<h2><SPAN name="page6"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>II</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">When</span> the child was about ten years
old, he invited his sister, Mrs. Penniman, to come and stay with
him. The Miss Slopers had been but two in number, and both
of them had married early in life. The younger, Mrs. Almond
by name, was the wife of a prosperous merchant, and the mother of
a blooming family. She bloomed herself, indeed, and was a
comely, comfortable, reasonable woman, and a favourite with her
clever brother, who, in the matter of women, even when they were
nearly related to him, was a man of distinct preferences.
He preferred Mrs. Almond to his sister Lavinia, who had married a
poor clergyman, of a sickly constitution and a flowery style of
eloquence, and then, at the age of thirty-three, had been left a
widow, without children, without fortune—with nothing but
the memory of Mr. Penniman’s flowers of speech, a certain
vague aroma of which hovered about her own conversation.
Nevertheless he had offered her a home under his own roof, which
Lavinia accepted with the alacrity of a woman who had spent the
ten years of her married life in the town of Poughkeepsie.
The Doctor had not proposed to Mrs. Penniman to come and live
with him indefinitely; he had suggested that she should make an
asylum of his house while she looked about for unfurnished
lodgings. It is uncertain whether Mrs. Penniman ever
instituted a search for unfurnished lodgings, but it is beyond
dispute that she never found them. She settled herself with
her brother and never went away, and when Catherine was twenty
years old her Aunt Lavinia was still one of the most striking
features of her immediate <i>entourage</i>. Mrs.
Penniman’s own account of the matter was that she had
remained to take charge of her niece’s education. She
had given this account, at least, to every one but the Doctor,
who never asked for explanations which he could entertain himself
any day with inventing. Mrs. Penniman, moreover, though she
had a good deal of a certain sort of artificial assurance,
shrank, for indefinable reasons, from presenting herself to her
brother as a fountain of instruction. She had not a high
sense of humour, but she had enough to prevent her from making
this mistake; and her brother, on his side, had enough to excuse
her, in her situation, for laying him under contribution during a
considerable part of a lifetime. He therefore assented
tacitly to the proposition which Mrs. Penniman had tacitly laid
down, that it was of importance that the poor motherless girl
should have a brilliant woman near her. His assent could
only be tacit, for he had never been dazzled by his
sister’s intellectual lustre. Save when he fell in
love with Catherine Harrington, he had never been dazzled,
indeed, by any feminine characteristics whatever; and though he
was to a certain extent what is called a ladies’ doctor,
his private opinion of the more complicated sex was not
exalted. He regarded its complications as more curious than
edifying, and he had an idea of the beauty of <i>reason</i>,
which was, on the whole, meagrely gratified by what he observed
in his female patients. His wife had been a reasonable
woman, but she was a bright exception; among several things that
he was sure of, this was perhaps the principal. Such a
conviction, of course, did little either to mitigate or to
abbreviate his widowhood; and it set a limit to his recognition,
at the best, of Catherine’s possibilities and of Mrs.
Penniman’s ministrations. He, nevertheless, at the
end of six months, accepted his sister’s permanent presence
as an accomplished fact, and as Catherine grew older perceived
that there were in effect good reasons why she should have a
companion of her own imperfect sex. He was extremely polite
to Lavinia, scrupulously, formally polite; and she had never seen
him in anger but once in her life, when he lost his temper in a
theological discussion with her late husband. With her he
never discussed theology, nor, indeed, discussed anything; he
contented himself with making known, very distinctly, in the form
of a lucid ultimatum, his wishes with regard to Catherine.</p>
<p>Once, when the girl was about twelve years old, he had said to
her:</p>
<p>“Try and make a clever woman of her, Lavinia; I should
like her to be a clever woman.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman, at this, looked thoughtful a moment.
“My dear Austin,” she then inquired, “do you
think it is better to be clever than to be good?”</p>
<p>“Good for what?” asked the Doctor.
“You are good for nothing unless you are clever.”</p>
<p>From this assertion Mrs. Penniman saw no reason to dissent;
she possibly reflected that her own great use in the world was
owing to her aptitude for many things.</p>
<p>“Of course I wish Catherine to be good,” the
Doctor said next day; “but she won’t be any the less
virtuous for not being a fool. I am not afraid of her being
wicked; she will never have the salt of malice in her
character. She is as good as good bread, as the French say;
but six years hence I don’t want to have to compare her to
good bread and butter.”</p>
<p>“Are you afraid she will turn insipid? My dear
brother, it is I who supply the butter; so you needn’t
fear!” said Mrs. Penniman, who had taken in hand the
child’s accomplishments, overlooking her at the piano,
where Catherine displayed a certain talent, and going with her to
the dancing-class, where it must be confessed that she made but a
modest figure.</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman was a tall, thin, fair, rather faded woman, with
a perfectly amiable disposition, a high standard of gentility, a
taste for light literature, and a certain foolish indirectness
and obliquity of character. She was romantic, she was
sentimental, she had a passion for little secrets and
mysteries—a very innocent passion, for her secrets had
hitherto always been as unpractical as addled eggs. She was
not absolutely veracious; but this defect was of no great
consequence, for she had never had anything to conceal. She
would have liked to have a lover, and to correspond with him
under an assumed name in letters left at a shop; I am bound to
say that her imagination never carried the intimacy farther than
this. Mrs. Penniman had never had a lover, but her brother,
who was very shrewd, understood her turn of mind.
“When Catherine is about seventeen,” he said to
himself, “Lavinia will try and persuade her that some young
man with a moustache is in love with her. It will be quite
untrue; no young man, with a moustache or without, will ever be
in love with Catherine. But Lavinia will take it up, and
talk to her about it; perhaps, even, if her taste for clandestine
operations doesn’t prevail with her, she will talk to me
about it. Catherine won’t see it, and won’t
believe it, fortunately for her peace of mind; poor Catherine
isn’t romantic.”</p>
<p>She was a healthy well-grown child, without a trace of her
mother’s beauty. She was not ugly; she had simply a
plain, dull, gentle countenance. The most that had ever
been said for her was that she had a “nice” face,
and, though she was an heiress, no one had ever thought of
regarding her as a belle. Her father’s opinion of her
moral purity was abundantly justified; she was excellently,
imperturbably good; affectionate, docile, obedient, and much
addicted to speaking the truth. In her younger years she
was a good deal of a romp, and, though it is an awkward
confession to make about one’s heroine, I must add that she
was something of a glutton. She never, that I know of,
stole raisins out of the pantry; but she devoted her pocket-money
to the purchase of cream-cakes. As regards this, however, a
critical attitude would be inconsistent with a candid reference
to the early annals of any biographer. Catherine was
decidedly not clever; she was not quick with her book, nor,
indeed, with anything else. She was not abnormally
deficient, and she mustered learning enough to acquit herself
respectably in conversation with her contemporaries, among whom
it must be avowed, however, that she occupied a secondary
place. It is well known that in New York it is possible for
a young girl to occupy a primary one. Catherine, who was
extremely modest, had no desire to shine, and on most social
occasions, as they are called, you would have found her lurking
in the background. She was extremely fond of her father,
and very much afraid of him; she thought him the cleverest and
handsomest and most celebrated of men. The poor girl found
her account so completely in the exercise of her affections that
the little tremor of fear that mixed itself with her filial
passion gave the thing an extra relish rather than blunted its
edge. Her deepest desire was to please him, and her
conception of happiness was to know that she had succeeded in
pleasing him. She had never succeeded beyond a certain
point. Though, on the whole, he was very kind to her, she
was perfectly aware of this, and to go beyond the point in
question seemed to her really something to live for. What
she could not know, of course, was that she disappointed him,
though on three or four occasions the Doctor had been almost
frank about it. She grew up peacefully and prosperously,
but at the age of eighteen Mrs. Penniman had not made a clever
woman of her. Dr. Sloper would have liked to be proud of
his daughter; but there was nothing to be proud of in poor
Catherine. There was nothing, of course, to be ashamed of;
but this was not enough for the Doctor, who was a proud man and
would have enjoyed being able to think of his daughter as an
unusual girl. There would have been a fitness in her being
pretty and graceful, intelligent and distinguished; for her
mother had been the most charming woman of her little day, and as
regards her father, of course he knew his own value. He had
moments of irritation at having produced a commonplace child, and
he even went so far at times as to take a certain satisfaction in
the thought that his wife had not lived to find her out. He
was naturally slow in making this discovery himself, and it was
not till Catherine had become a young lady grown that he regarded
the matter as settled. He gave her the benefit of a great
many doubts; he was in no haste to conclude. Mrs. Penniman
frequently assured him that his daughter had a delightful nature;
but he knew how to interpret this assurance. It meant, to
his sense, that Catherine was not wise enough to discover that
her aunt was a goose—a limitation of mind that could not
fail to be agreeable to Mrs. Penniman. Both she and her
brother, however, exaggerated the young girl’s limitations;
for Catherine, though she was very fond of her aunt, and
conscious of the gratitude she owed her, regarded her without a
particle of that gentle dread which gave its stamp to her
admiration of her father. To her mind there was nothing of
the infinite about Mrs. Penniman; Catherine saw her all at once,
as it were, and was not dazzled by the apparition; whereas her
father’s great faculties seemed, as they stretched away, to
lose themselves in a sort of luminous vagueness, which indicated,
not that they stopped, but that Catherine’s own mind ceased
to follow them.</p>
<p>It must not be supposed that Dr. Sloper visited his
disappointment upon the poor girl, or ever let her suspect that
she had played him a trick. On the contrary, for fear of
being unjust to her, he did his duty with exemplary zeal, and
recognised that she was a faithful and affectionate child.
Besides, he was a philosopher; he smoked a good many cigars over
his disappointment, and in the fulness of time he got used to
it. He satisfied himself that he had expected nothing,
though, indeed, with a certain oddity of reasoning.
“I expect nothing,” he said to himself, “so
that if she gives me a surprise, it will be all clear
again. If she doesn’t, it will be no
loss.” This was about the time Catherine had reached
her eighteenth year, so that it will be seen her father had not
been precipitate. At this time she seemed not only
incapable of giving surprises; it was almost a question whether
she could have received one—she was so quiet and
irresponsive. People who expressed themselves roughly
called her stolid. But she was irresponsive because she was
shy, uncomfortably, painfully shy. This was not always
understood, and she sometimes produced an impression of
insensibility. In reality she was the softest creature in
the world.</p>
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