<h2><SPAN name="BOOK_FIRST" id="BOOK_FIRST"></SPAN>BOOK FIRST</h2>
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<h2><SPAN name="I" id="I"></SPAN><SPAN href="#toc">I</SPAN></h2>
<p>The people of France have made it no secret that those of England, as a
general thing, are to their perception an inexpressive and speechless
race, perpendicular and unsociable, unaddicted to enriching any bareness
of contact with verbal or other embroidery. This view might have derived
encouragement, a few years ago, in Paris, from the manner in which four
persons sat together in silence, one fine day about noon, in the garden,
as it is called, of the Palais de l'Industrie—the central court of the
great glazed bazaar where, among plants and parterres, gravelled walks
and thin fountains, are ranged the figures and groups, the monuments and
busts, which form in the annual exhibition of the Salon the department
of statuary. The spirit of observation is naturally high at the Salon,
quickened by a thousand artful or artless appeals, but it need have put
forth no great intensity to take in the characters I mention. As a
solicitation of the eye on definite grounds these visitors too
constituted a successful plastic fact; and even the most superficial
observer would have marked them as products of an insular neighbourhood,
representatives of that tweed-and-waterproof class with which, on the
recurrent occasions when the English turn out for a holiday—Christmas
and Easter, Whitsuntide and the autumn—Paris besprinkles itself at a
night's notice. They had about them the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span> indefinable professional look
of the British traveller abroad; the air of preparation for exposure,
material and moral, which is so oddly combined with the serene
revelation of security and of persistence, and which excites, according
to individual susceptibility, the ire or the admiration of foreign
communities. They were the more unmistakable as they presented mainly
the happier aspects of the energetic race to which they had the honour
to belong. The fresh diffused light of the Salon made them clear and
important; they were finished creations, in their way, and, ranged there
motionless on their green bench, were almost as much on exhibition as if
they had been hung on the line.</p>
<p>Three ladies and a young man, they were obviously a family—a mother,
two daughters and a son; a circumstance which had the effect at once of
making each member of the group doubly typical and of helping to account
for their fine taciturnity. They were not, with each other, on terms of
ceremony, and also were probably fatigued with their course among the
pictures, the rooms on the upper floor. Their attitude, on the part of
visitors who had superior features even if they might appear to some
passers-by to have neglected a fine opportunity for completing these
features with an expression, was after all a kind of tribute to the
state of exhaustion, of bewilderment, to which the genius of France is
still capable of reducing the proud.</p>
<p>"En v'là des abrutis!" more than one of their fellow-gazers might have
been heard to exclaim; and certain it is that there was something
depressed and discouraged in this interesting group, who sat looking
vaguely before them, not noticing the life of the place, somewhat as if
each had a private anxiety. It might have been finely guessed, however,
that though on many questions they were closely united this present<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
anxiety was not the same for each. If they looked grave, moreover, this
was doubtless partly the result of their all being dressed in such
mourning as told of a recent bereavement. The eldest of the three ladies
had indeed a face of a fine austere mould which would have been moved to
gaiety only by some force more insidious than any she was likely to
recognise in Paris. Cold, still, and considerably worn, it was neither
stupid nor hard—it was firm, narrow and sharp. This competent matron,
acquainted evidently with grief but not weakened by it, had a high
forehead to which the quality of the skin gave a singular polish—it
glittered even when seen at a distance; a nose which achieved a high
free curve; and a tendency to throw back her head and carry it well
above her, as if to disengage it from the possible entanglements of the
rest of her person. If you had seen her walk you would have felt her to
tread the earth after a fashion suggesting that in a world where she had
long since discovered that one couldn't have one's own way one could
never tell what annoying aggression might take place, so that it was
well, from hour to hour, to save what one could. Lady Agnes saved her
head, her white triangular forehead, over which her close-crinkled
flaxen hair, reproduced in different shades in her children, made a
looped silken canopy like the marquee at a garden-party. Her daughters
were as tall as herself—that was visible even as they sat there—and
one of them, the younger evidently, altogether pretty; a straight,
slender, grey-eyed English girl of the sort who show "good" figures and
fresh complexions. The sister, who was not pretty, was also straight and
slender and grey-eyed. But the grey in this case was not so pure, nor
were the straightness and the slenderness so maidenly. The brother of
these young ladies had taken off his hat as if he felt the air of the
summer day heavy in the great pavilion.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span> He was a lean, strong,
clear-faced youth, with a formed nose and thick light-brown hair which
lay continuously and profusely back from his forehead, so that to smooth
it from the brow to the neck but a single movement of the hand was
required. I cannot describe him better than by saying that he was the
sort of young Englishman who looks particularly well in strange lands
and whose general aspect—his inches, his limbs, his friendly eyes, the
modulation of his voice, the cleanness of his flesh-tints and the
fashion of his garments—excites on the part of those who encounter him
in far countries on the ground of a common speech a delightful sympathy
of race. This sympathy may sometimes be qualified by the seen limits of
his apprehension, but it almost revels as such horizons recede. We shall
see quickly enough how accurate a measure it might have taken of
Nicholas Dormer. There was food for suspicion perhaps in the wandering
blankness that sat at moments in his eyes, as if he had no attention at
all, not the least in the world, at his command; but it is no more than
just to add without delay that this discouraging symptom was known among
those who liked him by the indulgent name of dreaminess. By his mother
and sisters, for instance, his dreaminess was constantly noted. He is
the more welcome to the benefit of such an interpretation as there is
always held to be something engaging in the combination of the muscular
and the musing, the mildness of strength.</p>
<p>After some time, an interval during which these good people might have
appeared to have come, individually, to the Palais de l'Industrie much
less to see the works of art than to think over their domestic affairs,
the young man, rousing himself from his reverie, addressed one of the
girls.</p>
<p>"I say, Biddy, why should we sit moping here all day? Come and take a
turn about with me."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>His younger sister, while he got up, leaned forward a little, looking
round her, but she gave for the moment no further sign of complying with
his invitation.</p>
<p>"Where shall we find you, then, if Peter comes?" asked the other Miss
Dormer, making no movement at all.</p>
<p>"I daresay Peter won't come. He'll leave us here to cool our heels."</p>
<p>"Oh Nick dear!" Biddy exclaimed in a small sweet voice of protest. It
was plainly her theory that Peter would come, and even a little her fond
fear that she might miss him should she quit that spot.</p>
<p>"We shall come back in a quarter of an hour. Really I must look at these
things," Nick declared, turning his face to a marble group which stood
near them on the right—a man with the skin of a beast round his loins,
tussling with a naked woman in some primitive effort of courtship or
capture.</p>
<p>Lady Agnes followed the direction of her son's eyes and then observed:
"Everything seems very dreadful. I should think Biddy had better sit
still. Hasn't she seen enough horrors up above?"</p>
<p>"I daresay that if Peter comes Julia'll be with him," the elder girl
remarked irrelevantly.</p>
<p>"Well then he can take Julia about. That will be more proper," said Lady
Agnes.</p>
<p>"Mother dear, she doesn't care a rap about art. It's a fearful bore
looking at fine things with Julia," Nick returned.</p>
<p>"Won't you go with him, Grace?"—and Biddy appealed to her sister.</p>
<p>"I think she has awfully good taste!" Grace exclaimed, not answering
this inquiry.</p>
<p>"<i>Don't</i> say nasty things about her!" Lady Agnes broke out solemnly to
her son after resting her eyes on him a moment with an air of reluctant
reprobation.</p>
<p>"I say nothing but what she'd say herself," the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span> young man urged. "About
some things she has very good taste, but about this kind of thing she
has no taste at all."</p>
<p>"That's better, I think," said Lady Agnes, turning her eyes again to the
"kind of thing" her son appeared to designate.</p>
<p>"She's awfully clever—awfully!" Grace went on with decision.</p>
<p>"Awfully, awfully!" her brother repeated, standing in front of her and
smiling down at her.</p>
<p>"You are nasty, Nick. You know you are," said the young lady, but more
in sorrow than in anger.</p>
<p>Biddy got up at this, as if the accusatory tone prompted her to place
herself generously at his side. "Mightn't you go and order lunch—in
that place, you know?" she asked of her mother. "Then we'd come back
when it was ready."</p>
<p>"My dear child, I can't order lunch," Lady Agnes replied with a cold
impatience which seemed to intimate that she had problems far more
important than those of victualling to contend with.</p>
<p>"Then perhaps Peter will if he comes. I'm sure he's up in everything of
that sort."</p>
<p>"Oh hang Peter!" Nick exclaimed. "Leave him out of account, and <i>do</i>
order lunch, mother; but not cold beef and pickles."</p>
<p>"I must say—about <i>him</i>—you're not nice," Biddy ventured to remark to
her brother, hesitating and even blushing a little.</p>
<p>"You make up for it, my dear," the young man answered, giving her
chin—a very charming, rotund, little chin—a friendly whisk with his
forefinger.</p>
<p>"I can't imagine what you've got against him," her ladyship said
gravely.</p>
<p>"Dear mother, it's disappointed fondness," Nick argued. "They won't
answer one's notes; they won't let one know where they are nor what to
expect.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span> 'Hell has no fury like a woman scorned'; nor like a man
either."</p>
<p>"Peter has such a tremendous lot to do—it's a very busy time at the
embassy; there are sure to be reasons," Biddy explained with her pretty
eyes.</p>
<p>"Reasons enough, no doubt!" said Lady Agnes—who accompanied these words
with an ambiguous sigh, however, as if in Paris even the best reasons
would naturally be bad ones.</p>
<p>"Doesn't Julia write to you, doesn't she answer you the very day?" Grace
asked, looking at Nick as if she were the bold one.</p>
<p>He waited, returning her glance with a certain severity. "What do you
know about my correspondence? No doubt I ask too much," he went on; "I'm
so attached to them. Dear old Peter, dear old Julia!"</p>
<p>"She's younger than you, my dear!" cried the elder girl, still resolute.</p>
<p>"Yes, nineteen days."</p>
<p>"I'm glad you know her birthday."</p>
<p>"She knows yours; she always gives you something," Lady Agnes reminded
her son.</p>
<p>"Her taste is good <i>then</i>, isn't it, Nick?" Grace Dormer continued.</p>
<p>"She makes charming presents; but, dear mother, it isn't <i>her</i> taste.
It's her husband's."</p>
<p>"How her husband's?"</p>
<p>"The beautiful objects of which she disposes so freely are the things he
collected for years laboriously, devotedly, poor man!"</p>
<p>"She disposes of them to you, but not to others," said Lady Agnes. "But
that's all right," she added, as if this might have been taken for a
complaint of the limitations of Julia's bounty. "She has to select among
so many, and that's a proof of taste," her ladyship pursued.</p>
<p>"You can't say she doesn't choose lovely ones,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span> Grace remarked to her
brother in a tone of some triumph.</p>
<p>"My dear, they're all lovely. George Dallow's judgement was so sure, he
was incapable of making a mistake," Nicholas Dormer returned.</p>
<p>"I don't see how you can talk of him, he was dreadful," said Lady Agnes.</p>
<p>"My dear, if he was good enough for Julia to marry he's good enough for
us to talk of."</p>
<p>"She did him a very great honour."</p>
<p>"I daresay, but he was not unworthy of it. No such enlightened
collection of beautiful objects has been made in England in our time."</p>
<p>"You think too much of beautiful objects!" Lady Agnes sighed.</p>
<p>"I thought you were just now lamenting that I think too little."</p>
<p>"It's very nice—his having left Julia so well off," Biddy interposed
soothingly, as if she foresaw a tangle.</p>
<p>"He treated her <i>en grand seigneur</i>, absolutely," Nick went on.</p>
<p>"He used to look greasy, all the same"—Grace bore on it with a dull
weight. "His name ought to have been Tallow."</p>
<p>"You're not saying what Julia would like, if that's what you are trying
to say," her brother observed.</p>
<p>"Don't be vulgar, Grace," said Lady Agnes.</p>
<p>"I know Peter Sherringham's birthday!" Biddy broke out innocently, as a
pacific diversion. She had passed her hand into Nick's arm, to signify
her readiness to go with him, while she scanned the remoter reaches of
the garden as if it had occurred to her that to direct their steps in
some such sense might after all be the shorter way to get at Peter.</p>
<p>"He's too much older than you, my dear," Grace answered without
encouragement.</p>
<p>"That's why I've noticed it—he's thirty-four.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span> Do you call that too
old? I don't care for slobbering infants!" Biddy cried.</p>
<p>"Don't be vulgar," Lady Agnes enjoined again.</p>
<p>"Come, Bid, we'll go and be vulgar together; for that's what we are, I'm
afraid," her brother said to her. "We'll go and look at all these low
works of art."</p>
<p>"Do you really think it's necessary to the child's development?" Lady
Agnes demanded as the pair turned away. And then while her son, struck
as by a challenge, paused, lingering a moment with his little sister on
his arm: "What we've been through this morning in this place, and what
you've paraded before our eyes—the murders, the tortures, all kinds of
disease and indecency!"</p>
<p>Nick looked at his mother as if this sudden protest surprised him, but
as if also there were lurking explanations of it which he quickly
guessed. Her resentment had the effect not so much of animating her cold
face as of making it colder, less expressive, though visibly prouder.
"Ah dear mother, don't do the British matron!" he replied
good-humouredly.</p>
<p>"British matron's soon said! I don't know what they're coming to."</p>
<p>"How odd that you should have been struck only with the disagreeable
things when, for myself, I've felt it to be most interesting, the most
suggestive morning I've passed for ever so many months!"</p>
<p>"Oh Nick, Nick!" Lady Agnes cried with a strange depth of feeling.</p>
<p>"I like them better in London—they're much less unpleasant," said Grace
Dormer.</p>
<p>"They're things you can look at," her ladyship went on. "We certainly
make the better show."</p>
<p>"The subject doesn't matter, it's the treatment, the treatment!" Biddy
protested in a voice like the tinkle of a silver bell.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Poor little Bid!"—her brother broke into a laugh.</p>
<p>"How can I learn to model, mamma dear, if I don't look at things and if
I don't study them?" the girl continued.</p>
<p>This question passed unheeded, and Nicholas Dormer said to his mother,
more seriously, but with a certain kind explicitness, as if he could
make a particular allowance: "This place is an immense stimulus to me;
it refreshes me, excites me—it's such an exhibition of artistic life.
It's full of ideas, full of refinements; it gives one such an impression
of artistic experience. They try everything, they feel everything. While
you were looking at the murders, apparently, I observed an immense deal
of curious and interesting work. There are too many of them, poor
devils; so many who must make their way, who must attract attention.
Some of them can only <i>taper fort</i>, stand on their heads, turn
somersaults or commit deeds of violence, to make people notice them.
After that, no doubt, a good many will be quieter. But I don't know;
to-day I'm in an appreciative mood—I feel indulgent even to them: they
give me an impression of intelligence, of eager observation. All art is
one—remember that, Biddy dear," the young man continued, smiling down
from his height. "It's the same great many-headed effort, and any ground
that's gained by an individual, any spark that's struck in any province,
is of use and of suggestion to all the others. We're all in the same
boat."</p>
<p>"'We,' do you say, my dear? Are you really setting up for an artist?"
Lady Agnes asked.</p>
<p>Nick just hesitated. "I was speaking for Biddy."</p>
<p>"But you <i>are</i> one, Nick—you are!" the girl cried.</p>
<p>Lady Agnes looked for an instant as if she were going to say once more
"Don't be vulgar!" But she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span> suppressed these words, had she intended
them, and uttered sounds, few in number and not completely articulate,
to the effect that she hated talking about art. While her son spoke she
had watched him as if failing to follow; yet something in the tone of
her exclamation hinted that she had understood him but too well.</p>
<p>"We're all in the same boat," Biddy repeated with cheerful zeal.</p>
<p>"Not me, if you please!" Lady Agnes replied. "It's horrid messy work,
your modelling."</p>
<p>"Ah but look at the results!" said the girl eagerly—glancing about at
the monuments in the garden as if in regard even to them she were,
through that unity of art her brother had just proclaimed, in some
degree an effective cause.</p>
<p>"There's a great deal being done here—a real vitality," Nicholas Dormer
went on to his mother in the same reasonable informing way. "Some of
these fellows go very far."</p>
<p>"They do indeed!" said Lady Agnes.</p>
<p>"I'm fond of young schools—like this movement in sculpture," Nick
insisted with his slightly provoking serenity.</p>
<p>"They're old enough to know better!"</p>
<p>"Mayn't I look, mamma? It <i>is</i> necessary to my development," Biddy
declared.</p>
<p>"You may do as you like," said Lady Agnes with dignity.</p>
<p>"She ought to see good work, you know," the young man went on.</p>
<p>"I leave it to your sense of responsibility." This statement was
somewhat majestic, and for a moment evidently it tempted Nick, almost
provoked him, or at any rate suggested to him an occasion for some
pronouncement he had had on his mind. Apparently, however, he judged the
time on the whole not quite<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span> right, and his sister Grace interposed with
the inquiry—</p>
<p>"Please, mamma, are we never going to lunch?"</p>
<p>"Ah mother, mother!" the young man murmured in a troubled way, looking
down at her with a deep fold in his forehead.</p>
<p>For Lady Agnes also, as she returned his look, it seemed an occasion;
but with this difference that she had no hesitation in taking advantage
of it. She was encouraged by his slight embarrassment, for ordinarily
Nick was not embarrassed. "You used to have so <i>much</i> sense of
responsibility," she pursued; "but sometimes I don't know what has
become of it—it seems all, <i>all</i> gone!"</p>
<p>"Ah mother, mother!" he exclaimed again—as if there were so many things
to say that it was impossible to choose. But now he stepped closer, bent
over her and in spite of the publicity of their situation gave her a
quick expressive kiss. The foreign observer whom I took for granted in
beginning to sketch this scene would have had to admit that the rigid
English family had after all a capacity for emotion. Grace Dormer indeed
looked round her to see if at this moment they were noticed. She judged
with satisfaction that they had escaped.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span></p>
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