<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<p class='c007'>“I shall do your hair for you, mother dear,”
said Eva one morning. They were both in Lady
Carey’s dressing-room, as it was the time when the
maid was rung for to attend to her mistress’s
coiffure.</p>
<p>“A very good idea, Eva. I must say I never
feel quite at my ease with Elise, and I ring for her
as seldom as I can now. It does seem so funny
to give orders to a person who stands just as
naked as you are.”</p>
<p>“Oh! I am so glad! I have been longing to
arrange your lovely hair in my own way,” and Eva
clapped her hands with joy.</p>
<p>“You are very brusque, Eva—here are the hairpins,
and the brush is in that drawer.”</p>
<p>Eva held the mass of auburn hair in her fingers,
and softly brushed it off the delicate temples of
her mother.</p>
<p>“I am afraid, dear child, you have lost a great
deal of your ladylike grace since you have been a
regular attendant at these public tournaments. You
associate with such a queer lot there; I am sure it
must be fatal to good manners.”</p>
<p>In a few seconds Eva had wound the rich coils
of hair into a Grecian knot on the shapely head of
her mother.</p>
<p>“You look a perfect dear, mother; so like the
Medici Venus—you don’t know how perfectly
lovely you are.” The girl kissed Lady Carey and
sat at her feet.</p>
<p>“My poor child, I do not know what is to
become of us all.”</p>
<p>“You need not be anxious, mother”—Eva leaned
her graceful head on her mother’s lap. “It is
useless to try to stem the tide; nothing that you
can ever do will prevent what has to be.”</p>
<p>“What do you aim at, child?” asked Lady
Carey, as she tidied her combs and brushes.</p>
<p>“Nothing, mother—but—I often crave for
freedom.”</p>
<p>“Is there anything you want to say, Eva?”
Lady Carey laid her hand on the girl’s hair. “I
have heard and seen such strange things lately,
that I might just as well know all.”</p>
<p>“Oh! darling mother, I could not bear to do
anything which you would consider underhand;
although my actions would only be the reflection
of my own convictions.”</p>
<p>Lady Carey took her daughter’s face in her two
hands and stared hard at her. “Are you thinking
of doing the same mad thing as Gwen? If
so, say it at once; I had rather be prepared for
the worst.”</p>
<p>No answer came. Eva dropped her eyelids and
spoke no word. At last she softly murmured, “I
love Sinclair.”</p>
<p>“Oh! for the matter of that, many have done
the same,” derisively remarked her mother, as she
gently pushed away the face she held.</p>
<p>“Yes,” breathlessly answered the girl, “but he
loves me.”</p>
<p>“Hum! He has told that to many. All this
is nonsense, you must put all this out of your
silly head. Sinclair is not a marrying man;
besides, he is not the husband <em>I</em> would wish you
to have.”</p>
<p>Eva stood up and looked straight at her mother.
“He is the husband <em>I</em> have chosen.”</p>
<p>“My poor girl, Sinclair is not the man to stick
to one woman. He is hypercritical and cynical, I
should even say—cruel, where a woman’s love is
concerned.”</p>
<p>“But, mother, he has repudiated his past errors—you
heard what he said a week ago?”</p>
<p>“Pooh! that was only hysteria, it will pass! It
is better to speak to you plainly, Eva; he was
Lady Vera’s lover for two years. I know all
about it, as I was her confidante through it all.
He nearly drove her out of her senses with his
capricious moods; her husband, as you know,
divorced her; and ever afterwards Sinclair
invented new modes of torture for the woman
who, I believe, sincerely loved him. She gave
him up at last and threw herself at the head of
that silly Bob Leyland, who is good to her in his
own way.”</p>
<p>“As to Sinclair’s relations with Lady Vera, that
is no news to me, my dear mother. How can a
girl remain ignorant of these scandals after one
London season? If the friends or enemies of
the man or the woman do not tell her all about it,
it is very easy for her to find it out for herself.
Women like Lady Vera are living advertisements,
and they would no more wish to hide their intrigues
than Epps and Cadbury would wish to
stop the advertising of their cocoas. It is all part
of the social business; and the pit and gallery
would be swindled out of their sport were Society’s
sewers to be thoroughly cleansed.”</p>
<p>“But it will always be the case as long as there
exists an Upper Ten; and, after all, when we think
of it, it was much worse in Charles II.’s time and
under the Georges,” replied Lady Carey.</p>
<p>“I have no doubt it was so,” said Eva. “They
were coarse, but we are suggestive; they were
brutal in the pursuit of indecorous pleasures, we
are complex in our vulgar dissipations. We combine
the corruption of a Louis XV. with the
casuist of a Loyola. The Georges were everything
that is bad, I grant you, but they were not
effeminate; they lived up to their standard
of military chivalry, which we do not, although
we pretend to believe in a military code of
honour.”</p>
<p>“What on earth will you put in its place, child?”</p>
<p>“Honesty.”</p>
<p>“How suburban, Eva. I expect my grocer or
my housekeeper to possess that <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bourgeois</span></i>
quality; but a gentleman must have a higher
ideal of chivalry.”</p>
<p>“There is nothing more exalted than perfect
honesty, dear mother; and the proof is that your
grocer and your housekeeper cannot afford to live
up to its standard, for it does not pay.”</p>
<p>“You are quite terrible, Eva, with your subversive
theories! I cannot imagine where you picked up
these queer ideas. I have always been most
particular to surround you with what we were used
to call well-bred people.”</p>
<p>“Yes, the Lady Veras and company,” retorted
Eva.</p>
<p>Lady Carey ignored the remark and continued,
“I always feared Gwen would have a fatal influence
over you. But what could I do? It is so
difficult to weed out one’s friends when one belongs
to a certain set.”</p>
<p>“My dear mother, Gwen was saved in time, for
she would have turned into a Lady Vera had not
Society’s foundations suddenly collapsed. She
had been taught all the tricks of a perfect woman
of the world, and would have even outdistanced
Lady Vera, for she possessed more brains and
more animal spirits. So, you see, there is still
hope for a Sinclair to develop into a paragon of
virtue, to suit even your fastidious ideal of a
son-in-law.”</p>
<p>“My dear Eva, pray do not accuse me of such
a Philistine notion as to require in my son-in-law
any of the qualities absolutely needed in a bank
accountant or in a land agent. Heaven forbid!
I am larger minded than that, and I know that a
man must live. You see, Sinclair is all right, and we
all run after him and make love to him, and look
forward to the clever sayings that drop from his
cynical lips; but”—a pout was on her lips, as she
looked for the proper word to express her sentiment—“well,
he is not what we are accustomed to
consider a—gentleman. It is extraordinary how
these upstarts end by believing they can do anything.
His father was tutor to Lord Farmiloe’s
son; and, instead of going into the army as his
father wished him to do, Sinclair, after leaving
Oxford, began to dabble in questionable journalism,
and soon developing that wonderful power of
criticism, he became the terror of all artists, known
or unknown. I know, perhaps better than most
women, what it is to suffer from a man who does
not consider his wife’s love all-sufficient to his
happiness.” Lady Carey relaxed her hard expression,
her eyes were for one instant dimmed by
a passing mist, and her lips trembled, whilst a
lump rose in her throat; but it was soon over.
“Your father <em>was</em> a gentleman, and I could not
wish a daughter of mine to have a more courteous
man for a husband. He treated me, before the
world, as he ought to have treated the woman who
bore his name, and carried on his numerous
intrigues with the discipline and gallantry of a
true soldier, who held his sword at the service of
his king, and his soul at the mercy of his God,
but brooked no restraint nor reproach from anyone
in this world.”</p>
<p>“What a convenient way of dismissing all moral
obligations,” remarked Eva.</p>
<p>“When you have seen as much of the world as
I have, my dear Eva, you will know that philosophy
plays a large part in our social training,
and helps to soften the coarseness of life. We
leave the rioting of the mind to the plebeian classes,
who have not, like us, to keep up appearances and
traditions of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bienséance</span></i>.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but the world’s philosophy is no longer
the enduring stoicism of a Spartan, nor is it the
calm acceptance of human frailty of a Marcus
Aurelius; it is a cynical acquiescence in the general
depravity of the over-fed and over-clothed
worshippers of Mammon, who smile at their
neighbour’s weaknesses, hoping that he in turn
will shut his eyes to their foibles. Philosophy
is your capital which pays you back heavy
dividends.”</p>
<p>“How bitter you are, my dear girl. You are too
young to think or speak like that; and you cannot
lay down any such rule of conduct. Of course I
know that things are awkward at present, and
that the future is not pleasant to contemplate;
and it grieves me to the quick that my child
should be in close contact with the vulgarity of
life.”</p>
<p>“Do not worry yourself, mother; I am seeing
life for the first time, and it is very beautiful.
Society is as far removed from true life as the sun
is from the moon. You fashionable mothers have a
strange way of bringing up your children. As
the Chinese tortured their women’s toes to prevent
their running away, so you cramped our youthful
minds, obliterated our organ of perception and
twisted our judgment so as to make us incapable
of distinguishing right from wrong. You showed us
little pictures encircled in trivial frames, and told
us that these were the sights we had to view for
the rest of our lives. We put questions to you
about the people with whom you surrounded us in
our infancy, but you answered scornfully, that
they were our inferiors whom we need not consider.
Later on, the same game of mystification
went on with our teachers whom we had to treat
only as educational cramming machines. When
we developed into women, the bandages were
swathed more tightly round our expanding brains,
and we were then informed, at the most perplexing
cross-roads of our lives, that no decent girl
inquired into any social problems: a tub, a game
of golf, and the admission into the smart set were
all-sufficient to assuage feminine yearning. If, as
often happened, the hygienic and worldly remedies
failed to cure the patient, the whole was dismissed
in these words: ‘A lady does not mention such
things!’ This was the prologue to matrimony!
When you, the mothers of Society, had brought
your victims safely to the stake, you turned your
eyes up to heaven and begged for God’s blessing,
which you deserved less than the devil’s benediction,
for in your culpable and wilful ignorance
you were playing a ghastly trick in sending out
defenceless beings into an arena of wild beasts.
Do you believe that your drawing-room philosophy
will be of any use to the victims of your
social wisdom? No, your philosophy thrives on
champagne and truffles, not on the understanding
of human passions. How often has a girl brought
to the conjugal market a young heart and a
healthy constitution, to close a bargain with a
cynical flesh dealer; and very soon had to learn
how to smuggle cunningly out of the unfair contract?
But it was useless to recriminate with
the only friend God gave us—our mothers;
for we were at once advised to read the first part
of the Marriage Service; and we learnt through
cruel experience that there was no escape, no
relief, for those born and bred in our unnatural
Society.”</p>
<p>“What has come over you, Eva? Who has been
poisoning your mind?” Lady Carey’s voice was
trembling, and she did not dare look at her
daughter. The latter impulsively fell on her
knees, and encircling her mother’s waist with her
arms, she said passionately,—</p>
<p>“You believed us to be safe when you had told
us never to look inside a certain closet; and like
Blue Beard you fed us on kick-shaws and soap-bubbles
as long as we never opened that secret
closet—life. Why were we not to know the
realities of existence? Why did you travesty life
into a Music Hall burlesque? What God created,
you belittled; what nature gave to man, you
turned into a deadly weapon against him. Love
came into the world, pure and generous, but it was
led astray in social haunts and became debauchery;
ambition prompted man to create something true
and beautiful, but he wandered in trimmed paths
of artificiality, and his natural instinct was transformed
into a passion for worldly power and
riches. What you called character was merely
callousness erected into a principle; what you
thought was philosophy was only an abnormal
power of frivolity, which would have made even a
butterfly blush. Oh! mother, mother, cannot you
see what a sham it all was?”</p>
<p>Lady Carey was not unintelligent; she knew
that what her daughter said was perfectly correct.
She quite realised that this was what they had
lived through, but she did not approve of the
spirit of revolt, and always had considered it
vulgar to kick against the rules of Society. Still,
her opposition was not altogether sincere, and her
displeasure did not arise at what her daughter
said, but at the fact of her daughter saying it.
Had Lionel, or any other, put forward these ideas,
she would have been the first to laugh, and to
agree with what he said.</p>
<p>“Forgive me, dearest mother, for saying these
cruel things to you, but if you only knew
how much I love, you could not blame me.
Set me free, my own mother! After all, it
is my life I am pleading for, and I am willing
to take the responsibility of all that will
follow.”</p>
<p>“This influence which has such an effect upon
you all must be very powerful.” Tears were
slowly dropping from Lady Carey’s eyes and
trickling down her cheeks. “Can it be that I
have never known you really, Eva? How is it
that for many years I have looked after you—for
I have not, like so many, been neglectful of my
maternal duties—and yet know no more to-day
about your nature than I did on the day you
were born? For the last few years, since you were
presented, we have lived the same life, seen the
same people, and yet we were as much divided
from each other as if you had been at the North
Pole.”</p>
<p>“But, darling mother, I was far away from my
true nature, so do not blame yourself alone; you
see, necessity made me think differently.”</p>
<p>“But then, necessity ought to have acted in the
same way upon me,” replied Lady Carey. “Still,
I cannot see as you do.”</p>
<p>“Because you are stiffening yourself against the
inevitable; you are not so blind as not to be able
to see. Oh! mother, if you knew how I love you,
how I want you to be happy!”</p>
<p>“Child, you are all I have in the world, for, as I
have said before, I have suffered. You have never
known this, my child, for I hid it from everyone;
but all that you have just said has brought back
to my mind past scenes which I had determined
to forget for ever. My girlhood! my marriage!
your words brought all back to me so distinctly.
But what is it that makes you so happy, so keenly
interested in all your surroundings? I should like
to know what it is, for I have not become an idiot,
and I might yet learn.”</p>
<p>“Love, love has been the teacher! Oh!
mother, I know you have always loved me, but
you allowed worldly barriers to divide us. Let
yourself go, do not be guided by your stubborn
prejudices, and judge our present world from the
standard of our past Society.”</p>
<p>“Ah! my poor child, I know of no other
standard but that of a well-bred woman of the
world; still, to show you that I have no silly
prejudice, and that I can turn my mind to anything,
I shall try to let myself go; but mind you,
it will be only out of sheer <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</span></i>, not from any
other motive. I shall enter into all your plans;
it will at least be something to do.”</p>
<p>Eva stood up and, taking both her mother’s
hands, lifted her from her chair; the two women
laughed joyously, and putting their arms round
one another’s necks, they left the room to go
down to luncheon.</p>
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