“Then it was a good laugh, indeed!” I
cried heartily.
“Oh, don’t let’s
go back to our fine manners!” he begged comically.
“We’ve satisfied each other that we have
them! I feel so lonely; and my aunt just now-well,
never mind about that. But you really must excuse
us about Miss Beaufain, and all that sort of thing.
I see it, because I’m of the new generation,
since the war, and-well, I’ve been
to other places, too. But Aunt Eliza, and all
of them, you know, can’t see it. And I
wouldn’t have them, either! So I don’t
ever attempt to explain to them that the world has
to go on. They’d say, ’We don’t
see the necessity!’ When slavery stopped, they
stopped, you see, just like a clock. Their hand
points to 1865-it has never moved a minute
since. And some day”-his voice
grew suddenly tender-“they’ll
go, one by one, to join the still older ones.
And I shall miss them very much.”
For a moment I did not speak, but
watched the roses nodding and moving. Then I
said - “May I say that I shall miss them,
too?”
He looked at me. “Miss
our old Kings Port people?” He didn’t invite
outsiders to do that!
“Don’t you see how it
is?” I murmured. “It was the same
thing once with us.”
“The same thing-in
the North?” His tone still held me off.
“The same sort of dear old people-I
mean charming, peppery, refined, courageous people;
in Salem, in Boston, in New York, in every place that
has been colonial, and has taken a hand in the game.”
And, as certain beloved memories of men and women
rose in my mind, I continued - “If you knew
some of the Boston elder people as I have known them,
you would warm with the same admiration that is filling
me as I see your people of Kings Port.”
“But politics?” the young Southerner slowly
suggested.
“Oh, hang slavery! Hang
the war!” I exclaimed. “Of course,
we had a family quarrel. But we were a family
once, and a fine one, too! We knew each other,
we visited each other, we wrote letters, sent presents,
kept up relations; we, in short, coherently joined
hands from one generation to another; the fibres of
the sons tingled with the current from their fathers,
back and back to the old beginnings, to Plymouth and
Roanoke and Rip Van Winkle! It’s all gone,
all done, all over. You have to be a small, well-knit
country for that sort of exquisite personal unitedness.
There’s nothing united about these States any
more, except Standard Oil and discontent. We’re
no longer a small people living and dying for a great
idea; we’re a big people living and dying for
money. And these ladies of yours-well,
they have made me homesick for a national and a social
past which I never saw, but which my old people knew.
They’re like legends, still living, still warm
and with us. In their quiet clean-cut faces I
seem to see a reflection of the old serene candlelight
we all once talked and danced in-sconces,
tall mirrors, candles burning inside glass globes
to keep them from the moths and the draft that, of
a warm evening, blew in through handsome mahogany doors;
the good bright silver; the portraits by Copley and
Gilbert Stuart; a young girl at a square piano, singing
Moore’s melodies-and Mr. Pinckney
or Commodore Perry, perhaps, dropping in for a hot
supper!”
John Mayrant was smiling and looking
at the graves. “Yes, that’s it; that’s
all it,” he mused. “You do understand.”
But I had to finish my flight.
“Such quiet faces are gone now in the breathless,
competing North - ground into oblivion between
the clashing trades of the competing men and the clashing
jewels and chandeliers of their competing wives-while
yours have lingered on, spared by your very adversity.
And that’s why I shall miss your old people when
they follow mine-because they’re
the last of their kind, the end of the chain, the
bold original stock, the great race that made our glory
grow and saw that it did grow through thick and thin:
the good old native blood of independence.”
I spoke as a man can always speak
when he means it; and my listener’s face showed
that my words had gone where meant words always go-home
to the heart. But he merely nodded at me.
His nod, however, telling as it did of a quickly established
accord between us, caused me to bring out to this
new acquaintance still more of those thoughts which
I condescend to expose to very few old ones.
“Haven’t you noticed,”
I said, “or don’t you feel it, away down
here in your untainted isolation, the change, the
great change, that has come over the American people?”
He wasn’t sure.
“They’ve lost their grip on patriotism.”
He smiled. “We did that here in 1861.”
“Oh, no! You left the Union,
but you loved what you considered was your country,
and you love it still. That’s just my point,
just my strange discovery in Kings Port. You
retain the thing we’ve lost. Our big men
fifty years ago thought of the country, and what they
could make it; our big men to-day think of the country
and what they can make out of it. Rather different,
don’t you see? When I walk about in the
North, I merely meet members of trusts or unions-according
to the length of the individual’s purse; when
I walk about in Kings Port, I meet Americans.-Of
course,” I added, taking myself up, “that’s
too sweeping a statement. The right sort of American
isn’t extinct in the North by any means.
But there’s such a commercial deluge of the wrong
sort, that the others sometimes seem to me sadly like
a drop in the bucket.”
“You certainly understand it
all,” John Mayrant repeated. “It’s
amazing to find you saying things that I have thought
were my own private notions.”
I laughed. “Oh, I fancy
there are more than two of us in the country.”
“Even the square piano and Mr.
Pinckney,” he went on. “I didn’t
suppose anybody had thought things like that, except
myself.”
“Oh,” I again said lightly,
“any American-any, that is, of the
world-who has a colonial background for
his family, has thought, probably, very much the same
sort of things. Of course it would be all Greek
or gibberish to the new people.”
He took me up with animation.
“The new people! My goodness, sir, yes!
Have you seen them? Have you seen Newport, for
instance?” His diction now (and I was to learn
it was always in him a sign of heightening intensity)
grew more and more like the formal speech of his ancestors.
“You have seen Newport?” he said.
“Yes; now and then.”
“But lately, sir? I knew
we were behind the times down here, sir, but I had
not imagined how much. Not by any means!
Kings Port has a long road to go before she will consider
marriage provincial and chastity obsolete.”
“Dear me, Mr. Mayrant!
Well, I must tell you that it’s not all quite
so-so advanced-as that, you know.
That’s not the whole of Newport.”
He hastened to explain. “Certainly
not, sir! I would not insult the honorable families
whom I had the pleasure to meet there, and to whom
my name was known because they had retained their
good position since the days when my great-uncle had
a house and drove four horses there himself.
I noticed three kinds of Newport, sir.”
“Three?”
“Yes. Because I took letters;
and some of the letters were to people who-who
once had been, you know; it was sad to see the thing,
sir, so plain against the glaring proximity of the
other thing. And so you can divide Newport into
those who leave to sell their old family pictures,
those who have to buy their old family pictures, and
the lucky few who need neither buy nor sell, who are
neither goin’ down nor bobbing up, but who have
kept their heads above the American tidal wave from
the beginning and continue to do so. And I don’t
believe that there are any nicer people in the world
than those.”
“Nowhere!” I exclaimed.
“When Near York does her best, what’s
better?-If only those best set the pace!”
“If only!” he assented.
“But it’s the others who get into the papers,
who dine the drunken dukes, and make poor chambermaids
envious a thousand miles inland!”
“There should be a high tariff on drunken dukes,”
I said.
“You’ll never get it!”
he declared. “It’s the Republican
party whose daughters marry them.”
I rocked with enjoyment where I sat;
he was so refreshing. And I agreed with him so
well. “You’re every bit as good as
Miss Beaufain,” I cried.
“Oh, no; oh, no! But I
often think if we could only deport the negroes and
Newport together to one of our distant islands, how
happily our two chief problems would be solved!”
I still rocked. “Newport
would, indeed, enjoy your plan for it. Do go
on!” I entreated him But he had, for the moment,
ceased; and I rose to stretch my legs and saunter
among the old headstones and the wafted fragrance.
His aunt (or his cousin, or whichever
of them it had been) was certainly right as to his
inheriting a pleasant and pointed gift of speech; and
a responsive audience helps us all. Such an audience
I certainly was for young John Mayrant, yet beneath
the animation that our talk had filled his eyes with
lay (I seemed to see or feel) that other mood all the
time, the mood which had caused the girl behind the
counter to say to me that he was “anxious about
something.” The unhappy youth, I was gradually
to learn, was much more than that-he was
in a tangle of anxieties. He talked to me as
a sick man turns in bed from pain; the pain goes on,
but the pillow for a while is cool.
Here there broke upon us a little
interruption, so diverting, so utterly like the whole
quaint tininess of Kings Port, that I should tell it
to you, even if it did not bear directly upon the matter
which was beginning so actively to concern me-the
love difficulties of John Mayrant.
It was the letter-carrier.
We had come, from our secluded seats,
round a corner, and so by the vestry door and down
the walk beside the church, and as I read to myself
the initials upon the stones wherewith the walk was
paved, I drew near the half-open gateway upon Worship
Street. The postman was descending the steps
of the post-office opposite. He saw me through
the gate and paused. He knew me, too! My
face, easily marked out amid the resident faces he
was familiar with, had at once caught his attention;
very likely he, too, had by now learned that I was
interested in the battle of Cowpens; but I did not
ask him this. He crossed over and handed me a
letter.
“No use,” he said most
politely, “takin’ it away down to Mistress
Trevise’s when you’re right here, sir.
Northern mail eight hours late to-day,” he added,
and bowing, was gone upon his route.
My home letter, from a man, an intimate running mate of mine,
soon had my full attention, for on the second page it said:-
“I have just got back from accompanying
her to Baltimore. One of us went as far as Washington
with her on the train. We gave her a dinner yesterday
at the March Hare by way of farewell. She tried
our new toboggan fire-escape on a bet. Clean
from the attic, my boy. I imagine our native
girls will rejoice at her departure. However,
nobody’s engaged to her, at least nobody here.
How many may fancy themselves so elsewhere I can’t
say. Her name is Hortense Rieppe.”
I suppose I must have been silent
after finishing this letter.
“No bad news, I trust?” John Mayrant inquired.
I told him no; and presently we had
resumed our seats in the quiet charm of the flowers.
I now spoke with an intention.
“What a lot you seem to have seen and suffered
of the advanced Newport!”
The intention wrought its due and
immediate effect. “Yes. There was no
choice. I had gone to Newport upon-upon
an urgent matter, which took me among those people.”
He dwelt upon the pictures that came
up in his mind. But he took me away again from
the “urgent matter.”
“I saw,” he resumed more
briskly, “fifteen or twenty-most amazing,
sir!-young men, some of them not any older
than I am, who had so many millions that they could
easily-” he paused, casting about
for some expression adequate-“could
buy Kings Port and put it under a glass case in a
museum-my aunts and all-and never
know it!” He livened with disrespectful mirth
over his own picture of his aunts, purchased by millionaire
steel or coal for the purposes of public edification.
“And a very good thing if they could be,”
I declared.
He wondered a moment. “My aunts? Under
a glass case?”
“Yes, indeed-and
with all deference be it said! They’d be
more invaluable, more instructive, than the classics
of a thousand libraries.”
He was prepared not to be pleased. “May
I ask to whom and for what?”
“Why, you ought to see!
You’ve just been saying it yourself. They
would teach our bulging automobilists, our unlicked
boy cubs, our alcoholic girls who shout to waiters
for ‘high-balls’ on country club porches-they
would teach these wallowing creatures, whose money
has merely gilded their bristles, what American refinement
once was. The manners we’ve lost, the decencies
we’ve banished, the standards we’ve lowered,
their light is still flickering in this passing generation
of yours. It’s the last torch. That’s
why I wish it could, somehow, pass on the sacred fire.”
He shook his head. “They
don’t want the sacred fire. They want the
high-balls-and they have money enough to
be drunk straight through the next world!” He
was thoughtful. “They are the classics,”
he added.
I didn’t see that he had gone
back to my word. “Roman Empire, you mean?”
“No, the others; the old people
we’re bidding good-by to. Roman Republic!
Simple lives, gallant deeds, and one great uniting
inspiration. Liberty winning her spurs. They
were moulded under that, and they are our true American
classics. Nothing like them will happen again.”
“Perhaps,” I suggested,
“our generation is uneasily living in a ’bad
quarter-of-an-hour’-good old childhood
gone, good new manhood not yet come, and a state of
chicken-pox between whiles.” And on this
I made to him a much-used and consoling quotation
about the old order changing.
“Who says that?” he inquired;
and upon my telling him, “I hope so,” he
said, “I hope so. But just now Uncle Sam
‘aspires to descend.’”
I laughed at his counter-quotation.
“You know your classics, if you don’t
know Tennyson.”
He, too, laughed. “Don’t tell Aunt
Eliza!”
“Tell her what?”
“That I didn’t recognize
Tennyson. My Aunt Eliza educated me-and
she thinks Tennyson about the only poet worth reading
since-well, since Byron and Sir Walter
at the very latest!”
“Neither she nor Sir Walter
come down to modern poetry-or to alcoholic
girls.” His tone, on these last words, changed.
Again, as when he had said “an
urgent matter,” I seemed to feel hovering above
us what must be his ceaseless preoccupation; and I
wondered if he had found, upon visiting Newport, Miss
Hortense sitting and calling for “high-balls.”
I gave him a lead. “The
worst of it is that a girl who would like to behave
herself decently finds that propriety puts her out
of the running. The men flock off to the other
kind.”
He was following me with watching eyes.
“And you know,” I continued,
“what an anxious Newport parent does on finding
her girl on the brink of being a failure.”
“I can imagine,” he answered,
“that she scolds her like the dickens.”
“Oh, nothing so ineffectual!
She makes her keep up with the others, you know.
Makes her do things she’d rather not do.”
“High-balls, you mean?”
“Anything, my friend; anything to keep up.”
He had a comic suggestion. “Driven
to drink by her mother! Well, it’s, at
any rate, a new cause for old effects.”
He paused. It seemed strangely to bring to him
some sort of relief. “That would explain
a great deal,” he said.
Was he thus explaining to himself
his lady-love, or rather certain Newport aspects of
her which had, so to speak, jarred upon his Kings
Port notions of what a lady might properly do?
I sat on my gravestone with my wonder, and my now-dawning
desire to help him (if improbably I could), to get
him out of it, if he were really in it; and he sat
on his gravestone opposite, with the path between
us, and the little noiseless breeze rustling the white
irises, and bearing hither and thither the soft perfume
of the roses. His boy face, lean, high-strung,
brooding, was full of suppressed contentions.
I made myself, during our silence, state his possible
problem - “He doesn’t love her any
more, he won’t admit this to himself; he intends
to go through with it, and he’s catching at
any justification of what he has seen in her that has
chilled him, so that he may, poor wretch! coax back
his lost illusion.” Well, if that was it,
what in the world could I, or anybody, do about it?
His next remark was transparent enough.
“Do you approve of young ladies smoking?”
I met his question with another:
“What reasons can be urged against it?”
He was quick. “Then you
don’t mind it?” There was actual hope in
the way he rushed at this.
I laughed. “I didn’t
say I didn’t mind it.” (As a matter of
fact I do mind it; but it seemed best not to say so
to him.)
He fell off again. “I certainly
saw very nice people doing it up there.”
I filled this out. “You’ll
see very nice people doing it everywhere.”
“Not in Kings Port! At
least, not my sort of people!” He stiffly proclaimed
this.
I tried to draw him out. “But
is there, after all, any valid objection to it?”
But he was off on a preceding speculation.
“A mother or any parent,” he said, “might
encourage the daughter to smoke, too. And the
girl might take it up so as not to be thought peculiar
where she was, and then she might drop it very gladly.”
I became specific. “Drop
it, you mean, when she came to a place where doing
it would be thought-well, in bad style?”
“Or for the better reason,”
he answered, “that she didn’t really like
it herself.”
“How much you don’t ‘really
like it’ yourself!” I remarked.
This time he was slow. “Well-well-why
need they? Are not their lips more innocent than
ours? Is not the association somewhat ?”
“My dear fellow,” I interrupted,
“the association is, I think you’ll have
to agree, scarcely of my making!”
“That’s true enough,”
he laughed. “And, as you say, very nice
people do it everywhere. But not here. Have
you ever noticed,” he now inquired with continued
transparency, “how much harder they are on each
other than we are on them?”
“Oh, yes! I’ve noticed
that.” I surmised it was this sort of thing
he had earlier choked himself off from telling me in
his unfinished complaint about his aunt; but I was
to learn later that on this occasion it was upon the
poor boy himself and not on the smoking habits of Miss
Rieppe, that his aunt had heavily descended. I
also reflected that if cigarettes were the only thing
he deprecated in the lady of his choice, the lost
illusion might be coaxed back. The trouble was
that deprecated something fairly distant from cigarettes.
The cake was my quite sufficient trouble; it stuck
in my throat worse than the probably magnified gossip
I had heard; this, for the present, I could manage
to swallow.
He came out now with a personal note.
“I suppose you think I’m a ninny.”
“Never in the wildest dream!”
“Well, but too innocent for a man, anyhow.”
“That would be an insult,” I declared
laughingly.
“For I’m not innocent
in the least. You’ll find we’re all
men here, just as much as any men in the North you
could pick out. South Carolina has never lacked
sporting blood, sir. But in Newport-well,
sir, we gentlemen down here, when we wish a certain
atmosphere and all that, have always been accustomed
to seek the demi-monde.”
“So it was with us until the women changed it.”
“The women, sir?” He was innocent!
“The ‘ladies,’ as
you Southerners so chivalrously continue to style
them. The rich new fashionable ladies became so
desperate in their competition for men’s allegiance
that they-well, some of them would, in
the point of conversation, greatly scandalize the smart
demi-monde.”
He nodded. “Yes. I
heard men say things in drawing-rooms to ladies that
a gentleman here would have been taken out and shot
for. And don’t you agree with me, sir,
that good taste itself should be a sort of religion?
I don’t mean to say anything sacrilegious, but
it seems to me that even if one has ceased to believe
some parts of the Bible, even if one does not always
obey the Ten Commandments, one is bound, not as a believer
but as a gentleman, to remember the difference between
grossness and refinement, between excess and restraint-that
one can have and keep just as the pagan Greeks did,
a moral elegance.”
He astonished me, this ardent, ideal,
troubled boy; so innocent regarding the glaring facts
of our new prosperity, so finely penetrating as to
some of the mysteries of the soul. But he was
of old Huguenot blood, and of careful and gentle upbringing;
and it was delightful to find such a young man left
upon our American soil untainted by the present fashionable
idolâtries.
“I bow to your creed of ‘moral
elegance,’” I cried. “It never
dies. It has outlasted all the mobs and all the
religions.”
“They seemed to think,”
he continued, pursuing his Newport train of thought,
“that to prove you were a dead game sport you
must behave like-behave like-
“Like a herd of swine,” I suggested.
He was merry. “Ah, if they only would-completely!”
“Completely what?”
“Behave so. Rush over a steep place into
the sea.”
We sat in the quiet relish of his
Scriptural idea, and the western crimson and the twilight
began to come and mingle with the perfumes. John
Mayrant’s face changed from its vivacity to a
sort of pensive wistfulness, which, for all the dash
and spirit in his delicate features, was somehow the
final thing one got from the boy’s expression.
It was as though the noble memories of his race looked
out of his eyes, seeking new chances for distinction,
and found instead a soil laid waste, an empty fatherland,
a people benumbed past rousing. Had he not said,
“Poor Kings Port!” as he tapped the gravestone?
Moral elegance could scarcely permit a sigh more direct.
“I am glad that you believe
it never dies,” he resumed. “And I
am glad to find somebody to-talk to, you
know. My friends here are everything friends
and gentlemen should be, but they don’t-I
suppose it’s because they have not had my special
experiences.”
I sat waiting for the boy to go on
with it. How plainly he was telling me of his
“special experiences”! He and his
creed were not merely in revolt against the herd of
swine; there would be nothing special in that; I had
met people before who were that; but he was tied by
honor, and soon to be tied by the formidable nuptial
knot, to a specimen devotee of the cult. He shouldn’t
marry her if he really did not want to, and I could
stop it! But how was I to begin spinning the first
faint web of plan how I might stop it, unless he came
right out with the whole thing? I didn’t
believe he was the man to do that ever, even under
the loosening inspiration of drink. In wine lies
truth, no doubt; but within him, was not moral elegance
the bottom truth that would, even in his cups, keep
him a gentleman, and control all such revelations?
He might smash the glasses, but he would not speak
of his misgivings as to Hortense Rieppe.
He began again, “Nor do I believe
that a really nice girl would continue to think as
those few do, if she once got safe away from them.
Why, my dear sir,” he stretched out his hand
in emphasis, “you do not have to do anything
untimely and extreme if you are in good earnest a dead
game sport. The time comes, and you meet the
occasion as the duck swims. There was one of
them-the right kind.”
“Where?” I asked.
“Why-you’re leaning against
her headstone!”
The little incongruity made us both
laugh, but it was only for the instant. The tender
mood of the evening, and all that we had said, sustained
the quiet and almost grave undertone of our conference.
My own quite unconscious act of rising from the grave
and standing before him on the path to listen brought
back to us our harmonious pensiveness.
“She was born in Kings Port,
but educated in Europe. I don’t suppose
until the time came that she ever did anything harder
than speak French, or play the piano, or ride a horse.
She had wealth and so had her husband. He was
killed in the war, and so were two of her sons.
The third was too young to go. Their fortune
was swept away, but the plantation was there, and
the negroes were proud to remain faithful to the family.
She took hold of the plantation, she walked the rice-banks
in high boots. She had an overseer, who, it was
told her, would possibly take her life by poison or
by violence. She nevertheless lived in that lonely
spot with no protector except her pistol and some directions
about antidotes. She dismissed him when she had
proved he was cheating her; she made the planting
pay as well as any man did after the war; she educated
her last son, got him into the navy, and then, one
evening, walking the river-banks too late, she caught
the fever and died. You will understand she went
with one step from cherished ease to single-handed
battle with life, a delicately nurtured lady, with
no preparation for her trials.”
“Except moral elegance,” I murmured.
“Ah, that was the point, sir!
To see her you would never have guessed it! She
kept her burdens from the sight of all. She wore
tribulation as if it were a flower in her bosom.
We children always looked forward to her coming, because
she was so gay and delightful to us, telling us stories
of the old times-old rides when the country
was wild, old journeys with the family and servants
to the Hot Springs before the steam cars were invented,
old adventures, with the battle of New Orleans or
a famous duel in them-the sort of stories
that begin with (for you seem to know something of
it yourself, sir) ’Your grandfather, my dear
John, the year that he was twenty, got himself into
serious embarrassments through paying his attentions
to two reigning beauties at once.’ She
was full of stories which began in that sort of pleasant
way.”
I said - “When a person
like that dies, an impoverishment falls upon us; the
texture of life seems thinner.”
“Oh, yes, indeed! I know
what you mean-to lose the people one has
always seen from the cradle. Well, she has gone
away, she has taken her memories out of the world,
the old times, the old stories. Nobody, except
a little nutshell of people here, knows or cares anything
about her any more; and soon even the nutshell will
be empty.” He paused, and then, as if brushing
aside his churchyard mood, he translated into his
changed thought another classic quotation - “But
we can’t dawdle over the ‘tears of things’;
it’s Nature’s law. Only, when I think
of the rice-banks and the boots and the pistol, I
wonder if the Newport ladies, for all their high-balls,
could do any better!”
The crimson had faded, the twilight
was altogether come, but the little noiseless breeze
was blowing still; and as we left the quiet tombs
behind us, and gained Worship Street, I could not help
looking back where slept that older Kings Port about
which I had heard and had said so much. Over
the graves I saw the roses, nodding and moving, as
if in acquiescent revery.