<SPAN name="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN><h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
<h3>SANDYS ON WOMAN</h3>
<br/>
<p>"Can you kindly tell me the name of the book I want?"</p>
<p>It is the commonest question asked at the circulating library by
dainty ladies just out of the carriage; and the librarian, after
looking them over, can usually tell. In the days we have now to speak
of, however, he answered, without looking them over:</p>
<p>"Sandys's 'Letters,'"</p>
<p>"Ah, yes, of course. May I have it, please?"</p>
<p>"I regret to find that it is out."</p>
<p>Then the lady looked naughty. "Why don't you have two copies?" she
pouted.</p>
<p>"Madam," said the librarian, "we have a thousand."</p>
<p>A small and very timid girl of eighteen, with a neat figure that
shrank from observation, although it was already aware that it looked
best in gray, was there to drink in this music, and carried it home in
her heart. She was Elspeth, and that dear heart was almost too full
at this time. I hesitate whether to tell or to conceal how it even
created a disturbance in no less a place than the House of Commons.
She was there with Mrs. Jerry, and the thing was recorded in the
papers of the period in these blasting words: "The Home Secretary was
understood to be quoting a passage from 'Letters to a Young Man,' but
we failed to catch its drift, owing to an unseemly interruption from
the ladies' gallery."</p>
<p>"But what was it you cried out?" Tommy asked Elspeth, when she thought
she had told him everything. (Like all true women, she always began in
the middle.)</p>
<p>"Oh, Tommy, have I not told you? I cried out, 'I'm his sister.'"</p>
<p>Thus, owing to Elspeth's behaviour, it can never be known which was
the passage quoted in the House; but we may be sure of one thing—that
it did the House good. That book did everybody good. Even Pym could
only throw off its beneficent effects by a tremendous effort, and
young men about to be married used to ask at the bookshops, not for
the "Letters," but simply for "Sandys on Woman," acknowledging Tommy
as the authority on the subject, like Mill on Jurisprudence, or
Thomson and Tait on the Differential Calculus. Controversies raged
about it. Some thought he asked too much of man, some thought he saw
too much in women; there was a fear that young people, knowing at last
how far short they fell of what they ought to be, might shrink from
the matrimony that must expose them to each other, now that they had
Sandys to guide them, and the persons who had simply married and
risked it (and it was astounding what a number of them there proved to
be) wrote to the papers suggesting that he might yield a little in the
next edition. But Sandys remained firm.</p>
<p>At first they took for granted that he was a very aged gentleman; he
had, indeed, hinted at this in the text; and when the truth came out
("And just fancy, he is not even married!") the enthusiasm was
doubled. "Not engaged!" they cried. "Don't tell that to me. No
unmarried man could have written such a eulogy of marriage without
being on the brink of it." Perhaps she was dead? It ran through the
town that she was dead. Some knew which cemetery.</p>
<p>The very first lady Mr. Sandys ever took in to dinner mentioned this
rumour to him, not with vulgar curiosity, but delicately, with a hint
of sympathy in waiting, and it must be remembered, in fairness to
Tommy, that all artists love sympathy. This sympathy uncorked him, and
our Tommy could flow comparatively freely at last. Observe the
delicious change.</p>
<p>"Has that story got abroad?" he said simply. "The matter is one which,
I need not say, I have never mentioned to a soul."</p>
<p>"Of course not," the lady said, and waited eagerly.</p>
<p>If Tommy had been an expert he might have turned the conversation to
brighter topics, but he was not; there had already been long pauses,
and in dinner talk it is perhaps allowable to fling on any faggot
rather than let the fire go out. "It is odd that I should be talking
of it now," he said musingly.</p>
<p>"I suppose," she said gently, to bring him out of the reverie into
which he had sunk, "I suppose it happened some time ago?"</p>
<p>"Long, long ago," he answered. (Having written as an aged person, he
often found difficulty in remembering suddenly that he was two and
twenty.)</p>
<p>"But you are still a very young man."</p>
<p>"It seems long ago to me," he said with a sigh.</p>
<p>"Was she beautiful?"</p>
<p>"She was beautiful to my eyes."</p>
<p>"And as good, I am sure, as she was beautiful."</p>
<p>"Ah me!" said Tommy.</p>
<p>His confidante was burning to know more, and hoping they were being
observed across the table; but she was a kind, sentimental creature,
though stout, or because of it, and she said, "I am so afraid that my
questions pain you."</p>
<p>"No, no," said Tommy, who was very, very happy.</p>
<p>"Was it very sudden?"</p>
<p>"Fever."</p>
<p>"Ah! but I meant your attachment."</p>
<p>"We met and we loved," he said with gentle dignity.</p>
<p>"That is the true way," said the lady.</p>
<p>"It is the only way," he said decisively.</p>
<p>"Mr. Sandys, you have been so good, I wonder if you would tell me her
name?"</p>
<p>"Felicity," he said, with emotion. Presently he looked up. "It is very
strange to me," he said wonderingly, "to find myself saying these
things to you who an hour ago were a complete stranger to me. But you
are not like other women."</p>
<p>"No, indeed!" said the lady, warmly.</p>
<p>"That," he said, "must be why I tell you what I have never told to
another human being. How mysterious are the workings of the heart!"</p>
<p>"Mr. Sandys," said the lady, quite carried away, "no words of mine can
convey to you the pride with which I hear you say that. Be assured
that I shall respect your confidences." She missed his next remark
because she was wondering whether she dare ask him to come to dinner
on the twenty-fifth, and then the ladies had to retire, and by the
time he rejoined her he was as tongue-tied as at the beginning. The
cork had not been extracted; it had been knocked into the bottle,
where it still often barred the way, and there was always, as we shall
see, a flavour of it in the wine.</p>
<p>"You will get over it yet; the summer and the flowers will come to you
again," she managed to whisper to him kind-heartedly, as she was
going.</p>
<p>"Thank you," he said, with that inscrutable face. It was far from his
design to play a part. He had, indeed, had no design at all, but an
opportunity for sentiment having presented itself, his mouth had
opened as at a cherry. He did not laugh afterwards, even when he
reflected how unexpectedly Felicity had come into his life; he thought
of her rather with affectionate regard, and pictured her as a tall,
slim girl in white. When he took a tall, slim girl in white in to
dinner, he could not help saying huskily:</p>
<p>"You remind me of one who was a very dear friend of mine. I was much
startled when you came into the room."</p>
<p>"You mean some one who is dead?" she asked in awe-struck tones.</p>
<p>"Fever," he said.</p>
<p>"You think I am like her in appearance?"</p>
<p>"In every way," he said dreamily; "the same sweet—pardon me, but it
is very remarkable. Even the tones of the voice are the same. I
suppose I ought not to ask your age?"</p>
<p>"I shall be twenty-one in August." "She would have been twenty-one
in August had she lived," Tommy said with fervour. "My dear young
lady—"</p>
<p>This was the aged gentleman again, but she did not wince; he soon
found out that they expect authors to say the oddest things, and this
proved to be a great help to him.</p>
<p>"My dear young lady, I feel that I know you very well."</p>
<p>"That," she said, "is only because I resemble your friend outwardly.
The real me (she was a bit of philosopher also) you cannot know at
all."</p>
<p>He smiled sadly. "Has it ever struck you," he asked, "that you are
very unlike other women?"</p>
<p>"Oh, how ever could you have found that out?" she exclaimed, amazed.</p>
<p>Almost before he knew how it came about, he was on terms of very
pleasant sentiment with this girl, for they now shared between them a
secret that he had confided to no other. His face, which had been so
much against him hitherto, was at last in his favour; it showed so
plainly that when he looked at her more softly or held her hand longer
than is customary, he was really thinking of that other of whom she
was the image. Or if it did not precisely show that, it suggested
something or other of that nature which did just as well. There was a
sweet something between them which brought them together and also
kept them apart; it allowed them to go a certain length, while it was
also a reason why they could never, never exceed that distance; and
this was an ideal state for Tommy, who could be most loyal and tender
so long as it was understood that he meant nothing in particular. She
was the right kind of girl, too, and admired him the more (and perhaps
went a step further) because he remained so true to Felicity's memory.</p>
<p>You must not think him calculating and cold-blooded, for nothing could
be less true to the fact. When not engaged, indeed, on his new work,
he might waste some time planning scenes with exquisite ladies, in
which he sparkled or had a hidden sorrow (he cared not which); but
these scenes seldom came to life. He preferred very pretty girls to be
rather stupid (oh, the artistic instinct of the man!), but instead of
keeping them stupid, as he wanted to do, he found himself trying to
improve their minds. They screwed up their noses in the effort.
Meaning to thrill the celebrated beauty who had been specially invited
to meet him, he devoted himself to a plain woman for whose plainness a
sudden pity had mastered him (for, like all true worshippers of beauty
in women, he always showed best in the presence of plain ones). With
the intention of being a gallant knight to Lady I-Won't-Tell-the-Name,
a whim of the moment made him so stiff to her that she ultimately
asked the reason; and such a charmingly sad reason presented itself to
him that she immediately invited him to her riverside party on
Thursday week. He had the conversations and incidents for that party
ready long before the day arrived; he altered them and polished them
as other young gentlemen in the same circumstances overhaul their
boating costumes; but when he joined the party there was among them
the children's governess, and seeing her slighted, his blood boiled,
and he was her attendant for the afternoon.</p>
<p>Elspeth was not at this pleasant jink in high life. She had been
invited, but her ladyship had once let Tommy kiss her hand for the
first and last time, so he decided sternly that this was no place for
Elspeth. When temptation was nigh, he first locked Elspeth up, and
then walked into it.</p>
<p>With two in every three women he was still as shy as ever, but the
third he escorted triumphantly to the conservatory. She did no harm to
his work—rather sent him back to it refreshed. It was as if he were
shooting the sentiment which other young men get rid of more gradually
by beginning earlier, and there were such accumulations of it that I
don't know whether he ever made up on them. Punishment sought him in
the night, when he dreamed constantly that he was married—to whom
scarcely mattered; he saw himself coming out of a church a married
man, and the fright woke him up. But with the daylight came again his
talent for dodging thoughts that were lying in wait, and he yielded as
recklessly as before to every sentimental impulse. As illustration,
take his humourous passage with Mrs. Jerry. Geraldine Something was
her name, but her friends called her Mrs. Jerry.</p>
<p>She was a wealthy widow, buxom, not a day over thirty when she was
merry, which might be at inappropriate moments, as immediately after
she had expressed a desire to lead the higher life. "But I have a
theory, my dear," she said solemnly to Elspeth, "that no woman is able
to do it who cannot see her own nose without the help of a mirror."
She had taken a great fancy to Elspeth, and made many engagements with
her, and kept some of them, and the understanding was that she
apprenticed herself to Tommy through Elspeth, he being too terrible to
face by himself, or, as Mrs. Jerry expressed it, "all nose." So Tommy
had seen very little of her, and thought less, until one day he called
by passionate request to sign her birthday-book, and heard himself
proposing to her instead!</p>
<p>For one thing, it was twilight, and she had forgotten to ring for the
lamps. That might have been enough, but there was more: she read to
him part of a letter in which her hand was solicited in marriage.
"And, for the life of me," said Mrs. Jerry, almost in tears, "I cannot
decide whether to say yes or no."</p>
<p>This put Tommy in a most awkward position. There are probably men who
could have got out of it without proposing; but to him there seemed at
the moment no other way open. The letter complicated matters also by
beginning "Dear Jerry," and saying "little Jerry" further
on—expressions which stirred him strangely.</p>
<p>"Why do you read this to me?" he asked, in a voice that broke a
little.</p>
<p>"Because you are so wise," she said. "Do you mind?"</p>
<p>"Do I mind!" he exclaimed bitterly. ("Take care, you idiot!" he said
to himself.)</p>
<p>"I was asking your advice only. Is it too much?"</p>
<p>"Not at all. I am quite the right man to consult at such a moment, am
I not?"</p>
<p>It was said with profound meaning; but his face was as usual.</p>
<p>"That is what I thought," she said, in all good faith.</p>
<p>"You do not even understand!" he cried, and he was also looking
longingly at his hat.</p>
<p>"Understand what?"</p>
<p>"Jerry," he said, and tried to stop himself, with the result that he
added, "dear little Jerry!" ("What am I doing!" he groaned.)</p>
<p>She understood now. "You don't mean—" she began, in amazement.</p>
<p>"Yes," he cried passionately. "I love you. Will you be my wife?" ("I
am lost!")</p>
<p>"Gracious!" exclaimed Mrs. Jerry; and then, on reflection, she became
indignant. "I would not have believed it of you," she said scornfully.
"Is it my money, or what? I am not at all clever, so you must tell
me."</p>
<p>With Tommy, of course, it was not her money. Except when he had
Elspeth to consider, he was as much a Quixote about money as Pym
himself; and at no moment of his life was he a snob.</p>
<p>"I am sorry you should think so meanly of me," he said with dignity,
lifting his hat; and he would have got away then (which, when you come
to think of it, was what he wanted) had he been able to resist an
impulse to heave a broken-hearted sigh at the door.</p>
<p>"Don't go yet, Mr. Sandys," she begged. "I may have been hasty. And
yet—why, we are merely acquaintances!"</p>
<p>He had meant to be very careful now, but that word sent him off again.
"Acquaintances!" he cried. "No, we were never that."</p>
<p>"It almost seemed to me that you avoided me."</p>
<p>"You noticed it!" he said eagerly. "At least, you do me that justice.
Oh, how I tried to avoid you!"</p>
<p>"It was because—"</p>
<p>"Alas!"</p>
<p>She was touched, of course, but still puzzled. "We know so little of
each other," she said.</p>
<p>"I see," he replied, "that you know me very little, Mrs. Jerry; but
you—oh, Jerry, Jerry! I know you as no other man has ever known you!"</p>
<p>"I wish I had proof of it," she said helplessly.</p>
<p>Proof! She should not have asked Tommy for proof. "I know," he cried,
"how unlike all other women you are. To the world you are like the
rest, but in your heart you know that you are different; you know it,
and I know it, and no other person knows it."</p>
<p>Yes, Mrs. Jerry knew it, and had often marvelled over it in the
seclusion of her boudoir; but that another should have found it out
was strange and almost terrifying.</p>
<p>"I know you love me now," she said softly. "Only love could have shown
you that. But—oh, let me go away for a minute to think!" And she ran
out of the room.</p>
<p>Other suitors have been left for a space in Tommy's state of doubt,
but never, it may be hoped, with the same emotions. Oh, heavens! if
she should accept him! He saw Elspeth sickening and dying of the news.</p>
<p>His guardian angel, however, was very good to Tommy at this time; or
perhaps, like cannibals with their prisoner, the god of sentiment (who
has a tail) was fattening him for a future feast; and Mrs. Jerry's
answer was that it could never be.</p>
<p>Tommy bowed his head.</p>
<p>But she hoped he would let her be his very dear friend. It would be
the proudest recollection of her life that Mr. Sandys had entertained
such feelings for her.</p>
<p>Nothing could have been better, and he should have found difficulty in
concealing his delight; but this strange Tommy was really feeling his
part again. It was an unforced tear that came to his eye. Quite
naturally he looked long and wistfully at her.</p>
<p>"Jerry, Jerry!" he articulated huskily, and whatever the words mean in
these circumstances he really meant; then he put his lips to her hand
for the first and last time, and so was gone, broken but brave. He was
in splendid fettle for writing that evening. Wild animals sleep after
gorging, but it sent this monster, refreshed, to his work.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, the incident gave him some uneasy reflections. Was he,
indeed, a monster? was one that he could dodge, as yet; but suppose
Mrs. Jerry told his dear Elspeth of what had happened? She had said
that she would not, but a secret in Mrs. Jerry's breast was like her
pug in her arms, always kicking to get free. "Elspeth," said Tommy,
"what do you say to going north and having a sight of Thrums again?"</p>
<p>He knew what she would say. They had been talking for years of going
back; it was the great day that all her correspondence with old
friends in Thrums looked forward to.</p>
<p>"They made little of you, Tommy," she said, "when we left; but I'm
thinking they will all be at their windows when you go back."</p>
<p>"Oh," replied Thomas, "that's nothing. But I should like to shake Corp
by the hand again."</p>
<p>"And Aaron," said Elspeth. She was knitting stockings for Aaron at
that moment.</p>
<p>"And Gavinia," Tommy said, "and the Dominie."</p>
<p>"And Ailie."</p>
<p>And then came an awkward pause, for they were both thinking of that
independent girl called Grizel. She was seldom discussed. Tommy was
oddly shy about mentioning her name; he would have preferred Elspeth
to mention it: and Elspeth had misgivings that this was so, with the
result that neither could say "Grizel" without wondering what was in
the other's mind. Tommy had written twice to Grizel, the first time
unknown to Elspeth, but that was in the days when the ladies of the
penny numbers were disturbing him, and, against his better judgment
(for well he knew she would never stand it), he had begun his letter
with these mad words: "Dear Little Woman." She did not answer this,
but soon afterwards she wrote to Elspeth, and he was not mentioned in
the letter proper, but it carried a sting in its tail. "P.S.," it said
"How is Sentimental Tommy?"</p>
<p>None but a fiend in human shape could have written thus, and Elspeth
put her protecting arms round her brother. "Now we know what Grizel
is," she said. "I am done with her now."</p>
<p>But when Tommy had got back his wind he said nobly: "I'll call her no
names. If this is how she likes to repay me for—for all my
kindnesses, let her. But, Elspeth, if I have the chance, I shall go on
being good to her just the same."</p>
<p>Elspeth adored him for it, but Grizel would have stamped had she
known. He had that comfort.</p>
<p>The second letter he never posted. It was written a few months before
he became a celebrity, and had very fine things indeed in it, for old
Dr. McQueen, Grizel's dear friend, had just died at his post, and it
was a letter of condolence. While Tommy wrote it he was in a quiver of
genuine emotion, as he was very pleased to feel, and it had a
specially satisfying bit about death, and the world never being the
same again. He knew it was good, but he did not send it to her, for no
reason I can discover save that postscripts jarred on him.</p>
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