"So that a girl can dance with a person she wants to?"
George's huskiness increased. "Well, do you mean you--you want to dance
with me all the time--all evening?"
"Well, this much of it--evidently!" she laughed.
"Is it because you thought I tried to keep you from getting hurt this
afternoon when we upset?"
She shook her head.
"Was it because you want to even things up for making me angry--I mean,
for hurting my feelings on the way home?"
With her eyes averted--for girls of nineteen can be as shy as boys,
sometimes--she said, "Well--you only got angry because I couldn't dance
the cotillion with you. I--I didn't feel terribly hurt with you for getting
angry about that!"
"Was there any other reason? Did my telling you I liked you have
anything to do with it?"
She looked up gently, and, as George met her eyes, something exquisitely
touching, yet queerly delightful, gave him a catch in the throat. She looked
instantly away, and, turning, ran out from the palm grove, where they stood, to
the dancing-floor.
"Come on!" she cried. "Let's dance!"
He followed her.
"See here--I--I--" he stammered. "You mean--Do you--"
"No, no!" she laughed. "Let's dance!"
He put his arm about her almost tremulously, and they began to waltz. It was
a happy dance for both of them.
Christmas day is the children's, but the holidays are youth's dancing-time.
The holidays belong to the early twenties and the 'teens, home from school and
college. These years possess the holidays for a little while, then possess them
only in smiling, wistful memories of holly and twinkling lights and
dance-music, and charming faces all aglow. It is the liveliest time in life,
the happiest of the irresponsible times in life. Mothers echo its
happiness--nothing is like a mother who has a son home from college, except
another mother with a son home from college. Bloom does actually come upon
these mothers; it is a visible thing; and they run like girls, walk like
athletes, laugh like sycophants. Yet they give up their sons to the daughters
of other mothers, and find it proud rapture enough to be allowed to sit and
watch.
Thus Isabel watched George and Lucy dancing, as together they danced away
the holidays of that year into the past.
"They seem to get along better than they did at first, those two
children," Fanny Minafer said sitting beside her at the Sharons' dance, a
week after the Assembly. "They seemed to be always having little quarrels
of some sort, at first. At least George did: he seemed to be continually
pecking at that lovely, dainty, little Lucy, and being cross with her over
nothing."
"'Pecking?"" Isabel laughed. "What a word to use about
Georgie! I think I never knew a more angelically amiable disposition in my
life!"
Miss Fanny echoed her sister-in-law's laugh, but it was a rueful echo, and
not sweet. "He's amiable to you!" she said. "That's all the side
of him you ever happen to see. And why wouldn't he be amiable to anybody that
simply fell down and worshipped him every minute of her life? Most of us
would!"
"Isn't he worth worshipping? Just look at him! Isn't he charming with
Lucy! See how hard he ran to get it when she dropped her handkerchief back
there."
"Oh, I'm not going to argue with you about George!" said Miss
Fanny. "I'm fond enough of him, for that matter. He can be charming, and
he's certainly stunning looking, if only--"
"Let the 'if only' go, dear," Isabel suggested good-naturedly.
"Let's talk about that dinner you thought I should--"
"I?" Miss Fanny interrupted quickly. "Didn't you want to give
it yourself?"
"Indeed, I did, my dear!" said Isabel heartily. "I only meant
that unless you had proposed it, perhaps I wouldn't--"
But here Eugene came for her to dance, and she left the sentence
uncompleted. Holiday dances can be happy for youth renewed as well as for youth
in bud--and yet it was not with the air of a rival that Miss Fanny watched her
brother's wife dancing with the widower. Miss Fanny's eyes narrowed a little,
but only as if her mind engaged in a hopeful calculation. She looked pleased.
CHAPTER
X
A FEW days after George's return to the university it became evident that
not quite everybody had gazed with complete benevolence upon the various young
collegians at their holiday sports. The Sunday edition of the principal morning
paper even expressed some bitterness under the heading, "Gilded Youths of
the Fin-de-Siècle"--this was considered the knowing phrase of the time,
especially for Sunday supplements--and there is no doubt that from certain
references in this bit of writing some people drew the conclusion that Mr.
George Amberson Minafer had not yet got his come-upance, a postponement still
irritating. Undeniably, Fanny Minafer was one of the people who drew this
conclusion, for she cut the article out and enclosed it in a letter to her
nephew, having written on the border of the clipping, "I wonder whom it
can mean!"
George read part of it:
We debate sometimes what is to be the future of this nation when we think
that in a few years public affairs may be in the hands of the fin-de-siècle
gilded youths we see about us during the Christmas holidays. Such foppery, such
luxury, such insolence, was surely never practised by the scented, overbearing
patricians of the Palatine, even in Rome's most decadent epoch. In all the wild
orgy of wastefulness and luxury with which the nineteenth century reaches its
close, the gilded youth has been surely the worst symptom. With his airs of
young milord, his fast horses, his gold and silver cigarette-cases, his clothes
from a New York tailor, his recklessness of money showered upon him by
indulgent mothers or doting grandfathers, he respects nothing and nobody. He is
blasé, if you please. Watch him at a social function, how condescendingly he
deigns to select a partner for the popular waltz or two-step; how carelessly he
shoulders older people out of his way, with what a blank stare he returns the
salutation of some old acquaintance whom he may choose in his royal whim to
forget! The unpleasant part of all this is that the young women he so
condescendingly selects as partners for the dance greet him with seeming
rapture, though in their hearts they must feel humiliated by his languid
hauteur, and many older people beam upon him almost fawningly if he unbends so
far as to throw them a careless, disdainful word!
One wonders what has come over the new generation. Of such as these the
Republic was not made. Let us pray that the future of our country is not in the
hands of these fin-de-siècle gilded youths, but rather in the calloused palms
of young men yet unknown, labouring upon the farms of the land. When we compare
the young manhood of Abraham Lincoln with the specimens we are now producing,
we see too well that it bodes ill for the twentieth century.
George yawned, and tossed the clipping into his waste-basket, wondering why
his aunt thought such dull nonsense worth the sending. As for her insinuation,
pencilled upon the border, he supposed she meant to joke--a supposition which
neither surprised him nor altered his lifelong opinion of her wit.
He read her letter with more interest:
. . . The dinner your mother gave for the Morgans was a lovely affair. It
was last Monday evening, just ten days after you left. It was peculiarly
appropriate that your mother should give this dinner, because her brother
George, your uncle, was Mr. Morgan's most intimate friend before he left here a
number of years ago, and it was a pleasant occasion for the formal announcement
of some news which you heard from Lucy Morgan before you returned to college.
At least she told me she had told you the night before you left that her father
had decided to return here to live. It was appropriate that your mother,
herself an old friend, should assemble a representative selection of Mr.
Morgan's old friends around him at such a time. He was in great spirits and
most entertaining. As your time was so charmingly taken up during your visit
home with a younger member of his family, you probably overlooked opportunities
of hearing him talk, and do not know what an interesting man he can be.
He will soon begin to build his factory here for the manufacture of
automobiles, which he says is a term he prefers to "horseless
carriages." Your Uncle George told me he would like to invest in this
factory, as George thinks there is a future for automobiles; perhaps not for
general use, but as an interesting novelty, which people with sufficient means
would like to own for their amusement and the sake of variety. However, he said
Mr. Morgan laughingly declined his offer, as Mr. M. was fully able to finance
this venture, though not starting in a very large way. Your uncle said other
people are manufacturing automobiles in different parts of the country with
success. Your father is not very well, though he is not actually ill, and the
doctor tells him he ought not to be so much at his office, as the long years of
application indoors with no exercise are beginning to affect him unfavourably,
but I believe your father would die if he had to give up his work, which is all
that has ever interested him outside of his family. I never could understand
it. Mr. Morgan took your mother and me with Lucy to see Modjeska in
"Twelfth Night" yesterday evening, and Lucy said she thought the Duke
looked rather like you, only much more democratic in his manner. I suppose you
will think I have written a great deal about the Morgans in this letter, but
thought you would be interested because of your interest in a younger member of
his family. Hoping that you are finding college still as attractive as ever,
Affectionately, AUNT FANNY.
George read one sentence in this letter several times. Then he dropped the
missive in his wastebasket to join the clipping, and strolled down the corridor
of his dormitory to borrow a copy of "Twelfth Night." Having secured
one, he returned to his study and refreshed his memory of the play--but
received no enlightenment that enabled him to comprehend Lucy's strange remark.
However, he found himself impelled in the direction of correspondence, and
presently wrote a letter--not a reply to his Aunt Fanny. ]
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