IN WHICH LIZZIE EXERTS AN
INFULENCE ON THE AFFAIRS OF THE RICH AND GREAT
A year after Socrates Potter had told
of the descent of Lizzie, and the successful beginning
of her new life, I called again at his office.
“How is Pointview?” I asked.
“Did ye ever learn how it happened
to be called Pointview?” he inquired.
“No.”
“Well, it began with a little
tavern with a tap-room called the Pointview House,
a great many years ago. Travellers used to stop
an’ look around for the Point, an’, of
course, they couldn’t see it, for there’s
none here; at least, no point of land. They’d
go in an’ order drinks an’ say:
“‘Landlord, where’s the point?’
“An’ the landlord would
say: ’Well, boys, if you ain’t in
a hurry you’ll probably see it purty soon.’
“All at once it would appear
to ’em, an’ it was apt to be an’
amusin’ bit o’ scenery.
“We’ve always been quick
to see a point here, an’ anxious to show it
to other people.”
He leaned back and laughed as one
foot sought the top of his desk.
“Our balloons rise from every
walk o’ life an’ come down out o’
ballast,” he went on. “Many of ’em
touch ground in the great financial aviation park
that surrounds Wall Street. In our stages of
recovery the power of Lizzie has been widely felt.”
Up went his other foot. I saw
that the historical mood was upon him.
“Talk about tryin’ to
cross the Atlantic in an air-ship-why,
that’s conservative,” he continued.
“Right here in the eastern part o’ Connecticut
lives a man who set out for the vicinity of the moon
with a large company-a joint-stock company-in
his life-boat. First he made the journey with
the hot-air-ship of his mind, an’ came back
with millions in the hold of his imagination.
Then he thought he’d experiment with a corporation
of his friends-his surplus friends.
They got in on the ground floor, an’ got out
in the sky. Most of ’em were thrown over
for ballast. The Wellman of this enterprise
escaped with his life an’ a little wreckage.
He was Mr. Thomas Robinson Barrow, an’ he
came to consult me about his affairs. They were
in bad shape.
“‘Sell your big house an’ your motor-cars,’
I urged.
“‘That would have been
easy,’ he answered, ’but Lizzie has spoilt
the market for luxuries. You remember how she
got high notions up at the Smythe school, an’
began a life of extravagance, an’ how we all
tried to keep up with her, an’ how the rococo
architecture broke out like pimples on the face of
Connecticut?’
“I smiled an’ nodded.
“’Well, it was you, I
hear, that helped her back to earth and started her
in the simpleton life. Since then she has been
going just as fast, but in the opposite direction,
and we’re still tryin’ to keep up with
her. Now I found a man who was going to buy my
property, but suddenly his wife decided that they would
get along with a more modest outfit. She’s
trying to keep up with Lizzie. Folks are getting
wise.’
“‘Why don’t you?’
“‘Can’t.’
“‘Why not?’
“’Because I’m a
born fool. We’re fettered; we’re
prisoners of luxury.’
“Only a night or two before
I had seen his wife at a reception with a rope of
pearls in her riggin’ an’ a search-light
o’ diamonds on her forward deck an’ a
tiara-boom-de-ay at her masthead an’ the flags
of opulence flyin’ fore an’ aft.
“‘If I were you,’
I said, ‘I’d sell everything-even
the jewels.’
“‘My poor wife!’
he exclaimed. ’I haven’t the heart
to tell her all. She don’t know how hard
up we are!’
“‘I wouldn’t neglect
her education if I were you,’ I said. ’There’s
a kindness, you know, that’s most unkind.
Some day I shall write an article on the use an’
abuse of tiaras-poor things!
It isn’t fair to overwork the family tiara.
I suggest that you get a good-sized trunk an’
lock it up with the other jewels for a vacation.
If necessary your house could be visited by a burglar-that
is, if you wanted to save the feelin’s of your
wife.’
“He turned with a puzzled look at me.
“‘Is it possible that
you haven’t heard of that trick?’ I asked-’a
man of your talents!’
“He shook his head.
“‘Why, these days, if
a man wishes to divorce the family jewels an’
is afraid of his wife, the house is always entered
by a burglar. My dear sir, the burglar is an
ever-present help in time of trouble. It’s
a pity that we have no Gentleman’s Home Journal
in which poor but deservin’ husbands could find
encouragement an’ inspiration.’
“He looked at me an’ laughed.
“‘Suppose you engage a trusty and reliable
burglar?’ he proposed.
“‘There’s only one in the world.’
I said.
“‘Who is it?’
“‘Thomas Robinson Barrow.
Of course, I’m not sayin’ that if I needed
a burglar he’s just the man I should choose,
but for this job he’s the only reliable burglar.
Try him.’
“He seemed to be highly amused.
“‘But it might be difficult
to fool the police,’ he said, in a minute.
“‘Well, it isn’t
absolutely necessary, you know,’ I suggested.
‘The Chief of Police is a friend of mine.’
“’Good! I’m
engaged for this job, and will sell the jewels and
turn the money over to you.’
“‘I do not advise that-not
just that,’ I said. ’We’ll
retire them from active life. A tiara in the
safe is worth two in the Titian bush. We’ll
use them for collateral an’ go to doin’
business. When we’ve paid the debts in
full we’ll redeem the goods an’ return
them to your overjoyed wife. We’ll launch
our tiara on the Marcel waves.’
“Tom was delighted with this
plan-not the best, perhaps-but,
anyhow, it would save his wife from reproach, an’
I don’t know what would have happened if she
had continued to dazzle an’ enrage his creditors
with the pearls an’ the tiara.
“‘It will not be so easy
to sell the house,’ Tom went on. ’That’s
our worst millstone. It was built for large hospitality,
and we have a good many friends, and they come every
week and jump on to the millstone.’
“’If one has to have a
millstone he should choose it with discretion,’
I said. ’It doesn’t pay to get one
that is too inviting. You’ll have to swim
around with yours for a while, and watch your chance
to slip it on to some other fellow’s neck.
You don’t want your son to be a millstonaire.
Some day a man of millions may find it a comfortable
fit, an’ relieve you. They’re buyin’
places all about here.’
“Tom left an’ began work
on our programme. The burglary was well executed
an’ advertised. It achieved a fair amount
of publicity-not too much, you know, but
enough. The place was photographed by the reporters
with the placard ‘For Sale’ showin’
plainly on the front lawn. The advertisin’
was worth almost as much as the diamonds. Tom
said that his wife had lost weight since the sad event.
“‘Of course,’ I
said. ’You can’t take ten pounds
of jewelry from a woman without reducin’ her
weight. She must have had a pint o’ diamonds.’
“‘Pictures an’ glowin’
accounts of the villa were printed in all the papers,
an’ soon a millionaire wrote that it was just
the place he was lookin’ for. I closed
the deal with him. It was Bill Warburton, who
used to go to school with me up there on the hills.
He had long been dreamin’ of a home in Pointview.
“They used to say that Bill
was a fool, but he proved an alibi. Went West
years ago an’ made a fortune, an’ thought
it would be nice to come back an’ finish his
life where it began, near the greatest American city.
I drew the papers, an’ Bill an’ I got
together often an’ talked of the old happy days,
now glimmering in the far past-some thirty-five
years away,
“Well, they enlarged the house-that
was already big enough for a hotel-an’
built stables an’ kennels an’ pheasant
yards an’ houses for ducks an’ geese an’
peacocks. They stocked up with fourteen horses,
twelve hounds, nine collies, four setters, nineteen
servants, innumerable fowls, an’ four motor-cars,
an’ started in pursuit o’ happiness.
“You see, they had no children,
an’ all these beasts an’ birds were intended
to supply the deficiency in human life, an’ assist
in the campaign. Well, somehow, it didn’t
succeed, an’ one day Bill came into my office
with a worried look. He confided to me the well-known
fact that his wife was nervous and unhappy.
“‘The doctors don’t
do her any good, an’ I thought I’d try
a lawyer,’ said he.
“’Do you want to sue Fate
for damages or indict her for malicious persecution?’
I asked.
“‘Neither,’ he said,
’but you know the laws of nature as well as
the laws of men. I appeal to you to tell me what
law my wife has broken, and how she can make amends.’
“‘You surprise me,’
I said. ‘You an’ the madame
can have everything you want, an’ still you’re
unhappy.’
“‘What can we have that
you can’t? You can eat as much, an’
sleep better, an’ wear as many clothes, an’
see an’ hear as well as we can.’
“’Ah, but in the matter
of quality I’m way behind the flag, Bill.
You can wear cloth o’ gold, an Russian sables,
an’ have champagne an’ terrapin every
meal, an’ fiddlers to play while ye eat it, an’
a brass band to march around the place with ye, an’
splendid horses to ride, an’ dogs to roar on
ahead an’ attract the attention of the populace.
You can have a lot of bankrupt noblemen to rub an’
manicure an’ adulate an’ chiropodize ye,
an’ people who’d have to laugh at your
wit or look for another job, an’ authors to read
from their own works-’
“Bill interrupted with a gentle
protest: ’Soc, how comforting you are!’
“‘Well, if all that is
losin’ its charm, what’s the matter with
travel?’
“‘Don’t talk to
me about travel,’ said Bill. ’We’ve
worn ruts in the earth now. Our feet have touched
every land.’
“‘How many meals do you eat a day?’
“‘Three.’
“‘Try six,’ I suggested.
“He laughed, an’ I thought I was makin’
progress, so I kept on.
“‘How many motor-cars have ye ?’
“‘Four.’
“‘Get eight,’ I
advised, as Bill put on the loud pedal. ’You’ve
got nineteen servants, I believe, try thirty-eight.
You have-twenty-one dogs-get
forty-two. You can afford it.’
“‘Come, be serious,’ said Bill.
‘Don’t poke fun at me.’
“’Ah! but your wife must
be able to prove that she has more dogs an’
horses an’ servants an’ motor-cars, an’
that she eats more meals in a day than any other woman
in Connecticut. Then, maybe, she’ll be
happy. You know it’s a woman’s ambition
to excel.’
“‘We have too many fool
things now,’ said Bill, mournfully. ’She’s
had enough of them-God knows!’
“Something in Bill’s manner made me sit
up and stare at him.
“‘Of course, you don’t
mean that she wants another husband!’ I exclaimed.
“‘I’m not so sure
of that,’ said Bill, sadly. ’Sometimes
I’m almost inclined to think she does.’
“’Well, that’s one
direction in which I should advise strict economy,’
said I. ‘You can multiply the dogs an’
the horses, an’ the servants an’ the motor-cars,
but in the matter o’ wives an’ husbands
we ought to stick to the simple life. Don’t
let her go to competing with those Fifth Avenue ladies.’
“‘I don’t know what’s
the matter,’ Bill went on. ’She’s
had everything that her heart could wish. But,
of course, she has had only one husband, and most
of her friends have had two or three. They’ve
outmarried her. It may be that, secretly, she’s
just a little annoyed about that. Many of her
old friends are consumed with envy; their bones are
rotten with it. They smile upon her; they accept
her hospitality; they declare their love, and they
long for her downfall. Now, my wife has a certain
pride and joy in all this, but, naturally, it breeds
a sense of loneliness-the bitter loneliness
that one may find only in a crowd. She turns
more and more to me, and, between ourselves, she seems
to have made up her mind that I don’t love her,
and I can’t convince her that I do.’
“’Well, Bill, I should
guess that you have always been fond of your wife-and-true
to her.’
“‘And you are right,’
said Bill. ’I’ve loved with all my
heart and with a conscience. It’s my only
pride, for, of course, I might have been gay.
In society I enjoy a reputation for firmness.
It is no idle boast.’
“’Well, Bill, you can’t
do anything more for her in the matter of food, raiment,
beasts, or birds, an’ as to jewelry she carries
a pretty heavy stock. I often feel the need
of smoked glasses when I look at her. You’ll
have to make up your mind as to whether she needs
more or less. I’ll study the situation
myself. It may be that I can suggest something
by-and-by-just as a matter of friendship.’
“‘Your common sense may
discern what is needed,’ said Bill. ’I
wish you’d come at least once a week to dinner.
My wife would be delighted, to have you, Soc.
You are one of the few men who interest her.’
“She was a pretty woman, distinguished
for a look of weariness and a mortal fear of fat.
She had done nothing so hard an’ so long, that,
to her, nothing was all there was in the world-save
fat. She was so busy about it that she couldn’t
sit still an’ rest. She wandered from
one chair to another, smokin’ a cigarette, an’
now and then glancin’ at her image in a mirror
an’ slyly feelin’ her ribs to see if she
had gained flesh that day. She liked me because
I was unlike any other man she had met. I poked
fun at her folly an’ all the grandeur of the
place. I amused her as much as she amused me,
perhaps. Anyhow, we got to be good friends, an’
the next Sunday we all drove out in a motor-car to
see Lizzie. Mrs. Bill wanted to meet her.
Lizzie had become famous. She was walkin’
up an’ down the lawn with the infant in a perambulator,
an’ the small boy toddling along behind her.
We left Mrs. Bill with Lizzie an’ the kids,
an’ set out for a tramp over the big farm.
When we returned we found the ladies talkin’
earnestly in the house.
“Before we left I called Lizzie aside for a
minute.
“‘How do you get along with these babies?’
I asked.
“’They’re the life
of our home. My father and mother think they
couldn’t live without them.’
“‘An’ they’re
good practice for you,’ I suggested. ’It’s
time you were plannin’ for yourself, Lizzie.’
“‘I’ve no prospects,’ said
she.
“‘How is that?’
“‘Why, there’s only
one boy that I care for, an’ he has had enough
of me.’
“‘You don’t mean Dan?’
“‘Yes,’ she whispered with trembling
lips, an’ turned away.
“‘What’s the matter?’
“She pulled herself together
an’ answered in half a moment: ’Oh,
I don’t know! He doesn’t come often.
He goes around with other girls.’
“‘Well,’ I said,
‘it’s the same ol’ story. He’s
only tryin’ to keep up with Lizzie. You’ve
done some goin’ around yourself.’
“‘I know, but I couldn’t help it.’
“‘He knows, an’
he couldn’t help it,’ I says. ’The
boys have flocked around you, an’ the girls
have flocked around Dan. They were afraid he’d
get lonesome. If I were you I’d put a mortgage
on him an’ foreclose it as soon as possible.’
“‘It’s too late,’ says she.
‘I hear he’s mortgaged.’
“‘You’d better search
the records,’ I says, ‘an’ if it
ain’t so, stop bein’ careless. You’ve
put yer father on his feet. Now look out for
yerself.’
“‘I think he’s angry on account
of the ham war,’ says she.
“‘Why do you think that?’
“She told me the facts, an’
I laughed ’til the tears came to my eyes.
“‘Nonsense,’ I says,
’Dan will like that. You wait ’til
I tell him, an’ he’ll be up here with
his throttle wide open.’
“‘Do you suppose he’d
spend Christmas with us?’ she asked, with a
very sober look. ‘You know, his mother
an’ father have gone South, an’ he’ll
be all alone.’
“’Ask him at once-call
him on the ‘phone,’ I advised, an’
bade her good-bye.
“The happiness o’ Lizzie
an’ the charm o’ those kids had suggested
an idea. I made up my mind that I’d try
to put Mr. an’ Mrs. Bill on the job o’
keepin’ up with Lizzie.
“‘That’s a wonderful
woman,’ said Mrs. Bill, as we drove away.
’I envy her-she’s so strong
and well and happy. She loves those babies,
and is in the saddle every afternoon, helping with
the work o’ the farm.’
“’Why don’t you
get into the saddle and be as well and strong as she
is?’ Bill asked.
“‘Because I’ve no
object-it’s only a way of doing nothing,’
said Mrs. Bill. ’I’m weary of riding
for exercise. There never was a human being
who could keep it up long. It’s like you
and your dumb-bells. To my knowledge you haven’t
set a foot in your gymnasium for a month. As
a matter of fact, you’re as tired of play as
I am, every bit. Why don’t you go into
Wall Street an’ get poor?’
“‘Tired of play!’
Bill exclaimed. ’Why, Grace, night before
last you were playing bridge until three o’clock
in the morning.’
“’Well, it’s a way
of doing nothing skilfully and on the competitive
plan,’ said she. ’It gives me a chance
to measure my capacity. When I get through I
am so weary that often I can go to sleep without thinking.
It seems to me that brains are a great nuisance to
one who has no need of them. Of course, by-and-by,
they’ll atrophy and disappear like the tails
of our ancestors. Meanwhile, I suppose they are
bound to get sore. Mine is such a fierce, ill-bred,
impudent sort of a brain, and it’s as busy as
a bat in a belfry. I often wish that I had one
of those soft, flexible, paralytic, cocker-spaniel
brains, like that of our friend Mrs. Seavey.
She is so happy with it-so unterrified.
She is equally at home in bed or on horseback, reading
the last best seller or pouring tea and compliments.
Now just hear how this brain of mine is going on
about that poor, inoffensive creature! But that’s
the way it treats me. It’s a perfect heathen
of a brain.’
“Bill an’ I looked at
each other an’ laughed. Her talk convinced
me of one thing-that her trouble was not
the lack of a brain.
“‘You’re always
making fun of me,’ she said. ’Why
don’t you give me something to do?’
“‘Suppose you wash the dishes?’
said Bill.
“‘Would it please you?’
“‘Anything that pleases you pleases me.’
“‘I saw that she, too,
was goin’ to try to keep up with Lizzie, an’
I decided that I’d help her. When we arrived
at the villa we made our way to its front door through
a pack of collie dogs out for an airing.
“‘By-the-way,’ I
said, when we sat down to luncheon at Bill’s
house, ‘congratulate me. I’m a candidate
for new honors.’
“’Those of a husband?
I’ve been hoping for that-you stubborn
old bachelor.’ said Mrs. Bill, expectantly.
“‘No,’ I answered, ‘I’m
to be a father.’
“Bill put down his fork an’
turned an’ stared at me. Mrs. Bill leaned
back in her chair with a red look of surprise.
“‘The gladdest, happiest
papa in Connecticut,’ I added.
“Mrs. Bill covered her face
with her napkin an’ began to shake.
“‘S-Soc., have you fallen?’ Bill
stammered.
“‘No, I’ve riz,’
I said. ‘Don’t blame me, ol’
man, I had to do it. I’ve adopted some
orphans. I’m goin’ to have an orphanage
on the hill; but it will take a year to finish it.
I’m goin’ to have five children.
They’re beauties, an’ I know that I’m
goin’ to love them. I propose to take
them out of the atmosphere of indigence an’
wholesale charity. They’ll have a normal,
pleasant home, an’ a hired mother an’
me to look after them-the personal touch,
you know. I expect to have a lot of fun with
them.’
“‘But what a responsibility!’ said
Mrs. Bill.
“’I know, but I feel the
need of it. Of course it’s different with
you-very different-you have all
these dogs an’ horses to be responsible for
an’ to give you amusement. I couldn’t
afford that. Then, too, I’m a little odd,
I guess. I can get more fun out of one happy,
human soul than out of all the dogs an’ horses
in creation.’
“’But children!
Why, they’re so subject to sickness and accident
and death,’ said Mrs. Bill.
“‘An’ they’re
subject, also, to health an’ life an’ safety,’
I answered.
“’Yes, but you know-they’ll
be getting into all kinds of trouble. They’ll
worry you.’
“‘True; but as for worry,
I don’t mind that much,’ I said.
’My best days were those that were full of worry.
Now, that I’ve won a competence an’ my
worries are gone, so is half my happiness. You
can’t have sunshine without shadows. There
was one of my neighbors who was troubled with “boils.”
He had to have ’em cured right away, an’
a doctor gave him some medicine that healed ’em
up, but he was worse off than ever. The boils
began to do business inside of him, an’ he rushed
back to the doctor.
“’What’s the matter now?”
said the medical man.
“’"Outside I’m sound
as a dollar,” said my neighbor, “but it
seems as if all hell had moved into me.”
“’Now, cares are like
boils: it don’t do to get rid of ’em
too quick. They’re often a great relief
to the inside of a man, an’ it’s better
to have ’em on the surface than way down in your
marrow.’
“Bill an’ his wife looked
into each other’s eyes for half a minute, but
neither spoke.
“‘I’m goin’
to ask a favor of you,’ I said. ’I
see that there’s nobody livin’ in the
old farm-house out back of the garden. I wish
you’d let me put my little family into it until
I can build a home for ’em.’
“‘Oh, my!’ Mrs.
Bill exclaimed. ’Those children would
be running all over the lawns and the garden.
They’d destroy my roses.’
“‘True; but, after all,
they’re more beautiful than the roses,’
I urged. ’They’re more graceful
in form, more charming in color. Then, too, roses
cannot laugh or weep or play. Roses cannot look
up at you out of eyes full of the light of heaven an’
brighter than your jewels. Roses may delight,
but they cannot love you or know that you love them.
Dear woman, my roses will wander over the lawns.
Their colors will be flickering about you, and the
music of their voices will surround the villa some
days; but, God knows, they’ll look better, far
better than the dogs or the bronze lions, or the roses.
I shall dress them well.’
“‘I think he’s right,’ said
Bill.
“‘He’s most disturbing
and persuasive anyway-the revolutionist!’
said Mrs. Bill. ’If it’s really a
favor to you, Mr. Potter, I shall agree to it.
But you must have a trusty woman. I really
cannot assume any responsibility.’
“’I thanked her and promised
to assume all responsibility, and Mrs. Warburton was
to get the old house ready at once.
“Three days later I drove to
the villa with my matron and the babies. Rather
quick work, wasn’t it? I hadn’t let
any grass grow under my plan. When we lit at
the front door every youngster broke out in a loud
hurrah of merriment. The three-year-old boy-beautiful
beyond all words-got aboard one of the crouched
lions and began to shout. A little girl made
a grab at the morning-glories on a Doric column, while
her sister had mounted a swinging seat an’ tumbled
to the floor. The other two were chattering
like parrots. Honestly, I was scared. I
was afraid that Mrs. Bill would come down and jump
into hysterics. I snaked the boy off the lion’s
back and rapped on him for order. The matron
got busy with the others. In a jiffy it seemed
as if they had all begun to wail an’ roar.
I trembled when a maid opened the door an’
I saw Mrs. Bill comin’ down the staircase.
I wouldn’t have been surprised to have seen
the bronze lion get up an’ run.
“‘The saints defend us!’
exclaimed Mrs. Bill, in the midst of the uproar.
“‘They’re not at
their best,’ I shouted, ‘but here they
are.’
“‘Yes, I knew they were
there,’ said Mrs. Bill. ’This is
the music of which you were speaking the other day.
Take them right around to the old house, if you please.
I’m sorry, but I must ask you to excuse me
this morning.’
“I succeeded in quellin’
the tumult, and introduced the matron, who received
a nod an’ a look that made a dent in her, an’
away we went around the great house, a melancholy,
shuffling troop, now silent as the grave. It
looked dark for my little battalion with which I had
been hoping to conquer this world within the villa
gates. They were of the great army of the friendless.
“I asked Mrs. Hammond, the matron,
to see that they did as little damage as possible,
and left them surrounded by every comfort.
“They had a telephone and unlimited
credit at the stores, an’ Mrs. Hammond was a
motherly soul of much experience with children, an’
I knew that I could trust her.
“I was to dine with the Warburtons
later in the week, an’ before I entered the
big house that evening I went around to the lodge.
The children were all well an’ asleep in their
beds, an’ the matron apparently happy an’
contented. She said that Mrs. Bill had met them
in the grounds that day, an’ she told how the
little three-year-old boy had exerted his charms upon
my lady Warburton, who had spent half an hour leading
him through the gardens.
“How beautiful he was lying
asleep in his bed that evening!-his face
like the old dreams of Eros, with silken, yellow, curly
locks on his brow, an’ long dark lashes, soft
as the silk of the growing corn, an’ a red mouth,
so wonderfully curved, so appealing in its silence.
Beneath it were teeth like carved ivory. Those
baby lips seemed to speak to me and to say: ’O
man that was born of a woman, and like me was helpless,
give me your love or look not upon me!’
“But I could not help looking,
an” as I looked he smiled in what dreams-of
things past or to come-I wish it were in
me to tell you. Something touched me-like
a strong hand. I went out under the trees in
the darkness an’ stood still an’ wondered
what had happened to me. Great Scott!-me!
Socrates Potter, lawyer, statesman, horse-trader!
“‘With that little captain
I could take a city,’ I whispered, an’
I got up an’ brushed myself off, as it were,
an’ walked around to the front door of the great
house.
“Therein I was to witness an
amusing comedy. The butler wore a new sort of
grin as he took my wraps at the door. There were
guests, mostly from New York an’ Greenwich.
We had taken our seats at the table when, to my surprise,
Mrs. Bill, in a grand costume, with a tiara on her
head, an’ a collar of diamonds on her neck, began
to serve the caviar.
“‘Ladies and gentlemen,’
said she, ’this is to convince Mr. Socrates
Potter that I can do useful work. I’m dieting,
anyhow, and I can’t eat.’
“’My friend, I observe
that you are serving us, and we are proud, but you
do not appear to be serving a purpose,’ I said.
“‘Now, don’t spoil
it all with your relentless logic,’ she began.
’You see, I am going to take a hand in this keeping-up-with-Lizzie
business. One of our ladies had to give up a
dinner-party the other day, because her butlers had
left suddenly.’
“’"Why didn’t you
and a maid serve the dinner yourselves?” I said.
“’"Impossible!” was her proud answer.
“’"It would have been
a fine lark. I would have done it,” I said.
“’"I’d like to see you,” she
laughed.
“‘"You shall,” I answered, and here
I am.’
“Now, there were certain smiles
which led me to suspect that it was a blow aimed at
one of the ladies who sat at the table with us, but
of that I am not sure.
“‘I’m also getting
my hand in,’ our hostess went on. ’Bill
and I are going to try the simple life. Tomorrow
we move into the log-cabin, where we shall do our
own work, and send the servants off for a week’s
holiday. I’m going to do the cooking-I’ve
been learning how-and I shall make the
beds, and Bill is to chop the wood, and help wash
the dishes, and we shall sleep out-of-doors.
It will, I hope, be a lesson to some of these proud
people around us who are living beyond their means.
That’s good, isn’t it?’
“‘Excellent!’ I exclaimed, as the
others laughed.
“‘Incidentally, it will help me to reduce,’
she added.
“‘An’ it promises
to reduce Bill,’ I said. ’It will
kill Bill, I fear, but it will pay. You might
change your plan a little-Just a little-an’
save poor Bill. Think of eating biscuit an’
flapjacks from the hand of a social leader!
Between the millstones of duty and indigestion he
will be sadly ground, but with the axe he may, if
he will, defend his constitution.’
“‘Well, what’s a
constitution between husband and wife?’ she asked.
“‘Nothin’.’ I says.
’Bear in mind I wouldn’t discourage you.
With the aid of the axe his ancestors were able to
withstand the assaults of pork an’ beans an’
pie. If he uses it freely, he is safe.’
“’You see, I shall have
him in a position where he must work or die,’
said Mrs. Bill.
“‘He’ll die,’ said a guest.
“‘I call it a worthy enterprise
whatever the expense,’ I said. ’It
will set a fashion here an’ a very good one.
In this community there are so many dear ladies who
are prisoners of gravitation. They rely almost
exclusively on hired hands an’ feet, an’
are losin’ the use o’ their own.
What confusion will spread among them when they learn
that Mrs. William Henry Warburton, the richest woman
in Fairfield County, and the daughter of a bishop,
has been doin’ her own work! What consternation!
What dismay! What female profanity! What
a revision of habits an’ resolutions! Why,
there’s been nothin’ like it since the
descent of Lizzie.’
“‘I think it’s terrible,’
said a fat lady from Louisville, distinguished for
her appetite, an’ often surreptitiously referred
to as ‘The Mammoth Cave of Kentucky.’
’The idea of trying to make it fashionable to
endure drudgery! I think we women have all we
can do now.’
“‘To be respectable,’
said Mrs. Bill; ’but let’s try to do something
else.’
“‘Why don’t you
form a Ladies’ Protective Union,’ Bill
suggested, ‘an’ choose the tiara for a
symbol, an’ strike for no hours a day an’
all your husbands can earn?’
“‘And the employment of
skilled idlers only,’ Mrs. Bill put in.
’They must all know how to do nothing in the
modern way-by discussing the rights of
women and the novel of lust, and the divorces past
and prospective, by playing at bridge and benevolence.
How absurd it all is! I’m not going to
be an overgrown child any longer.’
“I saw that Mrs. Bill was makin’
progress, an’ with her assistance I began to
hope for better things in that neighborhood.
“You’ve got to reach the
women somehow, you see, before you can improve the
social conditions of a community. I love them,
but many are overgrown children, as Mrs. Bill had
put it, an’ doin’ nothing with singular
skill an’ determination an’ often with
appalling energy.
“Our pretty hostess had been
helping a butler, as this talk went on, an’
presently one of the other ladies joined her, an’
never was any company so picturesquely an’ amusingly
served.
“‘I’ve quite fallen
in love with that three-year-old boy,’ said
Mrs. Bill, as we rose from the table. ’I
had a good romp with him to-day.’
“’I wish you’d go
over to the old farm-house with me; I want to show
you something,’ I said.
“In a moment we were in wraps
an’ making our way across the lawn.
“‘I was glad to get a
rap at that Mrs. Barrow,’ she whispered, as
we walked along. ’She’s just got
back her jewels that were stolen, and has begun to
go out again. She’s the vainest, proudest
fool of a woman, and her husband is always borrowing
money. Did you know it?’
“‘Some-that
is, fairly well,’ I said, with bitterness.
“’So does Bill, and she
goes about with the airs of a grand lady and the silliest
notions. Really, it was for her benefit that
I helped the butler.’
“‘If it weren’t
for Bill I’d call you an angel,’ I said.
’You have it in your power to redeem the skilled
idlers of this community.’
“We reached the little house
so unlike the big, baronial thing we had left.
It was a home. Mrs. Hammond sat by the reading-lamp
in its cozy sitting-room before an open fire.
She led us into the bedroom with the lamp in her
hand. There lay the boy as I had left him, still
smiling with a lovelier, softer red in his cheeks than
that of roses.
“‘See the color and the dimples,’
I said.
“She looked from one to another,
an’ suddenly the strong appeal of their faces
fell upon her. She raised the boy from his bed,
an’ he put his arms around her neck an’
began to talk in a tender baby treble.
“Did you ever hear the voice
of a child just out of dreamland, when it expresses,
not complaint, but love an’ contentment?
Well, sir, it is the sweetest, the most compelling
note in all nature, I believe. It is like a
muted violin-voice of God or voice of man-which
is it? I dare not say, but I do know that the
song of the hermit-thrush is but sounding brass compared
with that.
“I felt its power, an’
I said to myself: ’I will waste my life
no longer. I will marry.’
“She, too, had felt it.
The little captain had almost overcome her.
She laid him down, an’ we turned away.
“We walked through the garden
paths, an’ neither spoke, but in the stillness
I could hear trumpets of victory. We entered
the great hall an’ sat with the others by its
fireside, but took little part in the talk.
When I made my adieus she shook my hand warmly and
said I was very good to them.
“Save for its good example,
the log-cabin experiment was not a success.
They slept with all the doors and windows open, an’
one night a skunk came in an’ got under the
bed. Mrs. Bill discovered that they had company,
an’ Bill got up an’ lit the lantern, an’
followed the clew to its source. He threatened
an’ argued an’ appealed to the skunk’s
better nature with a doughnut, but the little beast
sat unmoved in his corner. The place seemed to
suit him.
“Bill got mad an’ flung
the axe at him. It was a fatal move-fatal
to the skunk an’ the cabin an’ the experiment,
an’ a blow to the sweetness an’ sociological
condition of Connecticut.
“They returned to the big house,
an’ by-an’-by told me of their adventure.
“‘Don’t be discouraged,’
I said. ’You will find skunks in every
walk of life, but when you do, always throw down your
cards an’ quit the game. They can deal
from the bottom of the pack. You haven’t
a ghost of a show with ’em.’
“Being driven out of the cabin,
Mrs. Bill gave most of her leisure to the farm-house,
where I had spent an hour or more every day.
“Suddenly I saw that a wonderful
thing had happened to me. I was in love with
those kids, an’ they with me. The whole
enterprise had been a bluff conceived in the interest
of the Warburtons. I hadn’t really intended
to build a house, but suddenly I got busy with all
the mechanics I could hire in Pointview, and the house
began to grow like a mushroom.
“Another wonderful thing happened.
Mrs. Warburton fell in love with the kids, and they
with her. She romped with them on the lawn;
she took them out to ride every day; she put them to
bed every night; she insisted upon buying their clothes;
she bought them a pony an’ a little omnibus;
she built them a playhouse for their comfort.
The whole villa began to revolve around the children.
They called her mama an’ they called me papa,
a sufficiently singular situation.