Part 2 (1/2)
Josephine took it like one dazed. She looked from me to it and back again from it to me, then with a joyous laugh she exclaimed, ”Really?
It is really true? Oh, Fred, you are an angel!”
”No, my dear,” I answered, as she flung her arms about my neck--for she does so still once in a while--”I am merely a philosopher who has learned to recognize that what must be must be.”
My wife was too much absorbed in her own mysterious mental processes to take note of or a.n.a.lyze this observation. For a few moments she was lost in a brown study, and gazed about her with a glance that struck me as somewhat critical.
”You are an angel, Fred,” she repeated, ruminantly. ”You took me in splendidly, didn't you? And to think of your doing it all by yourself!”
She wandered back into the dining-room, and thence to the hall, where she stood peering up the stairway at the skylight. ”Yes,” she continued presently, in a judicial, contemplative tone, ”I think it will do very well on the whole. I am not perfectly sure that the laundress will be satisfied with the arrangement of the laundry, and I don't see exactly, Fred, what you are to do for a dressing-room, when we have more than one visitor. I am out of conceit with the tinting of the drawing-room ceiling, and--and several of the mantelpieces are hideous. But, on the other hand, the dining-room is perfectly lovely, there is no end of closet-room, and the kitchen is a gem. Oh, thank you, Fred, thank you ever so much. I really never expected that we could afford to leave the dear old house. It will almost break my heart to leave it, too, although it is so dirty.”
Josephine's guns were spiked, as it were. Having declared that the house was ideal, she was barred from utterly blasting it in the next breath. To tell the truth, I felt as a consequence decidedly perky and inclined to perform the double-shuffle or something of the sort quite out of keeping with the traditional repose of a philosopher. It was so obvious to me that I had escaped weeks, if not months, of misery by the ruse which I had adopted that I was fain to dance with joy. Had I allowed Josephine to pick out a house she would have felt obliged, even though she was thoroughly satisfied with the first she saw, to inspect from top to bottom every other in the market, for fear that she might see something which pleased her better, and I should have been compelled to accompany her. There are a few advantages after all in being of a philosophic turn of mind.
And here is another bit of philosophy for you which I am thoroughly convinced is sound. A woman adroitly handled will permit her husband to choose a new unfurnished house for her without serious demur. But let the lord and master beware who takes it upon himself to do the furnis.h.i.+ng also stealthily and of his own accord. I will confess that it did occur to me at first to put through the whole business at one fell swoop--house, wall-papers, dados, chandeliers, carpets, and curtains. I even went so far as to cross the street one day with the intention of asking Poultney Briggs, who makes a business of letting people know what they ought to like in the line of interior decoration, to name his price to complete the job. But my courage failed me at the last minute, for I had a presentiment that Josephine would be disappointed if I did. You see I know her pretty well after all these years.
”I should never have forgiven you, Fred--never!” said my better-half, emphatically, when I told her how near I had come to the crucial act.
”I should have hated everything. Besides, no one nowadays thinks anything of Poultney Briggs as a decorator. He is terribly behind the times.”
I accepted this reproof and the accompanying verdict with becoming meekness. I remember that when we first went to house-keeping Poultney Briggs was in the van of artistic progress, and that no one was to be mentioned in the same breath with him; yet now, apparently, he was of the sere-and-yellow-leaf order, professionally speaking. And I was old fogy enough not to have been aware of it. Clearly, I was not fit to be entrusted with the selection of even a door-mat, to say nothing of the wall-papers and carpets. It was with a thankful heart over my foresight that I relinquished to Josephine the whole task of furnis.h.i.+ng, with the sole reservation that I should have my say about the wine-cellar. My only revenge, a miserable one forsooth, was that she resembled a skeleton three months later; a pale, pitiful bag of bones, though proud and radiant withal. Had it not been for that prediction that her life was to be lengthened, I should have felt anxious. What a marvellous creation a woman is, to be sure! Man and philosopher as I am, my impulse would have been to consign the contents of the garret to the auctioneer or the ash-man, and to retain most of the least-used furniture and upholstery to eke out our new splendor.
But Josephine's method was distinctly opposite. She was critical of nearly everything respectable-looking in the old house; on the other hand, there was scarcely anything in the attic or lumber-room, where our useless things were stored, which did not turn out to be a treasure and just the thing for the new establishment. To begin with, there was a love of a set of andirons and a bra.s.s fender (to reproduce Josephine's description exactly), which had been discarded at the time we began housekeeping as too old-fas.h.i.+oned and peculiar. Of equal import was a disreputable-looking mahogany desk with bra.s.s handles and claw feet which had belonged to my great-grandmother before it was banished to the garret within a month after our wedding ceremony, on the plea that none of the drawers would work. They don't still, for that matter. A c.u.mbersome, stately Dutch clock and a toast-rack of what Josephine styled medieval pattern, were among the other discoveries. The latter was reposing in a soap-box in company with a battered, vulgar nutmeg-grater. But the pieces of resistance, as I called them, on account of the difficulty we had in moving them from behind a pile of old window-blinds, were the portraits of a little gentleman in small-clothes, with his hair in a cue and a seeming cast in one eye, and a stout lady with a high complexion and corkscrew ringlets.
”Oh, Fred, who are they?” cried Josephine, ecstatically, and she began to dust the seedy, frameless canvases with a reverential air. ”Where did they come from?”
”They're ancestors of mine, love.”
”Ancestors? How lovely, Fred! I didn't know you had any. I mean I didn't know you had any who had their portraits painted.”
”On the contrary, Josephine, I told you who they were when we were engaged, and I remember I was rather anxious to hang them in the dining-room, but you said they were a pair of old frumps, and that you wouldn't give them house s.p.a.ce. So we compromised on the attic.”
”Did I?” said my darling, gravely. ”Well it must have been because the dining-room was too small for them. They will look delightfully in our new one, when they are mounted and touched up a bit, and they will set off our Copley of my great-aunt in the turban. What are their names?
They must have names.”
”They are my great-grandfather Plunkett and his wife, on my father's side. He was a common hangman.”
”Now don't be idiotic, Fred.”
”He was, my dear. It was you yourself who said it. Don't you remember my calling two of your forbears a precious pair of donkeys because they wouldn't eat any form of sh.e.l.l-fish, and your replying that, though I was in the habit of grandiloquently describing my ancestor who used to execute people as 'the sheriff of the county,' he was only a common hangman?”
”Oh, was that the man? All I said was that if he had been _my_ ancestor instead of yours, you would have called him a hangman. He _was_ sheriff of the county, wasn't he, dear?”
”So I have been taught to believe.”
”'My ancestor, the high sheriff,' won't sound badly at all,” she said, jauntily.
”Especially if we can tone up the old gentleman's game eye a little.”
Josephine's face expressed open admiration. ”You are a genius and a duck,” she exclaimed; then, after a reflective pause, she murmured, ”Very likely he met with an accident just before he was painted.”
”Yes, dear. Consequently, if the eye can't be improved by means of the best modern artistic talent, the least we can do is to put a shade over it.”