The Awkward Age - Henry James (ap literature book list .txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
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Another person present might have felt rather taxed either to determine the degree of provocation represented by Vanderbankâs considerate smile, or to say if there was an appreciable interval before he rang out: âI think, you know, you oughtnât to do anything of the sort. Let that alone, please. The great thing is the interestâthe great thing is the wish you express. It represents a view of me, an attitude toward meâ!â He pulled up, dropping his arms and turning away before the complete image.
âThereâs nothing in those things that need overwhelm you. It would be odd if you hadnât yourself, about your value and your future a feeling quite as lively as any feeling of mine. There IS mine at all events. I canât help it. Accept it. Then of the other feelingâhow SHE moves meâI wonât speak.â
âYou sufficiently show it!â
Mr. Longdon continued to watch the bright circle on the table, lost in which a moment he let his friendâs answer pass. âI wonât begin to you on Nanda.â
âDonât,â said Vanderbank. But in the pause that ensued each, in one way or another, might have been thinking of her for himself.
It was broken by Mr. Longdonâs presently going on: âOf course what it superficially has the air of is my offering to pay you for taking a certain step. Itâs open to you to be grand and proudâto wrap yourself in your majesty and ask if I suppose you bribeable. I havenât spoken without having thought of that.â
âYes,â said Vanderbank all responsively, âbut it isnât as if you proposed to me, is it, anything dreadful? If one cares for a girl oneâs deucedly glad she has money. The more of anything good she has the better. I may assure you,â he added with the brightness of his friendly intelligence and quite as if to show his companion the way to be least concernedââI may assure you that once I were disposed to act on your suggestion Iâd make short work of any vulgar interpretation of my motive. I should simply try to be as fine as yourself.â He smoked, he moved about, then came up in another place. âI dare say you know that dear old Mitchy, under whose blessed roof weâre plotting this midnight treason, would marry her like a shot and without a penny.â
âI think I know everythingâI think Iâve thought of everything. Mr. Mitchett,â Mr. Longdon added, âis impossible.â
Vanderbank appeared for an instant to wonder. âWholly then through HER attitude?â
âAltogether.â
Again he hesitated. âYouâve asked her?â
âIâve asked her.â
Once more Vanderbank faltered. âAnd thatâs how you know?â
âAbout YOUR chance? Thatâs how I know.â
The young man, consuming his cigarette with concentration, took again several turns. âAnd your idea IS to give one time?â
Mr. Longdon had for a minute to turn his idea over. âHow much time do you want?â
Vanderbank gave a headshake that was both restrictive and indulgent. âI must live into it a little. Your offer has been before me only these few minutes, and itâs too soon for me to commit myself to anything whatever. Except,â he added gallantly, âto my gratitude.â
Mr. Longdon, at this, on the divan, got up, as Vanderbank had previously done, under the spring of emotion; only, unlike Vanderbank, he still stood there, his hands in his pockets and his face, a little paler, directed straight. There was disappointment in him even before he spoke. âYouâve no strong enough impulseâ?â
His friend met him with admirable candour. âWouldnât it seem that if I had I would by this time have taken the jump?â
âWithout waiting, you mean, for anybodyâs money?â Mr. Longdon cultivated for a little a doubt. âOf course she has struck one asâtill nowâ tremendously young.â
Vanderbank looked about once more for matches and occupied a time with relighting. âTill nowâyes. But itâs not,â he pursued, âonly because sheâs so young thatâfor each of us, and for dear old Mitchy tooâsheâs so interesting.â Mr. Longdon had restlessly stepped down, and Vanderbankâs eyes followed him till he stopped again. âI make out that in spite of what you said to begin with youâre conscious of a certain pressure.â
âIn the matter of time? Oh yes, I do want it DONE. That,â Nandaâs patron simply explained, âis why I myself put on the screw.â He spoke with the ring of impatience. âI want her got out.â
ââOutâ?â
âOut of her motherâs house.â
Vanderbank laughed thoughâmore immediatelyâhe had coloured. âWhy, her motherâs house is just where I see her!â
âPrecisely; and if it only werenât we might get on faster.â
Vanderbank, for all his kindness, looked still more amused. âBut if it only werenât, as you say, I seem to understand you wouldnât have your particular vision of urgency.â
Mr. Longdon, through adjusted glasses, took him in with a look that was sad as well as sharp, then jerked the glasses off. âOh you do understand.â
âAh,â said Vanderbank, âIâm a mass of corruption!â
âYou may perfectly be, but you shall not,â Mr. Longdon returned with decision, âget off on any such plea. If youâre good enough for me youâre good enough, as you thoroughly know, on whatever head, for any one.â
âThank you.â But Vanderbank, for all his happy appreciation, thought again. âWe ought at any rate to remember, oughtnât we? that we should have Mrs. Brook against us.â
His companion faltered but an instant. âAh thatâs another thing I know. But itâs also exactly why. Why I want Nanda away.â
âI see, I see.â
The response had been prompt, yet Mr. Longdon seemed suddenly to show that he suspected the superficial. âUnless itâs with Mrs. Brook youâre in love.â Then on his friendâs taking the idea with a mere headshake of negation, a repudiation that might even have astonished by its own lack of surprise, âOr unless Mrs. Brookâs in love with you,â he amended.
Vanderbank had for this any decent gaiety. âAh that of course may perfectly be!â
âBut IS it? Thatâs the question.â
He continued light. âIf she had declared her passion shouldnât I rather compromise herâ?â
âBy letting me know?â Mr. Longdon reflected. âIâm sure I canât sayâitâs a sort of thing for which I havenât a measure or a precedent. In my time women didnât declare their passion. Iâm thinking of what the meaning is of Mrs. Brookenhamâs wanting youâas Iâve heard it calledâherself.â
Vanderbank, still with his smile, smoked a minute. âThatâs what youâve heard it called?â
âYes, but you must excuse me from telling you by whom.â
He was amused at his friendâs discretion. âItâs unimaginable. But it doesnât matter. We all call everythingâanything. The meaning of it, if you and I put it so, isâwell, a modern shade.â
âYou must deal then yourself,â said Mr. Longdon, âwith your modern shades.â He spoke now as if the case simply awaited such dealing.
But at this his young friend was more grave. âYOU could do nothing?âto bring, I mean, Mrs. Brook round.â
Mr. Longdon fairly started. âPropose on your behalf for her daughter? With your authorityâtomorrow. Authorise me and I instantly act.â
Vanderbankâs colour again roseâhis flush was complete. âHow awfully you want it!â
Mr. Longdon, after a look at him, turned away. âHow awfully YOU donât!â
The young man continued to blush. âNoâyou must do me justice. Youâve not made a mistake about meâI see in your proposal, I think, all you can desire I should. Only YOU see it much more simplyâand yet I canât just now explain. If it WERE so simple I should say to you in a moment âdo speak to them for meââI should leave the matter with delight in your hands. But I require time, let me remind you, and you havenât yet told me how much I may take.â
This appeal had brought them again face to face, and Mr. Longdonâs first reply to it was a look at his watch. âItâs one oâclock.â
âOh I requireââVanderbank had recovered his pleasant humourââmore than tonight!â
Mr. Longdon went off to the smaller table that still offered to view two bedroom candles. âYou must take of course the time you need. I wonât trouble youâI wonât hurry you. Iâm going to bed.â
Vanderbank, overtaking him, lighted his candle for him; after which, handing it and smiling: âShall we have conduced to your rest?â
Mr. Longdon looked at the other candle. âYouâre not coming to bed?â
âTo MY rest we shall not have conduced. I stay up a while longer.â
âGood.â Mr. Longdon was pleased. âYou wonât forget then, as we promised, to put out the lights?â
âIf you trust me for the greater you can trust me for the less. Good-night.â
Vanderbank had offered his hand. âGood-night.â But Mr. Longdon kept him a moment. âYou DONâT care for my figure?â
âNot yetânot yet. PLEASE.â Vanderbank seemed really to fear it, but on Mr. Longdonâs releasing him with a little drop of disappointment they went together to the door of the room, where they had another pause.
âSheâs to come down to meâaloneâin September.â
Vanderbank appeared to debate and conclude. âThen may I come?â
His friend, on this footing, had to consider. âShall you know by that time?â
âIâm afraid I canât promiseâif you must regard my coming as a pledge.â
Mr. Longdon thought on; then raising his eyes: âI donât quite see why you wonât suffer me to tell youâ!â
âThe detail of your intention? I do then. Youâve said quite enough. If my visit must commit me,â Vanderbank pursued, âIâm afraid I canât come.â
Mr. Longdon, who had passed into the corridor, gave a dry sad little laugh. âCome thenâas the ladies sayââas you areâ!â
On which, rather softly closing the door, the young man remained alone in the great emptily lighted billiard-room.
Presenting himself at Buckingham Crescent three days after the Sunday spent at Mertle, Vanderbank found Lady Fanny Cashmore in the act of taking leave of Mrs. Brook and found Mrs. Brook herself in the state of muffled exaltation that was the mark of all her intercourseâand most of all perhaps of her farewellsâwith Lady Fanny. This splendid creature gave out, as it were, so little that Vanderbank was freshly struck with all Mrs. Brook could take in, though nothing, for that matter, in Buckingham Crescent, had been more fully formulated on behalf of the famous beauty than the imperturbable grandeur of her almost total absence of articulation. Every aspect of the phenomenon had been freely discussed there and endless ingenuity lavished on the question of how exactly it was that so much of what the world would in another case have called complete stupidity could be kept by a mere wonderful face from boring one to death. It was Mrs. Brook who, in this relation as in many others, had arrived at the supreme expression of the law, had thrown off, happily enough, to whomever it might have concerned: âMy dear thing, it all comes back, as everything always does, simply to personal pluck. Itâs only a question, no matter when or where, of having enough. Lady Fanny has the courage of all her silenceâso much therefore that it sees her completely through and is what really makes her interesting. Not to be afraid of what may happen to you when youâve no more to say for yourself than a steamer without a lightâthat truly is the highest heroism, and Lady Fannyâs greatness is that sheâs never afraid. She takes the risk every time she goes outâtakes, as you may say, her life in her hand. She just turns that glorious mask upon you and practically says: âNo, I wonât open my lipsâto call it really openâfor the forty minutes I shall
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