<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> ANN VERONICA </h1>
<h2> A MODERN LOVE STORY </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h2> By H. G. Wells </h2>
<blockquote>
<p>"The art of ignoring is one of the accomplishments of every<br/>
well-bred girl, so carefully instilled that at last she can <br/> even
ignore her own thoughts and her own knowledge."</p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER THE FIRST </h2>
<h3> ANN VERONICA TALKS TO HER FATHER </h3>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 1 </h2>
<p>One Wednesday afternoon in late September, Ann Veronica Stanley came down
from London in a state of solemn excitement and quite resolved to have
things out with her father that very evening. She had trembled on the
verge of such a resolution before, but this time quite definitely she made
it. A crisis had been reached, and she was almost glad it had been
reached. She made up her mind in the train home that it should be a
decisive crisis. It is for that reason that this novel begins with her
there, and neither earlier nor later, for it is the history of this crisis
and its consequences that this novel has to tell.</p>
<p>She had a compartment to herself in the train from London to Morningside
Park, and she sat with both her feet on the seat in an attitude that would
certainly have distressed her mother to see, and horrified her grandmother
beyond measure; she sat with her knees up to her chin and her hands
clasped before them, and she was so lost in thought that she discovered
with a start, from a lettered lamp, that she was at Morningside Park, and
thought she was moving out of the station, whereas she was only moving in.
"Lord!" she said. She jumped up at once, caught up a leather clutch
containing notebooks, a fat text-book, and a chocolate-and-yellow-covered
pamphlet, and leaped neatly from the carriage, only to discover that the
train was slowing down and that she had to traverse the full length of the
platform past it again as the result of her precipitation. "Sold again,"
she remarked. "Idiot!" She raged inwardly while she walked along with that
air of self-contained serenity that is proper to a young lady of nearly
two-and-twenty under the eye of the world.</p>
<p>She walked down the station approach, past the neat, obtrusive offices of
the coal merchant and the house agent, and so to the wicket-gate by the
butcher's shop that led to the field path to her home. Outside the
post-office stood a no-hatted, blond young man in gray flannels, who was
elaborately affixing a stamp to a letter. At the sight of her he became
rigid and a singularly bright shade of pink. She made herself serenely
unaware of his existence, though it may be it was his presence that sent
her by the field detour instead of by the direct path up the Avenue.</p>
<p>"Umph!" he said, and regarded his letter doubtfully before consigning it
to the pillar-box. "Here goes," he said. Then he hovered undecidedly for
some seconds with his hands in his pockets and his mouth puckered to a
whistle before he turned to go home by the Avenue.</p>
<p>Ann Veronica forgot him as soon as she was through the gate, and her face
resumed its expression of stern preoccupation. "It's either now or never,"
she said to herself....</p>
<p>Morningside Park was a suburb that had not altogether, as people say, come
off. It consisted, like pre-Roman Gaul, of three parts. There was first
the Avenue, which ran in a consciously elegant curve from the railway
station into an undeveloped wilderness of agriculture, with big, yellow
brick villas on either side, and then there was the pavement, the little
clump of shops about the post-office, and under the railway arch was a
congestion of workmen's dwellings. The road from Surbiton and Epsom ran
under the arch, and, like a bright fungoid growth in the ditch, there was
now appearing a sort of fourth estate of little red-and-white rough-cast
villas, with meretricious gables and very brassy window-blinds. Behind the
Avenue was a little hill, and an iron-fenced path went over the crest of
this to a stile under an elm-tree, and forked there, with one branch going
back into the Avenue again.</p>
<p>"It's either now or never," said Ann Veronica, again ascending this stile.
"Much as I hate rows, I've either got to make a stand or give in
altogether."</p>
<p>She seated herself in a loose and easy attitude and surveyed the backs of
the Avenue houses; then her eyes wandered to where the new red-and-white
villas peeped among the trees. She seemed to be making some sort of
inventory. "Ye Gods!" she said at last. "WHAT a place!</p>
<p>"Stuffy isn't the word for it.</p>
<p>"I wonder what he takes me for?"</p>
<p>When presently she got down from the stile a certain note of internal
conflict, a touch of doubt, had gone from her warm-tinted face. She had
now the clear and tranquil expression of one whose mind is made up. Her
back had stiffened, and her hazel eyes looked steadfastly ahead.</p>
<p>As she approached the corner of the Avenue the blond, no-hatted man in
gray flannels appeared. There was a certain air of forced fortuity in his
manner. He saluted awkwardly. "Hello, Vee!" he said.</p>
<p>"Hello, Teddy!" she answered.</p>
<p>He hung vaguely for a moment as she passed.</p>
<p>But it was clear she was in no mood for Teddys. He realized that he was
committed to the path across the fields, an uninteresting walk at the best
of times.</p>
<p>"Oh, dammit!" he remarked, "dammit!" with great bitterness as he faced it.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART_"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 2 </h2>
<p>Ann Veronica Stanley was twenty-one and a half years old. She had black
hair, fine eyebrows, and a clear complexion; and the forces that had
modelled her features had loved and lingered at their work and made them
subtle and fine. She was slender, and sometimes she seemed tall, and
walked and carried herself lightly and joyfully as one who commonly and
habitually feels well, and sometimes she stooped a little and was
preoccupied. Her lips came together with an expression between contentment
and the faintest shadow of a smile, her manner was one of quiet reserve,
and behind this mask she was wildly discontented and eager for freedom and
life.</p>
<p>She wanted to live. She was vehemently impatient—she did not clearly
know for what—to do, to be, to experience. And experience was slow
in coming. All the world about her seemed to be—how can one put it?—in
wrappers, like a house when people leave it in the summer. The blinds were
all drawn, the sunlight kept out, one could not tell what colors these
gray swathings hid. She wanted to know. And there was no intimation
whatever that the blinds would ever go up or the windows or doors be
opened, or the chandeliers, that seemed to promise such a blaze of fire,
unveiled and furnished and lit. Dim souls flitted about her, not only
speaking but it would seem even thinking in undertones....</p>
<p>During her school days, especially her earlier school days, the world had
been very explicit with her, telling her what to do, what not to do,
giving her lessons to learn and games to play and interests of the most
suitable and various kinds. Presently she woke up to the fact that there
was a considerable group of interests called being in love and getting
married, with certain attractive and amusing subsidiary developments, such
as flirtation and "being interested" in people of the opposite sex. She
approached this field with her usual liveliness of apprehension. But here
she met with a check. These interests her world promptly, through the
agency of schoolmistresses, older school-mates, her aunt, and a number of
other responsible and authoritative people, assured her she must on no
account think about. Miss Moffatt, the history and moral instruction
mistress, was particularly explicit upon this score, and they all agreed
in indicating contempt and pity for girls whose minds ran on such matters,
and who betrayed it in their conversation or dress or bearing. It was, in
fact, a group of interests quite unlike any other group, peculiar and
special, and one to be thoroughly ashamed of. Nevertheless, Ann Veronica
found it a difficult matter not to think of these things. However having a
considerable amount of pride, she decided she would disavow these
undesirable topics and keep her mind away from them just as far as she
could, but it left her at the end of her school days with that wrapped
feeling I have described, and rather at loose ends.</p>
<p>The world, she discovered, with these matters barred had no particular
place for her at all, nothing for her to do, except a functionless
existence varied by calls, tennis, selected novels, walks, and dusting in
her father's house. She thought study would be better. She was a clever
girl, the best of her year in the High School, and she made a valiant
fight for Somerville or Newnham but her father had met and argued with a
Somerville girl at a friend's dinner-table and he thought that sort of
thing unsexed a woman. He said simply that he wanted her to live at home.
There was a certain amount of disputation, and meanwhile she went on at
school. They compromised at length on the science course at the Tredgold
Women's College—she had already matriculated into London University
from school—she came of age, and she bickered with her aunt for
latch-key privileges on the strength of that and her season ticket.
Shamefaced curiosities began to come back into her mind, thinly disguised
as literature and art. She read voraciously, and presently, because of her
aunt's censorship, she took to smuggling any books she thought might be
prohibited instead of bringing them home openly, and she went to the
theatre whenever she could produce an acceptable friend to accompany her.
She passed her general science examination with double honors and
specialized in science. She happened to have an acute sense of form and
unusual mental lucidity, and she found in biology, and particularly in
comparative anatomy, a very considerable interest, albeit the illumination
it cast upon her personal life was not altogether direct. She dissected
well, and in a year she found herself chafing at the limitations of the
lady B. Sc. who retailed a store of faded learning in the Tredgold
laboratory. She had already realized that this instructress was hopelessly
wrong and foggy—it is the test of the good comparative anatomist—upon
the skull. She discovered a desire to enter as a student in the Imperial
College at Westminster, where Russell taught, and go on with her work at
the fountain-head.</p>
<p>She had asked about that already, and her father had replied, evasively:
"We'll have to see about that, little Vee; we'll have to see about that."
In that posture of being seen about the matter hung until she seemed
committed to another session at the Tredgold College, and in the mean time
a small conflict arose and brought the latch-key question, and in fact the
question of Ann Veronica's position generally, to an acute issue.</p>
<p>In addition to the various business men, solicitors, civil servants, and
widow ladies who lived in the Morningside Park Avenue, there was a certain
family of alien sympathies and artistic quality, the Widgetts, with which
Ann Veronica had become very friendly. Mr. Widgett was a journalist and
art critic, addicted to a greenish-gray tweed suit and "art" brown ties;
he smoked corncob pipes in the Avenue on Sunday morning, travelled third
class to London by unusual trains, and openly despised golf. He occupied
one of the smaller houses near the station. He had one son, who had been
co-educated, and three daughters with peculiarly jolly red hair that Ann
Veronica found adorable. Two of these had been her particular intimates at
the High School, and had done much to send her mind exploring beyond the
limits of the available literature at home. It was a cheerful,
irresponsible, shamelessly hard-up family in the key of faded green and
flattened purple, and the girls went on from the High School to the Fadden
Art School and a bright, eventful life of art student dances, Socialist
meetings, theatre galleries, talking about work, and even, at intervals,
work; and ever and again they drew Ann Veronica from her sound persistent
industry into the circle of these experiences. They had asked her to come
to the first of the two great annual Fadden Dances, the October one, and
Ann Veronica had accepted with enthusiasm. And now her father said she
must not go.</p>
<p>He had "put his foot down," and said she must not go.</p>
<p>Going involved two things that all Ann Veronica's tact had been
ineffectual to conceal from her aunt and father. Her usual dignified
reserve had availed her nothing. One point was that she was to wear fancy
dress in the likeness of a Corsair's bride, and the other was that she was
to spend whatever vestiges of the night remained after the dance was over
in London with the Widgett girls and a select party in "quite a decent
little hotel" near Fitzroy Square.</p>
<p>"But, my dear!" said Ann Veronica's aunt.</p>
<p>"You see," said Ann Veronica, with the air of one who shares a difficulty,
"I've promised to go. I didn't realize—I don't see how I can get out
of it now."</p>
<p>Then it was her father issued his ultimatum. He had conveyed it to her,
not verbally, but by means of a letter, which seemed to her a singularly
ignoble method of prohibition. "He couldn't look me in the face and say
it," said Ann Veronica.</p>
<p>"But of course it's aunt's doing really."</p>
<p>And thus it was that as Ann Veronica neared the gates of home, she said to
herself: "I'll have it out with him somehow. I'll have it out with him.
And if he won't—"</p>
<p>But she did not give even unspoken words to the alternative at that time.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART__"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 3 </h2>
<p>Ann Veronica's father was a solicitor with a good deal of company
business: a lean, trustworthy, worried-looking, neuralgic, clean-shaven
man of fifty-three, with a hard mouth, a sharp nose, iron-gray hair, gray
eyes, gold-framed glasses, and a small, circular baldness at the crown of
his head. His name was Peter. He had had five children at irregular
intervals, of whom Ann Veronica was the youngest, so that as a parent he
came to her perhaps a little practised and jaded and inattentive; and he
called her his "little Vee," and patted her unexpectedly and
disconcertingly, and treated her promiscuously as of any age between
eleven and eight-and-twenty. The City worried him a good deal, and what
energy he had left over he spent partly in golf, a game he treated very
seriously, and partly in the practices of microscopic petrography.</p>
<p>He "went in" for microscopy in the unphilosophical Victorian manner as his
"hobby." A birthday present of a microscope had turned his mind to
technical microscopy when he was eighteen, and a chance friendship with a
Holborn microscope dealer had confirmed that bent. He had remarkably
skilful fingers and a love of detailed processes, and he had become one of
the most dexterous amateur makers of rock sections in the world. He spent
a good deal more money and time than he could afford upon the little room
at the top of the house, in producing new lapidary apparatus and new
microscopic accessories and in rubbing down slices of rock to a
transparent thinness and mounting them in a beautiful and dignified
manner. He did it, he said, "to distract his mind." His chief successes he
exhibited to the Lowndean Microscopical Society, where their high
technical merit never failed to excite admiration. Their scientific value
was less considerable, since he chose rocks entirely with a view to their
difficulty of handling or their attractiveness at conversaziones when
done. He had a great contempt for the sections the "theorizers" produced.
They proved all sorts of things perhaps, but they were thick, unequal,
pitiful pieces of work. Yet an indiscriminating, wrong-headed world gave
such fellows all sorts of distinctions....</p>
<p>He read but little, and that chiefly healthy light fiction with chromatic
titles, The Red Sword, The Black Helmet, The Purple Robe, also in order
"to distract his mind." He read it in winter in the evening after dinner,
and Ann Veronica associated it with a tendency to monopolize the lamp, and
to spread a very worn pair of dappled fawn-skin slippers across the
fender. She wondered occasionally why his mind needed so much distraction.
His favorite newspaper was the Times, which he began at breakfast in the
morning often with manifest irritation, and carried off to finish in the
train, leaving no other paper at home.</p>
<p>It occurred to Ann Veronica once that she had known him when he was
younger, but day had followed day, and each had largely obliterated the
impression of its predecessor. But she certainly remembered that when she
was a little girl he sometimes wore tennis flannels, and also rode a
bicycle very dexterously in through the gates to the front door. And in
those days, too, he used to help her mother with her gardening, and hover
about her while she stood on the ladder and hammered creepers to the
scullery wall.</p>
<p>It had been Ann Veronica's lot as the youngest child to live in a home
that became less animated and various as she grew up. Her mother had died
when she was thirteen, her two much older sisters had married off—one
submissively, one insubordinately; her two brothers had gone out into the
world well ahead of her, and so she had made what she could of her father.
But he was not a father one could make much of.</p>
<p>His ideas about girls and women were of a sentimental and modest quality;
they were creatures, he thought, either too bad for a modern vocabulary,
and then frequently most undesirably desirable, or too pure and good for
life. He made this simple classification of a large and various sex to the
exclusion of all intermediate kinds; he held that the two classes had to
be kept apart even in thought and remote from one another. Women are made
like the potter's vessels—either for worship or contumely, and are
withal fragile vessels. He had never wanted daughters. Each time a
daughter had been born to him he had concealed his chagrin with great
tenderness and effusion from his wife, and had sworn unwontedly and with
passionate sincerity in the bathroom. He was a manly man, free from any
strong maternal strain, and he had loved his dark-eyed, dainty
bright-colored, and active little wife with a real vein of passion in his
sentiment. But he had always felt (he had never allowed himself to think
of it) that the promptitude of their family was a little indelicate of
her, and in a sense an intrusion. He had, however, planned brilliant
careers for his two sons, and, with a certain human amount of warping and
delay, they were pursuing these. One was in the Indian Civil Service and
one in the rapidly developing motor business. The daughters, he had hoped,
would be their mother's care.</p>
<p>He had no ideas about daughters. They happen to a man.</p>
<p>Of course a little daughter is a delightful thing enough. It runs about
gayly, it romps, it is bright and pretty, it has enormous quantities of
soft hair and more power of expressing affection than its brothers. It is
a lovely little appendage to the mother who smiles over it, and it does
things quaintly like her, gestures with her very gestures. It makes
wonderful sentences that you can repeat in the City and are good enough
for Punch. You call it a lot of nicknames—"Babs" and "Bibs" and
"Viddles" and "Vee"; you whack at it playfully, and it whacks you back. It
loves to sit on your knee. All that is jolly and as it should be.</p>
<p>But a little daughter is one thing and a daughter quite another. There one
comes to a relationship that Mr. Stanley had never thought out. When he
found himself thinking about it, it upset him so that he at once resorted
to distraction. The chromatic fiction with which he relieved his mind
glanced but slightly at this aspect of life, and never with any quality of
guidance. Its heroes never had daughters, they borrowed other people's.
The one fault, indeed, of this school of fiction for him was that it had
rather a light way with parental rights. His instinct was in the direction
of considering his daughters his absolute property, bound to obey him, his
to give away or his to keep to be a comfort in his declining years just as
he thought fit. About this conception of ownership he perceived and
desired a certain sentimental glamour, he liked everything properly
dressed, but it remained ownership. Ownership seemed only a reasonable
return for the cares and expenses of a daughter's upbringing. Daughters
were not like sons. He perceived, however, that both the novels he read
and the world he lived in discountenanced these assumptions. Nothing else
was put in their place, and they remained sotto voce, as it were, in his
mind. The new and the old cancelled out; his daughters became
quasi-independent dependents—which is absurd. One married as he
wished and one against his wishes, and now here was Ann Veronica, his
little Vee, discontented with her beautiful, safe, and sheltering home,
going about with hatless friends to Socialist meetings and art-class
dances, and displaying a disposition to carry her scientific ambitions to
unwomanly lengths. She seemed to think he was merely the paymaster,
handing over the means of her freedom. And now she insisted that she MUST
leave the chastened security of the Tredgold Women's College for Russell's
unbridled classes, and wanted to go to fancy dress dances in pirate
costume and spend the residue of the night with Widgett's ramshackle girls
in some indescribable hotel in Soho!</p>
<p>He had done his best not to think about her at all, but the situation and
his sister had become altogether too urgent. He had finally put aside The
Lilac Sunbonnet, gone into his study, lit the gas fire, and written the
letter that had brought these unsatisfactory relations to a head.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART___"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 4 </h2>
<p>MY DEAR VEE, he wrote. These daughters! He gnawed his pen and reflected,
tore the sheet up, and began again.</p>
<p>"MY DEAR VERONICA,—Your aunt tells me you have involved yourself in
some arrangement with the Widgett girls about a Fancy Dress Ball in
London. I gather you wish to go up in some fantastic get-up, wrapped about
in your opera cloak, and that after the festivities you propose to stay
with these friends of yours, and without any older people in your party,
at an hotel. Now I am sorry to cross you in anything you have set your
heart upon, but I regret to say—"</p>
<p>"H'm," he reflected, and crossed out the last four words.</p>
<p>"—but this cannot be."</p>
<p>"No," he said, and tried again: "but I must tell you quite definitely that
I feel it to be my duty to forbid any such exploit."</p>
<p>"Damn!" he remarked at the defaced letter; and, taking a fresh sheet, he
recopied what he had written. A certain irritation crept into his manner
as he did so.</p>
<p>"I regret that you should ever have proposed it," he went on.</p>
<p>He meditated, and began a new paragraph.</p>
<p>"The fact of it is, and this absurd project of yours only brings it to a
head, you have begun to get hold of some very queer ideas about what a
young lady in your position may or may not venture to do. I do not think
you quite understand my ideals or what is becoming as between father and
daughter. Your attitude to me—"</p>
<p>He fell into a brown study. It was so difficult to put precisely.</p>
<p>"—and your aunt—"</p>
<p>For a time he searched for the mot juste. Then he went on:</p>
<p>"—and, indeed, to most of the established things in life is,
frankly, unsatisfactory. You are restless, aggressive, critical with all
the crude unthinking criticism of youth. You have no grasp upon the
essential facts of life (I pray God you never may), and in your rash
ignorance you are prepared to dash into positions that may end in lifelong
regret. The life of a young girl is set about with prowling pitfalls."</p>
<p>He was arrested for a moment by an indistinct picture of Veronica reading
this last sentence. But he was now too deeply moved to trace a certain
unsatisfactoriness to its source in a mixture of metaphors. "Well," he
said, argumentatively, "it IS. That's all about it. It's time she knew."</p>
<p>"The life of a young girl is set about with prowling pitfalls, from which
she must be shielded at all costs."</p>
<p>His lips tightened, and he frowned with solemn resolution.</p>
<p>"So long as I am your father, so long as your life is entrusted to my
care, I feel bound by every obligation to use my authority to check this
odd disposition of yours toward extravagant enterprises. A day will come
when you will thank me. It is not, my dear Veronica, that I think there is
any harm in you; there is not. But a girl is soiled not only by evil but
by the proximity of evil, and a reputation for rashness may do her as
serious an injury as really reprehensible conduct. So do please believe
that in this matter I am acting for the best."</p>
<p>He signed his name and reflected. Then he opened the study door and called
"Mollie!" and returned to assume an attitude of authority on the
hearthrug, before the blue flames and orange glow of the gas fire.</p>
<p>His sister appeared.</p>
<p>She was dressed in one of those complicated dresses that are all lace and
work and confused patternings of black and purple and cream about the
body, and she was in many ways a younger feminine version of the same
theme as himself. She had the same sharp nose—which, indeed, only
Ann Veronica, of all the family, had escaped. She carried herself well,
whereas her brother slouched, and there was a certain aristocratic dignity
about her that she had acquired through her long engagement to a curate of
family, a scion of the Wiltshire Edmondshaws. He had died before they
married, and when her brother became a widower she had come to his
assistance and taken over much of the care of his youngest daughter. But
from the first her rather old-fashioned conception of life had jarred with
the suburban atmosphere, the High School spirit and the memories of the
light and little Mrs. Stanley, whose family had been by any reckoning
inconsiderable—to use the kindliest term. Miss Stanley had
determined from the outset to have the warmest affection for her youngest
niece and to be a second mother in her life—a second and a better
one; but she had found much to battle with, and there was much in herself
that Ann Veronica failed to understand. She came in now with an air of
reserved solicitude.</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley pointed to the letter with a pipe he had drawn from his jacket
pocket. "What do you think of that?" he asked.</p>
<p>She took it up in her many-ringed hands and read it judicially. He filled
his pipe slowly.</p>
<p>"Yes," she said at last, "it is firm and affectionate."</p>
<p>"I could have said more."</p>
<p>"You seem to have said just what had to be said. It seems to me exactly
what is wanted. She really must not go to that affair."</p>
<p>She paused, and he waited for her to speak.</p>
<p>"I don't think she quite sees the harm of those people or the sort of life
to which they would draw her," she said. "They would spoil every chance."</p>
<p>"She has chances?" he said, helping her out.</p>
<p>"She is an extremely attractive girl," she said; and added, "to some
people. Of course, one doesn't like to talk about things until there are
things to talk about."</p>
<p>"All the more reason why she shouldn't get herself talked about."</p>
<p>"That is exactly what I feel."</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley took the letter and stood with it in his hand thoughtfully for
a time. "I'd give anything," he remarked, "to see our little Vee happily
and comfortably married."</p>
<p>He gave the note to the parlormaid the next morning in an inadvertent,
casual manner just as he was leaving the house to catch his London train.
When Ann Veronica got it she had at first a wild, fantastic idea that it
contained a tip.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART____"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 5 </h2>
<p>Ann Veronica's resolve to have things out with her father was not
accomplished without difficulty.</p>
<p>He was not due from the City until about six, and so she went and played
Badminton with the Widgett girls until dinner-time. The atmosphere at
dinner was not propitious. Her aunt was blandly amiable above a certain
tremulous undertow, and talked as if to a caller about the alarming spread
of marigolds that summer at the end of the garden, a sort of Yellow Peril
to all the smaller hardy annuals, while her father brought some papers to
table and presented himself as preoccupied with them. "It really seems as
if we shall have to put down marigolds altogether next year," Aunt Molly
repeated three times, "and do away with marguerites. They seed beyond all
reason." Elizabeth, the parlormaid, kept coming in to hand vegetables
whenever there seemed a chance of Ann Veronica asking for an interview.
Directly dinner was over Mr. Stanley, having pretended to linger to smoke,
fled suddenly up-stairs to petrography, and when Veronica tapped he
answered through the locked door, "Go away, Vee! I'm busy," and made a
lapidary's wheel buzz loudly.</p>
<p>Breakfast, too, was an impossible occasion. He read the Times with an
unusually passionate intentness, and then declared suddenly for the
earlier of the two trains he used.</p>
<p>"I'll come to the station," said Ann Veronica. "I may as well come up by
this train."</p>
<p>"I may have to run," said her father, with an appeal to his watch.</p>
<p>"I'll run, too," she volunteered.</p>
<p>Instead of which they walked sharply....</p>
<p>"I say, daddy," she began, and was suddenly short of breath.</p>
<p>"If it's about that dance project," he said, "it's no good, Veronica. I've
made up my mind."</p>
<p>"You'll make me look a fool before all my friends."</p>
<p>"You shouldn't have made an engagement until you'd consulted your aunt."</p>
<p>"I thought I was old enough," she gasped, between laughter and crying.</p>
<p>Her father's step quickened to a trot. "I won't have you quarrelling and
crying in the Avenue," he said. "Stop it!... If you've got anything to
say, you must say it to your aunt—"</p>
<p>"But look here, daddy!"</p>
<p>He flapped the Times at her with an imperious gesture.</p>
<p>"It's settled. You're not to go. You're NOT to go."</p>
<p>"But it's about other things."</p>
<p>"I don't care. This isn't the place."</p>
<p>"Then may I come to the study to-night—after dinner?"</p>
<p>"I'm—BUSY!"</p>
<p>"It's important. If I can't talk anywhere else—I DO want an
understanding."</p>
<p>Ahead of them walked a gentleman whom it was evident they must at their
present pace very speedily overtake. It was Ramage, the occupant of the
big house at the end of the Avenue. He had recently made Mr. Stanley's
acquaintance in the train and shown him one or two trifling civilities. He
was an outside broker and the proprietor of a financial newspaper; he had
come up very rapidly in the last few years, and Mr. Stanley admired and
detested him in almost equal measure. It was intolerable to think that he
might overhear words and phrases. Mr. Stanley's pace slackened.</p>
<p>"You've no right to badger me like this, Veronica," he said. "I can't see
what possible benefit can come of discussing things that are settled. If
you want advice, your aunt is the person. However, if you must air your
opinions—"</p>
<p>"To-night, then, daddy!"</p>
<p>He made an angry but conceivably an assenting noise, and then Ramage
glanced back and stopped, saluted elaborately, and waited for them to come
up. He was a square-faced man of nearly fifty, with iron-gray hair a
mobile, clean-shaven mouth and rather protuberant black eyes that now
scrutinized Ann Veronica. He dressed rather after the fashion of the West
End than the City, and affected a cultured urbanity that somehow
disconcerted and always annoyed Ann Veronica's father extremely. He did
not play golf, but took his exercise on horseback, which was also
unsympathetic.</p>
<p>"Stuffy these trees make the Avenue," said Mr. Stanley as they drew
alongside, to account for his own ruffled and heated expression. "They
ought to have been lopped in the spring."</p>
<p>"There's plenty of time," said Ramage. "Is Miss Stanley coming up with
us?"</p>
<p>"I go second," she said, "and change at Wimbledon."</p>
<p>"We'll all go second," said Ramage, "if we may?"</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley wanted to object strongly, but as he could not immediately
think how to put it, he contented himself with a grunt, and the motion was
carried. "How's Mrs. Ramage?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Very much as usual," said Ramage. "She finds lying up so much very
irksome. But, you see, she HAS to lie up."</p>
<p>The topic of his invalid wife bored him, and he turned at once to Ann
Veronica. "And where are YOU going?" he said. "Are you going on again this
winter with that scientific work of yours? It's an instance of heredity, I
suppose." For a moment Mr. Stanley almost liked Ramage. "You're a
biologist, aren't you?"</p>
<p>He began to talk of his own impressions of biology as a commonplace
magazine reader who had to get what he could from the monthly reviews, and
was glad to meet with any information from nearer the fountainhead. In a
little while he and she were talking quite easily and agreeably. They went
on talking in the train—it seemed to her father a slight want of
deference to him—and he listened and pretended to read the Times. He
was struck disagreeably by Ramage's air of gallant consideration and Ann
Veronica's self-possessed answers. These things did not harmonize with his
conception of the forthcoming (if unavoidable) interview. After all, it
came to him suddenly as a harsh discovery that she might be in a sense
regarded as grownup. He was a man who in all things classified without
nuance, and for him there were in the matter of age just two feminine
classes and no more—girls and women. The distinction lay chiefly in
the right to pat their heads. But here was a girl—she must be a
girl, since she was his daughter and pat-able—imitating the woman
quite remarkably and cleverly. He resumed his listening. She was
discussing one of those modern advanced plays with a remarkable, with an
extraordinary, confidence.</p>
<p>"His love-making," she remarked, "struck me as unconvincing. He seemed too
noisy."</p>
<p>The full significance of her words did not instantly appear to him. Then
it dawned. Good heavens! She was discussing love-making. For a time he
heard no more, and stared with stony eyes at a Book-War proclamation in
leaded type that filled half a column of the Times that day. Could she
understand what she was talking about? Luckily it was a second-class
carriage and the ordinary fellow-travellers were not there. Everybody, he
felt, must be listening behind their papers.</p>
<p>Of course, girls repeat phrases and opinions of which they cannot possibly
understand the meaning. But a middle-aged man like Ramage ought to know
better than to draw out a girl, the daughter of a friend and neighbor....</p>
<p>Well, after all, he seemed to be turning the subject. "Broddick is a heavy
man," he was saying, "and the main interest of the play was the
embezzlement." Thank Heaven! Mr. Stanley allowed his paper to drop a
little, and scrutinized the hats and brows of their three
fellow-travellers.</p>
<p>They reached Wimbledon, and Ramage whipped out to hand Miss Stanley to the
platform as though she had been a duchess, and she descended as though
such attentions from middle-aged, but still gallant, merchants were a
matter of course. Then, as Ramage readjusted himself in a corner, he
remarked: "These young people shoot up, Stanley. It seems only yesterday
that she was running down the Avenue, all hair and legs."</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley regarded him through his glasses with something approaching
animosity.</p>
<p>"Now she's all hat and ideas," he said, with an air of humor.</p>
<p>"She seems an unusually clever girl," said Ramage.</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley regarded his neighbor's clean-shaven face almost warily. "I'm
not sure whether we don't rather overdo all this higher education," he
said, with an effect of conveying profound meanings.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART_____"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 6 </h2>
<p>He became quite sure, by a sort of accumulation of reflection, as the day
wore on. He found his youngest daughter intrusive in his thoughts all
through the morning, and still more so in the afternoon. He saw her young
and graceful back as she descended from the carriage, severely ignoring
him, and recalled a glimpse he had of her face, bright and serene, as his
train ran out of Wimbledon. He recalled with exasperating perplexity her
clear, matter-of-fact tone as she talked about love-making being
unconvincing. He was really very proud of her, and extraordinarily angry
and resentful at the innocent and audacious self-reliance that seemed to
intimate her sense of absolute independence of him, her absolute security
without him. After all, she only LOOKED a woman. She was rash and
ignorant, absolutely inexperienced. Absolutely. He began to think of
speeches, very firm, explicit speeches, he would make.</p>
<p>He lunched in the Legal Club in Chancery Lane, and met Ogilvy. Daughters
were in the air that day. Ogilvy was full of a client's trouble in that
matter, a grave and even tragic trouble. He told some of the particulars.</p>
<p>"Curious case," said Ogilvy, buttering his bread and cutting it up in a
way he had. "Curious case—and sets one thinking."</p>
<p>He resumed, after a mouthful: "Here is a girl of sixteen or seventeen,
seventeen and a half to be exact, running about, as one might say, in
London. Schoolgirl. Her family are solid West End people, Kensington
people. Father—dead. She goes out and comes home. Afterward goes on
to Oxford. Twenty-one, twenty-two. Why doesn't she marry? Plenty of money
under her father's will. Charming girl."</p>
<p>He consumed Irish stew for some moments.</p>
<p>"Married already," he said, with his mouth full. "Shopman."</p>
<p>"Good God!" said Mr. Stanley.</p>
<p>"Good-looking rascal she met at Worthing. Very romantic and all that. He
fixed it."</p>
<p>"But—"</p>
<p>"He left her alone. Pure romantic nonsense on her part. Sheer calculation
on his. Went up to Somerset House to examine the will before he did it.
Yes. Nice position."</p>
<p>"She doesn't care for him now?"</p>
<p>"Not a bit. What a girl of sixteen cares for is hair and a high color and
moonlight and a tenor voice. I suppose most of our daughters would marry
organ-grinders if they had a chance—at that age. My son wanted to
marry a woman of thirty in a tobacconist's shop. Only a son's another
story. We fixed that. Well, that's the situation. My people don't know
what to do. Can't face a scandal. Can't ask the gent to go abroad and
condone a bigamy. He misstated her age and address; but you can't get home
on him for a thing like that.... There you are! Girl spoilt for life.
Makes one want to go back to the Oriental system!"</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley poured wine. "Damned Rascal!" he said. "Isn't there a brother
to kick him?"</p>
<p>"Mere satisfaction," reflected Ogilvy. "Mere sensuality. I rather think
they have kicked him, from the tone of some of the letters. Nice, of
course. But it doesn't alter the situation."</p>
<p>"It's these Rascals," said Mr. Stanley, and paused.</p>
<p>"Always has been," said Ogilvy. "Our interest lies in heading them off."</p>
<p>"There was a time when girls didn't get these extravagant ideas."</p>
<p>"Lydia Languish, for example. Anyhow, they didn't run about so much."</p>
<p>"Yes. That's about the beginning. It's these damned novels. All this
torrent of misleading, spurious stuff that pours from the press. These
sham ideals and advanced notions. Women who Dids, and all that kind of
thing...."</p>
<p>Ogilvy reflected. "This girl—she's really a very charming, frank
person—had had her imagination fired, so she told me, by a school
performance of Romeo and Juliet."</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley decided to treat that as irrelevant. "There ought to be a
Censorship of Books. We want it badly at the present time. Even WITH the
Censorship of Plays there's hardly a decent thing to which a man can take
his wife and daughters, a creeping taint of suggestion everywhere. What
would it be without that safeguard?"</p>
<p>Ogilvy pursued his own topic. "I'm inclined to think, Stanley, myself that
as a matter of fact it was the expurgated Romeo and Juliet did the
mischief. If our young person hadn't had the nurse part cut out, eh? She
might have known more and done less. I was curious about that. All they
left it was the moon and stars. And the balcony and 'My Romeo!'"</p>
<p>"Shakespeare is altogether different from the modern stuff. Altogether
different. I'm not discussing Shakespeare. I don't want to Bowdlerize
Shakespeare. I'm not that sort I quite agree. But this modern miasma—"</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley took mustard savagely.</p>
<p>"Well, we won't go into Shakespeare," said Ogilvy "What interests me is
that our young women nowadays are running about as free as air
practically, with registry offices and all sorts of accommodation round
the corner. Nothing to check their proceedings but a declining habit of
telling the truth and the limitations of their imaginations. And in that
respect they stir up one another. Not my affair, of course, but I think we
ought to teach them more or restrain them more. One or the other. They're
too free for their innocence or too innocent for their freedom. That's my
point. Are you going to have any apple-tart, Stanley? The apple-tart's
been very good lately—very good!"</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART______"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 7 </h2>
<p>At the end of dinner that evening Ann Veronica began: "Father!"</p>
<p>Her father looked at her over his glasses and spoke with grave
deliberation; "If there is anything you want to say to me," he said, "you
must say it in the study. I am going to smoke a little here, and then I
shall go to the study. I don't see what you can have to say. I should have
thought my note cleared up everything. There are some papers I have to
look through to-night—important papers."</p>
<p>"I won't keep you very long, daddy," said Ann Veronica.</p>
<p>"I don't see, Mollie," he remarked, taking a cigar from the box on the
table as his sister and daughter rose, "why you and Vee shouldn't discuss
this little affair—whatever it is—without bothering me."</p>
<p>It was the first time this controversy had become triangular, for all
three of them were shy by habit.</p>
<p>He stopped in mid-sentence, and Ann Veronica opened the door for her aunt.
The air was thick with feelings. Her aunt went out of the room with
dignity and a rustle, and up-stairs to the fastness of her own room. She
agreed entirely with her brother. It distressed and confused her that the
girl should not come to her.</p>
<p>It seemed to show a want of affection, to be a deliberate and unmerited
disregard, to justify the reprisal of being hurt.</p>
<p>When Ann Veronica came into the study she found every evidence of a
carefully foreseen grouping about the gas fire. Both arm-chairs had been
moved a little so as to face each other on either side of the fender, and
in the circular glow of the green-shaded lamp there lay, conspicuously
waiting, a thick bundle of blue and white papers tied with pink tape. Her
father held some printed document in his hand, and appeared not to observe
her entry. "Sit down," he said, and perused—"perused" is the word
for it—for some moments. Then he put the paper by. "And what is it
all about, Veronica?" he asked, with a deliberate note of irony, looking
at her a little quizzically over his glasses.</p>
<p>Ann Veronica looked bright and a little elated, and she disregarded her
father's invitation to be seated. She stood on the mat instead, and looked
down on him. "Look here, daddy," she said, in a tone of great
reasonableness, "I MUST go to that dance, you know."</p>
<p>Her father's irony deepened. "Why?" he asked, suavely.</p>
<p>Her answer was not quite ready. "Well, because I don't see any reason why
I shouldn't."</p>
<p>"You see I do."</p>
<p>"Why shouldn't I go?"</p>
<p>"It isn't a suitable place; it isn't a suitable gathering."</p>
<p>"But, daddy, what do you know of the place and the gathering?"</p>
<p>"And it's entirely out of order; it isn't right, it isn't correct; it's
impossible for you to stay in an hotel in London—the idea is
preposterous. I can't imagine what possessed you, Veronica."</p>
<p>He put his head on one side, pulled down the corners of his mouth, and
looked at her over his glasses.</p>
<p>"But why is it preposterous?" asked Ann Veronica, and fiddled with a pipe
on the mantel.</p>
<p>"Surely!" he remarked, with an expression of worried appeal.</p>
<p>"You see, daddy, I don't think it IS preposterous. That's really what I
want to discuss. It comes to this—am I to be trusted to take care of
myself, or am I not?"</p>
<p>"To judge from this proposal of yours, I should say not."</p>
<p>"I think I am."</p>
<p>"As long as you remain under my roof—" he began, and paused.</p>
<p>"You are going to treat me as though I wasn't. Well, I don't think that's
fair."</p>
<p>"Your ideas of fairness—" he remarked, and discontinued that
sentence. "My dear girl," he said, in a tone of patient reasonableness,
"you are a mere child. You know nothing of life, nothing of its dangers,
nothing of its possibilities. You think everything is harmless and simple,
and so forth. It isn't. It isn't. That's where you go wrong. In some
things, in many things, you must trust to your elders, to those who know
more of life than you do. Your aunt and I have discussed all this matter.
There it is. You can't go."</p>
<p>The conversation hung for a moment. Ann Veronica tried to keep hold of a
complicated situation and not lose her head. She had turned round
sideways, so as to look down into the fire.</p>
<p>"You see, father," she said, "it isn't only this affair of the dance. I
want to go to that because it's a new experience, because I think it will
be interesting and give me a view of things. You say I know nothing.
That's probably true. But how am I to know of things?"</p>
<p>"Some things I hope you may never know," he said.</p>
<p>"I'm not so sure. I want to know—just as much as I can."</p>
<p>"Tut!" he said, fuming, and put out his hand to the papers in the pink
tape.</p>
<p>"Well, I do. It's just that I want to say. I want to be a human being; I
want to learn about things and know about things, and not to be protected
as something too precious for life, cooped up in one narrow little
corner."</p>
<p>"Cooped up!" he cried. "Did I stand in the way of your going to college?
Have I ever prevented you going about at any reasonable hour? You've got a
bicycle!"</p>
<p>"H'm!" said Ann Veronica, and then went on "I want to be taken seriously.
A girl—at my age—is grown-up. I want to go on with my
University work under proper conditions, now that I've done the
Intermediate. It isn't as though I haven't done well. I've never muffed an
exam yet. Roddy muffed two...."</p>
<p>Her father interrupted. "Now look here, Veronica, let us be plain with
each other. You are not going to that infidel Russell's classes. You are
not going anywhere but to the Tredgold College. I've thought that out, and
you must make up your mind to it. All sorts of considerations come in.
While you live in my house you must follow my ideas. You are wrong even
about that man's scientific position and his standard of work. There are
men in the Lowndean who laugh at him—simply laugh at him. And I have
seen work by his pupils myself that struck me as being—well, next
door to shameful. There's stories, too, about his demonstrator, Capes
Something or other. The kind of man who isn't content with his science,
and writes articles in the monthly reviews. Anyhow, there it is: YOU ARE
NOT GOING THERE."</p>
<p>The girl received this intimation in silence, but the face that looked
down upon the gas fire took an expression of obstinacy that brought out a
hitherto latent resemblance between parent and child. When she spoke, her
lips twitched.</p>
<p>"Then I suppose when I have graduated I am to come home?"</p>
<p>"It seems the natural course—"</p>
<p>"And do nothing?"</p>
<p>"There are plenty of things a girl can find to do at home."</p>
<p>"Until some one takes pity on me and marries me?"</p>
<p>He raised his eyebrows in mild appeal. His foot tapped impatiently, and he
took up the papers.</p>
<p>"Look here, father," she said, with a change in her voice, "suppose I
won't stand it?"</p>
<p>He regarded her as though this was a new idea.</p>
<p>"Suppose, for example, I go to this dance?"</p>
<p>"You won't."</p>
<p>"Well"—her breath failed her for a moment. "How would you prevent
it?" she asked.</p>
<p>"But I have forbidden it!" he said, raising his voice.</p>
<p>"Yes, I know. But suppose I go?"</p>
<p>"Now, Veronica! No, no. This won't do. Understand me! I forbid it. I do
not want to hear from you even the threat of disobedience." He spoke
loudly. "The thing is forbidden!"</p>
<p>"I am ready to give up anything that you show to be wrong."</p>
<p>"You will give up anything I wish you to give up."</p>
<p>They stared at each other through a pause, and both faces were flushed and
obstinate.</p>
<p>She was trying by some wonderful, secret, and motionless gymnastics to
restrain her tears. But when she spoke her lips quivered, and they came.
"I mean to go to that dance!" she blubbered. "I mean to go to that dance!
I meant to reason with you, but you won't reason. You're dogmatic."</p>
<p>At the sight of her tears his expression changed to a mingling of triumph
and concern. He stood up, apparently intending to put an arm about her,
but she stepped back from him quickly. She produced a handkerchief, and
with one sweep of this and a simultaneous gulp had abolished her fit of
weeping. His voice now had lost its ironies.</p>
<p>"Now, Veronica," he pleaded, "Veronica, this is most unreasonable. All we
do is for your good. Neither your aunt nor I have any other thought but
what is best for you."</p>
<p>"Only you won't let me live. Only you won't let me exist!"</p>
<p>Mr. Stanley lost patience. He bullied frankly.</p>
<p>"What nonsense is this? What raving! My dear child, you DO live, you DO
exist! You have this home. You have friends, acquaintances, social
standing, brothers and sisters, every advantage! Instead of which, you
want to go to some mixed classes or other and cut up rabbits and dance
about at nights in wild costumes with casual art student friends and God
knows who. That—that isn't living! You are beside yourself. You
don't know what you ask nor what you say. You have neither reason nor
logic. I am sorry to seem to hurt you, but all I say is for your good. You
MUST not, you SHALL not go. On this I am resolved. I put my foot down like—like
adamant. And a time will come, Veronica, mark my words, a time will come
when you will bless me for my firmness to-night. It goes to my heart to
disappoint you, but this thing must not be."</p>
<p>He sidled toward her, but she recoiled from him, leaving him in possession
of the hearth-rug.</p>
<p>"Well," she said, "good-night, father."</p>
<p>"What!" he asked; "not a kiss?"</p>
<p>She affected not to hear.</p>
<p>The door closed softly upon her. For a long time he remained standing
before the fire, staring at the situation. Then he sat down and filled his
pipe slowly and thoughtfully....</p>
<p>"I don't see what else I could have said," he remarked.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />