upon the same subject. It was pretty
evident how much Kings Port was
buzzing over all this! They
fondly believed they did not like it; but
what would they have done without it? What, indeed, were they going to do
when it was all over and done with, one way or another? As a matter of
fact, they ought to be
grateful to Hortense for contributing
illustriously to the
excitement of their lives.
"Of course, I am well aware," Mrs. Gregory pursued, "that the young
people of to-day believe they can all 'teach their grandmothers to suck
eggs,' as we say in Kings Port."
"We say it
elsewhere, too," I
mildly put in.
"Indeed? I didn't know that the North, with its pest of Hebrew and other
low immigrants, had retained any of the good old
homely saws which we
brought from England. But do you imagine that if the control of marriage
rested in the hands of parents and grandparents (where it properly
belongs), you would be witnessing in the North this disgusting spectacle
of
divorce?"
"But, Mrs. St. Michael--"
"We didn't invite you to argue when we invited you to walk!" cried the
lady, laughing.
"We should like you to answer the question," said Mrs. Weguelin St.
Michael.
"And tell us," Mrs. Gregory continued, "if it's your opinion that a boy
who has never been married is a better judge of matrimony's pitfalls than
his father."
"Or than any older person who has
bravely and worthily gone through with
the experience," Mrs. Weguelin added.
"Ladies, I've no mind to argue. But we're ahead of Europe; we don't need
their
clumsy old plan."
Mrs. Gregory gave a
gallant,
incredulous snort. "I shall be interested to
learn of anything that is done better here than in Europe."
"Oh, many things, surely! But especially the mating of the
fashionableyoung. They don't need any parents to arrange for them; it's much better
managed through precocity."
"Through precocity? I scarcely follow you."
And Mrs. Weguelin
softly added, "You must excuse us if we do not follow
you." But her
softnessnevertheless indicated that if there were any one
present needing leniency, it was myself.
"Why, yes," I told them, "it's through precocity. The new-rich American
no longer commits the
blunder of keeping his children
innocent. You'll
see it
beginning in the dancing-class, where I heard an
exquisite little
girl of six say to a little boy, 'Go away; I can't dance with you,
because my mamma says your mamma only keeps a maid to answer the
doorbell.' When they get home from the dancing-class, tutors in poker and
bridge are
waiting to teach them how to
gamble for each other's little
dimes. I saw a little boy in knickerbockers and a wide
collar throw down
the evening paper--"
"At that age? They read the papers?" interrupted Mrs. Gregory.
"They read nothing else at any age. He threw it down and said, 'Well, I
guess there's not much behind this raid on Steel Preferred.' What need
has such a boy for parents or grandparents? Presently he is travelling to
a
fashionable boarding-school in his father's private car. At college all
his adolescent curiosities are
lavishly gratified. His sister at home
reads the French romances, and by eighteen she, too, knows (in her head
at least) the whole of life, so that she can be
perfectly trusted; she
would no more marry a mere half-millionaire just because she loved him
than she would appear twice in the same ball-dress. She and her
ball-dresses are described in the papers
precisely as if she were an
animal at a show--which indeed is what she has become; and she's eager to
be thus described, because she and her mother--even if her mother was
once a lady and knew better--are
haunted by one
perpetual, sickening
fear, the fear of being left out. And if you desire to pay correct
ballroom
compliments, you no longer go to her mother and tell her she's
looking every bit as young as her daughter; you go to the daughter and
tell her she's looking every bit as old as her mother, for that's what
she wishes to do, that's what she tries for, what she talks, dresses,
eats, drinks, goes to indecent plays and laughs for. Yes, we manage it
through precocity, and the new-rich American parent has achieved at least
one new thing under the sun,
namely, the
corruption of the child.
My ladies
silentlyconsulted each other's expressions, after which, in
equal silence, their gaze returned to me; but their
equally intent
scrutiny was
expressive of quite different things. It was with expectancy
that Mrs. Gregory looked at me--she wanted more. Not so Mrs. Weguelin;
she gave me
disapproval; it was shadowed in her beautiful, lustrous eyes
that burned dark in her white face with as much fire as that of youth,
yet it was not of youth, being deeply charged with retrospection.
In what, then, had I sinned? For the little lady's next words, coldly
murmured, increased in me an
uneasiness, as of sin:--
"You have told us much that we are not accustomed to hear in Kings Port."
"Oh, I haven't begun to tell you!" I exclaimed cheerily.
"You certainly have not told us," said Mrs. Gregory, "how your
'precocity' escapes this
divorce degradation."
"Escape it? Those people think it is--well, provincial--not to have been
divorced at least once!"
Mrs. Gregory opened her eyes, but Mrs. Weguelin shut her lips.
I continued: "Even the children, for their own little reasons, like it.
Only last summer, in Newport, a young boy was asked how he enjoyed having
a father and an ex-father."
"Ex-father!" said Mrs. Gregory. "Vice-father is what I should call him."
"Maria!" murmured Mrs. Weguelin, "how can you jest upon such topics?"
"I am far from jesting, Julia. Well, young gentleman, and what answer did
this precious Newport child make?"
"He said (if you will
pardon my giving you his little
sentiment in his
own quite
expressive idiom), 'Me for two fathers! Double money birthdays
and Christmases. See?' That was how he saw
divorce."
Once again my ladies
consulted each other's expressions; we moved along
High Walk in such silence that I heard the stiff little
rustle which the
palmettos were making across the street; even these trees, you might have
supposed, were whispering together over the horrors that I had recited in
their decorous presence.
It was Mrs. Gregory who next spoke. "I can
translate that last boy's
language, but what did the other boy mean about a 'raid on Steel
Preferred'--if I've got the jargon right?"
While I
translated this for her, I felt again the
disapproval in Mrs.
Weguelin's dark eyes; and my sins--for they were twofold--were
presentlymade clear to me by this lady.
"Are such subjects as--as stocks" (she
softly cloaked this word in scorn
immeasurable)--"are such subjects mentioned in your good society at the
North?"
I laughed
heartily. "Everything's mentioned!"
The lady paused over my reply. "I am afraid you must feel us to be very
old-fashioned in, Kings Port," she then said.
"But I
rejoice in it!"
She ignored my not
wholly dexterous
compliment. "And some subjects," she
pursued, "seem to us so grave that if we permit ourselves to speak of
them at all we cannot speak of them lightly."
No, they couldn't speak of them lightly! Here, then, stood my two sins
revealed; everything I had imparted, and also my tone of imparting it,
had displeased Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael, not with the thing, but with
me. I had transgressed her sound old American code of good manners, a
code
slightly pompous no doubt, but one in which no
familiarity was
allowed to breed
contempt. To her good taste, there were things in the
world which had,
apparently, to exist, but which one banished from
drawing-room
discussion as one conceals from sight the kitchen and
outhouses; one dealt with them only when necessity compelled, and never
in small-talk; and here had I been, so to speak, small-talking them in
that glib, modern, irresponsible
cadence with which our
brazen age rings
and clatters like the
beating of triangles and gongs. Not triangles and
gongs, but rather strings and flutes, had been the music to which Kings
Port society had attuned its measured voice.
I saw it all, and even saw that my own
dramatic sense of Mrs. Weguelin's