|
Mr. Jackson glanced over his shoulder to say to the sad butler:
"Perhaps . . . that sauce . . . just a little, after all--"; then,
having helped himself, he remarked: "I'm told she's looking for a house.
She means to live here."
"I hear she means to get a divorce," said Janey boldly.
"I hope she will!" Archer exclaimed.
The word had fallen like a bombshell in the pure and tranquil atmosphere of
the Archer dining-room. Mrs. Archer raised her delicate eye-brows in the
particular curve that signified: "The butler--" and the young man,
himself mindful of the bad taste of discussing such intimate matters in public,
hastily branched off into an account of his visit to old Mrs. Mingott.
After dinner, according to immemorial custom, Mrs. Archer and Janey trailed
their long silk draperies up to the drawing-room, where, while the gentlemen
smoked below stairs, they sat beside a Carcel lamp with an engraved globe,
facing each other across a rosewood work-table with a green silk bag under it,
and stitched at the two ends of a tapestry band of field-flowers destined to
adorn an "occasional" chair in the drawingroom of young Mrs. Newland
Archer.
While this rite was in progress in the drawing-room, Archer settled Mr.
Jackson in an armchair near the fire in the Gothic library and handed him a
cigar. Mr. Jackson sank into the armchair with satisfaction, lit his cigar with
perfect confidence (it was Newland who bought them), and stretching his thin
old ankles to the coals, said: "You say the secretary merely helped her to
get away, my dear fellow? Well, he was still helping her a year later, then;
for somebody met 'em living at Lausanne together."
Newland reddened. "Living together? Well, why not? Who had the right to
make her life over if she hadn't? I'm sick of the hypocrisy that would bury
alive a woman of her age if her husband prefers to live with harlots."
He stopped and turned away angrily to light his cigar. "Women ought to
be free--as free as we are," he declared, making a discovery of which he
was too irritated to measure the terrific consequences.
Mr. Sillerton Jackson stretched his ankles nearer the coals and emitted a
sardonic whistle.
"Well," he said after a pause, "apparently Count Olenski
takes your view; for I never heard of his having lifted a finger to get his wife
back."
VI.
That evening, after Mr. Jackson had taken himself away, and the ladies had
retired to their chintzcurtained bedroom, Newland Archer mounted thoughtfully
to his own study. A vigilant hand had, as usual, kept the fire alive and the
lamp trimmed; and the room, with its rows and rows of books, its bronze and
steel statuettes of "The Fencers" on the mantelpiece and its many
photographs of famous pictures, looked singularly home-like and welcoming.
As he dropped into his armchair near the fire his eyes rested on a large
photograph of May Welland, which the young girl had given him in the first days
of their romance, and which had now displaced all the other portraits on the
table. With a new sense of awe he looked at the frank forehead, serious eyes
and gay innocent mouth of the young creature whose soul's custodian he was to
be. That terrifying product of the social system he belonged to and believed
in, the young girl who knew nothing and expected everything, looked back at him
like a stranger through May Welland's familiar features; and once more it was
borne in on him that marriage was not the safe anchorage he had been taught to
think, but a voyage on uncharted seas.
The case of the Countess Olenska had stirred up old settled convictions and
set them drifting dangerously through his mind. His own exclamation:
"Women should be free--as free as we are," struck to the root of a
problem that it was agreed in his world to regard as non-existent.
"Nice" women, however wronged, would never claim the kind of freedom
he meant, and generousminded men like himself were therefore--in the heat of
argument--the more chivalrously ready to concede it to them. Such verbal
generosities were in fact only a humbugging disguise of the inexorable
conventions that tied things together and bound people down to the old pattern.
But here he was pledged to defend, on the part of his betrothed's cousin,
conduct that, on his own wife's part, would justify him in calling down on her
all the thunders of Church and State. Of course the dilemma was purely
hypothetical; since he wasn't a blackguard Polish nobleman, it was absurd to
speculate what his wife's rights would be if he WERE. But Newland Archer was
too imaginative not to feel that, in his case and May's, the tie might gall for
reasons far less gross and palpable. What could he and she really know of each
other, since it was his duty, as a "decent" fellow, to conceal his
past from her, and hers, as a marriageable girl, to have no past to conceal?
What if, for some one of the subtler reasons that would tell with both of them,
they should tire of each other, misunderstand or irritate each other? He
reviewed his friends' marriages-- the supposedly happy ones--and saw none that
answered, even remotely, to the passionate and tender comradeship which he
pictured as his permanent relation with May Welland. He perceived that such a
picture presupposed, on her part, the experience, the versatility, the freedom
of judgment, which she had been carefully trained not to possess; and with a shiver
of foreboding he saw his marriage becoming what most of the other marriages
about him were: a dull association of material and social interests held
together by ignorance on the one side and hypocrisy on the other. Lawrence
Lefferts occurred to him as the husband who had most completely realised this
enviable ideal. As became the high-priest of form, he had formed a wife so
completely to his own convenience that, in the most conspicuous moments of his
frequent love-affairs with other men's wives, she went about in smiling
unconsciousness, saying that "Lawrence was so frightfully strict";
and had been known to blush indignantly, and avert her gaze, when some one
alluded in her presence to the fact that Julius Beaufort (as became a "foreigner"
of doubtful origin) had what was known in New York as "another
establishment."
Archer tried to console himself with the thought that he was not quite such
an ass as Larry Lefferts, nor May such a simpleton as poor Gertrude; but the
difference was after all one of intelligence and not of standards. In reality
they all lived in a kind of hieroglyphic world, where the real thing was never
said or done or even thought, but only represented by a set of arbitrary signs;
as when Mrs. Welland, who knew exactly why Archer had pressed her to announce
her daughter's engagement at the Beaufort ball (and had indeed expected him to
do no less), yet felt obliged to simulate reluctance, and the air of having had
her hand forced, quite as, in the books on Primitive Man that people of
advanced culture were beginning to read, the savage bride is dragged with
shrieks from her parents' tent.
The result, of course, was that the young girl who was the centre of this
elaborate system of mystification remained the more inscrutable for her very
frankness and assurance. She was frank, poor darling, because she had nothing
to conceal, assured because she knew of nothing to be on her guard against; and
with no better preparation than this, she was to be plunged overnight into what
people evasively called "the facts of life."
The young man was sincerely but placidly in love. He delighted in the
radiant good looks of his betrothed, in her health, her horsemanship, her grace
and quickness at games, and the shy interest in books and ideas that she was
beginning to develop under his guidance. (She had advanced far enough to join
him in ridiculing the Idyls of the King, but not to feel the beauty of Ulysses
and the Lotus Eaters.) She was straightforward, loyal and brave; she had a
sense of humour (chiefly proved by her laughing at HIS jokes); and he
suspected, in the depths of her innocently-gazing soul, a glow of feeling that
it would be a joy to waken. But when he had gone the brief round of her he
returned discouraged by the thought that all this frankness and innocence were
only an artificial product. Untrained human nature was not frank and innocent;
it was full of the twists and defences of an instinctive guile. And he felt
himself oppressed by this creation of factitious purity, so cunningly manufactured
by a conspiracy of mothers and aunts and grandmothers and long-dead
ancestresses, because it was supposed to be what he wanted, what he had a right
to, in order that he might exercise his lordly pleasure in smashing it like an
image made of snow.
There was a certain triteness in these reflections: they were those habitual
to young men on the approach of their wedding day. But they were generally
accompanied by a sense of compunction and self-abasement of which Newland
Archer felt no trace. He could not deplore (as Thackeray's heroes so often
exasperated him by doing) that he had not a blank page to offer his bride in
exchange for the unblemished one she was to give to him. He could not get away
from the fact that if he had been brought up as she had they would have been no
more fit to find their way about than the Babes in the Wood; nor could he, for
all his anxious cogitations, see any honest reason (any, that is, unconnected
with his own momentary pleasure, and the passion of masculine vanity) why his
bride should not have been allowed the same freedom of experience as himself.
Such questions, at such an hour, were bound to drift through his mind; but
he was conscious that their uncomfortable persistence and precision were due to
the inopportune arrival of the Countess Olenska. Here he was, at the very
moment of his betrothal--a moment for pure thoughts and cloudless
hopes--pitchforked into a coil of scandal which raised all the special problems
he would have preferred to let lie. "Hang Ellen Olenska!" he
grumbled, as he covered his fire and began to undress. He could not really see
why her fate should have the least bearing on his; yet he dimly felt that he
had only just begun to measure the risks of the championship which his
engagement had forced upon him.
A few days later the bolt fell.
|