A last hour of vivid blue and gold
glare; but now the twilight sheds softly upon the
darting jays, and only the little oval frames catch
the fleeting beams. I go to the miniatures.
Amid the parliamentary faces, all strictly garrotted
with many-folded handkerchiefs, there is a metal frame
enchased with rubies and a few emeralds. And this
chef d’Åuvre of antique workmanship
surrounds a sharp, shrewdish, modern face, withal
pretty. Fair she is and thin.
She is a woman of thirty no, she
is the woman of thirty. Balzac has written some
admirable pages on this subject; my memory of them
is vague and uncertain, although durable, as all memories
of him must be. But that marvellous story, or
rather study, has been blunted in my knowledge of
this tiny face with the fine masses of hair drawn up
from the neck and arranged elaborately on the crown.
There is no fear of plagiary; he cannot have said
all; he cannot have said what I want to say.
Looking at this face so mundane, so
intellectually mundane, I see why a young man of refined
mind a bachelor who spends at least a pound
a day on his pleasures, and in whose library are found
some few volumes of modern poetry seeks
his ideal in a woman of thirty.
It is clear that, by the very essence
of her being, the young girl may evoke no ideal but
that of home; and home is in his eyes the antithesis
of freedom, desire, aspiration. He longs for mystery,
deep and endless, and he is tempted with a foolish
little illusion white dresses, water-colour
drawings and popular music. He dreams of Pleasure,
and he is offered Duty; for do not think that that
sylph-like waist does not suggest to him a yard of
apron string, cries of children, and that most odious
word, “Papa.” A young man of refined
mind can look through the glass of the years.
He has sat in the stalls, opera-glass
in hand; he has met women of thirty at balls, and
has sat with them beneath shadowy curtains; he knows
that the world is full of beautiful women, all waiting
to be loved and amused, the circles of his immediate
years are filled with feminine faces, they cluster
like flowers on this side and that, and they fade
into garden-like spaces of colour. How many may
love him? The loveliest may one day smile upon
his knee! and shall he renounce all for that little
creature who has just finished singing and is handing
round cups of tea? Every bachelor contemplating
marriage says, “I shall have to give up all
for one, one.”
The young girl is often pretty but
her prettiness is vague and uncertain, it inspires
a sort of pitying admiration, but it suggests nothing;
the very essence of the young girl’s being is
that she should have nothing to suggest, therefore
the beauty of the young face fails to touch the imagination.
No past lies hidden in those translucent eyes, no
story of hate, disappointment, or sin. Nor is
there in nine hundred and ninety-nine cases in a thousand
any doubt that the hand, that spends at least a pound
a day in restaurants and cabs, will succeed in gathering
the muslin flower if he so wills it, and by doing so
he will delight every one. Where, then, is the
struggle? where, then, is the triumph? Therefore,
I say that if a young man’s heart is not set
on children, and tiresome dinner-parties, the young
girl presents to him no possible ideal. But the
woman of thirty presents from the outset all that is
necessary to ensnare the heart of a young man.
I see her sitting in her beautiful drawing-room, all
designed by, and all belonging to her. Her chair
is placed beneath an evergreen plant, and the long
leaves lean out as if to touch her neck. The
great white and red roses of the Aubusson carpet are
spread enigmatically about her feline feet; a grand
piano leans its melodious mouth to her; and there she
sits when her visitors have left her, playing Beethoven’s
sonatas in the dreamy firelight. The spring-tide
shows but a bloom of unvarying freshness; August has
languished and loved in the strength of the sun.
She is stately, she is tall. What sins, what
disappointments, what aspirations lie in those grey
eyes, mysteriously still, and mysteriously revealed.
These a young man longs to know of, they are his life.
He imagines himself sitting by her, when the others
have gone, holding her hand, calling on her name;
sometimes she moves away and plays the moonlight sonata.
Letting her hands droop upon the keys she talks sadly,
maybe affectionately; she speaks of the tedium of
life, of its disenchantments. He knows well what
she means, he has suffered as she has; but could he
tell her, could she understand, that in his love reality
would dissolve into a dream, all limitations would
open into boundless infinity.
The husband he rarely sees. Sometimes
a latch-key is heard about half-past six. The
man is thick, strong, common, his jaws are heavy,
his eyes are expressionless, there is about him the
loud swagger of the caserne, and he suggests
the inevitable question, Why did she marry him? a
question that every young man of refined mind asks
a thousand times by day and ten thousand times by
night, asks till he is five-and-thirty, and sees that
his generation has passed into middle age.
Why did she marry him? Not the
sea, nor the sky, nor the great mysterious midnight,
when he opens his casement and gazes into starry space
will give him answer; no Ådipus will ever come to
unravel this riddle; this sphinx will never throw
herself from the rock into the clangour of the sea-gulls
and waves; she will never divulge her secret; and
if she is the woman and not a woman of thirty, she
has forgotten.
The young man shakes hands with the
husband; he strives not to look embarrassed, and he
talks of indifferent things of how well
he (the husband) is looking, of his amusements, his
projects; and then he (the young man of refined mind)
tastes of that keen and highly-seasoned delight happiness
in crime. He knows not the details of her home
life, the husband is merely a dark cloud that fills
one side of the picture, sometimes obliterating the
sunlight; a shadowy shape that in certain moments
solidifies and assumes the likeness of a rock-sculptured,
imminent monster, but the shadow and the shape and
the threat are magnetic, and in a sense of danger
the fascination is sealed.
The young man of refined mind is in
a ball-room! He leans against the woodwork in
a distant doorway; hardly knowing what to do with himself,
he strives to interest himself in the conversation
of a group of men twice his age. I will not say
he is shunned; but neither the matrons nor the young
girls make any advances towards him. The young
girls so sweet in the oneness of their
fresh hair, flowers, dresses, and glances are
being introduced, are getting up to dance, and the
hostess is looking round for partners. She sees
the young man in the doorway, but she hesitates and
goes to some one else, and if you asked her why, she
could not tell you why she avoided him. Presently
the woman of thirty enters. She is in white satin
and diamonds. She looks for him a
circular glance. Calm with possession she passes
to a seat, extending her hand here and there.
She dances the eighth, twelfth, and fifteenth waltz
with him.
Will he induce her to visit his rooms?
Will they be like Marshall’s strange
debauches of colour and Turkish lamps or
mine, an old cabinet, a faded pastel which embalms
the memory of a pastoral century, my taste; or will
it be a library, two leather library chairs,
a large escritoire, etc.? Be this as it may,
whether the apartments be the ruthless extravagance
of artistic impulse, or the subdued taste of the student,
she, the woman of thirty, shall be there by night and
day: her statue is there, and even when she is
sleeping safe in her husband’s arms, with fevered
brow, he, the young man of refined mind, alone and
lonely shall kneel and adore her.
And should she not visit his
rooms? If the complex and various accidents of
existence should have ruled out her life virtuously;
if the many inflections of sentiment have decided
against this last consummation, then she will wax
to the complete, the unfathomable temptress the
Lilith of old she will never set him free,
and in the end will be found about his heart “one
single golden hair.” She shall haunt his
wife’s face and words (should he seek to rid
himself of her by marriage), a bitter sweet, a half-welcome
enchantment; she shall consume and destroy the strength
and spirit of his life, leaving it desolation, a barren
landscape, burnt and faintly scented with the sea.
Fame and wealth shall slip like sand from him.
She may be set aside for the cadence of a rhyme, for
the flowing line of a limb, but when the passion of
art has raged itself out, she shall return to blight
the peace of the worker.
A terrible malady is she, a malady
the ancients knew of and called nympholepsy a
beautiful name evocative and symbolic of its ideal
aspect, “the breasts of the nymphs in the brake.”
And the disease is not extinct in these modern days,
nor will it ever be so long as men shall yearn for
the unattainable; and the prosy bachelors who trail
their ill-fated lives from their chambers to their
clubs know their malady, and they call it the
woman of thirty.