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<h2> Chapter Two </h2>
<p>When my hour was finished and I in liberty to leave that horrible corner,
I pushed out of the crowd and walked down the boulevard, my hat covering
my sin, and went quickly. To be in love with my mystery, I thought, that
was a strange happiness! It was enough. It was romance! To hear a voice
which speaks two sentences of pity and silver is to have a chime of bells
in the heart. But to have a shaven head is to be a monk! And to have a
shaven head with a sign painted upon it is to be a pariah. Alas! I was a
person whom the Parisians laughed at, not with!</p>
<p>Now that at last my martyrdom was concluded, I had some shuddering, as
when one places in his mouth a morsel of unexpected flavour. I wondered
where I had found the courage to bear it, and how I had resisted hurling
myself into the river, though, as is known, that is no longer safe, for
most of those who attempt it are at once rescued, arrested, fined, and
imprisoned for throwing bodies into the Seine, which is forbidden.</p>
<p>At the theatre the frightful badge was removed from my head-top and I was
given three hundred francs, the price of my shame, refusing an offer to
repeat the performance during the following week. To imagine such a thing
made me a choking in my throat, and I left the bureau in some sickness.
This increased so much (as I approached the Madeleine, where I wished to
mount an omnibus) that I entered a restaurant and drank a small glass of
cognac. Then I called for writing-papers and wrote to the good Mother
Superior and my dear little nieces at their convent. I enclosed two
hundred and fifty francs, which sum I had fallen behind in my payments for
their education and sustenance, and I felt a moment’s happiness that at
least for a while I need not fear that my poor brother’s orphans might
become objects of charity—a fear which, accompanied by my own
hunger, had led me to become the joke of the boulevards.</p>
<p>Feeling rich with my remaining fifty francs, I ordered the waiter to bring
me a goulasch and a carafe of blond beer, after the consummation of which
I spent an hour in the reading of a newspaper. Can it be credited that the
journal of my perusement was the one which may be called the
North-American paper of the aristocracies of Europe? Also, it contains
some names of the people of the United States at the hotels and elsewhere.</p>
<p>How eagerly I scanned those singular columns! Shall I confess to what
purpose? I read the long lists of uncontinental names over and over, but I
lingered not at all upon those like “Muriel,” “Hermione,” “Violet,” and
“Sibyl,” nor over “Balthurst,” “Skeffington-Sligo,” and “Covering-Legge”;
no, my search was for the Sadies and Mamies, the Thompsons, Van Dusens,
and Bradys. In that lies my preposterous secret.</p>
<p>You will see to what infatuation those words of pity, that sense of a
beautiful presence, had led me. To fall in love must one behold a face?
Yes; at thirty. At twenty, when one is something of a poet—No: it is
sufficient to see a grey pongee skirt! At fifty, when one is a philosopher—No:
it is enough to perceive a soul! I had done both; I had seen the skirt; I
had perceived the soul! Therefore, while hungry, I neglected my goulasch
to read these lists of names of the United States again and again, only
that I might have the thought that one of them—though I knew not
which—might be this lady’s, and that in so infinitesimal a degree I
had been near her again. Will it be estimated extreme imbecility in me
when I ventured the additional confession that I felt a great warmth and
tenderness toward the possessors of all these names, as being, if not
herself, at least her compatriots?</p>
<p>I am now brought to the admission that before to-day I had experienced
some prejudices against the inhabitants of the North-American republic,
though not on account of great experience of my own. A year previously I
had made a disastrous excursion to Monte Carlo in the company of a young
gentleman of London who had been for several weeks in New York and
Washington and Boston, and appeared to know very much of the country. He
was never anything but tired in speaking of it, and told me a great
amount. He said many times that in the hotels there was never a concierge
or portier to give you information where to discover the best vaudeville;
there was no concierge at all! In New York itself, my friend told me, a
facchino, or species of porter, or some such good-for-nothing, had said to
him, including a slap on the shoulder, “Well, brother, did you receive
your delayed luggage correctly?” (In this instance my studies of the
North-American idiom lead me to believe that my friend was intentionally
truthful in regard to the principalities, but mistaken in his observation
of detail.) He declared the recent willingness of the English to take some
interest in the United-Statesians to be a mistake; for their were noisy,
without real confidence in themselves; they were restless and merely
imitative instead of inventive. He told me that he was not exceptional;
all Englishmen had thought similarly for fifty or sixty years; therefore,
naturally, his opinion carried great weight with me. And myself, to my
astonishment, I had often seen parties of these republicans become all
ears and whispers when somebody called a prince or a countess passed by.
Their reverence for age itself, in anything but a horse, had often
surprised me by its artlessness, and of all strange things in the world, I
have heard them admire old customs and old families. It was strange to me
to listen, when I had believed that their land was the only one where
happily no person need worry to remember who had been his
great-grandfather.</p>
<p>The greatest of my own had not saved me from the decoration of the past
week, yet he was as much mine as he was Antonio Caravacioli’s; and
Antonio, though impoverished, had his motor-car and dined well, since I
happened to see, in my perusal of the journal, that he had been to dinner
the evening before at the English Embassy with a great company. “Bravo,
Antonio! Find a rich foreign wife if you can, since you cannot do well for
yourself at home!” And I could say so honestly, without spite, for all his
hatred of me,—because, until I had paid my addition, I was still the
possessor of fifty francs!</p>
<p>Fifty francs will continue life in the body of a judicial person a long
time in Paris, and combining that knowledge and the good goulasch, I
sought diligently for “Mamies” and “Sadies” with a revived spirit. I found
neither of those adorable names—in fact, only two such diminutives,
which are more charming than our Italian ones: A Miss Jeanie Archibald Zip
and a Miss Fannie Sooter. None of the names was harmonious with the grey
pongee—in truth, most of them were no prettier (however less
processional) than royal names. I could not please myself that I had come
closer to the rare lady; I must be contented that the same sky covered us
both, that the noise of the same city rang in her ears as mine.</p>
<p>Yet that was a satisfaction, and to know that it was true gave me
mysterious breathlessness and made me hear fragments of old songs during
my walk that night. I walked very far, under the trees of the Bois, where
I stopped for a few moments to smoke a cigarette at one of the tables
outside, at Armenonville.</p>
<p>None of the laughing women there could be the lady I sought; and as my
refusing to command anything caused the waiter uneasiness, in spite of my
prosperous appearance, I remained but a few moments, then trudged on, all
the long way to the Cafe’ de Madrid, where also she was not.</p>
<p>How did I assure myself of this since I had not seen her face? I cannot
tell you. Perhaps I should not have known her; but that night I was sure
that I should.</p>
<p>Yes, as sure of that as I was sure that she was beautiful!</p>
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