<SPAN name="X"></SPAN>
<h1 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">Chapter X</h1>
<h2 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">Gloria Decides to Proselyte the Rich</h2>
<p>While Philip was establishing himself in New York,
as a social worker and writer, Gloria was spending
more and more of her time in settlement work, in spite
of the opposition of her family. Naturally, their work
brought them much into each other’s society,
and drew them even closer together than in Philip’s
dark days when Gloria was trying to aid him in the
readjustment of his life. They were to all appearances
simply comrades in complete understanding, working
together for a common cause.</p>
<p>However, Strawn’s opposition to Gloria’s
settlement work was not all impersonal, for he made
no secret of his worry over Gloria’s evident
admiration for Dru. Strawn saw in Philip a masterly
man with a prodigious intellect, bent upon accomplishing
a revolutionary adjustment of society, and he knew
that nothing would deter him from his purpose. The
magnitude of the task and the uncertainties of success
made him fear that Gloria might become one of the
many unhappy women who suffer martyrdom through the
greatness of their love.</p>
<p>Gloria’s mother felt the same way about her
daughter’s companion in settlement work. Mrs.
Strawn was a placid, colorless woman, content to go
the conventional way, without definite purpose, further
than to avoid the rougher places in life.</p>
<p>She was convinced that men were placed here for the
sole purpose of shielding and caring for women, and
she had a contempt for any man who refused or was
unable to do so.</p>
<p>Gloria’s extreme advanced views of life alarmed
her and seemed unnatural. She protested as strongly
as she could, without upsetting her equanimity, for
to go beyond that she felt was unladylike and bad for
both nerves and digestion. It was a grief for her to
see Gloria actually working with anyone, much less
Philip, whose theories were quite upsetting, and who,
after all, was beyond the pale of their social sphere
and was impossible as a son-in-law.</p>
<p>Consequently, Philip was not surprised when one day
in the fall, he received a disconsolate note from
Gloria who was spending a few weeks with her parents
at their camp in the hills beyond Tuxedo, saying that
her father had flatly refused to allow her to take
a regular position with one of the New York settlements,
which would require her living on the East Side instead
of at home. The note concluded:</p>
<p>“Now, Philip, do come up for Sunday and let’s
talk it over, for I am sadly at variance with my family,
and I need your assistance and advice.</p>
<p>“Your very sincere,</p>
<p>“<i>Gloria</i>.”</p>
<p>The letter left Dru in a strangely disturbed state
of mind, and all during the trip up from New York
his thoughts were on Gloria and what the future would
bring forth to them both.</p>
<p>On the afternoon following his arrival at the camp,
as he and the young woman walked over the hills aflame
with autumnal splendor, Gloria told of her bitter
disappointment. The young man listened in sympathy,
but after a long pause in which she saw him weighing
the whole question in his mind, he said: “Well,
Gloria, so far as your work alone is concerned, there
is something better that you can do if you will. The
most important things to be done now are not amongst
the poor but amongst the rich. There is where you
may become a forceful missionary for good. All of
us can reach the poor, for they welcome us, but there
are only a few who think like you, who can reach the
rich and powerful.</p>
<p>“Let that be your field of endeavor. Do your
work gently and with moderation, so that some at least
may listen. If we would convince and convert, we must
veil our thoughts and curb our enthusiasm, so that
those we would influence will think us reasonable.”</p>
<p>“Well, Philip,” answered Gloria, “if
you really think I can help the cause, of course--”</p>
<p>“I’m sure you can help the cause. A lack
of understanding is the chief obstacle, but, Gloria,
you know that this is not an easy thing for me to
say, for I realize that it will largely take you out
of my life, for my path leads in the other direction.</p>
<p>“It will mean that I will no longer have you
as a daily inspiration, and the sordidness and loneliness
will press all the harder, but we have seen the true
path, and now have a clearer understanding of the meaning
and importance of our work.”</p>
<p>“And so, Philip, it is decided that you will
go back to the East Side to your destiny, and I will
remain here, there and everywhere, Newport, New York,
Palm Beach, London, carrying on my work as I see it.”</p>
<p>They had wandered long and far by now, and had come
again to the edge of the lofty forest that was a part
of her father’s estate. They stood for a moment
in that vast silence looking into each other’s
eyes, and then they clasped hands over their tacit
compact, and without a word, walked back to the bungalow.</p>
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