<h2><SPAN name="IX" id="IX"></SPAN>IX</h2>
<p>The next morning all were up at eight and picking strawberries for
breakfast. The prolonged and vociferous music of the horn had precluded
all hope of laziness, and the late seekers after sleep were obliged to
turn out with the best grace possible. A plunge in the sea had animated
the men for the day, and the women were very fresh and amiable.</p>
<p>After breakfast they scattered about the hills and beach. It was a
cloudless dark-blue day. The air was warm and dry. The bleak sand dunes
were reclaimed for a brief season by the vivid green of willow and oak,
the fields of purple lupin and yellow poppy; the trade winds were
elsewhere, and the vegetation of San Francisco enjoyed its brief span of
life. A ship with all her sails spread drifted, sleepily, over the bar.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Thorpe and Nina climbed an eminence from which they could see the
Mission Dolores, far on the right, the smoke curling languidly from its
great chimneys; the square Presidio of romantic memories and prosaic
present; the distant city, whose loud feverish pulse they fancied they
could hear.</p>
<p>They sat down under a tree. Nina took off her hat, and threw back her
head. “I think I am the re-embodiment of some pagan ancestor,” she said.
“On days like this, I care nothing for a single responsibility in life,
nor for what to-morrow will bring, nor for a religion nor a creed, nor
for the least nor greatest that civilisation has accomplished. I don’t
even long for Europe and the higher intellectual life. It is enough that
I am alive, that my eyes see only beauty, and my skin feels warmth. I
worship the sun and the sky and the flowers and the trees and the sea,
above all the warm quick atmosphere. They seem to me the only things
worth loving.”</p>
<p>“They are not the only things you love, however.”</p>
<p>“No, I love you and my father. I hate my mother. But I always manage to
forget <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</SPAN></span>her existence when I am off like this, and she is out of my
sight—”</p>
<p>“Why do you hate your mother?”</p>
<p>“That is one of the things you are not to know yet. This week you are to
hear nothing that is not pleasant. I wish you to feel like a pagan,
too.”</p>
<p>“I do. Some of your mandates are very easy to observe. We are reasonably
sympathetic on more points than one.”</p>
<p>“We will imagine that all life is to be like this week—only no allusion
is to be made during this week to the future, and no allusion in the
future to this week.”</p>
<p>“I will do all I can to respect your wishes as to the first. The second
is too ridiculous to notice. We will settle all that when the time
comes.”</p>
<p>To this she vouchsafed no reply, but peered up into the boughs. Her
expression changed after a moment; it became impersonal, and her eyes
hardened as they always did when her mind alone was at work.</p>
<p>“So far, California has evolved no literature,” she said. “When it does,
I don’t doubt it will be a literature of light and charm and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</SPAN></span>comedy—and pleasurable pathos. Writers will continue to go to the
dreary moorlands, the dun-coloured skies of England for tragedy
settings, and for the atmosphere of tradition and history. It will be
hard for any writer who has travelled over the wonderful mountains and
valleys of California—you have only seen the worst of it so far—to
imagine tragedy in a land of such exultant beauty, under a sun that
shines in a blue sky for eight months of the year. Fancy Emily Brontë
writing ‘Wuthering Heights’ in California! The setting is all wrong for
anything deeper than the picturesque crimes of desperadoes. But it is
the very contrast, this very accompaniment of unreality, that makes our
tragedies the harder to bear. I have thought sometimes that if I could
come out here on a furious day in winter, and wander about the sand
hills by myself, I’d feel as if I had a better right to be miserable—”</p>
<p>“I thought we were to have no more such hints this week. I am tired of
innuendoes. As I have remarked before, you take an unfair advantage. Let
down your hair. It <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</SPAN></span>looks full of gold and red in this light, and I want
to see it spread out in the sun.”</p>
<p>“Very well, put my hairpins in your pocket. Take it down yourself, and
don’t pull, on your life.”</p>
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