<h2> CHAPTER XXXIX </h2>
<p>
It will probably not surprise the reflective reader that Ralph Touchett
should have seen less of his cousin since her marriage than he had done
before that event—an event of which he took such a view as could
hardly prove a confirmation of intimacy. He had uttered his thought, as we
know, and after this had held his peace, Isabel not having invited him to
resume a discussion which marked an era in their relations. That
discussion had made a difference—the difference he feared rather
than the one he hoped. It had not chilled the girl’s zeal in carrying out
her engagement, but it had come dangerously near to spoiling a friendship.
No reference was ever again made between them to Ralph’s opinion of
Gilbert Osmond, and by surrounding this topic with a sacred silence they
managed to preserve a semblance of reciprocal frankness. But there was a
difference, as Ralph often said to himself—there was a difference.
She had not forgiven him, she never would forgive him: that was all he had
gained. She thought she had forgiven him; she believed she didn’t care;
and as she was both very generous and very proud these convictions
represented a certain reality. But whether or no the event should justify
him he would virtually have done her a wrong, and the wrong was of the
sort that women remember best. As Osmond’s wife she could never again be
his friend. If in this character she should enjoy the felicity she
expected, she would have nothing but contempt for the man who had
attempted, in advance, to undermine a blessing so dear; and if on the
other hand his warning should be justified the vow she had taken that he
should never know it would lay upon her spirit such a burden as to make
her hate him. So dismal had been, during the year that followed his
cousin’s marriage, Ralph’s prevision of the future; and if his meditations
appear morbid we must remember he was not in the bloom of health. He
consoled himself as he might by behaving (as he deemed) beautifully, and
was present at the ceremony by which Isabel was united to Mr. Osmond, and
which was performed in Florence in the month of June. He learned from his
mother that Isabel at first had thought of celebrating her nuptials in her
native land, but that as simplicity was what she chiefly desired to secure
she had finally decided, in spite of Osmond’s professed willingness to
make a journey of any length, that this characteristic would be best
embodied in their being married by the nearest clergyman in the shortest
time. The thing was done therefore at the little American chapel, on a
very hot day, in the presence only of Mrs. Touchett and her son, of Pansy
Osmond and the Countess Gemini. That severity in the proceedings of which
I just spoke was in part the result of the absence of two persons who
might have been looked for on the occasion and who would have lent it a
certain richness. Madame Merle had been invited, but Madame Merle, who was
unable to leave Rome, had written a gracious letter of excuses. Henrietta
Stackpole had not been invited, as her departure from America, announced
to Isabel by Mr. Goodwood, was in fact frustrated by the duties of her
profession; but she had sent a letter, less gracious than Madame Merle’s,
intimating that, had she been able to cross the Atlantic, she would have
been present not only as a witness but as a critic. Her return to Europe
had taken place somewhat later, and she had effected a meeting with Isabel
in the autumn, in Paris, when she had indulged—perhaps a trifle too
freely—her critical genius. Poor Osmond, who was chiefly the subject
of it, had protested so sharply that Henrietta was obliged to declare to
Isabel that she had taken a step which put a barrier between them. “It
isn’t in the least that you’ve married—it is that you have married
<i>him</i>,” she had deemed it her duty to remark; agreeing, it will be
seen, much more with Ralph Touchett than she suspected, though she had few
of his hesitations and compunctions. Henrietta’s second visit to Europe,
however, was not apparently to have been made in vain; for just at the
moment when Osmond had declared to Isabel that he really must object to
that newspaper-woman, and Isabel had answered that it seemed to her he
took Henrietta too hard, the good Mr. Bantling had appeared upon the scene
and proposed that they should take a run down to Spain. Henrietta’s
letters from Spain had proved the most acceptable she had yet published,
and there had been one in especial, dated from the Alhambra and entitled
‘Moors and Moonlight,’ which generally passed for her masterpiece. Isabel
had been secretly disappointed at her husband’s not seeing his way simply
to take the poor girl for funny. She even wondered if his sense of fun, or
of the funny—which would be his sense of humour, wouldn’t it?—were
by chance defective. Of course she herself looked at the matter as a
person whose present happiness had nothing to grudge to Henrietta’s
violated conscience. Osmond had thought their alliance a kind of
monstrosity; he couldn’t imagine what they had in common. For him, Mr.
Bantling’s fellow tourist was simply the most vulgar of women, and he had
also pronounced her the most abandoned. Against this latter clause of the
verdict Isabel had appealed with an ardour that had made him wonder afresh
at the oddity of some of his wife’s tastes. Isabel could explain it only
by saying that she liked to know people who were as different as possible
from herself. “Why then don’t you make the acquaintance of your
washerwoman?” Osmond had enquired; to which Isabel had answered that she
was afraid her washerwoman wouldn’t care for her. Now Henrietta cared so
much.
</p>
<p>
Ralph had seen nothing of her for the greater part of the two years that
had followed her marriage; the winter that formed the beginning of her
residence in Rome he had spent again at San Remo, where he had been joined
in the spring by his mother, who afterwards had gone with him to England,
to see what they were doing at the bank—an operation she couldn’t
induce him to perform. Ralph had taken a lease of his house at San Remo, a
small villa which he had occupied still another winter; but late in the
month of April of this second year he had come down to Rome. It was the
first time since her marriage that he had stood face to face with Isabel;
his desire to see her again was then of the keenest. She had written to
him from time to time, but her letters told him nothing he wanted to know.
He had asked his mother what she was making of her life, and his mother
had simply answered that she supposed she was making the best of it. Mrs.
Touchett had not the imagination that communes with the unseen, and she
now pretended to no intimacy with her niece, whom she rarely encountered.
This young woman appeared to be living in a sufficiently honourable way,
but Mrs. Touchett still remained of the opinion that her marriage had been
a shabby affair. It had given her no pleasure to think of Isabel’s
establishment, which she was sure was a very lame business. From time to
time, in Florence, she rubbed against the Countess Gemini, doing her best
always to minimise the contact; and the Countess reminded her of Osmond,
who made her think of Isabel. The Countess was less talked of in these
days; but Mrs. Touchett augured no good of that: it only proved how she
had been talked of before. There was a more direct suggestion of Isabel in
the person of Madame Merle; but Madame Merle’s relations with Mrs.
Touchett had undergone a perceptible change. Isabel’s aunt had told her,
without circumlocution, that she had played too ingenious a part; and
Madame Merle, who never quarrelled with any one, who appeared to think no
one worth it, and who had performed the miracle of living, more or less,
for several years with Mrs. Touchett and showing no symptom of irritation—Madame
Merle now took a very high tone and declared that this was an accusation
from which she couldn’t stoop to defend herself. She added, however
(without stooping), that her behaviour had been only too simple, that she
had believed only what she saw, that she saw Isabel was not eager to marry
and Osmond not eager to please (his repeated visits had been nothing; he
was boring himself to death on his hill-top and he came merely for
amusement). Isabel had kept her sentiments to herself, and her journey to
Greece and Egypt had effectually thrown dust in her companion’s eyes.
Madame Merle accepted the event—she was unprepared to think of it as
a scandal; but that she had played any part in it, double or single, was
an imputation against which she proudly protested. It was doubtless in
consequence of Mrs. Touchett’s attitude, and of the injury it offered to
habits consecrated by many charming seasons, that Madame Merle had, after
this, chosen to pass many months in England, where her credit was quite
unimpaired. Mrs. Touchett had done her a wrong; there are some things that
can’t be forgiven. But Madame Merle suffered in silence; there was always
something exquisite in her dignity.
</p>
<p>
Ralph, as I say, had wished to see for himself; but while engaged in this
pursuit he had yet felt afresh what a fool he had been to put the girl on
her guard. He had played the wrong card, and now he had lost the game. He
should see nothing, he should learn nothing; for him she would always wear
a mask. His true line would have been to profess delight in her union, so
that later, when, as Ralph phrased it, the bottom should fall out of it,
she might have the pleasure of saying to him that he had been a goose. He
would gladly have consented to pass for a goose in order to know Isabel’s
real situation. At present, however, she neither taunted him with his
fallacies nor pretended that her own confidence was justified; if she wore
a mask it completely covered her face. There was something fixed and
mechanical in the serenity painted on it; this was not an expression,
Ralph said—it was a representation, it was even an advertisement.
She had lost her child; that was a sorrow, but it was a sorrow she
scarcely spoke of; there was more to say about it than she could say to
Ralph. It belonged to the past, moreover; it had occurred six months
before and she had already laid aside the tokens of mourning. She appeared
to be leading the life of the world; Ralph heard her spoken of as having a
“charming position.” He observed that she produced the impression of being
peculiarly enviable, that it was supposed, among many people, to be a
privilege even to know her. Her house was not open to every one, and she
had an evening in the week to which people were not invited as a matter of
course. She lived with a certain magnificence, but you needed to be a
member of her circle to perceive it; for there was nothing to gape at,
nothing to criticise, nothing even to admire, in the daily proceedings of
Mr. and Mrs. Osmond. Ralph, in all this, recognised the hand of the
master; for he knew that Isabel had no faculty for producing studied
impressions. She struck him as having a great love of movement, of gaiety,
of late hours, of long rides, of fatigue; an eagerness to be entertained,
to be interested, even to be bored, to make acquaintances, to see people
who were talked about, to explore the neighbourhood of Rome, to enter into
relation with certain of the mustiest relics of its old society. In all
this there was much less discrimination than in that desire for
comprehensiveness of development on which he had been used to exercise his
wit. There was a kind of violence in some of her impulses, of crudity in
some of her experiments, which took him by surprise: it seemed to him that
she even spoke faster, moved faster, breathed faster, than before her
marriage. Certainly she had fallen into exaggerations—she who used
to care so much for the pure truth; and whereas of old she had a great
delight in good-humoured argument, in intellectual play (she never looked
so charming as when in the genial heat of discussion she received a
crushing blow full in the face and brushed it away as a feather), she
appeared now to think there was nothing worth people’s either differing
about or agreeing upon. Of old she had been curious, and now she was
indifferent, and yet in spite of her indifference her activity was greater
than ever. Slender still, but lovelier than before, she had gained no
great maturity of aspect; yet there was an amplitude and a brilliancy in
her personal arrangements that gave a touch of insolence to her beauty.
Poor human-hearted Isabel, what perversity had bitten her? Her light step
drew a mass of drapery behind it; her intelligent head sustained a majesty
of ornament. The free, keen girl had become quite another person; what he
saw was the fine lady who was supposed to represent something. What did
Isabel represent? Ralph asked himself; and he could only answer by saying
that she represented Gilbert Osmond. “Good heavens, what a function!” he
then woefully exclaimed. He was lost in wonder at the mystery of things.
</p>
<p>
He recognised Osmond, as I say; he recognised him at every turn. He saw
how he kept all things within limits; how he adjusted, regulated, animated
their manner of life. Osmond was in his element; at last he had material
to work with. He always had an eye to effect, and his effects were deeply
calculated. They were produced by no vulgar means, but the motive was as
vulgar as the art was great. To surround his interior with a sort of
invidious sanctity, to tantalise society with a sense of exclusion, to
make people believe his house was different from every other, to impart to
the face that he presented to the world a cold originality—this was
the ingenious effort of the personage to whom Isabel had attributed a
superior morality. “He works with superior material,” Ralph said to
himself; “it’s rich abundance compared with his former resources.” Ralph
was a clever man; but Ralph had never—to his own sense—been so
clever as when he observed, <i>in petto</i>, that under the guise of
caring only for intrinsic values Osmond lived exclusively for the world.
Far from being its master as he pretended to be, he was its very humble
servant, and the degree of its attention was his only measure of success.
He lived with his eye on it from morning till night, and the world was so
stupid it never suspected the trick. Everything he did was pose—pose
so subtly considered that if one were not on the lookout one mistook it
for impulse. Ralph had never met a man who lived so much in the land of
consideration. His tastes, his studies, his accomplishments, his
collections, were all for a purpose. His life on his hill-top at Florence
had been the conscious attitude of years. His solitude, his ennui, his
love for his daughter, his good manners, his bad manners, were so many
features of a mental image constantly present to him as a model of
impertinence and mystification. His ambition was not to please the world,
but to please himself by exciting the world’s curiosity and then declining
to satisfy it. It had made him feel great, ever, to play the world a
trick. The thing he had done in his life most directly to please himself
was his marrying Miss Archer; though in this case indeed the gullible
world was in a manner embodied in poor Isabel, who had been mystified to
the top of her bent. Ralph of course found a fitness in being consistent;
he had embraced a creed, and as he had suffered for it he could not in
honour forsake it. I give this little sketch of its articles for what they
may at the time have been worth. It was certain that he was very skilful
in fitting the facts to his theory—even the fact that during the
month he spent in Rome at this period the husband of the woman he loved
appeared to regard him not in the least as an enemy.
</p>
<p>
For Gilbert Osmond Ralph had not now that importance. It was not that he
had the importance of a friend; it was rather that he had none at all. He
was Isabel’s cousin and he was rather unpleasantly ill—it was on
this basis that Osmond treated with him. He made the proper enquiries,
asked about his health, about Mrs. Touchett, about his opinion of winter
climates, whether he were comfortable at his hotel. He addressed him, on
the few occasions of their meeting, not a word that was not necessary; but
his manner had always the urbanity proper to conscious success in the
presence of conscious failure. For all this, Ralph had had, toward the
end, a sharp inward vision of Osmond’s making it of small ease to his wife
that she should continue to receive Mr. Touchett. He was not jealous—he
had not that excuse; no one could be jealous of Ralph. But he made Isabel
pay for her old-time kindness, of which so much was still left; and as
Ralph had no idea of her paying too much, so when his suspicion had become
sharp, he had taken himself off. In doing so he had deprived Isabel of a
very interesting occupation: she had been constantly wondering what fine
principle was keeping him alive. She had decided that it was his love of
conversation; his conversation had been better than ever. He had given up
walking; he was no longer a humorous stroller. He sat all day in a chair—almost
any chair would serve, and was so dependent on what you would do for him
that, had not his talk been highly contemplative, you might have thought
he was blind. The reader already knows more about him than Isabel was ever
to know, and the reader may therefore be given the key to the mystery.
What kept Ralph alive was simply the fact that he had not yet seen enough
of the person in the world in whom he was most interested: he was not yet
satisfied. There was more to come; he couldn’t make up his mind to lose
that. He wanted to see what she would make of her husband—or what
her husband would make of her. This was only the first act of the drama,
and he was determined to sit out the performance. His determination had
held good; it had kept him going some eighteen months more, till the time
of his return to Rome with Lord Warburton. It had given him indeed such an
air of intending to live indefinitely that Mrs. Touchett, though more
accessible to confusions of thought in the matter of this strange,
unremunerative—and unremunerated—son of hers than she had ever
been before, had, as we have learned, not scrupled to embark for a distant
land. If Ralph had been kept alive by suspense it was with a good deal of
the same emotion—the excitement of wondering in what state she
should find him—that Isabel mounted to his apartment the day after
Lord Warburton had notified her of his arrival in Rome.
</p>
<p>
She spent an hour with him; it was the first of several visits. Gilbert
Osmond called on him punctually, and on their sending their carriage for
him Ralph came more than once to Palazzo Roccanera. A fortnight elapsed,
at the end of which Ralph announced to Lord Warburton that he thought
after all he wouldn’t go to Sicily. The two men had been dining together
after a day spent by the latter in ranging about the Campagna. They had
left the table, and Warburton, before the chimney, was lighting a cigar,
which he instantly removed from his lips.
</p>
<p>
“Won’t go to Sicily? Where then will you go?”
</p>
<p>
“Well, I guess I won’t go anywhere,” said Ralph, from the sofa, all
shamelessly.
</p>
<p>
“Do you mean you’ll return to England?”
</p>
<p>
“Oh dear no; I’ll stay in Rome.”
</p>
<p>
“Rome won’t do for you. Rome’s not warm enough.”
</p>
<p>
“It will have to do. I’ll make it do. See how well I’ve been.”
</p>
<p>
Lord Warburton looked at him a while, puffing a cigar and as if trying to
see it. “You’ve been better than you were on the journey, certainly. I
wonder how you lived through that. But I don’t understand your condition.
I recommend you to try Sicily.”
</p>
<p>
“I can’t try,” said poor Ralph. “I’ve done trying. I can’t move further. I
can’t face that journey. Fancy me between Scylla and Charybdis! I don’t
want to die on the Sicilian plains—to be snatched away, like
Proserpine in the same locality, to the Plutonian shades.”
</p>
<p>
“What the deuce then did you come for?” his lordship enquired.
</p>
<p>
“Because the idea took me. I see it won’t do. It really doesn’t matter
where I am now. I’ve exhausted all remedies, I’ve swallowed all climates.
As I’m here I’ll stay. I haven’t a single cousin in Sicily—much less
a married one.”
</p>
<p>
“Your cousin’s certainly an inducement. But what does the doctor say?”
</p>
<p>
“I haven’t asked him, and I don’t care a fig. If I die here Mrs. Osmond
will bury me. But I shall not die here.”
</p>
<p>
“I hope not.” Lord Warburton continued to smoke reflectively. “Well, I
must say,” he resumed, “for myself I’m very glad you don’t insist on
Sicily. I had a horror of that journey.”
</p>
<p>
“Ah, but for you it needn’t have mattered. I had no idea of dragging you
in my train.”
</p>
<p>
“I certainly didn’t mean to let you go alone.”
</p>
<p>
“My dear Warburton, I never expected you to come further than this,” Ralph
cried.
</p>
<p>
“I should have gone with you and seen you settled,” said Lord Warburton.
</p>
<p>
“You’re a very good Christian. You’re a very kind man.”
</p>
<p>
“Then I should have come back here.”
</p>
<p>
“And then you’d have gone to England.”
</p>
<p>
“No, no; I should have stayed.”
</p>
<p>
“Well,” said Ralph, “if that’s what we are both up to, I don’t see where
Sicily comes in!”
</p>
<p>
His companion was silent; he sat staring at the fire. At last, looking up,
“I say, tell me this,” he broke out; “did you really mean to go to Sicily
when we started?”
</p>
<p>
“<i>Ah, vous m’en demandez trop!</i> Let me put a question first. Did you
come with me quite—platonically?”
</p>
<p>
“I don’t know what you mean by that. I wanted to come abroad.”
</p>
<p>
“I suspect we’ve each been playing our little game.”
</p>
<p>
“Speak for yourself. I made no secret whatever of my desiring to be here a
while.”
</p>
<p>
“Yes, I remember you said you wished to see the Minister of Foreign
Affairs.”
</p>
<p>
“I’ve seen him three times. He’s very amusing.”
</p>
<p>
“I think you’ve forgotten what you came for,” said Ralph.
</p>
<p>
“Perhaps I have,” his companion answered rather gravely.
</p>
<p>
These two were gentlemen of a race which is not distinguished by the
absence of reserve, and they had travelled together from London to Rome
without an allusion to matters that were uppermost in the mind of each.
There was an old subject they had once discussed, but it had lost its
recognised place in their attention, and even after their arrival in Rome,
where many things led back to it, they had kept the same half-diffident,
half-confident silence.
</p>
<p>
“I recommend you to get the doctor’s consent, all the same,” Lord
Warburton went on, abruptly, after an interval.
</p>
<p>
“The doctor’s consent will spoil it. I never have it when I can help it.”
</p>
<p>
“What then does Mrs. Osmond think?” Ralph’s friend demanded. “I’ve not
told her. She’ll probably say that Rome’s too cold and even offer to go
with me to Catania. She’s capable of that.”
</p>
<p>
“In your place I should like it.”
</p>
<p>
“Her husband won’t like it.”
</p>
<p>
“Ah well, I can fancy that; though it seems to me you’re not bound to mind
his likings. They’re his affair.”
</p>
<p>
“I don’t want to make any more trouble between them,” said Ralph.
</p>
<p>
“Is there so much already?”
</p>
<p>
“There’s complete preparation for it. Her going off with me would make the
explosion. Osmond isn’t fond of his wife’s cousin.”
</p>
<p>
“Then of course he’d make a row. But won’t he make a row if you stop
here?”
</p>
<p>
“That’s what I want to see. He made one the last time I was in Rome, and
then I thought it my duty to disappear. Now I think it’s my duty to stop
and defend her.”
</p>
<p>
“My dear Touchett, your defensive powers—!” Lord Warburton began
with a smile. But he saw something in his companion’s face that checked
him. “Your duty, in these premises, seems to me rather a nice question,”
he observed instead.
</p>
<p>
Ralph for a short time answered nothing. “It’s true that my defensive
powers are small,” he returned at last; “but as my aggressive ones are
still smaller Osmond may after all not think me worth his gunpowder. At
any rate,” he added, “there are things I’m curious to see.”
</p>
<p>
“You’re sacrificing your health to your curiosity then?”
</p>
<p>
“I’m not much interested in my health, and I’m deeply interested in Mrs.
Osmond.”
</p>
<p>
“So am I. But not as I once was,” Lord Warburton added quickly. This was
one of the allusions he had not hitherto found occasion to make.
</p>
<p>
“Does she strike you as very happy?” Ralph enquired, emboldened by this
confidence.
</p>
<p>
“Well, I don’t know; I’ve hardly thought. She told me the other night she
was happy.”
</p>
<p>
“Ah, she told <i>you</i>, of course,” Ralph exclaimed, smiling.
</p>
<p>
“I don’t know that. It seems to me I was rather the sort of person she
might have complained to.”
</p>
<p>
“Complained? She’ll never complain. She has done it—what she <i>has</i>
done—and she knows it. She’ll complain to you least of all. She’s
very careful.”
</p>
<p>
“She needn’t be. I don’t mean to make love to her again.”
</p>
<p>
“I’m delighted to hear it. There can be no doubt at least of <i>your</i>
duty.”
</p>
<p>
“Ah no,” said Lord Warburton gravely; “none!”
</p>
<p>
“Permit me to ask,” Ralph went on, “whether it’s to bring out the fact
that you don’t mean to make love to her that you’re so very civil to the
little girl?”
</p>
<p>
Lord Warburton gave a slight start; he got up and stood before the fire,
looking at it hard. “Does that strike you as very ridiculous?”
</p>
<p>
“Ridiculous? Not in the least, if you really like her.”
</p>
<p>
“I think her a delightful little person. I don’t know when a girl of that
age has pleased me more.”
</p>
<p>
“She’s a charming creature. Ah, she at least is genuine.”
</p>
<p>
“Of course there’s the difference in our ages—more than twenty
years.”
</p>
<p>
“My dear Warburton,” said Ralph, “are you serious?”
</p>
<p>
“Perfectly serious—as far as I’ve got.”
</p>
<p>
“I’m very glad. And, heaven help us,” cried Ralph, “how cheered-up old
Osmond will be!”
</p>
<p>
His companion frowned. “I say, don’t spoil it. I shouldn’t propose for his
daughter to please <i>him</i>.”
</p>
<p>
“He’ll have the perversity to be pleased all the same.”
</p>
<p>
“He’s not so fond of me as that,” said his lordship.
</p>
<p>
“As that? My dear Warburton, the drawback of your position is that people
needn’t be fond of you at all to wish to be connected with you. Now, with
me in such a case, I should have the happy confidence that they loved me.”
</p>
<p>
Lord Warburton seemed scarcely in the mood for doing justice to general
axioms—he was thinking of a special case. “Do you judge she’ll be
pleased?”
</p>
<p>
“The girl herself? Delighted, surely.”
</p>
<p>
“No, no; I mean Mrs. Osmond.”
</p>
<p>
Ralph looked at him a moment. “My dear fellow, what has she to do with
it?”
</p>
<p>
“Whatever she chooses. She’s very fond of Pansy.”
</p>
<p>
“Very true—very true.” And Ralph slowly got up. “It’s an interesting
question—how far her fondness for Pansy will carry her.” He stood
there a moment with his hands in his pockets and rather a clouded brow. “I
hope, you know, that you’re very—very sure. The deuce!” he broke
off. “I don’t know how to say it.”
</p>
<p>
“Yes, you do; you know how to say everything.”
</p>
<p>
“Well, it’s awkward. I hope you’re sure that among Miss Osmond’s merits
her being—a—so near her stepmother isn’t a leading one?”
</p>
<p>
“Good heavens, Touchett!” cried Lord Warburton angrily, “for what do you
take me?”
</p>
<p>
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