ciety. They entertained at their red brick mausoleum
of ancient
greatness in an old square that is a ceme-
tery of crumbled glory. And Robert Walmsley was
proud of his wife; although while one of his hands
shook his guests' the other held
tightly to his alpen-
stock and thermometer.
One day Alicia found a letter written to Robert by
his mother. It was an unerudite letter, full of crops
and motherly love and farm notes. It chronicled the
health of the pig and the recent red calf, and asked
concerning Robert's in return. It was a letter direct
from the soil, straight from home, full of biographies
of bees, tales of turnips, peaans of new-laid eggs, neg-
lected parents and the slump in dried apples.
"Why have I not been shown your mother's let-
ters?" asked Alicia. There was always something in
her voice that made you think of lorgnettes, of ac-
counts at Tiffany's, of sledges
smoothly gliding on
the trail from Dawson to Forty Mile, of the tinkling
of pendant prisms on your grandmothers' chandeliers,
of snow lying on a
convent roof; of a police sergeant
refusing bail. "Your mother," continued Alicia,
"invites us to make a visit to the farm. I have
never seen a farm. We will go there for a week or
two, Robert."
"We will," said Robert, with the grand air of an
associate Supreme Justice concurring in an opinion.
"I did not lay the
invitation before you because I
thought you would not care to go. I am much pleased
at your decision."
"I will write to her myself," answered Alicia, with
a faint foreshadowing of
enthusiasm. " Felice shall
pack my trunks at once. Seven, I think, will be
enough. I do not suppose that your mother entertains
a great deal. Does she give many house parties?"
Robert arose, and as
attorney for rural places filed
a demurrer against six of the seven trunks. He en-
deavored to
define, picture, elucidate, set forth and
describe a farm. His own words sounded strange in
his ears. He had not realized how
thoroughly urbsi-
dized he had become.
A week passed and found them landed at the little
country station five hours out from the city. A grin-
ning, stentorian, sarcastic youth driving a mule to a
spring wagon hailed Robert savagely.
"Hallo, Mr. Walmsley. Found your way back at
last, have you? Sorry I couldn't bring in the auto-
mobile for you, but dad's bull-tonguing the ten-acre
clover patch with it to-day. Guess you'll excuse my,
not wearing a dress suit over to meet you -- it ain't
six o'clock yet, you know."
"I'm glad to see you, Tom," said Robert, grasp-
ing his brother's band. "Yes, I've found my way at
last. You've a right to say 'at last.' It's been over
two years since the last time. But it will be oftener
after this, my boy."
Alicia, cool in the summer beat as an Arctic wraith,
white as a Norse snow
maiden in her flimsy
muslin and
fluttering lace parasol, came round the corner of the
station; and Tom was stripped of his
assurance. He
became
chiefly eyesight clothed in blue jeans, and on
the
homeward drive to the mule alone did he confide
in language the inwardness of his thoughts.
They drove
homeward. The low sun dropped a
spendthrift flood of gold upon the
fortunate fields of
wheat. The cities were far away. The road lay curl-
ing around wood and dale and bill like a
ribbon lost
from the robe of
careless summer. The wind followed
like a whinnying colt in the track of Phoebus's steeds.
By and by the
farmhouse peeped gray out of its
faithful grove; they saw the long lane with its convoy
of
walnut trees
running from the road to the house;
they smelled the wild rose and the
breath of cool,
damp
willows in the creek's bed. And then in unison
all the voices of the soil began a chant addressed to
the soul of Robert Walmsley. Out of the tilted aisles
of the dim wood they came hollowly; they chirped and
buzzed from the parched grass; they trilled from the
ripples of the creek ford; they floated up in clear
Pan's pipe notes from the dimming meadows; the
whippoorwills joined in as they pursued midges in the
upper air; slow-going cow-bells struck out a homely
accompaniment -- and this was what each one said:
"You've found your way back at last, have you?"
The old voices of the soil spoke to him. Leaf and
bud and
blossom conversed with him in the old vocabu-
lary of his
careless youth - the inanimate things, the
familiar stones and rails, the gates and furrows and
roofs and turns of the road had an
eloquence, too, and
a power in the
transformation. The country had
smiled and he had felt the
breath of it, and his heart
was drawn as if in a moment back to his old love.
The city was far away.
This rural atavism, then, seized Robert Walmsley
and possessed him. A queer thing he noticed in con-
nection with it was that Alicia, sitting at his side,
suddenly seemed to him a stranger. She did not be-
long to this recurrent phase. Never before had she
seemed so
remote, so colorless and high - so intan-
gible and unreal. And yet he had never admired her
more than when she sat there by him in the rickety
spring wagon, chiming no more with his mood and
with her
environment than the Matterhorn chimes
with a
peasant's
cabbage garden.
That night when the greetings and the supper were
over, the entire family, including Buff, the yellow dog,
bestrewed itself upon the front porch. Alicia, not
haughty but silent, sat in the shadow dressed in an
exquisite pale-gray tea gown. Robert's mother dis-
coursed to her happily
concerning marmalade and
lumbago. Tom sat on the top step; Sisters Millie
and Pam on the lowest step to catch the lightning
bugs. Mother had the
willow rocker. Father sat in
the big
armchair with one of its arms gone. Buff
sprawled in the middle of the porch in everybody's
way. The
twilight pixies and pucks stole forth un-
seen and plunged other poignant shafts of memory
into the heart of Robert. A rural
madness entered
his soul. The city was far away.
Father sat without his pipe, writhing in his heavy
boots, a sacrifice to rigid
courtesy. Robert shouted:
"No, you don't!" He fetched the pipe and lit it; be
seized the old gentleman's boots and tore them off.
The last one slipped suddenly, and Mr. Robert
Walmsley, of Washington Square, tumbled off the
porch
backward with Buff on top of him, bowling
fearfully. Tom laughed sarcastically.
Robert tore off his coat and vest and hurled them
into a lilac bush.
"Come out here, you landlubber," be cried to Tom,
and I'll put grass seed on your back. I think you
Called me a 'dude' a while ago. Come along and cut
your capers."
Tom understood the
invitation and accepted it with
delight. Three times they wrestled on the grass,
"side holds," even as the giants of the mat. And
twice was Tom forced to bite grass at the hands of
the
distinguishedlawyer. Dishevelled, panting, each
still boasting of his own
prowess, they stumbled back
to the porch. Millie cast a pert
reflection upon the
qualities of a city brother. In an
instant Robert had
secured a
horrid katydid in his fingers and bore down
upon her. Screaming wildly, she fled up the lane,
pursued by the avenging glass of form. A quarter
of a mile and they returned, she full of
apology to
the
victorious " dude." The
rustic mania possessed
him unabatedly.
I can do up a cowpenful of you slow hayseeds,"
he proclaimed, vaingloriously. "Bring on your bull-
dogs, your hired men and your log-rollers."
He turned handsprings on the grass that prodded
Tom to
envious sarcasm. And then, with a whoop,
he clattered to the rear and brought back Uncle like,
a battered colored retainer of the family, with his
banjo, and strewed sand on the porch and danced
"Chicken in the Bread Tray" and did buck-and-
wing wonders for half an hour longer. Incredibly,
wild and
boisterous things he did. He sang, he told
stories that set all but one shrieking, he played the
yokel, the
humorous clodhopper; he was mad, and
with the
revival of the old life in his blood.
He became so
extravagant that once his mother
sought
gently to
reprove him. Then Alicia moved as
though she were about to speak, but she did not.
Through it all she sat
immovable, a slim, white spirit
in the dusk that no man might question or read.
By and by she asked
permission to
ascend to her
room,
saying that she was tired. On her way she
passed Robert. He was
standing in the door, the
figure of
vulgarcomedy, with ruffled hair, reddened
face and unpardonable
confusion of
attire -- no trace
there of the
immaculate Robert Walmsley, the courted
clubman and
ornament of select circles. He was do-
ing a conjuring trick with some household utensils,
and the family, now won over to him without excep-
tion, was beholding him with
worshipful admiration.
As Alicia passed in Robert started suddenly. He
had forgotten for the moment that she was present.
Without a glance at him she went on upstairs.
After that the fun grew quiet. An hour passed
in talk, and then Robert went up himself.
She was
standing by the window when he entered
their room. She was still clothed as when they were
on the porch. Outside and crowding against the
window was a giant apple tree, full
blossomed.
Robert sighed and went near the window. He was
ready to meet his fate. A confessed
vulgarian, he
foresaw the
verdict of justice in the shape of that
whiteclad form. He knew the rigid lines that a
Van Der Pool would draw. He was a
peasant gam-
bolling indecorously in the
valley, and the pure, cold,
white, unthawed
summit of the Matterhorn could not
but frown on him. He had been unmasked by his
own actions. All the
polish, the poise, the form that
the city had given him had fallen from him like an
ill-fitting
mantle at the first
breath of a country
breeze. Dully be awaited the approaching condemna-
tion.
"Robert," said the calm, cool voice of his judge,
"I thought I married a gentleman."
Yes, it was coming. And yet, in the face of it,