That evening, after Mr. Jackson had
taken himself away, and the ladies had retired to
their chintz-curtained 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 generous-minded
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.
The Lovell Mingotts had sent out cards
for what was known as “a formal dinner”
(that is, three extra footmen, two dishes for each
course, and a Roman punch in the middle), and had
headed their invitations with the words “To
meet the Countess Olenska,” in accordance with
the hospitable American fashion, which treats strangers
as if they were royalties, or at least as their ambassadors.
The guests had been selected with
a boldness and discrimination in which the initiated
recognised the firm hand of Catherine the Great.
Associated with such immemorial standbys as the Selfridge
Merrys, who were asked everywhere because they always
had been, the Beauforts, on whom there was a claim
of relationship, and Mr. Sillerton Jackson and his
sister Sophy (who went wherever her brother told her
to), were some of the most fashionable and yet most
irreproachable of the dominant “young married”
set; the Lawrence Leffertses, Mrs. Lefferts Rushworth
(the lovely widow), the Harry Thorleys, the Reggie
Chiverses and young Morris Dagonet and his wife (who
was a van der Luyden). The company indeed was
perfectly assorted, since all the members belonged
to the little inner group of people who, during the
long New York season, disported themselves together
daily and nightly with apparently undiminished zest.
Forty-eight hours later the unbelievable
had happened; every one had refused the Mingotts’
invitation except the Beauforts and old Mr. Jackson
and his sister. The intended slight was emphasised
by the fact that even the Reggie Chiverses, who were
of the Mingott clan, were among those inflicting it;
and by the uniform wording of the notes, in all of
which the writers “regretted that they were
unable to accept,” without the mitigating plea
of a “previous engagement” that ordinary
courtesy prescribed.
New York society was, in those days,
far too small, and too scant in its resources, for
every one in it (including livery-stable-keepers,
butlers and cooks) not to know exactly on which evenings
people were free; and it was thus possible for the
recipients of Mrs. Lovell Mingott’s invitations
to make cruelly clear their determination not to meet
the Countess Olenska.
The blow was unexpected; but the Mingotts,
as their way was, met it gallantly. Mrs. Lovell
Mingott confided the case to Mrs. Welland, who confided
it to Newland Archer; who, aflame at the outrage,
appealed passionately and authoritatively to his mother;
who, after a painful period of inward resistance and
outward temporising, succumbed to his instances (as
she always did), and immediately embracing his cause
with an energy redoubled by her previous hesitations,
put on her grey velvet bonnet and said: “I’ll
go and see Louisa van der Luyden.”
The New York of Newland Archer’s
day was a small and slippery pyramid, in which, as
yet, hardly a fissure had been made or a foothold
gained. At its base was a firm foundation of
what Mrs. Archer called “plain people”;
an honourable but obscure majority of respectable
families who (as in the case of the Spicers or the
Leffertses or the Jacksons) had been raised above
their level by marriage with one of the ruling clans.
People, Mrs. Archer always said, were not as particular
as they used to be; and with old Catherine Spicer ruling
one end of Fifth Avenue, and Julius Beaufort the other,
you couldn’t expect the old traditions to last
much longer.
Firmly narrowing upward from this
wealthy but inconspicuous substratum was the compact
and dominant group which the Mingotts, Newlands, Chiverses
and Mansons so actively represented. Most people
imagined them to be the very apex of the pyramid;
but they themselves (at least those of Mrs. Archer’s
generation) were aware that, in the eyes of the professional
genealogist, only a still smaller number of families
could lay claim to that eminence.
“Don’t tell me,”
Mrs. Archer would say to her children, “all
this modern newspaper rubbish about a New York aristocracy.
If there is one, neither the Mingotts nor the Mansons
belong to it; no, nor the Newlands or the Chiverses
either. Our grandfathers and great-grandfathers
were just respectable English or Dutch merchants,
who came to the colonies to make their fortune, and
stayed here because they did so well. One of
your great-grandfathers signed the Declaration, and
another was a general on Washington’s staff,
and received General Burgoyne’s sword after
the battle of Saratoga. These are things to
be proud of, but they have nothing to do with rank
or class. New York has always been a commercial
community, and there are not more than three families
in it who can claim an aristocratic origin in the
real sense of the word.”
Mrs. Archer and her son and daughter,
like every one else in New York, knew who these privileged
beings were: the Dagonets of Washington Square,
who came of an old English county family allied with
the Pitts and Foxes; the Lannings, who had intermarried
with the descendants of Count de Grasse, and the van
der Luydens, direct descendants of the first Dutch
governor of Manhattan, and related by pre-revolutionary
marriages to several members of the French and British
aristocracy.
The Lannings survived only in the
person of two very old but lively Miss Lannings, who
lived cheerfully and reminiscently among family portraits
and Chippendale; the Dagonets were a considerable
clan, allied to the best names in Baltimore and Philadelphia;
but the van der Luydens, who stood above all of them,
had faded into a kind of super-terrestrial twilight,
from which only two figures impressively emerged;
those of Mr. and Mrs. Henry van der Luyden.
Mrs. Henry van der Luyden had been
Louisa Dagonet, and her mother had been the granddaughter
of Colonel du Lac, of an old Channel Island family,
who had fought under Cornwallis and had settled in
Maryland, after the war, with his bride, Lady Angelica
Trevenna, fifth daughter of the Earl of St. Austrey.
The tie between the Dagonets, the du Lacs of Maryland,
and their aristocratic Cornish kinsfolk, the Trevennas,
had always remained close and cordial. Mr. and
Mrs. van der Luyden had more than once paid long visits
to the present head of the house of Trevenna, the
Duke of St. Austrey, at his country-seat in Cornwall
and at St. Austrey in Gloucestershire; and his Grace
had frequently announced his intention of some day
returning their visit (without the Duchess, who feared
the Atlantic).
Mr. and Mrs. van der Luyden divided
their time between Trevenna, their place in Maryland,
and Skuytercliff, the great estate on the Hudson which
had been one of the colonial grants of the Dutch government
to the famous first Governor, and of which Mr. van
der Luyden was still “Patroon.”
Their large solemn house in Madison Avenue was seldom
opened, and when they came to town they received in
it only their most intimate friends.
“I wish you would go with me,
Newland,” his mother said, suddenly pausing
at the door of the Brown coupe. “Louisa
is fond of you; and of course it’s on account
of dear May that I’m taking this step—and
also because, if we don’t all stand together,
there’ll be no such thing as Society left.”