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<h2> VII. THE MARRIED SON, by Henry James </h2>
<p>It's evidently a great thing in life to have got hold of a convenient
expression, and a sign of our inordinate habit of living by words. I have
sometimes flattered myself that I live less exclusively by them than the
people about me; paying with them, paying with them only, as the phrase is
(there I am at it, exactly, again!) rather less than my companions, who,
with the exception, perhaps, a little—sometimes!—of poor
Mother, succeed by their aid in keeping away from every truth, in ignoring
every reality, as comfortably as possible. Poor Mother, who is worth all
the rest of us put together, and is really worth two or three of poor
Father, deadly decent as I admit poor Father mainly to be, sometimes meets
me with a look, in some connection, suggesting that, deep within, she
dimly understands, and would really understand a little better if she
weren't afraid to: for, like all of us, she lives surrounded by the black
forest of the "facts of life" very much as the people in the heart of
Africa live in their dense wilderness of nocturnal terrors, the mysteries
and monstrosities that make them seal themselves up in the huts as soon as
it gets dark. She, quite exquisite little Mother, would often understand,
I believe, if she dared, if she knew how to dare; and the vague, dumb
interchange then taking place between us, and from the silence of which we
have never for an instant deviated, represents perhaps her wonder as to
whether I mayn't on some great occasion show her how.</p>
<p>The difficulty is that, alas, mere intelligent useless wretch as I am,
I've never hitherto been sure of knowing how myself; for am I too not as
steeped in fears as any of them? My fears, mostly, are different, and of
different dangers—also I hate having them, whereas they love them
and hug them to their hearts; but the fact remains that, save in this
private precinct of my overflow, which contains, under a strong little
brass lock, several bad words and many good resolutions, I have never
either said or done a bold thing in my life. What I seem always to feel,
doubtless cravenly enough, under her almost pathetic appeal, has been that
it isn't yet the occasion, the really good and right one, for breaking
out; than which nothing could more resemble of course the inveterate
argument of the helpless. ANY occasion is good enough for the helpful;
since there's never any that hasn't weak sides for their own strength to
make up. However, if there COULD be conceivably a good one, I'll be hanged
if I don't seem to see it gather now, and if I sha'n't write myself here
"poor" Charles Edward in all truth by failing to take advantage of it,
(They have in fact, I should note, one superiority of courage to my own:
this habit of their so constantly casting up my poverty at me—poverty
of character, of course I mean, for they don't, to do them justice, taunt
me with having "made" so little. They don't, I admit, take their lives in
their hands when they perform that act; the proposition itself being that
I haven't the spirit of a fished-out fly.)</p>
<p>My point is, at any rate, that I designate THEM as Poor only in the
abysmal confidence of these occult pages: into which I really believe even
my poor wife—for it's universal!—has never succeeded in
peeping. It will be a shock to me if I some day find she has so far
adventured—and this not on account of the curiosity felt or the
liberty taken, but on account of her having successfully disguised it. She
knows I keep an intermittent diary—I've confessed to her it's the
way in which I work things in general, my feelings and impatiences and
difficulties, off. It's the way I work off my nerves—that luxury in
which poor Charles Edward's natural narrow means—narrow so far as
ever acknowledged—don't permit him to indulge. No one for a moment
suspects I have any nerves, and least of all what they themselves do to
them; no one, that is, but poor little Mother again—who, however,
again, in her way, all timorously and tenderly, has never mentioned it:
any more than she has ever mentioned her own, which she would think quite
indecent. This is precisely one of the things that, while it passes
between us as a mute assurance, makes me feel myself more than the others
verily HER child: more even than poor little Peg at the present strained
juncture.</p>
<p>But what I was going to say above all is that I don't care that poor
Lorraine—since that's my wife's inimitable name, which I feel every
time I write it I must apologize even to myself for!—should quite
discover the moments at which, first and last, I've worked HER off. Yet
I've made no secret of my cultivating it as a resource that helps me to
hold out; this idea of our "holding out," separately and together, having
become for us—and quite comically, as I see—the very basis of
life. What does it mean, and how and why and to what end are we holding? I
ask myself that even while I feel how much we achieve even by just hugging
each other over the general intensity of it. This is what I have in mind
as to our living to that extent by the vain phrase; as to our really from
time to time winding ourselves up by the use of it, and winding each
other. What should we do if we didn't hold out, and of what romantic,
dramatic, or simply perhaps quite prosaic, collapse would giving in, in
contradistinction, consist for us? We haven't in the least formulated that—though
it perhaps may but be one of the thousand things we are afraid of.</p>
<p>At any rate we don't, I think, ever so much as ask ourselves, and much
less each other: we're so quite sufficiently sustained and inflamed by the
sense that we're just doing it, and that in the sublime effort our union
is our strength. There must be something in it, for the more intense we
make the consciousness—and haven't we brought it to as fine a point
as our frequently triumphant partnership at bridge?—the more it
positively does support us. Poor Lorraine doesn't really at all need to
understand in order to believe; she believes that, failing our exquisite
and intimate combined effort of resistance, we should be capable together
of something—well, "desperate." It's in fact in this beautiful
desperation that we spend our days, that we face the pretty grim prospect
of new ones, that we go and come and talk and pretend, that we consort, so
far as in our deep-dyed hypocrisy we do consort, with the rest of the
Family, that we have Sunday supper with the Parents and emerge, modestly
yet virtuously shining, from the ordeal; that we put in our daily
appearance at the Works—for a utility nowadays so vague that I'm
fully aware (Lorraine isn't so much) of the deep amusement I excite there,
though I also recognize how wonderfully, how quite charitably, they manage
not to break out with it: bless, for the most part, their dear simple
hearts! It is in this privately exalted way that we bear in short the
burden of our obloquy, our failure, our resignation, our sacrifice of what
we should have liked, even if it be a matter we scarce dare to so much as
name to each other; and above all of our insufferable reputation for an
abject meekness. We're really not meek a bit—we're secretly quite
ferocious; but we're held to be ashamed of ourselves not only for our
proved business incompetence, but for our lack of first-rate artistic
power as well: it being now definitely on record that we've never yet
designed a single type of ice-pitcher—since that's the damnable form
Father's production more and more runs to; his uncanny ideal is to turn
out more ice-pitchers than any firm in the world—that has "taken"
with their awful public. We've tried again and again to strike off
something hideous enough, but it has always in these cases appeared to us
quite beautiful compared to the object finally turned out, on their
improved lines, for the unspeakable market; so that we've only been able
to be publicly rueful and depressed about it, and to plead practically, in
extenuation of all the extra trouble we saddle them with, that such things
are, alas, the worst we can do.</p>
<p>We so far succeed in our plea that we're held at least to sit, as I say,
in contrition, and to understand how little, when it comes to a reckoning,
we really pay our way. This actually passes, I think for the main basis of
our humility, as it's certainly the basis of what I feel to be poor
Mother's unuttered yearning. It almost broke her heart that we SHOULD have
to live in such shame—she has only got so far as that yet. But it's
a beginning; and I seem to make out that if I don't spoil it by any wrong
word, if I don't in fact break the spell by any wrong breath, she'll
probably come on further. It will glimmer upon her—some day when she
looks at me in her uncomfortable bewildered tenderness, and I almost
hypnotize her by just smiling inscrutably back—that she isn't
getting all the moral benefit she somehow ought out of my being so
pathetically wrong; and then she'll begin to wonder and wonder, all to
herself, if there mayn't be something to be said for me. She has limped
along, in her more or less dissimulated pain, on this apparently firm
ground that I'm so wrong that nothing will do for either of us but a
sweet, solemn, tactful agreement between us never to mention it. It falls
in so richly with all the other things, all the "real" things, we never
mention.</p>
<p>Well, it's doubtless an odd fact to be setting down even here; but I SHALL
be sorry for her on the day when her glimmer, as I have called it,
broadens—when it breaks on her that if I'm as wrong as this comes
to, why the others must be actively and absolutely right. She has never
had to take it quite THAT way—so women, even mothers, wondrously get
on; and heaven help her, as I say, when she shall. She'll be immense—"tactfully"
immense, with Father about it—she'll manage that, for herself and
for him, all right; but where the iron will enter into her will be at the
thought of her having for so long given raison, as they say in Paris—or
as poor Lorraine at least says they say—to a couple like Maria and
Tom Price. It comes over her that she has taken it largely from THEM (and
she HAS) that we're living in immorality, Lorraine and I: ah THEN, poor
dear little Mother—! Upon my word I believe I'd go on lying low to
this positive pitch of grovelling—and Lorraine, charming, absurd
creature, would back me up in it too—in order precisely to save
Mother such a revulsion. It will be really more trouble than it will be
worth to her; since it isn't as if our relation weren't, of its kind, just
as we are, about as "dear" as it can be.</p>
<p>I'd literally much rather help her not to see than to see; I'd much rather
help her to get on with the others (yes, even including poor Father, the
fine damp plaster of whose composition, renewed from week to week, can't
be touched anywhere without letting your finger in, without peril of its
coming to pieces) in the way easiest for her—if not easiest TO her.
She couldn't live with the others an hour—no, not with one of them,
unless with poor little Peg—save by accepting all their premises,
save by making in other words all the concessions and having all the
imagination. I ask from her nothing of this—I do the whole thing
with her, as she has to do it with them; and of this, au fond, as Lorraine
again says, she is ever so subtly aware—just as, FOR it, she's ever
so dumbly grateful. Let these notes stand at any rate for my fond fancy of
that, and write it here to my credit in letters as big and black as the
tearful alphabet of my childhood; let them do this even if everything else
registers meaner things. I'm perfectly willing to recognize, as
grovellingly as any one likes, that, as grown-up and as married and as
preoccupied and as disillusioned, or at least as battered and seasoned (by
adversity) as possible, I'm in respect to HER as achingly filial and as
feelingly dependent, all the time, as when I used, in the far-off years,
to wake up, a small blubbering idiot, from frightening dreams, and refuse
to go to sleep again, in the dark, till I clutched her hands or her dress
and felt her bend over me.</p>
<p>She used to protect me then from domestic derision—for she somehow
kept such passages quiet; but she can't (it's where HER ache comes in!)
protect me now from a more insidious kind. Well, now I don't care! I feel
it in Maria and Tom, constantly, who offer themselves as the pattern of
success in comparison with which poor Lorraine and I are nowhere. I don't
say they do it with malice prepense, or that they plot against us to our
ruin; the thing operates rather as an extraordinary effect of their mere
successful blatancy. They're blatant, truly, in the superlative degree,
and I call them successfully so for just this reason, that poor Mother is
to all appearance perfectly unaware of it. Maria is the one member of all
her circle that has got her really, not only just ostensibly, into
training; and it's a part of the general irony of fate that neither she
nor my terrible sister herself recognizes the truth of this. The others,
even to poor Father, think they manage and manipulate her, and she can
afford to let them think it, ridiculously, since they don't come anywhere
near it. She knows they don't and is easy with them; playing over Father
in especial with finger-tips so lightly resting and yet so effectively
tickling, that he has never known at a given moment either where they were
or, in the least, what they were doing to him. That's enough for Mother,
who keeps by it the freedom other soul; yet whose fundamental humility
comes out in its being so hidden from her that her eldest daughter, to
whom she allows the benefit of every doubt, does damnably boss her.</p>
<p>This is the one case in which she's not lucid; and, to make it perfect,
Maria, whose humility is neither fundamental nor superficial, but whose
avidity is both, comfortably cherishes, as a ground of complaint—nurses
in fact, beatifically, as a wrong—the belief that she's the one
person without influence. Influence?—why she has so much on ME that
she absolutely coerces me into making here these dark and dreadful remarks
about her! Let my record establish, in this fashion, that if I'm a
clinging son I'm, in that quarter, to make up for it, a detached brother.
Deadly virtuous and deadly hard and deadly charmless—also, more than
anything, deadly sure I—how does Maria fit on, by consanguinity, to
such amiable characters, such REAL social values, as Mother and me at all?
If that question ceases to matter, sometimes, during the week, it flares
up, on the other hand, at Sunday supper, down the street, where Tom and
his wife, overwhelmingly cheerful and facetious, contrast so favorably
with poor gentle sickly (as we doubtless appear) Lorraine and me. We can't
meet them—that is I can't meet Tom—on that ground, the furious
football-field to which he reduces conversation, making it echo as with
the roar of the arena—one little bit.</p>
<p>Of course, with such deep diversity of feeling, we simply loathe each
other, he and I; but the sad thing is that we get no good of it, none of
the TRUE joy of life, the joy of our passions and perceptions and desires,
by reason of our awful predetermined geniality and the strange abysmal
necessity of our having so eternally to put up with each other. If we
could intermit that vain superstition somehow, for about three minutes, I
often think the air might clear (as by the scramble of the game of General
Post, or whatever they call it) and we should all get out of our wrong
corners and find ourselves in our right, glaring from these positions a
happy and natural defiance. Then I shouldn't be thus nominally and
pretendedly (it's too ignoble!) on the same side or in the same air as my
brother-in-law; whose value is that he has thirty "business ideas" a day,
while I shall never have had the thirtieth fraction of one in my whole
life. He just hums, Tom Price, with business ideas, whereas I just gape
with the impossibility of them; he moves in the densest we carry our heads
here on August evenings, each with its own thick nimbus of mosquitoes. I'm
but too conscious of how, on the other hand, I'm desolately outlined to
all eyes, in an air as pure and empty as that of a fine Polar sunset.</p>
<p>It was Lorraine, dear quaint thing, who some time ago made the remark (on
our leaving one of those weekly banquets at which we figure positively as
a pair of social skeletons) that Tom's facetae multiply, evidently, in
direct proportion to his wealth of business ideas; so that whenever he's
enormously funny we may take it that he's "on" something tremendous. He's
sprightly in proportion as he's in earnest, and innocent in proportion as
he's going to be dangerous; dangerous, I mean, to the competitor and the
victim. Indeed when I reflect that his jokes are probably each going to
cost certain people, wretched helpless people like myself, hundreds and
thousands of dollars, their abundant flow affects me as one of the most
lurid of exhibitions. I've sometimes rather wondered that Father can stand
so much of him. Father who has after all a sharp nerve or two in him, like
a razor gone astray in a valise of thick Jager underclothing; though of
course Maria, pulling with Tom shoulder to shoulder, would like to see any
one NOT stand her husband.</p>
<p>The explanation has struck me as, mostly, that business genial and
cheerful and even obstreperous, without detriment to its BEING business,
has been poor Father's ideal for his own terrible kind. This ideal is,
further, that his home-life shall attest that prosperity. I think it has
even been his conception that our family tone shall by its sweet innocence
fairly register the pace at which the Works keep ahead: so that he has the
pleasure of feeling us as funny and slangy here as people can only be who
have had the best of the bargains other people are having occasion to rue.
We of course don't know—that is Mother and Grandmamma don't, in any
definite way (any more than I do, thanks to my careful stupidity) how
exceeding small some of the material is consciously ground in the great
grim, thrifty mill of industrial success; and indeed we grow about as many
cheap illusions and easy comforts in the faintly fenced garden of our
little life as could very well be crammed into the space.</p>
<p>Poor Grandmamma—since I've mentioned her—appears to me always
the aged wan Flora of our paradise; the presiding divinity, seated in the
centre, under whose pious traditions, REALLY quite dim and outlived, our
fond sacrifices are offered. Queer enough the superstition that Granny is
a very solid and strenuous and rather grim person, with a capacity for
facing the world, that we, a relaxed generation, have weakly lost. She
knows as much about the world as a tin jelly-mould knows about the dinner,
and is the oddest mixture of brooding anxieties over things that don't in
the least matter and of bland failure to suspect things that intensely do.
She lives in short in a weird little waste of words—over the moral
earnestness we none of us cultivate; yet hasn't a notion of any effective
earnestness herself except on the subject of empty bottles, which have, it
would appear, noble neglected uses. At this time of day it doesn't matter,
but if there could have been dropped into her empty bottles, at an earlier
stage, something to strengthen a little any wine of life they were likely
to contain, she wouldn't have figured so as the head and front of all our
sentimentality.</p>
<p>I judge it, for that matter, a proof of our flat "modernity" in this order
that the scant starch holding her together is felt to give her among us
this antique and austere consistency. I don't talk things over with
Lorraine for nothing, and she does keep for me the flashes of perception
we neither of us waste on the others. It's the "antiquity of the age of
crinoline," she said the other day a propos of a little carte-de-visite
photograph of my ancestress as a young woman of the time of the War;
looking as if she had been violently inflated from below, but had
succeeded in resisting at any cost, and with a strange intensity of
expression, from her waist up. Mother, however, I must say, is as
wonderful about her as about everything else, and arranges herself,
exactly, to appear a mere contemporary illustration (being all the while
three times the true picture) in order that her parent shall have the
importance of the Family Portrait. I don't mean of course that she has
told me so; but she cannot see that if she hasn't that importance Granny
has none other; and it's therefore as if she pretended she had a ruff, a
stomacher, a farthingale and all the rest—grand old angles and
eccentricities and fine absurdities: the hard white face, if necessary, of
one who has seen witches burned.</p>
<p>She hasn't any more than any one else among us a gleam of fine absurdity:
that's a product that seems unable, for the life of it, and though so
indispensable (say) for literary material, to grow here; but, exquisitely
determined she shall have Character lest she perish—while it's
assumed we still need her—Mother makes it up for her, with a turn of
the hand, out of bits left over from her own, far from economically as her
own was originally planned; scraps of spiritual silk and velvet that no
one takes notice of missing. And Granny, as in the dignity of her legend,
imposes, ridiculous old woman, on every one—Granny passes for one of
the finest old figures in the place, while Mother is never discovered. So
is history always written, and so is truth mostly worshipped. There's
indeed one thing, I'll do her the justice to say, as to which she has a
glimmer of vision—as to which she had it a couple of years ago; I
was thoroughly with her in her deprecation of the idea that Peggy should
be sent, to crown her culture, to that horrid co-educative college from
which the poor child returned the other day so preposterously engaged to
be married; and, if she had only been a little more actively with me we
might perhaps between us have done something about it. But she has a way
of deprecating with her long, knobby, mittened hand over her mouth, and of
looking at the same time, in a mysterious manner, down into one of the
angles of the room—it reduces her protest to a feebleness: she's
incapable of seeing in it herself more than a fraction of what it has for
her, and really thinks it would be wicked and abandoned, would savor of
Criticism, which is the cardinal sin with her, to see all, or to follow
any premise to it in the right direction.</p>
<p>Still, there was the happy chance, at the time the question came up, that
she had retained, on the subject of promiscuous colleges, the mistrust of
the age of crinoline: as to which in fact that little old photograph, with
its balloon petticoat and its astonishingly flat, stiff "torso," might
have imaged some failure of the attempt to blow the heresy into her. The
true inwardness of the history, at the crisis, was that our fell Maria had
made up her mind that Peg should go—and that, as I have noted, the
thing our fell Maria makes up her mind to among us is in nine cases out of
ten the thing that is done. Maria still takes, in spite of her partial
removal to a wider sphere, the most insidious interest in us, and the
beauty of her affectionate concern for the welfare of her younger sisters
is the theme of every tongue. She observed to Lorraine, in a moment of
rare expansion, more than a year ago, that she had got their two futures
perfectly fixed, and that as Peggy appeared to have "some mind," though
how much she wasn't yet sure, it should be developed, what there was of
it, on the highest modern lines: Peggy would never be thought generally,
that is physically, attractive anyway. She would see about Alice, the
brat, later on, though meantime she had her idea—the idea that Alice
was really going to have the looks and would at a given moment break out
into beauty: in which event she should be run for that, and for all it
might be worth, and she, Maria, would be ready to take the contract.</p>
<p>This is the kind of patronage of us that passes, I believe, among her more
particular intimates, for "so sweet" of her; it being of course Maria all
over to think herself subtle for just reversing, with a "There—see
how original I am?" any benighted conviction usually entertained. I don't
know that any one has ever thought Alice, the brat, intellectual; but
certainly no one has ever judged her even potentially handsome, in the
light of no matter which of those staggering girl-processes that suddenly
produce features, in flat faces, and "figure," in the void of space, as a
conjurer pulls rabbits out of a sheet of paper and yards of ribbon out of
nothing. Moreover, if any one SHOULD know, Lorraine and I, with our
trained sense for form and for "values," certainly would. However, it
doesn't matter; the whole thing being but a bit of Maria's system of
bluffing in order to boss. Peggy hasn't more than the brain, in proportion
to the rest of her, of a small swelling dove on a window-sill; but she's
extremely pretty and absolutely nice, a little rounded pink-billed
presence that pecks up gratefully any grain of appreciation.</p>
<p>I said to Mother, I remember, at the time—I took that plunge: "I
hope to goodness you're not going to pitch that defenceless child into any
such bear garden!" and she replied that to make a bear-garden you first
had to have bears, and she didn't suppose the co-educative young men could
be so described. "Well then," said I, "would you rather I should call them
donkeys, or even monkeys? What I mean is that the poor girl—a
perfect little DECORATIVE person, who ought to have iridescent-gray
plumage and pink-shod feet to match the rest of her—shouldn't be
thrust into any general menagerie-cage, but be kept for the dovecote and
the garden, kept where we may still hear her coo. That's what, at college,
they'll make her unlearn; she'll learn to roar and snarl with the other
animals. Think of the vocal sounds with which she may come back to us!"
Mother appeared to think, but asked me, after a moment, as a result of it,
in which of the cages of the New York Art League menagerie, and among what
sort of sounds, I had found Lorraine—who was a product of
co-education if there ever had been one, just as our marriage itself had
been such a product.</p>
<p>I replied to this—well, what I could easily reply; but I asked, I
recollect, in the very forefront, if she were sending Peg to college to
get married. She declared it was the last thing she was in a hurry about,
and that she believed there was no danger, but her great argument let the
cat out of the bag. "Maria feels the want of it—of a college
education; she feels it would have given her more confidence"; and I shall
in fact never forget the little look of strange supplication that she gave
me with these words. What it meant was: "Now don't ask me to go into the
question, for the moment, any further: it's in the acute stage—and
you know how soon Maria can BRING a question to a head. She has settled it
with your Father—in other words has settled it FOR him: settled it
in the sense that we didn't give HER, at the right time, the advantage she
ought to have had. It would have given her confidence—from the want
of which, acquired at that age, she feels she so suffers; and your Father
thinks it fine of her to urge that her little sister shall profit by her
warning. Nothing works on him, you know, so much as to hear it hinted that
we've failed of our duty to any of you; and you can see how it must work
when he can be persuaded that Maria—!"</p>
<p>"Hasn't colossal cheek?"—I took the words out of her mouth. "With
such colossal cheek what NEED have you of confidence, which is such an
inferior form—?"</p>
<p>The long and short was of course that Peggy went; believing on her side,
poor dear, that it might for future relations give her the pull of Maria.
This represents, really, I think, the one spark of guile in Peggy's
breast: the smart of a small grievance suffered at her sister's hands in
the dim long-ago. Maria slapped her face, or ate up her chocolates, or
smeared her copy-book, or something of that sort; and the sound of the
slap still reverberates in Peg's consciousness, the missed sweetness still
haunts her palate, the smutch of the fair page (Peg writes an immaculate
little hand and Maria a wretched one—the only thing she can't
swagger about) still affronts her sight. Maria also, to do her justice,
has a vague hankering, under which she has always been restive, to make up
for the outrage; and the form the compunction now takes is to get her
away. It's one of the facts of our situation all round, I may thus add,
that every one wants to get some one else away, and that there are indeed
one or two of us upon whom, to that end, could the conspiracy only be
occult enough—which it can never!—all the rest would
effectively concentrate.</p>
<p>Father would like to shunt Granny—it IS monstrous his having his
mother-in-law a fixture under his roof; though, after all, I'm not sure
this patience doesn't rank for him as one of those domestic genialities
that allow his conscience a bolder and tighter business hand; a curious
service, this sort of thing, I note, rendered to the business conscience
throughout our community. Mother, at any rate, and small blame to her,
would like to "shoo" off Eliza, as Lorraine and I, in our deepest privacy,
call Aunt Elizabeth; the Tom Prices would like to extirpate US, of course;
we would give our most immediate jewel to clear the sky of the Tom Prices;
und so weiter. And I think we should really all band together, for once in
our lives, in an unnatural alliance to get rid of Eliza. The beauty as to
THIS is, moreover, that I make out the rich if dim, dawn of that
last-named possibility (which I've been secretly invoking, all this year,
for poor Mother's sake); and as the act of mine own right hand, moreover,
without other human help. But of that anon; the IMMEDIATELY striking thing
being meanwhile again the strange stultification of the passions in us,
which prevents anything ever from coming to an admitted and avowed head.</p>
<p>Maria can be trusted, as I have said, to bring on the small crisis, every
time; but she's as afraid as any one else of the great one, and she's
moreover, I write it with rapture, afraid of Eliza. Eliza is the one
person in our whole community she does fear—and for reasons I
perfectly grasp; to which moreover, this extraordinary oddity attaches,
that I positively feel I don't fear Eliza in the least (and in fact
promise myself before long to show it) and yet don't at all avail by that
show of my indifference to danger to inspire my sister with the least
terror in respect to myself. It's very funny, the DEGREE of her dread of
Eliza, who affects her, evidently, as a person of lurid "worldly"
possibilities—the one innocent light in which poor Maria wears for
me what Lorraine calls a weird pathos; and perhaps, after all, on the day
I shall have justified my futile passage across this agitated scene, and
my questionable utility here below every way, by converting our aunt's
lively presence into a lively absence, it may come over her that I AM to
be recognized. I in fact dream at times, with high intensity, that I see
the Prices some day quite turn pale as they look at each other and find
themselves taking me in.</p>
<p>I've made up my mind at any rate that poor Mother shall within the year be
relieved in one way or another of her constant liability to her
sister-in-law's visitations. It isn't to be endured that her house should
be so little her own house as I've known Granny and Eliza, between them,
though after a different fashion, succeed in making it appear; and yet the
action to take will, I perfectly see, never by any possibility come from
poor Father. He accepts his sister's perpetual re-arrivals, under the law
of her own convenience, with a broad-backed serenity which I find
distinctly irritating (if I may use the impious expression) and which
makes me ask myself how he sees poor Mother's "position" at all. The truth
is poor Father never does "see" anything of that sort, in the sense of
conceiving it in its relations; he doesn't know, I guess, but what the
prowling Eliza HAS a position (since this is a superstition that I observe
even my acute little Lorraine can't quite shake off). He takes refuge
about it, as about everything, truly, in the cheerful vagueness of that
general consciousness on which I have already touched: he likes to come
home from the Works every day to see how good he really is, after all—and
it's what poor Mother thus has to demonstrate for him by translating his
benevolence, translating it to himself and to others, into "housekeeping."
If he were only good to HER he mightn't be good enough; but the more we
pig together round about him the more blandly patriarchal we make him
feel.</p>
<p>Eliza meanwhile, at any rate, is spoiling for a dose—if ever a woman
required one; and I seem already to feel in the air the gathering elements
of the occasion that awaits me for administering it. All of which it is a
comfort somehow to maunder away on here. As I read over what I have
written the aspects of our situation multiply so in fact that I note again
how one has only to look at any human thing very straight (that is with
the minimum of intelligence) to see it shine out in as many aspects as the
hues of the prism; or place itself, in other words, in relations that
positively stop nowhere. I've often thought I should like some day to
write a novel; but what would become of me in that case—delivered
over, I mean, before my subject, to my extravagant sense that everything
is a part of something else? When you paint a picture with a brush and
pigments, that is on a single plane, it can stop at your gilt frame; but
when you paint one with a pen and words, that is in ALL the dimensions,
how are you to stop? Of course, as Lorraine says, "Stopping, that's art;
and what are we artists like, my dear, but those drivers of trolley-cars,
in New York, who, by some divine instinct, recognize in the forest of
pillars and posts the white-striped columns at which they may pull up?
Yes, we're drivers of trolley-cars charged with electric force and
prepared to go any distance from which the consideration of a probable
smash ahead doesn't deter us."</p>
<p>That consideration deters me doubtless even a little here—in spite
of my seeing the track, to the next bend, so temptingly clear. I should
like to note for instance, for my own satisfaction (though no fellow,
thank God, was ever less a prey to the ignoble fear of inconsistency) that
poor Mother's impugnment of my acquisition of Lorraine didn't in the least
disconcert me. I did pick Lorraine—then a little bleating stray lamb
collared with a blue ribbon and a tinkling silver bell—out of our
New York bear-garden; but it interests me awfully to recognize that,
whereas the kind of association is one I hate for my small Philistine
sister, who probably has the makings of a nice, dull, dressed, amiable,
insignificant woman, I recognize it perfectly as Lorraine's native element
and my own; or at least don't at all mind her having been dipped in it. It
has tempered and plated us for the rest of life, and to an effect
different enough from the awful metallic wash of our Company's admired
ice-pitchers. We artists are at the best children of despair—a
certain divine despair, as Lorraine naturally says; and what jollier place
for laying it in abundantly than the Art League? As for Peg, however, I
won't hear of her having anything to do with this; she shall despair of
nothing worse than the "hang" of her skirt or the moderation other hat—and
not often, if I can help her, even of those.</p>
<p>That small vow I'm glad to register here: it helps somehow, at the
juncture I seem to feel rapidly approaching, to do the indispensable thing
Lorraine is always talking about—to define my position. She's always
insisting that we've never sufficiently defined it—as if I've ever
for a moment pretended we have! We've REfined it, to the last intensity—and
of course, now, shall have to do so still more; which will leave them all
even more bewildered than the boldest definition would have done. But
that's quite a different thing. The furthest we have gone in the way of
definition—unless indeed this too belongs but to our invincible
tendency to refine—is by the happy rule we've made that Lorraine
shall walk with me every morning to the Works, and I shall find her there
when I come out to walk home with me. I see, on reading over, that this is
what I meant by "our" in speaking above of our little daily heroism in
that direction. The heroism is easier, and becomes quite sweet, I find,
when she comes so far on the way with me and when we linger outside for a
little more last talk before I go in.</p>
<p>It's the drollest thing in the world, and really the most precious note of
the mystic influence known in the place as "the force of public opinion"—which
is in other words but the incubus of small domestic conformity; I really
believe there's nothing we do, or don't do, that excites in the bosom of
our circle a subtler sense that we're "au fond" uncanny. And it's amusing
to think that this is our sole tiny touch of independence! That she should
come forth with me at those hours, that she should hang about with me, and
that we should have last (and, when she meets me again, first) small sweet
things to say to each other, as if we were figures in a chromo or a
tableau vwant keeping our tryst at a stile—no, this, quite
inexplicably, transcends their scheme and baffles their imagination. They
can't conceive how or why Lorraine gets out, or should wish to, at such
hours; there's a feeling that she must violate every domestic duty to do
it; yes, at bottom, really, the act wears for them, I discern, an
insidious immorality, and it wouldn't take much to bring "public opinion"
down on us in some scandalized way.</p>
<p>The funniest thing of all, moreover, is that that effect resides largely
in our being husband and wife—it would be absent, wholly, if we were
engaged or lovers; a publicly parading gentleman friend and lady friend.
What is it we CAN have to say to each other, in that exclusive manner, so
particularly, so frequently, so flagrantly, and as if we hadn't chances
enough at home? I see it's a thing Mother might accidentally do with
Father, or Maria with Tom Price; but I can imagine the shouts of hilarity,
the resounding public comedy, with which Tom and Maria would separate; and
also how scantly poor little Mother would permit herself with poor big
Father any appearance of a grave leave-taking. I've quite expected her—yes,
literally poor little Mother herself—to ask me, a bit anxiously, any
time these six months, what it is that at such extraordinary moments
passes between us. So much, at any rate, for the truth of this cluster of
documentary impressions, to which there may some day attach the value as
of a direct contemporary record of strange and remote things, so much I
here super-add; and verily with regret, as well, on behalf of my picture,
for two or three other touches from which I must forbear.</p>
<p>There has lately turned up, on our scene, one person with whom, doors and
windows closed, curtains drawn, secrecy sworn, the whole town asleep and
something amber-colored a-brewing—there has recently joined us one
person, I say, with whom we might really pass the time of day, to whom we
might, after due deliberation, tip the wink. I allude to the Parents' new
neighbor, the odd fellow Temple, who, for reasons mysterious and which his
ostensible undertaking of the native newspaper don't at all make
plausible, has elected, as they say, fondly to sojourn among us. A
journalist, a rolling stone, a man who has seen other life, how can one
not suspect him of some deeper game than he avows—some such
studious, surreptitious, "sociological" intent as alone, it would seem,
could sustain him through the practice of leaning on his fence at eventide
to converse for long periods with poor Father? Poor Father indeed, if a
real remorseless sociologist were once to get well hold of him! Lorraine
freely maintains that there's more in the Temples than meets the eye; that
they're up to something, at least that HE is, that he kind of feels us in
the air, just as we feel him, and that he would sort of reach out to us,
by the same token, if we would in any way give the first sign. This,
however, Lorraine contends, his wife won't let him do; his wife, according
to mine, is quite a different proposition (much more REALLY hatted and
gloved, she notes, than any one here, even than the belted and trinketed
Eliza) and with a conviction of her own as to what their stay is going to
amount to. On the basis of Lorraine's similar conviction about ours it
would seem then that we ought to meet for an esoteric revel; yet somehow
it doesn't come off. Sometimes I think I'm quite wrong and that he can't
really be a child of light: we should in this case either have seen him
collapse or have discovered what inwardly sustains him. We ARE ourselves
inwardly collapsing—there's no doubt of that: in spite of the
central fires, as Lorraine says somebody in Boston used to say somebody
said, from which we're fed. From what central fires is Temple nourished? I
give it up; for, on the point, again and again, of desperately stopping
him in the street to ask him, I recoil as often in terror. He may be only
plotting to MAKE me do it—so that he may give me away in his paper!</p>
<p>"Remember, he's a mere little frisking prize ass; stick to that, cling to
it, make it your answer to everything: it's all you now know and all you
need to know, and you'll be as firm on it as on a rock!" This is what I
said to poor Peg, on the subject of Harry Goward, before I started, in the
glorious impulse of the moment, five nights ago, for New York; and, with
no moment now to spare, yet wishing not to lose my small silver clue, I
just put it here for one of the white pebbles, or whatever they were, that
Hop o' my Thumb, carried off to the forest, dropped, as he went, to know
his way back. I was carried off the other evening in a whirlwind, which
has not even yet quite gone down, though I am now at home and recovering
my breath; and it will interest me vividly, when I have more freedom of
mind, to live over again these strange, these wild successions. But a few
rude notes, and only of the first few hours of my adventure, must for the
present suffice. The mot, of the whole thing, as Lorraine calls it, was
that at last, in a flash, we recognized what we had so long been wondering
about—what supreme advantage we've been, all this latter time in
particular, "holding out" for.</p>
<p>Lorraine had put it once again in her happy way only a few weeks previous;
we were "saving up," she said—and not meaning at all our poor scant
dollars and cents, though we've also kept hold of some of THEM—for
an exercise of strength and a show of character that would make us of a
sudden some unmistakable sign. We should just meet it rounding a corner as
with the rush of an automobile—a chariot of fire that would stop but
long enough to take us in, when we should know it immediately for the
vehicle of our fate. That conviction had somehow been with us, and I had
really heard our hour begin to strike on Peg's coming back to us from her
co-educative adventure so preposterously "engaged." I didn't believe in
it, in such a manner of becoming so, one little bit, and I took on myself
to hate the same; though that indeed seemed the last thing to trouble any
one else. Her turning up in such a fashion with the whole thing settled
before Father or Mother or Maria or any of us had so much as heard of the
young man, much less seen the tip of his nose, had too much in common, for
my taste, with the rude betrothals of the people, with some maid-servant's
announcement to her employer that she has exchanged vows with the
butcher-boy.</p>
<p>I was indignant, quite artlessly indignant I fear, with the college
authorities, barbarously irresponsible, as it struck me; for when I broke
out about them to poor Mother she surprised me (though I confess she had
sometimes surprised me before), by her deep fatalism. "Oh, I suppose they
don't pretend not to take their students at the young people's own risk:
they can scarcely pretend to control their affections!" she wonderfully
said; she seemed almost shocked, moreover, that I could impute either to
Father or to herself any disposition to control Peggy's. It was one of the
few occasions of my life on which I've suffered irritation from poor
Mother; and yet I'm now not sure, after all, that she wasn't again but at
her old game (even then, for she has certainly been so since) of
protecting poor Father, by feigning a like flaccidity, from the full
appearance, not to say the full dishonor, of his failure ever to meet a
domestic responsibility. It came over me that there would be absolutely
nobody to meet this one, and my own peculiar chance glimmered upon me
therefore on the spot. I can't retrace steps and stages; suffice it that
my opportunity developed and broadened, to my watching eyes, with each
precipitated consequence of the wretched youth's arrival.</p>
<p>He proved, without delay, an infant in arms; an infant, either, according
to circumstances, crowing and kicking and clamoring for sustenance, or
wailing and choking and refusing even the bottle, to the point even, as
I've just seen in New York, of imminent convulsions. The "arms" most
appropriate to his case suddenly announced themselves, in fine, to our
general consternation, as Eliza's: but it was at this unnatural vision
that my heart indeed leaped up. I was beforehand even with Lorraine; she
was still gaping while, in three bold strokes, I sketched to her our
campaign. "I take command—the others are flat on their backs. I save
little pathetic Peg, even in spite of herself; though her just resentment
is really much greater than she dares, poor mite, recognize (amazing
scruple!). By which I mean I guard her against a possible relapse. I save
poor Mother—that is I rid her of the deadly Eliza—forever and
a day! Despised, rejected, misunderstood, I nevertheless intervene, in its
hour of dire need, as the good genius of the family; and you, dear little
quaint thing, I take advantage of the precious psychological moment to
whisk YOU off to Europe. We'll take Peg with us for a year's true culture;
she wants a year's true culture pretty badly, but she doesn't, as it turns
out, want Mr. Goward a 'speck.' And I'll do it all in my own way, before
they can recover breath; they'll recover it—if we but give them time—to
bless our name; but by that moment we shall have struck for freedom!"</p>
<p>Well, then, my own way—it was "given me," as Lorraine says—was,
taking the night express, without a word to any one but Peg, whom it was
charming, at the supreme hour, to feel glimmeringly, all-wonderingly, with
us: my own way, I say, was to go, the next morning, as soon as I had
breakfasted, to the address Lorraine had been able, by an immense piece of
luck, to suggest to me as a possible clue to Eliza's whereabouts. "She'll
either be with her friends the Chataways, in East Seventy-third Street—she's
always swaggering about the Chataways, who by her account are tremendous
'smarts,' as she has told Lorraine the right term is in London, leading a
life that is a burden to them without her; or else they'll know where she
is. That's at least what I HOPE!" said my wife with infinite feminine
subtlety. The Chataways as a subject of swagger presented themselves, even
to my rustic vision, oddly; I may be mistaken about New York "values," but
the grandeur of this connection was brought home to me neither by the high
lopsided stoop of its very, very East Side setting, nor by the appearance
of a terrible massive lady who came to the door while I was in quite
unproductive parley with an unmistakably, a hopelessly mystified menial,
an outlandish young woman with a face of dark despair and an intelligence
closed to any mere indigenous appeal. I was to learn later in the day that
she's a Macedonian Christian whom the Chataways harbor against the cruel
Turk in return for domestic service; a romantic item that Eliza named to
me in rueful correction of the absence of several indeed that are
apparently prosaic enough.</p>
<p>The powder on the massive lady's face indeed transcended, I rather
thought, the bounds of prose, did much to refer her to the realm of
fantasy, some fairy-land forlorn; an effect the more marked as the wrapper
she appeared hastily to have caught up, and which was somehow both
voluminous and tense (flowing like a cataract in some places, yet in
others exposing, or at least denning, the ample bed of the stream)
reminded me of the big cloth spread in a room when any mess is to be made.
She apologized when I said I had come to inquire for Miss Talbert—mentioned
(with play of a wonderfully fine fat hand) that she herself was "just
being manicured in the parlor"; but was evidently surprised at my asking
about Eliza, which plunged her into the question—it suffused her
extravagant blondness with a troubled light, struggling there like a
sunrise over snow—of whether she had better, confessing to
ignorance, relieve her curiosity or, pretending to knowledge, baffle mine.
But mine of course carried the day, for mine showed it could wait, while
hers couldn't; the final superiority of women to men being in fact, I
think, that we are more PATIENTLY curious.</p>
<p>"Why, is she in the city?"</p>
<p>"If she isn't, dear madam," I replied, "she ought to be. She left
Eastridge last evening for parts unknown, and should have got here by
midnight." Oh, how glad I was to let them both in as far as I possibly
could! And clearly now I had let Mrs. Chataway, if such she was, in very
far indeed.</p>
<p>She stared, but then airily considered. "Oh, well—I guess she's
somewheres."</p>
<p>"I guess she is!" I replied.</p>
<p>"She hasn't got here yet—she has so many friends in the city. But
she always wants US, and when she does come—!" With which my friend,
now so far relieved and agreeably smiling, rubbed together conspicuously
the pair of plump subjects of her "cure."</p>
<p>"You feel then," I inquired, "that she will come?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I guess she'll be round this afternoon. We wouldn't forgive her—!"</p>
<p>"Ah, I'm afraid we MUST forgive her!" I was careful to declare. "But I'll
come back on the chance."</p>
<p>"Any message then?"</p>
<p>"Yes, please say her nephew from Eastridge—!"</p>
<p>"Oh, her nephew—!"</p>
<p>"Her nephew. She'll understand. I'll come back," I repeated. "But I've got
to find her!"</p>
<p>And, as in the fever of my need, I turned and sped away.</p>
<p>I roamed, I quite careered about, in those uptown streets, but
instinctively and confidently westward. I felt, I don't know why,
miraculously sure of some favoring chance and as if I were floating in the
current of success. I was on the way to our reward, I was positively on
the way to Paris, and New York itself, vast and glittering and roaring,
much noisier even than the Works at their noisiest, but with its old rich
thrill of the Art League days again in the air, was already almost Paris
for me—so that when I at last fidgeted into the Park, where you get
so beautifully away from the town, it was surely the next thing to Europe,
and in fact HAD to be, since it's the very antithesis of Eastridge. I
regularly revelled in that sense that Eliza couldn't have done a better
thing for us than just not be, that morning, where it was supremely
advisable she should have been. If she had had two grains of sense she
would have put in an appearance at the Chataways' with the lark, or at
least with the manicure, who seems there almost as early stirring. Or
rather, really, she would have reported herself as soon as their train,
that of the "guilty couple," got in; no matter how late in the evening. It
was at any rate actually uplifting to realize that I had got thus, in
three minutes, the pull of her in regard to her great New York friends. My
eye, as Lorraine says, how she HAS, on all this ground of those people,
been piling it on! If Maria, who has so bowed her head, gets any such
glimpse of what her aunt has been making her bow it to—well, I think
I shall then entertain something of the human pity for Eliza, that I found
myself, while I walked about, fairly entertaining for my sister.</p>
<p>What were they, what ARE they, the Chataways, anyhow? I don't even yet
know, I confess; but now I don't want to—I don't care a hang, having
no further use for them whatever. But on one of the Park benches, in the
golden morning, the wonderment added, I remember, to my joy, for we
hadn't, Lorraine and I, been the least bit overwhelmed about them:
Lorraine only pretending a little, with her charming elfish art, that she
occasionally was, in order to see how far Eliza would go. Well, that
brilliant woman HAD gone pretty far for us, truly, if, after all, they
were only in the manicure line. She was a-doing of it, as Lorraine says,
my massive lady was, in the "parlor" where I don't suppose it's usually
done; and aren't there such places, precisely, AS Manicure Parlors, where
they do nothing else, or at least are supposed to? Oh, I do hope, for the
perfection of it, that this may be what Eliza has kept from us! Otherwise,
by all the gods, it's just a boarding-house: there was exactly the smell
in the hall, THE boarding-house smell, that pervaded my old greasy haunt
of the League days: that boiled atmosphere that seems to belong at once,
confusedly, to a domestic "wash" and to inferior food—as if the
former were perhaps being prepared in the saucepan and the latter in the
tubs.</p>
<p>There also came back to me, I recollect, that note of Mrs. Chataway's
queer look at me on my saying I was Eliza's nephew—the droll effect
of her making on her side a discovery about ME. Yes, she made it, and as
against me, of course, against all of us, at sight of me; so that if Eliza
has bragged at Eastridge about New York, she has at least bragged in New
York about Eastridge. I didn't clearly, for Mrs. Chataway, come up to the
brag—or perhaps rather didn't come down to it: since I dare say the
poor lady's consternation meant simply that my aunt has confessed to me
but as an unconsidered trifle, a gifted child at the most; or as young and
handsome and dashing at the most, and not as—well, as what I am.
Whatever I am, in any case, and however awkward a document as nephew to a
girlish aunt, I believe I really tasted of the joy of life in its highest
intensity when, at the end of twenty minutes of the Park, I suddenly saw
my absurd presentiment of a miracle justified.</p>
<p>I could of course scarce believe my eyes when, at the turn of a quiet
alley, pulling up to gape, I recognized in a young man brooding on a bench
ten yards off the precious personality of Harry Goward! There he
languished alone, our feebler fugitive, handed over to me by a mysterious
fate and a well-nigh incredible hazard. There is certainly but one place
in all New York where the stricken deer may weep—or even, for that
matter, the hart ungalled play; the wonder of my coincidence shrank a
little, that is, before the fact that when young ardor or young despair
wishes to commune with immensity it can ONLY do so either in a hall
bedroom or in just this corner, practically, where I pounced on my prey.
To sit down, in short, you've GOT to sit there; there isn't another square
inch of the whole place over which you haven't got, as everything shrieks
at you, to step lively. Poor Goward, I could see at a glance, wanted very
much to sit down—looked indeed very much as if he wanted never,
NEVER again to get up.</p>
<p>I hovered there—I couldn't help it, a bit gloatingly—before I
pounced; and yet even when he became aware of me, as he did in a minute,
he didn't shift his position by an inch, but only took me and my dreadful
meaning, with his wan stare, as a part of the strange burden of his fate.
He didn't seem even surprised to speak of; he had waked up—premising
his brief, bewildered delirium—to the sense that something NATURAL
must happen, and even to the fond hope that something natural WOULD; and I
was simply the form in which it was happening. I came nearer, I stood
before him; and he kept up at me the oddest stare—which was plainly
but the dumb yearning that I would explain, explain! He wanted everything
told him—but every single thing; as if, after a tremendous fall, or
some wild parabola through the air, the effect of a violent explosion
under his feet, he had landed at a vast distance from his starting-point
and required to know where he was. Well, the charming thing was that this
affected me as giving the very sharpest point to the idea that, in asking
myself how I should deal with him, I had already so vividly entertained.</p>
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