Part 43 (1/2)

Thelma Marie Corelli 78290K 2022-07-22

”As bad as in Bosekop,” murmured Britta, more to herself than to him, ”only London is a larger place.” Then raising her voice again, she said, ”Perhaps there will be some people wicked enough to hate her ladys.h.i.+p, Morris?”

”I shouldn't wonder,” said Morris philosophically. ”I shouldn't wonder at all! There's a deal of hate about one way or another,--and if a lady is as beautiful as an angel, and cuts out everybody wherever she goes, why you can't expect the other ladies to be very fond of her. 'Tisn't in human nature--at least not in feminine human nature. Men don't care much about their looks, one way or the other, unless they're young chaps--then one has a little patience with them and they come all right.”

But Britta had become meditative again. She went slowly up into her mistress's room and began arranging the few trifles that had been left in disorder.

”Just fancy!”--she said to herself--”some one may hate the Froken even in London just as they hated her in Bosekop, because she is so unlike everybody else. _I_ shall keep my eyes open,--and _I_ shall soon find out any wickedness against her! My beautiful, dear darling! I believe the world is a cruel place after all,--but _she_ shan't be made unhappy in it, if I can help it!”

And with this emphatic declaration, she kissed a little shoe of Thelma's that she was just putting by--and, smoothing her curls, went down to her supper.

CHAPTER XX.

”Such people there are living and flouris.h.i.+ng in the world,--Faithless, Hopeless, Charityless,--let us have at them, dear friends, with might and main!”--THACKERAY.

Who can adequately describe the thrilling excitement attending an aristocratic ”crush,”--an extensive, sweeping-off-of-old-cores ”at home,”--that scene of bewildering confusion which might be appropriately set forth to the minds of the vulgar in the once-popular ditty, ”Such a getting-up-stairs I never did see!” Who can paint in sufficiently brilliant colors the mere _outside_ of a house thus distinguished by this strange festivity, in which there is no actual pleasure,--this crowding of carriages--this shouting of small boys and policemen?--who can, in words, delineate the various phases of lofty indignation and offense on the countenances of pompous coachmen, forced into contention with vulgar but good-natured ”cabbys”--for right of way? . . . who can sufficiently set forth the splendors of a striped awning avenue, lined on both sides with a collection of tropical verdure, hired for the occasion at so much per dozen pots, and illuminated with Chinese lanterns! Talk of orange groves in Italy and the languid light of a southern moon! What are they compared to the marvels of striped awning?

Mere trees--mere moonlight--(poor products of Nature!) do not excite either wonder or envy--but, strange to say, an awning avenue invariably does! As soon as it is erected in all its bland suggestiveness, no matter at what house, a small crowd of street-arabs and nursemaids collect to stare at it,--and when tired of staring, pa.s.s and repa.s.s under it with peculiar satisfaction; the beggar, starving for a crust, lingers doubtfully near it, and ventures to inquire of the influenza-smitten crossing-sweeper whether it is a wedding or a party?

And if Awning Avenue means matrimony, the beggar waits to see the guests come out; if, on the contrary, it stands for some evening festivity, he goes, resolving to return at the appointed hour, and try if he cannot persuade one ”swell” at least to throw him a penny for his night's supper. Yes--a great many people endure sharp twinges of discontent at the sight of Awning Avenue,--people who can't afford to give parties, and who wish they could,--pretty, sweet girls who never go to a dance in their lives, and long with all their innocent hearts for a glimpse,--just _one_ glimpse!--of what seems to them inexhaustible, fairy-like delight,--lonely folks, who imagine in their simplicity that all who are privileged to pa.s.s between the lines of hired tropical foliage aforementioned, must perforce be the best and most united of friends--hungry men and women who picture, with watering mouths, the supper-table that lies _beyond_ the awning, laden with good things, of the very names of which they are hopelessly ignorant,--while now and then a stern, dark-browed Thinker or two may stalk by and metaphorically shake his fist at all the waste, extravagance, useless luxury, humbug, and hypocrisy Awning Avenue usually symbolizes, and may mutter in his beard, like an old-fas.h.i.+oned tragedian, ”A time _will_ come!” Yes, Sir Thinker!--it will most undoubtedly--it _must_--but not through you--not through any mere human agency. Modern society contains within itself the seed of its own destruction,--the most utter Nihilist that ever swore deadly oath need but contain his soul in patience and allow the seed to ripen. For G.o.d's justice is as a circle that slowly surrounds an evil and as slowly closes on it with crus.h.i.+ng and resistless force,--and feverish, fretting humanity, however n.o.bly inspired, can do nothing either to hasten or r.e.t.a.r.d the round, perfect, absolute and Divine Law.

So let the babes of the world play on, and let us not frighten them with stories of earthquakes; they are miserable enough as it is, believe it!--their toys are so brittle, and snap in their feeble hands so easily, that one is inclined to pity them! And Awning Avenue, with its borrowed verdure and artificial light, is frequently erected for the use of some of the most wretched among the children of the earth,--children who have trifled with and lost everything,--love, honor, hope, and faith, and who are travelling rapidly to the grave with no consolation save a few handfuls, of base coin, which they must, perforce, leave behind them at the last.

So it may be that the crippled crossing-sweeper outside Winsleigh House is a very great deal happier than the master of that stately mansion. He has a new broom,--and Master Ernest Winsleigh has given him two oranges, and a rather bulky stick of sugar candy. He is a _protege_ of Ernest's--that bright handsome boy considers it a ”jolly shame”--to have only one leg,--and has said so with much emphasis,--and though the little sweeper himself has never regarded his affliction quite in that light, he is exceedingly grateful for the young gentleman's patronage and sympathy thus frankly expressed. And on this particular night of the grand reception he stands, leaning on his broom and munching his candy, a delighted spectator of the scene in Park Lane,--the splendid equipages, the prancing horses, the glittering liveries, the excited cabmen, the magnificent toilettes of the ladies, the solemn and resigned deportment of the gentlemen,--and he envies none of them--not he! Why should he? His oranges are in his pocket--untouched as yet--and it is doubtful whether the crowding guests at the Winsleigh supper-table shall find anything there to yield them such entire enjoyment as he will presently take in his humble yet refres.h.i.+ng desert. And he is pleased as a child at a pantomime--the Winsleigh ”at home” is a show that amuses him,--and he makes sundry remarks on ”'im” and ”'er” in a meditative _sotto voce_. He peeps up Awning Avenue heedless of the severe eye of the policeman on guard,--he sweeps the edge of the crimson felt foot-cloth tenderly with his broom,--and if he has a desire ungratified, it is that he might take a peep just for a minute inside the front door, and see how ”they're all a'goin' it!”

And how _are_ they a'goin' it! Well, not very hilariously, if one may judge by the aspect of the gentlemen in the hall and on the stairs,--gentlemen of serious demeanor, who are leaning, as though exhausted, against the banisters, with a universal air of profound weariness and dissatisfaction. Some of these are young fledglings of manhood,--callow birds who, though by no means innocent,--are more or less inexperienced,--and who have fluttered hither to the snare of Lady Winsleigh's ”at home,” half expecting to be allowed to make love to their hostess, and so have something to boast of afterwards,--others are of the middle-aged complacent type, who, though infinitely bored, have condescended to ”look in” for ten minutes or so, to see if there are any pretty women worth the honor of their criticism--others again (and these are the most unfortunate) are the ”n.o.bodies”--or husbands, fathers, and brothers of ”beauties,” whom they have dutifully escorted to the scene of triumph, in which they, unlucky wights! are certainly not expected to share. A little desultory conversation goes on among these stair-loungers,--conversation mingled with much dreary yawning,--a trained opera-singer is shaking forth chromatic roulades and trills in the great drawing-room above,--there is an incessant stream of people coming and going,--there is the rustle of silk and satin,--perfume, shaken out of lace kerchiefs, and bouquets oppresses the warm air,--the heat is excessive,--and there is a never-ending monotonous hum of voices, only broken at rare intervals by the ”society laugh”--that unmeaning giggle on the part of the women,--that strained ”ha, ha, ha!”

on the part of the men, which is but the faint ghostly echo of the farewell voice of true mirth.

Presently, out of the ladies' cloak-room come two fascinating figures--the one plump and matronly, with grey hair and a capacious neck glittering with diamonds,--the other a slim girl in pale pink, with dark eyes and a ravis.h.i.+ng complexion, for whom the lazy gentlemen on the stairs make immediate and respectful room.

”How d'ye do, Mrs. Van Clupp?” says one of the loungers.

”Glad to see you, Miss Marcia!” says another, a sandy-haired young man, with a large gardenia in his b.u.t.ton-hole, and a gla.s.s in his eye.

At the sound of his voice Miss Marcia stops and regards him with a surprised smile. She is very pretty, is Marcia,--bewitchingly pretty,--and she has an air of demure grace and modesty about her that is perfectly charming. Why? oh, why does she not remain in that sylph-like, att.i.tude of questioning silence? But she speaks--and the charm is broken.

”Waal now! Dew tell!” she exclaims. ”I thought yew were in Pa-ar--is!

Ma, would yew have concluded to find Lord Algy here? This is _too_ lovely! If I'd known _yew_ were coming I'd have stopped at home--yes, I would--that's so!”

And she nods her little head, crowned with its glossy braids of chestnut hair, in a very coquettish manner, while her mother, persistently beaming a stereotyped company smile on all around her, begins to ascend the stairs, beckoning her daughter to follow. Marcia does so, and Lord Algernon Masherville escorts her.

”You--you didn't mean that!” he stammers rather feebly--”You--you don't mind my being here, do you? I'm--I'm _awfully_ glad to see you again, you know--and--er--all that sort of thing!”

Marcia darts a keen glance at him,--the glance of an observant, clear-headed magpie.

”Oh yes! I dare say!” she remarks with airy scorn. ”S'pect _me_ to believe _yew_! Waal! Did yew have a good time in Pa-ar--is?”

”Fairly so,” answers Lord Masherville indifferently. ”I only came back two days ago. Lady Winsleigh met me by chance at the theatre, and asked me to look in to-night for 'some fun' she said. Have you any idea what she meant?”

”Of course!” says the fair New Yorker, with a little nasal laugh,--”don't _yew_ know? We're all here to see the fisherwoman from the wilds of Norway,--the creature Sir Philip Errington married last year. I conclude she'll give us fits all round, don't yew?”

Lord Masherville, at this, appears to hesitate. His eye-gla.s.s troubles him, and he fidgets with its black string. He is not intellectual--he is the most vacillating, most meek and timid of mortals--but he is a gentleman in his own poor fas.h.i.+on, and has a sort of fluttering chivalry about him, which, though feeble, is better than none.