In the course of the next day the
first of the usual betrothal visits were exchanged.
The New York ritual was precise and inflexible in
such matters; and in conformity with it Newland Archer
first went with his mother and sister to call on Mrs.
Welland, after which he and Mrs. Welland and May drove
out to old Mrs. Manson Mingott’s to receive
that venerable ancestress’s blessing.
A visit to Mrs. Manson Mingott was
always an amusing episode to the young man.
The house in itself was already an historic document,
though not, of course, as venerable as certain other
old family houses in University Place and lower Fifth
Avenue. Those were of the purest 1830, with
a grim harmony of cabbage-rose-garlanded carpets,
rosewood consoles, round-arched fire-places with black
marble mantels, and immense glazed book-cases of mahogany;
whereas old Mrs. Mingott, who had built her house
later, had bodily cast out the massive furniture of
her prime, and mingled with the Mingott heirlooms
the frivolous upholstery of the Second Empire.
It was her habit to sit in a window of her sitting-room
on the ground floor, as if watching calmly for life
and fashion to flow northward to her solitary doors.
She seemed in no hurry to have them come, for her
patience was equalled by her confidence. She
was sure that presently the hoardings, the quarries,
the one-story saloons, the wooden green-houses in ragged
gardens, and the rocks from which goats surveyed the
scene, would vanish before the advance of residences
as stately as her own—perhaps (for she was
an impartial woman) even statelier; and that the cobble-stones
over which the old clattering omnibuses bumped would
be replaced by smooth asphalt, such as people reported
having seen in Paris. Meanwhile, as every one
she cared to see came to her (and she could fill
her rooms as easily as the Beauforts, and without
adding a single item to the menu of her suppers),
she did not suffer from her geographic isolation.
The immense accretion of flesh which
had descended on her in middle life like a flood of
lava on a doomed city had changed her from a plump
active little woman with a neatly-turned foot and
ankle into something as vast and august as a natural
phenomenon. She had accepted this submergence
as philosophically as all her other trials, and now,
in extreme old age, was rewarded by presenting to
her mirror an almost unwrinkled expanse of firm pink
and white flesh, in the centre of which the traces
of a small face survived as if awaiting excavation.
A flight of smooth double chins led down to the dizzy
depths of a still-snowy bosom veiled in snowy muslins
that were held in place by a miniature portrait of
the late Mr. Mingott; and around and below, wave after
wave of black silk surged away over the edges of a
capacious armchair, with two tiny white hands poised
like gulls on the surface of the billows.
The burden of Mrs. Manson Mingott’s
flesh had long since made it impossible for her to
go up and down stairs, and with characteristic independence
she had made her reception rooms upstairs and established
herself (in flagrant violation of all the New York
proprieties) on the ground floor of her house; so that,
as you sat in her sitting-room window with her, you
caught (through a door that was always open, and a
looped-back yellow damask portiere) the unexpected
vista of a bedroom with a huge low bed upholstered
like a sofa, and a toilet-table with frivolous lace
flounces and a gilt-framed mirror.
Her visitors were startled and fascinated
by the foreignness of this arrangement, which recalled
scenes in French fiction, and architectural incentives
to immorality such as the simple American had never
dreamed of. That was how women with lovers lived
in the wicked old societies, in apartments with all
the rooms on one floor, and all the indecent propinquities
that their novels described. It amused Newland
Archer (who had secretly situated the love-scenes
of “Monsieur de Camors” in Mrs. Mingott’s
bedroom) to picture her blameless life led in the
stage-setting of adultery; but he said to himself,
with considerable admiration, that if a lover had
been what she wanted, the intrepid woman would have
had him too.
To the general relief the Countess
Olenska was not present in her grandmother’s
drawing-room during the visit of the betrothed couple.
Mrs. Mingott said she had gone out; which, on a day
of such glaring sunlight, and at the “shopping
hour,” seemed in itself an indelicate thing
for a compromised woman to do. But at any rate
it spared them the embarrassment of her presence,
and the faint shadow that her unhappy past might seem
to shed on their radiant future. The visit went
off successfully, as was to have been expected.
Old Mrs. Mingott was delighted with the engagement,
which, being long foreseen by watchful relatives,
had been carefully passed upon in family council;
and the engagement ring, a large thick sapphire set
in invisible claws, met with her unqualified admiration.
“It’s the new setting:
of course it shows the stone beautifully, but it looks
a little bare to old-fashioned eyes,” Mrs. Welland
had explained, with a conciliatory side-glance at
her future son-in-law.
“Old-fashioned eyes? I
hope you don’t mean mine, my dear? I like
all the novelties,” said the ancestress, lifting
the stone to her small bright orbs, which no glasses
had ever disfigured. “Very handsome,”
she added, returning the jewel; “very liberal.
In my time a cameo set in pearls was thought sufficient.
But it’s the hand that sets off the ring, isn’t
it, my dear Mr. Archer?” and she waved one of
her tiny hands, with small pointed nails and rolls
of aged fat encircling the wrist like ivory bracelets.
“Mine was modelled in Rome by the great Ferrigiani.
You should have May’s done: no doubt he’ll
have it done, my child. Her hand is large—it’s
these modern sports that spread the joints—but
the skin is white.—And when’s the
wedding to be?” she broke off, fixing her eyes
on Archer’s face.
“Oh—” Mrs.
Welland murmured, while the young man, smiling at
his betrothed, replied: “As soon as ever
it can, if only you’ll back me up, Mrs. Mingott.”
“We must give them time to get
to know each other a little better, mamma,”
Mrs. Welland interposed, with the proper affectation
of reluctance; to which the ancestress rejoined:
“Know each other? Fiddlesticks!
Everybody in New York has always known everybody.
Let the young man have his way, my dear; don’t
wait till the bubble’s off the wine. Marry
them before Lent; I may catch pneumonia any winter
now, and I want to give the wedding-breakfast.”
These successive statements were received
with the proper expressions of amusement, incredulity
and gratitude; and the visit was breaking up in a
vein of mild pleasantry when the door opened to admit
the Countess Olenska, who entered in bonnet and mantle
followed by the unexpected figure of Julius Beaufort.
There was a cousinly murmur of pleasure
between the ladies, and Mrs. Mingott held out Ferrigiani’s
model to the banker. “Ha! Beaufort,
this is a rare favour!” (She had an odd foreign
way of addressing men by their surnames.)
“Thanks. I wish it might
happen oftener,” said the visitor in his easy
arrogant way. “I’m generally so tied
down; but I met the Countess Ellen in Madison Square,
and she was good enough to let me walk home with her.”
“Ah—I hope the house
will be gayer, now that Ellen’s here!”
cried Mrs. Mingott with a glorious effrontery.
“Sit down—sit down, Beaufort:
push up the yellow armchair; now I’ve got you
I want a good gossip. I hear your ball was magnificent;
and I understand you invited Mrs. Lemuel Struthers?
Well—I’ve a curiosity to see the
woman myself.”
She had forgotten her relatives, who
were drifting out into the hall under Ellen Olenska’s
guidance. Old Mrs. Mingott had always professed
a great admiration for Julius Beaufort, and there
was a kind of kinship in their cool domineering way
and their short-cuts through the conventions.
Now she was eagerly curious to know what had decided
the Beauforts to invite (for the first time) Mrs.
Lemuel Struthers, the widow of Struthers’s Shoe-polish,
who had returned the previous year from a long initiatory
sojourn in Europe to lay siege to the tight little
citadel of New York. “Of course if you
and Regina invite her the thing is settled.
Well, we need new blood and new money—and
I hear she’s still very good-looking,”
the carnivorous old lady declared.
In the hall, while Mrs. Welland and
May drew on their furs, Archer saw that the Countess
Olenska was looking at him with a faintly questioning
smile.
“Of course you know already—about
May and me,” he said, answering her look with
a shy laugh. “She scolded me for not giving
you the news last night at the Opera: I had her
orders to tell you that we were engaged—but
I couldn’t, in that crowd.”
The smile passed from Countess Olenska’s
eyes to her lips: she looked younger, more like
the bold brown Ellen Mingott of his boyhood.
“Of course I know; yes. And I’m
so glad. But one doesn’t tell such things
first in a crowd.” The ladies were on
the threshold and she held out her hand.
“Good-bye; come and see me some
day,” she said, still looking at Archer.
In the carriage, on the way down Fifth
Avenue, they talked pointedly of Mrs. Mingott, of
her age, her spirit, and all her wonderful attributes.
No one alluded to Ellen Olenska; but Archer knew
that Mrs. Welland was thinking: “It’s
a mistake for Ellen to be seen, the very day after
her arrival, parading up Fifth Avenue at the crowded
hour with Julius Beaufort—” and the
young man himself mentally added: “And
she ought to know that a man who’s just engaged
doesn’t spend his time calling on married women.
But I daresay in the set she’s lived in they
do—they never do anything else.”
And, in spite of the cosmopolitan views on which he
prided himself, he thanked heaven that he was a New
Yorker, and about to ally himself with one of his own
kind.