<h1>Chapter XVIII.</h1>
<p>“I am so glad to have found you,” said
John to Josephine, when the latter had disposed of
Mr. Topeka. They had chosen a quiet corner in a dimly-lighted
room away from the dancers. “But I suppose it
is useless to ask you for a dance?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Joe, looking at her card; “I
always leave two dances free in the middle of the
evening in case I am tired. We will sit them out.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said John, looking at her.
She looked pale and a little tired, but wonderfully
lovely. “Thank you,” he repeated, “and
thank you also for your most kind note.”</p>
<p>“I wish I could tell you better how very sorry
I am,” said Joe, impulsively. “It is bad
enough to look on and see such things done, but I
should think you must be nearly distracted.”</p>
<p>“I think I was at first,” said John, simply.
“But one soon grows used to it. Man is a vain
animal, and I suppose no one could lose a fight as
I have without being disappointed.”</p>
<p>“If you were not disappointed it would be a
sign you did not really care,” answered Joe.
“And of course you must care–a great, great
deal. It is a loss to your cause, as well as a loss
to yourself. But you cannot possibly give it up; you
will win next time.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said John, “I hope I shall
win some day.” But his voice sounded uncertain;
it lacked that determined ring that Joe loved so well.
She felt as she sat beside him that he was deeply
hurt and needed fresh encouragement and strength to
restore him to his old self. She longed to help him
and to rouse him once more to the consciousness of
power and the hope of victory.</p>
<p>“It is my experience,” said she with an
air of superiority that would have been amusing if
she had spoken less earnestly–“it is my experience
that one should never think of anything in which one
has come to grief. I know, when one is going at a
big thing–a double post and rails with a ditch, or
anything like that, you know–it would never do to
remember that you have come off at the same thing
or at something else before. When a man is always
remembering his last tumble he has lost his nerve,
and had better give up hunting altogether. Thinking
that you may get an ugly fall will not help you over
anything.”</p>
<p>“No,” said John, “that is very true.”</p>
<p>“You must forget all about it and begin again.
You have missed one bird, but you are a good shot,
and you will not miss the next.”</p>
<p>“You are a most encouraging person, Miss Thorn,”
said John with a faint smile. “But you know
the only test of a good shot is that one hits the
mark. I have missed at the first trial, and that is
no reason why I should not miss at the second, too.”</p>
<p>“You are disappointed and unhappy now,”
said Joe, gently. “It is very natural indeed.
Anybody would feel like that. But you must not believe
in yourself any less than your friends believe in
you.”</p>
<p>“I fancy my friends do not all think alike,”
answered John. “But I am grateful to you for
what you say.”</p>
<p>He was indeed grateful, and the soothing sound of
her gentle voice was the best refreshment for his
troubled spirit. He thought for a moment how brave
a man could be with such a woman by his side; and the
thought pleased him, the more because he knew that
it could not be realized. They sat in silence for
a while, contented to be together, and in sympathy.
But before long the anxiety for the future and the
sense of his peculiar position came over John again.</p>
<p>“Do you know,” he said, “there are
times when I regret it all very much? I never told
any one so before–perhaps I was never so sure of it
as I have been since this affair.”</p>
<p>“What is it that you regret so much?”
asked Joe, softly. “It is a noble life.”</p>
<p>“It is, indeed, if only a man knows how to live
it,” answered John. “But sometimes I think
I do not. You once said a very true thing to me about
it all. Do you remember?”</p>
<p>“No; what was it?”</p>
<p>“You said I should not succeed because I am
not enough of a partisan, and because every one is
a partisan here.”</p>
<p>“Did I? Yes, I remember saying it,” answered
Joe, secretly pleased that he should not have forgotten
it. “I do not think it is so very true, after
all. It is true to-day; but it is for men like you
to set things right, to make partisanship a thing
of the past. Men ought to make laws because they are
just and necessary, not in order that they may profit
by them at the expense of the rest of the world. And
to have such good laws men ought to choose good men
to represent them.”</p>
<p>“There is no denying the truth of that,”
said John. “That is the way to construct the
ideal republic. It would be the way to do a great many
ideal things. You need only persuade humanity to do
right, and humanity will do it. Verily, it is an easy
task!” He laughed, a little bitterly.</p>
<p>“It is not like you to laugh in that way,”
said Joe, gravely.</p>
<p>“No; to tell the truth, I am not overmuch inclined
to laugh at anything to-day, excepting myself, and
I dare say there are plenty of people who will do
that for me without the asking. They will have no chance
when I am gone.”</p>
<p>Joe started slightly.</p>
<p>“Gone?” she repeated. “Are you going
away?”</p>
<p>“It is very likely,” said John. “A
friend of mine has warned me to be ready to start
at a moment’s notice on very important business.”</p>
<p>“But it is uncertain, then?” asked Joe,
quickly. She had turned very white in an instant,
and she looked straight across the little room and
pulled nervously at her fan. She would not have dared
to let her eyes meet John’s at that moment.</p>
<p>“Yes, rather uncertain,” answered John.
“But he would not have sent me such a warning
unless it were very likely that he would really want
me.”</p>
<p>Joe was silent; she could not speak.</p>
<p>“So you see,” continued Harrington, “I
may leave to-morrow, and I cannot tell when I may
come back. That is the reason I was glad to find you
here. I would have called to-day, if it had been possible,
after I got the message.” He spoke calmly, not
dreaming of the storm of fear and passion he was rousing
in the heart of the fair girl beside him.</p>
<p>“Where–where are you going?” asked Joe
in a low voice.</p>
<p>“Probably to England,” said John.</p>
<p>Before the words were out of his mouth he turned and
looked at her, suddenly realizing the change in her
tones. But she had turned away from him. He could
see the quiver of her lips and the beating throb of
her beautiful throat; and as he watched the outline
of her cheek a tear stole slowly over the delicate
skin, and trembled, and fell upon her white neck.
But still she looked away.</p>
<p>Ah, John Harrington, what have you done? You have
taken the most precious and pure thing in this world,
the thing men as brave as you have given their heart’s
best blood to win and have perished for failing, the
thing which angels guard and Heaven has in its keeping–the
love of a good and noble woman. It has come into your
hands and you do not want it. You hardly know it is
yours; and if you fully knew it you would not know
what to do!</p>
<p>You are innocent, indeed; you have done nothing, spoken
no word, given no look that, in your opinion, your
cold indifferent opinion, could attract a woman’s
love. But the harm is done, nevertheless, and a great
harm too. When you are old and sensible you will look
back to this day as one of sorrow and evil, and you
will know then that all greatness and power and glory
of realized ambition are nothing unless a man have
a woman’s love. You will know that a man who
cannot love is blind to half the world he seeks to
conquer, and that a man who cannot love truly is no
true man, for he who is not true to one cannot be
true to many. That is the sum and reckoning of what
love is worth.</p>
<p>But John knew of nothing beyond friendship, and he
could not conceive how friendship could turn into
anything else. When he saw the tear on Josephine Thorn’s
cheek he was greatly disturbed, and vaguely wondered
what in the world he should do. The idea that any woman
could care enough for him to shed a tear when he left
her had never crossed his mind; even now, with the
actual fact before his eyes, he doubted whether it
were possible. She was ill, perhaps, and suffering
pain. Pshaw! it was absurd, it could not be that she
cared so much for him.</p>
<p>Seeing she did not move, he sat quite still for a
while. His usual tact had deserted him in the extremity
of the situation. He revolved in his mind what was
best to say. It was safest to suppose that Joe was
ill, but he would say something indifferent, in order
to see whether she recovered, before he suggested
that he might be of assistance.</p>
<p>“It is cold here,” he remarked, trying
to speak as naturally as possible. “Would you
not like to take a turn, Miss Thorn?”</p>
<p>Joe moved a little. She was deadly pale, and in the
effort she had made to control her feelings she was
unconscious of the tears in her eyes.</p>
<p>“Oh no, thanks,” she faltered, “I
will not dance just now.” She could not say
more.</p>
<p>John made up his mind.</p>
<p>“You are ill, Miss Thorn,” he said anxiously.
“I am sure you are very far from well. Let me
get you something, or call your aunt. Shall I?”</p>
<p>“Oh no–don’t–that is–please, I think
so. I will go home.”</p>
<p>John rose quickly, but before he reached the door
she called him back.</p>
<p>“Mr. Harrington, it is nothing. Please sit down.”</p>
<p>John came back and did as he was bid, more and more
surprised and confused.</p>
<p>“I was afraid it was something serious,”
he said nervously, for he was greatly disturbed.</p>
<p>Joe laughed, a bitter, harsh little laugh, that was
bad to hear. She was making a great effort, but she
was strong, and bravely forced back her bursting tears.</p>
<p>“Oh no! I was only choking,” she said.
“I often do. Go on, please, with what you were
saying. Why are you going away so suddenly?”</p>
<p>“Indeed,” answered John, “I do not
know what the business is. I am going if I am required,
simply because my friend wants me.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean to say,” asked Joe, speaking
more calmly, “that you will pack up your belongings
and go to the end of the world whenever a friend asks
you to? It is most tremendously obliging, you know.”</p>
<p>“Not for any friend,” John replied. “But
I would most certainly do it for this particular one.”</p>
<p>“You must be very fond of him to do that,”
said Joe.</p>
<p>“I am under great obligations to him, too. He
is certainly the most important man with whom I have
any relations. We can trust each other-it would not
do to endanger the certainty of good faith that exists
between us.”</p>
<p>“He must be a very wonderful person,”
said Joe, who had grown quite calm by this time. “I
should like to know him.”</p>
<p>“Very possibly you may meet him, some day. He
is a very wonderful person indeed, as you say. He
has devoted fifty years of his life and strength to
the unremitting pursuit of the best aim that any man
can set before him.”</p>
<p>“In other words,” said Joe, “he
is your ideal. He is what you hope to be at his age.
He must be very old.”</p>
<p>“Yes, he is old. As for his representing my
ideal, I think he approaches more nearly to it than
any man alive. But you would probably not like him.”</p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>“He belongs to a class of men whom old-world
people especially dislike,” answered John. “He
does not believe in any monarchy, aristocracy, or
distinction of birth. He looks upon titles as a decaying
institution of barbarous ages, and he confidently
asserts that in two or three generations the republic
will be the only form of social contract known amongst
the inhabitants of the civilized world.”</p>
<p>John was watching Joe while he spoke. He was merely
talking because it seemed necessary, and he saw that
in spite of her assumed calm she was still greatly
agitated. She seemed anxious, however, to continue
the conversation.</p>
<p>“It is absurd,” said she, “to say
that all men are born equal.”</p>
<p>“Everything depends on what you mean by the
word ‘equal.’ I mean by it that all men
are born with an equal claim to a share in all the
essential rights of free citizenship. When a man demands
more than that, he is infringing on the rights of
others; when he is content with less, he is allowing
himself to be robbed.”</p>
<p>“But who is to decide just how much belongs
to each man?” asked Joe, leaning back wearily
against the cushions. She wished now that she had
allowed him to call her aunt. It was a fearful strain
on her faculties to continue talking upon general
subjects and listening to John Harrington’s
calm, almost indifferent tones.</p>
<p>“The majority decides that,” said John.</p>
<p>“But a majority has just decided that you are
not to be senator,” said Joe. “According
to you they were right, were they not?”</p>
<p>“It is necessary that the majority should be
free,” said John, “and that they should
judge of themselves, each man according to his honest
belief. Majorities with us are very frequently produced
by a handful of dishonest men, who can turn the scale
on either side, to suit their private ends. It is
the aim we set before us to protect the freedom of
majorities. That is the true doctrine of a republic.”</p>
<p>“And for that aim,” said Joe, slowly,
“you would sacrifice everything?”</p>
<p>“Yes, indeed we would,” said John, gravely.
“For that end we will sacrifice all that we
have to give–the care for personal satisfaction,
the hope of personal distinction, the peace of a home
and the love of a wife. We seek neither distinction
nor satisfaction, and we renounce all ties that could
hamper our strength or interfere with the persevering
and undivided attention we try to give to our work.”</p>
<p>“That is a magnificent programme,” said
Joe, somewhat incredulously. “Do you not think
it is possible sometimes to aim too high? You say ‘we
seek,’ ‘we try,’ as though there
were several of you, or at least, some one besides
yourself. Do you believe that such ideas as you tell
me of are really and seriously held by any body of
men?”</p>
<p>Nothing had seemed too high to Josephine an hour earlier,
nothing too exalted, nothing so noble but that John
Harrington might do it, then and there. But a sudden
change had come over her, the deadly cold phase of
half melancholy unbelief that often follows close upon
an unexpected disappointment, so that she looked with
distaste on anything that seemed so full of the enthusiasm
she had lost. The tears that bad risen so passionately
to her dimmed eyes were suddenly frozen, and seemed
to flow back with chilling force to her heart. She
coldly asked herself whether she were mad, that she
could have suffered thus for such a man, even ever
so briefly. He was a man, she said, who loved an unattainable,
fanatic idea in the first place, and who dearly loved
himself as well for his own fanaticism’s sake.
He was a man in whom the heart was crushed, even annihilated,
by his intellect, which he valued far too highly, and
by his vanity, which he dignified into a philosophy
of self-sacrifice. He was aiming at what no man can
reach, and though he knew his object to be beyond
human grasp, he desired all possible credit for having
madly dreamed of anything so high. In the sudden revulsion
of her strong passion, she almost hated him, she almost
felt the power to refute his theories, to destroy
his edifice of fantastic morality, and finally to
show him that he was a fool among men, and doubly a
fool, because he was not even happy in his own folly.</p>
<p>Joe vaguely felt all this, and with it she felt a
sense of shame at having so nearly broken down at
the news that he was going away. He had thought she
was ill; most assuredly he could not have guessed the
cause of what he had seen; but nevertheless she had
suffered a keen pain, and the tears had come to her
eyes. She did not understand it. He might leave her
now, if he pleased, and she would not care; indeed,
it would be rather a relief if he would go. She no
longer asked what she was to him, she simply reflected
that, after all was said, he was nothing to her. She
felt a quick antagonism to his ideas, to his words,
and to himself, and she was willing to show it. She
asked him incredulously whether his ideas were really
held by others.</p>
<p>“It makes little difference,” answered
John, “whether they are many or few who think
as I do, and I cannot tell how many there may be. The
truth is not made truth because many people believe
it. The world went round, as Galileo knew, although
he alone stood up and said it in the face of mankind,
who scoffed at him for his pains.”</p>
<p>“In other words, you occupy the position of
Galileo,” suggested Joe, calmly.</p>
<p>“Not I,” said John; “but there are
men, and there have been men, in our country who know
truths as great as any he discovered, and who have
spent their lives in proclaiming them. I <i>know</i>
that they are right, and that I am right, and that,
however we may fail, others will succeed at last.
I know that, come what may, honor and truth and justice
will win the day in the end!” His gray eyes
glittered as he spoke, and his broad white hands clasped
nervously together in his enthusiasm. He was depressed
and heartsick at his failure, but it needed only one
word of opposition to rouse the strong main thought
of his life into the most active expression. But Joe
sat coldly by, her whole nature seemingly changed in
the few minutes that had passed.</p>
<p>“And all this will be brought about by the measures
you advocated the other day,” said she with
a little laugh. “A civil service, a little tariff
reform–that is enough to inaugurate the reign of honor,
truth, and justice?”</p>
<p>John turned his keen eyes upon hers. He had begun
talking because she had required it of him, and he
had been roused by the subject. He remembered the
sympathy she had given him, and he was annoyed at her
caprice.</p>
<p>“Such things are the mere passing needs of a
time,” he said. “The truth, justice, and
honor, at which you are pleased to be amused, would
insure the execution at all times of what is right
and needful. Without a foundation composed of the
said truth, justice, and honor, to get what is right
and needful is often a matter so stupendous that the
half of a nation’s blood is drained in accomplishing
the task, if even it is accomplished after all. I
see nothing to laugh at.”</p>
<p>Indeed, Joe was only smiling faintly, but John was
so deeply impressed and penetrated by the absolute
truth of what he was saying, that he had altogether
ceased to make any allowances for Joe’s caprice
of mood or for the disturbance in her manner that
he had so lately witnessed. He was beginning to be
angry, and she had never seen him in such a mood.</p>
<p>“The world would be a very nice tiresome place
to live in,” she said, “if every one always
did exactly what is absolutely right. I should not
like to live among people who would be always so entirely
padded and lined with goodness as they must be in
your ideal republic.”</p>
<p>“It is a favorite and characteristic notion
of modern society to associate goodness with dullness,
and consequently, I suppose, to connect badness with
all that is gay, interesting, and diverting. There
is nothing more perverted, absurd, and contemptible
than that notion in the whole history of the world.”</p>
<p>John was not gentle with an idea when he despised
it, and the adjectives fell in his clear utterance
like the blows of a sledge-hammer. But as the idea
he was abusing had been suggested by Joe, she resented
the strong language.</p>
<p>“I am flattered that you should call anything
I say by such bad names,” she said. “I
am not good at arguing and that sort of thing. If I
were I think I could answer you very easily. Will
you please take me back to my aunt?” She rose
in a somewhat stately fashion.</p>
<p>John was suddenly aware that he had talked too much
and too strongly, and he was very sorry to have displeased
her. She had always let him talk as he pleased, especially
of late, and she had almost invariably agreed with
him in everything he said, so that he had acquired
too much confidence. At all events, that was the way
he explained to himself the present difficulty.</p>
<p>“Please forgive me, Miss Thorn,” he said
humbly, as he gave her his arm to leave the room.
“I am a very sanguine person, and I often talk
great nonsense. Please do not be angry.” Joe
paused just as they reached the door.</p>
<p>“Angry? I am not angry,” she said with
sudden gentleness. “Besides, you know, this
is–you are really going away?”</p>
<p>“I think so,” said John.</p>
<p>“Then, if you do,” she said with some
hesitation–“if you do, this is good-by, is
it not?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I am afraid it is,” said John; “but
not for long.”</p>
<p>“Not for long, perhaps,” she answered;
“but I would not like you to think I was angry
the very last time I saw you.”</p>
<p>“No, indeed. I should be very sorry if you were.
But you are not?”</p>
<p>“No. Well then”–she held out her hand–“Good-by,
then.” She had almost hated him a few minutes
ago. Half an hour earlier she had loved him. Now her
voice faltered a little, but her face was calm.</p>
<p>John took the proffered hand and grasped it warmly.
With all her caprice, and despite the strange changes
of her manner toward him, she had been a good friend
in a bad time during the last days, and he was more
sorry to leave her than he would himself have believed.</p>
<p>“Good-by,” he said, “and thank you
once more, with all my heart, for your friendship
and kindness.” Their hands remained clasped for
a moment; then she took his arm again, and he led
her out of the dimly-lighted sitting-room back among
the brilliant dancers and the noise and the music and
the whirling crowd.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />