Of course I had at once left the letters
of introduction which Aunt Carola had given me; but
in my ignorance of Kings Port hours I had found everybody
at dinner when I made my first round of calls between
half-past three and five-an experience particularly
regrettable, since I had hurried my own dinner on
purpose, not then aware that the hours at my boarding-house
were the custom of the whole town. (These hours even
since my visit to Kings Port, are beginning to change.
But such backsliding is much condemned.) Upon an afternoon
some days later, having seen in the extra looking-glass,
which I had been obliged to provide for myself, that
the part in my back hair was perfect, I set forth
again, better informed.
As I rang the first doorbell, another
visitor came up the steps, a beautiful old lady in
widow’s dress, a cardcase in her hand.
“Have you rung, sir?”
said she, in a manner at once gentle and voluminous.
“Yes, madam.”
Nevertheless she pulled it again.
“It doesn’t always ring,” she explained,
“unless one is accustomed to it, which you are
not.”
She addressed me with authority, exactly
like Aunt Carola, and with even greater precision
in her good English and good enunciation. Unlike
the girl at the Exchange, she had no accent; her language
was simply the perfection of educated utterance; it
also was racy with the free censoriousness which civilized
people of consequence are apt to exercise the world
over. “I was sorry to miss your visit,”
she began (she knew me, you see, perfectly); “you
will please to come again soon, and console me for
my disappointment. I am Mrs. Gregory St. Michael,
and my house is in Le Maire Street (Pronounced in
Kings Port, Lammarree) as you have been so civil as
to find out. And how does your Aunt Carola do
in these contemptible times? You can tell her
from me that vulgarization is descending, even upon
Kings Port.”
“I cannot imagine that!” I exclaimed.
“You cannot imagine it because
you don’t know anything about it, young gentleman!
The manners of some of our own young people will soon
be as dishevelled as those in New York. Have
you seen our town yet, or is it all books with you?
You should not leave without a look at what is still
left of us. I shall be happy if you will sit in
my pew on Sunday morning. Your Northern shells
did their best in the bombardment-did you
say that you rang? I think you had better pull
it again; all the way out; yes, like that-in
the bombardment, but we have our old church still,
in spite of you. Do you see the crack in that
wall? The earthquake did it. You’re
spared earthquakes in the North, as you seem to be
spared pretty much everything disastrous-except
the prosperity that’s going to ruin you all.
We’re better off with our poverty than you.
Just ring the bell once more, and then we’ll
go. I fancy Julia-I fancy Mrs. Weguelin
St. Michael-has run out to stare at the
Northern steam yacht in the harbor. It would
be just like her. This house is historic itself.
Shabby enough now, to be sure! The great-aunt
of my cousin, John Mayrant (who is going to be married
next Wednesday, to such a brute of a girl, poor boy!),
lived here in 1840, and made an answer to the Earl
of Mainridge that put him in his place. She was
our famous Kings Port wit, and at the reception which
her father (my mother’s uncle) gave the English
visitor, he conducted himself as so many Englishmen
seem to think they can in this country. Miss Beaufain
(pronounced in Kings Port, Bowfayne), as she was then,
asked the Earl how he liked America; and he replied,
very well, except for the people, who were so vulgar.
‘What can you expect?’ said Miss Beaufain;
’we’re descended from the English.’
Mrs. St. Michael is out, and the servant has gone
home. Slide this card under the door, with your
own, and come away.”
She took me with her, moving through
the quiet South Place with a leisurely grace and dignity
at which my spirit rejoiced; she was so beautiful,
and so easy, and afraid of nothing and nobody! (This
must be modified. I came later to suspect that
they all stood in some dread of their own immediate
families.)
In the North, everybody is afraid
of something - afraid of the legislature, afraid
of the trusts, afraid of the strikes, afraid of what
the papers will say, of what the neighbors will say,
of what the cook will say; and most of all, and worst
of all, afraid to be different from the general pattern,
afraid to take a step or speak a syllable that shall
cause them to be thought unlike the monotonous millions
of their fellow-citizens; the land of the free living
in ceaseless fear! Well, I was already afraid
of Mrs. Gregory St. Michael. As we walked and
she talked, I made one or two attempts at conversation,
and speedily found that no such thing was the lady’s
intention - I was there to listen; and truly I
could wish nothing more agreeable, in spite of my desire
to hear further about next Wednesday’s wedding
and the brute of a girl. But to this subject
Mrs. St. Michael did not return. We crossed Worship
Street and Chancel Street, and were nearing the East
Place where a cannon was being shown me, a cannon
with a history and an inscription concerning the “war
for Southern independence, which I presume your prejudice
calls the Rebellion,” said my guide. “There’s
Mrs. St. Michael now, coming round the corner.
Well, Julia, could you read the yacht’s name
with your naked eye? And what’s the name
of the gambler who owns it? He’s a gambler,
or he couldn’t own a yacht-unless
his wife’s a gambler’s daughter.”
“How well you’re feeling
to-day, Maria!” said the other lady, with a
gentle smile.
“Certainly. I have been
talking for twenty minutes.” I was now presented
to Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael, also old, also charming,
in widow’s dress no less in the bloom of age
than Mrs. Gregory, but whiter and very diminutive.
She shyly welcomed me to Kings Port. “Take
him home with you, Julia. We pulled your bell
three times, and it’s too damp for you to be
out. Don’t forget,” Mrs. Gregory said
to me, “that you haven’t told me a word
about your Aunt Carola, and that I shall expect you
to come and do it.” She went slowly away
from us, up the East Place, tall, graceful, sweeping
into the distance like a ship. No haste about
her dignified movement, no swinging of elbows, nothing
of the present hour!
“What a beautiful girl she must
have been!” I murmured aloud, unconsciously.
“No, she was not a beauty in
her youth,” said my new guide in her shy voice,
“but always fluent, always a wit. Kings
Port has at times thought her tongue too downright.
We think that wit runs in her family, for young John
Mayrant has it; and her first-cousin-once-removed put
the Earl of Mainridge in his place at her father’s
ball in 1840. Miss Beaufain (as she was then)
asked the Earl how he liked America; and he replied,
very well, except for the people, who were so vulgar.
’What can you expect?’ said Miss Beaufain;
‘we’re descended from the English.’
I am very sorry for Maria-for Mrs. St. Michael-just
at present. Her young cousin, John Mayrant, is
making an alliance deeply vexatious to her. Do
you happen to know Miss Hortense Rieppe?”
I had never heard of her.
“No? She has been North
lately. I thought you might have met her.
Her father takes her North, I believe, whenever any
one will invite them. They have sometimes managed
to make it extend through an unbroken year. Newport,
I am credibly informed, greatly admires her. We
in Kings Port have never (except John Mayrant, apparently)
seen anything in her beauty, which Northerners find
so exceptional.”
“What is her type?” I inquired.
“I consider that she looks like
a steel wasp. And she has the assurance to call
herself a Kings Port girl. Her father calls himself
a general, and it is repeated that he ran away at
the battle of Chattanooga. I hope you will come
to see me another day, when you can spare time from
the battle of Cowpens. I am Mrs. Weguelin St.
Michael, the other lady is Mrs. Gregory St. Michael.
I wonder if you will keep us all straight?”
And smiling, the little lady, whose shy manner and
voice I had found to veil as much spirit as her predecessor’s,
dismissed me and went up her steps, letting herself
into her own house.
The boy in question, the boy of the
cake, John Mayrant, was coming out of the gate at
which I next rang. The appearance of his boyish
figure and well-carried head struck me anew, as it
had at first; from his whole person one got at once
a strangely romantic impression. He looked at
me, made as if he would speak, but passed on.
Probably he had been hearing as much about me as I
had been hearing about him. At this house the
black servant had not gone home for the night, and
if the mistress had been out to take a look at the
steam yacht, she had returned.
“My sister,” she said,
presenting me to a supremely fine-looking old lady,
more chiselled, more august, than even herself.
I did not catch this lady’s name, and she confined
herself to a distant, though perhaps not unfriendly,
greeting. She was sitting by a work-table, and
she resumed some embroidery of exquisite appearance,
while my hostess talked to me.
Both wore their hair in a simple fashion
to suit their years, which must have been seventy
or more; both were dressed with the dignity that such
years call for; and I may mention here that so were
all the ladies above a certain age in this town of
admirable old-fashioned propriety. In New York,
in Boston, in Philadelphia, ladies of seventy won’t
be old ladies any more; they’re unwilling to
wear their years avowedly, in quiet dignity by their
firesides; they bare their bosoms and gallop egregiously
to the ball-rooms of the young; and so we lose a particular
graciousness that Kings Port retains, a perspective
of generations. We happen all at once, with no
background, in a swirl of haste and similarity.
One of the many things which came
home to me during the conversation that now began
(so many more things came home than I can tell you!)
was that Mrs. Gregory St. Michael’s tongue was
assuredly “downright” for Kings Port.
This I had not at all taken in while she talked to
me, and her friend’s reference to it had left
me somewhat at a loss. That better precision
and choice of words which I have mentioned, and the
manner in which she announced her opinions, had put
me in mind of several fine ladles whom I had known
in other parts of the world; but hers was an individual
manner, I was soon to find, and by no means the Kings
Port convention. This convention permitted, indeed,
condemnations of one’s neighbor no less sweeping,
but it conveyed them in a phraseology far more restrained.
“I cannot regret your coming
to Kings Port,” said my hostess, after we had
talked for a little while, and I had complimented the
balmy March weather and the wealth of blooming flowers;
“but I fear that Fanning is not a name that
you will find here. It belongs to North Carolina.”
I smiled and explained that North
Carolina Fannings were useless to me. “And,
if I may be so bold, how well you are acquainted with
my errand!”
I cannot say that my hostess smiled,
that would be too definite; but I can say that she
did not permit herself to smile, and that she let
me see this repression. “Yes,” she
said, “we are acquainted with your errand, though
not with its motive.”
I sat silent, thinking of the Exchange.
My hostess now gave me her own account
of why all things were known to all people in this
town. “The distances in your Northern cities
are greater, and their population is much greater.
There are but few of us in Kings Port.”
In these last words she plainly told me that those
“few” desired no others. She next
added - “My nephew, John Mayrant, has spoken
of you at some length.”
I bowed. “I had the pleasure
to see and hear him order a wedding cake.”
“Yes. From Eliza La Heu
(pronounced Layhew), my niece; he is my nephew, she
is my niece on the other side. My niece is a beginner
at the Exchange. We hope that she will fulfil
her duties there in a worthy manner. She comes
from a family which is schooled to meet responsibilities.”
I bowed again; again it seemed fitting.
“I had not, until now, known the charming girl’s
name,” I murmured.
My hostess now bowed slightly.
“I am glad that you find her charming.”
“Indeed, yes!” I exclaimed.
“We, also, are pleased with
her. She is of good family-for the
up-country.”
Once again our alphabet fails me.
The peculiar shade of kindness, of recognition, of
patronage, which my agreeable hostess (and all Kings
Port ladies, I soon noticed) imparted to the word “up-country”
cannot be conveyed except by the human voice-and
only a Kings Port voice at that. It is a much
lighter damnation than what they make of the phrase
“from Georgia,” which I was soon to hear
uttered by the lips of the lady. “And so
you know about his wedding cake?”
“My dear madam, I feel that
I shall know about everything.”
Her gray eyes looked at me quietly
for a moment. “That is possible. But
although we may talk of ourselves to you, we scarcely
expect you to talk of ourselves to us.”
Well, my pertness had brought me this
quite properly! And I received it properly.
“I should never dream-” I hastened
to say; “even without your warning. I find
I’m expected to have seen the young lady of his
choice,” I now threw out. My accidental
words proved as miraculous as the staff which once
smote the rock. It was a stream, indeed, which
now broke forth from her stony discretion. She
began easily. “It is evident that you have
not seen Miss Rieppe by the manner in which you allude
to her-although of course, in comparison
with my age, she is a young girl.” I think
that this caused me to open my mouth.
“The disparity between her years
and my nephew’s is variously stated,”
continued the old lady. “But since John’s
engagement we have all of us realized that love is
truly blind.”
I did not open my mouth any more;
but my mind’s mouth was wide open.
My hostess kept it so. “Since
John Mayrant was fifteen he has had many loves; and
for myself, knowing him and believing in him as I do,
I feel confident that he will make no connection distasteful
to the family when he really comes to marry.”
This time I gasped outright.
“But-the cake!-next Wednesday!”
She made, with her small white hand,
a slight and slighting gesture. “The cake
is not baked yet, and we shall see what we shall see.”
From this onward until the end a pinkness mounted
in her pale, delicate cheeks, and deep, strong resentment
burned beneath her discreetly expressed indiscretions.
“The cake is not baked, and I, at least, am not
solicitous. I tell my cousin, Mrs. Gregory St.
Michael, that she must not forget it was merely his
phosphates. That girl would never have looked
at John Mayrant had it not been for the rumor of his
phosphates. I suppose some one has explained
to you her pretensions of birth. Away from Kings
Port she may pass for a native of this place, but they
come from Georgia. It cannot be said that she
has met with encouragement from us; she, however,
easily recovers from such things. The present
generation of young people in Kings Port has little
enough to remind us of what we stood for in manners
and customs, but we are not accountable for her, nor
for her father. I believe that he is called a
general. His conduct at Chattanooga was conspicuous
for personal prudence. Both of them are skillful
in never knowing poor people-but the Northerners
they consort with must really be at a loss how to bestow
their money. Of course, such Northerners cannot
realize the difference between Kings Port and Georgia,
and consequently they make much of her. Her features
do undoubtedly possess beauty. A Newport woman-the
new kind-has even taken her to Worth!
And yet, after all, she has remained for John.
We heard a great deal of her men, too. She took
care of that, of course. John Mayrant actually
followed her to Newport.
“But,” I couldn’t
help crying out, “I thought he was so poor!”
“The phosphates,” my hostess
explained. “They had been discovered on
his land. And none of her New York men had come
forward. So John rushed back happy.”
At this point a very singular look came over the face
of my hostess, and she continued - “There
have been many false reports (and false hopes in consequence)
based upon the phosphate discoveries. It was
I who had to break it to him-what further
investigation had revealed. Poor John!”
“He has, then, nothing?” I inquired.
“His position in the Custom
House, and a penny or two from his mother’s
fortune.”
“But the cake?” I now once again reminded
her.
My hostess lifted her delicate hand
and let it fall. Her resentment at the would-be
intruder by marriage still mounted. “Not
even from that pair would I have believed such a thing
possible!” she exclaimed; and she went into
a long, low, contemplative laugh, looking not at me,
but at the fire. Our silent companion continued
to embroider. “That girl,” my hostess
resumed, “and her discreditable father played
on my nephew’s youth and chivalry to the tune
of-well, you have heard the tune.”
“You mean-you mean ?”
I couldn’t quite take it in.
“Yes. They rattled their
poverty at him until he offered and they accepted.”
I must have stared grotesquely now.
“That-that-the cake-and
that sort of thing-at his expense?
“My dear sir, I shall be glad
if you can find me anything that they have ever done
at their own expense!”
I doubt if she would ever have permitted
her speech such freedom had not the Rieppes been “from
Georgia”; I am sure that it was anger-family
anger, race anger-which had broken forth;
and I think that her silent, severe sister scarcely
approved of such breaking forth to me, a stranger.
But indignation had worn her reticence thin, and I
had happened to press upon the weak place. After
my burst of exclamation I came back to it. “So
you think Miss Rieppe will get out of it?”
“It is my nephew who will ‘get
out of it,’ as you express it.”
I totally misunderstood her.
“Oh!” I protested stupidly. “He
doesn’t look like that. And it takes all
meaning from the cake.”
“Do not say cake to me again!”
said the lady, smiling at last. “And-will
you allow me to tell you that I do not need to have
my nephew, John Mayrant, explained to me by any one?
I merely meant to say that he, and not she, is the
person who will make the lucky escape. Of course,
he is honorable-a great deal too much so
for his own good. It is a misfortune, nowadays,
to be born a gentleman in America. But, as I
told you, I am not solicitous. What she is counting
on-because she thinks she understands true
Kings Port honor, and does not in the least-is
his renouncing her on account of the phosphates-the
bad news, I mean. They could live on what he
has-not at all in her way, though-and
besides, after once offering his genuine, ardent, foolish
love-for it was genuine enough at the time-John
would never-
She stopped; but I took her up.
“Did I understand you to say that his love was
genuine at the lime?”
“Oh, he thinks it is now-insists
it is now! That is just precisely what would
make him-do you not see?-stick
to his colors all the closer.”
“Goodness!” I murmured. “What
a predicament!”
But my hostess nodded easily. “Oh, no.
You will see. They will all see.”
I rose to take my leave; my visit,
indeed, had been, for very interest, prolonged beyond
the limits of formality-my hostess had attended
quite thoroughly to my being entertained. And
at this point the other, the more severe and elderly
lady, made her contribution to my entertainment.
She had kept silence, I now felt sure, because gossip
was neither her habit nor to her liking. Possibly
she may have also felt that her displeasure had been
too manifest; at any rate, she spoke out of her silence
in cold, yet rich, symmetrical tones.
“This, I understand, is your first visit to
Kings Port?”
I told her that it was.
She laid down her exquisite embroidery.
“It has been thought a place worth seeing.
There is no town of such historic interest at the North.”
Standing by my chair, I assured her that I did not
think there could be.
“I heard you allude to my half-sister-in-law,
Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael. It was at the house
where she now lives that the famous Miss Beaufain
(as she was then) put the Earl of Mainridge in his
place, at the reception which her father gave the
English visitor in 1840. The Earl conducted himself
as so many Englishmen seem to think they can in this
country; and on her asking him how he liked America,
he replied, very well, except for the people, who
were so vulgar.
“‘What can you expect?’
said Miss Beaufain; ’we’re descended from
the English.’”
“But I suppose you will tell
me that your Northern beauties can easily outmatch
such wit.”
I hastened to disclaim any such pretension;
and having expressed my appreciation of the anecdote,
I moved to the door as the stately lady resumed her
embroidery.
My hostess had a last word for me.
“Do not let the cake worry you.”
Outside the handsome old iron gate
I looked at my watch and found that for this day I
could spend no more time upon visiting.