The last day of the dramatic portion
of Leonora’s life was that on which she went
to London with Milly. They were up early, in order
to catch the morning express, and, before leaving,
Leonora arranged with the excited Bessie all details
for the reception of Ethel and Fred, who were to arrive
in the afternoon from their honeymoon. ‘I
will drive,’ she said to Carpenter when the
cart was brought round, and Carpenter had to sit behind
among the trunks. Bessie in her morning print
and her engagement ring stood at the front door, and
sped them beneficently away while clinging hard to
Bran.
As the train rushed smoothly across
the vast and rich plain of Middle England, Leonora’s
thoughts dwelt on the house at Hillport, on her skilled
and sympathetic servants, on Prince and Bran, and on
the calm and the orderliness and the high decency
of everything. And she pictured the homecoming
of Ethel and Fred from Wales Fred stiff
and nervous, and Ethel flushed, beautiful, and utterly
bewitching in the self-consciousness of the bride.
‘May I call her Mrs. Fred, ma’am?’
Bessie had asked, recoiling from the formality of ‘Mrs.
Ryley,’ and aware that ‘Miss Ethel’
was no longer possible. Leonora saw them in the
dining-room consuming the tea which Bessie had determined
should be the final word of teas; and she saw Bessie,
in that perfect black of hers and that miraculous
muslin, waiting at table with a superlative and cold
primness that covered a desire to take Ethel in her
arms and kiss her. And she saw the pair afterwards,
dallying on the lawn with Bran at dusk, simple, unambitious,
unassuming, content; and, still later, Fred meticulously
locking up the great house, so much too large and
complicated for one timid couple, and Ethel standing
at the top of the stairs as he extinguished the hall-gas.
These visions of them made her feel sad sad
because Ethel could never again be that which she had
been, and because she was so young, inexperienced,
confiding, and beautiful, and would gradually grow
old and lose the ineffable grace of her years and
situation; and because they were both so innocent of
the meaning of life. Leonora yearned for some
magic to stay the destructive hand of time and keep
them ever thus, young, naïve, trustful, and unspoilt.
And knowing that this could not be, she wanted intensely
to shield, and teach, and advise them. She whispered,
thinking of Ethel: ’Ah! I must always
be near, within reach, within call, lest she should
need me.’
‘Mother, shall you go with me
to see Mr. Louis Lewis to-morrow?’ Milly demanded
suddenly when the train halted at Rugby.
‘Yes, of course, dear. Don’t you
wish me to?’
‘Oh! I don’t mind,’ said Milly
grandly.
Two well-dressed, middle-aged men
entered the compartment, which, till then, Leonora
and Milly had had to themselves; and while duly admiring
Leonora, they could not refrain from looking continually
at Millicent; they talked to one another gravely,
and they made a pretence of reading newspapers, but
their eyes always returned furtively to Milly’s
corner. The girl was not by any means confused
by the involuntary homage, which merely heightened
her restless vitality. She chattered to her mother;
she was pert; she looked out of the window; she tapped
the floor with her brown shoes. In the unconscious
process of displaying her individuality for admiration,
she was never still. The fair, pretty face under
the straw hat responded to each appreciative glance,
and beneath her fine blue coat and skirt the muscles
of the immature body and limbs played perpetually
in graceful and free movement. She was adorable;
she knew it, Leonora knew it, the two middle-aged
men knew it. Nothing no pertness,
no audacity, no silliness, no affectation could
impair the extraordinary charm. Leonora was exceedingly
proud of her daughter. And yet she reflected
impartially that Millicent was a little fool.
She trembled for Millicent; she feared to let her
out of sight; the idea of Millicent loose in the world,
with no guide but her own rashness and no protection
but her vanity, made Leonora feel sick. Nevertheless,
Millicent would soon be loose in the world, and at
the best Leonora could only stand in the background,
ready for emergency.
At Euston they were not surprised
to see Harry. The young man was more dandiacal
and correct than ever, and he could cut a figure on
the platform; but Leonora observed the pallor of his
thin cheeks and the watery redness of his eyes.
He had come to meet them, and he insisted on escorting
them to their hotel in South Kensington.
‘Look here,’ he said in
the cab, ’I’ve one dying request to make
before the luggage drops through the roof. I
want you both to come and dine with me at the Majestic
to-night, and then we’ll go to the Regency.
Lewis has given me a box. By the way, I told him
he might rely on me to take you up to see him to-morrow.’
‘Shall we, mother?’ Milly
asked carelessly; but it was obvious that she wished
to dine at the Majestic.
‘I don’t know,’
said Leonora. ’There’s Rose.
We’re going to fetch Rose from the hospital
this afternoon, Harry, and she will spend the evening
with us.’
‘Well, Rose must come too, of
course,’ Harry replied quickly, after a slight
hesitation. ‘It will do her good.’
‘We will see,’ said Leonora.
She had known Harry from his infancy, and when she
encountered him in these latter days she was always
subject to the illusion that he could not really be
a man, but was rather playing at manhood. Moreover,
she had warned Arthur Twemlow of their arrival and
expected to find a letter from him at the hotel, and
she could make no arrangements until she had seen
the letter.
They drove into the courtyard of the
select and austere establishment where John Stanway
had brought his wife on her wedding journey. Leonora
found that it had scarcely changed; the dark entrance
lounge presented the same appearance now as it had
done more than twenty years ago; it had the same air
of receiving visitors with condescension; the whole
street was the same. She grew thoughtful; and
Harry’s witticisms, as he ceremoniously superintended
their induction into the place, served only to deepen
the shadow in her heart.
‘Any letters for me?’
she asked the hall porter, loitering behind while
Millicent and Harry went into the salle a manger.
‘What name, madam? No, madam.’
But during luncheon, to which Harry
stayed, a flunkey approached bearing a telegram on
silver. ‘In a moment,’ she thought,
’I shall know when we are to meet.’
And she trembled with apprehension. The flunkey,
however, gave the telegram to Millicent, who accepted
it as though she had been accepting telegrams at the
hands of flunkeys all her life.
‘Miss Stanway,’
she smiled superiorly with her chin forward, perceiving
the look on Leonora’s face. She tore the
envelope. ’Lewis says I am to go to-day
at four, instead of to-morrow. Hooray! the sooner
it’s over, the sooner to sleep, though the harbour
bar be mo oaning. Ma, that’s
the very time you have to meet Rose at the hospital.
Harry, you shall take me.’
Leonora would have preferred that
Harry and Millicent should not go alone together to
see Mr. Louis Lewis. But she could not bring herself
to break the appointment with Rose, who was extremely
sensitive; nor could she well inform Harry, at this
stage of his close intimacy with the family, that
she no longer cared to entrust Milly to his charge.
She left the hotel before the other
two, because she had further to drive. The hansom
had scarcely got into the street when she instructed
the driver to return.
‘Of course you will settle nothing
definitely with Mr. Lewis,’ she said to Milly.
‘Tell him I wish to see him first.’
‘Oh, mother!’ the girl cried, pouting.
At the New Female and Maternity Hospital
in Lamb’s Conduit Street Leonora was shown to
a bench in the central hall and requested to sit down.
The clock over the first landing of the double staircase
indicated three minutes to four. During the drive
she had begun by expecting to meet Arthur on his way
to the hotel, and even in Piccadilly, where delays
of traffic had forced upon her attention the glittering
opulence and afternoon splendour of the London season,
she had still thought of him and of the interview
which was to pass between them. But here she
was obsessed by her immediate environment. The
approach to the hospital, through sombre squalid streets,
past narrow courts in which innumerable children tumbled
and yelled, disturbed and desolated her. It appeared
that she had entered the secret breeding-quarter of
the immense city, the obscene district where misery
teemed and generated, and where the revolting fecundity
of nature was proved amid surroundings of horror and
despair. And the hospital itself was the very
centre, the innermost temple of all this ceaseless
parturition. In a corner of the hall, near a
door, waited a small crowd of embossed women, young
and middle-aged, sad, weary, unkempt, lightly dressed
in shabby shapeless clothes, and sweltering in the
summer heat; a few had babies in their arms. In
the doorway two neatly attired youngish women, either
doctors or students, held an animated and interminable
conversation, staring absent-mindedly at the attendant
crowd. A pale nurse came hurrying from the back
of the hall and vanished through the doorway, squeezing
herself between the doctors or students, who soon
afterwards followed her, still talking; and then one
by one the embossed women began to vanish through the
doorway also. The clock gently struck four, and
Leonora, sighing, watched the hand creep to five minutes
and to ten beyond the hour. She gazed up the
well of the staircases, and in imagination saw ward
after ward, floor above floor of beds, on which lay
repulsive and piteous creatures in fear, in pain,
in exhaustion. And she thought with dismay how
many more poor immortal souls went out of that building
than ever went into it. ‘Rose is somewhere
up there,’ she reflected. At a quarter
past four a stout white-haired lady briskly descended
the stairs, and, after being accosted twice by officials,
spoke to Leonora.
’You are Mrs. Stanway?
My name is Smithson. I dare say your daughter
has mentioned it in her letters.’ The famous
dean of the hospital smiled, and paused while Leonora
responded. ‘Just at the moment,’ Miss
Smithson continued, ’dear Rosalys is engaged,
but I hope she will be down directly. We are
very, very busy. Are you making a long stay in
London, Mrs. Stanway? The season is now in full
swing, is it not?’
Leonora could find little to say to
this experienced spinster, whom she unwillingly admired
but with whom she was not in accord. Miss Smithson
uttered amiable banalities with an evident intention
to do nothing more; her demeanour was preoccupied,
and she made no further reference to Rose. Soon
a nurse respectfully called her; she hastened away
full of apologies, leaving Leonora to meditate upon
her own shortcomings as a serious person, and upon
the futility of her existence of forty-one years.
Another quarter of an hour elapsed,
and then Rose ran impetuously down the stone steps.
‘Mother, I’m so glad to
see you! Where’s Milly?’ she exclaimed
eagerly, and they kissed twice.
As she answered the greeting Leonora
noticed the lines of fatigue in Rose’s face,
the brilliancy of her eyes, the emaciation of the body
beneath her grey alpaca dress, and that air of false
serenity masking hysteric excitement which she seemed
to have noticed too in all the other officials the
doctors or students, the nurses, and even the dean.
‘Are you ready now, dear?’ she asked.
’Oh, I can’t possibly
come to-day, mother. Didn’t Miss Smithson
tell you? I’m awfully sorry I can’t.
But there’s a very important case on. I
can only stay a minute.’
‘But, my child, we have arranged
to take you to the theatre,’ Leonora was on
the point of expostulating. She checked herself,
and placidly replied: ‘I’m sorry,
too. When shall you be free?’
’Might be able to get off to-morrow.
I’ll slip out in the morning and send you a
telegram.’
’I should like you to try and
be free to-morrow, my dear. You seem as if you
needed a rest. Do you take any exercise?’
‘As much as I can.’
‘But you know, Rose ’
‘That’s all right, mater,’
Rose interrupted confidently, patting her mother’s
arm. ’We can look after ourselves here,
don’t you worry. Have you seen Mr. Twemlow
yet?’
‘Not yet. Why?’
’Nothing. But he called
to see me yesterday. We’re great friends.
I must run back now.’
Leonora departed with the girl’s
hasty kiss on her lips, realising that she had fallen
to the level of a mere episodic interest in Rose’s
life. The impassioned student of obstetrics had
disappeared up the staircase before Leonora could
reach the double-doors of the entrance. The mother
was dashed, stricken, a little humiliated. But
as she arranged the folds of her beautiful dress in
the hansom which was carrying her away from Lamb’s
Conduit Street towards South Kensington, she said to
herself firmly, ’I am not a ninny, after all,
and I know that Rose will be ill soon. And there
are things in that hospital that I could manage better.’
‘Mr. Twemlow came to see you
just after you left,’ said Harry when he restored
Milly to her mother at half-past five. ’I
asked him to join us at dinner, but he said he couldn’t.
However, he’s coming to the theatre, to our
box.’
‘You must excuse us from dining
with you to-night, Harry,’ was Leonora’s
reply. ‘We’ll meet you at the theatre.’
‘Yes, Harry,’ said Millicent
coldly. ‘We really can’t come to-day.’
‘The hand of the Lord is heavy
upon me,’ Harry murmured. And he repeated
the phrase on leaving the hotel.
Neither he nor Millicent had shown
much interest in Rose’s defection. The
dandy seemed to be relieved, and Millicent said, ’How
stupid of her!’ Milly had returned from the
visit to Mr. Louis Lewis in a state of high self-satisfaction.
Leonora was told that Mr. Lewis was simply the most
delightful and polite man that Milly had ever met;
he would be charmed to see Mrs. Stanway, and would
make an appointment. Meanwhile Milly gave her
mother to understand that the affair was practically
settled. She knew the date when the tour of Princess
Puck started, and the various towns which it would
include; and Mr. Lewis had provided her with a box
for the next afternoon at the Queen’s Theatre,
where the piece had been most successfully produced
a month ago; the music she would receive by post;
and the first rehearsal of the No. I. Company
would occur within a week or so. Millicent walked
in flowery paths. She saw herself covered with
jewels and compliments, flattered, adored, worshipped,
and leading always a life of superb luxury. And
this prophetic dream was not the conception of a credulous
fancy, but the product of the hard and calculating
shrewdness which she possessed. She was aware
of the importance of Mr. Louis Lewis, who, on behalf
of Lionel Belmont, absolutely controlled three West
End theatres; and she was also aware of the effect
which she had had upon him. She knew that in her
personality there was a mysterious something which
intoxicated, not all the men with whom she came in
contact, but most of them, and men of utterly different
sorts. She did not trouble to attempt any analysis
of that quality; she accepted it as a natural phenomenon;
and she meant to use it ruthlessly, for she was almost
incapable of pity or gratitude. It was, for instance,
her intention to drop Harry; she had no further use
for him now. She was learning to forget her childish
awe of Leonora: a very little time, and she would
implacably force her mother to recognise that even
the semblance of parental control must cease.
‘And I am to have my photograph
taken, mamma!’ she exclaimed triumphantly.
’Mr. Lewis says that Antonios in Regent Street
will be only too glad to take it for nothing.
He’s going to send them a line.’
Leonora was silent. Deep in her
heart she made a gesture of appeal to each of her
daughters to Ethel who was immersed in love,
to Rose who was absorbed by a vocation, and to this
seductive minx whose venal lips would only smile to
gain an end and each seemed to throw her
a glance indifferent or preoccupied, and to say, ’Presently,
presently. When I can spare a moment.’
And she thought bitterly how Rose had been content
to receive her mother in the public hall of the hospital.
They were late in arriving at the
theatre because the cab could not get through Piccadilly,
and Harry was impatiently expecting them in the foyer.
His brow smoothed at once when he caught sight of them,
and he admired their dresses, and escorted them up
the celebrated marble stairs with youthful pride.
‘I thought no one was going
to supervene,’ he smiled. ’I was afraid
you’d all been murdered in patent asphyxiating
hansoms. I don’t know what’s happened
to Twemlow. I must leave word with the people
here which box he’s to come to.’
‘Perhaps he won’t come,’
thought Leonora. ’Perhaps I shall not see
him till to-morrow.’
Harry’s box was exactly in the
middle of the semi-circle of boxes which surround
the balcony of the Regency Theatre. They were
ushered into it with the precautions of silence, for
the three hundred and fifty-fifth performance of The
Dolménico Doll, the unique musical comedy from
New York, had already commenced. Leonora and
Milly sat in front, and Harry drew up a chair so that
he might whisper in their ears; he was very talkative.
Leonora could see nothing clearly at first. Then
gradually the crowded auditorium arranged itself in
her mind. She perceived the semi-circle of boxes,
each exactly like their own, and each filled with
women quite as elegantly gowned as she and Millicent,
and men as dandiacal and correct as Harry; and in
the balcony and in the stalls were serried regular
rows of elaborate coiffures and shining bald heads;
and all the seats seemed to be pervaded by the glitter
of gems, the wing-like beating of fans, and the restless
curving of arms. She had not visited London for
many years, and this multitudinous and wholesale opulence
startled her. Under other circumstances she would
have enjoyed it intensely, and basked in it as a flower
in the sunshine; to-night, however, she could not
dismiss the image of Rose in the gaunt hospital in
Lamb’s Conduit Street. She knew the comparison
was crude; she assured herself that there must always
be rich and poor, idle and industrious, gay and sorrowful,
elegant and shabby, arrogant and meek; but her discomfort
none the less persisted, and she had the uneasy feeling
that the whole of civilisation was wrong, and that
Rose and the earnest ones were justified in their
scorn of such as her. And concurrently she dwelt
upon Ethel and Fred at that hour, and listened with
anxiety for the opening of the box-door and the entry
of Arthur Twemlow.
She imagined that owing to their late
arrival she must have missed the one essential clue
to the plot of The Dolménico Doll, and as the
gorgeously decorated action was developed on the dazzling
stage she tried in vain to grasp its significance.
The fall of the curtain came as a surprise to her.
The end of the first act had left her with nothing
but a confused notion of the interior of a confectioner’s
shop, and young men therein getting tipsy and stealing
kisses, and marvellously pretty girls submitting to
the robbery with a nonchalance born of three hundred
and fifty four similar experiences; and old men grotesque
in a dissolute senility; and sudden bursts of orchestral
music, and simpering ballads, and comic refrains and
crashing choruses; and lights, lingerie, picture-hats
and short skirts; and over all, dominating all, the
set, eternal, mechanical, bored smile of the pretty
girls.
‘Awfully good, isn’t it?’
said Harry, when the generous applause had ceased.
‘It’s simply lovely,’
Milly agreed, fidgeting on her chair in juvenile rapture.
‘Yes,’ Leonora admitted.
And she indeed thought that parts of it were amusing
and agreeable.
‘Of course,’ Harry remarked
hastily to Leonora, ’Princess Puck isn’t
at all like this. It’s an idyll sort of
thing, you know. By the way, hadn’t I better
go out and offer a reward for the recovery of Twemlow?’
He returned just as the curtain went
up, bringing a faint odour of whisky, but without
Twemlow.
A few moments later, while the principal
pretty girl was warbling an invitation to her lover
amid the diversions of Narragansett Pier, the latch
of the door clicked and Arthur noiselessly entered
the box. He nodded cheerfully, murmuring ‘Sorry
I’m so late,’ and then shook hands with
Leonora. She could not find her voice. In
the hazard of rearranging the seats, an operation
which Harry from diffidence conducted with a certain
clumsiness, Arthur was placed behind Milly while Leonora
had Harry by her side.
‘You’ve missed all the
first act, and everyone says it’s the best,’
Milly remarked, leaning towards Arthur with an air
of intimacy. And Harry expressed agreement.
‘But you must remember I saw
it in New York two years ago,’ Leonora heard
him whisper in reply.
She liked his avuncular, slightly
quizzical attitude to them. He reinforced the
elder generation in the box, reducing by his mere
presence the two young and callow creatures to their
proper position in the scheme of things.
And now the question of her future
relations with Arthur, which hitherto she had in a
manner shunned, at once became peremptory for Leonora.
She was conscious of a passionate tenderness for him;
he seemed to her to have qualities, indefinable and
exquisite touches of character, which she had never
observed in any other human being. But she was
in control of her heart. She had chosen, and
she knew that she could abide by her choice.
She was uplifted by the force of one of those tremendous
and invincible resolutions which women alone, with
their instinctive bent towards martyrdom, are capable
of making. And the resolution was not the fruit
of the day, the result of all that she had recently
seen and thought. It was a resolution independent
of particular circumstances, a simple admission of
the naked fact that she could not desert her daughters.
If Ethel had been shrewd and worldly, and Rose temperate
in her altruism, and Milly modest and sage, the resolution
would not have been modified. She dared not abandon
her daughters: the blood in her veins, the stern
traits inherited from her irreproachable ancestors,
forbade it. She might be convinced in argument and
she vividly remembered everything that Arthur had
said she might admit that she was wrong,
that her sacrifice would be futile, and that she was
about to be guilty of a terrible injustice to Arthur
and to herself. No matter! She would not
leave the girls. And if in thus obstinately remaining
at their service she committed a sin, she could only
ask pardon for that sin. She could only beg Arthur
to forgive her, and assure him that he would forget,
and submit to his reproaches in silence and humility.
Now and then she gazed at him, but his eyes were always
fixed on the stage, and the corners of his mouth turned
down into a slightly ironic smile. She wondered
if he expected to be able to persuade her, and whether
an opportunity to convince him and so end the crisis
would occur that evening, or whether she would be
compelled to wait through another night.
At last the adventures of the Dolménico
Doll were concluded, the naughty kisses regularised,
the old men finally befooled, the glory extinguished,
the music hushed. The audience stood up and began
to chatter, and the women curved their long arms backward
to receive white cloaks from the men. Arthur
led the way out with Milly, and as the party slowly
proceeded through the crush into the foyer, Leonora
could hear the impetuous and excited child delivering
to him her professional views on the acting and the
singing.
‘Well, Burgess,’ Arthur
said, in the portico, ’I guess we’ll see
these ladies home, eh?’ And he called to a commissionaire:
‘Say, two hansoms.’
In a minute Leonora and Arthur were
driving together along the scintillating nocturnal
thoroughfare; he had put Harry and Millicent into
the other hansom like school children. And in
the sudden privacy of the vehicle Leonora thought:
‘Now!’ She looked up at him furtively from
beneath her eyelashes. He caught the glance and
shook his head sadly.
‘Why do you shake your head?’ she timidly
began.
His kind shrewd eyes caressed her. ‘You
mustn’t look at me so,’ he said.
‘Why?’
‘I can’t stand it,’
he replied. ’It’s too much for me.
You don’t know you don’t know.
You think I’m calm enough, but I tell you the
top of my head has nearly come off to-day.’
‘But I ’
‘Listen here,’ he ran
on. ’Let me finish up. What I said
a fortnight ago was quite right. It was absolutely
unanswerable. But there was something about your
letter that upset me. I can’t tell you what
it was only it made my heart beat.
And then yesterday I happened to go and worry out
Rose at that awful hospital. And then Milly to-night!
I know how you feel. I’ve got it to the
eighth of an inch. And I’ve thought:
“Suppose I do get her to New York, and she isn’t
happy?” Well, it’s right here: I’ve
settled to sell my business over there, and fix up
in London. What do I care for New York, anyway?
I don’t care for anything so long as we can
be happy. I’ve been a bachelor too long.
And if I can be alone with you in this London, lost
in it, just you and me! Oh, well! I want
a woman to think about one woman all mine.
I’m simply mad for it. And we can only
live once. We shan’t be short of money.
Now don’t look at me any more like you did.
Say yes, and let’s begin right away and be happy.’
‘Do you really mean ?’
She was obliged thus, in weak unfinished phrases,
to gain time in order to recover from the shock.
‘I’m going to cable to-morrow
morning,’ he said, joyously. ’Not
that there’s so much hurry as all that, but
I shall feel better after I’ve cabled.
I’m silly, and I want to be silly.... I
wouldn’t live in New York for a million now.
And don’t you think we can keep an eye on Rose
and Millicent, between us?’
‘Oh, Arthur!’
She breathed a long, deep sigh, shutting
her eyes for an instant; and then the beautiful creature,
with all her elegance and her appearance of impassive
and fastidious calm, permitted herself to move infinitesimally,
but perceptibly, closer to him in the hansom; and her
spirit performed the supreme feminine act of acquiescence
and surrender. She thought passionately:
‘He has yielded to me I will be his
slave.’
‘I shall call you Leo,’
he murmured fondly. ’It occurred to me last
night.’
She smiled, as if to say: ‘How
charmingly boyish you are!’
‘And I must tell you but
see here, we shall be at your hotel too soon.’
He pushed at the trap-door. ’Say, driver,
go up Park Lane and along Oxford Street a bit.’
Then he explained to her how he had
refused Harry’s invitation to dinner, and had
arrived late at the theatre, solely that he might not
have to talk to her until they could talk in solitude.
As, later, the cab rolled swiftly
southwards through the mysterious dark avenues of
Hyde Park, Leonora had the sensation of being really
alone with him in the very heart of that luxurious,
voluptuous, and decadent civilisation for which she
had always yearned, and in which she was now to participate.
The feeling of the beauty of the world, and of its
catholicity and many-sidedness, returned to her.
She gave play to her instincts. And, revelling
in the self-confidence and the masterful ascendency
which underlay Arthur’s usual reticent demeanour,
she resumed with exquisite relief her natural supineness.
She began to depend on him. And she foresaw how
he would reason diplomatically with Rose, and watch
between Milly and Mr. Louis Lewis, and perhaps assist
Fred Ryley, and do in the best way everything that
ought to be done; and how she would reward him with
the consolations of her grace and charm, her feminine
arts, and her sweet acquiescence.
‘So you’ve come,’
exclaimed Milly, rather desolate in the drawing-room
of the hotel.
‘Yes, Miss Muffet,’ said
Arthur, ‘we’ve come. Where is the
youth?’
‘Harry? I made him go home.’
Leonora smiled indulgently at Millicent
with her pretty pouting face and her adorable artificiality,
lounging on one of the sofas in the vast garish chamber.
And her thoughts flew to Ethel, and existence in Bursley.
The Myatt family had risen, flourished, and declined.
Some of its members were dead, in honour or in dishonour;
others were scattered now. Only Ethel and Fred
remained; and these two, in the house at Hillport
(which Leonora meant to give them), were beginning
again the eternal effort, and renewing the simple
and austere traditions of the Five Towns, where luxury
was suspect and decadence unknown.