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<h2> CHAPTER XXX. IN WHICH THERE IS A TASTE OF A LITTLE DINNER AND AN AFTERTASTE </h2>
<p>'But Tony lives!' Emma Dunstane cried, on her solitary height, with the
full accent of envy marking the verb; and when she wrote enviously to her
friend of the life among bright intelligences, and of talk worth hearing,
it was a happy signification that health, frail though it might be, had
grown importunate for some of the play of life. Diana sent her word to
name her day, and she would have her choicest to meet her dearest. They
were in the early days of December, not the best of times for improvized
gatherings. Emma wanted, however, to taste them as they cropped; she was
also, owing to her long isolation, timid at a notion of encountering the
pick of the London world, prepared by Tony to behold 'a wonder more than
worthy of them,' as her friend unadvisedly wrote. That was why she came
unexpectedly, and for a mixture of reasons, went to an hotel. Fatality
designed it so. She was reproached, but she said: 'You have to write or
you entertain at night; I should be a clog and fret you. My hotel is
Maitland's; excellent; I believe I am to lie on the pillow where a crowned
head reposed! You will perceive that I am proud as well as comfortable.
And I would rather meet your usual set of guests.'</p>
<p>'The reason why I have been entertaining at night is, that Percy is
harassed and requires enlivening,' said Diana. 'He brings his friends. My
house is open to them, if it amuses him. What the world says, is past a
thought. I owe him too much.'</p>
<p>Emma murmured that the world would soon be pacified.</p>
<p>Diana shook her head. 'The poor man is better; able to go about his
affairs; and I am honestly relieved. It lays a spectre. As for me, I do
not look ahead. I serve as a kind of secretary to Percy. I labour at
making abstracts by day, and at night preside at my suppertable. You would
think it monotonous; no incident varies the course we run. I have no time
to ask whether it is happiness. It seems to bear a resemblance.'</p>
<p>Emma replied: 'He may be everything you tell me. He should not have chosen
the last night of the Opera to go to your box and sit beside you till the
fall of the curtain. The presence at the Opera of a man notoriously
indifferent to music was enough in itself.'</p>
<p>Diana smiled with languor. 'You heard of that? But the Opera was The
Puritani, my favourite. And he saw me sitting in Lady Pennon's box alone.
We were compromised neck-deep already. I can kiss you, my own Emmy, till I
die; 'but what the world says, is what the wind says. Besides he has his
hopes.... If I am blackened ever so thickly, he can make me white. Dear
me! if the world knew that he comes here almost nightly! It will; and does
it matter? I am his in soul; the rest is waste-paper—a half-printed
sheet.'</p>
<p>'Provided he is worthy of such devotion!'</p>
<p>'He is absolute worthiness. He is the prince of men: I dread to say, mine!
for fear. But Emmy will not judge him to-morrow by contrast with more
voluble talkers.—I can do anything but read poetry now. That kills
me!—See him through me. In nature, character, intellect, he has no
rival. Whenever I despond—and it comes now and then—I rebuke
myself with this one admonition.</p>
<p>Simply to have known him! Admit that for a woman to find one who is worthy
among the opposite creatures, is a happy termination of her quest, and in
some sort dismisses her to the Shades, an uncomplaining ferry-bird. If my
end were at hand I should have no cause to lament it. We women miss life
only when we have to confess we have never met the man to reverence.'</p>
<p>Emma had to hear a very great deal of Mr. Percy. Diana's comparison of
herself to 'the busy bee at a window-pane,' was more in her old manner;
and her friend would have hearkened to the marvels of the gentle man less
unrefreshed, had it not appeared to her that her Tony gave in excess for
what was given in return. She hinted her view...</p>
<p>'It is expected of our sex,' Diana said.</p>
<p>The work of busy bee at a window-pane had at any rate not spoilt her
beauty, though she had voluntarily, profitlessly, become this man's
drudge, and her sprightly fancy, her ready humour and darting look all
round in discussion, were rather deadened.</p>
<p>But the loss was not perceptible in the circle of her guests. Present at a
dinner little indicating the last, were Whitmonby, in lively trim for
shuffling, dealing, cutting, trumping or drawing trumps; Westlake,
polishing epigrams under his eyelids; Henry Wilmers, who timed an anecdote
to strike as the passing hour without freezing the current; Sullivan
Smith, smoked, cured and ready to flavour; Percy Dacier, pleasant
listener, measured speaker; and young Arthur Rhodes, the neophyte of the
hostess's training; of whom she had said to Emma, 'The dear boy very
kindly serves to frank an unlicenced widow'; and whom she prompted and
made her utmost of, with her natural tact. These she mixed and leavened.
The talk was on high levels and low; an enchantment to Emma Dunstane: now
a story; a question opening new routes, sharp sketches of known
personages; a paradox shot by laughter as soon as uttered; and all so
smoothly; not a shadow of the dominant holder-forth or a momentary
prospect of dead flats; the mellow ring of appositeness being the
concordant note of deliveries running linked as they flashed, and a
tolerant philosophy of the sage in the world recurrently the keynote.</p>
<p>Once only had Diana to protect her nurseling. He cited a funny line from a
recent popular volume of verse, in perfect A propos, looking at Sullivan
Smith; who replied, that the poets had become too many for him, and he
read none now. Diana said: 'There are many Alexanders, but Alexander of
Macedon is not dwarfed by the number.' She gave him an opening for a
smarter reply, but he lost it in a comment—against Whitmonby's
cardinal rule: 'The neatest turn of the wrist that ever swung a hero to
crack a crown!' and he bowed to young Rhodes: 'I 'll read your versicler
to-morrow morning early.' The latter expressed a fear that the hour was
too critical for poetry.</p>
<p>'I have taken the dose at a very early hour,' said Whitmonby, to bring
conversation to the flow again, 'and it effaced the critical mind
completely.'</p>
<p>'But did not silence the critical nose,' observed Westlake.</p>
<p>Wilmers named the owner of the longest nose in Europe.</p>
<p>'Potentially, indeed a critic!' said Diana.</p>
<p>'Nights beside it must be fearful, and good matter for a divorce, if the
poor dear lady could hale it to the doors of the Vatican!' Sullivan Smith
exclaimed. 'But there's character in noses.'</p>
<p>'Calculable by inches?' Dacier asked.</p>
<p>'More than in any other feature,' said Lady Dunstane. 'The Riffords are
all prodigiously gifted and amusing: suspendens omnia naso. It should be
prayed for in families.'</p>
<p>'Totum ut to faciant, Fabulle, nasum,' rejoined Whitmonby. 'Lady Isabella
was reading the tale of the German princess, who had a sentinel stationed
some hundred yards away to whisk off the flies, and she owned to me that
her hand instinctively travelled upward.'</p>
<p>'Candour is the best concealment, when one has to carry a saddle of
absurdity,' said Diana. 'Touchstone's “poor thing, but mine own,” is
godlike in its enveloping fold.'</p>
<p>'The most comforting sermon ever delivered on property in poverty,' said
Arthur Rhodes.</p>
<p>Westlake assented. 'His choice of Audrey strikes me as an exhibition of
the sure instinct for pasture of the philosophical jester in a forest.'</p>
<p>'With nature's woman, if he can find her, the urban seems equally at
home,' said Lady Dunstane.</p>
<p>'Baron Pawle is an example,' added Whitmonby. 'His cook is a pattern wife
to him. I heard him say at table that she was responsible for all except
the wines. “I wouldn't have them on my conscience, with a Judge!” my lady
retorted.'</p>
<p>'When poor Madame de Jacquieres was dying,' said Wilmers, 'her confessor
sat by her bedside, prepared for his ministrations. “Pour commencer, mon
ami, jamais je n'ai fait rien hors nature.”'</p>
<p>Lord Wadaster had uttered something tolerably similar: 'I am a sinner, and
in good society.' Sir Abraham Hartiston, a minor satellite of the Regent,
diversified this: 'I am a sinner, and go to good society.' Madame la
Comtesse de la Roche-Aigle, the cause of many deaths, declared it
unwomanly to fear anything save 'les revenants.' Yet the countess could
say the pretty thing: 'Foot on a flower, then think of me!'</p>
<p>'Sentimentality puts up infant hands for absolution,' said Diana.</p>
<p>'But tell me,' Lady Dunstane inquired generally, 'why men are so much
happier than women in laughing at their spouses?'</p>
<p>They are humaner, was one dictum; they are more frivolous, ironically
another.</p>
<p>'It warrants them for blowing the bugle-horn of masculine superiority
night and morning from the castle-walls,' Diana said.</p>
<p>'I should imagine it is for joy of heart that they still have cause to
laugh!' said Westlake.</p>
<p>On the other hand, are women really pained by having to laugh at their
lords? Curious little speeches flying about the great world, affirmed the
contrary. But the fair speakers were chartered libertines, and their laugh
admittedly had a biting acid. The parasite is concerned in the majesty of
the tree.</p>
<p>'We have entered Botany Bay,' Diana said to Emma; who answered: 'A
metaphor is the Deus ex machine, of an argument'; and Whitmonby, to
lighten a shadow of heaviness, related allusively an anecdote of the Law
Courts. Sullivan Smith begged permission to 'black cap' it with Judge
FitzGerald's sentence upon a convicted criminal: 'Your plot was perfect
but for One above.' Dacier cited an execrable impromptu line of the Chief
of the Opposition in Parliament. The Premier, it was remarked, played him
like an angler his fish on the hook; or say, Mr. Serjeant Rufus his
witness in the box.</p>
<p>'Or a French journalist an English missionary,' said Westlake; and as the
instance was recent it was relished.</p>
<p>The talk of Premiers offered Whitmonby occasion for a flight to the Court
of Vienna and Kaunitz. Wilmers told a droll story of Lord Busby's missing
the Embassy there. Westlake furnished a sample of the tranquil
sententiousness of Busby's brother Robert during a stormy debate in the
House of Commons.</p>
<p>'I remember,' Dacier was reminded, 'hearing him say, when the House
resembled a Chartist riot, “Let us stand aside and meditate on Life. If
Youth could know, in the season of its reaping of the Pleasures, that it
is but sowing Doctor's bills!”'</p>
<p>Latterly a malady had supervened, and Bob Busby had retired from the
universal to the special;—his mysterious case.</p>
<p>'Assure him, that is endemic. He may be cured of his desire for the
exposition of it,' said Lady Dunstane.</p>
<p>Westlake chimed with her: 'Yes, the charm in discoursing of one's case is
over when the individual appears no longer at odds with Providence.'</p>
<p>'But then we lose our Tragedy,' said Whitmonby.</p>
<p>'Our Comedy too,' added Diana. 'We must consent to be Busbied for the sake
of the instructive recreations.'</p>
<p>'A curious idea, though,' said Sullivan Smith, 'that some of the grand
instructive figures were in their day colossal bores!'</p>
<p>'So you see the marvel of the poet's craft at last?' Diana smiled on him,
and he vowed: 'I'll read nothing else for a month!' Young Rhodes bade him
beware of a deluge in proclaiming it.</p>
<p>They rose from table at ten, with the satisfaction of knowing that they
had not argued, had not wrangled, had never stagnated, and were
digestingly refreshed; as it should be among grown members of the
civilized world, who mean to practise philosophy, making the hour of the
feast a balanced recreation and a regeneration of body and mind.</p>
<p>'Evenings like these are worth a pilgrimage,' Emma said, embracing Tony
outside the drawing-room door. 'I am so glad I came: and if I am strong
enough, invite me again in the Spring. To-morrow early I start for
Copsley, to escape this London air. I shall hope to have you there soon.'</p>
<p>She was pleased by hearing Tony ask her whether she did not think that
Arthur Rhodes had borne himself well; for it breathed of her simply
friendly soul.</p>
<p>The gentlemen followed Lady Dunstane in a troop, Dacier yielding perforce
the last adieu to young Rhodes.</p>
<p>Five minutes later Diana was in her dressing-room, where she wrote at
night, on the rare occasions now when she was left free for composition.
Beginning to dwell on THE MAN OF TWO MINDS, she glanced at the woman
likewise divided, if not similarly; and she sat brooding. She did not
accuse her marriage of being the first fatal step: her error was the step
into Society without the wherewithal to support her position there. Girls
of her kind, airing their wings above the sphere of their birth, are
cryingly adventuresses. As adventuresses they are treated.</p>
<p>Vain to be shrewish with the world! Rather let us turn and scold our
nature for irreflectively rushing to the cream and honey! Had she
subsisted on her small income in a country cottage, this task of writing
would have been holiday. Or better, if, as she preached to Mary Paynham,
she had apprenticed herself to some productive craft. The simplicity of
the life of labour looked beautiful. What will not look beautiful
contrasted with the fly in the web? She had chosen to be one of the flies
of life.</p>
<p>Instead of running to composition, her mind was eloquent with a sermon to
Arthur Rhodes, in Redworth's vein; more sympathetically, of course. 'For I
am not one of the lecturing Mammonites!' she could say.</p>
<p>She was far from that. Penitentially, in the thick of her disdain of the
arrogant money-Betters, she pulled out a drawer where her bank-book lay,
and observed it contemplatively; jotting down a reflection before the
dread book of facts was opened: 'Gaze on the moral path you should have
taken, you are asked for courage to commit a sanctioned suicide, by
walking back to it stripped—a skeleton self.' She sighed forth: 'But
I have no courage: I never had!' The book revealed its tale in a small
pencilled computation of the bank-clerk's; on the peccant side. Credit
presented many pages blanks. She seemed to have withdrawn from the
struggle with such a partner.</p>
<p>It signified an immediate appeal to the usurers, unless the publisher
could be persuaded, with three parts of the book in his hands, to come to
the rescue. Work! roared old Debit, the sinner turned slavedriver.</p>
<p>Diana smoothed her wrists, compressing her lips not to laugh at the
simulation of an attitude of combat. She took up her pen.</p>
<p>And strange to think, she could have flowed away at once on the stuff that
Danvers delighted to read!—wicked princes, rogue noblemen, titled
wantons, daisy and lily innocents, traitorous marriages, murders, a
gallows dangling a corpse dotted by a moon, and a woman bowed beneath. She
could have written, with the certainty that in the upper and the middle as
well as in the lower classes of the country, there would be a multitude to
read that stuff, so cordially, despite the gaps between them, are they one
in their literary tastes. And why should they not read it? Her present
mood was a craving for excitement; for incident, wild action, the
primitive machinery of our species; any amount of theatrical heroics,
pathos, and clown-gabble. A panorama of scenes came sweeping round her.</p>
<p>She was, however, harnessed to a different kind of vehicle, and had to
drag it. The sound of the house-door shutting, imagined perhaps, was a
fugitive distraction. Now to animate The Man of Two Minds!</p>
<p>He is courting, but he is burdened with the task of tasks. He has an ideal
of womanhood and of the union of couples: a delicacy extreme as his
attachment: and he must induce the lady to school herself to his ideal,
not allowing her to suspect him less devoted to her person; while she, an
exacting idol, will drink any quantity of idealization as long as he
starts it from a full acceptance of her acknowledged qualities. Diana
could once have tripped the scene along airily. She stared at the opening
sentence, a heavy bit of moralized manufacture, fit to yoke beside that on
her view of her bank-book.</p>
<p>'It has come to this—I have no head,' she cried.</p>
<p>And is our public likely to muster the slightest taste for comic analysis
that does not tumble to farce? The doubt reduced her whole MS. to a leaden
weight, composed for sinking. Percy's addiction to burlesque was a further
hindrance, for she did not perceive how her comedy could be strained to
gratify it.</p>
<p>There was a knock, and Danvers entered. 'You have apparently a liking for
late hours,' observed her mistress. 'I told you to go to bed.' 'It is Mr.
Dacier,' said Danvers. 'He wishes to see me?' 'Yes, ma'am. He apologized
for disturbing you.' 'He must have some good reason.' What could it be!
Diana's glass approved her appearance. She pressed the black swell of hair
above her temples, rather amazed, curious, inclined to a beating of the
heart.</p>
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