The Awkward Age by Henry James (simple ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âWell, whatâs the difference?â
âOh there IS a difference,â Mrs. Brook loyally said. Then she opened an inch or two, for Vanderbank, the door of her dim radiance. âOnly I should have thought it a difference for the better. Of course,â she added, âit remains absolutely with us three alone, and donât you already feel from it the fresh charmâwith it here between usâof our being together?â
It was as if each of the men had waited for the other to assent better than he himself could and Mitchy then, as Vanderbank failed, had gracefully, to ^cover him, changed the subject. âBut isnât Nanda, the person most interested, to know?â
Vanderbank gave on this a strange sound of hilarity. âAh that would finish it off!â
It produced for a few seconds something like a chill, a chill that had for consequence a momentary pause which in its turn added weight to the words next uttered. âItâs not I who shall tell her,â Mrs. Brook said gently and gravely. âThere!âyou may be sure. If you want a promise, itâs a promise. So that if Mr. Longdonâs silent,â she went on, âand you are, Mitchy, and I am, how in the world shall she have a suspicion?â
âYou mean of course except by Vanâs deciding to mention it himself.â
Van might have been, from the way they looked at him, some beautiful unconscious object; but Mrs. Brook was quite ready to answer. âOh poor man, HEâLL never breathe.â
âI see. So there we are.â
To this discussion the subject of it had for the time nothing to contribute, even when Mitchy, rising with the words he had last uttered from the chair in which he had been placed, took sociably as well, on the hearth-rug, a position before their hostess. This move ministered apparently to Vanderbankâs mere silence, for it was still without speaking that, after a little, he turned away from his friend and dropped once more into the same seat. âIâve shown you already, you of course remember,â Vanderbank presently said to him, âthat Iâm perfectly aware of how much better Mrs. Brook would like YOU for the position.â
âHe thinks I want him myself,â Mrs. Brook blandly explained.
She was indeed, as they always thought her, âwonderful,â but she was perhaps not even now so much so as Mitchy found himself able to be. âBut how would you lose old Vanâeven at the worst?â he earnestly asked of her.
She just hesitated. âWhat do you mean by the worst?â
âThen even at the best,â Mitchy smiled. âIn the event of his falsifying your prediction; which, by the way, has the danger, hasnât it?âI mean for your intellectual creditâof making him, as we all used to be called by our nursemaids, âcontrairy.ââ
âOh Iâve thought of that,â Mrs. Brook returned. âBut he wonât do, on the whole, even for the sweetness of spiting me, what he wonât want to do. I havenât said I should lose him,â she went on; âthatâs only the view he himself takesâor, to do him perfeet justice, the idea he candidly imputes to me; though without, I imagineâfor I donât go so far as that âattributing to me anything so unutterably bete as a feeling of jealousy.â
âYou wouldnât dream of my supposing anything inept of you,â Vanderbank said on this, âif you understood to the full how I keep on admiring you. Only what stupefies me a little,â he continued, âis the extraordinary critical freedomâor we may call it if we like the high intellectual detachmentâwith which we discuss a question touching you, dear Mrs. Brook, so nearly and engaging so your private and most sacred sentiments. What are we playing with, after all, but the idea of Nandaâs happiness?â
âOh Iâm not playing!â Mrs. Brook declared with a little rattle of emotion.
âSheâs not playingââMr. Mitchett gravely confirmed it. âDonât you feel in the very air the vibration of the passion that sheâs simply too charming to shake at the window as the housemaid shakes the tablecloth or the jingo the flag?â Then he took up what Vanderbank had previously said. âOf course, my dear man, Iâm âaware,â as you just now put it, of everything, and Iâm not indiscreet, am I, Mrs. Brook? in admitting for you as well as for myself that there WAS an impossibility you and I used sometimes to turn over together. OnlyâLord bless us all!âit isnât as if I hadnât long ago seen that thereâs nothing at all FOR me.â
âAh wait, wait!â Mrs. Brook put in. âShe has a theoryââVanderbank, from his chair, lighted it up for Mitchy, who hovered before themââthat your chance WILL come, later on, after Iâve given my measure.â
âOh but thatâs exactly,â Mitchy was quick to respond, âwhat youâll never do! You wonât give your measure the least little bit. Youâll walk in magnificent mystery âlater onâ not a bit less than you do today; youâll continue to have the benefit of everything that our imagination, perpetually engaged, often baffled and never fatigued, will continue to bedeck you with. Nanda, in the same way, to the end of all her time, will simply remain exquisite, or genuine, or generousâwhatever we choose to call it. It may make a difference to us, who are comparatively vulgar, but what difference will it make to HER whether you do or you donât decide for her? You canât belong to her more, for herself, than you do alreadyâand thatâs precisely so much that thereâs no room for any one else. Where therefore, without that room, do I come in?â
âNowhere, I see,â Vanderbank seemed obligingly to muse.
Mrs. Brook had followed Mitchy with marked admiration, but she gave on this a glance at Van that was like the toss of a blossom from the same branch. âOh then shall I just go on with you BOTH? That WILL be joy!â She had, however, the next thing, a sudden drop which shaded the picture. âYouâre so divine, Mitchy, that how can you not in the long-run break ANY woman down?â
It was not as if Mitchy was struckâit was only that he was courteous. âWhat do you call the long-run? Taking about till Iâm eighty?â
âAh your genius is of a kind to which middle life will be particularly favourable. Youâll reap then somehow, one feels, everything youâve sown.â
Mitchy still accepted the prophecy only to control it. âDo you call eighty middle life? Why, my moral beauty, my dear womanâif thatâs what you mean by my geniusâis precisely my curse. What on earthâis left for a man just rotten with goodness? It renders necessary the kind of liking that renders unnecessary anything else.â
âNow that IS cheap paradox!â Vanderbank patiently sighed. âYouâre down for a fine.â
It was with less of the patience perhaps that Mrs. Brook took this up. âYes, on that we ARE stiff. Five pounds, please.â
Mitchy drew out his pocket-book even though he explained. âWhat I mean is that I donât give out the great thing.â With which he produced a crisp banknote.
âDONâT you?â asked Vanderbank, who, having taken it from him to hand to Mrs. Brook, held it a moment, delicately, to accentuate the doubt.
âThe great thingâs the sacred terror. Itâs you who give THAT out.â
âOh!ââand Vanderbank laid the money on the small stand at Mrs. Brookâs elbow.
âAinât I right, Mrs. Brook?âdoesnât he, tremendously, and isnât that more than anything else what does it?â
The two again, as if they understood each other, gazed in a unity of interest at their companion, who sustained it with an air clearly intended as the happy mean between embarrassment and triumph. Then Mrs. Brook showed she liked the phrase. âThe sacred terror! Yes, one feels it. It IS that.â
âThe finest case of it,â Mitchy pursued, âthat Iâve ever met. So my moralâs sufficiently pointed.â
âOh I donât think it can be said to be that,â Vanderbank returned, âtill youâve put the whole thing into a box by doing for Nanda what she does most want you to do.â
Mitchy caught on without a shade of wonder. âOh by proposing to the Duchess for little Aggie?â He took but an instant to turn it over. âWell, I WOULD proposeâto please Nanda. Only Iâve never yet quite made out the reason of her wish.â
âThe reason is largely,â his friend answered, âthat, being very fond of Aggie and in fact extremely admiring her, she wants to do something good for her and to keep her from anything bad. Donât you knowâitâs too charmingâshe regularly believes in her?â Mitchy, with all his recognition, vibrated to the touch. âIsnât it too charming?â
âWell then,â Vanderbank went on, âshe secures for her friend a phoenix like you, and secures for you a phoenix like her friend. Itâs hard to say for which of you she desires most to do the handsome thing. She loves you both in shortââhe followed it upââthough perhaps when one thinks of it the price she puts on you, Mitchy, in the arrangement, is a little the higher. Awfully fine at any rateâand yet awfully odd tooâ her feeling for Aggieâs type, which is divided by such abysses from her own.â
âAh,â laughed Mitchy, âbut think then of her feeling for mine!â
Vanderbank, still more at his ease now and with his head back, had his eyes aloft and far. âOh there are things in Nandaâ!â The others exchanged a glance at this, while their companion added: âLittle Aggieâs really the sort of creature she would have liked to be able to be.â
âWell,â Mitchy said, âI should have adored her even if she HAD been able.â
Mrs. Brook had for some minutes played no audible part, but the acute observer we are constantly taking for granted would perhaps have detected in her, as one of the effects of the special complexion to-day of Vanderbankâs presence, a certain smothered irritation. âShe couldnât possibly have been able,â she now interposed, âwith so looseâor rather, to express it more properly, with so perverseâa mother.â
âAnd yet, my dear lady,â Mitchy promptly qualified, âhow if in little Aggieâs case the Duchess hasnât preventedâ?â
Mrs. Brook was full of wisdom. âWell, itâs a different thing. Iâm not, as a motherâam I, Van?âbad ENOUGH. Thatâs whatâs the matter with me. Aggie, donât you see? is the Duchessâs morality, her virtue; which, by having it that way outside of you, as one may say, you can make a much better thing of. The child has been for Jane, I admit, a capital little subject, but Jane has kept her on hand and finished her like some wonderful piece of stitching. Oh as work itâs of a soigne! There it isâ to show. A woman like me has to be HERSELF, poor thing, her virtue and her morality. What will you have? Itâs our lumbering English plan.â
âSo that her daughter,â Mitchy sympathised, âcan only, by the arrangement, hope to become at the best her immorality and her vice?â
But Mrs. Brook, without an answer for the question, appeared suddenly to have plunged into a sea of thought. âThe only way for Nanda to have been REALLY niceâ!â
âWould have been for YOU to be like Jane?â
Mitchy and his hostess seemed for a minute, on this, to gaze together at the tragic truth. Then she shook her head. âWe see our mistakes too late.â She repeated the movement, but as if to let it all go, and Vanderbank meanwhile, pulling out his watch, had got up with a laugh that showed some inattention and made to Mitchy a remark about their walking away together. Mitchy, engaged for the instant with Mrs. Brook, had assented only with a nod, but the attitude of the two men had become that of departure. Their friend looked at them as if she would like to keep one of them, and for a purpose connected somehow with the
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