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<h2> CHAPTER XXIII. RECORDS A VISIT TO DIANA FROM ONE OF THE WORLD'S GOOD WOMEN </h2>
<p>Pure disengagement of contemplativeness had selected. Percy Dacier as the
model of her YOUNG MINISTER OF STATE, Diana supposed. Could she otherwise
have dared to sketch him? She certainly would not have done it now.</p>
<p>That was a reflection similar to what is entertained by one who has
dropped from a precipice to the midway ledge over the abyss, where caution
of the whole sensitive being is required for simple self-preservation. How
could she have been induced to study and portray him! It seemed a form of
dementia.</p>
<p>She thought this while imagining the world to be interrogating her. When
she interrogated herself, she flew to Lugano and her celestial Salvatore,
that she might be defended from a charge of the dreadful weakness of her
sex. Surely she there had proof of her capacity for pure disengagement.
Even in recollection the springs of spiritual happiness renewed the
bubbling crystal play. She believed that a divineness had wakened in her
there, to strengthen her to the end, ward her from any complicity in her
sex's culprit blushing.</p>
<p>Dacier's cry of her name was the cause, she chose to think, of the
excessive circumspection she must henceforth practise; precariously
footing, embracing hardest earth, the plainest rules, to get back to
safety. Not that she was personally endangered, or at least not
spiritually; she could always fly in soul to her heights. But she had now
to be on guard, constantly in the fencing attitude. And watchful of
herself as well. That was admitted with a ready frankness, to save it from
being a necessitated and painful confession: for the
voluntary-acquiescence, if it involved her in her sex, claimed an
individual exemption. 'Women are women, and I am a woman but I am I, and
unlike them: I see we are weak, and weakness tempts: in owning the
prudence of guarded steps, I am armed. It is by dissembling, feigning
immunity, that we are imperilled.' She would have phrased it so, with some
anger at her feminine nature as well as at the subjection forced on her by
circumstances.</p>
<p>Besides, her position and Percy Dacier's threw the fancied danger into
remoteness. The world was her stepmother, vigilant to become her judge;
and the world was his taskmaster, hopeful of him, yet able to strike him
down for an offence. She saw their situation as he did. The course of
folly must be bravely taken, if taken at all: Disguise degraded her to the
reptiles.</p>
<p>This was faced. Consequently there was no fear of it.</p>
<p>She had very easily proved that she had skill and self-possession to keep
him rational, and therefore they could continue to meet. A little outburst
of frenzy to a reputably handsome woman could be treated as the froth of a
passing wave. Men have the trick, infants their fevers.</p>
<p>Diana's days were spent in reasoning. Her nights were not so tuneable to
the superior mind. When asleep she was the sport of elves that danced her
into tangles too deliciously unravelled, and left new problems for the
wise-eyed and anxious morning. She solved them with the thought that in
sleep it was the mere ordinary woman who fell a prey to her tormentors;
awake, she dispersed the swarm, her sky was clear. Gradually the
persecution ceased, thanks to her active pen.</p>
<p>A letter from her legal adviser, old Mr. Braddock, informed her that no
grounds existed for apprehending marital annoyance, and late in May her
household had resumed its customary round.</p>
<p>She examined her accounts. The Debit and Credit sides presented much of
the appearance of male and female in our jog-trot civilization. They
matched middling well; with rather too marked a tendency to strain the
leash and run frolic on the part of friend Debit (the wanton male), which
deepened the blush of the comparison. Her father had noticed the same
funny thing in his effort to balance his tugging accounts: 'Now then for a
look at Man and Wife': except that he made Debit stand for the portly
frisky female, Credit the decorous and contracted other half, a prim
gentleman of a constitutionally lean habit of body, remonstrating with
her. 'You seem to forget that we are married, my dear, and must walk in
step or bundle into the Bench,' Dan Merion used to say.</p>
<p>Diana had not so much to rebuke in Mr. Debit; or not at the first
reckoning. But his ways were curious. She grew distrustful of him, after
dismissing him with a quiet admonition and discovering a series of ambush
bills, which he must have been aware of when he was allowed to pass as an
honourable citizen. His answer to her reproaches pleaded the
necessitousness of his purchases and expenditure: a capital plea; and Mrs.
Credit was requested by him, in a courteous manner, to drive her pen the
faster, so that she might wax to a corresponding size and satisfy the
world's idea of fitness in couples. She would have costly furniture,
because it pleased her taste; and a French cook, for a like reason, in
justice to her guests; and trained servants; and her tribe of pensioners;
flowers she would have profuse and fresh at her windows and over the
rooms; and the pictures and engravings on the walls were (always for the
good reason mentioned) choice ones; and she had a love of old lace, she
loved colours as she loved cheerfulness, and silks, and satin hangings,
Indian ivory carvings, countless mirrors, Oriental woods, chairs and desks
with some feature or a flourish in them, delicate tables with antelope
legs, of approved workmanship in the chronology of European upholstery,
and marble clocks of cunning device to symbol Time, mantelpiece
decorations, illustrated editions of her favourite authors; her
bed-chambers, too, gave the nest for sleep a dainty cosiness in aerial
draperies. Hence, more or less directly, the peccant bills. Credit was
reduced to reckon to a nicety the amount she could rely on positively: her
fixed income from her investments and the letting of The Crossways: the
days of half-yearly payments that would magnify her to some proportions
beside the alarming growth of her partner, who was proud of it, and
referred her to the treasures she could summon with her pen, at a murmur
of dissatisfaction. His compliments were sincere; they were seductive. He
assured her that she had struck a rich vein in an inexhaustible mine; by
writing only a very little faster she could double her income; counting a
broader popularity, treble it; and so on a tide of success down the
widening river to a sea sheer golden. Behold how it sparkles! Are we then
to stint our winged hours of youth for want of courage to realize the
riches we can command? Debit was eloquent, he was unanswerable.</p>
<p>Another calculator, an accustomed and lamentably-scrupulous arithmetician,
had been at work for some time upon a speculative summing of the outlay of
Diana's establishment, as to its chances of swamping the income. Redworth
could guess pretty closely the cost of a house hold, if his care for the
holder set him venturing on aver ages. He knew nothing of her ten per
cent. investment and considered her fixed income a beggarly regiment to
marshal against the invader. He fancied however, in his ignorance of
literary profits, that a popular writer, selling several editions, had
come to an El Dorado. There was the mine. It required a diligent worker.
Diana was often struck by hearing Redworth ask her when her next book
might be expected. He appeared to have an eagerness in hurrying her to
produce, and she had to say that she was not a nimble writer. His
flattering impatience was vexatious. He admired her work, yet he did his
utmost to render it little admirable. His literary taste was not that of
young Arthur Rhodes, to whom she could read her chapters, appearing to
take counsel upon them while drinking the eulogies: she suspected him of
prosaic ally wishing her to make money, and though her exchequer was
beginning to know the need of it, the author's lofty mind disdained such
sordidness: to be excused, possibly, for a failing productive energy. She
encountered obstacles to imaginative composition. With the pen in her
hand, she would fall into heavy musings; break a sentence to muse, and not
on the subject. She slept unevenly at night, was drowsy by day, unless the
open air was about her, or animating friends. Redworth's urgency to get
her to publish was particularly annoying when she felt how greatly THE
YOUNG MINISTER OF STATE would have been improved had she retained the work
to brood over it, polish, re-write passages, perfect it. Her musings
embraced long dialogues of that work, never printed; they sprang up, they
passed from memory; leaving a distaste for her present work: THE
CANTATRICE: far more poetical than the preceding, in the opinion of Arthur
Rhodes; and the story was more romantic; modelled on a Prima Donna she had
met at the musical parties of Henry Wilmers, after hearing Redworth tell
of Charles Rainer's quaint passion for the woman, or the idea of the
woman. Diana had courted her, studied and liked her. The picture she was
drawing of the amiable and gifted Italian, of her villain Roumanian
husband, and of the eccentric, high-minded, devoted Englishman, was good
in a fashion; but considering the theme, she had reasonable apprehension
that her CANTATRICE would not repay her for the time and labour bestowed
on it. No clever transcripts of the dialogue of the day occurred; no
hair-breadth 'scapes, perils by sea and land, heroisms of the hero, fine
shrieks of the heroine; no set scenes of catching pathos and humour; no
distinguishable points of social satire—equivalent to a smacking of
the public on the chaps, which excites it to grin with keen discernment of
the author's intention. She did not appeal to the senses nor to a
superficial discernment. So she had the anticipatory sense of its failure;
and she wrote her best, in perverseness; of course she wrote slowly; she
wrote more and more realistically of the characters and the downright
human emotions, less of the wooden supernumeraries of her story, labelled
for broad guffaw or deluge tears—the grappling natural links between
our public and an author. Her feelings were aloof. They flowed at a hint
of a scene of THE YOUNG MINISTER. She could not put them into THE
CANTATRICE. And Arthur Rhodes pronounced this work poetical beyond its
predecessors, for the reason that the chief characters were alive and the
reader felt their pulses. He meant to say, they were poetical inasmuch as
they were creations.</p>
<p>The slow progress of a work not driven by the author's feelings
necessitated frequent consultations between Debit and Credit, resulting in
altercations, recriminations, discord of the yoked and divergent couple.
To restore them to their proper trot in harness, Diana reluctantly went to
her publisher for an advance item of the sum she was to receive, and the
act increased her distaste. An idea came that she would soon cease to be
able to write at all. What then? Perhaps by selling her invested money,
and ultimately The Crossways, she would have enough for her term upon
earth. Necessarily she had to think that short, in order to reckon it as
nearly enough. 'I am sure,' she said to herself, 'I shall not trouble the
world very long.' A strange languor beset her; scarcely melancholy, for
she conceived the cheerfulness of life and added to it in company; but a
nervelessness, as though she had been left by the stream on the banks, and
saw beauty and pleasure sweep along and away, while the sun that primed
them dried her veins. At this time she was gaining her widest reputation
for brilliancy of wit. Only to welcome guests were her evenings ever spent
at home. She had no intimate understanding of the deadly wrestle of the
conventional woman with her nature which she was undergoing below the
surface. Perplexities she acknowledged, and the prudence of guardedness.
'But as I am sure not to live very long, we may as well meet.' Her
meetings with Percy Dacier were therefore hardly shunned; and his
behaviour did not warn her to discountenance them. It would have been
cruel to exclude him from her select little dinners of eight. Whitmonby,
Westlake, Henry Wilmers and the rest, she perhaps aiding, schooled him in
the conversational art. She heard it said of him, that the courted
discarder of the sex, hitherto a mere politician, was wonderfully
humanized. Lady Pennon fell to talking of him hopefully. She declared him
to be one of the men who unfold tardily, and only await the mastering
passion. If the passion had come, it was controlled. His command of
himself melted Diana. How could she forbid his entry to the houses she
frequented? She was glad to see him. He showed his pleasure in seeing her.
Remembering his tentative indiscretion on those foreign sands, she
reflected that he had been easily checked: and the like was not to be said
of some others. Beautiful women in her position provoke an intemperateness
that contrasts touchingly with the self-restraint of a particular admirer.
Her 'impassioned Caledonian' was one of a host, to speak of whom and their
fits of lunacy even to her friend Emma, was repulsive. She bore with them,
foiled them, passed them, and recovered her equanimity; but the contrast
called to her to dwell on it, the self-restraint whispered of a depth of
passion....</p>
<p>She was shocked at herself for a singular tremble 'she experienced,
without any beating of the heart, on hearing one day that the marriage of
Percy Dacier and Miss Asper was at last definitely fixed. Mary Paynham
brought her the news. She had it from a lady who had come across Miss
Asper at Lady Wathin's assemblies, and considered the great heiress
extraordinarily handsome.</p>
<p>'A golden miracle,' Diana gave her words to say. 'Good looks and gold
together are rather superhuman. The report may be this time true.' Next
afternoon the card of Lady Wathin requested Mrs. Warwick to grant her a
private interview.</p>
<p>Lady Wathin, as one of the order of women who can do anything in a holy
cause, advanced toward Mrs. Warwick, unabashed by the burden of her
mission, and spinally prepared, behind benevolent smilings, to repay
dignity of mien with a similar erectness of dignity. They touched fingers
and sat. The preliminaries to the matter of the interview were brief
between ladies physically sensible of antagonism and mutually too scornful
of subterfuges in one another's presence to beat the bush.</p>
<p>Lady Wathin began. 'I am, you are aware, Mrs. Warwick, a cousin of your
friend Lady Dunstane.'</p>
<p>'You come to me on business?' Diana said.</p>
<p>'It may be so termed. I have no personal interest in it. I come to lay
certain facts before you which I think you should know. We think it better
that an acquaintance, and one of your sex, should state the case to you,
instead of having recourse to formal intermediaries, lawyers—'</p>
<p>'Lawyers?'</p>
<p>'Well, my husband is a lawyer, it is true. In the course of his
professional vocations he became acquainted with Mr. Warwick. We have
latterly seen a good deal of him. He is, I regret to say, seriously
unwell.'</p>
<p>'I have heard of it.'</p>
<p>'He has no female relations, it appears. He needs more care than he can
receive from hirelings.'</p>
<p>'Are you empowered by him, Lady Wathin?'</p>
<p>'I am, Mrs. Warwick. We will not waste time in apologies. He is most
anxious for a reconciliation. It seems to Sir Cramborne and to me the most
desireable thing for all parties concerned, if you can be induced to
regard it in that light. Mr. Warwick may or may not live; but the
estrangement is quite undoubtedly the cause of his illness. I touch on
nothing connected with it. I simply wish that you should not be in
ignorance of his proposal and his condition.'</p>
<p>Diana bowed calmly. 'I grieve at his condition. His proposal has already
been made and replied to.'</p>
<p>'Oh, but, Mrs. Warwick, an immediate and decisive refusal of a proposal so
fraught with consequences...!'</p>
<p>'Ah, but, Lady Wathin, you are now outstepping the limits prescribed by
the office you have undertaken.'</p>
<p>'You will not lend ear to an intercession?'</p>
<p>'I will not.'</p>
<p>'Of course, Mrs. Warwick, it is not for me to hint at things that lawyers
could say on the subject.'</p>
<p>'Your forbearance is creditable, Lady Wathin.'</p>
<p>'Believe me, Mrs. Warwick, the step is—I speak in my husband's name
as well as my own—strongly to be advised.'</p>
<p>'If I hear one word more of it, I leave the country.'</p>
<p>'I should be sorry indeed at any piece of rashness depriving your numerous
friends of your society. We have recently become acquainted with Mr.
Redworth, and I know the loss you would be to them. I have not attempted
an appeal to your feelings, Mrs. Warwick.'</p>
<p>'I thank you warmly, Lady Wathin, for what you have not done.'</p>
<p>The aristocratic airs of Mrs. Warwick were annoying to Lady Wathin when
she considered that they were borrowed, and that a pattern morality could
regard the woman as ostracized: nor was it agreeable to be looked at
through eyelashes under partially lifted brows. She had come to appeal to
the feelings of the wife; at any rate, to discover if she had some and was
better than a wild adventuress.</p>
<p>'Our life below is short!' she said. To which Diana tacitly assented.</p>
<p>'We have our little term, Mrs. Warwick. It is soon over.'</p>
<p>'On the other hand, the platitudes concerning it are eternal.'</p>
<p>Lady Wathin closed her eyes, that the like effect might be produced on her
ears. 'Ah! they are the truths. But it is not my business to preach.
Permit me to say that I feel deeply for your husband.'</p>
<p>'I am glad of Mr. Warwick's having friends; and they are many, I hope.'</p>
<p>'They cannot behold him perishing, without an effort on his behalf.'</p>
<p>A chasm of silence intervened. Wifely pity was not sounded in it.</p>
<p>'He will question me, Mrs. Warwick.'</p>
<p>'You can report to him the heads of our conversation, Lady Wathin.'</p>
<p>'Would you—it is your husband's most earnest wish; and our house is
open to his wife and to him for the purpose; and it seems to us that...
indeed it might avert a catastrophe you would necessarily deplore:—would
you consent to meet him at my house?'</p>
<p>'It has already been asked, Lady Wathin, and refused.'</p>
<p>'But at my house-under our auspices!'</p>
<p>Diana glanced at the clock. 'Nowhere.'</p>
<p>'Is it not—pardon me—a wife's duty, Mrs. Warwick, at least to
listen?'</p>
<p>'Lady Wathin, I have listened to you.'</p>
<p>'In the case of his extreme generosity so putting it, for the present,
Mrs. Warwick, that he asks only to be heard personally by his wife! It may
preclude so much.'</p>
<p>Diana felt a hot wind across her skin.</p>
<p>She smiled and said: 'Let me thank you for bringing to an end a mission
that must have been unpleasant to you.'</p>
<p>'But you will meditate on it, Mrs. Warwick, will you not? Give me that
assurance!'</p>
<p>'I shall not forget it,' said Diana.</p>
<p>Again the ladies touched fingers, with an interchange of the social
grimace of cordiality. A few words of compassion for poor Lady Dunstane's
invalided state covered Lady Wathin's retreat.</p>
<p>She left, it struck her ruffled sentiments, an icy libertine, whom any
husband caring for his dignity and comfort was well rid of; and if only
she could have contrived allusively to bring in the name of Mr. Percy
Dacier, just to show these arrant coquettes, or worse, that they were not
quite so privileged to pursue their intrigues obscurely as they imagined,
it would have soothed her exasperation.</p>
<p>She left a woman the prey of panic.</p>
<p>Diana thought of Emma and Redworth, and of their foolish interposition to
save her character and keep her bound. She might now have been free! The
struggle with her manacles reduced her to a state of rebelliousness, from
which issued vivid illuminations of the one means of certain escape; an
abhorrent hissing cavern, that led to a place named Liberty, her refuge,
but a hectic place.</p>
<p>Unable to write, hating the house which held her a fixed mark for these
attacks, she had an idea of flying straight to her beloved Lugano lake,
and there hiding, abandoning her friends, casting off the slave's name she
bore, and living free in spirit. She went so far as to reckon the cost of
a small household there, and justify the violent step by an exposition of
retrenchment upon her large London expenditure. She had but to say
farewell to Emma, no other tie to cut! One morning on the Salvatore
heights would wash her clear of the webs defacing and entangling her.</p>
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