look away in my memory with a mark on it
-that meant &#8220;to be taken out and examined at leisure.&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-But she was absorbed in her chagrin over her social failure;
-she probably hardly realized I was there.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what&#8217;s the next move?&#8221; inquired I presently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve got to help,&#8221; replied she&mdash;and I knew
-this was what she had been revolving in her mind all
-evening.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anything that doesn&#8217;t take me away from business,
-or keep me up too late to fit myself for the next day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Business&mdash;always business,&#8221; said she, in deepest
-disgust. &#8220;Do you <i>never</i> think of anything else?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My business and my family&mdash;that&#8217;s my life,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not your family,&#8221; replied she. &#8220;You care nothing
-about them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Edna,&#8221; I said sharply, &#8220;that is unjust and untrue.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you give them money, if that&#8217;s what you
-mean,&#8221; said she disdainfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I give them love,&#8221; said I. &#8220;The trouble is I
-give so freely that you don&#8217;t value it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you are a good husband,&#8221; said she carelessly.
-&#8220;But I want you to take an interest.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In your social climbing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How insulting you are!&#8221; she cried, with flashing
-eyes. &#8220;I am trying to claim the position we are entitled
-to, and you speak of me as if I were one of those
-vulgar pushers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; said I humbly. &#8220;I was merely
-joking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve often told you that your idea of humor was
-revolting.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>I felt distressed for her in her chagrin and despair.
-I was ready to bear almost anything she might see fit
-to inflict. &#8220;What do you want me to do?&#8221; I asked.
-&#8220;Whatever it is, I&#8217;ll do it. Do you need more money?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I need help&mdash;real help,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Money&#8217;s god over the realm of fashion, the same
-as it is over that of&mdash;of religion&mdash;of politics&mdash;or anything
-you please. And luckily I&#8217;ve got that little god
-in my employ, my dear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you are so powerful,&#8221; said she, &#8220;put me into
-fashionable society&mdash;make these people receive me and
-come to my house.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But they do,&#8221; I reminded her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I mean <i>socially</i>,&#8221; cried she. &#8220;<i>Can&#8217;t</i> I make you
-understand? Why are business men so dumb at anything
-else? Compel these people to take me as one
-of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, Edna, my dear,&#8221; protested I, &#8220;be reasonable.
-How can I do that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Easily, if you&#8217;ve got real power,&#8221; rejoined she.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s been done often, I&#8217;ve found out lately. At least
-half the leaders in society got in originally by compelling
-it. But you, going round among men intimately&mdash;you
-must know it&mdash;must have known all along. If
-you&#8217;d been the right sort of man I&#8217;d not have to humiliate
-myself by asking you&mdash;by saying these dreadful
-things.&#8221; Her eyes were flashing and her bosom was
-heaving. &#8220;Women have hated men for less. But I
-must bear my cross. You insist on degrading me. Very
-well. I&#8217;ll let myself be degraded. I&#8217;ll say the things a
-decent man would not ask a woman to say&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>&#8220;Edna, darling,&#8221; I pleaded. &#8220;Honestly, I don&#8217;t
-understand. You&#8217;ll have to tell me. And it&#8217;s not degrading.
-We have no secrets from each other. We
-who love each other can say anything to each other&mdash;anything.
-What do you wish me to do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Use your power over the men. Frighten them
-into ordering their wives to invite us and to accept
-our invitations. You do business with a lot of the men,
-don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can benefit or injure them, as you please,
-can&#8217;t you?&mdash;can take money away from them&mdash;can put
-them in the way of making it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said I; &#8220;to a certain extent.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And how do you use this power?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In building up great enterprises. I am founding
-a city just now, for instance, where there was nothing
-but a swamp beside a lake, and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In making more and more money for yourself,&#8221;
-she cut in, &#8220;you think only of yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you&mdash;what do <i>you</i> think of?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not of myself,&#8221; cried she indignantly. &#8220;Never of
-myself. Of Margot. Of you. Of the family. I am
-working to build <i>us</i> up&mdash;to make <i>us</i> somebody and not
-mere low money grubbers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I did not see it from her point of view. But I was
-not inclined to aggravate her excitement and anger.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why shouldn&#8217;t you use your powers for some unselfish
-purpose?&#8221; she went on. &#8220;Why not try to have
-higher ambition?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I observed her narrowly. She was sincere.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>&#8220;I want you to help me&mdash;for Margot&#8217;s sake, for
-your own sake,&#8221; she went on in a kind of exaltation.
-&#8220;Margot is coming on. She&#8217;ll be out in less than three
-years. We&#8217;ve got to make a position for her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought, up there at Miss Ryper&#8217;s she was&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That shows how little interest you take!&#8221; cried
-Edna. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you know what is happening? Why,
-already the fashionable girls at her school are beginning
-to shy off from her&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be absurd!&#8221; laughed I. &#8220;That simply
-could not be. She&#8217;s lovely, sweet, attractive in every
-way. Any girls anywhere would be proud to have her
-as a friend.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How <i>can</i> you be so ignorant of the world!&#8221; cried
-Edna in a frenzy of exasperation. &#8220;Oh, you&#8217;ll drive me
-mad with your stupidity! Can&#8217;t you realize how <i>low</i>
-fashionable people are. The girls who were her friends
-so long as they were all mere children are now taking a
-positive delight in snubbing her, because she&#8217;s so pretty
-and will be an heiress. It gives them a sense of power
-to treat her as an inferior, to make her suffer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I flung away the cigar and sat up in the chair.
-&#8220;How long has this been going on?&#8221; I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nearly a year,&#8221; replied my wife. &#8220;It began as
-soon as she lost her childishness and developed toward
-a woman. I&#8217;m glad I&#8217;ve roused you at last. So long
-as she was a mere baby they liked her&mdash;invited her to
-their children&#8217;s parties&mdash;came to hers. But now they&#8217;re
-dropping her. Oh, it&#8217;s maddening! They are so sweet
-and smooth, the vile little daughters of vile mothers!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Incredible!&#8221; said I. &#8220;Surely not those sweet,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-well-mannered girls I&#8217;ve seen here at her parties? <i>They</i>
-couldn&#8217;t do that sort of thing. Why, what do those
-babies know about social position and such nonsense?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do they know? What <i>don&#8217;t</i> they know?&#8221;
-cried Edna, trembling with rage at her humiliation and
-at my incredulity. &#8220;You <i>are</i> an innocent! There
-ought to be a new proverb&mdash;innocent as a married man.
-Why, nowadays the children begin their social training
-in the cradle. They soon learn to know a nurse or a
-butler from a lady or a gentleman before they learn
-to walk. They hear the servants talk. They hear their
-parents talk. Except innocent you everyone nowadays
-thinks and talks about these things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But Margot&mdash;our Margot&mdash;she doesn&#8217;t know!&#8221;
-I said with conviction.</p>
-
-<p>Edna laughed harshly. &#8220;Know? What kind of
-mother do you think I am? Of course she knows.
-Haven&#8217;t I been teaching her ever since she began to
-talk? Why do you suppose I&#8217;ve always called her the
-little duchess?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She suggests a superior little person,&#8221; said I,
-groping vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She suggests a superior person because I gave
-her that name and brought her up to look and act and
-feel the part. She expects to be a real duchess some
-day&mdash;&#8221; Edna reared proudly, and her voice rang out
-confidently as she added&mdash;&#8220;and she shall be!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I stared at her. It seemed to me she must be out
-of her mind. Oh, I was indeed innocent, gentle reader.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve always treated her as a duchess, and have
-made the servants do it, and have trained her to treat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-them as if she were a duchess.&#8221; A proud smile came
-into her face, transforming it suddenly back to its loveliness.
-&#8220;The first time I ever read about a duchess&mdash;read,
-knowing what I was reading about&mdash;I decided
-that I would have a daughter and that she should be a
-duchess.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At any previous time such a sally would have made
-me laugh. But not then, for I saw that she meant it
-profoundly, and for the first time I was realizing what
-had been going on in my family, all unsuspected by me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But first,&#8221; proceeded Edna, &#8220;she shall have the
-highest social position in New York. And you must
-help if I am to succeed.&#8221; The fury burst into her face
-again. &#8220;Those little wretches, snubbing her!&mdash;dropping
-her! I&#8217;ll make them pay for it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you mean to tell me that Margot realizes all
-this?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor child, she&#8217;s wretched about it. Only yesterday
-she said to me: &#8216;Mamma, is it true that you and
-papa are very common, and that we haven&#8217;t anything
-but a lot of stolen money? One of the girls got mad
-at me because I was so good-looking and so proud, and
-taunted me with it.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Incredible!&#8221; said I, dazed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s horribly unhappy,&#8221; Edna went on. &#8220;And it
-cuts her to the heart to be losing all her dearest friends.
-I did my duty and taught her which girls to cultivate,
-and she was intimate only with the right sort of New
-York girls.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I expect she has been indiscreet,&#8221; said I. &#8220;They&#8217;ve
-found out why she made friends with them and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>&#8220;You will drive me crazy!&#8221; cried Edna. &#8220;<i>Can&#8217;t</i>
-you understand? All the mothers and the governesses&mdash;all
-the grown people in respectable families teach the
-children. Those mothers who don&#8217;t teach it directly see
-that it&#8217;s taught by the governesses, or else select the
-proper friends for their little girls and see that they
-drop any who aren&#8217;t proper.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I dropped back in my chair. I was stunned. It
-seemed to me I had never heard anything quite so infamous
-in my life. And as I reflected on what she had
-said I wondered that I had not realized it before. I
-recalled a hundred significant facts that had come out
-in talks I had had with men, women, and children in
-this fashionable world from which we were excluded,
-yet with which we were in constant and close communication.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The question is, what are <i>you</i> going to do,&#8221; proceeded
-Edna.</p>
-
-<p>I shook my head, probably looking as dazed as I
-felt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What does that headshake mean?&#8221; demanded she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>You</i>&mdash;taught <i>Margot</i> to be a&mdash;a&mdash;like those
-other girls?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you fool!&#8221; cried Edna. And in excuse for
-her, please remember I had ever been a dotingly bored
-slave of hers&mdash;as uxorious a husband as you ever saw&mdash;and
-therefore inevitably despised, for women have so
-little intelligence that they despise a man who loves
-them and lets them rule. &#8220;You fool!&#8221; she repeated.
-&#8220;Yes, I brought her up like a lady&mdash;taught her to
-cultivate nice things and nice people. What should I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-teach her? To associate with common people? To drop
-back toward where we came from&mdash;where <i>you</i> belong?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I guess I do,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>Up to that time I had interested myself in only one
-aspect of human nature&mdash;the aspect that concerned me
-as a business man. But from that time I began to study
-the human animal in all his&mdash;and her&mdash;aspects. And it
-was not long before I learned what that animal is forced
-to become when exposed to the powerful thrusts and
-temptings of wealth and social position. In our alternations
-of pride and humility we habitually take undue
-credit or give undue blame to ourselves for what is
-wholly the result of circumstance. The truth is, we are
-like flocks of birds in a high wind. Some of us fly more
-steadily than others, some are quite beaten down, others
-seem almost self-directing; but all, great and small,
-weak and strong, are controlled by the wind, and those
-who make the best showing are those who adapt themselves
-most skillfully to the will of the wind.</p>
-
-<p>At the time when Edna and I were talking I had
-not become a philosopher. I was in the primitive stages
-of development in which most men and nearly all women
-remain their whole lives through&mdash;the stage in which
-you live, gentle reader, with your shallow mistaken notions
-of what is and your shallower mistaken notions
-of what ought to be. So, as Edna uncovered herself
-to me, I shrank in horror. It was fortunate&mdash;for her,
-at least&mdash;that I had always trained myself never to
-make hasty speeches. My expertness in that habit has
-probably been the principal cause of my business success,
-of my ability to outwit even abler men than myself.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-I did not yield to the impulse to burst out against her.
-I compressed my lips and silently watched as she lifted
-the veil over our family life and revealed to me the
-truth about it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What are you going to do?&#8221; she asked impatiently,
-yet with a certain uneasiness born no doubt of
-a something in my manner that made her vaguely afraid,
-for while she knew I was her slave and despised me, as
-I was to learn, for being so weak before a mere woman,
-she also knew that, outside of her domain, I was not her
-slave nor anybody&#8217;s, but planned and executed at the
-pleasure of my own will.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what I&#8217;m going to do,&#8221; said I slowly.
-&#8220;I must think. All this is new to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you haven&#8217;t any pride in yourself, or in me,&#8221;
-said she, &#8220;still you surely must have pride for Margot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think so,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you could know how they have made the poor
-child suffer!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I made no reply, nor did I encourage her to talk
-further. In fact, when she began again I stopped her
-with: &#8220;I&#8217;ve heard enough, my dear. And I&#8217;ve some
-important business to attend to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She, preparing to leave me alone with my papers,
-came and put her arms round my neck and pressed her
-cheek against mine. I think she was uneasy about the
-posture of the affair in my mind&mdash;feared stupid commercial
-I could not appreciate these vital things of life.
-I suspect my tranquil reception of her caresses did not
-tend to allay her uneasiness. Never before had she
-failed to interest me in her physical self; and the only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-reason she then failed was that in the general upsetting
-of all my ideas of what my family life was there had
-been tossed up to the surface an undefined suspicion of
-her sincerity as a wife. I was not altogether blind as
-to the relations of men and women, as to the fact that
-women often coolly played upon the passions of men
-for their own purposes of money getting in its various
-forms. My wife was right in her sneer at the innocence
-of married men. But there are exceptions, and a woman
-with a husband intelligent in every way except in seeing
-through women would do well to take care how she
-tempts his intelligence to shake off its indifference in
-that respect.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning I was breakfasting alone as usual.
-No, gentle reader, I am not girding at my poor wife
-as you hastily accuse. I am sure I do not deceive myself
-when I say I never was of those men who fuss about
-trifles. Thank heaven, as soon as we had a servant my
-wife kept away from breakfast. It was one of the things
-I loved her for. If I had been married to a woman who
-appeared at breakfast looking lovely and smiling sweetly,
-I should have become a bad-tempered tyrant. I
-want no sentimentalities in the early-morning hours. I
-wake up uncomfortable and sour, and I quarrel with
-myself and look about for trouble until I have had
-something to eat and coffee. Further in the same direction,
-I took particular pleasure in my wife&#8217;s small personal
-slovenlinesses, in her curl papers, in her occasional
-overlaying of her face with cold cream and the like, in
-her careless negligee worn in her own rooms. There is, I
-guess, no nature so prodigal that it has not some small<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-economies. Edna had, probably still has, a fondness
-for wearing out thoroughly, in secluded privacy, house
-dresses, underclothes, and night gowns.</p>
-
-<p>It took nothing from my delight in her beauty that
-she was not invariably beautiful. I&#8217;ve rarely seen her
-lovely early in the morning. Who is? I should have
-taken habitual early-morning loveliness as a personal
-insult. I&#8217;ve seen her homely all day long, and for several
-days at a time. She was as attractive to me than
-as at her most beautiful. I detest monotony. Thank
-heaven, she was never monotonous to look at; one rather
-expects <i>mental</i> monotony in women unless one is a fool.
-I didn&#8217;t mind her times of homeliness, because she could
-be so far, far the opposite of homely. I did not mind her
-way of getting herself up in odds and ends, mussily,
-but, mind you, never after the Passaic days unclean&mdash;never!
-I did not mind her dishevelments because, when
-she set out to dress, she did it so bang up well. She
-was born with a talent for dress; she rapidly developed
-it into an art. You know what I mean. You&#8217;ve seen
-the girl with hardly five dollars&#8217; worth of clothing on
-her, including the hat, yet making the woman from the
-best dressmaker in Paris look a frump.</p>
-
-<p>I never had to join the innumerable and pitiful army
-of men who give the woman their money to squander
-upon bad fits and bad taste, and are bowed down with
-shame when they have to issue forth with her. I can
-honestly say, and Edna will bear me out, that I gave
-her money freely. No doubt the reason in part was I
-found it so easy to make money that I was indifferent
-to extravagance. But the chief reason, I believe, was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-Edna&#8217;s skill at dress. The woman who is physically
-alluring to her husband, and who knows how to dress,
-rarely has difficulty in getting money from him, though
-he be a miser. But, gentle lady reader, can you in your
-heart blame a man for grudging his earnings to a
-woman who isn&#8217;t fit to dress and who doesn&#8217;t know how,
-either?</p>
-
-<p>As I had begun to tell when I interrupted myself, I
-was breakfasting alone the morning after that memorable
-talk with Edna, and Margot came down to
-glance in for a smile at me on her way to school.</p>
-
-<p>In theory Margot was still classed as a child, and
-would be so classed for two years longer. In fact she
-was, and had been for two years and more, a full-fledged
-young lady. That is the way American children of the
-rank for which my wife was training Margot are being
-brought up nowadays. She had her own apartment,
-dressing room and bath, sitting room, reception room&mdash;as
-many rooms as my wife and I had altogether when
-we began married life, and about four times the room.
-As for luxury, a comparison would be ridiculous. Also
-Margot had her own staff of servants&mdash;companion,
-maid, maid&#8217;s assistant&mdash;and her own automobile with
-chauffeur, used by no one else. It would be hard to find
-more helpless creatures than these young aspirants to
-aristocracy. And they prided themselves upon their ignorance
-of the realities, and their mothers, often with hypocritical
-pretense of distress, boasted it. At that time
-I thought it amusing. The serious side of it was entirely
-out of my range. We American men of the comfortable
-and luxurious classes are addicted to the habit of regarding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-our wives and children as toys, as mere sources
-of amusement not to be taken seriously. It isn&#8217;t strange
-that the children should not mind this, but what a commentary
-upon the real mentality of the women that they
-tolerate and encourage it! Our women are always,
-with a fine show of earnestness, demanding that they be
-taken seriously. But woe unto the man who believes
-them in earnest and tries to treat them as his equals
-instead of as dainty toys, odalisques. How he will be
-denounced, hated, and, if proper alimony can be got,
-divorced!</p>
-
-<p>Margot&#8217;s parties differed in no respect from grown-up
-parties, except that there were restrictions in the
-matter of hours and also as to the serving of drinks.
-For, I believe my wife did not follow the extreme of
-fashionable custom, but forbade wines and punch at
-these parties. In this matter, as in the matter of using
-slang and in many others, she held that only people of
-long-established social position, people with what is
-called tradition, could safely make excursions beyond
-the bounds of conventionality; that it was safest, wisest
-for people like herself to stay well within the bounds, to
-be prim even, and so to avoid any possible criticism as
-vulgar. A very shrewd woman was Edna. If her intelligence
-had been equal to her shrewdness and energy,
-and if she had possessed a gleam of the sense of humor!
-However&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>In no essential respect did Margot&#8217;s routine of life
-differ from that of her mother&mdash;and her mother&#8217;s routine
-of inane and worthless time-killing was modeled
-exactly upon that of all the fashionable women and apers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-of fashionable women. Edna did a vast amount of
-studying, with and without teachers. It was all shallow
-and showy. Margot&#8217;s studies were also beneath contempt.
-I amused myself from time to time by inquiring&mdash;with
-pretense of gravity&mdash;into what they were
-teaching her at the Ryper school for the turning out of
-fashionable womanhood. Such a mess of trash! She
-was learning much about social usages, from how to sit
-in a carriage&mdash;a rare art that, I assure you, gentle
-reader&mdash;to how to receive guests at a large dinner.
-She was studying some of the vulgarities&mdash;science, history,
-literature, and the like&mdash;but in no vulgar way.
-She would get only the thinnest smatter of talkable stuff
-about them&mdash;nothing &#8220;unsettling,&#8221; nothing that might
-possibly rouse the mind to think or distract the attention
-from the &#8220;high&#8221; things of life. She was dabbling
-in music, in drawing, in several similar costly fripperies.
-And the sum total of expense!&mdash;well, no wonder Miss
-Ryper was fast becoming as rich as some of the asteroids
-in the plutocracy she adored.</p>
-
-<p>I regarded Margot&#8217;s education as a species of
-joke. It never occurred to me that our pretty baby
-had the right to be educated to become a wife and a
-mother. And why should it have occurred to me?
-Where is that being done? Who is thinking of it? In
-all the oceans of twaddle about the elevation of woman
-where is there a drop of good sense about <i>real</i> education?
-You say I was criminally negligent as to my
-daughter&#8217;s education. But how about your own? The
-truth is, we all still look upon education as a frill, an
-ornament. We never think of it, whether for our sons<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-or for our daughters, as nothing more or less than
-teaching a human being how to live. It is high time to
-end this idiotic ignorant exaltation of tomfoolery into
-culture!</p>
-
-<p>Poor Margot! How the little girls in plain clothes&mdash;and
-machine-made underwear&mdash;must have envied her
-as she swept along in her limousine, dressed with that
-enormously costly simplicity which only the rich can afford.
-No wonder many of the other girls at the Ryper
-school hated her. For, her mother was in one respect
-unlike most of the fashionable mothers who are too busy
-doing things not worth doing to attend to their children.
-Her mother gave her loving care, spent many hours&mdash;of
-anxious thought, no doubt&mdash;in planning to make her the
-most luxurious, the most helpless, the most envied girl
-in the school. We hear unendingly about the good that
-love does in the world. Not too much&mdash;no, indeed!
-But at the same time might it not be well if we also
-heard about the harm love can do&mdash;and does? How
-many sons and daughters have been ruined by loving
-parents! How many husbands have been wrecked by
-the flatteries and the assiduities of loving wives! How
-many wives have been lured to decay and destruction
-by the over-indulgent love of their husbands! What we
-need in this world is not more sentiment, but more intelligence.
-Sentiment is a force that rushes far and
-crazily in <i>both</i> directions, gentle reader, unless it has
-well-balanced intelligence to guide it.</p>
-
-<p>Margot, smiling in the doorway of the breakfast
-room, put me at once into a less somber humor. She
-was tall and slim&mdash;an inch taller than her mother and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-with the same supple, well-proportioned figure. She had
-her mother&#8217;s small, tip-tilted face and luminous eyes,
-but they were of an intense dark gray that gave her
-an expression of poetic thoughtfulness and mystery.
-Whiter or more perfectly formed teeth I have never
-seen. In former days children&#8217;s teeth were neglected.
-But my wife, with her peculiar reach for all matters
-having to do with appearances, had learned the modern
-methods of caring for the body when Margot was still
-in the period when the body is almost as formable as
-sculptor&#8217;s clay. Thus Margot&#8217;s teeth had been looked
-after and made perfect and kept so. Her hair hung
-loose upon her shoulders like a wonderful changeable
-veil of golden brown. Often at first glance you are
-dazzled by these carefully fed and carefully groomed
-children of the rich, only to note at the second glance
-that the best showing has been made of precious little
-in the way of natural charm. But this was not true of
-Margot. The longer you looked, and the more attentively,
-the finer she seemed to be&mdash;like a rare perfect
-specimen from a connoisseur&#8217;s greenhouses. There&#8217;s no
-doubt about it, Edna did know the physical side of life.
-She would have got notable results even had we been
-poor. As it was, with all the money she cared to spend,
-she performed what looked like miracles.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come and kiss me, Margot,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She obeyed, with a charming air of restrained eagerness
-that is regarded as ladylike. &#8220;My car is waiting,&#8221;
-said she. &#8220;I&#8217;m late.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is that Therese&#8221;&mdash;her maid&mdash;&#8220;out in the hall
-waiting to go with you?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>&#8220;Yes. Miss Parnell&#8221;&mdash;her companion&mdash;&#8220;has a
-headache, poor creature!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot had caught to perfection the refined, elegant,
-fashionable tone of speaking of the servile classes.
-Though I was in a critical mood that morning, I was
-not critical of my beloved little Margot, and her airs
-entertained me as much as ever. Said I:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sit down, little duchess&#8221;&mdash;the familiar name
-slipped out unconsciously&mdash;&#8220;and talk to me a few
-minutes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;m shockingly late, papa,&#8221; pleaded she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No matter. I&#8217;ll telephone Miss Ryper, if you
-wish.&#8221; To the butler, who was serving me: &#8220;Sackville,
-go tell Therese that I&#8217;m detaining Miss Margot. And
-close the door behind you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Sackville retired. Margot seated herself with alacrity.
-She did not like her useless school any better than
-other children like more or less useful schools. &#8220;Are
-you taking me to the theater Saturday afternoon, as
-you promised?&#8221; said she. &#8220;And do get a box and let
-me ask two of the girls.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly,&#8221; said I. &#8220;If I can&#8217;t go, Miss Parnell
-will chaperon you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I want you, papa. It&#8217;s so nice to have a man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How are you getting on at school? Not with the
-studies&#8221;&mdash;I laughed at the absurdity of calling her
-fiddle-faddle studies&mdash;&#8220;but with the girls?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her face clouded. &#8220;Has mamma told you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Told me what?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go on, dear,&#8221; said I. &#8220;What&#8217;s the trouble?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s always the same thing,&#8221; she sighed, with
-a grown-up air that was both humorous and pathetic.
-&#8220;Some of the girls are down on me&mdash;about&mdash;about
-social position. You see, we don&#8217;t go <i>socially</i> with their
-families.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why should we?&#8221; said I. &#8220;We don&#8217;t know them
-nor they us. Naturally, they don&#8217;t care anything about
-us, nor we about them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She hung her head. &#8220;But I want to go with them,&#8221;
-said she doggedly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because&mdash;because&mdash;it&#8217;s the proper thing to do. If
-you don&#8217;t go with them everybody looks down on you.&#8221;
-She lifted her head, and her flashing eyes reminded me
-of her mother. &#8220;It makes me just <i>wild</i> to be looked
-down on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should say so,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Those little girls at
-Miss Ryper&#8217;s must be an ill-bred lot. We must take
-you away from there and put you in a school with nice
-girls.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no, father!&#8221; she cried in a panic. &#8220;Those
-girls are the <i>nicest</i>&mdash;the only nice girls in any school
-in New York. All the other schools look up to ours.
-I&#8217;d cry my eyes out in any other school.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d feel&mdash;<i>low</i>.&#8221; Her eyes had filled and her cheeks
-were flushed. &#8220;I&#8217;d be out of place except among the
-richest and most aristocratic girls.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you don&#8217;t like them,&#8221; said I gently. I began
-to feel a sensation of sickness at the heart.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I <i>hate</i> them!&#8221; cried she with passionate energy.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-&#8220;But I want to stay on there and <i>make</i> them be friendly
-with me. I&#8217;ve got too much pride, papa, to run away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pride,&#8221; said I, and my tone must have been sad.
-&#8220;That isn&#8217;t pride, dear. You ought to choose your
-friends by liking. You ought to feel above girls with
-such cheap ideas.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;m not above them,&#8221; protested she. &#8220;And
-I couldn&#8217;t like any girl I&#8217;d be ashamed to be seen with,
-unless she were a sort of servant. Oh, papa, you don&#8217;t
-appreciate how proud I am.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Proud of what, dear? Of your parents? Of yourself?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She hung her head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of what, dear?&#8221; I urged.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It hurts me not to be treated as&mdash;as the inside
-clique of girls in our secret society treat each other.&#8221;
-She was almost crying. &#8220;They don&#8217;t even call me by
-my first name any more. They speak to me as Miss
-Loring&mdash;and <i>so</i> politely&mdash;exactly as I speak to Miss
-Parnell or one of the teachers or a servant. Oh, I&#8217;m
-so proud! I&#8217;d love to be like Gracie Fortescue. She
-speaks even to Miss Ryper as I would to Miss Parnell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My digestion wasn&#8217;t any too good, even in those
-days. My whole breakfast suddenly went wrong&mdash;turned
-to poison inside me, I suppose. A hot wave of
-rage against I knew not whom or what rolled up into
-my brain. I pushed away my plate abruptly. &#8220;Run
-along, child,&#8221; I said in a hoarse voice I did not recognize
-as my own.</p>
-
-<p>She threw her arms round my neck with a gesture
-and an expression that made me realize how close a copy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-of her mother she was. &#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t take me away
-from my school, would you, papa dear?&#8221; she pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All I want is to make you happy,&#8221; said I, patting
-and stroking that thick and lovely veil of flowing hair.</p>
-
-<p>She assumed that I meant she was to stay on with
-the viperous Ryper brood, and went away almost happy.
-She had awakened to the fact that there were fates
-even worse than being snubbed and addressed like a
-teacher or a companion or a servant or some other lower
-animal&mdash;yes, far worse fates. For instance, not being
-able to feel that she was, on whatever degrading terms,
-at least associated with the adored fashionables.</p>
-
-<p>That evening when my wife again accompanied me
-to my study, after dinner, I said to her:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been turning over our talk last night. I
-haven&#8217;t been able to reach a conclusion as yet, except
-on one point. I can&#8217;t help you socially in the way you
-suggested.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I glanced at her as I said this. She was looking at
-me. Her pale, intense expression fascinated me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think you have thought about it fully,&#8221;
-said she slowly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said I, with my utmost deliberateness; &#8220;and
-my decision is final.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She rose, stood beside her chair, rubbing her hand
-softly along the top of the back. &#8220;Very well,&#8221; said
-she quietly. And she left me alone.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">V</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> refusing Edna her heart&#8217;s desire thus promptly
-and tersely I had an object. I assumed she would protest
-and argue; in the discussion that would follow some
-light might come to me, utterly befogged as to what
-course to take about my family affairs. I knew something
-should be done&mdash;something quick and drastic.
-But what? It was no new experience to me to be faced
-with complex and well-nigh impossible situations. My
-business life had been a succession of such experiences.
-And while I had learned much as to handling them, I
-had also learned how dangerous it is to rush in recklessly
-and to begin action before one has discovered what to
-do&mdash;and what <i>not</i> to do. The world is full of Hasty
-Hals and Hatties who pride themselves on their emergency
-minds, on knowing just what to do in any situation
-the instant it arises; and fine spectacles they are,
-lying buried and broken amid the ruins they have aggravated
-if not created.</p>
-
-<p>How recover my wife? How rescue my daughter?
-I could think of no plan&mdash;of no beginning toward a
-plan. And when Edna, by receiving my refusal in cold
-silence, defeated my hope of a possibly illuminating discussion,
-I did not know which way to turn.</p>
-
-<p>Why had I refused to help her in the way she suggested?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-Not on moral grounds, gentle reader. There
-I should have been as free from scruple as you yourself
-would have been, as you perhaps have been in your social
-climbing or maneuvering in your native town, wherever
-it is. Nor yet through fear of failure. I did not
-know the social game, but I did know something of
-human nature. And I had found out that the triumphant
-class, far from being the gentlest and most civilized,
-as its dominant position in civilization would indicate,
-was in fact the most barbarous, was saturated
-with the raw savage spirit of the right of might. I
-am speaking of actualities, not of pretenses&mdash;of deeds,
-not of words. To find a class approaching it in frank
-savagery of will and action you would have to descend
-through the social strata until you came to the class
-that wields the blackjack and picks pockets and dynamites
-safes. The triumphant class became triumphant
-not by refinement and courtesy and consideration, but
-by defiance of those fundamentals of civilization&mdash;by
-successful defiance of them. It remained the triumphant
-class by keeping that primal savagery of nature. As
-soon as any member of it began to grow tame&mdash;gentle,
-considerate, except where consideration for others would
-increase his own wealth and power, became really a disciple
-of the sweet gospel he professed and urged upon
-others&mdash;just so soon did he begin to lose his wealth into
-the strong unscrupulous hands ever reaching for it&mdash;and
-with waning wealth naturally power and prestige
-waned.</p>
-
-<p>No, I did not refuse because I thought the triumphant
-class would contemptuously repel any attempt to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-carry its social doors by assault. I saw plainly enough
-that I could compel enough of these society leaders to
-receive my wife and daughters to insure their position.
-You have seen swine gathered about a trough, comfortably
-swilling; you have seen a huge porker come running
-with angry squeal to join the banquet. You have
-observed how rudely, how fiercely he is resented and
-fought off by the others. This, until he by biting and
-thrusting has made a place for himself; then the fact
-that he is an intruder and the method of his getting a
-place are forgotten, and the swilling goes peacefully
-forward. So it is, gentle reader, though it horrifies your
-hypocrisy to be told it, so do human beings conduct
-themselves round a financial or political or social swill
-trough. I should have had small difficulty in biting and
-kicking a satisfactory place for Edna and Margot at
-the social swill trough; I should have had no difficulty
-at all in keeping it for them. But&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>You will be incredulous, gentle reader, devoured of
-snobbishness and dazzled by what you have heard and
-read of the glories of fashionable society in the metropolis.
-You will be incredulous, because you, too,
-like the overwhelming majority of the comfortable
-classes in this great democracy&mdash;and many of the not
-so comfortable classes as well&mdash;because you, too, are
-infected of the mania for looking about for some one
-who refuses to associate with you on the ground that
-you are &#8220;common,&#8221; and for straightway making it
-your heart&#8217;s dearest desire to compel that person to
-associate with you. You will be incredulous when I
-tell you my sole reason was my hatred and horror of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-what seemed to me the degrading, vulgar, and rotten
-longings that filled my wife and that had infected my
-daughter. That hatred and horror had thrown me
-into a state of mind I did not dare confess to myself.
-You are incredulous; but perhaps you will admit I may
-be truthful when I explain that the reason for my moral
-and sentimental revolt was perhaps in large part my
-dense ignorance of the whole society side of life.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt in the Passaic public school of my boyhood
-there had been as much snobbishness as there is
-in Fifth Avenue. But I had somehow never happened
-to notice it. It must have been there; it must be elemental
-in human nature; how else account for my wife?
-We hear more about the snobbishness of Fifth Avenue
-than we do about the snobbishness of the tenements.
-But that is solely because Fifth Avenue is more conspicuous.
-Also, Fifth Avenue, supposedly educated,
-supposedly broadened by knowledge and taste, has no
-excuse for petty vanities that belong only to the ignorant.
-And if Fifth Avenue were really educated, really
-had knowledge and taste, it could not be snobbish.
-However, my busy life had never been touched by social
-snobbishness. I preferred to know and to associate
-with men better educated and richer than I, but for
-excellent practical reasons&mdash;because from such men I
-could get the knowledge and the wealth I needed. But
-I would not have wasted a moment of my precious time
-upon the men most exalted in fashionable life&mdash;the ignorant
-incompetents who had inherited their wealth.
-They seemed ridiculous and worthless to me, a man of
-thought and action.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>So, the sudden exposure of my wife&#8217;s and my little
-girl&#8217;s disease gave me a shock hardly to be measured
-by the man or woman used all his life to the social
-craze. It was much as if I had suddenly seen upon
-their bared bosoms the disgusting ravages of cancer.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As I could not devise any line of action that, however
-faintly, promised results, I kept away from home.
-I absorbed myself in some new enterprises that filled
-my evenings, which I spent at my club with the men
-I drew into them. At the mention of club, gentle
-reader, I see your ears pricking. You are wondering
-what sort of club <i>I</i> belonged to. I shall explain.</p>
-
-<p>It was the Amsterdam Club. You may have seen
-and gawked at its vast and imposing red sandstone
-front in middle Fifth Avenue. As you drove by in the
-&#8220;rubber-neck&#8221; wagon, the man with the megaphone
-may have shouted: &#8220;The Amsterdam Club, otherwise
-known as the Palace of Plutocracy. The total wealth
-of its members is one tenth of the total wealth of the
-United States. Every great millionaire in New York
-City belongs to it. The reason you see no one in the
-magnificent windows is because the plutocrats are afraid
-of cranks with pistol or bomb.&#8221; And you stared and
-envied and craned your neck backward as the sight-seeing
-car rolled on. A fairly accurate description
-of my club. But you will calm as I go on to tell
-you the inside truth about it. It was built to provide
-a club for those rich men of New York who had no
-social position, and so could not be admitted to the
-fashionable clubs. It was not built by those outcasts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-for whom it was intended, but by the rich men of the
-fashionable world. They did not build it out of pity
-nor yet out of generosity, but for freedom and convenience.</p>
-
-<p>You must know that the rich, both the fashionables
-and the excludeds, are intimately associated in business.
-Now, in the days before the Amsterdam Club, if a rich
-fashionable wished to talk business out of office hours
-with a rich unfashionable, he had to take him to his
-home or to his club, one or the other. You will readily
-appreciate that either course involved disagreeable complications.
-The rich unfashionable would say: &#8220;Why
-am I not invited to this snob&#8217;s house <i>socially</i>? Why
-does not this hound see that I am elected to his elegant
-club? I&#8217;ll teach this wrinkle-snout how to spit at me.
-I&#8217;ll slip a stiletto into his back, damn him.&#8221; As the
-number of rich unfashionables increased, as the number
-of stealthy financial stilettoings for social insult grew
-and swelled, the demand for a &#8220;way out&#8221; became more
-clamorous and panicky. The final result was the Amsterdam
-Club&mdash;perhaps by inspiration, perhaps by accident.
-And so it has come to pass that now, when a
-rich fashionable wishes to talk finance with a rich pariah,
-he does not have to run the risk of defiling his home or
-his exclusive club. With the gracious cordiality wherefor
-aristocracy is famed in song and story, he says:
-&#8220;Let us go to <i>our</i> club&#8221;&mdash;for, the rich fashionables see
-to it that every rich pariah is elected to the Amsterdam
-immediately he becomes a person of financial consequence.
-And I fancy that not one in ten of the rich
-pariah members dreams how he is being insulted and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-tricked. All, or nearly all, imagine they are elected by
-favor of the great fashionable plutocrats to about the
-most exclusive club in New York. Also, not one in a
-dozen of the fashionable members appreciates how he is
-degrading himself&mdash;for, to my quaint mind, the snob
-degrades only himself.</p>
-
-<p>Well! Not many months after we moved from
-Brooklyn to Manhattan I was elected to the Amsterdam&mdash;I,
-in serene ignorance of the trick that was being
-played upon me by my sponsors, associates in large
-financial deals and members of several exclusive really
-fashionable clubs. They pulled regretful faces as they
-talked of the &#8220;long waiting lists at most of the clubs.&#8221;
-They brightened as they spoke of the Amsterdam&mdash;&#8220;the
-finest and, take it all round, the most satisfactory
-of the whole bunch, old man. And we believe we&#8217;ve got
-pull enough to put you in there pretty soon. We&#8217;ll
-work it, somehow.&#8221; If I had known the shrivel-hearted
-trick behind their genial friendliness, I should not have
-minded, should probably have laughed. For, human littlenesses
-do not irritate me; and I have a vanity&mdash;I
-prefer to call it a pride&mdash;that lifts me out of their
-reach. I am of the one aristocracy that is truly exclusive,
-the only one that needs no artificial barriers
-to keep it so. But I shall not bore you, gentle reader,
-by explaining about it. You are interested only in the
-aristocracies of rank and title and wealth that are nothing
-but the tawdry realization of the tawdry fancies of
-the yokel among his kine and the scullery maid among
-her pots. For, who but a tossed-up yokel or scullery
-maid would indulge in such vulgarities as sitting upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-a gold throne or living in a draughty, cheerless palace
-or seeking to make himself more ridiculous by aggravating
-his littleness with a title, like the ass in the lion&#8217;s
-skin? Did it ever occur to you, gentle reader, that
-aristocracy is essentially common, essentially vulgar?
-To a large vision the distinction between king and
-carpenter, between the man with a million dollars and
-the million men with one dollar looks trivial and unimportant.
-Only a squat and squinting soul in a cellar
-and blinking through the twilight could discover agitating
-differences of rank between Fifth Avenue and
-Grand Street, between first floor front and attic rear,
-between flesh ripening to rot in silk and flesh ripening
-to rot in cotton. To an infinitesimal insect an
-infinite gulf yawns between the molecules of a razor&#8217;s
-edge.</p>
-
-<p>I often found my club a convenience, for in those
-busiest days of my financial career I had much private
-conferring&mdash;or conspiring, if you choose. Never had
-I found it so convenient as when for the first time there
-was pain and shrinking at the thought of going home,
-of seeing my wife and Margot. My Margot! When
-she was a baby how proudly I had wheeled her along
-the sidewalks of Passaic in the showy perambulator we
-bought for her&mdash;and the twenty-five dollars it cost
-loomed mighty big even to Edna. And in Brooklyn,
-what happy Sundays Edna and I had had with her,
-when I would hire a buggy at the livery stable round
-the corner and we would go out for the day to some
-Long Island woods; or when we would take her down
-to the respectable end of Coney Island to dig in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-sand and to wade after the receding tide. My Margot!
-No longer mine; never again to be mine.</p>
-
-<p>One evening I had an appointment at the Amsterdam
-with a Western millionaire, Charles Murdock, whom
-I had interested in a Canada railway to tap a Hudson
-Bay spruce forest. He was having trouble with his
-wife and something of it had come out in the afternoon
-newspapers. At the last moment his secretary&mdash;who,
-by the way, afterwards married the divorced Mrs. Murdock&mdash;telephoned
-that Murdock could not keep his engagement
-to dine. I looked about for some one to
-help me eat the dinner I had ordered. There are never
-many disengaged men in the Amsterdam. The fashionable
-rich come only when they have business with the
-pariahs. The pariahs prefer their own houses or the
-barrooms and caf&eacute;s of the big hotels. I therefore
-thought myself lucky when I found Bob Armitage
-sulking in a huge leather chair and got him to share
-my dinner. Armitage was one of my railway directors.
-He had helped me carry through the big stroke that
-made me, had joined in half a dozen of my enterprises
-in all of which I had been successful. There was no
-man of my acquaintance I knew and liked so well as
-Armitage. Yet it had so happened that we had never
-talked much with each other, except about business.</p>
-
-<p>It promised to be a silent dinner. He was as deep
-in his thoughts as I was in mine&mdash;and our faces showed
-that neither of us was cogitating anything cheerful.
-On impulse I suddenly said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bob, do you know about fashionable New York
-society?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>I knew that he did; that is to say, I had often
-heard he was one of the heavy swells, having all three
-titles to fashion&mdash;wealth, birth, and marriage. But I
-now pretended ignorance of the fact; when you wish
-to inform yourself thoroughly on a subject you should
-always select an expert, tell him you know nothing and
-bid him enlighten you from the alphabet up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why do you ask?&#8221; said Armitage. &#8220;Do you
-want to get in? I had a notion you didn&#8217;t care for
-society&mdash;you and your wife.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Armitage didn&#8217;t go to Holy Cross, but to St. Bartholomew&#8217;s.
-So he had never known of my wife&#8217;s activities,
-knew only the sort of man I was.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I forgot,&#8221; he went on. &#8220;You&#8217;ve a daughter
-almost grown. I suppose you want her looked after.
-All right. I&#8217;ll attend to it for you. Your wife won&#8217;t
-mind my wife&#8217;s calling? I&#8217;d have sent her long ago&mdash;in
-fact, I apologize for not having done it. But I
-hate the fashionable crowd. They bore me. However,
-your wife may like them. Women usually do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was at my lips to thank him and decline his
-offer. Then it flashed into my mind that perhaps my
-one hope of getting back my wife and daughter, of
-restoring them to sanity, lay in letting them have what
-they wanted. Another sort of man might have deluded
-himself with the notion that he could set his foot down,
-stamp out revolt, compel his family to do as he willed.
-But I happen not to be of that instinctively tyrannical
-and therefore inherently stupid temperament.</p>
-
-<p>Armitage ate in silence for a few moments, then
-said:</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>&#8220;I&#8217;ll have you elected to the Federal Club.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This club is all I need,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled sardonically. I didn&#8217;t understand that
-smile then, because I didn&#8217;t know anything about caste
-in New York. &#8220;You let me look after you,&#8221; said he.
-&#8220;You&#8217;re a child in the social game.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve no objection to remaining so,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite right. There&#8217;s nothing in it,&#8221; said he.
-&#8220;But you must remember you&#8217;re living in a world of
-rather cheap fools, and they are impressed by that
-nothing. On the other side of the Atlantic the social
-prizes have a large substantial value. Over here the
-value&#8217;s small. Still it&#8217;s something. You wouldn&#8217;t refuse
-even a trading stamp, would you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;I refuse nothing,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I take
-whatever&#8217;s offered me. If I find I don&#8217;t want it, why,
-what&#8217;s easier than to throw it away?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I&#8217;ll put you in the Federal Club. You could
-have made me do it, if you had happened to want it.
-So, why shouldn&#8217;t I do it anyhow, in appreciation
-of your forbearance? You don&#8217;t realize, but I&#8217;m
-doing for you what about two thirds of the members
-of this club would lick my boots to get me to do
-for them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I had no idea the taste for shoe polish was so general
-here,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a human taste, my dear Loring,&#8221; replied he.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s as common as the taste for bread. All the men
-have it. As for the women they like nothing so well.
-Having one&#8217;s boots licked is the highest human joy.
-Next comes licking boots.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>&#8220;You don&#8217;t believe that?&#8221; said I, for his tone was
-almost too bitter for jest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You aren&#8217;t acquainted with your kind, old man,&#8221;
-retorted he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know the kind you know,&#8221; said I. And
-then I remembered my wife and my daughter. There
-must be truth in what Armitage had said; for, my
-beautiful wife and my sweet daughter, both looking
-so proud&mdash;surely they could not be rare exceptions
-in their insensibility to what seemed to me elemental
-self-respect.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t know your kind,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;because
-you don&#8217;t indulge in cringing and don&#8217;t encourage it.
-You&#8217;re like the cold, pure-minded woman who goes
-through the world imagining it a chaste and austere
-place because her very face silences and awes sensuality.
-You are part of the small advance guard of a race that
-is to come.&#8221; He grinned satirically. &#8220;Perhaps you&#8217;ll
-drop out in the next few months. We&#8217;ll see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When the silence was again broken, it was broken
-by me. &#8220;Do you know a school kept by a woman named
-Ryper?&#8221; I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure I do,&#8221; replied he. He gave me a shrewd
-laughing glance. &#8220;The daughter isn&#8217;t learning anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing but mischief,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what Ryper&#8217;s for. But what does it matter?
-Why should a woman learn anything? They&#8217;re
-of no consequence. The less a man has to do with them
-the better off he will be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re of the highest consequence,&#8221; said I bitterly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-&#8220;They have the control of the coming generation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And a hell of a generation it&#8217;s to be,&#8221; cried he,
-suddenly rousing from the state of bored apathy in
-which he seemed to pass most of his time. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got
-me started on the subject that&#8217;s a craze with me. I
-have only one strong feeling&mdash;and that is my contempt
-for woman&mdash;the American woman. I&#8217;m not speaking
-about the masses. They don&#8217;t count. They never did.
-They never will. No one counts until he gets some education
-and some property. I suppose the women of
-the masses do as well as could be expected. But how
-about the women of the classes with education and property?
-Do you know why the world advances so slowly?&mdash;why
-the upper classes are always tumbling back and
-everything has to be begun all over again?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve a suspicion,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Because the men are
-fools about the women.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The sex question!&#8221; cried Armitage. &#8220;That&#8217;s
-the only question worth agitating about. Until it&#8217;s
-settled&mdash;or begins to be settled&mdash;and settled right, it&#8217;s
-useless to attempt anything else. The men climb up.
-The women they take on their backs become a heavier
-and heavier burden&mdash;and down they both drop&mdash;and
-the children with them. Selfish, vain, extravagant mothers,
-crazy about snobbishness, bringing up their children
-in extravagance, ignorance and snobbishness&mdash;that&#8217;s
-America to-day!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The men are fools about the women, and they let
-the women make fools of themselves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The men are fools&mdash;but not about the women,&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-said Armitage. &#8220;How much time and thought for
-your family have you averaged daily in the last ten
-years?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been busy,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I&#8217;ve had to look out
-for the bread and butter, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Exactly!&#8221; exclaimed he, in triumph. &#8220;You
-think you&#8217;re fond of your family. No doubt you are.
-But the bottom truth is you&#8217;re indifferent to your family.
-I can prove it in a sentence: You attend to anything
-you care about; and you haven&#8217;t attended to
-them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I stared at him like a man dazzled by a sudden
-light&mdash;which, in fact, I was.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Guilty or not guilty?&#8221; said he, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Guilty,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The American man, too busy to be bothered,
-turns the American woman loose&mdash;gives her absolute
-freedom. And what is she? A child in education, a
-child in experience, a child in taste. He turns her
-loose, bids her do as she likes&mdash;and, up to the limit of
-his ability gives her all the money she wants. He prefers
-her a child. Her childishness rests his tired brain.
-And he doesn&#8217;t mind if she&#8217;s a little mischievous&mdash;that
-makes her more amusing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are married&mdash;have children,&#8221; said I, too
-serious to bother about tact. &#8220;How is it with you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He laughed cynically. &#8220;Don&#8217;t speak of my family,&#8221;
-said he. &#8220;I tried the other way. But I&#8217;ve given
-up&mdash;several years ago. What can <i>one</i> do in a crazy
-crowd?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much,&#8221; confessed I, deeply depressed.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>&#8220;The women stampede each other,&#8221; he went on.
-&#8220;Besides, no American woman&mdash;none that I know&mdash;has
-been brought up with education enough to enable
-her to make a life for herself, even when the man tries
-to help her. To like an occupation, to do anything
-at it, you&#8217;ve got to understand it. Being a husband
-and father is an occupation, the most important one
-in the world for a man. Being a wife and mother is
-an occupation&mdash;the most important one in the world
-for a woman. Are American men and women brought
-up to those occupations&mdash;trained in them&mdash;prepared
-for them? The most they know is a smatter at the
-pastime of lover and mistress&mdash;and they&#8217;re none too
-adept at that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I believe,&#8221; said I, &#8220;that in my whole life I&#8217;ve
-never learned so much in so short a time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;ll do you no good to have learned,&#8221; rejoined
-Armitage. &#8220;It will only make you sad or bitter, according
-to your mood. Or, perhaps some day you
-may reach my plane of indifference&mdash;and be amused.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing is hopeless,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The American woman is hopeless,&#8221; said he.
-&#8220;Her vanity is triple-plated, copper-riveted. She&#8217;s
-hopeless so long as the American man will give her the
-money to buy flattery at home and abroad; for, so long
-as you can buy flattery, you never find out the truth
-about yourself. And the American man will give her
-the money as long as he can, because it buys him peace
-and freedom. He doesn&#8217;t want to be bothered with the
-American woman&mdash;except when he&#8217;s in a certain mood
-that doesn&#8217;t last long.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>&#8220;There are exceptions,&#8221; said I&mdash;not clear as to
-what I meant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;there are exceptions,&#8221; said he. &#8220;There
-are American men who spend time with the American
-woman. And what does she do to them? Look at the
-poor asses!&mdash;neglecting their business, letting their
-minds go to seed. They don&#8217;t make her wise. She
-makes them foolish&mdash;as foolish as herself&mdash;and her
-children.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>You may perhaps imagine into what a state this
-talk of Armitage&#8217;s threw me. He was talking generalities.
-But every word he spoke went straight home to
-me. He had torn the coverings from my inmost family
-life, had exposed its soul, naked and ugly, to my fascinated
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>He finished dinner, lighted a cigarette&mdash;sat back
-watching me with a mysterious smile, half amused,
-wholly sympathetic, upon his handsome face, younger
-than his forty-five years&mdash;for he was considerably
-older than I. I was hardly more than barely conscious
-of that look of his, or of his presence. Suddenly I
-struck my fist with violence upon the arm of my chair.
-And I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I <i>will</i> do something! It is <i>not</i> hopeless!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head slowly, at the same time exhaling
-a cloud of smoke. &#8220;I tried, Godfrey,&#8221; said he,
-&#8220;and I had a better chance of success than you could
-possibly have. For my wife had been brought up by a
-sensible father and mother in a sensible way, and she
-had been used to fashionable society all her life and,
-when I married her, seemed to have proved herself immune.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>
-A few years and&mdash;&#8221; His cynical smile may
-not have been genuine. &#8220;She leads the simpletons.
-But you&#8217;ll see for yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When you know what to do, and feel as you do,&#8221;
-said I, &#8220;why did you suggest our going into your
-society?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t mine,&#8221; laughed he. &#8220;It&#8217;s my wife&#8217;s. It
-doesn&#8217;t belong to the men. It belongs to the women.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Into your wife&#8217;s society?&#8221; persisted I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why did I suggest it? Because I wished to
-please you, and I know you like to please your wife.
-And she&#8217;s an American woman&mdash;therefore, society
-mad. She has her daughter at the Ryper joint, hasn&#8217;t
-she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I sat morosely silent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, come now! Cheer up!&#8221; cried he, with laughing
-irony. &#8220;After all, you can&#8217;t blame the American
-woman. She has no training for the career of woman.
-She has no training for any serious career. She&#8217;s got
-to do something, hasn&#8217;t she? Well, what is there open
-to her but the career of lady? That doesn&#8217;t call for
-brains or for education or for taste. The dressmaker
-and milliner supply the toilet. The architect and decorator
-and housekeeper and staff supply the grand background.
-Father or husband supplies the cash. A dip
-into a novel or book of culture essays supplies the gibble-gabble.
-A nice easy profession, is lady&mdash;and universally
-admired and envied. No, Loring, it isn&#8217;t fair
-to blame her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We strolled down Fifth Avenue. After he had
-watched the stream of elegant carriages and automobiles,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-some of the too elegant automobiles having their
-interiors brightly lighted that the passersby might not
-fail to see the elaborate toilets of the occupants&mdash;after
-he had observed this procession of extravagance and
-vanity, with only an occasional derisive laugh or
-&#8220;Look there! Don&#8217;t miss that lady!&#8221; he burst out
-again in his pleasantly ironical tone:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How fat the women are getting!&mdash;the automobile
-women! And how the candy shops are multiplying.
-Candy and automobiles!&mdash;and culture. Let us not forget
-culture.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, indeed,&#8221; said I grimly. &#8220;Let&#8217;s not forget
-the culture.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was telling my wife yesterday,&#8221; said Armitage,
-&#8220;what culture is. It is talking in language that means
-nothing about things that mean less than nothing. But
-watch the ladies stream by, all got up in their gorgeous
-raiment and jewels. What have they ever done,
-what are they doing, that entitles them to so much more
-than their poor sisters scuffling along on the sidewalk
-here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ve talked and are talking about culture,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;And don&#8217;t forget charity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah&mdash;charity!&#8221; cried he gayly. &#8220;Thank you. I
-see we understand each other.&#8221; He linked his arm affectionately
-in mine. &#8220;Charity! It&#8217;s the other half
-of a lady&#8217;s occupation. Charity! Having no fancy
-for attending to her own business, she meddles in the
-business of the poor, tempting them to become liars
-and paupers. Your fine lady is a professional patronizer.
-She has no usefulness to contribute to the world.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-So, she patronizes&mdash;the arts with her culture&mdash;the
-poor with her charity, and the human race with her
-snobbishness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was so amused by his train of thought that he
-lapsed into silence the more fully to enjoy it; for, every
-thought has its shadings that cannot be expressed in
-words yet give the keenest enjoyment. When he spoke
-again, it was to repeat:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what have these ladies done to entitle them
-to this luxury? Are they, perchance, being paid for
-giving to the world, and for inspiring, the noble sons
-and daughters who drive coaches and marry titles?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what do we men do? What do <i>I</i> do&mdash;that
-entitles me to so much more than that chap perched
-on the hansom? I often think of it. Don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never,&#8221; laughed Armitage. &#8220;I never claw my
-own sore spots. There&#8217;s no fun in that. Always claw
-the other fellow&#8217;s. There&#8217;s a laugh and distraction for
-your own troubles in seeing him wince.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is that why you&#8217;ve been clawing mine?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>We were pausing before his big house, at the corner
-of the Avenue. &#8220;If I have been I didn&#8217;t know it,&#8221;
-said he. He glanced up at his windows with a satirical
-smile. &#8220;This evening I&#8217;ve been breaking my rule and
-clawing at my own.&#8221; He put out his hand. &#8220;Let the
-social business take its course,&#8221; advised he with impressive
-friendliness. &#8220;You and I can&#8217;t make the world
-over. To fight against the inevitable merely increases
-everyone&#8217;s discomfort.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps you&#8217;re right,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>I agreed with his conclusion that it was best to let<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-things alone, though I reached that conclusion by a
-different route. I had in mind my forlorn hope of good
-results from a homeopathic treatment. I saw how impossible
-it was to undo the practically completed training
-of a grown girl. I appreciated the absurdity of
-an attempt radically to change Edna&#8217;s character&mdash;an
-absurdity as great as an attempt to make her a foot
-taller or to alter the color of her eyes. The one hope,
-it seemed to me&mdash;and I still think I was right&mdash;was
-that, when they had social position, when there should
-no longer be excuse for fretting lest some one were
-thinking them common, they might calm down toward
-some sort of sanity.</p>
-
-<p>Bear in mind, please, that at the time I did not
-have the situation, nor any idea of it, and of how to
-deal with it, definitely and clearly in mind. I was
-groping, was seeing dimly, was not even sure that I
-saw at all. I was like a thousand other busy American
-men who, after years of absorption in affairs, are
-abruptly and rudely awakened to the fact that there
-is something wrong at home where they had been flattering
-themselves everything was all right.</p>
-
-<p>The things Armitage had said occupied my mind,
-almost to the exclusion of my business. The longer
-I revolved them, the better I understood the situation
-at home. I could not but wonder what wretched catastrophe
-in his domestic life had made him so insultingly
-bitter against women. I felt that he was unfair to
-them; any judgment that condemned a class for possessing
-universal human weakness must be unfair. At
-the same time I believed he had excuse for being unfair&mdash;the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-excuse of a man whose domestic life is in
-ruins. I began to see toward the bottom of the woman
-question&mdash;the nature and the cause of the crisis
-through which women were passing.</p>
-
-<p>The modern world, as I had read history enough
-to know, had suddenly and completely revolutionized
-the conditions of life. The male sex, though poorly
-where at all equipped to meet the new conditions, still
-was compelled to meet them after a fashion. A river
-that for ages has moved quietly along in a deep bed,
-all in a night swells to many times its former size and
-plays havoc with the surrounding country. That was
-a fairly good figure for the new life science and machinery
-had suddenly forced upon the human race.
-The men living in the inundated region&mdash;where floods
-were unknown, where appliances, even ideas for combating
-them did not exist&mdash;the men, hastily, hysterically,
-incompetently, but with resolution and persistence,
-because forced by dire necessity, would proceed
-to deal with that vast new river. Just so were the men
-of our day dealing with the life of steam and electricity,
-of ancient landmarks of religion and morality swept
-away or shifted, of ancient industrial and social relations
-turned upside down and inside out. The men
-were coping with the situation after a fashion. But
-the women?</p>
-
-<p>These unfortunate creatures, faced with the new
-conditions, were in their greater ignorance and incapacity
-and helplessness, trying to live as if nothing
-had occurred!&mdash;as if the old order still existed. And
-the men, partly through ignorance, partly through preoccupation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-with the new order, partly through indifference
-and contempt veiled as consideration for the
-weaker sex, were encouraging them in their fatal folly.
-Was it strange that the women were deceived, remained
-unconscious of their peril? No, it was on the contrary
-inevitable. When men, though working away under
-and at the new conditions, still talked as if the old conditions
-prevailed, when preachers still preached that
-way, and orators still eulogized the thing that was
-dead and buried as if it lived and reigned, when in order
-to find out the change you had to disregard the
-speech, the professions, the confident assertions of all
-mankind and observe closely their actions only&mdash;when
-there was this universal unawareness and unpreparedness,
-how could the poor women be condemned?</p>
-
-<p>I could not but admit to myself that in his account
-of the doings of the women Armitage was only slightly
-if at all exaggerating. But with my more judicial
-temperament that had won me fortune and leadership
-while hardly more than a youth, I could not join him
-in damning the women for their folly and idleness and
-uselessness.</p>
-
-<p>So, the immediate result of Armitage&#8217;s talk was a
-gentler and thoroughly tolerant frame of mind toward
-my wife, both as to herself and as to what she had done
-to our daughter. After all, I had for wife only the
-typical woman&mdash;and a rarely sweet and charming example
-of the type. And my daughter was no worse,
-perhaps was better, than the average girl of her age
-and position. What did I think I had&mdash;or ought to
-have&mdash;in the way of wife and daughter, anyhow?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-What was this vague, sentimental dream of family life?
-If I were by some magic to find myself possessed of the
-sort of family I thought I wanted, wouldn&#8217;t I be more
-dissatisfied than at present? When I had a wife and
-a daughter who <i>looked</i> so well and did nothing but
-what everyone around me regarded as right and
-proper, was I not unjust in my discontent?</p>
-
-<p>I had not seen Edna or Margot for several days before
-my talk with Bob Armitage. I did not see Edna
-for several days afterwards, though I dined at home
-every evening and did not go out after dinner. I was
-debating how to make overtures toward a reconciliation
-when she came into my study. She had an air of
-coldness and constraint&mdash;the air of the woman who is
-inflicting severe punishment upon an offending husband
-by withholding herself from him. She said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Robert Armitage has asked me to dine on
-Thursday evening.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I replied hesitatingly: &#8220;Thursday&mdash; I&#8217;ve an engagement
-for Thursday&mdash;a dinner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In her agitation she did not note that I had not
-finished. Dropping her coldness, she flashed out
-fiercely:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve simply <i>got</i> to accept! It&#8217;s our chance.
-We may not have it again. It&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve been waiting
-for ever since we moved to this house. And I can&#8217;t go
-alone. Oh, how selfish you are! You never think of
-anything but your own comfort. And you can&#8217;t or
-won&#8217;t realize any of the higher things of life for which
-I&#8217;m striving. It is too horrible!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If any male reader of this story has known a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-woman who was, up to a certain time, always able to
-rouse a strong emotion in him&mdash;of love or anger, of
-pleasure or pain&mdash;a woman toward whom he could not
-be lukewarm, and if that reader can recall the day on
-which he faced that woman in a situation of stress and
-found himself calm and patient and kind toward
-her&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>I was surprised to find that Edna was not moving
-me. Her loveliness did not stir a single tiny flame of
-passion. Her abuse did not excite resentment or dread.
-&#8220;Just a moment, my dear,&#8221; said I with the tranquillity
-of a judge. &#8220;I was trying to say that I would break
-my engagement.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I saw that she did not believe me but imagined her
-outburst had terrified and cowed me into submission.
-How dispassionately I observed and judged!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Accept, if you wish,&#8221; I went on. &#8220;I like Armitage.
-We&#8217;ve been friends for years.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t you tell me so?&#8221; demanded she.
-&#8220;Why have you been plotting against me all this
-time?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You forbade me to speak of business,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;So I have never spoken of my business friends.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her anger against me was almost beyond control.
-If she had been a lady born, if she had not had a past
-to live down, a childhood of vulgar surroundings and
-actions, she would have given way and abused like a
-fish wife. A lady born dares excesses of passion that
-a made lady, with her deep reverence for the ladylike,
-would shrink from. She said through clinched teeth:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I find out that Mrs. Armitage, the leader of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-younger set, the most fashionable woman in New York,
-has been eager to know me for a long time. And <i>you</i>
-have been preventing it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How?&#8221; said I, amused, but not showing it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She called here the other day. She was as friendly
-as could be. We became friends at once. She said
-that for months she had been at her husband to get
-her leave to call on me, but that he and you, between
-you, had neglected to arrange it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I saw how this notion of the matter delighted her,
-and that the truth would enrage her, would make her
-dislike me more than ever. So, I held my peace and
-thought, for the first time, I believe, how tiresome a
-woman without a sense of humor could become&mdash;how
-tryingly tiresome.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She and I are going to do a lot of things together,&#8221;
-continued Edna in the same intense humorless
-way. &#8220;I always knew that if I got a chance to talk
-with one of those women who could appreciate me, I&#8217;d
-have no further trouble. I knew I was wasting time
-on those religious fakirs and frumps, but I was always
-hoping that through them I&#8217;d somehow meet a woman
-of my own sort. Now I&#8217;ve met her, and something tells
-me I&#8217;ll have no further trouble.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Probably you&#8217;re right,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How it infuriates me,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;to think
-I&#8217;d have been spared all the humiliations and heartaches
-I&#8217;ve suffered, if you had used your influence with
-Robert Armitage months&mdash;years ago. But no&mdash;you
-don&#8217;t want me to get on. You wanted to stick in the
-mud. So I had to suffer&mdash;and Margot, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>&#8220;Well, it&#8217;s all right now,&#8221; said I, probably as indifferently
-as I felt. Why had God seen fit to create
-women without the sense of humor? Perhaps to
-save men from falling altogether under their rule.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The sufferings of that poor child!&#8221; cried Edna.
-&#8220;And the very day after Mrs. Armitage came, Gracie
-Fortescue asked her to a party, and all the girls have
-taken her up. Gracie Fortescue is a niece of Hilda
-Armitage. Her brother married a Fortescue.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really?&#8221; said I. &#8220;And Margot is happy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No thanks to you,&#8221; retorted Edna sourly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, plunge in, my dear,&#8221; said I, beginning to examine
-the papers before me on the desk. &#8220;Only&mdash;spare
-me as much as possible. I need all my time and strength
-for my work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you&#8217;ll have to go with me to dinners, and to
-the opera occasionally. I can&#8217;t do this thing altogether
-alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say I&#8217;m an invalid. Say I&#8217;m away. They don&#8217;t
-want me, anyhow. Armitage doesn&#8217;t go with his wife.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But that&#8217;s different,&#8221; cried she in a fever. &#8220;<i>She</i>
-has always had social position. It doesn&#8217;t matter if
-people do talk scandal about her. <i>I</i> can&#8217;t afford to
-cause gossip.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why should they gossip? But no matter. I
-don&#8217;t want to worry with that&mdash;that higher life, let us
-call it. Or to be worried with it. Do the best you
-can for me. I&#8217;m a man&#8217;s man&mdash;always have been&mdash;always
-shall be. If you&#8217;ve got to have a man to take
-you about, dig up one somewhere. I&#8217;m willing to pay
-him well.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>&#8220;Always money!&#8221; exclaimed she in deep disgust.</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;Not a bad thing, money,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It would never have got me Mrs. Armitage&#8217;s
-friendship,&#8221; said she loftily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think so?&#8221; said I amiably. &#8220;All right, if
-it pleases you. But&mdash;take my advice, my dear&mdash;enjoy
-yourself to the limit with highfaluting <i>talk</i> about the
-worthlessness of money and that sort of rot. But don&#8217;t
-for a minute lose your point of view and convince
-yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank God I&#8217;ve got a vein of refinement, of idealism
-in my nature,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t have as
-sordid an opinion of human nature as you have for anything
-in the world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can afford not to have it, my dear,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;So long as I know the truth, and so make the necessary
-money to keep us going, you are free to indulge
-your lovely delusions. Have your beautiful, unmercenary
-friendship with Mrs. Armitage and the other
-ladies. I&#8217;ll continue to make it financially worth their
-husbands&#8217; while to encourage the friendships.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought so!&#8221; cried she. &#8220;You believe Mrs.
-Armitage has taken me up for business reasons.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you had been some poor woman&mdash;&#8221; I began
-mildly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be absurd!&#8221; cried my wife. &#8220;How could
-there be an equal and true friendship between Mrs.
-Armitage and a woman with none of the surroundings
-of a lady, and with no means of gratifying the tastes
-of a lady? But that doesn&#8217;t mean that Mrs. Armitage
-is a low, sordid woman. She has a beautiful nature.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-Money is merely the background of high society. It
-simply gives ladies and gentlemen the opportunity to
-set the standards of dress and manners and taste. And
-of course they&#8217;re careful whom they associate with.
-Who wants to be annoyed by adventurers and climbers
-and all sorts of dreadful mercenary, self-seeking
-people?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who, indeed?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>It gently appealed to my sense of the ridiculous, to
-see my wife thus changed in a twinkling into a defender
-and exponent of fashionable society. It was so deliciously
-feminine, as fantastically humorless, her sincere
-belief in the poppycock she was reeling off&mdash;the twaddle
-with which Mrs. Armitage had doubtless stuffed her.
-The sordidness, the vulgarity, the meanness, the petty
-cruelty, the snobbishness of fashionable people&mdash;all forgotten
-in a moment, hastily covered deep with the gilt
-and the tinsel of hypocritical virtues. What an amusing
-ass the human animal is! How stupidly unconscious
-of its own motives! How eagerly it attributes to
-itself all kinds of high motives for the ordinary, or
-scrubby, or downright mean actions&mdash;and attributes
-the same motives to its fellow asses, to make its own
-pretenses the more plausible! An amusing ass&mdash;but it
-would be more amusing if it were not so monotonously
-solemn, but laughed at itself occasionally.</p>
-
-<p>However&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The atmosphere of our home now steadily improved.
-The servants began to respect us, where they had despised
-and had scarcely troubled themselves to conceal
-their contempt. The cook sent up more attractive&mdash;though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-I fear even less digestible&mdash;dishes. The butler
-addressed me with a gratifying servility. The maids
-developed unexpected talents, showing acquaintance with
-the needs and customs of a fashionable household. The
-housekeeper&#8217;s soul dropped from its theretofore insolently
-erect posture to all fours, and she attended to
-her duties. Edna became sweet and gracious. Margot
-grew merry and affectionate. All the result of Mrs.
-Armitage. We had been pariahs; we were of the elect.</p>
-
-<p>I saw and felt the change distinctly at the time.
-But it is only in retrospect that I take the full measure&mdash;get
-its full humor&mdash;and pathos.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That Armitage dinner was <i>the</i> event of Edna&#8217;s life.
-She had been born; she had married; she had given
-birth&mdash;all memorable and important occurrences. But
-this formal d&eacute;but in fashionable society topped them
-as the peak tops the foothills. Having seen her quivering
-and hysterical excitement when we were leaving
-the house, I feared a breakdown. I marveled at her
-apparent calmness and ease as we entered the dining
-room of the Armitages. Never had she looked so well.
-If Mrs. Armitage had not been a self-satisfied beauty
-of the dark type she might have demolished Edna&#8217;s
-dream in its very realizing. But no doubt Edna, the
-shrewd, had duly measured Hilda Armitage and had discovered
-that it was safe to make her proud of the woman
-she had taken under protection and patronage.</p>
-
-<p>There were but a dozen people in all at the dinner.
-It did not seem to be much of an affair. The drawing-room
-was plain&mdash;nothing gaudy, nothing costly looking.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-Our own dining room was much grander&mdash;to our
-then uneducated taste. The guests were&mdash;just people&mdash;simple,
-good-natured mortals, perfectly at their ease
-and putting us at our ease. You would have wondered,
-after five minutes of that company, how anyone could
-possibly find any difficulty in getting intimately acquainted
-with them. But, as Edna knew at a glance,
-she and I were in the midst of the innermost and smallest
-circle of the many circles one within another that
-make up New York fashionable society. If on the
-recommendation of the Armitages we should have the
-good fortune to be accepted by that circle of circles,
-that circle within the circles, there would be nothing
-of a social nature left for us to conquer in New York.
-I was ignorant of all this at the time; had I known,
-I imagine I should have remained tranquil. But Edna
-knew at a glance; she had been studying these matters
-for years. It shows what force of character she had
-that she conducted herself as if it were the most ordinary
-and familiar occasion of her life. She had always
-said, even away back in the days of the grand forty-dollars-a-month
-flat in Passaic, that she belonged at
-the social top. She was undoubtedly right. The way
-she acted when she arrived there proved it.</p>
-
-<p>You do not often have the chance, gentle reader, to
-get so well acquainted with any human being as I have
-enabled you to get with Edna. Probably you do not
-even know yourself so well. Therefore I suspect that
-you have a wholly false notion of her&mdash;think her in
-every way much worse relatively than she was. Through
-your novels and through the reports your dim eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
-bring to your narrow and shallow mind, you have acquired
-certain habits of judging your fellow beings.</p>
-
-<p>You attach inflated importance to their unimportant
-surface qualities&mdash;physical appearance, pleasant voice
-and manner&mdash;and to their amiable little hypocrisies of
-apparent sweetness and generosity and friendliness.
-You do not see the real person&mdash;the human being. You,
-being by training a hypocrite and a believer in hypocrisies,
-scorn human beings. Now I prefer them to the
-sort of people with whom you and your false literature
-populate the world. In making you acquainted with
-Edna&mdash;and the others in my story&mdash;I have not introduced
-you to bad people, monsters, but to real beings
-of usual types, probably on the whole superior to your
-smug self in all the good qualities. Had you seen Edna
-in the Armitage house that evening you would have
-thought her as incapable of calculation and snobbishness
-as&mdash;well, as any of the others in that company
-whose whole lives were made up of calculation and snobbishness.
-She&mdash;and they&mdash;looked so refined and elevated.
-She&mdash;and they&mdash;talked so high-mindedly. I,
-who knew almost nothing at that time except business,
-was listener rather than talker; and you may be sure
-such a man as I, having such ignorance as mine to cover
-up, had in years of practice become somewhat adept in
-that saving art for the intelligent ignorant. But
-Edna&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She, the most expert of smatterers, fairly shone.
-With her beauty and vivacity, her eloquent eyes and
-dazzling smile, and exquisite bare shoulders, to aid her,
-she created an impression of brilliancy.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>&#8220;You had a good time?&#8221; said I, when we were in the
-motor for the home journey.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never had as good a time in my life,&#8221; she exclaimed,
-her voice tremulous with ecstasy. &#8220;Did I look
-well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never so well,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And you made a hit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was careful to cultivate the women,&#8221; said she.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve got to get the women.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve got them,&#8221; I declared sincerely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re sure I didn&#8217;t make some of them jealous?
-Did you see any signs?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They liked you,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I had to play my cards well,&#8221; pursued she. &#8220;It
-was a difficult position. I was far and away the best
-looking woman there, with the possible exception of
-Mrs. Armitage. Did you hear her call me Edna?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You and Mrs. Armitage look well together. You
-are of about the same figure, and the contrast of coloring
-is very good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s why we took to each other so quickly.
-Each of us sets off the other.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did you like Armitage?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, well enough,&#8221; said she indifferently. &#8220;I
-hardly noticed him&mdash;or the other men. I had my game
-to play. The men don&#8217;t count in the social game. It&#8217;s
-the women. I shall be nervous until I find out whether
-I really got them. They are such cats!&mdash;so mean and
-sly and jealous. I <i>detest</i> women!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I prefer men, myself,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Men!&#8221; She laughed scornfully. &#8220;I think men
-are intolerable&mdash;American men. They say foreigners<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-are better. But American men&mdash;they know nothing
-but dull business or politics. They have no breadth&mdash;no
-idealism. The women are far superior to the men.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;No doubt you women are too good
-for us,&#8221; said I carelessly. &#8220;We&#8217;re grateful that you
-don&#8217;t scorn us too much even to accept our money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How coarse that is! Don&#8217;t spoil the happiest
-evening of my life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We were at home, so she could escape from me.
-And I, for my part, was as glad to be quit of her society
-as she could possibly have been to get rid of me.
-I was beginning to realize that her conversation bored
-me, that it had always bored me, that it was her sex
-and only her sex that interested me. And latterly even
-this had lost its charm. Why?</p>
-
-<p>I have observed&mdash;and perhaps you have observed it,
-too&mdash;that people of wealth and position, unless they
-have very striking individuality indeed, are usually utterly
-devoid of charm. It is difficult to become interested
-in them, to establish any sort of sympathetic current.
-And you will notice that fashionable functions are dull,
-essentially dull; that the animation is artificial, is supplied
-from without by an orchestra or entertainers, and
-fails to infect the company. It was long before I discovered
-the explanation for this. I at first thought it
-was the stupidity that comes from a surfeit of the
-luxuries and pleasures. But I am now convinced that
-this familiar explanation is not the true one; that the
-true one is the excessive, the really preposterous self-centeredness
-of people of rank and wealth. From waking
-until sleeping they are surrounded by hirelings and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-sycophants who think and talk only of them. Thus
-the rich man or woman gets into the habit of concentrating
-upon self. Now the essence of charm is giving&mdash;giving
-oneself out in sympathetic interest in one&#8217;s fellows.
-How can people, all whose faculties are trained
-to work in upon themselves&mdash;how can they have charm?
-An egotist, one who <i>talks</i> only of himself, may have
-charm because he gives you the impression that he is
-trying to please you, that he thinks you so important
-that he wishes you to be sensible of his importance.
-But the egotist who, whatever he <i>talks</i>, <i>thinks</i> only of
-himself&mdash;he is not only dull and bored but also a diffuser
-of dullness and boredom. And that is how their
-servants and their sycophants make the rich and the
-fashionable so dreary.</p>
-
-<p>I imagine some such effect as this was being produced
-upon my wife by her surroundings of luxury. I
-think that may account for her long decreasing charm
-for me. At any rate, soon after she was well launched
-on her Elysian sea of fashion&mdash;that is to say, soon
-after she ceased to have any check of social seeking to
-restrain her from centering all her thoughts and actions
-upon herself, she lost the last bit of her charm for me.
-She became radiantly beautiful. Her face took on a
-serene and refinedly assured expression that made her
-extravagantly admired on every hand. She became
-gracious to me and almost as sweet as she had been
-before we moved to New York. She even let me see
-that, if I so desired, she would condescend to be on
-terms of wifely affection with me again. But I did
-not so desire. I liked her. I admired her energy, her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-toilets, and, quite impersonally, her aristocratic beauty.
-But I was content to be a bachelor, and I was grateful
-when she began to relieve me of the tediousness of going
-about in her train.</p>
-
-<p>My substitute was an architect, Leon MacIlvane by
-name&mdash;a handsome young fellow of about my wife&#8217;s age,
-though he thought her much younger, despite Margot&#8217;s
-age and appearance. With his poetic dark eyes and
-classic features, and rich, deep voice, MacIlvane had
-long been a favorite with the young married women of
-the Armitage set. He was indeed a valuable asset. The
-rich unmarried men were not especially interesting;
-also, they were needed by the marriageable girls. MacIlvane,
-not a marrying man and never making any
-mother uneasy by so much as an interested glance at
-a daughter intended for a rich husband, devoted himself
-to married women.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I do not care for girls,&#8221; he said to me. &#8220;They
-are too colorless.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why bother with women at all?&#8221; said I. &#8220;Aren&#8217;t
-they all colorless? What do they know about life?
-What experience have they had?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An intelligent woman&#8217;s mind is the complement of
-an intelligent man&#8217;s mind,&#8221; said he, as if this trite old
-fallacy were a brilliant discovery of his own making.
-&#8220;Women stimulate me, give me ideas.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I see,&#8221; said I practically. &#8220;Business. Yes,
-an architect does deal chiefly with the women.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t mean that,&#8221; said he, showing as much
-anger as he dared show the husband of the woman to
-whom he had attached himself.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>&#8220;Where&#8217;s the harm in it?&#8221; said I encouragingly.
-&#8220;You&#8217;ve got to make a living&mdash;haven&#8217;t you?
-It&#8217;s good sense for a business man to cultivate his
-customers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He, the poseur and the small man, hated this plain
-truthful way of dealing with his profession. Like all
-chaps of that kidney he thought only of himself and of
-appearances, and sought to degrade a noble profession
-to the base uses of his vanity. In fact, he had begun
-with my wife because of the orders he hoped to get&mdash;for,
-he suspected that once she looked about her in the
-fashionable world from the new viewpoint of a fashionable
-person, she would want changes in her house to
-make it less vividly grand. He believed she would let
-Hilda Armitage educate her; and Hilda, unlike most of
-her friends, liked the quiet kinds of ostentation and costliness.
-And he guessed correctly. He was well paid
-for undertaking to replace me as escort&mdash;so far as I
-could be replaced without causing scandal&mdash;and, thank
-heaven, that was very far in the New York of busy and
-bored husbands, detesting the gaudy gaddings their
-wives loved.</p>
-
-<p>Soon he was serving my wife for other reasons than
-pay. I saw something of him from time to time, and I
-presently began to note a change in his manner toward
-me&mdash;a formal politeness, an exaggeration of courtesy.
-I spoke to Armitage about it. Armitage and I had become
-the most intimate of friends&mdash;knocked about together
-in the evenings, were more closely associated than
-ever in business.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bob,&#8221; said I to Armitage, &#8220;what ails that ass,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-MacIlvane? He treats me as if he were in love with
-my wife.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Armitage laughed. &#8220;That&#8217;s it,&#8221; said he. &#8220;My
-wife&#8217;s spaniel, Courtleigh, who writes poetry, treats me
-the same way. Get any anonymous letters yet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Servants,&#8221; said he. &#8220;I suppose you burnt them?
-You didn&#8217;t show them to your wife?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Heavens, no,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;Why unsettle her?
-Why upset a pleasant arrangement? My wife finds
-MacIlvane useful. I find him invaluable. He saves me
-hours of time. He spares me hours of boredom.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My feeling about Courtleigh,&#8221; said Armitage.
-&#8220;And both those chaps are comfortably trustworthy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hadn&#8217;t thought of MacIlvane in that way,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;I know my wife&mdash;and that&#8217;s enough.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Armitage reflected with an amused smile on his face.
-Finally, he said: &#8220;I don&#8217;t suppose there ever were since
-the world began so thoroughly trustworthy women as
-these American women of the fashionable crowd&mdash;those
-that have very rich husbands&mdash;and only those, of course,
-are really fashionable. They may flirt a little, but
-never anything serious&mdash;never anything that&#8217;d give
-their husbands an excuse for throwing them out&mdash;and
-lose them their big houses and big incomes and social
-leadership.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I had not thought of these aspects of the matter. I
-based my feeling of security solely on my knowledge of
-my wife&#8217;s intense self-absorption. All the springs of
-sentiment&mdash;except the shallow spring of highfaluting
-talk&mdash;had dried up in her. She would listen to MacIlvane&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-flatteries as long as he cared to pour them out.
-But if he ever tried to get her to think of <i>him</i>, she
-would feel outraged.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose,&#8221; pursued Armitage, &#8220;we&#8217;d be tremendously
-amused if we could overhear those chaps talking
-to our wives about us. They don&#8217;t dare presume
-to the extent of mentioning our names. But
-they hand out generalities of roasting&mdash;how stupid
-most American men are, how superior the women are,
-what a tragic condescension for a wonderful American
-woman to have to live with a man who couldn&#8217;t
-appreciate her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I nodded and laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing a woman loves so much&mdash;an American
-woman with a little miseducation befogging her mind
-and fooling her as to its limited extent&mdash;nothing she
-so dearly loves as to hear that she has a great intellect
-and a great soul, complex, mysterious, beyond the comprehension
-of the vulgar male clods about her. That&#8217;s
-why they like foreigners. You ought to watch those
-foreign chaps flatter our women&mdash;make perfect fools
-of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But I had no desire to watch women in any circumstances.
-I had no active resentment against them as
-had Armitage. I simply wished to be let alone, to be
-free to pursue my ambitions and my ideas of self-development.
-I had ceased to feel about Margot. I was
-merely glad she was not a boy; for I felt that if she
-were a boy, I should have to assert myself and do some
-drastic and disagreeable&mdash;and almost certainly disastrous&mdash;disciplining
-in my family.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>About a year and a half after my wife achieved her
-ambition, I began to feel that she was spiritually bearing
-down upon me in pursuance of some new secret
-plan.</p>
-
-<p>During the year and a half she had been playing
-the fashionable social game with the strenuous enthusiasm
-which only a woman&mdash;I had almost said only an
-American woman&mdash;seems able to inject into the pursuit
-of objects that are of no consequences whatsoever. And,
-in spite of the useful MacIlvane I had been compelled
-to assist her far more than was to my liking. I went
-about enough to get a thorough insight into fashionableness&mdash;and
-a profound distaste for it. Of the many
-phases, ludicrous, repellent, despicable, pitiful, there
-was one that made a deep impression upon me. It
-amazed me to find that the &#8220;best&#8221; class of people was,
-if possible, more vulgarly snobbish than the class from
-which I had come&mdash;even than the &#8220;Brooklyn bounders.&#8221;
-I could not comprehend&mdash;I cannot comprehend&mdash;how
-those who have had the best opportunities are no more
-intelligent, no broader of mind than those who have had
-no opportunities at all. The ignorance, the narrowness
-of the men and women of the comfortable classes!&mdash;the
-laziness of their minds!&mdash;the shallow cant about literature,
-art and the like! Really, intelligence, activity
-of mind, seems confined to the few who are pushing
-upward; and the masses of mankind in all classes seem
-contented each class with its own peculiar wallow of
-ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>But to Edna&#8217;s secret plan. If you are a married
-man you will at once understand what I mean when I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-speak of having a vague sensation of being borne down
-upon. She said nothing; she did nothing. But I knew
-she was making ready to ask something to which she
-believed she could get my consent only by the use of all
-her tact and skill and charm&mdash;for she did not know her
-charms had ceased to charm, but thought them more
-potent than ever. I waited with patience and composure;
-and in due time she began cautious open approaches.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot is almost ready to come out,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Money?&#8221; said I, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>She rebuked this coarseness amiably. &#8220;<i>Everybody</i>
-isn&#8217;t <i>always</i> thinking of money, dear,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But why talk to <i>me</i> about anything else? That&#8217;s
-my only department in the family.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She deigned a smile for my pleasantry, then went
-on in her usual serious way: &#8220;I wish to consult you
-about her education.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;finish as you&#8217;ve begun,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I suppose
-it&#8217;s the best that can be done for a girl.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I can&#8217;t find what I want,&#8221; said she, with an
-expression of sweet maternal solicitude. &#8220;I&#8217;ve always
-been determined Margot should have the best education
-any girl in the whole world could get.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go ahead,&#8221; said I. &#8220;See that she gets it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She shall have the perfect equipment of a lady&mdash;of
-a woman of the world,&#8221; continued Edna, with
-growing enthusiasm. &#8220;She has the beauty to set
-it off&mdash;and we can afford to give it to her. I
-am willing to make any sacrifices that may be necessary.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>I pricked up my ears. I always do when anyone,
-male or female, uses that word sacrifice. I know a piece
-of selfishness is coming.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As I was saying,&#8221; pursued Edna, with the serene
-look of the self-confident woman who is taking her
-husband in firm, strong hands, &#8220;I have been unable to
-find what I want for her. Mrs. Armitage tells me I&#8217;ll
-not find it except in Paris.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well&mdash;why not go to Paris?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>Did you ever lift an empty box that you thought
-full and heavy? My wife looked as if she had just
-done that exceedingly uncomfortable thing. &#8220;But I
-don&#8217;t see&mdash; I&mdash;I&mdash; It would be a terrible sacrifice
-to have to go and live in Paris,&#8221; stammered she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then don&#8217;t do it,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I must think of Margot!&#8221; exclaimed she
-hastily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Margot seems to be stepping along all right.
-She&#8217;ll never miss what she doesn&#8217;t know about.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you must realize, dear, what an education
-she&#8217;d get in Paris. And I suppose it would do me
-good, too. It&#8217;s a shame that I don&#8217;t speak French.
-Everyone except me speaks it. They all had French
-governesses when they were children.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some of them had&mdash;and some hadn&#8217;t,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;Armitage has told me things about your friends that
-make me suspect they&#8217;re doing fully as much bluffing
-as we are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She winced, and sighed the sigh of the lady patient
-with a low husband. &#8220;Then you think I ought to go?&#8221;
-said she.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>&#8220;I think you ought to do as you like,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;I always have thought so. I always shall.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And,&#8221; continued she absently, &#8220;the society over
-there must be charming. Really, I need the education
-as much as Margot does. I do surprisingly well, considering
-what my early opportunities were.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve never once heard you give yourself away,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not that stupid,&#8221; replied she. &#8220;But&mdash;a while
-in France&mdash;on the Continent&mdash;and in England perhaps&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How long would you be gone?&#8221; interrupted I, to
-show her that all this beating round Robin&#8217;s barn was
-superfluous.</p>
-
-<p>She gave me a coquettish look: &#8220;How long could
-you spare me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t tell till I&#8217;ve tried,&#8221; said I, with a gallant
-smile&mdash;but with no move toward her. You women
-who would be wise, distrust the gallantry that is content
-with speech and look.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You understand,&#8221; pursued she, &#8220;if I started this
-thing I&#8217;d put it through&mdash;no matter how much I
-missed you or how homesick I was over there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You always do put things through,&#8221; said I admiringly.
-&#8220;When have you planned to start?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t planned at all, as yet,&#8221; replied she&mdash;and
-I saw she thought I had set a trap for her, and
-was delighted with herself for having dodged it. Certainly
-never was there a husband with whom indirection
-was more unnecessary. Yet she would not realize this,
-partly because she had never bothered to discover what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-manner of man I was, partly because she had one of
-those natures that move only by secrecy and indirection.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you expect me to go over with you?&#8221; inquired
-I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I only wish you would!&#8221; exclaimed she, but I
-distrusted her enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t MacIlvane take you over and settle
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her face clouded. Her lip curled slightly. &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t like him as I did,&#8221; said she. &#8220;I&#8217;ve found out
-he&#8217;s ridiculously vain and egotistical.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed outright.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221; inquired she, elevating her eyebrows.
-She had always disapproved my sense of humor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So he&#8217;s been making love to you&mdash;eh?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, indeed!&#8221; cried she, bridling haughtily.
-&#8220;He&#8217;d not dare. But I saw he was beginning to presume
-in that direction, and I checked him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, he&#8217;s harmless,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Keep friendly with
-him. He&#8217;d be the very person to settle you in Paris.
-He lived there several years.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It would cause scandal,&#8221; said she. &#8220;If you can&#8217;t
-go, I can do well enough alone, I&#8217;m sure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d only be in the way,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Let me know
-when you wish to go, and I&#8217;ll try to arrange it. But
-I can&#8217;t get away for at least three months.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That would be too late,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Margot
-must be started at once. She hasn&#8217;t any too much time
-before her coming out. Also, Mrs. Armitage is sailing
-in two weeks, and she would be a great help.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you have decided to sail in two weeks?&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-said I, adding before she had time to get beyond a
-gathering frown of protest, &#8220;That suits me. I&#8217;ll make
-my own plans accordingly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And in two weeks they sailed, I watching the big
-ship creep out of dock and drop slowly down the river.
-Armitage and I drove away from the pier together.
-We were in such high spirits that we had champagne
-with our lunch.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Armitage</span> and I were together every day. He attracted
-me for the usual reason of congeniality, and
-also because he was giving me a liberal education. I
-have never cared for books or, with two or three exceptions,
-for book men. About both there is for me
-an atmosphere of staleness, of tedium. I prefer to
-get what is in the few worth-while books through the
-medium of some clear and original mind&mdash;such a mind
-as Armitage had. He ought to have been a great man.
-No, he was a great man; what I mean to say is that
-his talents ought to have won his greatness recognition.
-He did not lack capacity or energy; he showed a high
-degree of both in the management and increase of his
-fortune. He lacked that species of vanity, I guess it
-is, which spurs a man to make himself conspicuous.
-Also he had a kind of laziness, and chose to be active
-only in the way that was easiest and most agreeable
-for him&mdash;the making of money.</p>
-
-<p>His father had been rich, and his grandfather;
-his great grandfather had been one of the richest men
-in Revolutionary times. His father was regarded as
-a crank because he had imagination, and therefore despised
-the conventional ideas of his own generation;
-to be regarded as thoroughly sane and sensible, you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-must be careful to be neither, but to pattern yourself
-painstakingly upon the particular form of feeble-mindedness
-and conventional silliness current in your time.
-Armitage&#8217;s father resolved that his son should not have
-his individuality clipped and moulded and patterned
-by college and caste into the familiar type of upper-class
-man. So Armitage went to public school, graduated
-from it into a factory, then into an office, himself
-earned the money to carry out the ambitions for
-study and travel with which his father had inspired
-him.</p>
-
-<p>I think there was nothing worth the knowing about
-which Armitage had not accurate essential information&mdash;books,
-plays, pictures, music, literature, history,
-economics, science, medicine, law, finance. He was a
-good shot and a good horseman, could run an automobile,
-take it to pieces, put it together again. He was
-a practical mechanic and a practical railroad man. He
-had a successful model farm. &#8220;It doesn&#8217;t take long
-to learn the essentials about anything,&#8221; said he, &#8220;if
-you will only put your whole mind on it and not let
-up till you&#8217;ve got what you want. And the trouble
-with most people&mdash;why, they are narrow and ignorant
-and incompetent&mdash;it isn&#8217;t lack of mind, but lack of interest.
-They have no curiosity.&#8221; Nor was my friend
-Armitage a smatterer. He didn&#8217;t try to <i>do</i> everything;
-he contented himself with knowledge, and <i>did</i> only one
-thing&mdash;made money out of railroads.</p>
-
-<p>When he saw that I really wished to be educated, he
-amused himself by educating me. Not in a formal
-way, of course; but simply talking along, about whatever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-happened to come up. I have never known a man
-to get anywhere, who did not have an excellent memory.
-Lack of memory&mdash;which means lack of the habit and
-power of giving attention&mdash;is the cause of more failures
-than all other defects put together. If you don&#8217;t
-believe it, test the failures you know; perhaps you
-might even test your own not too successful self. I
-had an unusual memory; and I don&#8217;t think Armitage or
-anyone ever told me anything worth knowing that I
-did not stick to it and keep it where I could use it
-instantly.</p>
-
-<p>Several months after his wife and mine departed,
-we were walking in the park one afternoon&mdash;the
-usual tramp round the upper reservoir to reduce or
-to keep in condition. He said in the most casual
-way:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My wife is coming next week, and will get her
-divorce at once.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Taking my cue from his manner I showed even less
-surprise then I felt. &#8220;This is the first I&#8217;ve heard of
-it,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really?&#8221; said he carelessly. &#8220;Everyone knows.&#8221;
-He laughed to himself. &#8220;She is to marry Lord Blankenship&mdash;the
-Earl of Blankenship.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the children?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>He shrugged his shoulders. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know. Her
-people will look after them. She has spoiled them beyond
-repair. I have no interest in them&mdash;nor they in
-me.&#8221; After a little tramping in silence, he halted and
-rested his hands on the railing and looked away across
-the lakelike reservoir, its surface tossed up into white<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-caps by the wind. &#8220;I loved her when we were married,&#8221;
-said he. &#8220;That caused all the mischief. I let
-her do as she pleased. She was a fine girl&mdash;good family
-but poor. She pretended to be in sympathy with
-my ideas.&#8221; His lip curled in good-humored contempt.
-&#8220;I believed in her enthusiasm. My father&mdash;wonderfully
-sane old man&mdash;warned me she was only after our
-money, but I wouldn&#8217;t listen. Tried to quarrel with
-him. He wouldn&#8217;t have it&mdash;gave me my way. It&#8217;s
-not strange I believed in her. She looked all that&#8217;s
-high-minded&mdash;and delicate&mdash;and what they call aristocratic.
-Well, it <i>is</i> aristocratic&mdash;the reality of aristocracy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps she was sincere,&#8221; said I, out of the depths
-of my own experience, &#8220;perhaps she honestly imagined
-she liked and wanted the sort of life you pictured. We
-are all hypocrites, but most of us are unconscious hypocrites.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No doubt she did deceive herself&mdash;in part at least,&#8221;
-he admitted. &#8220;For a year or so after our marriage she
-kept up the bluff. I didn&#8217;t catch on&mdash;didn&#8217;t find her
-out&mdash;until we began to differ about bringing up the
-children. Even then, I loved her so that I let her have
-her way until it was too late.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But,&#8221; said I, &#8220;don&#8217;t you owe it to them to&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He interrupted with an impatient, &#8220;Didn&#8217;t I try?
-But it was hopeless. To succeed in this day, I&#8217;d have
-had to take the children away off into the woods, with
-the chances that even there the servants I&#8217;d be compelled
-to have would spoil them&mdash;would keep them reminded of
-the rotten snobbishness they&#8217;ve been taught.&#8221; He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-laughed at me with mocking irony. &#8220;You have a
-daughter,&#8221; said he. &#8220;What about her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was thinking of your boy,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>He frowned and looked away. After a long pause&mdash;&#8220;Hopeless&mdash;hopeless,&#8221;
-said he. &#8220;Believe me&mdash;hopeless. The boy is like her.
-No, I&#8217;ll have to begin all over again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I gave an inquiring look.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Marry again,&#8221; explained he. &#8220;Another sort of
-woman, and keep her and her children away from this
-world of ours. I&#8217;d like to try the experiment. But&mdash;&#8221;
-He laughed apologetically. &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid I love the city
-and its amusements too well. I&#8217;m not as determined nor
-as ardent as I once was. What does it matter, anyway?
-So long as we are comfortable and well amused, why
-should we bother?&#8221; After a silence, &#8220;Another mistake
-I made&mdash;the initial mistake&mdash;was in giving her a fortune.
-She is almost as well fixed as I am. Don&#8217;t make
-that mistake, Godfrey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve already done it,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And I shall never
-be sorry that I did. I gave my wife the first large sum
-I made, and I&#8217;ve added to it from time to time. I wanted
-her and Margot to be safe, no matter what happened
-to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A mistake,&#8221; he said. &#8220;A sad mistake. I know
-how you felt. I felt the same way. But there&#8217;s something
-worse than the more or less sentimental aversion
-to being loved and considered merely for the money they
-can get out of you and can&#8217;t get without you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing worse,&#8221; I declared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he replied. &#8220;It&#8217;s worse to give a foolish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-woman the power to make a fool of herself, of her children,
-and of you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is bad, I&#8217;ll admit,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But the other
-is worse&mdash;at least to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d refuse to make a child behave itself, through
-the selfish fear that it would hate you for doing so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;You know my weakness, I see,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s the foolish American husband and father.
-No wonder all the classes that ought to be leaders in
-development and civilization are leaders only in luxury
-and folly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, let them have a good time&mdash;what they call a
-good time,&#8221; said I. &#8220;As you said a moment ago, it
-doesn&#8217;t matter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If it only were a good time&mdash;to be ignorant and
-snobbish and lazy, to drive instead of walking, to eat
-and drink instead of thinking, to be waited upon instead
-of getting the education and the happiness that
-come from serving others. Don&#8217;t laugh at me. After
-all, while you and I&mdash;all our sort of men&mdash;are greedy,
-selfish grabbers, making thousands work for us, still we
-do build up big enterprises, we do set things to moving,
-and we do teach men the discipline of regular work by
-forcing them to work for us at more or less useful
-things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>No doubt you, gentle reader, have fallen asleep over
-this conversation. I understand perfectly that it is beyond
-you; for you have no conception of the deep underlying
-principles of the relations of men and men or
-men and women. But there may be among my readers
-a few who will see interest and importance in this talk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-with Armitage. It is time the writers of stories concerned
-themselves with the realities of life instead of with
-the showy and sensational things that obscure or hide
-the realities. What would you think of the physiologist
-who issued a treatise on physiology with no mention
-or account of the blood? Yet you read stories about
-what purports to be life with no mention or account of
-money&mdash;this, when in any society money is the all-important
-factor. Put aside, if you can, the prejudices
-of your miseducation and &aelig;sthetics, of your false culture
-and your false refinement, open your mind, <i>think</i>,
-and you will see that I am right.</p>
-
-<p>When we were well down toward the end of the Park,
-Armitage said: &#8220;Pardon me a direct question. Have
-you and your wife separated?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said I. &#8220;She has gone abroad to round out
-Margot&#8217;s education&mdash;and her own.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know what that means?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In a general way,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;I&#8217;m letting them
-amuse themselves. They don&#8217;t need me, nor I them.
-Perhaps when they come back&mdash;&#8221; I did not finish my
-sentence.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed. &#8220;That means you don&#8217;t really care
-what happens when they come back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My smile was an admission of the correctness of his
-guess. We dropped our domestic affairs and took up
-the matters that were more interesting and more important
-to us.</p>
-
-<p>If you have good sight, unimpaired eyes, you go
-about assuming&mdash;when you think of it at all&mdash;that good
-sight is the rule in the world and impaired eyes the exception.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
-But let your sight begin to fail, let your eyes
-become darkened, and soon you discover that you are one
-of thousands&mdash;that good sight is the exception, that
-almost everyone has something the matter with his eyes.
-The reason human beings know so little about human
-nature, the reason the sentimental flapdoodle about human
-virtues, in the present not very far-advanced stage
-of human evolution, is so widely believed and doubt of it
-so indignantly denounced as cynicism, lies in the fact
-that the average human being is ignorant of the afflictions
-of his own soul. This would be pleasant and harmless
-enough, and to destroy the delusion would be wickedly
-cruel, were it not that the only way to cure ailments
-of whatever sort is to diagnose them. What hope
-is there for the man devoured of a fever who fancies and
-insists that he is healthy? What hope is there for the
-man who eats pleasant-tasting slow poison under the
-impression that it is food? What a quaint notion it is
-that the truth, the sole source of health and happiness,
-is bad for some people, chiefly for those sick unto death
-through the falsehoods of ignorance and vanity! We
-humans are like the animal that claws and bites the surgeon
-who is trying to set its broken leg.</p>
-
-<p>But I am wandering a little. Discover that you have
-any ailment of body or of soul, and you soon discover
-how widespread that ailment is. You do not even appreciate
-how widespread, incessant, and poignant are the
-ravages of death until your own family and friends begin
-to die off. I had no notion of the extent of the social
-or domestic malady of abandoned husbands and
-fathers until I became one of that curious class.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>Among the masses there is the great and growing
-pestilence of abandoned wives&mdash;husbands, worn out by
-the uncertainties of the laboring man&#8217;s income, and disgusted
-with the incompetence of their wives and with
-the exasperations of the badly brought up children&mdash;such
-husbands flying by tens of thousands to escape what
-they cannot cure or endure. Among the classes, from
-the plutocracy down to and through the small merchants
-and professional men, I now discovered that there was
-a corresponding and reversed disease&mdash;the abandoned
-husband.</p>
-
-<p>The husband and father, working hard and presently
-accumulating enough for ease in his particular station
-of life, suddenly finds himself supporting, with perhaps
-all the money he can scrape together, a distant and
-completely detached family. He mails his money regularly,
-and with a fidelity that will appear grotesque,
-noble, or pitiful according to the point of view. In return
-he gets occasional letters from the loved ones&mdash;perfunctory
-these letters somehow sound, or would sound
-to the critical, though they are liberally sprinkled with
-loving, even fawning phrases, such as &#8220;dear, sweet
-papa&#8221; and &#8220;darling husband.&#8221; Where are &#8220;the loved
-ones?&#8221; If the family home is in a small town or country,
-they are in New York or some other city of America
-usually. If the family home is in the city, they are
-abroad. What are they doing? Sacrificing themselves!
-Especially poor wife and mother. She would infinitely
-prefer being at home with beloved husband. But she
-must not be selfish. She must carry her part of their
-common burden. While <i>he</i> toils to provide for the children,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-<i>she</i> toils in the loneliness or unhappiness of New
-York or Paris or Rome or Dresden or Genoa. And what
-is she toiling at in those desert places? Why, at educating
-the children!</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes it&#8217;s music. Sometimes it&#8217;s painting.
-Again it&#8217;s &#8220;finishing,&#8221; whatever that may mean, or
-plain, vague &#8220;education.&#8221; There was a time when men
-of any sort could be instantly abashed, silenced and
-abased by the mere pronouncing of the word education.
-That happy day for mental fakers is nearing its close.
-Now, at the sound of the sacred word many a sensible,
-practical man has the courage to put on a grin. I have
-been credited with saying that a revival of the declining
-child-bearing among American women might be looked
-for, now that they have found the usefulness of children
-as an excuse for escape from home and husband. I admit
-having said this, but I meant it as a jest. However,
-there is truth in the jest. I don&#8217;t especially blame the
-women. Why should they stay at home when they have
-no sympathy with the things that necessarily engross
-the husband? Why stay at home when it bores them
-even to see that the servants carry on the house decently?
-Why stay at home when they simply show
-there from day to day how little they know about
-housekeeping? Why stay at home when there is an
-amiable fool willing to mail them his money, while they
-amuse themselves gadding about Europe or some big
-city of America?</p>
-
-<p>Abandoned wives at the one end of the social scale,
-abandoned husbands at the other end. Please note that
-in both cases the deep underlying cause is the same&mdash;money.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-Too little money, and the husband flies; too
-much money, and it is the wife who breaks up the family.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as I discovered, by being elected to membership,
-the existence of the universal order of abandoned
-husbands I took the liveliest interest in it. I was eager
-to learn whether there was another fool quite so foolish
-as myself, also whether the other fools were aware of
-their own folly. I found that most of them were rather
-proud of their membership, indulged in a ludicrous cocking
-of the comb and waggling of the wattles when they
-spoke of &#8220;my family over on the other side for a few
-years,&#8221; or of &#8220;my wife, poor woman, exiled in Paris to
-cultivate my daughter&#8217;s voice,&#8221; or of &#8220;my invalid wife&mdash;she
-has to live in the south of France. It&#8217;s a sad trial
-to us both.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then&mdash;but this came much later&mdash;I discovered that
-these credulous, money-mailing fools, including myself,
-were not quite so imbecile, as a class, as they seemed to
-be. I discovered that they were secretly, often unconsciously,
-glad to be rid of their uncongenial families,
-and regarded any money they mailed as money well
-spent. They toiled cheerfully at distasteful tasks to
-get the wherewithal to keep their loved ones far, far
-away!</p>
-
-<p>The absence of Edna and Margot was an enormous
-relief to me. Edna was constantly annoying me to accompanying
-her to places to which I did not care to go.
-I like the theatre and I rather like some operas, but when
-I go to either it is for the sake of the performance.
-Going with Edna and her friends meant a tedious social
-function. We arrived late; we did not hear the play or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-the opera. As for the purely social functions, they were
-intolerable. Perhaps I should not have been so unhappy
-had I been the kind of man who likes to talk for the sake
-of hearing his own voice. Women are attentive listeners
-when the man who is talking is worth flattering. But
-I talk only for purpose, and when I listen I wish it to
-be to some purpose also. So, Edna, always urging me
-to do something distasteful or giving me the sense that
-she was about to ask me, or was irritated against me for
-being &#8220;disobliging&#8221;&mdash;Edna made me uncomfortable, increasingly
-uncomfortable as I grew more intelligent,
-more critical, more discriminating. As for Margot, I
-could not talk with her ten minutes without seeing protrude
-from her sweet loveliness some vulgarity of snobbishness.
-It irritated me to hear her speak to a servant.
-I had to rebuke her privately several times for the tone
-she used in addressing her governess or my secretary&mdash;this
-when her mother and all her mother&#8217;s friends used
-precisely the same repellent &#8220;gracious&#8221; tone in the same
-circumstances. I saw that she, sometimes instinctively,
-again deliberately tried to hide her real self from me,
-that I was making a hypocrite of her. Any sort of
-frankness or sympathy between her and me was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>A few weeks after their departure I closed the house.
-It came to me that I need endure its discomforts no
-longer, that I could get rid of those smelly, dull-witted,
-low-minded foreign animals, that I need not endure food
-sent up from a kitchen as to which I had from time to
-time disgusting proofs that it was not clean. I closed
-the house and left the mice and roaches and other insects<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-to such short provender as would be provided by caretaker
-and family. I took an apartment in a first-class
-hotel.</p>
-
-<p>When Armitage got clear of his wife he took the
-adjoining apartment. And how comfortable and how
-cheerful we were!</p>
-
-<p>The women with their incompetence and indifference
-have about destroyed the American home. To get good
-service, to have capable people assisting you, you must
-yourself be capable. The incapacity of the &#8220;ladies&#8221;
-has driven good servants out of the business of domestic
-service, has left in it only the worthless and unreliable
-creatures who now take care of the homes. If you find
-any part of the laboring class deteriorating, don&#8217;t blame
-them. To do that is to get nowhere, is to be unjust
-and shallow to boot. Instead, look at the employers of
-that labor. Every time, you will find the fault is there,
-just as an ill-mannered or a bad child means unfaithful
-parents. The masses of mankind must have leadership,
-guidance, example. My experience has been that they
-respond when the dominating classes do their duty&mdash;that
-is, pay proper wages, demand good service, <i>and
-know what good service is</i>.</p>
-
-<p>What a relief and a joy that hotel was! Armitage
-and I had our own cook, and so could have the simple
-dishes we liked. We attended to the marketing&mdash;and
-both knew what sort of meat and vegetables and fruit to
-buy, and were not long trifled with by our butcher, our
-grocer, and our dairyman, spoiled though they were by
-the ladies. And our apartments were clean&mdash;really
-clean, and after the first few weeks our servants were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-contented, and abandoned the evil ways slip-shod
-mistresses had got them into. Pushing my inquiries, I
-found that not only our hotel, but every first-class hotel
-in the fashionable district was filled with the remnants
-of shattered homes&mdash;husbands who had compelled their
-wives to give up the expensive and dirty attempts at
-housekeeping; husbands who had abandoned their families
-in country homes or in other cities and towns and
-had, surreptitiously or boldly, returned to bachelor
-bliss; husbands who had been abandoned by their families,
-none of these last cases being more heart-breaking
-than Armitage&#8217;s or my own. The story ran that he
-was on the verge of melancholia because his beautiful
-wife had cast him off. There was no more truth in this
-than there would have been in a tale of my lonely grief.
-Had it not been for Armitage, pointing out to me the
-truth, I might have fancied myself a deserted unfortunate.
-It would not have been an isolated instance of
-a human being not knowing when he is well off.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I did not see my family again until the following
-spring. Business compelled me to go abroad, and they
-had come over to London for the season.</p>
-
-<p>When I descended from the train at Euston, a little
-confused by the strangeness, I saw my wife a few yards
-down the platform. Beside her stood a tall, beautiful
-young woman, whom I did not instantly recognize as my
-daughter. Both were dressed with the perfection of
-taste and of detail that has made the American woman
-famous throughout the world. I like well-dressed
-women&mdash;and well-dressed men, too. I should certainly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-have been convicted of poor taste had I not been dazzled
-by those two charming examples of fashion and style.
-They looked like two lovely sisters, the elder not more
-than five or six years in advance of the younger. I was
-a youthful-looking man, myself&mdash;except, perhaps, when
-I was in the midst of affairs and took on the air of responsibility
-that cannot appear in the face of youth.
-But no one would have believed there were so few years
-between Edna and me. Nor was she in the least made-up.
-The youth was genuinely there.</p>
-
-<p>That meeting must have impressed the by-standers,
-who were observing the two women with admiring interest.
-I felt a glow of enthusiasm at sight of these
-elegant beauties. I was proud to be able to claim them.
-As for them, they became radiant the instant they saw
-me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey!&#8221; cried Edna loudly, rushing toward me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Papa&mdash;dear old papa!&#8221; cried Margot, waving her
-arms in a pretty gesture of impatient adoration while
-her mother was detaining me from her embrace.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well&mdash;well!&#8221; cried I. &#8220;What a pair of girls!
-My, but you&#8217;re tearing it off!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They laughed gayly, and hugged and kissed me all
-over again. For a moment I felt that I had been missed&mdash;and
-that I had missed them. A good-looking, shortish
-and shy young man, dressed and groomed in the
-attractive English upper-class way of exquisiteness with
-no sacrifice of manliness, was now brought forward.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lord Crossley&mdash;my husband,&#8221; said Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pleased, I&#8217;m sure,&#8221; murmured the young man, giving
-me his hand with an awkwardness that was somehow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-not awkward&mdash;or, rather, that conveyed a subtle impression
-of good breeding. &#8220;Now that you&#8217;ve got him&mdash;or
-that he&#8217;s got you,&#8221; proceeded he, &#8220;I&#8217;ll toddle
-along.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My wife gave him her hand carelessly. &#8220;Until dinner,&#8221;
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>Margot shook hands with him, and nodded and
-smiled. When he was gone I observed the carriage near
-which we were standing&mdash;and I knew at once that it was
-my wife&#8217;s carriage. It was a grand car of state, yet
-quiet and simple. I often looked at it afterwards, trying
-to puzzle out how it contrived to convey two exactly
-opposite impressions. I could never solve the mystery.
-On the lofty box sat the most perfect model of a coachman
-I had seen up to that time. Beside the open door
-in the shallow, loftily hung body of the carriage stood
-an equally perfect footman. I was soon to get used to
-that marvelous English ability at specializing men&mdash;a
-system by which a man intended for a certain career is
-arrested in every other kind of growth, except only that
-which tends to make him more perfect for his purpose.
-Observing an English coachman, or valet or butler or
-what not, you say, &#8220;Here is a remarkably clever man.&#8221;
-Yet you soon find out that he is practically imbecile in
-every other respect but his specialty.</p>
-
-<p>We entered the carriage, I sitting opposite the ladies&mdash;and
-most uncomfortable I was; for the carriage was
-designed to show off its occupants, and to look well in
-it they had to know precisely how to sit, which I did not.
-No one noticed me, however. There was too much
-pleasure to be got out of observing Edna and Margot,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-who were looking like duchesses out of a storybook. I
-knew they were delightfully conscious of the sensation
-they were making, yet they talked and laughed as if
-they were alone in their own sitting room&mdash;a trick which
-is part of that &#8220;education&#8221; of which you have heard
-something, and will hear still more. The conversation
-seemed easy. In fact, it was only animated. It was
-a fair specimen of that whole mode of life. You have
-seen the wonderful peaches that come to New York
-from South Africa early in the winter&mdash;have delighted
-in their exquisite perfection of color and form. But
-have you ever tasted them? I would as lief eat sawdust;
-I would rather eat it&mdash;for, of sawdust I should
-expect nothing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That young man is the Marquis of Crossley,&#8221; said
-my wife.</p>
-
-<p>I liked to hear her pronounce a title in private. It
-gave you the sense of something that tasted fine&mdash;made
-you envy her the sensation she was getting. &#8220;Who is
-he?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>Margot laughed na&iuml;vely&mdash;an entrancing display of
-white teeth and rose-lined mouth. &#8220;Marquis of Crossley,
-papa,&#8221; she said. &#8220;That&#8217;s all&mdash;and quite enough
-it is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know much about the big men in England,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;He looked rather young to amount to very
-much.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s as old as you are,&#8221; said Edna, a flash of ill-humor
-appearing and vanishing.</p>
-
-<p>I was astonished. &#8220;I thought him a boy,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s one of the greatest nobles in England&mdash;one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-of the greatest in Europe,&#8221; said Edna&mdash;and I saw Margot&#8217;s
-eyes sparkling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He seemed a nice fellow,&#8221; said I amiably. &#8220;How
-you have grown, Margot!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hasn&#8217;t she, though!&#8221; cried my wife. &#8220;Aren&#8217;t
-you proud of her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m proud of you both,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You make me
-feel old and dingy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve been working too hard, poor dear,&#8221; said
-Edna tenderly. &#8220;If you only would stay over here and
-learn the art of leisure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid I&#8217;d be dismally bored,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>I had heard much about the art of loafing as practiced
-by Europeans, and I had not been attracted by
-what I had heard. It was inconceivable to me that intelligent
-grown men could pass their time at things
-about equal to marbles and tops. But I suppose I am
-abnormal, as they allege. Many men seem to look on
-mental effort of any kind as toilsome, and seize the first
-opportunity to return to the mindless frolickings of the
-beasts of the field. To me mental effort is a keen pleasure.
-And I must add I can&#8217;t help thinking it is to
-everybody who has real brains.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation would have died in distressing
-agony had it not been for the indomitable pluck of my
-wife. She struggled desperately&mdash;perhaps may even
-have deceived herself into thinking that she was glad to
-see me and that the carriage was the scene of a happy
-reunion. But I, who had a thorough training in quickly
-sizing up situations, saw the truth&mdash;that I was a rank
-outsider, to both wife and daughter; that they were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-strangers to me. I began to debate what was the shortest
-time I could decently stop in London.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are to be presented at Court next week,&#8221; said
-Edna.</p>
-
-<p>Margot&#8217;s eyes were again sparkling. It was the
-sort of look the novelists put on the sweet young girl&#8217;s
-face when she sees her lover coming.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;next week&mdash;next Thursday,&#8221; said Edna.
-&#8220;And so another of the little duchess&#8217;s dreams is coming
-true.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is it exciting?&#8221; said I to Margot. Somehow reference
-to the &#8220;little duchess&#8221; irritated me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather!&#8221; exclaimed Margot, fairly glowing with
-ecstasy. &#8220;You put on the most wonderful dress, and
-you drive in a long, long line of wonderful carriages,
-with all the women in wonderful dresses. And you go
-into the palace through lines and lines of gorgeous
-liveries and uniforms&mdash;and you wait in a huge grand
-room for an hour or so, frightened to death&mdash;and then
-you walk into the next room and make the courtesy you
-have been practicing for weeks&mdash;and you pass on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; cried I. &#8220;What then?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why you go home, half dead from the nervous
-shock. Oh, it&#8217;s wonderful!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to me&mdash;for I was becoming somewhat
-critical, as is the habit in moods of irritation&mdash;it
-seemed to me that Margot&#8217;s elaborate and costly education
-might have included the acquiring of a more
-extensive vocabulary. That word wonderful was beginning
-to get on my nerves. Still, this was hyper-criticism.
-A lovely woman does not need a vocabulary,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-or anything else but a lovely dress and plenty of money
-to provide background. &#8220;Yes&mdash;it must be&mdash;wonderful,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve been working at it for weeks, mamma and
-I,&#8221; continued she. &#8220;I&#8217;m sure we shall do well. I can
-hardly wait. Just fancy! I&#8217;m to meet the <i>king</i> and
-the <i>queen</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I saw that Edna was in the same ecstatic trance. I
-leaned back and tried to distract myself with the novelty
-of London houses and crowds. It may be you understand
-the mingling of pity, contempt, anger, and
-amusement that filled my breast. If you do not understand,
-explanation would merely weary you. I was no
-longer proud of my beautiful family; I wished to get
-away from them, to forget them. Edna and Margot
-chatted on and on about the king and queen, about the
-various titled people they knew or hoped to know, about
-the thrills of aristocratic society. I tried not to listen.
-After a while I said, with I hope not unsuccessful attempt
-at amiability:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry I shan&#8217;t be here to witness your triumph.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Across Edna&#8217;s face swept a flash of vivid&mdash;I had
-almost said vicious&mdash;annoyance. &#8220;You&#8217;re not going
-before the drawing-room at Buckingham Palace!&#8221; cried
-she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll have to,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you can&#8217;t!&#8221; protested Margot, tears of vexation
-in her eyes. &#8220;Everyone will think it&#8217;s dreadfully
-queer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t fret about that, my dear,&#8221; replied I lightly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-&#8220;I know how it is over here. So long as you&#8217;ve got
-the cash they&#8217;ll never ask a question. We Americans
-mean money to them&mdash;and that&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, papa!&#8221; cried Margot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t put such ideas into the child&#8217;s head, Godfrey,&#8221;
-said my wife, restraining herself in a most ladylike
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She knows,&#8221; said I. &#8220;So do you. Money is everything
-with aristocracies everywhere. They must live
-luxuriously without work. That can&#8217;t be done without
-money&mdash;lots of money. So aristocrats seriously think
-of nothing else, whatever they may talk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll have a better opinion of them when you
-know them,&#8221; said Edna, once more serene and sweetly
-friendly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think badly of them,&#8221; I replied. &#8220;I admire
-their cleverness. But you mustn&#8217;t ask me to respect
-them. They hardly expect it. They don&#8217;t respect
-themselves. If they did, they&#8217;d not be stealing, but
-working.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot listened with lowered eyes. I saw that she
-was ashamed of and for me. Edna concealed her feelings
-better. She forced an amiable smile. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
-know much about these things,&#8221; she said politely.
-&#8220;But, Godfrey, you mustn&#8217;t desert us, at least not until
-after the drawing-room. I&#8217;ve told our ambassador
-you&#8217;re to be here, and he has gone to no end of trouble
-to arrange for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Howard?&#8221; said I. &#8220;That pup! I despise him.
-He&#8217;s a rotten old snob. They tell me his toadyism turns
-the stomach of even the English. He&#8217;s a disgrace to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-our country. But I suppose he&#8217;s little if any worse
-than most of our ambassadors over here. They&#8217;ve all
-bought their jobs to gratify their own and their wives&#8217;
-taste for shoe polish.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This speech so depressed the ladies that their last
-remnant of vivacity fled, not to return. You are sympathizing
-with them, gentle reader, and they are welcome
-to your sympathy. We drove in silence the rest
-of the way to the hotel in Piccadilly, where they were
-installed in pompous luxury and had made equally luxurious
-provision for me. When I was alone with my
-valet I reasoned myself out of the grouchy mood into
-which the evidences of my family&#8217;s fresh access of folly
-had thrown me. To quarrel with them, to be irritated
-against them, was about as unreasonable as attacking a
-black man for not being white. I had long since realized,
-as the result of much experience and reflection,
-that character is no more to be changed than any other
-inborn quality. My wife had been born an aristocrat,
-and had brought into the world an aristocratic daughter.
-She was to be blamed neither for the one thing
-nor for the other. And it ill became my pretensions
-to superior intellect to gird at her and at Margot. The
-thing for me to do was to let them alone&mdash;keep away.</p>
-
-<p>At dinner, which was served in our apartment, I
-took a different tone with them, and they met me more
-than half way. So cheered was my lovely daughter that
-after dinner she perched on the arm of my chair and
-ventured to bring up the dangerous subject. Said she:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re not going to be mean to me and run away,
-are you, papa?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>Looking at Edna, but addressing Margot, I replied:
-&#8220;Your mother will tell you that it&#8217;s best. We three
-never can agree in our ideas of things. I&#8217;m an irritation.
-I spoil your pleasure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No&mdash;no, indeed!&#8221; cried the girl. &#8220;I&#8217;ve been looking
-forward to your coming. I&#8217;ve been telling everybody
-how handsome and superior you are. And I want
-them to see for themselves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Most pleasant to hear from such rare prettiness, and
-most sincerely spoken.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So many of the American men in society over here
-are common,&#8221; proceeded she, &#8220;and even those who
-aren&#8217;t so very common somehow seem so. They are
-down on their knees before titles, and they act&mdash;like
-servants. Even Mr. Howard&mdash; He oughtn&#8217;t to show
-his feelings so plainly. Of course we all feel impressed
-and honored by being taken up by real titled people of
-old families, but it&#8217;s such bad form to show, and it interferes
-with getting on. When I&#8217;m talking to Lord Crossley
-about that drawing-room, I act as if it were
-nothing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see you are being well educated,&#8221; said I, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes. Mamma and I have worked. We&#8217;ve not
-had an idle moment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I believe you,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You <i>will</i> stay, papa&mdash;won&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I shook my head. But it was no longer the positive
-gesture. My besetting sin, my good nature, had
-possession of me. Remember, it was after dinner, and
-my beautiful daughter was caressing my cheek and was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>
-pleading in a voice whose modulations had been cultivated
-by the best masters in Paris.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t want people to think I was deceiving
-them about my papa.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m willing to be exhibited to a select few in the
-next two or three days,&#8221; I conceded. &#8220;They will tell
-the others.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And with that they had to be content. In the faint
-hope of inducing me to change my mind, Edna&mdash;the
-devoid of the sense of humor&mdash;took me to a tailor&#8217;s
-and had me shown pictures and models of the court
-costume I would wear. But I remained firm. A sense
-of humor would have warned her that a person of my
-sort would have an aversion to liveries of every kind,
-to any costume that stamps a man as one of a class.
-I am perhaps foolishly jealous of my own individuality.
-But I cannot help it. A king in his robes, a general in
-his uniform&mdash;except in battle where it&#8217;s as necessary
-and useful as night shirt or pajamas in bed&mdash;any sort
-of livery seems pitiful and contemptible to me. I will
-wear the distinguishing dress of the human race and
-the male sex, but further than that classification I
-refuse to move. Also, what business had I, citizen of
-a democracy whose chief idea is the barbarism and
-silliness of aristocracy&mdash;what business had I going to
-see a king and a queen? I should have felt that I was
-aiding them in the triumph of dragging democracy at
-their chariot wheels. No, I would not go to levees and
-drawing-rooms. You may say I showed myself an absurd
-extremist. Well, perhaps so. But, as it seems
-to be necessary to go to one extreme or the other, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-prefer the extreme of exaggerated and vainglorious
-self-respect.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The king and queen are no doubt nice people,&#8221;
-said I to Margot. &#8220;But if I meet them, it must be
-on terms of equality&mdash;and for some purpose less inane
-than exchanging a few set phrases.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna and Margot seemed to feel that they had,
-on the whole, a presentable specimen of male relative
-to exhibit; for they made the most of the four days I
-gave them. Through Hilda Armitage, now Lady
-Blankenship, and much freshened up by the more congenial
-atmosphere, they had got in with the set that is
-the least easy of access to Americans&mdash;though, of
-course, it is not actually difficult for any American
-with plenty of money and a willingness to spend and
-good guidance in how to spend. And I must admit
-I enjoyed myself in those four days. The women
-were, for the most part, rather slow, though I recall
-two who had real intelligence, and I don&#8217;t think
-there was a single one quite so devoid of knowledge of
-important subjects as our boasted &#8220;bright&#8221; American
-women. The men were distinctly attractive.
-They had information, they had breadth&mdash;the thing
-the upper-class men of America often lack. Also,
-they were entirely free from that ill-at-easeness about
-their own and their neighbor&#8217;s position in society
-which makes the American upper classes tiresome and
-ridiculous.</p>
-
-<p>It amused me to observe the Americans in this environment.
-Both our women and our men seemed uneasy,
-small, pinched. You could distinguish the American<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-man instantly by his pinched, tight expression of
-an upper servant out for a holiday. I could feel the
-same thing in our women, but I doubt not their looks
-and dress and vivacity concealed it from the Englishmen.
-Anyhow, women are used to being nothing in
-themselves, to taking rank and form from their surroundings.
-While with us it seems to be true that the
-women are wholly responsible for social position with
-all its nonsense, the deeper truth is that they owe everything
-to the possessions of their fathers or husbands.
-Without that backing they would be nothing. Everything
-must ultimately rest upon a substantiality. In
-themselves, unsupported, the women&#8217;s swollen pretensions
-would vanish into thin air.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Crossley was to have dined with us my first
-evening in London, but was prevented by suddenly
-arising business in the country. Next day he came
-to lunch, and I at once saw that he was after Margot
-hammer and tongs. I discovered it not by the way he
-treated her, but by his attitude toward her mother and
-me. He seemed a thoroughly satisfactory young man
-in every way, and I especially liked his frankness and
-simplicity. Edna had devoted a large part of a long
-sight-seeing tour with me to an account of his grandeur
-in the British aristocracy. Having had experience
-at that time of the American brand of aristocracy
-only, I was ignorant of the European kinds that have
-the aristocratic instinct in the most acute form&mdash;the
-ingrowing form. I know now that our own sort, unpleasant
-and unsightly though it is, cannot compare
-in malignance, in littleness and meanness of soul with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-the European sort. Just as the noisy blowhard is a
-modest fellow and harmless, and on acquaintance lovable
-in comparison with the silent, brooding egotist,
-just so is the American aristocrat in comparison with
-the European. An American aristocrat has been known
-to forget himself and be human. I recall no instance
-of that sort in an European born and bred to the notion
-that his flesh and blood are of a subtler material
-than the flesh and blood of most men. However, as I
-was saying, at the time of my first visit to Europe I
-knew nothing of these matters, and Lord Crossley
-seemed to me a simple, ingenuous young man, most
-attractively boyish for his years.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That chap wants to marry Margot,&#8221; said I to
-Edna when we were alone later in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think so,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Several young men wish
-to marry her. But she is in no hurry. She&#8217;s not nineteen
-yet, and she would like a duke.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To be sure,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But she may not be able
-to love a duke.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never heard of a girl who wouldn&#8217;t love a duke
-if she got the chance,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;There are only
-five&mdash;English dukes, I mean&mdash;who are eligible. Margot
-has met three of them&mdash;and one, the Duke of Brestwell,
-has taken quite a fancy to her.&#8221; Carelessly, but
-with nervous anxiety underneath, &#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t have
-any objection?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I? Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;you are so&mdash;so peculiar in some ways.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anyone who pleases Margot will suit me,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We were afraid you&#8217;d be prejudiced against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-titles. You&#8217;ve been with that eccentric Mr. Armitage
-so much&mdash;and you always have been against the sort
-of things Margot and I like.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve no objection to titles,&#8221; said I. &#8220;In fact, I
-think Margot will be happier if she marries a title.
-You&#8217;ve educated her so well that she&#8217;ll never see the
-man or think of him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How little you know her!&#8221; cried Edna, pathetically.
-&#8220;And how unjust to me your prejudices make
-you. I&#8217;ve brought her up to be all refinement&mdash;all
-sentiment&mdash;all heart. She looks only at the highest
-and best.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At the duke,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly at the duke,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Her tastes
-are for the life where a woman can show her beauty of
-soul to the best advantage and can do the most good.
-There is no career for a woman in America. But over
-here a woman married into the aristocracy has a real
-career.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At what?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As a recognized social leader. As a leader in
-charities and all sorts of good movements.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, I see,&#8221; said I&mdash;and there I stopped, for I had
-learned not to argue with my wife&mdash;or with anyone
-else, male or female&mdash;when the subject is sheer twaddle.
-&#8220;Yes, I think Margot would do well to marry over
-here and to have a dazzling career. I&#8217;m sure she&#8217;d
-never get tired of this&mdash;pardon me&mdash;treadmill. I observe
-that it&#8217;s better organized than the imitation one
-we have over in &#8216;the States.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should say!&#8221; cried Edna. &#8220;You&#8217;ve no idea<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
-how cheap and common the best you have in New York
-is beside the social life here. I&#8217;ve been here only a
-year, but already there have been the greatest changes
-in me. Don&#8217;t you notice?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I do,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And I can honestly say you have
-changed for the better. You&#8217;ve learned to cover
-it up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked inquiringly at me, but I did not care
-to explain what the &#8220;it&#8221; was that she had learned to
-cover. A slight flush appeared in her cheeks, and I
-knew intuitively that she thought I was alluding to her
-humble origin. I did not disabuse her mind of this
-impression. She would have been angry had I explained
-that I meant her social ambitions which I
-thought vulgar and she thought refined. Both she and
-Margot, except in occasional unguarded moments in
-privacy, had indeed vastly improved in manners. They
-had learned the trick of the aristocrats they associated
-with&mdash;the trick of affecting simplicity and equality and
-quietly confident ease. There was a notable difference,
-and altogether in their favor, between their manners
-and the manners of the former Mrs. Armitage and
-other American women. Whatever might justly be
-said in the way of criticism of my wife, it assuredly
-could not be said that she was lacking in agility at
-&#8220;catching on.&#8221; Armitage once said to me, &#8220;Your
-wife is a marvelous woman. I never saw or heard of
-her making a break.&#8221; This tribute can be appreciated
-only when you recall whence she sprung&mdash;and how
-much of her origin remained with her&mdash;necessarily&mdash;through
-all her climbings and soarings.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>&#8220;You prefer it over here?&#8221; said I&mdash;we were still
-driving.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If it weren&#8217;t for you, I&#8217;d never go back,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For me?&#8221; said I. &#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t bother about me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I do,&#8221; replied she sweetly. And her hand
-covertly stole into mine for a moment. &#8220;Sometimes
-I get so homesick, Godfrey, that&#8217;s it all I can do to
-fight off the impulse to take the first steamer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I tried to look as a man should on hearing such
-pleasant and praiseworthy sentiments from the wife of
-his bosom.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve acted cold and&mdash;and reserved with me,&#8221; she
-went on. &#8220;I wanted to come to you last night. But
-I hadn&#8217;t the courage. You are such a mixture of tenderness
-and&mdash;and aloofness. You have the power to make
-even me feel like a stranger.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure I don&#8217;t mean to be that way,&#8221; said I,
-thoroughly uncomfortable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot was speaking of it,&#8221; proceeded Edna.
-&#8220;She said&mdash;poor affectionate child&mdash;that she hardly
-dared put her arms round you and kiss you. You
-oughtn&#8217;t to repulse the child that way, Godfrey. She
-has a tender, loving heart. And she adores you. She
-and I talk of you a long time every day. I&#8217;d insist
-on it as a matter of duty&mdash;for I&#8217;d not let your child
-forget you. But I don&#8217;t need to insist. She refers
-everything to you, and whenever she&#8217;s unusually happy,
-she always says: &#8216;If papa could only be enjoying this
-with us!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I saw that she had worked herself up into a state
-of excitement. My good sense told me that there was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-no genuineness in either her affection or Margot&#8217;s. But
-I had no doubt they both thought themselves genuine.
-And that was quite enough to give me, the easy-going
-American slob of a husband and father, an acute attack
-of guilty conscience. The upshot was&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>But you who have an impressionable heart and a
-keen sense of your own shortcomings can guess what
-it was. Edna and I resumed the relations of affectionate
-husband and wife for the rest of my&mdash;brief&mdash;stop
-in London. I remained several days longer than
-I had intended&mdash;stayed on because I did not wish to
-hurt her feelings. And I bought her and Margot all
-sorts of jewelry and gew-gaws, largely increased her
-personal fortune, did not utter a word that would ruffle
-either of them. And I left them convinced that I was
-going only because business not to be neglected compelled.</p>
-
-<p>They say that the hypocrite wife is a common occurrence.
-I wonder if the hypocrite husband is rare.
-I wonder if there are not more instances than this
-one of the husband and the wife playing a cross game
-of hypocrisy, with each fancying the other deceived?</p>
-
-<p>So busy was I with my own laborings to deceive
-my wife as to the true state of my feelings toward her
-that not until I was halfway across the Atlantic did I
-happen to think the obvious thought. You, gentle
-reader, have not thought it. But perhaps some more
-intelligent species of reader has. In mid-Atlantic, I
-suddenly thought: &#8220;Why she&mdash;she and Margot&mdash;were
-playing a game&mdash;the same game. For what purpose?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was not many months before I found out.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">That</span> summer Armitage was spending the week
-ends out on Long Island at the country place of his
-sister, Mrs. Kirkwood. He kept his yacht in the tiny
-harbor there and made short cruises in the Sound
-and up the New England coast. Naturally I often
-went with him. Those parties usually amused me. He
-knew a dozen interesting people&mdash;working people&mdash;such
-as Boris Raphael, the painter, and his wife, the
-architect, the Horace Armstrongs who had been divorced
-and remarried, a novelist named Beechman who
-wrote about the woods and lived in the wilderness in
-the Southwest most of the year, Susan Lenox the actress&mdash;several
-others of the same kind. Then there was
-his sister&mdash;Mary Kirkwood.</p>
-
-<p>For a reason which will presently appear I have
-not before spoken of Mrs. Kirkwood, though I had
-known her longer than I had known Armitage. Her
-husband had been treasurer of the road when I was
-an under Vice President. He speculated in the road&#8217;s
-funds and it so happened that, when he was about to
-be caught, I was the only man who could save him from
-exposure. Instead of asking me directly, he sent his
-wife to me. I can see her now as she was that day&mdash;pale,
-haggard, but with that perfect composure which
-deceives the average human being into thinking, &#8220;Here<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-is a person without nerves.&#8221; She told me the whole
-story in the manner of one relating a matter in which
-he has a sympathetic but remote interest. She made
-not the smallest attempt to work upon my feelings, to
-move me to pity. &#8220;And,&#8221; she ended, &#8220;if you will help
-him cover up the shortage, it will be made good and
-he will resign. I shall see to it that he does not take
-another position of trust.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t he come to me, himself?&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;Why did he send you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me&mdash;a steady gaze from a pair of
-melancholy gray eyes. &#8220;I cannot answer that,&#8221; said
-she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; stammered I; for I guessed
-the answer to my question even as I was asking it. I
-knew the man&mdash;an arrogant coward, with the vanity
-to lure him into doing preposterous things and wilting
-weakness the instant trouble began to gather. &#8220;You
-wish me to save him?&#8221; I said, still confused and not
-knowing how to meet the situation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am asking rather for myself,&#8221; replied she. &#8220;I
-married him against my father&#8217;s wishes and warning.
-I have not loved him since the second month of our
-marriage. If he should be exposed, I think the disgrace
-would kill me.&#8221; Her lip curled in self-scorn.
-&#8220;A queer kind of pride, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; she said. &#8220;To be
-able to live through the real shame, and to shrink only
-from the false.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do it,&#8221; said I, with a sudden complete change
-of intention. &#8220;That is, if you promise me he will
-resign and not try to get a similar position elsewhere.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>&#8220;I promise,&#8221; said she, rising, to show that she was
-taking not a moment more of my time than was unavoidable.
-&#8220;And I thank you&#8221;&mdash;and that was all.</p>
-
-<p>I kept my part of the agreement; she kept hers.
-In about two years she divorced him because he was
-flagrantly untrue to her. He married the woman and
-supported her and himself on the allowance Mary Kirkwood
-made him as soon as her father&#8217;s death let her into
-her share of the property. When I saw her again&mdash;one
-night at dinner at her brother&#8217;s house, before his
-wife divorced him&mdash;we met as if we were entire strangers.
-Neither of us made the remotest allusion to that
-first meeting.</p>
-
-<p>Going down to her house with Armitage often and
-being with her on the yacht for days together, I became
-fairly well acquainted with her, although she maintained
-the reserve which she did not increase for a stranger
-or drop even with her brother. You felt as if her
-personality were a large and interesting house, with
-room after room worth seeing, most attractive&mdash;but
-that no one ever was admitted beyond the drawing-room,
-not for a glimpse.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t picture her as of the somber sort of person.
-A real tragedy can befall only a person with a highly
-sensitive nature. Such persons always have sense of
-proportion and sense of humor. They do not exaggerate
-themselves; they see the amusing side of the
-antics of the human animal. So they do not pull long
-faces and swathe themselves in yards of cr&ecirc;pe and try
-to create an impression of dark and gloomy sorrow.
-They do not find woe a luxury; they know it in its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-grim horror. They strive to get the joy out of life.
-So, looking at Mary Kirkwood, you would never have
-suspected a secret of sadness, a blighted life. As her
-reserve did not come from self-consciousness&mdash;either the
-self-consciousness of haughtiness or that of shyness and
-greenness&mdash;you did not even suspect reserve until you
-had known her long and had tried in vain to get
-as well acquainted with her as you thought you were
-at first. I imagine that in our talk in my office about
-her husband I got further into the secret of her than
-anyone else ever had.</p>
-
-<p>One detail I shall put by itself, so important does
-it seem to me. She had a keen sense of humor. It
-was not merely passive, merely appreciation, as the
-sense of humor is apt to be in women&mdash;where it exists
-at all. It was also active; she said droll and even
-witty things. When her sense of humor was aroused,
-her eyes were bewitching.</p>
-
-<p>What did she look like? The women all wish to
-know this; for, being fond of the evanescent triumphs
-over the male which beauty of face or form gives, and
-as a rule having experience only of those petty victories,
-they fancy that looks are the important factor,
-the all-important factor. In fact, the real conquests
-of women are not won by looks. Beauty, or, rather,
-physical charm of some kind, is the lure that draws the
-desired male within range. If after pausing a while
-he finds nothing more, he is off again.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps, probably, my experience with Edna has
-made me more indifferent to looks than the average man
-who has never realized his longing to possess a physically<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-beautiful woman. However that may be, Mary
-Kirkwood certainly had no cause to complain that
-Nature had not been generous to her in the matter of
-looks. She was tall, she was slender. She had a delicate
-oval face, a skin that was clear and smooth and dark
-with the much prized olive tints in it. She had a beautiful
-long neck, a great quantity of almost black hair.
-Her nose suggested pride, her mouth mockery, her eyes
-sincerity. She was the kind of woman who exercises
-a powerful physical fascination over men, and at the
-same time makes them afraid to show their feelings.
-Women like that tantalize with visions of what they
-could and would give the man they loved, but make
-each man feel that it would be idle for him to hope.
-In character she was very different from her cynical,
-mocking brother&mdash;was, I imagine, more like her father.
-Mentally the resemblance between the brother and sister
-was strong&mdash;but she took pains to conceal how much
-she knew, where he found his chief pleasure in &#8220;showing
-off.&#8221; I feel I have fallen pitifully short of doing her
-justice in this description. But who can put into words
-such a subtlety as charm? She had it&mdash;for men. Women
-did not like her&mdash;nor she them. I state this without
-fear of prejudicing either women or men against her.
-Why is it, by the way, that to say a man does not like
-men and is not liked by them is to damn him utterly,
-while to say that a woman neither likes nor is liked by
-her own sex is rather to speak in her favor? You cry
-indignantly, &#8220;Not true!&#8221; gentle reader. But&mdash;do <i>you</i>
-know what is true and what not true? And, if you
-did, would you confess it, even to yourself?</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>You are proceeding to revenge yourself upon me.
-You are saying, &#8220;<i>Now</i> we know <i>why</i> he was indifferent
-to his beautiful wife and to his lovely daughter!&mdash;<i>Now</i>
-we understand that fit of guilty conscience in
-London!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do you know? Perhaps. I am not sure. I am
-not conscious of any especial interest in Mary Kirkwood
-until after I came back from London. I had seen
-her but a few times. We had never talked so long as
-five consecutive minutes, and then we had talked commonplaces.
-Not the commonplaces of fashionable people,
-but the commonplaces of intelligent people. There&#8217;s
-an enormous difference.</p>
-
-<p>The first time my memory records her with the vividness
-of moving pictures is, of course, at that meeting in
-my office. The next time is a few days after my return
-from London. I had been surfeited both in London and
-on the steamer with the inane amateurs at life, the shallow
-elegant dabblers in it, interesting themselves only
-in coaching, bridge, and similar pastimes worthy an
-asylum for the feeble-minded. I went down to the Kirkwood
-place with Armitage. As his sister was not in
-the house we set out for a walk through the grounds to
-find her. At the outer edge of the gardens a workman
-told us that if we would follow a path through the
-swampy woods we could not miss her.</p>
-
-<p>The path was the roughest kind of a trail. Our
-journey was beset with swarms of insects, most of them
-mosquitoes in savage humor. It lay along the course
-of a sluggish narrow stream that looked malarious and
-undoubtedly was. &#8220;Landscape gardening is one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-Mary&#8217;s fads,&#8221; explained her brother. &#8220;She has been
-planning to tackle this swamp for several years. Now
-she is at it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the depths of the morass we came upon her. She
-was in man&#8217;s clothes&mdash;laboring man&#8217;s clothes. Her
-face and neck were protected by veils, her hands by
-gloves. She was toiling away with a gang of men at
-clearing the ground where the drains were to center in
-an artificial lake. Armitage called several times before
-she heard. Then she dropped her ax and came
-forward to meet us. There was certainly nothing of
-what is usually regarded as feminine allure about her.
-Yet never had I seen a woman more fascinating. There
-undoubtedly was charm in her face and in her strong,
-slender figure. But I believe the real charm of charms
-for me was the spectacle of a woman usefully employed.
-A woman actually doing something. A woman!</p>
-
-<p>After the greeting she said: &#8220;The only way I can
-get the men to work in this pesthole is by working with
-them.&#8221; She smiled merrily. &#8220;One doesn&#8217;t look so well
-as in a fresh tennis suit wielding a racket. But I can&#8217;t
-bear doing things that have no results.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My father insisted on bringing us up in the commonest
-way and with the commonest tastes,&#8221; said Armitage,
-&#8220;and Mary has remained even less the lady than
-I am the gentleman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As the mosquitoes were tearing us to pieces Mrs.
-Kirkwood ordered us back to the house. Before we were
-out of sight she was leading on her gang and wielding
-the ax again. At dinner she appeared in all the radiance
-and grace of the beautiful woman with fondness for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-and taste in dress. She explained to me her plan&mdash;how
-swamp and sluggish, rotting brook were to be transformed
-into a wooded park with a swift, clear stream
-and a succession of cascades. I may add, she carried
-out the plan, and the results were even beyond what my
-imagination pictured as she talked.</p>
-
-<p>This first view of her life in the country set me to
-observing her closely&mdash;perhaps more closely and from a
-different standpoint than a man usually observes a
-woman. In all she did I saw the same rare and fascinating
-imagination&mdash;the only kind of imagination worth
-while. Of all its stupidities and follies none so completely
-convicts the human race of shallowness and bad
-taste as its notions of what is romantic and idealistic.
-The more elegant the human animal flatters itself it is,
-the poorer are its ideals&mdash;that is, the further removed
-from the practical and the useful. So, you rarely find
-a woman with so much true poetry, true romance, true
-imagination as to keep house well. But Mary Kirkwood
-kept house as a truly great artist paints a picture, as
-a truly great composer creates an opera. In all her
-house there was not a trace of the crude, costly luxury
-that rivals the squalor and bareness of poverty in repulsiveness
-to people of sense and taste. But what
-comfort! What splendid cooking, what perfection of
-service. The chairs and sofas, the beds, the linen, the
-hundred and one small but important devices for facilitating
-the material side of life, and so putting mind and
-spirit in the mood for their best&mdash; But I despair of
-making you realize. I should have to catalogue, describe,
-contrast through page after page. And when I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-had finished, those who understand what the phrase art
-of living means would have read only what they already
-know, while those who do not understand that phrase
-would be convulsed with the cackling laughter that is
-the tribute of mush-brain to intellect.</p>
-
-<p>Observing Mary Kirkwood I discovered a great
-truth about the woman question: the crudest indictment
-of the intellect of woman is the crude, archaic, futile,
-and unimaginative way in which is carried on the part
-of life that is woman&#8217;s peculiar work&mdash;or, rather, is
-messed, muddled, slopped, and neglected. No doubt this
-is not their fault. But it soon will be if they don&#8217;t bestir
-themselves. Already there are American men not
-a few who apologize for having married as a folly of their
-green and silly youth.</p>
-
-<p>So, gentle reader, though my enthusiasm tempts me
-to describe Mary Kirkwood&#8217;s housekeeping in detail, I
-shall spare you. You would not read. You would not
-understand if you did.</p>
-
-<p>The first time she and I approached the confidential
-was on an August evening when we were alone on the
-upper deck of the yacht. The others were in the cabin
-playing bridge. We had been sitting there perhaps an
-hour when she rose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t go,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought you wished to be alone,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why did you think that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your way of answering me. You&#8217;ve been almost
-curt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry. I can&#8217;t promise to talk if you stay.
-But I hate to be left alone with my thoughts.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>&#8220;I understand,&#8221; said she. And she seated herself
-beside the rail, and with my assistance lighted a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>There was a moon somewhere above the awning which
-gave us a roof. By the dim, uncertain light I could
-make out her features. It seemed to me she was staying
-as much on her own account as on mine&mdash;because she,
-too, wished not to be alone with her thoughts. I had
-not in a long time seen her in a frankly serious mood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How much better off a man is than a woman,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;A man has his career to think about, while a woman
-usually has only herself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Only herself,&#8221; echoed she absently. &#8220;And if one
-is able to think, oneself is an unsatisfactory subject.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Extremely,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Faults, follies, failures.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a time I watched the faintly glowing end of her
-cigarette and the slim fingers that held it gracefully.
-Then she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you believe in a future life?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Does anyone feel <i>sure</i> of any life but this?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then this is one&#8217;s only chance to get what one
-wants&mdash;what&#8217;s worth while.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What <i>is</i> worth while?&#8221; I inquired, feeling the
-charm of her quiet, sweet voice issuing upon the magical
-stillness. &#8220;What <i>is</i> worth while?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed softly. &#8220;What one wants.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what do <i>you</i> want?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She drew her white scarf closer about her bare shoulders,
-smiled queerly out over the lazily rippling waters.
-&#8220;Love and children,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I&#8217;m a normal woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That amused me. &#8220;Normal? Why, you&#8217;re unique&mdash;eccentric.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-Most women want money&mdash;and yet more
-money&mdash;and yet more money&mdash;for more and more and
-always more show.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must want the same thing,&#8221; retorted she.
-&#8220;You&#8217;re too sensible not to know you can&#8217;t possibly do
-any good to others with money. So you must want it
-for your own selfish purposes. It&#8217;s every bit as much
-for show when you have it tucked away in large masses
-for people to gape at as if you were throwing it round
-as the women do.... If anything, your passion is
-cruder than theirs.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think I make money,&#8221; said I, &#8220;for the same reasons
-that a hen lays eggs or a cow gives milk&mdash;because
-I can&#8217;t help it; because I can&#8217;t do anything else and
-must do something.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you ever try to do anything else?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; I admitted. Then I added, &#8220;I never had the
-chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;True,&#8221; she said reflectively. &#8220;A hen can&#8217;t give
-milk and a cow can&#8217;t lay eggs.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For some time,&#8221; I went on, &#8220;I&#8217;ve been trying to
-find something else to do. Something interesting. No,
-not exactly that either. I must find some way of reviving
-my interest in life. The things I am doing would
-be interesting enough if I could be interested in anything
-at all. But I&#8217;m not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded slowly. &#8220;I&#8217;m in the same state,&#8221; said
-she. &#8220;I&#8217;ve about decided what to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; said I encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Marry again,&#8221; replied she.</p>
-
-<p>I laughed outright. &#8220;That&#8217;s very unoriginal,&#8221; said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-I. &#8220;It puts you in with the rest of the women. Marrying
-is all <i>they</i> can think of doing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you don&#8217;t quite understand,&#8221; said she. &#8220;<i>I</i>
-want children. I am thinking of selecting some trustworthy
-man with good physical and mental qualities.
-I have had experience. I ought to be able to judge&mdash;and
-not being in love with him I shall not be so likely
-to make a mistake. I shall marry, and the children will
-give me love and occupation. You may laugh, but I tell
-you the only occupation worthy of a man or a woman is
-bringing up children. All the rest&mdash;for men as well as
-for women&mdash;is&mdash;is like a hen laying eggs to rot in the
-weeds.... Bringing up children to develop us, to
-give us a chance to make them an improvement on ourselves.
-That&#8217;s the best.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As the full meaning of what she had said unfolded
-I was filled with astonishment. How clear and simple&mdash;how
-true. Why had I not seen this long ago&mdash;why had
-it been necessary to have it pointed out by another?
-&#8220;I believe&mdash;yes, I&#8217;m sure&mdash;that&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve been groping
-for,&#8221; I said to her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought you&#8217;d understand,&#8221; said she, and most
-flattering was her tone of pleasure at my obvious admiration.</p>
-
-<p>Thus our friendship was born.</p>
-
-<p>I could not but envy her freedom to seek to satisfy
-the longing I thus discovered in my own heart. So
-strongly did the mood for confidence possess me that
-only my long and hard training in self-restraint held
-me from the disloyalty of speaking my thoughts. I
-said:</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>&#8220;It&#8217;s dismal to grow old with no ties in the oncoming
-generation. The sense of the utter futility of life
-would weigh more and more heavily. I&#8217;m surprised that
-you&#8217;ve realized it so young.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A woman realizes it earlier than a man,&#8221; she reminded
-me. &#8220;For a woman has no career to interfere
-and prevent her seeing the truth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A woman! Rather, a rare occasional Mary Kirkwood.
-Most women never looked beyond the gratification
-of the crudest, easiest vanities and appetites. &#8220;Yes,
-you are right,&#8221; I continued. &#8220;You ought to marry&mdash;as
-soon as you can. The man isn&#8217;t important, except in
-the ways you spoke of. So far as man and woman love
-is concerned, that quickly passes&mdash;where it ever exists
-at all. But the bond of father, mother, and children is
-enduring&mdash;at least, I&#8217;m sure <i>you</i> would make it so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We sat lost in thought for some time&mdash;I reflecting
-moodily upon my own baffled and now seemingly hopeless
-longing, she probably busy with the ideas suggested
-in her next speech.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The main trouble is money,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Except
-for that my husband would have been all right. When
-we first met he did not know my family had wealth. He
-thought I belonged to another and poor branch. And I
-think he cared for me, and would have been the man I
-sought but for the money. It roused a dormant side of
-his nature, and everything went to pieces.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then, marry a rich man,&#8221; I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know a single rich
-man&mdash;except <i>possibly</i> my brother&mdash;who isn&#8217;t obsessed
-about money. The rich have a craving to be richer that&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-worse than the desire of the poor to be rich.... I don&#8217;t
-know what to do. I couldn&#8217;t bring up children in the
-atmosphere of wealth and caste and show&mdash;the sort of
-atmosphere a man or woman crazy about money insists
-on creating. My father was right. He was a really
-wise man. I owe to him every good instinct and good
-idea I have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you must have seen some man who promised
-well. I think you can trust to your judgment. You
-mustn&#8217;t defeat your one chance for happiness by overcaution.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again she was silent for several minutes. Then she
-said, with a queer laugh and an embarrassed movement:
-&#8220;I have seen such a man&mdash;lately. I like him. I think
-I could like him more than a little. I&#8217;ve an idea he might
-care for me if I&#8217;d let him. But&mdash;I don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I saw that she longed to confide, but wished to be
-questioned. &#8220;Here on the yacht?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Beechman?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed shyly yet with amusement.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was an easy guess,&#8221; said I. &#8220;He&#8217;s the only
-man of us free to marry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you think of him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The very man I&#8217;d say,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;He&#8217;s good to
-look at&mdash;clever, healthy, and honest. He isn&#8217;t money-mad.
-He could make quite a splurge with what he
-has, yet he doesn&#8217;t. He is a serious man&mdash;does not let
-them tempt him into fashionable society or any other
-kind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What are the objections?&#8221; said she. &#8220;My father<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-trained us to look for the rotten spots, as he called them.
-He said one ought to hunt them out and examine them
-carefully. Then if, in spite of them, the thing still
-looked good, why there was a chance of its being worth
-taking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s precisely my way of proceeding in business,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;It&#8217;s a pity it isn&#8217;t used in every part of
-life&mdash;from marketing up to choosing a friend or a husband.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what are the &#8216;rotten spots&#8217; in Mr. Beechman?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t looked for them,&#8221; said I. &#8220;No doubt
-they&#8217;re there, but as they&#8217;re not obvious they may be
-unimportant.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t you think of <i>any</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was laughing, and so was I. Poor Beechman,
-down in the cabin absorbed in bridge, how amazed he&#8217;d
-have been if he could have heard! In my mind&#8217;s eye I
-was looking him over&mdash;a tall, fair man with good smooth-shaven
-features.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s getting bald rather rapidly for a man of
-thirty or thereabouts,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like baldness,&#8221; said she. &#8220;But I can endure
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is distinctly vain of his looks and his strength.
-But he has cause to be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All men are physically vain,&#8221; said she. &#8220;And they
-can&#8217;t help it, because it is the hereditary quality of the
-male from fishes and reptiles up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s inclined to be opinionated, and his point of
-view is narrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>&#8220;I think I might hope to educate him out of that,&#8221;
-said she. &#8220;I can be tactful.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s certainly not a serious objection.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Any other spots?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He has a certain&mdash;a certain&mdash;lack of vigor. It&#8217;s
-a thing I&#8217;ve observed in all professional men, except
-those of the first rank, those who are really men of
-action.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded. &#8220;I was waiting for that,&#8221; said she.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s the thing that has made me hesitate.&#8221; She laughed
-outright. &#8220;What a conceited speech! But I&#8217;m exposing
-myself fully to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am picking him to pieces as if I thought myself
-perfection. As a matter of fact, I know he&#8217;d fly from
-me if he saw me as I am.&#8221; She reflected, laughed
-quietly. &#8220;But he never would know me as I am. An
-unconventional woman&mdash;if she&#8217;s sensible&mdash;only shows
-enough of her variation from the pattern to make herself
-interesting&mdash;never enough to be alarming.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are unconventional?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You didn&#8217;t suspect it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. You smoke cigarettes&mdash;but that has ceased
-to be unconventional.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I rather thought you had a favorable opinion of
-my intelligence,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So I have,&#8221; said I. &#8220;To be perfectly frank,
-you seemed to me to have as good a mind as your
-brother.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is flattering,&#8221; said she, immensely pleased,
-and with reason. &#8220;Well, if you thought so favorably<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-of my intelligence, how could you believe me conventional?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see,&#8221; said I. &#8220;No one who thinks can be conventional.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Conventionality,&#8221; said she, &#8220;was invented to save
-some people the trouble of thinking and to prevent
-others from being outrageous through trying to think
-when they&#8217;ve nothing to think with.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is worth remembering and repeating,&#8221;
-laughed I. &#8220;Personally, I&#8217;m deeply grateful for conventionality.
-You see, I came up from the bottom, and
-I find it satisfactory to be able to refer to the rules in
-all the things I knew nothing about.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My brother says the most remarkable thing about
-you&mdash;and your wife&mdash; Do you mind my telling you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go on,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He says most people who come up are alternately
-hopeless barbarians and hopelessly conventional, but
-that you took the right course. You learned to be
-conventional&mdash;learned the rules&mdash;before you ventured
-to try to make personal variations in them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m slow to risk variations,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Most of
-the efforts in that direction are&mdash;eccentric. And I detest
-eccentricity as much as I like originality.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If Mr. Beechman were only a little less conventional!&#8221;
-sighed she. &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid he&#8217;d be rather&mdash;&#8221;
-She hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tiresome?&#8221; I ventured to suggest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tiresome,&#8221; she assented. &#8220;But&mdash;there would be
-the children. Do you think he&#8217;d try to interfere with
-me there?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>&#8220;You&#8217;ll never know that until you&#8217;ve married him,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a pity he has an occupation that would keep
-him round the house most of the time,&#8221; said she.
-&#8220;That&#8217;s a trial to a woman. She&#8217;s always being interrupted
-when she wishes to be free.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t expect too much,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I think
-the children will be <i>your</i> children.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did not reply in words. But a sudden strengthening
-of her expression made me feel that I was getting
-a glimpse of her father.</p>
-
-<p>We talked no more of Beechman or of any personalities
-related to this story. When the bridge party
-broke up and a supper was served on deck, she and
-Beechman sat together. And I gathered from the
-sounds coming from their direction that he was making
-progress. My spirits gradually oozed away and I sat
-glumly pretending to listen while Mrs. Raphael talked
-to me. Usually she interested me because she talked
-what she knew and knew things worth while. But that
-night I heard scarcely a word she said. When the
-party, one by one, began to go below, Mrs. Kirkwood
-joined me and found an opportunity to say, aside:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you talk with Mr. Beechman&mdash;and tell
-me your honest opinion? You know I can&#8217;t afford to
-make another mistake. And I&#8217;m in earnest.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I stood silent, smoking and staring out toward the
-dim Connecticut shore.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It wouldn&#8217;t be unfair to him,&#8221; she urged.
-&#8220;You&#8217;re not especially his friend. I can&#8217;t ask anyone
-else, and I believe in your judgment.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>&#8220;If I advised you, I&#8217;d be taking a heavy responsibility,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not that kind&mdash;you know I&#8217;m not,&#8221; replied
-she. &#8220;I don&#8217;t ask advice, to have some one to blame if
-things go wrong. Of course, if there&#8217;s a reason why
-you can&#8217;t very well help me&mdash; Maybe you already
-know something against him?&mdash;something you&#8217;ve no
-right to tell?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing,&#8221; said I, emphatically. &#8220;And I don&#8217;t
-believe there is anything against him.&#8221; Then, on an
-impulse of fairness and to wipe out the suspicion of
-Beechman I had unwittingly created, I said: &#8220;Really,
-there&#8217;s no reason why I shouldn&#8217;t size him up and give
-you my opinion. I&#8217;ll do my best.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She thanked me with a fine lighting up of the eyes.
-And the warm friendly pressure of her hand lingered
-after she had long been below and was no doubt asleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>What was my reason for hesitating? You have
-guessed it, but you think I do not intend to admit.
-You are deceived there. I admit frankly. I felt unable
-to advise her because I found that I was in love
-with her, myself. Yes, I was in love, and for the first
-time in my life. The latest time of falling in love is
-always the first. As we become older and more experienced,
-better acquainted with the world, with ourselves,
-with what we want and do not want&mdash;in a word, as we
-<i>grow</i>, the meaning of love grows. And each time we
-love, we see, as we look back over the previous times,
-that what we thought was love was in fact simply educational.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>So, when I say I had never loved until I loved Mary
-Kirkwood, I am speaking a truth which is worth thinking
-about. I had reached the age, the stage of physical
-and mental development, at which a man&#8217;s capacities
-are at their largest&mdash;at which I could give love and
-could appreciate love that was given to me. And I, who
-could not ask or hope love from her, gave her all the love
-I had to give. Gave because I could not help giving.
-Who, seeing the best, can help wanting it?</p>
-
-<p>But for my promise to her I should have left the
-yacht early the following morning. As it was I stayed
-on, with my mind made up to keep my word. Did I
-stay because of my promise? Did I stay because I
-loved her? I do not know. Who can fathom the real
-motive in such a situation as that? I can only say that
-I sought Beechman&#8217;s society and did my best to take
-his measure. It had been so long my habit to judge
-men without regard to my personal feeling about them
-that, perhaps in spite of myself, I saw this man as he
-was, not as I should have liked him to be. I found that
-I had underestimated him. I had been prejudiced by
-his taking himself too seriously&mdash;a form of vanity which
-I happen particularly to detest. Also his sense of humor
-was different from mine&mdash;a fact that had misled
-me into thinking he had no sense of humor. I had
-thought&mdash;shall I say hoped?&mdash;that I would find him
-a man she could respect but could not love. I was
-forced to abandon this idea. So far as a man can judge
-another for a woman, he could succeed with almost any
-heart-free woman. I wondered that Mary Kirkwood
-should be uncertain about him. I might have drawn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
-comfort from her having done so, had I not known how
-she dreaded making a second mistake.</p>
-
-<p>That day and the next, when I was not with him,
-she was. I shan&#8217;t attempt to tell my emotions. That
-sort of thing seems absurd to all the world but the one
-who is suffering. Besides, the fact that I was a married
-man would alienate the sympathies of all respectable
-readers. Not that I am yearning for sympathy.
-Those who have read thus far may have possibly gathered
-that I am not one of those who live on sympathy
-and wither and die without it. The only sympathy
-human beings seem able to give one another, I have discovered,
-is a species of self-complacent pity; and while
-it may not be exactly a stone, it is certainly a most inferior
-quality of bread.</p>
-
-<p>The third morning I sought her out. She made
-a picture of strong, slim young womanhood to cause
-the heart&mdash;at least, my heart&mdash;to ache, as she leaned
-against the rail in her blue-trimmed white linen dress
-showing her lovely throat. Said I, avoiding her eyes:
-&#8220;I&#8217;m off for the shore, and I wish to report before
-leaving.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ashore!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;Why, you were to have
-gone on to Bar Harbor and back again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Business&mdash;always business.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m disappointed,&#8221; said she, and I saw with a furtive
-glance that her face had quite lost its brightness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad of that, at least,&#8221; said I with a successful
-enough attempt at lightness; for, as I have never been
-the sort of man in whom women expect to find sentimentalism,
-signs of embarrassment or other agitation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-would be attributed to any other source before the
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve lost interest in the trip,&#8221; she declared.</p>
-
-<p>I forced a smile. &#8220;Beechman isn&#8217;t going.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s different,&#8221; said she, with a certain frank
-impatience. &#8220;You&#8217;re the one person I can really talk
-to.... Can&#8217;t you stay?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I did not let my face betray me. I waited before
-speaking until I was sure of my voice. &#8220;Impossible,&#8221;
-I said, perhaps rather curtly&mdash;for, mind you, I wished
-to deal honestly with her, and was not trying to hint my
-love while pretending to hide it. I know there is a notion
-that love cannot be controlled. But the kind of love
-that can&#8217;t be controlled is a selfish, greedy appetite and
-not love at all. When the man doesn&#8217;t control his love
-the woman may be sure he is thinking of himself only,
-of her merely as a possible means of pleasure&mdash;is thinking
-of her as the hungry hunter thinks of the fine fat
-rabbit. Said I:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now for my report on Beechman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But she would not let me escape. &#8220;Why are you
-short with me?&#8221; she asked. &#8220;Have I offended you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, indeed,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You&#8217;ve been everything
-that&#8217;s kind and friendly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The very idea of losing your friendship frightens
-me,&#8221; she went on. &#8220;I&#8217;ve a feeling for you&mdash;a feeling
-of&mdash;of intimacy&#8221;&mdash;she flushed rosily&mdash;&#8220;that I have
-for no one else in the world. Oh, I don&#8217;t expect you to
-return it. No doubt I seem insignificant to you. Almost
-anyone would want your friendship. You are
-sure you aren&#8217;t leaving because you are bored?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>&#8220;Absolutely sure. If I could explain my reason for
-going you would see that I must. But I can&#8217;t explain.
-So you&#8217;ll be glad to hear that I find Beechman even
-more of a man than I thought.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me apologetically. &#8220;You&#8217;ll think me
-foolish, but since I&#8217;ve begun to try to like him better
-I&#8217;ve been&mdash;almost&mdash;not liking him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I am sure I beamed with delight. For, there are
-limits&mdash;very narrow ones&mdash;to unselfishness in the most
-considerate love. And I am not able to pose as more
-than feebly unselfish. &#8220;That isn&#8217;t fair to him,&#8221; I said,
-with more enthusiasm in my words than in my tone.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve been judging him as carefully as I know how, and
-I must in honesty say he is a rare man. You&#8217;ll not find
-many like him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t tell me he&#8217;s worthy,&#8221; she cried, &#8220;or I shall
-loathe him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And he cares for you,&#8221; I said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did he tell you so?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think he would have if I had encouraged him....
-I liked the way he spoke of you, and&#8221;&mdash;I hesitated,
-could not hold back the words&mdash;&#8220;and I am not
-easy to please there.&#8221; Those words were certainly far
-from confession, were the mildest form of indiscretion.
-Still, so determined was I to be square, and so guilty
-did I feel, that they sounded like a contemptible attempt
-stealthily to make love to her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; she said gently. And her suddenly
-swimming eyes and tender voice reminded me how alone
-she was and how bitter her experience had been and
-how she deserved happiness.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>I felt ashamed of myself. &#8220;I hope you will be
-happy,&#8221; I said, perhaps rather huskily. &#8220;Anyone who
-tried to prevent it would deserve to be killed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me with such a steady, penetrating
-gaze that I feared I had betrayed myself. In fact, I
-knew I had. I glanced at my watch, put out my hand.
-&#8220;I hate to go,&#8221; I said, in the tone of one man to another.
-&#8220;But I must.&#8221; And as we shook hands, I repeated,
-&#8220;I know you will be happy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed nervously; she, too, had become ill at
-ease. &#8220;You make me feel engaged,&#8221; she said with an
-attempt at mockery.</p>
-
-<p>As the launch touched the shore I looked back. She
-was leaning on the rail, Beechman beside her. He was
-talking, but I felt sure she was not listening. As I
-looked she waved her hand. I lifted my hat and hurried
-away. And I learned the meaning of that word desolation.</p>
-
-<p>Do not think, because I have not raved, talked of
-the moon and stars, poetized about my soul states,
-that therefore I did not love her. The banquet of
-life spread so richly for me seemed a ghastly mockery.
-What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world
-and lose his own soul? I had lost my soul. I had
-discovered how I might have been happy, and at the
-same time I had discovered that it could never be&mdash;never.
-And always before me she stood in her radiant
-youth&mdash;intelligent, so capable, splendidly sincere&mdash;the
-woman I loved, the woman I felt I could have made
-love me.</p>
-
-<p>There was my temptation&mdash;the feeling, the conviction<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-that I could win her love. She had confessed to a
-friendship for me different from any she had for anyone
-else in the world. If I were willing to take advantage
-of her trust, of her liking, of her longing for love
-and of my knowledge of it&mdash;if I were to let her see
-how utterly I loved her&mdash;I could surely win her. There
-were times when I said to myself: &#8220;You&mdash;even as you
-are&mdash;can make her happier than anyone else could. She
-would prefer what you can give her to what she will get
-from Beechman. Your love gives you the right to
-make her happy. You are letting foolish conventional
-notions blind you to what is really right. If you had
-acted in business in that fashion, you would not have
-got far. Yet in the supreme crisis of your life you let
-yourself be frightened off by a bogy of conventional
-morality.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps I was giving myself sound advice there. I
-do not know. I only know that I put the temptation
-behind me and went to work. The sentimental readers
-will not forgive me. So be it. I am a plain man, rather
-old-fashioned&mdash;prim, I believe it is called&mdash;in my ideas,
-not at all the ladies&#8217; man. And I did not want to harm
-her. I loved her.</p>
-
-<p>I went to work. The sort of people who are ever
-on the lookout for some excuse for going to pieces,
-and the world is well sprinkled with them, eagerly
-seize on disappointment in love as precisely what they
-were seeking. At the risk of being thought cold and
-hard, I will say that it is extremely fortunate for Joan
-that she escaped the Darby who goes smash for disappointed
-love of her. If Joan had yielded to him, Darby<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-would simply have been put to the trouble of finding
-another pretext for throwing up his job and taking to
-drink. I confess it did not occur to me to give up
-and fall to boozing and brooding. I should not have
-dared do that; for, you see, I was really in love&mdash;not
-with myself, but with Mary Kirkwood. I went to work.
-I filled my days and my evenings with business engagements
-that compelled both my time and my thought.
-I took on an extra secretary. I started to build a
-railway. I laid out an addition to the manufacturing
-city I had founded. I organized a farm for teaching
-city slum boys to be farmers. I engaged in several
-entirely new mining and manufacturing enterprises.
-The result was that when I went to bed, I slept; and
-when they awakened me in the morning my brain was at
-work before my head was well off the pillow. And still&mdash; You
-can distract your mind from the aching tooth, but
-it aches on.</p>
-
-<p>All this time I was receiving weekly letters from
-Edna and Margot&mdash;long and loving letters. I read
-them, and you may possibly imagine I was filled with
-shame and remorse. Not at all. My wife and my
-daughter had rather exaggerated my vanity. Only
-vanity could gull a husband and father in my position
-into fancying himself the object of such luxuriant
-affection as those letters professed. If you have lies
-to tell, take my advice and don&#8217;t <i>write</i> them. I can&#8217;t
-explain the mystery, but a lie which, spoken and heard,
-passes out and passes in as smoothly as a greased shuttle
-in its greased groove, becomes a glaring falsehood
-when set down in black and white. The only effect of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-those letters upon me was to make my sick heart the
-sadder with the realization of what I had missed in
-losing Mary Kirkwood.</p>
-
-<p>And I kept wondering what it was that Edna and
-Margot were slathering me for.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In September I got the key to the mystery. The
-necessity of floating some bonds took me abroad again.
-I found my family ensconced in beautiful luxury in an
-apartment in Paris. You drove out the Champs Elys&eacute;es.
-Not far from the President&#8217;s palace you drove in
-at great doors&mdash;not gates, but doors&mdash;in a plain, unpretentious-looking
-house wall. You were in a superb
-garden of whose existence you had no hint from the
-street. Magnificent bronze inner doors&mdash;powdered and
-velveted lackeys&mdash;a majestic stairway leading to lofty
-and gorgeous corridors and salons. Really my wife,
-with the aid of those clever European professors of the
-aristocratic art, had educated herself amazingly. On
-every side there were evidences of her good taste in
-furniture, in tapestries, in wall coverings, in pictures.
-It was not the taste of a home maker, but it was
-unquestionably good taste. It was not the sort of
-taste I liked, but not to admire it would have been
-to lack the sense of harmony in line and color. And
-let me add in justice to her, it was her own taste.
-There is no mistaking the difference between the
-luxury that is merely bought and the luxury that is
-created.</p>
-
-<p>I submitted with what grace I could muster to the
-exuberant hypocrisies of that greeting. But I got to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-business with all speed. &#8220;In the note I found in London
-you said you had a surprise for me,&#8221; I said to
-Edna. &#8220;What is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How impatient you are,&#8221; laughed she. &#8220;Just like
-a child.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Whether because the fashions of the day happened
-to be peculiarly becoming or because she had actually
-improved, she now had the loveliness more exquisite
-than I had ever seen in woman. No doubt her piquant
-face had charm for most people; for me it had none
-whatever. I knew too well what lay beneath&mdash;or,
-rather, what was not there, for like most human beings
-her defects of character were not so much the presence
-of the vices as the lack of the virtues.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been waiting for that surprise several months,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;Your letters and Margot&#8217;s showed that some
-shock was coming.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shock? No, indeed!&#8221; And she and Margot
-laughed gayly. &#8220;It isn&#8217;t altogether a surprise,&#8221; she
-went on. &#8220;Can&#8217;t you guess?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I looked at Margot. &#8220;Ah!&#8221; I said. &#8220;Margot is
-engaged.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot ran across the room and kissed me. &#8220;Oh,
-I&#8217;m so happy, papa!&#8221; she cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is it the duke?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>She made a wry face. &#8220;He was horrid!&#8221; she said.
-&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t <i>endure</i> him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So you had to fall back on the marquis?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Neither of the women liked this way of putting the
-matter. It suggested that I knew the painful truth of
-the failure of the ducal campaign. But they were not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-to be put out of humor. &#8220;You liked him yourself,
-papa,&#8221; said Margot.</p>
-
-<p>I was abstractedly thinking how I had no sense of
-her being my daughter or of Edna being my wife.
-You would say that after all we three had been through
-together, from Passaic up, it would be a sheer impossibility
-for there ever to be a sense of strangeness between
-us. But there is no limit to the power of the
-human soul to cut itself off; intimacy is hard to maintain,
-isolation&mdash;alas&mdash;is the natural state. I looked
-on them as strangers; I could feel that, in spite of
-their clever, resolute forcing, in spite of the hypocrisy
-of love for me which each doubtless maintained at all
-times with the other, still they could scarcely hide their
-feeling that I was a strange man come in from the
-street.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I liked Crossley,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I think he&#8217;ll
-make you a good husband.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is <i>mad</i> about her!&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;There was
-a while this summer when he thought he had lost her,
-and he all but went out of his mind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To look at her was to believe it; for, a lovelier girl
-was never displayed in all her physical perfection by
-a more discriminating mother.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When is the wedding to be?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>There was a brief, surcharged silence&mdash;no more
-than a pause. Then Edna said indifferently, &#8220;As soon
-as the settlements are arranged.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;is he settling something on her?&#8221; said I,
-with pretended innocence. &#8220;I&#8217;m glad of that. There&#8217;s
-been too much of the other sort of thing.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>Margot came to the rescue with a charming laugh.
-&#8220;Poor Hugh!&#8221; she said. &#8220;He hasn&#8217;t anything but
-mortgages.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Um&mdash;I see,&#8221; said I glumly&mdash;and I observed intense
-anxiety behind the smiles in those two pairs of
-beautiful eyes. &#8220;How much have we got to pay for
-him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna looked reproachfully at me. &#8220;Margot,&#8221; said
-she, &#8220;you&#8217;d better go tell them to serve lunch in fifteen
-minutes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nonsense,&#8221; said I cheerfully. &#8220;Let her stay.
-What&#8217;s the use of this hypocrisy? She knows he cares
-no more about her than she cares about him&mdash;that it&#8217;s
-simply a matter of buying and selling. If she doesn&#8217;t
-know it, if she&#8217;s letting her vanity bamboozle her&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey&mdash;please!&#8221; implored Edna. &#8220;Don&#8217;t
-smirch the child&#8217;s romance. She and Hugh love
-each other. If she were poor, he&#8217;d marry her just the
-same.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Has he offered to go ahead, regardless of settlements?&#8221;
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course not, papa,&#8221; flashed Margot. &#8220;Things
-aren&#8217;t done that way over here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes, they are,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;Romantic love
-matches occur every day. Even royalty throws up its
-rights, to marry a chorus girl. But when there&#8217;s a
-fat American goose to pluck and eat, why, they pluck
-and eat it. I&#8217;m the goose, my dear&mdash;not you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t understand,&#8221; murmured Margot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish I didn&#8217;t,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And I wish you didn&#8217;t
-have to understand. If possible I want to arrange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-matters with him so that he&#8217;ll always treat you decently.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, Godfrey,&#8221; cried Edna in a panic, &#8220;you can&#8217;t
-talk money to <i>him</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221; said I. &#8220;He&#8217;s <i>thinking</i> money.
-Why shouldn&#8217;t he talk it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He knows nothing about those things, papa&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll ruin everything!&#8221; cried my wife. &#8220;You&#8217;ll
-make us the laughingstock of Europe!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We Americans of the rich class are that already,&#8221;
-replied I.</p>
-
-<p>Edna must have given her daughter some secret
-signal, for she abruptly and hastily left the room,
-closing the door behind her. I shrugged my shoulders,
-settled back on the exquisitely upholstered and carved
-sofa on which I had seated myself. Looking round I
-said, &#8220;This is a beautiful room. You&#8217;ve certainly arranged
-a fitting background for yourself and Margot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But she was not listening. She was watching her
-fingers slowly twist and untwist the delicate little lace
-handkerchief. At last she said: &#8220;Godfrey, I&#8217;ve never
-asked a favor of you. I&#8217;ve given my whole life to advancing
-your interests&mdash;to making our child a perfect
-lady&mdash;and to placing her in a dazzling position.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You have worked hard&mdash;and
-you&#8217;ve made your tricks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve played my hand well&mdash;as you have yours,&#8221;
-said she, accepting my rather unrefined figure with
-good grace. &#8220;I began to make Margot&#8217;s career before
-she was born. The first time I saw her little face, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-murmured to myself, &#8216;Little Duchess.&#8217; Now, you understand
-why I brought her up so carefully.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; said I, looking at her with new interest.
-&#8220;That was it?&#8221; I who knew what a futile, purposeless,
-easily discouraged breed the human race is could
-not but admire this woman. If her intelligence had
-only been equal to her will, what might she not have
-accomplished!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have never lost sight of it for a moment,&#8221; said
-she. &#8220;In the early days&mdash;for a time&mdash;when we were
-seemingly so hopelessly obscure, and I was too ignorant
-to learn which way to turn&mdash;for a while I was discouraged.
-But I never gave up&mdash;never! And step by step
-I&#8217;ve trained her for the grand position as a leader of
-European society she was one day to occupy&mdash;for, I
-knew that if she led Europe she would be leader at
-home, too. Over there they&#8217;re merely a feeble, crude
-echo of Europe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Socially,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all we&#8217;re talking about,&#8221; replied she.
-&#8220;That&#8217;s all there is worth talking about. What else
-have you been piling up money for?... What else?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I could think of no reply. I was silent. What else,
-indeed?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I kept her away from other children,&#8221; Edna went
-on. &#8220;After she could talk I never trusted her to nurses
-until we could afford fashionable servants. I got her
-the right sort of governesses&mdash;so that she should speak
-French, Italian, and German, and should have a well-bred
-English accent for her own language. I even
-trained her in the children&#8217;s stories she read&mdash;had her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-read only the fairy tales and the other stories that
-would fill her mind with ideas of nobility and titles and
-the high things of life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The high things of life,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She made an impressive gesture&mdash;she looked like
-a beautiful young empress. &#8220;Let&#8217;s not cant,&#8221; said she.
-&#8220;Those <i>are</i> the high things of life. Ask any person
-you meet in America&mdash;young or old, high or low&mdash;ask
-him which he&#8217;d rather be&mdash;a prince, duke, marquis,
-or a saint, scientist, statesman. What would he answer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;That he&#8217;d rather be a millionaire,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A millionaire with a title&mdash;with established social
-position at the very top&mdash;that couldn&#8217;t be taken away.
-That&#8217;s the truth, Godfrey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll not contradict you,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;I&#8217;ve brought up our daughter
-so that she could realize the highest ambition within
-our reach. Haven&#8217;t I brought her up well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perfectly, for the purpose,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When we came over here, I examined the ground
-carefully. I was at first inclined to one of the big Continental
-titles. They are much older, much more high
-sounding than the English titles&mdash;and so far as birth
-goes they mean something, while the English titles mean
-really nothing at all. The English aristocracy isn&#8217;t
-an aristocracy of birth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s, no doubt, the reason why it still has some
-say in affairs,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Its talk about birth is almost entirely sham,&#8221; proceeded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-she, not interested in my irrelevant comment.
-&#8220;But I found that it was the most substantial aristocracy,
-the only one that was respected everywhere,
-just as the English money circulates everywhere. And
-it&#8217;s the only one that makes much of an impression at
-home. We are so ignorant that we think England is
-all that it pretends to be&mdash;the powerful part of Europe.
-Of course, it isn&#8217;t, but&mdash;no matter. I decided for an
-English title.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And Margot?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have brought her up to respect my judgment,&#8221;
-said Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wonder what will become of her,&#8221; said I, reflectively,
-&#8220;when she hasn&#8217;t you at her elbow to tell her
-what to do.... But why a marquis? Why not a
-duke?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She smiled, blushed a little. &#8220;The only duke we
-could have got&mdash;and he was a nice young fellow&mdash;but he
-was in love with an English girl of wealth&mdash;and he
-wanted too much to change to an American. Is that
-frank enough to suit you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you&#8217;d only keep to that key,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He wanted double the American dowry that he
-was willing to take with an English girl.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;His being in love with another girl might have
-made it unpleasant for Margot,&#8221; I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That wouldn&#8217;t have amounted to anything,&#8221; replied
-she. &#8220;Over here the right sort of people bring
-up their children as I brought up Margot&mdash;to give
-their hearts where their hands should go. They are
-not shallow and selfish. They think of the family dignity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-and honor before they think of their personal
-feelings.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s interesting&mdash;and new&mdash;at least to me,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have been judging these things without knowing,
-Godfrey,&#8221; said she. &#8220;You have attacked me for
-narrowness, when in fact you were the narrow one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes? What next?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I found that the Massingfords&mdash;that&#8217;s the family
-name of the Marquis of Crossley&mdash;I found they ranked
-higher as a family than any of the ducal families except
-one. Of course I don&#8217;t include the royal dukes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course not,&#8221; said I gravely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I might possibly have got one of the royal dukes&mdash;if
-not in England, then here on the Continent. But
-I decided&mdash; You see, Godfrey, I looked into everything.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You certainly have been thorough,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I
-should have said it was impossible in so short a time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But it wasn&#8217;t difficult. All the Americans over
-here are well informed about these things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can readily believe it,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But why did
-you turn down the poor royal dukes?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because the other women would have made it
-dreadfully uncomfortable for Margot. They&#8217;d have
-hated her for taking precedence over them by such a
-long distance. Then, too&mdash;the dowry. I was afraid
-you couldn&#8217;t afford the dowry&mdash;or wouldn&#8217;t think the
-title worth the money. Indeed, I didn&#8217;t think so, myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A royal duke comes high?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>&#8220;The least dowry would be seventy-five million
-francs.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fifteen million dollars!&#8221; I exclaimed. &#8220;Whew!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Sinkers tried to get one for her daughter for
-ten millions&mdash;all she could scrape together. They
-agreed to a morganatic marriage for that, but not a full
-marriage. So, she and poor Martha gave it up.
-Martha&#8217;s heart is broken. The duke made love to her
-so wonderfully. I can&#8217;t imagine what Mrs. Sinkers
-was about, to allow such a thing before the affair was
-settled. Poor Martha was so excited that she would
-have accepted the morganatic marriage&mdash;she ranking
-merely as the duke&#8217;s head mistress. But while he was
-willing to take other mistresses for nothing, and even to
-pay them, he wouldn&#8217;t take <i>her</i> for less than fifty million
-francs.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor Martha!&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was too wise to trifle with royal dukes,&#8221; pursued
-Edna, so interested in her own narrative and so eager to
-show how sagacious she had been that she forgot her
-pose and her doubts as to my sympathies. &#8220;I weighed
-the advantages and disadvantages of about a dozen
-eligible men. Only three stood the test, and it finally
-narrowed down to Crossley. Margot was so happy
-when I told her. She wanted to love him&mdash;and now she
-is loving him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A long pause while Edna calmed down to earth from
-her European soarings, and while I, too, returned to the
-normal from an excursion in the opposite direction.
-&#8220;How much does he want?&#8221; said I. &#8220;Let&#8217;s get to bed
-rock.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>&#8220;He loves her so that he is willing, so I hear&mdash; Of
-course, nothing has been said&mdash; You will not believe
-how refined and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How much?&#8221; interrupted I.</p>
-
-<p>Edna winced at my rudeness, then again presented an
-unruffled front of happy loving serenity. &#8220;Enough to
-pay off the mortgages and to provide them with a suitable
-income.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How much?&#8221; I persisted, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>She looked tenderly remonstrant. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know,
-Godfrey&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know <i>about</i> how much. What&#8217;s the figure&mdash;the
-price of this marked down marquis?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should say the whole thing would not cost more
-than three or four million dollars.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Three&mdash;or four.&#8221; I laughed aloud. &#8220;Not much
-difference there. Now which is it&mdash;three or four?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps nearer four. Margot must have a <i>good</i>
-income.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To be sure,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The whole object would be defeated if she hadn&#8217;t
-the means&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The money,&#8221; I suggested. &#8220;Why use these
-evasive words? We&#8217;re talking a plain subject. Let&#8217;s
-use its language.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The money, then,&#8221; acquiesced she, resolutely good-humored.
-&#8220;If she hadn&#8217;t the money to make a proper
-appearance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Naturally, to lead in society you must lead in
-spending money.... Well&mdash;it can&#8217;t be done.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She paled, half started from her chair, sank back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-again. There was a long silence. Then she said,
-&#8220;You have never been cruel, Godfrey. You won&#8217;t be
-cruel now. You won&#8217;t destroy my life work. You
-won&#8217;t shatter Margot&#8217;s happiness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The whole thing is&mdash;is nauseating to me,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>Her short, pretty upper lip quivered. Her eyes
-filled. &#8220;If you didn&#8217;t approve, dear, why didn&#8217;t you
-stop me long ago? Why did you let me go on until
-there was no turning back?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was silent. There seemed to be no answer to that.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you do it purposely, Godfrey?&#8221; said she, with
-melancholy eyes upon me. &#8220;Did you lure us on, so
-that you could crush us at one stroke?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was silent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t believe that of you. I won&#8217;t believe it until
-you compel me to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As I understand it,&#8221; said I, &#8220;you propose that I
-hand over to this young man four million&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Only about half of it, Godfrey,&#8221; cried she, reviving.
-&#8220;The other half would be Margot&#8217;s&mdash;for her own
-income.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then that I hand over to this amiable, insignificant
-young foreigner two million dollars to induce him to
-consent to the degradation of marrying my daughter&mdash;to
-have him going about, saying in effect, &#8216;It is true,
-she is only one of those low Americans, but don&#8217;t forget
-that I got two million dollars for stooping.&#8217; Is that
-the proposition?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know it isn&#8217;t!&#8221; cried she. &#8220;He doesn&#8217;t feel
-that he is degrading himself. He feels proud of winning
-her&mdash;the most beautiful, the best mannered girl in London.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-But it&#8217;d be simply impossible for them to marry
-without the money. <i>I</i> shouldn&#8217;t want it. They would
-be wretched. You talk like a sentimental schoolboy,
-Godfrey. How could two refined, sensitive people such
-as Hugh and Margot, used to every luxury, used to
-being foremost in society&mdash;how could they be happy
-without the means&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The money,&#8221; I corrected blandly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Without the money needed to maintain their position
-as marquis and marchioness of Crossley?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I nodded assent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He has only about five thousand&mdash;twenty-five
-thousand of our money&mdash;a year. That is ridiculous for
-a marquis. He has to keep all his houses closed and
-run as economically as possible. Even then they cost
-him nearly seventy-five thousand dollars a year to maintain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And he has only twenty-five thousand!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I meant twenty-five thousand over and above. He
-has that to live on. And, poor fellow, he is dropping
-every year deeper and deeper into debt. So much is
-expected of a marquis.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But not honesty, apparently,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t judge these people by our commercial
-standards,&#8221; she gently rebuked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I forgot,&#8221; said I penitently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the poor fellow does love Margot so!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Um,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Have you ever happened to hear
-of a Miss Townley&mdash;Jupey Townley?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A flash of annoyance flitted over Edna&#8217;s lovely, delicate
-countenance.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>&#8220;I see you have,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You were, indeed, thorough.
-Permit me to compliment you, my dear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am glad Hugh hasn&#8217;t been a saint.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all in the past,&#8221; declared she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I saw them in a box at a London music hall night
-before last,&#8221; said I. &#8220;They were&mdash; They had been
-drinking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But Edna was not daunted. &#8220;You are a man of
-the world, Godfrey. Don&#8217;t pretend to be narrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When a man loves a woman&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Love is very different from that sort of thing, and
-you know it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Has Margot heard&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey!&#8221; cried Edna, in horror. &#8220;Do you
-think I would permit <i>my</i> daughter&mdash;<i>our</i> daughter&mdash;to
-know such things! Why, her mind is as pure&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I could not restrain a gesture of disgust. &#8220;You
-women!&#8221; I cried, rising. &#8220;Pure! Pure&mdash;God in
-Heaven, pure!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her look of dazed astonishment, obviously sincere,
-helped me to get back my composure. I sat down again.
-&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; I said. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t mean to interrupt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Even if you men have no purity yourselves, you
-ought to believe in it in women,&#8221; said she, with an injured
-air.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed,&#8221; I agreed heartily. &#8220;I congratulate
-you on being able to make such generous allowances for
-masculine frailty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are sarcastic,&#8221; said she coldly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>&#8220;No matter. It certainly does not damage the
-title&mdash;perhaps adds to its luster.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s hereditary in their family to be wild up to marriage,
-and then to settle down and serve the state in
-some distinguished position.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;in that case&mdash;&#8221; said I ironically.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot and her husband and her children will have
-your money some day,&#8221; pursued she. &#8220;Why not give
-it to her now, when it will get her happiness?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That impressed me. &#8220;I have not said I would not
-consent to this marriage,&#8221; I reminded her. &#8220;As a matter
-of fact, I&#8217;m in favor of it. I can see no future for
-Margot in America&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, indeed,&#8221; cried Edna eagerly. &#8220;She simply
-couldn&#8217;t marry over there. She&#8217;d be wretched.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I feel it is my duty&mdash; Rather late in the day
-for me to talk about duty toward my daughter, after
-neglecting it all these years. Still, I ought to see to it
-that she has the best possible chance for a smooth married
-life. It&#8217;s only common prudence to take all precautions&mdash;isn&#8217;t
-it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All <i>sensible</i> precautions,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know how many of these foreign &#8216;alliances,&#8217;
-as they&#8217;re called, have turned out badly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They get a good many divorces in the states,&#8221; she
-suggested smilingly. &#8220;One to every twelve marriages,
-I read the other day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I admitted that she had made an effective retort.
-&#8220;The truth is,&#8221; said I, &#8220;American women aren&#8217;t
-brought up for domestic life. So, whether they marry
-at home or abroad they have trouble.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>&#8220;Men resent their independence,&#8221; said Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It may be so,&#8221; said I. Of what use to point out
-to her that the trouble lay in the women&#8217;s demanding to
-be supported and refusing to do anything to earn their
-support? All I said was: &#8220;I suspect a good many husbands
-think the marriage contract too one-sided&mdash;binding
-only them and not their wives. But the trouble with the
-&#8216;alliances&#8217; can&#8217;t be that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s because Europeans look on the wife as a kind
-of head servant. But Hugh isn&#8217;t that sort.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll know more as to that when we hear what
-Margot says after she&#8217;s been married a few years,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;The point to settle now is how to bind him to good
-behavior so far as it can be done in advance. He may
-be deeply in love with Margot. He may stay in love
-with her. But in the circumstances it&#8217;s wise to assume
-that he wants only her money and that, if he gets it,
-he&#8217;ll treat her badly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My wife&#8217;s silence was encouraging.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If he had plenty of money he might even goad her
-into releasing him&mdash;and might marry again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My wife was obviously impressed. &#8220;Yes&mdash;that has
-been done,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Of course, if Margot should
-have an heir right away. But&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me as if trying to decide whether she
-could trust me with a confidence. She evidently decided
-in my favor, for she went on to say:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the other hand&mdash;Margot is a peculiar girl.
-No&mdash;many women have the same peculiarity. They
-can&#8217;t be trusted with power over their husbands. If
-she had all the money in her own name and he were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-dependent on her&mdash; Godfrey, I&#8217;m sure there&#8217;d be
-trouble.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Once more she was astonishing me with her clear
-judgment in matters as to which I should have thought
-her hopelessly prejudiced. &#8220;But <i>I</i> can be trusted,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;The plan I had in mind was to take over the mortgages
-and guarantee a sufficient income.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head. &#8220;He won&#8217;t consent,&#8221; said she.
-&#8220;His solicitors will insist on better terms than that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now you see why I want to talk to him directly.
-I don&#8217;t purpose to be hampered by that old trick of the
-principal hidden behind a go-between.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s no other way,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;They&#8217;re too
-clever to yield that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He needs money badly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But he won&#8217;t marry unless he&#8217;s actually to get it,&#8221;
-replied she. &#8220;Almost every American who has married
-a daughter over here has tried to make a business bargain&mdash;at
-least, a bargain not altogether one-sided. Not
-one of them has succeeded. These Europeans have been
-handling the dowry and settlement question too many
-centuries.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see,&#8221; said I affably. &#8220;If we want what they&#8217;ve
-got, we have to take it on their terms.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was most satisfactory, talking with her now that
-she consented to speak and listen to good sense. I was
-at once in a more amiable frame of mind, although I
-knew she had descended from her high horse only because
-she was shrewd enough to see it was the one way
-to get me to do as she wished.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will hide behind a go-between myself,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>&#8220;Any English lawyer would simply play into the
-hands of the other side. At least, so Hilda was telling
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is she happy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When&#8217;s her husband coming back?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not for a year or so, I believe. Lord Blankenship
-cares more for big game and for exploring than for
-anything else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An ideal marriage,&#8221; said I. &#8220;She brought him
-the money he wanted. He brought her the title she
-wanted. And they don&#8217;t annoy each other. He devotes
-himself to sport, she to society. These aristocratic people,
-with their simple, vulgar wants that are so easily
-gratified&mdash;how they are to be envied!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna was observing me furtively, uneasily. I pretended
-not to notice. I went on: &#8220;Now, if they wanted
-the difficult things&mdash;things like love and companionship
-and congeniality&mdash;they might be wretched. When a
-child cries for a stick of candy or a tinsel-covered rattle&mdash;for
-money or social position&mdash;why, it&#8217;s easily pacified.
-But if it cries for the moon and the stars&mdash;&#8221;
-I laughed softly, enjoying her wonder as much as my
-own fancies.</p>
-
-<p>After a while she said, with some constraint: &#8220;You
-see a great deal of Armitage?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We console each other,&#8221; said I, with mild raillery.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you been going out much?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m very busy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In one of your letters&mdash; Those rare little notes of
-yours! You are cruelly neglectful, Godfrey&mdash; In one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-of them you spoke of a week end or so on Armitage&#8217;s
-yacht. You and he don&#8217;t go off alone?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no. Some literary and artistic people usually
-are aboard.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know you cared for that sort.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re interesting enough.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose they&#8217;re friends of Mrs. Kirkwood&#8217;s,&#8221;
-pursued Edna. &#8220;She&#8217;s like her brother&mdash;affects to
-despise fashionable society. Their pretenses always
-amused me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They are sincere people,&#8221; said I. &#8220;They don&#8217;t
-pretend. That&#8217;s why I like them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I notice that Armitage belongs to every fashionable
-club in New York&mdash;and to some over here,&#8221; said
-Edna with a smile that was as shrewd as her observation.
-&#8220;Also, that he manages to find time to appear at the
-most exclusive parties during the season.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I had observed this same peculiarity. While I refused
-to draw from it the inference she drew&mdash;and was
-undeniably justified in drawing&mdash;I had been tempted to
-do so. It irritated me to see her finger upon the weak
-spot in Armitage&#8217;s profession of freedom from snobbishness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And Mary Kirkwood,&#8221; pursued Edna, &#8220;she&#8217;s the
-same sort of fakir. Only, being a woman, she does it
-more deceptively than he.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She goes nowhere,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But she revels in the fact that she <i>could</i> go anywhere.
-So, she fooled you&mdash;did she?&#8221; Edna laughed
-merrily at my ill-concealed discomfiture. &#8220;But then you
-know so little about women.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>&#8220;I confess I&#8217;ve never seen in her the least sign of
-snobbishness or of interest in fashionable foolishness,&#8221;
-said I, with what I flatter myself was a fair attempt at
-the impartial air.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That in itself ought to have opened your eyes,&#8221;
-said Edna. &#8220;Whenever you see anyone, dear, with no
-sign of a weakness that everybody in the world has, you
-may be sure you are seeing a fraud.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because <i>you</i> have a weakness, dear,&#8221; said I&mdash;as
-pleasant and as acid as she, &#8220;you must not imagine it
-is universal.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But <i>you</i> have that weakness, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you or did you not join the fashionable clubs
-Armitage put you up at?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I had to laugh at myself.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you or are you not proud of the fact that your
-best friend, Armitage, is a fashionable person? Would
-you be as proud of him if he were only welcome in middle-class
-houses?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m ashamed to say there&#8217;s something in that,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;Not much, but something.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yet you believed Mary Kirkwood!&#8221; ended Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought little about it,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And I still
-believe that she is sincere&mdash;that she has no snobbishness
-in her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You like her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So far as I know her&mdash;yes.&#8221; My answer was an
-attempt to meet and parry a suspicion I felt in Edna&#8217;s
-mind. And it was fairly successful; fairly&mdash;for no one
-ever yet completely dislodged a suspicion. We cannot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-see into each other&#8217;s minds. We know, from what is
-going on in our own minds, that the human mind is capable
-of any vagary. Once we have applied this general
-principle to a specific person, once we have become definitely
-aware that there are in that person&#8217;s mind things
-of which we have no knowledge&mdash;from that time forth
-suspicion of them is in us, and is ready to grow, to
-flourish.</p>
-
-<p>I had no difficulty in shifting to the subject of the
-marriage. &#8220;I&#8217;ll cable for my lawyer,&#8221; said I. &#8220;If
-anyone can beat this game, Fred Norman can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;send for him,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;He is canny&mdash;and
-a man of <i>our</i> world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going back to London to-night&mdash;&#8221; I
-went on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To-night!&#8221; she exclaimed. Her eyes filled with
-tears. &#8220;Godfrey&mdash;is this treating us right?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I looked at her intently. &#8220;Don&#8217;t fake with me,&#8221;
-said I quietly. &#8220;It isn&#8217;t necessary.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What <i>do</i> you mean?&#8221; cried she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I mean, I understand perfectly that you care nothing
-about me, except as the source of the money you
-need in amusing yourself. As you see in my manner,
-I am not wildly agitated by that fact. So far as I&#8217;m
-concerned, there&#8217;s no reason why we should make each
-other uncomfortable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What <i>is</i> the matter with you, Godfrey?&#8221; she said,
-with large widening eyes gazing at me. &#8220;You have
-changed entirely.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As you have,&#8221; said I, admiring her shrewdness,
-and afraid of it. &#8220;You&#8217;ve been educating. So have I.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-Mine has been slower than yours and along different
-lines. But it, too, has been thorough.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was not satisfied, though I&#8217;m confident my tone
-and manner betrayed nothing. Said she: &#8220;Some bad
-woman has been poisoning you against Margot and
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As you please,&#8221; said I, too wary to be drawn into
-that discussion. I realized I had said entirely too much.
-Relying upon her intense vanity, her profound belief
-in her power over me, I had gone too far. &#8220;My business
-takes me to London to-night. I&#8217;ll probably be
-there until Norman arrives. Then we&#8217;ll come over.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you want us in London with you?&#8221; said
-Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are comfortably settled here,&#8221; replied I.
-&#8220;Why disturb yourselves?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She knew how to read me. She saw I was not in
-a dangerous mood, as she had begun to fear. She said:
-&#8220;We <i>did</i> intend to stay in Paris a month or six weeks.
-We have a charming circle of friends among the old
-families here. I wish you&#8217;d stop on, Godfrey. The
-people are attractive, and the social life is most interesting.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not to me,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You forget I&#8217;m a Hooligan.
-Besides, you don&#8217;t need me. There&#8217;s your advantage
-through being young and lovely and rich. You can
-get plenty of men to escort you about. It&#8217;s only the
-old and ugly married women who really need their
-husbands. Well&mdash;I&#8217;ll be ready when you are forced to
-fall back on me. Nothing like having in reserve a faithful
-Dobbin.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>She looked hurt. &#8220;How <i>can</i> you joke about sacred
-things,&#8221; she reproached.</p>
-
-<p>I laughed her seriousness aside. &#8220;Yes, I&#8217;ll be waiting,
-ready to be your companion, the confidant of your
-rheumatism and gout, when all the others have fled.
-Meanwhile, my dear, I&#8217;ll have my frisk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It amused me to see how bitter to her was the taste
-of the medicine she had been forcing upon me so self-complacently.
-It amused me to watch the confusion
-into which these new and unsuspected aspects of myself
-was throwing her.</p>
-
-<p>Said I: &#8220;I&#8217;m glad you&#8217;re as generous toward me as
-I&#8217;ve been toward you. That&#8217;s why we&#8217;ve avoided the
-Armitage sort of smash-up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When I left Paris that night I&#8217;ll engage she was
-thinking about me as she had never thought in her
-whole self-centered, American-female life.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My</span> cable to Norman was answered the next day but
-one by a note from him, stopping in the same hotel.
-I shall not detail the negotiations that followed&mdash;the
-long and stormy scenes between him and Dawkins, solicitor
-to the Marquis of Crossley. It is sufficient to
-say that Norman had the novel sensation of being
-beaten on every point. Not outwitted, for he had wit
-enough and to spare for any contest of cunning; but
-beaten by the centuries-old precedents and customs and
-requirements in matters of dower and settlement. The
-mercenary marriage is an ancient habit of the human
-race; in fact, the scientists have proved that it began
-with marriage itself, that there was no marriage in the
-civilized sense until there was property to marry for.
-Perhaps the mercenary marriage is not so recent in
-America as our idyllists declare. Do we not read that
-the father of his country married solely for money an
-almost feeble-minded woman whom everybody knew he
-did not love? And, inasmuch as marriage is first of all
-a business&mdash;the business of providing for the material
-needs and wants of two and their children&mdash;may it not
-barely be possible that the unqualifiedly sentimental view
-of marriage can be&mdash;perhaps has been&mdash;overdone? In
-America, where the marriage for sentiment prevails to
-an extent unknown anywhere else in the world&mdash;is not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-the institution of marriage there in its most uneasy
-state? And may not that be the reason?</p>
-
-<p>What a world of twaddle it is! If men and women
-could only learn to build their ideals on the firm foundation&mdash;the
-only firm foundation&mdash;of the practical instead
-of upon the quicksand of lies and pretenses,
-wouldn&#8217;t the tower climb less shakily, if more slowly,
-toward the stars?</p>
-
-<p>You may be sure there was nothing of the stars in
-those talks between Norman and Dawkins&mdash;or in my
-talks with Norman&mdash;or in Crossley&#8217;s talks with Dawkins.
-Crossley had had me looked up&mdash;had discovered
-as much about my finances as it is possible to discover
-about the private business of an American. He had
-got the usual exaggerated estimate of my wealth, and
-he was resolved that he would not be cheated of a single
-dollar he might wring from me. From my standpoint
-it was obvious that he and Margot must have plenty of
-money or they could not be happy. All I desired was
-to prevent him from feeling financially free&mdash;and therefore
-under the aristocratic code, morally free&mdash;to show
-and to act, after marriage, the contempt I knew he
-felt for all things and persons American&mdash;except the
-dollars, which could be exchanged into sovereigns. I
-fought hard, but he stood fast. Either Margot must
-lose him or I must give him about what he asked&mdash;a
-fortune in his own right for him. If I choose I could
-dower her; but as to dowering him he would not permit
-the question of alternative to be raised.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said I at last to Norman. &#8220;Give them
-their minimum.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>He was astounded, was furious&mdash;and as he is not
-the ordinary lick-spittle lawyer but a man of arrogant
-independence, he did not hesitate to let me see that his
-anger&mdash;and scorn&mdash;were for myself. &#8220;Do you mean
-that?&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; replied I carelessly&mdash;as if I were now indifferent
-about the whole business. &#8220;My girl wants his
-title. And why let a question of money come between
-her and happiness?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t refrain from saying, Loring, that I&#8217;d not
-have believed this of you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s not fit to live in America,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Her
-mother hasn&#8217;t educated her for it. American mothers
-don&#8217;t educate their daughters nowadays to be wives of
-American men. Honestly, do you know an American
-man able to do for himself who would be foolish enough
-to marry that sort of girl?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His silence was assent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see. I&#8217;ve got to buy her a husband&mdash;that is,
-a title&mdash;over here. This offering seems as good as there
-is in the market&mdash;at the price. So&mdash;why not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s one view of it,&#8221; said he coldly.</p>
-
-<p>I laid my hand on his shoulder. &#8220;Come now&mdash;be
-sensible,&#8221; said I. &#8220;What else can I do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It would be an impertinence for me to say,&#8221; replied
-he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can guess,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You needn&#8217;t trouble
-yourself to say it. You evidently don&#8217;t know the circumstances.
-And I may add that so long as I&#8217;ve got
-to buy Margot a title I might as well buy her a good
-one.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>He eyed me sharply. But I did not take him into
-my confidence&mdash;nor shall I confide in you at present,
-gentle reader. I did not even let him see that I was
-holding back anything. I went on with good-humored
-raillery:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m doing better than Hanley or Vanderveld or
-Pattison or any of the others who&#8217;ve dealt in these
-markets. For a marquis Crossley is selling cheap.
-He&#8217;s far from penniless, you know. It&#8217;s simply that
-he wants more money. Why, really, old man, it&#8217;s what&#8217;s
-called a love match. They always call it a love match
-when the nobleman isn&#8217;t absolutely on his uppers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are certainly a philosopher, Loring,&#8221; said
-Norman, anxious, I saw, to finish and drop the affair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I became one in the usual way&mdash;necessity,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;I&#8217;m as eager to have this thing dispatched
-as you are. I want to get out to sea, where perhaps
-the stench of aristocracy will blow out of my nostrils,
-and stay out of them till I reach the other shore. Then
-I&#8217;ll get it again. It blows down the bay to meet the
-incoming ships.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, we&#8217;re pretty bad,&#8221; admitted Norman. &#8220;Not
-so bad as we used to be, but pretty bad.&#8221; He laughed.
-&#8220;They accuse us of loving money. Why, we are mere
-beginners at it. We haven&#8217;t learned how to idle or how
-to spend money except in crude, tiresome ways. And to
-love money deeply you must know how to idle and how
-to spend. Money&#8217;s <i>the</i> passion with these people.
-How they do need it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Neither shall I linger over the details of the engagement
-and the wedding. For all that was important<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-about either I refer you to the newspapers of London
-and New York. They gave everything that makes a
-snob&#8217;s eyes glisten and a snob&#8217;s mouth water. My wife
-has somewhere&mdash;she knows exactly where&mdash;a scrapbook,
-and my daughter has another of the same kind. Those
-scrapbooks are strongly bound and the pages are of
-the heaviest time- and wear-resisting paper. In them
-are pasted columns on columns of lists of titles, of
-descriptions of jewels and dresses, of enumerations of
-wedding gifts. Margot received things costing small
-fortunes from people she barely knew well enough to
-invite. They gave in the hope&mdash;the good hope&mdash;of
-gaining the valuable favor of the Marchioness of Crossley,
-a great lady by reason of her title, a greater lady
-by reason of the ancientness of the Massingford family,
-and at the top and summit of greatness by reason of
-her wealth.</p>
-
-<p>That last item, by the way, was vastly overestimated.
-Everyone assumed that Crossley had sold much more
-dearly. No one but those intimately concerned dreamed
-what a bargain I had got.</p>
-
-<p>You may be picturing a sordid affair, redolent of
-the stenches of commercialism. If you are, gentle
-reader, you are showing yourself unworthy of your own
-soulfulness, unworthy of the elegant society into which
-I have introduced you. I have been giving simply the
-plain facts&mdash;a mere skeleton upon which you, versed
-in society columns and society novels, and skilled in the
-art of hiding ugly truths under pretty lies, may readily
-drape the flesh and the garments of sentimentality and
-snobbishness. You will then have the truth as it appeared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-to the world&mdash;a handsome, manly groom, every
-inch of him the patrician; a wondrous lovely, innocent,
-pure young bride, looking the worthy mate of the great
-noble she had won with her beauty and her sweetness;
-a background of magnificent houses and equipages, of
-grand society people, of lackeys in livery without number;
-an atmosphere of luxury, refinement, perfumed
-with the fairest flowers and the most delicate artificial
-scents. You are seeing also the high and noble motives
-of all concerned&mdash;the joy of parents in a daughter
-sentimentally wooed and won to happiness; the generous
-and kindly feelings of all the friends; the lavish and
-affectionate overflowing of costly gifts; above all, the
-ecstatic young couple wrapped up in their love for
-each other. Flesh up and beautify the skeleton to your
-taste, gentle reader. You will not go amiss.</p>
-
-<p>I must linger a moment on the happiness of my
-daughter. It was too spiritual to be of this earth. As
-soon as the miserable, unimportant money matters were
-settled, and her mother gave her full leave to love, she
-threw herself into it with all the ardor of the heroine
-of a novel. She had two diamond hearts made&mdash;at the
-most fashionable jewelers in Paris, you may be sure.
-Upon the inside of the one she kept she had engraved,
-under his picture, &#8220;From Hugh to Margot.&#8221; In the
-one she gave him there surrounded her picture in diamond
-inlay, &#8220;To Hugh from his dear love Margot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Each was to wear the heart round the neck until
-death. Again and again I caught her dreaming over
-hers, sometimes with tears in her limpid eyes. Again
-and again I caught her scribbling, &#8220;Margot, Marchioness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-of Crossley, Viscountess Brear, Countess of Felday
-and Noth, Baroness de Selve,&#8221; and so on through a
-list of titles which gentle reader will find in &#8220;Burke&#8217;s&#8221;
-and the &#8220;Almanach de Gotha.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And she had a reverent way of looking at him and
-a tender way of touching him. Her mother, you will
-believe, spared neither expense nor pains in getting
-together the trousseau. But Margot was not satisfied.
-&#8220;Not nearly fine enough for <i>his</i> bride,&#8221; she would say.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m <i>so</i> afraid he&#8217;ll be disappointed.&#8221; Then the tears
-would spring. &#8220;Oh, mamma! If he should be disappointed
-in me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not so bad as if you were to be disappointed in
-him,&#8221; I put in with no other motive than to cheer her up.</p>
-
-<p>But it only shocked her. &#8220;In Hugh!&#8221; she exclaimed,
-meaning in Cecil Robert Grunleigh Percival
-Hugh Massingford, Marquis of Crossley, etc. &#8220;<i>I</i> disappointed
-in <i>him</i>! Oh, papa! You don&#8217;t <i>realize</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I suppose not,&#8221; said I, getting myself away as
-speedily as my legs would carry me.</p>
-
-<p>Through these joyous scenes of youth and love and
-luxury I moved gloomily&mdash;restless, bitter, tormented by
-self-reproaches and by thoughts of the woman I loved.
-What Edna had said about her, though I knew it was
-by way of precautionary cattishness, put into my mind
-the inevitable suspicion&mdash;no, not actual suspicion, but
-germ of suspicion&mdash;the almost harmless germ from
-which the most poisonous suspicions may develop. I
-went round and round my mental image of Mary Kirkwood.
-I viewed it from all angles. But I could not
-find a trace of the flaw Edna had asserted. I analyzed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-her with all the analytical skill I possessed, and that, I
-flatter myself, is not a little. No one who has not the
-faculty of analysis ever gets anywhere; no one who has
-that faculty ever escapes the charge of cynicism. Shallow
-people&mdash;the sort that make such a charge&mdash;will
-regard it as proof of my utter cynicism, my absolute
-lack of sentiment, that I was able to analyze the woman
-I loved, or pretended I loved. But I assure you, gentle
-reader, that not even love and passion suspend the habitual
-processes of a good mind. The reason you have
-read the contrary so often is because precious few
-writers about men of the superior sort have the capacity
-to comprehend the intellects they try to picture. To
-the man of large affairs, the average&mdash;and many a one
-above the average&mdash;biography or novel about a great
-man reads like the attempt of a straddle bug to give his
-fellow straddle bugs an account of an elephant.</p>
-
-<p>I was the only inharmonious figure in that round of
-festivals. But no one observed me. I simply got the
-reputation of being a man of reserve, a thinker rather
-than a talker&mdash;as if there ever lived a thinker who did
-not overflow with torrents of talk like a spring fed from
-a glacier; but, of course, the spring flows only when
-The conditions are favorable, not when it is ice-bound.
-I was not even interested in observing. There is a
-monotony about the actions of fashionable people that
-soon reduces a spectator of agile mind to stupor. The
-same thing over and over again, with variations so
-slight that only a nit-wit would be interested in them&mdash; Could
-there be a worse indictment of the intelligence of
-the human race than that so large a part of its presumably<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-most intelligent classes engage in the social
-farce, which is an example of aimless activity about on
-a level with a dog&#8217;s chasing its own tail?</p>
-
-<p>But Edna&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>As I look back on those weeks of days, each one
-crowded like a ragbag with rubbish, the figure of Edna
-stands out radiant. You would never have thought her
-the mother of the bride&mdash;or, indeed, a mother at all.
-A woman who for many years leads a virginal or almost
-virginal life gets back the vestal air of the unmarried
-girl. This air had returned to Edna. She had it as
-markedly as had Margot. It was most becoming to
-her piquant style of beauty, giving it the allure of the
-height that invites ascent and capture, yet has never
-been desecrated. And how she did enjoy the grandeur&mdash;the
-great names, the gorgeous presents of curiously
-and costlily wrought gold and silver and crystal,
-and precious stones, the succession of panoramas of
-ultra-fashionable life, with herself and Margot always
-the center.</p>
-
-<p>I used to stand aside and watch her and feel as if
-I were hypnotized into vivid hallucinations. I recalled
-the incidents of our early life&mdash;Brooklyn, the Passaic
-flat, the squat and squalid homes of our childhood. I
-recalled our people&mdash;hers and mine&mdash;tucked away in
-homely obscurity among the New Jersey hills. But by
-no effort of mind could I associate her with these realities.
-She had literally been born again. I looked at
-the other Americans of humble beginnings&mdash;and there
-were not a few of them in that society. All had retained
-some traces of their origin, had some characteristics<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-that made it not difficult to connect their present
-with their past. But not Edna.</p>
-
-<p>At the wedding&mdash;in the most fashionable church in
-the West End&mdash;Margot looked weary and rather old,
-gone slightly stale from too long and hard preliminary
-training. Edna was at her best&mdash;delicate, fragile, radiant.
-How the other women hated her for that time-defying
-beauty of hers! Many of the women of her still
-youthful age retained much of the physical attractiveness
-of youth. But there was not another one who was
-not beginning to show the effects of dissipation&mdash;of too
-much food and wine and cigarettes, of lives devoid of
-elevating sensations, of minds used only for petty, mean
-thoughts. But Edna seemed in the flower of that period
-when the secrets of the soul have as yet made no marks
-upon the countenance. You would have said she was a
-merry and romantic girl. I could not fathom that
-mystery. I cannot fathom it now. Its clew must be
-in her truly amazing powers of self-deception and also
-in that unique capacity of hers for forgetting the thing,
-no matter what, that is disagreeable to remember.</p>
-
-<p>When we were at last alone, with the young couple
-off for the yacht Lord Shangway had loaned them for
-the honeymoon, with the last guest gone and the last
-powdered flunkey vanished&mdash;when she and I were alone,
-she settled herself with a sigh and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish I could make it begin all over again!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must be built of steel,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am supremely happy,&#8221; said she, &#8220;and have been
-for weeks. Nothing agrees with me so thoroughly as
-happiness.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>I looked at her scrutinizingly. No, she was not the
-least tired; she was as fresh as if that moment risen from
-a long sleep in the air of seashore or mountains.</p>
-
-<p>She went on: &#8220;I&#8217;m going over to Paris to-morrow.
-I&#8217;ve a lot of engagements there. And I must get some
-clothes. I&#8217;ve worn out all I brought with me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Worn out&#8221; meant worn once or at most twice;
-for in a society where everyone is seeing everyone else
-all the time a woman with a reputation for dress cannot
-afford to reappear in clothes once seen. In some circles
-this would sound delightfully prodigal, in others delightfully
-impossible, and perhaps in still others delightfully
-criminal. But then all that sort of thing is relative&mdash;like
-everything else in the world.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you come along?&#8221; said she in a perfunctory
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, thanks,&#8221; I replied. &#8220;I&#8217;m off for Russia with
-a party of bankers to look at some mining properties.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought you were returning to New York?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not for several months,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How can you stay away so long from your beloved
-America?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Business&mdash;always business.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She eyed me somewhat as one eyes a strange, mildly
-interesting specimen. &#8220;Well&mdash;you must enjoy it, or
-you wouldn&#8217;t keep at it year in and year out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One has to pass the time,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How does Mary Kirkwood pass the time?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This unexpected and&mdash;except sub-consciously&mdash;accidental
-question, staggered me for an instant. &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t know much about it,&#8221; said I. &#8220;She has a house&mdash;and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-she looks after it, herself. She reads, I believe.
-She has gardens&mdash;and they use up a lot of time. Then
-she rides.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna yawned. &#8220;It sounds dull,&#8221; she said. &#8220;But
-domestic people are always dull. And she is certainly
-domestic. I wonder why she doesn&#8217;t marry again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was silent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are any men attentive to her? It seems to me I
-heard something about a novelist&mdash;some poor man who
-is after her money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was choking with rage and jealousy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you see any such man about?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I contrived to compose myself for a calm reply.
-&#8220;No one answering to your description,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you like her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You asked me that once before,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;I forgot. It seems to me you and she would
-have exactly suited each other. You like domestic
-women. That is, you think you do. Really, you&#8217;d
-probably fly from a woman of that sort.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And a woman of the other sort would fly from
-me,&#8221; said I, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me thoughtfully. &#8220;You must admit
-you&#8217;re not easy to get on with&mdash;except at a distance,&#8221;
-observed she. &#8220;But men of positive individuality are
-never easy to get on with. A big tree blights all the
-little trees and bushes that try to grow in its neighborhood....
-No, Godfrey dear, you weren&#8217;t made for
-domestic life&mdash;you and I. Domestic life is successful
-only where there are two very small and very much
-alike. People like us have to live alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>I rose abruptly. There was for me a sound in that
-&#8220;alone&#8221; like the slam of a graveyard gate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You never will appreciate me&mdash;how satisfactory
-I&#8217;ve been,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;until you marry again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must make my final arrangements for Russia,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shall I see you in the morning? I&#8217;m leaving
-rather early.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Probably not,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then we&#8217;ll meet when you come back. We&#8217;ll visit
-Margot at Sothewell Abbey.&#8221; She rose, drew herself
-to her full height with a graceful gesture of triumph.
-&#8220;Don&#8217;t you honestly rather like it, being the father of
-a Marchioness?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I could not speak. I looked at her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How solemn you are!&#8221; laughed she. &#8220;Well,
-good-by, dear.&#8221; And she held out her hand and turned
-her face upward for me to kiss her lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;ll probably see you in the morning,&#8221; I said,
-&#8220;or to-night.&#8221; And away I went.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From Russia I drifted to India, intending to return
-home by the Pacific. At Bombay I met Lord Blankenship,
-and he persuaded me to cross to East Africa. I
-found him a companion exactly to my taste. He was
-a silent chap having nothing to think about and nothing
-to think with&mdash;a typical and model product of the
-aristocratic education that completes a man as a sculptor
-completes an image, and prepares him to stand in
-his appointed niche until decay tumbles him down as
-rubbish. I had lost all my former passion for talking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-and listening. I wished to confine myself&mdash;my thoughts&mdash;to
-the trivial matters of the senses, to lingering over
-and tinkering with the physical details of life. The
-silent and vacant Blankenship set me a perfect example,
-one easy to fall into the habit of following.</p>
-
-<p>At Paris, I picked up my private secretary, Markham,
-and resumed attention to my affairs. I had arranged
-for things to go on without me, when I set out
-for East Africa. I found that my guess as to how they
-would go had been correct. For a month or so there
-was confusion&mdash;the confusion that is inevitable when a
-man who has attended to everything abruptly throws
-up his leadership. Then the affairs in which he fancied
-himself indispensable begin to move as well as if
-he were at the throttle&mdash;perhaps better. The most
-substantial result of my neglect seemed to be that I
-had become much richer, had more than recovered what
-my purchase of a son-in-law had cost me.</p>
-
-<p>Markham, who had been at Cairo two months, had
-got himself engaged to be married. For several years
-I had been promising him a good position, that is to
-say, one more fitting a grown man of real capacity.
-But he made himself so useful that I put off redeeming
-my promise and eased my conscience and quieted his
-ambition with a succession of increases of salary.
-Now, however, I could no longer delay releasing him.
-So I must go back to New York, to find some one to take
-his place. Blankenship was wavering between a trip
-through West Africa and going to America with me,
-on the chance of my accompanying him on a shooting
-trip through British Columbia. He decided to stick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-to me, and as I had grown thoroughly used to having
-him about I was rather glad. It is astonishing how
-much comfort one can get out of the society of a silent
-man, when one feels that he is a good fellow and a devoted
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>I telegraphed Edna that I would be unable to come
-to London, where she then was. But she defeated my
-plan for not seeing her. When I reached Paris there
-she was waiting for me at the Ritz. She had a swarm
-of French, Italians, and English about her&mdash;I believe
-there were some Germans or Austrians, also. I refused
-to be annoyed with them, and we dined quietly with
-Blankenship, Markham, and a pretty little Countess de
-Salevac to act us buffers between us. I tried to avoid
-being left alone with her, but she would not have it so.
-She insisted on my coming to her sitting room after
-the others had gone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know you are tired,&#8221; said she, &#8220;but I shan&#8217;t detain
-you long.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t,&#8221; said I. &#8220;The journey has knocked
-me out. I&#8217;ve not slept for two nights.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a shame to worry you&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I made for the door. &#8220;Not to-night&mdash;no worries.
-They&#8217;ll keep until to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, Godfrey dear,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I must tell you
-at once. There is serious trouble between Margot and
-Hugh.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, they haven&#8217;t been married a year.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He has been treating her shamefully from the
-outset. In fact, he cut short the honeymoon to hurry
-back to that music-hall person.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>&#8220;The one I saw him with?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;the same one&mdash;that notorious Jupey
-What&#8217;s-her-name. Isn&#8217;t it dreadful! Margot&#8217;s pride
-is up in arms. Nothing I say will quiet her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Um,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She refuses to understand that over here husbands
-are allowed a&mdash;a&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Latitude,&#8221; I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;More latitude than in America. I have talked
-with Hugh, too. He is&mdash;very difficult. Really, he isn&#8217;t
-at all as he seemed. He is a&mdash;he is horribly coarse.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;People who think of nothing but how to get money
-without work and how to spend it without usefulness
-are apt to be coarse, when you probe through to the
-reality of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is&mdash;defiant,&#8221; pursued she, too femininely practical
-to have interest in or patience with philosophy.
-&#8220;He&mdash; Godfrey, he says he hates her. He won&#8217;t
-speak to her. And there&#8217;s no prospect of an heir. He
-says he wants to get rid of her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>These successive admissions of a worse and worse
-mess were forced from her by my air of indifference.
-&#8220;What has <i>she</i> done?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Done? I don&#8217;t understand&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What has she done to drive him to extremes?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey!&#8221; she cried in a shocked tone. &#8220;<i>You</i>&mdash;taking
-sides against your daughter&mdash;your only
-child! Have you no paternal feeling, either?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You see, I&#8217;ve seen little of
-Margot&mdash;not enough to get acquainted with her. And
-you educated her so that we are uncongenial. No&mdash;since<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-you set me to thinking, I find I haven&#8217;t much paternal
-feeling for her. I used to have in Passaic, when
-I wheeled her about the streets on Sundays.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I paused to enjoy the shame my wife was struggling
-with.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But soon after we moved to Brooklyn&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna winced and shivered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You sent her away to begin to be a lady. And
-a lady she is&mdash;and ladies are not daughters&mdash;are not
-women even.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must help me, Godfrey,&#8221; said Edna, after a
-strained silence. &#8220;Margot is wretched, and a dreadful
-scandal may break out in time. Already people are
-talking. Margot is ashamed to show herself in public.
-She thinks everyone is laughing at her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No doubt she&#8217;s right,&#8221; said I. &#8220;A woman who
-loses her husband on the honeymoon is likely to be laughed
-at.... What did she do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why do you persist in saying that?&#8221; cried she,
-so irritated that she could not altogether restrain herself.
-&#8220;Your dislike of women has become a mania
-with you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t dislike them,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;On the contrary,
-I like them&mdash;like them so well that their worthlessness
-angers me like the treachery of a friend. And
-I believe so much in their power that, when things go
-wrong, I blame them. They have dominion over the
-men and over the children. And whenever they use their
-powers it is to make fools of the men and weaklings of
-the children. I don&#8217;t know which is the worse influence&mdash;the
-wishy-washy, unpractical, preacher morality of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-good woman or the lazy, idle, irresponsible dissipation of
-the&mdash;the ladies and near-ladies and lady-climbers and
-lady-imitators.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But this has nothing to do with poor Margot!&#8221;
-exclaimed she impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Everything to do with her,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;Still&mdash;it&#8217;s
-a spilt pail of milk. As for the present&mdash;and future&mdash; How
-can I do anything to help her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t, if you condemn her unheard.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t condemn her. I am simply recognizing that
-there are two sides to this quarrel. And I assure you,
-you only make matters worse when you interfere without
-recognizing that fact. So I say again, what did <i>she</i>
-do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My wife calmed slightly and replied: &#8220;He says she
-made him ridiculous with the airs she put on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;After the education you gave her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right! Blame me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And aren&#8217;t you to be blamed?&#8221; urged I. &#8220;Didn&#8217;t
-you have full charge of her from the time she was born?
-Couldn&#8217;t you have made what you pleased of her?
-Didn&#8217;t you make what you pleased of her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna tossed her head indignantly. &#8220;I never taught
-her to be a vulgar snob.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, I thought that was her whole education.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna ignored this interruption. &#8220;It&#8217;s all very well
-for the women of noble families to act the snob,&#8221; pursued
-she. &#8220;Lots of them do, and no one criticises. But
-Margot ought to have had sense enough to realize that
-she, a mere American, couldn&#8217;t afford to do it. I warned
-her that her cue was sweetness and an air of equality.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
-I told her that her title in itself would keep people at
-their proper distance. But she lost her head.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then the thing for her to do is to behave herself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s too late, I&#8217;m afraid. The tide has turned
-against her. All the women&mdash;especially the titled English
-women of good family&mdash;were against her&mdash;hated
-her&mdash;were ready to stab her in the back. And her
-haughtiness and condescension gave them the chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what do you propose? To give him more
-money?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna showed none of her familiar scorn of sordid
-things. She reflected, said uncertainly: &#8220;I wonder
-would that do any good?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To win anyone give them what they most want,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;What do your friends over here want above
-everything and anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps you are right,&#8221; confessed she. Consider,
-gentle reader, what this confession involved, how it exposed
-the rotten insincerity of all her and her fine friends&#8217;
-pretenses. &#8220;Yes, I guess you&#8217;re right, Godfrey.&#8221; She
-pressed her hands to her temples. &#8220;It simply <i>must</i> be
-straightened out. I am quite distracted. I can&#8217;t afford
-to lose sleep and to be harrowed up. Those things mean
-ruin to a woman&#8217;s looks. And what <i>would</i> I do if she
-were flung back on my hands in this disgraceful fashion!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You want me to go to London?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey, you <i>must</i> go. You must see her, and him,
-too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was thinking it would be enough to see him. But
-perhaps you&#8217;re right.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>&#8220;She is clean mad,&#8221; cried Edna, with sudden fury
-against her daughter. &#8220;She doesn&#8217;t appreciate the peril
-of her position. One minute she&#8217;s all for groveling. The
-next she talks like an idiot about her rank and power.
-Oh, she is a fool&mdash;a <i>fool</i>! I always knew she was&mdash;though
-I wouldn&#8217;t admit it to myself. You never will
-know what a time I&#8217;ve had training her to hide it
-enough to make a pleasing appearance. She is a brainless
-fool.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A fool, but not brainless,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Her education
-made her a fool and paralyzed her brain. You see,
-she didn&#8217;t have the advantages you had in your early
-training. In your early days you had the chance to
-learn something&mdash;the useful things that have saved you
-from the consequences of such folly as you&#8217;ve taught
-her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What nonsense!&#8221; cried Edna in disgust. &#8220;But
-we mustn&#8217;t quarrel. I&#8217;m agitated enough already. You
-will go to London?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said I, after reflecting. &#8220;I&#8217;ll go.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To-morrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;ll go with you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said I firmly. &#8220;Either I manage this affair
-alone or I have nothing to do with it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, Godfrey, there are so many things about
-these people that you don&#8217;t understand. And you&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I understand the essential thing,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And
-that is their mania for money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was on the verge of hysteria&mdash;afraid I would
-not go, afraid of what I would do if I did go. &#8220;But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-they have to be handled carefully,&#8221; she urged. &#8220;If you
-put them in a position where their pride won&#8217;t let them
-take the&mdash;the money&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Trust me,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Go to bed, sleep soundly,
-and trust me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I stood. She suddenly flung herself against my
-breast and began to sob on my shoulder. &#8220;You are
-hard and cold,&#8221; she said. &#8220;You have no sympathy with
-me&mdash;no feeling for anything but business. But somehow&mdash;in
-spite of it all&mdash;I have such a sense of your
-strength and your honesty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed rather awkwardly, patted her shoulder,
-helped her to a chair. &#8220;There are times when a coarse,
-common American business man of a husband has his
-uses&mdash;and advantages,&#8221; I said lightly. &#8220;I&#8217;ll telegraph
-you how things are going.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She dried her eyes, looked at me in a puzzled way.
-&#8220;You always repulse me,&#8221; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I appreciate your kindness in remembering to toss
-a few crumbs to the starving man,&#8221; laughed I. &#8220;They
-are precious crumbs, no doubt, and more than he deserves.
-But&mdash;please don&#8217;t do it. He hates that sort of
-thing. You are free to act as you feel like acting. I&#8217;ll
-do as much for you and Margot without the crumbs as
-with them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How hard you are, Godfrey! How you have always
-misunderstood me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right,&#8221; said I amiably. &#8220;I&#8217;m too coarse
-for such a fine nature. Well&mdash;good night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I took myself hastily away to bed; and at ten the
-next morning I departed for London.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>I decided to see Margot first. She was at Sothewell
-Abbey, about an hour by express from Paddington. You
-perhaps know Sothewell Abbey through the pictures and
-descriptions. And it is indeed an imposing pile of old
-masonry seated in the midst of a park of surpassing
-beauty. As soon as I entered the ancient gates for the
-two-mile drive to the Abbey, I saw signs that my money
-was in action. When I first visited it, the lodge was in
-sad disrepair, the gates were about to fall to pieces and
-the vista of the drive was unkempt. Now, all was
-changed. The servile pair who came out to open for
-me, and made me fear they would drop down on their
-bellies and crawl before me, were neatly and properly
-dressed, in strong contrast to their former appearance.</p>
-
-<p>The exterior of the house, which had been most &#8220;romantic&#8221;
-but obviously the front of poverty and decay,
-looked much better&mdash;not younger I hasten to assure you,
-quiet reader, but somewhat like a hairless, toothless old
-man when he gets a nice white wig on his pate and a
-set of good false teeth on his shriveled gums. I saw
-gardeners at work&mdash;and plenty there was for them to do.
-Within, I saw evidences of a more adequate staff of
-servants; but the great halls were dreary and bare and
-dingy. That was a cold summer in England, even colder
-than the summer usually is. So, the enormous house was
-literally uninhabitable, like all the European palaces,
-city and country, that I have been in. I can fancy what
-such a place must be in winter with no way of heating it
-but open fireplaces, and not many of them. I can&#8217;t conceive
-any sane American, used to comfort in the way of
-steam heat, spending a winter in the English country.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-I know it is done by Americans reputedly sane; but if
-those at home knew what Europe in winter meant&mdash;the
-old-fashioned &#8220;romantic&#8221; Europe&mdash;they would not believe
-their expatriated countrymen sane in sacrificing
-comfort and health to vanity. Yes, I believe they would;
-for, do not they, at home, make the same imbecile sacrifices
-to vanity in other ways?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Take me to some small warm room,&#8221; said I to Margot,
-&#8220;before I catch my death of cold.&#8221; This the instant
-I was within doors and felt in my very marrow
-the clammy chill of that picturesque vaulted hall.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There isn&#8217;t any warm room in the house,&#8221; replied
-she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How about the kitchen?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She looked alarmed&mdash;being her mother&#8217;s own daughter,
-in lack of the sense of humor as in many other ways.
-She said hastily: &#8220;The upstairs rooms are a little better.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They couldn&#8217;t be worse. These rooms are cold
-storage.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m getting used to it,&#8221; said she. &#8220;One doesn&#8217;t
-mind it so much after a while.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her nose was red and swollen, and her voice husky.
-She had a frightful cold at that very moment. &#8220;Why
-don&#8217;t you get out of here and go to a decent modern
-hotel in town?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Give up possession!&#8221; cried she in horror. &#8220;He
-might not let me come back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was too ridiculous. &#8220;Possession of what?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, <i>papa</i>!&#8221; cried she, in despair and shame at my
-coarse stupidity.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>&#8220;Possession of what?&#8221; I repeated. &#8220;Of a dirty,
-dingy old cold-storage plant. Why should you want
-to come back? Put on your wraps and let&#8217;s fly to town
-by the next train.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She burst into tears. &#8220;I&#8217;d rather die!&#8221; she sobbed.
-&#8220;I <i>won&#8217;t</i> give up my position. I am Marchioness of
-Crossley and I belong here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Let&#8217;s try the smaller
-rooms.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She led me up a vast stairway&mdash;it would have thrilled
-your soul, gentle reader. Think how it sounds, put into
-the fitting language&mdash; &#8220;The beautiful young Marchioness
-conducted her father up the ancient and magnificent
-stairway that rose from the spacious medi&aelig;val
-hall and swept in a curve of wonderfully wrought stone
-work, dating from the thirteenth century, to the upper
-chambers of the majestic old abbey.&#8221; I hurried her as
-fast as I could, for we both were sneezing and a hideous
-draught like the breath of death was streaming from
-somewhere. I don&#8217;t mind looking at pictures of abbeys
-and the like; but when I read of the grandeur of living
-in that sort of place, I laugh. The men who built them
-did as well as they could in the age they lived in. But
-what shall be said of men who dwell in them now, when
-infinitely better is to be had?</p>
-
-<p>Those upper chambers! Cold, clammy, draughty&mdash;the
-furniture and hangings old and dowdy. And my
-daughter&#8217;s room! Like a squalid, decrepit tenement
-flat. Yes, squalid; for the rugs and draperies were
-dirty, were stained and frayed. There was a distinct
-tenement odor.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t it fascinating?&#8221; said she, gazing round with
-sparkling eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s the fire?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She led me to a smelly, low-ceilinged little room, like
-a segment out of a hovel. It was her boudoir, she informed
-me. In one wall, in a dinky fireplace burned a
-handful of fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is that it?&#8221; said I. &#8220;Is that all?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must remember, papa,&#8221; said she proudly,
-&#8220;that this isn&#8217;t a <i>modern</i> house.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ring for a servant,&#8221; said I. &#8220;This overcoat of
-mine is too light. I must have wraps if I&#8217;m to sit here.
-And you&#8217;d better get out your furs and put them on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The servants&#8217;d think me mad,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Must
-you have a coat?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No&mdash;that spread will do,&#8221; said I. And I jerked
-it from the sofa and flung it round my shoulders. &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t want to upset your establishment. Good God, I
-had no idea people with any money at all anywhere on
-earth lived like this. If you&#8217;re going to stay here, you
-must put in steam heat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, we couldn&#8217;t do that, papa dear,&#8221; said she with
-a plaintive mingling of shame for me and apology for
-the tradition against sense and health.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s get to business, Margot,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Sit in
-the fireplace&mdash;that&#8217;s right. What&#8217;s the trouble? Your
-mother has explained&mdash;has told all she knew. I&#8217;ve come
-to find what the quarrel is <i>really</i> about.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Has she told you of that woman?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why did he go back to her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She began to sob. &#8220;Oh, the hideous things he said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-to me! I didn&#8217;t dream a gentleman could talk like that.
-He called me a low American&mdash;said he was ashamed of
-me&mdash;said he was going to get rid of me at any cost,
-said&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what had you <i>done</i>!&#8221; interrupted I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing!&#8221; she cried, lifting her flushed face.
-&#8220;Absolutely nothing&mdash;except worship him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What had you done?&#8221; I repeated. As she started
-to rise I restrained her. &#8220;Stay in the fireplace. What
-was the beginning of the row&mdash;the very beginning?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes wavered, but she said: &#8220;Nothing, papa!&#8221;
-though less vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was about money,&#8221; said I. &#8220;It always is&mdash;in
-all ranks of society. The beginnings of the quarrels
-have money at the bottom of them. Now&mdash;tell me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was silent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t help you unless you do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, it was so sordid!&#8221; cried she. &#8220;And I thought
-him high above those things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No one that&#8217;s human is,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Any person
-who wears pants or skirts that have to be paid for is not
-above money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He wanted me to turn over to him all I had,&#8221; said
-she. &#8220;Think of that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I might have known,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He said it was beneath his dignity as an English
-gentleman to have a wife independent of him. And, do
-you know, papa, I was so infatuated that I almost
-yielded. I could see his point of view. And I&#8217;d have
-been glad to come to him for every cent. Only&mdash;&#8221; She
-stopped short.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>&#8220;Only what?&#8221; I urged.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I heard about that other woman. And his way of
-treating me&mdash; He said it was the proper way for a
-marquis to treat his marchioness. And I liked the dignity
-and the beauty of it all, when others were about.
-But it seemed to me that when we were alone&mdash; Oh,
-papa, I can&#8217;t tell you these things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I understand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I was&mdash;a little jealous, away down in my
-heart&mdash;and suspicious. And I was afraid he wanted
-the money to spend on <i>her</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Um,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You didn&#8217;t tell your mother
-this?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She hates sordidness of every kind,&#8221; said Margot.
-&#8220;And I hadn&#8217;t the courage. Besides, I&#8217;m sure mamma
-would have advised me to let him have his way. She
-wouldn&#8217;t sympathize with the&mdash;the weak side of my
-character.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was interested. Could it be that Edna&#8217;s daughter
-had a &#8220;weak&#8221;&mdash;a human side? Could it be that her
-education and her mode of life had not altogether killed
-the natural and made her soul a garden of artificial
-flowers only?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So, you want to be free from him?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Free from him!&#8221; cried she, aghast. &#8220;Give up my
-position? Oh, papa&mdash;never&mdash;<i>never</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you don&#8217;t love him. Don&#8217;t come away from
-that fire!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She seated herself by the miserable smoky little blaze
-again. &#8220;He is my husband. I am his wife. I am the
-Marchioness of Crossley.&#8221; And she drew herself up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
-with as much of an air as her cold and the contracted
-space in the chimney-piece permitted. Unluckily, the
-sudden gesture caused a current of air, and she sneezed
-once&mdash;twice&mdash;three times.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better get those furs,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You want the
-man back?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed. I must have him back.&#8221; She
-clasped her hands and wailed, &#8220;If I only had a son!
-Then&mdash;<i>then</i> I&#8217;d show Hugh that he couldn&#8217;t trample on
-me. But he has me in his power now. If he casts me
-off I shan&#8217;t have any position at all. The women are
-down on me. They hate all the American women, except
-those who toady to them and give them money or
-jewelry or pay their bridge and dressmaker&#8217;s bills. And
-they&#8217;re only too glad of the chance to crush me. But
-they&#8217;ll not succeed!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221; said I dryly.</p>
-
-<p>She burst into tears. &#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t know what to
-do! Papa, shall I give him the money?&mdash;sign over all
-my income to him and take only what he&#8217;ll allow me?
-And would he come back if I did?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He would not,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then&mdash;what <i>shall</i> I do? Oh, what slaves we
-women are! Think of it, papa! He wants to make
-a <i>slave</i> of me&mdash;said he didn&#8217;t believe in women
-gadding about and showing themselves off in costly
-dresses and causing scandalous talk&mdash;said my place
-was at home&mdash;looking after the house and that sort
-of thing!&#8221; She laughed wildly. &#8220;Like a low, common
-servant! And he&mdash;he free to carry on with that
-woman!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>&#8220;You might teach him to stay at home, if you set
-him a good example,&#8221; suggested I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t want to stay at home!&#8221; cried she. &#8220;I
-didn&#8217;t marry for that. I want to enjoy all the privileges
-of my rank.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To be sure,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wasn&#8217;t brought up to be like a low, middle-class
-woman, or a workingman&#8217;s wife.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, indeed,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You are a lady. You&#8217;re
-made, not to be of use in the world, but to enjoy yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to find some cause for dissatisfaction in
-my enthusiastic tone. &#8220;Of course,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I shall
-do my duty as a member of the high nobility&mdash;lead in
-society and open bazars and visit the poor on our estate
-and&mdash;and all that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And the world being what
-it is, there&#8217;s no reason why you shouldn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you think you can bring him back, papa?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That depends on you,&#8221; said I warily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do anything&mdash;anything. I&#8217;ll crawl to him, if
-he wants me to. After all, he <i>is</i> the Marquis of Crossley,
-and I&#8217;m only an American nobody.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the proper spirit,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But you
-mustn&#8217;t show it to him <i>too</i> plainly. Be moderate. A
-little pretense of dignity&mdash;of self-respect.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I understand,&#8221; said she seriously&mdash;she was indeed
-Edna&#8217;s own daughter. &#8220;I&#8217;ll be as I was before we were
-married.&#8221; Her eyes flashed. &#8220;Oh, I can bide my time.
-When I have a son!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Get ready and come up to town to-night,&#8221; said I,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-with a most unfatherly gruffness and curtness, I fear.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m off now to deal with him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be careful not to wound his pride, papa,&#8221; she
-cautioned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I realize the danger of that,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;Come
-to the Savoy. Be on hand, so I can get hold of you
-whenever I need you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, papa <i>dear</i>!&#8221; she cried, and cast herself into
-my arms.</p>
-
-<p>I brushed my lips upon her crown of hair&mdash;it was
-false hair, that being the fashion of the day. &#8220;Try to
-make yourself as pretty as you can,&#8221; said I, releasing
-her and myself. &#8220;You&#8217;ll hear from me to-night or to-morrow,
-unless I&#8217;ve caught my death in this damp cave.
-You must leave it to the frogs, and snakes, and bats,
-and build yourself a decent house somewhere. You&#8217;ll
-die here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid Hugh wouldn&#8217;t consent to <i>live</i> anywhere
-but here. It&#8217;s the ancestral seat, you know.
-The Massingfords have lived here since forever and
-ever.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have died here, you mean. Have killed wives they
-wanted to get rid of, here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She startled&mdash;looked excitedly at me. &#8220;Papa!&#8221;
-she exclaimed breathlessly. &#8220;Yes&mdash;I wouldn&#8217;t put it
-past him!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed.</p>
-
-<p>She drew a long breath of relief. &#8220;Oh, you weren&#8217;t
-in earnest,&#8221; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;But&mdash;don&#8217;t live here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shan&#8217;t,&#8221; said she firmly. &#8220;It&#8217;s dreadful for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>
-looks. You&#8217;ve seen what so many of these English
-women look like.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Like shriveled, frost-bitten apples,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;They don&#8217;t die because they&#8217;re used to it. But it&#8217;s
-death for people accustomed to civilization. Not even
-the steady glow of pride in your title and position can
-keep you heated up enough to save you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Will you give Hugh a house, if he&#8217;ll consent?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.... Until to-night or to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And I fled from the romantic old Abbey, but not soon
-enough to avoid what was threatening to be the cold of
-my life.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> moment I was in London, and before that
-Sothewell Abbey cold had a chance to grip me, I went
-at it. Starve, stay in bed, and keep the air out for a day&mdash;that&#8217;s
-the way to put a cold out of business. Unless
-it be some occasional prodigy endowed with superhuman
-common sense and self-restraint, no one learns how to
-take care of his health except by experience. The doctors
-know precious little about disease; about health they
-know nothing&mdash;naturally, they have no interest in health.
-The average human being not only does not know how
-to take care of his health, but also does not wish to learn
-how; health involves self-denial, cutting down on food,
-drink, tobacco and the other joys of life. So he who
-wishes to avoid enormous payments in discomfort and
-pain for slight neglects and transgressions of physical
-laws has to work it out for himself. I&#8217;ve made several
-valuable discoveries in the science and art of living; about
-the most valuable of them is that every illness starts
-under cover of a cold. So I instantly take myself in
-hand whenever I begin to sneeze and to have chilly sensations
-or a catch in the throat. The result has been
-that since I was thirty I have not spent a cent on doctors
-or lost a day through illness, and I&#8217;ve eaten and drunk
-about as I pleased. I can see gentle reader&#8217;s expression<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
-of disdain at these confessions as to my care for health.
-You are welcome to your disdain, gentle reader. It is
-characteristic of your shallowness. You see, the chief
-difference between you and me is that I have imagination
-while you have not. And as I have imagination, illness
-makes to my mind a picture of revolting internal conditions
-which I can no more endure than I could endure
-having my outside unclean and frowzy.</p>
-
-<p>Margot, coming by a later train, sent me word that
-she was ill. She had called in a doctor. He poured
-some medicine&mdash;some poison&mdash;into her, of course, and
-so got her into the way of giving him an excuse for
-robbing her. In England doctors rank socially with
-butchers and bakers, rank scientifically with voodoo
-quacks and astrologers. They still look on a cold as a
-trifle, and treat it by feeding! The food and drugs she
-swallowed soon reduced Margot to the state where it was
-taking all the reserve force of her youth to save her from
-severe illness. I was entirely well the following day, and
-went to see her. The doctor&mdash;five guineas or twenty-five
-dollars a visit&mdash;was coming twice a day; his assistant&mdash;two
-guineas or ten dollars a visit&mdash;was coming four
-times a day. The Marchioness of Crossley, a rich American,
-was ill. Her social position and Dr. Sir Spratt
-Wallet&#8217;s rank as a practitioner together made it imperative
-that the illness be no ordinary affair. The second
-day he issued bulletins to the papers. I attempted
-to interfere in the treatment, but Margot would not
-have it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s growing worse instead of better,&#8221; said I to
-Wallet.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>&#8220;Certainly, sir,&#8221; replied he. &#8220;That is the regular
-course with a cold.&#8221; And he stroked his whiskers and
-looked at me with dull, self-complacent, supercilious eyes.
-&#8220;The regular course, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In England, but not in America,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I dare say,&#8221; said he, with heavy politeness. Then,
-after a heavy pause, &#8220;her ladyship will be quite fit
-again in a week&mdash;quite fit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As she was eating three strapping meals a day and
-taking rhinitis and another equally poisonous drug I had
-my doubts. But once you let a doctor in you are powerless.
-If you order him out without giving him an opportunity
-in his own good time to cure the mischief he
-has done the consequences may be serious. Not to linger
-over this incident in high life, Wallet made out of that
-cold a hundred guineas, not counting his commissions
-on the fees of his assistant, on the wages of a trained
-nurse, and on the stuff from the chemist. If Margot had
-been English born the bill would have been about one
-fourth that sum&mdash;for the same rank in society. Slay
-the Midianite! But that&#8217;s the rule the world over.
-When I am &#8220;trimmed&#8221; abroad I console myself with
-reflecting on the fate of the luckless foreigner visiting
-America. Europe trims us to the quick; but we trim
-to the bone; and when no foreigners are handy we keep
-in practice by trimming one another.</p>
-
-<p>Margot&#8217;s illness did not interfere with my efforts
-to right her matrimonial ship and set it in its course
-again. I had greatly modified my original plan. It
-involved my seeking the Marquis. My new plan was
-to compel him to seek me. I proceeded so successfully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>
-that on the morning of the third day of Margot&#8217;s
-&#8220;indisposition,&#8221; while I was at breakfast in
-my sitting room, Markham came in with a grin of
-triumph on his face. &#8220;You win,&#8221; he cried. &#8220;But you
-always do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dawkins?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here&#8217;s his card.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let him up. No&mdash;wait.... Tell him I&#8217;ll see him
-in half an hour.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gentle reader, you are about to learn why in that
-controversy over settlements <i>I</i> abruptly abandoned the
-struggle and yielded everything. I worked with Markham
-at my mail and telegrams for three quarters of an
-hour before I let Dawkins in. I saw at a glance that my
-treatment of him had produced the effect I had hoped.
-He was a typical middle-class Englishman&mdash;but all middle-class
-Englishmen are typical. He was fattish and
-baldish and smug. He had a beef-and-beer face, ruddy
-and smooth except tufts of red-gray, curling whiskers
-before either ear. He had cold, shrewd, pious eyes&mdash;the
-eyes of the hypocrite who serves the Lord with every
-breath he draws, and gets a blessing upon every crime he
-commits before committing it. In my first interviews
-with him I, being new to England, had made the mistake
-of treating him as an equal, that is, as a human being.
-My respect for myself forbids me to meet any of my
-fellow-members of the human race in any other fashion.
-But experience has taught me that in doing business with
-a man, it is being absolutely necessary that you dominate
-him unless you are willing to have him dominate you, the
-most skillful care must be taken to impress him with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
-your superiority. A certain amount of &#8220;side&#8221; is useful
-in America. A lot of it is imperative in England;
-and if you are dealing with an Englishman who feels
-that he is low, you dare not treat him as an equal or he
-at once imagines you are lower than he, and despicable&mdash;and
-you can do nothing with him.</p>
-
-<p>I had suffered, and so had my lawyer, Norman, for
-our American way of treating Dawkins. I appreciated
-my mistake afterwards, and resolved not to repeat it.
-I studied the manner of Crossley and Blankenship and
-the other upper-class men toward the middle and lower
-classes, and I learned to copy it, an accomplishment of
-which I am not proud, though common sense forbids me
-to be ashamed of it. Dawkins, entering with heels thoroughly
-cooled, made ready to put out his hand, but did
-so hesitatingly. He saw that his worst fears were realized,
-altered the handshaking gesture into a tug at his
-right whiskers. Nor did I offer him a seat, but simply
-looked at him pleasantly over the top of my newspaper
-and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, Dawkins, is that you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good morning, Mr. Loring. Hope you are well,
-sir,&#8221; said Dawkins, now squeezing awkwardly into his
-proper place.</p>
-
-<p>I half turned my back on him and dictated a note
-and a telegram to Markham. Then I glanced at Dawkins
-again. &#8220;Ah, Dawkins, yes&mdash;what were you saying?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I would esteem it a favor, sir, if you would give
-me a few minutes of your time&mdash;alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are alone,&#8221; said I. &#8220;What is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>The solicitor shifted his portly frame uneasily,
-smoothed his top hat with his gloved left hand, glanced
-dubiously at Markham. &#8220;The matter is confidential,
-sir&mdash;relating to&mdash;to the family.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Markham knows more about my affairs than
-I do,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Don&#8217;t beat about the bush, Dawkins.
-I have no time to waste.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well, sir. I beg your pardon. It concerns
-those bonds&mdash;the bonds you turned over to me in arranging
-the settlements.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. I remember. Great Lakes and Gulf bonds,
-were they not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Precisely, sir. You bound us to a stipulation
-that they were not to be converted for at least five
-years.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right,&#8221; said I. &#8220;In fact, I made it impossible
-for you to convert them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A pained expression came into the face of Dawkins.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I believe I conceded everything else your client demanded,&#8221;
-pursued I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But it now develops, sir,&#8221; said Dawkins, &#8220;that that
-was the only important thing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have doubtless seen the papers these last few
-days&mdash;the stock market.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.... Yes&mdash;so the bonds <i>are</i> dropping. That&#8217;s
-unfortunate.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dropping rapidly,&#8221; said Dawkins. &#8220;And there
-are rumors that Great Lakes and Gulf will soon be practically
-worthless.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So I&#8217;ve read.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>&#8220;I&#8217;ve come to ask you to release us. We wish to
-sell. We must sell. If we don&#8217;t the settlement on your
-son-in-law will be worthless.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I smiled agreeably. &#8220;As worthless as his promises
-to my daughter. As worthless as he is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Dawkins was breathing heavily. His pious eyes were
-snapping with rage. He had prided himself on his
-astuteness. He had gloated over his shrewdness in outwitting
-Norman and me. And now he discovered that
-the boot was on the other leg. I had trapped him and
-put him and his client in my power.</p>
-
-<p>I leaned back comfortably and smiled. &#8220;Of course
-I know nothing about it, Dawkins, but I am willing to
-make a Yankee guess that the bonds will continue to
-drop until&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When my pause became unendurable, he said: &#8220;Yes,
-sir. Until when?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Until I discover some signs of value in my son-in-law.
-Then he may discover some signs of value in
-the bonds. Our America is a peculiar country, Dawkins.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Peculiar will do, sir,&#8221; said he with respectful
-insolence. &#8220;But I should have chosen another
-word.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I shook my head laughingly. &#8220;What bad losers you
-English are!&#8221; said I. &#8220;But&mdash;I&#8217;ll not detain you.
-Good morning, Dawkins.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I am to understand, sir&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But I had my back squarely to him and was busy
-with Markham, who took his cue for the little comedy
-we were playing like the well-trained American business<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>
-man that he was. Presently Markham said, &#8220;He&#8217;s
-gone, and I never saw a madder man get out of a room
-more awkwardly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>You, gentle reader, who know about as much of the
-science of managing men in practical life as you know
-of any other phase of the world-that-is&mdash;you, gentle
-reader, are shocked by my rudeness to a polite, well-educated,
-well-dressed Englishman. And you hope&mdash;and
-feel&mdash;that I overreached myself. But let me inform
-you&mdash;not for your instruction but for my own satisfaction&mdash;courtesy
-has to be used most sparingly. Human
-vanity is so monstrous that men eagerly read into politeness
-to them&mdash;the most ordinary politeness&mdash;evidence
-that their superiority is inspiring fear, awe and desire
-to conciliate them. You often hear men in high place
-severely criticised for being rude, short, arrogant, insulting.
-Do not condemn them too hastily. It may
-be that they were driven into this attitude toward their
-fellows by the disastrous consequences of courtesy. Be
-polite to a man and he will misunderstand. Be cool to
-him and he, thickly enveloped in his own good opinion
-of himself, will not feel it. Rudeness, overt and unmistakable,
-is often the one way to reach him and save not
-only yourself but also him from the consequences of his
-vanity. It is the instinct of big men to be big and
-simple and natural in their dealings with their fellows.
-The mass of little men with big vanities compels them
-to suppress this instinct; and by suppression it inevitably
-becomes in time crushed out of existence. How
-can one who is busy continue to show consideration for
-others if they, instead of showing a return consideration<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>
-for him, take it as tribute to their importance and begin
-to rear and impose and trample?</p>
-
-<p>To cite my own relatively unimportant case, I have
-long had a reputation for coldness and meager civility
-in my business relations. I recall distinctly the desperate
-pressure of sheer imposition that led me to
-abandon my early openness to all comers at all times.
-And I admit that I did change; rather abruptly, too,
-for it suddenly came to me why I was slipping backwards.
-But looking only at my career <i>since</i> the change,
-when I think of the boredom I have endured, the folly
-I have permitted to waste my valuable time&mdash;when I
-recall the forbearance I have shown in sparing impudent
-and lazy incompetence where I might, yes, ought
-to have used the ax&mdash;when I think of my good-natured
-tolerance in face of extremest daily provocation, year
-after year, I marvel at myself and feel how unjust, how
-characteristically the verdict of little shallow men, is
-the attack on me as cold and unsympathetic. When
-I consider how the leaders of the human race have been
-tempted to tyranny, I cannot understand why history
-is able to record comparatively few real tyrants, most
-of them being homicidal lunatics like Nero, or success-crazed
-megalomaniacs like Napoleon, and almost none
-men of sanity. If the great of earth were as vain,
-as selfishly, as egotistically inconsiderate of the small
-as the small are of the great and of each other, would
-not the story of history have come to an end long ago
-for lack of surviving characters?</p>
-
-<p>Two days after Dawkins came Crossley. I knew
-that in America there is no one so easily frightened as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>
-a rich man who has inherited his wealth and does not
-know whether, if he lost it, he could make a living or
-not. All rich men are cowards, but that species is
-craven. I suspected that the same thing was true of
-the European type&mdash;the nobleman with the grotesque
-pose of disdain for money that convinces and captivates
-you, gentle reader, and your favorite authors. Crossley&#8217;s
-face instantly showed me that my suspicion was
-correct. He had been dissipating wildly for several
-weeks, but it did not account for the look in his eyes.
-If, gentle reader, you wish to learn the truth about the
-aristocracy you worship&mdash;which you do not&mdash;get an
-aristocrat where you can cut off or turn on his supply
-of cash at will. You will then discover that he who has
-a stiff neck also has supple knees&mdash;the stiffer the neck
-the suppler the knees.</p>
-
-<p>Crossley was a clever chap in his way; that is, he
-knew his business of idle spender of unearned money
-thoroughly. Another mode of putting it would be the
-commonplace and less exact if more alluring phrase
-&#8220;aristocrat to his finger tips.&#8221; There are many modes
-of cringing. He showed judgment and taste&mdash;judgment
-of me, taste in sparing himself&mdash;in his choice of the
-mode. With fright and wariness in his eyes&mdash;the look
-of readiness to go to any depths of self-abasement in
-gaining his end&mdash;he put a tone of manly, bluff, shamefaced
-contrition into his voice as he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pardon my breaking in on you this way. I&#8217;ve
-just heard. Is <i>she</i> very ill?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He meant he had just heard about the bonds. I
-knew he meant that, and he knew I knew it. But we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>
-were men of the world. &#8220;Not desperately ill,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;Only about twenty guineas a day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He smiled a faint but flattering appreciation of my
-humor, then resumed his gloomy anxiety and self-reproach.
-&#8220;But she <i>is</i> ill. I read it in one of those
-screaming ha&#8217;penny rags and came as fast as ever I
-could. The truth is&mdash;well, we&#8217;ve had a bit of a row.
-Has she told you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much,&#8221; said I. &#8220;A little.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve acted the skunk, the howling skunk&mdash;and I
-want to&mdash; Do you think she&#8217;ll see me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you wish, I&#8217;ll find out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d be no end grateful,&#8221; said he with enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>She saw him as soon as she could make herself presentable&mdash;and
-her delay gave him a chance to tone up
-his nerves and to smooth out his face. That afternoon
-I was able to telegraph Edna that all was well
-The Crossleys were reconciled; Love had scored another
-of his famous triumphs. She came over the
-following day, but I had sailed for America a few hours
-before.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The day after my arrival in New York I saw Mary
-Kirkwood and Hartley Beechman lunching together at
-Delmonico&#8217;s. In those days that meant an engagement
-actual or impending&mdash;or, at least, a flirtation far advanced
-into the stage of loverlike intimacy. I was in
-the passageway looking through the glass and the screen
-of palms. I stood there long, noting every detail of
-her. She was well, perfectly well&mdash;of that much her
-eyes and her color assured me. Is there anything<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>
-lovelier than a clear dark skin, tastefully set off by
-black-brown hair? Was she happy? I could not tell.
-Still in her face was that restless, expectant look&mdash;not
-unlike the expression of a child being shown a picture
-book and too impatient for the next page rightly to
-examine the one that is open. An intense interest in
-life, an intense vitality&mdash;that fascinating capacity to
-love, if she found the right man. And her beauty&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Beauty she undoubtedly had. But charm does not
-lie in beauty&mdash;physical charm, I mean. There is a
-certain light in the eyes, a certain curve of cheek and
-throat, of bosom and arm&mdash;and the blood flames and
-rushes. She had charm for me. Her beauty impressed
-others; it was her charm that made her the one woman
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>Blankenship came to take me into the caf&eacute; where
-we were to lunch. I went with the meager consolation
-that while I had stood there she had given Beechman
-not a single glance with any suggestion of a feeling it
-would have wounded me to the quick to see. Should I
-speak to her? Did I dare risk the attempt? Would not
-speaking to her be merely a useless torment? After
-a long struggle that could have but one end, I said:
-&#8220;Excuse me,&#8221; rose and went to the palm room. They
-were gone; the waiter was clearing the table at which
-they had been sitting. I stared round dazedly, returned
-to Blankenship.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re not up to the mark&mdash;what?&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;New York doesn&#8217;t agree with me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hate towns. They give you such dirty second-hand
-stuff to breathe. Let&#8217;s move on&mdash;what?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>&#8220;To-morrow,&#8221; I said.</p>
-
-<p>But it seemed there was no place on earth for me.
-Don&#8217;t judge me so poorly as to think, or to imagine I
-thought, this was due wholly to Mary Kirkwood. I
-wish to be carefully, exactly accurate in this frank
-recital of a man&#8217;s point of view. She was responsible
-for my forlorn state to the extent that loving her had
-revealed to me the futility and failure of my own life
-and had made me see another sort of life that would
-have been possible with her, that was impossible without
-her&mdash;without love and comradeship. But loving her
-did not make my life empty; it was already empty,
-though I had not realized it. I understood now why
-the big business men, as soon as they reached security,
-cast about for some real interest. Most of them&mdash;nearly
-all&mdash;were as unfortunate in their family relations
-as I. They had trivial wives and trivial children&mdash;mere
-silly strutters and spenders. They sought interest
-in art, in science, in religion, in exploration, in
-philanthropy, in politics, in stamps and butterflies, in
-old books and antiques, in racing stables and prize fighting,
-in gambling, in drink, in women. Their craving
-was now mine. How to find an interest that would make
-life attractive to me, with Mary Kirkwood left out&mdash;there
-was my problem.</p>
-
-<p>While waiting for the solution, I followed Blankenship
-to the Northwest. The second day from New
-York, as he and I were walking up and down the platform
-during a halt&mdash;at St. Paul, I think it was&mdash;Hartley
-Beechman joined us.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t I see you in the caf&eacute; at Delmonico&#8217;s a few<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>
-days ago?&#8221; said he. &#8220;I was getting my hat and stick
-in a rush. It certainly looked like your back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was,&#8221; said I. And I was seized with a wild
-longing to escape from him and a wilder longing to
-hold on to him and to pour out question after question.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Kirkwood and I were lunching together,&#8221;
-he went on. &#8220;We talked of you. I told her I thought
-I had seen you, and she said she heard you were in
-town and was much hurt because you hadn&#8217;t looked
-her up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was merely passing through,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She has an enormous admiration for you,&#8221; continued
-he. &#8220;She says you have imagination&mdash;which
-means that she thinks you in the small class. You
-know the world divides into sheep and goats on imagination,
-with the mass in the have-not class. I believe it&#8217;s
-the true distinction between House of Have and House
-of Have-not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She is well?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Always. She knows how to take care of herself.
-I never knew a woman so sensible&mdash;and sensible means
-the reverse of what it&#8217;s usually supposed to mean when
-applied to a woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This hardly sounded like an engaged man talking
-of his fianc&eacute;e. On the other hand, Beechman was a
-peculiar chap.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Does she still live in the country?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just now&mdash;yes. Last winter she kept house for
-Bob in New York.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But you will not be interested in how I drew from
-him bit by bit a hundred details of her life, stories of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>
-what she had said and done. I saw Beechman several
-hours every day until he left us at Seattle. Alternately
-I thought him merely her closest man friend and her
-accepted lover. At times I thought he was not quite
-sure, himself, in which position he stood. When we were
-having our last talk together I nerved myself and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I heard in London that she was to be married.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I felt him drawing in and shutting all doors and
-windows.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have <i>you</i> heard anything of it?&#8221; pursued I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, in the case of a woman like her,&#8221; replied he,
-&#8220;there&#8217;s always gossip about this man and that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She ought to marry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She <i>will</i> marry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I forced a smile, and, as we knew each other so
-well, I ventured: &#8220;You speak as one having authority.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t <i>you</i> know she will?&#8221; parried he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That sounds like evasion,&#8221; laughed I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not at all. She cannot escape. Some man will
-convince her&mdash;surely.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But so far as you know, no man has?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His eyes were frankly mocking. &#8220;I did not say
-that,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>And I could get no further.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Before I returned to New York in the autumn I
-had added a lot of far western enterprises to my already
-long list of occupations. Everything I touched
-seemed to succeed. Even my new secretary, Rossiter,
-proved better than Markham. Markham had an indifferent
-memory and a fondness for women that was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span>
-trying. Rossiter forgot nothing and was as shy of
-the women, including the ladies, as was Lord Blankenship,
-who yawned and retreated at the very sight of a
-skirt. The news from England was altogether satisfactory.
-An heir was hoped for, and Crossley had become
-a devoted husband and was about to enter politics.
-This struck me as a huge joke, the more so because I
-knew that in England Crossley would be welcomed as
-a source of real strength to his party. It seemed to
-me amazing how England could stagger along when
-she was being managed by such men and was grateful
-for it. But when I spoke to Blankenship about it, he set
-me to thinking from a different standpoint.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My son-in-law is going into politics,&#8221; said I. &#8220;In
-America he couldn&#8217;t be elected dog-catcher.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I fancy money will do most anything most
-anywhere,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>The news from Paris was equally good. Edna had
-settled there after a joyous summer going from country
-house to country house in Britain, and from ch&acirc;teau
-to ch&acirc;teau in France. She had seen one ch&acirc;teau
-which she wished me to buy, and she begged me to come
-over and inspect it. She did not explicitly say so, but
-I read between the lines that she was greatly strengthening
-her social position by giving out that she purposed
-buying a big place. You may imagine how much
-enthusiasm for her such an announcement would create
-among noble down-at-the-heel families eager to exchange
-unsalable old rook-roosts for American dollars.
-I could hear her talking&mdash;how subtly she would put
-forth the suggestion, how diplomatically she would discuss<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>
-each worthless stone heap in turn&mdash;and how she
-would rake in the invitations so difficult to get unless
-one happens to know how, and so easy when one does
-know.</p>
-
-<p>But with my arrival in New York I had a reverse.
-A cable came from Edna saying that she was sailing
-at once and wished to see me.</p>
-
-<p>I could not imagine what she wanted, and I did not
-waste much time in making guesses. One evening, when
-Armitage and I were dining together in the Federal Club&mdash;Blankenship
-had sailed for home&mdash;the idea flashed
-into my mind that perhaps Edna wanted a divorce.
-Immediately I felt that I had hit upon the precise reason
-for her coming. You will have no difficulty in imagining
-what was the next idea in my train of thought.
-If she divorced me I should be free to marry whom I
-pleased!</p>
-
-<p>It was stupid of me, but in all my revolvings of my
-hopeless love for Mary Kirkwood never once had I
-thought of divorcing my wife. I cannot account for
-this lapse, except as an instance of the universal human
-failing for overlooking the obvious. There was no religious
-scruple in my early training to make me shy
-of divorce. On the contrary, my parents, like most
-old-fashioned Americans of faiths other than Episcopal
-and Catholic&mdash;and Episcopalians and Catholics
-were few in the old American stock, except in New York
-and Baltimore and South Carolina&mdash;most old-fashioned
-Americans believed that living together in wedlock
-without love was sin, that divorce was no mere
-necessary evil, but a religious rite as sacred as marriage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span>
-itself. A house, they held, is either a House of
-Hate or a House of Love, and no one should remain in
-a House of Hate, and no child should be brought up
-there.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt, if Edna and I had been living under the
-same roof the idea of divorce would have taken form,
-actively definite form, long before. But we had no
-home to be a House of Hate. We did not hate each
-other; we bored each other. And as we were not poor,
-we lived far enough apart not to annoy each other in
-the least. I cheerfully paid any ransom she exacted
-for leaving me free&mdash;and you may be sure she was not
-inexpensive. She had her own fortune&mdash;and it gave
-her quite an income&mdash;but she husbanded that. She insisted
-upon state and equipage, not to mention such
-small matters as stockings at fifty dollars a pair and
-chemises at three hundred dollars apiece&mdash;for, she
-knew how lovely she was and demanded for her beautiful
-body the most beautiful garments that could be devised
-by French ingenuity at combining cost and simplicity.
-I was&mdash;by instinct rather than by avowed
-principles&mdash;thoroughly old-fashioned in my family
-ideas. Indeed, I still am; and I say this with no apology.
-It may be that woman will some day develop another
-and higher sphere for herself. But first she
-would do well&mdash;in my humbly heretical opinion&mdash;to
-learn to fill the sphere she now rattles round in like
-one dry pea in a ten-gallon can. I want to see a few
-more women up to the modern requirements for wife
-and mother. I want to see a few more women making
-a living without using their sex charms&mdash;a few less<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>
-&#8217;tending the typewriter with one eye while the other and
-busier is on the lookout for a husband. I believe in
-emancipation of women&mdash;in votes for women&mdash;in all that
-sort of thing. The one and only way to learn to swim
-is in the water. I am sick and tired of woman the
-irresponsible, woman the cozener and milker of man,
-woman the dead weight upon man, and drawing the
-pay of a housewife and shirking all a housewife&#8217;s
-duties. So, you see, I am the friend of woman&mdash;not
-of woman&#8217;s vanity and laziness and passion for parasiteism,
-but of woman&#8217;s education and self-respect and
-independence.</p>
-
-<p>I was thoroughly old-fashioned. My notion of wife
-was the independent, self-respecting equal of her husband.
-That is, I had the typical American husband&#8217;s
-ideal&mdash;the ideal that dates from the pioneer days of
-no property and of labor for all, the ideal the American
-man still lives up to, the one that enables woman
-to betray him. And, having this ideal, I never permitted
-myself&mdash;no, not even when I spoke to her the contrary
-in words&mdash;I never permitted myself to <i>feel</i> that my
-wife was not in the main what she should be.</p>
-
-<p>If you have borne me company thus far, gentle
-reader, turn away now. For, dreadful things are coming.
-I said to Armitage: &#8220;Your sister&mdash;she&#8217;s still in
-the country?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, she&#8217;s abroad,&#8221; replied he. &#8220;She&#8217;s visiting
-friends in Budapest. Later on she&#8217;s to yacht in the
-East Mediterranean&mdash;she and the Horace Armstrongs
-and Beechman&mdash;and&mdash;&#8221; He gave several names I do
-not now recall.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span>&#8220;Is she engaged to Beechman?&#8221; I asked carelessly,
-but the question was not one that could sound other
-than raw.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled&mdash;an expression I did not like. At first
-I thought it a rebuke to my impertinence. Afterwards
-I saw no such notion was in his mind. &#8220;Beechman?
-Good Lord, no.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are <i>sure</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Absolute. He&#8217;d not dare go in that direction with
-<i>her</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;well&mdash;you see&mdash; She doesn&#8217;t care for him,&#8221;
-replied Armitage lamely. I was not liking him so well,
-now that I knew the world&mdash;his world&mdash;better and could
-judge its beliefs and its hypocrisies more accurately.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s an unusual man,&#8221; said I. &#8220;She might easily
-care for him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, she doesn&#8217;t,&#8221; retorted he irritably. &#8220;I happen
-to know she doesn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was convinced. Armitage&#8217;s tone said in effect that
-he had heard the rumor, had questioned her, had been
-assured that there was no basis for it.</p>
-
-<p>So, she was abroad&mdash;five or six days away. I could
-not go to her and make a beginning. Would I have
-gone if she had been within reach? I do not know. I
-rather think not. As I have said, I was old-fashioned;
-and the sort of love I felt for her, and my sense of what
-she had suffered at the hands of the first man she had
-trusted would have made me wait, I hope, until I was
-free. Still, love is insidiously compelling. Who can say
-what love would or would not beguile or goad him into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span>
-doing? The old-fashioned man, always reminding himself
-that women haven&#8217;t an equal chance with men, was
-inclined to be considerate in his dealings with a woman.
-The new-fashioned man lets her look out for herself. I
-am not sure that he is wrong. Perhaps some who have
-read thus far will guess the reason for my doubt.</p>
-
-<p>You may imagine how impatiently I waited for Edna
-to arrive. I am afraid Rossiter found me difficult in
-those intervening days. Only the weak sort of men and
-women are easy for an intelligent person to live with.
-Men and women of positive character have their impossible
-moods. I made this remark to Mary Kirkwood on
-that yachting trip in the Sound. And her quick answer
-was: &#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s true. But everything worth while is
-difficult. Weathering the stormy days would have its
-compensations&mdash;and more.&#8221; What a woman! No wonder
-I loved her.</p>
-
-<p>When Edna finally arrived&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>What an arrival it was! She was attended by two
-maids, one French, the other Italian. She had trained
-them&mdash;she and their former fashionable mistresses&mdash;to
-treat her as if she was a royal person, requiring the most
-minute assistance, incapable even of ascertaining for
-herself whether it was daylight or dark, rain or shine.
-She was clad in the latest Paris fashions, adapted and
-improved for her own especial charms. She wore much
-jewelry, but nothing noisy. There never was anything
-noisy about her&mdash;any more than there is about a burst
-of sunshine that fills and floods the whole place, permeating
-everywhere and dominating everything. She
-talked by turns in English&mdash;with a superb British accent&mdash;in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>
-French that sounded Parisian and in Italian that
-seemed as liquid and swift as the Italian maid&#8217;s. It was
-a vast ship, and there were about a thousand passengers,
-and much luggage. To me, to all on the pier that day,
-there seemed to be but one landing and but one lot of
-luggage.</p>
-
-<p>How many trunks had she? Heaven only knows.
-The customs people were glad to expedite her after a
-glance at the exhibit imposing both in extent and in
-costliness. She affected a delightful, most aristocratic
-unconsciousness of the stir she was making, of the excited
-admiration of men, of the gaping or jeering envy
-of women. Yes, it was a great day, and as I accompanied
-her in the auto to the Plaza, I felt dowdy and
-insignificant&mdash;felt like a humble male menial, a courier
-or valet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I did not fully appreciate your magnificence,&#8221; said
-I, &#8220;until I saw you on these humble shores.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is shocking here&mdash;isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; said she. &#8220;So incomplete,
-so crude. No wonder the ideals are low. The
-surroundings give no inspiration.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;None&mdash;except for work,&#8221; said I. &#8220;It&#8217;s a land
-for working people only. No doubt you&#8217;ll be going back
-soon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As soon as I can,&#8221; replied she. With a friendly
-but not tender smile: &#8220;As soon as you&#8217;ll let me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The absence of her customary effusiveness confirmed
-my theory of her coming. I had thought all out with
-the utmost care. I felt it would be in every way unwise
-to let her see that I was eager for the divorce. She
-must open the subject. It had ever been my rule, when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>
-I wanted anything, so to maneuver that the other person
-should propose the exchange. It is the rule of successful
-operation in every department of life. Therefore,
-adhering strictly to my prearranged programme,
-I could only sit tight and wait.</p>
-
-<p>How she tried my patience! I was mad to have the
-preliminaries over, to have the divorce under way&mdash;mad,
-not with the hysterical impatience of those short-sighted
-people who mess their purposes through lack of self-restraint,
-but with the white-hot repressed patience of
-those who have their way in this world. Day followed
-day, and she did not speak. I gave up the evenings
-and a large part of the afternoons to her. I stayed on
-after dinner until there was no further excuse for lingering.
-I listened to her interminable recital of fashionable
-names, dates, gossip, adventure. A week of this, and
-just as my fortitude was wearing itself out and I had
-begun to debate opening the subject myself, she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been down looking at our house. Really it&#8217;s
-not half bad. Why shouldn&#8217;t we open it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I did not know what to say. Was I mistaken in her
-purpose in coming? Or was this proposal to open the
-house the clever move of a clever gamester to force me
-to speak first?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This lovely weather!&#8221; she went on. &#8220;It&#8217;s a shame
-such a climate should be wasted upon such a vulgar city.
-When I think of the dreadful rains that infest Paris and
-the rains and fogs of London&mdash; How they would glory
-in this sun and sparkling air.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To my notion New York was vastly more attractive
-than dreary London or rainy, sloppy Paris. But I made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>
-no defense of New York. I wished her to think it crude
-and tiresome.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the fashionable society here,&#8221; she went on.
-&#8220;What a silly copy of the real thing over there!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It must remind you of Passaic,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She visibly shivered.</p>
-
-<p>I was suddenly seized of a base inspiration. In my
-despair I did not hesitate. Said I: &#8220;That reminds me.
-We must go over to see the old people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes,&#8221; she murmured. &#8220;I&#8217;m so neglectful.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I felt&mdash;I saw&mdash;that I was on the right track at last.
-&#8220;When will you go?&#8221; I persisted. &#8220;Next Sunday?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; said she faintly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, we&#8217;ll go Sunday. They fret because you never
-write.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They are well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In splendid health. There&#8217;s no reason why all four
-of them shouldn&#8217;t outlive us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&mdash;you go often?&#8221; she faltered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t been for some time,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You see,
-I&#8217;ve been away.... If we opened the house, we could
-have them visit us. That would make up to them for
-the way we&#8217;ve acted.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She gazed at me in large-eyed horror. Suddenly she
-smiled with patient scorn and shrugged her shoulders.
-&#8220;Oh, I had forgotten your passion for jesting.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am in earnest,&#8221; said I&mdash;and I was indeed in the
-full flood of a virtuous penitence whose hypocrisy I did
-not detect until I was thinking about the matter afterwards.
-You, gentle reader, would in the same circumstances
-never have permitted yourself to discover the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span>
-hypocrisy. I went on: &#8220;I&#8217;m ashamed of the way I&#8217;ve
-acted.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ve got everything they need or want,&#8221; said
-Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Material comfort,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;But haven&#8217;t
-parents a right to expect something more? And now
-that our social position is secure, we&#8217;ve no excuse for
-acting snobbishly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I enjoyed this virtuous talk for itself; still more, I
-enjoyed teasing her. Her delicate, refined, ladylike
-nerves were aristocratically sensitive. Have you observed
-that peculiarity of lady nerves? A lady will live
-with the most shocking husband for luxury. She will
-endure the most degrading humiliations to get dresses,
-jewels, motor cars. She will crawl in the dirt to gain
-or to improve social position. She will, without a quiver,
-kiss her worst enemy, cut her dearest friends, in the
-furtherance of any ladylike purpose. But talk to her
-of self-respecting independence, of earning her own living,
-or of any of the homely decencies of life&mdash;of her
-ignorant old parents or unsightly poor relatives&mdash;and
-what a fairy princess of high-strung nerves she straightway
-becomes. Yes, Edna was a lady&mdash;a perfect lady,
-as perfect as if she had been born to it.</p>
-
-<p>To my surprise I had daunted her only for the day;
-the following afternoon she began again. &#8220;This heavenly
-weather!&#8221; she exclaimed. &#8220;It tempts me to stay
-on and on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope it will last over Sunday,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She ignored the shaft, and went on with undiminished
-enthusiasm: &#8220;And really New York has improved.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>
-In some respects it can be compared to Paris&mdash;though,
-of course, it has no background. A city can be built in
-a generation or so. But to build up the country&mdash;that
-takes centuries.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s building up rapidly,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You&#8217;ll be astonished
-Sunday by the change down where the old folks
-are. The Fosdicks have bought up twenty farms or so,
-and are making a park. I saw Amy Siersdorf not long
-ago and she spoke of having stopped at father&#8217;s place
-and got milk and corn bread.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The fluffy little cat,&#8221; said Edna, not especially
-ruffled. &#8220;I shall snub her the first time we meet. But
-I was about to speak of our house. I am arranging to
-open it. Of course, Margot can&#8217;t come over <i>this</i> winter,
-but I don&#8217;t really need her. We owe it to our friends
-here to do something socially. I want to stop the gossip.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The gossip?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The talk because we are not living together. It
-isn&#8217;t dangerous, but it&#8217;s uncomfortable. I believe people
-like us ought to maintain the best social traditions&mdash;ought
-to set a good example to the lower classes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, bother!&#8221; said I as good-humoredly as I could.
-&#8220;We&#8217;ll do as we please. Otherwise, where&#8217;s the use in
-having money?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A pause which I felt was hopeful. Edna said with
-affected carelessness: &#8220;<i>You</i> don&#8217;t think people have a
-right to&mdash;to divorce?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At last! My intuition had been correct! &#8220;Why
-not?&#8221; replied I, my tone as casual as hers. &#8220;Certainly,
-if they wish.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A long silence. Then she: &#8220;Sometimes I feel that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span>
-way myself. When two people find that they&#8217;re uncongenial,
-that they&#8217;d be better off&mdash;happier&mdash;if free to go
-their separate ways and to realize to the full their own
-ideals of life&mdash; Why not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Precisely my view,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>Again a long silence. She finally said: &#8220;Has it ever
-occurred to you, Godfrey, that you and I might be better
-off&mdash;apart?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;It&#8217;s a good many years now since we
-were together,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;We might as well be divorced
-as living the way we do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s because I&#8217;ve been feeling those very things,
-that I&#8217;ve come back,&#8221; said she. &#8220;It seemed to me that,
-now I&#8217;ve fulfilled my duty to Margot, I ought to do my
-duty to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s like you,&#8221; said I. &#8220;For you life is one
-long sacrifice.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If she scented irony she dissembled well. &#8220;Sacrifice
-is the woman&#8217;s part,&#8221; replied she sweetly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No doubt,&#8221; I went on, &#8220;you&#8217;re willing to stay here
-where you&#8217;re unhappy, and for my sake to jam the
-house night after night with people you care nothing
-about, and disport yourself in splendor to make the
-world envy me. I appreciate your nobility of character,
-but I positively can&#8217;t allow it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We must do our duty,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Society expects
-certain things of us, and we must do them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not I, my dear. Open the house if you like. But
-I stick to my bachelor apartment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you want me to go back to Europe?&#8221; said she
-with a fine show of quiet melancholy.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span>&#8220;I want you to do as you please,&#8221; was my answer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But unless I stay here, and you and I take our
-place in society together, I&mdash;&#8221; She hesitated. &#8220;Now
-that Margot is settled,&#8221; she went on desperately, &#8220;I am
-adrift. And&mdash;Godfrey, we <i>can&#8217;t</i> go on as we are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see that,&#8221; said I. &#8220;What do you propose?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To stay in New York,&#8221; replied she, with the
-promptness of the skilled fencer. &#8220;To stay here and
-be the mistress of your establishment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My establishment is an apartment at Sherry&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But that&#8217;s impossible!&#8221; remonstrated she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be calm, my dear. I don&#8217;t ask you to lead my
-kind of life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then&mdash;what do you propose?&#8221; ventured she.</p>
-
-<p>I shrugged my shoulders and settled myself more
-comfortably in her luxurious motor. I gazed with absorbed
-interest at the bunch of orchids in the flower-holder.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see how we can continue neither free nor
-bound,&#8221; pursued she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whatever you like,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Only&mdash;no fashionable
-capering for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you want me to get a divorce, Godfrey?&#8221; said
-she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want you to be happy,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Divorce has
-no terrors for me. Aren&#8217;t we practically divorced
-already?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s true,&#8221; said she. &#8220;We never did have much
-in common.&#8221; Then she reddened&mdash;for, she could not
-quite forget those first days of our married life, before I
-got the money to feed her ambition. &#8220;You make me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span>
-feel as if you were a&mdash;no, not a stranger, but only a
-friend.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And we <i>are</i> friends,&#8221; said I heartily. &#8220;And always
-shall be.&#8221; For I was beginning to like her, to take
-the amiably indifferent outsider&#8217;s view of her, now that
-she was freeing me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey, do you want to marry again?&#8221; she asked
-with a sudden shrewd look straight into my eyes.</p>
-
-<p>I laughed easily. &#8220;That question might better
-come from me,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You will never be happy, I
-suppose, until you are the Duchess or Princess Something-or-other.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A flush stole over her small sweet face, making it
-lovelier than ever. &#8220;I never thought of such a thing,&#8221;
-she protested&mdash;but too energetically.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nonsense,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You&#8217;ve dreamed it for years.
-Be honest with me, Edna.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How could I dream it?&#8221; replied she. &#8220;It would
-take an awful lot of money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have quite a bunch,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And if we
-parted, naturally I&#8217;d give you more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Once again&mdash;but this time slowly&mdash;the searching
-gaze turned upon me.</p>
-
-<p>I bore it well. &#8220;You can&#8217;t live as I live,&#8221; I went on.
-&#8220;I won&#8217;t live as you live. You say that means divorce.
-I don&#8217;t think so. Many rich American couples live
-apart without divorce. I believe usually the reason is
-the wife has found she couldn&#8217;t get a large enough slice
-of the husband&#8217;s fortune, if she divorced him. Still, for
-whatever reason, they stay married. You don&#8217;t like the
-idea. So I say, if you want to go I&#8217;ll give you as much as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>
-I gave Margot&mdash;in addition to what you already have&mdash;and
-my blessing. I&#8217;ve some sentiment about the past,
-but it is as a past.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am&mdash;stunned,&#8221; said she. And I think her vanity
-was.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s what you want?&#8221; rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You put me in a hard position, Godfrey. You
-give me no alternative but to accept.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am a hard man,&#8221; said I suavely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are really willing to let me go?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You expected to have a difficult time persuading
-me?&#8221; laughed I.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me reproachfully. &#8220;Do be serious,
-Godfrey, about these serious things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right. What do you say, Edna? Yes or
-no?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must have time to think,&#8221; replied she. &#8220;This
-is a very solemn moment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why fake?&#8221; said I pleasantly. &#8220;You have it all
-thought out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is solemn to <i>me</i>, Godfrey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s nothing solemn about our married life.
-It&#8217;s a farce.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But she was searching for confirmation of her fear
-of some kind of trap. &#8220;You really mean that you wish
-to free me?&#8221; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I mean precisely what I say,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;Freedom
-and the cash are yours for the asking. But you
-must ask, my dear. I&#8217;ll not have any more of your
-favorite comedy of making yourself out a martyr.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t know how you hurt me,&#8221; cried she.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>
-&#8220;But you always have hurt me&mdash;always. I know&mdash;&#8221;
-very gently&mdash;&#8220;that you didn&#8217;t mean to, but you haven&#8217;t
-understood.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I did my best,&#8221; said I, with the pleasant smile of
-which she was so intolerant. &#8220;But what can be expected
-of a plain, coarse materialist of a business man?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yet you are generous in many ways,&#8221; mused she.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s simply that you can&#8217;t understand me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps it&#8217;s <i>you</i> that don&#8217;t understand <i>me</i>,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; inquired she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, nothing,&#8221; I replied carelessly. How hope to
-make a vain woman, obsessed of the notion that she has
-a profound and mysterious soul when she simply has a
-fog-bank&mdash;how hope to make her see the truth about
-herself? &#8220;It isn&#8217;t worth explaining. Only&mdash;when you
-are free and you find some one who appreciates and sympathizes
-with that soul of yours, be careful to pay him
-well, and to keep on paying. You can always be flattered
-and fooled, if you pay for it. But if you don&#8217;t
-pay&mdash; Look out. You may hear the truth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a cynic you are!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;Thank God,
-I haven&#8217;t your low views of life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Keep your views, by all means,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But
-don&#8217;t forget my advice. You are lovely. You are
-charming. You dress beautifully and have good taste.
-But it&#8217;s the money, my dear, that causes the excitement
-about those charms and graces. Hold on to
-your principal, and spend your income freely but
-judiciously.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I could only convince you that there is something
-beside money in the world.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>&#8220;Not for those to whom money is the breath of
-life,&#8221; replied I.</p>
-
-<p>When we returned to her hotel she urged me to come
-in for tea. We went into the greenroom, to listen to
-the music and to observe the crowds. There was a
-sprinkling of men, but two thirds were women&mdash;women
-of all classes and conditions, above the working class.
-Women obviously fashionable as well as rich. Women
-obviously only rich. Women living off men respectably.
-Women &#8220;trimming&#8221; here and there. An army
-of pretty women&mdash;well-cared-for bodies, attractive faces,
-inviting the various kinds of sensual attack from the
-subtlest to the frankest. This woman at the next table
-is rather cheaply dressed, except a gorgeous hat. That
-woman yonder has contrived to &#8220;trim&#8221; only a handsome
-set of furs; it looks grotesque with the rest of the
-costume. A third has a huge gilt bag as her sole claim
-to sisterhood with the throng of fair pampered parasites
-upon husbands, fathers, lovers. A charming and a useless
-throng. No, not charming, unless a man happens
-to be in the mood in which he succumbs to the trimming
-process with pleasure&mdash;and then, he would not think
-them altogether useless.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;New York grows more and more like Europe,&#8221;
-said my wife, gazing around with shining eyes, and inhaling
-the heavily scented atmosphere with dilating
-nostrils. &#8220;More and more like Europe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;More and more,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;Especially the
-women.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, they&#8217;re ahead of the European women,&#8221; said
-she.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span>&#8220;So they are,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Yes&mdash;they beat the European
-women at it. But I&#8217;m not sure whether that&#8217;s
-because they are really cleverer, or merely because our
-men trim more readily.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She regarded me with an expression of mildly interested
-perplexity, as if she couldn&#8217;t imagine what was the
-&#8220;it&#8221; I was talking about. &#8220;You must admit they are
-lovely,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Admit it?&#8221; said I. &#8220;I proclaim it. If a man&#8217;s
-notion of dinner is only the dessert, he couldn&#8217;t do
-better.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked still more vague&mdash;one of her tricks when
-she wished to avoid or to ignore. &#8220;I never touch desserts,&#8221;
-said she.</p>
-
-<p>As I was leaving&mdash;for we were not dining together
-that evening&mdash;she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall think about your proposal.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I looked straight at her. &#8220;Tell me whether you will
-or will not confirm your own proposal,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And
-don&#8217;t delay too long. Unfinished business makes me
-nervous.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She returned my look with quiet composure. &#8220;I
-shall let you know to-morrow,&#8221; said she.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">X</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Among</span> my acquaintances, both in and out of fashionable
-society, there were not a few jealous husbands.
-I knew one man who, in the evening, made his wife account
-for every moment of the day, and tell him in detail
-how she was going to spend the following day, and
-during business hours he called up irregularly on the
-telephone. He was not content with the effective system
-of espionage which a retinue of servants automatically
-establishes. Another man&mdash;to give a typical instance
-of each of the two types&mdash;hired detectives from
-time to time to watch his wife living abroad &#8220;for her
-health and to educate her children.&#8221; In a decently ordered
-society this sort of jealousy is rare. Only where
-the women are luxuriously supported parasites and the
-men are attaching but the one value to the women&mdash;the
-only value they possess for them&mdash;only there do you find
-this defiling jealousy the rule instead of the exception.
-Naturally, if the woman is mere property the man guards
-her as he guards the rest of his material possessions; and
-the woman who consents to be mere property probably
-needs guarding if she has qualities of desirability discoverable
-by other eyes than those of her overprizing
-owner.</p>
-
-<p>This jealousy was in the air of the offices and clubs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>
-I frequented. But it had somehow or other never infected
-me. Was I occupied too deeply with other matters?
-Was I indifferent? Did my own disinclination to
-dalliance make me slow to appreciate the large part dalliance
-now plays in American life? I do not know why
-I was free from jealousy. I only know that never once
-had my mind been shadowed by a sinister thought as to
-what my wife might be about, far away and free. Possibly
-my knowledge of her absorption in social ambition
-kept me quiet. Certainly a woman whose whole mind
-and heart are set upon social climbing is about the last
-person a seeker for dalliance would invest.</p>
-
-<p>I had never heard a word or a hint of a scandal about
-her&mdash;for the best of reasons; she did nothing to cause
-that kind of talk. But, how curious is coincidence! On
-the very evening of the day of our divorce discussion
-Edna had her first experience of scandal, and I immediately
-knew of it. After leaving her I went to the Federal
-Club, where I often took a hand in a rather stiff game of
-bridge before dinner. I drifted into the reading room,
-glanced idly at the long row of current magazines. In
-full view lay the weekly purveyor of social news, a paper
-I had not looked at half a dozen times in my life, and
-then only because some one had asked me to read a particular
-paragraph. The week&#8217;s issue of this scandal
-monger had just come in. I threw back the cover, let my
-glance drop upon the page. I was hardly aware that I
-was reading&mdash;for my thoughts were elsewhere&mdash;when I
-became vaguely conscious that the print had some relation
-to me. I reread it; it was a veiled attack upon
-Edna. All unsuspected by her husband&mdash;so the story<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>
-ran&mdash;she had come to America to divorce him that she
-might marry a German nobleman of almost royal rank.
-A voice close beside me said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is it amuses you so in that dirty sheet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was Armitage. I started guiltily. Then my
-common sense asserted itself, and I pointed to the paragraph.
-When he had read it I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s the German? I&#8217;m not well enough up on
-the nobility to be able to guess, though it&#8217;s probably
-plainly told.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Count von Biestrich,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thanks,&#8221; said I, no wiser than before, and we went
-up to play bridge.</p>
-
-<p>A year or so before I might possibly have talked
-freely with Armitage; but the day of our closest intimacy
-had passed. He was still my intimate friend; I was his&mdash;with
-several large reservations. Why? Chiefly because
-when he passed the critical age his mind took the
-turn for the worse. At forty to forty-five a man begins
-to reap his harvest. Armitage had many and varied
-interests, but the one that affected his nature most profoundly
-was women. He mocked at them; he was always
-inventing or relating stories about them of the more or
-less gamey sort. But, somewhat like his pretensions of
-disdain for birth and fashion, his wordy scorn of women
-concealed a slavish weakness for them. After forty this
-began to disclose itself in his features. Their handsome
-intellectuality began to be marred by a sensual heaviness;
-and presently his wit degenerated toward a repellent
-coarseness. It takes delicate juggling to make filth
-attractive. After forty a man does well to be careful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span>
-how he attempts it; for, after forty, the hand loses its
-lightness. I rather avoided Armitage; not that I was
-squeamish, but my sense of humor somehow rarely has
-responded to rude rootings and pawings in the garbage
-barrel.</p>
-
-<p>About an hour after dinner Edna called me to the
-telephone and asked me to come to her. I found her in
-high excitement, her color vivid, her manner nervous
-beyond its natural vivacity even as now expanded upon
-the best Continental models. &#8220;I got rid of my guests,&#8221;
-said she, &#8220;and sent for you as soon as I could. Have
-you heard?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About von Biestrich?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is hideous!&mdash;hideous!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;I who have
-kept my name unsullied&mdash;I who have&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure of that,&#8221; I interrupted. &#8220;I&#8217;m dead tired
-and, if you&#8217;ll excuse me, I&#8217;ll go home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She caught me by the arm. &#8220;Godfrey, you think
-this was what I had in mind. I swear to you&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure you&#8217;ve been all that a wife is expected to
-be,&#8221; said I, in my usual manner of good-natured raillery.
-&#8220;And I&#8217;m also sure you would wait until you
-were free, and would deliberate very carefully before
-deciding&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey, how can you!&#8221; cried she, in her most exaggerated
-tone for outraged spirituality. &#8220;Have you
-<i>no</i> heart? Have you no respect for me&mdash;your wife, the
-mother of your daughter?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have I not said I did not suspect you?&#8221; remonstrated
-I. &#8220;Why so agitated, my dear? Do you wish
-to make me begin to suspect?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>She shrank and began to cool down. &#8220;I&#8217;ve never
-had such an experience before,&#8221; she apologized. &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t know how to take it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s nothing&mdash;nothing,&#8221; I declared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I give you my word of honor that if I were free
-I should not consider marrying that German.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I believe you.&#8221; I put out a friendly hand. &#8220;Good
-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This ends all talk of divorce,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>I dropped my hand. &#8220;I don&#8217;t see that the situation
-is changed in the least.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s because you are not a woman,&#8221; replied she.
-&#8220;You can&#8217;t appreciate how I feel.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You wished to be free before this paragraph appeared.
-You still wish to be free.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, <i>how</i> can you be so insensible!&#8221; cried she, all
-unstrung again and, I could not but see, genuinely so.
-&#8220;I <i>never</i> could face the scandal of a divorce. I didn&#8217;t
-realize. It would kill me. How <i>did</i> Hilda face it?&mdash;and
-all these other nice women? I should hide and
-never show my face again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was agitating me so wildly that I felt I could
-not much longer conceal it. &#8220;I must go,&#8221; said I, pretending
-to yawn. &#8220;Sleep on it. Perhaps to-morrow
-you&#8217;ll feel differently.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She tried to detain me, but I broke away and fled.
-To be almost free and then to have freedom snatched
-away! Not out of reach, but where it can be reached
-easily if one will simply stretch out his hand somewhat
-ruthlessly. By no means so ruthless as my wife had
-been a score of times in gaining her ends without regard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span>
-to me. Why not be ruthless? Had she not been ruthless?
-Had she not given me the right to compel her to
-free me? More, did she not herself wish to be free?
-And was she not now restrained, not by consideration for
-me, not by any decent instinct whatsoever, but solely by
-a snobbish groveling fear of public opinion?&mdash;a senseless
-fear, too?</p>
-
-<p>We are constantly criticising people&mdash;by way of
-patting ourselves on the back&mdash;because they take what
-they want regardless of the feelings of others. A form
-of self-righteousness as shameless as common; for we
-happen not to fancy the things they show themselves
-inconsiderate and swinish about. But&mdash;when we really
-do want a thing&mdash;what then? How industrious we become
-in appeal to conscience&mdash;that most perfect of
-courtiers&mdash;to show us how just and right it is that we
-should have this thing <i>we</i> want! Having set myself
-drastically to cure self-fooling years before&mdash;when first
-I realized how dangerous it is and how common a cause
-of failure and ruin&mdash;I was unable to conceal from myself
-the cruelty of forcing Edna to divorce me. My conscience&mdash;as
-sly a sophist and flatterer as yours, gentle
-reader&mdash;my conscience could not convince me. Cruel
-things I had never done&mdash;that is, not directly. Of
-course I, like all men of action, had again and again been
-compelled to do them indirectly. But not by my own direct
-act had I ever made any human being suffer. I
-would not begin now. I would not commit the stupidity
-of trying to found my happiness upon the wretchedness
-of another. I could feel the withering scorn that would
-blaze in Mary Kirkwood&#8217;s honest eyes if I should go<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>
-to her after having freed myself by force, and she
-should find it out. I see your sarcastic smile, gentle
-reader, as I thus ingenuously confess the selfish fear
-that was the hidden spring of my virtue. Your smile
-betrays your shallowness. If you knew human nature
-you would know that all <i>real</i> motives are selfish. The
-differences of character in human beings are not differences
-between selfish and unselfish. They are differences
-between petty, short-sighted selfishness and broad, far-sighted
-selfishness.</p>
-
-<p>When I saw Edna again she was still wavering. She
-had come to America with her mind made up for divorce,
-if I could by hook or by crook be induced to consent.
-She had been frightened by this attack upon her&mdash;frightened
-as only those who live a life of complete
-self-deception can be frightened by a sudden and public
-holding up of the mirror to reflect their naked selves.
-She was, of course, easily able to convince herself that
-her own motives in seeking a divorce were fine and
-high and self-martyring. But she could now see no
-way to convince others. In the public estimation she
-saw she would be classed with Lady Blankenship,
-with Mrs. Ramsdell, with all the other women who
-had got divorces to better themselves socially or financially.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of dying out the scandal grew. The daily
-papers took up the hints in the society journal&#8217;s veiled
-paragraph, had long cabled accounts of Count von
-Biestrich, of his attentions to Edna, told when and
-where they had been guests at the same ch&acirc;teaus and
-country houses, made it appear that they had been no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>
-better than they should be for nearly a year. Edna
-was prostrated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s only one answer to these attacks,&#8221; she said
-to me. &#8220;You must give up your apartment and move
-to this hotel. We must open the house and live in it
-together and entertain together.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was not unprepared. I had threshed out the whole
-matter with myself, had made my choice between the two
-courses open to me&mdash;or, rather, had forced myself to see
-the truth that there was in decency but the one course.
-&#8220;Very well,&#8221; said I to her&mdash;and that was all.</p>
-
-<p>I moved to the Plaza the same day; I was seen constantly
-with her; I did my best to show the world that
-all was serene between us. In fact, if you saw us
-during those scandal-clouded days you may have thought
-us a couple on a honeymoon. Behind the scenes we
-quarreled&mdash;about anything, about everything, about
-nothing&mdash;as people do when forced to play in public
-the farce of billing and cooing lovers. Especially if
-one of them has not the faintest glimmer of a sense of
-humor. But in public&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The newspapers soon had to drop their campaign
-of slander by insinuation.</p>
-
-<p>So it came to pass that by the opening of the
-season Edna and I were installed in the big house,
-decidedly improved now thanks to the collecting both of
-ideas and of things she had done abroad. And we were
-giving all kinds of parties, with me taking part to an
-extent I should have laughed at beforehand as impossible.
-She had become so irritating to me that the
-mere sight of her put me in a rage. Have you ever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span>
-been forced into intimate daily contact with a nature
-that is thoroughly artificial&mdash;after you have discovered
-its artificiality, its lack of sincerity, its vanity and pretense
-and sex trickery? There is, as we all know, in
-everyone of us a streak of artificiality, of self-consciousness,
-a fondness for posing to seem better than we
-are. But somewhere beneath the pose there is usually
-a core of sincerity, a genuine individuality, perhaps a
-poor thing but still a real thing. It may be there was
-this reality somewhere in Edna. I can only say that
-I was never granted a sight of it. And I rather suspect
-that she, like most of the fashion-rotted women and men,
-had lost by a process of atrophy through suppression
-and disuse the last fragment of reality. Had Gabriel&#8217;s
-trumpet sounded and the great light from the Throne
-revealed the secrets of all hearts, it would have penetrated
-in her to nothing but posing within posing.</p>
-
-<p>I shall get no sympathy from man or woman&mdash;or
-fellow-beast&mdash;after talking thus of a woman and a lady.
-It is the convention to speak gallant lies to and about
-women&mdash;and to treat them as if they were beneath contempt.
-So my habit of treating them well and speaking
-the truth about them will be condemned and denounced
-with the triple curse. Well&mdash;I shall try to
-live through it.</p>
-
-<p>Except in occasional outbursts when her rude candor
-toward me would anger me into retort in kind, I
-concealed my feeling about her. I knew it was just,
-yet I was ashamed of it. Our quarrels were all surface
-affairs&mdash;outbursts of irritation&mdash;the blowing off of surplus
-steam, not the bursting of the boiler and the wrecking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>
-of the machinery. If you happen to take into your
-employ any of the servants we had in those days&mdash;Edna&#8217;s
-maids or my valet or any other of the menials
-so placed that they could spy upon our innermost
-privacy&mdash;I am confident that in return for your adroit,
-searching questionings you will hear we were no more
-inharmonious than the usual married couple past the
-best-foot-foremost stage. I did not swear at her; she
-did not throw bric-&agrave;-brac at me. And once, I remember,
-when I had a bad headache she stayed home from the
-opera&mdash;on a Monday night, too&mdash;to read to me. It is
-true the new dress in which she had expected to show
-herself was not ready. But that is a detail for a cynic
-to linger upon.</p>
-
-<p>Three months of New York, and she was bored to
-extinction. I had confidently been expecting this. I
-watched the signs of it with gnawing anxiety, for I
-was very near to the end of my good behavior. If
-possible I wished to stay on and help her toward a
-rational frame of mind&mdash;one in which she would see
-that divorce was the only possible solution of our impossible
-situation. But I began to fear I should have
-to give up and fly&mdash;to hunt or to inspect western mines
-and railways. She was bored by the women; they
-seemed shallow dabblers in culture after the European
-women. She was offended by their nervousness about
-their position; it made them seem common in contrast
-with the Europeans, born swells and impregnably ensconced.
-She was bored by the men&mdash;by their fewness,
-by the insufferable dullness of those few&mdash;all of them
-feeble imitations of the European type of elegant loafer.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span>&#8220;These men have no subtlety,&#8221; she cried. &#8220;They
-have no conversation. When they&#8217;re alone with a woman&mdash;you
-should hear them try to flatter. They are
-as different from the European men as&mdash;as&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As a fence-painter from an artist,&#8221; I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite that,&#8221; said she, and I saw her making a
-mental note of the comparison for future use&mdash;one of
-her best tricks. &#8220;Really, I prefer the business men
-to them. But one cannot get the business men. What
-a country, where everyone who has any brains is at
-work!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you are unhappy here, why not go abroad?&#8221;
-said I amiably. &#8220;Margot is always waiting for
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But how <i>can</i> I go abroad?&#8221; railed she. &#8220;There&#8217;ll
-be another outbreak of scandal. Was ever a woman so
-wretchedly placed! What <i>shall</i> I do! If I had some
-one to advise me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was interesting to hear her, determined, self-reliant
-character though she was, thus confess to the
-universal weakness of the female sex. Women, not
-trained to act for themselves, can hardly overcome this
-fundamental defect. That is why you so often see an
-apparently, and probably, superior woman weaken and
-yield where a distinctly ordinary man would be strong
-and would march ahead. The trouble with Edna was
-that she had no definite man behind her, spurring her
-on to action. In all she had done from the beginning
-of our married life she had felt that she had me to fall
-back on, should emergency arise&mdash;an unconscious dependence,
-one she would have scornfully denied, but none<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>
-the less real. In this affair there was no man to fall
-back on.</p>
-
-<p>I saw this. Yet I refrained from giving her the
-support she needed and all but asked. Her cry, &#8220;If I
-had some one to advise me,&#8221; meant, &#8220;If I had some one
-to give me the courage to act.&#8221; I knew what it meant.
-But eager though I was to be quit of her, I would not
-give her the thrust toward divorce that would have put
-into her the courage of anger and of the feeling that
-she was a martyr to my brutality. Why did I hold
-myself in check? Candidly, I do not know. I distrust
-the suggestion that it may have been due to essential
-goodness of heart. At any rate, I did restrain myself.
-She&mdash;naturally enough&mdash;misunderstood; and she proceeded
-to explain it to the gratifying of her vanity. I
-saw in her eyes, in her way of treating me, that she
-thought me her secret adorer, convinced of my unworthiness,
-of her god-to-mortal superiority; not daring
-openly to resist her desire to be free from me, but
-opposing it humbly, silently. I saw that she pitied me.
-Did this add to my anger? Not in the least. I have
-a perhaps queer sense of humor. I rather welcomed
-the chance to get a little amusement out of a situation
-otherwise dreary and infuriating.</p>
-
-<p>Curiously enough, it was Armitage who came to her
-rescue&mdash;and to mine.</p>
-
-<p>Bob had been in retirement several weeks, having
-himself rejuvenated by a beauty doctor. You are astonished,
-gentle reader, perhaps incredulous, that a
-man of his position&mdash;high both socially and financially&mdash;should
-stoop to such triviality&mdash;not a woman but a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span>
-man. And the serious, masculine sort of man he was,
-I assure you. But you, being a confirmed accepter of
-the trash written and talked about human nature, do
-not appreciate what a power physical vanity is in the
-world. Of course, if you are a man, you know about
-your own carefully hid physical vanity. But you
-think it in yourself a virtue, quite natural, not a vanity
-at all. Bob Armitage was not vain enough to fail to
-see the beginning of the ravages of time and dissipation.
-Another man would have looked in the glass and
-would have seen a reflection ever handsomer as the
-years went by, would have discovered in the creases and
-crow&#8217;s-feet and lengthening wattles a superb beauty of
-manly strength of character showing at last in the face.
-Bob was not that sort of fool. He wished to fascinate
-the ladies; so, he strove to retain the fair insignia of
-youth as long as he possibly could. He knew as well
-as the next man that his wealth had value with the
-women far beyond any degree of beauty or charm. But
-like most men he wished to feel that he was at least not
-a &#8220;winner&#8221; in spite of his personal self; and his young
-good looks even helped toward the pleasantest of delusions&mdash;that
-he was loved for himself chiefly.</p>
-
-<p>The beauty doctor did well by him, I must say. He
-looked ten years younger, would have passed in artificial
-light for a youth of thirty or thereabouts. He reappeared
-in his haunts, freshened up mentally, too;
-for physical content reacts powerfully upon the mind,
-and while it is true that feeling young helps one to look
-young, it is truer that looking young compels one to
-feel young.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>With him came a Prince Frascatoni, head of one of
-the great families of Italy, one of the few that have
-retained German titles and estates from the days of the
-Holy Roman Empire. Frascatoni was sufficiently rich
-for all ordinary purposes, and could therefore pose as
-a traveler for pleasure with no matrimonial designs.
-He was, in fact, poor for a <i>grand seigneur</i> and was
-on the same business in America that has attracted
-here every other visiting foreigner of rank&mdash;except
-those who come for political purposes, and those
-who come to shoot in the West. And those classes
-give our fashionable society as wide a berth as
-they would its middle-class prototype in their home
-countries.</p>
-
-<p>The first time I saw Frascatoni&mdash;when he and Armitage
-strolled into the reading room of the Federal
-Club together&mdash;I thought him about the handsomest
-and, in a certain way, the most distinguished-looking
-man I had ever seen. He was a black Italian&mdash;dark
-olive skin, coal-black hair, dark-gray eyes that seemed
-black or brown at a glance. They were weary-looking
-eyes; they gazed at you with the ineffable dreamy
-satiric repose of a sphinx who has seen the futile human
-procession march into the grave for countless centuries.
-He had a slow sweet smile, a manner made superior by
-the effacement of every trace of superiority. He had
-the quiet, leisurely voice of one used to being listened
-to attentively.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Loring&mdash;the Prince Frascatoni. Prince, I particularly
-wish you to know my friend Godfrey Loring.
-Don&#8217;t be deceived by his look of the honest simple<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>
-youth into thinking him either young or unsophisticated.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The prince gave me his hand. As it had also been
-my habit ever since I learned the valuable trick merely
-to give my hand, the gesture was a draw. Neither had
-trapped the other into making an advance. We talked
-commonplaces of New York sky line, American energy
-and business enthusiasm for perhaps half an hour.
-Then we three and some one else, a professional cultivator
-of millionaires named Chassory, I believe, played
-bridge and afterwards dined together. It came out
-sometime during the evening that Frascatoni had met
-my wife in Rome and in Paris, and that he knew my
-son-in-law&mdash;not surprising, as the fashionable set is international,
-and is small enough to be acquainted all
-round.</p>
-
-<p>Armitage must have told him that my wife and I
-were not altogether inconsolable if we did not see too
-much of each other. For, the prince, taking Edna in
-to dinner a few nights later, laid siege at once. I recall
-noting how he would talk to her in his quiet, leisurely
-way until she looked at him; then, how his weary eyes
-would suddenly light up with interest&mdash;not with ardor&mdash;nothing
-so banal as that&mdash;but a fleeting gleam of interest
-that was more flattering than the ardor of another
-man would have been. As Frascatoni, an unusual
-type, attracted me, I saved myself from boredom
-by observing him all evening. And it was highly instructive
-in the art of winning&mdash;whether women or men&mdash;to
-see how he led her on to try to make that fascinating
-fugitive gleam reappear in his eyes. I afterwards<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>
-discovered that he accompanied the gleam with a peculiar
-veiled caress of inflection in his calm, even voice&mdash;a
-trick that doubly re&euml;nforced the flattery of the gleam.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a charming man Prince Frascatoni is,&#8221; said
-my wife, when our guests were gone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very,&#8221; said I. &#8220;If I were writing a novel I&#8217;d
-make him the hero&mdash;or the villain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is one of the greatest nobles in Europe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He looks it and acts it,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, I thought him very simple and natural,&#8221;
-protested she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Exactly,&#8221; said I. &#8220;So many of the nobles I&#8217;ve
-met looked and acted like frauds. They seemed afraid
-it wouldn&#8217;t be known that they were of the aristocracy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are prejudiced,&#8221; said Edna.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then why do I size up Frascatoni so well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You happen to like him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t,&#8221; replied I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course not,&#8221; said Edna with sarcasm. &#8220;He
-isn&#8217;t in business.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Precisely,&#8221; I answered. &#8220;He couldn&#8217;t do anything&mdash;build
-a railroad, run a factory, write a book,
-paint a picture. He and his kind are simply amateurs
-at life, and their pretense that they could be professionals
-if they chose ought to deceive nobody. He probably
-could ride a horse a little worse than a professional
-jockey, or handle a foil almost as well as a fencing
-master, or play on the piano or the violin passably.
-I don&#8217;t admire that sort of people, and I can&#8217;t like
-where I don&#8217;t admire.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span>Edna yawned and prepared to go up to her own
-rooms. &#8220;I hope he&#8217;ll stay a while,&#8221; said she. &#8220;And
-I hope he&#8217;ll let me see something of him. He&#8217;s the first
-ray of interest I&#8217;ve had this winter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will see something of him,&#8221; said I. &#8220;He
-liked you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think so?&#8221; said she, seating herself on the
-arm of a chair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know it. Unless he finds what he&#8217;s looking for,
-he&#8217;ll attach himself to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is he looking for?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A very rich wife,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But she must be attractive
-as well as rich, Armitage tells me. Frascatoni
-doesn&#8217;t need money badly enough to annex a frump.
-And Armitage says that while Englishmen and Germans
-and the heiress-hunting sort of French don&#8217;t care
-a rap what the lady looks like, the Italians&mdash;of the
-old families&mdash;are rather particular&mdash;not exacting,
-but particular. Unless, of course, the fortune is
-huge.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edna yawned again. That sort of talk either irritated
-or bored her.</p>
-
-<p>Frascatoni was constantly with her thenceforth&mdash;not
-pointedly or scandalously so; there are discreet ways
-of doing those things, and of discretion in all its forms
-the Italian was a supreme master. The game of man
-and woman had been his especial game from precocious
-and maddeningly handsome boyhood. He had learned
-both by being conquered and by conquering. They say&mdash;and
-I believe it&mdash;that of all the foreigners a clean
-Italian nobleman is the most fascinating.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>The Hungarian or Russian is a wild, barbaric love-maker,
-the German a wordy sentimentalist, the Englishman
-dominates and absorbs, the Frenchman knows
-how to flatter the most subtly, how to make the woman
-feel that life with him would be full of interest and charm.
-But the right sort of Italian combines the best of all
-these qualities, and adds to them the allure of the unfathomably
-mysterious. He constantly satisfies yet
-always baffles. He reveals himself, only to disclose in
-the inner wall of what seemed to be his innermost self
-a strangely carved door ajar.</p>
-
-<p>My first intimation of what Frascatoni was about
-came from my wife. Not words, of course, but actions.
-She abruptly ceased quarreling, rebuking, reproaching,
-scoffing. She soothed, sympathized, agreed. She became
-as sweet as she had formerly been. I was puzzled,
-and waited for light. It came with her next move.
-She began to talk of going back to Europe, to deplore
-that scandalmongers would not let her. She began to
-chaff me on my love of a bachelor&#8217;s life, on my dislike
-of married life. She said with reproachful, yet
-smiling gentleness, that I made her feel ashamed to
-stay on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Admit,&#8221; said she, &#8220;that you&#8217;d be better pleased if
-I were in Guinea.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You oughtn&#8217;t have given me so many years of
-freedom,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d have been glad if I had gone on and gotten
-a divorce,&#8221; pursued she.</p>
-
-<p>My drowsing soul startled and listened. &#8220;I was
-willing that you should do as you liked,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Divorce<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>
-is a matter of more importance to the woman than
-to the man&mdash;just as marriage is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And it&#8217;s a sensible thing, too&mdash;isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey, would you honestly be willing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d not lay a straw in your way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What nonsense we&#8217;re talking!&#8221; cried she, with a
-nervous laugh. &#8220;And yet there&#8217;s no denying that we
-don&#8217;t get on together. I see how trying it is to you to
-have me about.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you want to be free and living abroad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wonder how much I&#8217;d really mind the scandal,&#8221;
-pursued she. &#8220;I don&#8217;t care especially about these New
-York people. And at the worst what harm could they
-do <i>me</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;None,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They could only talk. How they&#8217;d blame me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Behind your back, perhaps,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Unless they
-thought I was to blame&mdash;which is more likely.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You talk of divorce as if it were nothing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s merely a means to an end,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You&#8217;ve
-got only the one life, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;m no longer so <i>dreadfully</i> young. Though,
-I heard that Armitage said the other day he would never
-dream I was over twenty-eight if he didn&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed with the pleasure we all take in a compliment
-that is genuine; for she knew as well as did
-Armitage that she could pass for twenty-eight&mdash;and a
-radiant twenty-eight&mdash;even in her least lovely hour.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No one has youth to waste,&#8221; observed I. &#8220;In your
-heart you wish to be free&mdash;don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>&#8220;We are not suited to each other, Godfrey,&#8221; said
-she with gentle friendliness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s not a doubt of that,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why should we spoil each other&#8217;s lives? I conceal
-it from you, but I am so unhappy here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t blame <i>me</i>,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I&#8217;m not detaining
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A long silence, then she said: &#8220;Suppose I were to
-consent&mdash;&#8221; I laughed, she reddened, corrected herself:
-&#8220;Suppose we were to decide to do it&mdash;what then?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why&mdash;a divorce,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t those things be done quietly?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly. No publicity until the decree is entered
-and the papers sealed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Does that mean no scandal beyond just the fact?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No scandal at all. Just the fact, and some newspaper
-comment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And we needn&#8217;t be here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not then.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Would it take long?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I reflected. &#8220;Let me see&mdash;if you begin action say
-within a month, the divorce would take&mdash; I could have
-it pushed through in another month or so, and then&mdash;by
-next fall you&#8217;d be free.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But doesn&#8217;t one have to have grounds for divorce,
-beside not wanting to be married?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All that easily arranges itself,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She lapsed into a deep study, I furtively watching
-her. I saw an expression of fright, at the daring of her
-thoughts, gather&mdash;fright, yet fascination, too. Said she
-in a low voice: &#8220;Godfrey, are you <i>serious</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>&#8220;Entirely so,&#8221; was my careless reply. &#8220;Aren&#8217;t
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know whether I am or not.... I am
-<i>wretched</i> here!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All you have to do is to say the word. We don&#8217;t
-in the least need each other, and mutual need is the only
-respectable excuse for marriage. And I must tell you,
-I&#8217;ll not stand for any more of this social nonsense that
-compels me to participate. I&#8217;m done.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me pityingly. Our season had been a
-brilliant success, yet I remained unconverted, coarsely unsympathetic.
-&#8220;If I should decide to&mdash;to do it&mdash;what
-then?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing. I&#8217;d go away. The rest would be for the
-lawyers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me dazedly. &#8220;I&#8217;ll see&mdash;I&#8217;ll see,&#8221; she
-said, and went to her own part of the house.</p>
-
-<p>A week passed. Frascatoni sailed for home, sending
-by her his polite regrets at not having seen me before
-his departure. I waited, confident. I knew she had a
-definite goal at last, and, therefore, a definite purpose.
-Aside from the danger of frightening her back by showing
-my own eagerness there was the matter of property.
-I was willing to pay a good round price for freedom.
-I have always hated money wrangles; I had never had
-one with her, and I did not purpose to have. On the
-other hand, that is, on her side, she would have given me
-short shrift had it not been that she wished a slice of my
-fortune&mdash;and a generous slice&mdash;to add to her own. I&#8217;ve
-not a doubt that the fierce social campaign she put me
-through that winter was not so much for her own pleasure,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span>
-though she delighted in it, as for goading me to
-demand a divorce, and, so, enable her to ease her conscience
-and to drive a better bargain.</p>
-
-<p>My seeming indifference, combined with her now
-trembling eagerness to be free and away, soon forced
-her hand. The break came on a Sunday afternoon. Life
-is so inartistic&mdash;that is, from the standpoint of the cheap
-novelists and playwrights with their dramatic claptrap.
-Here is how the grand crash was precipitated:</p>
-
-<p>Said I: &#8220;Well, I&#8217;m off for a few weeks&#8217; fishing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re not starting now?&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Day after to-morrow,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;ve made several engagements for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Get a substitute,&#8221; said I. &#8220;No one will miss me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How inconsiderate you are!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s pretty good&mdash;after all I&#8217;ve borne this winter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are insufferable!&#8221; cried she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then&mdash;why suffer me?&#8221; said I coolly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you torture me much further, I won&#8217;t,&#8221; retorted
-she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think I&#8217;ll clear out to-night,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;With people coming to dinner to-morrow! A big
-dinner!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;to-night,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I had forgotten to-morrow&#8217;s
-horrors.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I were free!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s easy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;I <i>will</i> be free!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll send you a lawyer at eleven to-morrow morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>She was pale and trembling. The quarrel was a
-mere pretense&mdash;a pretext so flimsy that each knew the
-other was not deceived by it. Her tones of anger, my
-tones of abrupt and contemptuous indifference were obviously
-false and forced. As I left the room I cast a
-furtive glance at her, saw that her daring was so terrifying
-her that she could hardly keep a plausible front of
-haughty anger.</p>
-
-<p>It was several hours before I could get away from
-the house, though I made all haste. Every moment I
-expected some word from her. But none came. I sent
-the lawyer the following morning. I was surprised when
-later in the day, by the necessary roundabout way, I
-learned that she had actually consented.</p>
-
-<p>She showed that she had made an exhaustive study
-of the subject, like the wise campaigner she was. She
-thoroughly understood how to proceed; for, she told her
-lawyer&mdash;the one of my lawyers whom I assigned to her&mdash;that
-my coldness to her had filled her with suspicion
-and that she wished detectives employed. She needed
-no coaching whatever; he found her prepared on every
-point.</p>
-
-<p>How far had matters gone between her and Frascatoni?
-Not so far as you imagine; but perhaps farther
-than I think. Both the husband and the world are
-poor judges in those affairs.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I shall pass over the suit. It was commonplace
-throughout. There has been much speculation as to the
-person named by my wife in the sealed papers. I can
-truthfully say that I know as little about that person<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span>
-as does the public. It is usually so, I believe, in these
-arranged suits. I did not appear at any of the hearings,
-all of them held secretly. Nor did Edna appear,
-though I believe that, to comply with the forms of law,
-she made some sort of deposition in the presence of the
-lawyers for both sides. It so happened that the first
-and only public step&mdash;the judge&#8217;s ordering of the decree
-of divorce&mdash;was published on the same day with the
-news of a big prize fight, a sensational murder, and a
-terrific earthquake. So, we got off with little public attention.
-At the time the law provided that a decree
-should not become valid for six months. We were nominally
-free; but actually neither could marry again for
-six months and meanwhile either of us could reopen the
-case&mdash;and she could by merely requesting put an end
-to it and restore her status as my wife. So, I was free&mdash;unless
-Edna should change her mind sometime within
-the six months.</p>
-
-<p>Edna was in London and I in Paris when the news
-came. Curiously enough, as I stood in the doorway of
-the Ritz restaurant, that evening, looking about for a
-table where I could dine alone, in came Prince Frascatoni
-with another Italian whose name I cannot recall. I
-bowed to Frascatoni. He said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are alone, sir?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Unluckily, yes,&#8221; replied I.</p>
-
-<p>He introduced his companion and suggested that we
-three dine at the same table. &#8220;Why not share our dinner?&#8221;
-said he. &#8220;I can easily change my order. Perhaps
-you will go with us afterwards to some amusing
-little plays in a Montmartre theater?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span>I accepted the courteous invitation. The situation
-appealed to my sense of humor. Also I knew that Edna&mdash;toward
-whom I now felt most kindly&mdash;would be delighted
-to read in the papers: &#8220;Prince Frascatoni had
-as his guest at dinner last night Mr. Godfrey Loring.&#8221;
-It would put an immediate stop to any tendency to gossip.
-As the prince did not speak of my former wife I
-assumed that he had heard the news.</p>
-
-<p>When we were separating I said: &#8220;You will dine
-with me to-morrow night?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Unfortunately I&#8217;m leaving town in the morning,&#8221;
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>I thought I could guess which way he was journeying.
-With perhaps a twinkle in my eyes, I said: &#8220;So
-soon? Well&mdash;thank you, and good-by&mdash;and good luck.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I thought I saw a sardonic smile flit over his face.
-He probably imagined I was in the dark as to his
-maneuverings and designs and smiled to himself as he
-thought, &#8220;How differently this American would be
-treating me if he knew!&#8221; Do not fancy, because Edna
-had no charm for me, I thought it strange she should
-have charm for other men. Nothing could be further
-from the truth. I appreciated her attractive points
-perhaps more than any other man possibly could. Also,
-I appreciated&mdash;and still appreciate&mdash;that another man
-would not be so peculiarly annoyed by her lack of any
-sense of humor as I was. Indeed, had not circumstances
-forced me into the acutely critical mood toward her, I
-doubt not I could have continued to bear with that lack,
-though it made conversation with her all but impossible
-and precipitated quarrels without number.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>Beyond question the strongest and most enduring
-hold a man can get upon a woman or a woman upon a
-man is the physical. We&mdash;even the least intellectual of
-us&mdash;are something more than physical; but the physical
-must be contented first, and must remain contented, because
-we are first of all physical. The physical is the
-fundamental; but it takes more than foundations to make
-a house. And a marriage such as ours was could not endure.
-Each of us had but the one charm for the other.
-It wore itself out like a fire that is not supplied with fuel.</p>
-
-<p>If I had not fallen in love with another woman, there
-might have remained a feeling for Edna that would
-have made me jealous, perhaps domineering toward her.
-As it was, I viewed her calmly; when I said &#8220;good luck&#8221;
-to Frascatoni, I meant it. I hoped he would make Edna
-happy, for, I wished her well.</p>
-
-<p>Through Armitage I had provided myself with Mary
-Kirkwood&#8217;s address&mdash;an apartment overlooking the Parc
-Monceau which she and Neva Armstrong had taken for
-the spring months. That very afternoon I went to leave
-cards. As I feared she was not at home. &#8220;But,&#8221; said
-Mrs. Armstrong, &#8220;you may find her walking in the
-park with Hartley Beechman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, is he here?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Naturally,&#8221; replied she.</p>
-
-<p>You may picture me as suddenly dashed down by this
-word whose meaning there was no mistaking. If so, you
-have discovered little about me in these pages. Life had
-made me a competent judge of the situation that is really
-hopeless, the situation where to struggle is folly, and
-that situation which seems hopeless to the small of earth,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>
-accustomed to defeat in their desires, but seems only difficult
-to the other sort of human beings.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He has taken a studio over in the Latin quarter,&#8221;
-continued Mrs. Armstrong. &#8220;We are all going back
-together in July.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Armstrong is an attractive woman&mdash;singularly
-so for one who is obviously wholly absorbed in her husband.
-She has the sort of personality her paintings
-prepare you to expect. But I had difficulty in concealing
-my impatience to get away. I strolled several times
-through the park, which is not large, before I finally came
-upon Mary and Beechman seated in one of the less-frequented
-paths. As I was moving directly toward them,
-both saw me at the same instant. Her welcoming smile
-was radiant. I did not notice his, but I assume it was
-more reserved.</p>
-
-<p>Never had I seen her looking so well. You may
-say what you please, but an American woman who knows
-how to dress, in touch with a French dressmaker who is
-rather artist than dressmaker, is the supreme combination
-for &aelig;sthetic beauty. Mrs. Kirkwood, of the
-ivory skin and the coal-black hair, was a thrilling sight
-to see in her white dress and big black hat, with that
-background of fresh spring foliage and late afternoon
-light. Her eyes and her smile, I noted for the first time,
-had somewhat the same quality as Frascatoni&#8217;s&mdash;the
-weary eyes, the slow sweet smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Loring!&#8221; she cried, rising and extending her
-hand impulsively. &#8220;I thought I was never to see you
-again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I hid my emotion and greeted her, then Beechman, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>
-my habitual manner which, they tell me, is the reverse of
-effusive. I suppose, when I am deeply moved, its lack
-of cordiality becomes even more pronounced. After a
-few minutes of the talk necessary among acquaintances
-who have not met in a long time Beechman rose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You and Beechman will dine with me, I hope?&#8221; I
-said. &#8220;Mrs. Armstrong says she will go if you can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was arranged and, as the day was warm, d&#8217;Armenonville
-was fixed upon as the place. &#8220;Until half-past
-eight,&#8221; said Beechman as he left. Mary and I sat silent
-watching him walk away. A superb figure of young
-manhood, supremely fortunate in that his body was an
-adequate expression of a strong and simple nature.</p>
-
-<p>As he passed from view at the turn of the walk I
-transferred my gaze to her. Her eyes slowly lowered,
-and a faint flush came into her cheeks. Said I:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You saw the news&mdash;about me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hartley and I were talking of it as you appeared.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You were not surprised?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;and no,&#8221; replied she, with constraint and
-some confusion. &#8220;A year or so ago I&mdash;people thought&mdash;you
-and she had&mdash;had drifted apart. Then it looked
-as though you had come together again. It seemed the
-natural thing. She is beautiful and has so much charm.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She was unhappy in America. She wished to be
-free.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mary looked at me reflectively. &#8220;You are not&mdash;inconsolable,
-I see,&#8221; said she with a smile of faint raillery.
-&#8220;My brother has often told me about you&mdash;how indifferent
-you are to women. Perhaps that is why you are
-attractive to them.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span>&#8220;Am I?&#8221; said I. &#8220;I did not know it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are terribly impersonal,&#8221; she went on laughingly.
-&#8220;Last summer I&mdash;well, I was not&mdash;that is, not
-exactly&mdash;trying to flirt with you. But your absolute unconsciousness
-of me as a woman was often very&mdash;baffling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;You thought that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How could I help seeing it? Why, you treated me
-precisely as if I were another man. Not that I didn&#8217;t
-like it, on the whole. A woman gets tired of being always
-on guard.&#8221; She smiled at herself. &#8220;That sounds
-horribly conceited. But you know what I mean. The
-men never lose a chance to practice. Then, too&mdash;well, if
-a woman has the reputation of being rich she need not
-flatter herself that it is her charms that do all the drawing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the supreme curse of money&mdash;it all but cuts
-one off from love and friendship. Fortunately it, to a
-great extent, takes the place of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like to hear you say that,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How many poor people get love and friendship?&#8221;
-replied I. &#8220;Isn&#8217;t it the truth that there is little&mdash;very,
-very little&mdash;real love or friendship in the world? All I
-meant was that money, and the independence and comfort
-and the counterfeit of affection it brings, are better
-than nothing at all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I see,&#8221; said she. &#8220;You are so sensible&mdash;and
-you don&#8217;t cant. That was why I liked to talk with you.
-At first I thought you cynical and hard. That&#8217;s the first
-impression plain good sense makes. We are used to
-hearing only shallow sentimentality.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>&#8220;The unending flapdoodle,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Flapdoodle,&#8221; agreed she. &#8220;Then&mdash;I began to discover
-that you were anything but hard&mdash;that you looked
-at people as they are, and liked them for themselves, not
-for what they pretended to be. I was beginning to trust
-you&mdash;to venture timidly in the direction of being my
-natural self&mdash;when you left.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well&mdash;here I am again,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And we start in
-afresh.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She smiled with embarrassment. &#8220;Yes,&#8221; she said
-hesitatingly. &#8220;But the circumstances have changed
-somewhat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I know full well now what I should have said. I
-should have replied, &#8220;Yes&mdash;we are both almost free&mdash;but
-soon will be altogether free&mdash;I in six months, you as
-soon as you break your engagement.&#8221; That would have
-been bold and intelligent&mdash;for it is always intelligent to
-make the issue clear at the earliest possible moment. But
-I did not speak. I remained silent. Why? Because as
-I was talking with her I was realizing that I had been
-deceiving myself in a curious fashion. I had been so concentratedly
-in love with her&mdash; Gentle reader, I see the
-mocking smile on your shallowly sentimental face. You
-are ridiculing a love that could have such restraint as
-mine&mdash;that could bear with Edna, could wait, could refrain
-from any of the familiar much-admired impetuosities
-and follies. You cannot understand. In this day
-when men no longer regard or feel their responsibilities
-in taking a more or less helpless woman to wife, your
-sense of the decencies is utterly corrupted. But let me
-say that no matter how ardently and romantically a man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span>
-may conduct himself, a woman would do well to take care
-how she trusts him if he has a bad or even a doubtful
-record as to his way of meeting his responsibilities of
-whatever sort. That kind of love may &#8220;listen good,&#8221; but
-it does not &#8220;live good.&#8221; However&mdash;as I was about to
-say when your smile interrupted me, my all-absorbing
-love for Mary Kirkwood had misled me into assuming,
-with no reason whatsoever, that she understood all,
-that she knew I was eager to come to her, and would
-come as soon as I could. You will say this was absurd.
-Granted. But is not a man in love always absurd?
-You will say it was egotistical. Granted. But is not
-a man in love always egotistical? It is not the realities
-but the delusions that keep us going; and in those
-long months of waiting, of hoping often against hope,
-I had to have a delusion to keep me going. But now,
-her friendly, simply friendly, way of talking to me
-made me see that I had her yet to win, that I could
-not speak out directly as I had planned. You, who probably
-know women well, may say that this was a mistake.
-Perhaps. Nevertheless <i>I</i> could not have done
-otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>You will say that women do not know their own
-minds, but have to be told. I admit it. You will say
-my silence was timidity. I admit it. I could not talk
-of love to a woman until I was sure she wished to hear.
-I had the timidity of the man to whom woman and love
-are serious matters; the timidity unknown to the man
-who makes love to every passable female at whom he has
-a chance; the timidity which all women profess to approve,
-but which, I more than suspect, appeals only to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span>
-the jaded palate of the woman who has long made love
-and passion her profession.</p>
-
-<p>As Beechman was busy with a novel I had everything
-my own way without strategy during those following
-days. There are a thousand attractive places to go in
-and near Paris, and I was resourceful in contriving excursions
-for the days when there was no chance of seeing
-only her. Almost every day the London papers or the
-Paris <i>Herald</i> printed something about Edna and the brilliant
-season she was having in London; often not far
-away from her name in a list of guests was the name of
-Prince Frascatoni. My own activities, more Bohemian
-as was my taste and the taste of my friends&mdash;and I may
-say the taste of civilized and intelligent Paris&mdash;my activities
-were not recorded in the papers. I fancied they
-were unobserved. I was soon to be undeceived.</p>
-
-<p>I wonder who the people are that write anonymous
-letters&mdash;and give anonymous &#8220;tips&#8221; to society journals?
-Every once in a while by mischance&mdash;often by my having
-made a remark that was misinterpreted into something
-malicious or low, utterly foreign to my real meaning&mdash;I
-have had some fellow-being suddenly unveil a noisome
-corner in his or her soul for confidently awaited sympathy;
-and I have almost literally shrunk back in my
-horror at the cesspool of coarseness, or at the vicious
-envy. Have you had that experience? No doubt scattered
-among us ordinary folk, neither particularly good
-nor particularly bad, well rather than ill-disposed and
-amiable, if not too severely tried or tempted&mdash;no doubt,
-scattered among us there are not a few of these swine
-souls or snake souls, hid beneath a pleasant smile and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span>
-fine raiment. And these are they who give off the foulness
-of the anonymous letters and the anonymous tip.</p>
-
-<p>In one of the minor London society papers appeared
-this paragraph which I am sure I quote word for word:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;American Paris is much amused these beautifully
-fine spring days with the ardent love-making
-of a recently divorced railway &#8216;baron.&#8217; The lady
-is herself a divorcee of several years standing and
-is supposed to be engaged to a famous young literary
-man who is all unaware of what is going on.&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I know of five copies of this journal that were mailed
-with the paragraph marked. The five were received by
-Edna, Margot, myself, Mary Kirkwood, and Hartley
-Beechman. I have often mentally gone through the list
-of my acquaintances in search of the person who was responsible
-for this thing. I have some extremely unpleasant
-characters in that list. But I have never been able
-to suspect who did it. Not improbably the guilty person
-is some one in other respects not a bad sort&mdash;for
-almost any given cut from that vast universal, human
-nature, contains something of everything.</p>
-
-<p>I had an engagement with Mary Kirkwood to walk
-in the Bois and have tea the afternoon of the day this
-paragraph reached me. When I arrived at her apartment
-she came down ready to go. Her costume was so
-lovely and I so delighted in her that I did not immediately
-note the heavy circles round her eyes nor the
-drawn expression of her mouth. I did not dream that
-she knew of the paragraph. I had read it and had dismissed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span>
-it from my mind. The anonymous letter and the
-anonymous newspaper attack were old familiar stories to
-me, as they are to every man who attains distinction in
-active life. But as we drove toward the Bois I happened
-to catch a glimpse of her by way of the mirror in
-the frame of the taxi. I saw the evidence of suffering&mdash;and
-the wistful, weary look in her beautiful eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221; said I. &#8220;You have had bad news?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; replied she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can I help?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t let&#8217;s talk of it now,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Wait until
-we are in the woods.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Soon after we passed the entrance gates we descended
-and rambled away over the not too even ground,
-along the indistinct paths under the fascinating little
-trees. It was a gorgeous, perfumed May day. You
-know the Bois&mdash;how lovely it is, how artfully it mingles
-the wild and the civilized, suggesting nature as a
-laughing nymph with tresses half bound, half free,
-with graceful young form half clad, half nude. We
-rambled on and on, and after half an hour seated ourselves
-where there were leaves and the slim graceful
-trunks on every side and the sound of falling water
-like the musical voice of the sunbeams.</p>
-
-<p>Mary drew a long sigh. &#8220;I feel better,&#8221; she said.</p>
-
-<p>I looked at her. &#8220;You <i>are</i> better. You have
-shaken it off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She met my gaze. &#8220;This is the last time,&#8221; she said.
-She looked away, repeated softly, thoughtfully, &#8220;the
-last time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The last time?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>&#8220;We are not going to see each other any more.
-It is being misunderstood.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I glanced quickly at her, and I knew she had read
-the paragraph. &#8220;That miserable scandal sheet!&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;No one sees it&mdash;and if they did why should we
-notice anything so ridiculous?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer immediately. After a while she
-said: &#8220;Perhaps I ought not to say it, but&mdash;Hartley is
-sensitive. A copy of the paper got to him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One to me. One to you. One to him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No matter,&#8221; said she. &#8220;The mischief is done.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You do not give up a friend lightly,&#8221; rejoined I.
-The time to speak was at hand; I welcomed it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>He</i> has asked me to give you up,&#8221; said she simply.
-&#8220;And I shall do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But he has no right to ask such a thing,&#8221; protested
-I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;he has. He and I are engaged&mdash;you knew
-that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I imagined there was some sort of an engagement,&#8221;
-said I, still waiting for the right opening.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is only one sort of engagement possible
-with me,&#8221; replied she, with a certain gentle reproach.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know that,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But I remember the talk
-we had on the yacht.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A flush overspread her paleness for a moment.
-Then she rose from the little rustic iron chair. &#8220;We
-must go,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wait,&#8221; said I. And I made a tactless, a stupid
-beginning: &#8220;You can&#8217;t deny that you do not love
-him.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>She turned coldly away and walked on, I following.
-&#8220;I think I&#8217;ll not stop for tea,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Will you
-hail the first taxi we meet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are offended&mdash;Mary?&#8221; I said. What a blundering
-fool love does make of a man!&mdash;unless he makes
-a fool of it.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head. &#8220;No&mdash;not offended. But
-when a subject comes up about which we may not talk
-there is nothing to do but drop it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In my desperation I reached for the right chord
-and struck it. &#8220;Do you know,&#8221; said I, &#8220;why I left
-the yacht abruptly?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She halted, gave me a swift, frightened glance.
-The color flooded her face, then fled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;that was why,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And&mdash;I&#8217;ve come
-as soon as I could.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, why, why didn&#8217;t you <i>tell</i> me?&#8221; cried she.
-Then, before I could answer, &#8220;I don&#8217;t mean that. I
-understand.&#8221; Then, with a wild look around, &#8220;<i>What</i>
-am I saying?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve come for you, Mary,&#8221; I went on. &#8220;And you
-are not going to rush into folly a second time&mdash;a
-greater folly. For&mdash;you do not love him&mdash;and you will
-care for me. You are right, we can&#8217;t discuss him&mdash;you
-and him. But we can, and must, discuss you and me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall not see you again,&#8221; said she, looking at me
-with tranquil eyes that would have daunted me had I
-not known her so well, understood her so well&mdash;which is
-only another way of saying, had I not loved her so well.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why have you been seeing me day after day,
-when you knew that I loved you&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span>&#8220;I did not know it,&#8221; replied she. &#8220;I did not think
-I could move you in the least&mdash;beyond a friendly liking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>An inflection in her voice made me suddenly realize.
-&#8220;You came because it made you happy to come!&#8221; I
-cried triumphantly. I caught her hand. &#8220;You do
-care, Mary!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She drew her hand away resolutely. &#8220;I shall keep
-my promise,&#8221; she said coldly. &#8220;I wish to hear no
-more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will not keep your promise. If necessary
-I&#8217;ll go to him and tell him&mdash;and he&#8217;ll release you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She gave me a look that withered. &#8220;You&mdash;do a
-cowardly thing like that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But <i>you</i> will ask him to release
-you. You have no right to marry him. And I&mdash;I
-love you&mdash;and must live my life with you, or&mdash;I can
-think of nothing more futile and empty than life without
-you. And your life&mdash;would it not be futile and
-empty, Mary, if you tried to live it without me, when
-we might have been together? Together!&mdash;you and I!
-Mary, my love!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why do you say those things, Godfrey?&#8221; she
-cried passionately. &#8220;To make me wretched? To
-make it harder for me to do what I must?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To make it impossible for you to do what you
-must not. Marry a man you don&#8217;t love&mdash;marry him
-when you love another! You&#8217;d be doing him the worst
-possible injury. No matter how much he loves you, he
-can recover from the blow of losing you. But the day
-to day horror of such a loveless marriage would destroy
-you both. He is a sensitive man. He would feel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>
-it, in spite of all your efforts to pretend. You&mdash;pretend!
-You could not do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;After what has passed between him and me&mdash;the
-promises we&#8217;ve exchanged&mdash;the plans we&#8217;ve made&mdash;there
-is no going back! I don&#8217;t wish to go back. I&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mary&mdash;I love you!&#8221; I cried. &#8220;I love you&mdash;and
-you love me. That&#8217;s the wall between you and any other
-man, between me and any other woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had waved to a passing taxi. It swept into the
-edge of the drive. She opened the door. &#8220;You are
-not coming with me,&#8221; she said. &#8220;And I shall not see
-you again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laid my hand on her arm and forced her to meet
-my gaze. &#8220;You are hysterical now,&#8221; I said. &#8220;But
-you will be calm, and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She gave me a cold smile&mdash;it would have deceived
-those who do not understand the temperaments that can
-conceal themselves. &#8220;I am perfectly calm, I assure
-you,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As you were the first time we ever met,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;You&#8217;ve no right to marry any man but me, Mary.
-If you did you&#8217;d be wronging yourself&mdash;me&mdash;him most
-of all. That is the truth, and you will see it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She dragged her arm away, burst into violent sobs,
-sank upon the seat of the cab. I hesitated&mdash;obeyed a
-right instinct, closed the door, gave her address to the
-ignoring chauffeur, stood watching the cab whisk away.
-I was shaking from head to foot. But I had no fear
-for the outcome. I knew that I had won&mdash;that <i>we</i> had
-won.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Rossiter</span>&mdash;I believe I have mentioned the name of
-my new secretary&mdash;was lying in wait for me at the hotel
-entrance. He read me a telegram from Margot: Edna
-was ill, was not expected to live, begged me to come at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>I wrote to Mary Kirkwood&mdash;a brief repetition of
-what I had said to her&mdash;&#8220;of what I know both your
-intelligence and your heart are saying to you, dear.&#8221; I
-told her that Edna was desperately ill and had sent for
-me, and that I should be back as soon as I could get
-away. I went on to say many things such as a man
-deeply in love always says. No doubt it was a commonplace
-letter, as sincere love letters are apt to be; but
-because it was from my heart I felt that, for all the
-shortcomings, it would go to her heart. I admit I am
-not a facile love-maker. I have had little practice.
-And I suspect, those who are facile at love-making have
-got their facility by making love speeches so often when
-they were not in earnest that they cannot but have lost
-all capacity to be in earnest.</p>
-
-<p>Toward noon the next day Rossiter and I and my
-valet were set down at the little station of Kesson Wells,
-half an hour out from London in Surrey. We were in
-the midst of about as beautiful a country us I have seen.
-I am a narrow enough patriot not to take the most<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>
-favorable view of things foreign. But I must admit
-that no other countryside can give one the sense of sheer
-loveliness that one gets in certain parts of England.
-I am glad we have nothing like it at home; for to have it
-means rainy weather most of the time, and serf labor,
-and landlord selfishly indifferent to the misery of the
-poor human creatures he works and robs. Still, I try
-to forget the way it came in the joy of the thing itself&mdash;as
-you, gentle reader, forget the suffering and death of
-the animals that make the artistic and delicious course
-dinners you eat.</p>
-
-<p>We were received with much ceremony at the station.
-My money was being exercised by those who knew
-how to do it. After a drive between perfumed and blossoming
-hedgerows and over a road as smooth and clean
-as a floor we came to Garton Hall, the place my son-in-law
-had leased until his new house should be ready.
-It was a modern house, as I noted with relief when we
-were still afar off, and while not large, was a most satisfactory
-embodiment of that often misused and often
-misunderstood word comfort. To live in the luxurious
-yet comfortable comfort obtainable in England only&mdash;indoors,
-in its steam-heated or Americanized portions&mdash;one
-must have English servants. I am glad we do not
-breed English servants in America; I am glad that when
-they are imported they soon cease to be the models of
-menial perfection they are at home. But when I am in
-England I revel in the English servant. To find him
-at his best you must see him serving in the establishment
-of a great noble. And my son-in-law was that; and the
-establishment over which Margot presided, but with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>
-which she was not permitted to interfere in the smallest
-detail because of her utter ignorance of all the &#8220;vulgarities&#8221;
-of life, as became a true lady of our quaint
-American brand&mdash;the establishment was a combination
-of the best of the city with the best of the country, a
-skillful mingling of the most attractive features of home,
-club, and hotel.</p>
-
-<p>My first question at the station had, of course, been
-as to Mrs. Loring. I was assured that her ladyship&#8217;s
-mother was somewhat better, but still awaiting the dangerous
-crisis of the fever. Margot, not a whit less girlish
-for her maternity, met me in the doorway, and had
-the nurse there with the boy&mdash;the Earl of Gorse. They
-said he looked like me&mdash;and he did, though I do not
-believe they thought so. Why should they say it? I
-was still a young man and might marry again. I fancy
-the same prudent instinct prompted them to give him
-Godfrey as one of his four or five names. Why do I
-think they did not believe he looked like me? Because
-all of them were ashamed of everything American. In
-the frequent quarrels between Margot and Hugh, he
-never failed to use the shaft that would surely pierce
-the heart of her vanity and rankle there&mdash;her low American
-birth, in such ghastly and grotesque contrast to the
-illustrious descent of her husband. She had an acid
-tongue when it came to quarreling; she could hurl taunts
-about his shifts to keep up appearances before he met
-her that made ugly and painful marks on his hide. She
-had discovered, probably by gossiping with some traitor
-servant, that he had been flouted by a rich English girl
-for a chauffeur&mdash;and you may be sure she put it to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>
-good use. But nothing she could say made him quiver
-as she quivered when he opened out on the subject of
-those &#8220;filthy bounders in the States.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do not imagine, gentle reader, that my daughter
-was unhappily married. She would not have exchanged
-places with anyone but the wife of a duke; and Hugh&mdash;well,
-he needed the money. Nor should you think that
-they lived unhappily together. They saw little of each
-other alone; and in public they were as smiling and
-amiable with each other as&mdash;perhaps as you and your
-husband.</p>
-
-<p>A fine baby was the Earl of Gorse&mdash;one who in a
-decent environment would have grown up a sensible,
-useful person. But hardly, I feared, when he was already
-living in his own separate apartment, with his
-name&mdash;&#8220;The Earl of Gorse&#8221;&mdash;on a card beside the
-door, and with all the servants, including his mother,
-treating him as if he were of superior clay. This when
-he barely had his sight. They say a baby learns the
-utility of bawling at about three days old; I should say
-the germ of snobbishness would get to work very soon
-thereafter.</p>
-
-<p>You are waiting to hear what was the matter with
-Edna. No, it was not a fake illness to draw me within
-reach for some further trimming. She had indeed fallen
-dangerously ill&mdash;did not expect to live when Margot
-telegraphed me. It was an intestinal fever brought on
-by the excesses of the London season. I wonder when
-the biographers, poets, playwrights, novelists, and other
-gentry who give us the annals of the race will catch up
-with the progress of science? How long will it be before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>
-they stop telling us of germ and filth diseases as
-if they were the romantic physical expressions of soul
-states? There was a time when such blunders were excusable.
-Now, science has shown us that they are so
-much twaddle. So, gentle reader, I cannot gratify your
-taste for humbug and moonshine by telling you that
-Edna was stricken of remorse or of overjoy or of secret
-grief or of any other soul state whatever. The doctor
-bosh was, of course, nervous exhaustion. It always is
-if the patient is above the working class. The truth
-was that she fell ill, even as you and I. She ate and
-drank too much, both at and between meals, and did
-not take proper care of herself in any way. She wore
-dresses that were nearly nothing in cold carriages and
-draughty rooms, when she was laden with undigested
-food. Vulgar&mdash;isn&#8217;t it? Revolting for me to speak
-thus of a lady? But I am trying to tell the truth,
-gentle reader, not to increase your stock of slop and
-lies which you call &#8220;culture.&#8221; And if a lady will put
-herself in such a condition, why should it not be spoken
-of? Why go on lying about these things, and encouraging
-people to attribute to sensitive nerves and souls the
-consequences of gluttony, ignorance, and neglect?</p>
-
-<p>I am not criticising Edna for getting into such an
-internal physical state that a pestilence began to rage
-within her. The most intelligent of us is only too foolish
-and ignorant in these matters, thanks to stupid education
-from childhood up. And she has the added excuse
-of having been exposed to the temptations of a
-London season. She fell; it is hardly in human nature
-not to fall.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>You have been through a London season? It is a
-mad chase from food to food. You rise and hastily
-swallow a heavy English breakfast. You ride in the
-Row a while, ride toward a lunch table&mdash;and an English
-lunch, especially in the season, means a bigger dinner
-than any Frenchman or other highly civilized person
-ever willingly sat down to. Hardly is this long lunch
-over before it is time for tea&mdash;which means not merely
-tea, but toast, and sandwiches, and hot muffins, and
-many kinds of heavy cake, and often fruit or jam. Tea
-is to give you an appetite for the dinner that follows&mdash;and
-what a dinner! One rich, heavy course upon another,
-with drenchings of wine and a poisonous liqueur
-afterward. You sit about until this has settled a bit,
-then&mdash;on to supper! Not so formidable a meal as the
-dinner, but still what any reasonable person would call
-a square meal. Then to bed? By no means. On to a
-ball, where you eat and drink in desultory fashion until
-late supper is served. You roll heavily home to sleep.
-But hardly have your eyes closed when you are roused to
-eat again. It is breakfast time, and another day of
-stuffing has begun.</p>
-
-<p>Starvation, they tell me, is one of the regular causes
-of death in London. But that is in the East End. In
-the West End&mdash;and you, gentle reader, are interested
-only in that section&mdash;death, I&#8217;ll wager, reaps twenty
-from overfeeding to one he gets in the East End through
-underfeeding. Famine is a dreadful thing. But how
-characteristic of the shallowness of human beings it is
-that you can make a poetic horror out of famine, when
-no one would listen while you told the far more horrible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span>
-truth of the frightful ravages of overfeeding, chief
-cause of all the diseases that torture and twist the human
-body, aging and killing it prematurely.</p>
-
-<p>Edna had been for many years most cautiously careful
-of her health. She loved her youth, her beautiful
-body. She fought against her natural fondness for
-food and wine. I fancy that, for this first season after
-freedom she relaxed her rules, and turned herself loose to
-&#8220;celebrate.&#8221; I know she must have had something of
-this sort in mind, because her French maid&mdash;I could not
-talk with the Italian&mdash;told me that madame had arranged
-an elaborate programme of &#8220;cures&#8221; on the Continent
-after the season. &#8220;And they were to be serious
-cures,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>Her illness took such a course of ups and downs, with
-death always hovering, that it was impossible for me to
-leave. I wrote Mary; I got no reply. I sent Rossiter
-to Paris; he reported that Mrs. Armstrong and Mrs.
-Kirkwood had left for the country, but that he could
-get no address.</p>
-
-<p>You probably picture me as scarcely able to restrain
-myself from acting like a madman. How little you
-know of me! Do you think I could have achieved my
-solid success before I reached forty-five years if I had
-been one of the little people who fret and fume against
-the inevitable? All men who amount to anything are
-violent men. Jesus, the model of serenity and patience,
-scourged the money changers from the temple. Washington,
-one more great exemplar of the majesty of repose,
-swore like a lunatic at the battle of Monmouth.
-These great ones simply had in the highest form the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span>
-virtues that make for success in every department
-of leadership. Certainly, I am a violent man; but I
-have rarely been foolish enough to go crazy to no
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p>What could I do but wait? And over that beautiful,
-quiet country place floated the black cormorant,
-with wings outspread and hollow, burning eyes bent
-eagerly downward. I waited, not in fury, but oppressed
-by a deep melancholy. For the first time in my life I
-was thinking seriously of death. To any man no decisive
-event of life is so absolutely unimportant as his
-own death. I never have wasted, and never shall waste,
-a moment in thinking of my death. It may concern
-others, but how does it concern me? When it comes I
-shall not be there. The death of another, however&mdash;that
-is cause for reflection, for sadness. I knew, as did
-no one else, how intensely Edna loved life, how in her
-own way of strain and struggle she enjoyed it. And to
-me it was pitiful, this spectacle of her sudden arrest, her
-sudden mortal peril, as she was about to achieve the
-summit of her ambition.</p>
-
-<p>I wondered as to Frascatoni. I pictured him waiting,
-with those tranquil, weary eyes already looking
-about for another means to his aim of large fortune
-should this means fail. There I misjudged him; for,
-one day as I stood in a balcony overlooking the drive he
-came rushing up in a motor, and my first glance at his
-haggard face told me that he loved her. In a way it is
-small compliment to a woman to be loved by the fortune-hunting
-sort of man; for, he does not release himself
-until he has the permit of basest self-interest. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span>
-Frascatoni, having released himself, had fallen in love
-with all the frenzy of his super-refined, passionately
-imaginative nature.</p>
-
-<p>After a few minutes he drove away. I do not know
-what occurred&mdash;naturally, they would not speak of his
-call and I did not ask questions. I can imagine, however.
-She seemed better that day, and he must have
-gone away reassured. He was sending, every morning,
-enormous quantities of flowers; such skill and taste
-showed in the arranging that I am sure it was not the
-usual meaningless performance of rich people, who are
-always trying to make money-spending serve instead of
-thoughtful and delicate attention.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly a month dragged along before she was able
-to see me. As I have explained, her beauty was not
-dependent upon evanescent charms of contour and coloring,
-but was securely founded in the structure of her
-head and face and body. So, I saw lying weakly in the
-bed an emaciated but lovely Edna. Instantly, on sight
-of her, there came flooding back to me the memory of
-the birth of Margot, our first child&mdash;how Edna had
-looked when they let me go into the humble, almost
-squalid little bedroom in the flat of which we were so
-vain. She was looking exactly so in this bed of state,
-in this magnificent room with the evidences of wealth
-and rank and fashion on every side. She smiled faintly;
-one of the slim weak hands lying upon the cream-white
-silk coverlet moved. I bent and kissed it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you for being here,&#8221; she murmured, tears
-in her eyes. Her lips could scarcely utter the words.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must not speak, your ladyship,&#8221; warned the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span>
-nurse. To flatter Americans and to give themselves the
-comfortable feeling of gratified snobbishness English
-servants address us&mdash;or rather our women&mdash;as if we had
-titles.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are to get well rapidly now,&#8221; I said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll stay until I can talk to you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said&mdash;what else could I say?</p>
-
-<p>They motioned me away. I had committed myself
-to several weeks more of that futile monotony&mdash;and I no
-longer had the restraint of the sense that she might die
-at any moment.</p>
-
-<p>Even had I been willing to break my promise I could
-not have done so; for she would have me in every morning
-and every afternoon to look at me, and they told
-me that if I were not there to reassure her, it would
-undoubtedly cause a change for the worse. I stayed
-on and wrote to Mary Kirkwood&mdash;all the time with the
-fear that my letters were not reaching her, but also
-with the unshakable conviction that she was mine. You
-smile at this as proof of my colossal vanity. Well, your
-smile convicts you of never having loved. The essence
-of love is congeniality. Appetite is the essence of passion&mdash;which,
-therefore, has no sense of or especial desire
-for mutuality. Passion is as common as any other
-physical appetite. Love is as rare as are souls generous
-enough to experience or to inspire it. The essence of
-love is congeniality&mdash;and I <i>knew</i> there was a sympathy
-and understanding between me and Mary Kirkwood that
-made us lovers for all time.</p>
-
-<p>There came a day&mdash;how it burned into my memory!&mdash;when
-Edna was well enough to talk with me. Several<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[378]</span>
-days before and I saw that it was not far away, and I
-awaited it with fierce impatience; she would tell me
-why she had sent for me and I should be free to go. It
-was one of those soft gray days of alternating rain
-and sun that are the specialty of the British climate.
-Edna, with flowers everywhere in her sitting room, was
-half reclining in an invalid chair, all manner of rich,
-delicate silk and lace assistants to comfort, luxury and
-beauty adorning her or forming background for her
-lovely face and head. I do not think there is a detail
-of the room or of her appearance that I could not
-reproduce, though at the time I was unaware of anything
-but her voice&mdash;her words.</p>
-
-<p>I entered, seated myself in the broad low window
-opposite her. She looked at me a long time, a strange
-soft expression in her weary eyes&mdash;an expression that
-disquieted me. At last she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is so good to be getting well.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you are getting well rapidly,&#8221; I said. &#8220;You
-have a wonderful constitution.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are glad I am better, Godfrey?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;What a foolish question.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know,&#8221; said she. &#8220;I feared&mdash; I have
-acted <i>so</i> badly toward you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No indeed,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;Don&#8217;t worry about those
-things. I hope you feel as friendly toward me as I do
-toward you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you have always been good to me&mdash;even when
-I haven&#8217;t deserved it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was most puzzling. Said I vaguely, &#8220;I guess
-we&#8217;ve both done the best we could. Do you want to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[379]</span>
-tell me to-day why you sent for me? Or don&#8217;t you feel
-strong enough?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;I wish to tell you to-day. But&mdash;it isn&#8217;t
-easy to say. I&#8217;m very proud, Godfrey&mdash;and when I&#8217;ve
-been in the wrong it&#8217;s hard for me to admit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, come now, Edna,&#8221; said I soothingly. &#8220;Let&#8217;s
-not rake up the past. It&#8217;s finished&mdash;and it has left no
-hard feeling&mdash;at least not in me. Don&#8217;t think of anything
-but of getting well.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She lay gazing out into the gentle rain with the
-sunshine glistening upon it. A few large tears rolled
-down her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s nothing to be unhappy about,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;You are far on the way to health. You are as lovely
-as ever. And you will get everything you want.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s so hard to tell you!&#8221; she sighed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then don&#8217;t,&#8221; I urged. &#8220;If there&#8217;s anything I
-can do for you, let me know. I&#8217;ll be glad to do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She covered her eyes with her thin, beautiful hand.
-&#8220;Love me&mdash;love me, Godfrey&mdash;as you used to,&#8221; she
-sobbed.</p>
-
-<p>I was dumbfounded. It seemed to me I could not
-have heard aright. I stared at her until she lowered
-her hand and looked at me. Then I hastily glanced
-away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry for the way I&#8217;ve acted,&#8221; she went on.
-&#8220;I want you to take me back. That was why I sent
-for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I puzzled over this. Was she still out of her mind?
-Or was there some other and sane&mdash;and extremely practical&mdash;reason
-behind this strange turn?&mdash;for I could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[380]</span>
-not for an instant imagine she was in sane and sober
-earnest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t believe me!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;No wonder.
-But it&#8217;s so, Godfrey. I want your love&mdash;I want <i>you</i>.
-Won&#8217;t you&mdash;won&#8217;t you&mdash;take me&mdash;back?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her voice sounded pitifully sick and weak; and when
-I looked at her I could not but see that to refuse to
-humor her would be to endanger her life. I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Edna, this is an utter surprise for me&mdash;about the
-last thing I expected. I can&#8217;t grasp it&mdash;so suddenly.
-I&mdash;I&mdash; Do you really mean it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I really mean it, dear,&#8221; she said earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>It was evident she, in her secret heart, was taking it
-for granted that her news would be welcome to me;
-that all she had to do in order to win me back as her
-devoted, enslaved husband was to announce her willingness
-to come. I have often marveled at this peculiar
-vanity of women&mdash;their deep, abiding belief in the power
-of their own charms&mdash;the all but impossibility of a
-man&#8217;s ever convincing a woman that he does not love
-her. They say hope is the hardiest of human emotions.
-I doubt it. I think vanity, especially the sex vanity
-both of men and of women, is far and away hardier
-than even hope. I saw she was assuming I would be
-delighted, deeply grateful, ardently responsive as soon
-as I should grasp the dazzling glad tidings. And she
-so ill and weak that I dared not speak at all frankly
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>She stretched out her hand for mine. I slowly took
-it, held it listlessly. I did not know what to do&mdash;what
-to say.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[381]</span>&#8220;It is so good to have you again, dear,&#8221; she murmured.
-&#8220;Aren&#8217;t you going to kiss me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand,&#8221; I muttered, dropping her
-hand and standing up to gaze out over the gardens.
-&#8220;I am stunned.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been cruel to you,&#8221; she said with gracious
-humility. &#8220;Can you ever forgive me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s nothing to forgive. But&mdash;&#8221; There I
-halted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll make up for it, dear,&#8221; she went on, sweetly
-gracious. &#8220;I&#8217;m not surprised that you are stunned.
-You didn&#8217;t realize how I loved you. I didn&#8217;t
-myself. I couldn&#8217;t believe at first when I found
-out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are not strong enough to talk about these
-things to-day,&#8221; said I. &#8220;We&#8217;ll wait until&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She interrupted my hesitating speech with a laugh
-full of gentle gayety. &#8220;You&#8217;re quite wrong,&#8221; said she.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m not out of my mind. I mean it, dear&mdash;and more.
-Oh, we shall be <i>so</i> happy! You&#8217;ve been far too modest
-about yourself. You don&#8217;t appreciate what a fascinating
-man you are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I&#8217;m sure I reddened violently. I sat, rose, sat again.
-&#8220;You&#8217;ve given me the shock of my life,&#8221; said I, with
-an embarrassed laugh. &#8220;I&#8217;ll have to think this over.&#8221;
-I rose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No&mdash;don&#8217;t go yet,&#8221; said she, with the graciousness
-of a princess granting a longer interview. &#8220;Let
-me tell you all about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not to-day,&#8221; I pleaded. &#8220;You must be careful.
-You mustn&#8217;t overtax yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[382]</span>&#8220;Oh, but <i>this</i> does me good. Sit near me, Godfrey,
-and hold my hand while I tell you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I felt like one closeted with an insane person and
-compelled to humor his caprices. I obediently shifted
-to a seat near her and took her hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You could never guess how it came about,&#8221; she
-went on.</p>
-
-<p>As she was looking inquiringly at me, I said, &#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was very strange. For the first few weeks after
-the divorce&mdash;no, not the divorce&mdash;but the decree&mdash;for
-it isn&#8217;t a divorce yet, thank God!&mdash;for the first weeks
-I was happy&mdash;or thought I was. I went early and late.
-I had never been so gay. I acted like a girl just
-launched in society. I was in ecstasies over my freedom.
-Do you mind, dear? Does it hurt you for me
-to say these things?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No&mdash;no,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Go on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How queer you are! But I suppose you are dazed,
-poor dear. Never mind! When I am better&mdash;stronger,
-I&#8217;ll soon convince you.&#8221; And she nodded and smiled
-at me. &#8220;Poor dear! How cruel I have been!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;we&#8217;ll wait till you are stronger,&#8221; stammered
-I, making a move to rise.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I must tell you how it came about,&#8221; she said,
-detaining me. &#8220;All of a sudden&mdash;when I was at my
-gayest&mdash;I began to feel strange and sad&mdash;to dislike
-everyone and everything about me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was the illness working in you,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She gave the smile of gentle tolerance with which
-she received my attempts at humor when she was in an
-amiable mood. &#8220;How like you that is! But it wasn&#8217;t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[383]</span>
-the illness at all. It was my inmost heart striving to
-force open its door and reveal its secret. Do be a little
-romantic, this once, dear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well&mdash;and then?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then&mdash;a paragraph in one of the society papers.
-Some one sent it to me anonymously. Was it you,
-dear?&mdash;and did you do it to make me jealous?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She spoke as one who suddenly sees straight into a
-secret. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t,&#8221; said I hastily. &#8220;It never entered
-my head to think you cared a rap about me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, don&#8217;t tease me, Godfrey, dear. You must
-have been making all sorts of plans to win me back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You read the item in the paper?&#8221; suggested I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes&mdash;I must finish. I read it. And at first
-I shrugged my shoulders and said to myself I didn&#8217;t
-in the least care. But I couldn&#8217;t get the thing out of
-mind. Godfrey, I had always been too sure of you.
-You never seemed to be a single tiny bit interested in
-other women. So the thought of you and another
-woman had not once come to me. That item put it
-there. You&mdash;<i>my</i> husband&mdash;<i>my</i> Godfrey and another
-woman! It was like touching a match to powder. I
-went mad. I&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was sitting up, her eyes wild, her voice trembling.
-&#8220;You must not excite yourself, Edna,&#8221; I said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I went mad,&#8221; she repeated, so interested in her
-emotions that she probably did not hear me. &#8220;I rushed
-down to Margot. I fell ill. I made her telegraph for
-you. Oh, how I suffered until I knew you were here.
-If you hadn&#8217;t come right away I&#8217;d have cabled to my
-lawyer in New York to have the divorce set aside&mdash;or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[384]</span>
-whatever they do. I can have it set aside any time up
-to the end of the six months, can&#8217;t I?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; admitted I, though her tone of positive
-knowledge made my reply superfluous.</p>
-
-<p>She seemed instinctively to feel a suspicion&mdash;an
-explanation of her amazing about-face&mdash;that was slowly
-gathering in my bewildered mind. She drew from the
-folds of her negligee a note and handed it to me. She
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t confessed the worst I had done. Read
-that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind,&#8221; said I. &#8220;I don&#8217;t wish to know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I wish you to know,&#8221; insisted she. &#8220;There
-mustn&#8217;t be anything dark between us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I reluctantly opened the note and read. It was
-from Prince Frascatoni&mdash;not the cold bid for a break
-that my suspicion expected but a passionate appeal to
-her not to break their engagement and throw him over.
-I could by no reach of the imagination picture that
-calm, weary-eyed man of the world writing those lines&mdash;which
-shows how ill men understand each other where
-women are concerned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He sent me that note the day I came here,&#8221; said
-she. &#8220;I did not answer it.&#8221; Her tone was supreme
-indifference&mdash;the peculiar cruelty of woman toward
-man when she does not care.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You were engaged to him?&#8221; said I&mdash;because I
-could think of nothing else to say.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said she. Then with the chaste pride of
-the &#8220;good&#8221; woman, &#8220;But not until after the decree
-was granted. He would have declared himself in New<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[385]</span>
-York, but I wouldn&#8217;t permit <i>that</i>. At least, Godfrey,
-I never forgot with other men that I was your wife&mdash;or
-let them forget it. You believe me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure of it,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She gazed dreamily into vacancy. &#8220;To think,&#8221; she
-mused, &#8220;that I imagined I could marry him&mdash;<i>any</i> man!
-How little a woman knows her own heart. I always loved
-you. Godfrey, I don&#8217;t believe there is any such thing
-as divorce&mdash;not for a good woman. When she gives
-herself&#8221;&mdash;in a dreamy, musical voice, with a tender
-pressure of my hand&mdash;&#8220;it is for time and for eternity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Never in all my life had I so welcomed anyone as I
-welcomed the interrupting nurse. I felt during the
-whole interview that I was under a strain; until I was
-in the open air and alone I did not realize how terrific
-the strain. I walked&mdash;on and on, like a madman&mdash;vaulting
-gates and fences, scrambling over hedges, plowing
-through gardens, leaping brooks&mdash;on and on, hour
-after hour. What should I do? What <i>could</i> I do?
-Nothing but wait until she was out of danger, wait and
-study away at this incredible, impossible freak of hers&mdash;try
-to fathom it, if it was not the vagary of a diseased
-mind. I wished to believe it that, but I could not.
-There was nothing of insanity in her manner, and from
-beginning to end her story was coherent and plausible.
-Plausible, but not believable; for I had no more vanity
-about her loving me than has the next man when he
-does not want the love offered him and finds it inconvenient
-to credit, and so is in the frame of mind to see
-calmly and clearly.</p>
-
-<p>I wandered so far that I had to hire a conveyance at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[386]</span>
-some village at which I halted toward nightfall. As
-soon as I was at the house I ordered my valet to pack,
-and wrote Edna a note saying that neglected business
-compelled me to bolt for London. &#8220;But I&#8217;ll be back,&#8221; I
-wrote, at the command of human decency. &#8220;I feel that
-I can go, as you are almost well.&#8221; Half an hour later
-I was in the train for London.</p>
-
-<p>A letter, feebly scrawled, came from her the next day
-but one&mdash;a brief loving note, saying that she understood
-and that I knew how eagerly she was looking forward
-to my return&mdash;&#8220;but don&#8217;t worry, dearest, about me. I
-shall soon be well, now that my conscience is clear and
-all is peace and love between us. I know how you hate
-to write letters, but you will telegraph me every day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>How I got through those next few weeks I cannot
-tell. I had no sense of the reality of the world about me
-or of my own thoughts and actions. Every once in a
-while&mdash;sometimes when I was talking with the men whose
-company I sought, again when I was alone in bed and
-would start abruptly from sleep&mdash;I pinched myself or
-struck myself violently to see if I was awake. Edna&#8217;s
-letters were daily and long. I read them, stared at them,
-felt less certain than ever of my sanity or of my being
-awake. I sent her an occasional telegram, dictated to
-Rossiter&mdash;a vague sentence of congratulation on her
-better health or something of that kind. Soon this formality
-degenerated to a request to Rossiter: &#8220;And telegraph
-Mrs. Loring.&#8221; Or he would say, &#8220;Shall I send
-Mrs. Loring a telegram?&#8221; and I would reply, &#8220;Yes&mdash;do
-please.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[387]</span>It was obviously necessary that I should not see her
-before she was well enough to be talked to frankly. I
-invented excuses for staying away until my ability in
-that direction gave out. Then Rossiter, best of secretaries,
-divining my plight, came to the rescue. I gave
-him a free hand. He went too far, created in her predisposed
-mind the illusion that I was champing with impatience
-at the business that persisted in keeping me
-away from her. I do not blame him; he took the only
-possible course.</p>
-
-<p>At last she was completely restored. The doctors
-and nurses could find no pretext for lingering, and that
-in itself was proof positive of her health and strength.
-She was having her meals with the family, was attending
-to her correspondence, was alarmed because she was taking
-on flesh so rapidly. She began offering to join me
-in London. When she wrote that she was starting the
-next day I telegraphed her not to come; and, after four
-more days of delay on various excuses, I went down. I
-should have liked to postpone this interview a week or
-ten days. Again I see you smiling at me, posing as
-madly in love with Mary Kirkwood yet able to put off
-the joy of being free to go to her. But, gentle reader,
-you must not forget that I had first to deal with Edna.
-And, from what you have learned of her, do you think
-I was wise or foolish to wish to meet her only when she
-could not possibly prevent candor by pleading a remnant
-of invalidism?</p>
-
-<p>She was charmingly dressed to receive me, rushed
-forward before them all and flung her arms around my
-neck in a graceful, effusive fashion she had learned on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[388]</span>
-the Continent. I received the shock as calmly as I could,
-noting the awkwardly concealed surprise of Margot and
-Hugh. We had lunch; she did most of the talking&mdash;a
-gay, happy-hearted rattling&mdash;the natural expression of
-a woman with not a care in the world. And I&mdash; In
-spite of myself I felt like an executioner come to assassinate
-an unsuspicious and innocent victim. For the
-best side of her was to the fore, and all the unpleasant
-traits were so thoroughly concealed that they seemed to
-have been burned up in that terrible fever. I <i>knew</i>
-they were still there, but I could not <i>feel</i> it.</p>
-
-<p>When we were alone in her sitting room, she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s your valet and your luggage?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In London,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, they&#8217;re coming on a later train.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said I, seizing this excellent opportunity.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m going back this afternoon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She gave a cry of dismay. &#8220;Godfrey!&#8221; she exclaimed.
-&#8220;Isn&#8217;t it a shame!&#8221; Then, rushing to the
-bell, &#8220;I&#8217;ll have my things got ready. I&#8217;ll go back with
-you. You shan&#8217;t be left alone, dearest.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I seated myself. &#8220;Don&#8217;t ring,&#8221; I said. &#8220;Wait till
-we&#8217;ve talked the matter over.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see you can&#8217;t really believe&mdash;even yet,&#8221; cried
-she laughingly. &#8220;I must convince you.&#8221; And she rang
-the bell.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When your maid comes, send her away,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;Don&#8217;t order her to pack. You can&#8217;t go with me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me anxiously. &#8220;How solemn you
-are!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;Has something gone wrong in that
-business?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[389]</span>&#8220;Nothing,&#8221; said I. The maid came, was sent away.
-Edna moved toward me, would have sat in my lap or on
-the arm of my chair had I not prevented her by rising
-on the pretext of lighting a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are very&mdash;very&mdash;strange,&#8221; said she. Then advancing
-toward me and gazing into my face, &#8220;Godfrey,
-there wasn&#8217;t any truth in that item&mdash;was there?&#8221; She
-looked like a sweet, lovely slip of a girl, all tenderness
-and sincerity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve come to discuss our affairs&mdash;not malicious
-newspaper gossip,&#8221; said I, fighting for my usual manner
-of good-humored raillery. &#8220;First, tell me what is
-the meaning of this outburst of affection for me? Aren&#8217;t
-you satisfied with the settlements?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Godfrey, what a cynic you are!&#8221; laughed she.
-Then with an air of earnestness that certainly was convincing,
-she said: &#8220;Can&#8217;t you <i>feel</i> that I love you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I cannot,&#8221; replied I blandly. &#8220;On the contrary, I
-<i>know</i> that you care nothing about me. So let&#8217;s talk business
-as we always have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did not rave and vow and swear. She did not
-show the least excitement. She seated herself and, fixing
-upon me a look which I can only describe as tenacious,
-she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whether you believe me or not, I love you. And I
-shall not give you up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My internal agitation instantly cleared away. I
-am always nervous about crossing a bridge until my foot
-touches it; thenceforth I am too busy crossing to bother
-about myself. &#8220;Well&mdash;what do you propose?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To be your wife,&#8221; replied she. &#8220;To show you how<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[390]</span>
-sorry I am for the way I have acted, to show you by
-thinking only of making you happy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes? And what will you <i>do</i> to make me
-happy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look after your comfort&mdash;your home, Godfrey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you don&#8217;t know about that sort of thing,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;You know only how to make a house attractive
-to other people. You are far too fine for a private
-housekeeper.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall learn,&#8221; said she sweetly. &#8220;Those things
-are not difficult.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I smiled at this unconscious confession of incapacity
-to learn the most difficult of all the arts.
-&#8220;You will practice on me, eh? Thank you&mdash;but no.
-You wouldn&#8217;t make me comfortable. You&#8217;d only
-harass yourself and deprive me of comfort&mdash;and for
-years. &#8216;Those things&#8217; are less easy than you imagine.
-You are set in your ways, I in mine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t realize,&#8221; protested she confidently.
-&#8220;You must be lonely, Godfrey. You need companionship&mdash;sympathy.
-I can give it to you now&mdash;for, I am
-awake at last. I know my own mind and heart.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I shook my head. &#8220;That sounds well, but what
-does it <i>mean</i>? Next door to nothing, my friend. You
-and I are not interested in the same things. We&#8217;ve
-nothing to talk about. I don&#8217;t know the things you
-know&mdash;the social, the fashionable side of life. You
-don&#8217;t know my side of life&mdash;and you couldn&#8217;t and
-wouldn&#8217;t learn enough to interest me. Any forced interest
-you might give would bore me. Pardon my
-frankness, but this is no time for polite falsehoods.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[391]</span>
-The fact is we&#8217;ve outgrown each other. When we look
-out of our eyes, each of us sees an entirely different
-world; and neither of us cares about or even believes in
-the other&#8217;s world. We talk, only to irritate. We are
-absolutely and finally apart. It would be impossible
-for us to live together.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She waited until I finished. I doubt if she listened.
-It was her habit not to listen to what she did not wish
-to hear. &#8220;Godfrey&mdash;Godfrey!&#8221; she cried, battling
-with the sobs that rose, perhaps in spite of her. &#8220;Do
-I mean nothing to you&mdash;I who have been everything to
-you? Does the word wife mean nothing to you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean nothing to me,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;And I
-mean nothing to you. Let us not pretend to deceive
-ourselves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you did care about me once,&#8221; she pleaded.
-&#8220;I am not old and faded. I still have all the charms
-I used to have&mdash;yes, and more. Isn&#8217;t that so, dear?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are more beautiful than you ever were,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;But&mdash;you&#8217;ve gotten me out of the habit of you.
-And I couldn&#8217;t go back to it if I would.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She buried her face in her hands and wept.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At your old tricks,&#8221; said I impatiently. &#8220;It has
-always been your way to try to make me seem in the
-wrong. As a matter of fact, you lost years ago&mdash;lost
-before I did&mdash;all interest and taste for our life together.
-It was you who ended our married life, not I.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, it was all my fault,&#8221; she sobbed. &#8220;Forgive
-me, dear. Take me back. Don&#8217;t cast me off. I&#8217;ll be
-whatever you say&mdash;do whatever you wish. Only take
-me back!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[392]</span>I could not make an inch of progress toward the
-real motive behind this obviously sincere plea. As I
-sat silent, looking at her and puzzling, she began to
-hope that she had moved me. No&mdash;rather, she began
-to feel stronger in her deep rooted conviction that at
-bottom I loved her and had never wavered. She came
-across the room, dropped to her knees beside my chair
-and hid her face in my lap. Why is it that passion
-once extinguished can never light again? As she knelt
-there I appreciated all her physical charms; but I was
-appreciative with that critical calmness which is the
-absence of all feeling. I laid my hand on hers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Edna,&#8221; I said, &#8220;what <i>is</i> the meaning of this?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am telling you the truth, Godfrey,&#8221; replied she,
-lifting her gold-brown eyes to gaze at me. &#8220;As God
-is my judge, I am telling you the truth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No doubt you think you are,&#8221; said I diplomatically.
-&#8220;But your good sense must tell you that
-there&#8217;s something wrong.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;with you,&#8221; was her answer in a sad tone.
-&#8220;I hoped we could begin to be happy at once. I see
-now that I&#8217;ve got to win you back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I concealed my panic behind an amused laugh. &#8220;I
-suppose I&#8217;ve misled you into forming this poor estimate
-of my intelligence where you are concerned,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;You have thought all these years that, because I said
-nothing, I did not understand. The truth is, for many
-years I have understood you thoroughly, Edna. You
-doubt it. You say to yourself, &#8216;If he had understood,
-he would have been furious and would not have allowed
-me to use him as a mere pocketbook.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[393]</span>Up she started, wounded to the quick. &#8220;Godfrey!&#8221;
-she cried. &#8220;How you hurt! Oh, my dear&mdash;spare
-me. If you had such a low opinion of me, don&#8217;t
-tell me about it. Perhaps I deserve your contempt.
-God knows, I thought I was doing right. Don&#8217;t be
-harsh with me, dearest. I am only a woman, after all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I shook my head smilingly. &#8220;Drop it,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;You are entirely too strong a person to be able to
-hide behind a plea of weakness. I have let you use me
-for your own selfish pleasure all these years because I
-did not especially care. Also, it kept you away from
-me&mdash;which was highly agreeable to us both.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The anguish in her eyes, whether it was genuine
-or not, looked so sincere that I avoided her gaze.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But,&#8221; I went on, &#8220;I&#8217;m no longer in the mood to
-be used. You got through with me, as you thought,
-and divorced me and prepared to marry a man more
-to your liking&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Godfrey&mdash;you needn&#8217;t be jealous of him&mdash;of anyone!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I made a gesture of resigned despair. Jealous!
-Her vanity rampant. It had seized upon an insignificant
-phrase and had found what it was eagerly looking
-for. &#8220;I am not jealous of him,&#8221; said I, &#8220;though it
-would be useless for me to try to convince you. Still,
-I repeat&mdash;I am not jealous. I was merely saying that
-you have cast me off, that I choose to regard your
-action as final, that I shall not let you fasten on me
-again simply because your selfishness and vanity happen
-to discover a new value in me. Do I make my position
-clear?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[394]</span>&#8220;I see I can&#8217;t convince you of what&#8217;s in my heart,&#8221;
-said she with sweet resignation. &#8220;I had no right to
-expect it&mdash;to hope for it. But my life will convince
-you, Godfrey. I shall win you back!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I retained my appearance of calmness. But I was
-the reverse of calm. I appreciated that she had me
-in her power. So far as I could judge, she was not
-after more money, but was under the spell of some form
-of hysteria that gave her the delusion of an actual desire
-to love me and to be loved by me. As she had a
-fortune in her own right, and a large one, I was without
-means of controlling her. I could not compel her
-to stick to her bargain and make the divorce legally
-final; and, even if I had been so disposed I had no
-ground for a divorce from her unless she should be
-consenting and assisting.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you cared for another woman, I might despair,&#8221;
-she went on. &#8220;But you don&#8217;t. My heart tells
-me that you don&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Should I tell her? I strangled the impulse as it
-was born; my common sense lost no time in reminding
-me of the folly of that course.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be so utterly yours, Godfrey,&#8221; she went on,
-&#8220;that you&#8217;ll simply <i>have</i> to love me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I rose. &#8220;Let&#8217;s have no more of this nonsense,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;Understand, once for all, Edna, the day
-when you can use me is past&mdash;gone forever. You are
-free&mdash;and so am I. We will annoy each other no
-more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She faced me, her bosom heaving, her widening eyes
-scrutinizing me. And what I saw in them made me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[395]</span>
-quail. For there shone the arch-fiend jealousy. &#8220;Godfrey!&#8221;
-she exclaimed at last. &#8220;It must be another
-woman!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed&mdash;not pleasantly, I imagine. &#8220;Is there no
-end to your vanity?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Another woman,&#8221; she repeated dazedly. &#8220;If that
-weren&#8217;t true you couldn&#8217;t treat me harshly&mdash;you would
-want me back&mdash;would love me&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If there were not another woman on earth, I would
-not go back to you,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>But what woman would believe that of a man&mdash;especially
-of one upon whom she had put her private brand?
-She said in the same slow ferocious way: &#8220;Some woman
-has hold of you&mdash;is getting ready to make a fool of
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed&mdash;nervously watching her mind dart from
-woman to woman of those we knew.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah&mdash;you can&#8217;t deceive me!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;Mary
-Kirkwood! She has been stealing you away from me.
-And you, a fool like all men where women are concerned,
-can&#8217;t see through her.&#8221; Edna laughed wildly. &#8220;But
-she has <i>me</i> to reckon with now. I&#8217;ll show her!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Kirkwood is engaged to Hartley Beechman,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A nobody of a novelist,&#8221; said Edna. &#8220;That&#8217;s a
-mere blind. She&#8217;s after <i>you</i>. After <i>my</i> husband&mdash;the
-man <i>I</i> love! We&#8217;ll see!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again I laughed&mdash;and I am sure my counterfeit of
-indifference was successful. &#8220;Have it your way,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;But the fact remains that you and I are done with each
-other.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[396]</span>&#8220;I shall set aside the divorce,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As you please,&#8221; replied I, lighting a cigarette and
-preparing to leave the room. &#8220;If you are not content
-with the terms of settlement you can have more money.
-If that&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why <i>do</i> I love you?&#8221; cried she, all softness and
-piteous appeal again. &#8220;You who are so base that you
-think only of money! What weakness for me to love
-you! Yet, God help me, I do&mdash;I do! Godfrey&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am going back to London,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She stretched out her arms, and her face was a grief-stricken
-appeal for mercy. &#8220;You can&#8217;t be so cruel to
-me&mdash;your Edna.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I smiled mockingly at her and left the room.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[397]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I have</span> not been unaware of your anger and disgust
-with me, gentle reader, during the progress of the preceding
-scene. In real life&mdash;in your own life&mdash;you would
-have understood such a scene. But you are not in the
-habit of reading realities in books&mdash;real men, real women,
-real action. Everything is there toned down, put in
-what is called an artistic perspective. Well, I am not
-an artist, and perhaps I have no right to express an
-opinion upon matters of art. But I&#8217;ll venture. To me
-art means a point of view upon life; so, I see nothing
-artistic, nothing but more or less grotesque nonsense, in
-an art that is not a point of view but a false view. But
-to keep to Edna and myself.</p>
-
-<p>You think I should have been moist and mushy,
-should have taken her back, should have burdened myself
-for the rest of my days with her insincere and unsympathetic
-personality. You are saying: &#8220;But after all
-she loved him.&#8221; Even so&mdash;what does the word love mean
-when used by a person of her character? It means nothing
-but the narrowest, blighting selfishness. She had
-for years used me without any thought for or of my
-feelings, wishes, needs. When we moved into our grand
-New York house she gave me as a bedroom the noisiest
-room in the house, one overlooking the street where the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[398]</span>
-rattling of carriages, cabs, and carts and the talk and
-laughter of pedestrians kept me awake until far into the
-night and roused me about four in the morning&mdash;this,
-when I was working with might and main all day long
-and needed every moment of rest I could get. Why did
-she give me that room? Because she wanted the only
-available quiet room&mdash;beside her own bedroom&mdash;for a
-dressing room! She said the light in the room she gave
-me was unfit to dress by! I thought nothing of all this
-at the time. It is characteristic of American wives to
-do these things; it is characteristic of American men to
-regard them as the matter of course. I cite the small
-but not insignificant incident to show the minuteness of
-her indifference to me. I have already given many of
-the larger though perhaps less important instances, and
-I could give scores, hundreds, in the same tenor. She
-professed to love me at that time&mdash;and she either had or
-simulated a very ardent passion. But that was not love,
-was it? Love is generous, is considerate, finds its highest
-pleasure of self-gratification in making the loved one
-happy. Such a conception of love never entered her head&mdash;and
-how many American women&#8217;s heads does it enter?
-How it amuses me to watch them as they absorb everything,
-give nothing, sit enthroned upon their vanities&mdash;and
-then wonder and grow sulky or sour when their husbands
-or lovers tire of the thankless task of loving them
-and turn away&mdash;or turn them away.</p>
-
-<p>If Edna had awakened to genuine love, gentle outraged
-reader, would she not have been overwhelmed with
-shame as she looked back upon her married life? Would
-she have come to me with the offer of her love as a queen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[399]</span>
-with the offer of her crown? She would not have indulged
-in empty words; she would have tried to <i>do</i> something
-by way of reparation. She would not have demanded
-that she be taken back; but, feeling that she
-had forfeited her rights, she would have tried to find
-out whether I would consent to take her back; and if she
-had found that I would not, she would have accepted her
-fate as her desert.</p>
-
-<p>In those circumstances do you think I could have
-laughed at her and remained firm? No one not a monster
-could have done that.</p>
-
-<p>But the thing she called love was not love at all,
-was merely as I described it to her&mdash;a newly discovered
-way of using me after she had thought all possible use
-for me exhausted. Such, gentle reader, is the simple
-truth. Yet because I had intelligence enough to see the
-truth and firmness enough not to be swayed by shallow
-and meaningless sentimentalities, you call me hard, harsh,
-cruel. One of your impulsive kindly souls would have
-taken her weeping to his arms, would have begun to live
-with her. And there the novel would have ended, with
-you, gentle reader, all tears and thrills. For, having no
-imagination, you would have been unable to picture the
-few weeks of cat-and-dog life after the &#8220;happy ending,&#8221;
-then the breaking apart in hatred and vindictiveness.
-But this is not an &#8220;artistic&#8221; novel. It is a story
-of life, a plain setting forth of actualities, in the hope
-that it may enable some men and women to understand
-life more clearly and to live their own lives more wisely
-and perhaps less mischievously.</p>
-
-<p>I went to my daughter. &#8220;Margot,&#8221; said I, &#8220;your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[400]</span>
-mother threatens to try to stop the divorce. It is best
-for both her and me that we be free. I am determined
-not to live with her again, for I abominate the sort of
-life she and you lead. If you will do what you can to
-bring her to her senses, I will see that you don&#8217;t regret
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot rather liked me, I believe. Not as a father;
-as a father I made her ashamed, like everything else
-American about her. But it was a resigned kind of
-shame, and she appreciated my money, my good nature
-about it and my services in bringing back her marquis
-and making possible her son the earl. I knew I could
-count on her active sympathy; for she would vastly prefer
-that her mother be the Princess Frascatoni.</p>
-
-<p>My mother, Mrs. Loring; my mother, the Princess
-Frascatoni. Pronounce those two phrases, gentle reader,
-and you will grasp my meaning.</p>
-
-<p>I was by no means sure she would have any influence
-with her mother, even though she was now the wife of
-one marquis and the mother of a marquis to be, with
-about half the high British peerage as relatives. But I
-was desperate, and a desperate man clutches at anything.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think you are right, papa,&#8221; said she in her mother&#8217;s
-own grave sweet way. &#8220;You and mamma never
-have been suited to each other. Besides, I don&#8217;t want her
-away off in America where I never expect to be again.
-Some of the girls who have married here like to go back
-there and receive the flattery and the homage. But it
-seems cheap to me. I&#8217;m sure I don&#8217;t care what the
-Americans think of me. I&#8217;m not snobbish, as I used
-to be. I am English now&mdash;loyal English to the core.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[401]</span>&#8220;This is the place for your mother, too.&#8221; An idea
-occurred to me. &#8220;If I took your mother back with
-me, I would have my parents and hers live with us in a
-big place I&#8217;m going to buy in the country. You don&#8217;t
-know your grandparents well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was coloring deeply. She must have heard more
-than her mother dreamed she knew. &#8220;No, papa,&#8221; said
-she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your mother and I were disgracefully neglectful
-of them,&#8221; pursued I. &#8220;But I shall make up for it, as
-far as I can. I wish you would come over and visit us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should like it, papa,&#8221; murmured she, ready to
-sink down with shame.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They are plain people,&#8221; I went on, &#8220;but they are
-good and honest&mdash;much ahead of these wretched parasites
-you&#8217;ve been brought up among.... Talk to your
-mother about them. Tell her what I have said.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She understood thoroughly; that is the sort of thing
-fashionable people always understand. &#8220;I shall, papa,&#8221;
-said she. And I could see her putting on a fetching air
-of sweet innocence and telling her mother.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And if she does not like it,&#8221; continued I&mdash;&#8220;can&#8217;t
-bear the scandal and ridicule among her fashionable
-friends&mdash;why, she can desert me. And that would give
-me ground for divorce.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She would be dreadfully unhappy over there,&#8221; said
-Margot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sure of it,&#8221; said I, and my accent was a guarantee.</p>
-
-<p>Should I see Edna again and picture our life together
-in the house of love she was bent upon? I decided<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[402]</span>
-against it. Margot&#8217;s pictures might lack the
-energy and detail of mine. They would more than make
-up in bringing home to her the awful reality, as she
-would believe Margot where she might suspect me of
-merely threatening what I would never carry out. So,
-off I went to London&mdash;to wait.</p>
-
-<p>About the hardest task in this world is inaction
-when every fiber of your being is clamorous for action.
-Yet I contrived to sit tight&mdash;for a week&mdash;for two weeks.
-I have always regarded myself as too impatient, too
-impetuous. And, beyond question, my natural tendency
-is to the precipitate. But looking back over my life I
-am astonished&mdash;and not a little pleased with myself&mdash;as
-I note how I have held myself in check, have confined
-my follies of rash haste to occasions when miscarriage
-was not a serious matter.</p>
-
-<p>Armitage came&mdash;on the way from St. Moritz to
-America. As soon as I could command the right tone,
-I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve seen your sister and Mrs. Armstrong? How
-are they?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; replied he indifferently. &#8220;Motoring in
-Spain at present, I believe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Beechman&mdash;he&#8217;s with them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. He&#8217;s somewhere hereabouts, I believe. I saw
-him in Hyde Park the other day&mdash;looking as seedy as if
-he were pulling out of an illness. I spoke and he stared
-and scowled and nodded&mdash;like the bounder that he is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t care for him?&#8221; said I, rejoiced by this
-news of my rival&#8217;s seediness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, one doesn&#8217;t bother to like or dislike that sort<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[403]</span>
-of chap.&#8221; He said this in a supercilious manner&mdash;a manner
-he had never had in the earlier period of our acquaintance.
-How the inner man does poke through the
-surface when the veneer of youth wears thin!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For one who despises birth and wealth and rank,&#8221;
-said I, not without a certain malice, &#8220;you have a queer
-way of talking at times.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Armitage winced, changed the subject by saying:
-&#8220;And what the devil&#8217;s the matter with <i>you</i>? You&#8217;re
-looking anything but fit yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;I&#8217;m up against it, as usual,&#8221; said I gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed. My pessimism was one of the jokes of
-my friends. But, having seen so much of the ravages
-of optimism&mdash;of the cheer-boys-cheer and always-look-at-the-bright-side
-sort of thing, I had given myself the
-habit of reckoning in the possibilities of disaster at full
-value when I made plans. Little people ought always to
-be optimistic. Then, their enthusiasm&mdash;<i>if</i> directed by
-some big person&mdash;produces good results, where they
-would avail nothing could they see the dangers in advance.
-But big people must not be&mdash;and are not&mdash;optimists,
-whatever they may pretend. The big man must
-foresee all the chances against success. Then, if his
-judgment tells him there is still a chance for success, his
-courage of the big man will enable him to go firmly
-ahead, not blunderingly but wisely. The general must
-be pessimist. The private must be optimist; for if he
-were pessimist, if he saw what the general must see, he
-would be paralyzed with fear and doubt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re always grumbling,&#8221; said Armitage. &#8220;Yet
-you&#8217;re the luckiest man I know.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[404]</span>&#8220;Perhaps that&#8217;s why,&#8221; replied I.</p>
-
-<p>He understood, nodded. &#8220;Doubtless,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s luck? Nothing but shrewd calculation. The
-fellow who can&#8217;t calculate soon loses any windfalls that
-may happen to blunder his way. But what&#8217;s the grouch
-now?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was so helplessly befogged that I resolved to tell
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My late wife is threatening not to release me,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled curiously. &#8220;But she hasn&#8217;t done it yet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not yet,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;At least not up to eleven
-o&#8217;clock this morning, New York time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think she will,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; demanded I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You won&#8217;t let her, for one reason,&#8221; replied he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re as fond of your freedom as I am. And nothing
-on earth could induce me to marry again. When
-women&mdash;English women&mdash;look at me I see them fairly
-twitching to get me where they can make free use of
-me. Yes&mdash;marriage has gone the way of everything
-else. Business&mdash;finance&mdash;politics&mdash;religion&mdash;they&#8217;ve all
-degenerated into so many means of graft. And art&#8217;s
-going the same way. And marriage&mdash;it&#8217;s the woman&#8217;s
-great and only graft. Our women look at marriage in
-two ways&mdash;how much can be got out of it, living with
-the man; how much will it net as alimony.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You seemed rather positive that my late wife
-would not hold on to me?&#8221; persisted I.</p>
-
-<p>He eyed me sharply. &#8220;You really wish to be
-free?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[405]</span>&#8220;I am determined to be free.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s a charming&mdash;a lovely woman,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>There was doubt of my candor in his eyes. It is
-all but impossible for a man rightly to judge any
-woman except her he has tired of or for some other
-reason does not want and cannot imagine himself wanting.
-The unpossessed woman has but the one value;
-the possessed woman must have other values&mdash;or she has
-none. Armitage could judge Edna only as female,
-unpossessed female. Said he:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s a charming&mdash;a lovely woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Like the former Mrs. Armitage,&#8221; I reminded him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So&mdash;so,&#8221; conceded he. &#8220;But I&#8217;ve always believed
-you were a fond husband at bottom.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dismiss it from your mind,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You are
-hesitating about telling me something. Say it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With a certain nervousness he yielded to his love
-of gossip. &#8220;Prince Frascatoni&mdash;you know him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I beamed in a reassuring smile. &#8220;My late wife&#8217;s
-chief admirer,&#8221; said I. &#8220;A fine fellow. I like him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s visiting down at&mdash;what&#8217;s the name of the
-place your son-in-law has taken?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is?&#8221; exclaimed I jubilantly. &#8220;When did he
-go?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About a week, I hear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That looks encouraging, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221; cried I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It certainly does,&#8221; said he. &#8220;They say he was
-charging round town like a lunatic up to a few weeks
-ago&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two weeks ago,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But now he has calmed again&mdash;looks serene. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[406]</span>
-had a note from him this morning. I&#8217;m positive he&#8217;s
-content with the way the cards are falling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The change in me was so radical that Armitage
-must have been convinced&mdash;for the moment. &#8220;If I
-only knew!&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can find out for you,&#8221; suggested he. &#8220;Your
-daughter has asked me down for the week end. I&#8217;ll
-sacrifice myself, if you wish.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll take your going as a special favor,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Besides,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;these Anglo-American
-menages interest me. American women are so brash with
-the men of their own country. I like to see them playing
-the part of meek upper servants. The only kind
-of wife to have is a grateful one. To get a grateful
-wife an American has to marry some poor creature,
-homely, neglected by everyone till he came along. Even
-then the odds are two to one she&#8217;ll go crazy about herself
-and despise him&mdash;because he stooped to her, if she
-can&#8217;t find any other excuse. But a titled foreigner&mdash; An
-American girl is on her knees at once and stays
-there. He can abuse her&mdash;step on her&mdash;kill her almost&mdash;neglect
-her&mdash;waste her money. She is still humbly
-grateful.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The worms have been known to turn,&#8221; protested I.
-For, while I could not deny the general truth of Armitage&#8217;s
-attack I felt he was whipped too far by bitterness
-that he, for lack of a title, could not command what
-these inferior men with titles had offered to them without
-the bother of asking.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not a worm,&#8221; declared he. &#8220;No American woman
-ever divorced a title unless she was either in terror of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[407]</span>
-her life or in terror of being robbed to the last penny
-and kicked out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank God all our women aren&#8217;t title crazy,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How do you know they aren&#8217;t?&#8221; retorted he.
-&#8220;Do you know one who has been tempted and has
-resisted?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I had to confess I did not.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you thanked God too soon. The truth is our
-women are brought up to be snobs, spenders&mdash;useless,
-vain parasites. Their systems are all ready to be infected
-with the title mania.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Armitage, on his favorite subject, talked and talked.
-I did not listen attentively&mdash;not so much because I did
-not like what he was saying or because I thought him
-prejudiced as because I knew him to be a secret snob
-of the thoroughgoing variety. I suspected that if
-things were reversed, if he could get a title by marriage
-and a position that would enable him to swagger
-and would make everyone bow and scrape, he would
-put the eagerest of the female title-hunters to the blush.
-It may be just and proper to criticise women for being
-what they are. But let us also hear in mind that it is
-not their fault but the fault of their training; also that
-the men do no better when they have the chance to
-live in idle vanity upon the labors of some one else.</p>
-
-<p>On the following Monday my emissary returned
-from Garton Hall full to the brim with news.</p>
-
-<p>But first he had again to assure himself that there
-was no pretense in my seeming anxiety to be free. I
-saw doubt of me in his eyes before he began his adroit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[408]</span>
-cross-examination. I gave no sign that I knew what he
-was about; for in those cases the one chance of convincing
-is to submit to whatever tests may be applied.
-It was not unnatural that he should doubt, coming as
-he did direct from seeing and talking with the charming
-Edna. Men are habitually fools about women&mdash;not
-because women make fools of them but because they
-enjoy the sensation of making fools of themselves.
-That is a sensation much praised by poets, romancers,
-sentimentalists of all kinds; and because of this praise
-it has come to have a certain fictitious value, has come
-to be a cheap way for a man to imagine himself a devil
-of a fellow, a figure of romantic recklessness. There is
-no limit to which the passion for living up to a pose
-will not carry a man. Men have flung away their
-fortunes, their lives, for the sake of a pose; martyrs
-have burned at the stake for pose. So a man of experience
-even more than your ordinary brick-brained
-citizen is distrustful of his fellow men where women are
-concerned. And it is nothing against Armitage&#8217;s intelligence,
-nor any sign of his having a low estimate
-of my strength of mind, that he tried to make absolutely
-sure of me before proceeding.</p>
-
-<p>Then, too, there was Edna&#8217;s charm. Women&mdash;I
-mean, our fashionable and would-be fashionable American
-women of all classes, from Fifth Avenue to the
-Bowery, from Maine to the Pacific&mdash;women are parlor-bred&mdash;are
-bred to make an imposing surface impression.
-The best of them fool the most expert man, as Edna
-had been fooling Armitage during those two days down
-in the country. A man has to live with them to find<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[409]</span>
-them out. And often, our men, being extremely busy
-and kindly disposed toward their women and unobservant
-of them and uncritical of them, do not find them
-out for many years. The house is run badly, the money
-is wasted, the children are not brought up right. But
-the man lets it pass as &#8220;part of the game.&#8221; He tells
-himself that not much but good looks is to be expected
-of a woman; he buries himself still deeper in his business.
-Then&mdash; If he is a successful man, along about
-forty when he has got up high enough to be able to
-relax from the labor of his career and thinks of enjoying
-himself, he tries to form an alliance for pleasure
-with his wife. And lo and behold, he discovers that he
-is married to a vain, superficial fool.</p>
-
-<p>There could have been no more delightful experience
-than passing a few days in the society of Edna.
-She had educated herself, admirably, thoroughly, for
-show. She could have fooled the fashionable man his
-whole life through, for one cannot see beyond the range
-of his own vision. She might have fooled many a serious
-man of the narrow type; an excellent shoemaker
-might easily be misled by a clever showy jack of all
-trades into thinking him a master of all trades so long
-as he avoided betraying his ignorance of shoemaking.
-But your successful American man of the highest type,
-having a broad range of practical interests, becomes a
-shrewd judge of human values. Thus, the American
-woman who can pass for brilliant in fashionable society
-at home or abroad cannot deceive the American man&mdash;for
-long. Not when he lives with her. No wonder she
-finds him coarse; who does not wince when vanity is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[410]</span>
-stepped on or ignored? No wonder she thinks him uninteresting.
-A child would have an equally poor opinion
-of any person inexpert at catcher, marbles, and mud
-pies.</p>
-
-<p>Armitage, in a company of titled people, his nostrils
-full of his beloved, stealthily enjoyed perfumes of wealth
-and rank, was captivated by Edna. If he had stopped
-a week or so, his American shrewdness might have found
-her out, might have seen why I could view with unruffled
-sleeves, as the Chinese say, the loss of so lovely and
-lively a companion. But, stopping only for the week
-end, he became doubtful of my sincerity. I measured
-how deeply he had been deluded when he spoke of her
-keen sense of humor. Woman nature is too practical,
-too matter of fact for even the cleverest of them to
-have a real sense of humor&mdash;with now and then an
-exception, of course. Edna had not a glimmer of appreciation
-of either wit or humor. But only I, before
-whom she dropped all pretenses except those that were
-essential to her pose&mdash;only I knew this. Before the
-rest of the world, with the aid of her vivacity!&mdash;What
-an aid to women is vivacity!&mdash;how many of them it
-marries well!&mdash;With the aid of her vivacity she made
-a convincing show not only of appreciating humor and
-wit but also of having much of both. At precisely the
-right place she gave the proper, convincing, charming
-exhibition of dancing eyes and pearl-white teeth. And
-occasionally with a pretty liveliness she repeated as her
-own some witticism she had heard much applauded in
-another and remote company. But I do not blame you,
-ladies, for your inveterate and incessant posing. We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[411]</span>
-men are determined to idealize and to be gulled, and
-you need us to pay for your luxury and your finery.</p>
-
-<p>I let Armitage probe on and on until my impatience
-for his news would suffer no further delay. I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see you refuse to be convinced. So let it go at
-that, and tell me what you found out. Is she to
-marry Frascatoni?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As I&#8217;ve been telling you, I believe she is in love
-with you, Loring.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But is she going to free me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Unless you do something pretty soon, I&#8217;m afraid
-you&#8217;ll lose her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was too absurd that he, who had lived with one
-of these showy vivacious women, had found her out and
-had rid himself of her should be thus taken in by another
-of precisely the same kind. But that&#8217;s the way
-it is with men. They understand why they yawn at
-their own show piece; but they can&#8217;t appreciate that all
-show pieces in time produce the same effect.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There still remain three weeks before the day on
-which her lawyers must ask the judge to confirm the
-decree,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Do you think she will have them
-do it or not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Unless you get busy, old man&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I shall not get busy. I shall do everything
-I can to encourage her to stay free.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you&#8217;ll lose her,&#8221; said he. &#8220;Frascatoni is
-mad about her, and he knows how to make an impression
-on a woman. It irritated me to see a damned dago
-carrying off such a prize&mdash;and you know I&#8217;m not
-prejudiced in favor of American women.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">[412]</span>&#8220;I want to see her happy,&#8221; said I. &#8220;She will be
-happy with him&mdash;so, I hope he gets her.&#8221; I laughed
-mockingly. &#8220;She wouldn&#8217;t be happy with an American,
-Bob&mdash;not even with you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He colored guiltily. &#8220;That idea never entered my
-head,&#8221; protested he.</p>
-
-<p>But I laughed the more. &#8220;And she wouldn&#8217;t have
-you, Bob,&#8221; I went on. &#8220;So, don&#8217;t put yourself in the
-way of being made uncomfortable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had enjoyed himself hugely. Not only was my
-former wife most entertaining, but also Margot. She
-had, beyond question, been beautifully educated for
-the part she was to take in life. Her manner&mdash;so Armitage
-assured me&mdash;was the perfection of gracious
-simplicity&mdash;the most exquisite exhibition of the perfect
-lady&mdash;&#8220;note how ladylike I am, yet how I treat you as
-if you were my equal.&#8221; Gracious&mdash;there&#8217;s the word
-that expresses the whole thing. And she had a quantity
-of bright parlor tricks&mdash;French recitation, a little
-ladylike singing in a pleasant plaintive soprano that
-gave people an excuse for saying: &#8220;She could have
-been a grand-opera star if she had cared to go in seriously
-for that sort of thing.&#8221; Also, a graceful skirt
-dance and a killing cake walk. She had an effective
-line of fashionable conversation, too&mdash;about books and
-pictures, analysis of soul states, mystic love theories&mdash;all
-the paraphernalia of a first-class heroine of a first-class
-society novel. And you, gentle reader, who know
-nothing, would never have dreamed that she knew nothing.
-You who are futile would not have seen how
-worthless she was&mdash;except to do skirt dances well<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">[413]</span>
-enough for a drawing-room or to talk soul states well
-enough for a society novel.</p>
-
-<p>The more Armitage discoursed of the delights of
-his little visit the more nervous I became lest Edna
-should again change her mind and inflict me further.
-What he had said brought back my life with her in
-stinging vividness. I lived again the days of my self-deception,
-the darker days of my slow awakening, the
-black days of my full realization of the mess my life
-was, and of my feeling that there was no escape for me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will admit, Loring,&#8221; said Armitage, &#8220;that as
-women go our women are the best of all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I assented, sincerely. &#8220;And they ought to
-be. America is the best place to grow men. Why
-shouldn&#8217;t it be the best place to grow women?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He did not pursue the subject. In his heart he disagreed
-with me, for he was wholly out of conceit with
-everything American. His pose had been the other
-way, and he shrank from uncovering himself.</p>
-
-<p>A day or so later I was crossing Green Park when
-I ran straight into Hartley Beechman. I smiled pleasantly,
-though not too cordially. He planted himself in
-front of me and stared with a tragic frown. I then
-noted that he verged on the unkempt, that he had
-skipped his morning shave and perhaps his bath. His
-stare was unmistakably offensive&mdash;the look of a man
-who is seeking a quarrel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How&#8217;re you, Beechman?&#8221; said I, ignoring the
-signs of foul weather. &#8220;Armitage told me you were
-in town, but didn&#8217;t know your address. Stopping
-long?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[414]</span>&#8220;You are a scoundrel,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>I shrugged my shoulders. As I was much the larger
-and stronger man I could afford to do it. &#8220;So I&#8217;ve
-often heard,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Perhaps it&#8217;s true. What of
-it? Why should you think I cared to know your opinion
-of me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I send you a challenge will you accept it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;No, I never pay the slightest attention
-to crank letters.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are a coward. You will not give me a chance
-to meet you on equal terms.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll take you over my knee and give you a spanking
-if you don&#8217;t behave yourself,&#8221; said I, and I pushed
-him out of my path and was passing on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You took her away from me,&#8221; he jeered. &#8220;But
-it will do you no good. She is laughing at us both.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I strode away. I had heard enough to put me in
-high good humor.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As the end of my wait upon the anxious seat
-drew into its last week, I fell into a state of deep
-depression. Too much eating and drinking was, of
-course, the cause. But I had to pass the time somehow;
-and what is there to do in London but eat and
-drink?</p>
-
-<p>Four days before the last, Rossiter came into my
-sitting room with the news that Edna was calling.
-There arose a nice question: Would I better send word
-I was out or see her? Because of my knowledge of her
-persistence where her interest was really engaged, I
-decided to see her and have done with. So in she came,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[415]</span>
-vivacious, radiant&mdash;dressed for a scene in which she
-was to be heroine, as I saw at a glance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pray don&#8217;t think I&#8217;m going to repeat what I did
-the other day,&#8221; cried she by way of beginning. &#8220;I&#8217;m
-in quite another mood.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So I see,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was horribly ashamed and disgusted with myself
-afterwards,&#8221; she went on. &#8220;You must have thought
-me crazy. In fact, you did. You treated me as if I
-were.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you sit?&#8221; said I, arranging a chair for
-her.</p>
-
-<p>She smiled mischievously at me as she seated herself.
-&#8220;You do know something about women,&#8221; said
-she. &#8220;You put this chair so that my face would be
-spared the strong light.&#8221; As she said this, she turned
-into the full strength of the light a face as free as a
-girl&#8217;s from wrinkles or any other sign of years. &#8220;You
-certainly do know something about women.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very little,&#8221; said I, for it was not a time to
-pause and poke a finger into the swelling bubble of
-woman&#8217;s baffling complexity and unfathomable mystery.
-&#8220;You&#8217;ve come to tell me what it was you wanted the
-other day?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head. She was wearing a charming
-hat&mdash;but her costumes were never indifferent and nearly
-always charming&mdash;a feat the more remarkable because
-she, being a timidly conventional woman, followed
-the fashions and ventured cautiously and never
-far in individual style. &#8220;You&#8217;re usually right, my
-dear,&#8221; said she, &#8220;in your guesses at people&#8217;s underlying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[416]</span>
-motives. But you were mistaken that time. I wanted
-exactly what I said. I wanted <i>you</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Incredible,&#8221; laughed I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;it does sound so,&#8221; conceded she. &#8220;But it&#8217;s
-the truth. I had a queer attack&mdash;an attack of jealousy.
-I&#8217;d often heard of that sort of thing. I fancied
-myself above it. Perhaps that was why I fell such a
-foolish victim. But I&#8217;ve recovered completely.&#8221; And
-her eyes were mocking me as if she had a secret joke
-on me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It couldn&#8217;t last long,&#8221; said I, to be saying something.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, perhaps not,&#8221; replied she. &#8220;At any rate, as
-soon as I heard of Mary Kirkwood&#8217;s engagement I was
-cured&mdash;instantly cured.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I told you she was engaged,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t mean that Beechman person,&#8221; scoffed
-Edna. &#8220;She was simply amusing herself with him. A
-woman&mdash;a woman of our world&mdash;might have an affair
-with a man of that sort&mdash;as you men sometimes do with
-queer women. But she wouldn&#8217;t think of <i>marrying</i> him.
-Marriage is a serious matter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a woman&#8217;s whole career,&#8221; pursued she. &#8220;It
-means not only her position, but the position of her
-children, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very serious,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No&mdash;I mean Mary&#8217;s engagement to Count von
-Tilzer-Borgfeldt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hadn&#8217;t heard of it,&#8221; said I indifferently. There
-could be nothing in such a silly story.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[417]</span>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t Bob Armitage tell you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not yet,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But why should he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s queer,&#8221; mused she. &#8220;Perhaps he thought
-there might be a little something in the talk about you
-and Mary, and that it would be well not to stir things
-up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That might account for it,&#8221; I agreed.</p>
-
-<p>She was studying me closely. &#8220;I believe you really
-didn&#8217;t care about Mary,&#8221; continued she. &#8220;I confess
-I was astonished when I first heard that you did.
-She&#8217;s&mdash;&#8221; Edna laughed&mdash;&#8220;hardly up to <i>me</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hardly,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But let&#8217;s not talk of her. I&#8217;ve forgotten all that.
-I&#8217;ve come to make a last proposal to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was smiling, but I detected seriousness in her
-eyes, in her unsteady upper lip, in her hands trying not
-to move restlessly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t realize what a strong hold you have on
-me, Godfrey. Is it love? Is it habit? I don&#8217;t know.
-But I can&#8217;t shake it off. Don&#8217;t you think me strange,
-talking to you in this way?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why shouldn&#8217;t you?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s more like a woman who isn&#8217;t attractive to
-men.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the contrary,&#8221; said I. &#8220;You speak like a
-woman accustomed to deal with men according to her
-own good pleasure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How shrewd that is!&#8221; said she, with an admiring
-glance. &#8220;How shrewd you are! That&#8217;s what I miss
-in other men&mdash;in these men over here who have so much
-that I admire. But they&mdash;well, they give me the feeling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[418]</span>
-that they are superficial. Do you think <i>I</i> am superficial?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How could I?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s an evasion,&#8221; laughed she. &#8220;You <i>do</i> think
-so. And perhaps I am. A woman ought to be. A
-man looks after the serious side of life. The woman&#8217;s
-side is the lighter and graceful side&mdash;don&#8217;t you think
-so?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That sounds plausible,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I grow tired of superficial men. They give
-me the feeling that&mdash;well, that they couldn&#8217;t be relied
-on. And you are reliable, Godfrey. I feel about you
-that no matter what happened you&#8217;d be equal to it.
-And that&#8217;s why I don&#8217;t want to give you up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I sat with my eyes down, as if I were listening and
-reflecting.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Since you&#8217;ve been over here long enough to&mdash;to
-broaden a little&mdash; You don&#8217;t mind my saying you&#8217;ve
-broadened?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s true,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve fancied perhaps you might be seeing that I
-wasn&#8217;t altogether wrong in my ideas?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; said I, as she hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot was telling me about some plans you had&mdash;for
-living on the other side. You weren&#8217;t in earnest?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I looked at her gravely. &#8220;Very much in earnest,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;I shall never again, in any circumstances, live
-as we used to live.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She sank back in her chair, slowly turned her parasol
-round and round. &#8220;Then&mdash;it&#8217;s hopeless,&#8221; said she,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[419]</span>
-with a sigh that was a sob also. And the look in the
-eyes she lifted to mine went straight to my heart. &#8220;I
-simply can&#8217;t stand America,&#8221; said she. &#8220;It reminds
-me of&mdash;&#8221; She rose impatiently. &#8220;If you only knew,
-Godfrey, how I <i>loathe</i> my origin&mdash;the dreadful depth
-we came from&mdash;the commonness of it.&#8221; She shuddered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Europe is the place for you,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, it is,&#8221; cried she. &#8220;And we could be happy
-over here&mdash;if you&#8217;d only see it in the right light. Godfrey,
-I don&#8217;t want to&mdash;to change. Won&#8217;t you compromise?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By conceding everything?&#8221; said I good-humoredly.
-&#8220;By becoming the bedraggled tail to your gay and
-giddy kite?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You simply won&#8217;t reason about these things!&#8221;
-exclaimed she. &#8220;Yet they say men are reasonable!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear Edna, I don&#8217;t ask you to make yourself
-wretched for <i>my</i> sake. And I don&#8217;t purpose to be
-wretched for <i>your</i> sake.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She sat down again. The brightness had faded
-from her. She looked older than I&#8217;d have believed she
-could. &#8220;Well&mdash;I see it&#8217;s useless,&#8221; she said finally.
-&#8220;And as I&#8217;ve got to stay over here, I simply must
-marry again. You understand that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perfectly,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you care the least bit?&#8221; said she wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You wish me to be unhappy about it,&#8221; laughed I,
-&#8220;to gratify your vanity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She sighed again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are content with the settlements?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">[420]</span>&#8220;Oh, yes,&#8221; said she wearily.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt you, gentle reader, are now completely won
-over to her and think that the least I could in decency
-have done would have been to insist on her accepting
-half my fortune. I had no impulse toward that folly.
-There is a kind of wife who can justly claim that she is
-the equal partner in her husband&#8217;s wealth. But not the
-Edna kind. I had made my fortune in spite of her.
-Nor was I keen to give her any more money than I should
-be compelled; why turn over wealth to her to fritter
-away and to bolster the pretensions of a family of worthless
-Italian aristocrats?</p>
-
-<p>With a sudden darting look at me, she said: &#8220;You
-know Frascatoni. What do you think of him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A fine specimen,&#8221; said I. &#8220;A fascinating man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shrugged her shoulders. &#8220;Fascinating enough,
-I suppose. But&mdash;would you <i>trust</i> him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I would not,&#8221; replied I. &#8220;Nor any other man. I
-have long since learned not to trust even myself. But
-I&#8217;d trust him as far as the next man&mdash;as far as it&#8217;s necessary
-to trust anyone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded in appreciation and agreement. &#8220;I believe
-he genuinely cares for me,&#8221; she said, adding with a
-melancholy look at me, &#8220;And it&#8217;s pleasant to be cared
-about.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So I have heard,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You never wanted anyone to care about you,&#8221;
-said she. &#8220;You are independent of everything and
-everybody.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s safest,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She did not reply. After reflecting she burst out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">[421]</span>
-with, &#8220;You ought to have <i>made</i> me, Godfrey&mdash;ought to
-have trained me to your taste. Women have to be
-<i>made</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Even if that had been possible in this case,&#8221; I observed,
-&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know enough.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again she thought a long time; then with a sigh she
-said: &#8220;But it&#8217;s too late now. You&#8217;re right. It&#8217;s too
-late.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It puzzled me to note how much the world had taught
-her in some ways, and how little in others. But that is
-a familiar puzzle&mdash;the unexpected, startling ways in
-which knowledge juts out into ignorance and ignorance
-closes in upon knowledge, forming a coast line between
-the land of knowledge and the sea of ignorance more
-jagged than that of Alaska or Norway. The result is
-that each of us is a confused contention of wisdom and
-folly in which the imperious instincts of elemental passions
-and appetites, by their steady persistence, easily
-get their way.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Since I&#8217;ve begun to look at these foreign men
-seriously,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;to study them&mdash; It&#8217;s one
-thing to size them up, as you say in America, with the
-idea that they&#8217;re mere outsiders&mdash;acquaintances&mdash;social
-friends. It&#8217;s very different to measure them with a view
-to serious relations. I&#8217;m not altogether a fool&mdash;even
-from your standpoint&mdash;am I, Godfrey?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Distinctly not,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Since I&#8217;ve been <i>studying</i> these upper-class men
-over here&mdash;I&#8217;ve changed my mind in some respects.
-I&#8217;m not a child, you know. I haven&#8217;t done what I&#8217;ve
-done without using some judgment of men and women.&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">[422]</span>
-She flooded me with a smile of gratitude. &#8220;I owe my
-judgment to you, Godfrey. You taught me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You never agreed with anything I said&mdash;when I
-did occasionally venture an opinion.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because a woman disagrees and scorns&mdash;it doesn&#8217;t
-follow that she isn&#8217;t convinced.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve changed your mind about these men?&#8221;
-said I, for my curiosity was aroused.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I find a lack in them. You&#8217;re right to a certain
-extent, Godfrey. They <i>are</i> futile&mdash;the cleverest of
-them. Culture gives a great deal, of course.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s too long and involved to explain. And you
-don&#8217;t believe in it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m willing to,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But first, I&#8217;d like to
-know what it is, and second, I&#8217;d like to know what it
-<i>does</i>. I&#8217;ve never been able to get anything but words in
-answer to either question.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, <i>I</i> see that it gives a great deal. But I must
-admit that it takes away something&mdash;yes, much&mdash;strength
-from the mind and softness from the heart.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was astonished at this admission from her&mdash;at the
-admission itself, at the fresh evidences of what a good
-natural mind she had. But I had no desire to discuss
-with her. I had long outgrown the folly of discussion
-with futile people. I was tempted to air my own views
-of this so-called culture&mdash;how it emasculated where it
-pretended to soften; how it discovered nothing, invented
-nothing, produced nothing, did not feed, or clothe, or
-shelter, or in any way contribute to the sane happiness
-of a human being; how it unfitted men and women for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">[423]</span>
-active life, made them pitiful spectators merely, scoffing
-or smiling superciliously at the battle. But I refrained.
-I knew she believed the r&ocirc;le of spectator the only one
-worthy a lady or a gentleman&mdash;and certainly it is the
-only one either lady or gentleman could take without
-being exposed as ridiculous. I knew that her wise observations
-were clever conversation merely, after the
-manner of futile people&mdash;that when the time for action
-came her snobbishness dominated her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish these men were not so&mdash;so&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good-for-nothing?&#8221; I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>She accepted the phrase, though she would have
-preferred one less mercilessly truthful.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t find everything in one person,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>That kind of tame generality&mdash;lack of interest thinly
-veiled in a polite show of interest&mdash;kills conversation
-and sets a tarrying caller to moving where dead silence
-produces a nervous tendency to linger. Edna extended
-her arm, resting her hand upon the crook of her parasol
-in a gesture of approaching departure. Yet she seemed
-loth to go. She rose, but counterbalanced with:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know, I suppose, that it&#8217;s likely to be Frascatoni?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I rose, replied indifferently, &#8220;So I hear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She stood, smiling vaguely down at the gloved hand
-on the crook of the parasol. &#8220;If I were only younger&mdash;or
-more credulous,&#8221; said she. And I knew that there
-was a thin, sour after-taste to the sparkling wine of the
-prince&#8217;s love-making. I smiled&mdash;pleasant, noncommittal.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I ask too much of life,&#8221; said she impatiently.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">[424]</span>
-&#8220;Isn&#8217;t it irritating that I should become critical just as
-I am in a position to get everything I&#8217;ve longed for and
-worked for?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Those moods pass,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No doubt,&#8221; said she. &#8220;Well&mdash;good-by.&#8221; She
-put out her hand with a radiant smile. &#8220;I&#8217;ll not annoy
-you any more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My answering smile and pressure of the hand were
-friendly, but cautiously so, for I felt I was still on thin
-ice. I opened the door for her. We shook hands again.
-Our eyes met. I think it must have given each of us a
-shock to see in the other&#8217;s face the polite, distant look of
-strangers parting. How easy it is for two to become
-like one&mdash;and when they are, how impossible it seems
-that they could ever be aliens. How easy it is for two
-that are as one to become utter strangers; the sea is
-wide, and its currents curve rapidly away from each
-other.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rossiter,&#8221; said I&mdash;he was at work in the anteroom,
-&#8220;take Mrs. Loring to her carriage, please.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>So&mdash;she was gone; I was free!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">[425]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Not</span> a shadow of doubt lingered. She was gone; I
-was free. Her manner had been the manner of finality.
-Her reluctance and her sadness were little more than
-the convention of mourning which human beings feel
-compelled to display on mortuary occasions of all kinds.
-Beneath the crepe I saw a not discontented resignation,
-a conviction of the truth that life together was impossible
-for her and me.</p>
-
-<p>My male readers&mdash;those who have a thinking apparatus
-and use it&mdash;will probably wonder, as I did then,
-that she had overlooked certain obvious advantages to
-be gained through refusing to divorce me. She knew
-me well enough to be certain I would not compel her to
-go to America and live with me, but if she insisted would
-let her stay in Europe or wander where she pleased.
-This would have given her all the advantages of widowhood.
-Free, with plenty of money, she could have led
-her own life, without ever having to consult the conveniences
-and caprices of a husband. It seemed to me
-singularly stupid of her to resign this signal advantage,
-to tie herself to a husband she could not ignore,
-a husband she already saw would bore her, as poseurs
-invariably bore each other&mdash;to tie herself to such a man
-with no compensating advantage but a title. Indeed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">[426]</span>
-so stupid did it seem that from the moment she began
-to waver about confirming the divorce I all but lost hope
-of freedom.</p>
-
-<p>My women readers will understand her. A man
-cannot appreciate how hampered a woman of the lady
-class is without a legitimate male attachment of some
-kind&mdash;a husband, a brother, or a father in constant
-attendance, ready for use the instant the need arises.
-Our whole society is built upon the theory that woman
-is the dependent, the appendage of man. Freedom is
-impossible for a woman, except at a price almost no
-woman voluntarily pays. To have any measure of
-freedom a woman must bind herself to some man, and
-the bondage has to be cruel indeed not to be preferable
-to the so-called freedom of the unattached female. Thus
-it was not altogether snobbishness, it may not have
-been chiefly snobbishness, that moved Edna to transfer
-herself to a husband who would be a more or less unpleasant
-actuality. She had to have a man. She wished
-to live abroad and to be in fashionable society. She
-chose shrewdly. I imagine, from several things she
-said, that she had measured Frascatoni with calm
-impartiality, had discovered many serious disadvantages
-in him as husband to a woman of her fondness
-for her own way. But estimating the disadvantages
-at their worst, the balance still tipped heavily toward
-him.</p>
-
-<p>I am glad I was not born a woman. I pity the women
-of our day, bred and educated in the tastes of men, yet
-compelled to be dependents, and certain of defeat in a
-finish contest with man.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">[427]</span>Though there was now no reasonable doubt of Edna&#8217;s
-having the decree of divorce made final, I, through
-overcaution or oversensitiveness as to Mary Kirkwood&#8217;s
-rights, or what motive you please, would not let myself
-leave London until a cable from my lawyers in New
-York informed me that the decree had been entered
-and that I was legally free. The newspapers had given
-much space to our affairs. It was assumed that I had
-come abroad &#8220;to make last desperate efforts to win
-back the beautiful and charming wife, the favorite of
-fashionable European society.&#8221; Stories had been published,
-giving in minute detail accounts of the bribes I
-had offered. And when the final decree was entered, my
-chagrin and fury were pictured vividly.</p>
-
-<p>I did nothing to discredit this, but, on the contrary,
-helped along the campaign for the preservation of the
-literary and journalistic fiction that the American woman
-is a kind of divine autocrat over mankind. If I had
-been so vain and so ungallant as to try to make the
-public see the truth I should have failed. You can
-discredit the truth to the foolish race of men; but you
-cannot discredit, nor even cast a shade of doubt upon,
-a generally accepted fiction of sentimentality. And of
-all the sentimental fictions that everyone slobbers over,
-but no one in his heart believes with the living and only
-valid faith of works, the fictions about woman are the
-most sacred. Further, how many men are there who believe
-that a man could get enough of a physically lovely
-woman, however trying she might be? Once in a while
-in a novel&mdash;not often, but once in a while&mdash;there are
-scenes portraying with some approach to fidelity what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">[428]</span>
-happens between a woman and a man who is of the sort
-that is attractive to women. Invariably such scenes are
-derided or denounced by the critics. Why? For an
-obvious reason. A critic is, to put it charitably, an
-average man. He has no insight; he must rely for his
-knowledge of life solely upon experience. Now what is
-the average man&#8217;s experience of women? He treats
-them in a certain dull, conventional way, and they treat
-him&mdash;as he invites and compels. So when he reads how
-women act toward a man who does not leave them cold
-or indifferent, who rouses in them some sensation other
-than wonder whether they would be able to stomach him
-as a husband, the critic scoffs and waxes wroth. The
-very idea that women might be less reserved, less queenly,
-less grudgingly gracious than woman has ever been
-to him sends shooting pains through his vanity&mdash;and
-toothache and sciatica are mild compared with the torturings
-of a pain-shotten vanity.</p>
-
-<p>Edna scored heavily in the newspapers. You would
-never have suspected it was her late husband&#8217;s money
-that had given her everything, that had made her
-throughout; for, what had she, and what was she, except
-a product of lavishly squandered money? Think about
-that carefully, gentle reader, before you damn me and
-commiserate her as in these pages a victim of my venomous
-malice.... She was the newspaper heroine of the
-hour. If she had been content with this&mdash; But I shall
-not anticipate.</p>
-
-<p>My cable message from New York came at five
-o&#8217;clock. At half-past six, accompanied only by my
-valet, I was journeying toward Switzerland.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">[429]</span>Mrs. Kirkwood, I had learned from her brother, was
-at Territet, at the Hotel Excelsior, with the Horace
-Armstrongs. At four the following afternoon I descended
-at Montreux from the Milan express; at five,
-with travel stains removed, I was in the garden of the
-Excelsior having tea with Mrs. Armstrong and listening
-to her raptures over the Savoy Alps. Doubtless
-you know Mrs. Armstrong&#8217;s (Neva Carlin&#8217;s) work.
-Her portrait of Edna is famous, is one of the best examples
-I know of inside-outness. Edna does not like it,
-perhaps for that reason.</p>
-
-<p>Mary and Horace Armstrong had gone up to Caux.
-&#8220;But,&#8221; said Neva, &#8220;they&#8217;ll surely be back in a few
-minutes. Count von Tilzer-Borgfeldt is coming at
-half-past five.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I instantly recognized that name as the one Edna
-gave in telling me that Mary had gone shopping for
-a title and had invested. I had thought Edna&#8217;s jeer
-produced no effect upon me. I might have known
-better. My nature has, inevitably, been made morbidly
-suspicious by my business career. Also, I had found
-out Robert Armitage as a well-veneered snob, and this
-could not but have put me in an attitude of watchfulness
-toward his sister, so like him mentally. Also my
-investigations of that most important phenomenon of
-American life, the American woman, had compelled me to
-the conclusion that the disease of snobbishness had infected
-them all, with a few doubtful exceptions. So,
-without my realizing it, my mind was prepared to believe
-that Mary Kirkwood was like the rest. When
-Neva Armstrong pronounced the name Edna had given,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">[430]</span>
-there shot through me that horrible feeling of insufferable
-heat and insufferable cold which it would be useless
-to attempt to describe; for those who have felt it will understand
-at once, and those who have not could not be
-made to understand. And then I recalled Hartley Beechman&#8217;s
-jeer, &#8220;She&#8217;s laughing at us both.&#8221; But my voice
-was natural as I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tilzer-Borgfeldt. That&#8217;s the chap she&#8217;s engaged
-to just now, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Armstrong, who is a loyal friend, flushed angrily.
-&#8220;Mary isn&#8217;t that sort, and you know it, for
-you&#8217;ve known her a long time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then she&#8217;s not engaged to him?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, she is,&#8221; replied Neva. &#8220;And if you knew
-him, you&#8217;d not wonder at it. I don&#8217;t like foreigners,
-but if I weren&#8217;t bespoke I think I&#8217;d have to take Tilzer-Borgfeldt
-if he asked me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No doubt it&#8217;s a first-class title,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know perfectly well, Godfrey Loring, that I
-don&#8217;t mean the title.&#8221; She happened to glance toward
-the entrance to the garden. &#8220;Here he comes now.
-You&#8217;ll judge for yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Advancing toward us was a big, happy blond man
-of the pattern from which nine out of ten German upper-class
-men are cut. He had the expression of simple, unaffected
-joy natural to a big, healthy, happy blond youth
-looking forward to seeing his best girl. He had youth,
-good looks, unusual personal magnetism&mdash;and you will
-imagine what effect this produced upon my mood. I
-could not deny that Neva was right. Without a title
-this man would have all the chances in his favor when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">[431]</span>
-he went courting. He had not a trace of aristocratic
-futility.</p>
-
-<p>You would have admired the frank cordiality of my
-greeting. Instead of sitting down again I glanced at
-my watch and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, my time&#8217;s up. I shall have to go without
-seeing Horace and Mary.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you&#8217;ll come to dinner?&#8221; said Mrs. Armstrong.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m taking the first express back to Paris,&#8221; said I.
-&#8220;I found a telegram waiting for me at my hotel.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mary will be disappointed,&#8221; said Neva. &#8220;You&#8217;ll
-give Mrs. Loring my best?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I remembered that the English papers, with the news
-doubtless in it, would not reach Territet until late that
-evening or the following morning. But I could not well
-tell her what had occurred. &#8220;Good-by,&#8221; said I, shaking
-hands. &#8220;Tell them how sorry I was. I may see you
-all in Paris.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And away I went, with not an outward sign of my internal
-state. In less than half an hour I was in the
-Paris express.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I stopped at Paris a month. A letter came from her&mdash;a
-bulky letter. I tossed it unopened into the fire. A
-week, and a second letter came. It was not so bulky.
-I flung it unopened into the fire. About two weeks, and
-a third letter came. I got Rossiter to address an envelope
-to her. I inclosed her unopened letter in the
-envelope and mailed it. I was giving myself an exquisite
-pleasure, the keener because it was seasoned with exquisite
-pain.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">[432]</span>All this time I had been amusing my idle days in
-the usual fashion. My readers who lead quiet lives&mdash;the
-women who sit thinking what they would do if only they
-were men&mdash;the men who slip away occasionally for a
-scampish holiday, and return to their sober routine with
-the cheering impression that they have been most fearfully
-and wonderfully devilish&mdash;those women and those
-men will regret that I refrain from details of how I
-amused myself. But to my notion I have said enough
-when I have said &#8220;in the usual fashion.&#8221; It passed the
-time as probably nothing else in the circumstances would
-have passed such tenacious hours, every one lingering to
-be counted. But I confess I have never been virtuous
-enough to be especially raptured by so-called vice. No
-doubt those who divide actions into good and bad, using
-the good for steady diet and the bad for dessert, have
-advantages in enjoyment over those who simply regard
-things as interesting and uninteresting. For, curiously
-enough, on that latter basis of division practically all
-the things esteemed by most human beings as the delightful
-but devilish dessert of life fall into the class of more
-or less uninteresting. But for the stimulus of the notion
-that he is doing something courageously, daringly
-wicked, I doubt if any but a dull fellow would perpetrate
-vice enough to lift the most easily scandalized hands in
-the world. The trouble with vice is that it is so tiresome&mdash;and
-so bad for the health. And most of it is so vulgar.
-Drinking to excess and gambling, for instance. I
-have indulged in both at times, when hard pressed for
-ways to pass the time or when in those stupid moods of
-obstinate unreasonableness in which a man takes a savage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">[433]</span>
-pleasure in disgusting himself with himself. Drinking
-has a certain coarse appeal to the imagination&mdash;coarse
-and slight but definite. But gambling is sheer
-vulgarity. I have been called money-mad, because I have
-made money, finding it easy and occupying to attend to
-business. Yet never have I cared about money sufficiently
-to take the faintest interest in the gaming table.
-Gambling&mdash;all forms of it&mdash;is for those sordid creatures
-who love money, and who have no intelligent appreciation
-of its value. Gambling&mdash;all the vices, for that
-matter&mdash;is essentially aristocratic; for, as I believe I
-have explained, aristocracy analyzes into the quintessence
-of vulgarity. The two incompetent classes&mdash;the
-topmost and the bottommost&mdash;are steeped in vice, for
-the same reason of their incompetence to think or to act.</p>
-
-<p>A fourth letter, the bulkiest of all, came from Mary
-Kirkwood. A few hours before it was delivered a telegram
-came from her:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;A letter is on the way. Godfrey, I beg you
-to read it. I love you.&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I tore up the telegram, sent back the letter without
-opening it. You are denouncing me as inhuman, gentle
-reader. Perhaps you are right. But permit me to point
-out to you that, if I had not in my composition a vein
-of iron, I should never have risen from the mosquito-haunted
-flats of the Passaic. Also, gentle reader, if I
-had been a man of the ordinary sort would Mary Kirkwood
-have been sufficiently interested in me to send those
-letters and that telegram?</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_434">[434]</span>A day or so after the return of her last letter I was
-seized&mdash;I can&#8217;t say why&mdash;with a longing to see my father
-and mother and sister, on that lonely farm out in New
-Jersey. I had never felt that desire since I first left
-home, but had made my few and brief visits out of a
-sense of duty&mdash;no, of shame. The thought of them gave
-me no sensation of horror, as it gave Edna and her
-daughter. When I remembered them it was simply as
-one remembers any random fact. They did not understand me;
-and in them there was nothing to understand.
-We had few subjects for conversation, and those not
-wildly interesting and soon exhausted. You will smile
-when I say I loved them. Yet it is the truth. We do
-not always love those we like to be with; we do not always
-like to be with those we love.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing to detain me in Paris. The hours
-hung like guests who do not know how to take leave. So
-not many days elapsed between my seizure and my appearance
-at the spacious and comfortable stone farmhouse
-where the four old people were awaiting in a semi-comatose
-or dozing state what they firmly believed was
-a summons to a higher life. Their belief in it, like that
-of most religious people, was not strong enough to make
-them impatient to get it; still they believed, and found
-the belief a satisfactory way of employing such small
-part of their minds as remained awake.</p>
-
-<p>I had not seen them or their place in several years, so
-I was astonished by the changes. My sister Polly&mdash;a
-homely old maid&mdash;and Edna&#8217;s father had some glimmerings
-of enterprise. Polly took in and read several
-magazines, and from them gathered odds and ends of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_435">[435]</span>
-up-to-date ideas about dress, about furnishing, about
-gardens. With the valuable assistance of old Weeping
-Willie she had wrought a most creditable transformation.
-The old people now &#8220;looked like something,&#8221; as the saying
-is. And the place had a real smartness&mdash;both within
-and without.</p>
-
-<p>Polly&mdash;she was about eight years my senior, but
-looked old enough to be my mother&mdash;Polly watched me
-anxiously as I strolled and nosed about. My delight
-filled her with delight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re not so ashamed of us, perhaps?&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never have been,&#8221; replied I. Nor did I put an
-accent on the personal pronoun that would have been a
-hint about somebody else&#8217;s feelings.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well&mdash;you ought to have been,&#8221; said she. &#8220;We
-were mighty far behind even the tail of the procession.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll admit I like this better than the way we used
-to live in Passaic. Polly, you&#8217;ve got the best there is
-going. All the rest&mdash;all the luxury and other nonsense&mdash;is
-nothing but a source of unhappiness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer. I noted a touching sadness in
-her expression.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t agree with me?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I do,&#8221; replied she emphatically. &#8220;I wasn&#8217;t
-thinking of that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What have <i>you</i> got to be unhappy about?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think I&#8217;m ungrateful to you,&#8221; said she, with
-quick sensitiveness. &#8220;But I&#8217;m not, Godfrey&mdash;indeed
-I&#8217;m not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ungrateful?&#8221; I laughed. &#8220;Don&#8217;t talk nonsense.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_436">[436]</span>&#8220;You&#8217;ve done all you could&mdash;all anyone could.
-And in a way I am happy. But&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; I urged, as she hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve found out&mdash;looking back over my life&mdash;I&#8217;ve
-found out that I&mdash; It seems to me I&#8217;ve got all the
-<i>tools</i> of happiness, but nothing to <i>work on</i>. I keep
-thinking, &#8216;How happy I could be if I only had something
-to work on!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was silent. A shadow crept out of a black corner
-of my heart and cast a somberness and a chill over me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You understand?&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>I nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought you would,&#8221; she went on. &#8220;Godfrey,
-I&#8217;ve often felt sorry for you&mdash;sorrier than I do for myself.&#8221;
-She laid her hand on my arm. &#8220;But you&#8217;re a
-man&mdash;a handsome, attractive, <i>young</i> man. You&#8217;ll have
-only yourself to blame if you waste your life as mine&#8217;s
-been wasted.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t realize how lucky you&#8217;ve been,&#8221; said I,
-with a bitterness that surprised me. &#8220;You&#8217;ve at least
-escaped marriage.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish to God I hadn&#8217;t,&#8221; cried she with an energy
-that startled me. There was a fierce look of pain in her
-eyes. &#8220;I thought you understood. But I see you
-don&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you mean, Polly Ann?&#8221; said I gently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The real unhappiness isn&#8217;t an unhappy marriage,&#8221;
-replied she. &#8220;It&#8217;s being not married at all&mdash;not having
-any children. You know what I am&mdash;an old maid.
-You think that means the same thing as old bachelor.
-Well, it don&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_437">[437]</span>&#8220;Why not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An old bachelor&mdash;nine times out of ten that means
-simply an old, selfish, comfortable man. But an old
-maid&mdash; The nature of woman&#8217;s different from the
-nature of man. A woman&#8217;s got to have a home&mdash;<i>her</i>
-home&mdash;her nest, with her children in it. And I&#8217;m an old
-maid. If I&#8217;d been a man&mdash;&#8221; She turned on me.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m ugly, ain&#8217;t I? You know I am. <i>I</i> know it.
-Dress me up in men&#8217;s clothes and I&#8217;d be a good-looking
-person&mdash;as a man. But as a woman I&#8217;m ugly. If I&#8217;d
-have been a man I could have got a mighty nice, mighty
-nice-looking wife&mdash;one that&#8217;d have been grateful to me
-for taking her and would have cared for me. But as a
-woman I couldn&#8217;t get a husband.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can get a very good one,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Money&mdash;what
-would have bought you a wife as a man&mdash;what buys
-most men their wives&mdash;will buy you a husband. And
-he&#8217;ll be grateful and loving, so long as you manage the
-purse strings well&mdash;just as most wives are loving and
-grateful if their husbands don&#8217;t treat them too indulgently.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s different, and you know it is,&#8221; retorted she.
-&#8220;Custom has made it different. And I&#8217;m ugly&mdash;and
-that&#8217;s fatal in a woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Charm will beat beauty every time,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got no charm&mdash;none on the outside. And
-that&#8217;s where a woman&#8217;s charm has to be. No, I&#8217;ve
-thought out my case. It&#8217;s hopeless. I&#8217;m a born old
-maid. No man ever asked me to marry him. No man
-ever said a word of love to me. Do you know what that
-means, Godfrey?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_438">[438]</span>I was silent. A choke in my throat made speech
-impossible.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never a word of love,&#8221; she went on monotonously.
-&#8220;Yet I don&#8217;t suppose any woman ever wanted to hear it
-more. And no children. Yet I know no woman ever
-wanted them more. No, not adopted children&mdash;but my
-own flesh and blood. I&#8217;ve heard women complain of
-the burden of bearing a child. It made me wild to
-listen to them&mdash;the fools&mdash;the selfish fools! What
-wouldn&#8217;t I have given to have felt a child within me.
-Does it scandalize you to hear me talk like this?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said I. &#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a wonder,&#8221; said she, with a grim smile. She
-was quieting down, was hiding the heart from which she
-had on impulse snatched the veil, was ashamed of her
-outburst. &#8220;A woman can talk about having a cancer,
-or a tumor, or any frightful disease inside her, and
-nobody&#8217;s modesty is shocked. But if she speaks of
-having a child within her&mdash;a wonderful, living human
-being&mdash;a lovely baby&mdash;why, it&#8217;s immodest!&#8221; She gave
-a scornful laugh. &#8220;What a world! What a world!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I looked at her and marveled. What a world, indeed!&mdash;where
-<i>this</i> was one of the sort of relatives of
-whom pushing arrived people were ashamed!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I think I forced myself to stay three days with them.
-I cannot recall; perhaps I left the second day. However
-that may be, I have the sense of a long, a very long
-visit. To one who has the city habit the country is
-oppressively deliberate even when it is interesting. It
-makes you realize how there is room, and to spare, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_439">[439]</span>
-sixty minutes in an hour, for sixty seconds in each
-minute. The city entertains; the country compels you
-to seek entertainment, to make entertainment. People
-whose mentality tapers away from mediocrity grow old
-and dull rapidly in the country as soon as childhood&#8217;s
-torrential life begins to slacken. For men of thought
-the country ought to be ideal, I should say, once they
-formed its habit and lost the city habit of waiting in
-confident expectation of being amused. But for men
-of action like myself, for men whose whole life is dealing
-directly with their fellow men, to acquire the country
-habit is a matter of years, of a complete revolution.</p>
-
-<p>I brought a sore and a sick heart to the country. I
-took back to town one that was on the way toward the
-normal. And I owed the improvement not to the
-country directly, but to my sister. Polly Ann had reminded
-me of the futility of graveyard mooning, of its
-egotism and hypocrisy. She had reminded me that only
-the fool walks backward through life. I believed I had
-been guilty of the folly of blowing a bubble of delusion,
-pretending to myself that it was no bubble, but permanent,
-substantial, real. The bubble had burst, as bubbles
-must&mdash;had burst with a mocking and irritating
-dash of cold spray straight into my face. Well!&mdash;the
-sensible thing to do, the only thing to do, was to laugh
-and blow no more bubbles.</p>
-
-<p>I went back to finance; I busied myself to the uttermost
-of my capacity for work. But I could not uproot
-the idea Mary Kirkwood had set growing in my mind.
-I saw ever more clearly that my sister was eternally
-right. Some men might be successful bachelors. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_440">[440]</span>
-could be fairly successful at that selfish and solitary
-profession for a few years, perhaps for ten or fifteen
-years longer. But I knew with the clearness of a vision
-trained to search the horizon of the future that the
-feeling of loneliness, of complete futility which already
-shadowed me, would become a black pall. I <i>must</i> have
-companionship; and to companionship there is but the
-one way&mdash;the way of wife and children. A poor, an
-uncertain way; nevertheless the only way.</p>
-
-<p>You have, perhaps, observed the marriages of the
-rich. You have noted that every rich man and every
-rich woman is surrounded by a smaller or larger army
-of satellites&mdash;persons nominally their social equals, often
-distinctly their mental superiors, salaried persons, wearers
-of cast-off clothing, eaters of luncheons and dinners,
-permanent free lodgers, constant or occasional pensioners
-more or less disguised. Family life fails with the
-rich as it fails with the well off, or with the poor. But
-while other classes revert to the herd life, the life of
-clubs, saloons, teas, receptions, the rich take up the
-parasite-beset life, each rich person aloof with his or her
-particular circle of flatterers, attendants, coat-holders,
-joke-makers, and boot-lickers.</p>
-
-<p>Now it so happened that for me there could be no
-enduring of this standing apart in the meadow, switching
-my tail while parasites bit and tickled, buzzed and
-burrowed. Riches, like any other heavy and constantly
-growing responsibility, usually rob a man of his sense
-of humor and turn his thoughts in upon himself and
-make him a ridiculous ass of an egotist. They had not
-had that effect upon me. I can give no reason; I simply<span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">[441]</span>
-state the fact. So, with my sense of humor active, and
-my sense of proportion fairly well balanced, I could not
-give myself up to the dreary life custom assigns to the
-rich. I retained the normal human instincts.</p>
-
-<p>I had hoped to satisfy them to the uttermost with
-the aid of Mary Kirkwood. That hope had fallen dead.
-I must search on&mdash;not for the best conceivable, but for
-the best possible.</p>
-
-<p>You are not surprised at my lack of sentiment,
-gentle reader. By this time, I am sure, I could not
-surprise you with any exhibition of that or other depravity.
-But it confirms your conviction of my utter
-sordidness. So? Then you imagine, do you, that there
-are many love marriages in the world, leaving out of
-the count those in novels and in the twaddling gossip
-men and women repeat as the true heart stories of this
-and that person? Yes, I should say your intelligence
-was about rudimentary enough to give you such a false
-notion of life as it is lived. Marriages of passion there
-are a-plenty. Rarely, indeed, does a man become bill-payer
-to a woman for life&mdash;not to speak of the insurance&mdash;without
-having been more or less agitated by her
-physical charms; and usually the woman, eager to be
-married, whips up for him a return feeling that looks
-well, convinces the man and herself, and makes you,
-gentle reader, sigh and wipe your sloppy eyes. But
-love-marriage&mdash;that&#8217;s a wholly different matter. I
-should say it almost never occurs. Where love, a sentiment
-of slow and reluctant growth, does happen occasionally
-to come afterwards, because the two are really
-congenial, really mated&mdash;where love does come afterwards,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_442">[442]</span>
-it did not exist when the wedding bells rang.
-And I doubt not that love has grown as often, if not
-oftener, where the motives that led to the marriage were
-practical and even sordid than where they were the
-bright, swift fading, and in death most foul-smelling,
-flowers of passion.</p>
-
-<p>I was willing to buy a wife, if I could find a woman
-who promised to wear well, to improve on acquaintance,
-or, at least, not to deteriorate. And, beyond question,
-with my money I could have taken my pick. Almost
-any girl anywhere, engaged or unengaged, would have
-fallen in love with me as soon as she discovered my
-charms&mdash;of person and of purse. Yes, would have
-fallen in love, gentle reader. Don&#8217;t you know that a
-nice, pure girl always makes herself, or lets herself, fall
-in love, before she gives herself? And don&#8217;t you know
-that, except falling out of love&mdash;out of that kind of love&mdash;there&#8217;s
-nothing easier, especially for an inexperienced
-girl, than falling in love&mdash;in that kind of love?</p>
-
-<p>But where was I to find a woman with enough solid
-quality to give me a reasonable hope that she would aid
-me in my quest for family happiness?</p>
-
-<p>Do not denounce me, gentle reader. Epithet and
-hiss are not reply. Answer my question.</p>
-
-<p>You say there are millions of such girls. Yes?
-But where?</p>
-
-<p>You say there are millions of pure, sweet, charming
-girls, intelligent and domestic. Yes. No doubt.
-But how long would they remain so if tempted by
-wealth, by the example of all the money-mad, luxury-mad,
-society-mad women about them?</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_443">[443]</span>Mind you, I did not want a stupid rotter, a cow, a
-sitter and lounger and taker on of fat and slougher
-off of intelligence. I did not want the lazy slattern
-who poses as domestic, who is fond of home in
-exactly the same way that a pig is fond of an alley
-wallow.</p>
-
-<p>You laugh at me. You say: &#8220;He is a conceited
-fool!&mdash;to think that <i>he</i> could attract and absorb an intelligent
-woman with a complex woman&#8217;s soul!&#8221; Not
-so, gentle reader. I did not wish to attract and to absorb
-her. As for the &#8220;complex woman&#8217;s soul,&#8221; the
-less I saw or heard of it, the better pleased I&#8217;d be. I
-simply wanted a woman who would join me in being
-attracted by and absorbed in family life.</p>
-
-<p>You are still smiling mockingly. But let me tell
-you a few secrets of wisdom and happiness. First&mdash;Friendship
-is divine, but intimacy is the devil himself&mdash;unless
-it is the intimacy of the family. Second&mdash;To
-love your neighbor as yourself, he must be and must
-remain your neighbor, that is to say, within hail, but
-not within touch. Third&mdash;Husband, wife, and children
-are the only natural intimates&mdash;intimate because they
-have the bond of common interest. The family that
-looks abroad for intimates has ceased to be a family.
-Finally&mdash;A man who has his wife and children for intimates
-has neither need nor time for other intimates;
-and unless a man&#8217;s wife and children are his intimates,
-he has, in fact, no wife and no children. Let me add,
-for the benefit of&mdash;perhaps of you and your husband,
-gentle reader&mdash;that the only career worth having is
-built upon and with efficient work; careers made with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_444">[444]</span>
-friendships, gaddings, pulls, and the like would better
-be left unmade.</p>
-
-<p>You are smiling still, in your smug, supercilious
-fashion&mdash;smiling at what you promptly call old-fashioned
-trite truisms. I am not sure that, after they have
-been thought about a while, they would seem old-fashioned
-or stale. Rather, I flatter myself, they are the
-statement of a new philosophy of life. For the old
-theory with which you are confusing these truths was
-that the family is the <i>social unit</i>. In fact, it is not;
-the only <i>social</i> units are individuals&mdash;capable individuals.
-My theory, or rather my philosophy&mdash;for it is
-more than a theory&mdash;my philosophy is that the family
-is the <i>unit of happiness</i>. Society can&mdash;and does&mdash;get
-along fairly well with little or no happiness. But happiness
-is an excellent thing, nevertheless. And <i>I</i>
-wanted it.</p>
-
-<p>Now, perhaps, you see why I was not looking forward
-with any exuberance of optimism to finding the
-woman whom I needed and wanted, and who needed and
-wanted me. Prompted by my experiences and guided
-somewhat by my shrewd and cynical friend Bob Armitage,
-I had been giving no small amount of spare time
-to observing and thinking about the American woman.
-And while I admired that charming lady and found her
-an amusing companion for an occasional leisure hour,
-I saw that she was not to be taken seriously by a serious
-person. She knew how to look well, how to make
-a good &#8220;front,&#8221; how to get perhaps a hundred dollars
-worth of pleasing surface results by squandering a
-thousand or two thousand dollars. As an ornament,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_445">[445]</span>
-a decoration, as a basket of rare inedible fruit to irradiate
-lovely costliness, she could not be beaten. As wife
-to a showy plutocrat, ignorant of the art of comfortable
-living, as head mistress to an European noble with
-servants trained to maintain his state in splendid and
-orderly discomfort, she would do excellently well. But
-not for the practical uses of sensible life. She had no
-training for them, no taste for them, no intention of
-adapting herself to them, whatever she might pretend
-in order to catch a bill-payer.</p>
-
-<p>Still, I did not despair. I dared not despair. If I
-had, loneliness&mdash;and heartache, yes, heartache&mdash;and
-my sense of present and future futility would have become
-intolerable. On the other hand, while there was
-every reason for haste&mdash;when happiness was my goal,
-and life is short and uncertain&mdash;I was resolved to be
-deliberate. If I should be deceived&mdash;perhaps by the
-girl&#8217;s honest self-deception&mdash;into choosing wrong, how
-she would hate me! For not again would, or could I
-let a woman use me as Edna had used me. A fool is a
-grown-up person who has never grown up. I had
-grown up&mdash;had become a definite person, knowing what
-I wanted and what I did not want. Such persons are
-hated by those who try in vain to use them. My one
-chance lay in finding a woman with the same definite
-tastes as mine. Only disaster could come through the
-woman who might marry me, pretending to agree with
-me and secretly resolved to &#8220;redeem&#8221; me once she got
-me firmly in her grasp.</p>
-
-<p>Armitage was back in New York, was eager to resume
-our old relations. But that could not be. I had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_446">[446]</span>
-outgrown him. And he, at the dangerous age, was allowing
-himself to harden into all the habits of the rich
-class and of middle life. Despite his efforts to conceal
-it, I saw that he had even reached the pass where a
-man of property regards a new idea as a menace to
-society. If it is a new invention, it may make some
-stock he owns worthless. If it is a new social or political
-idea it may make his laborers demand higher wages,
-or in some other way affect his dividends. And, of
-course, whenever a man speaks of a menace to society,
-he means a menace to himself whom he naturally regards
-as the most precious and vital thread in the
-social fabric. Compelled by my need for ideas to
-occupy me in supplement to the now thoroughly familiar
-and rather monotonous routine of investing and
-reinvesting, organizing and reorganizing, I was associating
-more and more with artists and writers of
-the sort who feel suffocated in the society of the merely
-rich.</p>
-
-<p>Material conditions force upon men inexorable modes
-of life. And every mode of life breeds a definite, distinct
-set of ideas. Men fancy themselves original because
-they suddenly discover certain ideas in their
-brains. As well might a hen who has just eaten hot bran
-fancy herself original because she laid an egg. The idea
-was not from the man, but from his material conditions&mdash;lawyer
-idea, politician idea, banker idea, anarchist
-idea, big or little merchant idea, dog-fighter idea, professor
-idea, preacher idea, and so on. I was fighting to
-escape this to me repellent molding process&mdash;and I was
-making headway. But poor Armitage was rapidly yielding;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_447">[447]</span>
-his struggle, I fear, had been in its best days in
-large part a brassy make-believe&mdash;the valor of the trumpet,
-not of the sword.</p>
-
-<p>He was a sorry sight. His once handsome face was
-taking on that petty, pinched, frost-bitten Fifth Avenue
-expression. And he had been driven for companionship
-into forming the familiar parasite circle. The chief
-figures in it were a decaying dandy of an old New York
-family who had been fawner and crumb snapper all his
-days, and a broken-down plutocrat who had squandered
-his fortune on fine women, fine wine, and fine food. The
-dandy gave Bob the fashionable gossip; the broken-down
-plutocrat gave him the gossip and scandal of the
-giddy part of town, also the latest gamey stories; also
-he&mdash;perhaps both&mdash;arranged for him the peculiar pleasures
-of the rich man with the palate that needs strong
-sensations to make it respond.</p>
-
-<p>Armitage was out of the question for me. Then&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>I drifted into the Amsterdam Club one evening&mdash;to
-write a note or send a telegram&mdash;and there sat Hartley
-Beechman. The instant he saw me he sprang up and
-made straight for me. His expression was puzzling, but
-not hostile&mdash;still, I was unobtrusively ready. Said he
-in a straight, frank fashion:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Loring, I want to apologize to you. I made a
-damned ass of myself in Green Park last summer. My
-excuse is that I was more than half crazy&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I put out my hand. &#8220;I half guessed at the time,&#8221;
-said I. &#8220;I know all about it now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We looked at each other with the friendliness that
-has become the stronger by a mended break&mdash;for broken<span class="pagenum" id="Page_448">[448]</span>
-hearts and broken lives and broken friendships are much
-the stronger if the break mends. Said he:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One way of measuring the strength of a man is the
-length of the intervals between the times when he makes
-a fool of himself about a woman. My first came at
-eighteen, my next at thirty-eight. Not a bad showing,
-I flatter myself&mdash;eh?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Uncommonly good,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the second shall be the last.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Optimism!&#8221; I warned him laughingly. &#8220;Beware
-of optimism!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. I shall write about women, but I&#8217;ll see no more
-of them. I&#8217;ve got hold of myself again. I&#8217;m as good
-as ever&mdash;better than ever, probably. But&mdash;it cost! And
-I&#8217;ll not pay that price again. For a while I thought it
-was you who had upset my happiness. Then&mdash;&#8221; He
-gave a loud, unnatural laugh&mdash;&#8220;That German purchase!
-I saw she had been simply playing with me. You know
-how fond women of that sort are of playing with romantic
-or sentimental ideas. But when it came to the test&mdash;why,
-she would have married only a fortune or a title.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I made no comment. He was saying only what I
-thought, what I believed true. But I hated to hear it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I may wrong her,&#8221; pursued he reflectively. &#8220;Not
-altogether, but to a certain extent. I rather think the
-impulse to something saner and less vulgar was there&mdash;actually
-there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As he was looking at me inquiringly I said: &#8220;I
-think so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But&mdash;nothing came of it. And there&#8217;s little in
-these fine impulses of which nothing comes.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_449">[449]</span>&#8220;Little?&#8221; laughed I. &#8220;Why, they produce the most
-beautiful decorative effects. Life would be barren without
-them. What a repulsive sight the poor little human
-animal would be, grunting and grubbing about, thinking
-always of its beloved self&mdash;what a repulsive sight if it
-didn&#8217;t wear the flowers of high ideals in its ears&mdash;and
-the jewels of fine impulses ringed in its nose.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>I</i> think it would look better without them,&#8221; said he.
-&#8220;Less ridiculous&mdash;less contemptible.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To you&mdash;yes. Because you&#8217;re like I am&mdash;coarse.
-But not to itself and its fellows.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going back to the woods to-morrow,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better come on a yachting trip to South America
-with me,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>He flushed. &#8220;Thank you&mdash;but I can&#8217;t do that,&#8221; replied
-he. &#8220;I can&#8217;t afford it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was my turn to flush. &#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; I
-said. &#8220;I spoke without thinking&mdash;spoke on impulse.
-You are quite right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A man&#8217;s a fool or a sycophant who goes where he
-can&#8217;t pay his own way,&#8221; continued he. &#8220;I&#8217;ve come to
-realize that. I&#8217;ll do it no more. I&#8217;ll stick to my own
-class. I&#8217;ve been justly punished for blundering out of
-it. But not so severely punished as I should have been
-had my&mdash;&#8221; he smiled ironically&mdash;&#8220;my love affair prospered.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He thought for several minutes, then he said: &#8220;I
-wonder&mdash;when the clash came&mdash;would I have gone with
-her or she with me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I did not reply.</p>
-
-<p>He pulled himself together, smiled mockingly at his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_450">[450]</span>
-own folly of lingering near the unsightly and not too
-aromatic corpse. &#8220;I must get into the woods and
-breathe it out of my system. Did you see the account
-of the arrangements for her approaching marriage in
-this evening&#8217;s paper? Nearly a page&mdash;and I read every
-line.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When he had finished his drink he rose and departed&mdash;and
-I have not talked with him since. He resumed his
-career; we all know how brilliant it is. As I have said
-before, I have no sympathy with the silly notion, bruited
-about by silly flabby people that women ruin the lives
-of strong men. Now and then a woman may be the
-proverbial last straw that breaks the camel&#8217;s back. But
-there&#8217;s a vast difference between woman the actuality,
-woman the mere last straw, and woman the vampire, the
-scarlet destroyer as portrayed in novels and so-called
-histories. Those mighty men, made or ruined by women&mdash;why
-do we never <i>see</i> them, why do we only read about
-them?</p>
-
-<p>I resisted the temptation to follow Beechman&#8217;s example
-and read the newspaper account of Mary Kirkwood&#8217;s
-approaching apotheosis into the heaven that is
-the dream of all true American ladies. There is but
-one way to do a thing&mdash;and that is to do it. I had
-destroyed or sent back the letters; I had resisted the telegram.
-I could not yet bar my mind from wandering to
-her. But I could avoid leading it to her&mdash;and I did.
-So it was by accident that, the following week, I one
-morning let my eye take in the whole of a four-line newspaper
-paragraph before I realized what it was about.
-The purport was that the engagement between Count<span class="pagenum" id="Page_451">[451]</span>
-von Tilzer-Borgfeldt and Mrs. Kirkwood had been
-broken off because of a &#8220;failure to agree as to settlements.&#8221;
-This, in the same newspaper that contained
-two columns descriptive of the quietly gorgeous marriage
-of Frascatoni and Edna in my son-in-law&#8217;s new
-house near London.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Failure to agree as to settlements&mdash;&#8221; Faugh!</p>
-
-<p>I had calmed until all my anger against her was
-gone and I was thinking of her as merely human, as the
-result of her environment like everyone else. I believed
-now that where she had deceived me she had also deceived
-herself. And I saw as clearly as in the days of
-my infatuation that she and I had been made for each
-other, that our coming together had been one of those
-rare meetings of two who are entirely congenial. It
-filled me with sadness that fate had not been kind instead
-of sardonically cruel, had not brought us together ten
-years earlier, before the world had poisoned her originally
-simple and sincere nature. But how absurd to
-linger over impossible might-have-beens! I had gone as
-far as I cared to go in the company of those who have
-made fools of themselves for love.</p>
-
-<p>I believed I could trust myself with her in the same
-neighborhood. But I was not sure, and I would take no
-chance. A few days after I read of the broken engagement
-I departed on the yachting trip to South America.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_452">[452]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> were but two in my party&mdash;Dugdale, the
-playwright, and myself. A more amusing man than
-Dugdale never lived. He was amusing both consciously
-and unconsciously. A mountain of a man&mdash;bone and
-muscle, little fat. He had eyes that were large, but
-were so habitually squinted, the better to see every detail
-of everything, that they seemed small; and his expression,
-severe to the verge of savageness, changed the
-instant he spoke into childlike simplicity and good humor.
-He made money easily&mdash;large sums of money&mdash;for
-he had the talent for success. But he spent long
-before he made. I think it must have been his secret
-ambition to owe everybody in the world&mdash;except his
-friends. From a friend he never borrowed. The general
-belief was that he had never paid back a loan&mdash;and
-I have no reason to doubt it. What did he do with
-his borrowings? Loaned them to his friends who were
-hard up. If the list of those he owed was long, the list
-of those who owed him was longer. If he never paid
-back, neither was he ever paid.</p>
-
-<p>He could work at sea, or anywhere else&mdash;no doubt
-even in a balloon. On that trip he toiled prodigiously,
-crouched over a foolish little table in his cabin, smoking
-endless cigarettes and setting down with incredible rapidity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_453">[453]</span>
-illegible words in a tiny writing that contrasted grotesquely
-with the enormous hand holding the pencil. He
-labored altogether at night, after I had gone to bed.
-He was always astir before me. He slept unbelievably
-little, probably kept up on the quantities of whisky he
-drank. However that may be, he was as active by day
-physically as he was mentally by night. He was all
-over the boat, always finding something to do&mdash;something
-for me as well as for himself.</p>
-
-<p>The only terms on which Dugdale would consent to
-go were that I should keep him away from New York not
-less than two months, and that I should take no one else.
-I promptly assented to both conditions. It was not the
-first time he had put me under a heavy debt of gratitude
-for congenial society. We had made several long trips
-together, always with satisfaction on both sides. Whatever
-else you may think of me, I hope I have at least convinced
-you that I am not one of those rich men who rely
-for consideration upon their wealth. I believe I am one
-of the few rich men who can justly claim that distinction.
-When I ask a man less well off than I am to dine with me&mdash;or
-to accept my hospitality in any way&mdash;I ask him
-because I want him. And I do not either directly or indirectly
-try to make him feel that he is being honored. I
-would not ask the sort of man who feels honored by
-being in the society of bank accounts or of any other
-glittering symbols in substitute for good-fellowship.</p>
-
-<p>You will see, gentle reader, that my list was short
-indeed.</p>
-
-<p>It is one of the not few drawbacks of riches that
-they rouse the instinct of cupidity in nearly all human<span class="pagenum" id="Page_454">[454]</span>
-beings. The rich man glances round at a circle of constrained
-faces, each more or less unsuccessfully striving
-to veil from him the glistening eye and the watery lip
-of the gold hunger. Probably you know how pepsin is
-got for the market&mdash;how they pen pigs so that their
-snouts almost touch food which they can by no straining
-and struggling reach; how the unhappy creatures soon
-begin to drip, then to slobber, then to stream into the
-receiving trough under their jaws the pepsin which the
-sight of the food starts their stomachs to secreting. As
-I have looked at the parasite circles of some of my friends
-I have often been reminded of the pepsin pigs. Some of
-my friends like these displays, encourage them in every
-way, associate solely with pepsin pigs. I confess I have
-never acquired the least taste for that sort of entertainment.</p>
-
-<p>I have traveled the world over, and everywhere I
-have found men either industriously engaged in cringing
-or looking hopefully about for some one to cringe
-to them. Well&mdash;what of it?</p>
-
-<p>I owe Dugdale a debt I cannot hope to repay. He,
-a light-hearted philosopher, made me light-hearted. He
-kept my sense of humor and my sense of proportion
-constantly active. There is a stripe of philosopher of
-the light-hearted variety who lets his perception of the
-fundamental futility of life and all that therein is discourage
-him from everything but cynical laughter at
-himself and at the world. That sort is a shallow ass,
-fit company for no one but the bleary, blowsy wrecks
-to whose level he rapidly sinks. Dugdale&mdash;and I&mdash;were
-of the other school. We did not&mdash;at least, not habitually&mdash;exaggerate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_455">[455]</span>
-our own importance. It caused no
-swelling of the head in him that his name was known
-wherever people went to the theater, or in me that I
-usually had to be taken into account when they did anything
-important in finance. We did not measure the
-world or rank its inhabitants according to the silly
-standards in general use. But at the same time we
-appreciated that to work and to work well was the only
-sensible way to pass the few swift years assigned us.</p>
-
-<p>It takes a serious man to make even a good joke. A
-frivolous person can do nothing. That is why so many
-of our American women, and so many of the men, too,
-sink into insignificance as soon as the first freshness of
-youth is gone from them. Youth has charm simply as
-youth because it seems to be a brilliant promise. When
-the promise goes to protest the charm vanishes.</p>
-
-<p>I shall reserve what I saw and heard in South America
-for another volume, one of a different kind. I shall
-go forward to the following spring when I was once
-more in New York. Edna and her daughter&mdash;so I read
-in the newspapers&mdash;were living in fitting estate in a famous
-villa they had taken in the fashionable part of the
-south of France, &#8220;for the health of the two young sons
-of the marchioness.&#8221; Frascatoni was gambling at Monte
-Carlo, Crossley was at his government post in London.
-I could fill in the tiresome details for both the wives and
-the husbands&mdash;and so, probably, can you. While some
-business matters were settling, I was turning over in my
-mind plans for making a systematic search for a wife.</p>
-
-<p>I count on your amusement confidently, gentle reader.
-If you wished a fresh egg for your breakfast or a suit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_456">[456]</span>
-of clothes to be worn a few weeks and discarded, or an
-automobile, you would set about getting it with some
-attention to the best ways and means. But, saturated
-as you are with silly sentimentalities about marriage,
-you believe that the most important matter in the world&mdash;the
-matter which determines your own happiness or unhappiness
-and also the current of posterity&mdash;you believe
-that such a matter should be left to the lottery of chance!
-Well, I had long since abandoned that delusion, and I
-purposed to establish my life with as much thought and
-care as I gave all other matters.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A dull fellow,&#8221; you are saying. &#8220;No wonder his
-wife fled from him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I do not wonder that you regard as dull anything
-that is intelligent. To ignorance intelligence must necessarily
-seem dull. When any subject of real interest is
-brought up, some silly, empty-headed pretty woman is
-sure to say, &#8220;How dull! Let&#8217;s talk of something interesting.&#8221;
-And there will always be a chorus of laughing
-assent&mdash;because the woman is pretty. So I accept your
-sneer at me with a certain pleasure. I wish to be thought
-dull by some people, including some women very good to
-look at. But out of vanity and in fairness to Edna I
-must acquit her of having thought me dull&mdash;after she
-had been about the world.</p>
-
-<p>One evening at the Federal Club I fell in with my
-old acquaintance, Sam Cauldwell, the fashionable physician.
-He was something more than that&mdash;or had been&mdash;but
-was too lazy to use his mind when his gift for sympathetic
-and flattering gab brought him in plenty of
-money. Cauldwell was a trained, thoroughgoing sycophant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_457">[457]</span>
-and snob. But he saw the humorous aspect of the
-gods he was on his knees before&mdash;and saw the humor of
-his being there. He knew the kind of man I was, and
-liked to take me aside and make sport of his deities for
-an hour over a bottle of wine. Also&mdash;he liked the idea
-of being, and of being seen, intimate with a man conspicuous
-for wealth and for the social position of his
-family&mdash;the ex-husband of a princess, the father of a
-marchioness. Gentle reader, if you wish to see human
-nature to its depth, you must occupy such a position as
-mine. Believe me, you are mistaken in thinking the traits
-you shamedly hide are unique. There are others like you&mdash;many
-others.</p>
-
-<p>Cauldwell was perhaps ten years older than I, but
-being a well-taken-care-of New Yorker, he passed for a
-young man&mdash;which, indeed, he was. I do not regard
-fifty as anything but young unless it insists upon another
-estimate by looking older than it really is. I shall
-assuredly be young at fifty, perhaps younger than I am
-now, for I take better care of my health every year&mdash;and
-I have health worth taking care of. But, as I was
-about to say, Cauldwell had a meditative look that night
-as we sat down to dinner together. And when he had
-drunk his third glass of champagne he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Loring, why the devil don&#8217;t you get married?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I felt that he had something especial to say to me.
-I answered indifferently, &#8220;Why don&#8217;t <i>you</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very simple,&#8221; replied he. &#8220;Not rich enough. To
-marry in New York a man must be either a pauper or
-a Cr&#339;sus.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then marry a rich girl,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_458">[458]</span>&#8220;I&#8217;d have done it long ago if I could,&#8221; he confessed
-with a laugh. &#8220;But I&#8217;ve never been able to get at the
-girls who are rich enough. Their mammas guard them
-for plutocrats or titles. But you&mdash; Really, it&#8217;s a shame
-for you to stay single. I know a dozen women who&#8217;re
-losing sleep longing for you&mdash;for themselves, or for some
-lovely young daughter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pathetic,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see that irritates you. Well&mdash;you needn&#8217;t be
-alarmed. You&#8217;re famed for being about the wariest
-bird in the preserves. And I know you don&#8217;t want that
-kind of woman. Why not take the kind you do want?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where is she?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I could name a dozen,&#8221; rejoined he. &#8220;But I shan&#8217;t
-name any. I have one in mind. A doctor has the best
-opportunity in the world to find out about women&mdash;about
-men, too&mdash;the truth about them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed. &#8220;If I wanted misinformation about
-human nature,&#8221; said I, &#8220;I&#8217;d go to a doctor&mdash;or a
-preacher. They&#8217;re the depositories of all the hysterical
-tommyrot, all the sentimental lies that vain women and
-men think out about themselves and their sex relations.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His smile was not a denial. &#8220;Yes, I&#8217;ve been rather
-credulous, I&#8217;ll admit,&#8221; said he. &#8220;And men and women
-do tell the most astounding whoppers about themselves.
-Especially women, having trouble with their husbands.
-I try not to believe, but I&#8217;m caught every once in a
-while.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A gleam in his eye made me wonder whether he
-wasn&#8217;t thinking of some yarn Edna had spun for him
-about me. Probably. There are precious few women,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_459">[459]</span>
-even among the fairly close-mouthed, who don&#8217;t take
-advantage of the family doctor to indulge in the passion
-for romancing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I wasn&#8217;t thinking of any confession,&#8221; he went
-on. &#8220;Several women have confessed a secret passion
-for you to me&mdash;with the hope that I&#8217;d help them. The
-woman I have in mind isn&#8217;t that sort. I don&#8217;t know
-that she cares anything about you. I only know that
-she&#8217;s exactly the woman for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Interesting,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s young&mdash;unusually pretty&mdash;and in a distinguished
-way. She knows how to run a house as a home&mdash;and
-she&#8217;s about the only woman I know in our class
-who does. She&#8217;s got a good mind&mdash;not for a woman,
-but for anybody. And she needs a husband and children
-and a home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He must have misunderstood the peculiar expression
-of my face, for he hastened on:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not that she&#8217;s poor. On the contrary, she&#8217;s rich.
-I&#8217;d not recommend a poor girl to you. Poor girls can
-think of nothing but money&mdash;naturally.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Everybody, rich and poor, thinks of money&mdash;naturally,&#8221;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Guess you&#8217;re right,&#8221; laughed he. &#8220;But it <i>looks</i>
-worse in a poor girl.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should say the opposite. A feeding glutton
-looks worse than a feeding famished man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At any rate&mdash;this woman I have in mind isn&#8217;t poor.
-That&#8217;s not a disadvantage, is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not a hopeless obstacle,&#8221; said I. &#8220;By the way,
-what <i>are</i> her disadvantages?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_460">[460]</span>&#8220;Well&mdash;she&#8217;s been married before.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So have I,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, on the other hand, she has no children.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Neither have I,&#8221; said I, without thinking. I
-hastened to add, &#8220;My only child is married.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And splendidly married,&#8221; said he with the snob&#8217;s
-enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To return to the lady,&#8221; said I dryly. &#8220;Why
-don&#8217;t you marry her yourself?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had drunk several more glasses of the champagne.
-He laughed. &#8220;She wouldn&#8217;t look at <i>me</i>. She sees
-straight through me. She wants a man with domestic
-tastes. I&#8217;m about as fit for domestic life as a fire-engine
-horse for an old maid&#8217;s ph&aelig;ton.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well&mdash;who is it?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid you&#8217;ll think she&#8217;s been at me to help
-her. But, on my honor, Loring, she isn&#8217;t that sort.
-We&#8217;ve talked of you. For some reason, ever since I&#8217;ve
-known her&mdash;well, I&#8217;ve never seen her without thinking
-of you. I often talk of you to her&mdash;not marrying talk&mdash;I&#8217;d
-not dare&mdash;but in a friendly sort of way. She
-listens&mdash;says nothing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But she is sickly,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sickly?&#8221; he cried. He looked horrified and amazed.
-&#8220;Good Lord, what gave you that notion?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You said you saw her often.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I see. It was her brother who had the illness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right. Bring her round and I&#8217;ll look her
-over,&#8221; said I carelessly. And I forced a change of
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>Had Mary Kirkwood been taking this agreeable, insidious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_461">[461]</span>
-doctor into her confidence? I did not know. I
-do not know. I have reasons for thinking he told the
-literal truth. And yet&mdash;women are queer about
-doctors. However, that&#8217;s a small matter. The thing
-that impressed me, that agitated me as he talked, was
-the picture he, by implication, was making of Mary
-Kirkwood, alone again, and evidently absolutely unattached&mdash;living
-alone in the country as when I first knew
-her.</p>
-
-<p>I tossed and fretted away most of the hours of that
-night with the result that at breakfast I resolved to leave
-town again, to put the width of the continent or of the
-ocean between me and temptation to folly. But one
-thing and another came up to detain me. It was perhaps
-ten days later that I, walking alone in the Park, as
-was my habit, found myself at a turning face to face
-with her. I don&#8217;t think my expression reflected credit
-upon my boasted self-control. As for her&mdash;I thought
-she was going to faint&mdash;and she is not one of the fainting
-kind. We gazed at each other in fright and embarrassment,
-and both had the same child&#8217;s impulse to
-turn and fly&mdash;one, of those sensible, natural instincts
-for the shortest way out of difficult situations that the
-cowardly conventionality of the grown-up estate makes
-it impossible to obey. But&mdash;we had to do something.
-So, we laughed.</p>
-
-<p>She put out her hand; I took it. &#8220;How well you
-are looking,&#8221; said I&mdash;and it was the truth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You, too,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>I turned to walk with her. We strolled along cheerfully
-and contentedly, talking of the early spring, of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_462">[462]</span>
-flowers, and birds, and such neutral matters. I was
-fluent, she no less so. Our agitation disappeared; our
-sense of congeniality returned. Our acquaintance
-seemed to have lumped back to where it was before we
-had that first confidential talk together on the yacht.
-After perhaps an hour, as agreeable an hour as I ever
-spent, she said she must go home, as she had an engagement.
-On the way to the Sixty-fifth Street entrance
-the conversation lagged somewhat. We were both
-busily resolving the same thing&mdash;the matter of explanations.
-Now that I was seeing her again&mdash;a wholly different
-matter from inspecting my defaced and smirched
-and battered image of her&mdash;battered by the blows of my
-jealousy, and anger, and scorn&mdash;now that I was seeing
-<i>her</i> again, I could not but see and feel that she was in
-reality a sweet and simple and attractive woman. No
-doubt she had her faults&mdash;as all of us have&mdash;grave
-faults of inheritance, of education, of environment. But
-who was I that I should sit in judgment on her? I
-realized that I had judged her unjustly so far as
-her treatment of me was concerned. Assuming that
-she was tainted with snobbishness, assuming that her
-defects were as bad as I had thought in my worst
-paroxysms, still that did not alter the charms and the
-fine qualities.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are friends?&#8221; said I abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope so,&#8221; said she. She added: &#8220;I know so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Without discussion or explanation?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is best&mdash;don&#8217;t you think?&#8221; replied she. &#8220;I
-am&mdash;not&mdash;not proud of some things I did.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nor I, of some things I did.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_463">[463]</span>&#8220;I should like to forget them&mdash;my own and yours.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I, too. And explanations do not explain. Let
-sleeping dogs lie.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She smiled and nodded. She said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The latter part of the week I&#8217;m going back to the
-country. Perhaps you&#8217;ll spend Saturday and Sunday
-there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Let me know at the
-Federal Club if your plans change.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At her door we shook hands, but both lingered.
-Said she:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am glad we are friends again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was inevitable,&#8221; I replied. &#8220;We <i>like</i> each
-other too well not to have come round. Bitternesses
-and enmities are stupid.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And sad,&#8221; said she.</p>
-
-<p>When we met again&mdash;at her house in the country&mdash;there
-was no constraint on either side. We knew that
-neither of us had the power to breach, much less to remove,
-the barrier between us. We ignored its existence&mdash;and
-were content.</p>
-
-<p>You may have observed that I have rarely been able
-to speak of Edna without resentment. I shall now tell
-you why:</p>
-
-<p>The friendship between Mary Kirkwood and me presently
-set the newspaper gossips to talking. Our engagement
-was announced again and again&mdash;the announcement
-always a pretext for rehashing the story of the matrimonial
-bankruptcy through which each had passed. But as
-we were above the reach of the missiles of the scandalmongers
-the worst that was printed produced only a slight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_464">[464]</span>
-and brief irritation. This until the Princess Frascatoni
-began her campaign of slander.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not go into it. I shall simply say that she
-ordered one of her hangers-on&mdash;one of the semi-literary
-parasites to be found in the train of every rich person&mdash;to
-attack Mary and me as keeping up an intrigue of
-long standing, the one that was the real cause of my
-wife&#8217;s divorcing me. When I read the first of these
-articles I believed, from certain details, that no one in the
-world but the Princess Frascatoni could have inspired it.
-But with my habitual caution I leashed my impetuous
-anger and did not condemn her until I had investigated.
-Is it not strange, is it not the irony of fate that in every
-serious crisis of my life, except one, I should have had
-coolness and self-control, and that the one exception
-should have been when I loved Mary Kirkwood and condemned
-her unheard? After all, I am not sure that love
-isn&#8217;t a kind of lunacy.</p>
-
-<p>Why did Edna engage in that campaign of slander?
-Why did she say to everyone from this side the most malicious,
-the most mendacious things about my relations
-with Mrs. Kirkwood&mdash;that she had ignored the intrigue
-as long as she could for the sake of her dear daughter;
-that it had driven her from New York, had forced her to
-get a divorce, and so on through the gamut of malignant
-lying? There may perhaps be a clew to the mystery in
-the failure of her second marriage&mdash;as a marriage, I
-mean; not, of course, as a social enterprise, for there it
-was a world-renowned success. If the clew is not in
-Edna&#8217;s emptiness of heart and boredom, then I can suggest
-no explanation. I imagine she had been hearing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_465">[465]</span>
-and reading the gossip about an impending marriage
-between Mrs. Kirkwood and me until she had concluded
-that there must be truth in it&mdash;and by outrageous slander
-she hoped to make it impossible.</p>
-
-<p>The first effect was as she had probably calculated.
-Mary and I avoided each other. Mary hid herself and
-would see no one. Armitage and I for a time kept up a
-pretense of close friendship, or, rather, publicly again
-pretended a friendship that had long since all but ceased.
-But when the talk both in the newspapers and among our
-acquaintances grew until the &#8220;at last uncovered scandal&#8221;
-was the chief topic of gossip, he and I almost
-stopped speaking. You may wonder why he or I or both
-of us did not &#8220;do something&#8221; to crush the absurd lie.
-Gentle reader, did you ever try to kill a scandal? It is
-done in novels and on the stage; but in life the silly ass
-who draws his sword and attacks a pestilent fog accomplishes
-nothing&mdash;beyond attracting more attention to the
-fog by his absurd and futile gesticulations. The world
-had made up its nasty little mind that the relations between
-Mary Kirkwood, divorced, and Godfrey Loring,
-divorced, were not, and for years had not been, what they
-should be. And the matter was settled. I think Armitage
-himself believed. I know Beechman believed, for he
-pointedly crossed the street to avoid speaking to me.</p>
-
-<p>I stood this for a month. Then I went down to
-Mary&#8217;s place on Long Island.</p>
-
-<p>You may imagine the excitement my coming caused
-among the honest yeomanry gathered at the station&mdash;those
-worthy folk who peep and pry into the business of
-their fashionable overlords, and are learning to cringe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_466">[466]</span>
-like English peasants. I found Mary setting out for a
-ride&mdash;through her own grounds; she was ashamed to venture
-abroad. I came upon her abruptly. Instead of the
-terror and aversion I had steeled myself to meet, I got
-a radiance of welcome that made my heart leap. But
-in an instant she had remembered and was almost in a
-panic.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please send the groom away with the horse,&#8221; said
-I. &#8220;Let us walk up and down here before the house.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She hesitated, obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>The broad space before the house was laid out in
-hedges and blooming beds with a long, straight drive
-leading in one direction to the highroad, in the other
-direction to stable, carriage house, and garage. When
-we were securely alone I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you missed me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Our friendship meant a lot to me,&#8221; replied she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have discovered that it&#8217;s the principal thing in
-my life,&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>We paced the length of the drive toward the lodge in
-silence. As we turned toward the house again I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have chartered the largest yacht I could get&mdash;for
-a cruise round the world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A pause, then she in a constrained voice: &#8220;When do
-you start?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Immediately,&#8221; I answered. &#8220;Perhaps to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She halted, leaned against a tree, and gazed out
-through the shrubbery.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve not been well?&#8221; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never am, when I lose interest in life,&#8221; replied she.
-&#8220;You will be gone&mdash;long?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_467">[467]</span>&#8220;Long,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Either we shall not see each other
-again for years&mdash;or&mdash;&#8221; I paused.</p>
-
-<p>After a wait of fully a minute she looked inquiringly
-at me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mary,&#8221; said I, &#8220;shall we take a motor launch and
-go over to Connecticut and be married?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She began to walk again, I keeping pace with her.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s the only sensible thing to do,&#8221; said I. &#8220;It&#8217;s the
-only way out of this mess. And to-morrow we&#8217;ll sail
-away and not come back until&mdash;until we are good and
-ready.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I waited a moment, then went on, and I had the
-feeling that I was saying what we were both thinking:
-&#8220;We&#8217;ve had the same experience&mdash;have been through
-the same bankruptcy. It has taught us, I think&mdash;I hope&mdash;I
-can&#8217;t be sure; human nature learns slowly and badly.
-But I see a good chance for us&mdash;not to be utterly and
-always blissfully happy, but to get far more out of life
-than either is getting&mdash;or could get alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As we turned at the group of outbuildings she looked
-at me and I at her&mdash;a look straight into each other&#8217;s
-souls. And then and there was born that which alone
-can make a marriage successful or a life worth the living.
-What is the difference between friendship and love?
-I had thought&mdash;and said&mdash;that love was friendship in
-bloom. But as Mary and I looked at each other, I knew
-the full truth. Love is friendship set on fire. We did
-not speak. We glanced hastily away. At the front
-door she halted. In a quiet, awed voice she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll change from this riding suit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And what did I say, gentle reader, to commemorate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_468">[468]</span>
-our standing upon holy ground? I did no better than
-she. With eyes uncertain and voice untrustworthy and
-hoarse I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And tell your maid to pack and go to town with
-the trunks&mdash;go to the landing at East Twenty-third
-Street. Can she be there by four or five this afternoon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I&#8217;ll see you at the bay&mdash;at the launch wharf&mdash;in
-half an hour? I&#8217;ve got to send off a telegram.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In half an hour,&#8221; said she, and with a grave smile
-and a wave of her crop she disappeared into the house.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At seven that evening we steamed past Sandy Hook.
-At ten&mdash;after an almost silent dinner&mdash;we were on deck,
-leaning side by side at the rail, near the bow. We were
-alone on the calm and shining sea. No land in sight,
-not a steamer, not a sail&mdash;not a sign of human existence
-beyond the rail of our yacht. Her arm slipped within
-mine; my hand sought hers. Not a sail, not a streamer
-of smoke. Alone and free and together.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I forgive you, gentle reader. Go in peace.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1">TITLES SELECTED FROM</p>
-
-
-<p class="ph3">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP&#8217;S LIST</p>
-
-<p class="center">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset &amp; Dunlap&#8217;s list.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="u">THE SECOND WIFE.</span> By Thompson Buchanan. Illustrated
-by W. W. Fawcett. Harrison Fisher wrapper printed in four
-colors and gold.</p>
-
-
-<p>An intensely interesting story of a marital complication in
-a wealthy New York family involving the happiness of a
-beautiful young girl.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">TESS OF THE STORM COUNTRY.</span> By Grace Miller White.
-Illustrated by Howard Chandler Christy.</p>
-
-
-<p>An amazingly vivid picture of low class life in a New
-York college town, with a heroine beautiful and noble, who makes
-a great sacrifice for love.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">FROM THE VALLEY OF THE MISSING.</span> By Grace Miller
-White. Frontispiece and wrapper in colors by Penrhyn Stanlaws.</p>
-
-
-<p>Another story of &#8220;the storm country.&#8221; Two beautiful children
-are kidnapped from a wealthy home and appear many years
-after showing the effects of a deep, malicious scheme behind
-their disappearance.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE LIGHTED MATCH.</span> By Charles Neville Buck. Illustrated
-by R. F. Schabelitz.</p>
-
-
-<p>A lovely princess travels incognito through the States and
-falls in love with an American man. There are ties that bind her
-to someone in her own home, and the great plot revolves round
-her efforts to work her way out.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">MAUD BAXTER.</span> By C. C. Hotchkiss. Illustrated by Will
-Grefe.</p>
-
-
-<p>A romance both daring and delightful, involving an American
-girl and a young man who had been impressed into English
-service during the Revolution.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE HIGHWAYMAN.</span> By Guy Rawlence. Illustrated by
-Will Grefe.</p>
-
-
-<p>A French beauty of mysterious antecedents wins the love
-of an Englishman of title. Developments of a startling character
-and a clever untangling of affairs hold the reader&#8217;s interest.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE PURPLE STOCKINGS.</span> By Edward Salisbury Field.
-Illustrated in colors; marginal illustrations.</p>
-
-
-<p>A young New York business man, his pretty sweetheart,
-his sentimental stenographer, and his fashionable sister are all
-mixed up in a misunderstanding that surpasses anything in the
-way of comedy in years. A story with a laugh on every page.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Ask for complete free list of G. &amp; D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph3"><small>A FEW OF</small><br />
-GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP&#8217;S<br />
-Great Books at Little Prices</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>WHEN A MAN MARRIES. By Mary Roberts Rinehart.
-Illustrated by Harrison Fisher and Mayo Bunker.</p>
-
-
-<p>A young artist, whose wife had recently divorced him, finds that
-a visit is due from his Aunt Selina, an elderly lady having ideas
-about things quite apart from the Bohemian set in which her
-nephew is a shining light. The way in which matters are temporarily
-adjusted forms the motif of the story.</p>
-
-<p>A farcical extravaganza, dramatised under the title of &#8220;Seven Days.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p>THE FASHIONABLE ADVENTURES OF JOSHUA
-CRAIG. By David Graham Phillips. Illustrated.</p>
-
-
-<p>A young westerner, uncouth and unconventional, appears in
-political and social life in Washington. He attains power in politics,
-and a young woman of the exclusive set becomes his wife, undertaking
-his education in social amenities.</p>
-
-
-<p>&#8220;DOC.&#8221; GORDON. By Mary E. Wilkins-Freeman. Illustrated
-by Frank T. Merrill.</p>
-
-
-<p>Against the familiar background of American town life, the
-author portrays a group of people strangely involved in a mystery.
-&#8220;Doc.&#8221; Gordon, the one physician of the place, D. Elliot, his
-assistant, a beautiful woman and her altogether charming daughter
-are all involved in the plot. A novel of great interest.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>HOLY ORDERS. By Marie Corelli.</p>
-
-
-<p>A dramatic story, in which is pictured a clergyman in touch with
-society people, stage favorites, simple, common village folk, powerful financiers
-and others, each presenting vital problems to this man &#8220;in
-holy orders&#8221;&mdash;problems that we are now struggling with in America.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>KATRINE. By Elinor Macartney Lane. With frontispiece.</p>
-
-
-<p>Katrine, the heroine of this story, is a lovely Irish girl, of lowly
-birth, but gifted with a beautiful voice.</p>
-
-<p>The narrative is based on the facts of an actual singer&#8217;s career,
-and the viewpoint throughout is a most exalted one.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>THE FORTUNES OF FIFI. By Molly Elliot Seawell.
-Illustrated by T. de Thulstrup.</p>
-
-<p>A story of life in France at the time of the first Napoleon. Fifi,
-a glad, mad little actress of eighteen, is the star performer in a third
-rate Parisian theatre. A story as dainty as a Watteau painting.</p>
-
-
-<p>SHE THAT HESITATES. By Harris Dickson. Illustrated
-by C. W. Relyea.</p>
-
-
-<p>The scene of this dashing romance shifts from Dresden to St.
-Petersburg in the reign of Peter the Great, and then to New Orleans.</p>
-
-<p>The hero is a French Soldier of Fortune, and the princess, who
-hesitates&mdash;but you must read the story to know how she that hesitates
-may be lost and yet saved.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph3"><small>TITLES SELECTED FROM</small><br />
-GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP&#8217;S LIST</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">REALISTIC, ENGAGING PICTURES OF LIFE</p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>THE GARDEN OF FATE. By Roy Norton. Illustrated
-by Joseph Clement Coll.</p>
-
-
-<p>The colorful romance of an American girl in Morocco, and
-of a beautiful garden, whose beauty and traditions of strange
-subtle happenings were closed to the world by a Sultan&#8217;s seal.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>THE MAN HIGHER UP. By Henry Russell Miller.
-Full page vignette illustrations by M. Leone Bracker.</p>
-
-
-<p>The story of a tenement waif who rose by his own ingenuity
-to the office of mayor of his native city. His experiences
-while &#8220;climbing,&#8221; make a most interesting example of the
-possibilities of human nature to rise above circumstances.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>THE KEY TO YESTERDAY. By Charles Neville
-Buck. Illustrated by R. Schabelitz.</p>
-
-
-<p>Robert Saxon, a prominent artist, has an accident, while in
-Paris, which obliterates his memory, and the only clue he has
-to his former life is a rusty key. What door in Paris will it
-unlock? He must know that before he woos the girl he loves.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>THE DANGER TRAIL. By James Oliver Curwood.
-Illustrated by Charles Livingston Bull.</p>
-
-
-<p>The danger trail is over the snow-smothered North. A
-young Chicago engineer, who is building a road through the
-Hudson Bay region, is involved in mystery, and is led into
-ambush by a young woman.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>THE GAY LORD WARING. By Houghton Townley.
-Illustrated by Will Grefe.</p>
-
-
-<p>A story of the smart hunting set in England. A gay young
-lord wins in love against his selfish and cowardly brother and
-apparently against fate itself.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>BY INHERITANCE. By Octave Thanet. Illustrated
-by Thomas Fogarty. Elaborate wrapper in colors.</p>
-
-
-<p>A wealthy New England spinster with the most elaborate
-plans for the education of the negro goes to visit her nephew
-in Arkansas, where she learns the needs of the colored race
-first hand and begins to lose her theories.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph3"><small>A FEW OF</small><br />
-GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP&#8217;S<br />
-Great Books at Little Prices</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. A Picture of New
-England Home Life. With illustrations by C. W.
-Reed, and Scenes Reproduced from the Play.</p>
-
-
-<p>One of the best New England stories ever written. It is
-full of homely human interest * * * there is a wealth of New
-England village character, scenes and incidents * * * forcibly,
-vividly and truthfully drawn. Few books have enjoyed a
-greater sale and popularity. Dramatized, it made the greatest
-rural play of recent times.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF QUINCY
-ADAMS SAWYER. By Charles Felton Pidgin.
-Illustrated by Henry Roth.</p>
-
-
-<p>All who love honest sentiment, quaint and sunny humor,
-and homespun philosophy will find these &#8220;Further Adventures&#8221;
-a book after their own heart.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>HALF A CHANCE. By Frederic S. Isham. Illustrated
-by Herman Pfeifer.</p>
-
-
-<p>The thrill of excitement will keep the reader in a state of
-suspense, and he will become personally concerned from the
-start, as to the central character, a very real man who suffers,
-dares&mdash;and achieves!</p>
-
-
-<p>VIRGINIA OF THE AIR LANES. By Herbert
-Quick. Illustrated by William R. Leigh.</p>
-
-
-<p>The author has seized the romantic moment for the airship
-novel, and created the pretty story of &#8220;a lover and his lass&#8221;
-contending with an elderly relative for the monopoly of the
-skies. An exciting tale of adventure in midair.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>THE GAME AND THE CANDLE. By Eleanor M.
-Ingram. Illustrated by P. D. Johnson.</p>
-
-
-<p>The hero is a young American, who, to save his family from
-poverty, deliberately commits a felony. Then follow his capture
-and imprisonment, and his rescue by a Russian Grand
-Duke. A stirring story, rich in sentiment.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph3"><small>THE NOVELS OF</small><br />
-GEORGE BARR McCUTCHEON</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>GRAUSTARK.</p>
-
-<p>A story of love behind a throne, telling how a young
-American met a lovely girl and followed her to a new and
-strange country. A thrilling, dashing narrative.</p>
-
-
-<p>BEVERLY OF GRAUSTARK.</p>
-
-<p>Beverly is a bewitching American girl who has gone to
-that stirring little principality&mdash;Graustark&mdash;to visit her friend
-the princess, and there has a romantic affair of her own.</p>
-
-
-<p>BREWSTER&#8217;S MILLIONS.</p>
-
-<p>A young man is required to spend <i>one</i> million dollars in
-one year in order to inherit <i>seven</i>. How he does it forms the
-basis of a lively story.</p>
-
-
-<p>CASTLE CRANEYCROW.</p>
-
-<p>The story revolves round the abduction of a young American
-woman, her imprisonment in an old castle and the adventures
-created through her rescue.</p>
-
-
-<p>COWARDICE COURT.</p>
-
-<p>An amusing social feud in the Adirondacks in which an
-English girl is tempted into being a traitor by a romantic
-young American, forms the plot.</p>
-
-
-<p>THE DAUGHTER OF ANDERSON CROW.</p>
-
-<p>The story centers about the adopted daughter of the town
-marshal in a western village. Her parentage is shrouded in
-mystery, and the story concerns the secret that deviously
-works to the surface.</p>
-
-
-<p>THE MAN FROM BRODNEY&#8217;S.</p>
-
-<p>The hero meets a princess in a far-away island among
-fanatically hostile Musselmen. Romantic love-making amid
-amusing situations and exciting adventures.</p>
-
-
-<p>NEDRA.</p>
-
-<p>A young couple elope from Chicago to go to London
-traveling as brother and sister. They are shipwrecked and a
-strange mix-up occurs on account of it.</p>
-
-
-<p>THE SHERRODS.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is the Middle West and centers around a man
-who leads a double life. A most enthralling novel.</p>
-
-
-<p>TRUXTON KING.</p>
-
-<p>A handsome good-natured young fellow ranges on the
-earth looking for romantic adventures and is finally enmeshed
-in most complicated intrigues in Graustark.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph3">KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN&#8217;S<br />
-STORIES OF PURE DELIGHT</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">Full of originality and humor, kindliness and cheer</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="u">THE OLD PEABODY PEW.</span> Large Octavo. Decorative
-text pages, printed in two colors. Illustrations by Alice
-Barber Stephens.</p>
-
-
-<p>One of the prettiest romances that has ever come from this
-author&#8217;s pen is made to bloom on Christmas Eve in the sweet
-freshness of an old New England meeting house.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">PENELOPE&#8217;S PROGRESS.</span> Attractive cover design in
-colors.</p>
-
-
-<p>Scotland is the background for the merry doings of three very
-clever and original American girls. Their adventures in adjusting
-themselves to the Scot and his land are full of humor.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">PENELOPE&#8217;S IRISH EXPERIENCES.</span> Uniform In style
-<span class="u">with &#8220;Penelope&#8217;s Progress.&#8221;</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The trio of clever girls who rambled over Scotland cross the border
-to the Emerald Isle, and again they sharpen their wits against
-new conditions, and revel in the land of laughter and wit.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM.</span></p>
-
-
-<p>One of the most beautiful studies of childhood&mdash;Rebecca&#8217;s artistic,
-unusual and quaintly charming qualities stand out midst a circle
-of austere New Englanders. The stage version is making a phenomenal
-dramatic record.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">NEW CHRONICLES OF REBECCA.</span> With illustrations
-by F. C. Yohn.</p>
-
-
-<p>Some more quaintly amusing chronicles that carry Rebecca
-through various stages to her eighteenth birthday.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">ROSE O&#8217; THE RIVER.</span> With illustrations by George
-Wright.</p>
-
-
-<p>The simple story of Rose, a country girl and Stephen a sturdy
-young farmer. The girl&#8217;s fancy for a city man interrupts their love
-and merges the story into an emotional strain where the reader follows
-the events with rapt attention.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph3">LOUIS TRACY&#8217;S<br />
-<small>CAPTIVATING AND EXHILARATING ROMANCES</small></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset &amp; Dunlap&#8217;s list.</p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="u">CYNTHIA&#8217;S CHAUFFEUR.</span> Illustrated by Howard Chandler
-Christy.</p>
-
-
-<p>A pretty American girl in London is touring in a car with
-a chauffeur whose identity puzzles her. An amusing mystery.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE STOWAWAY GIRL.</span> Illustrated by Nesbitt Benson.</p>
-
-
-<p>A shipwreck, a lovely girl stowaway, a rascally captain, a
-fascinating officer, and thrilling adventures in South Seas.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE CAPTAIN OF THE KANSAS.</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Love and the salt sea, a helpless ship whirled into the hands
-of cannibals, desperate fighting and a tender romance.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE MESSAGE.</span> Illustrated by Joseph Cummings Chase.</p>
-
-
-<p>A bit of parchment found in the figurehead of an old vessel
-tells of a buried treasure. A thrilling mystery develops.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE PILLAR OF LIGHT.</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The pillar thus designated was a lighthouse, and the author
-tells with exciting detail the terrible dilemma of its cut-off inhabitants.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE WHEEL O&#8217;FORTUNE.</span> With illustrations by James
-Montgomery Flagg.</p>
-
-
-<p>The story deals with the finding of a papyrus containing
-the particulars of some of the treasures of the Queen of Sheba.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">A SON OF THE IMMORTALS.</span> Illustrated by Howard
-Chandler Christy.</p>
-
-
-<p>A young American is proclaimed king of a little Balkan
-Kingdom, and a pretty Parisian art student is the power behind
-the throne.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="u">THE WINGS OF THE MORNING.</span></p>
-
-
-<p>A sort of Robinson Crusoe <i>redivivus</i> with modern settings
-and a very pretty love story added. The hero and heroine, are
-the only survivors of a wreck, and have many thrilling adventures
-on their desert island.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Ask for complete free list of G. &amp; D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction</i></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph3">B. M. Bower&#8217;s Novels<br />
-<small>Thrilling Western Romances</small></p>
-
-
-<p class="center">Large 12 mos. Handsomely bound in cloth. Illustrated</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><span class="u">CHIP, OF THE FLYING U</span></p>
-
-<p>A breezy, wholesome tale, wherein the love affairs of Chip and
-Della Whitman are charmingly and humorously told. Chip&#8217;s
-jealousy of Dr. Cecil Grantham, who turns out to be a big, blue-eyed
-young woman is very amusing. A clever, realistic story of
-the American Cow-puncher.</p>
-
-<p><span class="u">THE HAPPY FAMILY</span></p>
-
-<p>A lively and amusing story, dealing with the adventures of
-eighteen jovial, big hearted Montana cowboys. Foremost amongst
-them, we find Ananias Green, known as Andy, whose imaginative
-powers cause many lively and exciting adventures.</p>
-
-<p><span class="u">HER PRAIRIE KNIGHT</span></p>
-
-<p>A realistic story of the plains, describing a gay party of Easterners
-who exchange a cottage at Newport for the rough homeliness
-of a Montana ranch-house. The merry-hearted cowboys, the
-fascinating Beatrice, and the effusive Sir Redmond, become living
-breathing personalities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="u">THE RANGE DWELLERS</span></p>
-
-<p>Here are everyday, genuine cowboys, just as they really exist.
-Spirited action, a range feud between two families, and a Romeo
-and Juliet courtship makes this a bright, jolly, entertaining story,
-without a dull page.</p>
-
-<p><span class="u">THE LURE OF DIM TRAILS</span></p>
-
-<p>A vivid portrayal of the experience of an Eastern author,
-among the cowboys of the West, in search of &#8220;local color&#8221; for a new
-novel. &#8220;Bud&#8221; Thurston learns many a lesson while following
-&#8220;the lure of the dim trails&#8221; but the hardest, and probably the most
-welcome, is that of love.</p>
-
-<p><span class="u">THE LONESOME TRAIL</span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Weary&#8221; Davidson leaves the ranch for Portland, where conventional
-city life palls on him. A little branch of sage brush,
-pungent with the atmosphere of the prairie, and the recollection of
-a pair of large brown eyes soon compel his return. A wholesome
-love story.</p>
-
-<p><span class="u">THE LONG SHADOW</span></p>
-
-<p>A vigorous Western story, sparkling with the free, outdoor,
-life of a mountain ranch. Its scenes shift rapidly and its actors play
-the game of life fearlessly and like men. It is a fine love story from
-start to finish.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">Ask for a complete free list of G. &amp; D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">GROSSETT</span> &amp; <span class="smcap">DUNLAP, 526 West 26th St., New York</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or alternate spelling has been retained from the original.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUSBAND’S STORY ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
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-<div style='margin:0.83em 0; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE<br />
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