The odd thing is that what sticks
out in my recollection of the rest of that evening
was Leonora’s saying:
“Of course you might marry her,”
and, when I asked whom, she answered:
“The girl.”
Now that is to me a very amazing thing-amazing
for the light of possibilities that it casts into
the human heart. For I had never had the slightest
conscious idea of marrying the girl; I never had the
slightest idea even of caring for her. I must
have talked in an odd way, as people do who are recovering
from an anæsthetic. It is as if one had a dual
personality, the one I being entirely unconscious of
the other. I had thought nothing; I had said
such an extraordinary thing. I don’t know
that analysis of my own psychology matters at all to
this story. I should say that it didn’t
or, at any rate, that I had given enough of it.
But that odd remark of mine had a strong influence
upon what came after. I mean, that Leonora would
probably never have spoken to me at all about Florence’s
relations with Edward if I hadn’t said, two hours
after my wife’s death:
“Now I can marry the girl.”
She had, then, taken it for granted
that I had been suffering all that she had been suffering,
or, at least, that I had permitted all that she had
permitted. So that, a month ago, about a week
after the funeral of poor Edward, she could say to
me in the most natural way in the world-I
had been talking about the duration of my stay at Branshaw-she
said with her clear, reflective intonation:
“Oh, stop here for ever and
ever if you can.” And then she added, “You
couldn’t be more of a brother to me, or more
of a counsellor, or more of a support. You are
all the consolation I have in the world. And isn’t
it odd to think that if your wife hadn’t been
my husband’s mistress, you would probably never
have been here at all?”
That was how I got the news-full
in the face, like that. I didn’t say anything
and I don’t suppose I felt anything, unless maybe
it was with that mysterious and unconscious self that
underlies most people. Perhaps one day when I
am unconscious or walking in my sleep I may go and
spit upon poor Edward’s grave. It seems
about the most unlikely thing I could do; but there
it is. No, I remember no emotion of any sort,
but just the clear feeling that one has from time
to time when one hears that some Mrs So-and-So is
au mieux with a certain gentleman. It
made things plainer, suddenly, to my curiosity.
It was as if I thought, at that moment, of a windy
November evening, that, when I came to think it over
afterwards, a dozen unexplained things would fit themselves
into place. But I wasn’t thinking things
over then. I remember that distinctly. I
was just sitting back, rather stiffly, in a deep arm-chair.
That is what I remember. It was twilight.
Branshaw Manor lies in a little hollow
with lawns across it and pine-woods on the fringe
of the dip. The immense wind, coming from across
the forest, roared overhead. But the view from
the window was perfectly quiet and grey. Not
a thing stirred, except a couple of rabbits on the
extreme edge of the lawn. It was Leonora’s
own little study that we were in and we were waiting
for the tea to be brought. I, as I said, was
sitting in the deep chair, Leonora was standing in
the window twirling the wooden acorn at the end of
the window-blind cord desultorily round and round.
She looked across the lawn and said, as far as I can
remember:
“Edward has been dead only ten
days and yet there are rabbits on the lawn.”
I understand that rabbits do a great
deal of harm to the short grass in England. And
then she turned round to me and said without any adornment
at all, for I remember her exact words:
“I think it was stupid of Florence to commit
suicide.”
I cannot tell you the extraordinary
sense of leisure that we two seemed to have at that
moment. It wasn’t as if we were waiting
for a train, it wasn’t as if we were waiting
for a meal-it was just that there was nothing
to wait for. Nothing. There was an extreme
stillness with the remote and intermittent sound of
the wind. There was the grey light in that brown,
small room. And there appeared to be nothing else
in the world. I knew then that Leonora was about
to let me into her full confidence. It was as
if-or no, it was the actual fact that-Leonora
with an odd English sense of decency had determined
to wait until Edward had been in his grave for a full
week before she spoke. And with some vague motive
of giving her an idea of the extent to which she must
permit herself to make confidences, I said slowly-and
these words too I remember with exactitude-“Did
Florence commit suicide? I didn’t know.”
I was just, you understand, trying
to let her know that, if she were going to speak she
would have to talk about a much wider range of things
than she had before thought necessary.
So that that was the first knowledge
I had that Florence had committed suicide. It
had never entered my head. You may think that
I had been singularly lacking in suspiciousness; you
may consider me even to have been an imbecile.
But consider the position.
In such circumstances of clamour,
of outcry, of the crash of many people running together,
of the professional reticence of such people as hotel-keepers,
the traditional reticence of such “good people”
as the Ashburnhams-in such circumstances
it is some little material object, always, that catches
the eye and that appeals to the imagination. I
had no possible guide to the idea of suicide and the
sight of the little flask of nitrate of amyl in Florence’s
hand suggested instantly to my mind the idea of the
failure of her heart. Nitrate of amyl, you understand,
is the drug that is given to relieve sufferers from
angina pectoris.
Seeing Florence, as I had seen her,
running with a white face and with one hand held over
her heart, and seeing her, as I immediately afterwards
saw her, lying upon her bed with the so familiar little
brown flask clenched in her fingers, it was natural
enough for my mind to frame the idea. As happened
now and again, I thought, she had gone out without
her remedy and, having felt an attack coming on whilst
she was in the gardens, she had run in to get the
nitrate in order, as quickly as possible, to obtain
relief. And it was equally inevitable my mind
should frame the thought that her heart, unable to
stand the strain of the running, should have broken
in her side. How could I have known that, during
all the years of our married life, that little brown
flask had contained, not nitrate of amyl, but prussic
acid? It was inconceivable.
Why, not even Edward Ashburnham, who
was, after all more intimate with her than I was,
had an inkling of the truth. He just thought that
she had dropped dead of heart disease. Indeed,
I fancy that the only people who ever knew that Florence
had committed suicide were Leonora, the Grand Duke,
the head of the police and the hotel-keeper. I
mention these last three because my recollection of
that night is only the sort of pinkish effulgence
from the electric-lamps in the hotel lounge. There
seemed to bob into my consciousness, like floating
globes, the faces of those three. Now it would
be the bearded, monarchical, benevolent head of the
Grand Duke; then the sharp-featured, brown, cavalry-moustached
feature of the chief of police; then the globular,
polished and high-collared vacuousness that represented
Monsieur Schontz, the proprietor of the hotel.
At times one head would be there alone, at another
the spiked helmet of the official would be close to
the healthy baldness of the prince; then M. Schontz’s
oiled locks would push in between the two. The
sovereign’s soft, exquisitely trained voice would
say, “Ja, ja, ja!” each
word dropping out like so many soft pellets of suet;
the subdued rasp of the official would come: “Zum
Befehl Durchlaucht,” like five revolver-shots;
the voice of M. Schontz would go on and on under its
breath like that of an unclean priest reciting from
his breviary in the corner of a railway-carriage.
That was how it presented itself to me.
They seemed to take no notice of me;
I don’t suppose that I was even addressed by
one of them. But, as long as one or the other,
or all three of them were there, they stood between
me as if, I being the titular possessor of the corpse,
had a right to be present at their conferences.
Then they all went away and I was left alone for a
long time.
And I thought nothing; absolutely
nothing. I had no ideas; I had no strength.
I felt no sorrow, no desire for action, no inclination
to go upstairs and fall upon the body of my wife.
I just saw the pink effulgence, the cane tables, the
palms, the globular match-holders, the indented ash-trays.
And then Leonora came to me and it appears that I
addressed to her that singular remark:
“Now I can marry the girl.”
But I have given you absolutely the
whole of my recollection of that evening, as it is
the whole of my recollection of the succeeding three
or four days. I was in a state just simply cataleptic.
They put me to bed and I stayed there; they brought
me my clothes and I dressed; they led me to an open
grave and I stood beside it. If they had taken
me to the edge of a river, or if they had flung me
beneath a railway train, I should have been drowned
or mangled in the same spirit. I was the walking
dead.
Well, those are my impressions.
What had actually happened had been
this. I pieced it together afterwards. You
will remember I said that Edward Ashburnham and the
girl had gone off, that night, to a concert at the
Casino and that Leonora had asked Florence, almost
immediately after their departure, to follow them
and to perform the office of chaperone. Florence,
you may also remember, was all in black, being the
mourning that she wore for a deceased cousin, Jean
Hurlbird. It was a very black night and the girl
was dressed in cream-coloured muslin, that must have
glimmered under the tall trees of the dark park like
a phosphorescent fish in a cupboard. You couldn’t
have had a better beacon.
And it appears that Edward Ashburnham
led the girl not up the straight allée that leads
to the Casino, but in under the dark trees of the park.
Edward Ashburnham told me all this in his final outburst.
I have told you that, upon that occasion, he became
deucedly vocal. I didn’t pump him.
I hadn’t any motive. At that time I didn’t
in the least connect him with my wife. But the
fellow talked like a cheap novelist.-Or
like a very good novelist for the matter of that,
if it’s the business of a novelist to make you
see things clearly. And I tell you I see that
thing as clearly as if it were a dream that never
left me. It appears that, not very far from the
Casino, he and the girl sat down in the darkness upon
a public bench. The lights from that place of
entertainment must have reached them through the tree-trunks,
since, Edward said, he could quite plainly see the
girl’s face-that beloved face with
the high forehead, the queer mouth, the tortured eyebrows,
and the direct eyes. And to Florence, creeping
up behind them, they must have presented the appearance
of silhouettes. For I take it that Florence came
creeping up behind them over the short grass to a
tree that, I quite well remember, was immediately
behind that public seat. It was not a very difficult
feat for a woman instinct with jealousy. The Casino
orchestra was, as Edward remembered to tell me, playing
the Rakocsy march, and although it was not loud enough,
at that distance, to drown the voice of Edward Ashburnham
it was certainly sufficiently audible to efface, amongst
the noises of the night, the slight brushings
and rustlings that might have been made by the feet
of Florence or by her gown in coming over the short
grass. And that miserable woman must have got
it in the face, good and strong. It must have
been horrible for her. Horrible! Well, I
suppose she deserved all that she got.
Anyhow, there you have the picture,
the immensely tall trees, elms most of them, towering
and feathering away up into the black mistiness that
trees seem to gather about them at night; the silhouettes
of those two upon the seat; the beams of light coming
from the Casino, the woman all in black peeping with
fear behind the tree-trunk. It is melodrama; but
I can’t help it.
And then, it appears, something happened
to Edward Ashburnham. He assured me-and
I see no reason for disbelieving him-that
until that moment he had had no idea whatever of caring
for the girl. He said that he had regarded her
exactly as he would have regarded a daughter.
He certainly loved her, but with a very deep, very
tender and very tranquil love. He had missed
her when she went away to her convent-school; he had
been glad when she had returned. But of more than
that he had been totally unconscious. Had he
been conscious of it, he assured me, he would have
fled from it as from a thing accursed. He realized
that it was the last outrage upon Leonora. But
the real point was his entire unconsciousness.
He had gone with her into that dark park with no quickening
of the pulse, with no desire for the intimacy of solitude.
He had gone, intending to talk about polo-ponies, and
tennis-racquets; about the temperament of the reverend
Mother at the convent she had left and about whether
her frock for a party when they got home should be
white or blue. It hadn’t come into his head
that they would talk about a single thing that they
hadn’t always talked about; it had not even
come into his head that the tabu which extended around
her was not inviolable. And then, suddenly, that-He
was very careful to assure me that at that time there
was no physical motive about his declaration.
It did not appear to him to be a matter of a dark
night and a propinquity and so on. No, it was
simply of her effect on the moral side of his life
that he appears to have talked. He said that he
never had the slightest notion to enfold her in his
arms or so much as to touch her hand. He swore
that he did not touch her hand. He said that they
sat, she at one end of the bench, he at the other;
he leaning slightly towards her and she looking straight
towards the light of the Casino, her face illuminated
by the lamps. The expression upon her face he
could only describe as “queer”. At
another time, indeed, he made it appear that he thought
she was glad. It is easy to imagine that she was
glad, since at that time she could have had no idea
of what was really happening. Frankly, she adored
Edward Ashburnham. He was for her, in everything
that she said at that time, the model of humanity,
the hero, the athlete, the father of his country,
the law-giver. So that for her, to be suddenly,
intimately and overwhelmingly praised must have been
a matter for mere gladness, however overwhelming it
were. It must have been as if a god had approved
her handiwork or a king her loyalty. She just
sat still and listened, smiling. And it seemed
to her that all the bitterness of her childhood, the
terrors of her tempestuous father, the bewailings
of her cruel-tongued mother were suddenly atoned for.
She had her recompense at last. Because, of course,
if you come to figure it out, a sudden pouring forth
of passion by a man whom you regard as a cross between
a pastor and a father might, to a woman, have the aspect
of mere praise for good conduct. It wouldn’t,
I mean, appear at all in the light of an attempt to
gain possession. The girl, at least, regarded
him as firmly anchored to his Leonora. She had
not the slightest inkling of any infidelities.
He had always spoken to her of his wife in terms of
reverence and deep affection. He had given her
the idea that he regarded Leonora as absolutely impeccable
and as absolutely satisfying. Their union had
appeared to her to be one of those blessed things that
are spoken of and contemplated with reverence by her
church.
So that, when he spoke of her as being
the person he cared most for in the world, she naturally
thought that he meant to except Leonora and she was
just glad. It was like a father saying that he
approved of a marriageable daughter... And Edward,
when he realized what he was doing, curbed his tongue
at once. She was just glad and she went on being
just glad.
I suppose that that was the most monstrously
wicked thing that Edward Ashburnham ever did in his
life. And yet I am so near to all these people
that I cannot think any of them wicked. It is
impossible of me to think of Edward Ashburnham as
anything but straight, upright and honourable.
That, I mean, is, in spite of everything, my permanent
view of him. I try at times by dwelling on some
of the things that he did to push that image of him
away, as you might try to push aside a large pendulum.
But it always comes back-the memory of his
innumerable acts of kindness, of his efficiency, of
his unspiteful tongue. He was such a fine fellow.
So I feel myself forced to attempt
to excuse him in this as in so many other things.
It is, I have no doubt, a most monstrous thing to attempt
to corrupt a young girl just out of a convent.
But I think Edward had no idea at all of corrupting
her. I believe that he simply loved her.
He said that that was the way of it and I, at least,
believe him and I believe too that she was the only
woman he ever really loved. He said that that
was so; and he did enough to prove it. And Leonora
said that it was so and Leonora knew him to the bottom
of his heart.
I have come to be very much of a cynic
in these matters; I mean that it is impossible to
believe in the permanence of man’s or woman’s
love. Or, at any rate, it is impossible to believe
in the permanence of any early passion. As I
see it, at least, with regard to man, a love affair,
a love for any definite woman-is something
in the nature of a widening of the experience.
With each new woman that a man is attracted to there
appears to come a broadening of the outlook, or, if
you like, an acquiring of new territory. A turn
of the eyebrow, a tone of the voice, a queer characteristic
gesture-all these things, and it is these
things that cause to arise the passion of love-all
these things are like so many objects on the horizon
of the landscape that tempt a man to walk beyond the
horizon, to explore. He wants to get, as it were,
behind those eyebrows with the peculiar turn, as if
he desired to see the world with the eyes that they
overshadow. He wants to hear that voice applying
itself to every possible proposition, to every possible
topic; he wants to see those characteristic gestures
against every possible background. Of the question
of the sex-instinct I know very little and I do not
think that it counts for very much in a really great
passion. It can be aroused by such nothings-by
an untied shoelace, by a glance of the eye in passing-that
I think it might be left out of the calculation.
I don’t mean to say that any great passion can
exist without a desire for consummation. That
seems to me to be a commonplace and to be therefore
a matter needing no comment at all. It is a thing,
with all its accidents, that must be taken for granted,
as, in a novel, or a biography, you take it for granted
that the characters have their meals with some regularity.
But the real fierceness of desire, the real heat of
a passion long continued and withering up the soul
of a man is the craving for identity with the woman
that he loves. He desires to see with the same
eyes, to touch with the same sense of touch, to hear
with the same ears, to lose his identity, to be enveloped,
to be supported. For, whatever may be said of
the relation of the sexes, there is no man who loves
a woman that does not desire to come to her for the
renewal of his courage, for the cutting asunder of
his difficulties. And that will be the mainspring
of his desire for her. We are all so afraid, we
are all so alone, we all so need from the outside
the assurance of our own worthiness to exist.
So, for a time, if such a passion come to fruition,
the man will get what he wants. He will get the
moral support, the encouragement, the relief from
the sense of loneliness, the assurance of his own
worth. But these things pass away; inevitably
they pass away as the shadows pass across sundials.
It is sad, but it is so. The pages of the book
will become familiar; the beautiful corner of the road
will have been turned too many times. Well, this
is the saddest story. And yet I do believe that
for every man there comes at last a woman-or
no, that is the wrong way of formulating it.
For every man there comes at last a time of life when
the woman who then sets her seal upon his imagination
has set her seal for good. He will travel over
no more horizons; he will never again set the knapsack
over his shoulders; he will retire from those scenes.
He will have gone out of the business. That at
any rate was the case with Edward and the poor girl.
It was quite literally the case. It was quite
literally the case that his passions-for
the mistress of the Grand Duke, for Mrs Basil, for
little Mrs Maidan, for Florence, for whom you will-these
passions were merely preliminary canters compared
to his final race with death for her. I am certain
of that. I am not going to be so American as to
say that all true love demands some sacrifice.
It doesn’t. But I think that love will
be truer and more permanent in which self-sacrifice
has been exacted. And, in the case of the other
women, Edward just cut in and cut them out as he did
with the polo-ball from under the nose of Count Baron
von Leloeffel. I don’t mean to say that
he didn’t wear himself as thin as a lath in
the endeavour to capture the other women; but over
her he wore himself to rags and tatters and death-in
the effort to leave her alone.
And, in speaking to her on that night,
he wasn’t, I am convinced, committing a baseness.
It was as if his passion for her hadn’t existed;
as if the very words that he spoke, without knowing
that he spoke them, created the passion as they went
along. Before he spoke, there was nothing; afterwards,
it was the integral fact of his life. Well, I
must get back to my story.
And my story was concerning itself
with Florence-with Florence, who heard
those words from behind the tree. That of course
is only conjecture, but I think the conjecture is
pretty well justified. You have the fact that
those two went out, that she followed them almost
immediately afterwards through the darkness and, a
little later, she came running back to the hotel with
that pallid face and the hand clutching her dress
over her heart. It can’t have been only
Bagshawe. Her face was contorted with agony before
ever her eyes fell upon me or upon him beside me.
But I dare say Bagshawe may have been the determining
influence in her suicide. Leonora says that she
had that flask, apparently of nitrate of amyl, but
actually of prussic acid, for many years and that
she was determined to use it if ever I discovered
the nature of her relationship with that fellow Jimmy.
You see, the mainspring of her nature must have been
vanity. There is no reason why it shouldn’t
have been; I guess it is vanity that makes most of
us keep straight, if we do keep straight, in this
world.
If it had been merely a matter of
Edward’s relations with the girl I dare say
Florence would have faced it out. She would no
doubt have made him scenes, have threatened him, have
appealed to his sense of humour, to his promises.
But Mr Bagshawe and the fact that the date was the
4th of August must have been too much for her superstitious
mind. You see, she had two things that she wanted.
She wanted to be a great lady, installed in Branshaw
Teleragh. She wanted also to retain my respect.
She wanted, that is to say, to retain
my respect for as long as she lived with me.
I suppose, if she had persuaded Edward Ashburnham to
bolt with her she would have let the whole thing go
with a run. Or perhaps she would have tried to
exact from me a new respect for the greatness of her
passion on the lines of all for love and the world
well lost. That would be just like Florence.
In all matrimonial associations there
is, I believe, one constant factor-a desire
to deceive the person with whom one lives as to some
weak spot in one’s character or in one’s
career. For it is intolerable to live constantly
with one human being who perceives one’s small
meannesses. It is really death to do so-that
is why so many marriages turn out unhappily.
I, for instance, am a rather greedy
man; I have a taste for good cookery and a watering
tooth at the mere sound of the names of certain comestibles.
If Florence had discovered this secret of mine I should
have found her knowledge of it so unbearable that I
never could have supported all the other privations
of the regime that she extracted from me. I am
bound to say that Florence never discovered this secret.
Certainly she never alluded to it;
I dare say she never took sufficient interest in me.
And the secret weakness of Florence-the
weakness that she could not bear to have me discover,
was just that early escapade with the fellow called
Jimmy. Let me, as this is in all probability the
last time I shall mention Florence’s name, dwell
a little upon the change that had taken place in her
psychology. She would not, I mean, have minded
if I had discovered that she was the mistress of Edward
Ashburnham. She would rather have liked it.
Indeed, the chief trouble of poor Leonora in those
days was to keep Florence from making, before me, theatrical
displays, on one line or another, of that very fact.
She wanted, in one mood, to come rushing to me, to
cast herself on her knees at my feet and to declaim
a carefully arranged, frightfully emotional, outpouring
as to her passion. That was to show that she
was like one of the great erotic women of whom history
tells us. In another mood she would desire to
come to me disdainfully and to tell me that I was
considerably less than a man and that what had happened
was what must happen when a real male came along.
She wanted to say that in cool, balanced and sarcastic
sentences. That was when she wished to appear
like the heroine of a French comedy. Because
of course she was always play acting.
But what she didn’t want me
to know was the fact of her first escapade with the
fellow called Jimmy. She had arrived at figuring
out the sort of low-down Bowery tough that that fellow
was. Do you know what it is to shudder, in later
life, for some small, stupid action-usually
for some small, quite genuine piece of emotionalism-of
your early life? Well, it was that sort of shuddering
that came over Florence at the thought that she had
surrendered to such a low fellow. I don’t
know that she need have shuddered. It was her
footling old uncle’s work; he ought never to
have taken those two round the world together and shut
himself up in his cabin for the greater part of the
time. Anyhow, I am convinced that the sight of
Mr Bagshawe and the thought that Mr Bagshawe-for
she knew that unpleasant and toadlike personality-the
thought that Mr Bagshawe would almost certainly reveal
to me that he had caught her coming out of Jimmy’s
bedroom at five o’clock in the morning on the
4th of August, 1900-that was the determining
influence in her suicide. And no doubt the effect
of the date was too much for her superstitious personality.
She had been born on the 4th of August; she had started
to go round the world on the 4th of August; she had
become a low fellow’s mistress on the 4th of
August. On the same day of the year she had married
me; on that 4th she had lost Edward’s love,
and Bagshawe had appeared like a sinister omen-like
a grin on the face of Fate. It was the last straw.
She ran upstairs, arranged herself decoratively upon
her bed-she was a sweetly pretty woman
with smooth pink and white cheeks, long hair, the
eyelashes falling like a tiny curtain on her cheeks.
She drank the little phial of prussic acid and there
she lay.-Oh, extremely charming and clear-cut-looking
with a puzzled expression at the electric-light bulb
that hung from the ceiling, or perhaps through it,
to the stars above. Who knows? Anyhow, there
was an end of Florence.
You have no idea how quite extraordinarily
for me that was the end of Florence. From that
day to this I have never given her another thought;
I have not bestowed upon her so much as a sigh.
Of course, when it has been necessary to talk about
her to Leonora, or when for the purpose of these writings
I have tried to figure her out, I have thought about
her as I might do about a problem in algebra.
But it has always been as a matter for study, not
for remembrance. She just went completely out
of existence, like yesterday’s paper.
I was so deadly tired. And I
dare say that my week or ten days of affaissement-of
what was practically catalepsy-was just
the repose that my exhausted nature claimed after
twelve years of the repression of my instincts, after
twelve years of playing the trained poodle. For
that was all that I had been. I suppose that it
was the shock that did it-the several shocks.
But I am unwilling to attribute my feelings at that
time to anything so concrete as a shock. It was
a feeling so tranquil. It was as if an immensely
heavy-an unbearably heavy knapsack, supported
upon my shoulders by straps, had fallen off and left
my shoulders themselves that the straps had cut into,
numb and without sensation of life. I tell you,
I had no regret. What had I to regret? I
suppose that my inner soul-my dual personality-had
realized long before that Florence was a personality
of paper-that she represented a real human
being with a heart, with feelings, with sympathies
and with emotions only as a bank-note represents a
certain quantity of gold. I know that sort of
feeling came to the surface in me the moment the man
Bagshawe told me that he had seen her coming out of
that fellow’s bedroom. I thought suddenly
that she wasn’t real; she was just a mass of
talk out of guidebooks, of drawings out of fashion-plates.
It is even possible that, if that feeling had not
possessed me, I should have run up sooner to her room
and might have prevented her drinking the prussic
acid. But I just couldn’t do it; it would
have been like chasing a scrap of paper-an
occupation ignoble for a grown man.
And, as it began, so that matter has
remained. I didn’t care whether she had
come out of that bedroom or whether she hadn’t.
It simply didn’t interest me. Florence
didn’t matter.
I suppose you will retort that I was
in love with Nancy Rufford and that my indifference
was therefore discreditable. Well, I am not seeking
to avoid discredit. I was in love with Nancy
Rufford as I am in love with the poor child’s
memory, quietly and quite tenderly in my American sort
of way. I had never thought about it until I heard
Leonora state that I might now marry her. But,
from that moment until her worse than death, I do
not suppose that I much thought about anything else.
I don’t mean to say that I sighed about her
or groaned; I just wanted to marry her as some people
want to go to Carcassonne.
Do you understand the feeling-the
sort of feeling that you must get certain matters
out of the way, smooth out certain fairly negligible
complications before you can go to a place that has,
during all your life, been a sort of dream city?
I didn’t attach much importance to my superior
years. I was forty-five, and she, poor thing,
was only just rising twenty-two. But she was
older than her years and quieter. She seemed
to have an odd quality of sainthood, as if she must
inevitably end in a convent with a white coif framing
her face. But she had frequently told me that
she had no vocation; it just simply wasn’t there-the
desire to become a nun. Well, I guess that I was
a sort of convent myself; it seemed fairly proper
that she should make her vows to me. No, I didn’t
see any impediment on the score of age. I dare
say no man does and I was pretty confident that with
a little preparation, I could make a young girl happy.
I could spoil her as few young girls have ever been
spoiled; and I couldn’t regard myself as personally
repulsive. No man can, or if he ever comes to
do so, that is the end of him. But, as soon as
I came out of my catalepsy, I seemed to perceive that
my problem-that what I had to do to prepare
myself for getting into contact with her, was just
to get back into contact with life. I had been
kept for twelve years in a rarefied atmosphere; what
I then had to do was a little fighting with real life,
some wrestling with men of business, some travelling
amongst larger cities, something harsh, something
masculine. I didn’t want to present myself
to Nancy Rufford as a sort of an old maid. That
was why, just a fortnight after Florence’s suicide,
I set off for the United States.