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<h2> CHAPTER XV. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>n the time of the
amiable Brantome,” Mr. Scogan was saying, “every debutante at the French
Court was invited to dine at the King’s table, where she was served with
wine in a handsome silver cup of Italian workmanship. It was no ordinary
cup, this goblet of the debutantes; for, inside, it had been most
curiously and ingeniously engraved with a series of very lively amorous
scenes. With each draught that the young lady swallowed these engravings
became increasingly visible, and the Court looked on with interest, every
time she put her nose in the cup, to see whether she blushed at what the
ebbing wine revealed. If the debutante blushed, they laughed at her for
her innocence; if she did not, she was laughed at for being too knowing.”</p>
<p>“Do you propose,” asked Anne, “that the custom should be revived at
Buckingham Palace?”</p>
<p>“I do not,” said Mr. Scogan. “I merely quoted the anecdote as an
illustration of the customs, so genially frank, of the sixteenth century.
I might have quoted other anecdotes to show that the customs of the
seventeenth and eighteenth, of the fifteenth and fourteenth centuries, and
indeed of every other century, from the time of Hammurabi onward, were
equally genial and equally frank. The only century in which customs were
not characterised by the same cheerful openness was the nineteenth, of
blessed memory. It was the astonishing exception. And yet, with what one
must suppose was a deliberate disregard of history, it looked upon its
horribly pregnant silences as normal and natural and right; the frankness
of the previous fifteen or twenty thousand years was considered abnormal
and perverse. It was a curious phenomenon.”</p>
<p>“I entirely agree.” Mary panted with excitement in her effort to bring out
what she had to say. “Havelock Ellis says...”</p>
<p>Mr. Scogan, like a policeman arresting the flow of traffic, held up his
hand. “He does; I know. And that brings me to my next point: the nature of
the reaction.”</p>
<p>“Havelock Ellis...”</p>
<p>“The reaction, when it came—and we may say roughly that it set in a
little before the beginning of this century—the reaction was to
openness, but not to the same openness as had reigned in the earlier ages.
It was to a scientific openness, not to the jovial frankness of the past,
that we returned. The whole question of Amour became a terribly serious
one. Earnest young men wrote in the public prints that from this time
forth it would be impossible ever again to make a joke of any sexual
matter. Professors wrote thick books in which sex was sterilised and
dissected. It has become customary for serious young women, like Mary, to
discuss, with philosophic calm, matters of which the merest hint would
have sufficed to throw the youth of the sixties into a delirium of amorous
excitement. It is all very estimable, no doubt. But still”—Mr.
Scogan sighed.—“I for one should like to see, mingled with this
scientific ardour, a little more of the jovial spirit of Rabelais and
Chaucer.”</p>
<p>“I entirely disagree with you,” said Mary. “Sex isn’t a laughing matter;
it’s serious.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” answered Mr. Scogan, “perhaps I’m an obscene old man. For I
must confess that I cannot always regard it as wholly serious.”</p>
<p>“But I tell you...” began Mary furiously. Her face had flushed with
excitement. Her cheeks were the cheeks of a great ripe peach.</p>
<p>“Indeed,” Mr. Scogan continued, “it seems to me one of few permanently and
everlastingly amusing subjects that exist. Amour is the one human activity
of any importance in which laughter and pleasure preponderate, if ever so
slightly, over misery and pain.”</p>
<p>“I entirely disagree,” said Mary. There was a silence.</p>
<p>Anne looked at her watch. “Nearly a quarter to eight,” she said. “I wonder
when Ivor will turn up.” She got up from her deck-chair and, leaning her
elbows on the balustrade of the terrace, looked out over the valley and
towards the farther hills. Under the level evening light the architecture
of the land revealed itself. The deep shadows, the bright contrasting
lights gave the hills a new solidity. Irregularities of the surface,
unsuspected before, were picked out with light and shade. The grass, the
corn, the foliage of trees were stippled with intricate shadows. The
surface of things had taken on a marvellous enrichment.</p>
<p>“Look!” said Anne suddenly, and pointed. On the opposite side of the
valley, at the crest of the ridge, a cloud of dust flushed by the sunlight
to rosy gold was moving rapidly along the sky-line. “It’s Ivor. One can
tell by the speed.”</p>
<p>The dust cloud descended into the valley and was lost. A horn with the
voice of a sea-lion made itself heard, approaching. A minute later Ivor
came leaping round the corner of the house. His hair waved in the wind of
his own speed; he laughed as he saw them.</p>
<p>“Anne, darling,” he cried, and embraced her, embraced Mary, very nearly
embraced Mr. Scogan. “Well, here I am. I’ve come with incredulous speed.”
Ivor’s vocabulary was rich, but a little erratic. “I’m not late for
dinner, am I?” He hoisted himself up on to the balustrade, and sat there,
kicking his heels. With one arm he embraced a large stone flower-pot,
leaning his head sideways against its hard and lichenous flanks in an
attitude of trustful affection. He had brown, wavy hair, and his eyes were
of a very brilliant, pale, improbable blue. His head was narrow, his face
thin and rather long, his nose aquiline. In old age—though it was
difficult to imagine Ivor old—he might grow to have an Iron Ducal
grimness. But now, at twenty-six, it was not the structure of his face
that impressed one; it was its expression. That was charming and
vivacious, and his smile was an irradiation. He was forever moving,
restlessly and rapidly, but with an engaging gracefulness. His frail and
slender body seemed to be fed by a spring of inexhaustible energy.</p>
<p>“No, you’re not late.”</p>
<p>“You’re in time to answer a question,” said Mr. Scogan. “We were arguing
whether Amour were a serious matter or no. What do you think? Is it
serious?”</p>
<p>“Serious?” echoed Ivor. “Most certainly.”</p>
<p>“I told you so,” cried Mary triumphantly.</p>
<p>“But in what sense serious?” Mr. Scogan asked.</p>
<p>“I mean as an occupation. One can go on with it without ever getting
bored.”</p>
<p>“I see,” said Mr. Scogan. “Perfectly.”</p>
<p>“One can occupy oneself with it,” Ivor continued, “always and everywhere.
Women are always wonderfully the same. Shapes vary a little, that’s all.
In Spain”—with his free hand he described a series of ample curves—“one
can’t pass them on the stairs. In England”—he put the tip of his
forefinger against the tip of his thumb and, lowering his hand, drew out
this circle into an imaginary cylinder—“In England they’re tubular.
But their sentiments are always the same. At least, I’ve always found it
so.”</p>
<p>“I’m delighted to hear it,” said Mr. Scogan.</p>
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