Part 23 (2/2)
”Well, if you've followed me, you begin to realize why a superfluity of women threatens conventional life. There are an awful lot of women in this town, Lew.”
Leighton rose to his feet and started walking up and down, his hands clasped behind him, his head dropped.
”I haven't been feeding you on all these generalities just to kill time.
A generality would be worth nothing if it weren't for its exceptions.
Women are remarkable for the number of their exceptions. You are crossing a threshold into a peculiarly lax section and age of woman. I want you to believe and to remember that the world still breeds n.o.ble and innocent women.”
Leighton stopped, threw up his head, and fixed Lewis with his eyes.
”Do you know what innocence is? Ask the average clergyman to describe innocence to you, and when he gets through, think a bit, take off the tinsel words with which he has decked out his graven image, and you'll find what? Ignorance enshrined. Every clergy the world has seen has enshrined ignorance, and ignorance has no single virtue that a sound turnip does not share.”
Leighton stopped and faced his son.
”Now, my boy,” he said, ”here comes the end of the sermon. Beware of the second-best in women. Many a man trades his soul not for the whole world, but for a bed-fellow.” He paused. ”I believe,” he continued, flus.h.i.+ng, ”I still believe that for every man there is an all-embracing woman to whom he is all-embracing. Thank G.o.d! I'm childish enough to believe in her still, though I speak through soiled lips--the all-embracing woman who alone can hold you and that you alone can hold.”
Lewis stared absently into the fire.
”'The worlds of women are seven,'” he repeated, half to himself: ”'spirit, weed, flower, the blind, the visioned, libertine, and saint.
None of these is for thee. For each child of love there is a woman that holds the seven worlds within a single breast. Hold fast to thy birthright, even though thou journey with thy back unto the light.'”
”What--where--what's that?” stammered Leighton, staring at his son.
Lewis looked up and smiled.
”Only Old Immortality. Do you remember her? The old woman who told my fortune. She said that. D'you know, I think she must have been a discarded Gipsy. I never thought of it before. I didn't know then what a Gipsy was.”
”Gipsy or saint, take it from me, she was, and probably is, a wise woman,” said Leighton. ”Somehow I'm still sure she can never die. Do you remember all she said when she told you your fortune?”
”Yes,” said Lewis; ”I think I do. Every once in a while I've said it over to myself.”
”I wish you'd write down what she said and--and leave it on my table for me. You'll have to do it tonight, for I'm off to-morrow. Old Ivory and I have shot so much game we've grown squeamish about it, but it seems there's a terrific drought and famine on in the game country of the East Coast, and all the reserves have been thrown open. The idea is meat for the natives and a thinning out of game in the overstocked country. We are going out this time not as murderers, but as philanthropists.”
”I'd like to go, too,” said Lewis, his eyes lighting. ”Won't you let me?”
”Not this trip, my boy,” said Leighton. ”I hate to refuse you anything, but don't think I'm robbing you. I'm not. I merely don't wish you to eat life too fast. Times will come when you'll _need_ to go away. Just now you've got things enough to hunt right here. One of them is art. You may think you've arrived, but you haven't--not yet.”
”I know I haven't,” said Lewis.
Leighton nodded.
”Ever heard this sort of thing? 'Art is giving something for nothing.
Art is the ensnaring of beauty in an invisible mesh. Art is the ideal of common things. Art is a mirage stolen from the heavens and trapped on a bit of canvas or on a sheet of paper or in a lump of clay.' And so on and so on.”
Lewis smiled.
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