Two Countries

By Henry James

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  • I.
  • II.
  • III.
  • IV.
  • V.
  • VI.
  • VII.
  • Etext by Ian Hillman

    I.

     

    WHEN he reached the hotel, Macarthy Grice was apprised, to his great disappointment, of the fact that his mother and sister were absent for the day, and he reproached himself with not having been more definite in announcing his arrival to them in advance. It was a little his nature to expect people to know things about himself that he had not told them, and to be vexed when he found they didn't know them. I will not go so far as to say that he was inordinately conceited, but he had a general sense that he himself knew most things without having them pumped into him. He had been uncertain about his arrival, and since he disembarked at Liverpool had communicated his movements to the two ladies who, after spending the winter in Rome, were awaiting him at Cadenabbia, only by notes as brief as telegrams, and on several occasions by telegrams simply. It struck his mother that he spent a great deal of money on these latter missives—which were mainly negative—to say that he couldn't yet say when he should be able to start for the Continent. He had had business in London, and had been apparently a good deal vexed by the discovery that, most of the people it was necessary for him to see being out of town, the middle of August was a bad time for transacting it. Mrs. Grice gathered that he had had annoyances and disappointments, but she hoped that by the time he should join them his serenity would have been restored. She had not seen him for a year, and her heart hungered for her boy. Family feeling was strong among these three (though Macarthy's manner of showing it was sometimes peculiar), and her affection for her son was jealous and passionate; but she and Agatha made no secret between themselves of the fact that the privilege of being his mother and his sister was mainly sensible when things were going well with him. They were a little afraid they were not going well just now, and they asked each other why he couldn't leave his affairs alone for a few weeks anyway, and treat his journey to Europe as a complete holiday—a course which would do him infinitely more good. He took life too hard, and was overworked and overstrained. It was only to each other, however, that the anxious and affectionate women made these reflections, for they knew it was of no use to say such things to Macarthy. It was not that he answered them angrily; on the contrary, he never noticed them at all. The answer was in the very essence of his nature: he was indomitably ambitious.

    They had gone on the steamboat to the other end of the lake, and couldn't possibly be back for several hours. There was a festa going on at one of the villages—in the hills, a little way from the lake—and several ladies and gentlemen had gone from the hotel to be present at it. They would find carriages at the landing, and they would drive to the village, after which the same vehicles would bring them back to the boat. This information was given to Macarthy Grice by the secretary of the hotel, a young man with a very low shirt collar, whose nationality puzzled and even defied him by it's indefiniteness (he liked to know whom he was talking to, even when he couldn't have the satisfaction of feeling that it was an American), and who suggested to him that he might follow and overtake his friends in the next steamer. As, however, there appeared to be some danger that in this case he should cross them on their way back, he determined simply to lounge about the lake-side and the grounds of the hotel. The place was lovely, the view magnificent, and there was a coming and going of little boats, of travellers of every nationality, of itinerant venders of small superfluities. Macarthy observed these things as patiently as his native restlessness allowed—and indeed that quality was re-enforced to-day by an inexplicable tendency to fidget. He changed his place twenty times; he lighted a cigar and threw it away; he ordered some luncheon, and when it came didn't care to eat it. He felt nervous, and he wondered what he was nervous about; whether he were afraid that during their excursion an accident had occurred to his mother or to Agatha. He was not usually a prey to small timidities, and indeed it cost him a certain effort to admit that a little Italian lake could be deep enough to drown a pair of Americans, or that Italian horses could have the high spirit to run away with them. He talked with no one, for the Americans seemed to him all taken up with each other, and the English all taken up with themselves. He had a few elementary principles for use in travelling (he had travelled little, but he had an abundant supply of theory on the subject), and one of them was that with Englishmen an American should never open the conversation. It was his belief that in doing so an American was exposed to be snubbed, or even insulted, and this belief was unshaken by the fact that Englishmen very often spoke to him, Macarthy, first.

    The afternoon passed, little by little, and at last, as he stood there, with his hands in his pockets, and his hat pulled over his nose to keep the western sun out of his eyes, he saw the boat that he was waiting for round a distant point. At this stage the little annoyance he had felt at the trick his relations had unwittingly played him passed completely away, and there was nothing in his mind but the eagerness of affection, the joy of reunion—of the prospective embrace. This feeling was in his face, in the fixed smile with which he watched the boat grow larger and larger. If we watch the young man himself as he does so we shall perceive him to be a tallish, lean personage, with an excessive slope of the shoulders, a very thin neck, a short light beard, and a bright, sharp, expressive eye. He almost always wore his hat too much behind or too much in front; in the former case it showed a very fine high forehead. He looked like a man of intellect whose body was not much to him, and it's senses and appetites not importunate. His feet were small, and he always wore a double-breasted frock-coat, which he never buttoned. His mother and sister thought him very handsome. He had this appearance especially, of course, when, making them out on the deck of the steamer, he began to wave his hat and his hand to them. They responded in the most demonstrative manner, and when they got near enough, his mother called out to him over the water that she couldn't forgive herself for having lost so much of his visit. This was a bold proceeding for Mrs. Grice, who usually held back. Only she had been uncertain—she hadn't expected him that day in particular. “It's my fault!—it's my fault!” exclaimed a gentleman beside her, whom our young man had not yet noticed, raising his hat slightly as he spoke. Agatha, on the other side, said nothing, but only smiled at her brother. He had not seen her for so many months that he had almost forgotten how pretty she was. She looked lovely, under the shadow of her hat and of the awning of the steamer, as she stood. there, with happiness in her face and a big bunch of familiar flowers in her hand. Macarthy was proud of many things, but on this occasion he was proudest of having such a charming sister. Before they all disembarked he had time to observe the gentleman who had spoken to him—an extraordinarily fair, clean-looking man, with a white waistcoat, a white hat, a glass in one eye, and a flower in his button-hole. Macarthy wondered who he was, but only vaguely, as it. explained him sufficiently to suppose that. he was a gentleman staying at the hotel, who had made acquaintance with his mother and sister, and taken part in the excursion. The only thing Grice had against him was that he had the air of an American who tried to look like an Englishman—a definite and conspicuous class to the young man's sense, and one in regard to which he entertained a peculiar abhorrence. He was sorry his relatives should associate themselves with persons of that stamp; he would almost have preferred that they should become acquainted with the genuine English. He happened. to perceive that the individual in question looked a good deal at him; but he disappeared, instantly and discreetly, when the boat drew up at the landing, and the three Grices—I had almost written the three Graces—pressed each other in their arms.

    Half an hour later Macarthy sat between the two ladies at the table d'hôte,. where he had a hundred questions to answer and to ask. He was still more struck with Agatha's improvement; she was older, handsomer, brighter: she had turned completely into a young lady, and into a very accomplished one. It seemed to him that there had been a change for the better in his mother as well, the only change of that sort of which the good lady was susceptible, an amelioration of health, a fresher colour, and a less frequent cough. Mrs. Grice was a gentle, sallow, serious. little woman, the main principle of whose being was the habit of insisting that nothing that concerned herself was of the least consequence. She thought it indelicate to be ill, and obtrusive even to be better, and discouraged all conversation of which she herself was in any degree the subject. Fortunately she had not been able to prevent her children from discussing her condition sufficiently to agree—it took but few words, for they agreed easily, that is, Agatha always agreed with her brother—that she must have a change of climate, and spend a winter or two in the south of Europe. Mrs. Grice kept her son's birthday all the year, and knew an extraordinary number of stitches in knitting. Her friends constantly received from her, by post, offerings of little mats for the table, done up in an envelop, usually without any writing. She could make little mats in forty or fifty different ways. Toward the end of the dinner, Macarthy, who up to this moment had been wholly occupied with his companions, began to look about him, and to ask questions about the people opposite. Then he leaned forward a little, and turned his eye up and down the row of their fellow-tourists on the same side. It was in this way that he perceived the gentleman who had said from the steamer that it was his fault that Mrs. Grice and her daughter had gone away for so many hours, and who now was seated at some distance below the younger lady. At the moment Macarthy leaned forward, this personage happened to be looking toward him, so that he caught his eye. The stranger smiled at him and nodded, as if an acquaintance might be considered to have been established between them, rather to Macarthy's surprise. He drew back and asked his sister who he was—the fellow who had been with them on the boat.

    “He's an Englishman—Sir Rufus Chasemore,” said the girl. Then she added, “Such a nice man.”

    “Oh, I thought he was an American making a fool of himself!” Macarthy rejoined.

    “There's nothing of the fool about him,” Agatha declared, laughing; and in a moment she added that Sir Rufus's usual place was beside hers, on her left hand. On this occasion he had moved away.

    “What do you mean by this occasion?” her brother inquired.

    “Oh, because you are here.”

    “And is he afraid of me?”

    “Yes, I think he is.”

    “He doesn't behave so, anyway.”

    “Oh, he has very good manners,” said the girl.

    “Well, I suppose he's bound to do that. Isn't he a kind of nobleman?” Macarthy asked.

    “Well, no, not exactly a nobleman.”

    “Well, some kind of a panjandrum. Hasn't he got one of their titles?”

    “Yes, but not a very high one,” Agatha explained. “He's only a K.G.B. And also an M.P.”

    “A K.G.B. and an M.P.? What the deuce is all that?” And when Agatha had elucidated these mystic signs, as to which the young man's ignorance was partly simulated, he remarked that the Post-office ought to charge her friend double for his letters—for requiring that amount of stuff in his address. He also said that he owed him one for leading them astray at a time when they were bound to be on hand to receive one who was so dear to them; to which Agatha replied:

    “Ah, you see, Englishmen are like that. They expect women to be so much honoured by their wanting them to do anything. And it must always be what they like, of course.”

    “What the men like? Well, that's all right, only they mustn't be Englishmen,” said Macarthy Grice.

    “Oh, if one is going to be a slave, I don't know that the nationality of one's master matters!” his sister exclaimed. After which his mother began to ask him if he had seen anything during the previous months of their Philadelphia cousins—some cousins who wrote their name Gryce, and for whom Macarthy had but a small affection.

    After dinner the three sat out on the terrace of the hotel, in the delicious warmth of the September night. There were boats on the water, decked with coloured lanterns; music and song proceeded from several of them, and every influence was harmonious. Nevertheless, by the time Macarthy had finished a cigar it was judged best that the old lady should withdraw herself from the evening air. She went into the salon of the hotel, and her children accompanied her, against her protests, so that she might not be alone. Macarthy liked better to sit with his mother in a drawing-room which the lamps made hot than without her under the stars. At the end of a quarter of an hour he became aware that his sister had disappeared, and as some time elapsed without her returning, he asked his mother what had become of her.

    “I guess she has gone to walk with Sir Rufus,” said the old lady, candidly.

    “Why, you seem to do everything Sir Rufus wants, down here!” her son exclaimed. “How did he get such a grip on you?”

    “Well, he has been most kind, Macarthy,” Mrs. Grice returned, not appearing to deny that the Englishman's influence was considerable.

    “I have heard it stated that it's not the custom, down here, for young girls to walk round—at night—with foreign lords.”

    Oh, he's not foreign, and he's most reliable,” said the old lady, very earnestly. It was not in her nature to treat such a question, or indeed any question, as unimportant.

    “Well, that's all right,” her son remarked, in a tone which implied that he was in good-humour, and didn't wish to have his equanimity ruffled. Such accidents, with Macarthy Grice, were not light things. All the same, at the end of five minutes more, as Agatha did not reappear, he expressed the hope that nothing of any kind had sprung up between her and the K.C.B.

    “Oh, I guess they are just conversing by the lake. I'll go and find them if you like.” said Mrs. Grice.

    “Well, haven't they been conversing by the lake and on the lake all day?” asked the young man, without taking up her proposal.

    “Yes, of course we had a great deal of bright talk while we were out. It was quite enough for me to listen to it. But he is most kind-and he knows everything Macarthy.”

    “Well, that's all right!” exclaimed the young man again. But a few moments later he returned to the charge, and asked his mother if the Englishman were paying any serious attention—she knew what he meant—to Agatha. “Italian lakes, and summer evenings, and glittering titles, and all that sort of thing—of course you know what they may lead to.”

    Mrs. Grice looked anxious and veracious, as she always did, and appeared to consider a little. “Well, Macarthy, the truth is just this. Your sister is so attractive and so admired that it seems as if, wherever she went, there was a great interest taken in her. Sir Rufus certainly does like to converse with her, but so have many others—and so would any one in their place. And Agatha is full of conscience. For me that's her highest attraction.”

    “I'm very much pleased with her—she's a lovely creature,” Macarthy remarked.

    “Well, there's no one whose appreciation could gratify her more than yours. She has praised you up to Sir Rufus,” added the old lady, simply.

    “Dear mother, what has he got to do with it?” her son demanded, staring. “ I don't care what Sir Rufus thinks of me.”

    Fortunately the good lady was left only for a moment confronted with this inquiry, for Agatha now re-entered the room, passing in from the terrace by one of the long windows, and accompanied precisely by the gentleman whom her relatives had been discussing. She came toward them smiling, and perhaps even blushing a little, but with an air of considerable resolution, and she said to Macarthy, “Brother, I want to make you acquainted with a good friend of ours, Sir Rufus Chasemore.”

    “Oh, I asked Miss Grice to be so good.” The Englishman laughed, looking easy and genial.

    Macarthy got up and extended his hand, with a “Very happy to know you, sir,” and the two men stood a moment looking at each other, while Agatha, beside them, bent her regard upon both. I shall not attempt to translate the reflections which rose in the young lady's mind as she did so, for they were complicated and subtle, and it is quite difficult enough to reproduce our own more casual impression of the contrast between her companions. This contrast was extreme and complete, and it was not weakened by the fact that both the men had the signs of character and ability. The American was thin, dry, fine, with something in his face which seemed to say that there was more in him of the spirit than of the letter. He looked unfinished, and yet somehow he looked mature, though he was not advanced in life. The Englishman had more detail about him, something stippled and retouched, an air of having been more artfully fashioned in conformity with traditions and models. He wore old clothes which looked new, while his transatlantic brother wore new clothes which looked old. He thought he had never heard the American tone so marked as on the lips of Mr. Macarthy Grice, who on his side found in the accent of his sister's friend a strange, exaggerated, even affected, variation of the tongue in which he supposed himself to have been brought up. In general he was much irritated by the tricks which the English played with the English language, and he deprecated especially their use of familiar slang.

    “Miss Grice tells me that you have just crossed the ditch, but I'm afraid you are not going to stay with us long,” Sir Rufus remarked, with much pleasantness.

    “Well, no, I shall return as soon as I have transacted my business,” Macarthy replied. “That's all I came for.”

    “You don't do us justice; you ought to follow the example of your mother and sister, and take a look round,” Sir Rufus went on, with another laugh. He was evidently of a mirthful nature.

    “Oh, I have been here before; I've seen the principal curiosities.”

    “He has seen everything thoroughly,” Mrs. Grice murmured over her crochet.

    “Ah, I dare say you have seen much more than we poor natives. And your own country is so interesting. I have an immense desire to see that.”

    “Well, it certainly repays observation,” said Macarthy Grice.

    “You wouldn't like it at all; you would find it awful.” his sister remarked, sportively. to Sir Rufus.

    “Gracious, daughter!” the old lady exclaimed, trying to catch Agatha's eye.

    “That's what she's always telling me, as if she were trying to keep me from going. I don't know what she has been doing over there that she wants to prevent me from finding out.” Sir Rufus's eyes, while he made this observation, rested on the young lady in the most respectful yet at the same time the most complacent manner.

    She smiled back at him, and said, with a laugh still clearer than his own, “I know the kind of people who will like America and the kind of people who won't.”

    “Do you know the kind who will like you, and the kind who won't?” Sir Rufus Chasemore inquired.

    “I don't know that in some cases it particularly matters what people like,” Macarthy interposed, with a certain severity.

    “Well, I must say I like people to like my country,” said Agatha.

    “You certainly take the best way to make them, Miss Grice!” Sir Rufus exclaimed.

    “Do you mean by dissuading them from visiting it, sir?” Macarthy asked.

    “Oh dear no; by being so charming a representative of it. But I shall most positively go on the first opportunity.”

    “I hope it won't be while we are on this side,” said Mrs. Grice, very civilly.

    “You will need us over there to explain everything,” her daughter added.

    The Englishman looked at her a moment with his glass in his eye. “I shall certainly pretend to be very stupid.” Then he went on, addressing himself to Macarthy: “I have an idea that you have some rocks ahead, but that doesn't diminish—in fact it increases—my curiosity to see the country.”

    “Oh, I suspect we'll scratch along all right,” Macarthy replied, with rather a grim smile, in a tone which conveyed that the success of American institutions might not altogether depend on Sir Rufus's judgment of them. He was on the point of expressing his belief, further, that there were European countries which would be glad enough to exchange their “rocks” for those of the United States; but he kept back this reflection, as it might appear too pointed, and he didn't wish to be rude to a man who seemed on such sociable terms with his mother and sister. In the course of a quarter of an hour the ladies took their departure for the upper regions, and Macarthy Grice went off with them. The Englishman looked for him again, however, as something had been said about their smoking a cigar together before they went to bed; but he didn't turn up, and Sir Rufus puffed his own weed in solitude, strolling up and down the terrace without mingling with the groups that remained, and looking much at the starlit lake and mountains.

    II.

     

    THE NEXT morning, after breakfast, Mrs. Grice had a conversation with her son in her own room. Agatha had not yet appeared, and she explained that the girl was sleeping late, having been much fatigued by her excursion the day before, as well as by the excitement of her brother's arrival. Macarthy thought it a little singular that she should bear her fatigue so much less well than her mother, but he understood everything in a moment, as soon as the old lady drew him toward her, with her little conscious cautious face, taking his hand in hers. She had a long and important talk with Agatha the previous evening after they went upstairs, and she had extracted from the girl some information which she had within a day or two begun very much to desire.

    “It's about Sir Rufus Chasemore. I couldn't but think you would wonder—just as I was wondering myself,” said Mrs. Grice. “I felt as if I couldn't be satisfied till I had asked. I don't know how you will feel about it. I am afraid it will upset you a little; but anything that you may think—well, yes, it is the case.”

    “Do you mean she is engaged to be married to your Englishman?” Macarthy demanded, with a face that suddenly flushed.

    “No, she's not engaged. I presume she wouldn't take that step without finding out how you'd feel. In fact that's what she said last night.”

    “I feel like—well, I feel like thunder!” Macarthy exclaimed, “and I hope you'll tell her so.”

    Mrs. Grice looked frightened and pained. “Well, my son, I'm glad you've come, if there is going to be any trouble.”

    “Trouble—what trouble should there be? He can't marry her if she won't have him.”

    “Well, she didn't say she wouldn't have him; she said the question hadn't come up. But she thinks it would come up if she were to give him any sort of opening. That's what I thought, and that's what I wanted to make sure of.”

    Macarthy looked at his mother for some moments in extreme seriousness; then he took out his watch and looked at that. “What time is the first boat?” he asked.

    “I don't know—there are a good many.”

    Well, we'll take the first—we'll quit this.” And the young man put back his watch and got up with decision.

    His mother sat looking at him rather ruefully. “Would you feel so badly if she were to do it?”

    “She may do it without my consent; she shall never do it with,” said Macarthy Grice.

    “Well, I could see last evening, by the way you acted—” his mother murmured, as if she thought it her duty to try and enter into his opposition.

    “How did I act, ma'am?”

    “Well, you acted as if you didn't think much of the English.”

    “Well, I don't,” said the young man.

    “Agatha noticed it, and she thought Sir Rufus noticed it too.”

    “They have such thick hides in general that they don't notice anything. But if he is more sensitive than the others, perhaps it will keep him away.”

    “Would you like to wound him, Macarthy?” his mother inquired, with an accent of timid reproach.

    “Wound him? I should like to kill him! Please to let Agatha know that we'll move on,” the young man added.

    Mrs. Grice got up as if she were about to comply with this injunction, but she stopped in the middle of the room, and asked of her son, with a quaint effort of conscientious impartiality which would have made him smile if he had been capable of smiling in such a connection, “Don't you think that in some respects the English are a fine nation?”

    “Well, yes; I like them for pale ale, and note-paper, and umbrellas; and I got a first-rate trunk there the other day. But I want my sister to marry one of her own people.”

    “Yes, I presume it would be better,” Mrs. Grice remarked. “But Sir Rufus has occupied very high positions in his own country.”

    “I know the kind of positions he has occupied; I can tell what they were by looking at him. The more he has done of that, the more intensely he represents what I don't like.”

    “Of course he would stand up for England,” Mrs. Grice felt herself compelled to admit.

    “Then why the mischief doesn't he do so instead of running round after Americans?” Macarthy demanded.

    “He doesn't run round after us; but we knew his sister, Lady Bolitho, in Rome. She is a most sweet woman, and we saw a great deal of her; she took a great fancy to Agatha. I surmise she mentioned us to him pretty often when she went back to England, and when he came abroad for his autumn holiday, as he calls it—he met us first in the Engadine, three or four weeks ago, and came down here with us—it seemed as if we already knew him and he knew us. He is very talented, and he is quite well off.”

    “Mother,” said Macarthy Grice, going close to the old lady, and speaking very gravely, “why do you know so much about him? Why have you gone into it so?”

    “I haven't gone into it; I only know what he has told us.”

    “But why have you given him the right to tell you? How does it concern you whether he is well off?”

    The poor woman began to look flurried and scared. “My son, I have given him no right; I don't know what you mean. Besides, it wasn't he who told us he is well off; it was his sister.”

    “It would have been better if you hadn't known his sister,” said the young man, gloomily.

    “Gracious, Macarthy, we must know some one!” Mrs. Grice rejoined, with a flicker of spirit.

    “I don't see the necessity of your knowing the English.”

    “Why, Macarthy, can't we even know them?” pleaded his mother.

    “You see the sort of thing it gets you into.”

    “It hasn't got us into anything. Nothing has been done.”

    “So much the better,” mother darling, said the young man. “In that case we will go on to Venice. Where is he going?”

    “I don't know, but I suppose he won't come on to Venice if we don't ask him.”

    “I don't believe any delicacy would prevent him,” Macarthy rejoined. “But he loathes me; that's an advantage.”

    “He loathes you—when he wanted so to know you?”

    “Oh yes, I understand. Well, now he knows me! He knows he hates everything I like, and I hate everything he likes.”

    “He doesn't imagine you hate your sister, I suppose!” said the old lady, with a little vague laugh.

    “Mother,” said Macarthy, still in front of her, with his hands in his pockets, “I verily believe I should hate her if she were to marry him.”

    “Oh, gracious! my son! don't! don't,” cried Mrs. Grice, throwing herself into his arms with a shudder of horror, and burying her face on his shoulder.

    Her son held her close, and as he bent over her he went on: “Dearest mother, don't you see that we must remain together—that at any rate we mustn't be separated by different ideas, different associations and institutions? I don't believe any family has ever had more of the feeling that holds people closely together than we have had; therefore, for Heaven's sake, let us keep it, let us find our happiness in it, as we always have done. Of course Agatha will marry some day, but why need she marry in such a way as to make a gulf? You and she are all I have, and—I may be selfish—I should like very much to keep you.”

    “Of course I will let her know the way you feel,” said the old lady, a moment later, rearranging her cap and her shawl, and putting away her pocket-handkerchief.

    “It's a matter she certainly ought to understand. She would wish to, unless she is very much changed,” Macarthy added, as if he saw all this with high lucidity.

    “Oh, she isn't changed—she'll never change!” his mother exclaimed, with rebounding optimism. She thought it wicked not to take cheerful views.

    “She wouldn't if she were to marry an Englishman,” he declared, as Mrs. Grice left him to go to her daughter.

    She told him an hour later that Agatha would be quite ready to start for Venice on the morrow, and that she said he need have no fear that Sir Rufus Chasemore would follow them. He was naturally anxious to know from her what had passed between her and the girl, but the only very definite information he extracted was to the effect that Agatha had declared, with infinite feeling, that she would never marry an enemy of her country. When he saw her, later in the day, he thought she had been crying; but there was nothing in her manner to show that she resented any pressure her mother might have represented to her that he had put upon her, or that she was making a reluctant sacrifice. Agatha Grice was very fond of her brother, whom she knew to be upright, distinguished, and exceedingly mindful of the protection and support that he owed her mother and herself. He was perverse and obstinate, but she was aware that in essentials he was supremely tender, and he had always been very much the most eminent figure in her horizon. No allusion was made between them to Sir Rufus Chasemore, though the silence on either side was rather a conscious one, and they talked of the prospective pleasures of Venice, and of the arrangements Macarthy would be able to make in regard to his mother's spending another winter in Rome. He was to accompany them to Venice and spend a fortnight with them there, after which he was to return to London, to terminate his business, and then take his way back to New York. There was a plan of his coming to see them again later in the winter, in Rome, if he should succeed in getting six weeks off. As a man of energy and decision, though indeed of a somewhat irritable stomach, he made light of the Atlantic voyage; it was a rest and a relief, alternating with his close attention to business. That the disunion produced by the state of Mrs. Grice's health was a source of constant regret, and even of much depression to him, was well known to his mother and sister, who would not have broken up his home by coming to live in Europe if he had not insisted upon it. Macarthy was in the highest degree conscientious, and capable of suffering the extremity of discomfort in a cause which he held to be right. But his mother and sister were his home, all the same, and in their absence he was perceptibly desolate. Fortunately it had been hoped that a couple of southern winters would quite set Mrs. Grice up again, and that then everything, in America would be as it had been before. Agatha's affection for her brother was very nearly as great as his affection for herself; but it took the form of wishing that his loneliness might be the cause of his marrying some thoroughly nice girl, inasmuch as, after all, her mother and she might not always be there. Fraternal tenderness in Macarthy's bosom followed a different logic. He was so fond of his sister that he had a secret hope that she would never marry at all. He had spoken otherwise to his mother, because that was the only way not to seem offensively selfish; but the bottom of his thought, as the French say was that on the day Agatha should marry she would throw him over. On the day she should marry an Englishman she would not throw him over—she would betray him. That is, she would betray her country, and it came to the same thing. Macarthy's patriotism was of so intense a hue that, to his own sense, the national life and his own life flowed in an indistinguishable current.

    The particular Englishman he had his eye upon now was not, as a general thing, visible before luncheon. He had told Agatha, who mentioned it to her brother, that in the morning he was immersed in work—in letter-writing. Macarthy wondered what his work might be, but did not condescend to inquire. He was enlightened, however, by happening by an odd chance to observe an allusion to Sir Rufus in a copy of the London Times which he took up in the reading-room of the hotel. This occurred in a letter to the editor of the newspaper, the writer of which accused Agatha's friend of having withheld from the public some information to which the public was entitled. The information had respect to “the situation in South Africa", and Sir Rufus was plainly an agent of the British government, the head of some kind of department or sub-department. This didn't make Macarthy like him any better. He was displeased with the idea of England's possessing colonies at all, and considered that she had acquired them by force and fraud, and held them by a frail and unnatural tenure. It appeared to him that any man who occupied a place in this unrighteous system must have false, detestable views. Sir Rufus Chasemore turned up on the terrace in the afternoon, and bore himself with the serenity of a man unconscious of the damaging inferences that had been formed about him. Macarthy neither avoided him nor sought him out—he even relented a little toward him mentally when he thought of the loss he was about to inflict on him; but when the Englishman approached him and appeared to wish to renew their conversation of the evening before, it struck him that he was wanting in delicacy. There was nothing strange in that, however, for delicacy and tact were not the strong point of one's transatlantic cousins with whom one had always to dot one's i's. It seemed to Macarthy that Sir Rufus Chasemore ought to have guessed that he didn't desire to keep up an acquaintance with him, though indeed the young American would have been at a loss to say how he was to guess it, inasmuch as he would have resented the imputation that he himself had been rude enough to make such a fact patent. The American ladies were in their apartments, occupied in some manner connected with their intended retreat, and there was nothing for Macarthy but to stroll up and down for nearly half an hour with the personage who was so provokingly the cause of it. It had come over him now that he should have liked extremely to spend several days on the lake of Como. The place struck him as much more delicious than it had done while he chafed the day before at the absence of his relations. He was angry with the Englishman for forcing him to leave it, and still more angry with him for showing so little responsibility, or even perception, in regard to the matter. It occurred to him while he was in this humour that it might be a good plan to make himself so disagreeable that Sir Rufus would take to his heels and never reappear, fleeing before the portent of such an insufferable brother-in-law. But this plan demanded powers of execution which Macarthy did not flatter himself that he possessed; he felt that it was impossible to him to divest himself of his character of a polished American gentleman.

    If he found himself dissenting from most of the judgments and opinions which Sir Rufus Chasemore happened to express in the course of their conversation, there was nothing perverse in that; it was a simple fact, apparently, that the Englishman had nothing in common with him, and was predestined to enunciate propositions to which it was impossible for him to assent. Moreover, how could he assent to propositions enunciated in that short, off-hand, clipping tone, with the words running into each other, and the voice rushing up and down the scale? Macarthy, who spoke very slowly, with great distinctness, and in general with great correctness, was annoyed not only by his companions intonation, but by the odd and, as it seemed to him, licentious application that he made of certain words. He struck him as wanting in reverence for the language, which Macarthy had an idea, not altogether unjust, that he himself deeply cherished. He would have admitted that these things were small and not great, but in the usual relations of life the small things count more than the great, and they sufficed, at any rate, to remind him of the essential antipathy and incompatibility which he had always believed to exist between an Englishman and an American. They were, in the very nature of things, disagreeable to each other, both mentally and physically irreconcilable. In cases where this want of correspondence had been bridged over, it was because the American had made weak concessions, had been shamefully accommodating. That was a kind of thing the Englishman, to do him justice, never did; he had at least the courage of his prejudices. It was not unknown to Macarthy that the repugnance in question appeared to be confined to the American male, as was shown by a thousand international marriages, which had transplanted as many of his countrywomen to unnatural British homes. That variation had to be allowed for, and the young man felt that he was allowing for it when he reflected that very likely his own sister liked the way Sir Rufus Chasemore spoke. In fact he was intimately convinced she liked it, which was a reason the more for their quitting Cadenabbia the next morning.

    Sir Rufus took the opposite point of view quite as much as himself, only he took it gaily and familiarly and laughed about it, as if he were amused at the preferences his companion betrayed, and especially amused that he should hold them so gravely, so almost gloomily. This sociable jocosity, as if they had known each other for three months, was what appeared to Macarthy so indelicate. They talked no politics, and Sir Rufus said nothing more about America; but it stuck out of the Englishman at every pore that he was a resolute and consistent conservative, a prosperous, accomplished, professional, official Tory. It gave Macarthy a kind of palpitation to think that his sister had been in danger of associating herself with such arrogant theories; not that a woman's political creed mattered, but that of her husband did. He had an impression that he himself was a passionate democrat, an unshrinking radical. It was a proof of how far Sir Rufus's manner was from being satisfactory to his companion that the latter was unable to guess whether he already knew of the sudden determination of his American friends to leave Cadenabbia, or whether their intention was first revealed to him in Macarthy's casual mention of it, which apparently didn't put him out at all, eliciting nothing more than a frank, cheerful expression of regret. Macarthy somehow mistrusted a man who could conceal his emotions like that. How could he have known they were going unless Agatha had told him, and how could Agatha have told him, since she couldn't as yet have seen him? It did not even occur to the young man to suspect that she might have conveyed the unwelcome news to him by a letter. And if he hadn't known it, why wasn't he more startled and discomfited when Macarthy dealt the blow? The young American made up his mind at last that the reason why Sir Rufus was not startled was that he had thought in advance it would be no more than natural that the newly arrived brother should wish to spoil his game. But in that case why wasn't he angry with him for such a disposition? Why did he come after him and insist on talking with him? There seemed to Macarthy something impudent in this incongruity—as if to the mind of an English statesman the animosity of a Yankee lawyer were really of too little account.

    III.

     

    IT MAY be intimated to the reader that Agatha Grice had written no note to her English friend, and she held no communication with him of any sort, till after she had left the table d'hôte with her mother and brother in the evening. Sir Rufus had seated himself at dinner in the same place as the night before; he was already occupying it, and he simply bowed to her, with a smile, from a distance, when she came into the room. As she passed out to the terrace, later, with her companions, he overtook her, and said to her, in a lower tone of voice than usual, that he had been exceedingly sorry to hear that she was leaving Cadenabbia so soon. Was it really true? couldn't they put it off a little? shouldn't they find the weather too hot in Venice, and the mosquitoes too numerous? Agatha saw that Sir Rufus asked these questions with the intention of drawing her away, engaging her in a walk, in some talk to which they should have no listeners, and she resisted him at first a little, keeping near the others, because she had made up her mind that morning, in deep and solitary meditation, that she would force him to understand that further acquaintance could lead to nothing profitable for either party. It presently came over her, however, that it would take some little time to explain this truth, and that the time might be obtained by their walking a certain distance along the charming shore of the lake together. The windows of the hotel and of the little water-side houses and villas projected long shafts of lamp-light over the place, which shimmered on the water, broken by the slow-moving barges, laden with musicians, and gave the whole region the air of an illuminated garden surrounding a magnificent pond. Agatha made the further reflection that it would be only common kindness to give Sir Rufus an opportunity to say anything he wished to say, that is, within the limits she was prepared to allow; they had been too good friends to separate without some of the forms of regret, without a backward look at least, since they might not enjoy a forward one. In short, she had taken in the morning a resolution so virtuous, founded on so high and large a view of the whole situation, that she felt herself entitled to some reward, some present liberty of action. She turned away from her relatives with Sir Rufus—she observed that they paid no attention to her—and in a few moments she was strolling by his side at a certain distance from the hotel.

    “I will tell you what I should like to do,” he said, as they went; “I should like to turn up in Venice—about a week hence.”

    “I don't recommend you to do that the girl replied,” promptly enough, though as soon as she had spoken she bethought herself that she could give him no definite reason why he should not follow her; she could give him no reason at all that would not be singularly wanting in delicacy. She had a movement of vexation with her brother for having put her in a false position; it was the first, for in the morning, when her mother repeated to her what Macarthy had said, and she perceived all that it implied, she had not been in the least angry with him—she sometimes, indeed, wondered why she was not—and she didn't propose to become so for Sir Rufus Chasemore. What she had been was sad, and touched, too, with a sense of horror—horror at the idea that she might be in danger of denying, under the influence of an insinuating alien, the pieties and sanctities in which she had been brought up. Sir Rufus was a tremendous conservative, though perhaps that didn't matter so much, and he had let her know at an early stage of their acquaintance that he had never liked Americans in the least as a people. As it was apparent that he liked her—all American, and very American, as she was she had regarded this shortcoming only in it's minor bearings, and it had even entertained her to form a private project of converting him to a friendlier view. If she hadn't found him a charming man, she wouldn't have cared what he thought about her country people; but, as it happened, she did find him a charming man, and it grieved her to see a mind that was really worthy of the finest initiations (as regarded the American question) wasting itself on poor prejudices. Somehow, by showing him how nice she was herself, she could make him like the people better with whom she had so much in common, and as he admitted that his observation of them had, after all, been very restricted, she would also make him know them better. This prospect drew her on till suddenly her brother sounded the note of warning. When it came she understood it perfectly; she couldn't pretend that she didn't. If she didn't look out, she would give her country away; and in the privacy of her own room she had coloured up to her hair at the thought. She had a lurid vision in which the chance seemed to be greater that Sir Rufus Chasemore would bring her over to his side than that she should make him like anything he had begun by disliking; so that she resisted, with the conviction that the complications which might arise from allowing a prejudiced Englishman to possess himself, as he evidently desired to do, of her affections, would be much greater than a sensitive girl with other loyalties to observe might be able to manage. A moment after she had said to her companion that she didn't recommend him to come to Venice she added that of course he was free to do as he liked; only why should he come if he was sure the place was so uncomfortable? To this Sir Rufus replied that he didn't care how uncomfortable it was if she should be there, and that there was nothing he wouldn't put up with for the sake of a few days more of her society.

    “Oh, if it's for that you are coming,” the girl replied, laughing and feeling nervous—feeling that something was in the air which she had wished precisely to keep out of it—“Oh, if it's for that you are coming, you had very much better not take the trouble; you would have very little of my society. While my brother is with us, all my time will be given up to him.”

    “Confound your brother!” Sir Rufus exclaimed. Then he went on: “You told me yourself he wouldn't be with you long. After he's gone you will be free again, and you will still be in Venice shan't you? I do want to float in a gondola with you.”

    “It's very possible my brother may be with us for weeks.”

    Sir Rufus hesitated a moment. “I see what you mean—that he won't leave you so long as I am about the place. In that case, if you are so fond of him, you ought to take it as a kindness of me to hover about.” Before the girl had time to make a rejoinder to this ingenious proposition he added, “Why in the world has he taken such a dislike to me?”

    “I know nothing of any dislike,” Agatha said, not very honestly. “He has expressed none to me.”

    “He has to me, then. He quite loathes me.”

    She was silent a little. Then she inquired, “And do you like him very much?”

    “I think he's immense fun! He's very clever, like most of the Americans I have seen, including yourself. I should like to show him I like him, and I have salaamed and kowtowed to him whenever I had a chance; but he won't let me get near him. Hang it, it's cruel!”

    “It's not directed to you, in particular, any dislike he may have. I have told you before that he doesn't like the English,” Agatha remarked.

    “Bless me! no more do I! But my best friends have been among them.”

    “I don't say I agree with my brother, and I don't say I disagree with him,” Sir Rufus's companion went on. “I have told you before that we are of Irish descent, on my mother's side. Her mother was a Macarthy. We have kept up the name, and we have kept up the feeling.”

    “I see—so that even if the Yankee were to let me off, the Paddy would come down! That's a most unholy combination. But you remember, I hope, what I have also told you—that I am quite as Irish as you can ever be. I had an Irish grandmother—a beauty of beauties, a certain Lady Laura Fitzgibbon, qui vaut bien la vôtre. A charming old woman she was.”

    “Oh, well, she wasn't of our kind,” the girl exclaimed, laughing.

    “You mean that your's wasn't charming? In the presence of her granddaughter permit me to doubt it.”

    “Well, I suppose that those hostilities of race—transmitted and hereditary, as it were—are the greatest of all.” Agatha Grice uttered this sage reflection by no means in the tone of successful controversy, and with the faintest possible tremor in her voice.

    “Good God! do you mean to say that a hostility of race, a legendary feud, is to prevent you and me from meeting again?” The Englishman stopped short as he made this inquiry, but Agatha continued to walk, as if that might help her to elude it. She had come out with a perfectly sincere determination to prevent Sir Rufus from saying what she believed he wanted to say, and if her voice had trembled just now, it was because it began to come over her that her preventive measures would fail. The only tolerably efficacious one would be to turn straight round and go home. But there would be a rudeness in this course, and even a want of dignity; and besides, she didn't wish to go home. She compromised by not answering her companions question, and though she couldn't see him, she was aware that he was looking after her with an expression in his face of high impatience momentarily baffled. She knew that expression, and thought it handsome; she knew all his expressions, and thought them all handsome. He overtook her in a few moments, and then she was surprised that he should be laughing, as he exclaimed, “It's too absurd it's too absurd!” It was not long, however, before she understood the nature of his laughter, as she understood everything else. If she was nervous, he was scarcely less so; his whole manner now expressed the temper of a man wishing to ascertain rapidly whether he may enjoy or must miss great happiness. Before she knew it he had spoken the words which she had flattered herself he should not speak; he had said that since there appeared to be a doubt whether they should soon meet again, it was important he should seize the present occasion. He was very glad, after all, because for several days he had been wanting to speak. He loved her as he had never loved any woman, and he besought her earnestly to believe it. What was this crude stuff about disliking the English and disliking the Americans? what had questions of nationality to do with it any more than questions of ornithology? It was a question simply of being his wife, and that was rather between themselves; wasn't it? He besought her to consider it, as he had been turning it over from almost the first hour he met her. It was not in Agatha's power to go her way now, because he had laid his hand upon her in a manner that kept her motionless, and while he talked to her in low, kind tones, touching her face with the breath of supplication, she stood there in the warm darkness, very pale, looking as if she were listening to a threat of injury rather than to a declaration of love. “Of course I ought to speak to your mother, he said; I ought to have spoken to her first. But your leaving at an hour's notice, and apparently wishing to shake me off, has given me no time. For Gods sake, give me your permission, and I will do it to-night.”

    “Don't—don't speak to my mother,” said Agatha, mournfully.

    “Don't tell me to-morrow, then, that she won't hear of it!”

    “She likes you, Sir Rufus,” the girl rejoined, in the same singular, hopeless tone.

    “I hope you don't mean to imply by that that you don't!”

    “No; I like you, of course; otherwise I should never have allowed myself to be in this position, because I hate it.” The girl uttered these last words with a sudden burst of emotion, and an equally sudden failure of sequence, and turning round quickly, began to walk in the direction from which they had come. Her companion, however, was again beside her, close to her, and he found means to prevent her from going as fast as she wished. History has lost the record of what at that moment he said to her; it was something that made her exclaim, in a tone which seemed on the point of breaking into tears: “Please don't say that, or anything like it, again, Sir Rufus, or I shall have to take leave of you forever, this instant, on the spot.” He strove to be obedient, and they walked on a little in silence; after which she resumed, with a slightly different manner: “I am very sorry you have said this to-night. You have troubled and distressed me; it isn't a good time.”

    “I wonder if you would favour me with your idea of what might be a good time?”

    “I don't know. Perhaps never. I am greatly obliged to you for the honour you have done me. I beg you to believe me when I say this. But I don't think I shall ever marry. I have other duties. I can't do what I like with my life.”

    At this Sir Rufus made her stop again, to tell him what she meant by such an extraordinary speech. What overwhelming duties had she, pray, and what restrictions upon her life that made her so different from other women? He couldn't, for his part, imagine a woman more free. She explained that she had her mother, who was terribly delicate, and who must be her first thought and her first care. Nothing would induce her to leave her mother. She was all her mother had except Macarthy, who was absorbed in his profession.

    “What possible question need there be of your leaving her?” the Englishman demanded. “What could be more delightful than that she should live with us, and that we should take care of her together? You say she is so good as to like me, and I assure you I like her—most uncommonly.”

    “It would be impossible that we should take her away from my brother,” said the girl, after a hesitation.

    “Take her away?” And Sir Rufus Chasemore stood staring. “Well, if he won't look after her himself—you say he is so taken up with his work—he has no earthly right to prevent other people from doing so.”

    “It's not a man's business-its mine it's her daughters.”

    “That's exactly what I think, and what in the world do I wish but to help you? If she requires a mild climate, we will find some lovely place in the south of England, and be as happy there as the day is long.”

    “So that Macarthy would have to come there to see his mother? Fancy Macarthy in the south of England—specially as happy as the day is long! He would find the day very long,” Agatha Grice continued with the strange little laugh which expressed—or rather which disguised—the mixture of her feelings. “He would never consent.”

    “Never consent to what? Is what you mean to say that he would never consent to your marriage? I certainly never dreamed that you would have to ask him. Haven't you defended to me again and again the freedom, the independence, with which American girls marry? Where is the independence when it comes to your own case?” Sir Rufus Chasemore paused a moment, and then he went on, with bitterness: “Why don't you say outright that you are afraid of your brother? Miss Grice, I never dreamed that that would be your answer to an offer of everything that a man—and a man of some distinction, I may say, for it would be affectation in me to pretend that I consider myself a nonentity—can lay at the feet of a woman.”

    The girl did not reply immediately; she appeared to think over intently what he had said to her, and while she did so she turned her white face and her charming serious eyes upon him. When at last she spoke it was in a very gentle, considerate tone. “You are wrong in supposing that I am afraid of my brother. How can I be afraid of a person of whom I am so exceedingly fond?”

    “Oh, the two things are quite consistent,” said Sir Rufus Chasemore, impatiently. “And is it impossible that I should ever inspire you with a sentiment which you would consent to place in the balance with this intense fraternal affection?” He had no sooner spoken those somewhat sarcastic words than he broke out, in a different tone, “Oh, Agatha, for pity's sake, don't make difficulties where there are no difficulties!”

    “I don't make them; I assure you they exist. It is difficult to explain them, but I can see them, I can feel them. Therefore we mustn't talk this way any more. Please, please don't,” the girl pursued, imploringly. “Nothing is possible to-day. Some day or other very likely there will be changes. Then we shall meet; then we shall talk again.”

    “I like the way you ask me to wait ten years. What do you mean by 'changes'? Before Heaven, I shall never change,” Sir Rufus declared.

    Agatha Grice hesitated. “Well, perhaps you will like us better.”

    “Us? Whom do you mean by 'us'? Are you coming back to that beastly question of one's feelings—real or supposed it doesn't matter—about your great and glorious country? Good God, it's too monstrous! One tells a girl one adores her, and she replies that she doesn't care so long as one doesn't adore her compatriots. What do you want me to do to them? What do you want me to say? I will say anything in the English language, or in the American, that you like. I'll say that they're the greatest of the great, and have every charm and virtue under heaven. I'll go down on my stomach before them, and remain there forever. I can't do more than that.”

    Whether this extravagant profession had the effect of making Agatha Grice ashamed of having struck that note in regard to her companions international attitude, or whether her nerves were simply upset by his vehemence, his insistence, is more than I can say: what is certain is that her rejoinder to this last speech was a sudden burst of tears. They fell for a moment rapidly, soundlessly, but she was quicker still in brushing them away. “You may laugh at me, or you may despise me,” she said, when she could speak, “and I dare say my state of mind is deplorably narrow, but I couldn't be happy with you if you hated my country.”

    “You would hate mine back, and we should pass the liveliest, jolliest days!” returned the Englishman, gratified, softened, enchanted, by her tears. “My dear girl, what is a woman's country? It's her house and her garden, her children, and her social world. You exaggerate immensely the difference which that part of the business makes. I assure you that if you were to marry me, it would be the last thing you would find yourself thinking of. However, to prove how little I hate your country, I am perfectly willing to go there and live with you.?”

    “Oh, Sir Rufus Chasemore!” murmured Agatha Grice, protestingly.

    “You don't believe me?”

    She didn't believe him, and yet to hear him make such an offer was sweet to her, for it gave her a sense of the reality of his passion. “I shouldn't ask that—I shouldn't even like it,” she said; and then he wished to know what she would like. “I should like you to let me go—not to press me, not to distress me any more now. I shall think of everything—of course you know that. But it will take me a long time. That's all I can tell you now, but I think you ought to be content.” He was obliged to say that he was content, and they resumed their walk, in the direction of the hotel. Shortly before they reached it Agatha exclaimed, with a certain irrelevance, “You ought to go there first; then you would know.”

    “Then I should know what?”

    “Whether you would like it.”

    “Like your great country? Good Lord! what difference does it make whether I like it or not?”

    “No—that's just it—you don't care,” said Agatha; “yet you said to my brother that you wanted immensely to go.”

    “So I do; I am ashamed not to have been; that's an immense drawback today in England to a man in public life. Something has always stopped me off, tiresomely, from year to year. Of course I shall go the very first moment I can take the time.”

    “It's a pity you didn't go this year, instead of coming down here,” the girl observed, rather sententiously.

    “I thank my stars I didn't!” he responded, in a very different tone.

    “Well, I should try to make you like it,” she went on. “I think it very probable I should succeed.”

    “I think it very probable you could do with me exactly whatever you might attempt.”

    “Oh, you hypocrite!” the girl exclaimed; and it was on this that she separated from him and went into the house. It soothed him to see her do so, instead of rejoining her mother and brother, whom he distinguished at a distance sitting on the terrace. She had perceived them there as well, but she would go straight to her room; she preferred the company of her thoughts. It suited Sir Rufus Chasemore to believe that those thoughts would plead for him and eventually win his suit. He gave a melancholy, lover-like sigh, however, as he walked toward Mrs. Grice and her son. He. couldn't keep away from them, though he was so interested in being and appearing discreet. The girl had told him that her mother liked him, and he desired both to stimulate and to reward that inclination. Whatever he desired he desired with extreme definiteness and energy. He would go and sit down beside the little old lady (with whom hitherto he had no very direct conversation), and talk to her and be kind to her and amuse her. It must be added that he rather despaired of the success of these arts as he saw Macarthy Grice, on becoming aware of his approach, get up and walk away.

    IV.

     

    “IT SOMETIMES seems to me as if he didn't marry on purpose to make me feel badly.” That was the only fashion, as yet, in which Lady Chasemore had given away her brother to her husband. The words fell from her lips some five years after Macarthy's visit to the lake of Como—two years after her mothers death—a twelvemonth after her marriage. The same idea came into her mind—a trifle whimsically, perhaps, only this time she didn't express it—as she stood by her husbands side on the deck of the steamer, half an hour before they reached the wharf at New York. Six years had elapsed between the scenes at Cadenabbia and their disembarkation in that city. Agatha knew that Macarthy would be on the wharf to meet them, and that he should be there alone was natural enough. But she had a prevision of their return with him—she also knew he expected that—to the house, so narrow, but fortunately rather deep, in Thirty-seventh Street, in which such a happy trio had lived in the old days, before this unexpressed but none the less perceptible estrangement. As her marriage had taken place in Europe (Sir Rufus coming to her at Bologna, in the very midst of the Parliamentary session, the moment he heard, by his sister, of her mother's death: this was really the sign of devotion that had won her)—as the ceremony of her nuptials, I say (it was a very quiet one), had been performed in Paris, so that her absence from her native land had had no intermission, she had not seen the house since she left it with her mother for that remedial pilgrimage in the course of which poor Mrs. Grice, travelling up from Rome in the. spring, after her third winter there (two had been so far from sufficing), was to succumb, from one day to the other, to inflammation of the lungs. She saw it over again now, even before she left the ship, and felt in advance all that it would imply to find Macarthy living there as a bachelor, struggling with New York servants, unaided and unrelieved by the sister whose natural place might by many people have been thought to be the care of his establishment, as her natural reward would have been the honours of such a position. Lady Chasemore was prepared to feel pang upon pang when she should perceive how much less comfortably he lived than he would have lived if she had not quitted him. She knew that their second cousins in Boston, whose sense of duty was so terrible (even her poor mother, who never had a thought for herself, used to try as much as possible to conceal her life from them), considered that she had, in a manner almost immoral, deserted him for the sake of an English title. When they went ashore and drove home with Macarthy, Agatha received exactly the impression she had expected: her brother's life struck her as bare, ungarnished, helpless, socially and domestically speaking. He didn't know how to keep house, naturally, and in New York, unless one had a larger fortune than his, it was very difficult to do that sort of thing by deputy. But Lady Chasemore made to her husband no further allusion to the idea that he remained single out of perversity. The situation was too serious for that or for any other flippant speech.

    It was a delicate matter for the brothers-in-law to spend two or three weeks together, not, however, because, when the moment for her own real decision came, Macarthy had protested in vivid words against her marriage. By the time he arrived from America, after his mother's death, the Englishman was in possession of the field, and it was too late to save her. He had had the opportunity to show her kindness, for which her situation made her extremely grateful—he had, indeed, rendered her services which Macarthy himself, though he knew they were the result of an interested purpose, could not but appreciate. When her brother met her in Paris he saw that she was already lost to him, she had ceased to struggle, she had accepted the fate of a Briton's bride. It appeared that she was much in love with her Briton, and that was the end of it. Macarthy offered no opposition, and she would have liked it better if he had, as it would have given her a chance to put him in the wrong a little more than, formally at least, she had been able to do. He knew that she knew what he thought and how he felt, and there was no need of saying any more about it. No doubt he would not have accepted a sacrifice from her, even if she had been capable of making it (there were moments when it seemed to her that even at the last; if he had appealed to her directly and with tenderness, she would have renounced); but it was none the less clear to her that he was deeply disappointed at her having found it in her heart to separate herself so utterly. And there was something in his whole attitude which seemed to say that it was not only from him that she separated herself, but from all her fellow-countrymen besides, and from everything that was best and finest in American life. He regarded her marriage as an abjuration, an apostasy, a kind of moral treachery. It was of no use to say to him that she was doing nothing original or extraordinary, to ask him if he didn't know that in England, at the point things had come to, American wives were as thick as blackberries, so that if she were doing wrong she was doing wrong with—well, almost the majority; for he had an answer to such cheap arguments, an answer according to which it appeared that the American girls who had done what she was about to do were notoriously poor specimens, the most frivolous and rattle-brained young persons in the country. They had no conception of the great meaning of American institutions, no appreciation of their birthright, and they were doubtless very worthy recruits to a debauched and stultified aristocracy. The pity of Agatha's desertion was that she had been meant for better things, she had appreciated her birthright, or, if she hadn't, it had not been the fault of a brother who had taken so much pains to form her mind and character. The sentiment of her nationality had been cultivated in her; it was not a mere brute instinct or customary prejudice, but a responsibility, a faith, a religion. She was not a poor specimen, but a remarkably fine one; she was intelligent, she was clever, she was sensitive, she could understand difficult things and feel great ones.

    Of course, in those days of trouble, in Paris, when it was arranged that she should be married immediately (as if there had really been an engagement to Sir Rufus from the night before their flight from Cadenabbia), of course she had had a certain amount of talk with Macarthy about the matter, and at those moments she had almost wished to drive him to protest articulately, so that she might as explicitly reassure him, endeavour to bring him round. But he had never said to her personally what he had said to her mother at Cadenabbia—what her mother, frightened and distressed, had immediately repeated to her. The most he said was that he hoped she was conscious of all the perfectly different and opposed things she and her husband would represent when they should find themselves face to face. He hoped she had measured in advance the strain that might arise from the fact that in so many ways her good would be his evil, her white his black, and vice versa—the fact, in a word, that by birth, tradition, convictions, she was the product of a democratic society, while the very breath of Sir Rufus's nostrils was the denial of human equality. She had replied, “Oh yes, I have thought of everything;” but in reality she had not thought that she was, in any very aggressive manner, a democrat, or even that she had a representative function. She had not thought that Macarthy, in his innermost soul, was a democrat either; and she had even wondered what would happen if, in regard to some of those levelling theories, he had suddenly been taken at his word. She knew, however, that nothing would have made him more angry than to hint that anything could happen which would find him unprepared, and she was ashamed to repudiate the opinions, the general character, her brother attributed to her, to fall below the high standard he had set up for her. She had, moreover, no wish to do so. She was well aware that there were many things in English life that she shouldn't like, and she was never a more passionate American than the day she married Sir Rufus Chasemore.

    To what extent she remained one, an observer of the deportment of this young lady would at first have had considerable difficulty in judging. The question of the respective merits of the institutions of the two countries came up very little in her life. Her husband had other things to think of than the great republic beyond the sea, and her horizon, social and political, became for the time exclusively English. Sir Rufus was immersed in politics and in administrative questions; but these things belonged wholly to the domestic field; they were embodied in big blue-books with terrible dry titles (Agatha had tried conscientiously to acquaint herself with the contents of some of them), which piled themselves up on the table of his library. The Conservatives had come into power just after his marriage, and he had held honourable, though not supereminent, office. His duties had nothing to do with foreign relations; they were altogether of an economical and statistical kind. He performed them in a manner which showed, perhaps, that he was conscious of some justice in the reproach usually addressed to the Tories—the taunt that they always came to grief in the department of industry and finance. His wife was sufficiently in his confidence to know how much he had it at heart to prove that a Conservative administration could be strong on that side. He never spoke to her of her own country—they had so many other things to talk about—but if there was nothing in his behaviour to betray the assumption that she had given it up, so, on the other hand, there was nothing to show that he doubted of her having done so. What he had said about a woman's country being her husband and children, her house and garden and visiting list, was very considerably verified; for it was certain that her ladyship's new career gave her, though she had no children, plenty of occupation. Even if it had not, however, she would have found a good deal of work to her hand in loving her husband, which she continued to do with the most commendable zeal. He seemed to her a very magnificent person, and he didn't bully her half so much as she expected. There were times when it even occurred to her that he really didn't bully her enough, for she had always had an idea that it would be agreeable to be subjected to this probation by some one she should be very fond of.

    After they had been married a year he became a permanent official, in succession to a gentleman who was made a peer on his retirement from the post to which Sir Rufus was appointed. This gave Lady Chasemore an opportunity to reflect that she might some day be a peeress, it being reasonable to suppose that the same reward would be meted out to her husband on the day on which, in the fullness of time and of credit, he also should retire. She was obliged to admit to herself that the reflection was unattended with any sense of horror; it exhilarated her indeed to the point of making her smile at the contingency of Macarthy's finding himself the brother of a member of the aristocracy. As a permanent official, her husband was supposed to have no active political opinions; but she could not flatter herself that she perceived any diminution of his Conservative zeal. Even if she had, it would have made little difference, for it had not taken her long to discover that she had married into a tremendous Tory “set”—a set in which people took for granted she had feelings that she was not prepared to publish on the house-tops. It was scarcely worth while, however, to explain at length that she had not been brought up in that way, partly because the people wouldn't have understood, and partly because really, after all, they didn't care. Of how little it was possible, in general, to care, her career in England helped her gradually to discover. The people who cared least appeared to be those who were most convinced that everything in the national life was going to the dogs. Lady Chasemore was not struck with this tendency herself; but if she had been, the belief would have worried her more than it seemed to worry her friends. She liked most of them extremely, and thought them very kind, very easy to live with; but she liked London much better than the country, rejoiced much when her husband's new post added to the number of months he would have annually to spend there (they ended by being there as much as any one), and had grave doubts as to whether she would have been able to “stand” it if her lot had been cast among those members of her new circle who lived mainly on their acres. All the same, though what she had to bear she bore very easily, she indulged in a good deal of private meditation on some of the things that displeased and distressed her. She didn't always mention them to her husband, but she always intended to. She desired he should not think that she swallowed his country whole, that she was stupidly undiscriminating. Of course he knew that she was not stupid, and of course, also, he knew that she could not fail to be painfully impressed by the misery and brutality of the British populace. She had never, anywhere else, seen anything like that. Of course, furthermore, she knew that Sir Rufus had given, and would give in the future, a great deal of thought to legislative measures directed to elevating gradually the condition of the lower orders. It came over Lady Chasemore at times that it would be well if some of these measures might arrive at maturity with as little delay as possible.

    The night before she quitted England with her husband they slept at a hotel at Liverpool, in order to embark early on the morrow. Sir Rufus went out to attend to some business, and the evening being very close, she sat at the window of their sitting-room, looking out on a kind of square which stretched in front of the hotel. The night was muggy, the window was open, and she was held there by a horrible fascination. Dusky forms of vice and wretchedness moved about in the stuffy darkness, visions of grimy, half-naked, whining beggary hovered before her, curses and the sound of blows came to her ears; there were young girls, frowzy and violent, who evidently were drunk, as every one seemed to be, more or less, which was little wonder, as four public-houses flared into the impure night, visible from where Lady Chasemore sat, and they appeared to be gorged with customers, half of whom were women. The impression came back to her that the horrible place had made upon her and upon her mother when they landed in England years before, and as she turned from the window she liked to think that she was going to a country where, at any rate, there would be less of that sort of thing. When her husband came in he said it was of course a beastly place, but much better than it used to be—which she was glad to hear. She made some allusion to the confidence they might have that they should be treated to no such scenes as that in her country; whereupon he remonstrated, jocosely expressing a hope that they should not be deprived of a glimpse of the celebrated American drinks and bar-room fights.

    It must be added that in New York he made of his brother-in-law no inquiry about these phenomena—a reserve, a magnanimity even, keenly appreciated by his wife. She appreciated altogether the manner in which he conducted himself during their visit to the United States, and felt that if she had not already known that she had married a perfect gentleman, the fact would now have been revealed to her. For she had to make up her mind to this, that after all (it was vain to shut one's eyes to it) Sir Rufus personally didn't like the United States: he didn't like them, yet he made an immense effort to behave as if he did. She was grateful to him for that; it assuaged her nervousness (she was afraid there might be “scenes” if he should break out with some of his displeasures) so grateful that she almost forgot to be disappointed at the failure of her own original intent, to be distressed at seeing, or rather at guessing (for he was reserved about it even to her), that a nearer view of American institutions had not had the effect which she once promised herself a nearer view should have. She had married him partly to bring him over to an admiration of her country (she had never told any one this, for she was too proud to make the confidence to an English person, and if she had made it to an American, the answer would have been so prompt, “What on earth does it signify what he thinks of it?” no one, of course, being obliged to understand that it might signify to her); she had united herself to Sir Rufus in this missionary spirit, and now not only did her proselyte prove unamenable, but the vanity of her enterprise became a fact of secondary importance. She wondered a little that she didn't suffer more from it, and this is partly why she rejoiced that her husband kept most of his observations to himself: it gave her a pretext for not being ashamed. She had flattered herself before that in general he had the manners of a diplomatist (she did not suspect that this was not the opinion of all his contemporaries), and his behaviour during the first few weeks at least of their stay in the Western world struck her as a triumph of diplomacy. She had really passed from caring whether he disliked American manners to caring primarily whether he showed he disliked them—a transition which, on her own side, she was very sensible it was important to conceal from Macarthy. To love a man who could feel no tenderness for the order of things which had encompassed her early years, and had been intimately mixed with her growth, which was a part of the conscience, the piety, of many who had been most dear to her, and whose memory would be dear to her always—that was an irregularity which was, after all, shut up in her own breast, where she could trust her dignity to get, some way or other, the upper hand of it. But to be pointed at as having such a problem as that on one's back was quite another affair; it was a kind of exposure of one's sanctities, a surrender of private judgment. Lady Chasemore had by this time known her husband long enough to enter into the logic of his preferences; if he disliked or disapproved of what he saw in America, his reasons for doing so had ceased to be a mystery. They were the very elements of his character, the joints and vertebration of his general creed. All the while she was absent from England with him (it was not very long, their whole tour, including the two voyages, being included in ten weeks) she knew more or less the impression that things would have made upon him; she knew that both in the generals and in the particulars American life would have gone against his grain, contradicted his traditions, violated his taste.

    V.

     

    ALL THE SAME, he was determined to see it thoroughly, and this is doubtless one of the reasons why, after the first few days, she cherished the hope that they should be able to get off at the end without any collision with Macarthy. Of course it was to be taken into account that Macarthy's own behaviour was much more that of a man of the world than she had ventured to hope. He appeared for the time almost to have smothered his national consciousness, which had always been so acute, and to have accepted his sisters perfidious alliance. She could see that he was delighted that she should be near him again—so delighted that he neglected to look for the signs of corruption in her, or to manifest any suspicion that in fact, now that she was immersed in them again, she regarded her old associations with changed eyes. So, also, if she had not already been aware of how much Macarthy was a gentleman, she would have seen it from the way he rose to the occasion. Accordingly they were all superior people, and all was for the best, in Lady Chasemore's simple creed. Her brother asked her no questions whatever about her life in England, but his letters had already enlightened her as to his determination to avoid that topic. They had hitherto not contained a single inquiry on the subject of her occupations and pursuits, and if she had been domiciled in the moon he could not have indulged in less reference to public or private events in the British Islands. It was a tacit form of disapprobation of her being connected with that impertinent corner of the globe; but it had never prevented her from giving him the fullest information on everything he didn't ask about. He never took up her allusions, and when she poured forth information to him now, in regard to matters concerning her in her new home (on these points she was wilfully copious and appealing), he listened with a sort of exaggerated dumb deference, as if she were reciting a lesson, and he must sit quiet till she should come to the end. Usually, when she stopped, he simply sighed, then directed the conversation to something as different as possible. It evidently pleased him, however, to see that she enjoyed her native air and her temporary reunion with some of her old familiars. This was a graceful inconsistency on his part: it showed that he had not completely given her up. Perhaps he thought Sir Rufus would die, and that in this case she would come back and live in New York. She was careful not to tell him that such a calculation was baseless, that with or without Sir Rufus she should never be able to settle in her native city as Lady Chasemore. He was scrupulously polite to Sir Rufus, and this personage asked Agatha why he never by any chance addressed him save by his title. She could see what her husband meant, but even in the privacy of the conjugal chamber she was loyal enough to Macarthy not to reply, “Oh, it's a mercy he doesn't say simply 'Sir.'“

    The English visitor was immensely active; he desired to leave nothing unexplored, unattempted; his purpose was to inspect institutions, to collect statistics, to talk with the principal people, to see the workings of the political machine, and Macarthy acquitted himself scrupulously, even zealously, in the way of giving him introductions and facilities. Lady Chasemore reflected with pleasure that it was in her brothers power to do the honours of his native land very completely. She suspected, indeed, that as he didn't like her husband (he couldn't like him, in spite of Sir Rufus's now demeaning himself so sweetly), it was a relief to him to pass him on to others—to work him off, as it were, into penitentiaries and chambers of commerce. Sir Rufus's frequent expeditions to these establishments, and long interviews with local worthies of every kind, kept him constantly out of the house, and removed him from contact with his host, so that as Macarthy was extremely busy with his own profession (Sir Rufus was greatly struck with the way he worked; he had never seen a gentleman work so hard, without any shooting or hunting or fishing), it may be said, though it sounds odd, that the two men met very little directly—met scarcely more than in the evening, or, in other words, always in company. During the twenty days the Chasemore's spent together in New York they either dined out or were members of a party given at home by Macarthy, and on these occasions Sir Rufus found plenty to talk about with his new acquaintance. His wife flattered herself he was liked, he was so hilarious and so easy. He had a most appreciative manner, but she really wished sometimes that he might have subdued his hilarity a little; there were moments when perhaps it looked as if he took everything in the United States as if it were more than all else amusing. She knew exactly how it must privately affect Macarthy, this implication that it was merely a comical country; but, after all, it was not very easy to say how Macarthy would have preferred that a stranger, or that Sir Rufus in particular, should take the great republic. A cheerful view, yet untinged by the sense of drollery—that would have been the right thing if it could have been arrived at. At all events (and this was something gained), if Sir Rufus was in his heart a pessimist in regard to things he didn't like, he was not superficially sardonic. And then he asked questions by the million; and what was curiosity but a homage?

    It will be inferred, and most correctly, that Macarthy Grice was not personally in any degree, for his brother-in-law, the showman of the exhibition. He caused him to be conducted, but he didn't conduct him. He listened to his reports of what he had seen (it was at breakfast. mainly that these fresh intimations dropped from Sir Rufus's lips), with very much the same cold patience (as if he were civilly forcing his attention) with which he listened to Agatha's persistent anecdotes of things that had happened to her in England. Of course, with Sir Rufus, there could be no question of persistence; he didn't care whether Macarthy cared or not, and he didn't stick to this everlasting subject of American institutions either to entertain him or to entertain himself—all he wanted was to lead on to further researches and discoveries. Macarthy always met him with the same response: “Oh, So-and-So is the man to tell you all about that. If you wish, I will give you a letter to him.” Sir Rufus always wished, and certainly Macarthy wrote, a prodigious number of letters. The inquiries and conclusions of his visitor (so far as Sir Rufus indulged in the latter) all bore special points; he was careful to commit himself to no crude generalizations. He had to remember that he had still the rest of the country to see, and after a little discussion (which was confined to Lady Chasemore and her husband) it was decided that he should see it without his wife, who would await his return among her friends in New York. This arrangement was much to her taste, but it gives again the measure of the degree to which she had renounced her early dream of interpreting the Western world to Sir Rufus. If she was not to be at his side at the moment, on the spot, of course she couldn't interpret—he would get a tremendous start of her. In short, by staying quietly with Macarthy during his absence she almost gave up the great ad vantage she had hitherto had of knowing more about America than her husband could. She liked, however, to feel that she was making a sacrifice—making one, indeed, both to Sir Rufus and to her brother. The idea of giving up something for Macarthy (she only wished it had been something more) did her great good—sweetened the period of her husbands absence.

    The whole season had been splendid, but at this moment the golden days of the Indian summer descended upon the shining city, and steeped it in a kind of fragrant haze. For two or three weeks New York seemed to Lady Chasemore poetical; the marble buildings looked yellow in the sleeping sunshine, and her native land exhibited, for the occasion, an atmosphere; vague memories came back to her of her younger years, of things that had to do, somehow, with the blurred brightness of the late autumn in the country. She walked about, she walked irresponsibly for hours; she didn't care, as she had to care in London. She met friends in the streets and turned and walked with them; and pleasures as simple as this acquired an exaggerated charm for her. She liked walking, and as an American girl had indulged the taste freely; but in London she had no time but to drive—besides which, there were other tiresome considerations. Macarthy came home from his office earlier, and she went to meet him in Washington Square, and walked up the Fifth Avenue with him in the rich afternoon. It was many years since she had been in New York, and she found herself taking a kind of personal interest in changes and improvements. There were houses she used to know, where friends had lived in the old days, and where they lived no more (no one in New York seemed to her to live where they used to live), which reminded her of incidents she had long ago forgotten, which it pleased and touched her now, to recall. Macarthy became very easy and sociable; he even asked her a few questions about her arrangements and habits in England, and struck her (though she had never been particularly aware of it before) as having had an immense deal of American humour. On one occasion he staid away from work altogether and took her up the Hudson, on the steamer, to West Point—an excursion in which she found a peculiar charm. Every day she lunched intimately with a dozen ladies at the house of one or other of them.

    In due time Sir Rufus returned from Canada, the Mississippi, the Rocky Mountains, and California; he had achieved marvels in the way of traversing distances and seeing manners and men with rapidity and facility. Everything had been settled in regard to their sailing for England almost directly after his return; there were only to be two more days in New York, then a rush to Boston, followed by another rush to Philadelphia and Washington. Macarthy made no inquiry whatever of his brother-in-law touching his impression of the great West; he didn't even ask him if he had been favourably impressed with Canada. There would not have been much opportunity, however, for Sir Rufus, on his side, was extremely occupied with the last things he had to do. He had not even time, as yet, to impart his impressions to his wife, and she forbore to interrogate him, feeling that the voyage close at hand would afford abundant leisure for the history of his adventures. For the moment almost the only light that he threw upon them was by saying to Agatha (not before Macarthy) that it was a pleasure to him to see a handsome woman again, as he had not had that satisfaction in the course of his travels. Lady Chasemore wondered, exclaimed, protested, and elicited the declaration that, to his sense, and in the interior at least, the beauty of the women was, like a great many other things, a gigantic American fraud. Sir Rufus had looked for it in vain—he went so far as to say that he had, in the course of extensive wanderings about the world, seen no female type on the whole less to his taste than that of the ladies in whose society, in hundreds (there was no paucity of specimens), in the long, hot, heaving trains, he had traversed a large part of the American continent. His wife inquired whether by chance he preferred the young persons they had (or at least she had) observed at Liverpool the night before their departure; to which he replied that they were no doubt sad creatures, but that the looks of the woman mattered only so long as one lived with her, and he didn't live, and never should live, with the daughters of that grimy seaport. With the women in the American cars he had been living—oh, tremendously! and they were deucedly plain. Thereupon Lady Chasemore wished to know whether he didn't think Mrs. Eugene had beauty, and Mrs. Ripley, and her sister Mrs. Redwood, and Mrs .Long, and several other ornaments of the society in which they had mingled during their stay in New York. “Mrs. Eugene is Mrs. Eugene, and Mrs. Redwood is Mrs. Redwood,” Sir Rufus retorted; “but the women in the cars weren't either, and all the women I saw were like the women in the cars.” “Well, there may be something in the cars,” said Lady Chasemore, pensively; and she mentioned that it was very odd that during her husband's absence, as she roamed about New York, she should have made precisely the opposite reflection, and been struck with the number of pretty faces. “Oh, pretty faces, pretty faces, I dare say!” But Sir Rufus had no time to develop this vague rejoinder.

    When they came back from Washington to sail, Agatha told her brother that he was going to write a book about America; it was for this he had made so many inquiries and taken so many notes. She hadn't known it before; it was only while they were in Washington that he told her he had made up his mind to it. Something he saw or heard in Washington appeared to have brought this resolution to a point. Lady Chasemore privately thought it rather a formidable fact; her husband had startled her a good deal in announcing his intention. She had said, “Of course it will be friendly—you'll say nice things?” And he had replied, “My poor child, they will abuse me like a pickpocket.” This had scarcely been reassuring, and she had had it at heart to probe the question further, in the train, after they left Washington. But as it happened, in the train, all the way, Sir Rufus was engaged in conversation with a Democratic Representative, whom he had picked up she didn't know how—very certain he hadn't met him at any respectable house in Washington. They sat in front of her in the car, with their heads almost touching, and although she was a better American than her husband, she shouldn't have liked hers to be so close to that of the Democratic Representative. Now of course she knew that Sir Rufus was taking in material for his book. This idea made her uncomfortable, and she would have liked immensely to separate him from his companion—she scarcely knew why, after all, except that she couldn't believe the Representative represented anything very nice. She promised herself to ascertain thoroughly, after they should be comfortably settled in the ship, the animus with which the book was to be written. She was a very good sailor, and she liked to talk at sea; there her husband would not be able to escape from her, and she foresaw the manner in which she should catechise him. It exercised her greatly in advance, and she was more agitated than she could easily have expressed by the whole question of the book. Meanwhile however, she was careful not to show her agitation to Macarthy. She referred to her husbands project as casually as possible, and the reason she referred to it was that this seemed more loyal—more loyal to Macarthy. If the book, when written, should attract attention by the severity of it's criticism (and that by many qualities it would attract attention of the widest character Lady Chasemore could not doubt), she should feel more easy not to have had the air of concealing from her brother that such a work was in preparation, which would also be the air of having a bad conscience about it. It was to prove (both to herself and Macarthy) that she had a good conscience that she told him of Sir Rufus's design. The habit of detachment from matters connected with his brother-in-laws activity was strong in him, nevertheless he was not able to repress some sign of emotion—he flushed very perceptibly. Quickly, however, he recovered his appearance of considering that the circumstance was one in which he could not hope to interest himself much; though the next moment he observed, with a certain inconsequence, “I am rather sorry to hear it.”

    “Why are you sorry?” asked Agatha. She was surprised, and indeed gratified, that he should commit himself even so far as to express regret. What she had supposed he would say, if he should say anything, was that he was obliged to her for the information, but that if it was given him with any expectation that he might be induced to read the book, he must really let her know that such an expectation was positively vain. Sir Rufus's printed ideas could have no more value for him than his spoken ones.

    “Well, it will be rather disagreeable for you,” he said, in answer to her question. “Unless, indeed, you don't care what he says.”

    “But I do care. The book will be sure to be very able. Do you mean if it should be severe—that would be disagreeable for me? Very certainly it would; it would put me in a false, in a ridiculous, position, and I don't see how I should bear it,” Lady Chasemore went on, feeling that her candour was generous, and wishing it to be. “But I shan't allow it to be severe. To prevent that, if it's necessary, I will write every word of it myself.”

    She laughed as she made this declaration, but there was nothing in Macarthy's face to show that he could lend himself to a mirthful treatment of the question. “I think an Englishman had better look at home,” he said, “and if he does so I don't easily see how the occupation should leave him any leisure or any assurance for reading lectures to other nations. The self-complacency of your husband's countrymen is colossal and imperturbable. Still, with the tight place they find themselves in to-day, and with the judgment of the rest of the world upon them being what it is, it's grotesque to see them still sitting in their old judgment-seat, and pronouncing upon the shortcomings of people who are full of the life that has so long since left them.” Macarthy Grice spoke slowly, mildly, with a certain dryness, as if he were delivering himself once for all, and would not return to the subject. The quietness of his manner made the words solemn for his sister, and she stared at him a moment, wondering, as if they pointed to strange things, which she had hitherto but imperfectly apprehended.

    “The judgment of the rest of the world—what is that?”

    “Why, that they are simply finished; that they don't count.”

    “Oh, a nation must count which produces such men as my husband,” Agatha rejoined, with another laugh. Macarthy was on the point of retorting that it counted as the laughing-stock of the world (that, of course, was something), but he checked himself, and she, moreover, checked him by going on: “Why, Macarthy, you ought to come out with a book yourself about the English. You would steal my husbands thunder.”

    “Nothing would induce me to do anything of the sort; I pity them too much.”

    “You pity them!” Lady Chasemore exclaimed. “It would amuse my husband to hear that.”

    “Very likely, and it would be exactly a proof of what is so pitiable—the contrast between their gross pretensions and the real facts of their condition. They have pressing upon them at once every problem, every source of weakness, every danger, that can threaten the life of a people, and they have nothing to meet the situation with but their classic stupidity.”

    “Well, that has been useful to them before,” said Lady Chasemore, smiling. Her smile was a little forced, and she coloured, as her brother had done when she first spoke to him. She found it impossible not to be impressed by what he said, and yet she was vexed that she was, because she didn't wish to be.

    He looked at her as if he saw some warning in her face, and continued: “Excuse my going so far. In this last month that we have spent together, so happily for me, I had almost forgotten that you are one of them.”

    Lady Chasemore said nothing, and she didn't deny that she was one of them. If her husband's country was denounced after all, he hadn't written his book yet she felt as if this would be a repudiation of one of the responsibilities she had taken in marrying him.

    VI.

     

    THE POSTMAN was at the door in Grosvenor Crescent when she came back from her drive; the servant took the letters from his hand as she passed into the house. In the hall she stopped to see which of the letters were for her; the butler gave her two, and retained those that were for Sir Rufus. She asked him what orders Sir Rufus had given about his letters, and he replied that they were to be forwarded up to the following night. This applied only to letters, not to parcels, pamphlets, and books. “But would he wish this to go, my lady?” the man asked, holding up a small packet; he added that it appeared to be a kind of document. She took it from him; her eye had caught a name printed on the wrapper, and though she made no great profession of literature she recognized the name as that of a distinguished publisher, and the packet as a roll of proof-sheets. She turned it up and down while the servant waited; it had quite a different look from the bundles of printed official papers which the postman was perpetually leaving, and which, when she scanned the array on the hall table in her own interest, she recognized even at a distance. They were certainly the sheets, at least the first, of her husbands book—those of which he had said to her, on the steamer, on the way back from New York a year before, “My dear child, when I tell you that you shall see them—every page of them—that you shall have complete control of them!” Since she was to have complete control of them, she began with telling the butler not to forward them—to lay them on the hall table. She went upstairs to dress—she was dining out in her husbands absence—and when she came down to re-enter her carriage, she saw the packet lying where it had been placed. So many months had passed that she had ended by forgetting that the book was on the stocks; nothing had happened to remind her of it. She had believed, indeed, that it was not on the stocks, and even that the project would die a natural death. Sir Rufus would have no time to carry it out—he had returned from America to find himself more than ever immersed in official work—and if he didn't put his hand to it within two or three years, at the very most, he would never do so at all, for he would have lost the freshness of his impressions, on which the success of the whole thing would depend. He had his notes, of course, but none the less a delay would be fatal to the production of the volume (it was to be only a volume, and not a big one), inasmuch as by the time it should be published it would have to encounter the objection that everything changed in America in two or three years, and no one wanted to know anything about a dead past.

    Such had been the reflections with which Lady Chasemore consoled herself for the results of those inquiries she had promised herself in New York to make when once she should be ensconced in a sea chair by her husband's side, and which she had in fact made, to her no small discomposure. Meanwhile, apparently, he had stolen a march upon her, he had put his hand to The Modern Warning (that was to be the title, as she had learned on the ship), he had worked at it in his odd hours, he had sent it to the printers, and here were the first-fruits of it. Had he had a bad conscience about it—was that the reason he had been so quiet? She didn't believe much in his bad conscience, for he had been tremendously, formidably explicit when they talked the matter over; had let her know as fully as possible what he intended to do. Then it was that he relieved himself, that in the long, unoccupied hours of their fine voyage (he was in wonderful “form” at sea) he took her into the confidence of his real impressions—made her understand how things had struck him in the United States. They had not struck him well; oh no, they had not struck him well at all! But at least he had prepared her, and therefore, since then, he had nothing to hide. It was doubtless an accident that he appeared to have kept his work away from her, for sometimes, in other cases, he had paid her intelligence the compliment (was it not for that, in part, he had married her?) of supposing that she could enter into it. It was probable that in this case he had wanted first to see for himself how his chapters would look in print. Very likely, even, he had not written the whole book, nor even half of it; he had only written the opening pages, and had them “set up”: she remembered to have heard him speak of that as a very convenient system. It would be very convenient for her as well, and she should also be made interested in seeing how they looked. On the table, in their neat little packet, they seemed half to solicit her, half to warn her off.

    They were still there, of course, when she came back from her dinner, and this time she took possession of them. She carried them upstairs, and in her dressing-room, when she had been left alone, in her wrapper, she sat down with them under the lamp. The packet lay in her lap a long time, however, before she decided to detach the envelop. Her hesitation came not from her feeling in any degree that this roll of printed sheets had the sanctity of a letter, a seal that she might not discreetly break, but from an insurmountable nervousness as to what she might find within. She sat there for an hour, with her head resting on the back of her chair, and her eyes closed; but she had not fallen asleep; Lady Chasemore was very wide-awake indeed. She was living for the moment in a kind of concentration of memory, thinking over everything that had fallen from her husband's lips after he began, as I have said, to relieve himself. It turned out that the opinion he had formed of the order of society in the United States was even less favourable than she had reason to fear. There were not many things of which he had thought well, and the few exceptions related to the matters that were the most characteristic of the country, not idiosyncrasies of American life. The idiosyncrasies he had held to be one and all detestable. The whole spectacle was a colossal warning, a consummate illustration of the horrors of democracy. The only thing that had saved the misbegotten republic as yet was it's margin, it's geographical vastness; but that was now discounted and exhausted. For the rest, every democratic vice was in the ascendant, and could be studied there sur le vif; he couldn't be too thankful that he had not delayed longer to go over and study it. He had come back with a head full of lessons and a heart fired with the resolve to enforce them upon his own people, who, as Agatha knew, had begun to move in the same lamentable direction. As she listened to him she perceived the mistake she had made in not going to the West with him, for it was from that part of the country that he had drawn his most formidable anecdotes and examples. Of these he produced a terrific array; he spoke by book, he overflowed with facts and figures, and his wife felt herself submerged by the deep, bitter waters. She even felt what a pity it was that she had not dragged him away from that common little Congressman whom he had stuck to so in the train coming from Washington; yet it didn't matter—a little more or a little less—the whole affair had rubbed him so the wrong way, exasperated his taste, confounded his traditions. He proved to have disliked quite unspeakably things that she supposed he liked, to have suffered acutely on occasions when she thought he was really pleased. It would appear that there had been no occasion, except once, sitting at dinner between Mrs. Redwood and Mrs. Eugene, when he was really pleased. Even his long chat with the Pennsylvania Congressman had made him almost ill at the time. His wife could be none the less struck with the ability which had enabled him to master so much knowledge in so short a time; he had not only gobbled up facts, he had arranged them in a magnificent order, and she was proud of his being so clever, even when he made her bleed by the way he talked. He had had no intention whatever of this, and he was as much surprised as touched when she broke out into a passionate appeal to him not to publish such horrible misrepresentations. She defended her country with exaltation, and so far as was possible in the face of his own flood of statistics, of anecdotes of “lobbying", of the corruption of public life, for which she was unprepared, endeavouring to gainsay him in the particulars as well as in the generals. She maintained that he had seen everything wrong, seen it through the distortion of prejudice, of a hostile temperament, in the light—or rather in the darkness—of wishing to find weapons to worry in England the opposite party. Of course America had it's faults, but on the whole it was a much finer country than any other, finer even than his clumsy, congested old England, where there was plenty to do to sweep the house clean, if he would give a little more of his time to that. Scandals for scandals she had heard more since she came to England than all the years she had lived at home. She didn't quote Macarthy to him (she had reasons for not doing so), but something of the spirit of Macarthy flamed up in her as she spoke.

    Sir Rufus smiled at her vehemence; he took it in perfectly good part, though it evidently left him not a little astonished. He had forgotten that America was hers—that she had any allegiance but the allegiance of her marriage. He had made her his own, and being the intense Englishman that he was, it had never occurred to him to doubt that she now partook of his quality in the same degree as himself. He had assimilated her, as it were, completely, and he had assumed that she had also assimilated him, and his country with him—a process which would have for it's consequence that the other country, the ugly, vulgar, superfluous one, would be, as he mentally phrased it to himself, “shunted”. That it hadn't been was the proof of a rather morbid sensibility, which tenderness and time would still assuage. Sir Rufus was tender, he reassured his wife on the spot, in the first place by telling her that she knew nothing whatever about the United States (it was astonishing how little many of the people in the country itself knew about them), and in the second by promising her that he would not print a word to which her approval should not be expressly given. She should countersign every page before it went to press, and none should leave the house without her visé. She wished to know if he possibly could have forgotten—so strange would it be—that she had told him long ago at Cadenabbia how horrible it would be to her to find herself married to a man harbouring evil thoughts of her father-land. He remembered this declaration perfectly, and others that had followed it, but was prepared to ask if she, on her side, recollected giving him notice that she should convert him into an admirer of transatlantic peculiarities. She had had an excellent opportunity, but she had not carried out her plan. He had been passive in her hands, she could have done what she liked with him (hadn't he offered, that night by the lake of Como, to throw up his career and go and live with her in some beastly American town? and he had really meant it—upon his honour he had!), so that if the conversion hadn't come off, whose fault was it but hers? She hadn't gone to work with any sort of earnestness. At all events, now it was too late; he had seen for himself—the impression was made. Two points were vivid beyond the others in Lady Chasemore's evocation of the scene on the ship; one was her husband's insistence on the fact that he had not the smallest animosity to the American people, but had only his own English brothers in view, wished only to protect and save them, to point a certain moral as it never had been pointed before; the other was his pledge that nothing should be made public without her assent. As at last she broke the envelop of the packet in her lap she wondered how much she should find to assent to. More, perhaps, than a third person, judging the case, would have expected; for after what had passed between them, Sir Rufus must have taken great pains to tone down his opinions—or at least the expression of them.

    VII.

     

    HE CAME back to Grosvenor Place the next evening, very late, and on asking for his wife, was told that she was in her apartments. He was furthermore informed that she was to have dined out, but had given it up, countermanding the carriage at the last moment, and despatching a note instead. On Sir Rufus asking if she were ill, it was added that she had seemed rather poorly, and had not left the house since the day before. A minute later he found her in her own sitting-room, where she appeared to have been walking up and down. She stopped when he entered, and stood there, looking at him; she was in her dressing-gown, very pale, and she received him without a smile. He went up to her, kissed her, saw something strange in her eyes, and asked, with eagerness, if she had been suffering. “Yes, yes,” she said, “but I have not been ill,” and the next moment flung herself upon his neck and buried her face there, sobbing, yet at the same time stifling her sobs. Inarticulate words were mingled with them, and it was not till after a moment he understood that she was saying, “How could you? ah, how could you?” He failed to understand her allusion, and while he was still in the dark, she recovered herself and broke away from him. She went quickly to a drawer and possessed herself of some papers, which she held out to him, this time without meeting his eyes. “Please take them away—take them away forever. It's your book—the things from the printers. I saw them on the table—I guessed what they were—I opened them to see. I read them—I read them. Please take them away.”

     

    He had by this time become aware that, even though she had flung herself upon his breast, his wife was animated by a spirit of the deepest reproach, an exquisite sense of injury. When he first saw the papers he did not recognize his book: it had not been in his mind. He took them from her with an exclamation of wonder, accompanied by a laugh which was meant in kindness, and turned them over, glancing at page after page. Disconcerted as he was at the condition in which Agatha presented herself, he was still accessible to that agreeable titillation which a man feels on seeing his prose, and still more his verse, “set up”. Sir Rufus had been quoted and reported by the newspapers, and had put into circulation several little pamphlets, but this was his first contribution to the regular literature of his country, and his publishers had given him a very handsome page. Its striking beauty held him a moment, then his eyes passed back to his wife, who, with her grand, cold, wounded air, was also very handsome. “My dear girl, do you think me an awful brute? have I made you ill?” he asked. He declared that he had no idea that he had gone so far as to shock her; he had left out such a lot; he had tried to keep the sting out of everything; he had made it all butter and honey. But he begged her not to get into a state; he would go over the whole thing with her if she liked—make any changes she should require. It would spoil the book, but he would rather do that than spoil her lovely temper. It was in a highly jocular manner that he made this allusion to her temper, and it was impressed upon her that he was not too much discomposed by her discomposure to be able to joke. She took notice of two things: the first of which was that he had a perfectly good conscience, and that no accusing eye that might have been turned upon him would have made him change colour. He had no sense that he had broken faith with her, and he really thought his horrible book was very mild. He spoke the simple truth in saying that for her sake he had endeavoured to qualify his strictures, and strange as it might appear, he honestly believed he had succeeded. Later, at other times, Agatha wondered what he would have written if he had felt himself free. What she observed in the second place was that though he saw she was much upset, he didn't in the least sound the depth of her distress, or, as she herself would have said, of her shame. He never would—he never would; he couldn't enter into her feelings, because he couldn't believe in them; they could only strike him as exaggerated and factitious. He had given her a country, a magnificent one, and why in the name of commonsense was she making him a scene about another? With the simplest form of the national consciousness a woman had more than the tenor of the feminine existence and the scope of her responsibilities demanded: what, therefore, was this morbid fancy of his wife's to give it in her own case an indefinite extension?

    When he accused her of being morbid, it was very simple for her to deny it utterly, and to express her astonishment at his being able to allow so little for her just susceptibility. He couldn't take it seriously that she had American feelings; he couldn't believe that it would make a terrible difference in her happiness to go about the world as the wife, the cynical, consenting wife, of the author of a blow dealt with that brutality at a breast to which she owed filial honour. She didn't say to him that she should never hold her head up before Macarthy again (her strength had been that hitherto, as against Macarthy, she was perfectly straight), but it was in a great degree the prefigurement of her brothers cold, life-long scorn that had kindled in her, while she awaited her husband's return, the passion with which she now protested. He would never read The Modern Warning, but he would hear all about it, he would meet it in the newspapers, in every one's talk; the very voices of the air would distil the worst pages into his ear, and make the scandal of the participation even greater than—as Heaven knew—it would deserve to be. She thought of the month of renewed tenderness, of happy, pure impressions, that she had spent a year before in the midst of American kindness and memories more innocent than her visions of to-day, and the effect of this retrospect was galling in the face of her possible shame. Shame—shame. She repeated that word to Sir Rufus in a tone which made him stare, as if it dawned upon him that her reason was perhaps deserting her. That shame should attach itself to his wife in consequence of any behaviour of his was an idea that he had to make a very considerable effort to embrace, and while his candour betrayed it, his wife was touched, even through her resentment, by seeing that she had not made him angry. He thought she was strangely unreasonable, but he was determined not, on his own side, to fall into that vice. She was silent about Macarthy, because Sir Rufus had accused her before her marriage of being afraid of him, and she had then resolved never again to incur such a taunt; but before things had gone much further between them she reminded her husband that she had Irish blood, the blood of the people, in her veins, and that he must take that into account in measuring the provocation he might think it safe to heap upon her. She was far from being a fanatic on this subject, as he knew, but when America was made out to be an object of holy horror to virtuous England, she could not but remember that millions of her Celtic cousins had found refuge there from the blessed English dispensation, and be struck with his recklessness in challenging comparisons which were better left to sleep.

    When his wife began to represent herself as Irish, Sir Rufus evidently thought her “off her head” indeed; it was the first he had heard of it since she communicated the mystic fact to him on the lake of Como. Nevertheless he argued with her for half an hour as if she were sane, and before they separated he made her a liberal concession, such as only a perfectly lucid mind would be able to appreciate. This was a simple indulgence, at the end of their midnight discussion; it was not dictated by any recognition of his having been unjust; for though his wife reiterated this charge, with a sacred fire in her eyes which made them more beautiful than he had ever known them, he took his stand, in his own stubborn opinion, too firmly upon piles of evidence, revelations of political fraud and corruption, and the “whole tone of the newspapers” to speak only of that. He remarked to her that, clearly, he must simply give way to her opposition. If she were going to suffer so inordinately, it settled the question. The book should not be published, and they would say no more about it. He would put it away, he would burn it up, and The Modern Warning should be as if it had never been. Amen! amen! Lady Chasemore accepted this sacrifice with eagerness, although her husband (it must be added) did not fail to place before her the exceeding greatness of it. He didn't lose his temper, he was not petulant nor spiteful, he didn't throw up his project and his vision of literary distinction in a huff; but he called her attention very vividly and solemnly to the fact that in deferring to the feelings she so uncompromisingly expressed he renounced the dream of rendering a signal service to his country. There was a certain bitterness in his smile as he told her that her wish was the only thing in the world that could have made him throw away such a golden opportunity. The rest of his life would never offer him such another; but patriotism might go to the dogs if only it were settled that she shouldn't have a grudge. He didn't care what became of poor old England, if once that precious result were obtained; poor old England might pursue impure delusions and rattle down hill as fast as she chose, for want of the word his voice would have spoken—really inspired, as he held it to be, by the justice of his cause.

    Lady Chasemore flattered herself that they did not part that night in acrimony; there was nothing of this in the long kiss which she took from her husbands lips, with wet eyes, with a grateful, comprehensive murmur. It seemed to her that nothing could be fairer or finer than their mutual confidence; her husbands concession was gallant in the extreme; but even more than this was it impressed upon her that her own affection was perfect, since it could accept such a renunciation without a fear of the after-taste. She had been in love with Sir Rufus from the day he sought her hand at Cadenabbia, but she was never so much in love with him as during the weeks that immediately followed his withdrawal of his book. It was agreed between them that neither of them would speak of the circumstance again, but she at least, in private, devoted an immense deal of meditation to it. It gave her a tremendous reprieve, lifted a nightmare off her breast, and that, in turn, gave her freedom to reflect that probably few men would have made such a graceful surrender. She wanted him to understand, or at any rate she wanted to understand herself, that in all it's particulars too she thoroughly appreciated it; if he really couldn't conceive how she could feel as he did, it was all the more generous of him to comply blindly, to take her at her word, little as he could make of it. It did not become less obvious to Lady Chasemore, but quite the contrary, as the weeks went on, that The Modern Warning would have been a masterpiece of it's class. In her room, that evening, her husband had told her that the best of him, intellectually, had gone into it, that he believed he had uttered certain truths there as they never would be uttered again—contributed his grain of gold to the limited sum of human wisdom. He had done something to help his country, and then—to please her—he had undone it. Above all it was delightful to her that he had not been sullen or rancorous about it, that he didn't make her pay for his magnanimity. He didn't sigh or scowl, or take on the air of a domestic martyr; he came and went with his usual step and his usual smile, and remained to all appearance the same fresh-coloured, decided, accomplished high official.

    Therefore it is that I find it difficult to explain how it was that Lady Chasemore began to feel at the end of a few months that their difficulties had, after all, not become the mere reminiscence of a flurry, making present security more deep. What if the flurry continued, impalpably, insidiously, under the surface? She thought there had been no change, but now she suspected that there was at least a difference. She had read Tennyson, and she knew the famous phrase about the little rift within the lute. It came back to her with a larger meaning, it haunted her at last, and she asked herself whether, when she accepted her husband's relinquishment, it had been her happiness and his that she staked and threw away. In the light of this fear she struck herself as having lived in a fool's paradise—a misfortune from which she had ever prayed to be delivered. She wanted in every situation to know the worst, and in this case she had not known it; at least she knew it only now, in the shape of the formidable fact that Sir Rufus's outward good manners misrepresented his real reaction. At present she began, anxiously, broodingly, to take this reaction for granted, and to see signs of it in the very things which she had regarded at first as signs of resignation. She secretly watched his face; she privately counted his words. When she began to do this it was no very long time before she made up her mind that the latter had become much fewer, that Sir Rufus talked to her very much less than he had done of old. He took no revenge, but he was cold, and in his coldness there was something horribly inevitable. He looked at her less and less, whereas formerly his eyes had had no more agreeable occupation. She tried to teach herself that her suspicions were woven of air, and were an injury to a just man's character; she remembered that Sir Rufus had told her she was morbid, and if the charge had not been true at the time, it might very well be true now. But the effect of this reflection was only to suggest to her that Sir Rufus himself was morbid, and that her behaviour had made him so. It was the last thing that would be in his nature, but she had subjected that nature to a most unnatural strain. He was feeling it now; he was feeling that he had failed in the duty of a good citizen: a good citizen being what he had ever most earnestly proposed to himself to be. Lady Chasemore pictured to herself that his cheek burned for this when it was turned away from her—that he ground his teeth with shame in the watches of the night. Then it came over her with unspeakable bitterness that there had been no real solution of their difficulty; that it was too great to be settled by so simple an arrangement as that—an arrangement too primitive for a complicated world. Nothing was less simple than to bury one's gold and live without the interest. It is a singular circumstance, and suggesting perhaps a perversion of the imagination under the influence of distress, but Lady Chasemore at this time found herself thinking with a kind of baffled pride of the merits of The Modern Warning as a literary composition, a political essay. It would have been dreadful for her, but at least it would have been superb, and that was what was, naturally enough, present to the defeated author as he tossed through the sleepless hours. She determined at last to question him, to confess her fears, to make him tell her whether his weakness—if he considered it a weakness—really did rankle; though when he made the sacrifice months before (nearly a year had come round), he let her know that he wished the subject buried between them for evermore. She approached it with some trepidation, and the manner in which he looked at her as she stammered out her inquiry was not such as to make the effort easier. He waited in silence till she had expressed herself as she best could, without helping her, without showing that he guessed her trouble, her need to be assured that he didn't feel her to have been cruel. Did he?—did he? that was what she wanted to be certain of. Sir Rufus's answer was in itself a question; he demanded what she meant by imputing to him such hypocrisy, such bad faith. What did she take him for, and what right had he given her to make a new scene when he flattered himself the last pretext had been removed? If he had been dissatisfied, she might be very sure he would have told her so; and as he hadn't told her, she might pay him the compliment to believe he was honest. He expressed the hope—and for the first time in his life he was stern with her—that this would be the last endeavour on her part to revive an odious topic. His sternness was of no avail; it neither wounded her nor comforted her; it only had the effect of making her perfectly sure that he suffered, and that he regarded himself as a kind of traitor. He was one more in the long list of those whom a woman had ruined, who had sold themselves, sold their honour and the commonwealth, for a fair face, a quiet life, a show of tears, a bribe of caresses. The vision of this smothered pain, which he tried to carry off as a gentleman should, only ministered to the love she had ever borne him, the love that had the power originally to throw her into his arms in the face of an opposing force. As month followed month, all her nature centred itself in this feeling; she loved him more than ever, and yet she had been the cause of the most tormenting thing that had ever happened to him. This was a tragic contradiction, impossible to bear, and she sat staring at it with tears of rage.

    One day she had occasion to tell him that she had received a letter from Macarthy, who announced that he should soon sail for Europe, even intimated that he should spend two or three weeks in London. He had been overworked, it was years since he had had a proper holiday, and the doctor threatened him with nervous prostration if he didn't very soon break off everything. His sister had a vision of his reason for offering to let her see him in England; it was a piece of appreciation, on Macarthy's part, a reward for their having behaved—that is, for Sir Rufus's having behaved—apparently under her influence, better than might have been expected. He had the good taste not to bring out his insolent book, and Macarthy gave this little sign, the most mollified thing he had done as yet, that he noticed. If Lady Chasemore had not at this moment been thinking of something else, it might have occurred to her that nervous prostration in her brothers organism had already set in. The prospect of his visit held Sir Rufus's attention very briefly, and in a few minutes Agatha herself ceased to dwell upon it. Suddenly, illogically, fantastically, she could not have told why, at that moment and in that place, for she had had no such intention when she came into the room, she broke out: “My own darling, do you know what has come over me? I have changed entirely—I see it differently; I want you to publish that grand thing.” And she stood there smiling at him, expressing the transformation of her feeling so well that he might have been forgiven for not doubting it.

    Nevertheless he did doubt it, especially at first. But she repeated, she pressed, she insisted; once she had spoken in this sense, she abounded and overflowed. It went on for several days (he had begun by refusing to listen to her, for even in touching the question she had violated his solemn injunction), and by the end of a week she persuaded him that she had really come round. She was extremely ingenious and plausible in tracing the process by which she had done so, and she drew from him the confession (they kissed a great deal after it was made) that the manuscript of The Modern Warning had not been destroyed at all, but was safely locked up in a cabinet, together with the interrupted proofs. She doubtless placed her tergiversation in a more natural light than her biographer has been able to do; he, however, will spare the reader the exertion of following the impalpable clew which leads to the heart of the labyrinth. A month was still to elapse before Macarthy would show himself, and during this time she had the leisure and freedom of mind to consider the sort of face with which she should meet him, her husband having virtually promised that he would send the book back to the printers. Now, of course, she renounced all pretension of censorship; she had nothing to do with it; it might be whatever he liked; she gave him formal notice that she should not even look at it after it was printed. It was his affair altogether now—it had ceased to be hers. A hard crust had formed itself, in the course of a year, over a sensibility that was once so tender this she admitted was very strange, but it would be stranger still if (with the value that he had originally set upon his opportunity) he should fail to feel that he might throw his weight upon it. In this case the morbidness would be on his side. Several times, during the period that preceded McCarthy's arrival, Lady Chasemore saw on the table in the hall little packets which reminded her of the roll of proofs she had opened that evening in her room. Her courage never failed her, and an observer of her present relations with her husband might easily have been excused for believing that the solution which at one time appeared so illusory was now substantial and complete. Sir Rufus was immensely taken up with the resumption of his task; the revision of his original pages went forward the more rapidly that in fact, though his wife was unaware of it, they had repeatedly been in his hands since he put them away. He had retouched and amended them, by the midnight lamp, disinterestedly, platonically, hypothetically, and the alterations and improvements which suggest themselves when a work is laid by to ripen, like a row of pears on a shelf, started into life and liberty. Sir Rufus was as happy as a man who, after having been obliged for a long time to entertain a passion in secret, finds it recognized and legitimated, finds that the obstacles are removed, and he may conduct his beloved to the altar.

    Nevertheless, when Macarthy Grice alighted at the door of his sisters house—he had assented at the last to her urgent request that he would make it his habitation during his stay in London—he stepped into an atmosphere of sudden alarm and dismay. It was late in the afternoon a couple of hours before dinner, and it so happened that Sir Rufus drove up at the moment the American traveller issued from the carriage that had been sent for him. The two men exchanged greetings on the steps of the house, but in the next breath McCarthy's host asked what had become of Agatha, whether she had not gone to the station to meet him, as she had announced at noon, when Sir Rufus saw her last, that she intended.

    It appeared that she had not accompanied the carriage; Macarthy had been met only by one of the servants, who had been with the Chasemore's to America, and was therefore in a position to recognize him. This functionary said to Sir Rufus that her ladyship had sent him down word, an hour before the carriage started, that she had altered her intention, and he was to go on without her. By this time the door of the house had been thrown open; the butler and the other footman had come to the front. They had not, however, their usual perpendicular demeanour, and the master's eye immediately saw that there was something wrong in the house. This apprehension was confirmed by the butler on the instant, before he had time to ask a question. “We are afraid her ladyship is ill, sir; rather seriously, sir; we have but this moment discovered it, sir; her maid is with her, sir, and the other women.”

    Sir Rufus started; he paused but a single instant, looking from one of the men to the other. Their faces were very white; they had a strange, scared expression. “What do you mean by rather seriously?—what the devil has happened?” But he had sprung to the stairs—he was half-way up before they could answer.

    “You had better go up, sir, really,” said the butler, to Macarthy, who was planted there, and had turned as white as himself; “we are afraid she has taken something.”

    “Taken something?”

    “By mistake, sir, you know, sir,” quavered the footman, looking at his companion. There were tears in the footman's eyes. Macarthy felt sick.

    “And there's no doctor? You don't send? You stand gaping?”

    “We are going, sir—we have already gone!” cried both the men together. “He'll come from the hospital, round the corner; he'll be here by the time you're upstairs. It was but this very moment, sir, just before you rang the bell,” one of them went on. The footman who had come with Macarthy from Euston dashed out of the house, and he himself followed the direction his brother-in-law had taken. The butler was with him, saying he didn't know what—that it was only while they were waiting—that it would be a stroke for Sir Rufus. He got before him, on the upper landing; he led the way to Lady Chasemore's room, the door of which was open, revealing a horrible hush, and, beyond the interior, a flurried, gasping flight of female domestics. Sir Rufus was there, he was at the bed still; he had cleared the room; two of the women had remained, they had hold of Lady Chasemore, who lay there passive, with a lifeless arm that caught Macarthy's eye—calling her, chafing her, pushing each other, saying that she would come to in a minute. Sir Rufus had apparently been staring at his wife in stupefaction and horror, but as Macarthy came to the bed he caught her up in his arms, pressing her to his bosom, and the American visitor met his face, glaring at him over her shoulder, convulsed and transformed. “She has taken something, but only by mistake;” he was conscious that the butler was saying that again, behind him, in his ears.

    “My God, you have killed her! it's your infernal work!” cried Sir Rufus, in a voice that matched his terrible face.

    “I have killed her?” answered Macarthy, bewildered and appalled.

    “Your d—d fantastic opposition—the fear of meeting you,” Sir Rufus went on. But his words lost themselves, as he bent over her in violent kisses and imprecations, in demands whether nothing could be done, why the doctor wasn't there, in clumsy, passionate attempts to arouse, to revive.

    “Oh, I am sure she wanted you to come. She was very well this morning, sir,” the lady's-maid broke out, to Macarthy, contradicting Sir Rufus in her fright, and protesting again that it was nothing; that it was a faint—for the very pleasure—that her ladyship would come round. The other woman had picked up a little phial. She thrust it at Macarthy with the boldness of their common distress, and as he took it from her mechanically he perceived that it was empty, and had a strange odour. He sniffed it, and with a shout of horror flung it away. He rushed at his sister, and for a moment almost had a struggle with her husband for the possession of her body, in which, as soon as he touched it, he felt the absence of life. Then she was in the bed again, beautiful, irresponsive, inanimate, and they were both beside her for an instant, after which Sir Rufus broke away, and staggered out of the room. It seemed an eternity to Macarthy while he waited, though it had already come over him that he was waiting only for something still worse. The women talked, tried to tell him things; one of them said something about the pity of his coming all the way from America on purpose. Agatha was beautiful; there was no disfigurement. The butler had gone out with Sir Rufus, and he came back with him, reappearing first, and with the doctor. Macarthy didn't even heed what the doctor said. By this time he knew it all for himself. He flung himself into a chair, overwhelmed, covering his face with the cape of his Ulster. The odour of the little phial was in his nostrils. He let the doctor lead him out without resistance, scarcely with consciousness, after some minutes.

    Lady Chasemore had taken something—the doctor gave it a name—but it was not by mistake. In the hall, down-stairs, he stood looking at Macarthy, kindly, soothingly, tentatively, with his hand on his shoulder. Had she—a—had she some domestic grief? Macarthy heard him ask. He couldn't stay in the house—not with Chasemore. The servant who had brought him from the station took him to a hotel, with his luggage, in the carriage, which was still at the door—a horrible hotel, where in a dismal, dingy back room, with chimney-pots outside, he spent a night of unsurpassable anguish. He could not understand, and he howled to himself, “Why, why, just now?” Sir Rufus, in the other house, had exactly such another vigil; it was plain enough that this was the case when, the next morning, he came to the hotel. He held out his hand to Macarthy—he appeared to take back his monstrous words of the evening before. He made him come back to Grosvenor Crescent; he made him spend three days there, three days during which the two men scarcely exchanged a word. But the rest of the holiday that Macarthy had undertaken for the benefit of his health was passed upon the Continent, with little present evidence that he should find what he had sought. The Modern Warning has not yet been published, but it may still appear. This doubtless will depend upon whether, this time, the sheets have really been destroyed—buried in Lady Chasemore's grave, or only put back into the cabinet.