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<h2> CHAPTER XXVII. CONTAINS MATTER FOR SUBSEQUENT EXPLOSION </h2>
<p>Among the various letters inundating Sir Lukin Dunstane upon the report of
the triumph of surgical skill achieved by Sir William Macpherson and Mr.
Lanyan Thomson, was one from Lady Wathin, dated Adlands, an estate of Mr.
Quintin Manx's in Warwickshire, petitioning for the shortest line of
reassurance as to the condition of her dear cousin, and an intimation of
the period when it might be deemed possible for a relative to call and
offer her sincere congratulations: a letter deserving a personal reply,
one would suppose. She received the following, in a succinct female hand
corresponding to its terseness; every 't' righteously crossed, every 'i'
punctiliously dotted, as she remarked to Constance Asper, to whom the
communication was transferred for perusal:</p>
<p>'DEAR LADY WATHIN,—Lady Dunstane is gaining strength. The measure<br/>
of her pulse indicates favourably. She shall be informed in good<br/>
time of your solicitude for her recovery. The day cannot yet be<br/>
named for visits of any kind. You will receive information as soon<br/>
as the house is open.<br/>
<br/>
'I have undertaken the task of correspondence, and beg you to<br/>
believe me,<br/>
<br/>
'Very truly yours,<br/>
'D. A. WARWICK.'<br/></p>
<p>Miss Asper speculated on the handwriting of her rival. She obtained
permission to keep the letter, with the intention of transmitting it per
post to an advertising interpreter of character in caligraphy.</p>
<p>Such was the character of the fair young heiress, exhibited by her
performances much more patently than the run of a quill would reveal it.</p>
<p>She said, 'It is rather a pretty hand, I think.'</p>
<p>'Mrs. Warwick is a practised writer,' said Lady Wathin. 'Writing is her
profession, if she has any. She goes to nurse my cousin. Her husband says
she is an excellent nurse. He says what he can for her. But you must be in
the last extremity, or she is ice. His appeal to her has been totally
disregarded. Until he drops down in the street, as his doctor expects him
to do some day, she will continue her course; and even then...' An
adventuress desiring her freedom! Lady Wathin looked. She was too devout a
woman to say what she thought. But she knew the world to be very wicked.
Of Mrs. Warwick, her opinion was formed. She would not have charged the
individual creature with a criminal design; all she did was to stuff the
person her virtue abhorred with the wickedness of the world, and that is a
common process in antipathy.</p>
<p>She sympathized, moreover, with the beautiful devotedness of the wealthy
heiress to her ideal of man. It had led her to make the acquaintance of
old Lady Dacier, at the house in town, where Constance Asper had first met
Percy; Mrs. Grafton Winstanley's house, representing neutral territory or
debateable land for the occasional intercourse of the upper class and the
climbing in the professions or in commerce; Mrs. Grafton Winstanley being
on the edge of aristocracy by birth, her husband, like Mr. Quintin Manx, a
lord of fleets. Old Lady Dacier's bluntness in speaking of her grandson
would have shocked Lady Wathin as much as it astonished, had she been less
of an ardent absorber of aristocratic manners. Percy was plainly called a
donkey, for hanging off and on with a handsome girl of such expectations
as Miss Asper. 'But what you can't do with a horse, you can't hope to do
with a donkey.' She added that she had come for the purpose of seeing the
heiress, of whose points of person she delivered a judgement critically
appreciative as a horsefancier's on the racing turf. 'If a girl like that
holds to it, she's pretty sure to get him at last. It 's no use to pull
his neck down to the water.'</p>
<p>Lady Wathin delicately alluded to rumours of an entanglement, an
admiration he had, ahem.</p>
<p>'A married woman,' the veteran nodded. 'I thought that was off? She must
be a clever intriguer to keep him so long.'</p>
<p>'She is undoubtedly clever,' said Lady Wathin, and it was mumbled in her
hearing: 'The woman seems to have a taste for our family.'</p>
<p>They agreed that they could see nothing to be done. The young lady must
wither, Mrs. Warwick have her day. The veteran confided her experienced
why to Lady Wathin: 'All the tales you tell of a woman of that sort are
sharp sauce to the palates of men.'</p>
<p>They might be, to the men of the dreadful gilded idle class!</p>
<p>Mrs. Warwick's day appeared indefinitely prolonged, judging by Percy
Dacier's behaviour to Miss Asper. Lady Wathin watched them narrowly when
she had the chance, a little ashamed of her sex, or indignant rather at
his display of courtliness in exchange for her open betrayal of her
preference. It was almost to be wished that she would punish him by
sacrificing herself to one of her many brilliant proposals of marriage.
But such are women!—precisely because of his holding back he
tightened the cord attaching him to her tenacious heart. This was the
truth. For the rest, he was gracefully courteous; an observer could
perceive the charm he exercised. He talked with a ready affability,
latterly with greater social ease; evidently not acting the indifferent
conqueror, or so consummately acting it as to mask the air. And yet he was
ambitious, and he was not rich. Notoriously was he ambitious, and with
wealth to back him, a great entertaining house, troops of adherents, he
would gather influence, be propelled to leadership. The vexation of a
constant itch to speak to him on the subject, and the recognition, that he
knew it all as well as she, tormented Lady Wathin. He gave her comforting
news of her dear cousin in the Winter.</p>
<p>'You have heard from Mrs. Warwick?' she said.</p>
<p>He replied, 'I had the latest from Mr. Redworth.'</p>
<p>'Mrs. Warwick has relinquished her post?'</p>
<p>'When she does, you may be sure that Lady Dunstane is, perfectly
reestablished.'</p>
<p>'She is an excellent nurse.'</p>
<p>'The best, I believe.'</p>
<p>'It is a good quality in sickness.'</p>
<p>'Proof of good all through.'</p>
<p>'Her husband might have the advantage of it. His state is really pathetic.
If she has feeling, and could only be made aware, she might perhaps be
persuaded to pass from the friendly to the wifely duty.'</p>
<p>Mr. Dacier bent his head to listen, and he bowed.</p>
<p>He was fast in the toils; and though we have assurance that evil cannot
triumph in perpetuity, the aspect of it throning provokes a kind of
despair. How strange if ultimately the lawyers once busy about the uncle
were to take up the case of the nephew, and this time reverse the issue,
by proving it! For poor Mr. Warwick was emphatic on the question of his
honour. It excited him dangerously. He was long-suffering, but with the
slightest clue terrible. The unknotting of the entanglement might thus
happen—and Constance Asper would welcome her hero still.</p>
<p>Meanwhile there was actually nothing to be done: a deplorable absence of
motive villainy; apparently an absence of the beneficent Power directing
events to their proper termination. Lady Wathin heard of her cousin's
having been removed to Cowes in May, for light Solent and Channel voyages
on board Lord Esquart's yacht. She heard also of heavy failures and
convulsions in the City of London, quite unconscious that the Fates, or
agents of the Providence she invoked to precipitate the catastrophe, were
then beginning cavernously their performance of the part of villain in
Diana's history.</p>
<p>Diana and Emma enjoyed happy quiet sailings under May breezes on the
many-coloured South-western waters, heart in heart again; the physical
weakness of the one, the moral weakness of the other, creating that mutual
dependency which makes friendship a pulsating tie. Diana's confession had
come of her letter to Emma. When the latter was able to examine her
correspondence, Diana brought her the heap for perusal, her own sealed
scribble, throbbing with all the fatal might-have-been, under her eyes.
She could have concealed and destroyed it. She sat beside her friend,
awaiting her turn, hearing her say at the superscription: 'Your writing,
Tony?' and she nodded. She was asked: 'Shall I read it?' She answered:
'Read.' They were soon locked in an embrace. Emma had no perception of
coldness through those brief dry lines; her thought was of the matter.</p>
<p>'The danger is over now?' she said.</p>
<p>'Yes, that danger is over now.'</p>
<p>'You have weathered it?'</p>
<p>'I love him.'</p>
<p>Emma dropped a heavy sigh in pity of her, remotely in compassion for
Redworth, the loving and unbeloved. She was too humane and wise of our
nature to chide her Tony for having her sex's heart. She had charity to
bestow on women; in defence of them against men and the world, it was a
charity armed with the weapons of battle. The wife madly stripped before
the world by a jealous husband, and left chained to the rock, her youth
wasting, her blood arrested, her sensibilities chilled and assailing her
under their multitudinous disguises, and for whom the world is merciless,
called forth Emma's tenderest commiseration; and that wife being Tony, and
stricken with the curse of love, in other circumstances the blessing, Emma
bled for her.</p>
<p>'But nothing desperate?' she said.</p>
<p>'No; you have saved me.'</p>
<p>'I would knock at death's doors again, and pass them, to be sure of that.'</p>
<p>'Kiss me; you may be sure. I would not put my lips to your cheek if there
were danger of my faltering.'</p>
<p>'But you love him.'</p>
<p>'I do: and because I love him I will not let him be fettered to me.'</p>
<p>'You will see him.'</p>
<p>'Do not imagine that his persuasions undermined your Tony. I am subject to
panics.'</p>
<p>'Was it your husband?'</p>
<p>'I had a visit from Lady Wathin. She knows him. She came as peacemaker.
She managed to hint at his authority. Then came a letter from him—of
supplication, interpenetrated with the hint: a suffused atmosphere. Upon
that; unexpected by me, my—let me call him so once, forgive me!—lover
came. Oh! he loves me, or did then. Percy! He had been told that I should
be claimed. I felt myself the creature I am—a wreck of marriage. But
I fancied I could serve him:—I saw golden. My vanity was the chief
traitor. Cowardice of course played a part. In few things that we do,
where self is concerned, will cowardice not be found. And the
hallucination colours it to seem a lovely heroism. That was the second
time Mr. Redworth arrived. I am always at crossways, and he rescues me; on
this occasion unknowingly.'</p>
<p>'There's a divinity...' said Emma. 'When I think of it I perceive that
Patience is our beneficent fairy godmother, who brings us our harvest in
the long result.'</p>
<p>'My dear, does she bring us our labourers' rations, to sustain us for the
day?' said Diana.'</p>
<p>'Poor fare, but enough.'</p>
<p>'I fear I was born godmotherless.'</p>
<p>'You have stores of patience, Tony; only now and then fits of
desperation.'</p>
<p>'My nature's frailty, the gap in it: we will give it no fine names—they
cover our pitfalls. I am open to be carried on a tide of unreasonableness
when the coward cries out. But I can say, dear, that after one rescue, a
similar temptation is unlikely to master me. I do not subscribe to the
world's decrees for love of the monster, though I am beginning to
understand the dues of allegiance. We have ceased to write letters. You
may have faith in me.'</p>
<p>'I have, with my whole soul,' said Emma.</p>
<p>So the confession closed; and in the present instance there were not any
forgotten chambers to be unlocked and ransacked for addenda confessions.</p>
<p>The subjects discoursed of by the two endeared the hours to them. They
were aware that the English of the period would have laughed a couple of
women to scorn for venturing on them, and they were not a little hostile
in consequence, and shot their epigrams profusely, applauding the keener
that appeared to score the giant bulk of their intolerant enemy, who holds
the day, but not the morrow. Us too he holds for the day, to punish us if
we have temporal cravings. He scatters his gifts to the abject; tossing to
us rebels bare dog-biscuit. But the life of the spirit is beyond his
region; we have our morrow in his day when we crave nought of him. Diana
and Emma delighted to discover that they were each the rebel of their
earlier and less experienced years; each a member of the malcontent minor
faction, the salt of earth, to whom their salt must serve for nourishment,
as they admitted, relishing it determinedly, not without gratification.</p>
<p>Sir Lukin was busy upon his estate in Scotland. They summoned young Arthur
Rhodes to the island, that he might have a taste of the new scenes. Diana
was always wishing for his instruction and refreshment; and Redworth came
to spend a Saturday and Sunday with them, and showed his disgust of the
idle boy, as usual, at the same time consulting them on the topic of
furniture for the Berkshire mansion he had recently bought, rather
vaunting the Spanish pictures his commissioner in Madrid was transmitting.
The pair of rebels, vexed by his treatment of the respectful junior, took
him for an incarnation of their enemy, and pecked and worried the man
astonishingly. He submitted to it like the placable giant. Yes, he was a
Liberal, and furnishing and decorating the house in the stability of which
he trusted. Why not? We must accept the world as it is, try to improve it
by degrees.—Not so: humanity will not wait for you, the victims are
shrieking beneath the bricks of your enormous edifice, behind the canvas
of your pictures. 'But you may really say that luxurious yachting is an
odd kind of insurgency,' avowed Diana. 'It's the tangle we are in.'</p>
<p>'It's the coat we have to wear; and why fret at it for being comfortable?'</p>
<p>'I don't half enough, when I think of my shivering neighbours.'</p>
<p>'Money is of course a rough test of virtue,' said Redworth. 'We have no
other general test.'</p>
<p>Money! The ladies proclaimed it a mere material test; Diana, gazing on
sunny sea, with an especial disdain. And name us your sort of virtue.
There is more virtue in poverty, He denied that. Inflexibly British, he
declared money, and also the art of getting money, to be hereditary
virtues, deserving of their reward. The reward a superior wealth and its
fruits? Yes, the power to enjoy and spread enjoyment: and let idleness
envy both! He abused idleness, and by implication the dilettante
insurgency fostering it. However, he was compensatingly heterodox in his
view of the Law's persecution of women; their pertinacious harpings on the
theme had brought him to that; and in consideration of the fact, as they
looked from yacht to shore, of their being rebels participating largely in
the pleasures of the tyrant's court, they allowed him to silence them, and
forgave him.</p>
<p>Thoughts upon money and idleness were in confusion with Diana. She had a
household to support in London, and she was not working; she could not
touch THE CANTATRICE while Emma was near. Possibly, she again ejaculated,
the Redworths of the world were right: the fruitful labours were with the
mattock and hoe, or the mind directing them. It was a crushing invasion of
materialism, so she proposed a sail to the coast of France, and thither
they flew, touching Cherbourg, Alderney, Sark, Guernsey, and sighting the
low Brittany rocks. Memorable days to Arthur Rhodes. He saw perpetually
the one golden centre in new scenes. He heard her voice, he treasured her
sayings; her gestures, her play of lip and eyelid, her lift of head,
lightest movements, were imprinted on him, surely as the heavens are
mirrored in the quiet seas, firmly and richly as earth answers to the
sprinkled grain. For he was blissfully athirst, untroubled by a hope. She
gave him more than she knew of: a present that kept its beating heart into
the future; a height of sky, a belief in nobility, permanent through
manhood down to age. She was his foam-born Goddess of those leaping
waters; differently hued, crescented, a different influence. He had a
happy week, and it charmed Diana to hear him tell her so. In spite of
Redworth, she had faith in the fruit-bearing powers of a time of simple
happiness, and shared the youth's in reflecting it. Only the happiness
must be simple, that of the glass to the lovely face: no straining of arms
to retain, no heaving of the bosom in vacancy.</p>
<p>His poverty and capacity for pure enjoyment led her to think of him almost
clingingly when hard news reached her from the quaint old City of London,
which despises poverty and authorcraft and all mean adventurers, and bows
to the lordly merchant, the mighty financier, Redworth's incarnation of
the virtues. Happy days on board the yacht Clarissa! Diana had to recall
them with effort. They who sow their money for a promising high percentage
have built their habitations on the sides of the most eruptive mountain in
Europe. AEtna supplies more certain harvests, wrecks fewer vineyards and
peaceful dwellings. The greed of gain is our volcano. Her wonder leapt up
at the slight inducement she had received to embark her money in this
Company: a South-American mine, collapsed almost within hearing of the
trumpets of prospectus, after two punctual payments of the half-yearly
interest. A Mrs. Ferdinand Cherson, an elder sister of the pretty Mrs.
Fryar-Gunnett, had talked to her of the cost of things one afternoon at
Lady Singleby's garden-party, and spoken of the City as the place to help
to swell an income, if only you have an acquaintance with some of the
chief City men. The great mine was named, and the rush for allotments. She
knew a couple of the Directors. They vowed to her that ten per cent. was a
trifle; the fortune to be expected out of the mine was already clearly
estimable at forties and fifties. For their part they anticipated cent.
per cent. Mrs. Cherson said she wanted money, and had therefore invested
in the mine. It seemed so consequent, the cost of things being enormous!
She and her sister Mrs. Fryar-Gunnett owned husbands who did their
bidding, because of their having the brains, it might be understood. Thus
five thousand pounds invested would speedily bring five thousand pounds
per annum. Diana had often dreamed of the City of London as the seat of
magic; and taking the City's contempt for authorcraft and the intangible
as, from its point of view, justly founded, she had mixed her dream
strangely with an ancient notion of the City's probity. Her broker's
shaking head did not damp her ardour for shares to the full amount of her
ability to purchase. She remembered her satisfaction at the allotment; the
golden castle shot up from this fountain mine. She had a frenzy for mines
and fished in some English with smaller sums. 'I am now a miner,' she had
exclaimed, between dismay at her audacity and the pride of it. Why had she
not consulted Redworth? He would peremptorily have stopped the frenzy in
its first intoxicating effervescence. She, like Mrs. Cherson, like all
women who have plunged upon the cost of things, wanted money. She
naturally went to the mine. Address him for counsel in the person of dupe,
she could not; shame was a barrier. Could she tell him that the prattle of
a woman, spendthrift as Mrs. Cherson, had induced her to risk her money?
Latterly the reports of Mrs. Fryar-Gunnett were not of the flavour to make
association of their names agreeable to his hearing.</p>
<p>She had to sit down in the buzz of her self-reproaches and amazement at
the behaviour of that reputable City, shrug, and recommence the labour of
her pen. Material misfortune had this one advantage; it kept her from
speculative thoughts of her lover, and the meaning of his absence and,
silence.</p>
<p>Diana's perusal of the incomplete CANTATRICE was done with the cold
critical eye interpreting for the public. She was forced to write on
nevertheless, and exactly in the ruts of the foregoing matter. It
propelled her. No longer perversely, of necessity she wrote her best,
convinced that the work was doomed to unpopularity, resolved that it
should be at least a victory in style. A fit of angry cynicism now and
then set her composing phrases as baits for the critics to quote,
condemnatory of the attractiveness of the work. Her mood was bad. In
addition, she found Whitmonby cool; he complained of the coolness of her
letter of adieu; complained of her leaving London so long. How could she
expect to be his Queen of the London Salon if she lost touch of the
topics? He made no other allusion. They were soon on amicable terms, at
the expense of flattering arts that she had not hitherto practised. But
Westlake revealed unimagined marvels of the odd corners of the masculine
bosom. He was the man of her circle the neatest in epigram, the widest of
survey, an Oriental traveller, a distinguished writer, and if not
personally bewitching, remarkably a gentleman of the world. He was
wounded; he said as much. It came to this: admitting that he had no
claims, he declared it to be unbearable for him to see another preferred.
The happier was unmentioned, and Diana scraped his wound by rallying him.
He repeated that he asked only to stand on equal terms with the others;
her preference of one was past his tolerance. She told him that since
leaving Lady Dunstane she had seen but Whitmonby, Wilmers, and him. He
smiled sarcastically, saying he had never had a letter from her, except
the formal one of invitation.</p>
<p>'Powers of blarney, have you forsaken a daughter of Erin?' cried Diana.
'Here is a friend who has a craving for you, and I talk sense to him. I
have written to none of my set since I last left London.'</p>
<p>She pacified him by doses of cajolery new to her tongue. She liked him,
abhorred the thought of losing any of her friends, so the cajoling
sentences ran until Westlake betrayed an inflammable composition, and had
to be put out, and smoked sullenly. Her resources were tried in restoring
him to reason. The months of absence from London appeared to have
transformed her world. Tonans was moderate. The great editor rebuked her
for her prolonged absence from London, not so much because it discrowned
her as Queen of the Salon, but candidly for its rendering her service less
to him. Everything she knew of men and affairs was to him stale.</p>
<p>'How do you get to the secrets?' she asked.</p>
<p>'By sticking to the centre of them,' he said.</p>
<p>'But how do you manage to be in advance and act the prophet?'</p>
<p>'Because I will have them at any price, and that is known.'</p>
<p>She hinted at the peccant City Company.</p>
<p>'I think I have checked the mining mania, as I did the railway,' said he;
'and so far it was a public service. There's no checking of maniacs.'</p>
<p>She took her whipping within and without. 'On another occasion I shall
apply to you, Mr. Tonans.'</p>
<p>'Ah, there was a time when you could have been a treasure to me,' he
rejoined; alluding of course to the Dannisburgh days.</p>
<p>In dejection, as she mused on those days, and on her foolish ambition to
have a London house where her light might burn, she advised herself, with
Redworth's voice, to quit the house, arrest expenditure, and try for
happiness by burning and shining in the spirit: devoting herself, as
Arthur Rhodes did, purely to literature. It became almost a decision.</p>
<p>Percy she had still neither written to nor heard from, and she dared not
hope to meet him. She fancied a wish to have tidings of his marriage: it
would be peace; if in desolation. Now that she had confessed and given her
pledge to Emma, she had so far broken with him as to render the holding
him chained a cruelty, and his reserve whispered of a rational acceptance
of the end between them. She thanked him for it; an act whereby she was:
instantly melted to such softness that a dread of him haunted her. Coward,
take up your burden for armour! she called to her poor dungeoned self
wailing to have common nourishment. She knew how prodigiously it waxed on
crumbs; nay, on the imagination of small morsels. By way of chastizing it,
she reviewed her life, her behaviour to her husband, until she sank
backward to a depth deprived of air and light. That life with her husband
was a dungeon to her nature deeper than any imposed by present conditions.
She was then a revolutionary to reach to the breath of day. She had now to
be, only not a coward, and she could breathe as others did. 'Women who sap
the moral laws pull down the pillars of the temple on their sex,' Emma had
said. Diana perceived something of her personal debt to civilization. Her
struggles passed into the doomed CANTATRICE occupying days and nights
under pressure for immediate payment; the silencing of friend Debit,
ridiculously calling himself Credit, in contempt of sex and conduct, on
the ground, that he was he solely by virtue of being she. He had got a
trick of singing operatic solos in the form and style of the delightful
tenor Tellio, and they were touching in absurdity, most real in unreality.
Exquisitely trilled, after Tellio's manner,</p>
<p>'The tradesmen all beseech ye,<br/>
The landlord, cook and maid,<br/>
Complete THE CANTATRICE,<br/>
That they may soon be paid.'<br/></p>
<p>provoked her to laughter in pathos. He approached, posturing himself
operatically, with perpetual new verses, rhymes to Danvers, rhymes to
Madame Sybille, the cook. Seeing Tellio at one of Henry Wilmers' private
concerts, Diana's lips twitched to dimples at the likeness her familiar
had assumed. She had to compose her countenance to talk to him; but the
moment of song was the trial. Lady Singleby sat beside her, and remarked:</p>
<p>'You have always fun going on in you!' She partook of the general
impression that Diana Warwick was too humorous to nurse a downright
passion.</p>
<p>Before leaving, she engaged Diana to her annual garden-party of the
closing season, and there the meeting with Percy occurred, not unobserved.
Had they been overheard, very little to implicate them would have been
gathered. He walked in full view across the lawn to her, and they
presented mask to mask.</p>
<p>'The beauty of the day tempts you at last, Mrs. Warwick.'</p>
<p>'I have been finishing a piece of work.'</p>
<p>Lovely weather, beautiful dresses: agreed. Diana wore a yellow robe with a
black bonnet, and he commented on the becoming hues; for the first time,
he noticed her dress! Lovely women? Dacier hesitated. One he saw. But
surely he must admire Mrs. Fryar-Gunnett? And who steps beside her,
transparently fascinated, with visage at three-quarters to the rays within
her bonnet? Can it be Sir Lukin Dunstane? and beholding none but his
charmer!</p>
<p>Dacier withdrew his eyes thoughtfully from the spectacle, and moved to woo
Diana to a stroll. She could not restrain her feet; she was out of the
ring of her courtiers for the moment. He had seized his opportunity.</p>
<p>'It is nearly a year!' he said.</p>
<p>'I have been nursing nearly all the time, doing the work I do best.'</p>
<p>'Unaltered?'</p>
<p>'A year must leave its marks.'</p>
<p>'Tony!'</p>
<p>'You speak of a madwoman, a good eleven months dead. Let her rest. Those
are the conditions.'</p>
<p>'Accepted, if I may see her.'</p>
<p>'Honestly accepted?'</p>
<p>'Imposed fatally, I have to own. I have felt with you: you are the wiser.
But, admitting that, surely we can meet. I may see you?'</p>
<p>'My house has not been shut.'</p>
<p>'I respected the house. I distrusted myself.'</p>
<p>'What restores your confidence?'</p>
<p>'The strength I draw from you.'</p>
<p>One of the Beauties at a garden-party is lucky to get as many minutes as
had passed in quietness. Diana was met and captured. But those last words
of Percy's renewed her pride in him by suddenly building a firm faith in
herself. Noblest of lovers! she thought, and brooded on the little that
had been spoken, the much conveyed, for a proof of perfect truthfulness.</p>
<p>The world had watched them. It pronounced them discreet if culpable;
probably cold to the passion both. Of Dacier's coldness it had no doubt,
and Diana's was presumed from her comical flights of speech. She was given
to him because of the known failure of her other adorers. He in the front
rank of politicians attracted her with the lustre of his ambition; she him
with her mingling of talent and beauty. An astute world; right in the
main, owing to perceptions based upon brute nature; utterly astray in
particulars, for the reason that it takes no count of the soul of man or
woman. Hence its glee at a catastrophe; its poor stock of mercy. And when
no catastrophe follows, the prophet, for the honour of the profession,
must decry her as cunning beyond aught yet revealed of a serpent sex.</p>
<p>Save for a word or two, the watchman might have overheard and trumpeted
his report of their interview at Diana's house. After the first pained
breathing, when they found themselves alone in that room where they had
plighted their fortunes, they talked allusively to define the terms
imposed on them by Reason. The thwarted step was unmentioned; it was a
past madness. But Wisdom being recognized, they could meet. It would be
hard if that were denied! They talked very little of their position; both
understood the mutual acceptance of it; and now that he had seen her and
was again under the spell, Dacier's rational mind, together with his
delight in her presence, compelled him honourably to bow to the terms.
Only, as these were severe upon lovers, the innocence of their meetings
demanded indemnification in frequency.</p>
<p>'Come whenever you think I can be useful,' said Diana.</p>
<p>They pressed hands at parting, firmly and briefly, not for the ordinary
dactylology of lovers, but in sign of the treaty of amity.</p>
<p>She soon learnt that she had tied herself to her costly household.</p>
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