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<h1> MADAME DE MAUVES </h1>
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<h2> Byhenry James </h2>
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<h2> Contents </h2>
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<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> I </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> II </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> III </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> IV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> V </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> VI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> VII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> VIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> IX </SPAN></p>
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<h2> I </h2>
<p>The view from the terrace at Saint-Germain-en-Laye is immense and famous.
Paris lies spread before you in dusky vastness, domed and fortified,
glittering here and there through her light vapours and girdled with her
silver Seine. Behind you is a park of stately symmetry, and behind that a
forest where you may lounge through turfy avenues and light-chequered
glades and quite forget that you are within half an hour of the
boulevards. One afternoon, however, in mid-spring, some five years ago, a
young man seated on the terrace had preferred to keep this in mind. His
eyes were fixed in idle wistfulness on the mighty human hive before him.
He was fond of rural things, and he had come to Saint-Germain a week
before to meet the spring halfway; but though he could boast of a six
months’ acquaintance with the great city he never looked at it from his
present vantage without a sense of curiosity still unappeased. There were
moments when it seemed to him that not to be there just then was to miss
some thrilling chapter of experience. And yet his winter’s experience had
been rather fruitless and he had closed the book almost with a yawn.
Though not in the least a cynic he was what one may call a disappointed
observer, and he never chose the right-hand road without beginning to
suspect after an hour’s wayfaring that the left would have been the
better. He now had a dozen minds to go to Paris for the evening, to dine
at the Cafe Brebant and repair afterwards to the Gymnase and listen to the
latest exposition of the duties of the injured husband. He would probably
have risen to execute this project if he had not noticed a little girl
who, wandering along the terrace, had suddenly stopped short and begun to
gaze at him with round-eyed frankness. For a moment he was simply amused,
the child’s face denoting such helpless wonderment; the next he was
agreeably surprised. “Why this is my friend Maggie,” he said; “I see
you’ve not forgotten me.”</p>
<p>Maggie, after a short parley, was induced to seal her remembrance with a
kiss. Invited then to explain her appearance at Saint-Germain, she
embarked on a recital in which the general, according to the infantine
method, was so fatally sacrificed to the particular that Longmore looked
about him for a superior source of information. He found it in Maggie’s
mamma, who was seated with another lady at the opposite end of the
terrace; so, taking the child by the hand, he led her back to her
companions.</p>
<p>Maggie’s mamma was a young American lady, as you would immediately have
perceived, with a pretty and friendly face and a great elegance of fresh
finery. She greeted Longmore with amazement and joy, mentioning his name
to her friend and bidding him bring a chair and sit with them. The other
lady, in whom, though she was equally young and perhaps even prettier,
muslins and laces and feathers were less of a feature, remained silent,
stroking the hair of the little girl, whom she had drawn against her knee.
She had never heard of Longmore, but she now took in that her companion
had crossed the ocean with him, had met him afterwards in travelling and—having
left her husband in Wall Street—was indebted to him for sundry
services. Maggie’s mamma turned from time to time and smiled at this lady
with an air of invitation; the latter smiled back and continued gracefully
to say nothing. For ten minutes, meanwhile, Longmore felt a revival of
interest in his old acquaintance; then (as mild riddles are more amusing
than mere commonplaces) it gave way to curiosity about her friend. His
eyes wandered; her volubility shook a sort of sweetness out of the
friend’s silence.</p>
<p>The stranger was perhaps not obviously a beauty nor obviously an American,
but essentially both for the really seeing eye. She was slight and fair
and, though naturally pale, was delicately flushed just now, as by the
effect of late agitation. What chiefly struck Longmore in her face was the
union of a pair of beautifully gentle, almost languid grey eyes with a
mouth that was all expression and intention. Her forehead was a trifle
more expansive than belongs to classic types, and her thick brown hair
dressed out of the fashion, just then even more ugly than usual. Her
throat and bust were slender, but all the more in harmony with certain
rapid charming movements of the head, which she had a way of throwing back
every now and then with an air of attention and a sidelong glance from her
dove-like eyes. She seemed at once alert and indifferent, contemplative
and restless, and Longmore very soon discovered that if she was not a
brilliant beauty she was at least a most attaching one. This very
impression made him magnanimous. He was certain he had interrupted a
confidential conversation, and judged it discreet to withdraw, having
first learned from Maggie’s mamma—Mrs. Draper—that she was to
take the six o’clock train back to Paris. He promised to meet her at the
station.</p>
<p>He kept his appointment, and Mrs. Draper arrived betimes, accompanied by
her friend. The latter, however, made her farewells at the door and drove
away again, giving Longmore time only to raise his hat. “Who is she?” he
asked with visible ardour as he brought the traveller her tickets.</p>
<p>“Come and see me to-morrow at the Hotel de l’Empire,” she answered, “and
I’ll tell you all about her.” The force of this offer in making him
punctual at the Hotel de l’Empire Longmore doubtless never exactly
measured; and it was perhaps well he was vague, for he found his friend,
who was on the point of leaving Paris, so distracted by procrastinating
milliners and perjured lingeres that coherence had quite deserted her.
“You must find Saint-Germain dreadfully dull,” she nevertheless had the
presence of mind to say as he was going. “Why won’t you come with me to
London?”</p>
<p>“Introduce me to Madame de Mauves,” he answered, “and Saint-Germain will
quite satisfy me.” All he had learned was the lady’s name and residence.</p>
<p>“Ah she, poor woman, won’t make your affair a carnival. She’s very
unhappy,” said Mrs. Draper.</p>
<p>Longmore’s further enquiries were arrested by the arrival of a young lady
with a bandbox; but he went away with the promise of a note of
introduction, to be immediately dispatched to him at Saint-Germain.</p>
<p>He then waited a week, but the note never came, and he felt how little it
was for Mrs. Draper to complain of engagements unperformed. He lounged on
the terrace and walked in the forest, studied suburban street life and
made a languid attempt to investigate the records of the court of the
exiled Stuarts; but he spent most of his time in wondering where Madame de
Mauves lived and whether she ever walked on the terrace. Sometimes, he was
at last able to recognise; for one afternoon toward dusk he made her out
from a distance, arrested there alone and leaning against the low wall. In
his momentary hesitation to approach her there was almost a shade of
trepidation, but his curiosity was not chilled by such a measure of the
effect of a quarter of an hour’s acquaintance. She at once recovered their
connexion, on his drawing near, and showed it with the frankness of a
person unprovided with a great choice of contacts. Her dress, her
expression, were the same as before; her charm came out like that of fine
music on a second hearing. She soon made conversation easy by asking him
for news of Mrs. Draper. Longmore told her that he was daily expecting
news and after a pause mentioned the promised note of introduction.</p>
<p>“It seems less necessary now,” he said—“for me at least. But for you—I
should have liked you to know the good things our friend would probably
have been able to say about me.”</p>
<p>“If it arrives at last,” she answered, “you must come and see me and bring
it. If it doesn’t you must come without it.”</p>
<p>Then, as she continued to linger through the thickening twilight, she
explained that she was waiting for her husband, who was to arrive in the
train from Paris and who often passed along the terrace on his way home.
Longmore well remembered that Mrs. Draper had spoken of uneasy things in
her life, and he found it natural to guess that this same husband was the
source of them. Edified by his six months in Paris, “What else is
possible,” he put it, “for a sweet American girl who marries an unholy
foreigner?”</p>
<p>But this quiet dependence on her lord’s return rather shook his
shrewdness, and it received a further check from the free confidence with
which she turned to greet an approaching figure. Longmore distinguished in
the fading light a stoutish gentleman, on the fair side of forty, in a
high grey hat, whose countenance, obscure as yet against the quarter from
which it came, mainly presented to view the large outward twist of its
moustache. M. de Mauves saluted his wife with punctilious gallantry and,
having bowed to Longmore, asked her several questions in French. Before
taking his offered arm to walk to their carriage, which was in waiting at
the gate of the terrace, she introduced our hero as a friend of Mrs.
Draper and also a fellow countryman, whom she hoped they might have the
pleasure of seeing, as she said, chez eux. M. de Mauves responded briefly,
but civilly, in fair English, and led his wife away.</p>
<p>Longmore watched him as he went, renewing the curl of his main facial
feature—watched him with an irritation devoid of any mentionable
ground. His one pretext for gnashing his teeth would have been in his
apprehension that this gentleman’s worst English might prove a matter to
shame his own best French. For reasons involved apparently in the very
structure of his being Longmore found a colloquial use of that idiom as
insecure as the back of a restive horse, and was obliged to take his
exercise, as he was aware, with more tension than grace. He reflected
meanwhile with comfort that Madame de Mauves and he had a common tongue,
and his anxiety yielded to his relief at finding on his table that evening
a letter from Mrs. Draper. It enclosed a short formal missive to Madame de
Mauves, but the epistle itself was copious and confidential. She had
deferred writing till she reached London, where for a week, of course, she
had found other amusements.</p>
<p>“I think it’s the sight of so many women here who don’t look at all like
her that has reminded me by the law of contraries of my charming friend at
Saint-Germain and my promise to introduce you to her,” she wrote. “I
believe I spoke to you of her rather blighted state, and I wondered
afterwards whether I hadn’t been guilty of a breach of confidence. But you
would certainly have arrived at guesses of your own, and, besides, she has
never told me her secrets. The only one she ever pretended to was that
she’s the happiest creature in the world, after assuring me of which, poor
thing, she went off into tears; so that I prayed to be delivered from such
happiness. It’s the miserable story of an American girl born neither to
submit basely nor to rebel crookedly marrying a shining sinful Frenchman
who believes a woman must do one or the other of those things. The
lightest of US have a ballast that they can’t imagine, and the poorest a
moral imagination that they don’t require. She was romantic and perverse—she
thought the world she had been brought up in too vulgar or at least too
prosaic. To have a decent home-life isn’t perhaps the greatest of
adventures; but I think she wishes nowadays she hadn’t gone in quite so
desperately for thrills. M. de Mauves cared of course for nothing but her
money, which he’s spending royally on his menus plaisirs. I hope you
appreciate the compliment I pay you when I recommend you to go and cheer
up a lady domestically dejected. Believe me, I’ve given no other man a
proof of this esteem; so if you were to take me in an inferior sense I
would never speak to you again. Prove to this fine sore creature that our
manners may have all the grace without wanting to make such selfish terms
for it. She avoids society and lives quite alone, seeing no one but a
horrible French sister-in-law. Do let me hear that you’ve made her
patience a little less absent-minded. Make her WANT to forget; make her
like you.”</p>
<p>This ingenious appeal left the young man uneasy. He found himself in
presence of more complications than had been in his reckoning. To call on
Madame de Mauves with his present knowledge struck him as akin to fishing
in troubled waters. He was of modest composition, and yet he asked himself
whether an appearance of attentions from any gallant gentleman mightn’t
give another twist to her tangle. A flattering sense of unwonted
opportunity, however—of such a possible value constituted for him as
he had never before been invited to rise to—made him with the lapse
of time more confident, possibly more reckless. It was too inspiring not
to act upon the idea of kindling a truer light in his fair countrywoman’s
slow smile, and at least he hoped to persuade her that even a raw
representative of the social order she had not done justice to was not
necessarily a mere fortuitous collocation of atoms. He immediately called
on her.</p>
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