<h2 class="main">CHAPTER II</h2>
<p class="first">She had hired a victoria after lunch and had driven
through Rome, to make her first acquaintance with the city for which
she had longed so eagerly. This first impression was a great
disappointment. Her unspoiled imagination, her reading, even the
photographs which she had bought in Florence and studied with the
affection of an inexperienced tourist had given her the illusion of a
city of an ideal antiquity, an ideal Renascence; and she had forgotten
that, especially in Rome, life has progressed pitilessly and that the
ages are not visible, in buildings and ruins, as distinct periods, but
that each period is closely connected with the next by the passing days
and years.</p>
<p>Thus she had thought the dome of St. Peter’s small, the Corso
narrow and Trajan’s Column a column like any other; she had not
noticed the Forum as she drove past it; and she had been unable to
think of a single emperor when she was at the Palatine.</p>
<p>Now she was home again, tired, and was resting a little and
meditating; she felt depressed, yet she enjoyed her vague reflections
and the silence about her in the big house, to which most of the
boarders had not yet returned. She thought of the Hague, of her big
family, her father, mother, brothers and sisters, to whom she had said
good-bye for a long time to go abroad. Her father, a retired colonel of
hussars living on his pension, with no great private means, had been
unable to contribute anything to the fulfilment of her caprice, as he
called it; and she would not have been able to satisfy that
caprice, of beginning a new life, but for a small legacy which she had
inherited some years ago from a godmother. She was glad to be more or
less independent, though she felt the selfishness of her
independence.</p>
<p>But what could she have done for her family-circle, after the
scandal of her divorce? She was weak and selfish, she knew it; but she
had received a blow under which she had at first expected to succumb.
And, when she found herself surviving it, she had mustered such energy
as she possessed and said to herself that she could not go on existing
in that same narrow circle of her sisters and her girl friends; and she
had forced her life into a different path. She had always had the knack
of creating an apparently new frock out of an old dress, transforming a
last year’s hat into one of the latest fashion. Even so she had
now done with her distraught and wretched life, all battered and broken
as it was: she had gathered together, as in a fit of economy, all that
was left, all that was still serviceable; and out of those remnants she
had made herself a new existence. But this new life was unable to
breathe in the old atmosphere: it felt aimless in it and estranged; and
she had managed to force it into a different path, in spite of all the
opposition of her family and friends. Perhaps she would not have
succeeded so readily if she had not been so completely shattered.
Perhaps she would not have felt this energy if she had suffered only a
little. She had her strength and she had her weakness; she was very
simple and yet she was very various; and it was perhaps just this
complexity that had been the saving of her youth.</p>
<p>Besides, she was actually very young, only twenty-three; and in
youth one possesses an unconscious vitality, notwithstanding any
apparent weakness. And her contradictory qualities gave her
equilibrium and saved her from falling over into the abyss....</p>
<p>All this passed vaguely through her mind as clouds pass before the
eyes, not with the conciseness of words but with the misty
indefiniteness of a dreamy fatigue. As she lay there, she did not look
as if she had ever exerted the strength to give a new path to her life:
a pale, delicate woman, slender, with drooping movements, lying on a
sofa in her not very fresh dressing-gown, with its faded pink and its
rumpled lace. And yet there was a certain poetical fragrance about her
personality, despite her weary eyes and the limp outlines of her
attire, despite the boarding-house room, with its air of quickly
improvised comfort, a comfort which was a matter of tact rather than
reality and could be packed away in a single trunk. Her frail figure,
her pale and delicate rather than beautiful features were surrounded,
as by an aura, by that atmosphere of personal poetry which she
unconsciously radiated, which she shed from her eyes upon the things
which she beheld, from her fingers upon the things which she touched.
To those who did not like her, this peculiar atmosphere, this
unusualness, this eccentricity, this unlikeness to the typical young
woman of the Hague, was the very thing with which they reproached her.
To those who liked her, it was partly talent, partly soul; something
peculiar to her which seemed almost genius; yet it was perturbing. It
invested her with a great charm; it gave pause for thought and it
promised much: more, perhaps, than could be realized. And this woman
was the child of her time but especially of her environment and
therefore so unfinished, revealing disparity against disparity, in an
equilibrium of opposing forces, which might be her undoing or her
salvation, but were in either case her fate. </p>
<p>She felt lonely in Italy. She had stayed for weeks at Florence,
where she tried to lead a full life, enriched by art and history.
There, it was true, she forgot herself to a great extent, but she still
felt lonely. She had spent a fortnight at Siena, but Siena had
depressed her, with its sombre streets, its dead palaces; and she had
yearned for Rome. But she had not found Rome yet that afternoon. And,
though she felt tired, she felt above all things lonely, terribly
lonely and useless in a great world, in a great town, a town in which
one feels the greatness, uselessness and vast antiquity of things more
perhaps than anywhere else. She felt like a little atom of suffering,
like an insect, an ant, half-trodden, half-crushed, among the immense
domes of Rome, of whose presence out of doors she was subtly
conscious.</p>
<p>And her hand wandered vacantly over her books, which she had stacked
punctiliously and conscientiously on a little table: some translations
of the classics, Ovid, Tacitus, together with Dante, Petrach, Tasso. It
was growing dusk in her room, there was no light to read by, she was
too much enervated to ring for a lamp; a chilliness hovered in her
little room, now that the sun had quite gone down, and she had
forgotten to ask for a fire on that first day. Loneliness was all about
her, her suffering pained her; her soul craved for a fellow-soul, but
her mouth craved for a kiss, her arms for <i>him</i>, once her husband;
and, turning on her cushions and wringing her hands, she prayed deep
down in herself:</p>
<p>“O God, tell me what to do!” </p>
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