Much as I wished to see him, I had
kept my letter of introduction for three weeks in
my pocket-book. I was nervous and timid about
meeting him, conscious of youth and ignorance,
convinced that he was tormented by strangers, and
especially by my country-people, and not exempt from
the suspicion that he had the irritability as well
as the brilliancy of genius. Moreover, the pleasure,
if it should occur (for I could scarcely believe it
was near at hand), would be so great that I wished
to think of it in advance, to feel that it was in
my pocket, not to mix it with satisfactions more superficial
and usual In the little game of new sensations that
I was playing with my ingenuous mind, I wished to keep
my visit to the author of Beltraffio as a trump
card. It was three years after the publication
of that fascinating work, which I had read over five
times, and which now, with my riper judgment, I admire
on the whole as much as ever. This will give
you about the date of my first visit (of any duration)
to England; for you will not have forgotten the commotion I
may even say the scandal produced by Mark
Ambient’s masterpiece. It was the most
complete presentation that had yet been made of the
gospel of art; it was a kind of aesthetic war-cry.
People had endeavored to sail nearer to “truth”
in the cut of their sleeves and the shape of their
sideboards; but there had not as yet been, among English
novels, such an example of beauty of execution and
genuineness of substance. Nothing had been done
in that line from the point of view of art for art
This was my own point of view, I may mention, when
I was twenty-five; whether it is altered now I won’t
take upon myself to say especially as the
discerning reader will be able to judge for himself.
I had been in England, briefly, a twelvemonth before
the time to which I began by alluding, and had learned
then that Mr. Ambient was in distant lands was
making a considerable tour in the East: so there
was nothing to do but to keep my letter till I should
be in London again. It was of little use to me
to hear that his wife had not left England, and, with
her little boy, their only child, was spending the
period of her husband’s absence a
good many months at a small place they
had down in Surrey. They had a house in London
which was let. All this I learned, and also that
Mrs. Ambient was charming (my friend the American
poet, from whom I had my introduction, had never seen
her, his relations with the great man being only epistolary);
but she was not, after all, though she had lived so
near the rose, the author of Beltraffio, and
I did not go down into Surrey to call on her.
I went to the Continent, spent the following winter
in Italy, and returned to London in May. My visit
to Italy opened my eyes to a good many things, but
to nothing more than the beauty of certain pages in
the works of Mark Ambient I had every one of his productions
in my portmanteau, they are not, as you
know, very numerous, but he had preluded to Beltraffio
by some exquisite things, and I used to
read them over in the evening at the inn. I used
to say to myself that the man who drew those characters
and wrote that style understood what he saw and knew
what he was doing. This is my only reason for
mentioning my winter in Italy. He had been there
much in former years, and he was saturated with what
painters call the “feeling” of that classic
land. He expressed the charm of the old hill-cities
of Tuscany, the look of certain lonely grass-grown
places which, in the past, had echoed with life; he
understood the great artists, he understood the spirit
of the Renaissance, he understood everything.
The scene of one of his earlier novels was laid in
Borne, the scene of another in Florence, and I moved
through these cities in company with the figures whom
Mark Ambient had set so vividly upon their feet.
This is why I was now so much happier even than before
in the prospect of making his acquaintance.
At last, when I had dallied with this
privilege long enough, I despatched to him the missive
of the American poet He had already gone out of town;
he shrank from the rigor of the London “season”
and it was his habit to migrate on the first of June.
Moreover, I had heard that this year he was hard at
work on a new book, into which some of his impressions
of the East were to be wrought, so that he desired
nothing so much as quiet days. This knowledge,
however, did not prevent me cet age
est sans pitié from sending with my
friend’s letter a note of my own, in which I
asked Mr. Ambient’s leave to come down and see
him for an hour or two, on a day to be designated
by himself. My proposal was accompanied with
a very frank expression of my sentiments, and the
effect of the whole projectile was to elicit from the
great man the kindest possible invitation. He
would be delighted to see me, especially if I should
turn up on the following Saturday and would remain
till the Monday morning. We would take a walk
over the Surrey commons, and I could tell him all
about the other great man, the one in America.
He indicated to me the best train, and it may be imagined
whether on the Saturday afternoon I was punctual at
Waterloo. He carried his benevolence to the point
of coming to meet me at the little station at which
I was to alight, and my heart beat very fast as I saw
his handsome face, surmounted with a soft wide-awake,
and which I knew by a photograph long since enshrined
upon my mantelshelf, scanning the carriage windows
as the train rolled up. He recognized me as infallibly
as I had recognized him; he appeared to know by instinct
how a young American of an aesthetic turn would look
when much divided between eagerness and modesty.
He took me by the hand, and smiled at me, and said:
“You must be a you,
I think!” and asked if I should mind going on
foot to his house, which would take but a few minutes.
I remember thinking it a piece of extraordinary affability
that he should give directions about the conveyance
of my bag, and feeling altogether very happy and rosy,
in fact quite transported, when he laid his hand on
my shoulder as we came out of the station.
I surveyed him, askance, as we walked
together; I had already I had indeed instantly seen
that he was a delightful creature. His face is
so well known that I need n’t describe it; he
looked to me at once an English gentleman and a man
of genius, and I thought that a happy combination.
There was just a little of the Bohemian in his appearance;
you would easily have guessed that he belonged to the
guild of artists and men of letters. He was addicted
to velvet jackets, to cigarettes, to loose shirt-collars,
to looking a little dishevelled. His features,
which were fine, but not perfectly regular, are fairly
enough represented in his portraits; but no portrait
that I have seen gives any idea of his expression.
There were so many things in it, and they chased each
other in and out of his face. I have seen people
who were grave and gay in quick alternation; but Mark
Ambient was grave and gay at one and the same moment.
There were other strange oppositions and contradictions
in his slightly faded and fatigued countenance.
He seemed both young and old, both anxious and indifferent.
He had evidently had an active past, which inspired
one with curiosity, and yet it was impossible not to
be more curious still about his future. He was
just enough above middle height to be spoken of as
tall, and rather lean and long in the flank.
He had the friendliest, frankest manner possible, and
yet I could see that he was shy. He was thirty-eight
years old at the time Beltraffio was published.
He asked me about his friend in America, about the
length of my stay in England, about the last news
in London and the people I had seen there; and I remember
looking for the signs of genius in the very form of
his questions, and thinking I found it. I liked
his voice.
There was genius in his house, too,
I thought, when we got there; there was imagination
in the carpets and curtains, in the pictures and books,
in the garden behind it, where certain old brown walls
were muffled in creepers that appeared to me to have
been copied from a masterpiece of one of the pre-Raphaelites.
That was the way many things struck me at that time,
in England; as if they were reproductions of something
that existed primarily in art or literature.
It was not the picture, the poem, the fictive page,
that seemed to me a copy; these things were the originals,
and the life of happy and distinguished people was
fashioned in their image. Mark Ambient called
his house a cottage, and I perceived afterwards that
he was right; for if it had not been a cottage it must
have been a villa, and a villa, in England at least,
was not a place in which one could fancy him at home.
But it was, to my vision, a cottage glorified and
translated; it was a palace of art, on a slightly reduced
scale, it was an old English demesne.
It nestled under a cluster of magnificent beeches,
it had little creaking lattices that opened out of,
or into, pendent mats of ivy, and gables, and old red
tiles, as well as a general aspect of being painted
in water-colors and inhabited by people whose lives
would go on in chapters and volumes. The lawn
seemed to me of extraordinary extent, the garden-walls
of incalculable height, the whole air of the place
delightfully still, private, proper to itself.
“My wife must be somewhere about,” Mark
Ambient said, as we went in. “We shall
find her perhaps; we have got about an hour before
dinner. She may be in the garden. I will
show you my little place.”
We passed through the house, and into
the grounds, as I should have called them, which extended
into the rear. They covered but three or four
acres, but, like the house, they were very old and
crooked, and full of traces of long habitation, with
inequalities of level and little steps mossy
and cracked were these which connected the
different parts with each other. The limits of
the place, cleverly dissimulated, were muffled in
the deepest verdure. They made, as I remember,
a kind of curtain at the further end, in one of the
folds of which, as it were, we presently perceived,
from afar, a little group. “Ah, there she
is!” said Mark Ambient; “and she has got
the boy.” He made this last remark in a
slightly different tone from any in which he yet had
spoken. I was not fully aware of it at the time,
but it lingered in my ear and I afterwards understood
it.
“Is it your son?” I inquired,
feeling the question not to be brilliant.
“Yes, my only child. He’s
always in his mother’s pocket She coddles him
too much.” It came back to me afterwards,
too the manner in which he spoke these
words. They were not petulant; they expressed
rather a sudden coldness, a kind of mechanical submission.
We went a few steps further, and then he stopped short
and called the boy, beckoning to him repeatedly.
“Dolcino, come and see your
daddy!” There was something in the way he stood
still and waited that made me think he did it for a
purpose. Mrs. Ambient had her arm round the child’s
waist, and he was leaning against her knee; but though
he looked up at the sound of his father’s voice,
she gave no sign of releasing him. A lady, apparently
a neighbor, was seated near her, and before them was
a garden-table, on which a tea-service had been placed.
Mark Ambient called again, and Dolcino
struggled in the maternal embrace, but he was too
tightly held, and after two or three fruitless efforts
he suddenly turned round and buried his head deep in
his mother’s lap. There was a certain awkwardness
in the scene; I thought it rather odd that Mrs. Ambient
should pay so little attention to her husband.
But I would not for the world have betrayed my thought,
and, to conceal it, I observed that it must be such
a pleasant thing to have tea in the garden. “Ah,
she won’t let him come!” said Mark Ambient,
with a sigh; and we went our way ’till we reached
the two ladies. He mentioned my name to his wife,
and I noticed that he addressed her as “My dear,”
very genially, without any trace of resentment at her
detention of the child. The quickness of the
transition made me vaguely ask myself whether he were
henpecked, a shocking conjecture, which
I instantly dismissed. Mrs. Ambient was quite
such a wife as I should have expected him to have;
slim and fair, with a long neck and pretty eyes and
an air of great refinement. She was a little
cold, and a little shy; but she was very sweet, and
she had a certain look of race, justified by my afterwards
learning that she was “connected” with
two or three great families. I have seen poets
married to women of whom it was difficult to conceive
that they should gratify the poetic fancy, women
with dull faces and glutinous minds, who were none
the less, however, excellent wives. But there
was no obvious incongruity in Mark Ambient’s
union. Mrs. Ambient, delicate and quiet, in a
white dress, with her beautiful child at her side,
was worthy of the author of a work so distinguished
as Beltraffio. Bound her neck she wore
a black velvet ribbon, of which the long ends, tied
behind, hung down her back, and to which, in front,
was attached a miniature portrait of her little boy.
Her smooth, shining hair was confined in a net She
gave me a very pleasant greeting, and Dolcino I
thought this little name of endearment delightful took
advantage of her getting up to slip away from her and
go to his father, who said nothing to him, but simply
seized him and held him high in his arms for a moment,
kissing him several times.
I had lost no time in observing that
the child, who was not more than seven years old,
was extraordinarily beautiful He had the face of an
angel, the eyes, the hair, the more than
mortal bloom, the smile of innocence. There was
something touching, almost alarming, in his beauty,
which seemed to be composed of elements too fine and
pure for the breath of this world. When I spoke
to him, and he came and held out his hand and smiled
at me, I felt a sudden pity for him, as if he had been
an orphan, or a changeling, or stamped with some social
stigma. It was impossible to be, in fact, more
exempt from these misfortunes, and yet, as one kissed
him, it was hard to keep from murmuring “Poor
little devil!” though why one should have applied
this epithet to a living cherub is more than I can
say. Afterwards, indeed, I knew a little better;
I simply discovered that he was too charming to live,
wondering at the same time that his parents should
not have perceived it, and should not be in proportionate
grief and despair. For myself, I had no doubt
of his evanescence, having already noticed that there
is a kind of charm which is like a death-warrant.
The lady who had been sitting with
Mrs. Ambient was a jolly, ruddy personage, dressed
in velveteen and rather limp feathers, whom I guessed
to be the vicar’s wife, our hostess
did not introduce me, and who immediately
began to talk to Ambient about chrysanthemums.
This was a safe subject, and yet there was a certain
surprise for me in seeing the author of Beltraffio
even in such superficial communion with the Church
of England. His writings implied so much detachment
from that institution, expressed a view of life so
profane, as it were, so independent, and so little
likely, in general, to be thought edifying, that I
should have expected to find him an object of horror
to vicars and their ladies of horror repaid
on his own part by good-natured but brilliant mockery.
This proves how little I knew as yet of the English
people and their extraordinary talent for keeping up
their forms, as well as of some of the mysteries of
Mark Ambient’s hearth and home. I found
afterwards that he had, in his study, between smiles
and cigar-smoke, some wonderful comparisons for his
clerical neighbors; but meanwhile the chrysanthemums
were a source of harmony, for he and the vicaress
were equally fond of them, and I was surprised at the
knowledge they exhibited of this interesting plant.
The lady’s visit, however, had presumably already
been long, and she presently got up, saying she must
go, and kissed Mrs. Ambient Mark started to walk with
her to the gate of the grounds, holding Dolcino by
the hand.
“Stay with me, my darling,”
Mrs. Ambient said to the boy, who was wandering away
with his father.
Mark Ambient paid no attention to
the summons, but Dolcino turned round and looked with
eyes of shy entreaty at his mother. “Can’t
I go with papa?”
“Not when I ask you to stay with me.”
“But please don’t ask
me, mamma,” said the child, in his little clear,
new voice.
“I must ask you when I want
you. Come to me, my darling.” And Mrs.
Ambient, who had seated herself again, held out her
long, slender hands.
Her husband stopped, with his back
turned to her, but without releasing the child.
He was still talking to the vicaress, but this good
lady, I think, had lost the thread of her attention.
She looked at Mrs. Ambient and at Dolcino, and then
she looked at me, smiling very hard, in an extremely
fixed, cheerful manner.
“Papa,” said the child,
“mamma wants me not to go with you.”
“He’s very tired he
has run about all day. He ought to be quiet till
he goes to bed. Otherwise he won’t sleep.”
These declarations fell successively and gravely from
Mrs. Ambient’s lips.
Her husband, still without turning
round, bent over the boy and looked at him in silence.
The vicaress gave a genial, irrelevant laugh, and
observed that he was a precious little pet “Let
him choose,” said Mark Ambient. “My
dear little boy, will you go with me or will you stay
with your mother?”
“Oh, it’s a shame!”
cried the vicar’s lady, with increased hilarity.
“Papa, I don’t think I
can choose,” the child answered, making his voice
very low and confidential. “But I have been
a great deal with mamma to-day,” he added in
a moment.
“And very little with papa!
My dear fellow, I think you have chosen!” And
Mark Ambient walked off with his son, accompanied by
re-echoing but inarticulate comments from my fellow-visitor.
His wife had seated herself again,
and her fixed eyes, bent upon the ground, expressed
for a few moments so much mute agitation that I felt
as if almost any remark from my own lips would be a
false note. But Mrs. Ambient quickly recovered
herself, and said to me civilly enough that she hoped
I did n’t mind having had to walk from the station.
I reassured her on this point, and she went on, “We
have got a thing that might have gone for you, but
my husband wouldn’t order it.”
“That gave me the pleasure of
a walk with him,” I rejoined.
She was silent a minute, and then
she said, “I believe the Americans walk very
little.”
“Yes, we always run,” I answered laughingly.
She looked at me seriously, and I
began to perceive a certain coldness in her pretty
eyes. “I suppose your distances are so great?”
“Yes; but we break our marches
I I can’t tell you what a pleasure it is for
me to find myself here,” I added. “I
have the greatest admiration for Mr. Ambient.”
“He will like that. He likes being admired.”
“He must have a very happy life, then.
He has many worshippers.”
“Oh, yes, I have seen some of
them,” said Mrs. Ambient, looking away, very
far from me, rather as if such a vision were before
her at the moment Something in her tone seemed to
indicate that the vision was scarcely edifying, and
I guessed very quickly that she was not in sympathy
with the author of Beltraffio. I thought
the fact strange, but, somehow, in the glow of my
own enthusiasm, I did n’t think it important;
it only made me wish to be rather explicit about that
enthusiasm.
“For me, you know,” I
remarked, “he is quite the greatest of living
writers.”
“Of course I can’t judge.
Of course he’s very clever,” said Mrs.
Ambient, smiling a little.
“He’s magnificent, Mrs.
Ambient! There are pages in each of his books
that have a perfection that classes them with the greatest
things. Therefore, for me to see him in this
familiar way, in his habit as he lives, and
to find, apparently, the man as delightful as the artist,
I can’t tell you how much too good to be true
it seems, and how great a privilege I think it.”
I knew that I was gushing, but I could n’t help
it, and what I said was a good deal less than what
I felt. I was by no means sure that I should
dare to say even so much as this to Ambient himself,
and there was a kind of rapture in speaking it out
to his wife which was not affected by the fact that,
as a wife, she appeared peculiar. She listened
to me with her face grave again, and with her lips
a little compressed, as if there were no doubt, of
course, that her husband was remarkable, but at the
same time she had heard all this before and couldn’t
be expected to be particularly interested in it.
There was even in her manner an intimation that I was
rather young, and that people usually got over that
sort of thing. “I assure you that for me
this is a red-letter day,” I added.
She made no response, until after
a pause, looking round her, she said abruptly, though
gently, “We are very much afraid about the fruit
this year.”
My eyes wandered to the mossy, mottled,
garden walls, where plum-trees and pear-trees, flattened
and fastened upon the rusty bricks, looked like crucified
figures with many arms. “Does n’t
it promise well?” I inquired.
“No, the trees look very dull. We had such
late frosts.”
Then there was another pause.
Mrs. Ambient kept her eyes fixed on the opposite end
of the grounds, as if she were watching for her husband’s
return with the child. “Is Mr. Ambient fond
of gardening?” it occurred to me to inquire,
irresistibly impelled as I felt myself, moreover, to
bring the conversation constantly back to him.
“He’s very fond of plums,” said
his wife.
“Ah, well then, I hope your
crop will be better than you fear. It’s
a lovely old place,” I continued. “The
whole character of it is that of certain places that
he describes. Your house is like one of his pictures.”
“It’s a pleasant little
place. There are hundreds like it”
“Oh, it has got his tone,”
I said, laughing, and insisting on my point the more
that Mrs. Ambient appeared to see in my appreciation
of her simple establishment a sign of limited experience.
It was evident that I insisted too
much. “His tone?” she repeated, with
a quick look at me, and a slightly heightened color.
“Surely he has a tone, Mrs. Ambient”
“Oh, yes, he has indeed!
But I don’t in the least consider that I am
living in one of his books; I should n’t care
for that, at all,” she went on, with a smile
which had in some degree the effect of converting
her slightly sharp protest into a joke deficient in
point “I am afraid I am not very literary,”
said Mrs. Ambient. “And I am not artistic.”
“I am very sure you are not
ignorant, not stupid,” I ventured to reply,
with the accompaniment of feeling immediately afterwards
that I had been both familiar and patronizing.
My only consolation was in the reflection that it
was she, and not I, who had begun it She had brought
her idiosyncrasies into the discussion.
“Well, whatever I am, I am very
different from my husband. If you like him, you
won’t like me. You need n’t say anything.
Your liking me is n’t in the least necessary!”
“Don’t defy me!” I exclaimed.
She looked as if she had not heard
me, which was the best thing she could do; and we
sat some time without further speech. Mrs. Ambient
had evidently the enviable English quality of being
able to be silent without being restless. But
at last she spoke; she asked me if there seemed to
be many people in town. I gave her what satisfaction
I could on this point, and we talked a little about
London and of some pictures it presented at that time
of the year. At the end of this I came back,
irrepressibly, to Mark Ambient.
“Does n’t he like to be
there now? I suppose he does n’t find the
proper quiet for his work. I should think his
things had been written, for the most part, in a very
still place. They suggest a great stillness,
following on a kind of tumult. Don’t you
think so? I suppose London is a tremendous place
to collect impressions, but a refuge like this, in
the country, must be much better for working them
up. Does he get many of his impressions in London,
do you think?” I proceeded from point to point
in this malign inquiry, simply because my hostess,
who probably thought me a very pushing and talkative
young man, gave me time; for when I paused I
have not represented my pauses she simply
continued to let her eyes wander, and, with her long
fair fingers, played with the medallion on her neck.
When I stopped altogether, however, she was obliged
to say something, and what she said was that she had
not the least idea where her husband got his impressions.
This made me think her, for a moment, positively disagreeable;
delicate and proper and rather aristocratically dry
as she sat there. But I must either have lost
the impression a moment later, or been goaded by it
to further aggression, for I remember asking her whether
Mr. Ambient were in a good vein of work, and when
we might look for the appearance of the book on which
he was engaged. I have every reason now to know
that she thought me an odious person.
She gave a strange, small laugh as
she said, “I am afraid you think I know a great
deal more about my husband’s work than I do.
I haven’t the least idea what he is doing,”
she added presently, in a slightly different, that
is a more explanatory, tone, as if she recognized
in some degree the enormity of her confession.
“I don’t read what he writes!”
She did not succeed (and would not,
even had she tried much harder) in making it seem
to me anything less than monstrous. I stared at
her, and I think I blushed. “Don’t
you admire his genius? Don’t you admire
Beltraffio?”
She hesitated a moment, and I wondered
what she could possibly say. She did not speak I
could see the first words that rose to her
lips; she repeated what she had said a few minutes
before. “Oh, of course he ’s very
clever!” And with this she got up; her husband
and little boy had reappeared. Mrs. Ambient left
me and went to meet them; she stopped and had a few
words with her husband, which I did not hear, and which
ended in her taking the child by the hand and returning
to the house with him. Her husband joined me
in a moment, looking, I thought, the least bit conscious
and constrained, and said that if I would come in with
him he would show me my room. In looking back
upon these first moments of my visit to him, I find
it important to avoid the error of appearing to have
understood his situation from the first, and to have
seen in him the signs of things which I learnt only
afterwards. This later knowledge throws a backward
light, and makes me forget that at least on the occasion
of which I am speaking now (I mean that first afternoon),
Mark Ambient struck me as a fortunate man. Allowing
for this, I think he was rather silent and irresponsive
as we walked back to the house, though I remember
well the answer he made to a remark of mine in relation
to his child.
“That’s an extraordinary
little boy of yours,” I said. “I have
never seen such a child.”
“Why do you call him extraordinary?”
“He’s so beautiful, so fascinating.
He’s like a little work of art.”
He turned quickly, grasping my arm
an instant. “Oh, don’t call him that,
or you ’ll you ’ll !”
And in his hesitation he broke off
suddenly, laughing at my surprise. But immediately
afterwards he added, “You will make his little
future very difficult.”
I declared that I wouldn’t for
the world take any liberties with his little future it
seemed to me to hang by threads of such delicacy.
I should only be highly interested in watching it.
“You Americans are very sharp,”
said Ambient “You notice more things than we
do.”
“Ah, if you want visitors who
are not struck with you, you should n’t ask
me down here!”
He showed me my room, a little bower
of chintz, with open windows where the light was green,
and before he left me he said irrelevantly, “As
for my little boy, you know, we shall probably kill
him between us, before wo have done with him!”
And he made this assertion as if he really believed
it, without any appearance of jest, with his fine,
near-sighted, expressive eyes looking straight into
mine.
“Do you mean by spoiling him?”
“No; by fighting for him!”
“You had better give him to
me to keep for you,” I said. “Let
me remove the apple of discord.”
I laughed, of course, but he had the
air of being perfectly serious. “It would
be quite the best thing we could do. I should
be quite ready to do it.”
“I am greatly obliged to you for your confidence.”
Mark Ambient lingered there, with
his hands in his pockets. I felt, within a few
moments, as if I had, morally speaking, taken several
steps nearer to him. He looked weary, just as
he faced me then, looked preoccupied, and as if there
were something one might do for him. I was terribly
conscious of the limits of my own ability, but I wondered
what such a service might be, feeling at bottom, however,
that the only thing I could do for him was to like
him. I suppose he guessed this, and was grateful
for what was in my mind; for he went on presently,
“I have n’t the advantage of being an
American. But I also notice a little, and I have
an idea that a ” here he
smiled and laid his hand on my shoulder, “that
even apart from your nationality, you are not destitute
of intelligence! I have only known you half an
hour, but a ” And here
he hesitated again. “You are very young,
after all.”
“But you may treat me as if
I could understand you!” I said; and before
he left me to dress for dinner he had virtually given
me a promise that he would.
When I went down into the drawing-room I
was very punctual I found that neither
my hostess nor my host had appeared. A lady rose
from a sofa, however, and inclined her head as I rather
surprisedly gazed at her. “I dare say you
don’t know me,” she said, with the modern
laugh. “I am Mark Ambient’s sister.”
Whereupon I shook hands with her, saluting her very
low. Her laugh was modern by which
I mean that it consisted of the vocal agitation which,
between people who meet in drawing-rooms, serves as
the solvent of social mysteries, the medium of transitions;
but her appearance was what shall I call
it? mediaeval. She was pale and angular,
with a long, thin face, inhabited by sad, dark eyes,
and black hair intertwined with golden fillets and
curious chains. She wore a faded velvet robe,
which clung to her when she moved, fashioned, as to
the neck and sleeves, like the garments of old Venetians
and Florentines. She looked pictorial and melancholy,
and was so perfect an image of a type which I, in
my ignorance, supposed to be extinct, that while she
rose before me I was almost as much startled as if
I had seen a ghost. I afterwards perceived that
Miss Ambient was not incapable of deriving pleasure
from the effect she produced, and I think this sentiment
had something to do with her sinking again into her
seat, with her long, lean, but not ungraceful arms
locked together in an archaic manner on her knees,
and her mournful eyes addressing themselves to me
with an intentness which was a menace of what they
were destined subsequently to inflict upon me.
She was a singular, self-conscious, artificial creature,
and I never, subsequently, more than half penetrated
her motives and, mysteries. Of one thing I am
sure, however: that they were considerably less
extraordinary than her appearance announced.
Miss Ambient was a restless, disappointed, imaginative
spinster, consumed with the love of Michael-Angelesque
attitudes and mystical robes; but I am pretty sure
she had not in her nature those depths of unutterable
thought which, when you first knew her, seemed to
look out from her eyes and to prompt her complicated
gestures. Those features, in especial, had a
misleading eloquence; they rested upon you with a
far-off dimness, an air of obstructed sympathy, which
was certainly not always a key to the spirit of their
owner; and I suspect that a young lady could not really
have been so dejected and disillusioned as Miss Ambient
looked, without having committed a crime for which
she was consumed with remorse, or parted with a hope
which she could not sanely have entertained.
She had, I believe, the usual allowance of vulgar
impulses: she wished to be looked at, she wished
to be married, she wished to be thought original.
It costs me something to speak in this irreverent
manner of Mark Ambient’s sister, but I shall
have still more disagreeable things to say before I
have finished my little anecdote, and moreover, I
confess it, I owe the young lady a sort
of grudge. Putting aside the curious cast of her
face, she had no natural aptitude for an artistic
development, she had little real intelligence.
But her affectations rubbed off on her brother’s
renown, and as there were plenty of people who disapproved
of him totally, they could easily point to his sister
as a person formed by his influence. It was quite
possible to regard her as a warning, and she had done
him but little good with the world at large.
He was the original, and she was the inevitable imitation.
I think he was scarcely aware of the impression she
produced, beyond having a general idea that she made
up very well as a Rossetti; he was used to her, and
he was sorry for her, wishing she would
marry and observing that she did n’t Doubtless
I take her too seriously, for she did me no harm,
though I am bound to add that I feel I can only half
account for her. She was not so mystical as she
looked, but she was a strange, indirect, uncomfortable,
embarrassing woman. My story will give the reader
at best so very small a knot to untie that I need
not hope to excite his curiosity by delaying to remark
that Mrs. Ambient hated her sister-in-law. This
I only found out afterwards, when I found out some
other things. But I mention it at once, for I
shall perhaps not seem to count too much on having
enlisted the imagination of the reader if I say that
he will already have guessed it Mrs. Ambient was a
person of conscience, and she endeavored to behave
properly to her kinswoman, who spent a month with her
twice a year; but it required no great insight to
discover that the two ladies were made of a very different
paste, and that the usual feminine hypocrisies must
have cost them, on either side, much more than the
usual effort. Mrs. Ambient, smooth-haired, thin-lipped,
perpetually fresh, must have regarded her crumpled
and dishevelled visitor as a very stale joke; she
herself was not a Rossetti, but a Gainsborough or a
Lawrence, and she had in her appearance no elements
more romantic than a cold, ladylike candor, and a
well-starched muslin dress.
It was in a garment, and with an expression,
of this kind, that she made her entrance, after I
had exchanged a few words with Miss Ambient. Her
husband presently followed her, and there being no
other company we went to dinner. The impression
I received from that repast is present to me still.
There were elements of oddity in my companions, but
they were vague and latent, and did n’t interfere
with my delight It came mainly, of course, from Ambient’s
talk, which was the most brilliant and interesting
I had ever heard. I know not whether he laid himself
out to dazzle a rather juvenile pilgrim from over
the sea; but it matters little, for it was very easy
for him to shine. He was almost better as a talker
than as a writer; that is, if the extraordinary finish
of his written prose be really, as some people have
maintained, a fault. There was such a kindness
in him, however, that I have no doubt it gave him
ideas to see me sit open-mouthed, as I suppose I did.
Not so the two ladies, who not only were very nearly
dumb from beginning to the end of the meal, but who
had not the air of being struck with such an exhibition
of wit and knowledge. Mrs. Ambient, placid and
detached, met neither my eye nor her husband’s;
she attended to her dinner, watched the servants,
arranged the puckers in her dress, exchanged at wide
intervals a remark with her sister-in-law, and while
she slowly rubbed her white hands between the courses,
looked out of the window at the first signs of twilight the
long June day allowing us to dine without candles..
Miss Ambient appeared to give little direct heed to
her brother’s discourse; but on the other hand
she was much engaged in watching its effect upon me.
Her lustreless pupils continued to attach themselves
to my countenance, and it was only her air of belonging
to another century that kept them from being importunate.
She seemed to look at me across the ages, and the
interval of time diminished the vividness of the performance.
It was as if she knew in a general way that her brother
must be talking very well, but she herself was so rich
in ideas that she had no need to pick them up, and
was at liberty to see what would become of a young
American when subjected to a high aesthetic temperature.
The temperature was aesthetic, certainly,
but it was less so than I could have desired, for
I was unsuccessful in certain little attempts to make
Mark Ambient talk about himself I tried to put him
on the ground of his own writings, but he slipped
through my fingers every time and shifted the saddle
to one of his contemporaries. He talked about
Balzac and Browning, and what was being done in foreign
countries, and about his recent tour in the East,
and the extraordinary forms of life that one saw in
that part of the world. I perceived that he had
reasons for not wishing to descant upon literature,
and suffered him without protest to deliver himself
on certain social topics, which he treated with extraordinary
humor and with constant revelations of that power of
ironical portraiture of which his books are full.
He had a great deal to say about London, as London
appears to the observer who does n’t fear the
accusation of cynicism, during the high-pressure time from
April to July of its peculiarities.
He flashed his faculty of making the fanciful real
and the real fanciful over the perfunctory pleasures
and desperate exertions of so many of his compatriots,
among whom there were evidently not a few types for
which he had little love. London bored him, and
he made capital sport of it; his only allusion, that
I can remember, to his own work was his saying that
he meant some day to write an immense grotesque epic
of London society. Miss Ambient’s perpetual
gaze seemed to say to me: “Do you perceive
how artistic we are? Frankly now, is it possible
to be more artistic than this? You surely won’t
deny that we are remarkable.” I was irritated
by her use of the plural pronoun, for she had no right
to pair herself with her brother; and moreover, of
course, I could not see my way to include Mrs. Ambient.
But there was no doubt that, for that matter, they
were all remarkable, and, with all allowances, I had
never heard anything so artistic. Mark Ambient’s
conversation seemed to play over the whole field of
knowledge and taste, and to flood it with light and
color.
After the ladies had left us he took
me into his study to smoke, and here I led him on
to talk freely enough about himself. I was bent
upon proving to him that I was worthy to listen to
him, upon repaying him for what he had said to me
before dinner, by showing him how perfectly I understood.
He liked to talk; he liked to defend his ideas (not
that I attacked them); he liked a little perhaps it
was a pardonable weakness to astonish the
youthful mind and to feel its admiration and sympathy.
I confess that my own youthful mind was considerably
astonished at some of his speeches; he startled me
and he made me wince. He could not help forgetting,
or rather he could n’t know, how little personal
contact I had had with the school in which he was master;
and he promoted me at a jump, as it were, to the study
of its innermost mysteries. My trépidations,
however, were delightful; they were just what I had
hoped for, and their only fault was that they passed
away too quickly; for I found that, as regards most
things, I very soon seized Mark Ambient’s point
of view. It was the point of view of the artist
to whom every manifestation of human energy was a
thrilling spectacle, and who felt forever the desire
to resolve his experience of life into a literary
form. On this matter of the passion for form, the
attempt at perfection, the quest for which was to
his mind the real search for the holy grail, he
said the most interesting, the most inspiring things.
He mixed with them a thousand illustrations from his
own life, from other lives that he had known, from
history and fiction, and above all from the annals
of the time that was dear to him beyond all periods, the
Italian cinque-cento. I saw that in his
books he had only said half of his thought, and what
he had kept back from motives that I deplored
when I learnt them later was the richer
part It was his fortune to shock a great many people,
but there was not a grain of bravado in his pages
(I have always maintained it, though often contradicted),
and at bottom the poor fellow, an artist to his fingertips,
and regarding a failure of completeness as a crime,
had an extreme dread of scandal. There are people
who regret that having gone so far he did not go further;
but I regret nothing (putting aside two or three of
the motives I just mentioned), for he arrived at perfection,
and I don’t see how you can go beyond that The
hours I spent in his study this first one
and the few that followed it; they were not, after
all, so numerous seem to glow, as I look
back on them, with a tone which is partly that of
the brown old room, rich, under the shaded candlelight
where we sat and smoked, with the dusky, delicate
bindings of valuable books; partly that of his voice,
of which I still catch the echo, charged with the images
that came at his command. When we went back to
the drawing-room we found Miss Ambient alone in possession
of it; and she informed us that her sister-in-law
had a quarter of an hour before been called by the
nurse to see Dolcino, who appeared to be a little
feverish.
“Feverish! how in the world
does he come to be feverish?” Ambient asked.
“He was perfectly well this afternoon.”
“Beatrice says you walked him
about too much you almost killed him.”
“Beatrice must be very happy she
has an opportunity to triumph!” Mark Ambient
said, with a laugh of which the bitterness was just
perceptible.
“Surely not if the child is
ill,” I ventured to remark, by way of pleading
for Mrs. Ambient.
“My dear fellow, you are not
married you don’t know the nature
of wives!” my host exclaimed.
“Possibly not; but I know the nature of mothers.”
“Beatrice is perfect as a mother,”
said Miss Ambient, with a tremendous sigh and her
fingers interlaced on her embroidered knees.
“I shall go up and see the child,”
her brother went on. “Do you suppose he’s
asleep?”
“Beatrice won’t let you
see him, Mark,” said the young lady, looking
at me, though she addressed, our companion.
“Do you call that being perfect
as a mother?” Ambient inquired.
“Yes, from her point of view.”
“Damn her point of view!”
cried the author of Beltraffio. And he
left the room; after which we heard him ascend the
stairs.
I sat there for some ten minutes with
Miss Ambient, and we naturally had some conversation,
which was begun, I think, by my asking her what the
point of view of her sister-in-law could be.
“Oh, it’s so very odd,”
she said. “But we are so very odd, altogether.
Don’t you find us so? We have lived so much
abroad. Have you people like us in America?”
“You are not all alike, surely;
so that I don’t think I understand your question.
We have no one like your brother I may go
so far as that.”
“You have probably more persons
like his wife,” said Miss Ambient, smiling.
“I can tell you that better
when you have told me about her point of view.”
“Oh, yes oh, yes.
Well, she does n’t like his ideas. She doesn’t
like them for the child. She thinks them undesirable.”
Being quite fresh from the contemplation
of some of Mark Ambient’s arcana, I was
particularly in a position to appreciate this announcement.
But the effect of it was to make me, after staring
a moment, burst into laughter, which I instantly checked
when I remembered that there was a sick child above.
“What has that infant to do
with ideas?” I asked “Surely, he can’t
tell one from another. Has he read his father’s
novels?”
“He’s very precocious
and very sensitive, and his mother thinks she can’t
begin to guard him too early.” Miss Ambient’s
head drooped a little to one side, and her eyes fixed
themselves on futurity. Then suddenly there was
a strange alteration in her face; she gave a smile
that was more joyless than her gravity a
conscious, insincere smile, and added, “When
one has children, it’s a great responsibility what
one writes.”
“Children are terrible critics,”
I answered. “I am rather glad I have n’t
got any.”
“Do you also write then?
And in the same style as my brother? And do you
like that style? And do people appreciate it in
America? I don’t write, but I think I feel.”
To these and various other inquiries and remarks the
young lady treated me, till we heard her brother’s
step in the hall again, and Mark Ambient reappeared.
He looked flushed and serious, and I supposed that
he had seen something to alarm him in the condition
of his child. His sister apparently had another
idea; she gazed at him a moment as if he were a burning
ship on the horizon, and simply murmured, “Poor
old Mark!”
“I hope you are not anxious,” I said.
“No, but I ’m disappointed.
She won’t let me in. She has locked the
door, and I ’m afraid to make a noise.”
I suppose there might have been something ridiculous
in a confession of this kind, but I liked my new friend
so much that for me it did n’t detract from his
dignity. “She tells me from
behind the door that she will let me know
if he is worse.”
“It’s very good of her,” said Miss
Ambient
I had exchanged a glance with Mark
in which it is possible that he read that my pity
for him was untinged with contempt, though I know not
why he should have cared; and as, presently, his sister
got up and took her bedroom candlestick, he proposed
that we should go back to his study. We sat there
till after midnight; he put himself into his slippers,
into an old velvet jacket, lighted an ancient pipe,
and talked considerably less than he had done before.
There were longish pauses in our communion,
but they only made me feel that we had advanced in
intimacy. They helped me, too, to understand my
friend’s personal situation, and to perceive
that it was by no means the happiest possible.
When his face was quiet, it was vaguely troubled; it
seemed to me to show that for him, too, life was a
struggle, as it has been for many another man of genius.
At last I prepared to leave him, and then, to my ineffable
joy, he gave me some of the sheets of his forthcoming
book, it was not finished, but he had indulged
in the luxury, so dear to writers of deliberation,
of having it “set up,” from chapter to
chapter, as he advanced, he gave me, I say,
the early pages, the prémices, as the French
have it, of this new fruit of his imagination, to
take to my room and look over at my leisure. I
was just quitting him when the door of his study was
noiselessly pushed open, and Mrs. Ambient stood before
us. She looked at us a moment, with her candle
in her hand, and then she said to her husband that
as she supposed he had not gone to bed, she had come
down to tell him that Dolcino was more quiet and would
probably be better in the morning. Mark Ambient
made no reply; he simply slipped past her in the doorway,
as if he were afraid she would seize him in his passage,
and bounded upstairs, to judge for himself of his
child’s condition. Mrs. Ambient looked slightly
discomfited, and for a moment I thought she was going
to give chase to her husband. But she resigned
herself, with a sigh, while her eyes wandered over
the lamp-lit room, where various books, at which I
had been looking, were pulled out of their places
on the shelves, and the fumes of tobacco seemed to
hang in mid-air. I bade her good-night, and then,
without intention, by a kind of fatality, the perversity
which had already made me insist unduly on talking
with her about her husband’s achievements, I
alluded to the precious proof-sheets with which Ambient
had intrusted me and which I was nursing there under
my arm. “It is the opening chapters of
his new book,” I said. “Fancy my satisfaction
at being allowed to carry them to my room!”
She turned away, leaving me to take
my candlestick from the table in the hall; but before
we separated, thinking it apparently a good occasion
to let me know once for all since I was
beginning, it would seem, to be quite “thick”
with my host that there was no fitness in
my appealing to her for sympathy in such a case; before
we separated, I say, she remarked to me with her quick,
round, well-bred utterance, “I dare say you
attribute to me ideas that I have n’t got I don’t
take that sort of interest in my husband’s proof-sheets.
I consider his writings most objectionable!”