The Awkward Age - Henry James (ap literature book list .txt) š
- Author: Henry James
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āOf what you have in your head? Dear Mr. Longdon, how SHOULD I have?ā
āWell, Iām wondering if I shouldnāt perhaps have a little in your place. Thereās nothing that in the circumstances occurs to you as likely I should want to say?ā
Vanderbank gave a laugh that might have struck an auditor as a trifle uneasy. āWhen you speak of āthe circumstancesā you do a thing thatā unless you mean the simple thrilling ones of this particular momentā always of course opens the door of the lurid for a man of any imagination. To such a man youāve only to give a nudge for his conscience to jump. Thatās at any rate the case with mine. Itās never quite on its feetāso itās now already on its back.ā He stopped a littleāhis smile was even strained. āIs what you want to put before me something awful Iāve done?ā
āExcuse me if I press this point.ā Mr. Longdon spoke kindly, but if his friendās anxiety grew his own thereby diminished. āCan you think of nothing at all?ā
āDo you mean that Iāve done?ā
āNo, but thatāwhether youāve done it or notāI may have become aware of.ā
There could have been no better proof than Vanderbankās expression, on this, of his having mastered the secret of humouring without appearing to patronise. āI think you ought to give me a little more of a clue.ā
Mr. Longdon took off his glasses. āWellāthe clueās Nanda Brookenham.ā
āOh I see.ā His friend had responded quickly, but for a minute said nothing more, and the great marble clock that gave the place the air of a club ticked louder in the stillness. Mr. Longdon waited with a benevolent want of mercy, yet with a look in his face that spoke of what depended for himāthough indeed very far withināon the upshot of his patience. The hush between them, for that matter, became a conscious public measure of the young manās honesty. He evidently at last felt it as such, and there would have been for an observer of his handsome controlled face a study of some sharp things. āI judge that you ask me for such an utterance,ā he finally said, āas very few persons at any time have the right to expect of a man. Think of the peopleāand very decent onesāto whom on so many a question one must only reply that itās none of their business.ā
āI see you know what I mean,ā said Mr. Longdon.
āThen you know also the distinguished exception I make of you. There isnāt another man with whom Iād talk of it.ā
āAnd even to me you donāt! But Iām none the less obliged to you,ā Mr. Longdon added.
āIt isnāt only the gravity,ā his companion went on; āitās the ridicule that inevitably attachesā!ā
The manner in which Mr. Longdon indicated the empty room was in itself an interruption. āDonāt I sufficiently spare you?ā
āThank you, thank you,ā said Vanderbank.
āBesides, itās not for nothing.ā
āOf course not!ā the young man returned, though with a look of noting the next moment a certain awkwardness in his concurrence. āBut donāt spare me now.ā
āI donāt mean to.ā Mr. Longdon had his back to the table again, on which he rested with each hand on the rim. āI donāt mean to,ā he repeated.
His victim gave a laugh that betrayed at least the drop of a tension. āYet I donāt quite see what you can do to me.ā
āItās just what for some time past Iāve been trying to think.ā
āAnd at last youāve discovered?ā
āWellāit has finally glimmered out a little in this extraordinary place.ā
Vanderbank frankly wondered. āIn consequence of anything particular that has happened?ā
Mr. Longdon had a pause. āFor an old idiot who notices as much as I something particularās always happening. If youāre a man of imaginationāā
āOh,ā Vanderbank broke in, āI know how much more in that case youāre one! It only makes me regret,ā he continued, āthat Iāve not attended more since yesterday to what youāve been about.ā
āIāve been about nothing but what among you people Iām always about. Iāve been seeing, feeling, thinking. That makes no show, of course Iām aware, for any one but myself, and itās wholly my own affair. Except indeed,ā he added, āso far as Iāve taken into my head to make, on it all, this special appeal. There are things that have come home to me.ā
āOh I see, I see,ā Vanderbank showed the friendliest alertness. āIām to take it from you then, with all the avidity of my vanity, that I strike you as the person best able to understand what they are.ā
Mr. Longdon appeared to wonder an instant if his intelligence now had not almost too much of a glitter: he kept the same position, his back against the table, and while Vanderbank, on the settee, pressed upright against the wall, they recognised in silence that they were trying each other. āYouāre much the best of them. Iāve my ideas about you. Youāve great gifts.ā
āWell then, weāre worthy of each other. When Greek meets Greekā!ā and the young man laughed while, a little with the air of bracing himself, he folded his arms. āHere we are.ā
His companion looked at him a moment longer, then, turning away, went slowly round the table. On the further side of it he stopped again and, after a minute, with a nervous movement, set a ball or two in motion. āItās beautifulābut itās terrible!ā he finally murmured. He hadnāt his eyes on Vanderbank, who for a minute said nothing, and he presently went on: āTo see it and not to want to try to helpāwell, I canāt do that.ā Vanderbank, still neither speaking nor moving, remained as if he might interrupt something of high importance, and his friend, passing along the opposite edge of the table, continued to produce in the stillness, without the cue, the small click of the ivory. āHow longāif you donāt mind my askingāhave you known it?ā
Even for this at first Vanderbank had no answerānone but to rise from his place, come down to the floor and, standing there, look at Mr. Longdon across the table. He was serious now, but without being solemn. āHow can one tell? One can never be sure. A man may fancy, may wonder; but about a girl, a person so much younger than himself and so much more helpless, he feels aāwhat shall I call it?ā
āA delicacy?ā Mr. Longdon suggested. āIt may be that; the name doesnāt matter; at all events heās embarrassed. He wants not to be an ass on the one side and yet not some other kind of brute on the other.ā
Mr. Longdon listened with considerationāwith a beautiful little air indeed of being, in his all but finally benighted state, earnestly open to information on such points from a magnificent young man. āHe doesnāt want, you mean, to be a coxcomb?āand he doesnāt want to be cruel?ā
Vanderbank, visibly preoccupied, produced a faint kind smile. āOh you KNOW!ā
āI? I should know less than any one.ā Mr. Longdon had turned away from the table on this, and the eyes of his companion, who after an instant had caught his meaning, watched him move along the room and approach another part of the divan. The consequence of the passage was that Vanderbankās only rejoinder was presently to say: āI canāt tell you how long Iāve imaginedāhave asked myself. Sheās so charming, so interesting, and I feel as if I had known her always. Iāve thought of one thing and another to doāand then, on purpose, havenāt thought at all. That has mostly seemed to me best.ā
āThen I gather,ā said Mr. Longdon, āthat your interest in herā?ā
āHasnāt the same character as her interest in ME?ā Vanderbank had taken him up responsively, but after speaking looked about for a match and lighted a new cigarette. āIām sure you understand,ā he broke out, āwhat an extreme effort it is to me to talk of such things!ā
āYes, yes. But itās just effort only? It gives you no pleasure? I mean the fact of her condition,ā Mr. Longdon explained.
Vanderbank had really to think a little. āHowever much it might give me I should probably not be a fellow to gush. Iām a self-conscious stick of a Briton.ā
āBut even a stick of a Britonā!ā Mr. Longdon faltered and hovered. āIāve gushed in short to YOU.ā
āAbout Lady Julia?ā the young man frankly asked. āIs gushing what you call what youāve done?ā
āSay then weāre sticks of Britons. Youāre not in any degree at all in love?ā
There fell between them, before Vanderbank replied, another pause, of which he took advantage to move once more round the table. Mr. Longdon meanwhile had mounted to the high bench and sat there as if the judge were now in his proper place. At last his companion spoke. āWhat youāre coming to is of course that youāve conceived a desire.ā
āThatās itāstrange as it may seem. But believe me, it has not been precipitate. Iāve watched you both.ā
āOh I knew you were watching HER,ā said Vanderbank.
āTo such a tune that Iāve made up my mind. I want her so to marryā!ā But on the odd little quaver of longing with which he brought it out the elder man fairly hung.
āWell?ā said Vanderbank.
āWell, so that on the day she does sheāll come into the interest of a considerable sum of moneyāalready very decently investedāthat Iāve determined to settle on her.ā
Vanderbankās instant admiration flushed across the room. āHow awfully jolly of youāhow beautiful!ā
āOh thereās a way to show practically your appreciation of it.ā
But Vanderbank, for enthusiasm, scarcely heard him. āI canāt tell you how admirable I think you.ā Then eagerly, āDoes Nanda know it?ā he demanded.
Mr. Longdon, after a wait, spoke with comparative dryness. āMy idea has been that for the present you alone shall.ā
Vanderbank took it in. āNo other man?ā
His companion looked still graver. āI need scarcely say that I depend on you to keep the fact to yourself.ā
āAbsolutely then and utterly. But that wonāt prevent what I think of it. Nothing for a long time has given me such joy.ā
Shining and sincere, he had held for a minute Mr. Longdonās eyes. āThen you do care for her?ā
āImmensely. Never, I think, so much as now. That sounds of a grossness, doesnāt it?ā the young man laughed. āBut your announcement really lights up the mind.ā
His friend for a moment almost glowed with his pleasure. āThe sum Iāve fixed upon would be, I may mention, substantial, and I should of course be prepared with a clear statementāa very definite pledgeāof my intentions.ā
āSo much the better! OnlyāāVanderbank suddenly pulled himself upāāto get it she MUST marry?ā
āItās not in my interest to allow you to suppose she neednāt, and itās only because of my intensely wanting her marriage that Iāve spoken to you.ā
āAnd on the ground also with itāāVanderbank so far concurredāāof your quite taking for granted my only having to put myself forward?ā
If his friend seemed to cast about it proved but to be for the fullest expression. Nothing in fact could have been more charged than the quiet way in which he presently said: āMy dear boy, I back you.ā
Vanderbank clearly was touched by it. āHow extraordinarily kind you are to me!ā Mr. Longdonās silence appeared to reply that he was willing to let it go for that, and the young man next went on: āWhat it comes to thenāas you put itāis that itās a way for me to add something handsome to my income.ā
Mr. Longdon sat for a
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