As first published in Scribner’s Magazine, July,
1891
The view from Mrs. Manstey’s
window was not a striking one, but to her at least
it was full of interest and beauty. Mrs. Manstey
occupied the back room on the third floor of a New
York boarding-house, in a street where the ash-barrels
lingered late on the sidewalk and the gaps in the
pavement would have staggered a Quintus Curtius.
She was the widow of a clerk in a large wholesale
house, and his death had left her alone, for her only
daughter had married in California, and could not afford
the long journey to New York to see her mother.
Mrs. Manstey, perhaps, might have joined her daughter
in the West, but they had now been so many years apart
that they had ceased to feel any need of each other’s
society, and their intercourse had long been limited
to the exchange of a few perfunctory letters, written
with indifference by the daughter, and with difficulty
by Mrs. Manstey, whose right hand was growing stiff
with gout. Even had she felt a stronger desire
for her daughter’s companionship, Mrs. Manstey’s
increasing infirmity, which caused her to dread the
three flights of stairs between her room and the street,
would have given her pause on the eve of undertaking
so long a journey; and without perhaps, formulating
these reasons she had long since accepted as a matter
of course her solitary life in New York.
She was, indeed, not quite lonely,
for a few friends still toiled up now and then to
her room; but their visits grew rare as the years went
by. Mrs. Manstey had never been a sociable woman,
and during her husband’s lifetime his companionship
had been all-sufficient to her. For many years
she had cherished a desire to live in the country,
to have a hen-house and a garden; but this longing
had faded with age, leaving only in the breast of
the uncommunicative old woman a vague tenderness for
plants and animals. It was, perhaps, this tenderness
which made her cling so fervently to her view from
her window, a view in which the most optimistic eye
would at first have failed to discover anything admirable.
Mrs. Manstey, from her coign of vantage
(a slightly projecting bow-window where she nursed
an ivy and a succession of unwholesome-looking bulbs),
looked out first upon the yard of her own dwelling,
of which, however, she could get but a restricted
glimpse. Still, her gaze took in the topmost
boughs of the ailanthus below her window, and she knew
how early each year the clump of dicentra strung its
bending stalk with hearts of pink.
But of greater interest were the yards
beyond. Being for the most part attached to boarding-houses
they were in a state of chronic untidiness and fluttering,
on certain days of the week, with miscellaneous garments
and frayed table-cloths. In spite of this Mrs.
Manstey found much to admire in the long vista which
she commanded. Some of the yards were, indeed,
but stony wastes, with grass in the cracks of the pavement
and no shade in spring save that afforded by the intermittent
leafage of the clothes-lines. These yards Mrs.
Manstey disapproved of, but the others, the green
ones, she loved. She had grown used to their disorder;
the broken barrels, the empty bottles and paths unswept
no longer annoyed her; hers was the happy faculty
of dwelling on the pleasanter side of the prospect
before her.
In the very next enclosure did not
a magnolia open its hard white flowers against the
watery blue of April? And was there not, a little
way down the line, a fence foamed over every May be
lilac waves of wistaria? Farther still, a horse-chestnut
lifted its candelabra of buff and pink blossoms above
broad fans of foliage; while in the opposite yard
June was sweet with the breath of a neglected syringa,
which persisted in growing in spite of the countless
obstacles opposed to its welfare.
But if nature occupied the front rank
in Mrs. Manstey’s view, there was much of a
more personal character to interest her in the aspect
of the houses and their inmates. She deeply disapproved
of the mustard-colored curtains which had lately been
hung in the doctor’s window opposite; but she
glowed with pleasure when the house farther down had
its old bricks washed with a coat of paint. The
occupants of the houses did not often show themselves
at the back windows, but the servants were always in
sight. Noisy slatterns, Mrs. Manstey pronounced
the greater number; she knew their ways and hated
them. But to the quiet cook in the newly painted
house, whose mistress bullied her, and who secretly
fed the stray cats at nightfall, Mrs. Manstey’s
warmest sympathies were given. On one occasion
her feelings were racked by the neglect of a housemaid,
who for two days forgot to feed the parrot committed
to her care. On the third day, Mrs. Manstey,
in spite of her gouty hand, had just penned a letter,
beginning: “Madam, it is now three days
since your parrot has been fed,” when the forgetful
maid appeared at the window with a cup of seed in
her hand.
But in Mrs. Manstey’s more meditative
moods it was the narrowing perspective of far-off
yards which pleased her best. She loved, at twilight,
when the distant brown-stone spire seemed melting in
the fluid yellow of the west, to lose herself in vague
memories of a trip to Europe, made years ago, and
now reduced in her mind’s eye to a pale phantasmagoria
of indistinct steeples and dreamy skies. Perhaps
at heart Mrs. Manstey was an artist; at all events
she was sensible of many changes of color unnoticed
by the average eye, and dear to her as the green of
early spring was the black lattice of branches against
a cold sulphur sky at the close of a snowy day.
She enjoyed, also, the sunny thaws of March, when
patches of earth showed through the snow, like ink-spots
spreading on a sheet of white blotting-paper; and,
better still, the haze of boughs, leafless but swollen,
which replaced the clear-cut tracery of winter.
She even watched with a certain interest the trail
of smoke from a far-off factory chimney, and missed
a detail in the landscape when the factory was closed
and the smoke disappeared.
Mrs. Manstey, in the long hours which
she spent at her window, was not idle. She read
a little, and knitted numberless stockings; but the
view surrounded and shaped her life as the sea does
a lonely island. When her rare callers came it
was difficult for her to detach herself from the contemplation
of the opposite window-washing, or the scrutiny of
certain green points in a neighboring flower-bed which
might, or might not, turn into hyacinths, while she
feigned an interest in her visitor’s anecdotes
about some unknown grandchild. Mrs. Manstey’s
real friends were the denizens of the yards, the hyacinths,
the magnolia, the green parrot, the maid who fed the
cats, the doctor who studied late behind his mustard-colored
curtains; and the confidant of her tenderer musings
was the church-spire floating in the sunset.
One April day, as she sat in her usual
place, with knitting cast aside and eyes fixed on
the blue sky mottled with round clouds, a knock at
the door announced the entrance of her landlady.
Mrs. Manstey did not care for her landlady, but she
submitted to her visits with ladylike resignation.
To-day, however, it seemed harder than usual to turn
from the blue sky and the blossoming magnolia to Mrs.
Sampson’s unsuggestive face, and Mrs. Manstey
was conscious of a distinct effort as she did so.
“The magnolia is out earlier
than usual this year, Mrs. Sampson,” she remarked,
yielding to a rare impulse, for she seldom alluded
to the absorbing interest of her life. In the
first place it was a topic not likely to appeal to
her visitors and, besides, she lacked the power of
expression and could not have given utterance to her
feelings had she wished to.
“The what, Mrs. Manstey?”
inquired the landlady, glancing about the room as
if to find there the explanation of Mrs. Manstey’s
statement.
“The magnolia in the next yard in
Mrs. Black’s yard,” Mrs. Manstey repeated.
“Is it, indeed? I didn’t
know there was a magnolia there,” said Mrs.
Sampson, carelessly. Mrs. Manstey looked at her;
she did not know that there was a magnolia in the
next yard!
“By the way,” Mrs. Sampson
continued, “speaking of Mrs. Black reminds me
that the work on the extension is to begin next week.”
“The what?” it was Mrs. Manstey’s
turn to ask.
“The extension,” said
Mrs. Sampson, nodding her head in the direction of
the ignored magnolia. “You knew, of course,
that Mrs. Black was going to build an extension to
her house? Yes, ma’am. I hear it is
to run right back to the end of the yard. How
she can afford to build an extension in these hard
times I don’t see; but she always was crazy about
building. She used to keep a boarding-house in
Seventeenth Street, and she nearly ruined herself
then by sticking out bow-windows and what not; I should
have thought that would have cured her of building,
but I guess it’s a disease, like drink.
Anyhow, the work is to begin on Monday.”
Mrs. Manstey had grown pale.
She always spoke slowly, so the landlady did not heed
the long pause which followed. At last Mrs. Manstey
said: “Do you know how high the extension
will be?”
“That’s the most absurd
part of it. The extension is to be built right
up to the roof of the main building; now, did you ever?”
Mrs. Manstey paused again. “Won’t
it be a great annoyance to you, Mrs. Sampson?”
she asked.
“I should say it would.
But there’s no help for it; if people have got
a mind to build extensions there’s no law to
prevent ’em, that I’m aware of.”
Mrs. Manstey, knowing this, was silent. “There
is no help for it,” Mrs. Sampson repeated, “but
if I am a church member, I wouldn’t be so
sorry if it ruined Eliza Black. Well, good-day,
Mrs. Manstey; I’m glad to find you so comfortable.”
So comfortable so comfortable!
Left to herself the old woman turned once more to
the window. How lovely the view was that day!
The blue sky with its round clouds shed a brightness
over everything; the ailanthus had put on a tinge
of yellow-green, the hyacinths were budding, the magnolia
flowers looked more than ever like rosettes carved
in alabaster. Soon the wistaria would bloom,
then the horse-chestnut; but not for her. Between
her eyes and them a barrier of brick and mortar would
swiftly rise; presently even the spire would disappear,
and all her radiant world be blotted out. Mrs.
Manstey sent away untouched the dinner-tray brought
to her that evening. She lingered in the window
until the windy sunset died in bat-colored dusk; then,
going to bed, she lay sleepless all night.
Early the next day she was up and
at the window. It was raining, but even through
the slanting gray gauze the scene had its charm and
then the rain was so good for the trees. She
had noticed the day before that the ailanthus was
growing dusty.
“Of course I might move,”
said Mrs. Manstey aloud, and turning from the window
she looked about her room. She might move, of
course; so might she be flayed alive; but she was
not likely to survive either operation. The room,
though far less important to her happiness than the
view, was as much a part of her existence. She
had lived in it seventeen years. She knew every
stain on the wall-paper, every rent in the carpet;
the light fell in a certain way on her engravings,
her books had grown shabby on their shelves, her bulbs
and ivy were used to their window and knew which way
to lean to the sun. “We are all too old
to move,” she said.
That afternoon it cleared. Wet
and radiant the blue reappeared through torn rags
of cloud; the ailanthus sparkled; the earth in the
flower-borders looked rich and warm. It was Thursday,
and on Monday the building of the extension was to
begin.
On Sunday afternoon a card was brought
to Mrs. Black, as she was engaged in gathering up
the fragments of the boarders’ dinner in the
basement. The card, black-edged, bore Mrs. Manstey’s
name.
“One of Mrs. Sampson’s
boarders; wants to move, I suppose. Well, I can
give her a room next year in the extension. Dinah,”
said Mrs. Black, “tell the lady I’ll be
upstairs in a minute.”
Mrs. Black found Mrs. Manstey standing
in the long parlor garnished with statuettes
and antimacassars; in that house she could not sit
down.
Stooping hurriedly to open the register,
which let out a cloud of dust, Mrs. Black advanced
on her visitor.
“I’m happy to meet you,
Mrs. Manstey; take a seat, please,” the landlady
remarked in her prosperous voice, the voice of a woman
who can afford to build extensions. There was
no help for it; Mrs. Manstey sat down.
“Is there anything I can do
for you, ma’am?” Mrs. Black continued.
“My house is full at present, but I am going
to build an extension, and ”
“It is about the extension that
I wish to speak,” said Mrs. Manstey, suddenly.
“I am a poor woman, Mrs. Black, and I have never
been a happy one. I shall have to talk about
myself first to to make you understand.”
Mrs. Black, astonished but imperturbable,
bowed at this parenthesis.
“I never had what I wanted,”
Mrs. Manstey continued. “It was always one
disappointment after another. For years I wanted
to live in the country. I dreamed and dreamed
about it; but we never could manage it. There
was no sunny window in our house, and so all my plants
died. My daughter married years ago and went
away besides, she never cared for the same
things. Then my husband died and I was left alone.
That was seventeen years ago. I went to live
at Mrs. Sampson’s, and I have been there ever
since. I have grown a little infirm, as you see,
and I don’t get out often; only on fine days,
if I am feeling very well. So you can understand
my sitting a great deal in my window the
back window on the third floor ”
“Well, Mrs. Manstey,”
said Mrs. Black, liberally, “I could give you
a back room, I dare say; one of the new rooms in the
ex ”
“But I don’t want to move;
I can’t move,” said Mrs. Manstey, almost
with a scream. “And I came to tell you
that if you build that extension I shall have no view
from my window no view! Do you understand?”
Mrs. Black thought herself face to
face with a lunatic, and she had always heard that
lunatics must be humored.
“Dear me, dear me,” she
remarked, pushing her chair back a little way, “that
is too bad, isn’t it? Why, I never thought
of that. To be sure, the extension will
interfere with your view, Mrs. Manstey.”
“You do understand?” Mrs. Manstey gasped.
“Of course I do. And I’m
real sorry about it, too. But there, don’t
you worry, Mrs. Manstey. I guess we can fix that
all right.”
Mrs. Manstey rose from her seat, and
Mrs. Black slipped toward the door.
“What do you mean by fixing
it? Do you mean that I can induce you to change
your mind about the extension? Oh, Mrs. Black,
listen to me. I have two thousand dollars in
the bank and I could manage, I know I could manage,
to give you a thousand if ” Mrs. Manstey
paused; the tears were rolling down her cheeks.
“There, there, Mrs. Manstey,
don’t you worry,” repeated Mrs. Black,
soothingly. “I am sure we can settle it.
I am sorry that I can’t stay and talk about
it any longer, but this is such a busy time of day,
with supper to get ”
Her hand was on the door-knob, but
with sudden vigor Mrs. Manstey seized her wrist.
“You are not giving me a definite
answer. Do you mean to say that you accept my
proposition?”
“Why, I’ll think it over,
Mrs. Manstey, certainly I will. I wouldn’t
annoy you for the world ”
“But the work is to begin to-morrow,
I am told,” Mrs. Manstey persisted.
Mrs. Black hesitated. “It
shan’t begin, I promise you that; I’ll
send word to the builder this very night.”
Mrs. Manstey tightened her hold.
“You are not deceiving me, are you?” she
said.
“No no,” stammered
Mrs. Black. “How can you think such a thing
of me, Mrs. Manstey?”
Slowly Mrs. Manstey’s clutch
relaxed, and she passed through the open door.
“One thousand dollars,” she repeated, pausing
in the hall; then she let herself out of the house
and hobbled down the steps, supporting herself on
the cast-iron railing.
“My goodness,” exclaimed
Mrs. Black, shutting and bolting the hall-door, “I
never knew the old woman was crazy! And she looks
so quiet and ladylike, too.”
Mrs. Manstey slept well that night,
but early the next morning she was awakened by a sound
of hammering. She got to her window with what
haste she might and, looking out saw that Mrs. Black’s
yard was full of workmen. Some were carrying
loads of brick from the kitchen to the yard, others
beginning to demolish the old-fashioned wooden balcony
which adorned each story of Mrs. Black’s house.
Mrs. Manstey saw that she had been deceived.
At first she thought of confiding her trouble to Mrs.
Sampson, but a settled discouragement soon took possession
of her and she went back to bed, not caring to see
what was going on.
Toward afternoon, however, feeling
that she must know the worst, she rose and dressed
herself. It was a laborious task, for her hands
were stiffer than usual, and the hooks and buttons
seemed to evade her.
When she seated herself in the window,
she saw that the workmen had removed the upper part
of the balcony, and that the bricks had multiplied
since morning. One of the men, a coarse fellow
with a bloated face, picked a magnolia blossom and,
after smelling it, threw it to the ground; the next
man, carrying a load of bricks, trod on the flower
in passing.
“Look out, Jim,” called
one of the men to another who was smoking a pipe,
“if you throw matches around near those barrels
of paper you’ll have the old tinder-box burning
down before you know it.” And Mrs. Manstey,
leaning forward, perceived that there were several
barrels of paper and rubbish under the wooden balcony.
At length the work ceased and twilight
fell. The sunset was perfect and a roseate light,
transfiguring the distant spire, lingered late in the
west. When it grew dark Mrs. Manstey drew down
the shades and proceeded, in her usual methodical
manner, to light her lamp. She always filled
and lit it with her own hands, keeping a kettle of
kerosene on a zinc-covered shelf in a closet.
As the lamp-light filled the room it assumed its usual
peaceful aspect. The books and pictures and plants
seemed, like their mistress, to settle themselves down
for another quiet evening, and Mrs. Manstey, as was
her wont, drew up her armchair to the table and began
to knit.
That night she could not sleep.
The weather had changed and a wild wind was abroad,
blotting the stars with close-driven clouds. Mrs.
Manstey rose once or twice and looked out of the window;
but of the view nothing was discernible save a tardy
light or two in the opposite windows. These lights
at last went out, and Mrs. Manstey, who had watched
for their extinction, began to dress herself.
She was in evident haste, for she merely flung a thin
dressing-gown over her night-dress and wrapped her
head in a scarf; then she opened her closet and cautiously
took out the kettle of kerosene. Having slipped
a bundle of wooden matches into her pocket she proceeded,
with increasing precautions, to unlock her door, and
a few moments later she was feeling her way down the
dark staircase, led by a glimmer of gas from the lower
hall. At length she reached the bottom of the
stairs and began the more difficult descent into the
utter darkness of the basement. Here, however,
she could move more freely, as there was less danger
of being overheard; and without much delay she contrived
to unlock the iron door leading into the yard.
A gust of cold wind smote her as she stepped out and
groped shiveringly under the clothes-lines.
That morning at three o’clock
an alarm of fire brought the engines to Mrs. Black’s
door, and also brought Mrs. Sampson’s startled
boarders to their windows. The wooden balcony
at the back of Mrs. Black’s house was ablaze,
and among those who watched the progress of the flames
was Mrs. Manstey, leaning in her thin dressing-gown
from the open window.
The fire, however, was soon put out,
and the frightened occupants of the house, who had
fled in scant attire, reassembled at dawn to find that
little mischief had been done beyond the cracking of
window panes and smoking of ceilings. In fact,
the chief sufferer by the fire was Mrs. Manstey, who
was found in the morning gasping with pneumonia, a
not unnatural result, as everyone remarked, of her
having hung out of an open window at her age in a
dressing-gown. It was easy to see that she was
very ill, but no one had guessed how grave the doctor’s
verdict would be, and the faces gathered that evening
about Mrs. Sampson’s table were awestruck and
disturbed. Not that any of the boarders knew Mrs.
Manstey well; she “kept to herself,” as
they said, and seemed to fancy herself too good for
them; but then it is always disagreeable to have anyone
dying in the house and, as one lady observed to another:
“It might just as well have been you or me,
my dear.”
But it was only Mrs. Manstey; and
she was dying, as she had lived, lonely if not alone.
The doctor had sent a trained nurse, and Mrs. Sampson,
with muffled step, came in from time to time; but both,
to Mrs. Manstey, seemed remote and unsubstantial as
the figures in a dream. All day she said nothing;
but when she was asked for her daughter’s address
she shook her head. At times the nurse noticed
that she seemed to be listening attentively for some
sound which did not come; then again she dozed.
The next morning at daylight she was
very low. The nurse called Mrs. Sampson and as
the two bent over the old woman they saw her lips move.
“Lift me up out of bed,” she
whispered.
They raised her in their arms, and
with her stiff hand she pointed to the window.
“Oh, the window she
wants to sit in the window. She used to sit there
all day,” Mrs. Sampson explained. “It
can do her no harm, I suppose?”
“Nothing matters now,” said the nurse.
They carried Mrs. Manstey to the window
and placed her in her chair. The dawn was abroad,
a jubilant spring dawn; the spire had already caught
a golden ray, though the magnolia and horse-chestnut
still slumbered in shadow. In Mrs. Black’s
yard all was quiet. The charred timbers of the
balcony lay where they had fallen. It was evident
that since the fire the builders had not returned
to their work. The magnolia had unfolded a few
more sculptural flowers; the view was undisturbed.
It was hard for Mrs. Manstey to breathe;
each moment it grew more difficult. She tried
to make them open the window, but they would not understand.
If she could have tasted the air, sweet with the penetrating
ailanthus savor, it would have eased her; but the view
at least was there the spire was golden
now, the heavens had warmed from pearl to blue, day
was alight from east to west, even the magnolia had
caught the sun.
Mrs. Manstey’s head fell back and smiling she
died.
That day the building of the extension was resumed.