A Hazard of New Fortunes

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A Hazard of New Fortunes Page 32

by William Dean Howells


  “Not so much as with Miss Woodburn’s father.”

  “Well, he is rather apt to scoop the conversation. I must draw his fire sometime, when you and Mrs. March are around, and get you a chance with Miss Woodburn.”

  “I should like that better, I believe,” said March.

  “Well, I shouldn’t wonder if you did. Curious, but Miss Woodburn isn’t at all your idea of a Southern girl. She’s got lots of go; she’s never idle a minute; she keeps the old gentleman in first-class shape, and she don’t believe a bit in the slavery solution of the labor problem; says she’s glad it’s gone, and if it was anything like the effects of it, she’s glad it went before her time. No, sir, she’s as full of snap as the liveliest kind of a Northern girl. None of that sunny Southern languor you read about.”

  “I suppose the typical Southerner, like the typical anything else, is pretty difficult to find,” said March. “But perhaps Miss Woodburn represents the new South. The modern conditions must be producing a modern type.”

  “Well, that’s what she and the Colonel both say. They say there ain’t anything left of that Walter Scott dignity and chivalry in the rising generation; takes too much time. You ought to see her sketch the old-school, high-and-mighty manners as they survive among some of the antiques in Charlottesburg. If that thing could be put upon the stage it would be a killing success. Makes the old gentleman laugh in spite of himself. But he’s as proud of her as Punch, anyway. Why don’t you and Mrs. March come round oftener ? Look here! How would it do to have a little excursion somewhere after the spring fairly gets in its work?”

  “Reporters present?”

  “No, no! Nothing of that kind, perfectly sincere and disinterested enjoyment.”

  “Oh, a few handbills to be scattered around: ‘Buy Every Other Week,’ ‘Look out for the next number of Every Other Week,’ ‘Every Other Other Week at all the newsstands.’ Well, I’ll talk it over with Mrs. March. I suppose there’s no great hurry.”

  March told his wife of the idyllic mood in which he had left Fulkerson at the widow’s door, and she said he must be in love.

  “Why, of course! I wonder I didn’t think of that. But Fulkerson is such an impartial admirer of the whole sex that you can’t think of his liking one more than another. I don’t know that he showed any unjust partiality, though, in his talk of ‘those girls,’ as he called them. And I always rather fancied that Mrs. Mandel—he’s done so much for her, you know; and she is such a well-balanced, well-preserved person, and so ladylike and correct—”

  “Fulkerson had the word for her: academic. She’s everything that instruction and discipline can make of a woman, but I shouldn’t think they could make enough of her to be in love with.”

  “Well, I don’t know. The academic has its charm. There are moods in which I could imagine myself in love with an academic person. That regularity of line, that reasoned strictness of contour, that neatness of pose, that slightly conventional but harmonious grouping of the emotions and morals—you can see how it would have its charm, the Wedgwood in human nature? I wonder where Mrs. Mandel keeps her urn and her willow.”

  “I should think she might have use for them in that family, poor thing!” said Mrs. March.

  “Ah, that reminds me,” said her husband, “that we had another talk with the old gentleman this afternoon, about Fulkerson’s literary, artistic, and advertising orgy, and it’s postponed till October.”

  “The later the better, I should think,” said Mrs. March, who did not really think about it at all, but whom the date fixed for it caused to think of the intervening time. “We have got to consider what we will do about the summer before long, Basil.”

  “Oh, not yet, not yet,” he pleaded, with that man’s willingness to abide in the present, which is so trying to a woman. “It’s only the end of April.”

  “It will be the end of June before we know. And these people wanting the Boston house another year complicates it. We can’t spend the summer there, as we planned.”

  “They oughtn’t to have offered us an increased rent; they have taken an advantage of us.”

  “I don’t know that it matters,” said Mrs. March. “I had decided not to go there.”

  “Had you? This is a surprise.”

  “Everything is a surprise to you, Basil, when it happens.”

  “True; I keep the world fresh that way.”

  “It wouldn’t have been any change to go from one city to another for the summer. We might as well have stayed in New York.”

  “Yes, I wish we had stayed,” said March, idly humoring a conception of the accomplished fact. “Mrs. Green would have let us have the gimcrackery very cheap for the summer months; and we could have made all sorts of nice little excursions and trips off, and been twice as well as if we had spent the summer away.”

  “Nonsense! You know we couldn’t spend the summer in New York.”

  “I know I could.”

  “What stuff! You couldn’t manage.”

  “Oh, yes, I could. I could take my meals at Fulkerson’s widow’s, or at Maroni’s with poor old Lindau; he’s got to dining there again. Or I could keep house, and he could dine with me here.”

  There was a teasing look in March’s eyes, and he broke into a laugh at the firmness with which his wife said, “I think if there is to be any housekeeping, I will stay too and help to look after it. I would try not to intrude upon you and your guest.”

  “Oh, we should be only too glad to have you join us,” said March, playing with fire.

  “Very well, then, I wish you would take him off to Maroni’s the next time he comes to dine here!” cried his wife.

  The experiment of making March’s old friend free of his house had not given her all the pleasure that so kind a thing ought to have afforded so good a woman. She received Lindau at first with robust benevolence and the high resolve not to let any of his little peculiarities alienate her from a sense of his claim upon her sympathy and gratitude, not only as a man who had been so generously fond of her husband in his youth, but a hero who had suffered for her country. Her theory was that his mutilation must not be ignored, but must be kept in mind as a monument of his sacrifice, and she fortified Bella with this conception, so that the child bravely sat next his maimed arm at table, and helped him to dishes he could not reach, and cut up his meat for him. As for Mrs. March herself, the thought of his mutilation made her a little faint; she was not without a bewildered resentment of its presence as a sort of oppression. She did not like his drinking so much of March’s beer either; it was no harm, but it was somehow unworthy, out of character with a hero of the war. But what she really could not reconcile herself to was the violence of Lindau’s sentiments concerning the whole political and social fabric. She did not feel sure that he should be allowed to say such things before the children, who had been nurtured in the faith of Bunker Hill and Appomattox as the beginning and the end of all possible progress in human rights. As a woman she was naturally an aristocrat, but as an American she was theoretically a democrat; and it astounded, it alarmed her, to hear American democracy denounced as a shuffling evasion. She had never cared much for the United States Senate, but she doubted if she ought to sit by when it was railed at as a rich man’s club. It shocked her to be told that the rich and poor were not equal before the law in a country where justice must be paid for at every step in fees and costs, or where a poor man must go to war in his own person, and a rich man might hire someone to go in his. Mrs. March felt that this rebellious mind in Lindau really somehow outlawed him from sympathy and retroactively undid his past suffering for the country; she had always particularly valued that provision of the law, because in forecasting all the possible mischances that might befall her own son, she had been comforted by the thought that if there ever was another war and Tom were drafted, his father could buy him a substitute. Compared with such blasphemy as this, Lindau’s declaration that there was not equality of opportunity in America and that fully one half the people were deb
arred their right to the pursuit of happiness by the hopeless conditions of their lives was flattering praise. She could not listen to such things in silence, though, and it did not help matters when Lindau met her arguments with facts and reasons which she felt she was merely not sufficiently instructed to combat, and he was not quite gentlemanly to urge. “I am afraid for the effect on the children,” she said to her husband. “Such perfectly distorted ideas—Tom will be ruined by them.”

  “Oh, let Tom find out where they’re false,” said March. “It will be good exercise for his faculties of research. At any rate, those things are getting said nowadays; he’ll have to hear them sooner or later.”

  “Had he better hear them at home?” demanded his wife.

  “Why, you know, as you’re here to refute them, Isabel,” he teased, “perhaps it’s the best place. But don’t mind poor old Lindau, my dear. He says himself that his parg is worse than his pidte, you know.”

  “Ah, it’s too late now to mind him,” she sighed. In a moment of rash good feeling or perhaps an exalted conception of duty, she had herself proposed that Lindau should come every week and read German with Tom; and it had become a question first how they could get him to take pay for it, and then how they could get him to stop it. Mrs. March never ceased to wonder at herself for having brought this about, for she had warned her husband against making any engagement with Lindau which would bring him regularly to the house; the Germans stuck so and were so unscrupulously dependent. Yet, the deed being done, she would not ignore the duty of hospitality, and it was always she who made the old man stay to their Sunday evening tea when he lingered near the hour, reading Schiller and Heine and Uhland with the boy, in the clean shirt with which he observed the day; Lindau’s linen was not to be trusted during the week. She now concluded a season of mournful reflection by saying, “He will get you into trouble somehow, Basil.”

  “Well, I don’t know how exactly. I regard Lindau as a political economist of an unusual type; but I shall not let him array me against the constituted authorities. Short of that, I think I am safe.”

  “Well, be careful, Basil; be careful. You know you are so rash.”

  “I suppose I may continue to pity him? He is such a poor lonely old fellow. Are you really sorry he’s come into our lives, my dear?”

  “No, no; not that. I feel as you do about it; but I wish I felt easier about him—sure, that is, that we’re not doing wrong to let him keep on talking so.”

  “I suspect we couldn’t help it,” March returned lightly. “It’s one of what Lindau calls his ‘brincibles’ to say what he thinks.”

  II

  THE MARCHES had no longer the gross appetite for novelty which urges youth to a surfeit of strange scenes, experiences, ideas and makes travel, with all its annoyances and fatigues, an inexhaustible delight. But there is no doubt that the chief pleasure of their life in New York was from its quality of foreignness: the flavor of olives, which, once tasted, can never be forgotten. The olives may not be of the first excellence; they may be a little stale, and small and poor to begin with, but they are still olives, and the fond palate craves them. The sort which grew in New York, on lower Sixth Avenue and in the region of Jefferson Market and on the soft exposures south of Washington Square, were nonetheless acceptable because they were of the commonest Italian variety.

  The Marches spent a good deal of time and money in a grocery of that nationality, where they found all the patriotic comestibles and potables and renewed their faded Italian with the friendly family in charge. Italian table d‘hôtes formed the adventure of the week on the day when Mrs. March let her domestics go out and went herself to dine abroad with her husband and children; and they became adept in the restaurants where they were served and which they varied almost from dinner to dinner. The perfect decorum of these places, and their immunity from offense in any, emboldened the Marches to experiment in Spanish restaurants, where red pepper and beans insisted in every dinner and where once they chanced upon a night of olla podrida, with such appeals to March’s memory of a boyish ambition to taste the dish that he became poetic and then pensive over its cabbage and carrots, peas and bacon. For a rare combination of international motives they prized most the table d’hôte of a French lady who had taken a Spanish husband in a second marriage and had a Cuban Negro for her cook, with a cross-eyed Alsacian for waiter and a slim young South American for cashier. March held that something of the catholic character of these relations expressed itself in the generous and tolerant variety of the dinner, which was singularly abundant for fifty cents, without wine. At one very neat French place he got a dinner at the same price with wine, but it was not so abundant; and March inquired in fruitless speculation why the table d’hôte of the Italians, a notoriously frugal and abstemious people, should be usually more than you wanted at seventy-five cents and a dollar, and that of the French rather less for half a dollar. He could not see that the frequenters were greatly different at the different places; they were mostly Americans of subdued manners and conjecturably subdued fortunes, with here and there a table full of foreigners. There was no noise and not much smoking anywhere; March liked going to that neat French place because there Madame sat enthroned and high behind a comptoir at one side of the room, and everybody saluted her in going out. It was there that a gentle-looking young couple used to dine, in whom the Marches became effectlessly interested because they thought they looked like that when they were young. The wife had an aesthetic dress and defined her pretty head by wearing her back hair pulled up very tight under her bonnet; the husband had dreamy eyes set wide apart under a pure forehead.

  “They are artists, August, I think,” March suggested to the waiter whom he had vainly asked about them.

  “Oh, hartis, cedenly,” August consented; but Heaven knows whether they were or what they were. March never learned.

  This immunity from acquaintance, this touch-and-go quality in their New York sojourn, this almost loss of individuality at times, after the intense identification of their Boston life, was a relief, though Mrs. March had her misgivings and questioned whether it were not perhaps too relaxing to the moral fiber. March refused to explore his conscience; he allowed that it might be so, but he said he liked now and then to feel his personality in that state of solution. They went and sat a good deal in the softening evenings among the infants and dotards of Latin extraction in Washington Square, safe from all who ever knew them, and enjoyed the advancing season, which thickened the foliage of the trees and flattered out of sight the churchwarden’s gothic of the University Building. The infants were sometimes cross, and cried in their weary mothers’ or little sisters’ arms; but they did not disturb the dotards who slept, some with their heads fallen forward and some with their heads fallen back; March arbitrarily distinguished those with the drooping faces as tipsy and ashamed to confront the public. The small Italian children raced up and down the asphalt paths, playing American games of tag and hide-and-whoop; larger boys passed ball in training for potential championships. The Marches sat and mused, or quarreled fitfully about where they should spend the summer, like sparrows, he once said, till the electric lights began to show distinctly among the leaves, and they looked round and found the infants and dotards gone, and the benches filled with lovers. That was the signal for the Marches to go home. He said that the spectacle of so much courtship as the eye might take in there at a glance was not perhaps oppressive, but the thought that at the same hour the same thing was going on all over the country, wherever two young fools could get together, was more than he could bear; he did not deny that it was natural, and in a measure, authorized, but he declared that it was hackneyed; and the fact that it must go on forever, as long as the race lasted, made him tired.

  At home, generally, they found that the children had not missed them and were perfectly safe. It was one of the advantages of a flat that they could leave the children there whenever they liked without anxiety. They liked better staying there than wandering about in the e
vening with their parents, whose excursions seemed to them somewhat aimless and their pleasures insipid. They studied, or read, or looked out of the window at the street sights, and their mother always came back to them with a pang for their lonesomeness. Bella knew some little girls in the house, but in a ceremonious way; Tom had formed no friendships among the boys at school such as he had left in Boston; as nearly as he could explain, the New York fellows carried canes at an age when they would have had them broken for them by the other boys at Boston; and they were both sissyish and fast. It was probably prejudice; he never could say exactly what their demerits were, and neither he nor Bella was apparently so homesick as they pretended, though they answered inquirers, the one that New York was a hole and the other that it was horrid and that all they lived for was to get back to Boston. In the meantime they were thrown much upon each other for society, which March said was well for both of them; he did not mind their cultivating a little gloom and the sense of a common wrong; it made them better comrades, and it was providing them with amusing reminiscences for the future. They really enjoyed bohemianizing in that harmless way: though Tom had his doubts of its respectability; he was very punctilious about his sister and went round from his own school every day to fetch her home from hers. The whole family went to the theater a good deal and enjoyed themselves together in their desultory explorations of the city.

  They lived near Greenwich Village, and March liked strolling through its quaintness toward the waterside on a Sunday, when a hereditary Sabbatarianism kept his wife at home; he made her observe that it even kept her at home from church. He found a lingering quality of pure Americanism in the region, and he said the very bells called to worship in a nasal tone. He liked the streets of small brick houses, with here and there one painted red, and the mortar lines picked out in white, and with now and then a fine wooden portal of fluted pillars and a bowed transom. The rear of the tenement houses showed him the picturesqueness of clothes-lines fluttering far aloft, as in Florence; and the new apartment houses, breaking the old skyline with their towering stories, implied a life as alien to the American manner as anything in continental Europe. In fact, foreign faces and foreign tongues prevailed in Greenwich Village, but no longer German or even Irish tongues or faces. The eyes and earrings of Italians twinkled in and out of the alleyways and basements, and they seemed to abound even in the streets, where long ranks of trucks drawn up in Sunday rest along the curbstones suggested the presence of a race of sturdier strength than theirs. March liked the swarthy, strange visages; he found nothing menacing for the future in them; for wickedness he had to satisfy himself as he could with the sneering, insolent, clean-shaven mug of some rare American of the b’hoy type, now almost as extinct in New York as the dodo or the volunteer fire-man. When he had found his way, among the ash barrels and the groups of decently dressed churchgoers, to the docks, he experienced a sufficient excitement in the recent arrival of a French steamer whose sheds were thronged with hacks and express wagons, and in a tacit inquiry into the emotions of the passengers, fresh from the cleanliness of Paris and now driving up through the filth of those streets.

 

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