3669 lines
165 KiB
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3669 lines
165 KiB
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****The Project Gutenberg Etext of An International Episode****
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An International Episode
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by Henry James
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February, 1995 [Etext #210]
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****The Project Gutenberg Etext of An International Episode****
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AN INTERNATIONAL EPISODE
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By Henry James
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PART I
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Four years ago--in 1874--two young Englishmen had occasion to go
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to the United States. They crossed the ocean at midsummer,
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and, arriving in New York on the first day of August,
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were much struck with the fervid temperature of that city.
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Disembarking upon the wharf, they climbed into one of those huge
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high-hung coaches which convey passengers to the hotels,
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and with a great deal of bouncing and bumping, took their
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course through Broadway. The midsummer aspect of New York
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is not, perhaps, the most favorable one; still, it is
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not without its picturesque and even brilliant side.
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Nothing could well resemble less a typical English street
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than the interminable avenue, rich in incongruities,
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through which our two travelers advanced--looking out on each
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side of them at the comfortable animation of the sidewalks,
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the high-colored, heterogeneous architecture, the huge white marble
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facades glittering in the strong, crude light, and bedizened
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with gilded lettering, the multifarious awnings, banners,
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and streamers, the extraordinary number of omnibuses, horsecars,
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and other democratic vehicles, the vendors of cooling fluids,
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the white trousers and big straw hats of the policemen,
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the tripping gait of the modish young persons on the pavement,
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the general brightness, newness, juvenility, both of people
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and things. The young men had exchanged few observations;
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but in crossing Union Square, in front of the monument to Washington--
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in the very shadow, indeed, projected by the image of the <i
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pater patriae>--one of them remarked to the other, "It seems
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a rum-looking place."
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"Ah, very odd, very odd," said the other, who was the clever
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man of the two.
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"Pity it's so beastly hot," resumed the first speaker after a pause.
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"You know we are in a low latitude," said his friend.
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"I daresay," remarked the other.
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"I wonder," said the second speaker presently, "if they can give
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one a bath?"
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"I daresay not," rejoined the other.
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"Oh, I say!" cried his comrade.
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This animated discussion was checked by their arrival at the hotel,
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which had been recommended to them by an American gentleman whose acquaintance
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they made--with whom, indeed, they became very intimate--on the steamer,
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and who had proposed to accompany them to the inn and introduce them,
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in a friendly way, to the proprietor. This plan, however, had been
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defeated by their friend's finding that his "partner" was awaiting him on
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the wharf and that his commercial associate desired him instantly to come
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and give his attention to certain telegrams received from St. Louis.
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But the two Englishmen, with nothing but their national prestige and
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personal graces to recommend them, were very well received at the hotel,
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which had an air of capacious hospitality. They found that a bath was
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not unattainable, and were indeed struck with the facilities for prolonged
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and reiterated immersion with which their apartment was supplied.
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After bathing a good deal--more, indeed, than they had ever done before on
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a single occasion--they made their way into the dining room of the hotel,
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which was a spacious restaurant, with a fountain in the middle, a great
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many tall plants in ornamental tubs, and an array of French waiters.
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The first dinner on land, after a sea voyage, is, under any circumstances,
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a delightful occasion, and there was something particularly agreeable
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in the circumstances in which our young Englishmen found themselves.
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They were extremely good natured young men; they were more observant than
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they appeared; in a sort of inarticulate, accidentally dissimulative fashion,
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they were highly appreciative. This was, perhaps, especially the case
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with the elder, who was also, as I have said, the man of talent.
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They sat down at a little table, which was a very different affair
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from the great clattering seesaw in the saloon of the steamer.
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The wide doors and windows of the restaurant stood open, beneath large
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awnings, to a wide pavement, where there were other plants in tubs,
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and rows of spreading trees, and beyond which there was a large
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shady square, without any palings, and with marble-paved walks.
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And above the vivid verdure rose other facades of white marble and of
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pale chocolate-colored stone, squaring themselves against the deep
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blue sky. Here, outside, in the light and the shade and the heat,
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there was a great tinkling of the bells of innumerable streetcars,
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and a constant strolling and shuffling and rustling of many pedestrians,
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a large proportion of whom were young women in Pompadour-looking dresses.
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Within, the place was cool and vaguely lighted, with the plash of water,
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the odor of flowers, and the flitting of French waiters, as I have said,
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upon soundless carpets.
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"It's rather like Paris, you know," said the younger of our two travelers."
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"It's like Paris--only more so," his companion rejoined.
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"I suppose it's the French waiters," said the first speaker.
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"Why don't they have French waiters in London?"
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"Fancy a French waiter at a club," said his friend.
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The young Englishman started a little, as if he could not fancy it.
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"In Paris I'm very apt to dine at a place where there's an English waiter.
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Don't you know what's-his-name's, close to the thingumbob?
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They always set an English waiter at me. I suppose they think I
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can't speak French."
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"Well, you can't." And the elder of the young Englishmen unfolded his napkin.
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His companion took no notice whatever of this declaration. "I say,"
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he resumed in a moment, "I suppose we must learn to speak American.
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I suppose we must take lessons."
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"I can't understand them," said the clever man.
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"What the deuce is HE saying?" asked his comrade,
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appealing from the French waiter.
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"He is recommending some soft-shell crabs," said the clever man.
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And so, in desultory observation of the idiosyncrasies of the new society
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in which they found themselves, the young Englishmen proceeded to dine--
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going in largely, as the phrase is, for cooling draughts and dishes,
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of which their attendant offered them a very long list. After dinner
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they went out and slowly walked about the neighboring streets. The early
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dusk of waning summer was coming on, but the heat was still very great.
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The pavements were hot even to the stout boot soles of the British travelers,
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and the trees along the curbstone emitted strange exotic odors.
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The young men wandered through the adjoining square--that queer place
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without palings, and with marble walks arranged in black and white lozenges.
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There were a great many benches, crowded with shabby-looking people,
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and the travelers remarked, very justly, that it was not much like
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Belgrave Square. On one side was an enormous hotel, lifting up into
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the hot darkness an immense array of open, brightly lighted windows.
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||
|
At the base of this populous structure was an eternal jangle of horsecars,
|
||
|
and all round it, in the upper dusk, was a sinister hum of mosquitoes.
|
||
|
The ground floor of the hotel seemed to be a huge transparent cage,
|
||
|
flinging a wide glare of gaslight into the street, of which it formed a sort
|
||
|
of public adjunct, absorbing and emitting the passersby promiscuously.
|
||
|
The young Englishmen went in with everyone else, from curiosity, and saw
|
||
|
a couple of hundred men sitting on divans along a great marble-paved corridor,
|
||
|
with their legs stretched out, together with several dozen more standing
|
||
|
in a queue, as at the ticket office of a railway station, before a
|
||
|
brilliantly illuminated counter of vast extent. These latter persons,
|
||
|
who carried portmanteaus in their hands, had a dejected, exhausted look;
|
||
|
their garments were not very fresh, and they seemed to be rendering
|
||
|
some mysterious tribute to a magnificent young man with a waxed mustache,
|
||
|
and a shirtfront adorned with diamond buttons, who every now and
|
||
|
then dropped an absent glance over their multitudinous patience.
|
||
|
They were American citizens doing homage to a hotel clerk.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm glad he didn't tell us to go there," said one of our Englishmen,
|
||
|
alluding to their friend on the steamer, who had told them so many things.
|
||
|
They walked up the Fifth Avenue, where, for instance, he had told
|
||
|
them that all the first families lived. But the first families
|
||
|
were out of town, and our young travelers had only the satisfaction
|
||
|
of seeing some of the second--or perhaps even the third--
|
||
|
taking the evening air upon balconies and high flights of doorsteps,
|
||
|
in the streets which radiate from the more ornamental thoroughfare.
|
||
|
They went a little way down one of these side streets, and they
|
||
|
saw young ladies in white dresses--charming-looking persons--
|
||
|
seated in graceful attitudes on the chocolate-colored steps.
|
||
|
In one or two places these young ladies were conversing across the street
|
||
|
with other young ladies seated in similar postures and costumes
|
||
|
in front of the opposite houses, and in the warm night air their
|
||
|
colloquial tones sounded strange in the ears of the young Englishmen.
|
||
|
One of our friends, nevertheless--the younger one--intimated that
|
||
|
he felt a disposition to interrupt a few of these soft familiarities;
|
||
|
but his companion observed, pertinently enough, that he had
|
||
|
better be careful. "We must not begin with making mistakes,"
|
||
|
said his companion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But he told us, you know--he told us," urged the young man,
|
||
|
alluding again to the friend on the steamer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Never mind what he told us!" answered his comrade, who, if he had
|
||
|
greater talents, was also apparently more of a moralist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
By bedtime--in their impatience to taste of a terrestrial couch again our
|
||
|
seafarers went to bed early--it was still insufferably hot, and the buzz
|
||
|
of the mosquitoes at the open windows might have passed for an audible
|
||
|
crepitation of the temperature. "We can't stand this, you know,"
|
||
|
the young Englishmen said to each other; and they tossed about all night
|
||
|
more boisterously than they had tossed upon the Atlantic billows.
|
||
|
On the morrow, their first thought was that they would re-embark that day
|
||
|
for England; and then it occured to them that they might find an asylum
|
||
|
nearer at hand. The cave of Aeolus became their ideal of comfort,
|
||
|
and they wondered where the Americans went when they wished to cool off.
|
||
|
They had not the least idea, and they determined to apply for information
|
||
|
to Mr. J. L. Westgate. This was the name inscribed in a bold hand on the back
|
||
|
of a letter carefully preserved in the pocketbook of our junior traveler.
|
||
|
Beneath the address, in the left-hand corner of the envelope,
|
||
|
were the words, "Introducing Lord Lambeth and Percy Beaumont, Esq."
|
||
|
The letter had been given to the two Englishmen by a good friend
|
||
|
of theirs in London, who had been in America two years previously,
|
||
|
and had singled out Mr. J. L. Westgate from the many friends
|
||
|
he had left there as the consignee, as it were, of his compatriots.
|
||
|
"He is a capital fellow," the Englishman in London had said,
|
||
|
"and he has got an awfully pretty wife. He's tremendously hospitable--
|
||
|
he will do everything in the world for you; and as he knows everyone
|
||
|
over there, it is quite needless I should give you any other introduction.
|
||
|
He will make you see everyone; trust to him for putting you into circulation.
|
||
|
He has got a tremendously pretty wife." It was natural that in the hour
|
||
|
of tribulation Lord Lambeth and Mr. Percy Beaumont should have bethought
|
||
|
themselves of a gentleman whose attractions had been thus vividly depicted;
|
||
|
all the more so that he lived in the Fifth Avenue, and that the Fifth Avenue,
|
||
|
as they had ascertained the night before, was contiguous to their hotel.
|
||
|
"Ten to one he'll be out of town," said Percy Beaumont; "but we can at least
|
||
|
find out where he has gone, and we can immediately start in pursuit.
|
||
|
He can't possibly have gone to a hotter place, you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, there's only one hotter place," said Lord Lambeth,
|
||
|
"and I hope he hasn't gone there."
|
||
|
|
||
|
They strolled along the shady side of the street to the number
|
||
|
indicated upon the precious letter. The house presented
|
||
|
an imposing chocolate-colored expanse, relieved by facings
|
||
|
and window cornices of florid sculpture, and by a couple of dusty
|
||
|
rose trees which clambered over the balconies and the portico.
|
||
|
This last-mentioned feature was approached by a monumental
|
||
|
flight of steps.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Rather better than a London house," said Lord Lambeth,
|
||
|
looking down from this altitude, after they had rung the bell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It depends upon what London house you mean," replied his companion.
|
||
|
"You have a tremendous chance to get wet between the house door
|
||
|
and your carriage."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well," said Lord Lambeth, glancing at the burning heavens,
|
||
|
"I 'guess' it doesn't rain so much here!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The door was opened by a long Negro in a white jacket, who grinned
|
||
|
familiarly when Lord Lambeth asked for Mr. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He ain't at home, sah; he's downtown at his o'fice."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, at his office?" said the visitors. "And when will he be at home?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, sah, when he goes out dis way in de mo'ning, he ain't
|
||
|
liable to come home all day."
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was discouraging; but the address of Mr. Westgate's
|
||
|
office was freely imparted by the intelligent black
|
||
|
and was taken down by Percy Beaumont in his pocketbook.
|
||
|
The two gentlemen then returned, languidly, to their hotel,
|
||
|
and sent for a hackney coach, and in this commodious vehicle
|
||
|
they rolled comfortably downtown. They measured the whole
|
||
|
length of Broadway again and found it a path of fire; and then,
|
||
|
deflecting to the left, they were deposited by their conductor
|
||
|
before a fresh, light, ornamental structure, ten stories high,
|
||
|
in a street crowded with keen-faced, light-limbed young men,
|
||
|
who were running about very quickly and stopping each other eagerly
|
||
|
at corners and in doorways. Passing into this brilliant building,
|
||
|
they were introduced by one of the keen-faced young men--
|
||
|
he was a charming fellow, in wonderful cream-colored garments
|
||
|
and a hat with a blue ribbon, who had evidently perceived them
|
||
|
to be aliens and helpless--to a very snug hydraulic elevator,
|
||
|
in which they took their place with many other persons,
|
||
|
and which, shooting upward in its vertical socket,
|
||
|
presently projected them into the seventh horizontal compartment
|
||
|
of the edifice. Here, after brief delay, they found themselves
|
||
|
face to face with the friend of their friend in London.
|
||
|
His office was composed of several different rooms, and they
|
||
|
waited very silently in one of them after they had sent in
|
||
|
their letter and their cards. The letter was not one which it
|
||
|
would take Mr. Westgate very long to read, but he came out
|
||
|
to speak to them more instantly than they could have expected;
|
||
|
he had evidently jumped up from his work. He was a tall,
|
||
|
lean personage and was dressed all in fresh white linen;
|
||
|
he had a thin, sharp, familiar face, with an expression that was
|
||
|
at one and the same time sociable and businesslike, a quick,
|
||
|
intelligent eye, and a large brown mustache, which concealed
|
||
|
his mouth and made his chin, beneath it, look small.
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth thought he looked tremendously clever.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How do you do, Lord Lambeth--how do you do, sir?" he said,
|
||
|
holding the open letter in his hand. "I'm very glad to see you;
|
||
|
I hope you're very well. You had better come in here; I think
|
||
|
it's cooler," and he led the way into another room, where there were
|
||
|
law books and papers, and windows wide open beneath striped awning.
|
||
|
Just opposite one of the windows, on a line with his eyes,
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth observed the weathervane of a church steeple.
|
||
|
The uproar of the street sounded infinitely far below,
|
||
|
and Lord Lambeth felt very high in the air. "I say it's cooler,"
|
||
|
pursued their host, "but everything is relative.
|
||
|
How do you stand the heat?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I can't say we like it," said Lord Lambeth; "but Beaumont likes
|
||
|
it better than I."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, it won't last," Mr. Westgate very cheerfully declared;
|
||
|
"nothing unpleasant lasts over here. It was very hot when Captain
|
||
|
Littledale was here; he did nothing but drink sherry cobblers.
|
||
|
He expressed some doubt in his letter whether I will remember him--
|
||
|
as if I didn't remember making six sherry cobblers for him one day
|
||
|
in about twenty minutes. I hope you left him well, two years having
|
||
|
elapsed since then."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, yes, he's all right," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am always very glad to see your countrymen," Mr. Westgate pursued.
|
||
|
"I thought it would be time some of you should be coming along.
|
||
|
A friend of mine was saying to me only a day or two ago, 'It's time
|
||
|
for the watermelons and the Englishmen."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The Englishmen and the watermelons just now are about the same thing,"
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont observed, wiping his dripping forehead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, well, we'll put you on ice, as we do the melons.
|
||
|
You must go down to Newport."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We'll go anywhere," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, you want to go to Newport; that's what you want to do,"
|
||
|
Mr. Westgate affirmed. "But let's see--when did you get here?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Only yesterday," said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, yes, by the Russia. Where are you staying?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"At the Hanover, I think they call it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Pretty comfortable?" inquired Mr. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It seems a capital place, but I can't say we like the gnats,"
|
||
|
said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mr. Westgate stared and laughed. "Oh, no, of course you don't
|
||
|
like the gnats. We shall expect you to like a good many things
|
||
|
over here, but we shan't insist upon your liking the gnats;
|
||
|
though certainly you'll admit that, as gnats, they are fine, eh?
|
||
|
But you oughtn't to remain in the city."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"So we think," said Lord Lambeth. "If you would kindly suggest something--"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Suggest something, my dear sir?" and Mr. Westgate looked at him,
|
||
|
narrowing his eyelids. "Open your mouth and shut your eyes!
|
||
|
Leave it to me, and I'll put you through. It's a matter of national
|
||
|
pride with me that all Englishmen should have a good time;
|
||
|
and as I have had considerable practice, I have learned to minister
|
||
|
to their wants. I find they generally want the right thing.
|
||
|
So just please to consider yourselves my property; and if anyone
|
||
|
should try to appropriate you, please to say, 'Hands off;
|
||
|
too late for the market.' But let's see," continued the American,
|
||
|
in his slow, humorous voice, with a distinctness of utterance
|
||
|
which appeared to his visitors to be part of a humorous intention--
|
||
|
a strangely leisurely, speculative voice for a man evidently
|
||
|
so busy and, as they felt, so professional--"let's see;
|
||
|
are you going to make something of a stay, Lord Lambeth?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, dear, no," said the young Englishman; "my cousin was coming
|
||
|
over on some business, so I just came across, at an hour's notice,
|
||
|
for the lark."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Is it your first visit to the United States?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, dear, yes."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I was obliged to come on some business," said Percy Beaumont,
|
||
|
"and I brought Lambeth along."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And YOU have been here before, sir?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Never--never."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I thought, from your referring to business--" said Mr. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, you see I'm by way of being a barrister," Percy Beaumont answered.
|
||
|
"I know some people that think of bringing a suit against one of your
|
||
|
railways, and they asked me to come over and take measures accordingly."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What's your railroad?" he asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The Tennessee Central."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The American tilted back his chair a little and poised it an instant.
|
||
|
"Well, I'm sorry you want to attack one of our institutions,"
|
||
|
he said, smiling. "But I guess you had better enjoy yourself FIRST!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm certainly rather afraid I can't work in this weather,"
|
||
|
the young barrister confessed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Leave that to the natives," said Mr. Westgate.
|
||
|
"Leave the Tennessee Central to me, Mr. Beaumont.
|
||
|
Some day we'll talk it over, and I guess I can make it square.
|
||
|
But I didn't know you Englishmen ever did any work,
|
||
|
in the upper classes."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, we do a lot of work; don't we, Lambeth?" asked Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I must certainly be at home by the 19th of September,"
|
||
|
said the younger Englishman, irrelevantly but gently.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"For the shooting, eh? or is it the hunting, or the fishing?"
|
||
|
inquired his entertainer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I must be in Scotland," said Lord Lambeth, blushing a little.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, then," rejoined Mr. Westgate, "you had better amuse
|
||
|
yourself first, also. You must go down and see Mrs. Westgate."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We should be so happy, if you would kindly tell us the train,"
|
||
|
said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It isn't a train--it's a boat."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I see. And what is the name of--a-- the--a-- town?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It isn't a town," said Mr. Westgate, laughing. "It's a--well, what shall
|
||
|
I call it? It's a watering place. In short, it's Newport.
|
||
|
You'll see what it is. It's cool; that's the principal thing.
|
||
|
You will greatly oblige me by going down there and putting yourself
|
||
|
into the hands of Mrs. Westgate. It isn't perhaps for me to say it,
|
||
|
but you couldn't be in better hands. Also in those of her sister,
|
||
|
who is staying with her. She is very fond of Englishmen.
|
||
|
She thinks there is nothing like them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Mrs. Westgate or--a-- her sister?" asked Percy Beaumont modestly,
|
||
|
yet in the tone of an inquiring traveler.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I mean my wife," said Mr. Westgate. "I don't suppose
|
||
|
my sister-in-law knows much about them. She has always led
|
||
|
a very quiet life; she has lived in Boston."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont listened with interest. "That, I believe,"
|
||
|
he said, "is the most--a-- intellectual town?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I believe it is very intellectual. I don't go there much,"
|
||
|
responded his host.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I say, we ought to go there," said Lord Lambeth to his companion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, Lord Lambeth, wait till the great heat is over,"
|
||
|
Mr. Westgate interposed. "Boston in this weather would be very trying;
|
||
|
it's not the temperature for intellectual exertion. At Boston,
|
||
|
you know, you have to pass an examination at the city limits;
|
||
|
and when you come away they give you a kind of degree."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth stared, blushing a little; and Percy Beaumont
|
||
|
stared a little also--but only with his fine natural complexion--
|
||
|
glancing aside after a moment to see that his companion was not looking
|
||
|
too credulous, for he had heard a great deal of American humor.
|
||
|
"I daresay it is very jolly," said the younger gentleman.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I daresay it is," said Mr. Westgate. "Only I must impress
|
||
|
upon you that at present--tomorrow morning, at an early hour--
|
||
|
you will be expected at Newport. We have a house there;
|
||
|
half the people in New York go there for the summer.
|
||
|
I am not sure that at this very moment my wife can take
|
||
|
you in; she has got a lot of people staying with her;
|
||
|
I don't know who they all are; only she may have no room.
|
||
|
But you can begin with the hotel, and meanwhile you can live
|
||
|
at my house. In that way--simply sleeping at the hotel--
|
||
|
you will find it tolerable. For the rest, you must make
|
||
|
yourself at home at my place. You mustn't be shy, you know;
|
||
|
if you are only here for a month that will be a great waste
|
||
|
of time. Mrs. Westgate won't neglect you, and you had better
|
||
|
not try to resist her. I know something about that.
|
||
|
I expect you'll find some pretty girls on the premises.
|
||
|
I shall write to my wife by this afternoon's mail,
|
||
|
and tomorrow morning she and Miss Alden will look out for you.
|
||
|
Just walk right in and make yourself comfortable.
|
||
|
Your steamer leaves from this part of the city, and I will
|
||
|
immediately send out and get you a cabin. Then, at half past
|
||
|
four o'clock, just call for me here, and I will go with you
|
||
|
and put you on board. It's a big boat; you might get lost.
|
||
|
A few days hence, at the end of the week, I will come down
|
||
|
to Newport and see how you are getting on."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The two young Englishmen inaugurated the policy of not resisting Mrs. Westgate
|
||
|
by submitting, with great docility and thankfulness, to her husband.
|
||
|
He was evidently a very good fellow, and he made an impression upon
|
||
|
his visitors; his hospitality seemed to recommend itself consciously--
|
||
|
with a friendly wink, as it were--as if it hinted, judicially, that you
|
||
|
could not possibly make a better bargain. Lord Lambeth and his cousin
|
||
|
left their entertainer to his labors and returned to their hotel,
|
||
|
where they spent three or four hours in their respective shower baths.
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont had suggested that they ought to see something of
|
||
|
the town; but "Oh, damn the town!" his noble kinsman had rejoined.
|
||
|
They returned to Mr. Westgate's office in a carriage, with their luggage,
|
||
|
very punctually; but it must be reluctantly recorded that, this time,
|
||
|
he kept them waiting so long that they felt themselves missing
|
||
|
the steamer, and were deterred only by an amiable modesty from dispensing
|
||
|
with his attendance and starting on a hasty scramble to the wharf.
|
||
|
But when at last he appeared, and the carriage plunged into the
|
||
|
purlieus of Broadway, they jolted and jostled to such good purpose
|
||
|
that they reached the huge white vessel while the bell for departure
|
||
|
was still ringing and the absorption of passengers still active.
|
||
|
It was indeed, as Mr. Westgate had said, a big boat, and his leadership
|
||
|
in the innumerable and interminable corridors and cabins, with which
|
||
|
he seemed perfectly acquainted, and of which anyone and everyone appeared
|
||
|
to have the entree, was very grateful to the slightly bewildered voyagers.
|
||
|
He showed them their stateroom--a spacious apartment, embellished with
|
||
|
gas lamps, mirrors en pied, and sculptured furniture--and then,
|
||
|
long after they had been intimately convinced that the steamer was in motion
|
||
|
and launched upon the unknown stream that they were about to navigate,
|
||
|
he bade them a sociable farewell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, goodbye, Lord Lambeth," he said; "goodbye, Mr. Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
I hope you'll have a good time. Just let them do what they want with you.
|
||
|
I'll come down by-and-by and look after you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young Englishmen emerged from their cabin and amused
|
||
|
themselves with wandering about the immense labyrinthine steamer,
|
||
|
which struck them as an extraordinary mixture of a ship and a hotel.
|
||
|
It was densely crowded with passengers, the larger number
|
||
|
of whom appeared to be ladies and very young children;
|
||
|
and in the big saloons, ornamented in white and gold,
|
||
|
which followed each other in surprising succession,
|
||
|
beneath the swinging gaslight, and among the small side
|
||
|
passages where the Negro domestics of both sexes assembled
|
||
|
with an air of philosophic leisure, everyone was moving
|
||
|
to and fro and exchanging loud and familiar observations.
|
||
|
Eventually, at the instance of a discriminating black,
|
||
|
our young men went and had some "supper" in a wonderful
|
||
|
place arranged like a theater, where, in a gilded gallery,
|
||
|
upon which little boxes appeared to open, a large orchestra
|
||
|
was playing operatic selections, and, below, people were
|
||
|
handing about bills of fare, as if they had been programs.
|
||
|
All this was sufficiently curious; but the agreeable thing, later,
|
||
|
was to sit out on one of the great white decks of the steamer,
|
||
|
in the warm breezy darkness, and, in the vague starlight,
|
||
|
to make out the line of low, mysterious coast. The young
|
||
|
Englishmen tried American cigars--those of Mr. Westgate--
|
||
|
and talked together as they usually talked, with many
|
||
|
odd silences, lapses of logic, and incongruities of transition;
|
||
|
like people who have grown old together and learned to
|
||
|
supply each other's missing phrases; or, more especially,
|
||
|
like people thoroughly conscious of a common point of view,
|
||
|
so that a style of conversation superficially lacking in finish
|
||
|
might suffice for reference to a fund of associations in the light
|
||
|
of which everything was all right.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We really seem to be going out to sea," Percy Beaumont observed.
|
||
|
"Upon my word, we are going back to England. He has shipped us off again.
|
||
|
I call that 'real mean.'"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I suppose it's all right," said Lord Lambeth. "I want to see those
|
||
|
pretty girls at Newport. You know, he told us the place was an island;
|
||
|
and aren't all islands in the sea?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well," resumed the elder traveler after a while, "if his house
|
||
|
is as good as his cigars, we shall do very well."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He seems a very good fellow," said Lord Lambeth, as if this idea
|
||
|
had just occurred to him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I say, we had better remain at the inn," rejoined his companion presently.
|
||
|
"I don't think I like the way he spoke of his house. I don't like stopping
|
||
|
in the house with such a tremendous lot of women."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I don't mind," said Lord Lambeth. And then they smoked
|
||
|
a while in silence. "Fancy his thinking we do no work in England!"
|
||
|
the young man resumed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I daresay he didn't really think so," said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, I guess they don't know much about England over here!"
|
||
|
declared Lord Lambeth humorously. And then there was another long pause.
|
||
|
"He was devilish civil," observed the young nobleman.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Nothing, certainly, could have been more civil," rejoined his companion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Littledale said his wife was great fun," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Whose wife--Littledale's?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"This American's--Mrs. Westgate. What's his name? J.L."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beaumont was silent a moment. "What was fun to Littledale,"
|
||
|
he said at last, rather sententiously, "may be death to us."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What do you mean by that?" asked his kinsman. "I am as good
|
||
|
a man as Littledale."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My dear boy, I hope you won't begin to flirt," said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't care. I daresay I shan't begin."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"With a married woman, if she's bent upon it, it's all very well,"
|
||
|
Beaumont expounded. "But our friend mentioned a young lady--a sister,
|
||
|
a sister-in-law. For God's sake, don't get entangled with her!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How do you mean entangled?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Depend upon it she will try to hook you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, bother!" said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"American girls are very clever," urged his companion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"So much the better," the young man declared.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I fancy they are always up to some game of that sort," Beaumont continued.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They can't be worse than they are in England," said Lord Lambeth judicially.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, but in England," replied Beaumont, "you have got your
|
||
|
natural protectors. You have got your mother and sisters."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My mother and sisters--" began the young nobleman with a certain energy.
|
||
|
But he stopped in time, puffing at his cigar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Your mother spoke to me about it, with tears in her eyes,"
|
||
|
said Percy Beaumont. "She said she felt very nervous.
|
||
|
I promised to keep you out of mischief."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You had better take care of yourself," said the object of maternal
|
||
|
and ducal solicitude.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah," rejoined the young barrister, "I haven't the expectation of a hundred
|
||
|
thousand a year, not to mention other attractions."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well," said Lord Lambeth, "don't cry out before you're hurt!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was certainly very much cooler at Newport, where our travelers
|
||
|
found themselves assigned to a couple of diminutive bedrooms
|
||
|
in a faraway angle of an immense hotel. They had gone ashore
|
||
|
in the early summer twilight and had very promptly put themselves
|
||
|
to bed; thanks to which circumstance and to their having,
|
||
|
during the previous hours, in their commodious cabin,
|
||
|
slept the sleep of youth and health, they began to feel,
|
||
|
toward eleven o'clock, very alert and inquisitive.
|
||
|
They looked out of their windows across a row of small
|
||
|
green fields, bordered with low stone walls of rude construction,
|
||
|
and saw a deep blue ocean lying beneath a deep blue sky,
|
||
|
and flecked now and then with scintillating patches of foam.
|
||
|
A strong, fresh breeze came in through the curtainless casements
|
||
|
and prompted our young men to observe, generally, that it didn't
|
||
|
seem half a bad climate. They made other observations after they
|
||
|
had emerged from their rooms in pursuit of breakfast--a meal
|
||
|
of which they partook in a huge bare hall, where a hundred Negroes,
|
||
|
in white jackets, were shuffling about upon an uncarpeted floor;
|
||
|
where the flies were superabundant, and the tables and dishes covered
|
||
|
over with a strange, voluminous integument of coarse blue gauze;
|
||
|
and where several little boys and girls, who had risen late,
|
||
|
were seated in fastidious solitude at the morning repast.
|
||
|
These young persons had not the morning paper before them,
|
||
|
but they were engaged in languid perusal of the bill of fare.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This latter document was a great puzzle to our friends, who, on reflecting
|
||
|
that its bewildering categories had relation to breakfast alone,
|
||
|
had an uneasy prevision of an encyclopedic dinner list.
|
||
|
They found a great deal of entertainment at the hotel, an enormous
|
||
|
wooden structure, for the erection of which it seemed to them that
|
||
|
the virgin forests of the West must have been terribly deflowered.
|
||
|
It was perforated from end to end with immense bare corridors,
|
||
|
through which a strong draught was blowing--bearing along
|
||
|
wonderful figures of ladies in white morning dresses and clouds
|
||
|
of Valenciennes lace, who seemed to float down the long vistas
|
||
|
with expanded furbelows, like angels spreading their wings.
|
||
|
In front was a gigantic veranda, upon which an army might have encamped--
|
||
|
a vast wooden terrace, with a roof as lofty as the nave of a cathedral.
|
||
|
Here our young Englishmen enjoyed, as they supposed, a glimpse
|
||
|
of American society, which was distributed over the measureless
|
||
|
expanse in a variety of sedentary attitudes, and appeared to consist
|
||
|
largely of pretty young girls, dressed as if for a fete champetre,
|
||
|
swaying to and fro in rocking chairs, fanning themselves with large
|
||
|
straw fans, and enjoying an enviable exemption from social cares.
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth had a theory, which it might be interesting to trace
|
||
|
to its origin, that it would be not only agreeable, but easily possible,
|
||
|
to enter into relations with one of these young ladies; and his companion
|
||
|
(as he had done a couple of days before) found occasion to check
|
||
|
the young nobleman's colloquial impulses.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You had better take care," said Percy Beaumont, "or you will have an offended
|
||
|
father or brother pulling out a bowie knife."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I assure you it is all right," Lord Lambeth replied. "You know
|
||
|
the Americans come to these big hotels to make acquaintances."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I know nothing about it, and neither do you," said his kinsman, who, like a
|
||
|
clever man, had begun to perceive that the observation of American society
|
||
|
demanded a readjustment of one's standard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hang it, then let's find out!" cried Lord Lambeth with some impatience.
|
||
|
"You know I don't want to miss anything."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We will find out," said Percy Beaumont very reasonably.
|
||
|
"We will go and see Mrs. Westgate and make all proper inquiries."
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so the two inquiring Englishmen, who had this lady's
|
||
|
address inscribed in her husband's hand upon a card,
|
||
|
descended from the veranda of the big hotel and took their way,
|
||
|
according to direction, along a large straight road, past a
|
||
|
series of fresh-looking villas embosomed in shrubs and flowers
|
||
|
and enclosed in an ingenious variety of wooden palings.
|
||
|
The morning was brilliant and cool, the villas were smart and snug,
|
||
|
and the walk of the young travelers was very entertaining.
|
||
|
Everything looked as if it had received a coat of fresh paint
|
||
|
the day before--the red roofs, the green shutters, the clean,
|
||
|
bright browns and buffs of the housefronts. The flower beds
|
||
|
on the little lawns seemed to sparkle in the radiant air,
|
||
|
and the gravel in the short carriage sweeps to flash and twinkle.
|
||
|
Along the road came a hundred little basket phaetons, in which,
|
||
|
almost always, a couple of ladies were sitting--ladies in white
|
||
|
dresses and long white gloves, holding the reins and looking
|
||
|
at the two Englishmen, whose nationality was not elusive,
|
||
|
through thick blue veils tied tightly about their faces as if
|
||
|
to guard their complexions. At last the young men came within
|
||
|
sight of the sea again, and then, having interrogated a gardener
|
||
|
over the paling of a villa, they turned into an open gate.
|
||
|
Here they found themselves face to face with the ocean and with
|
||
|
a very picturesque structure, resembling a magnified chalet,
|
||
|
which was perched upon a green embankment just above it.
|
||
|
The house had a veranda of extraordinary width all around it
|
||
|
and a great many doors and windows standing open to the veranda.
|
||
|
These various apertures had, in common, such an accessible,
|
||
|
hospitable air, such a breezy flutter within of light curtains,
|
||
|
such expansive thresholds and reassuring interiors, that our friends
|
||
|
hardly knew which was the regular entrance, and, after hesitating
|
||
|
a moment, presented themselves at one of the windows.
|
||
|
The room within was dark, but in a moment a graceful figure
|
||
|
vaguely shaped itself in the rich-looking gloom, and a lady
|
||
|
came to meet them. Then they saw that she had been seated at
|
||
|
a table writing, and that she had heard them and had got up.
|
||
|
She stepped out into the light; she wore a frank, charming smile,
|
||
|
with which she held out her hand to Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, you must be Lord Lambeth and Mr. Beaumont," she said.
|
||
|
"I have heard from my husband that you would come. I am extremely
|
||
|
glad to see you." And she shook hands with each of her visitors.
|
||
|
Her visitors were a little shy, but they had very good manners;
|
||
|
they responded with smiles and exclamations, and they apologized
|
||
|
for not knowing the front door. The lady rejoined, with vivacity,
|
||
|
that when she wanted to see people very much she did not insist
|
||
|
upon those distinctions, and that Mr. Westgate had written to her
|
||
|
of his English friends in terms that made her really anxious.
|
||
|
"He said you were so terribly prostrated," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, you mean by the heat?" replied Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
"We were rather knocked up, but we feel wonderfully better.
|
||
|
We had such a jolly--a-- voyage down here. It's so very good
|
||
|
of you to mind."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, it's so very kind of you," murmured Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate stood smiling; she was extremely pretty. "Well, I did mind,"
|
||
|
she said; "and I thought of sending for you this morning to the Ocean House.
|
||
|
I am very glad you are better, and I am charmed you have arrived.
|
||
|
You must come round to the other side of the piazza." And she led the way,
|
||
|
with a light, smooth step, looking back at the young men and smiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The other side of the piazza was, as Lord Lambeth presently remarked,
|
||
|
a very jolly place. It was of the most liberal proportions,
|
||
|
and with its awnings, its fanciful chairs, its cushions and rugs,
|
||
|
its view of the ocean, close at hand, tumbling along the base of the low
|
||
|
cliffs whose level tops intervened in lawnlike smoothness, it formed
|
||
|
a charming complement to the drawing room. As such it was in course
|
||
|
of use at the present moment; it was occupied by a social circle.
|
||
|
There were several ladies and two or three gentlemen, to whom
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate proceeded to introduce the distinguished strangers.
|
||
|
She mentioned a great many names very freely and distinctly;
|
||
|
the young Englishmen, shuffling about and bowing, were rather bewildered.
|
||
|
But at last they were provided with chairs--low, wicker chairs,
|
||
|
gilded, and tied with a great many ribbons--and one of the ladies
|
||
|
(a very young person, with a little snub nose and several dimples)
|
||
|
offered Percy Beaumont a fan. The fan was also adorned with pink
|
||
|
love knots; but Percy Beaumont declined it, although he was very hot.
|
||
|
Presently, however, it became cooler; the breeze from the sea
|
||
|
was delicious, the view was charming, and the people sitting there
|
||
|
looked exceedingly fresh and comfortable. Several of the ladies
|
||
|
seemed to be young girls, and the gentlemen were slim, fair youths,
|
||
|
such as our friends had seen the day before in New York.
|
||
|
The ladies were working upon bands of tapestry, and one of the young
|
||
|
men had an open book in his lap. Beaumont afterward learned
|
||
|
from one of the ladies that this young man had been reading aloud,
|
||
|
that he was from Boston and was very fond of reading aloud.
|
||
|
Beaumont said it was a great pity that they had interrupted him;
|
||
|
he should like so much (from all he had heard) to hear a Bostonian read.
|
||
|
Couldn't the young man be induced to go on?
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh no," said his informant very freely; "he wouldn't be able
|
||
|
to get the young ladies to attend to him now."
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was something very friendly, Beaumont perceived,
|
||
|
in the attitude of the company; they looked at the young Englishmen
|
||
|
with an air of animated sympathy and interest; they smiled,
|
||
|
brightly and unanimously, at everything either of the visitors said.
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth and his companion felt that they were being made
|
||
|
very welcome. Mrs. Westgate seated herself between them, and,
|
||
|
talking a great deal to each, they had occasion to observe
|
||
|
that she was as pretty as their friend Littledale had promised.
|
||
|
She was thirty years old, with the eyes and the smile of a girl
|
||
|
of seventeen, and she was extremely light and graceful,
|
||
|
elegant, exquisite. Mrs. Westgate was extremely spontaneous.
|
||
|
She was very frank and demonstrative and appeared always--
|
||
|
while she looked at you delightedly with her beautiful
|
||
|
young eyes--to be making sudden confessions and concessions,
|
||
|
after momentary hesitations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We shall expect to see a great deal of you," she said to Lord
|
||
|
Lambeth with a kind of joyous earnestness. "We are very fond
|
||
|
of Englishmen here; that is, there are a great many we have been
|
||
|
fond of. After a day or two you must come and stay with us;
|
||
|
we hope you will stay a long time. Newport's a very nice place
|
||
|
when you come really to know it, when you know plenty of people.
|
||
|
Of course you and Mr. Beaumont will have no difficulty about that.
|
||
|
Englishmen are very well received here; there are almost always
|
||
|
two or three of them about. I think they always like it,
|
||
|
and I must say I should think they would. They receive ever
|
||
|
so much attention. I must say I think they sometimes get spoiled;
|
||
|
but I am sure you and Mr. Beaumont are proof against that.
|
||
|
My husband tells me you are a friend of Captain Littledale;
|
||
|
he was such a charming man. He made himself most agreeable here,
|
||
|
and I am sure I wonder he didn't stay. It couldn't have been
|
||
|
pleasanter for him in his own country, though, I suppose,
|
||
|
it is very pleasant in England, for English people.
|
||
|
I don't know myself; I have been there very little.
|
||
|
I have been a great deal abroad, but I am always on the Continent.
|
||
|
I must say I'm extremely fond of Paris; you know we Americans
|
||
|
always are; we go there when we die. Did you ever hear that before?
|
||
|
That was said by a great wit, I mean the good Americans;
|
||
|
but we are all good; you'll see that for yourself.
|
||
|
All I know of England is London, and all I know of London is
|
||
|
that place on that little corner, you know, where you buy jackets--
|
||
|
jackets with that coarse braid and those big buttons.
|
||
|
They make very good jackets in London, I will do you
|
||
|
the justice to say that. And some people like the hats;
|
||
|
but about the hats I was always a heretic; I always got
|
||
|
my hats in Paris. You can't wear an English hat--at least
|
||
|
I never could--unless you dress your hair a l'Anglaise;
|
||
|
and I must say that is a talent I have never possessed.
|
||
|
In Paris they will make things to suit your peculiarities;
|
||
|
but in England I think you like much more to have--how shall I
|
||
|
say it?--one thing for everybody. I mean as regards dress.
|
||
|
I don't know about other things; but I have always
|
||
|
supposed that in other things everything was different.
|
||
|
I mean according to the people--according to the classes,
|
||
|
and all that. I am afraid you will think that I don't take
|
||
|
a very favorable view; but you know you can't take a very
|
||
|
favorable view in Dover Street in the month of November.
|
||
|
That has always been my fate. Do you know Jones's Hotel
|
||
|
in Dover Street? That's all I know of England. Of course
|
||
|
everyone admits that the English hotels are your weak point.
|
||
|
There was always the most frightful fog; I couldn't see to try
|
||
|
my things on. When I got over to America--into the light--
|
||
|
I usually found they were twice too big. The next time I
|
||
|
mean to go in the season; I think I shall go next year.
|
||
|
I want very much to take my sister; she has never been to England.
|
||
|
I don't know whether you know what I mean by saying
|
||
|
that the Englishmen who come here sometimes get spoiled.
|
||
|
I mean that they take things as a matter of course--
|
||
|
things that are done for them. Now, naturally, they are
|
||
|
only a matter of course when the Englishmen are very nice.
|
||
|
But, of course, they are almost always very nice.
|
||
|
Of course this isn't nearly such an interesting country as England;
|
||
|
there are not nearly so many things to see, and we haven't your
|
||
|
country life. I have never seen anything of your country life;
|
||
|
when I am in Europe I am always on the Continent. But I have
|
||
|
heard a great deal about it; I know that when you are among
|
||
|
yourselves in the country you have the most beautiful time.
|
||
|
Of course we have nothing of that sort, we have nothing on
|
||
|
that scale. I don't apologize, Lord Lambeth; some Americans
|
||
|
are always apologizing; you must have noticed that.
|
||
|
We have the reputation of always boasting and bragging and
|
||
|
waving the American flag; but I must say that what strikes me
|
||
|
is that we are perpetually making excuses and trying to smooth
|
||
|
things over. The American flag has quite gone out of fashion;
|
||
|
it's very carefully folded up, like an old tablecloth.
|
||
|
Why should we apologize? The English never apologize--
|
||
|
do they? No; I must say I never apologize. You must take
|
||
|
us as we come--with all our imperfections on our heads.
|
||
|
Of course we haven't your country life, and your old ruins,
|
||
|
and your great estates, and your leisure class, and all that.
|
||
|
But if we haven't, I should think you might find it a pleasant change--
|
||
|
I think any country is pleasant where they have pleasant manners.
|
||
|
Captain Littledale told me he had never seen such pleasant manners
|
||
|
as at Newport, and he had been a great deal in European society.
|
||
|
Hadn't he been in the diplomatic service? He told me
|
||
|
the dream of his life was to get appointed to a diplomatic
|
||
|
post in Washington. But he doesn't seem to have succeeded.
|
||
|
I suppose that in England promotion--and all that sort of thing--
|
||
|
is fearfully slow. With us, you know, it's a great deal too fast.
|
||
|
You see, I admit our drawbacks. But I must confess I think Newport
|
||
|
is an ideal place. I don't know anything like it anywhere.
|
||
|
Captain Littledale told me he didn't know anything like it anywhere.
|
||
|
It's entirely different from most watering places;
|
||
|
it's a most charming life. I must say I think that when one
|
||
|
goes to a foreign country one ought to enjoy the differences.
|
||
|
Of course there are differences, otherwise what did one come
|
||
|
abroad for? Look for your pleasure in the differences,
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth; that's the way to do it; and then I am sure
|
||
|
you will find American society--at least Newport society--
|
||
|
most charming and most interesting. I wish very much my
|
||
|
husband were here; but he's dreadfully confined to New York.
|
||
|
I suppose you think that is very strange--for a gentleman.
|
||
|
But you see we haven't any leisure class."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate's discourse, delivered in a soft, sweet voice,
|
||
|
flowed on like a miniature torrent, and was interrupted by a
|
||
|
hundred little smiles, glances, and gestures, which might have
|
||
|
figured the irregularities and obstructions of such a stream.
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth listened to her with, it must be confessed,
|
||
|
a rather ineffectual attention, although he indulged in a good
|
||
|
many little murmurs and ejaculations of assent and deprecation.
|
||
|
He had no great faculty for apprehending generalizations.
|
||
|
There were some three or four indeed which, in the play
|
||
|
of his own intelligence, he had originated, and which had
|
||
|
seemed convenient at the moment; but at the present time
|
||
|
he could hardly have been said to follow Mrs. Westgate
|
||
|
as she darted gracefully about in the sea of speculation.
|
||
|
Fortunately she asked for no especial rejoinder,
|
||
|
for she looked about at the rest of the company as well,
|
||
|
and smiled at Percy Beaumont, on the other side of her,
|
||
|
as if he too much understand her and agree with her.
|
||
|
He was rather more successful than his companion;
|
||
|
for besides being, as we know, cleverer, his attention was
|
||
|
not vaguely distracted by close vicinity to a remarkably
|
||
|
interesting young girl, with dark hair and blue eyes.
|
||
|
This was the case with Lord Lambeth, to whom it occurred
|
||
|
after a while that the young girl with blue eyes and dark
|
||
|
hair was the pretty sister of whom Mrs. Westgate had spoken.
|
||
|
She presently turned to him with a remark which established
|
||
|
her identity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's a great pity you couldn't have brought my brother-in-law with you.
|
||
|
It's a great shame he should be in New York in these days."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, yes; it's so very hot," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It must be dreadful," said the young girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I daresay he is very busy," Lord Lambeth observed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The gentlemen in America work too much," the young girl went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, do they? I daresay they like it," said her interlocutor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't like it. One never sees them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't you, really?" asked Lord Lambeth. "I shouldn't have fancied that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Have you come to study American manners?" asked the young girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I don't know. I just came over for a lark. I haven't got long."
|
||
|
Here there was a pause, and Lord Lambeth began again. "But Mr. Westgate
|
||
|
will come down here, will not he?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I certainly hope he will. He must help to entertain you and Mr. Beaumont."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth looked at her a little with his handsome brown eyes.
|
||
|
"Do you suppose he would have come down with us if we had urged him?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mr. Westgate's sister-in-law was silent a moment, and then,
|
||
|
"I daresay he would," she answered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Really!" said the young Englishman. "He was immensely civil
|
||
|
to Beaumont and me," he added.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He is a dear good fellow," the young lady rejoined,
|
||
|
"and he is a perfect husband. But all Americans are that,"
|
||
|
she continued, smiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Really!" Lord Lambeth exclaimed again and wondered whether all American
|
||
|
ladies had such a passion for generalizing as these two.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He sat there a good while: there was a great deal of talk;
|
||
|
it was all very friendly and lively and jolly. Everyone present,
|
||
|
sooner or later, said something to him, and seemed to make
|
||
|
a particular point of addressing him by name. Two or three other
|
||
|
persons came in, and there was a shifting of seats and changing
|
||
|
of places; the gentlemen all entered into intimate conversation
|
||
|
with the two Englishmen, made them urgent offers of hospitality,
|
||
|
and hoped they might frequently be of service to them.
|
||
|
They were afraid Lord Lambeth and Mr. Beaumont were not very
|
||
|
comfortable at their hotel; that it was not, as one of them said,
|
||
|
"so private as those dear little English inns of yours."
|
||
|
This last gentleman went on to say that unfortunately,
|
||
|
as yet, perhaps, privacy was not quite so easily obtained
|
||
|
in America as might be desired; still, he continued,
|
||
|
you could generally get it by paying for it; in fact,
|
||
|
you could get everything in America nowadays by paying for it.
|
||
|
American life was certainly growing a great deal more private;
|
||
|
it was growing very much like England. Everything at Newport,
|
||
|
for instance, was thoroughly private; Lord Lambeth would
|
||
|
probably be struck with that. It was also represented to
|
||
|
the strangers that it mattered very little whether their hotel
|
||
|
was agreeable, as everyone would want them to make visits;
|
||
|
they would stay with other people, and, in any case,
|
||
|
they would be a great deal at Mrs. Westgate's. They would find
|
||
|
that very charming; it was the pleasantest house in Newport.
|
||
|
It was a pity Mr. Westgate was always away; he was a man
|
||
|
of the highest ability--very acute, very acute. He worked like
|
||
|
a horse, and he left his wife--well, to do about as she liked.
|
||
|
He liked her to enjoy herself, and she seemed to know how.
|
||
|
She was extremely brilliant and a splendid talker.
|
||
|
Some people preferred her sister; but Miss Alden was very different;
|
||
|
she was in a different style altogether. Some people even
|
||
|
thought her prettier, and, certainly, she was not so sharp.
|
||
|
She was more in the Boston style; she had lived a great deal
|
||
|
in Boston, and she was very highly educated. Boston girls,
|
||
|
it was propounded, were more like English young ladies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth had presently a chance to test the truth of this proposition,
|
||
|
for on the company rising in compliance with a suggestion from their
|
||
|
hostess that they should walk down to the rocks and look at the sea,
|
||
|
the young Englishman again found himself, as they strolled across the grass,
|
||
|
in proximity to Mrs. Westgate's sister. Though she was but a girl of twenty,
|
||
|
she appeared to feel the obligation to exert an active hospitality; and this
|
||
|
was, perhaps, the more to be noticed as she seemed by nature a reserved
|
||
|
and retiring person, and had little of her sister's fraternizing quality.
|
||
|
She was perhaps rather too thin, and she was a little pale; but as she moved
|
||
|
slowly over the grass, with her arms hanging at her sides, looking gravely
|
||
|
for a moment at the sea and then brightly, for all her gravity, at him,
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth thought her at least as pretty as Mrs. Westgate, and reflected
|
||
|
that if this was the Boston style the Boston style was very charming.
|
||
|
He thought she looked very clever; he could imagine that she was
|
||
|
highly educated; but at the same time she seemed gentle and graceful.
|
||
|
For all her cleverness, however, he felt that she had to think a little
|
||
|
what to say; she didn't say the first thing that came into her head;
|
||
|
he had come from a different part of the world and from a different society,
|
||
|
and she was trying to adapt her conversation. The others were scattering
|
||
|
themselves near the rocks; Mrs. Westgate had charge of Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Very jolly place, isn't it?" said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
"It's a very jolly place to sit."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Very charming," said the young girl. "I often sit here;
|
||
|
there are all kinds of cozy corners--as if they had been
|
||
|
made on purpose."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah! I suppose you have had some of them made," said the young man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Miss Alden looked at him a moment. "Oh no, we have had nothing made.
|
||
|
It's pure nature."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I should think you would have a few little benches--rustic seats
|
||
|
and that sort of thing. It might be so jolly to sit here, you know,"
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am afraid we haven't so many of those things as you,"
|
||
|
said the young girl thoughtfully.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I daresay you go in for pure nature, as you were saying.
|
||
|
Nature over here must be so grand, you know." And Lord Lambeth
|
||
|
looked about him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The little coast line hereabouts was very pretty, but it was not
|
||
|
at all grand, and Miss Alden appeared to rise to a perception
|
||
|
of this fact. "I am afraid it seems to you very rough," she said.
|
||
|
"It's not like the coast scenery in Kingsley's novels."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, the novels always overdo it, you know," Lord Lambeth rejoined.
|
||
|
"You must not go by the novels."
|
||
|
|
||
|
They were wandering about a little on the rocks, and they stopped
|
||
|
and looked down into a narrow chasm where the rising tide made
|
||
|
a curious bellowing sound. It was loud enough to prevent their
|
||
|
hearing each other, and they stood there for some moments in silence.
|
||
|
The young girl looked at her companion, observing him attentively,
|
||
|
but covertly, as women, even when very young, know how to do.
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth repaid observation; tall, straight, and strong,
|
||
|
he was handsome as certain young Englishmen, and certain young
|
||
|
Englishmen almost alone, are handsome; with a perfect finish
|
||
|
of feature and a look of intellectual repose and gentle good temper
|
||
|
which seemed somehow to be consequent upon his well-cut nose and chin.
|
||
|
And to speak of Lord Lambeth's expression of intellectual repose
|
||
|
is not simply a civil way of saying that he looked stupid.
|
||
|
He was evidently not a young man of an irritable imagination;
|
||
|
he was not, as he would himself have said, tremendously clever;
|
||
|
but though there was a kind of appealing dullness in his eye,
|
||
|
he looked thoroughly reasonable and competent, and his appearance
|
||
|
proclaimed that to be a nobleman, an athlete, and an excellent
|
||
|
fellow was a sufficiently brilliant combination of qualities.
|
||
|
The young girl beside him, it may be attested without further delay,
|
||
|
thought him the handsomest young man she had ever seen;
|
||
|
and Bessie Alden's imagination, unlike that of her companion,
|
||
|
was irritable. He, however, was also making up his mind that she
|
||
|
was uncommonly pretty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I daresay it's very gay here, that you have lots of balls and parties,"
|
||
|
he said; for, if he was not tremendously clever, he rather prided himself
|
||
|
on having, with women, a sufficiency of conversation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, yes, there is a great deal going on," Bessie Alden replied.
|
||
|
"There are not so many balls, but there are a good many other things.
|
||
|
You will see for yourself; we live rather in the midst of it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's very kind of you to say that. But I thought you Americans
|
||
|
were always dancing."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I suppose we dance a good deal; but I have never seen much of it.
|
||
|
We don't do it much, at any rate, in summer. And I am sure,"
|
||
|
said Bessie Alden, "that we don't have so many balls as you
|
||
|
have in England."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Really!" exclaimed Lord Lambeth. "Ah, in England it all depends, you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You will not think much of our gaieties," said the young girl,
|
||
|
looking at him with a little mixture of interrogation and decision
|
||
|
which was peculiar to her. The interrogation seemed earnest and
|
||
|
the decision seemed arch; but the mixture, at any rate, was charming.
|
||
|
"Those things, with us, are much less splendid than in England."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I fancy you don't mean that," said Lord Lambeth, laughing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I assure you I mean everything I say," the young girl declared.
|
||
|
"Certainly, from what I have read about English society,
|
||
|
it is very different."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah well, you know," said her companion, "those things are
|
||
|
often described by fellows who know nothing about them.
|
||
|
You mustn't mind what you read."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I SHALL mind what I read!" Bessie Alden rejoined.
|
||
|
"When I read Thackeray and George Eliot, how can I help minding them?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah well, Thackeray, and George Eliot," said the young nobleman;
|
||
|
"I haven't read much of them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't you suppose they know about society?" asked Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I daresay they know; they were so very clever.
|
||
|
But these fashionable novels," said Lord Lambeth, "they are
|
||
|
awful rot, you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
His companion looked at him a moment with her dark blue eyes, and then
|
||
|
she looked down in the chasm where the water was tumbling about.
|
||
|
"Do you mean Mrs. Gore, for instance?" she said presently,
|
||
|
raising her eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am afraid I haven't read that, either," was the young
|
||
|
man's rejoinder, laughing a little and blushing.
|
||
|
"I am afraid you'll think I am not very intellectual."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Reading Mrs. Gore is no proof of intellect. But I like
|
||
|
reading everything about English life--even poor books.
|
||
|
I am so curious about it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Aren't ladies always curious?" asked the young man jestingly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Bessie Alden appeared to desire to answer his question seriously.
|
||
|
"I don't think so--I don't think we are enough so--that we care
|
||
|
about many things. So it's all the more of a compliment," she added,
|
||
|
"that I should want to know so much about England."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The logic here seemed a little close; but Lord Lambeth, made conscious
|
||
|
of a compliment, found his natural modesty just at hand.
|
||
|
"I am sure you know a great deal more than I do."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I really think I know a great deal--for a person who has never been there."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Have you really never been there?" cried Lord Lambeth. "Fancy!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Never--except in imagination," said the young girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Fancy!" repeated her companion. "But I daresay you'll go soon, won't you?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's the dream of my life!" declared Bessie Alden, smiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But your sister seems to know a tremendous lot about London,"
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young girl was silent a moment. "My sister and I are two
|
||
|
very different persons," she presently said. "She has been
|
||
|
a great deal in Europe. She has been in England several times.
|
||
|
She has known a great many English people."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But you must have known some, too," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't think that I have ever spoken to one before.
|
||
|
You are the first Englishman that--to my knowledge--
|
||
|
I have ever talked with."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden made this statement with a certain gravity--
|
||
|
almost, as it seemed to Lord Lambeth, an impressiveness.
|
||
|
Attempts at impressiveness always made him feel awkward,
|
||
|
and he now began to laugh and swing his stick. "Ah, you
|
||
|
would have been sure to know!" he said. And then he added,
|
||
|
after an instant, "I'm sorry I am not a better specimen."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young girl looked away; but she smiled, laying aside her impressiveness.
|
||
|
"You must remember that you are only a beginning," she said.
|
||
|
Then she retraced her steps, leading the way back to the lawn, where they
|
||
|
saw Mrs. Westgate come toward them with Percy Beaumont still at her side.
|
||
|
"Perhaps I shall go to England next year," Miss Alden continued;
|
||
|
"I want to, immensely. My sister is going to Europe, and she has
|
||
|
asked me to go with her. If we go, I shall make her stay as long
|
||
|
as possible in London."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, you must come in July," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
"That's the time when there is most going on."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't think I can wait till July," the young girl rejoined.
|
||
|
"By the first of May I shall be very impatient." They had gone further,
|
||
|
and Mrs. Westgate and her companion were near them. "Kitty," said
|
||
|
Miss Alden, "I have given out that we are going to London next May.
|
||
|
So please to conduct yourself accordingly."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont wore a somewhat animated--even a slightly irritated--air.
|
||
|
He was by no means so handsome a man as his cousin, although in
|
||
|
his cousin's absence he might have passed for a striking specimen
|
||
|
of the tall, muscular, fair-bearded, clear-eyed Englishman.
|
||
|
Just now Beaumont's clear eyes, which were small and of a pale
|
||
|
gray color, had a rather troubled light, and, after glancing at
|
||
|
Bessie Alden while she spoke, he rested them upon his kinsman.
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate meanwhile, with her superfluously pretty gaze,
|
||
|
looked at everyone alike.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You had better wait till the time comes," she said to her sister.
|
||
|
"Perhaps next May you won't care so much about London.
|
||
|
Mr. Beaumont and I," she went on, smiling at her companion,
|
||
|
"have had a tremendous discussion. We don't agree about anything.
|
||
|
It's perfectly delightful."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I say, Percy!" exclaimed Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I disagree," said Beaumont, stroking down his back hair,
|
||
|
"even to the point of not thinking it delightful."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I say!" cried Lord Lambeth again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't see anything delightful in my disagreeing with Mrs. Westgate,"
|
||
|
said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, I do!" Mrs. Westgate declared; and she turned to her sister.
|
||
|
"You know you have to go to town. The phaeton is there.
|
||
|
You had better take Lord Lambeth."
|
||
|
|
||
|
At this point Percy Beaumont certainly looked straight at his kinsman;
|
||
|
he tried to catch his eye. But Lord Lambeth would not look at him; his own
|
||
|
eyes were better occupied. "I shall be very happy," cried Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
"I am only going to some shops. But I will drive you about and show
|
||
|
you the place."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"An American woman who respects herself," said Mrs. Westgate,
|
||
|
turning to Beaumont with her bright expository air, "must buy
|
||
|
something every day of her life. If she can not do it herself,
|
||
|
she must send out some member of her family for the purpose.
|
||
|
So Bessie goes forth to fulfill my mission."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young girl had walked away, with Lord Lambeth by her side,
|
||
|
to whom she was talking still; and Percy Beaumont watched them
|
||
|
as they passed toward the house. "She fulfills her own mission,"
|
||
|
he presently said; "that of being a very attractive young lady."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't know that I should say very attractive," Mrs. Westgate rejoined.
|
||
|
"She is not so much that as she is charming when you really know her.
|
||
|
She is very shy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, indeed!" said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Extremely shy," Mrs. Westgate repeated. "But she is a dear good girl; she is
|
||
|
a charming species of girl. She is not in the least a flirt; that isn't
|
||
|
at all her line; she doesn't know the alphabet of that sort of thing.
|
||
|
She is very simple, very serious. She has lived a great deal in Boston,
|
||
|
with another sister of mine--the eldest of us--who married a Bostonian.
|
||
|
She is very cultivated, not at all like me; I am not in the least cultivated.
|
||
|
She has studied immensely and read everything; she is what they call
|
||
|
in Boston 'thoughtful.'"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"A rum sort of girl for Lambeth to get hold of!" his lordship's
|
||
|
kinsman privately reflected.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I really believe," Mrs. Westgate continued, "that the most charming
|
||
|
girl in the world is a Boston superstructure upon a New York fonds;
|
||
|
or perhaps a New York superstructure upon a Boston fonds. At any rate,
|
||
|
it's the mixture," said Mrs. Westgate, who continued to give Percy
|
||
|
Beaumont a great deal of information.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth got into a little basket phaeton with Bessie Alden,
|
||
|
and she drove him down the long avenue, whose extent he had
|
||
|
measured on foot a couple of hours before, into the ancient town,
|
||
|
as it was called in that part of the world, of Newport. The ancient
|
||
|
town was a curious affair--a collection of fresh-looking little
|
||
|
wooden houses, painted white, scattered over a hillside and clustered
|
||
|
about a long straight street paved with enormous cobblestones.
|
||
|
There were plenty of shops--a large proportion of which appeared
|
||
|
to be those of fruit vendors, with piles of huge watermelons and
|
||
|
pumpkins stacked in front of them; and, drawn up before the shops,
|
||
|
or bumping about on the cobblestones, were innumerable other basket
|
||
|
phaetons freighted with ladies of high fashion, who greeted each other
|
||
|
from vehicle to vehicle and conversed on the edge of the pavement
|
||
|
in a manner that struck Lord Lambeth as demonstrative, with a great
|
||
|
many "Oh, my dears," and little quick exclamations and caresses.
|
||
|
His companion went into seventeen shops--he amused himself with
|
||
|
counting them--and accumulated at the bottom of the phaeton a pile
|
||
|
of bundles that hardly left the young Englishman a place for his feet.
|
||
|
As she had no groom nor footman, he sat in the phaeton to hold
|
||
|
the ponies, where, although he was not a particularly acute observer,
|
||
|
he saw much to entertain him--especially the ladies just mentioned,
|
||
|
who wandered up and down with the appearance of a kind of aimless
|
||
|
intentness, as if they were looking for something to buy, and who,
|
||
|
tripping in and out of their vehicles, displayed remarkably pretty feet.
|
||
|
It all seemed to Lord Lambeth very odd, and bright, and gay.
|
||
|
Of course, before they got back to the villa, he had had a great
|
||
|
deal of desultory conversation with Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young Englishmen spent the whole of that day and the whole
|
||
|
of many successive days in what the French call the intimite
|
||
|
of their new friends. They agreed that it was extremely jolly,
|
||
|
that they had never known anything more agreeable.
|
||
|
It is not proposed to narrate minutely the incidents
|
||
|
of their sojourn on this charming shore; though if it were
|
||
|
convenient I might present a record of impressions nonetheless
|
||
|
delectable that they were not exhaustively analyzed.
|
||
|
Many of them still linger in the minds of our travelers,
|
||
|
attended by a train of harmonious images--images of brilliant
|
||
|
mornings on lawns and piazzas that overlooked the sea;
|
||
|
of innumerable pretty girls; of infinite lounging and talking
|
||
|
and laughing and flirting and lunching and dining; of universal
|
||
|
friendliness and frankness; of occasions on which they knew
|
||
|
everyone and everything and had an extraordinary sense of ease;
|
||
|
of drives and rides in the late afternoon over gleaming beaches,
|
||
|
on long sea roads, beneath a sky lighted up by marvelous sunsets;
|
||
|
of suppers, on the return, informal, irregular, agreeable;
|
||
|
of evenings at open windows or on the perpetual verandas,
|
||
|
in the summer starlight, above the warm Atlantic.
|
||
|
The young Englishmen were introduced to everybody,
|
||
|
entertained by everybody, intimate with everybody. At the end
|
||
|
of three days they had removed their luggage from the hotel
|
||
|
and had gone to stay with Mrs. Westgate--a step to which Percy
|
||
|
Beaumont at first offered some conscientious opposition.
|
||
|
I call his opposition conscientious, because it was founded upon
|
||
|
some talk that he had had, on the second day, with Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
He had indeed had a good deal of talk with her, for she
|
||
|
was not literally always in conversation with Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
He had meditated upon Mrs. Westgate's account of her sister,
|
||
|
and he discovered for himself that the young lady was clever,
|
||
|
and appeared to have read a great deal. She seemed very nice,
|
||
|
though he could not make out, as Mrs. Westgate had said, she was shy.
|
||
|
If she was shy, she carried it off very well.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Mr. Beaumont," she had said, "please tell me something about Lord
|
||
|
Lambeth's family. How would you say it in England--his position?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"His position?" Percy Beaumont repeated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"His rank, or whatever you call it. Unfortunately we haven't got
|
||
|
a PEERAGE, like the people in Thackeray."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's a great pity," said Beaumont. "You would find it all set
|
||
|
forth there so much better than I can do it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He is a peer, then?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, yes, he is a peer."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And has he any other title than Lord Lambeth?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"His title is the Marquis of Lambeth," said Beaumont; and then he was silent.
|
||
|
Bessie Alden appeared to be looking at him with interest. "He is the son
|
||
|
of the Duke of Bayswater," he added presently.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The eldest son?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The only son."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And are his parents living?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh yes; if his father were not living he would be a duke."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"So that when his father dies," pursued Bessie Alden with more
|
||
|
simplicity than might have been expected in a clever girl,
|
||
|
"he will become Duke of Bayswater?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Of course," said Percy Beaumont. "But his father is in excellent health."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And his mother?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beaumont smiled a little. "The duchess is uncommonly robust."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And has he any sisters?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, there are two."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And what are they called?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"One of them is married. She is the Countess of Pimlico."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And the other?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The other is unmarried; she is plain Lady Julia."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden looked at him a moment. "Is she very plain?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beaumont began to laugh again. "You would not find her so handsome as
|
||
|
her brother," he said; and it was after this that he attempted to dissuade
|
||
|
the heir of the Duke of Bayswater from accepting Mrs. Westgate's invitation.
|
||
|
"Depend upon it," he said, "that girl means to try for you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It seems to me you are doing your best to make a fool of me,"
|
||
|
the modest young nobleman answered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She has been asking me," said Beaumont, "all about your people
|
||
|
and your possessions."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am sure it is very good of her!" Lord Lambeth rejoined.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, then," observed his companion, "if you go, you go
|
||
|
with your eyes open."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Damn my eyes!" exclaimed Lord Lambeth. "If one is to be a dozen times
|
||
|
a day at the house, it is a great deal more convenient to sleep there.
|
||
|
I am sick of traveling up and down this beastly avenue."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Since he had determined to go, Percy Beaumont would, of course,
|
||
|
have been very sorry to allow him to go alone; he was a man
|
||
|
of conscience, and he remembered his promise to the duchess.
|
||
|
It was obviously the memory of this promise that made him say
|
||
|
to his companion a couple of days later that he rather wondered
|
||
|
he should be so fond of that girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In the first place, how do you know how fond I am of her?"
|
||
|
asked Lord Lambeth. "And, in the second place, why shouldn't
|
||
|
I be fond of her?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I shouldn't think she would be in your line."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What do you call my 'line'? You don't set her down as 'fast'?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Exactly so. Mrs. Westgate tells me that there is no such thing
|
||
|
as the 'fast girl' in America; that it's an English invention,
|
||
|
and that the term has no meaning here."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"All the better. It's an animal I detest."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You prefer a bluestocking."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Is that what you call Miss Alden?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Her sister tells me," said Percy Beaumont, "that she
|
||
|
is tremendously literary."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't know anything about that. She is certainly very clever."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well," said Beaumont, "I should have supposed you would have found
|
||
|
that sort of thing awfully slow."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In point of fact," Lord Lambeth rejoined, "I find it uncommonly lively."
|
||
|
|
||
|
After this, Percy Beaumont held his tongue; but on
|
||
|
the 10th of August he wrote to the Duchess of Bayswater.
|
||
|
He was, as I have said, a man of conscience, and he had
|
||
|
a strong, incorruptible sense of the proprieties of life.
|
||
|
His kinsman, meanwhile, was having a great deal of talk
|
||
|
with Bessie Alden--on the red sea rocks beyond the lawn;
|
||
|
in the course of long island rides, with a slow return in
|
||
|
the glowing twilight; on the deep veranda late in the evening.
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth, who had stayed at many houses, had never stayed
|
||
|
at a house in which it was possible for a young man to converse
|
||
|
so frequently with a young lady. This young lady no longer applied
|
||
|
to Percy Beaumont for information concerning his lordship.
|
||
|
She addressed herself directly to the young nobleman.
|
||
|
She asked him a great many questions, some of which bored him
|
||
|
a little; for he took no pleasure in talking about himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Lord Lambeth," said Bessie Alden, "are you a hereditary legislator?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I say!" cried Lord Lambeth, "don't make me call myself
|
||
|
such names as that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But you are a member of Parliament," said the young girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't like the sound of that, either."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't you sit in the House of Lords?" Bessie Alden went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Very seldom," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Is it an important position?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, dear, no," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I should think it would be very grand," said Bessie Alden,
|
||
|
"to possess, simply by an accident of birth, the right to make
|
||
|
laws for a great nation."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, but one doesn't make laws. It's a great humbug."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't believe that," the young girl declared.
|
||
|
"It must be a great privilege, and I should think that if one
|
||
|
thought of it in the right way--from a high point of view--
|
||
|
it would be very inspiring."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The less one thinks of it, the better," Lord Lambeth affirmed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I think it's tremendous," said Bessie Alden; and on
|
||
|
another occasion she asked him if he had any tenantry.
|
||
|
Hereupon it was that, as I have said, he was a little bored.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do you want to buy up their leases?" he asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, have you got any livings?" she demanded.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I say!" he cried. "Have you got a clergyman that is looking out?"
|
||
|
But she made him tell her that he had a castle; he confessed to but one.
|
||
|
It was the place in which he had been born and brought up, and, as he had
|
||
|
an old-time liking for it, he was beguiled into describing it a little
|
||
|
and saying it was really very jolly. Bessie Alden listened with great
|
||
|
interest and declared that she would give the world to see such a place.
|
||
|
Whereupon--"It would be awfully kind of you to come and stay there,"
|
||
|
said Lord Lambeth. He took a vague satisfaction in the circumstance
|
||
|
that Percy Beaumont had not heard him make the remark I have just recorded.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mr. Westgate all this time had not, as they said at Newport, "come on."
|
||
|
His wife more than once announced that she expected him on the morrow;
|
||
|
but on the morrow she wandered about a little, with a telegram in her
|
||
|
jeweled fingers, declaring it was very tiresome that his business detained him
|
||
|
in New York; that he could only hope the Englishmen were having a good time.
|
||
|
"I must say," said Mrs. Westgate, "that it is no thanks to him if you are."
|
||
|
And she went on to explain, while she continued that slow-paced
|
||
|
promenade which enabled her well-adjusted skirts to display themselves
|
||
|
so advantageously, that unfortunately in America there was no leisure class.
|
||
|
It was Lord Lambeth's theory, freely propounded when the young men
|
||
|
were together, that Percy Beaumont was having a very good time with
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate, and that, under the pretext of meeting for the purpose
|
||
|
of animated discussion, they were indulging in practices that imparted
|
||
|
a shade of hypocrisy to the lady's regret for her husband's absence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I assure you we are always discussing and differing,"
|
||
|
said Percy Beaumont. "She is awfully argumentative.
|
||
|
American ladies certainly don't mind contradicting you.
|
||
|
Upon my word I don't think I was ever treated so by a woman before.
|
||
|
She's so devilish positive."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate's positive quality, however, evidently had
|
||
|
its attractions, for Beaumont was constantly at his hostess's side.
|
||
|
He detached himself one day to the extent of going to New
|
||
|
York to talk over the Tennessee Central with Mr. Westgate;
|
||
|
but he was absent only forty-eight hours, during which,
|
||
|
with Mr. Westgate's assistance, he completely settled this piece
|
||
|
of business. "They certainly do things quickly in New York,"
|
||
|
he observed to his cousin; and he added that Mr. Westgate
|
||
|
had seemed very uneasy lest his wife should miss her visitor--
|
||
|
he had been in such an awful hurry to send him back to her.
|
||
|
"I'm afraid you'll never come up to an American husband,
|
||
|
if that's what the wives expect," he said to Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate, however, was not to enjoy much longer the entertainment
|
||
|
with which an indulgent husband had desired to keep her provided.
|
||
|
On the 21st of August Lord Lambeth received a telegram from his mother,
|
||
|
requesting him to return immediately to England; his father had been
|
||
|
taken ill, and it was his filial duty to come to him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young Englishman was visibly annoyed. "What the deuce does it mean?"
|
||
|
he asked of his kinsman. "What am I to do?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont was annoyed as well; he had deemed it his duty,
|
||
|
as I have narrated, to write to the duchess, but he had not expected
|
||
|
that this distinguished woman would act so promptly upon his hint.
|
||
|
"It means," he said, "that your father is laid up.
|
||
|
I don't suppose it's anything serious; but you have no option.
|
||
|
Take the first steamer; but don't be alarmed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth made his farewells; but the few last words that he exchanged
|
||
|
with Bessie Alden are the only ones that have a place in our record.
|
||
|
"Of course I needn't assure you," he said, "that if you should come to England
|
||
|
next year, I expect to be the first person that you inform of it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden looked at him a little, and she smiled.
|
||
|
"Oh, if we come to London," she answered, "I should think you
|
||
|
would hear of it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont returned with his cousin, and his sense of duty
|
||
|
compelled him, one windless afternoon, in mid-Atlantic, to say
|
||
|
to Lord Lambeth that he suspected that the duchess's telegram was
|
||
|
in part the result of something he himself had written to her.
|
||
|
"I wrote to her--as I explicitly notified you I had promised to do--
|
||
|
that you were extremely interested in a little American girl."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth was extremely angry, and he indulged for some
|
||
|
moments in the simple language of indignation. But I have said
|
||
|
that he was a reasonable young man, and I can give no better
|
||
|
proof of it than the fact that he remarked to his companion
|
||
|
at the end of half an hour, "You were quite right, after all.
|
||
|
I am very much interested in her. Only, to be fair,"
|
||
|
he added, "you should have told my mother also that she
|
||
|
is not--seriously--interested in me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont gave a little laugh. "There is nothing
|
||
|
so charming as modesty in a young man in your position.
|
||
|
That speech is a capital proof that you are sweet on her."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She is not interested--she is not!" Lord Lambeth repeated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My dear fellow," said his companion, "you are very far gone."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
PART II
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
In point of fact, as Percy Beaumont would have said,
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate disembarked on the 18th of May on
|
||
|
the British coast. She was accompanied by her sister,
|
||
|
but she was not attended by any other member of her family.
|
||
|
To the deprivation of her husband's society Mrs. Westgate was,
|
||
|
however, habituated; she had made half a dozen journeys
|
||
|
to Europe without him, and she now accounted for his absence,
|
||
|
to interrogative friends on this side of the Atlantic,
|
||
|
by allusion to the regrettable but conspicuous fact that in
|
||
|
America there was no leisure class. The two ladies came up
|
||
|
to London and alighted at Jones's Hotel, where Mrs. Westgate,
|
||
|
who had made on former occasions the most agreeable impression
|
||
|
at this establishment, received an obsequious greeting.
|
||
|
Bessie Alden had felt much excited about coming to England;
|
||
|
she had expected the "associations" would be very charming,
|
||
|
that it would be an infinite pleasure to rest her eyes upon
|
||
|
the things she had read about in the poets and historians.
|
||
|
She was very fond of the poets and historians, of the picturesque,
|
||
|
of the past, of retrospect, of mementos and reverberations
|
||
|
of greatness; so that on coming into the English world,
|
||
|
where strangeness and familiarity would go hand in hand,
|
||
|
she was prepared for a multitude of fresh emotions.
|
||
|
They began very promptly--these tender, fluttering sensations;
|
||
|
they began with the sight of the beautiful English landscape,
|
||
|
whose dark richness was quickened and brightened by the season;
|
||
|
with the carpeted fields and flowering hedgerows, as she
|
||
|
looked at them from the window of the train; with the spires
|
||
|
of the rural churches peeping above the rook-haunted treetops;
|
||
|
with the oak-studded parks, the ancient homes, the cloudy light,
|
||
|
the speech, the manners, the thousand differences.
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate's impressions had, of course, much less novelty
|
||
|
and keenness, and she gave but a wandering attention to her
|
||
|
sister's ejaculations and rhapsodies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You know my enjoyment of England is not so intellectual as Bessie's," she
|
||
|
said to several of her friends in the course of her visit to this country.
|
||
|
"And yet if it is not intellectual, I can't say it is physical.
|
||
|
I don't think I can quite say what it is, my enjoyment of England."
|
||
|
When once it was settled that the two ladies should come abroad and should
|
||
|
spend a few weeks in England on their way to the Continent, they of course
|
||
|
exchanged a good many allusions to their London acquaintance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It will certainly be much nicer having friends there,"
|
||
|
Bessie Alden had said one day as she sat on the sunny deck
|
||
|
of the steamer at her sister's feet on a large blue rug.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Whom do you mean by friends?" Mrs. Westgate asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"All those English gentlemen whom you have known and entertained.
|
||
|
Captain Littledale, for instance. And Lord Lambeth and Mr. Beaumont,"
|
||
|
added Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do you expect them to give us a very grand reception?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie reflected a moment; she was addicted, as we know,
|
||
|
to reflection. "Well, yes."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My poor, sweet child," murmured her sister.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What have I said that is so silly?" asked Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are a little too simple; just a little. It is very becoming,
|
||
|
but it pleases people at your expense."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am certainly too simple to understand you," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Shall I tell you a story?" asked her sister.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If you would be so good. That is what they do to amuse simple people."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate consulted her memory, while her companion sat gazing
|
||
|
at the shining sea. "Did you ever hear of the Duke of Green-Erin?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I think not," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, it's no matter," her sister went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's a proof of my simplicity."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My story is meant to illustrate that of some other people,"
|
||
|
said Mrs. Westgate. "The Duke of Green-Erin is what they call in
|
||
|
England a great swell, and some five years ago he came to America.
|
||
|
He spent most of his time in New York, and in New York he spent his
|
||
|
days and his nights at the Butterworths'. You have heard, at least,
|
||
|
of the Butterworths. Bien. They did everything in the world for him--
|
||
|
they turned themselves inside out. They gave him a dozen dinner parties
|
||
|
and balls and were the means of his being invited to fifty more.
|
||
|
At first he used to come into Mrs. Butterworth's box at the opera
|
||
|
in a tweed traveling suit; but someone stopped that. At any rate,
|
||
|
he had a beautiful time, and they parted the best friends in the world.
|
||
|
Two years elapse, and the Butterworths come abroad and go to London.
|
||
|
The first thing they see in all the papers--in England those things
|
||
|
are in the most prominent place--is that the Duke of Green-Erin
|
||
|
has arrived in town for the Season. They wait a little, and then
|
||
|
Mr. Butterworth--as polite as ever--goes and leaves a card.
|
||
|
They wait a little more; the visit is not returned; they wait
|
||
|
three weeks--silence de mort--the Duke gives no sign.
|
||
|
The Butterworths see a lot of other people, put down the Duke
|
||
|
of Green-Erin as a rude, ungrateful man, and forget all about him.
|
||
|
One fine day they go to Ascot Races, and there they meet him face
|
||
|
to face. He stares a moment and then comes up to Mr. Butterworth,
|
||
|
taking something from his pocketbook--something which proves
|
||
|
to be a banknote. 'I'm glad to see you, Mr. Butterworth,' he says,
|
||
|
'so that I can pay you that ten pounds I lost to you in New York.
|
||
|
I saw the other day you remembered our bet; here are the ten pounds,
|
||
|
Mr. Butterworth. Goodbye, Mr. Butterworth.' And off he goes,
|
||
|
and that's the last they see of the Duke of Green-Erin."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Is that your story?" asked Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't you think it's interesting?" her sister replied.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't believe it," said the young girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah," cried Mrs. Westgate, "you are not so simple after all!
|
||
|
Believe it or not, as you please; there is no smoke without fire."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Is that the way," asked Bessie after a moment, "that you expect
|
||
|
your friends to treat you?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I defy them to treat me very ill, because I shall not give
|
||
|
them the opportunity. With the best will in the world,
|
||
|
in that case they can't be very offensive."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden was silent a moment. "I don't see what makes you talk that way,"
|
||
|
she said. "The English are a great people."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Exactly; and that is just the way they have grown great--
|
||
|
by dropping you when you have ceased to be useful.
|
||
|
People say they are not clever; but I think they are very clever."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You know you have liked them--all the Englishmen you have seen," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They have liked me," her sister rejoined; "it would be more correct
|
||
|
to say that. And, of course, one likes that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden resumed for some moments her studies in sea green.
|
||
|
"Well," she said, "whether they like me or not, I mean to like them.
|
||
|
And happily," she added, "Lord Lambeth does not owe me ten pounds."
|
||
|
|
||
|
During the first few days after their arrival at Jones's Hotel our charming
|
||
|
Americans were much occupied with what they would have called looking
|
||
|
about them. They found occasion to make a large number of purchases,
|
||
|
and their opportunities for conversation were such only as were offered
|
||
|
by the deferential London shopmen. Bessie Alden, even in driving
|
||
|
from the station, took an immense fancy to the British metropolis,
|
||
|
and at the risk of exhibiting her as a young woman of vulgar tastes it
|
||
|
must be recorded that for a considerable period she desired no higher
|
||
|
pleasure than to drive about the crowded streets in a hansom cab.
|
||
|
To her attentive eyes they were full of a strange picturesque life,
|
||
|
and it is at least beneath the dignity of our historic muse to enumerate
|
||
|
the trivial objects and incidents which this simple young lady from Boston
|
||
|
found so entertaining. It may be freely mentioned, however, that whenever,
|
||
|
after a round of visits in Bond Street and Regent Street, she was
|
||
|
about to return with her sister to Jones's Hotel, she made an earnest
|
||
|
request that they should be driven home by way of Westminster Abbey.
|
||
|
She had begun by asking whether it would not be possible to take the Tower
|
||
|
on the way to their lodgings; but it happened that at a more primitive stage
|
||
|
of her culture Mrs. Westgate had paid a visit to this venerable monument,
|
||
|
which she spoke of ever afterward vaguely as a dreadful disappointment;
|
||
|
so that she expressed the liveliest disapproval of any attempt to combine
|
||
|
historical researches with the purchase of hairbrushes and notepaper.
|
||
|
The most she would consent to do in this line was to spend half
|
||
|
an hour at Madame Tussaud's, where she saw several dusty wax effigies
|
||
|
of members of the royal family. She told Bessie that if she
|
||
|
wished to go to the Tower she must get someone else to take her.
|
||
|
Bessie expressed hereupon an earnest disposition to go alone; but upon
|
||
|
this proposal as well Mrs. Westgate sprinkled cold water.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Remember," she said, "that you are not in your innocent little Boston.
|
||
|
It is not a question of walking up and down Beacon Street."
|
||
|
Then she went on to explain that there were two classes of American
|
||
|
girls in Europe--those that walked about alone and those that did not.
|
||
|
"You happen to belong, my dear," she said to her sister, "to the class
|
||
|
that does not."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is only," answered Bessie, laughing, "because you happen to prevent me."
|
||
|
And she devoted much private meditation to this question of effecting a visit
|
||
|
to the Tower of London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Suddenly it seemed as if the problem might be solved; the two
|
||
|
ladies at Jones's Hotel received a visit from Willie Woodley.
|
||
|
Such was the social appellation of a young American who had sailed
|
||
|
from New York a few days after their own departure, and who,
|
||
|
having the privilege of intimacy with them in that city, had lost
|
||
|
no time, on his arrival in London, in coming to pay them his respects.
|
||
|
He had, in fact, gone to see them directly after going to see his tailor,
|
||
|
than which there can be no greater exhibition of promptitude on the part
|
||
|
of a young American who has just alighted at the Charing Cross Hotel.
|
||
|
He was a slim, pale youth, of the most amiable disposition,
|
||
|
famous for the skill with which he led the "German" in New York.
|
||
|
Indeed, by the young ladies who habitually figured in this Terpsichorean
|
||
|
revel he was believed to be "the best dancer in the world";
|
||
|
it was in these terms that he was always spoken of, and that his
|
||
|
identity was indicated. He was the gentlest, softest young
|
||
|
man it was possible to meet; he was beautifully dressed--"in
|
||
|
the English style"--and he knew an immense deal about London.
|
||
|
He had been at Newport during the previous summer, at the time of our
|
||
|
young Englishmen's visit, and he took extreme pleasure in the society
|
||
|
of Bessie Alden, whom he always addressed as "Miss Bessie."
|
||
|
She immediately arranged with him, in the presence of her sister,
|
||
|
that he should conduct her to the scene of Anne Boleyn's execution.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You may do as you please," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
"Only--if you desire the information--it is not the custom
|
||
|
here for young ladies to knock about London with young men."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Miss Bessie has waltzed with me so often," observed Willie Woodley;
|
||
|
"she can surely go out with me in a hansom."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I consider waltzing," said Mrs. Westgate, "the most innocent pleasure
|
||
|
of our time."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's a compliment to our time!" exclaimed the young man with a little laugh,
|
||
|
in spite of himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't see why I should regard what is done here," said Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
"Why should I suffer the restrictions of a society of which I enjoy none
|
||
|
of the privileges?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's very good--very good," murmured Willie Woodley.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, go to the Tower, and feel the ax, if you like," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
"I consent to your going with Mr. Woodley; but I should not let you go
|
||
|
with an Englishman."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Miss Bessie wouldn't care to go with an Englishman!"
|
||
|
Mr. Woodley declared with a faint asperity that was, perhaps,
|
||
|
not unnatural in a young man, who, dressing in the manner
|
||
|
that I have indicated and knowing a great deal, as I have said,
|
||
|
about London, saw no reason for drawing these sharp distinctions.
|
||
|
He agreed upon a day with Miss Bessie--a day of that same week.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An ingenious mind might, perhaps, trace a connection between the young
|
||
|
girl's allusion to her destitution of social privileges and a question
|
||
|
she asked on the morrow as she sat with her sister at lunch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't you mean to write to--to anyone?" said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I wrote this morning to Captain Littledale," Mrs. Westgate replied.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But Mr. Woodley said that Captain Littledale had gone to India."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He said he thought he had heard so; he knew nothing about it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a moment Bessie Alden said nothing more; then, at last,
|
||
|
"And don't you intend to write to--to Mr. Beaumont?" she inquired.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You mean to Lord Lambeth," said her sister.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I said Mr. Beaumont because he was so good a friend of yours."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate looked at the young girl with sisterly candor.
|
||
|
"I don't care two straws for Mr. Beaumont."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You were certainly very nice to him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am nice to everyone," said Mrs. Westgate simply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"To everyone but me," rejoined Bessie, smiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her sister continued to look at her; then, at last, "Are you
|
||
|
in love with Lord Lambeth?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young girl stared a moment, and the question was apparently too humorous
|
||
|
even to make her blush. "Not that I know of," she answered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Because if you are," Mrs. Westgate went on, "I shall certainly
|
||
|
not send for him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That proves what I said," declared Bessie, smiling--"that you
|
||
|
are not nice to me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It would be a poor service, my dear child," said her sister.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In what sense? There is nothing against Lord Lambeth that I know of."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate was silent a moment. "You ARE in love with him then?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie stared again; but this time she blushed a little.
|
||
|
"Ah! if you won't be serious," she answered, "we will not
|
||
|
mention him again."
|
||
|
|
||
|
For some moments Lord Lambeth was not mentioned again, and it was
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate who, at the end of this period, reverted to him.
|
||
|
"Of course I will let him know we are here, because I think he would
|
||
|
be hurt--justly enough--if we should go away without seeing him.
|
||
|
It is fair to give him a chance to come and thank me for the kindness
|
||
|
we showed him. But I don't want to seem eager."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Neither do I," said Bessie with a little laugh.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Though I confess," added her sister, "that I am curious to see
|
||
|
how he will behave."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He behaved very well at Newport."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Newport is not London. At Newport he could do as he liked;
|
||
|
but here it is another affair. He has to have an eye to consequences."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If he had more freedom, then, at Newport," argued Bessie, "it is the more
|
||
|
to his credit that he behaved well; and if he has to be so careful here,
|
||
|
it is possible he will behave even better."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Better--better," repeated her sister. "My dear child,
|
||
|
what is your point of view?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How do you mean--my point of view?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't you care for Lord Lambeth--a little?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
This time Bessie Alden was displeased; she slowly got up
|
||
|
from the table, turning her face away from her sister.
|
||
|
"You will oblige me by not talking so," she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate sat watching her for some moments as she moved
|
||
|
slowly about the room and went and stood at the window.
|
||
|
"I will write to him this afternoon," she said at last.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do as you please!" Bessie answered; and presently she turned round.
|
||
|
"I am not afraid to say that I like Lord Lambeth. I like him very much."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He is not clever," Mrs. Westgate declared.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, there have been clever people whom I have disliked,"
|
||
|
said Bessie Alden; "so that I suppose I may like a stupid one.
|
||
|
Besides, Lord Lambeth is not stupid."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Not so stupid as he looks!" exclaimed her sister, smiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If I were in love with Lord Lambeth, as you said just now,
|
||
|
it would be bad policy on your part to abuse him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My dear child, don't give me lessons in policy!" cried Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
"The policy I mean to follow is very deep."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young girl began to walk about the room again; then she
|
||
|
stopped before her sister. "I have never heard in the course
|
||
|
of five minutes," she said, "so many hints and innuendoes.
|
||
|
I wish you would tell me in plain English what you mean."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I mean that you may be much annoyed."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That is still only a hint," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her sister looked at her, hesitating an instant.
|
||
|
"It will be said of you that you have come after Lord Lambeth--
|
||
|
that you followed him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden threw back her pretty head like a startled hind, and a look
|
||
|
flashed into her face that made Mrs. Westgate rise from her chair.
|
||
|
"Who says such things as that?" she demanded.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"People here."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't believe it," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You have a very convenient faculty of doubt. But my policy will be,
|
||
|
as I say, very deep. I shall leave you to find out this kind
|
||
|
of thing for yourself."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie fixed her eyes upon her sister, and Mrs. Westgate thought for a moment
|
||
|
there were tears in them. "Do they talk that way here?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You will see. I shall leave you alone."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't leave me alone," said Bessie Alden. "Take me away."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No; I want to see what you make of it," her sister continued.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't understand."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You will understand after Lord Lambeth has come," said Mrs. Westgate
|
||
|
with a little laugh.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The two ladies had arranged that on this afternoon Willie
|
||
|
Woodley should go with them to Hyde Park, where Bessie Alden
|
||
|
expected to derive much entertainment from sitting on a little
|
||
|
green chair, under the great trees, beside Rotten Row.
|
||
|
The want of a suitable escort had hitherto rendered this
|
||
|
pleasure inaccessible; but no escort now, for such an expedition,
|
||
|
could have been more suitable than their devoted young countryman,
|
||
|
whose mission in life, it might almost be said, was to find
|
||
|
chairs for ladies, and who appeared on the stroke of half-past
|
||
|
five with a white camellia in his buttonhole.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have written to Lord Lambeth, my dear," said Mrs. Westgate to her sister,
|
||
|
on coming into the room where Bessie Alden, drawing on her long gray gloves,
|
||
|
was entertaining their visitor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie said nothing, but Willie Woodley exclaimed that his lordship
|
||
|
was in town; he had seen his name in the Morning Post.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do you read the Morning Post?" asked Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, yes; it's great fun," Willie Woodley affirmed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I want so to see it," said Bessie; "there is so much about it in Thackeray."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I will send it to you every morning," said Willie Woodley.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He found them what Bessie Alden thought excellent places,
|
||
|
under the great trees, beside the famous avenue whose
|
||
|
humors had been made familiar to the young girl's childhood
|
||
|
by the pictures in Punch. The day was bright and warm,
|
||
|
and the crowd of riders and spectators, and the great procession
|
||
|
of carriages, were proportionately dense and brilliant.
|
||
|
The scene bore the stamp of the London Season at its height,
|
||
|
and Bessie Alden found more entertainment in it than she
|
||
|
was able to express to her companions. She sat silent,
|
||
|
under her parasol, and her imagination, according to its wont,
|
||
|
let itself loose into the great changing assemblage of striking
|
||
|
and suggestive figures. They stirred up a host of old
|
||
|
impressions and preconceptions, and she found herself fitting
|
||
|
a history to this person and a theory to that, and making
|
||
|
a place for them all in her little private museum of types.
|
||
|
But if she said little, her sister on one side and Willie Woodley
|
||
|
on the other expressed themselves in lively alternation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Look at that green dress with blue flounces," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
"Quelle toilette!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's the Marquis of Blackborough," said the young man--"the one
|
||
|
in the white coat. I heard him speak the other night in the House
|
||
|
of Lords; it was something about ramrods; he called them 'wamwods.'
|
||
|
He's an awful swell."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Did you ever see anything like the way they are pinned back?"
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate resumed. "They never know where to stop."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They do nothing but stop," said Willie Woodley. "It prevents them
|
||
|
from walking. Here comes a great celebrity--Lady Beatrice Bellevue.
|
||
|
She's awfully fast; see what little steps she takes."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, my dear," Mrs. Westgate pursued, "I hope you are getting some ideas
|
||
|
for your couturiere?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am getting plenty of ideas," said Bessie, "but I don't know
|
||
|
that my couturiere would appreciate them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Willie Woodley presently perceived a friend on horseback,
|
||
|
who drove up beside the barrier of the Row and beckoned to him.
|
||
|
He went forward, and the crowd of pedestrians closed about him,
|
||
|
so that for some ten minutes he was hidden from sight.
|
||
|
At last he reappeared, bringing a gentleman with him--a gentleman
|
||
|
whom Bessie at first supposed to be his friend dismounted.
|
||
|
But at a second glance she found herself looking at Lord Lambeth,
|
||
|
who was shaking hands with her sister.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I found him over there," said Willie Woodley, "and I told
|
||
|
him you were here."
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then Lord Lambeth, touching his hat a little, shook hands with Bessie.
|
||
|
"Fancy your being here!" he said. He was blushing and smiling;
|
||
|
he looked very handsome, and he had a kind of splendor that he had
|
||
|
not had in America. Bessie Alden's imagination, as we know,
|
||
|
was just then in exercise; so that the tall young Englishman,
|
||
|
as he stood there looking down at her, had the benefit of it.
|
||
|
"He is handsomer and more splendid than anything I have ever seen,"
|
||
|
she said to herself. And then she remembered that he was a marquis,
|
||
|
and she thought he looked like a marquis.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I say, you know," he cried, "you ought to have let a man know
|
||
|
you were here!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I wrote to you an hour ago," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Doesn't all the world know it?" asked Bessie, smiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I assure you I didn't know it!" cried Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
"Upon my honor I hadn't heard of it. Ask Woodley now;
|
||
|
had I, Woodley?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, I think you are rather a humbug," said Willie Woodley.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You don't believe that--do you, Miss Alden?" asked his lordship.
|
||
|
"You don't believe I'm a humbug, eh?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," said Bessie, "I don't."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are too tall to stand up, Lord Lambeth," Mrs. Westgate observed.
|
||
|
"You are only tolerable when you sit down. Be so good as to get a chair."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He found a chair and placed it sidewise, close to the two ladies.
|
||
|
"If I hadn't met Woodley I should never have found you," he went on.
|
||
|
"Should I, Woodley?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, I guess not," said the young American.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Not even with my letter?" asked Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, well, I haven't got your letter yet; I suppose I shall get it
|
||
|
this evening. I was awfully kind of you to write."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"So I said to Bessie," observed Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Did she say so, Miss Alden?" Lord Lambeth inquired.
|
||
|
"I daresay you have been here a month."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We have been here three," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Have you been here three months?" the young man asked again of Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It seems a long time," Bessie answered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I say, after that you had better not call me a humbug!" cried Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
"I have only been in town three weeks; but you must have been hiding away;
|
||
|
I haven't seen you anywhere."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Where should you have seen us--where should we have gone?"
|
||
|
asked Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You should have gone to Hurlingham," said Willie Woodley.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No; let Lord Lambeth tell us," Mrs. Westgate insisted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"There are plenty of places to go to," said Lord Lambeth;
|
||
|
"each one stupider than the other. I mean people's houses;
|
||
|
they send you cards."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No one has sent us cards," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We are very quiet," her sister declared. "We are here as travelers."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We have been to Madame Tussaud's," Bessie pursued.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I say!" cried Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We thought we should find your image there," said Mrs. Westgate--"yours
|
||
|
and Mr. Beaumont's."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In the Chamber of Horrors?" laughed the young man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It did duty very well for a party," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
"All the women were decolletes, and many of the figures
|
||
|
looked as if they could speak if they tried."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Upon my word," Lord Lambeth rejoined, "you see people at London
|
||
|
parties that look as if they couldn't speak if they tried."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do you think Mr. Woodley could find us Mr. Beaumont?"
|
||
|
asked Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth stared and looked round him. "I daresay he could.
|
||
|
Beaumont often comes here. Don't you think you could find him, Woodley?
|
||
|
Make a dive into the crowd."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Thank you; I have had enough diving," said Willie Woodley.
|
||
|
"I will wait till Mr. Beaumont comes to the surface."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I will bring him to see you," said Lord Lambeth; "where are you staying?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You will find the address in my letter--Jones's Hotel."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, one of those places just out of Piccadilly? Beastly hole, isn't it?"
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth inquired.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I believe it's the best hotel in London," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But they give you awful rubbish to eat, don't they?"
|
||
|
his lordship went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I always feel so sorry for the people that come up to town
|
||
|
and go to live in those places," continued the young man.
|
||
|
"They eat nothing but filth."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I say!" cried Willie Woodley.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, how do you like London, Miss Alden?" Lord Lambeth asked,
|
||
|
unperturbed by this ejaculation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I think it's grand," said Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My sister likes it, in spite of the 'filth'!" Mrs. Westgate exclaimed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I hope you are going to stay a long time."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"As long as I can," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And where is Mr. Westgate?" asked Lord Lambeth of this gentleman's wife.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He's where he always is--in that tiresome New York."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He must be tremendously clever," said the young man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I suppose he is," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth sat for nearly an hour with his American friends;
|
||
|
but it is not our purpose to relate their conversation in full.
|
||
|
He addressed a great many remarks to Bessie Alden, and finally turned
|
||
|
toward her altogether, while Willie Woodley entertained Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
Bessie herself said very little; she was on her guard, thinking of
|
||
|
what her sister had said to her at lunch. Little by little, however,
|
||
|
she interested herself in Lord Lambeth again, as she had done at Newport;
|
||
|
only it seemed to her that here he might become more interesting.
|
||
|
He would be an unconscious part of the antiquity, the impressiveness,
|
||
|
the picturesqueness, of England; and poor Bessie Alden, like many
|
||
|
a Yankee maiden, was terribly at the mercy of picturesqueness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have often wished I were at Newport again," said the young man.
|
||
|
"Those days I spent at your sister's were awfully jolly."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We enjoyed them very much; I hope your father is better."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, dear, yes. When I got to England, he was out grouse shooting.
|
||
|
It was what you call in America a gigantic fraud. My mother had got nervous.
|
||
|
My three weeks at Newport seemed like a happy dream."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"America certainly is very different from England," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I hope you like England better, eh?" Lord Lambeth
|
||
|
rejoined almost persuasively.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No Englishman can ask that seriously of a person of another country."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her companion looked at her for a moment. "You mean it's
|
||
|
a matter of course?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If I were English," said Bessie, "it would certainly seem to me
|
||
|
a matter of course that everyone should be a good patriot."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, dear, yes, patriotism is everything," said Lord Lambeth,
|
||
|
not quite following, but very contented. "Now, what are you
|
||
|
going to do here?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"On Thursday I am going to the Tower."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The Tower?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The Tower of London. Did you never hear of it?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, yes, I have been there," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
"I was taken there by my governess when I was six years old.
|
||
|
It's a rum idea, your going there."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do give me a few more rum ideas," said Bessie. "I want
|
||
|
to see everything of that sort. I am going to Hampton Court,
|
||
|
and to Windsor, and to the Dulwich Gallery."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth seemed greatly amused. "I wonder you don't go
|
||
|
to the Rosherville Gardens."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Are they interesting?" asked Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, wonderful."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Are they very old? That's all I care for," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They are tremendously old; they are all falling to ruins."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I think there is nothing so charming as an old ruinous garden,"
|
||
|
said the young girl. "We must certainly go there."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth broke out into merriment. "I say, Woodley," he cried,
|
||
|
"here's Miss Alden wants to go to the Rosherville Gardens!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Willie Woodley looked a little blank; he was caught in the fact
|
||
|
of ignorance of an apparently conspicuous feature of London life.
|
||
|
But in a moment he turned it off. "Very well," he said, "I'll write
|
||
|
for a permit."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth's exhilaration increased. "Gad, I believe you Americans would
|
||
|
go anywhere!" he cried.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We wish to go to Parliament," said Bessie. "That's one of the first things."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, it would bore you to death!" cried the young man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We wish to hear you speak."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I never speak--except to young ladies," said Lord Lambeth, smiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden looked at him a while, smiling, too, in the shadow
|
||
|
of her parasol. "You are very strange," she murmured.
|
||
|
"I don't think I approve of you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, now, don't be severe, Miss Alden," said Lord Lambeth,
|
||
|
smiling still more. "Please don't be severe. I want you
|
||
|
to like me--awfully."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"To like you awfully? You must not laugh at me, then, when I make mistakes.
|
||
|
I consider it my right--as a freeborn American--to make as many mistakes
|
||
|
as I choose."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Upon my word, I didn't laugh at you," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And not only that," Bessie went on; "but I hold that all my mistakes shall
|
||
|
be set down to my credit. You must think the better of me for them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I can't think better of you than I do," the young man declared.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden looked at him a moment again. "You certainly speak
|
||
|
very well to young ladies. But why don't you address the House?--
|
||
|
isn't that what they call it?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Because I have nothing to say," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Haven't you a great position?" asked Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He looked a moment at the back of his glove. "I'll set that down,"
|
||
|
he said, "as one of your mistakes--to your credit." And as if
|
||
|
he disliked talking about his position, he changed the subject.
|
||
|
"I wish you would let me go with you to the Tower, and to Hampton Court,
|
||
|
and to all those other places."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We shall be most happy," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And of course I shall be delighted to show you the House of Lords--
|
||
|
some day that suits you. There are a lot of things I want to do for you.
|
||
|
I want to make you have a good time. And I should like very much
|
||
|
to present some of my friends to you, if it wouldn't bore you.
|
||
|
Then it would be awfully kind of you to come down to Branches."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We are much obliged to you, Lord Lambeth," said Bessie.
|
||
|
"What is Branches?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's a house in the country. I think you might like it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Willie Woodley and Mrs. Westgate at this moment were sitting
|
||
|
in silence, and the young man's ear caught these last words of Lord
|
||
|
Lambeth's. "He's inviting Miss Bessie to one of his castles,"
|
||
|
he murmured to his companion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate, foreseeing what she mentally called "complications,"
|
||
|
immediately got up; and the two ladies, taking leave of Lord Lambeth,
|
||
|
returned, under Mr. Woodley's conduct, to Jones's Hotel.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth came to see them on the morrow, bringing Percy
|
||
|
Beaumont with him--the latter having instantly declared his
|
||
|
intention of neglecting none of the usual offices of civility.
|
||
|
This declaration, however, when his kinsman informed him
|
||
|
of the advent of their American friends, had been preceded
|
||
|
by another remark.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Here they are, then, and you are in for it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What am I in for?" demanded Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I will let your mother give it a name. With all respect to whom,"
|
||
|
added Percy Beaumont, "I must decline on this occasion to do any
|
||
|
more police duty. Her Grace must look after you herself."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I will give her a chance," said her Grace's son, a trifle grimly.
|
||
|
"I shall make her go and see them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She won't do it, my boy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We'll see if she doesn't," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But if Percy Beaumont took a somber view of the arrival
|
||
|
of the two ladies at Jones's Hotel, he was sufficiently
|
||
|
a man of the world to offer them a smiling countenance.
|
||
|
He fell into animated conversation--conversation, at least,
|
||
|
that was animated on her side--with Mrs. Westgate, while his
|
||
|
companion made himself agreeable to the younger lady.
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate began confessing and protesting,
|
||
|
declaring and expounding.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I must say London is a great deal brighter and prettier just
|
||
|
now than it was when I was here last--in the month of November.
|
||
|
There is evidently a great deal going on, and you seem to have
|
||
|
a good many flowers. I have no doubt it is very charming
|
||
|
for all you people, and that you amuse yourselves immensely.
|
||
|
It is very good of you to let Bessie and me come and sit
|
||
|
and look at you. I suppose you will think I am very satirical,
|
||
|
but I must confess that that's the feeling I have in London."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am afraid I don't quite understand to what feeling you allude,"
|
||
|
said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The feeling that it's all very well for you English people.
|
||
|
Everything is beautifully arranged for you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It seems to me it is very well for some Americans, sometimes,"
|
||
|
rejoined Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"For some of them, yes--if they like to be patronized.
|
||
|
But I must say I don't like to be patronized. I may be very eccentric,
|
||
|
and undisciplined, and outrageous, but I confess I never was fond
|
||
|
of patronage. I like to associate with people on the same terms
|
||
|
as I do in my own country; that's a peculiar taste that I have.
|
||
|
But here people seem to expect something else--Heaven knows what!
|
||
|
I am afraid you will think I am very ungrateful, for I certainly
|
||
|
have received a great deal of attention. The last time I was here,
|
||
|
a lady sent me a message that I was at liberty to come and see her."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Dear me! I hope you didn't go," observed Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are deliciously naive, I must say that for you!"
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate exclaimed. "It must be a great advantage to you here
|
||
|
in London. I suppose that if I myself had a little more naivete,
|
||
|
I should enjoy it more. I should be content to sit on a chair
|
||
|
in the park, and see the people pass, and be told that this
|
||
|
is the Duchess of Suffolk, and that is the Lord Chamberlain,
|
||
|
and that I must be thankful for the privilege of beholding them.
|
||
|
I daresay it is very wicked and critical of me to ask for
|
||
|
anything else. But I was always critical, and I freely confess
|
||
|
to the sin of being fastidious. I am told there is some remarkably
|
||
|
superior second-rate society provided here for strangers.
|
||
|
Merci! I don't want any superior second-rate society.
|
||
|
I want the society that I have been accustomed to."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I hope you don't call Lambeth and me second rate," Beaumont interposed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I am accustomed to you," said Mrs. Westgate. "Do you know
|
||
|
that you English sometimes make the most wonderful speeches?
|
||
|
The first time I came to London I went out to dine--as I told you,
|
||
|
I have received a great deal of attention. After dinner,
|
||
|
in the drawing room, I had some conversation with an old lady;
|
||
|
I assure you I had. I forget what we talked about, but she
|
||
|
presently said, in allusion to something we were discussing,
|
||
|
'Oh, you know, the aristocracy do so-and-so; but in one's own
|
||
|
class of life it is very different.' In one's own class of life!
|
||
|
What is a poor unprotected American woman to do in a country
|
||
|
where she is liable to have that sort of thing said to her?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You seem to get hold of some very queer old ladies;
|
||
|
I compliment you on your acquaintance!" Percy Beaumont exclaimed.
|
||
|
"If you are trying to bring me to admit that London is an
|
||
|
odious place, you'll not succeed. I'm extremely fond of it,
|
||
|
and I think it the jolliest place in the world."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Pour vous autres. I never said the contrary," Mrs. Westgate retorted.
|
||
|
I make use of this expression, because both interlocutors had begun
|
||
|
to raise their voices. Percy Beaumont naturally did not like to hear
|
||
|
his country abused, and Mrs. Westgate, no less naturally, did not like
|
||
|
a stubborn debater.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hallo!" said Lord Lambeth; "what are they up to now?"
|
||
|
And he came away from the window, where he had been standing
|
||
|
with Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I quite agree with a very clever countrywoman of mine," Mrs. Westgate
|
||
|
continued with charming ardor, though with imperfect relevancy.
|
||
|
She smiled at the two gentlemen for a moment with terrible brightness, as if
|
||
|
to toss at their feet--upon their native heath--the gauntlet of defiance.
|
||
|
"For me, there are only two social positions worth speaking of--
|
||
|
that of an American lady and that of the Emperor of Russia."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And what do you do with the American gentlemen?" asked Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She leaves them in America!" said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the departure of their visitors, Bessie Alden told her sister that
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth would come the next day, to go with them to the Tower,
|
||
|
and that he had kindly offered to bring his "trap" and drive them thither.
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate listened in silence to this communication,
|
||
|
and for some time afterward she said nothing. But at last,
|
||
|
"If you had not requested me the other day not to mention it,"
|
||
|
she began, "there is something I should venture to ask you."
|
||
|
Bessie frowned a little; her dark blue eyes were more dark than blue.
|
||
|
But her sister went on. "As it is, I will take the risk.
|
||
|
You are not in love with Lord Lambeth: I believe it, perfectly.
|
||
|
Very good. But is there, by chance, any danger of your becoming so?
|
||
|
It's a very simple question; don't take offense. I have a
|
||
|
particular reason," said Mrs. Westgate, "for wanting to know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden for some moments said nothing; she only looked displeased.
|
||
|
"No; there is no danger," she answered at last, curtly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Then I should like to frighten them," declared Mrs. Westgate,
|
||
|
clasping her jeweled hands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"To frighten whom?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"All these people; Lord Lambeth's family and friends."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How should you frighten them?" asked the young girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It wouldn't be I--it would be you. It would frighten them to think
|
||
|
that you should absorb his lordship's young affections."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden, with her clear eyes still overshadowed by her dark brows,
|
||
|
continued to interrogate. "Why should that frighten them?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate poised her answer with a smile before delivering it.
|
||
|
"Because they think you are not good enough. You are a charming girl,
|
||
|
beautiful and amiable, intelligent and clever, and as bien-elevee
|
||
|
as it is possible to be; but you are not a fit match for Lord Lambeth."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden was decidedly disgusted. "Where do you get such extraordinary
|
||
|
ideas?" she asked. "You have said some such strange things lately.
|
||
|
My dear Kitty, where do you collect them?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Kitty was evidently enamored of her idea. "Yes, it would
|
||
|
put them on pins and needles, and it wouldn't hurt you.
|
||
|
Mr. Beaumont is already most uneasy; I could soon see that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young girl meditated a moment. "Do you mean that they spy upon him--
|
||
|
that they interfere with him?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't know what power they have to interfere, but I know
|
||
|
that a British mama may worry her son's life out."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It has been intimated that, as regards certain disagreeable things,
|
||
|
Bessie Alden had a fund of skepticism. She abstained on the present occasion
|
||
|
from expressing disbelief, for she wished not to irritate her sister.
|
||
|
But she said to herself that Kitty had been misinformed--that this
|
||
|
was a traveler's tale. Though she was a girl of a lively imagination,
|
||
|
there could in the nature of things be, to her sense, no reality in
|
||
|
the idea of her belonging to a vulgar category. What she said aloud was,
|
||
|
"I must say that in that case I am very sorry for Lord Lambeth."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate, more and more exhilarated by her scheme, was smiling
|
||
|
at her again. "If I could only believe it was safe!" she exclaimed.
|
||
|
"When you begin to pity him, I, on my side, am afraid."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Afraid of what?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Of your pitying him too much."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden turned away impatiently; but at the end of a minute she
|
||
|
turned back. "What if I should pity him too much?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate hereupon turned away, but after a moment's
|
||
|
reflection she also faced her sister again. "It would come,
|
||
|
after all, to the same thing," she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth came the next day with his trap, and the two ladies,
|
||
|
attended by Willie Woodley, placed themselves under his guidance,
|
||
|
and were conveyed eastward, through some of the duskier portions
|
||
|
of the metropolis, to the great turreted donjon which overlooks
|
||
|
the London shipping. They all descended from their vehicle and
|
||
|
entered the famous inclosure; and they secured the services of a
|
||
|
venerable beefeater, who, though there were many other claimants for
|
||
|
legendary information, made a fine exclusive party of them and marched
|
||
|
them through courts and corridors, through armories and prisons.
|
||
|
He delivered his usual peripatetic discourse, and they stopped and stared,
|
||
|
and peeped and stooped, according to the official admonitions.
|
||
|
Bessie Alden asked the old man in the crimson doublet a great
|
||
|
many questions; she thought it a most fascinating place.
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth was in high good humor; he was constantly laughing;
|
||
|
he enjoyed what he would have called the lark. Willie Woodley kept
|
||
|
looking at the ceilings and tapping the walls with the knuckle
|
||
|
of a pearl-gray glove; and Mrs. Westgate, asking at frequent
|
||
|
intervals to be allowed to sit down and wait till they came back,
|
||
|
was as frequently informed that they would never come back.
|
||
|
To a great many of Bessie's questions--chiefly on collateral
|
||
|
points of English history--the ancient warder was naturally
|
||
|
unable to reply; whereupon she always appealed to Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
But his lordship was very ignorant. He declared that he knew nothing
|
||
|
about that sort of thing, and he seemed greatly diverted at being
|
||
|
treated as an authority.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You can't expect everyone to know as much as you," he said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I should expect you to know a great deal more," declared Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Women always know more than men about names and dates
|
||
|
and that sort of thing," Lord Lambeth rejoined.
|
||
|
"There was Lady Jane Grey we have just been hearing about,
|
||
|
who went in for Latin and Greek and all the learning of her age."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"YOU have no right to be ignorant, at all events," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why haven't I as good a right as anyone else?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Because you have lived in the midst of all these things."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What things do you mean? Axes, and blocks, and thumbscrews?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"All these historical things. You belong to a historical family."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Bessie is really too historical," said Mrs. Westgate,
|
||
|
catching a word of this dialogue.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, you are too historical," said Lord Lambeth, laughing, but thankful
|
||
|
for a formula. "Upon my honor, you are too historical!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
He went with the ladies a couple of days later to Hampton Court,
|
||
|
Willie Woodley being also of the party. The afternoon was charming,
|
||
|
the famous horse chestnuts were in blossom, and Lord Lambeth,
|
||
|
who quite entered into the spirit of the cockney excursionist,
|
||
|
declared that it was a jolly old place. Bessie Alden was in ecstasies;
|
||
|
she went about murmuring and exclaiming.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's too lovely," said the young girl; "it's too enchanting;
|
||
|
it's too exactly what it ought to be!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
At Hampton Court the little flocks of visitors are not provided
|
||
|
with an official bellwether, but are left to browse at discretion
|
||
|
upon the local antiquities. It happened in this manner that,
|
||
|
in default of another informant, Bessie Alden, who on doubtful
|
||
|
questions was able to suggest a great many alternatives, found herself
|
||
|
again applying for intellectual assistance to Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
But he again assured her that he was utterly helpless in such matters--
|
||
|
that his education had been sadly neglected.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And I am sorry it makes you unhappy," he added in a moment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are very disappointing, Lord Lambeth," she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, now don't say that," he cried. "That's the worst thing
|
||
|
you could possibly say."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," she rejoined, "it is not so bad as to say that I had expected
|
||
|
nothing of you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't know. Give me a notion of the sort of thing you expected."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well," said Bessie Alden, "that you would be more what I should like to be--
|
||
|
what I should try to be--in your place."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, my place!" exclaimed Lord Lambeth. "You are always talking
|
||
|
about my place.!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young girl looked at him; he thought she colored a little;
|
||
|
and for a moment she made no rejoinder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Does it strike you that I am always talking about your place?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am sure you do it a great honor," he said, fearing he had been uncivil.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have often thought about it," she went on after a moment.
|
||
|
"I have often thought about your being a hereditary legislator.
|
||
|
A hereditary legislator ought to know a great many things."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Not if he doesn't legislate."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But you do legislate; it's absurd your saying you don't. You are very much
|
||
|
looked up to here--I am assured of that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't know that I ever noticed it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is because you are used to it, then. You ought to fill the place."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How do you mean to fill it?" asked Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You ought to be very clever and brilliant, and to know almost everything."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth looked at her a moment. "Shall I tell you something?" he asked.
|
||
|
"A young man in my position, as you call it--"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I didn't invent the term," interposed Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
"I have seen it in a great many books."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hang it! you are always at your books. A fellow
|
||
|
in my position, then, does very well whatever he does.
|
||
|
That's about what I mean to say."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, if your own people are content with you,"
|
||
|
said Bessie Alden, laughing, "it is not for me to complain.
|
||
|
But I shall always think that, properly, you should have been
|
||
|
a great mind--a great character."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, that's very theoretic," Lord Lambeth declared.
|
||
|
"Depend upon it, that's a Yankee prejudice."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Happy the country," said Bessie Alden, "where even people's
|
||
|
prejudices are so elevated!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, after all," observed Lord Lambeth, "I don't know that I am
|
||
|
such a fool as you are trying to make me out."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I said nothing so rude as that; but I must repeat that
|
||
|
you are disappointing."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My dear Miss Alden," exclaimed the young man, "I am the best
|
||
|
fellow in the world!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, if it were not for that!" said Bessie Alden with a smile.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate had a good many more friends in London than
|
||
|
she pretended, and before long she had renewed acquaintance
|
||
|
with most of them. Their hospitality was extreme, so that,
|
||
|
one thing leading to another, she began, as the phrase is, to go out.
|
||
|
Bessie Alden, in this way, saw something of what she found
|
||
|
it a great satisfaction to call to herself English society.
|
||
|
She went to balls and danced, she went to dinners and talked,
|
||
|
she went to concerts and listened (at concerts Bessie
|
||
|
always listened), she went to exhibitions and wondered.
|
||
|
Her enjoyment was keen and her curiosity insatiable, and,
|
||
|
grateful in general for all her opportunities, she especially
|
||
|
prized the privilege of meeting certain celebrated persons--
|
||
|
authors and artists, philosophers and statesmen--of whose
|
||
|
renown she had been a humble and distant beholder, and who now,
|
||
|
as a part of the habitual furniture of London drawing rooms,
|
||
|
struck her as stars fallen from the firmament and become palpable--
|
||
|
revealing also sometimes, on contact, qualities not to
|
||
|
have been predicted of sidereal bodies. Bessie, who knew
|
||
|
so many of her contemporaries by reputation, had a good many
|
||
|
personal disappointments; but, on the other hand, she had
|
||
|
innumerable satisfactions and enthusiasms, and she communicated
|
||
|
the emotions of either class to a dear friend, of her own sex,
|
||
|
in Boston, with whom she was in voluminous correspondence.
|
||
|
Some of her reflections, indeed, she attempted to impart
|
||
|
to Lord Lambeth, who came almost every day to Jones's Hotel,
|
||
|
and whom Mrs. Westgate admitted to be really devoted.
|
||
|
Captain Littledale, it appeared, had gone to India; and of
|
||
|
several others of Mrs. Westgate's ex-pensioners--gentlemen who,
|
||
|
as she said, had made, in New York, a clubhouse of her drawing room--
|
||
|
no tidings were to be obtained; but Lord Lambeth was certainly
|
||
|
attentive enough to make up for the accidental absences,
|
||
|
the short memories, all the other irregularities of everyone else.
|
||
|
He drove them in the park, he took them to visit private collections
|
||
|
of pictures, and, having a house of his own, invited them to dinner.
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate, following the fashion of many of her compatriots,
|
||
|
caused herself and her sister to be presented at the English
|
||
|
court by her diplomatic representative--for it was in this
|
||
|
manner that she alluded to the American minister to England,
|
||
|
inquiring what on earth he was put there for, if not to make
|
||
|
the proper arrangements for one's going to a Drawing Room.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth declared that he hated Drawing Rooms, but he participated
|
||
|
in the ceremony on the day on which the two ladies at Jones's Hotel
|
||
|
repaired to Buckingham Palace in a remarkable coach which his lordship
|
||
|
had sent to fetch them. He had on a gorgeous uniform, and Bessie Alden
|
||
|
was particularly struck with his appearance--especially when on her
|
||
|
asking him, rather foolishly as she felt, if he were a loyal subject,
|
||
|
he replied that he was a loyal subject to HER. This declaration
|
||
|
was emphasized by his dancing with her at a royal ball to which the two
|
||
|
ladies afterward went, and was not impaired by the fact that she
|
||
|
thought he danced very ill. He seemed to her wonderfully kind;
|
||
|
she asked herself, with growing vivacity, why he should be so kind.
|
||
|
It was his disposition--that seemed the natural answer.
|
||
|
She had told her sister that she liked him very much, and now that she
|
||
|
liked him more she wondered why. She liked him for his disposition;
|
||
|
to this question as well that seemed the natural answer.
|
||
|
When once the impressions of London life began to crowd thickly upon her,
|
||
|
she completely forgot her sister's warning about the cynicism
|
||
|
of public opinion. It had given her great pain at the moment,
|
||
|
but there was no particular reason why she should remember it;
|
||
|
it corresponded too little with any sensible reality; and it
|
||
|
was disagreeable to Bessie to remember disagreeable things.
|
||
|
So she was not haunted with the sense of a vulgar imputation.
|
||
|
She was not in love with Lord Lambeth--she assured herself of that.
|
||
|
It will immediately be observed that when such assurances become
|
||
|
necessary the state of a young lady's affections is already ambiguous;
|
||
|
and, indeed, Bessie Alden made no attempt to dissimulate--to herself,
|
||
|
of course--a certain tenderness that she felt for the young nobleman.
|
||
|
She said to herself that she liked the type to which he belonged--
|
||
|
the simple, candid, manly, healthy English temperament.
|
||
|
She spoke to herself of him as women speak of young men they like--
|
||
|
alluded to his bravery (which she had never in the least seen
|
||
|
tested), to his honesty and gentlemanliness, and was not silent
|
||
|
upon the subject of his good looks. She was perfectly conscious,
|
||
|
moreover, that she liked to think of his more adventitious merits;
|
||
|
that her imagination was excited and gratified by the sight
|
||
|
of a handsome young man endowed with such large opportunities--
|
||
|
opportunities she hardly knew for what, but, as she supposed,
|
||
|
for doing great things--for setting an example, for exerting
|
||
|
an influence, for conferring happiness, for encouraging the arts.
|
||
|
She had a kind of ideal of conduct for a young man who should find
|
||
|
himself in this magnificent position, and she tried to adapt
|
||
|
it to Lord Lambeth's deportment as you might attempt to fit
|
||
|
a silhouette in cut paper upon a shadow projected upon a wall.
|
||
|
But Bessie Alden's silhouette refused to coincide with his
|
||
|
lordship's image, and this want of harmony sometimes vexed her
|
||
|
more than she thought reasonable. When he was absent it was,
|
||
|
of course, less striking; then he seemed to her a sufficiently
|
||
|
graceful combination of high responsibilities and amiable qualities.
|
||
|
But when he sat there within sight, laughing and talking with his
|
||
|
customary good humor and simplicity, she measured it more accurately,
|
||
|
and she felt acutely that if Lord Lambeth's position was heroic,
|
||
|
there was but little of the hero in the young man himself.
|
||
|
Then her imagination wandered away from him--very far away; for it was
|
||
|
an incontestable fact that at such moments he seemed distinctly dull.
|
||
|
I am afraid that while Bessie's imagination was thus invidiously
|
||
|
roaming, she cannot have been herself a very lively companion;
|
||
|
but it may well have been that these occasional fits of indifference
|
||
|
seemed to Lord Lambeth a part of the young girl's personal charm.
|
||
|
It had been a part of this charm from the first that he felt
|
||
|
that she judged him and measured him more freely and irresponsibly--
|
||
|
more at her ease and her leisure, as it were--than several young
|
||
|
ladies with whom he had been on the whole about as intimate.
|
||
|
To feel this, and yet to feel that she also liked him, was very agreeable
|
||
|
to Lord Lambeth. He fancied he had compassed that gratification so
|
||
|
desirable to young men of title and fortune--being liked for himself.
|
||
|
It is true that a cynical counselor might have whispered to him,
|
||
|
"Liked for yourself? Yes; but not so very much!" He had, at any rate,
|
||
|
the constant hope of being liked more.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It may seem, perhaps, a trifle singular--but it is nevertheless true--
|
||
|
that Bessie Alden, when he struck her as dull, devoted some time,
|
||
|
on grounds of conscience, to trying to like him more.
|
||
|
I say on grounds of conscience because she felt that he had
|
||
|
been extremely "nice" to her sister, and because she reflected
|
||
|
that it was no more than fair that she should think as well
|
||
|
of him as he thought of her. This effort was possibly sometimes
|
||
|
not so successful as it might have been, for the result
|
||
|
of it was occasionally a vague irritation, which expressed
|
||
|
itself in hostile criticism of several British institutions.
|
||
|
Bessie Alden went to some entertainments at which she met
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth; but she went to others at which his lordship was
|
||
|
neither actually nor potentially present; and it was chiefly
|
||
|
on these latter occasions that she encountered those literary
|
||
|
and artistic celebrities of whom mention has been made.
|
||
|
After a while she reduced the matter to a principle.
|
||
|
If Lord Lambeth should appear anywhere, it was a symbol that
|
||
|
there would be no poets and philosophers; and in consequence--
|
||
|
for it was almost a strict consequence--she used to enumerate
|
||
|
to the young man these objects of her admiration.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You seem to be awfully fond of those sort of people," said Lord
|
||
|
Lambeth one day, as if the idea had just occurred to him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They are the people in England I am most curious to see,"
|
||
|
Bessie Alden replied.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I suppose that's because you have read so much," said Lord Lambeth gallantly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have not read so much. It is because we think so much of them at home."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I see," observed the young nobleman. "In Boston."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Not only in Boston; everywhere," said Bessie. "We hold them in great honor;
|
||
|
they go to the best dinner parties."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I daresay you are right. I can't say I know many of them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's a pity you don't," Bessie Alden declared.
|
||
|
"It would do you good."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I daresay it would," said Lord Lambeth very humbly.
|
||
|
"But I must say I don't like the looks of some of them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Neither do I--of some of them. But there are all kinds,
|
||
|
and many of them are charming."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have talked with two or three of them," the young man went on,
|
||
|
"and I thought they had a kind of fawning manner."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why should they fawn?" Bessie Alden demanded.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm sure I don't know. Why, indeed?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Perhaps you only thought so," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, of course," rejoined her companion, "that's a kind of thing
|
||
|
that can't be proved."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In America they don't fawn," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, well, then, they must be better company."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie was silent a moment. "That is one of the things I don't like
|
||
|
about England," she said; "your keeping the distinguished people apart."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How do you mean apart?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why, letting them come only to certain places.
|
||
|
You never see them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth looked at her a moment. "What people do you mean?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The eminent people--the authors and artists--the clever people."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, there are other eminent people besides those," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, you certainly keep them apart," repeated the young girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And there are other clever people," added Lord Lambeth simply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden looked at him, and she gave a light laugh.
|
||
|
"Not many," she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On another occasion--just after a dinner party--she told him
|
||
|
that there was something else in England she did not like.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I say!" he cried, "haven't you abused us enough?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have never abused you at all," said Bessie; "but I don't
|
||
|
like your PRECEDENCE."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It isn't my precedence!" Lord Lambeth declared, laughing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, it is yours--just exactly yours; and I think it's odious," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I never saw such a young lady for discussing things!
|
||
|
Has someone had the impudence to go before you?"
|
||
|
asked his lordship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is not the going before me that I object to," said Bessie;
|
||
|
"it is their thinking that they have a right to do it--<i
|
||
|
a right that I recognize>."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I never saw such a young lady as you are for not 'recognizing.'
|
||
|
I have no doubt the thing is BEASTLY, but it saves a lot of trouble."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It makes a lot of trouble. It's horrid," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But how would you have the first people go?" asked Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
"They can't go last."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Whom do you mean by the first people?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, if you mean to question first principles!" said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If those are your first principles, no wonder some of your arrangements
|
||
|
are horrid," observed Bessie Alden with a very pretty ferocity.
|
||
|
"I am a young girl, so of course I go last; but imagine what Kitty must
|
||
|
feel on being informed that she is not at liberty to budge until certain
|
||
|
other ladies have passed out."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I say, she is not 'informed!'" cried Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
"No one would do such a thing as that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She is made to feel it," the young girl insisted--"as if they were afraid
|
||
|
she would make a rush for the door. No; you have a lovely country,"
|
||
|
said Bessie Alden, "but your precedence is horrid."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I certainly shouldn't think your sister would like it,"
|
||
|
rejoined Lord Lambeth with even exaggerated gravity.
|
||
|
But Bessie Alden could induce him to enter no formal protest
|
||
|
against this repulsive custom, which he seemed to think
|
||
|
an extreme convenience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont all this time had been a very much less
|
||
|
frequent visitor at Jones's Hotel than his noble kinsman;
|
||
|
he had, in fact, called but twice upon the two American ladies.
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth, who often saw him, reproached him with his neglect
|
||
|
and declared that, although Mrs. Westgate had said nothing
|
||
|
about it, he was sure that she was secretly wounded by it.
|
||
|
"She suffers too much to speak," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's all gammon," said Percy Beaumont; "there's a limit
|
||
|
to what people can suffer!" And, though sending no apologies
|
||
|
to Jones's Hotel, he undertook in a manner to explain his absence.
|
||
|
"You are always there," he said, "and that's reason enough
|
||
|
for my not going."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't see why. There is enough for both of us."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't care to be a witness of your--your reckless passion,"
|
||
|
said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth looked at him with a cold eye and for a moment said nothing.
|
||
|
"It's not so obvious as you might suppose," he rejoined dryly,
|
||
|
"considering what a demonstrative beggar I am."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't want to know anything about it--nothing whatever,"
|
||
|
said Beaumont. "Your mother asks me everytime she sees me whether
|
||
|
I believe you are really lost--and Lady Pimlico does the same.
|
||
|
I prefer to be able to answer that I know nothing about it--
|
||
|
that I never go there. I stay away for consistency's sake.
|
||
|
As I said the other day, they must look after you themselves."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are devilish considerate," said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
"They never question me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They are afraid of you. They are afraid of irritating you and making
|
||
|
you worse. So they go to work very cautiously, and, somewhere or other,
|
||
|
they get their information. They know a great deal about you.
|
||
|
They know that you have been with those ladies to the dome of St. Paul's and--
|
||
|
where was the other place?--to the Thames Tunnel."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If all their knowledge is as accurate as that, it must be very valuable,"
|
||
|
said Lord Lambeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, at any rate, they know that you have been visiting
|
||
|
the 'sights of the metropolis.' They think--very naturally,
|
||
|
as it seems to me--that when you take to visiting the sights
|
||
|
of the metropolis with a little American girl, there is serious
|
||
|
cause for alarm." Lord Lambeth responded to this intimation
|
||
|
by scornful laughter, and his companion continued, after a pause:
|
||
|
"I said just now I didn't want to know anything about the affair;
|
||
|
but I will confess that I am curious to learn whether you
|
||
|
propose to marry Miss Bessie Alden."
|
||
|
|
||
|
On this point Lord Lambeth gave his interlocutor no immediate satisfaction;
|
||
|
he was musing, with a frown. "By Jove," he said, "they go rather too far.
|
||
|
They SHALL find me dangerous--I promise them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Percy Beaumont began to laugh. "You don't redeem your promises.
|
||
|
You said the other day you would make your mother call."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth continued to meditate. "I asked her to call,"
|
||
|
he said simply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And she declined?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes; but she shall do it yet."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Upon my word," said Percy Beaumont, "if she gets much more frightened
|
||
|
I believe she will." Lord Lambeth looked at him, and he went on.
|
||
|
"She will go to the girl herself."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How do you mean she will go to her?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She will beg her off, or she will bribe her. She will take strong measures."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth turned away in silence, and his companion
|
||
|
watched him take twenty steps and then slowly return.
|
||
|
"I have invited Mrs. Westgate and Miss Alden to Branches,"
|
||
|
he said, "and this evening I shall name a day."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And shall you invite your mother and your sisters to meet them?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Explicitly!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That will set the duchess off," said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
"I suspect she will come."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She may do as she pleases."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beaumont looked at Lord Lambeth. "You do really propose to marry
|
||
|
the little sister, then?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I like the way you talk about it!" cried the young man.
|
||
|
"She won't gobble me down; don't be afraid."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She won't leave you on your knees," said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
"What IS the inducement?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You talk about proposing: wait till I HAVE proposed,"
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's right, my dear fellow; think about it," said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She's a charming girl," pursued his lordship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Of course she's a charming girl. I don't know a girl
|
||
|
more charming, intrinsically. But there are other charming
|
||
|
girls nearer home."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I like her spirit," observed Lord Lambeth, almost as if he were trying
|
||
|
to torment his cousin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What's the peculiarity of her spirit?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She's not afraid, and she says things out, and she thinks
|
||
|
herself as good as anyone. She is the only girl I have ever
|
||
|
seen that was not dying to marry me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How do you know that, if you haven't asked her?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't know how; but I know it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am sure she asked me questions enough about your property
|
||
|
and your titles," said Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She has asked me questions, too; no end of them," Lord Lambeth admitted.
|
||
|
"But she asked for information, don't you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Information? Aye, I'll warrant she wanted it. Depend upon it
|
||
|
that she is dying to marry you just as much and just as little
|
||
|
as all the rest of them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I shouldn't like her to refuse me--I shouldn't like that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If the thing would be so disagreeable, then, both to you and to her,
|
||
|
in Heaven's name leave it alone," said Percy Beaumont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate, on her side, had plenty to say to her sister about the rarity
|
||
|
of Mr. Beaumont's visits and the nonappearance of the Duchess of Bayswater.
|
||
|
She professed, however, to derive more satisfaction from this latter
|
||
|
circumstance than she could have done from the most lavish attentions on
|
||
|
the part of this great lady. "It is most marked," she said--"most marked.
|
||
|
It is a delicious proof that we have made them miserable. The day
|
||
|
we dined with Lord Lambeth I was really sorry for the poor fellow."
|
||
|
It will have been gathered that the entertainment offered by Lord Lambeth
|
||
|
to his American friends had not been graced by the presence of his
|
||
|
anxious mother. He had invited several choice spirits to meet them;
|
||
|
but the ladies of his immediate family were to Mrs. Westgate's sense--
|
||
|
a sense possibly morbidly acute--conspicuous by their absence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't want to express myself in a manner that you dislike,"
|
||
|
said Bessie Alden; "but I don't know why you should have so many
|
||
|
theories about Lord Lambeth's poor mother. You know a great many
|
||
|
young men in New York without knowing their mothers."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate looked at her sister and then turned away.
|
||
|
"My dear Bessie, you are superb!" she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"One thing is certain," the young girl continued.
|
||
|
"If I believed I were a cause of annoyance--however unwitting--
|
||
|
to Lord Lambeth's family, I should insist--"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Insist upon my leaving England," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, not that. I want to go to the National Gallery again;
|
||
|
I want to see Stratford-on-Avon and Canterbury Cathedral.
|
||
|
But I should insist upon his coming to see us no more."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That would be very modest and very pretty of you; but you wouldn't
|
||
|
do it now."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why do you say 'now'?" asked Bessie Alden. "Have I ceased to be modest?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You care for him too much. A month ago, when you said
|
||
|
you didn't, I believe it was quite true. But at present,
|
||
|
my dear child," said Mrs. Westgate, "you wouldn't find it
|
||
|
quite so simple a matter never to see Lord Lambeth again.
|
||
|
I have seen it coming on."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are mistaken," said Bessie. "You don't understand."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My dear child, don't be perverse," rejoined her sister.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I know him better, certainly, if you mean that," said Bessie.
|
||
|
"And I like him very much. But I don't like him enough to make
|
||
|
trouble for him with his family. However, I don't believe in that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I like the way you say 'however,'" Mrs. Westgate exclaimed.
|
||
|
"Come; you would not marry him?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, no," said the young girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate for a moment seemed vexed. "Why not, pray?" she demanded.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Because I don't care to," said Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The morning after Lord Lambeth had had, with Percy Beaumont,
|
||
|
that exchange of ideas which has just been narrated, the ladies at
|
||
|
Jones's Hotel received from his lordship a written invitation to pay
|
||
|
their projected visit to Branches Castle on the following Tuesday.
|
||
|
"I think I have made up a very pleasant party," the young nobleman said.
|
||
|
"Several people whom you know, and my mother and sisters, who have
|
||
|
so long been regrettably prevented from making your acquaintance."
|
||
|
Bessie Alden lost no time in calling her sister's attention to
|
||
|
the injustice she had done the Duchess of Bayswater, whose hostility
|
||
|
was now proved to be a vain illusion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Wait till you see if she comes," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
"And if she is to meet us at her son's house the obligation
|
||
|
was all the greater for her to call upon us."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie had not to wait long, and it appeared that Lord Lambeth's mother
|
||
|
now accepted Mrs. Westgate's view of her duties. On the morrow,
|
||
|
early in the afternoon, two cards were brought to the apartment
|
||
|
of the American ladies--one of them bearing the name of the Duchess
|
||
|
of Bayswater and the other that of the Countess of Pimlico.
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate glanced at the clock. "It is not yet four," she said;
|
||
|
"they have come early; they wish to see us. We will receive them."
|
||
|
And she gave orders that her visitors should be admitted.
|
||
|
A few moments later they were introduced, and there was a solemn
|
||
|
exchange of amenities. The duchess was a large lady, with a fine
|
||
|
fresh color; the Countess of Pimlico was very pretty and elegant.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The duchess looked about her as she sat down--looked not especially
|
||
|
at Mrs. Westgate. "I daresay my son has told you that I have been
|
||
|
wanting to come and see you," she observed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are very kind," said Mrs. Westgate, vaguely--her conscience not
|
||
|
allowing her to assent to this proposition--and, indeed, not permitting
|
||
|
her to enunciate her own with any appreciable emphasis.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He says you were so kind to him in America," said the duchess.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We are very glad," Mrs. Westgate replied, "to have been able to make
|
||
|
him a little more--a little less--a little more comfortable."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I think he stayed at your house," remarked the Duchess of Bayswater,
|
||
|
looking at Bessie Alden.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"A very short time," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh!" said the duchess; and she continued to look at Bessie,
|
||
|
who was engaged in conversation with her daughter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do you like London?" Lady Pimlico had asked of Bessie,
|
||
|
after looking at her a good deal--at her face and her hands,
|
||
|
her dress and her hair.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Very much indeed," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do you like this hotel?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is very comfortable," said Bessie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do you like stopping at hotels?" inquired Lady Pimlico after a pause.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am very fond of traveling," Bessie answered, "and I suppose
|
||
|
hotels are a necessary part of it. But they are not the part
|
||
|
I am fondest of."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I hate traveling," said the Countess of Pimlico and transferred
|
||
|
her attention to Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My son tells me you are going to Branches," the duchess presently resumed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Lord Lambeth has been so good as to ask us," said Mrs. Westgate,
|
||
|
who perceived that her visitor had now begun to look at her, and who
|
||
|
had her customary happy consciousness of a distinguished appearance.
|
||
|
The only mitigation of her felicity on this point was that,
|
||
|
having inspected her visitor's own costume, she said to herself,
|
||
|
"She won't know how well I am dressed!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He has asked me to go, but I am not sure I shall be able,"
|
||
|
murmured the duchess.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He had offered us the p--prospect of meeting you," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I hate the country at this season," responded the duchess.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate gave a little shrug. "I think it is pleasanter than London."
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the duchess's eyes were absent again; she was looking very fixedly
|
||
|
at Bessie. In a moment she slowly rose, walked to a chair that stood
|
||
|
empty at the young girl's right hand, and silently seated herself.
|
||
|
As she was a majestic, voluminous woman, this little transaction had,
|
||
|
inevitably, an air of somewhat impressive intention. It diffused
|
||
|
a certain awkwardness, which Lady Pimlico, as a sympathetic daughter,
|
||
|
perhaps desired to rectify in turning to Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I daresay you go out a great deal," she observed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, very little. We are strangers, and we didn't come here for society."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I see," said Lady Pimlico. "It's rather nice in town just now."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's charming," said Mrs. Westgate. "But we only go to see a few people--
|
||
|
whom we like."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Of course one can't like everyone," said Lady Pimlico.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It depends upon one's society," Mrs. Westgate rejoined.
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The Duchess meanwhile had addressed herself to Bessie.
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"My son tells me the young ladies in America are so clever."
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"I am glad they made so good an impression on him," said Bessie, smiling.
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The Duchess was not smiling; her large fresh face was very tranquil.
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"He is very susceptible," she said. "He thinks everyone clever,
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and sometimes they are."
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"Sometimes," Bessie assented, smiling still.
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The duchess looked at her a little and then went on;
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"Lambeth is very susceptible, but he is very volatile, too."
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"Volatile?" asked Bessie.
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"He is very inconstant. It won't do to depend on him."
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"Ah," said Bessie, "I don't recognize that description.
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We have depended on him greatly--my sister and I--and he has
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never disappointed us."
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"He will disappoint you yet," said the duchess.
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Bessie gave a little laugh, as if she were amused at the
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duchess's persistency. "I suppose it will depend on what we
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expect of him."
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"The less you expect, the better," Lord Lambeth's mother declared.
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"Well," said Bessie, "we expect nothing unreasonable."
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The duchess for a moment was silent, though she appeared to have more to say.
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"Lambeth says he has seen so much of you," she presently began.
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"He has been to see us very often; he has been very kind,"
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said Bessie Alden.
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"I daresay you are used to that. I am told there is a great deal
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of that in America."
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"A great deal of kindness?" the young girl inquired, smiling.
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"Is that what you call it? I know you have different expressions."
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"We certainly don't always understand each other," said Mrs. Westgate,
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the termination of whose interview with Lady Pimlico allowed her to give
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her attention to their elder visitor.
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"I am speaking of the young men calling so much upon the young ladies,"
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the duchess explained.
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"But surely in England," said Mrs. Westgate, "the young ladies don't
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call upon the young men?"
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"Some of them do--almost!" Lady Pimlico declared.
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"What the young men are a great parti."
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"Bessie, you must make a note of that," said Mrs. Westgate.
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"My sister," she added, "is a model traveler. She writes
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down all the curious facts she hears in a little book she
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keeps for the purpose."
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The duchess was a little flushed; she looked all about the room, while her
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daughter turned to Bessie. "My brother told us you were wonderfully clever,"
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said Lady Pimlico.
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"He should have said my sister," Bessie answered--"when she says
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such things as that."
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"Shall you be long at Branches?" the duchess asked, abruptly,
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of the young girl.
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"Lord Lambeth has asked us for three days," said Bessie.
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"I shall go," the duchess declared, "and my daughter, too."
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"That will be charming!" Bessie rejoined.
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"Delightful!" murmured Mrs. Westgate.
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"I shall expect to see a great deal of you," the duchess continued.
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"When I go to Branches I monopolize my son's guests."
|
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"They must be most happy," said Mrs. Westgate very graciously.
|
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|
"I want immensely to see it--to see the castle," said Bessie
|
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|
to the duchess. "I have never seen one--in England, at least;
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|
and you know we have none in America."
|
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|
"Ah, you are fond of castles?" inquired her Grace.
|
||
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||
|
"Immensely!" replied the young girl. "It has been the dream
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|
of my life to live in one."
|
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|
The duchess looked at her a moment, as if she hardly knew
|
||
|
how to take this assurance, which, from her Grace's point
|
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|
of view, was either very artless or very audacious.
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|
"Well," she said, rising, "I will show you Branches myself."
|
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|
And upon this the two great ladies took their departure.
|
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"What did they mean by it?" asked Mrs. Westgate, when they were gone.
|
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|
"They meant to be polite," said Bessie, "because we are going
|
||
|
to meet them."
|
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|
"It is too late to be polite," Mrs. Westgate replied almost grimly.
|
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|
"They meant to overawe us by their fine manners and their grandeur,
|
||
|
and to make you lacher prise."
|
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|
"Lacher prise? What strange things you say!" murmured Bessie Alden.
|
||
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|
"They meant to snub us, so that we shouldn't dare to go to Branches,"
|
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|
Mrs. Westgate continued.
|
||
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"On the contrary," said Bessie, "the duchess offered to show
|
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|
me the place herself."
|
||
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||
|
"Yes, you may depend upon it she won't let you out of her sight.
|
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|
She will show you the place from morning till night."
|
||
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|
||
|
"You have a theory for everything," said Bessie.
|
||
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||
|
"And you apparently have none for anything."
|
||
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|
||
|
"I saw no attempt to 'overawe' us," said the young girl.
|
||
|
"Their manners were not fine."
|
||
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|
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|
"They were not even good!" Mrs. Westgate declared.
|
||
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|
||
|
Bessie was silent a while, but in a few moments she observed
|
||
|
that she had a very good theory. "They came to look at me,"
|
||
|
she said, as if this had been a very ingenious hypothesis.
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate did it justice; she greeted it with a smile
|
||
|
and pronounced it most brilliant, while, in reality, she felt
|
||
|
that the young girl's skepticism, or her charity, or, as she
|
||
|
had sometimes called it appropriately, her idealism,
|
||
|
was proof against irony. Bessie, however, remained meditative
|
||
|
all the rest of that day and well on into the morrow.
|
||
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|
||
|
On the morrow, before lunch, Mrs. Westgate had occasion to go
|
||
|
out for an hour, and left her sister writing a letter.
|
||
|
When she came back she met Lord Lambeth at the door of the hotel,
|
||
|
coming away. She thought he looked slightly embarrassed;
|
||
|
he was certainly very grave. "I am sorry to have missed you.
|
||
|
Won't you come back?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," said the young man, "I can't. I have seen your sister.
|
||
|
I can never come back." Then he looked at her a moment and took her hand.
|
||
|
"Goodbye, Mrs. Westgate," he said. "You have been very kind to me."
|
||
|
And with what she thought a strange, sad look in his handsome young face,
|
||
|
he turned away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She went in, and she found Bessie still writing her letter;
|
||
|
that is, Mrs. Westgate perceived she was sitting at the table with
|
||
|
the pen in her hand and not writing. "Lord Lambeth has been here,"
|
||
|
said the elder lady at last.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then Bessie got up and showed her a pale, serious face. She bent this face
|
||
|
upon her sister for some time, confessing silently and a little pleading.
|
||
|
"I told him," she said at last, "that we could not go to Branches."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Westgate displayed just a spark of irritation.
|
||
|
"He might have waited," she said with a smile, "till one had seen
|
||
|
the castle." Later, an hour afterward, she said, "Dear Bessie,
|
||
|
I wish you might have accepted him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I couldn't," said Bessie gently.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He is an excellent fellow," said Mrs. Westgate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I couldn't," Bessie repeated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If it is only," her sister added, "because those women will think
|
||
|
that they succeeded--that they paralyzed us!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie Alden turned away; but presently she added, "They were interesting;
|
||
|
I should have liked to see them again."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"So should I!" cried Mrs. Westgate significantly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And I should have liked to see the castle," said Bessie.
|
||
|
"But now we must leave England," she added.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her sister looked at her. "You will not wait to go to the National Gallery?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Not now."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Nor to Canterbury Cathedral?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bessie reflected a moment. "We can stop there on our way
|
||
|
to Paris," she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord Lambeth did not tell Percy Beaumont that the contingency
|
||
|
he was not prepared at all to like had occurred; but Percy
|
||
|
Beaumont, on hearing that the two ladies had left London,
|
||
|
wondered with some intensity what had happened; wondered, that is,
|
||
|
until the Duchess of Bayswater came a little to his assistance.
|
||
|
The two ladies went to Paris, and Mrs. Westgate beguiled
|
||
|
the journey to that city by repeating several times--
|
||
|
"That's what I regret; they will think they petrified us."
|
||
|
But Bessie Alden seemed to regret nothing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of An International Episode
|
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