<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER IV </h2>
<p>At about nine o'clock at night, on every alternate Wednesday, Miss Mary
Datchet made the same resolve, that she would never again lend her rooms
for any purposes whatsoever. Being, as they were, rather large and
conveniently situated in a street mostly dedicated to offices off the
Strand, people who wished to meet, either for purposes of enjoyment, or to
discuss art, or to reform the State, had a way of suggesting that Mary had
better be asked to lend them her rooms. She always met the request with
the same frown of well-simulated annoyance, which presently dissolved in a
kind of half-humorous, half-surly shrug, as of a large dog tormented by
children who shakes his ears. She would lend her room, but only on
condition that all the arrangements were made by her. This fortnightly
meeting of a society for the free discussion of everything entailed a
great deal of moving, and pulling, and ranging of furniture against the
wall, and placing of breakable and precious things in safe places. Miss
Datchet was quite capable of lifting a kitchen table on her back, if need
were, for although well-proportioned and dressed becomingly, she had the
appearance of unusual strength and determination.</p>
<p>She was some twenty-five years of age, but looked older because she
earned, or intended to earn, her own living, and had already lost the look
of the irresponsible spectator, and taken on that of the private in the
army of workers. Her gestures seemed to have a certain purpose, the
muscles round eyes and lips were set rather firmly, as though the senses
had undergone some discipline, and were held ready for a call on them. She
had contracted two faint lines between her eyebrows, not from anxiety but
from thought, and it was quite evident that all the feminine instincts of
pleasing, soothing, and charming were crossed by others in no way peculiar
to her sex. For the rest she was brown-eyed, a little clumsy in movement,
and suggested country birth and a descent from respectable hard-working
ancestors, who had been men of faith and integrity rather than doubters or
fanatics.</p>
<p>At the end of a fairly hard day's work it was certainly something of an
effort to clear one's room, to pull the mattress off one's bed, and lay it
on the floor, to fill a pitcher with cold coffee, and to sweep a long
table clear for plates and cups and saucers, with pyramids of little pink
biscuits between them; but when these alterations were effected, Mary felt
a lightness of spirit come to her, as if she had put off the stout stuff
of her working hours and slipped over her entire being some vesture of
thin, bright silk. She knelt before the fire and looked out into the room.
The light fell softly, but with clear radiance, through shades of yellow
and blue paper, and the room, which was set with one or two sofas
resembling grassy mounds in their lack of shape, looked unusually large
and quiet. Mary was led to think of the heights of a Sussex down, and the
swelling green circle of some camp of ancient warriors. The moonlight
would be falling there so peacefully now, and she could fancy the rough
pathway of silver upon the wrinkled skin of the sea.</p>
<p>"And here we are," she said, half aloud, half satirically, yet with
evident pride, "talking about art."</p>
<p>She pulled a basket containing balls of differently colored wools and a
pair of stockings which needed darning towards her, and began to set her
fingers to work; while her mind, reflecting the lassitude of her body,
went on perversely, conjuring up visions of solitude and quiet, and she
pictured herself laying aside her knitting and walking out on to the down,
and hearing nothing but the sheep cropping the grass close to the roots,
while the shadows of the little trees moved very slightly this way and
that in the moonlight, as the breeze went through them. But she was
perfectly conscious of her present situation, and derived some pleasure
from the reflection that she could rejoice equally in solitude, and in the
presence of the many very different people who were now making their way,
by divers paths, across London to the spot where she was sitting.</p>
<p>As she ran her needle in and out of the wool, she thought of the various
stages in her own life which made her present position seem the
culmination of successive miracles. She thought of her clerical father in
his country parsonage, and of her mother's death, and of her own
determination to obtain education, and of her college life, which had
merged, not so very long ago, in the wonderful maze of London, which still
seemed to her, in spite of her constitutional level-headedness, like a
vast electric light, casting radiance upon the myriads of men and women
who crowded round it. And here she was at the very center of it all, that
center which was constantly in the minds of people in remote Canadian
forests and on the plains of India, when their thoughts turned to England.
The nine mellow strokes, by which she was now apprised of the hour, were a
message from the great clock at Westminster itself. As the last of them
died away, there was a firm knocking on her own door, and she rose and
opened it. She returned to the room, with a look of steady pleasure in her
eyes, and she was talking to Ralph Denham, who followed her.</p>
<p>"Alone?" he said, as if he were pleasantly surprised by that fact.</p>
<p>"I am sometimes alone," she replied.</p>
<p>"But you expect a great many people," he added, looking round him. "It's
like a room on the stage. Who is it to-night?"</p>
<p>"William Rodney, upon the Elizabethan use of metaphor. I expect a good
solid paper, with plenty of quotations from the classics."</p>
<p>Ralph warmed his hands at the fire, which was flapping bravely in the
grate, while Mary took up her stocking again.</p>
<p>"I suppose you are the only woman in London who darns her own stockings,"
he observed.</p>
<p>"I'm only one of a great many thousands really," she replied, "though I
must admit that I was thinking myself very remarkable when you came in.
And now that you're here I don't think myself remarkable at all. How
horrid of you! But I'm afraid you're much more remarkable than I am.
You've done much more than I've done."</p>
<p>"If that's your standard, you've nothing to be proud of," said Ralph
grimly.</p>
<p>"Well, I must reflect with Emerson that it's being and not doing that
matters," she continued.</p>
<p>"Emerson?" Ralph exclaimed, with derision. "You don't mean to say you read
Emerson?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps it wasn't Emerson; but why shouldn't I read Emerson?" she asked,
with a tinge of anxiety.</p>
<p>"There's no reason that I know of. It's the combination that's odd—books
and stockings. The combination is very odd." But it seemed to recommend
itself to him. Mary gave a little laugh, expressive of happiness, and the
particular stitches that she was now putting into her work appeared to her
to be done with singular grace and felicity. She held out the stocking and
looked at it approvingly.</p>
<p>"You always say that," she said. "I assure you it's a common
'combination,' as you call it, in the houses of the clergy. The only thing
that's odd about me is that I enjoy them both—Emerson and the
stocking."</p>
<p>A knock was heard, and Ralph exclaimed:</p>
<p>"Damn those people! I wish they weren't coming!"</p>
<p>"It's only Mr. Turner, on the floor below," said Mary, and she felt
grateful to Mr. Turner for having alarmed Ralph, and for having given a
false alarm.</p>
<p>"Will there be a crowd?" Ralph asked, after a pause.</p>
<p>"There'll be the Morrises and the Crashaws, and Dick Osborne, and
Septimus, and all that set. Katharine Hilbery is coming, by the way, so
William Rodney told me."</p>
<p>"Katharine Hilbery!" Ralph exclaimed.</p>
<p>"You know her?" Mary asked, with some surprise.</p>
<p>"I went to a tea-party at her house."</p>
<p>Mary pressed him to tell her all about it, and Ralph was not at all
unwilling to exhibit proofs of the extent of his knowledge. He described
the scene with certain additions and exaggerations which interested Mary
very much.</p>
<p>"But, in spite of what you say, I do admire her," she said. "I've only
seen her once or twice, but she seems to me to be what one calls a
'personality.'"</p>
<p>"I didn't mean to abuse her. I only felt that she wasn't very sympathetic
to me."</p>
<p>"They say she's going to marry that queer creature Rodney."</p>
<p>"Marry Rodney? Then she must be more deluded than I thought her."</p>
<p>"Now that's my door, all right," Mary exclaimed, carefully putting her
wools away, as a succession of knocks reverberated unnecessarily,
accompanied by a sound of people stamping their feet and laughing. A
moment later the room was full of young men and women, who came in with a
peculiar look of expectation, exclaimed "Oh!" when they saw Denham, and
then stood still, gaping rather foolishly.</p>
<p>The room very soon contained between twenty and thirty people, who found
seats for the most part upon the floor, occupying the mattresses, and
hunching themselves together into triangular shapes. They were all young
and some of them seemed to make a protest by their hair and dress, and
something somber and truculent in the expression of their faces, against
the more normal type, who would have passed unnoticed in an omnibus or an
underground railway. It was notable that the talk was confined to groups,
and was, at first, entirely spasmodic in character, and muttered in
undertones as if the speakers were suspicious of their fellow-guests.</p>
<p>Katharine Hilbery came in rather late, and took up a position on the
floor, with her back against the wall. She looked round quickly,
recognized about half a dozen people, to whom she nodded, but failed to
see Ralph, or, if so, had already forgotten to attach any name to him. But
in a second these heterogeneous elements were all united by the voice of
Mr. Rodney, who suddenly strode up to the table, and began very rapidly in
high-strained tones:</p>
<p>"In undertaking to speak of the Elizabethan use of metaphor in poetry—"</p>
<p>All the different heads swung slightly or steadied themselves into a
position in which they could gaze straight at the speaker's face, and the
same rather solemn expression was visible on all of them. But, at the same
time, even the faces that were most exposed to view, and therefore most
tautly under control, disclosed a sudden impulsive tremor which, unless
directly checked, would have developed into an outburst of laughter. The
first sight of Mr. Rodney was irresistibly ludicrous. He was very red in
the face, whether from the cool November night or nervousness, and every
movement, from the way he wrung his hands to the way he jerked his head to
right and left, as though a vision drew him now to the door, now to the
window, bespoke his horrible discomfort under the stare of so many eyes.
He was scrupulously well dressed, and a pearl in the center of his tie
seemed to give him a touch of aristocratic opulence. But the rather
prominent eyes and the impulsive stammering manner, which seemed to
indicate a torrent of ideas intermittently pressing for utterance and
always checked in their course by a clutch of nervousness, drew no pity,
as in the case of a more imposing personage, but a desire to laugh, which
was, however, entirely lacking in malice. Mr. Rodney was evidently so
painfully conscious of the oddity of his appearance, and his very redness
and the starts to which his body was liable gave such proof of his own
discomfort, that there was something endearing in this ridiculous
susceptibility, although most people would probably have echoed Denham's
private exclamation, "Fancy marrying a creature like that!"</p>
<p>His paper was carefully written out, but in spite of this precaution Mr.
Rodney managed to turn over two sheets instead of one, to choose the wrong
sentence where two were written together, and to discover his own
handwriting suddenly illegible. When he found himself possessed of a
coherent passage, he shook it at his audience almost aggressively, and
then fumbled for another. After a distressing search a fresh discovery
would be made, and produced in the same way, until, by means of repeated
attacks, he had stirred his audience to a degree of animation quite
remarkable in these gatherings. Whether they were stirred by his
enthusiasm for poetry or by the contortions which a human being was going
through for their benefit, it would be hard to say. At length Mr. Rodney
sat down impulsively in the middle of a sentence, and, after a pause of
bewilderment, the audience expressed its relief at being able to laugh
aloud in a decided outburst of applause.</p>
<p>Mr. Rodney acknowledged this with a wild glance round him, and, instead of
waiting to answer questions, he jumped up, thrust himself through the
seated bodies into the corner where Katharine was sitting, and exclaimed,
very audibly:</p>
<p>"Well, Katharine, I hope I've made a big enough fool of myself even for
you! It was terrible! terrible! terrible!"</p>
<p>"Hush! You must answer their questions," Katharine whispered, desiring, at
all costs, to keep him quiet. Oddly enough, when the speaker was no longer
in front of them, there seemed to be much that was suggestive in what he
had said. At any rate, a pale-faced young man with sad eyes was already on
his feet, delivering an accurately worded speech with perfect composure.
William Rodney listened with a curious lifting of his upper lip, although
his face was still quivering slightly with emotion.</p>
<p>"Idiot!" he whispered. "He's misunderstood every word I said!"</p>
<p>"Well then, answer him," Katharine whispered back.</p>
<p>"No, I shan't! They'd only laugh at me. Why did I let you persuade me that
these sort of people care for literature?" he continued.</p>
<p>There was much to be said both for and against Mr. Rodney's paper. It had
been crammed with assertions that such-and-such passages, taken liberally
from English, French, and Italian, are the supreme pearls of literature.
Further, he was fond of using metaphors which, compounded in the study,
were apt to sound either cramped or out of place as he delivered them in
fragments. Literature was a fresh garland of spring flowers, he said, in
which yew-berries and the purple nightshade mingled with the various tints
of the anemone; and somehow or other this garland encircled marble brows.
He had read very badly some very beautiful quotations. But through his
manner and his confusion of language there had emerged some passion of
feeling which, as he spoke, formed in the majority of the audience a
little picture or an idea which each now was eager to give expression to.
Most of the people there proposed to spend their lives in the practice
either of writing or painting, and merely by looking at them it could be
seen that, as they listened to Mr. Purvis first, and then to Mr.
Greenhalgh, they were seeing something done by these gentlemen to a
possession which they thought to be their own. One person after another
rose, and, as with an ill-balanced axe, attempted to hew out his
conception of art a little more clearly, and sat down with the feeling
that, for some reason which he could not grasp, his strokes had gone awry.
As they sat down they turned almost invariably to the person sitting next
them, and rectified and continued what they had just said in public.
Before long, therefore, the groups on the mattresses and the groups on the
chairs were all in communication with each other, and Mary Datchet, who
had begun to darn stockings again, stooped down and remarked to Ralph:</p>
<p>"That was what I call a first-rate paper."</p>
<p>Both of them instinctively turned their eyes in the direction of the
reader of the paper. He was lying back against the wall, with his eyes
apparently shut, and his chin sunk upon his collar. Katharine was turning
over the pages of his manuscript as if she were looking for some passage
that had particularly struck her, and had a difficulty in finding it.</p>
<p>"Let's go and tell him how much we liked it," said Mary, thus suggesting
an action which Ralph was anxious to take, though without her he would
have been too proud to do it, for he suspected that he had more interest
in Katharine than she had in him.</p>
<p>"That was a very interesting paper," Mary began, without any shyness,
seating herself on the floor opposite to Rodney and Katharine. "Will you
lend me the manuscript to read in peace?"</p>
<p>Rodney, who had opened his eyes on their approach, regarded her for a
moment in suspicious silence.</p>
<p>"Do you say that merely to disguise the fact of my ridiculous failure?" he
asked.</p>
<p>Katharine looked up from her reading with a smile.</p>
<p>"He says he doesn't mind what we think of him," she remarked. "He says we
don't care a rap for art of any kind."</p>
<p>"I asked her to pity me, and she teases me!" Rodney exclaimed.</p>
<p>"I don't intend to pity you, Mr. Rodney," Mary remarked, kindly, but
firmly. "When a paper's a failure, nobody says anything, whereas now, just
listen to them!"</p>
<p>The sound, which filled the room, with its hurry of short syllables, its
sudden pauses, and its sudden attacks, might be compared to some animal
hubbub, frantic and inarticulate.</p>
<p>"D'you think that's all about my paper?" Rodney inquired, after a moment's
attention, with a distinct brightening of expression.</p>
<p>"Of course it is," said Mary. "It was a very suggestive paper."</p>
<p>She turned to Denham for confirmation, and he corroborated her.</p>
<p>"It's the ten minutes after a paper is read that proves whether it's been
a success or not," he said. "If I were you, Rodney, I should be very
pleased with myself."</p>
<p>This commendation seemed to comfort Mr. Rodney completely, and he began to
bethink him of all the passages in his paper which deserved to be called
"suggestive."</p>
<p>"Did you agree at all, Denham, with what I said about Shakespeare's later
use of imagery? I'm afraid I didn't altogether make my meaning plain."</p>
<p>Here he gathered himself together, and by means of a series of frog-like
jerks, succeeded in bringing himself close to Denham.</p>
<p>Denham answered him with the brevity which is the result of having another
sentence in the mind to be addressed to another person. He wished to say
to Katharine: "Did you remember to get that picture glazed before your
aunt came to dinner?" but, besides having to answer Rodney, he was not
sure that the remark, with its assertion of intimacy, would not strike
Katharine as impertinent. She was listening to what some one in another
group was saying. Rodney, meanwhile, was talking about the Elizabethan
dramatists.</p>
<p>He was a curious-looking man since, upon first sight, especially if he
chanced to be talking with animation, he appeared, in some way,
ridiculous; but, next moment, in repose, his face, with its large nose,
thin cheeks and lips expressing the utmost sensibility, somehow recalled a
Roman head bound with laurel, cut upon a circle of semi-transparent
reddish stone. It had dignity and character. By profession a clerk in a
Government office, he was one of those martyred spirits to whom literature
is at once a source of divine joy and of almost intolerable irritation.
Not content to rest in their love of it, they must attempt to practise it
themselves, and they are generally endowed with very little facility in
composition. They condemn whatever they produce. Moreover, the violence of
their feelings is such that they seldom meet with adequate sympathy, and
being rendered very sensitive by their cultivated perceptions, suffer
constant slights both to their own persons and to the thing they worship.
But Rodney could never resist making trial of the sympathies of any one
who seemed favorably disposed, and Denham's praise had stimulated his very
susceptible vanity.</p>
<p>"You remember the passage just before the death of the Duchess?" he
continued, edging still closer to Denham, and adjusting his elbow and knee
in an incredibly angular combination. Here, Katharine, who had been cut
off by these maneuvers from all communication with the outer world, rose,
and seated herself upon the window-sill, where she was joined by Mary
Datchet. The two young women could thus survey the whole party. Denham
looked after them, and made as if he were tearing handfuls of grass up by
the roots from the carpet. But as it fell in accurately with his
conception of life that all one's desires were bound to be frustrated, he
concentrated his mind upon literature, and determined, philosophically, to
get what he could out of that.</p>
<p>Katharine was pleasantly excited. A variety of courses was open to her.
She knew several people slightly, and at any moment one of them might rise
from the floor and come and speak to her; on the other hand, she might
select somebody for herself, or she might strike into Rodney's discourse,
to which she was intermittently attentive. She was conscious of Mary's
body beside her, but, at the same time, the consciousness of being both of
them women made it unnecessary to speak to her. But Mary, feeling, as she
had said, that Katharine was a "personality," wished so much to speak to
her that in a few moments she did.</p>
<p>"They're exactly like a flock of sheep, aren't they?" she said, referring
to the noise that rose from the scattered bodies beneath her.</p>
<p>Katharine turned and smiled.</p>
<p>"I wonder what they're making such a noise about?" she said.</p>
<p>"The Elizabethans, I suppose."</p>
<p>"No, I don't think it's got anything to do with the Elizabethans. There!
Didn't you hear them say, 'Insurance Bill'?"</p>
<p>"I wonder why men always talk about politics?" Mary speculated. "I
suppose, if we had votes, we should, too."</p>
<p>"I dare say we should. And you spend your life in getting us votes, don't
you?"</p>
<p>"I do," said Mary, stoutly. "From ten to six every day I'm at it."</p>
<p>Katharine looked at Ralph Denham, who was now pounding his way through the
metaphysics of metaphor with Rodney, and was reminded of his talk that
Sunday afternoon. She connected him vaguely with Mary.</p>
<p>"I suppose you're one of the people who think we should all have
professions," she said, rather distantly, as if feeling her way among the
phantoms of an unknown world.</p>
<p>"Oh dear no," said Mary at once.</p>
<p>"Well, I think I do," Katharine continued, with half a sigh. "You will
always be able to say that you've done something, whereas, in a crowd like
this, I feel rather melancholy."</p>
<p>"In a crowd? Why in a crowd?" Mary asked, deepening the two lines between
her eyes, and hoisting herself nearer to Katharine upon the window-sill.</p>
<p>"Don't you see how many different things these people care about? And I
want to beat them down—I only mean," she corrected herself, "that I
want to assert myself, and it's difficult, if one hasn't a profession."</p>
<p>Mary smiled, thinking that to beat people down was a process that should
present no difficulty to Miss Katharine Hilbery. They knew each other so
slightly that the beginning of intimacy, which Katharine seemed to
initiate by talking about herself, had something solemn in it, and they
were silent, as if to decide whether to proceed or not. They tested the
ground.</p>
<p>"Ah, but I want to trample upon their prostrate bodies!" Katharine
announced, a moment later, with a laugh, as if at the train of thought
which had led her to this conclusion.</p>
<p>"One doesn't necessarily trample upon people's bodies because one runs an
office," Mary remarked.</p>
<p>"No. Perhaps not," Katharine replied. The conversation lapsed, and Mary
saw Katharine looking out into the room rather moodily with closed lips,
the desire to talk about herself or to initiate a friendship having,
apparently, left her. Mary was struck by her capacity for being thus
easily silent, and occupied with her own thoughts. It was a habit that
spoke of loneliness and a mind thinking for itself. When Katharine
remained silent Mary was slightly embarrassed.</p>
<p>"Yes, they're very like sheep," she repeated, foolishly.</p>
<p>"And yet they are very clever—at least," Katharine added, "I suppose
they have all read Webster."</p>
<p>"Surely you don't think that a proof of cleverness? I've read Webster,
I've read Ben Jonson, but I don't think myself clever—not exactly,
at least."</p>
<p>"I think you must be very clever," Katharine observed.</p>
<p>"Why? Because I run an office?"</p>
<p>"I wasn't thinking of that. I was thinking how you live alone in this
room, and have parties."</p>
<p>Mary reflected for a second.</p>
<p>"It means, chiefly, a power of being disagreeable to one's own family, I
think. I have that, perhaps. I didn't want to live at home, and I told my
father. He didn't like it.... But then I have a sister, and you haven't,
have you?"</p>
<p>"No, I haven't any sisters."</p>
<p>"You are writing a life of your grandfather?" Mary pursued.</p>
<p>Katharine seemed instantly to be confronted by some familiar thought from
which she wished to escape. She replied, "Yes, I am helping my mother," in
such a way that Mary felt herself baffled, and put back again into the
position in which she had been at the beginning of their talk. It seemed
to her that Katharine possessed a curious power of drawing near and
receding, which sent alternate emotions through her far more quickly than
was usual, and kept her in a condition of curious alertness. Desiring to
classify her, Mary bethought her of the convenient term "egoist."</p>
<p>"She's an egoist," she said to herself, and stored that word up to give to
Ralph one day when, as it would certainly fall out, they were discussing
Miss Hilbery.</p>
<p>"Heavens, what a mess there'll be to-morrow morning!" Katharine exclaimed.
"I hope you don't sleep in this room, Miss Datchet?"</p>
<p>Mary laughed.</p>
<p>"What are you laughing at?" Katharine demanded.</p>
<p>"I won't tell you."</p>
<p>"Let me guess. You were laughing because you thought I'd changed the
conversation?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Because you think—" She paused.</p>
<p>"If you want to know, I was laughing at the way you said Miss Datchet."</p>
<p>"Mary, then. Mary, Mary, Mary."</p>
<p>So saying, Katharine drew back the curtain in order, perhaps, to conceal
the momentary flush of pleasure which is caused by coming perceptibly
nearer to another person.</p>
<p>"Mary Datchet," said Mary. "It's not such an imposing name as Katharine
Hilbery, I'm afraid."</p>
<p>They both looked out of the window, first up at the hard silver moon,
stationary among a hurry of little grey-blue clouds, and then down upon
the roofs of London, with all their upright chimneys, and then below them
at the empty moonlit pavement of the street, upon which the joint of each
paving-stone was clearly marked out. Mary then saw Katharine raise her
eyes again to the moon, with a contemplative look in them, as though she
were setting that moon against the moon of other nights, held in memory.
Some one in the room behind them made a joke about star-gazing, which
destroyed their pleasure in it, and they looked back into the room again.</p>
<p>Ralph had been watching for this moment, and he instantly produced his
sentence.</p>
<p>"I wonder, Miss Hilbery, whether you remembered to get that picture
glazed?" His voice showed that the question was one that had been
prepared.</p>
<p>"Oh, you idiot!" Mary exclaimed, very nearly aloud, with a sense that
Ralph had said something very stupid. So, after three lessons in Latin
grammar, one might correct a fellow student, whose knowledge did not
embrace the ablative of "mensa."</p>
<p>"Picture—what picture?" Katharine asked. "Oh, at home, you mean—that
Sunday afternoon. Was it the day Mr. Fortescue came? Yes, I think I
remembered it."</p>
<p>The three of them stood for a moment awkwardly silent, and then Mary left
them in order to see that the great pitcher of coffee was properly
handled, for beneath all her education she preserved the anxieties of one
who owns china.</p>
<p>Ralph could think of nothing further to say; but could one have stripped
off his mask of flesh, one would have seen that his will-power was rigidly
set upon a single object—that Miss Hilbery should obey him. He
wished her to stay there until, by some measures not yet apparent to him,
he had conquered her interest. These states of mind transmit themselves
very often without the use of language, and it was evident to Katharine
that this young man had fixed his mind upon her. She instantly recalled
her first impressions of him, and saw herself again proffering family
relics. She reverted to the state of mind in which he had left her that
Sunday afternoon. She supposed that he judged her very severely. She
argued naturally that, if this were the case, the burden of the
conversation should rest with him. But she submitted so far as to stand
perfectly still, her eyes upon the opposite wall, and her lips very nearly
closed, though the desire to laugh stirred them slightly.</p>
<p>"You know the names of the stars, I suppose?" Denham remarked, and from
the tone of his voice one might have thought that he grudged Katharine the
knowledge he attributed to her.</p>
<p>She kept her voice steady with some difficulty.</p>
<p>"I know how to find the Pole star if I'm lost."</p>
<p>"I don't suppose that often happens to you."</p>
<p>"No. Nothing interesting ever happens to me," she said.</p>
<p>"I think you make a system of saying disagreeable things, Miss Hilbery,"
he broke out, again going further than he meant to. "I suppose it's one of
the characteristics of your class. They never talk seriously to their
inferiors."</p>
<p>Whether it was that they were meeting on neutral ground to-night, or
whether the carelessness of an old grey coat that Denham wore gave an ease
to his bearing that he lacked in conventional dress, Katharine certainly
felt no impulse to consider him outside the particular set in which she
lived.</p>
<p>"In what sense are you my inferior?" she asked, looking at him gravely, as
though honestly searching for his meaning. The look gave him great
pleasure. For the first time he felt himself on perfectly equal terms with
a woman whom he wished to think well of him, although he could not have
explained why her opinion of him mattered one way or another. Perhaps,
after all, he only wanted to have something of her to take home to think
about. But he was not destined to profit by his advantage.</p>
<p>"I don't think I understand what you mean," Katharine repeated, and then
she was obliged to stop and answer some one who wished to know whether she
would buy a ticket for an opera from them, at a reduction. Indeed, the
temper of the meeting was now unfavorable to separate conversation; it had
become rather debauched and hilarious, and people who scarcely knew each
other were making use of Christian names with apparent cordiality, and had
reached that kind of gay tolerance and general friendliness which human
beings in England only attain after sitting together for three hours or
so, and the first cold blast in the air of the street freezes them into
isolation once more. Cloaks were being flung round the shoulders, hats
swiftly pinned to the head; and Denham had the mortification of seeing
Katharine helped to prepare herself by the ridiculous Rodney. It was not
the convention of the meeting to say good-bye, or necessarily even to nod
to the person with whom one was talking; but, nevertheless, Denham was
disappointed by the completeness with which Katharine parted from him,
without any attempt to finish her sentence. She left with Rodney.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />