“Good-bye, proud world, I’m going home.
Thou art not my friend, and I’m not thine.”
- EMERSON.
I think the reader will possibly gain
a better idea of what happened at the Howlett dance,
at which Count Bonetti was to have been presented
to Miss Andrews, if I forego the pleasure of writing
this chapter myself, and produce instead the chapter
of Stuart Harley’s ill-fated book which was
to have dealt with that most interesting incident.
Having relinquished all hope of ever getting that
particular story into shape without a change of heroine,
and being unwilling to go to that extreme, Mr. Harley
has very kindly placed his manuscript at my disposal.
“Use it as you will, my dear
fellow,” he said, when I asked him for it.
“I can’t do anything with it myself, and
it is merely occupying space in my pigeon-holes for
which I can find better use. It may need a certain
amount of revision—in fact, it is sure to,
for it is unconscionably long, and, thanks to the
persistent failure of Miss Andrews to do as I thought
she would, may frequently seem incoherent. For
your own sake revise it, for the readers of your book
won’t believe that you are telling a true story
anyhow; they will say that you wrote this chapter
and attributed it to me, and you will find yourself
held responsible for its shortcomings. I have
inserted a few notes here and there which will give
you an idea of what I suffered as I wrote on and found
her growing daily less and less tractable, with occasionally
an indication of the point of divergence between her
actual behavior and that which I expected of her.”
To a fellow-workman in literary fields
this chapter is of pathetic interest, though it may
not so appear to the reader who knows little of the
difficulties of authorship. I can hardly read
it myself without a feeling of most intense pity for
poor Harley. I can imagine the sleepless nights
which followed the shattering of his hopes as to what
his story might be by the recalcitrant attitude of
the young woman he had honored so highly by selecting
her for his heroine. I can almost feel the bitter
sense of disappointment, which must have burned to
the very depths of his soul, when he finally realized
how completely overturned were all his plans, and I
cannot forego calling attention to the constancy to
his creed of Stuart Harley, in sacrificing his opportunity
rather than his principles, as shown by his resolute
determination not to force Miss Andrews to do his
bidding, even though it required merely the dipping
of his pen into the ink and the resolution to do so.
I cannot blame her, however.
Granting to Harley the right to a creed, Miss Andrews,
too, it must be admitted, was entitled to have views
as to how she ought to behave under given circumstances,
and if she found her notions running counter to his,
it was only proper that she should act according to
the dictates of her own heart, or mind, or whatever
else it may be that a woman reasons with, rather than
according to his wishes.
As to all questions of this kind,
however, as between the two, the reader must judge,
and one document in evidence is Harley’s chapter,
which ran in this wise:
A MEETING
“Stop beating, heart, and in
a moment calm The question answer—is this,
then, my fate?” – PERKINS’S “Odes.”
As the correspondents of the New York
papers had surmised, invitations for the Howlett ball
were issued on the 12th. It is not surprising
that the correspondents in this instance should be
guilty of that rare crime among society reporters,
accuracy, for their information was derived from a
perfectly reliable source, Mrs. Howlett’s butler,
in whose hands the addressing of the envelopes had
been placed—a man of imposing presence,
and of great value to the professional snappers-up
of unconsidered trifles of social gossip in the pay
of the Sunday newspapers, with many of whom he was
on terms of closest intimacy. Of course Mrs.
Howlett was not aware that her household contained
a personage of great journalistic importance, any
more than her neighbor, Mrs. Floyd-Hopkins, was aware
that it was her maid who had furnished the Weekly
Journal of Society with the vivid account of the scandalous
behavior, at her last dinner, of Major Pompoly, who
had to be forcibly ejected from the Floyd-Hopkins
domicile by the husband of Mrs. Jernigan Smith—a
social morsel which attracted much attention several
years ago. Every effort was made to hush that
matter up, and the guests all swore eternal secrecy;
but the Weekly Journal of Society had it, and, strangely
enough, had it right, in its next issue; but the maid
was never suspected, even though she did appear to
be possessed of more ample means than usual for some
time after. Mrs. Floyd-Hopkins preferred to suspect
one of her guests, and, on the whole, was not sorry
that the matter had got abroad, for everybody talked
about it, and through the episode her dinner became
one of the historic banquets of the season.
The Willards, who were by this time
comfortably settled at “The Needles,”
their cottage on the cliff, it is hardly necessary
to state, were among those invited, and with their
cards was included one for Marguerite. Added
to the card was a personal note from Mrs. Howlett
to Miss Andrews, expressing the especial hope that
she would not fail them, all of which was very gratifying
to the young girl.
“See what I’ve got,”
she cried, gleefully, running into Mrs. Willard’s
“den” at the head of the beautiful oaken
stairs.
(Note.—At this point in
Harley’s manuscript there is evidence of indecision
on the author’s part. His heroine had begun
to bother him a trifle. He had written a half-dozen
lines descriptive of Miss Andrews’s emotions
at receiving a special note of invitation, subsequently
erasing them. The word “gleefully”
had been scratched out, and then restored in place
of “scornfully,” which had at first been
substituted for it. It was plain that Harley
was not quite certain as to how much a woman of Miss
Andrews’s type would care for a special attention
of this nature, even if she cared for it at all.
As a matter of fact, the word chosen should have been
“dubiously,” and neither “gleefully”
nor “scornfully”; for the real truth was
that there was no reason why Mrs. Howlett should so
honor Marguerite, and the girl at once began to wonder
if it were not an extra precaution of Harley’s
to assure her presence at the ball for the benefit
of himself and his publishers. The author finally
wrote it as I have given it above, however, and Miss
Andrews received her special invitation “gleefully”—according
to Harley. He perceives her doubt, however,
without comprehending it; for after describing Mrs.
Willard’s reading of the note, he goes on.)
“That is very nice of Mrs. Howlett,”
said Mrs. Willard, handing Marguerite back her note.
“It is a special honor, my dear, by which you
should feel highly flattered. She doesn’t
often do things like that.”
“I should think not,”
said Marguerite. “I am a perfect stranger
to her, and that she should do it at all strikes me
as being most extraordinary. It doesn’t
seem sincere, and I can’t help thinking that
some extraneous circumstance has been brought to bear
upon her to force her to do it.”
(Note.—Stuart Harley has
commented upon this as follows: “As I read
this over I must admit that Miss Andrews was right.
Why I had Mrs. Howlett do such a thing I don’t
know, unless it was that my own admiration for my
heroine led me to believe that some more than usual
attention was her due. In my own behalf I will
say that I should in all probability have eliminated
or corrected this false note when I came to the revision
of my proofs.” The chapter then proceeds.)
“What shall we wear?”
mused Mrs. Willard, as Marguerite folded Mrs. Howlett’s
note and replaced it in its envelope.
“I must positively decline to
discuss that question. It is of no public interest,”
snapped Marguerite, her face flushing angrily.
“My clothing is my own business, and no one’s
else.” She paused a moment, and then,
in an apologetic tone, she added, “I’d
be perfectly willing to talk with you about it generally,
my dear Dorothy, but not now.”
Mrs. Willard looked at the girl in surprise.
(Note.—Stuart Harley has
written this in the margin: “Here you have
one of the situations which finally compelled me to
relinquish this story. You know yourself how
hard it is to make 30,000 words out of a slight situation,
and at the same time stick to probability. I
had an idea, in mapping out this chapter, that I could
make three or four interesting pages—interesting
to the girls, mind you—out of a discussion
of what they should wear at the Howlett dance.
It was a perfectly natural subject for discussion
at the time and under the circumstances. It
would have been a good thing in the book, too, for
it might have conveyed a few wholesome hints in the
line of good taste in dress which would have made
my story of some value. Women are always writing
to the papers, asking, ‘What shall I wear here?’
and ‘What shall I wear there?’ The ideas
of two women like Mrs. Willard and Marguerite Andrews
would have been certain to be interesting, elevating,
and exceedingly useful to such people, but the moment
I attempted to involve them in that discussion Miss
Andrews declined utterly to speak, and I was cut out
of some six or seven hundred quite important words.
I had supposed all women alike in that matter, but
I find I was mistaken; one, at least, won’t
discuss clothes—but I don’t wonder
that Mrs. Willard looked up in surprise. I put
that in just to please myself, for of course the whole
incident would have had to be cut out when the manuscript
went to the type-setter.” The chapter
takes a new lead here, as follows:)
Mrs. Willard was punctiliously prompt
in sending the acceptances of herself and Mr. Willard
to Mrs. Howlett, and at the same time Marguerite’s
acceptance was despatched, although she was at first
disposed to send her regrets. She was only moderately
fond of those inconsequent pleasures which make the
life social. She was a good dancer, but a more
excellent talker, and she preferred talking to dancing;
but the inanity of what are known as stair talks at
dances oppressed her; nor did she look forward with
any degree of pleasure to what we might term conservatory
confidences, which in these luxurious days have become
so large a factor in terpsichorean diversions, for
Marguerite was of a practical nature. She had
once chilled the heart of a young poet by calling
Venice malarious (Harley little realized when he wrote
this how he would have suffered had he carried out
his original intention and transplanted Marguerite
to the City of the Sea!), and a conservatory to her
was a thing for mid-day, and not for midnight.
She was therefore not particularly anxious to spend
an evening—which began at an aggravatingly
late hour instead of at a reasonable time, thanks
to a social custom which has its foundation in nothing
short of absolute insanity—in the pursuit
of nothing of greater value than dancing, stair talks,
and conservatory confidences; but Mrs. Willard soon
persuaded her that she ought to go, and go she did.
It was a beautiful night, that of
the 22d of July. Newport was at her best.
The morning had been oppressively warm, but along
about three in the afternoon a series of short and
sharp electrical storms came, and as quickly went,
cooling the heated city, and freshening up the air
until it was as clear as crystal, and refreshing as
a draught of cold spring-water.
At the Howlett mansion on Bellevue
Avenue all was in readiness for the event. The
caterer’s wagons had arrived with their dainty
contents, and had gone, and now the Hungarian band
was sending forth over the cool night air those beautiful
and weird waves of melody which entrance the most
unwilling ear. About the broad and spacious
grounds festooned lights hung from tree to tree; here
and there little rose-scented bowers for tete-a-tete
talks were set; from within, streaming through the
windows in regal beauty, came the lights of the vast
ballroom, the reception-rooms, and the beautifully
designed dining-hall—lately added by young
Morris Black, the architect, to Mrs. Howlett’s
already perfect house.
On the ballroom floor are some ten
or twenty couples gracefully waltzing to the strains
of Sullivan, and in the midst of these we see Marguerite
Andrews threading her way across the room with some
difficulty, attended by Mr. and Mrs. Willard.
They have just arrived. As Marguerite walks
across the hall she attracts every one. There
is that about her which commands attention. At
the instant of her entrance Count Bonetti is on the
qui Vive.
“Py Chove!” he cries,
as he leans gracefully against the doorway opening
into the conservatory. “Zare, my dear friend,
zat iss my idea of ze truly peautiful woman.
Vat iss her name?”
“That is Miss Andrews of New
York, Count,” the person addressed replies.
“She is up here with the Willards.”
“I musd meed her,” says
the Count, his eye following Marguerite as she walks
up to Mrs. Howlett and is greeted effusively by that
lady.
Marguerite is pale, and appears anxious.
Even to the author the ways of the women in his works
are inscrutable; so upon this occasion. She is
pale, but I cannot say why. Can it be that she
has an intuitive knowledge that to-night may decide
her whole future life? Who can tell? Woman’s
intuitions are great, and there be those who say they
are unerringly true. One by one, with the exception
of Count Bonetti, the young men among Mrs. Howlett’s
guests are presented—Bonetti prefers to
await a more favorable opportunity—and
to all Marguerite appears to be the beautiful woman
she is. Hers is an instant success. A
new beauty has dawned upon the Newport horizon.
Let us describe her as she stands.
(Note.—There is a blank
space left here. At first I thought it was because
Harley wished to reflect a little before drawing a
picture of so superb a woman as he seemed to think
her, and go on to the conclusion of the chapter, the
main incidents being hot in his mind, and the purely
descriptive matters more easily left to calmer moments.
He informs me, however, that such was not the case.
“When I came to describe her as she stood,”
he said, “she had disappeared, and I had to
search all over the house before I finally found her
in the conservatory. So I changed the chapter
to read thus:”)
After a half-hour of dancing and holding
court—for Marguerite’s triumph was
truly that of a queen, it was so complete—Miss
Andrews turned to Mr. Willard and took his arm.
“Let us go into the conservatory,”
she said, in a whisper. “I have heard
so much about Mrs. Howlett’s orchids, I should
like to see them.”
Willard, seeing that she was tired
and slightly bored by the incessant chatter of those
about her, escorted her out through the broad door
into the conservatory. As she passed from the
ballroom the dark eyes of Count Bonetti flashed upon
her, but she heeded them not, moving on into the floral
bower in apparently serene unconsciousness of that
person’s presence. Here Willard got her
a chair.
“Will you have an ice?”
he asked, as she seated herself beneath one of the
lofty palms.
“Yes,” she answered, simply.
“I can wait here alone if you will get it.”
Willard passed out, and soon returned
with the ice; but as he came through the doorway Bonetti
stopped him and whispered something in his ear.
“Certainly, Count, right away,”
Willard answered. “Come along.”
Bonetti needed no second bidding,
but followed Willard closely, and soon stood expectant
before Marguerite.
“Miss Andrews,” said Willard,
“may I have the pleasure of presenting Count
Bonetti?”
The Count’s head nearly collided
with his toes in the bow that he made.
“Mr. Willard,” returned
Miss Andrews, coldly, ignoring the Count, “feeling
as I do that Count Bonetti is merely a bogus Count
with acquisitive instincts, brought here, like myself,
for literary purposes of which I cannot approve, I
must reply to your question that you may not have
that pleasure.”
With which remark (concludes Stuart
Harley) Miss Marguerite Andrews swept proudly from
the room, ordered her carriage, and went home, thereby
utterly ruining the second story of her life that I
had undertaken to write. But I shall make one
more effort.