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The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER I.
On a January evening of the early seventies, Christine Nilsson was singing in
Faust at the Academy of Music in New York.
Though there was already talk of the ***, in remote metropolitan distances
"above the Forties," of a new Opera House which should compete in costliness and
splendour with those of the great European
capitals, the world of fashion was still content to reassemble every winter in the
shabby red and gold boxes of the sociable old Academy.
Conservatives cherished it for being small and inconvenient, and thus keeping out the
"new people" whom New York was beginning to dread and yet be drawn to; and the
sentimental clung to it for its historic
associations, and the musical for its excellent acoustics, always so problematic
a quality in halls built for the hearing of music.
It was Madame Nilsson's first appearance that winter, and what the daily press had
already learned to describe as "an exceptionally brilliant audience" had
gathered to hear her, transported through
the slippery, snowy streets in private broughams, in the spacious family landau,
or in the humbler but more convenient "Brown coupe."
To come to the Opera in a Brown coupe was almost as honourable a way of arriving as
in one's own carriage; and departure by the same means had the immense advantage of
enabling one (with a playful allusion to
democratic principles) to scramble into the first Brown conveyance in the line, instead
of waiting till the cold-and-gin congested nose of one's own coachman gleamed under
the portico of the Academy.
It was one of the great livery-stableman's most masterly intuitions to have discovered
that Americans want to get away from amusement even more quickly than they want
to get to it.
When Newland Archer opened the door at the back of the club box the curtain had just
gone up on the garden scene.
There was no reason why the young man should not have come earlier, for he had
dined at seven, alone with his mother and sister, and had lingered afterward over a
cigar in the Gothic library with glazed
black-walnut bookcases and finial-topped chairs which was the only room in the house
where Mrs. Archer allowed smoking.
But, in the first place, New York was a metropolis, and perfectly aware that in
metropolises it was "not the thing" to arrive early at the opera; and what was or
was not "the thing" played a part as
important in Newland Archer's New York as the inscrutable totem terrors that had
ruled the destinies of his forefathers thousands of years ago.
The second reason for his delay was a personal one.
He had dawdled over his cigar because he was at heart a dilettante, and thinking
over a pleasure to come often gave him a subtler satisfaction than its realisation.
This was especially the case when the pleasure was a delicate one, as his
pleasures mostly were; and on this occasion the moment he looked forward to was so rare
and exquisite in quality that--well, if he
had timed his arrival in accord with the prima donna's stage-manager he could not
have entered the Academy at a more significant moment than just as she was
singing: "He loves me--he loves me not--HE
LOVES ME!--" and sprinkling the falling daisy petals with notes as clear as dew.
She sang, of course, "M'ama!" and not "he loves me," since an unalterable and
unquestioned law of the musical world required that the German text of French
operas sung by Swedish artists should be
translated into Italian for the clearer understanding of English-speaking
audiences.
This seemed as natural to Newland Archer as all the other conventions on which his life
was moulded: such as the duty of using two silver-backed brushes with his monogram in
blue enamel to part his hair, and of never
appearing in society without a flower (preferably a gardenia) in his buttonhole.
"M'ama...non m'ama..." the prima donna sang, and "M'ama!", with a final burst of
love triumphant, as she pressed the dishevelled daisy to her lips and lifted
her large eyes to the sophisticated
countenance of the little brown Faust- Capoul, who was vainly trying, in a tight
purple velvet doublet and plumed cap, to look as pure and true as his artless
victim.
Newland Archer, leaning against the wall at the back of the club box, turned his eyes
from the stage and scanned the opposite side of the house.
Directly facing him was the box of old Mrs. Manson Mingott, whose monstrous obesity had
long since made it impossible for her to attend the Opera, but who was always
represented on fashionable nights by some of the younger members of the family.
On this occasion, the front of the box was filled by her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Lovell
Mingott, and her daughter, Mrs. Welland; and slightly withdrawn behind these
brocaded matrons sat a young girl in white
with eyes ecstatically fixed on the stagelovers.
As Madame Nilsson's "M'ama!" thrilled out above the silent house (the boxes always
stopped talking during the Daisy Song) a warm pink mounted to the girl's cheek,
mantled her brow to the roots of her fair
braids, and suffused the young slope of her breast to the line where it met a modest
tulle tucker fastened with a single gardenia.
She dropped her eyes to the immense bouquet of lilies-of-the-valley on her knee, and
Newland Archer saw her white-gloved finger- tips touch the flowers softly.
He drew a breath of satisfied vanity and his eyes returned to the stage.
No expense had been spared on the setting, which was acknowledged to be very beautiful
even by people who shared his acquaintance with the Opera houses of Paris and Vienna.
The foreground, to the footlights, was covered with emerald green cloth.
In the middle distance symmetrical mounds of woolly green moss bounded by croquet
hoops formed the base of shrubs shaped like orange-trees but studded with large pink
and red roses.
Gigantic pansies, considerably larger than the roses, and closely resembling the
floral pen-wipers made by female parishioners for fashionable clergymen,
sprang from the moss beneath the rose-
trees; and here and there a daisy grafted on a rose-branch flowered with a luxuriance
prophetic of Mr. Luther Burbank's far-off prodigies.
In the centre of this enchanted garden Madame Nilsson, in white cashmere slashed
with pale blue satin, a reticule dangling from a blue girdle, and large yellow braids
carefully disposed on each side of her
muslin chemisette, listened with downcast eyes to M. Capoul's impassioned wooing, and
affected a guileless incomprehension of his designs whenever, by word or glance, he
persuasively indicated the ground floor
window of the neat brick villa projecting obliquely from the right wing.
"The darling!" thought Newland Archer, his glance flitting back to the young girl with
the lilies-of-the-valley.
"She doesn't even guess what it's all about."
And he contemplated her absorbed young face with a thrill of possessorship in which
pride in his own masculine initiation was mingled with a tender reverence for her
abysmal purity.
"We'll read Faust together...by the Italian lakes..." he thought, somewhat hazily
confusing the scene of his projected honey- moon with the masterpieces of literature
which it would be his manly privilege to reveal to his bride.
It was only that afternoon that May Welland had let him guess that she "cared" (New
York's consecrated phrase of maiden avowal), and already his imagination,
leaping ahead of the engagement ring, the
betrothal kiss and the march from Lohengrin, pictured her at his side in some
scene of old European witchery. He did not in the least wish the future
Mrs. Newland Archer to be a simpleton.
He meant her (thanks to his enlightening companionship) to develop a social tact and
readiness of wit enabling her to hold her own with the most popular married women of
the "younger set," in which it was the
recognised custom to attract masculine homage while playfully discouraging it.
If he had probed to the bottom of his vanity (as he sometimes nearly did) he
would have found there the wish that his wife should be as worldly-wise and as eager
to please as the married lady whose charms
had held his fancy through two mildly agitated years; without, of course, any
hint of the frailty which had so nearly marred that unhappy being's life, and had
disarranged his own plans for a whole winter.
How this miracle of fire and ice was to be created, and to sustain itself in a harsh
world, he had never taken the time to think out; but he was content to hold his view
without analysing it, since he knew it was
that of all the carefully-brushed, white- waistcoated, button-hole-flowered gentlemen
who succeeded each other in the club box, exchanged friendly greetings with him, and
turned their opera-glasses critically on
the circle of ladies who were the product of the system.
In matters intellectual and artistic Newland Archer felt himself distinctly the
superior of these chosen specimens of old New York gentility; he had probably read
more, thought more, and even seen a good
deal more of the world, than any other man of the number.
Singly they betrayed their inferiority; but grouped together they represented "New
York," and the habit of masculine solidarity made him accept their doctrine
on all the issues called moral.
He instinctively felt that in this respect it would be troublesome--and also rather
bad form--to strike out for himself.
"Well--upon my soul!" exclaimed Lawrence Lefferts, turning his opera-glass abruptly
away from the stage. Lawrence Lefferts was, on the whole, the
foremost authority on "form" in New York.
He had probably devoted more time than any one else to the study of this intricate and
fascinating question; but study alone could not account for his complete and easy
competence.
One had only to look at him, from the slant of his bald forehead and the curve of his
beautiful fair moustache to the long patent-leather feet at the other end of his
lean and elegant person, to feel that the
knowledge of "form" must be congenital in any one who knew how to wear such good
clothes so carelessly and carry such height with so much lounging grace.
As a young admirer had once said of him: "If anybody can tell a fellow just when to
wear a black tie with evening clothes and when not to, it's Larry Lefferts."
And on the question of pumps versus patent- leather "Oxfords" his authority had never
been disputed. "My God!" he said; and silently handed his
glass to old Sillerton Jackson.
Newland Archer, following Lefferts's glance, saw with surprise that his
exclamation had been occasioned by the entry of a new figure into old Mrs.
Mingott's box.
It was that of a slim young woman, a little less tall than May Welland, with brown hair
growing in close curls about her temples and held in place by a narrow band of
diamonds.
The suggestion of this headdress, which gave her what was then called a "Josephine
look," was carried out in the cut of the dark blue velvet gown rather theatrically
caught up under her *** by a girdle with a large old-fashioned clasp.
The wearer of this unusual dress, who seemed quite unconscious of the attention
it was attracting, stood a moment in the centre of the box, discussing with Mrs.
Welland the propriety of taking the
latter's place in the front right-hand corner; then she yielded with a slight
smile, and seated herself in line with Mrs. Welland's sister-in-law, Mrs. Lovell
Mingott, who was installed in the opposite corner.
Mr. Sillerton Jackson had returned the opera-glass to Lawrence Lefferts.
The whole of the club turned instinctively, waiting to hear what the old man had to
say; for old Mr. Jackson was as great an authority on "family" as Lawrence Lefferts
was on "form."
He knew all the ramifications of New York's cousinships; and could not only elucidate
such complicated questions as that of the connection between the Mingotts (through
the Thorleys) with the Dallases of South
Carolina, and that of the relationship of the elder branch of Philadelphia Thorleys
to the Albany Chiverses (on no account to be confused with the Manson Chiverses of
University Place), but could also enumerate
the leading characteristics of each family: as, for instance, the fabulous stinginess
of the younger lines of Leffertses (the Long Island ones); or the fatal tendency of
the Rushworths to make foolish matches; or
the insanity recurring in every second generation of the Albany Chiverses, with
whom their New York cousins had always refused to intermarry--with the disastrous
exception of poor Medora Manson, who, as
everybody knew...but then her mother was a Rushworth.
In addition to this forest of family trees, Mr. Sillerton Jackson carried between his
narrow hollow temples, and under his soft thatch of silver hair, a register of most
of the scandals and mysteries that had
smouldered under the unruffled surface of New York society within the last fifty
years.
So far indeed did his information extend, and so acutely retentive was his memory,
that he was supposed to be the only man who could have told you who Julius Beaufort,
the banker, really was, and what had become
of handsome Bob Spicer, old Mrs. Manson Mingott's father, who had disappeared so
mysteriously (with a large sum of trust money) less than a year after his marriage,
on the very day that a beautiful Spanish
dancer who had been delighting thronged audiences in the old Opera-house on the
Battery had taken ship for Cuba.
But these mysteries, and many others, were closely locked in Mr. Jackson's breast; for
not only did his keen sense of honour forbid his repeating anything privately
imparted, but he was fully aware that his
reputation for discretion increased his opportunities of finding out what he wanted
to know.
The club box, therefore, waited in visible suspense while Mr. Sillerton Jackson handed
back Lawrence Lefferts's opera-glass.
For a moment he silently scrutinised the attentive group out of his filmy blue eyes
overhung by old veined lids; then he gave his moustache a thoughtful twist, and said
simply: "I didn't think the Mingotts would have tried it on."
>
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER II.
Newland Archer, during this brief episode, had been thrown into a strange state of
embarrassment.
It was annoying that the box which was thus attracting the undivided attention of
masculine New York should be that in which his betrothed was seated between her mother
and aunt; and for a moment he could not
identify the lady in the Empire dress, nor imagine why her presence created such
excitement among the initiated. Then light dawned on him, and with it came
a momentary rush of indignation.
No, indeed; no one would have thought the Mingotts would have tried it on!
But they had; they undoubtedly had; for the low-toned comments behind him left no doubt
in Archer's mind that the young woman was May Welland's cousin, the cousin always
referred to in the family as "poor Ellen Olenska."
Archer knew that she had suddenly arrived from Europe a day or two previously; he had
even heard from Miss Welland (not disapprovingly) that she had been to see
poor Ellen, who was staying with old Mrs. Mingott.
Archer entirely approved of family solidarity, and one of the qualities he
most admired in the Mingotts was their resolute championship of the few black
sheep that their blameless stock had produced.
There was nothing mean or ungenerous in the young man's heart, and he was glad that his
future wife should not be restrained by false prudery from being kind (in private)
to her unhappy cousin; but to receive
Countess Olenska in the family circle was a different thing from producing her in
public, at the Opera of all places, and in the very box with the young girl whose
engagement to him, Newland Archer, was to be announced within a few weeks.
No, he felt as old Sillerton Jackson felt; he did not think the Mingotts would have
tried it on!
He knew, of course, that whatever man dared (within Fifth Avenue's limits) that old
Mrs. Manson Mingott, the Matriarch of the line, would dare.
He had always admired the high and mighty old lady, who, in spite of having been only
Catherine Spicer of Staten Island, with a father mysteriously discredited, and
neither money nor position enough to make
people forget it, had allied herself with the head of the wealthy Mingott line,
married two of her daughters to "foreigners" (an Italian marquis and an
English banker), and put the crowning touch
to her audacities by building a large house of pale cream-coloured stone (when brown
sandstone seemed as much the only wear as a frock-coat in the afternoon) in an
inaccessible wilderness near the Central Park.
Old Mrs. Mingott's foreign daughters had become a legend.
They never came back to see their mother, and the latter being, like many persons of
active mind and dominating will, sedentary and corpulent in her habit, had
philosophically remained at home.
But the cream-coloured house (supposed to be modelled on the private hotels of the
Parisian aristocracy) was there as a visible proof of her moral courage; and she
throned in it, among pre-Revolutionary
furniture and souvenirs of the Tuileries of Louis Napoleon (where she had shone in her
middle age), as placidly as if there were nothing peculiar in living above Thirty-
fourth Street, or in having French windows
that opened like doors instead of sashes that pushed up.
Every one (including Mr. Sillerton Jackson) was agreed that old Catherine had never had
beauty--a gift which, in the eyes of New York, justified every success, and excused
a certain number of failings.
Unkind people said that, like her Imperial namesake, she had won her way to success by
strength of will and hardness of heart, and a kind of haughty effrontery that was
somehow justified by the extreme decency and dignity of her private life.
Mr. Manson Mingott had died when she was only twenty-eight, and had "tied up" the
money with an additional caution born of the general distrust of the Spicers; but
his bold young widow went her way
fearlessly, mingled freely in foreign society, married her daughters in heaven
knew what corrupt and fashionable circles, hobnobbed with Dukes and Ambassadors,
associated familiarly with Papists,
entertained Opera singers, and was the intimate friend of Mme.
Taglioni; and all the while (as Sillerton Jackson was the first to proclaim) there
had never been a breath on her reputation; the only respect, he always added, in which
she differed from the earlier Catherine.
Mrs. Manson Mingott had long since succeeded in untying her husband's fortune,
and had lived in affluence for half a century; but memories of her early straits
had made her excessively thrifty, and
though, when she bought a dress or a piece of furniture, she took care that it should
be of the best, she could not bring herself to spend much on the transient pleasures of
the table.
Therefore, for totally different reasons, her food was as poor as Mrs. Archer's, and
her wines did nothing to redeem it.
Her relatives considered that the penury of her table discredited the Mingott name,
which had always been associated with good living; but people continued to come to her
in spite of the "made dishes" and flat
champagne, and in reply to the remonstrances of her son Lovell (who tried
to retrieve the family credit by having the best chef in New York) she used to say
laughingly: "What's the use of two good
cooks in one family, now that I've married the girls and can't eat sauces?"
Newland Archer, as he mused on these things, had once more turned his eyes
toward the Mingott box.
He saw that Mrs. Welland and her sister-in- law were facing their semicircle of critics
with the Mingottian APLOMB which old Catherine had inculcated in all her tribe,
and that only May Welland betrayed, by a
heightened colour (perhaps due to the knowledge that he was watching her) a sense
of the gravity of the situation.
As for the cause of the commotion, she sat gracefully in her corner of the box, her
eyes fixed on the stage, and revealing, as she leaned forward, a little more shoulder
and *** than New York was accustomed to
seeing, at least in ladies who had reasons for wishing to pass unnoticed.
Few things seemed to Newland Archer more awful than an offence against "Taste," that
far-off divinity of whom "Form" was the mere visible representative and vicegerent.
Madame Olenska's pale and serious face appealed to his fancy as suited to the
occasion and to her unhappy situation; but the way her dress (which had no tucker)
sloped away from her thin shoulders shocked and troubled him.
He hated to think of May Welland's being exposed to the influence of a young woman
so careless of the dictates of Taste.
"After all," he heard one of the younger men begin behind him (everybody talked
through the Mephistopheles-and-Martha scenes), "after all, just WHAT happened?"
"Well--she left him; nobody attempts to deny that."
"He's an awful brute, isn't he?" continued the young enquirer, a candid Thorley, who
was evidently preparing to enter the lists as the lady's champion.
"The very worst; I knew him at Nice," said Lawrence Lefferts with authority.
"A half-paralysed white sneering fellow-- rather handsome head, but eyes with a lot
of lashes.
Well, I'll tell you the sort: when he wasn't with women he was collecting china.
Paying any price for both, I understand." There was a general laugh, and the young
champion said: "Well, then----?"
"Well, then; she bolted with his secretary."
"Oh, I see." The champion's face fell.
"It didn't last long, though: I heard of her a few months later living alone in
Venice. I believe Lovell Mingott went out to get
her.
He said she was desperately unhappy. That's all right--but this parading her at
the Opera's another thing." "Perhaps," young Thorley hazarded, "she's
too unhappy to be left at home."
This was greeted with an irreverent laugh, and the youth blushed deeply, and tried to
look as if he had meant to insinuate what knowing people called a "double entendre."
"Well--it's *** to have brought Miss Welland, anyhow," some one said in a low
tone, with a side-glance at Archer. "Oh, that's part of the campaign: Granny's
orders, no doubt," Lefferts laughed.
"When the old lady does a thing she does it thoroughly."
The act was ending, and there was a general stir in the box.
Suddenly Newland Archer felt himself impelled to decisive action.
The desire to be the first man to enter Mrs. Mingott's box, to proclaim to the
waiting world his engagement to May Welland, and to see her through whatever
difficulties her cousin's anomalous
situation might involve her in; this impulse had abruptly overruled all scruples
and hesitations, and sent him hurrying through the red corridors to the farther
side of the house.
As he entered the box his eyes met Miss Welland's, and he saw that she had
instantly understood his motive, though the family dignity which both considered so
high a virtue would not permit her to tell him so.
The persons of their world lived in an atmosphere of faint implications and pale
delicacies, and the fact that he and she understood each other without a word seemed
to the young man to bring them nearer than any explanation would have done.
Her eyes said: "You see why Mamma brought me," and his answered: "I would not for
the world have had you stay away."
"You know my niece Countess Olenska?" Mrs. Welland enquired as she shook hands
with her future son-in-law.
Archer bowed without extending his hand, as was the custom on being introduced to a
lady; and Ellen Olenska bent her head slightly, keeping her own pale-gloved hands
clasped on her huge fan of eagle feathers.
Having greeted Mrs. Lovell Mingott, a large blonde lady in creaking satin, he sat down
beside his betrothed, and said in a low tone: "I hope you've told Madame Olenska
that we're engaged?
I want everybody to know--I want you to let me announce it this evening at the ball."
Miss Welland's face grew rosy as the dawn, and she looked at him with radiant eyes.
"If you can persuade Mamma," she said; "but why should we change what is already
settled?"
He made no answer but that which his eyes returned, and she added, still more
confidently smiling: "Tell my cousin yourself: I give you leave.
She says she used to play with you when you were children."
She made way for him by pushing back her chair, and promptly, and a little
ostentatiously, with the desire that the whole house should see what he was doing,
Archer seated himself at the Countess Olenska's side.
"We DID use to play together, didn't we?" she asked, turning her grave eyes to his.
"You were a horrid boy, and kissed me once behind a door; but it was your cousin
Vandie Newland, who never looked at me, that I was in love with."
Her glance swept the horse-shoe curve of boxes.
"Ah, how this brings it all back to me--I see everybody here in knickerbockers and
pantalettes," she said, with her trailing slightly foreign accent, her eyes returning
to his face.
Agreeable as their expression was, the young man was shocked that they should
reflect so unseemly a picture of the august tribunal before which, at that very moment,
her case was being tried.
Nothing could be in worse taste than misplaced flippancy; and he answered
somewhat stiffly: "Yes, you have been away a very long time."
"Oh, centuries and centuries; so long," she said, "that I'm sure I'm dead and buried,
and this dear old place is heaven;" which, for reasons he could not define, struck
Newland Archer as an even more
disrespectful way of describing New York society.
>
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER III.
It invariably happened in the same way.
Mrs. Julius Beaufort, on the night of her annual ball, never failed to appear at the
Opera; indeed, she always gave her ball on an Opera night in order to emphasise her
complete superiority to household cares,
and her possession of a staff of servants competent to organise every detail of the
entertainment in her absence.
The Beauforts' house was one of the few in New York that possessed a ball-room (it
antedated even Mrs. Manson Mingott's and the Headly Chiverses'); and at a time when
it was beginning to be thought "provincial"
to put a "crash" over the drawing-room floor and move the furniture upstairs, the
possession of a ball-room that was used for no other purpose, and left for three-
hundred-and-sixty-four days of the year to
shuttered darkness, with its gilt chairs stacked in a corner and its chandelier in a
bag; this undoubted superiority was felt to compensate for whatever was regrettable in
the Beaufort past.
Mrs. Archer, who was fond of coining her social philosophy into axioms, had once
said: "We all have our pet common people-- " and though the phrase was a daring one,
its truth was secretly admitted in many an exclusive ***.
But the Beauforts were not exactly common; some people said they were even worse.
Mrs. Beaufort belonged indeed to one of America's most honoured families; she had
been the lovely Regina Dallas (of the South Carolina branch), a penniless beauty
introduced to New York society by her
cousin, the imprudent Medora Manson, who was always doing the wrong thing from the
right motive.
When one was related to the Mansons and the Rushworths one had a "droit de cite" (as
Mr. Sillerton Jackson, who had frequented the Tuileries, called it) in New York
society; but did one not forfeit it in marrying Julius Beaufort?
The question was: who was Beaufort?
He passed for an Englishman, was agreeable, handsome, ill-tempered, hospitable and
witty.
He had come to America with letters of recommendation from old Mrs. Manson
Mingott's English son-in-law, the banker, and had speedily made himself an important
position in the world of affairs; but his
habits were dissipated, his tongue was bitter, his antecedents were mysterious;
and when Medora Manson announced her cousin's engagement to him it was felt to
be one more act of folly in poor Medora's long record of imprudences.
But folly is as often justified of her children as wisdom, and two years after
young Mrs. Beaufort's marriage it was admitted that she had the most
distinguished house in New York.
No one knew exactly how the miracle was accomplished.
She was indolent, passive, the caustic even called her dull; but dressed like an idol,
hung with pearls, growing younger and blonder and more beautiful each year, she
throned in Mr. Beaufort's heavy brown-stone
palace, and drew all the world there without lifting her jewelled little finger.
The knowing people said it was Beaufort himself who trained the servants, taught
the chef new dishes, told the gardeners what hot-house flowers to grow for the
dinner-table and the drawing-rooms,
selected the guests, brewed the after- dinner punch and dictated the little notes
his wife wrote to her friends.
If he did, these domestic activities were privately performed, and he presented to
the world the appearance of a careless and hospitable millionaire strolling into his
own drawing-room with the detachment of an
invited guest, and saying: "My wife's gloxinias are a marvel, aren't they?
I believe she gets them out from Kew." Mr. Beaufort's secret, people were agreed,
was the way he carried things off.
It was all very well to whisper that he had been "helped" to leave England by the
international banking-house in which he had been employed; he carried off that rumour
as easily as the rest--though New York's
business conscience was no less sensitive than its moral standard--he carried
everything before him, and all New York into his drawing-rooms, and for over twenty
years now people had said they were "going
to the Beauforts'" with the same tone of security as if they had said they were
going to Mrs. Manson Mingott's, and with the added satisfaction of knowing they
would get hot canvas-back ducks and vintage
wines, instead of tepid Veuve Clicquot without a year and warmed-up croquettes
from Philadelphia.
Mrs. Beaufort, then, had as usual appeared in her box just before the Jewel Song; and
when, again as usual, she rose at the end of the third act, drew her opera cloak
about her lovely shoulders, and
disappeared, New York knew that meant that half an hour later the ball would begin.
The Beaufort house was one that New Yorkers were proud to show to foreigners,
especially on the night of the annual ball.
The Beauforts had been among the first people in New York to own their own red
velvet carpet and have it rolled down the steps by their own footmen, under their own
awning, instead of hiring it with the supper and the ball-room chairs.
They had also inaugurated the custom of letting the ladies take their cloaks off in
the hall, instead of shuffling up to the hostess's bedroom and recurling their hair
with the aid of the gas-burner; Beaufort
was understood to have said that he supposed all his wife's friends had maids
who saw to it that they were properly coiffees when they left home.
Then the house had been boldly planned with a ball-room, so that, instead of squeezing
through a narrow passage to get to it (as at the Chiverses') one marched solemnly
down a vista of enfiladed drawing-rooms
(the sea-green, the crimson and the bouton d'or), seeing from afar the many-candled
lustres reflected in the polished parquetry, and beyond that the depths of a
conservatory where camellias and tree-ferns
arched their costly foliage over seats of black and gold bamboo.
Newland Archer, as became a young man of his position, strolled in somewhat late.
He had left his overcoat with the silk- stockinged footmen (the stockings were one
of Beaufort's few fatuities), had dawdled a while in the library hung with Spanish
leather and furnished with Buhl and
malachite, where a few men were chatting and putting on their dancing-gloves, and
had finally joined the line of guests whom Mrs. Beaufort was receiving on the
threshold of the crimson drawing-room.
Archer was distinctly nervous.
He had not gone back to his club after the Opera (as the young bloods usually did),
but, the night being fine, had walked for some distance up Fifth Avenue before
turning back in the direction of the Beauforts' house.
He was definitely afraid that the Mingotts might be going too far; that, in fact, they
might have Granny Mingott's orders to bring the Countess Olenska to the ball.
From the tone of the club box he had perceived how grave a mistake that would
be; and, though he was more than ever determined to "see the thing through," he
felt less chivalrously eager to champion
his betrothed's cousin than before their brief talk at the Opera.
Wandering on to the bouton d'or drawing- room (where Beaufort had had the audacity
to hang "Love Victorious," the much- discussed nude of Bouguereau) Archer found
Mrs. Welland and her daughter standing near the ball-room door.
Couples were already gliding over the floor beyond: the light of the wax candles fell
on revolving tulle skirts, on girlish heads wreathed with modest blossoms, on the
dashing aigrettes and ornaments of the
young married women's coiffures, and on the glitter of highly glazed shirt-fronts and
fresh glace gloves.
Miss Welland, evidently about to join the dancers, hung on the threshold, her lilies-
of-the-valley in her hand (she carried no other bouquet), her face a little pale, her
eyes burning with a candid excitement.
A group of young men and girls were gathered about her, and there was much
hand-clasping, laughing and pleasantry on which Mrs. Welland, standing slightly
apart, shed the beam of a qualified approval.
It was evident that Miss Welland was in the act of announcing her engagement, while her
mother affected the air of parental reluctance considered suitable to the
occasion.
Archer paused a moment. It was at his express wish that the
announcement had been made, and yet it was not thus that he would have wished to have
his happiness known.
To proclaim it in the heat and noise of a crowded ball-room was to rob it of the fine
bloom of privacy which should belong to things nearest the heart.
His joy was so deep that this blurring of the surface left its essence untouched; but
he would have liked to keep the surface pure too.
It was something of a satisfaction to find that May Welland shared this feeling.
Her eyes fled to his beseechingly, and their look said: "Remember, we're doing
this because it's right."
No appeal could have found a more immediate response in Archer's breast; but he wished
that the necessity of their action had been represented by some ideal reason, and not
simply by poor Ellen Olenska.
The group about Miss Welland made way for him with significant smiles, and after
taking his share of the felicitations he drew his betrothed into the middle of the
ball-room floor and put his arm about her waist.
"Now we shan't have to talk," he said, smiling into her candid eyes, as they
floated away on the soft waves of the Blue Danube.
She made no answer.
Her lips trembled into a smile, but the eyes remained distant and serious, as if
bent on some ineffable vision.
"Dear," Archer whispered, pressing her to him: it was borne in on him that the first
hours of being engaged, even if spent in a ball-room, had in them something grave and
sacramental.
What a new life it was going to be, with this whiteness, radiance, goodness at one's
side!
The dance over, the two, as became an affianced couple, wandered into the
conservatory; and sitting behind a tall screen of tree-ferns and camellias Newland
pressed her gloved hand to his lips.
"You see I did as you asked me to," she said.
"Yes: I couldn't wait," he answered smiling.
After a moment he added: "Only I wish it hadn't had to be at a ball."
"Yes, I know." She met his glance comprehendingly.
"But after all--even here we're alone together, aren't we?"
"Oh, dearest--always!" Archer cried.
Evidently she was always going to understand; she was always going to say the
right thing.
The discovery made the cup of his bliss overflow, and he went on gaily: "The worst
of it is that I want to kiss you and I can't."
As he spoke he took a swift glance about the conservatory, assured himself of their
momentary privacy, and catching her to him laid a fugitive pressure on her lips.
To counteract the audacity of this proceeding he led her to a bamboo sofa in a
less secluded part of the conservatory, and sitting down beside her broke a lily-of-
the-valley from her bouquet.
She sat silent, and the world lay like a sunlit valley at their feet.
"Did you tell my cousin Ellen?" she asked presently, as if she spoke through a dream.
He roused himself, and remembered that he had not done so.
Some invincible repugnance to speak of such things to the strange foreign woman had
checked the words on his lips.
"No--I hadn't the chance after all," he said, fibbing hastily.
"Ah." She looked disappointed, but gently
resolved on gaining her point.
"You must, then, for I didn't either; and I shouldn't like her to think--"
"Of course not. But aren't you, after all, the person to do
it?"
She pondered on this.
"If I'd done it at the right time, yes: but now that there's been a delay I think you
must explain that I'd asked you to tell her at the Opera, before our speaking about it
to everybody here.
Otherwise she might think I had forgotten her.
You see, she's one of the family, and she's been away so long that she's rather--
sensitive."
Archer looked at her glowingly. "Dear and great angel!
Of course I'll tell her." He glanced a trifle apprehensively toward
the crowded ball-room.
"But I haven't seen her yet. Has she come?"
"No; at the last minute she decided not to."
"At the last minute?" he echoed, betraying his surprise that she should ever have
considered the alternative possible. "Yes. She's awfully fond of dancing," the
young girl answered simply.
"But suddenly she made up her mind that her dress wasn't smart enough for a ball,
though we thought it so lovely; and so my aunt had to take her home."
"Oh, well--" said Archer with happy indifference.
Nothing about his betrothed pleased him more than her resolute determination to
carry to its utmost limit that ritual of ignoring the "unpleasant" in which they had
both been brought up.
"She knows as well as I do," he reflected, "the real reason of her cousin's staying
away; but I shall never let her see by the least sign that I am conscious of there
being a shadow of a shade on poor Ellen Olenska's reputation."
>
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER IV.
In the course of the next day the first of the usual betrothal visits were exchanged.
The New York ritual was precise and inflexible in such matters; and in
conformity with it Newland Archer first went with his mother and sister to call on
Mrs. Welland, after which he and Mrs.
Welland and May drove out to old Mrs. Manson Mingott's to receive that venerable
ancestress's blessing. A visit to Mrs. Manson Mingott was always
an amusing episode to the young man.
The house in itself was already an historic document, though not, of course, as
venerable as certain other old family houses in University Place and lower Fifth
Avenue.
Those were of the purest 1830, with a grim harmony of cabbage-rose-garlanded carpets,
rosewood consoles, round-arched fire-places with black marble mantels, and immense
glazed book-cases of mahogany; whereas old
Mrs. Mingott, who had built her house later, had bodily cast out the massive
furniture of her prime, and mingled with the Mingott heirlooms the frivolous
upholstery of the Second Empire.
It was her habit to sit in a window of her sitting-room on the ground floor, as if
watching calmly for life and fashion to flow northward to her solitary doors.
She seemed in no hurry to have them come, for her patience was equalled by her
confidence.
She was sure that presently the hoardings, the quarries, the one-story saloons, the
wooden green-houses in ragged gardens, and the rocks from which goats surveyed the
scene, would vanish before the advance of
residences as stately as her own--perhaps (for she was an impartial woman) even
statelier; and that the cobble-stones over which the old clattering omnibuses bumped
would be replaced by smooth asphalt, such as people reported having seen in Paris.
Meanwhile, as every one she cared to see came to HER (and she could fill her rooms
as easily as the Beauforts, and without adding a single item to the menu of her
suppers), she did not suffer from her geographic isolation.
The immense accretion of flesh which had descended on her in middle life like a
flood of lava on a doomed city had changed her from a plump active little woman with a
neatly-turned foot and ankle into something as vast and august as a natural phenomenon.
She had accepted this submergence as philosophically as all her other trials,
and now, in extreme old age, was rewarded by presenting to her mirror an almost
unwrinkled expanse of firm pink and white
flesh, in the centre of which the traces of a small face survived as if awaiting
excavation.
A flight of smooth double chins led down to the dizzy depths of a still-snowy ***
veiled in snowy muslins that were held in place by a miniature portrait of the late
Mr. Mingott; and around and below, wave
after wave of black silk surged away over the edges of a capacious armchair, with two
tiny white hands poised like gulls on the surface of the billows.
The burden of Mrs. Manson Mingott's flesh had long since made it impossible for her
to go up and down stairs, and with characteristic independence she had made
her reception rooms upstairs and
established herself (in flagrant violation of all the New York proprieties) on the
ground floor of her house; so that, as you sat in her sitting-room window with her,
you caught (through a door that was always
open, and a looped-back yellow damask portiere) the unexpected vista of a bedroom
with a huge low bed upholstered like a sofa, and a toilet-table with frivolous
lace flounces and a gilt-framed mirror.
Her visitors were startled and fascinated by the foreignness of this arrangement,
which recalled scenes in French fiction, and architectural incentives to immorality
such as the simple American had never dreamed of.
That was how women with lovers lived in the wicked old societies, in apartments with
all the rooms on one floor, and all the indecent propinquities that their novels
described.
It amused Newland Archer (who had secretly situated the love-scenes of "Monsieur de
Camors" in Mrs. Mingott's bedroom) to picture her blameless life led in the
stage-setting of adultery; but he said to
himself, with considerable admiration, that if a lover had been what she wanted, the
intrepid woman would have had him too.
To the general relief the Countess Olenska was not present in her grandmother's
drawing-room during the visit of the betrothed couple.
Mrs. Mingott said she had gone out; which, on a day of such glaring sunlight, and at
the "shopping hour," seemed in itself an indelicate thing for a compromised woman to
do.
But at any rate it spared them the embarrassment of her presence, and the
faint shadow that her unhappy past might seem to shed on their radiant future.
The visit went off successfully, as was to have been expected.
Old Mrs. Mingott was delighted with the engagement, which, being long foreseen by
watchful relatives, had been carefully passed upon in family council; and the
engagement ring, a large thick sapphire set
in invisible claws, met with her unqualified admiration.
"It's the new setting: of course it shows the stone beautifully, but it looks a
little bare to old-fashioned eyes," Mrs. Welland had explained, with a conciliatory
side-glance at her future son-in-law.
"Old-fashioned eyes? I hope you don't mean mine, my dear?
I like all the novelties," said the ancestress, lifting the stone to her small
bright orbs, which no glasses had ever disfigured.
"Very handsome," she added, returning the jewel; "very liberal.
In my time a cameo set in pearls was thought sufficient.
But it's the hand that sets off the ring, isn't it, my dear Mr. Archer?" and she
waved one of her tiny hands, with small pointed nails and rolls of aged fat
encircling the wrist like ivory bracelets.
"Mine was modelled in Rome by the great Ferrigiani.
You should have May's done: no doubt he'll have it done, my child.
Her hand is large--it's these modern sports that spread the joints--but the skin is
white.--And when's the wedding to be?" she broke off, fixing her eyes on Archer's
face.
"Oh--" Mrs. Welland murmured, while the young man, smiling at his betrothed,
replied: "As soon as ever it can, if only you'll back me up, Mrs. Mingott."
"We must give them time to get to know each other a little better, mamma," Mrs. Welland
interposed, with the proper affectation of reluctance; to which the ancestress
rejoined: "Know each other?
Fiddlesticks! Everybody in New York has always known
everybody. Let the young man have his way, my dear;
don't wait till the bubble's off the wine.
Marry them before Lent; I may catch pneumonia any winter now, and I want to
give the wedding-breakfast."
These successive statements were received with the proper expressions of amusement,
incredulity and gratitude; and the visit was breaking up in a vein of mild
pleasantry when the door opened to admit
the Countess Olenska, who entered in bonnet and mantle followed by the unexpected
figure of Julius Beaufort.
There was a cousinly murmur of pleasure between the ladies, and Mrs. Mingott held
out Ferrigiani's model to the banker. "Ha!
Beaufort, this is a rare favour!"
(She had an odd foreign way of addressing men by their surnames.)
"Thanks. I wish it might happen oftener," said the
visitor in his easy arrogant way.
"I'm generally so tied down; but I met the Countess Ellen in Madison Square, and she
was good enough to let me walk home with her."
"Ah--I hope the house will be gayer, now that Ellen's here!" cried Mrs. Mingott with
a glorious effrontery.
"Sit down--sit down, Beaufort: push up the yellow armchair; now I've got you I want a
good gossip.
I hear your ball was magnificent; and I understand you invited Mrs. Lemuel
Struthers? Well--I've a curiosity to see the woman
myself."
She had forgotten her relatives, who were drifting out into the hall under Ellen
Olenska's guidance.
Old Mrs. Mingott had always professed a great admiration for Julius Beaufort, and
there was a kind of kinship in their cool domineering way and their short-cuts
through the conventions.
Now she was eagerly curious to know what had decided the Beauforts to invite (for
the first time) Mrs. Lemuel Struthers, the widow of Struthers's Shoe-polish, who had
returned the previous year from a long
initiatory sojourn in Europe to lay siege to the tight little citadel of New York.
"Of course if you and Regina invite her the thing is settled.
Well, we need new blood and new money--and I hear she's still very good-looking," the
carnivorous old lady declared.
In the hall, while Mrs. Welland and May drew on their furs, Archer saw that the
Countess Olenska was looking at him with a faintly questioning smile.
"Of course you know already--about May and me," he said, answering her look with a shy
laugh.
"She scolded me for not giving you the news last night at the Opera: I had her orders
to tell you that we were engaged--but I couldn't, in that crowd."
The smile passed from Countess Olenska's eyes to her lips: she looked younger, more
like the bold brown Ellen Mingott of his boyhood.
"Of course I know; yes.
And I'm so glad. But one doesn't tell such things first in a
crowd." The ladies were on the threshold and she
held out her hand.
"Good-bye; come and see me some day," she said, still looking at Archer.
In the carriage, on the way down Fifth Avenue, they talked pointedly of Mrs.
Mingott, of her age, her spirit, and all her wonderful attributes.
No one alluded to Ellen Olenska; but Archer knew that Mrs. Welland was thinking: "It's
a mistake for Ellen to be seen, the very day after her arrival, parading up Fifth
Avenue at the crowded hour with Julius
Beaufort--" and the young man himself mentally added: "And she ought to know
that a man who's just engaged doesn't spend his time calling on married women.
But I daresay in the set she's lived in they do--they never do anything else."
And, in spite of the cosmopolitan views on which he prided himself, he thanked heaven
that he was a New Yorker, and about to ally himself with one of his own kind.
>
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER V.
The next evening old Mr. Sillerton Jackson came to dine with the Archers.
Mrs. Archer was a shy woman and shrank from society; but she liked to be well-informed
as to its doings.
Her old friend Mr. Sillerton Jackson applied to the investigation of his
friends' affairs the patience of a collector and the science of a naturalist;
and his sister, Miss Sophy Jackson, who
lived with him, and was entertained by all the people who could not secure her much-
sought-after brother, brought home bits of minor gossip that filled out usefully the
gaps in his picture.
Therefore, whenever anything happened that Mrs. Archer wanted to know about, she asked
Mr. Jackson to dine; and as she honoured few people with her invitations, and as she
and her daughter Janey were an excellent
audience, Mr. Jackson usually came himself instead of sending his sister.
If he could have dictated all the conditions, he would have chosen the
evenings when Newland was out; not because the young man was uncongenial to him (the
two got on capitally at their club) but
because the old anecdotist sometimes felt, on Newland's part, a tendency to weigh his
evidence that the ladies of the family never showed.
Mr. Jackson, if perfection had been attainable on earth, would also have asked
that Mrs. Archer's food should be a little better.
But then New York, as far back as the mind of man could travel, had been divided into
the two great fundamental groups of the Mingotts and Mansons and all their clan,
who cared about eating and clothes and
money, and the Archer-Newland-van-der- Luyden tribe, who were devoted to travel,
horticulture and the best fiction, and looked down on the grosser forms of
pleasure.
You couldn't have everything, after all.
If you dined with the Lovell Mingotts you got canvas-back and terrapin and vintage
wines; at Adeline Archer's you could talk about Alpine scenery and "The Marble Faun";
and luckily the Archer Madeira had gone round the Cape.
Therefore when a friendly summons came from Mrs. Archer, Mr. Jackson, who was a true
eclectic, would usually say to his sister: "I've been a little gouty since my last
dinner at the Lovell Mingotts'--it will do me good to diet at Adeline's."
Mrs. Archer, who had long been a widow, lived with her son and daughter in West
Twenty-eighth Street.
An upper floor was dedicated to Newland, and the two women squeezed themselves into
narrower quarters below.
In an unclouded harmony of tastes and interests they cultivated ferns in Wardian
cases, made macrame lace and wool embroidery on linen, collected American
revolutionary glazed ware, subscribed to
"Good Words," and read Ouida's novels for the sake of the Italian atmosphere.
(They preferred those about peasant life, because of the descriptions of scenery and
the pleasanter sentiments, though in general they liked novels about people in
society, whose motives and habits were more
comprehensible, spoke severely of Dickens, who "had never drawn a gentleman," and
considered Thackeray less at home in the great world than Bulwer--who, however, was
beginning to be thought old-fashioned.)
Mrs. and Miss Archer were both great lovers of scenery.
It was what they principally sought and admired on their occasional travels abroad;
considering architecture and painting as subjects for men, and chiefly for learned
persons who read Ruskin.
Mrs. Archer had been born a Newland, and mother and daughter, who were as like as
sisters, were both, as people said, "true Newlands"; tall, pale, and slightly round-
shouldered, with long noses, sweet smiles
and a kind of drooping distinction like that in certain faded Reynolds portraits.
Their physical resemblance would have been complete if an elderly embonpoint had not
stretched Mrs. Archer's black brocade, while Miss Archer's brown and purple
poplins hung, as the years went on, more and more slackly on her *** frame.
Mentally, the likeness between them, as Newland was aware, was less complete than
their identical mannerisms often made it appear.
The long habit of living together in mutually dependent intimacy had given them
the same vocabulary, and the same habit of beginning their phrases "Mother thinks" or
"Janey thinks," according as one or the
other wished to advance an opinion of her own; but in reality, while Mrs. Archer's
serene unimaginativeness rested easily in the accepted and familiar, Janey was
subject to starts and aberrations of fancy
welling up from springs of suppressed romance.
Mother and daughter adored each other and revered their son and brother; and Archer
loved them with a tenderness made compunctious and uncritical by the sense of
their exaggerated admiration, and by his secret satisfaction in it.
After all, he thought it a good thing for a man to have his authority respected in his
own house, even if his sense of humour sometimes made him question the force of
his mandate.
On this occasion the young man was very sure that Mr. Jackson would rather have had
him dine out; but he had his own reasons for not doing so.
Of course old Jackson wanted to talk about Ellen Olenska, and of course Mrs. Archer
and Janey wanted to hear what he had to tell.
All three would be slightly embarrassed by Newland's presence, now that his
prospective relation to the Mingott clan had been made known; and the young man
waited with an amused curiosity to see how they would turn the difficulty.
They began, obliquely, by talking about Mrs. Lemuel Struthers.
"It's a pity the Beauforts asked her," Mrs. Archer said gently.
"But then Regina always does what he tells her; and BEAUFORT--"
"Certain nuances escape Beaufort," said Mr. Jackson, cautiously inspecting the broiled
shad, and wondering for the thousandth time why Mrs. Archer's cook always burnt the roe
to a cinder.
(Newland, who had long shared his wonder, could always detect it in the older man's
expression of melancholy disapproval.) "Oh, necessarily; Beaufort is a vulgar
man," said Mrs. Archer.
"My grandfather Newland always used to say to my mother: 'Whatever you do, don't let
that fellow Beaufort be introduced to the girls.'
But at least he's had the advantage of associating with gentlemen; in England too,
they say. It's all very mysterious--" She glanced at
Janey and paused.
She and Janey knew every fold of the Beaufort mystery, but in public Mrs. Archer
continued to assume that the subject was not one for the unmarried.
"But this Mrs. Struthers," Mrs. Archer continued; "what did you say SHE was,
Sillerton?" "Out of a mine: or rather out of the saloon
at the head of the pit.
Then with Living Wax-Works, touring New England.
After the police broke THAT up, they say she lived--" Mr. Jackson in his turn
glanced at Janey, whose eyes began to bulge from under her prominent lids.
There were still hiatuses for her in Mrs. Struthers's past.
"Then," Mr. Jackson continued (and Archer saw he was wondering why no one had told
the butler never to slice cucumbers with a steel knife), "then Lemuel Struthers came
along.
They say his advertiser used the girl's head for the shoe-polish posters; her
hair's intensely black, you know--the Egyptian style.
Anyhow, he--eventually--married her."
There were volumes of innuendo in the way the "eventually" was spaced, and each
syllable given its due stress.
"Oh, well--at the pass we've come to nowadays, it doesn't matter," said Mrs.
Archer indifferently.
The ladies were not really interested in Mrs. Struthers just then; the subject of
Ellen Olenska was too fresh and too absorbing to them.
Indeed, Mrs. Struthers's name had been introduced by Mrs. Archer only that she
might presently be able to say: "And Newland's new cousin--Countess Olenska?
Was SHE at the ball too?"
There was a faint touch of sarcasm in the reference to her son, and Archer knew it
and had expected it.
Even Mrs. Archer, who was seldom unduly pleased with human events, had been
altogether glad of her son's engagement.
("Especially after that silly business with Mrs. Rushworth," as she had remarked to
Janey, alluding to what had once seemed to Newland a tragedy of which his soul would
always bear the scar.)
There was no better match in New York than May Welland, look at the question from
whatever point you chose.
Of course such a marriage was only what Newland was entitled to; but young men are
so foolish and incalculable--and some women so ensnaring and unscrupulous--that it was
nothing short of a miracle to see one's
only son safe past the Siren Isle and in the haven of a blameless domesticity.
All this Mrs. Archer felt, and her son knew she felt; but he knew also that she had
been perturbed by the premature announcement of his engagement, or rather
by its cause; and it was for that reason--
because on the whole he was a tender and indulgent master--that he had stayed at
home that evening.
"It's not that I don't approve of the Mingotts' esprit de corps; but why
Newland's engagement should be mixed up with that Olenska woman's comings and
goings I don't see," Mrs. Archer grumbled
to Janey, the only witness of her slight lapses from perfect sweetness.
She had behaved beautifully--and in beautiful behaviour she was unsurpassed--
during the call on Mrs. Welland; but Newland knew (and his betrothed doubtless
guessed) that all through the visit she and
Janey were nervously on the watch for Madame Olenska's possible intrusion; and
when they left the house together she had permitted herself to say to her son: "I'm
thankful that Augusta Welland received us alone."
These indications of inward disturbance moved Archer the more that he too felt that
the Mingotts had gone a little too far.
But, as it was against all the rules of their code that the mother and son should
ever allude to what was uppermost in their thoughts, he simply replied: "Oh, well,
there's always a phase of family parties to
be gone through when one gets engaged, and the sooner it's over the better."
At which his mother merely pursed her lips under the lace veil that hung down from her
grey velvet bonnet trimmed with frosted grapes.
Her revenge, he felt--her lawful revenge-- would be to "draw" Mr. Jackson that evening
on the Countess Olenska; and, having publicly done his duty as a future member
of the Mingott clan, the young man had no
objection to hearing the lady discussed in private--except that the subject was
already beginning to bore him.
Mr. Jackson had helped himself to a slice of the tepid filet which the mournful
butler had handed him with a look as sceptical as his own, and had rejected the
mushroom sauce after a scarcely perceptible sniff.
He looked baffled and hungry, and Archer reflected that he would probably finish his
meal on Ellen Olenska.
Mr. Jackson leaned back in his chair, and glanced up at the candlelit Archers,
Newlands and van der Luydens hanging in dark frames on the dark walls.
"Ah, how your grandfather Archer loved a good dinner, my dear Newland!" he said, his
eyes on the portrait of a plump full- chested young man in a stock and a blue
coat, with a view of a white-columned country-house behind him.
"Well--well--well... I wonder what he would have said to all
these foreign marriages!"
Mrs. Archer ignored the allusion to the ancestral cuisine and Mr. Jackson continued
with deliberation: "No, she was NOT at the ball."
"Ah--" Mrs. Archer murmured, in a tone that implied: "She had that decency."
"Perhaps the Beauforts don't know her," Janey suggested, with her artless malice.
Mr. Jackson gave a faint sip, as if he had been tasting invisible Madeira.
"Mrs. Beaufort may not--but Beaufort certainly does, for she was seen walking up
Fifth Avenue this afternoon with him by the whole of New York."
"Mercy--" moaned Mrs. Archer, evidently perceiving the uselessness of trying to
ascribe the actions of foreigners to a sense of delicacy.
"I wonder if she wears a round hat or a bonnet in the afternoon," Janey speculated.
"At the Opera I know she had on dark blue velvet, perfectly plain and flat--like a
night-gown."
"Janey!" said her mother; and Miss Archer blushed and tried to look audacious.
"It was, at any rate, in better taste not to go to the ball," Mrs. Archer continued.
A spirit of perversity moved her son to rejoin: "I don't think it was a question
of taste with her.
May said she meant to go, and then decided that the dress in question wasn't smart
enough." Mrs. Archer smiled at this confirmation of
her inference.
"Poor Ellen," she simply remarked; adding compassionately: "We must always bear in
mind what an eccentric bringing-up Medora Manson gave her.
What can you expect of a girl who was allowed to wear black satin at her coming-
out ball?"
"Ah--don't I remember her in it!" said Mr. Jackson; adding: "Poor girl!" in the tone
of one who, while enjoying the memory, had fully understood at the time what the sight
portended.
"It's odd," Janey remarked, "that she should have kept such an ugly name as
Ellen. I should have changed it to Elaine."
She glanced about the table to see the effect of this.
Her brother laughed. "Why Elaine?"
"I don't know; it sounds more--more Polish," said Janey, blushing.
"It sounds more conspicuous; and that can hardly be what she wishes," said Mrs.
Archer distantly.
"Why not?" broke in her son, growing suddenly argumentative.
"Why shouldn't she be conspicuous if she chooses?
Why should she slink about as if it were she who had disgraced herself?
She's 'poor Ellen' certainly, because she had the bad luck to make a wretched
marriage; but I don't see that that's a reason for hiding her head as if she were
the culprit."
"That, I suppose," said Mr. Jackson, speculatively, "is the line the Mingotts
mean to take." The young man reddened.
"I didn't have to wait for their cue, if that's what you mean, sir.
Madame Olenska has had an unhappy life: that doesn't make her an outcast."
"There are rumours," began Mr. Jackson, glancing at Janey.
"Oh, I know: the secretary," the young man took him up.
"Nonsense, mother; Janey's grown-up.
They say, don't they," he went on, "that the secretary helped her to get away from
her brute of a husband, who kept her practically a prisoner?
Well, what if he did?
I hope there isn't a man among us who wouldn't have done the same in such a
case."
Mr. Jackson glanced over his shoulder to say to the sad butler: "Perhaps...that
sauce...just a little, after all--"; then, having helped himself, he remarked: "I'm
told she's looking for a house.
She means to live here." "I hear she means to get a divorce," said
Janey boldly. "I hope she will!"
Archer exclaimed.
The word had fallen like a bombshell in the pure and tranquil atmosphere of the Archer
dining-room.
Mrs. Archer raised her delicate eye-brows in the particular curve that signified:
"The butler--" and the young man, himself mindful of the bad taste of discussing such
intimate matters in public, hastily
branched off into an account of his visit to old Mrs. Mingott.
After dinner, according to immemorial custom, Mrs. Archer and Janey trailed their
long silk draperies up to the drawing-room, where, while the gentlemen smoked below
stairs, they sat beside a Carcel lamp with
an engraved globe, facing each other across a rosewood work-table with a green silk bag
under it, and stitched at the two ends of a tapestry band of field-flowers destined to
adorn an "occasional" chair in the drawing- room of young Mrs. Newland Archer.
While this rite was in progress in the drawing-room, Archer settled Mr. Jackson in
an armchair near the fire in the Gothic library and handed him a cigar.
Mr. Jackson sank into the armchair with satisfaction, lit his cigar with perfect
confidence (it was Newland who bought them), and stretching his thin old ankles
to the coals, said: "You say the secretary
merely helped her to get away, my dear fellow?
Well, he was still helping her a year later, then; for somebody met 'em living at
Lausanne together."
Newland reddened. "Living together?
Well, why not? Who had the right to make her life over if
she hadn't?
I'm sick of the hypocrisy that would bury alive a woman of her age if her husband
prefers to live with harlots." He stopped and turned away angrily to light
his cigar.
"Women ought to be free--as free as we are," he declared, making a discovery of
which he was too irritated to measure the terrific consequences.
Mr. Sillerton Jackson stretched his ankles nearer the coals and emitted a sardonic
whistle.
"Well," he said after a pause, "apparently Count Olenski takes your view; for I never
heard of his having lifted a finger to get his wife back."
>
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER VI.
That evening, after Mr. Jackson had taken himself away, and the ladies had retired to
their chintz-curtained bedroom, Newland Archer mounted thoughtfully to his own
study.
A vigilant hand had, as usual, kept the fire alive and the lamp trimmed; and the
room, with its rows and rows of books, its bronze and steel statuettes of "The
Fencers" on the mantelpiece and its many
photographs of famous pictures, looked singularly home-like and welcoming.
As he dropped into his armchair near the fire his eyes rested on a large photograph
of May Welland, which the young girl had given him in the first days of their
romance, and which had now displaced all the other portraits on the table.
With a new sense of awe he looked at the frank forehead, serious eyes and gay
innocent mouth of the young creature whose soul's custodian he was to be.
That terrifying product of the social system he belonged to and believed in, the
young girl who knew nothing and expected everything, looked back at him like a
stranger through May Welland's familiar
features; and once more it was borne in on him that marriage was not the safe
anchorage he had been taught to think, but a voyage on uncharted seas.
The case of the Countess Olenska had stirred up old settled convictions and set
them drifting dangerously through his mind.
His own exclamation: "Women should be free--as free as we are," struck to the
root of a problem that it was agreed in his world to regard as non-existent.
"Nice" women, however wronged, would never claim the kind of freedom he meant, and
generous-minded men like himself were therefore--in the heat of argument--the
more chivalrously ready to concede it to them.
Such verbal generosities were in fact only a humbugging disguise of the inexorable
conventions that tied things together and bound people down to the old pattern.
But here he was pledged to defend, on the part of his betrothed's cousin, conduct
that, on his own wife's part, would justify him in calling down on her all the thunders
of Church and State.
Of course the dilemma was purely hypothetical; since he wasn't a blackguard
Polish nobleman, it was absurd to speculate what his wife's rights would be if he WERE.
But Newland Archer was too imaginative not to feel that, in his case and May's, the
tie might gall for reasons far less gross and palpable.
What could he and she really know of each other, since it was his duty, as a "decent"
fellow, to conceal his past from her, and hers, as a marriageable girl, to have no
past to conceal?
What if, for some one of the subtler reasons that would tell with both of them,
they should tire of each other, misunderstand or irritate each other?
He reviewed his friends' marriages--the supposedly happy ones--and saw none that
answered, even remotely, to the passionate and tender comradeship which he pictured as
his permanent relation with May Welland.
He perceived that such a picture presupposed, on her part, the experience,
the versatility, the freedom of judgment, which she had been carefully trained not to
possess; and with a shiver of foreboding he
saw his marriage becoming what most of the other marriages about him were: a dull
association of material and social interests held together by ignorance on the
one side and hypocrisy on the other.
Lawrence Lefferts occurred to him as the husband who had most completely realised
this enviable ideal.
As became the high-priest of form, he had formed a wife so completely to his own
convenience that, in the most conspicuous moments of his frequent love-affairs with
other men's wives, she went about in
smiling unconsciousness, saying that "Lawrence was so frightfully strict"; and
had been known to blush indignantly, and avert her gaze, when some one alluded in
her presence to the fact that Julius
Beaufort (as became a "foreigner" of doubtful origin) had what was known in New
York as "another establishment."
Archer tried to console himself with the thought that he was not quite such an ***
as Larry Lefferts, nor May such a simpleton as poor Gertrude; but the difference was
after all one of intelligence and not of standards.
In reality they all lived in a kind of hieroglyphic world, where the real thing
was never said or done or even thought, but only represented by a set of arbitrary
signs; as when Mrs. Welland, who knew
exactly why Archer had pressed her to announce her daughter's engagement at the
Beaufort ball (and had indeed expected him to do no less), yet felt obliged to
simulate reluctance, and the air of having
had her hand forced, quite as, in the books on Primitive Man that people of advanced
culture were beginning to read, the savage bride is dragged with shrieks from her
parents' tent.
The result, of course, was that the young girl who was the centre of this elaborate
system of mystification remained the more inscrutable for her very frankness and
assurance.
She was frank, poor darling, because she had nothing to conceal, assured because she
knew of nothing to be on her guard against; and with no better preparation than this,
she was to be plunged overnight into what
people evasively called "the facts of life."
The young man was sincerely but placidly in love.
He delighted in the radiant good looks of his betrothed, in her health, her
horsemanship, her grace and quickness at games, and the shy interest in books and
ideas that she was beginning to develop under his guidance.
(She had advanced far enough to join him in ridiculing the Idyls of the King, but not
to feel the beauty of Ulysses and the Lotus Eaters.)
She was straightforward, loyal and brave; she had a sense of humour (chiefly proved
by her laughing at HIS jokes); and he suspected, in the depths of her innocently-
gazing soul, a glow of feeling that it would be a joy to waken.
But when he had gone the brief round of her he returned discouraged by the thought that
all this frankness and innocence were only an artificial product.
Untrained human nature was not frank and innocent; it was full of the twists and
defences of an instinctive guile.
And he felt himself oppressed by this creation of factitious purity, so cunningly
manufactured by a conspiracy of mothers and aunts and grandmothers and long-dead
ancestresses, because it was supposed to be
what he wanted, what he had a right to, in order that he might exercise his lordly
pleasure in smashing it like an image made of snow.
There was a certain triteness in these reflections: they were those habitual to
young men on the approach of their wedding day.
But they were generally accompanied by a sense of compunction and self-abasement of
which Newland Archer felt no trace.
He could not deplore (as Thackeray's heroes so often exasperated him by doing) that he
had not a blank page to offer his bride in exchange for the unblemished one she was to
give to him.
He could not get away from the fact that if he had been brought up as she had they
would have been no more fit to find their way about than the Babes in the Wood; nor
could he, for all his anxious cogitations,
see any honest reason (any, that is, unconnected with his own momentary
pleasure, and the passion of masculine vanity) why his bride should not have been
allowed the same freedom of experience as himself.
Such questions, at such an hour, were bound to drift through his mind; but he was
conscious that their uncomfortable persistence and precision were due to the
inopportune arrival of the Countess Olenska.
Here he was, at the very moment of his betrothal--a moment for pure thoughts and
cloudless hopes--pitchforked into a coil of scandal which raised all the special
problems he would have preferred to let lie.
"Hang Ellen Olenska!" he grumbled, as he covered his fire and began to undress.
He could not really see why her fate should have the least bearing on his; yet he dimly
felt that he had only just begun to measure the risks of the championship which his
engagement had forced upon him.
A few days later the bolt fell.
The Lovell Mingotts had sent out cards for what was known as "a formal dinner" (that
is, three extra footmen, two dishes for each course, and a Roman punch in the
middle), and had headed their invitations
with the words "To meet the Countess Olenska," in accordance with the hospitable
American fashion, which treats strangers as if they were royalties, or at least as
their ambassadors.
The guests had been selected with a boldness and discrimination in which the
initiated recognised the firm hand of Catherine the Great.
Associated with such immemorial standbys as the Selfridge Merrys, who were asked
everywhere because they always had been, the Beauforts, on whom there was a claim of
relationship, and Mr. Sillerton Jackson and
his sister Sophy (who went wherever her brother told her to), were some of the most
fashionable and yet most irreproachable of the dominant "young married" set; the
Lawrence Leffertses, Mrs. Lefferts
Rushworth (the lovely widow), the Harry Thorleys, the Reggie Chiverses and young
Morris Dagonet and his wife (who was a van der Luyden).
The company indeed was perfectly assorted, since all the members belonged to the
little inner group of people who, during the long New York season, disported
themselves together daily and nightly with apparently undiminished zest.
Forty-eight hours later the unbelievable had happened; every one had refused the
Mingotts' invitation except the Beauforts and old Mr. Jackson and his sister.
The intended slight was emphasised by the fact that even the Reggie Chiverses, who
were of the Mingott clan, were among those inflicting it; and by the uniform wording
of the notes, in all of which the writers
"regretted that they were unable to accept," without the mitigating plea of a
"previous engagement" that ordinary courtesy prescribed.
New York society was, in those days, far too small, and too scant in its resources,
for every one in it (including livery- stable-keepers, butlers and cooks) not to
know exactly on which evenings people were
free; and it was thus possible for the recipients of Mrs. Lovell Mingott's
invitations to make cruelly clear their determination not to meet the Countess
Olenska.
The blow was unexpected; but the Mingotts, as their way was, met it gallantly.
Mrs. Lovell Mingott confided the case to Mrs. Welland, who confided it to Newland
Archer; who, aflame at the outrage, appealed passionately and authoritatively
to his mother; who, after a painful period
of inward resistance and outward temporising, succumbed to his instances (as
she always did), and immediately embracing his cause with an energy redoubled by her
previous hesitations, put on her grey
velvet bonnet and said: "I'll go and see Louisa van der Luyden."
The New York of Newland Archer's day was a small and slippery pyramid, in which, as
yet, hardly a fissure had been made or a foothold gained.
At its base was a firm foundation of what Mrs. Archer called "plain people"; an
honourable but obscure majority of respectable families who (as in the case of
the Spicers or the Leffertses or the
Jacksons) had been raised above their level by marriage with one of the ruling clans.
People, Mrs. Archer always said, were not as particular as they used to be; and with
old Catherine Spicer ruling one end of Fifth Avenue, and Julius Beaufort the
other, you couldn't expect the old traditions to last much longer.
Firmly narrowing upward from this wealthy but inconspicuous substratum was the
compact and dominant group which the Mingotts, Newlands, Chiverses and Mansons
so actively represented.
Most people imagined them to be the very apex of the pyramid; but they themselves
(at least those of Mrs. Archer's generation) were aware that, in the eyes of
the professional genealogist, only a still
smaller number of families could lay claim to that eminence.
"Don't tell me," Mrs. Archer would say to her children, "all this modern newspaper
rubbish about a New York aristocracy.
If there is one, neither the Mingotts nor the Mansons belong to it; no, nor the
Newlands or the Chiverses either.
Our grandfathers and great-grandfathers were just respectable English or Dutch
merchants, who came to the colonies to make their fortune, and stayed here because they
did so well.
One of your great-grandfathers signed the Declaration, and another was a general on
Washington's staff, and received General Burgoyne's sword after the battle of
Saratoga.
These are things to be proud of, but they have nothing to do with rank or class.
New York has always been a commercial community, and there are not more than
three families in it who can claim an aristocratic origin in the real sense of
the word."
Mrs. Archer and her son and daughter, like every one else in New York, knew who these
privileged beings were: the Dagonets of Washington Square, who came of an old
English county family allied with the Pitts
and Foxes; the Lannings, who had intermarried with the descendants of Count
de Grasse, and the van der Luydens, direct descendants of the first Dutch governor of
Manhattan, and related by pre-revolutionary
marriages to several members of the French and British aristocracy.
The Lannings survived only in the person of two very old but lively Miss Lannings, who
lived cheerfully and reminiscently among family portraits and Chippendale; the
Dagonets were a considerable clan, allied
to the best names in Baltimore and Philadelphia; but the van der Luydens, who
stood above all of them, had faded into a kind of super-terrestrial twilight, from
which only two figures impressively
emerged; those of Mr. and Mrs. Henry van der Luyden.
Mrs. Henry van der Luyden had been Louisa Dagonet, and her mother had been the
granddaughter of Colonel du Lac, of an old Channel Island family, who had fought under
Cornwallis and had settled in Maryland,
after the war, with his bride, Lady Angelica Trevenna, fifth daughter of the
Earl of St. Austrey.
The tie between the Dagonets, the du Lacs of Maryland, and their aristocratic Cornish
kinsfolk, the Trevennas, had always remained close and cordial.
Mr. and Mrs. van der Luyden had more than once paid long visits to the present head
of the house of Trevenna, the Duke of St. Austrey, at his country-seat in Cornwall
and at St. Austrey in Gloucestershire; and
his Grace had frequently announced his intention of some day returning their visit
(without the Duchess, who feared the Atlantic).
Mr. and Mrs. van der Luyden divided their time between Trevenna, their place in
Maryland, and Skuytercliff, the great estate on the Hudson which had been one of
the colonial grants of the Dutch government
to the famous first Governor, and of which Mr. van der Luyden was still "Patroon."
Their large solemn house in Madison Avenue was seldom opened, and when they came to
town they received in it only their most intimate friends.
"I wish you would go with me, Newland," his mother said, suddenly pausing at the door
of the Brown coupe.
"Louisa is fond of you; and of course it's on account of dear May that I'm taking this
step--and also because, if we don't all stand together, there'll be no such thing
as Society left."
>
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER VII.
Mrs. Henry van der Luyden listened in silence to her cousin Mrs. Archer's
narrative.
It was all very well to tell yourself in advance that Mrs. van der Luyden was always
silent, and that, though non-committal by nature and training, she was very kind to
the people she really liked.
Even personal experience of these facts was not always a protection from the chill that
descended on one in the high-ceilinged white-walled Madison Avenue drawing-room,
with the pale brocaded armchairs so
obviously uncovered for the occasion, and the gauze still veiling the ormolu mantel
ornaments and the beautiful old carved frame of Gainsborough's "Lady Angelica du
Lac."
Mrs. van der Luyden's portrait by Huntington (in black velvet and Venetian
point) faced that of her lovely ancestress.
It was generally considered "as fine as a Cabanel," and, though twenty years had
elapsed since its execution, was still "a perfect likeness."
Indeed the Mrs. van der Luyden who sat beneath it listening to Mrs. Archer might
have been the twin-sister of the fair and still youngish woman drooping against a
gilt armchair before a green rep curtain.
Mrs. van der Luyden still wore black velvet and Venetian point when she went into
society--or rather (since she never dined out) when she threw open her own doors to
receive it.
Her fair hair, which had faded without turning grey, was still parted in flat
overlapping points on her forehead, and the straight nose that divided her pale blue
eyes was only a little more pinched about
the nostrils than when the portrait had been painted.
She always, indeed, struck Newland Archer as having been rather gruesomely preserved
in the airless atmosphere of a perfectly irreproachable existence, as bodies caught
in glaciers keep for years a rosy life-in- death.
Like all his family, he esteemed and admired Mrs. van der Luyden; but he found
her gentle bending sweetness less approachable than the grimness of some of
his mother's old aunts, fierce spinsters
who said "No" on principle before they knew what they were going to be asked.
Mrs. van der Luyden's attitude said neither yes nor no, but always appeared to incline
to clemency till her thin lips, wavering into the shadow of a smile, made the almost
invariable reply: "I shall first have to talk this over with my husband."
She and Mr. van der Luyden were so exactly alike that Archer often wondered how, after
forty years of the closest conjugality, two such merged identities ever separated
themselves enough for anything as controversial as a talking-over.
But as neither had ever reached a decision without prefacing it by this mysterious
conclave, Mrs. Archer and her son, having set forth their case, waited resignedly for
the familiar phrase.
Mrs. van der Luyden, however, who had seldom surprised any one, now surprised
them by reaching her long hand toward the bell-rope.
"I think," she said, "I should like Henry to hear what you have told me."
A footman appeared, to whom she gravely added: "If Mr. van der Luyden has finished
reading the newspaper, please ask him to be kind enough to come."
She said "reading the newspaper" in the tone in which a Minister's wife might have
said: "Presiding at a Cabinet meeting"-- not from any arrogance of mind, but because
the habit of a life-time, and the attitude
of her friends and relations, had led her to consider Mr. van der Luyden's least
gesture as having an almost sacerdotal importance.
Her promptness of action showed that she considered the case as pressing as Mrs.
Archer; but, lest she should be thought to have committed herself in advance, she
added, with the sweetest look: "Henry
always enjoys seeing you, dear Adeline; and he will wish to congratulate Newland."
The double doors had solemnly reopened and between them appeared Mr. Henry van der
Luyden, tall, spare and frock-coated, with faded fair hair, a straight nose like his
wife's and the same look of frozen
gentleness in eyes that were merely pale grey instead of pale blue.
Mr. van der Luyden greeted Mrs. Archer with cousinly affability, proffered to Newland
low-voiced congratulations couched in the same language as his wife's, and seated
himself in one of the brocade armchairs
with the simplicity of a reigning sovereign.
"I had just finished reading the Times," he said, laying his long finger-tips together.
"In town my mornings are so much occupied that I find it more convenient to read the
newspapers after luncheon."
"Ah, there's a great deal to be said for that plan--indeed I think my uncle Egmont
used to say he found it less agitating not to read the morning papers till after
dinner," said Mrs. Archer responsively.
"Yes: my good father abhorred hurry.
But now we live in a constant rush," said Mr. van der Luyden in measured tones,
looking with pleasant deliberation about the large shrouded room which to Archer was
so complete an image of its owners.
"But I hope you HAD finished your reading, Henry?" his wife interposed.
"Quite--quite," he reassured her. "Then I should like Adeline to tell you--"
"Oh, it's really Newland's story," said his mother smiling; and proceeded to rehearse
once more the monstrous tale of the affront inflicted on Mrs. Lovell Mingott.
"Of course," she ended, "Augusta Welland and Mary Mingott both felt that, especially
in view of Newland's engagement, you and Henry OUGHT TO KNOW."
"Ah--" said Mr. van der Luyden, drawing a deep breath.
There was a silence during which the tick of the monumental ormolu clock on the white
marble mantelpiece grew as loud as the boom of a minute-gun.
Archer contemplated with awe the two slender faded figures, seated side by side
in a kind of viceregal rigidity, mouthpieces of some remote ancestral
authority which fate compelled them to
wield, when they would so much rather have lived in simplicity and seclusion, digging
invisible weeds out of the perfect lawns of Skuytercliff, and playing Patience together
in the evenings.
Mr. van der Luyden was the first to speak. "You really think this is due to some--some
intentional interference of Lawrence Lefferts's?" he enquired, turning to
Archer.
"I'm certain of it, sir.
Larry has been going it rather harder than usual lately--if cousin Louisa won't mind
my mentioning it--having rather a stiff affair with the postmaster's wife in their
village, or some one of that sort; and
whenever poor Gertrude Lefferts begins to suspect anything, and he's afraid of
trouble, he gets up a fuss of this kind, to show how awfully moral he is, and talks at
the top of his voice about the impertinence
of inviting his wife to meet people he doesn't wish her to know.
He's simply using Madame Olenska as a lightning-rod; I've seen him try the same
thing often before."
"The LEFFERTSES!--" said Mrs. van der Luyden.
"The LEFFERTSES!--" echoed Mrs. Archer.
"What would uncle Egmont have said of Lawrence Lefferts's pronouncing on
anybody's social position? It shows what Society has come to."
"We'll hope it has not quite come to that," said Mr. van der Luyden firmly.
"Ah, if only you and Louisa went out more!" sighed Mrs. Archer.
But instantly she became aware of her mistake.
The van der Luydens were morbidly sensitive to any criticism of their secluded
existence.
They were the arbiters of fashion, the Court of last Appeal, and they knew it, and
bowed to their fate.
But being shy and retiring persons, with no natural inclination for their part, they
lived as much as possible in the sylvan solitude of Skuytercliff, and when they
came to town, declined all invitations on the plea of Mrs. van der Luyden's health.
Newland Archer came to his mother's rescue. "Everybody in New York knows what you and
cousin Louisa represent.
That's why Mrs. Mingott felt she ought not to allow this slight on Countess Olenska to
pass without consulting you." Mrs. van der Luyden glanced at her husband,
who glanced back at her.
"It is the principle that I dislike," said Mr. van der Luyden.
"As long as a member of a well-known family is backed up by that family it should be
considered--final."
"It seems so to me," said his wife, as if she were producing a new thought.
"I had no idea," Mr. van der Luyden continued, "that things had come to such a
pass."
He paused, and looked at his wife again. "It occurs to me, my dear, that the
Countess Olenska is already a sort of relation--through Medora Manson's first
husband.
At any rate, she will be when Newland marries."
He turned toward the young man. "Have you read this morning's Times,
Newland?"
"Why, yes, sir," said Archer, who usually tossed off half a dozen papers with his
morning coffee. Husband and wife looked at each other
again.
Their pale eyes clung together in prolonged and serious consultation; then a faint
smile fluttered over Mrs. van der Luyden's face.
She had evidently guessed and approved.
Mr. van der Luyden turned to Mrs. Archer.
"If Louisa's health allowed her to dine out--I wish you would say to Mrs. Lovell
Mingott--she and I would have been happy to--er--fill the places of the Lawrence
Leffertses at her dinner."
He paused to let the irony of this sink in. "As you know, this is impossible."
Mrs. Archer sounded a sympathetic assent.
"But Newland tells me he has read this morning's Times; therefore he has probably
seen that Louisa's relative, the Duke of St. Austrey, arrives next week on the
Russia.
He is coming to enter his new sloop, the Guinevere, in next summer's International
Cup Race; and also to have a little canvasback shooting at Trevenna."
Mr. van der Luyden paused again, and continued with increasing benevolence:
"Before taking him down to Maryland we are inviting a few friends to meet him here--
only a little dinner--with a reception afterward.
I am sure Louisa will be as glad as I am if Countess Olenska will let us include her
among our guests."
He got up, bent his long body with a stiff friendliness toward his cousin, and added:
"I think I have Louisa's authority for saying that she will herself leave the
invitation to dine when she drives out
presently: with our cards--of course with our cards."
Mrs. Archer, who knew this to be a hint that the seventeen-hand chestnuts which
were never kept waiting were at the door, rose with a hurried murmur of thanks.
Mrs. van der Luyden beamed on her with the smile of Esther interceding with Ahasuerus;
but her husband raised a protesting hand. "There is nothing to thank me for, dear
Adeline; nothing whatever.
This kind of thing must not happen in New York; it shall not, as long as I can help
it," he pronounced with sovereign gentleness as he steered his cousins to the
door.
Two hours later, every one knew that the great C-spring barouche in which Mrs. van
der Luyden took the air at all seasons had been seen at old Mrs. Mingott's door, where
a large square envelope was handed in; and
that evening at the Opera Mr. Sillerton Jackson was able to state that the envelope
contained a card inviting the Countess Olenska to the dinner which the van der
Luydens were giving the following week for their cousin, the Duke of St. Austrey.
Some of the younger men in the club box exchanged a smile at this announcement, and
glanced sideways at Lawrence Lefferts, who sat carelessly in the front of the box,
pulling his long fair moustache, and who
remarked with authority, as the soprano paused: "No one but Patti ought to attempt
the Sonnambula."
>
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER VIII.
It was generally agreed in New York that the Countess Olenska had "lost her looks."
She had appeared there first, in Newland Archer's boyhood, as a brilliantly pretty
little girl of nine or ten, of whom people said that she "ought to be painted."
Her parents had been continental wanderers, and after a roaming babyhood she had lost
them both, and been taken in charge by her aunt, Medora Manson, also a wanderer, who
was herself returning to New York to "settle down."
Poor Medora, repeatedly widowed, was always coming home to settle down (each time in a
less expensive house), and bringing with her a new husband or an adopted child; but
after a few months she invariably parted
from her husband or quarrelled with her ward, and, having got rid of her house at a
loss, set out again on her wanderings.
As her mother had been a Rushworth, and her last unhappy marriage had linked her to one
of the crazy Chiverses, New York looked indulgently on her eccentricities; but when
she returned with her little orphaned
niece, whose parents had been popular in spite of their regrettable taste for
travel, people thought it a pity that the pretty child should be in such hands.
Every one was disposed to be kind to little Ellen Mingott, though her dusky red cheeks
and tight curls gave her an air of gaiety that seemed unsuitable in a child who
should still have been in black for her parents.
It was one of the misguided Medora's many peculiarities to flout the unalterable
rules that regulated American mourning, and when she stepped from the steamer her
family were scandalised to see that the
crape veil she wore for her own brother was seven inches shorter than those of her
sisters-in-law, while little Ellen was in crimson merino and amber beads, like a
gipsy foundling.
But New York had so long resigned itself to Medora that only a few old ladies shook
their heads over Ellen's gaudy clothes, while her other relations fell under the
charm of her high colour and high spirits.
She was a fearless and familiar little thing, who asked disconcerting questions,
made precocious comments, and possessed outlandish arts, such as dancing a Spanish
shawl dance and singing Neapolitan love- songs to a guitar.
Under the direction of her aunt (whose real name was Mrs. Thorley Chivers, but who,
having received a Papal title, had resumed her first husband's patronymic, and called
herself the Marchioness Manson, because in
Italy she could turn it into Manzoni) the little girl received an expensive but
incoherent education, which included "drawing from the model," a thing never
dreamed of before, and playing the piano in quintets with professional musicians.
Of course no good could come of this; and when, a few years later, poor Chivers
finally died in a madhouse, his widow (draped in strange weeds) again pulled up
stakes and departed with Ellen, who had
grown into a tall bony girl with conspicuous eyes.
For some time no more was heard of them; then news came of Ellen's marriage to an
immensely rich Polish nobleman of legendary fame, whom she had met at a ball at the
Tuileries, and who was said to have
princely establishments in Paris, Nice and Florence, a yacht at Cowes, and many square
miles of shooting in Transylvania.
She disappeared in a kind of sulphurous apotheosis, and when a few years later
Medora again came back to New York, subdued, impoverished, mourning a third
husband, and in quest of a still smaller
house, people wondered that her rich niece had not been able to do something for her.
Then came the news that Ellen's own marriage had ended in disaster, and that
she was herself returning home to seek rest and oblivion among her kinsfolk.
These things passed through Newland Archer's mind a week later as he watched
the Countess Olenska enter the van der Luyden drawing-room on the evening of the
momentous dinner.
The occasion was a solemn one, and he wondered a little nervously how she would
carry it off.
She came rather late, one hand still ungloved, and fastening a bracelet about
her wrist; yet she entered without any appearance of haste or embarrassment the
drawing-room in which New York's most
chosen company was somewhat awfully assembled.
In the middle of the room she paused, looking about her with a grave mouth and
smiling eyes; and in that instant Newland Archer rejected the general verdict on her
looks.
It was true that her early radiance was gone.
The red cheeks had paled; she was thin, worn, a little older-looking than her age,
which must have been nearly thirty.
But there was about her the mysterious authority of beauty, a sureness in the
carriage of the head, the movement of the eyes, which, without being in the least
theatrical, struck his as highly trained and full of a conscious power.
At the same time she was simpler in manner than most of the ladies present, and many
people (as he heard afterward from Janey) were disappointed that her appearance was
not more "stylish"--for stylishness was what New York most valued.
It was, perhaps, Archer reflected, because her early vivacity had disappeared; because
she was so quiet--quiet in her movements, her voice, and the tones of her low-pitched
voice.
New York had expected something a good deal more reasonant in a young woman with such a
history. The dinner was a somewhat formidable
business.
Dining with the van der Luydens was at best no light matter, and dining there with a
Duke who was their cousin was almost a religious solemnity.
It pleased Archer to think that only an old New Yorker could perceive the shade of
difference (to New York) between being merely a Duke and being the van der
Luydens' Duke.
New York took stray noblemen calmly, and even (except in the Struthers set) with a
certain distrustful hauteur; but when they presented such credentials as these they
were received with an old-fashioned
cordiality that they would have been greatly mistaken in ascribing solely to
their standing in Debrett.
It was for just such distinctions that the young man cherished his old New York even
while he smiled at it. The van der Luydens had done their best to
emphasise the importance of the occasion.
The du Lac Sevres and the Trevenna George II plate were out; so was the van der
Luyden "Lowestoft" (East India Company) and the Dagonet Crown Derby.
Mrs. van der Luyden looked more than ever like a Cabanel, and Mrs. Archer, in her
grandmother's seed-pearls and emeralds, reminded her son of an Isabey miniature.
All the ladies had on their handsomest jewels, but it was characteristic of the
house and the occasion that these were mostly in rather heavy old-fashioned
settings; and old Miss Lanning, who had
been persuaded to come, actually wore her mother's cameos and a Spanish blonde shawl.
The Countess Olenska was the only young woman at the dinner; yet, as Archer scanned
the smooth plump elderly faces between their diamond necklaces and towering
ostrich feathers, they struck him as curiously immature compared with hers.
It frightened him to think what must have gone to the making of her eyes.
The Duke of St. Austrey, who sat at his hostess's right, was naturally the chief
figure of the evening.
But if the Countess Olenska was less conspicuous than had been hoped, the Duke
was almost invisible.
Being a well-bred man he had not (like another recent ducal visitor) come to the
dinner in a shooting-jacket; but his evening clothes were so shabby and baggy,
and he wore them with such an air of their
being homespun, that (with his stooping way of sitting, and the vast beard spreading
over his shirt-front) he hardly gave the appearance of being in dinner attire.
He was short, round-shouldered, sunburnt, with a thick nose, small eyes and a
sociable smile; but he seldom spoke, and when he did it was in such low tones that,
despite the frequent silences of
expectation about the table, his remarks were lost to all but his neighbours.
When the men joined the ladies after dinner the Duke went straight up to the Countess
Olenska, and they sat down in a corner and plunged into animated talk.
Neither seemed aware that the Duke should first have paid his respects to Mrs. Lovell
Mingott and Mrs. Headly Chivers, and the Countess have conversed with that amiable
hypochondriac, Mr. Urban Dagonet of
Washington Square, who, in order to have the pleasure of meeting her, had broken
through his fixed rule of not dining out between January and April.
The two chatted together for nearly twenty minutes; then the Countess rose and,
walking alone across the wide drawing-room, sat down at Newland Archer's side.
It was not the custom in New York drawing- rooms for a lady to get up and walk away
from one gentleman in order to seek the company of another.
Etiquette required that she should wait, immovable as an idol, while the men who
wished to converse with her succeeded each other at her side.
But the Countess was apparently unaware of having broken any rule; she sat at perfect
ease in a corner of the sofa beside Archer, and looked at him with the kindest eyes.
"I want you to talk to me about May," she said.
Instead of answering her he asked: "You knew the Duke before?"
"Oh, yes--we used to see him every winter at Nice.
He's very fond of gambling--he used to come to the house a great deal."
She said it in the simplest manner, as if she had said: "He's fond of wild-flowers";
and after a moment she added candidly: "I think he's the dullest man I ever met."
This pleased her companion so much that he forgot the slight shock her previous remark
had caused him.
It was undeniably exciting to meet a lady who found the van der Luydens' Duke dull,
and dared to utter the opinion.
He longed to question her, to hear more about the life of which her careless words
had given him so illuminating a glimpse; but he feared to touch on distressing
memories, and before he could think of
anything to say she had strayed back to her original subject.
"May is a darling; I've seen no young girl in New York so handsome and so intelligent.
Are you very much in love with her?"
Newland Archer reddened and laughed. "As much as a man can be."
She continued to consider him thoughtfully, as if not to miss any shade of meaning in
what he said, "Do you think, then, there is a limit?"
"To being in love?
If there is, I haven't found it!" She glowed with sympathy.
"Ah--it's really and truly a romance?" "The most romantic of romances!"
"How delightful!
And you found it all out for yourselves--it was not in the least arranged for you?"
Archer looked at her incredulously.
"Have you forgotten," he asked with a smile, "that in our country we don't allow
our marriages to be arranged for us?" A dusky blush rose to her cheek, and he
instantly regretted his words.
"Yes," she answered, "I'd forgotten. You must forgive me if I sometimes make
these mistakes.
I don't always remember that everything here is good that was--that was bad where
I've come from."
She looked down at her Viennese fan of eagle feathers, and he saw that her lips
trembled. "I'm so sorry," he said impulsively; "but
you ARE among friends here, you know."
"Yes--I know. Wherever I go I have that feeling.
That's why I came home.
I want to forget everything else, to become a complete American again, like the
Mingotts and Wellands, and you and your delightful mother, and all the other good
people here tonight.
Ah, here's May arriving, and you will want to hurry away to her," she added, but
without moving; and her eyes turned back from the door to rest on the young man's
face.
The drawing-rooms were beginning to fill up with after-dinner guests, and following
Madame Olenska's glance Archer saw May Welland entering with her mother.
In her dress of white and silver, with a wreath of silver blossoms in her hair, the
tall girl looked like a Diana just alight from the chase.
"Oh," said Archer, "I have so many rivals; you see she's already surrounded.
There's the Duke being introduced."
"Then stay with me a little longer," Madame Olenska said in a low tone, just touching
his knee with her plumed fan. It was the lightest touch, but it thrilled
him like a caress.
"Yes, let me stay," he answered in the same tone, hardly knowing what he said; but just
then Mr. van der Luyden came up, followed by old Mr. Urban Dagonet.
The Countess greeted them with her grave smile, and Archer, feeling his host's
admonitory glance on him, rose and surrendered his seat.
Madame Olenska held out her hand as if to bid him goodbye.
"Tomorrow, then, after five--I shall expect you," she said; and then turned back to
make room for Mr. Dagonet.
"Tomorrow--" Archer heard himself repeating, though there had been no
engagement, and during their talk she had given him no hint that she wished to see
him again.
As he moved away he saw Lawrence Lefferts, tall and resplendent, leading his wife up
to be introduced; and heard Gertrude Lefferts say, as she beamed on the Countess
with her large unperceiving smile: "But I
think we used to go to dancing-school together when we were children--."
Behind her, waiting their turn to name themselves to the Countess, Archer noticed
a number of the recalcitrant couples who had declined to meet her at Mrs. Lovell
Mingott's.
As Mrs. Archer remarked: when the van der Luydens chose, they knew how to give a
lesson. The wonder was that they chose so seldom.
The young man felt a touch on his arm and saw Mrs. van der Luyden looking down on him
from the pure eminence of black velvet and the family diamonds.
"It was good of you, dear Newland, to devote yourself so unselfishly to Madame
Olenska. I told your cousin Henry he must really
come to the rescue."
He was aware of smiling at her vaguely, and she added, as if condescending to his
natural shyness: "I've never seen May looking lovelier.
The Duke thinks her the handsomest girl in the room."
>
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton CHAPTER IX.
The Countess Olenska had said "after five"; and at half after the hour Newland Archer
rang the bell of the peeling stucco house with a giant wisteria throttling its feeble
cast-iron balcony, which she had hired, far
down West Twenty-third Street, from the vagabond Medora.
It was certainly a strange quarter to have settled in.
Small dress-makers, bird-stuffers and "people who wrote" were her nearest
neighbours; and further down the dishevelled street Archer recognised a
dilapidated wooden house, at the end of a
paved path, in which a writer and journalist called Winsett, whom he used to
come across now and then, had mentioned that he lived.
Winsett did not invite people to his house; but he had once pointed it out to Archer in
the course of a nocturnal stroll, and the latter had asked himself, with a little
shiver, if the humanities were so meanly housed in other capitals.
Madame Olenska's own dwelling was redeemed from the same appearance only by a little
more paint about the window-frames; and as Archer mustered its modest front he said to
himself that the Polish Count must have
robbed her of her fortune as well as of her illusions.
The young man had spent an unsatisfactory day.
He had lunched with the Wellands, hoping afterward to carry off May for a walk in
the Park.
He wanted to have her to himself, to tell her how enchanting she had looked the night
before, and how proud he was of her, and to press her to hasten their marriage.
But Mrs. Welland had firmly reminded him that the round of family visits was not
half over, and, when he hinted at advancing the date of the wedding, had raised
reproachful eye-brows and sighed out:
"Twelve dozen of everything--hand- embroidered--"
Packed in the family landau they rolled from one tribal doorstep to another, and
Archer, when the afternoon's round was over, parted from his betrothed with the
feeling that he had been shown off like a wild animal cunningly trapped.
He supposed that his readings in anthropology caused him to take such a
coarse view of what was after all a simple and natural demonstration of family
feeling; but when he remembered that the
Wellands did not expect the wedding to take place till the following autumn, and
pictured what his life would be till then, a dampness fell upon his spirit.
"Tomorrow," Mrs. Welland called after him, "we'll do the Chiverses and the Dallases";
and he perceived that she was going through their two families alphabetically, and that
they were only in the first quarter of the alphabet.
He had meant to tell May of the Countess Olenska's request--her command, rather--
that he should call on her that afternoon; but in the brief moments when they were
alone he had had more pressing things to say.
Besides, it struck him as a little absurd to allude to the matter.
He knew that May most particularly wanted him to be kind to her cousin; was it not
that wish which had hastened the announcement of their engagement?
It gave him an odd sensation to reflect that, but for the Countess's arrival, he
might have been, if not still a free man, at least a man less irrevocably pledged.
But May had willed it so, and he felt himself somehow relieved of further
responsibility--and therefore at liberty, if he chose, to call on her cousin without
telling her.
As he stood on Madame Olenska's threshold curiosity was his uppermost feeling.
He was puzzled by the tone in which she had summoned him; he concluded that she was
less simple than she seemed.
The door was opened by a swarthy foreign- looking maid, with a prominent *** under
a gay neckerchief, whom he vaguely fancied to be Sicilian.
She welcomed him with all her white teeth, and answering his enquiries by a head-shake
of incomprehension led him through the narrow hall into a low firelit drawing-
room.
The room was empty, and she left him, for an appreciable time, to wonder whether she
had gone to find her mistress, or whether she had not understood what he was there
for, and thought it might be to wind the
clock--of which he perceived that the only visible specimen had stopped.
He knew that the southern races communicated with each other in the
language of pantomime, and was mortified to find her shrugs and smiles so
unintelligible.
At length she returned with a lamp; and Archer, having meanwhile put together a
phrase out of Dante and Petrarch, evoked the answer: "La signora e fuori; ma verra
subito"; which he took to mean: "She's out--but you'll soon see."
What he saw, meanwhile, with the help of the lamp, was the faded shadowy charm of a
room unlike any room he had known.
He knew that the Countess Olenska had brought some of her possessions with her--
bits of wreckage, she called them--and these, he supposed, were represented by
some small slender tables of dark wood, a
delicate little Greek bronze on the chimney-piece, and a stretch of red damask
nailed on the discoloured wallpaper behind a couple of Italian-looking pictures in old
frames.
Newland Archer prided himself on his knowledge of Italian art.
His boyhood had been saturated with Ruskin, and he had read all the latest books: John
Addington Symonds, Vernon Lee's "Euphorion," the essays of P. G. Hamerton,
and a wonderful new volume called "The Renaissance" by Walter Pater.
He talked easily of Botticelli, and spoke of Fra Angelico with a faint condescension.
But these pictures bewildered him, for they were like nothing that he was accustomed to
look at (and therefore able to see) when he travelled in Italy; and perhaps, also, his
powers of observation were impaired by the
oddness of finding himself in this strange empty house, where apparently no one
expected him.
He was sorry that he had not told May Welland of Countess Olenska's request, and
a little disturbed by the thought that his betrothed might come in to see her cousin.
What would she think if she found him sitting there with the air of intimacy
implied by waiting alone in the dusk at a lady's fireside?
But since he had come he meant to wait; and he sank into a chair and stretched his feet
to the logs.
It was odd to have summoned him in that way, and then forgotten him; but Archer
felt more curious than mortified.
The atmosphere of the room was so different from any he had ever breathed that self-
consciousness vanished in the sense of adventure.
He had been before in drawing-rooms hung with red damask, with pictures "of the
Italian school"; what struck him was the way in which Medora Manson's shabby hired
house, with its blighted background of
pampas grass and Rogers statuettes, had, by a turn of the hand, and the skilful use of
a few properties, been transformed into something intimate, "foreign," subtly
suggestive of old romantic scenes and sentiments.
He tried to analyse the trick, to find a clue to it in the way the chairs and tables
were grouped, in the fact that only two Jacqueminot roses (of which nobody ever
bought less than a dozen) had been placed
in the slender vase at his elbow, and in the vague pervading perfume that was not
what one put on handkerchiefs, but rather like the scent of some far-off bazaar, a
smell made up of Turkish coffee and ambergris and dried roses.
His mind wandered away to the question of what May's drawing-room would look like.
He knew that Mr. Welland, who was behaving "very handsomely," already had his eye on a
newly built house in East Thirty-ninth Street.
The neighbourhood was thought remote, and the house was built in a ghastly greenish-
yellow stone that the younger architects were beginning to employ as a protest
against the brownstone of which the uniform
hue coated New York like a cold chocolate sauce; but the plumbing was perfect.
Archer would have liked to travel, to put off the housing question; but, though the
Wellands approved of an extended European honeymoon (perhaps even a winter in Egypt),
they were firm as to the need of a house for the returning couple.
The young man felt that his fate was sealed: for the rest of his life he would
go up every evening between the cast-iron railings of that greenish-yellow doorstep,
and pass through a Pompeian vestibule into
a hall with a wainscoting of varnished yellow wood.
But beyond that his imagination could not travel.
He knew the drawing-room above had a bay window, but he could not fancy how May
would deal with it.
She submitted cheerfully to the purple satin and yellow tuftings of the Welland
drawing-room, to its sham Buhl tables and gilt vitrines full of modern Saxe.
He saw no reason to suppose that she would want anything different in her own house;
and his only comfort was to reflect that she would probably let him arrange his
library as he pleased--which would be, of
course, with "sincere" Eastlake furniture, and the plain new bookcases without glass
doors.
The round-bosomed maid came in, drew the curtains, pushed back a log, and said
consolingly: "Verra--verra." When she had gone Archer stood up and began
to wander about.
Should he wait any longer? His position was becoming rather foolish.
Perhaps he had misunderstood Madame Olenska--perhaps she had not invited him
after all.
Down the cobblestones of the quiet street came the ring of a stepper's hoofs; they
stopped before the house, and he caught the opening of a carriage door.
Parting the curtains he looked out into the early dusk.
A street-lamp faced him, and in its light he saw Julius Beaufort's compact English
brougham, drawn by a big roan, and the banker descending from it, and helping out
Madame Olenska.
Beaufort stood, hat in hand, saying something which his companion seemed to
negative; then they shook hands, and he jumped into his carriage while she mounted
the steps.
When she entered the room she showed no surprise at seeing Archer there; surprise
seemed the emotion that she was least addicted to.
"How do you like my funny house?" she asked.
"To me it's like heaven."
As she spoke she untied her little velvet bonnet and tossing it away with her long
cloak stood looking at him with meditative eyes.
"You've arranged it delightfully," he rejoined, alive to the flatness of the
words, but imprisoned in the conventional by his consuming desire to be simple and
striking.
"Oh, it's a poor little place. My relations despise it.
But at any rate it's less gloomy than the van der Luydens'."
The words gave him an electric shock, for few were the rebellious spirits who would
have dared to call the stately home of the van der Luydens gloomy.
Those privileged to enter it shivered there, and spoke of it as "handsome."
But suddenly he was glad that she had given voice to the general shiver.
"It's delicious--what you've done here," he repeated.
"I like the little house," she admitted; "but I suppose what I like is the
blessedness of its being here, in my own country and my own town; and then, of being
alone in it."
She spoke so low that he hardly heard the last phrase; but in his awkwardness he took
it up. "You like so much to be alone?"
"Yes; as long as my friends keep me from feeling lonely."
She sat down near the fire, said: "Nastasia will bring the tea presently,"
and signed to him to return to his armchair, adding: "I see you've already
chosen your corner."
Leaning back, she folded her arms behind her head, and looked at the fire under
drooping lids. "This is the hour I like best--don't you?"
A proper sense of his dignity caused him to answer: "I was afraid you'd forgotten the
hour. Beaufort must have been very engrossing."
She looked amused.
"Why--have you waited long? Mr. Beaufort took me to see a number of
houses--since it seems I'm not to be allowed to stay in this one."
She appeared to dismiss both Beaufort and himself from her mind, and went on: "I've
never been in a city where there seems to be such a feeling against living in des
quartiers excentriques.
What does it matter where one lives? I'm told this street is respectable."
"It's not fashionable." "Fashionable!
Do you all think so much of that?
Why not make one's own fashions? But I suppose I've lived too independently;
at any rate, I want to do what you all do-- I want to feel cared for and safe."
He was touched, as he had been the evening before when she spoke of her need of
guidance. "That's what your friends want you to feel.
New York's an awfully safe place," he added with a flash of sarcasm.
"Yes, isn't it? One feels that," she cried, missing the
mockery.
"Being here is like--like--being taken on a holiday when one has been a good little
girl and done all one's lessons." The analogy was well meant, but did not
altogether please him.
He did not mind being flippant about New York, but disliked to hear any one else
take the same tone.
He wondered if she did not begin to see what a powerful engine it was, and how
nearly it had crushed her.
The Lovell Mingotts' dinner, patched up in extremis out of all sorts of social odds
and ends, ought to have taught her the narrowness of her escape; but either she
had been all along unaware of having
skirted disaster, or else she had lost sight of it in the triumph of the van der
Luyden evening.
Archer inclined to the former theory; he fancied that her New York was still
completely undifferentiated, and the conjecture nettled him.
"Last night," he said, "New York laid itself out for you.
The van der Luydens do nothing by halves." "No: how kind they are!
It was such a nice party.
Every one seems to have such an esteem for them."
The terms were hardly adequate; she might have spoken in that way of a tea-party at
the dear old Miss Lannings'.
"The van der Luydens," said Archer, feeling himself pompous as he spoke, "are the most
powerful influence in New York society. Unfortunately--owing to her health--they
receive very seldom."
She unclasped her hands from behind her head, and looked at him meditatively.
"Isn't that perhaps the reason?" "The reason--?"
"For their great influence; that they make themselves so rare."
He coloured a little, stared at her--and suddenly felt the penetration of the
remark.
At a stroke she had pricked the van der Luydens and they collapsed.
He laughed, and sacrificed them.
Nastasia brought the tea, with handleless Japanese cups and little covered dishes,
placing the tray on a low table.
"But you'll explain these things to me-- you'll tell me all I ought to know," Madame
Olenska continued, leaning forward to hand him his cup.
"It's you who are telling me; opening my eyes to things I'd looked at so long that
I'd ceased to see them."
She detached a small gold cigarette-case from one of her bracelets, held it out to
him, and took a cigarette herself. On the chimney were long spills for
lighting them.
"Ah, then we can both help each other. But I want help so much more.
You must tell me just what to do."
It was on the tip of his tongue to reply: "Don't be seen driving about the streets
with Beaufort--" but he was being too deeply drawn into the atmosphere of the
room, which was her atmosphere, and to give
advice of that sort would have been like telling some one who was bargaining for
attar-of-roses in Samarkand that one should always be provided with arctics for a New
York winter.
New York seemed much farther off than Samarkand, and if they were indeed to help
each other she was rendering what might prove the first of their mutual services by
making him look at his native city objectively.
Viewed thus, as through the wrong end of a telescope, it looked disconcertingly small
and distant; but then from Samarkand it would.
A flame darted from the logs and she bent over the fire, stretching her thin hands so
close to it that a faint halo shone about the oval nails.
The light touched to russet the rings of dark hair escaping from her braids, and
made her pale face paler.
"There are plenty of people to tell you what to do," Archer rejoined, obscurely
envious of them. "Oh--all my aunts?
And my dear old Granny?"
She considered the idea impartially. "They're all a little vexed with me for
setting up for myself--poor Granny especially.
She wanted to keep me with her; but I had to be free--" He was impressed by this
light way of speaking of the formidable Catherine, and moved by the thought of what
must have given Madame Olenska this thirst for even the loneliest kind of freedom.
But the idea of Beaufort gnawed him. "I think I understand how you feel," he
said.
"Still, your family can advise you; explain differences; show you the way."
She lifted her thin black eyebrows. "Is New York such a labyrinth?
I thought it so straight up and down--like Fifth Avenue.
And with all the cross streets numbered!"
She seemed to guess his faint disapproval of this, and added, with the rare smile
that enchanted her whole face: "If you knew how I like it for just THAT--the straight-
up-and-downness, and the big honest labels on everything!"
He saw his chance. "Everything may be labelled--but everybody
is not."
"Perhaps. I may simplify too much--but you'll warn me
if I do." She turned from the fire to look at him.
"There are only two people here who make me feel as if they understood what I mean and
could explain things to me: you and Mr. Beaufort."
Archer winced at the joining of the names, and then, with a quick readjustment,
understood, sympathised and pitied.
So close to the powers of evil she must have lived that she still breathed more
freely in their air.
But since she felt that he understood her also, his business would be to make her see
Beaufort as he really was, with all he represented--and abhor it.
He answered gently: "I understand.
But just at first don't let go of your old friends' hands: I mean the older women,
your Granny Mingott, Mrs. Welland, Mrs. van der Luyden.
They like and admire you--they want to help you."
She shook her head and sighed. "Oh, I know--I know!
But on condition that they don't hear anything unpleasant.
Aunt Welland put it in those very words when I tried....
Does no one want to know the truth here, Mr. Archer?
The real loneliness is living among all these kind people who only ask one to
pretend!"
She lifted her hands to her face, and he saw her thin shoulders shaken by a sob.
"Madame Olenska!--Oh, don't, Ellen," he cried, starting up and bending over her.
He drew down one of her hands, clasping and chafing it like a child's while he murmured
reassuring words; but in a moment she freed herself, and looked up at him with wet
lashes.
"Does no one cry here, either? I suppose there's no need to, in heaven,"
she said, straightening her loosened braids with a laugh, and bending over the tea-
kettle.
It was burnt into his consciousness that he had called her "Ellen"--called her so
twice; and that she had not noticed it.
Far down the inverted telescope he saw the faint white figure of May Welland--in New
York. Suddenly Nastasia put her head in to say
something in her rich Italian.
Madame Olenska, again with a hand at her hair, uttered an exclamation of assent--a
flashing "Gia--gia"--and the Duke of St. Austrey entered, piloting a tremendous
blackwigged and red-plumed lady in overflowing furs.
"My dear Countess, I've brought an old friend of mine to see you--Mrs. Struthers.
She wasn't asked to the party last night, and she wants to know you."
The Duke beamed on the group, and Madame Olenska advanced with a murmur of welcome
toward the *** couple.
She seemed to have no idea how oddly matched they were, nor what a liberty the
Duke had taken in bringing his companion-- and to do him justice, as Archer perceived,
the Duke seemed as unaware of it himself.
"Of course I want to know you, my dear," cried Mrs. Struthers in a round rolling
voice that matched her bold feathers and her brazen wig.
"I want to know everybody who's young and interesting and charming.
And the Duke tells me you like music-- didn't you, Duke?
You're a pianist yourself, I believe?
Well, do you want to hear Sarasate play tomorrow evening at my house?
You know I've something going on every Sunday evening--it's the day when New York
doesn't know what to do with itself, and so I say to it: 'Come and be amused.'
And the Duke thought you'd be tempted by Sarasate.
You'll find a number of your friends." Madame Olenska's face grew brilliant with
pleasure.
"How kind! How good of the Duke to think of me!"
She pushed a chair up to the tea-table and Mrs. Struthers sank into it delectably.
"Of course I shall be too happy to come."
"That's all right, my dear. And bring your young gentleman with you."
Mrs. Struthers extended a hail-fellow hand to Archer.
"I can't put a name to you--but I'm sure I've met you--I've met everybody, here, or
in Paris or London. Aren't you in diplomacy?
All the diplomatists come to me.
You like music too? Duke, you must be sure to bring him."
The Duke said "Rather" from the depths of his beard, and Archer withdrew with a
stiffly circular bow that made him feel as full of spine as a self-conscious school-
boy among careless and unnoticing elders.
He was not sorry for the denouement of his visit: he only wished it had come sooner,
and spared him a certain waste of emotion.
As he went out into the wintry night, New York again became vast and imminent, and
May Welland the loveliest woman in it.
He turned into his florist's to send her the daily box of lilies-of-the-valley
which, to his confusion, he found he had forgotten that morning.
As he wrote a word on his card and waited for an envelope he glanced about the
embowered shop, and his eye lit on a cluster of yellow roses.
He had never seen any as sun-golden before, and his first impulse was to send them to
May instead of the lilies.
But they did not look like her--there was something too rich, too strong, in their
fiery beauty.
In a sudden revulsion of mood, and almost without knowing what he did, he signed to
the florist to lay the roses in another long box, and slipped his card into a
second envelope, on which he wrote the name
of the Countess Olenska; then, just as he was turning away, he drew the card out
again, and left the empty envelope on the box.
"They'll go at once?" he enquired, pointing to the roses.
The florist assured him that they would.
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