He found her the next day in a pretty
morning-room, dressed in a long white gown, with a
single great yellow rose at her throat. She had
a piece of tapestry in her hand, and as she rose to
greet him, the plain, heavy folds of her gown clinging
about her, and her dark hair bound closely around
her head with a simplicity that was almost severe,
Dartmouth again felt a humorous sense of having suddenly
stepped into a page of a past century.
“What are you doing?”
he said, as he took a chair opposite her. “Women
never make tapestry—real tapestry—in
these days. You remind me of Lady Jane Grey.
Shall I get a volume of Greek and read it to you?”
She laughed. “I fear it
would literally be Greek to me. Latin and I had
a fierce and desperate war, but I conquered in the
end. With the Greek, however, the war was extremely
brief, and he marched off with colors flying, and
never condescended to renew the engagement.”
“For all mercies make us duly
thankful. A woman who knows Greek is like a hot-house
grape; a mathematically perfect thing, but scentless
and flavorless.”
“You are consoling; and, indeed,
I cannot see that it would have done me much good;
it certainly would not have increased my popularity
among your exacting sex. You are the first man
to whom I have dared acknowledge I know Latin.
Lady Langdon was kind enough to give me elaborate
warnings and instructions before she launched me into
society. Among other things, she constantly reiterated,
’Never let a man suspect that you know anything,
my dear. He will fly from you as a hare to cover.
I want you to be a belle, and you must help me.’
I naturally asked her what I was to talk about, and
she promptly replied ’Nothing. Study the
American girl, they have the most brilliant way of
jabbering meaningless recitativos of any tribe on the
face of the earth. Every sentence is an epigram
with the point left out. They are like the effervescent
part of a bottle of soda-water.’ This was
while we were still in Wales, and she sent for six
books by two of those American novelists who are supposed
to be the expounders-in-chief of the American girl
at home and abroad, and made me read them. It
nearly killed me, but I did it, and I learned a valuable
lesson. I hated the American girl, but I felt
as if I had been boiled in soda-water and every pore
of my body had absorbed it. I felt ecstatically
frivolous, and commonplace, and flashing, and sizzling.
And—I assure you this is a fact, although
you may not give me credit for such grim determination
and concentration of purpose—but I never
eat my breakfast before I have read an entire chapter
from one of those two authors, it adjusts my mental
tone for the day and keeps me in proper condition.”
Dartmouth threw back his head and
gave vent to the heartiest burst of laughter he had
indulged in for years. “Upon my word, you
are original,” he exclaimed, delightedly, “and
for heaven’s sake, don’t try to be anything
else. You could not be an American girl if you
tried for a century, for the reason that you have too
many centuries behind you. The American girl
is charming, exquisite, a perfect flower—but
thin. She is like the first fruit of a new tree
planted in new soil. Her flavor is as subtle
and vanishing as pistachio, but there is no richness,
no depth, no mellowness, no suggestion of generations
of grafting, or of orchards whose very sites are forgotten.
The soda-water simile is good, but the American girl,
in her actual existence—not in her verbal
photographs, I grant you—is worthy of a
better. She is more like one glass of champagne-frappe,
momentarily stimulating, but quickly forgotten.
When I was in America, I met the most charming women
in New York—I did not spend two weeks,
all told, in Washington—and New York is
the concentrated essence, the pinnacle of American
civilization and achievement. But although I
frequently talked to one or another of those women
for five hours at a time without a suggestion of fatigue,
I always had the same sensation in regard to them
that I had in regard to their waists while dancing—they
were unsatisfactory, intangible. I never could
be sure I really held a woman in my arms, and I never
could remember a word I had exchanged with them.
But they are charming—that word describes
them ‘down to the ground.’”
“That word ‘thin’
is good, too,” she replied; “and I think
it describes their literature better than any other.
They write beautifully those Americans, they are witty,
they are amusing, they are entertaining, they delineate
character with a master hand; they give us an exact
idea of their peculiar environment and conditions;
and the way they handle dialect is a marvel; but—they
are thin; they ring hollow; they are like sketches
in pen-and-ink; there is no color, no warmth, and
above all, no perspective. I don’t know
that they are even done in sharp black-and-white;
to me the pervading tone is gray. The American
author depresses me; he makes me feel commonplace and
new and unballasted. I always feel as if I were
the ’millionth woman in superfluous herds’;
and when one of those terrible American authors attacks
my type, and carves me up for the delectation of the
public, I shall go back to Wales, nor ever emerge
from my towers again. And they are so cool and
calm and deliberate, and so horribly exact, even the
lesser lights. They always remind me of a medical
student watching the workings of the exposed nervous
system of a chloroformed hare.”
Dartmouth looked at her with some
intensity in his gaze. “I am glad your
ideas are so singularly like my own,” he said.
“It is rather remarkable they should be, but
so it is. You have even a way of putting your
thoughts that strikes me as familiar, and which, out
of my natural egotism, I find attractive. But
I wish you would go back to your old castle; the world
will spoil you.”
“I shall return in a month or
two now; my father is lonely without me.”
“I suppose he spoils you,”
said Dartmouth, smiling. “I imagine you
were an abominable infant. Tell me of some of
the outrageous things you used to do. I was called
the worst child in three counties; but, I doubt not,
your exploits discounted mine, as the Americans say.”
“Oh, mine are too bad to relate,”
she exclaimed, with a nervous laugh, and coloring
swiftly, as she had done the night before. “But
you were ill for a whole week, were you not?
Was it anything serious?”
Dartmouth felt a sudden impulse to
tell her of his strange experience. He was not
given to making confidences, but he felt en rapport
with this girl as he had never felt with man or woman
before. He had a singular feeling, when talking
with or listening to her, of losing his sense of separateness.
It was not that he felt de-individualized, but that
he had an accession of personality. It was pleasant
because it was novel, but at the same time it was
uncomfortable because it was a trifle unnatural.
He smiled a little to himself. Was it a case of
affinity after all? But he had no time to analyze.
She was waiting for an answer, and in a moment he
found himself yielding to his impulse and giving her
a graphic account of his peculiar visitation.
At first she merely dropped her tapestry
and listened attentively, smiling and blushing a little
when he told her what had immediately preceded the
impulse to write. But gradually the delicate pink
left her face, and she began to move in the spasmodic,
uncontrollable way of a person handling an electric
battery. She clasped the arms of her chair with
such force that her arms looked twisted and rigid,
and finally she bent slowly forward, gazing up into
his face with eyes expanded to twice their natural
size and not a vestige of color in her cheek or lips:
she looked like a corpse still engaged in the mechanical
act of gazing on the scene of agony which had preceded
its death. Suddenly she sprang to her feet and
threw out her hands. “Stop!” she
cried; “stop!”
“What is it?” he demanded,
rising to his feet in amazement; he had been watching
her with more or less surprise for some time.
“I am afraid I have frightened you and made
you nervous. I had better have kept my confidence
to myself.”
“No, no,” she cried, throwing
back her head and clasping her hands about it; “it
is not that I am frightened—only—it
was so strange! While you were talking it seemed—oh!
I cannot describe it!—as if you were telling
me something which I knew as well as yourself.
When you spoke it seemed to me that I knew and could
put into words the wonderful verse-music which was
battling upward to reach your brain. They were,
they were—I know them so well. I have
known them always; but I cannot—I cannot
catch their meaning!” Suddenly she stepped backward,
dropped her hands, and colored painfully. “It
is all purest nonsense, of course,” she said,
in her ordinary tone and manner, except for its painful
embarrasment. “It is only your strong,
picturesque way of telling it which presented it as
vividly to my mind as if it were an experience of
my own. I never so much as dreamed of it before
you began to speak.”
Dartmouth did not answer her for a
moment. His own mind was in something of a tumult.
In telling the story he had felt, not a recurrence
of its conditions, but a certain sense of their influence;
and the girl’s manner and words were extraordinary.
It could hardly be possible, even in cold blood, to
understand their meaning. She was indisputably
not acting. What she had said was very strange
and unconventional, but from whatever source the words
had sprung, they had not been uttered with the intention
premeditated or spontaneous of making an impression
upon him. They carried conviction of their sincerity
with them, and Dartmouth was sensible that they produced
a somewhat uncanny but strangely responsive effect
upon himself. But what did it mean? That
in some occult way she had been granted a glimpse
into the depths of his nature was unthinkable.
He was not averse to indulging a belief in affinity;
and that this girl was his was not a disagreeable
idea; but his belief by no means embraced a second,
to the effect that the soul of one’s antitype
is as an open book to the other. Could her mind
be affected? But no. She was a very unusual
girl, possibly an eccentric one; but he flattered himself
that he knew a lunatic when he saw one. There
was left then but the conclusion that she possessed
a strongly and remarkably sympathetic nature, as yet
unbridled and unblunted by the world, and that he had
made a dangerous imprint upon it. He was not unduly
vain, but he was willing to believe that she would
not vibrate so violently to every man’s touch.
This point settled to the best of
his capabilities, he allowed a second consciousness,
which had been held under for the moment, during the
exercisings of his analytical instinct, to claim his
consideration. He was sensible that he was attracted
as he had never been attracted by woman before.
He had felt something of this on the night he had
met her, and he had felt it more strongly on the occasion
of their second interview; but now he was aware that
it had suddenly taken the form of an overmastering
desire for possession. He was by nature an impulsive
man, but he was a man of the world as well, and he
had his impulses pretty well subordinated to interest
and common-sense; nevertheless he felt very much like
doing a rash and impulsive thing at the present moment.
He was a man of rapid thought, and these reflections
chased each other through his mind much more quickly
than I have been able to take them down, and Miss Penrhyn
had averted her gaze and was playing nervously with
some flowers in a basket on a pedestal beside her.
She was acutely aware that she had made a fool of
herself, and imagined that his hesitation was due to
a polite desire to arrange his reply in such wise as
not to make his appreciation of the fact too crudely
apparent. At the same time she was a little exhausted
under the reaction of a short but very severe mental
strain. As for Dartmouth, he hesitated a moment
longer. He was balancing several pros and cons
very rapidly. He was aware that if he asked this
girl to marry him and she consented, he must, as a
man of honor, abide by the contract, no matter how
much she might disappoint him hereafter. At the
same time the knowledge that he was in love with her
was growing more distinct every second. Doubtless
the wisest course would be to go away for the present
and postpone any decisive step until he knew her better.
But he was not a patient man, and he was not in the
habit of putting off until to-morrow what he could
do to-day. (He considered that certain of the precepts
instilled during childhood were of admirable practical
value). The best thing in life was its morning:
he did not like evening shadows and autumn twilights.
There was nothing that could compare with the sweetness
and fineness of the flavor of novelty. When it
was practicable to take advantage of one’s impulses
one had a brief draught of true philosopher’s
happiness. And, at all events, this girl was a
lady, high-born, high-bred, intellectual, and unique.
She was also plastic, and if she had a somewhat too
high-strung nature, love had been known to work wonders
before. He had mastered the difficult art of controlling
himself; he was not afraid of not being able to control
any woman who loved him. He went over to her
and took her hands in his strong clasp.
“I have known you a very short—”
he began, and then paused abruptly.
He had meant to speak calmly and not
frighten her by the suddenness of his love-making,
but her touch fired him and sent the blood to his
head. He flung down her hands, and throwing his
arms about her, kissed her full on the mouth.
The girl turned very white and tried to free herself,
but his arms were too strong, and in a moment she ceased
to resist. She made no attempt to define her
feelings as Dartmouth had done. She had felt
the young man’s remarkable magnetism the moment
she had met him: she had been aware of a certain
prophetic instinct of it some hours before, when he
had stood in the window of a crowded café above a
crowded thoroughfare and speculatively returned her
gaze. And the night before, she had gone home
with a very sharply outlined consciousness that she
would never again meet a man who would interest her
so deeply. To-day, this feeling had developed
into one of strong reciprocal sympathy, and he had
exerted a psychological influence over her as vaguely
delightful as it was curious and painful. But
all this was no preparation for the sudden tumult
of feeling which possessed her under his kiss.
She knew that it was love; and, that it had come to
her without warning, made the knowledge no less keen
and sure. Her first impulse was to resist, but
purely out of that pride which forbids a woman to
yield too soon; and when his physical strength made
her powerless, she was glad that it should be so.
“Will you marry me?” he asked.
“Yes” she said; “I will marry you.”