<h2><SPAN name="XLIII" id="XLIII"></SPAN>XLIII</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">June</span> again at Hanaford—and Cicely's birthday.
The anniversary was to coincide, this year, with
the opening of the old house at Hopewood, as a kind of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_620" id="Page_620"></SPAN></span>
pleasure-palace—gymnasium, concert-hall and museum—for
the recreation of the mill-hands.</p>
<p>The idea had first come to Amherst on the winter
afternoon when Bessy Westmore had confessed her
love for him under the snow-laden trees of Hopewood.
Even then the sense that his personal happiness was
enlarged and secured by its promise of happiness to
others had made him wish that the scene associated
with the opening of his new life should be made to
commemorate a corresponding change in the fortunes
of Westmore. But when the control of the mills passed
into his hands other and more necessary improvements
pressed upon him; and it was not till now that the
financial condition of the company had permitted the
execution of his plan.</p>
<p>Justine, on her return to Hanaford, had found the
work already in progress, and had been told by her
husband that he was carrying out a projected scheme
of Bessy's. She had felt a certain surprise, but had
concluded that the plan in question dated back to the
early days of his first marriage, when, in his wife's eyes,
his connection with the mills still invested them with
interest.</p>
<p>Since Justine had come back to her husband, both
had tacitly avoided all allusions to the past, and the
recreation-house at Hopewood being, as she divined,
in some sort an expiatory offering to Bessy's plaintive<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_621" id="Page_621"></SPAN></span>
shade, she had purposely refrained from questioning
Amherst about its progress, and had simply approved
the plans he submitted to her.</p>
<p>Fourteen months had passed since her return, and
now, as she sat beside her husband in the carriage which
was conveying them to Hopewood, she said to herself
that her life had at last fallen into what promised to be
its final shape—that as things now were they would
probably be to the end. And outwardly at least they
were what she and Amherst had always dreamed of
their being. Westmore prospered under the new rule.
The seeds of life they had sown there were springing
up in a promising growth of bodily health and mental
activity, and above all in a dawning social consciousness.
The mill-hands were beginning to understand
the meaning of their work, in its relation to their own
lives and to the larger economy. And outwardly, also,
the new growth was showing itself in the humanized
aspect of the place. Amherst's young maples were tall
enough now to cast a shade on the grass-bordered
streets; and the well-kept turf, the bright cottage gardens,
the new central group of library, hospital and
club-house, gave to the mill-village the hopeful air of a
"rising" residential suburb.</p>
<p>In the bright June light, behind their fresh green
mantle of trees and creepers, even the factory buildings
looked less stern and prison-like than formerly; and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_622" id="Page_622"></SPAN></span>
the turfing and planting of the adjoining river-banks
had transformed a waste of foul mud and refuse into
a little park where the operatives might refresh themselves
at midday.</p>
<p>Yes—Westmore was alive at last: the dead city of
which Justine had once spoken had risen from its grave,
and its blank face had taken on a meaning. As Justine
glanced at her husband she saw that the same thought
was in his mind. However achieved, at whatever cost
of personal misery and error, the work of awakening and
freeing Westmore was done, and that work had justified
itself.</p>
<p>She looked from Amherst to Cicely, who sat opposite,
eager and rosy in her mourning frock—for Mr. Langhope
had died some two months previously—and as
intent as her step-parents on the scene before her.
Cicely was old enough now to regard her connection
with Westmore as something more than a nursery game.
She was beginning to learn a great deal about the mills,
and to understand, in simple, friendly ways, something
of her own relation to them. The work and play of
the children, the interests and relaxations provided for
their elders, had been gradually explained to her by
Justine, and she knew that this shining tenth birthday
of hers was to throw its light as far as the clouds of
factory-smoke extended.</p>
<p>As they mounted the slope to Hopewood, the spacious<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_623" id="Page_623"></SPAN></span>
white building, with its enfolding colonnades, its broad
terraces and tennis-courts, shone through the trees like
some bright country-house adorned for its master's
home-coming; and Amherst and his wife might have
been driving up to the house which had been built to
shelter their wedded happiness. The thought flashed
across Justine as their carriage climbed the hill. She
was as much absorbed as Amherst in the welfare of
Westmore, it had become more and more, to both, the
refuge in which their lives still met and mingled; but for
a moment, as they paused before the flower-decked
porch, and he turned to help her from the carriage, it occurred
to her to wonder what her sensations would have
been if he had been bringing her home—to a real home
of their own—instead of accompanying her to another
philanthropic celebration. But what need had they of
a real home, when they no longer had any real life of
their own? Nothing was left of that secret inner union
which had so enriched and beautified their outward
lives. Since Justine's return to Hanaford they had
entered, tacitly, almost unconsciously, into a new relation
to each other: a relation in which their personalities
were more and more merged in their common work,
so that, as it were, they met only by avoiding each
other.</p>
<p>From the first, Justine had accepted this as inevitable;
just as she had understood, when Amherst had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_624" id="Page_624"></SPAN></span>
sought her out in New York, that his remaining at
Westmore, which had once been contingent on her
leaving him, now depended on her willingness to return
and take up their former life.</p>
<p>She accepted the last condition as she had accepted
the other, pledged to the perpetual expiation of an act
for which, in the abstract, she still refused to hold herself
to blame. But life is not a matter of abstract principles,
but a succession of pitiful compromises with fate,
of concessions to old tradition, old beliefs, old charities
and frailties. That was what her act had taught her—that
was the word of the gods to the mortal who had
laid a hand on their bolts. And she had humbled herself
to accept the lesson, seeing human relations at last
as a tangled and deep-rooted growth, a dark forest
through which the idealist cannot cut his straight path
without hearing at each stroke the cry of the severed
branch: "<i>Why woundest thou me?</i>"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The lawns leading up to the house were already
sprinkled with holiday-makers, while along the avenue
came the rolling of wheels, the throb of motor-cars;
and Justine, with Cicely beside her, stood in the wide
hall to receive the incoming throng, in which Hanaford
society was indiscriminately mingled with the operatives
in their Sunday best.</p>
<p>While his wife welcomed the new arrivals, Amherst,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_625" id="Page_625"></SPAN></span>
supported by some young Westmore cousins, was guiding
them into the concert-hall, where he was to say a
word on the uses of the building before declaring it
open for inspection. And presently Justine and Cicely,
summoned by Westy Gaines, made their way through
the rows of seats to a corner near the platform. Her
husband was there already, with Halford Gaines and
a group of Hanaford dignitaries, and just below them
sat Mrs. Gaines and her daughters, the Harry Dressels,
and Amherst's radiant mother.</p>
<p>As Justine passed between them, she wondered how
much they knew of the events which had wrought so
profound and permanent change in her life. She had
never known how Hanaford explained her absence or
what comments it had made on her return. But she
saw to-day more clearly than ever that Amherst had
become a power among his townsmen, and that if they
were still blind to the inner meaning of his work, its
practical results were beginning to impress them profoundly.
Hanaford's sociological creed was largely
based on commercial considerations, and Amherst had
won Hanaford's esteem by the novel feat of defying its
economic principles and snatching success out of his
defiance.</p>
<p>And now he had advanced a step or two in front of
the "representative" semi-circle on the platform, and
was beginning to speak.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_626" id="Page_626"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Justine did not hear his first words. She was looking
up at him, trying to see him with the eyes of the crowd,
and wondering what manner of man he would have
seemed to her if she had known as little as they did of
his inner history.</p>
<p>He held himself straight, the heavy locks thrown back
from his forehead, one hand resting on the table beside
him, the other grasping a folded blue-print which the
architect of the building had just advanced to give him.
As he stood there, Justine recalled her first sight of him
in the Hope Hospital, five years earlier—was it only
five years? They had dealt deep strokes to his face,
hollowing the eye-sockets, accentuating the strong
modelling of nose and chin, fixing the lines between the
brows; but every touch had a meaning—it was not the
languid hand of time which had remade his features,
but the sharp chisel of thought and action.</p>
<p>She roused herself suddenly to the consciousness of
what he was saying.</p>
<p>"For the idea of this building—of a building dedicated
to the recreation of Westmore—is not new in my
mind; but while it remained there as a mere idea, it
had already, without my knowledge, taken definite
shape in the thoughts of the owner of Westmore."</p>
<p>There was a slight drop in his voice as he designated
Bessy, and he waited a moment before continuing: "It
was not till after the death of my first wife that I learned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_627" id="Page_627"></SPAN></span>
of her intention—that I found by accident, among her
papers, this carefully-studied plan for a pleasure-house
at Hopewood."</p>
<p>He paused again, and unrolling the blue-print, held
it up before his audience.</p>
<p>"You cannot, at this distance," he went on, "see all
the admirable details of her plan; see how beautifully
they were imagined, how carefully and intelligently
elaborated. She who conceived them longed to see
beauty everywhere—it was her dearest wish to bestow
it on her people here. And her ardent imagination
outran the bounds of practical possibility. We cannot
give you, in its completeness, the beautiful thing she
had imagined—the great terraces, the marble porches,
the fountains, lily-tanks, and cloisters. But you will
see that, wherever it was possible—though in humbler
materials, and on a smaller scale—we have faithfully
followed her design; and when presently you go through
this building, and when, hereafter, you find health and
refreshment and diversion here, I ask you to remember
the beauty she dreamed of giving you, and to let the
thought of it make her memory beautiful among you
and among your children...."</p>
<p>Justine had listened with deepening amazement. She
was seated so close to her husband that she had recognized
the blue-print the moment he unrolled it. There
was no mistaking its origin—it was simply the plan of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_628" id="Page_628"></SPAN></span>
the gymnasium which Bessy had intended to build at
Lynbrook, and which she had been constrained to
abandon owing to her husband's increased expenditure
at the mills. But how was it possible that Amherst
knew nothing of the original purpose of the plans, and
by what mocking turn of events had a project devised
in deliberate defiance of his wishes, and intended to
declare his wife's open contempt for them, been transformed
into a Utopian vision for the betterment of the
Westmore operatives?</p>
<p>A wave of anger swept over Justine at this last derisive
stroke of fate. It was grotesque and pitiable that
a man like Amherst should create out of his regrets
a being who had never existed, and then ascribe to her
feelings and actions of which the real woman had again
and again proved herself incapable!</p>
<p>Ah, no, Justine had suffered enough—but to have
this imaginary Bessy called from the grave, dressed in
a semblance of self-devotion and idealism, to see her
petty impulses of vindictiveness disguised as the motions
of a lofty spirit—it was as though her small malicious
ghost had devised this way of punishing the wife
who had taken her place!</p>
<p>Justine had suffered enough—suffered deliberately
and unstintingly, paying the full price of her error, not
seeking to evade its least consequence. But no sane
judgment could ask her to sit quiet under this last hal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_629" id="Page_629"></SPAN></span>lucination.
What! This unreal woman, this phantom
that Amherst's uneasy imagination had evoked, was to
come between himself and her, to supplant her first as
his wife, and then as his fellow-worker? Why should
she not cry out the truth to him, defend herself against
the dead who came back to rob her of such wedded
peace as was hers? She had only to tell the true story
of the plans to lay poor Bessy's ghost forever!</p>
<p>The confused throbbing impulses within her were
stifled under a long burst of applause—then she saw
Westy Gaines at her side again, and understood that
he had come to lead Cicely to the platform. For a
moment she clung jealously to the child's hand, hardly
aware of what she did, feeling only that she was being
thrust farther and farther into the background of the
life she had helped to call out of chaos. Then a contrary
impulse moved her. She gently freed Cicely's
hand, and a moment later, as she sat with bent head
and throbbing breast, she heard the child's treble
piping out above her:</p>
<p>"In my mother's name, I give this house to Westmore."</p>
<p>Applause again—and then Justine found herself enveloped
in a general murmur of compliment and congratulation.
Mr. Amherst had spoken admirably—a
"beautiful tribute—" ah, he had done poor Bessy justice!
And to think that till now Hanaford had never<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_630" id="Page_630"></SPAN></span>
fully known how she had the welfare of the mills at
heart—how it was really only <i>her</i> work that he was
carrying on there! Well, he had made that perfectly
clear—and no doubt Cicely was being taught to follow
in her mother's footsteps: everyone had noticed how
her step-father was associating her with the work at
the mills. And his little speech would, as it were, consecrate
the child's relation to that work, make it appear
to her as the continuance of a beautiful, a sacred
tradition....</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>And now it was over. The building had been inspected,
the operatives had dispersed, the Hanaford
company had rolled off down the avenue, Cicely, among
them, driving away tired and happy in Mrs. Dressel's
victoria, and Amherst and his wife were alone.</p>
<p>Amherst, after bidding good-bye to his last guests,
had gone back to the empty concert-room to fetch
the blue-print lying on the platform. He came back
with it, between the uneven rows of empty chairs,
and joined Justine, who stood waiting in the hall. His
face was slightly flushed, and his eyes had the light
which in happy moments burned through their veil of
thought.</p>
<p>He laid his hand on his wife's arm, and drawing her
toward a table spread out the blueprint before her.</p>
<p>"You haven't seen this, have you?" he said.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_631" id="Page_631"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She looked down at the plan without answering,
reading in the left-hand corner the architect's conventional
inscription: "Swimming-tank and gymnasium
designed for Mrs. John Amherst."</p>
<p>Amherst looked up, perhaps struck by her silence.</p>
<p>"But perhaps you <i>have</i> seen it—at Lynbrook? It
must have been done while you were there."</p>
<p>The quickened throb of her blood rushed to her brain
like a signal. "Speak—speak now!" the signal commanded.</p>
<p>Justine continued to look fixedly at the plan. "Yes,
I have seen it," she said at length.</p>
<p>"At Lynbrook?"</p>
<p>"At Lynbrook."</p>
<p>"<i>She</i> showed it to you, I suppose—while I was
away?"</p>
<p>Justine hesitated again. "Yes, while you were away."</p>
<p>"And did she tell you anything about it, go into
details about her wishes, her intentions?"</p>
<p>Now was the moment—now! As her lips parted she
looked up at her husband. The illumination still lingered
on his face—and it was the face she loved. He
was waiting eagerly for her next word.</p>
<p>"No, I heard no details. I merely saw the plan
lying there."</p>
<p>She saw his look of disappointment. "She never
told you about it?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_632" id="Page_632"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"No—she never told me."</p>
<p>It was best so, after all. She understood that now.
It was now at last that she was paying her full price.</p>
<p>Amherst rolled up the plan with a sigh and pushed
it into the drawer of the table. It struck her that he
too had the look of one who has laid a ghost. He
turned to her and drew her hand through his arm.</p>
<p>"You're tired, dear. You ought to have driven back
with the others," he said.</p>
<p>"No, I would rather stay with you."</p>
<p>"You want to drain this good day to the dregs, as I
do?"</p>
<p>"Yes," she murmured, drawing her hand away.</p>
<p>"It <i>is</i> a good day, isn't it?" he continued, looking
about him at the white-panelled walls, the vista of
large bright rooms seen through the folding doors.
"I feel as if we had reached a height, somehow—a
height where one might pause and draw breath for the
next climb. Don't you feel that too, Justine?"</p>
<p>"Yes—I feel it."</p>
<p>"Do you remember once, long ago—one day when
you and I and Cicely went on a picnic to hunt orchids—how
we got talking of the one best moment in life—the
moment when one wanted most to stop the clock?"</p>
<p>The colour rose in her face while he spoke. It was
a long time since he had referred to the early days of
their friendship—the days <i>before</i>....<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_633" id="Page_633"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes, I remember," she said.</p>
<p>"And do you remember how we said that it was
with most of us as it was with Faust? That the moment
one wanted to hold fast to was not, in most lives,
the moment of keenest personal happiness, but the
other kind—the kind that would have seemed grey and
colourless at first: the moment when the meaning of
life began to come out from the mists—when one could
look out at last over the marsh one had drained?"</p>
<p>A tremor ran through Justine. "It was you who said
that," she said, half-smiling.</p>
<p>"But didn't you feel it with me? Don't you now?"</p>
<p>"Yes—I do now," she murmured.</p>
<p>He came close to her, and taking her hands in his,
kissed them one after the other.</p>
<p>"Dear," he said, "let us go out and look at the marsh
we have drained."</p>
<p>He turned and led her through the open doorway
to the terrace above the river. The sun was setting
behind the wooded slopes of Hopewood, and the trees
about the house stretched long blue shadows across the
lawn. Beyond them rose the smoke of Westmore.<br/><br/><br/><br/></p>
<div class="tnote"><p>Transcriber's Note:</p>
<p>Most inconsistencies in hyphenation and spelling have been left as in the
original. Missing or wrong punctuation has been added or corrected,
where it is obvious (missing punctuation is often a result of the
scanning/OCR process). In one case, a missing letter has also been
added, and the following misspellings have been corrected: involuntairly to
involuntarily, sensastions to sensations, Wetsmore to Westmore, Cilfton
to Clifton, It to If</p>
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<p class="center">(<i>Es lebe das Leben</i>)</p>
<p>A play in five acts, by <span class="smcap">Hermann Sudermann</span>. Translated
from the German by <span class="smcap">Edith Wharton</span>.</p>
<hr style="width: 95%;" />
<p class="center">[<i>Large 8vo, $2.50 net</i>]</p>
<h2>The Decoration of Houses</h2>
<p>With 56 full-page illustrations, by <span class="smcap">Edith Wharton</span> and
<span class="smcap">Ogden Codman, Jr.</span></p>
</div>
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