The Awkward Age by Henry James (best novel books to read .TXT) đ
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- Author: Henry James
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The young man met his eyes only the more sociably. âFriendship?â
âFriendship.â Mr. Longdon maintained the full value of the word.
âWell,â his companion risked, âI dare say it isnât in London by any means what it is at Beccles. I quite literally mean that,â Vanderbank reassuringly added; âI never really have believed in the existence of friendship in big societiesâin great towns and great crowds. Itâs a plant that takes time and space and air; and London society is a huge âsquash,â as we elegantly call itâan elbowing pushing perspiring chattering mob.â
âAh I donât say THAT of you!â the visitor murmured with a withdrawal of his hand and a visible scruple for the sweeping concession he had evoked.
âDo say it thenâfor Godâs sake; let some one say it, so that something or other, whatever it may be, may come of it! Itâs impossible to say too muchâitâs impossible to say enough. There isnât anything any one can say that I wonât agree to.â
âThat shows you really donât care,â the old man returned with acuteness.
âOh weâre past saving, if thatâs what you mean!â Vanderbank laughed.
âYou donât care, you donât care!â his guest repeated, âandâif I may be frank with youâI shouldnât wonder if it were rather a pity.â
âA pity I donât care?â
âYou ought to, you ought to.â And Mr. Longdon paused. âMay I say all I think?â
âI assure you I shall! Youâre awfully interesting.â
âSo are you, if you come to that. Itâs just what Iâve had in my head. Thereâs something I seem to make out in youâ!â He abruptly dropped this, however, going on in another way. âI remember the rest of you, but why did I never see YOU?â
âI must have been at schoolâat college. Perhaps you did know my brothers, elder and younger.â
âThere was a boy with your mother at Malvern. I was near her there for three months inâwhat WAS the year?â
âYes, I know,â Vanderbank replied while his guest tried to fix the date. âIt was my brother Miles. He was awfully clever, but had no health, poor chap, and we lost him at seventeen. She used to take houses at such places with himâit was supposed to be for his benefit.â
Mr. Longdon listened with a visible recovery. âHe used to talk to meâI remember he asked me questions I couldnât answer and made me dreadfully ashamed. But I lent him booksâpartly, upon my honour, to make him think that as I had them I did know something. He read everything and had a lot to say about it. I used to tell your mother he had a great future.â
Vanderbank shook his head sadly and kindly. âSo he had. And you remember Nancy, who was handsome and who was usually with them?â he went on.
Mr. Longdon looked so uncertain that he explained he meant his other sister; on which his companion said: âOh her? Yes, she was charmingâshe evidently had a future too.â
âWell, sheâs in the midst of her future now. Sheâs married.â
âAnd whom did she marry?â
âA fellow called Toovey. A man in the City.â
âOh!â said Mr. Longdon a little blankly. Then as if to retrieve his blankness: âBut why do you call her Nancy? Wasnât her name Blanche?â
âExactlyâBlanche Bertha Vanderbank.â
Mr. Longdon looked half-mystified and half-distressed. âAnd now sheâs Nancy Toovey?â
Vanderbank broke into laughter at his dismay. âThatâs what every one calls her.â
âBut why?â
âNobody knows. You see you were right about her future.â
Mr. Longdon gave another of his soft smothered sighs; he had turned back again to the first photograph, which he looked at for a longer time. âWell, it wasnât HER way.â
âMy motherâs? No indeed. Oh my motherâs wayâ!â Vanderbank waited, then added gravely: âShe was taken in time.â
Mr. Longdon turned half-round as to reply to this, but instead of replying proceeded afresh to an examination of the expressive oval in the red plush frame. He took up little Aggie, who appeared to interest him, and abruptly observed: âNanda isnât so pretty.â
âNo, not nearly. Thereâs a great question whether Nandaâs pretty at all.â
Mr. Longdon continued to inspect her more favoured friend; which led him after a moment to bring out: âShe ought to be, you know. Her grandmother was.â
âOh and her mother,â Vanderbank threw in. âDonât you think Mrs. Brookenham lovely?â
Mr. Longdon kept him waiting a little. âNot so lovely as Lady Julia. Lady Julia hadâ!â He faltered; then, as if there were too much to say, disposed of the question. âLady Julia had everything.â
Vanderbank gathered hence an impression that determined him more and more to diplomacy. âBut isnât that just what Mrs. Brookenham has?â
This time the old man was prompt. âYes, sheâs very brilliant, but itâs a totally different thing.â He laid little Aggie down and moved away as without a purpose; but his friend presently perceived his purpose to be another glance at the other young lady. As if all accidentally and absently he bent again over the portrait of Nanda. âLady Julia was exquisite and this childâs exactly like her.â
Vanderbank, more and more conscious of something working in him, was more and more interested. âIf Nandaâs so like her, WAS she so exquisite?â
âOh yes; every one was agreed about that.â Mr. Longdon kept his eyes on the face, trying a little, Vanderbank even thought, to conceal his own. âShe was one of the greatest beauties of her day.â
âThen IS Nanda so like her?â Vanderbank persisted, amused at his friendâs transparency.
âExtraordinarily. Her mother told me all about her.â
âTold you sheâs as beautiful as her grandmother?â
Mr. Longdon turned it over. âWell, that she has just Lady Juliaâs expression. She absolutely HAS itâI see it here.â He was delightfully positive. âSheâs much more like the dead than like the living.â
Vanderbank saw in this too many deep things not to follow them up. One of these was, to begin with, that his guest had not more than half-succumbed to Mrs. Brookenhamâs attraction, if indeed he had by a fine originality not resisted it altogether. That in itself, for an observer deeply versed in this lady, was attaching and beguiling. Another indication was that he found himself, in spite of such a break in the chain, distinctly predisposed to Nanda. âIf she reproduces then so vividly Lady Julia,â the young man threw out, âwhy does she strike you as so much less pretty than her foreign friend there, who is after all by no means a prodigy?â
The subject of this address, with one of the photographs in his hand, glanced, while he reflected, at the other. Then with a subtlety that matched itself for the moment with Vanderbankâs: âYou just told me yourself that the little foreign personââ
âIs ever so much the lovelier of the two? So I did. But youâve promptly recognised it. Itâs the first time,â Vanderbank went on, to let him down more gently, âthat Iâve heard Mrs. Brookenham admit the girlâs good looks.â
âHer own girlâs? âAdmitâ them?â
âI mean grant them to be even as good as they are. I myself, I must tell you, extremely like Nandaâs appearance. I think Lady Juliaâs granddaughter has in her face, in spite of everythingâ!â
âWhat do you mean by everything?â Mr. Longdon broke in with such an approach to resentment that his hostâs gaiety overflowed.
âYouâll seeâwhen you do see. She has no features. No, not one,â Vanderbank inexorably pursued; âunless indeed you put it that she has two or three too many. What I was going to say was that she has in her expression all thatâs charming in her nature. But beauty, in Londonââ and feeling that he held his visitorâs attention he gave himself the pleasure of freely presenting his ideaââstaring glaring obvious knock-down beauty, as plain as a poster on a wall, an advertisement of soap or whiskey, something that speaks to the crowd and crosses the footlights, fetches such a price in the market that the absence of it, for a woman with a girl to marry, inspires endless terrors and constitutes for the wretched pair (to speak of mother and daughter alone) a sort of social bankruptcy. London doesnât love the latent or the lurking, has neither time nor taste nor sense for anything less discernible than the red flag in front of the steam-roller. It wants cash over the counter and letters ten feet high. Therefore you see itâs all as yet rather a dark question for poor Nandaâa question that in a way quite occupies the foreground of her motherâs earnest little life. How WILL she look, what will be thought of her and what will she be able to do for herself? Sheâs at the age when the whole thingâspeaking of her âattractions,â her possible share of good looksâis still to a degree in a fog. But everything depends on it.â
Mr. Longdon had by this time come back to him. âExcuse my asking it againâfor you take such jumps: what, once more, do you mean by everything?â
âWhy naturally her marrying. Above all her marrying early.â
Mr. Longdon stood before the sofa. âWhat do you mean by early?â
âWell, we do doubtless get up later than at Beccles; but that gives us, you see, shorter days. I mean in a couple of seasons. Soon enough,â Vanderbank developed, âto limit the strainâ!â He was moved to higher gaiety by his friendâs expression.
âWhat do you mean by the strain?â
âWell, the complication of her being there.â
âBeing where?â
âYou do put one through!â Vanderbank laughed. But he showed himself perfectly prepared. âOut of the schoolroom and where she is now. In her motherâs drawing-room. At her motherâs fireside.â
Mr. Longdon stared. âBut where else should she be?â
âAt her husbandâs, donât you see?â
He looked as if he quite saw, yet was nevertheless not to be put off from his original challenge. âAh certainly; but not as if she had been pushed down the chimney. All in good time.â
âWhat do you call good time?â
âWhy time to make herself loved.â
Vanderbank wondered. âBy the men who come to the house?â
Mr. Longdon slightly attenuated this way of putting it. âYesâand in the home circle. Whereâs the âstrainâ of her being suffered to be a member of it?â
IIIVanderbank at this left his corner of the sofa and, with his hands in his pockets and a manner so amused that it might have passed for excited, took several paces about the room while his interlocutor, watching him, waited for his response. That gentleman, as this response for a minute hung fire, took his turn at sitting down, and then Vanderbank stopped before him with a face in which something had been still more brightly kindled. âYou ask me more things than I can tell you. You ask me more than I think you suspect. You must come and see me againâyou must let me come and see you. You raise the most interesting questions and we must sooner or later have them all out.â
Mr. Longdon looked happy in such a prospect, but once more took out his watch. âIt wants five minutes to midnight. Which means that I must go now.â
âNot in the least. There are satisfactions you too must give.â His host, with an irresistible hand, confirmed him in his position and pressed upon him another cigarette. His resistance rang hollowâit was clearly, he judged, such an occasion for sacrifices. Vanderbankâs view of it meanwhile was quite as marked. âYou see thereâs ever so much more you must in common kindness tell me.â
Mr. Longdon sat there like a shy singer invited to strike up. âI told you everything at Mrs. Brookenhamâs. It comes over me now how I dropped on you.â
âWhat you told me,â Vanderbank
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