<h2><SPAN name="page82"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>X</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Poor</span> Adelaide’s silence was
fully explained later—practically explained when in June,
returning to London, I was honoured by this admirable woman with
an early visit. As soon as she arrived I guessed
everything, and as soon as she told me that darling Ruth had been
in her house nearly a month I had my question ready.
“What in the name of maidenly modesty is she staying in
England for?”</p>
<p>“Because she loves me so!” cried Adelaide
gaily. But she hadn’t come to see me only to tell me
Miss Anvoy loved her: that was quite sufficiently established,
and what was much more to the point was that Mr. Gravener had now
raised an objection to it. He had protested at least
against her being at Wimbledon, where in the innocence of his
heart he had originally brought her himself; he called on her to
put an end to their engagement in the only proper, the only happy
manner.</p>
<p>“And why in the world doesn’t she do do?” I
asked.</p>
<p>Adelaide had a pause. “She says you
know.”</p>
<p>Then on my also hesitating she added: “A condition he
makes.”</p>
<p>“The Coxon Fund?” I panted.</p>
<p>“He has mentioned to her his having told you about
it.”</p>
<p>“Ah but so little! Do you mean she has accepted
the trust?”</p>
<p>“In the most splendid spirit—as a duty about which
there can be no two opinions.” To which my friend
added: “Of course she’s thinking of Mr.
Saltram.”</p>
<p>I gave a quick cry at this, which, in its violence, made my
visitor turn pale. “How very awful!”</p>
<p>“Awful?”</p>
<p>“Why, to have anything to do with such an idea
one’s self.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure <i>you</i> needn’t!” and
Mrs. Mulville tossed her head.</p>
<p>“He isn’t good enough!” I went on; to which
she opposed a sound almost as contentious as my own had
been. This made me, with genuine immediate horror, exclaim:
“You haven’t influenced her, I hope!” and my
emphasis brought back the blood with a rush to poor
Adelaide’s face. She declared while she
blushed—for I had frightened her again—that she had
never influenced anybody and that the girl had only seen and
heard and judged for herself. <i>He</i> had influenced her,
if I would, as he did every one who had a soul: that word, as we
knew, even expressed feebly the power of the things he said to
haunt the mind. How could she, Adelaide, help it if Miss
Anvoy’s mind was haunted? I demanded with a groan
what right a pretty girl engaged to a rising M.P. had to
<i>have</i> a mind; but the only explanation my bewildered friend
could give me was that she was so clever. She regarded Mr.
Saltram naturally as a tremendous force for good. She was
intelligent enough to understand him and generous enough to
admire.</p>
<p>“She’s many things enough, but is she, among them,
rich enough?” I demanded. “Rich enough, I mean,
to sacrifice such a lot of good money?”</p>
<p>“That’s for herself to judge. Besides,
it’s not her own money; she doesn’t in the least
consider it so.”</p>
<p>“And Gravener does, if not <i>his</i> own; and
that’s the whole difficulty?”</p>
<p>“The difficulty that brought her back, yes: she had
absolutely to see her poor aunt’s solicitor.
It’s clear that by Lady Coxon’s will she may have the
money, but it’s still clearer to her conscience that the
original condition, definite, intensely implied on her
uncle’s part, is attached to the use of it. She can
only take one view of it. It’s for the Endowment or
it’s for nothing.”</p>
<p>“The Endowment,” I permitted myself to observe,
“is a conception superficially sublime, but fundamentally
ridiculous.”</p>
<p>“Are you repeating Mr. Gravener’s words?”
Adelaide asked.</p>
<p>“Possibly, though I’ve not seen him for
months. It’s simply the way it strikes me too.
It’s an old wife’s tale. Gravener made some
reference to the legal aspect, but such an absurdly loose
arrangement has <i>no</i> legal aspect.”</p>
<p>“Ruth doesn’t insist on that,” said Mrs.
Mulville; “and it’s, for her, exactly this technical
weakness that constitutes the force of the moral
obligation.”</p>
<p>“Are you repeating <i>her</i> words?” I
enquired. I forget what else Adelaide said, but she said
she was magnificent. I thought of George Gravener
confronted with such magnificence as that, and I asked what could
have made two such persons ever suppose they understood each
other. Mrs. Mulville assured me the girl loved him as such
a woman could love and that she suffered as such a woman could
suffer. Nevertheless she wanted to see <i>me</i>. At
this I sprang up with a groan. “Oh I’m so
sorry!—when?” Small though her sense of humour,
I think Adelaide laughed at my sequence. We discussed the
day, the nearest it would be convenient I should come out; but
before she went I asked my visitor how long she had been
acquainted with these prodigies.</p>
<p>“For several weeks, but I was pledged to
secrecy.”</p>
<p>“And that’s why you didn’t write?”</p>
<p>“I couldn’t very well tell you she was with me
without telling you that no time had even yet been fixed for her
marriage. And I couldn’t very well tell you as much
as that without telling you what I knew of the reason of
it. It was not till a day or two ago,” Mrs. Mulville
went on, “that she asked me to ask you if you
wouldn’t come and see her. Then at last she spoke of
your knowing about the idea of the Endowment.”</p>
<p>I turned this over. “Why on earth does she want to
see me?”</p>
<p>“To talk with you, naturally, about Mr.
Saltram.”</p>
<p>“As a subject for the prize?” This was
hugely obvious, and I presently returned: “I think
I’ll sail to-morrow for Australia.”</p>
<p>“Well then—sail!” said Mrs. Mulville,
getting up.</p>
<p>But I frivolously, continued. “On Thursday at
five, we said?” The appointment was made definite and
I enquired how, all this time, the unconscious candidate had
carried himself.</p>
<p>“In perfection, really, by the happiest of chances: he
has positively been a dear. And then, as to what we revere
him for, in the most wonderful form. His very
highest—pure celestial light. You <i>won’t</i>
do him an ill turn?” Adelaide pleaded at the door.</p>
<p>“What danger can equal for him the danger to which
he’s exposed from himself?” I asked.
“Look out sharp, if he has lately been too prim.
He’ll presently take a day off, treat us to some exhibition
that will make an Endowment a scandal.”</p>
<p>“A scandal?” Mrs. Mulville dolorously echoed.</p>
<p>“Is Miss Anvoy prepared for that?”</p>
<p>My visitor, for a moment, screwed her parasol into my
carpet. “He grows bigger every day.”</p>
<p>“So do you!” I laughed as she went off.</p>
<p>That girl at Wimbledon, on the Thursday afternoon, more than
justified my apprehensions. I recognised fully now the
cause of the agitation she had produced in me from the
first—the faint foreknowledge that there was something very
stiff I should have to do for her. I felt more than ever
committed to my fate as, standing before her in the big
drawing-room where they had tactfully left us to ourselves, I
tried with a smile to string together the pearls of lucidity
which, from her chair, she successively tossed me. Pale and
bright, in her monotonous mourning, she was an image of
intelligent purpose, of the passion of duty; but I asked myself
whether any girl had ever had so charming an instinct as that
which permitted her to laugh out, as for the joy of her
difficulty, into the priggish old room. This remarkable
young woman could be earnest without being solemn, and at moments
when I ought doubtless to have cursed her obstinacy I found
myself watching the unstudied play of her eyebrows or the
recurrence of a singularly intense whiteness produced by the
parting of her lips. These aberrations, I hasten to add,
didn’t prevent my learning soon enough why she had wished
to see me. Her reason for this was as distinct as her
beauty: it was to make me explain what I had meant, on the
occasion of our first meeting, by Mr. Saltram’s want of
dignity. It wasn’t that she couldn’t imagine,
but she desired it there from my lips. What she really
desired of course was to know whether there was worse about him
than what she had found out for herself. She hadn’t
been a month so much in the house with him without discovering
that he wasn’t a man of monumental bronze. He was
like a jelly minus its mould, he had to be embanked; and that was
precisely the source of her interest in him and the ground of her
project. She put her project boldly before me: there it
stood in its preposterous beauty. She was as willing to
take the humorous view of it as I could be: the only difference
was that for her the humorous view of a thing wasn’t
necessarily prohibitive, wasn’t paralysing.</p>
<p>Moreover she professed that she couldn’t discuss with me
the primary question—the moral obligation: that was in her
own breast. There were things she couldn’t go
into—injunctions, impressions she had received. They
were a part of the closest intimacy of her intercourse with her
aunt, they were absolutely clear to her; and on questions of
delicacy, the interpretation of a fidelity, of a promise, one had
always in the last resort to make up one’s mind for
one’s self. It was the idea of the application to the
particular case, such a splendid one at last, that troubled her,
and she admitted that it stirred very deep things. She
didn’t pretend that such a responsibility was a simple
matter; if it <i>had</i> been she wouldn’t have attempted
to saddle me with any portion of it. The Mulvilles were
sympathy itself, but were they absolutely candid? Could
they indeed be, in their position—would it even have been
to be desired? Yes, she had sent for me to ask no less than
that of me—whether there was anything dreadful kept
back. She made no allusion whatever to George
Gravener—I thought her silence the only good taste and her
gaiety perhaps a part of the very anxiety of that discretion, the
effect of a determination that people shouldn’t know from
herself that her relations with the man she was to marry were
strained. All the weight, however, that she left me to
throw was a sufficient implication of the weight <i>he</i> had
thrown in vain. Oh she knew the question of character was
immense, and that one couldn’t entertain any plan for
making merit comfortable without running the gauntlet of that
terrible procession of interrogation-points which, like a young
ladies’ school out for a walk, hooked their uniform noses
at the tail of governess Conduct. But were we absolutely to
hold that there was never, never, never an exception, never,
never, never an occasion for liberal acceptance, for clever
charity, for suspended pedantry—for letting one side, in
short, outbalance another? When Miss Anvoy threw off this
appeal I could have embraced her for so delightfully emphasising
her unlikeness to Mrs. Saltram. “Why not have the
courage of one’s forgiveness,” she asked, “as
well as the enthusiasm of one’s adhesion?”</p>
<p>“Seeing how wonderfully you’ve threshed the whole
thing out,” I evasively replied, “gives me an
extraordinary notion of the point your enthusiasm has
reached.”</p>
<p>She considered this remark an instant with her eyes on mine,
and I divined that it struck her I might possibly intend it as a
reference to some personal subjection to our fat philosopher, to
some aberration of sensibility, some perversion of taste.
At least I couldn’t interpret otherwise the sudden flash
that came into her face. Such a manifestation, as the
result of any word of mine, embarrassed me; but while I was
thinking how to reassure her the flush passed away in a smile of
exquisite good nature. “Oh you see one forgets so
wonderfully how one dislikes him!” she said; and if her
tone simply extinguished his strange figure with the brush of its
compassion, it also rings in my ear to-day as the purest of all
our praises. But with what quick response of fine pity such
a relegation of the man himself made me privately sigh “Ah
poor Saltram!” She instantly, with this, took the
measure of all I didn’t believe, and it enabled her to go
on: “What can one do when a person has given such a lift to
one’s interest in life?”</p>
<p>“Yes, what can one do?” If I struck her as a
little vague it was because I was thinking of another
person. I indulged in another inarticulate
murmur—“Poor George Gravener!” What had
become of the lift <i>he</i> had given that interest? Later
on I made up my mind that she was sore and stricken at the
appearance he presented of wanting the miserable money.
This was the hidden reason of her alienation. The probable
sincerity, in spite of the illiberality, of his scruples about
the particular use of it under discussion didn’t efface the
ugliness of his demand that they should buy a good house with
it. Then, as for <i>his</i> alienation, he didn’t,
pardonably enough, grasp the lift Frank Saltram had given her
interest in life. If a mere spectator could ask that last
question, with what rage in his heart the man himself
might! He wasn’t, like her, I was to see, too proud
to show me why he was disappointed.</p>
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