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полная версияWashington Square

Генри Джеймс
Washington Square

XXV

The voyage was indeed uncomfortable, and Catherine, on arriving in New York, had not the compensation of “going off,” in her father’s phrase, with Morris Townsend.  She saw him, however, the day after she landed; and, in the meantime, he formed a natural subject of conversation between our heroine and her Aunt Lavinia, with whom, the night she disembarked, the girl was closeted for a long time before either lady retired to rest.

“I have seen a great deal of him,” said Mrs. Penniman.  “He is not very easy to know.  I suppose you think you know him; but you don’t, my dear.  You will some day; but it will only be after you have lived with him.  I may almost say I have lived with him,” Mrs. Penniman proceeded, while Catherine stared.  “I think I know him now; I have had such remarkable opportunities.  You will have the same—or rather, you will have better!” and Aunt Lavinia smiled.  “Then you will see what I mean.  It’s a wonderful character, full of passion and energy, and just as true!”

Catherine listened with a mixture of interest and apprehension.  Aunt Lavinia was intensely sympathetic, and Catherine, for the past year, while she wandered through foreign galleries and churches, and rolled over the smoothness of posting roads, nursing the thoughts that never passed her lips, had often longed for the company of some intelligent person of her own sex.  To tell her story to some kind woman—at moments it seemed to her that this would give her comfort, and she had more than once been on the point of taking the landlady, or the nice young person from the dressmaker’s, into her confidence.  If a woman had been near her she would on certain occasions have treated such a companion to a fit of weeping; and she had an apprehension that, on her return, this would form her response to Aunt Lavinia’s first embrace.  In fact, however, the two ladies had met, in Washington Square, without tears, and when they found themselves alone together a certain dryness fell upon the girl’s emotion.  It came over her with a greater force that Mrs. Penniman had enjoyed a whole year of her lover’s society, and it was not a pleasure to her to hear her aunt explain and interpret the young man, speaking of him as if her own knowledge of him were supreme.  It was not that Catherine was jealous; but her sense of Mrs. Penniman’s innocent falsity, which had lain dormant, began to haunt her again, and she was glad that she was safely at home.  With this, however, it was a blessing to be able to talk of Morris, to sound his name, to be with a person who was not unjust to him.

“You have been very kind to him,” said Catherine.  “He has written me that, often.  I shall never forget that, Aunt Lavinia.”

“I have done what I could; it has been very little.  To let him come and talk to me, and give him his cup of tea—that was all.  Your Aunt Almond thought it was too much, and used to scold me terribly; but she promised me, at least, not to betray me.”

“To betray you?”

“Not to tell your father.  He used to sit in your father’s study!” said Mrs. Penniman, with a little laugh.

Catherine was silent a moment.  This idea was disagreeable to her, and she was reminded again, with pain, of her aunt’s secretive habits.  Morris, the reader may be informed, had had the tact not to tell her that he sat in her father’s study.  He had known her but for a few months, and her aunt had known her for fifteen years; and yet he would not have made the mistake of thinking that Catherine would see the joke of the thing.  “I am sorry you made him go into father’s room,” she said, after a while.

“I didn’t make him go; he went himself.  He liked to look at the books, and all those things in the glass cases.  He knows all about them; he knows all about everything.”

Catherine was silent again; then, “I wish he had found some employment,” she said.

“He has found some employment!  It’s beautiful news, and he told me to tell you as soon as you arrived.  He has gone into partnership with a commission merchant.  It was all settled, quite suddenly, a week ago.”

This seemed to Catherine indeed beautiful news; it had a fine prosperous air.  “Oh, I’m so glad!” she said; and now, for a moment, she was disposed to throw herself on Aunt Lavinia’s neck.

“It’s much better than being under some one; and he has never been used to that,” Mrs. Penniman went on.  “He is just as good as his partner—they are perfectly equal!  You see how right he was to wait.  I should like to know what your father can say now!  They have got an office in Duane Street, and little printed cards; he brought me one to show me.  I have got it in my room, and you shall see it to-morrow.  That’s what he said to me the last time he was here—‘You see how right I was to wait!’  He has got other people under him, instead of being a subordinate.  He could never be a subordinate; I have often told him I could never think of him in that way.”

Catherine assented to this proposition, and was very happy to know that Morris was his own master; but she was deprived of the satisfaction of thinking that she might communicate this news in triumph to her father.  Her father would care equally little whether Morris were established in business or transported for life.  Her trunks had been brought into her room, and further reference to her lover was for a short time suspended, while she opened them and displayed to her aunt some of the spoils of foreign travel.  These were rich and abundant; and Catherine had brought home a present to every one—to every one save Morris, to whom she had brought simply her undiverted heart.  To Mrs. Penniman she had been lavishly generous, and Aunt Lavinia spent half an hour in unfolding and folding again, with little ejaculations of gratitude and taste.  She marched about for some time in a splendid cashmere shawl, which Catherine had begged her to accept, settling it on her shoulders, and twisting down her head to see how low the point descended behind.

“I shall regard it only as a loan,” she said.  “I will leave it to you again when I die; or rather,” she added, kissing her niece again, “I will leave it to your first-born little girl!”  And draped in her shawl, she stood there smiling.

“You had better wait till she comes,” said Catherine.

“I don’t like the way you say that,” Mrs. Penniman rejoined, in a moment.  “Catherine, are you changed?”

“No; I am the same.”

“You have not swerved a line?”

“I am exactly the same,” Catherine repeated, wishing her aunt were a little less sympathetic.

“Well, I am glad!” and Mrs. Penniman surveyed her cashmere in the glass.  Then, “How is your father?” she asked in a moment, with her eyes on her niece.  “Your letters were so meagre—I could never tell!”

“Father is very well.”

“Ah, you know what I mean,” said Mrs. Penniman, with a dignity to which the cashmere gave a richer effect.  “Is he still implacable!”

“Oh yes!”

“Quite unchanged?”

“He is, if possible, more firm.”

Mrs. Penniman took off her great shawl, and slowly folded it up.  “That is very bad.  You had no success with your little project?”

“What little project?”

“Morris told me all about it.  The idea of turning the tables on him, in Europe; of watching him, when he was agreeably impressed by some celebrated sight—he pretends to be so artistic, you know—and then just pleading with him and bringing him round.”

“I never tried it.  It was Morris’s idea; but if he had been with us, in Europe, he would have seen that father was never impressed in that way.  He is artistic—tremendously artistic; but the more celebrated places we visited, and the more he admired them, the less use it would have been to plead with him.  They seemed only to make him more determined—more terrible,” said poor Catherine.  “I shall never bring him round, and I expect nothing now.”

“Well, I must say,” Mrs. Penniman answered, “I never supposed you were going to give it up.”

“I have given it up.  I don’t care now.”

“You have grown very brave,” said Mrs. Penniman, with a short laugh.  “I didn’t advise you to sacrifice your property.”

“Yes, I am braver than I was.  You asked me if I had changed; I have changed in that way.  Oh,” the girl went on, “I have changed very much.  And it isn’t my property.  If he doesn’t care for it, why should I?”

Mrs. Penniman hesitated.  “Perhaps he does care for it.”

“He cares for it for my sake, because he doesn’t want to injure me.  But he will know—he knows already—how little he need be afraid about that.  Besides,” said Catherine, “I have got plenty of money of my own.  We shall be very well off; and now hasn’t he got his business?  I am delighted about that business.”  She went on talking, showing a good deal of excitement as she proceeded.  Her aunt had never seen her with just this manner, and Mrs. Penniman, observing her, set it down to foreign travel, which had made her more positive, more mature.  She thought also that Catherine had improved in appearance; she looked rather handsome.  Mrs. Penniman wondered whether Morris Townsend would be struck with that.  While she was engaged in this speculation, Catherine broke out, with a certain sharpness, “Why are you so contradictory, Aunt Penniman?  You seem to think one thing at one time, and another at another.  A year ago, before I went away, you wished me not to mind about displeasing father; and now you seem to recommend me to take another line.  You change about so.”

This attack was unexpected, for Mrs. Penniman was not used, in any discussion, to seeing the war carried into her own country—possibly because the enemy generally had doubts of finding subsistence there.  To her own consciousness, the flowery fields of her reason had rarely been ravaged by a hostile force.  It was perhaps on this account that in defending them she was majestic rather than agile.

 

“I don’t know what you accuse me of, save of being too deeply interested in your happiness.  It is the first time I have been told I am capricious.  That fault is not what I am usually reproached with.”

“You were angry last year that I wouldn’t marry immediately, and now you talk about my winning my father over.  You told me it would serve him right if he should take me to Europe for nothing.  Well, he has taken me for nothing, and you ought to be satisfied.  Nothing is changed—nothing but my feeling about father.  I don’t mind nearly so much now.  I have been as good as I could, but he doesn’t care.  Now I don’t care either.  I don’t know whether I have grown bad; perhaps I have.  But I don’t care for that.  I have come home to be married—that’s all I know.  That ought to please you, unless you have taken up some new idea; you are so strange.  You may do as you please; but you must never speak to me again about pleading with father.  I shall never plead with him for anything; that is all over.  He has put me off.  I am come home to be married.”

This was a more authoritative speech than she had ever heard on her niece’s lips, and Mrs. Penniman was proportionately startled.  She was indeed a little awestruck, and the force of the girl’s emotion and resolution left her nothing to reply.  She was easily frightened, and she always carried off her discomfiture by a concession; a concession which was often accompanied, as in the present case, by a little nervous laugh.

XXVI

If she had disturbed her niece’s temper—she began from this moment forward to talk a good deal about Catherine’s temper, an article which up to that time had never been mentioned in connexion with our heroine—Catherine had opportunity, on the morrow, to recover her serenity.  Mrs. Penniman had given her a message from Morris Townsend, to the effect that he would come and welcome her home on the day after her arrival.  He came in the afternoon; but, as may be imagined, he was not on this occasion made free of Dr. Sloper’s study.  He had been coming and going, for the past year, so comfortably and irresponsibly, that he had a certain sense of being wronged by finding himself reminded that he must now limit his horizon to the front parlour, which was Catherine’s particular province.

“I am very glad you have come back,” he said; “it makes me very happy to see you again.”  And he looked at her, smiling, from head to foot; though it did not appear, afterwards, that he agreed with Mrs. Penniman (who, womanlike, went more into details) in thinking her embellished.

To Catherine he appeared resplendent; it was some time before she could believe again that this beautiful young man was her own exclusive property.  They had a great deal of characteristic lovers’ talk—a soft exchange of inquiries and assurances.  In these matters Morris had an excellent grace, which flung a picturesque interest even over the account of his début in the commission business—a subject as to which his companion earnestly questioned him.  From time to time he got up from the sofa where they sat together, and walked about the room; after which he came back, smiling and passing his hand through his hair.  He was unquiet, as was natural in a young man who has just been reunited to a long-absent mistress, and Catherine made the reflexion that she had never seen him so excited.  It gave her pleasure, somehow, to note this fact.  He asked her questions about her travels, to some of which she was unable to reply, for she had forgotten the names of places, and the order of her father’s journey.  But for the moment she was so happy, so lifted up by the belief that her troubles at last were over, that she forgot to be ashamed of her meagre answers.  It seemed to her now that she could marry him without the remnant of a scruple or a single tremor save those that belonged to joy.  Without waiting for him to ask, she told him that her father had come back in exactly the same state of mind—that he had not yielded an inch.

“We must not expect it now,” she said, “and we must do without it.”

Morris sat looking and smiling.  “My poor dear girl!” he exclaimed.

“You mustn’t pity me,” said Catherine; “I don’t mind it now—I am used to it.”

Morris continued to smile, and then he got up and walked about again.  “You had better let me try him!”

“Try to bring him over?  You would only make him worse,” Catherine answered resolutely.

“You say that because I managed it so badly before.  But I should manage it differently now.  I am much wiser; I have had a year to think of it.  I have more tact.”

“Is that what you have been thinking of for a year?”

“Much of the time.  You see, the idea sticks in my crop.  I don’t like to be beaten.”

“How are you beaten if we marry?”

“Of course, I am not beaten on the main issue; but I am, don’t you see, on all the rest of it—on the question of my reputation, of my relations with your father, of my relations with my own children, if we should have any.”

“We shall have enough for our children—we shall have enough for everything.  Don’t you expect to succeed in business?”

“Brilliantly, and we shall certainly be very comfortable.  But it isn’t of the mere material comfort I speak; it is of the moral comfort,” said Morris—“of the intellectual satisfaction!”

“I have great moral comfort now,” Catherine declared, very simply.

“Of course you have.  But with me it is different.  I have staked my pride on proving to your father that he is wrong; and now that I am at the head of a flourishing business, I can deal with him as an equal.  I have a capital plan—do let me go at him!”

He stood before her with his bright face, his jaunty air, his hands in his pockets; and she got up, with her eyes resting on his own.  “Please don’t, Morris; please don’t,” she said; and there was a certain mild, sad firmness in her tone which he heard for the first time.  “We must ask no favours of him—we must ask nothing more.  He won’t relent, and nothing good will come of it.  I know it now—I have a very good reason.”

“And pray; what is your reason?”

She hesitated to bring it out, but at last it came.  “He is not very fond of me!”

“Oh, bother!” cried Morris angrily.

“I wouldn’t say such a thing without being sure.  I saw it, I felt it, in England, just before he came away.  He talked to me one night—the last night; and then it came over me.  You can tell when a person feels that way.  I wouldn’t accuse him if he hadn’t made me feel that way.  I don’t accuse him; I just tell you that that’s how it is.  He can’t help it; we can’t govern our affections.  Do I govern mine? mightn’t he say that to me?  It’s because he is so fond of my mother, whom we lost so long ago.  She was beautiful, and very, very brilliant; he is always thinking of her.  I am not at all like her; Aunt Penniman has told me that.  Of course, it isn’t my fault; but neither is it his fault.  All I mean is, it’s true; and it’s a stronger reason for his never being reconciled than simply his dislike for you.”

“‘Simply?’” cried Morris, with a laugh, “I am much obliged for that!”

“I don’t mind about his disliking you now; I mind everything less.  I feel differently; I feel separated from my father.”

“Upon my word,” said Morris, “you are a queer family!”

“Don’t say that—don’t say anything unkind,” the girl entreated.  “You must be very kind to me now, because, Morris—because,” and she hesitated a moment—“because I have done a great deal for you.”

“Oh, I know that, my dear!”

She had spoken up to this moment without vehemence or outward sign of emotion, gently, reasoningly, only trying to explain.  But her emotion had been ineffectually smothered, and it betrayed itself at last in the trembling of her voice.  “It is a great thing to be separated like that from your father, when you have worshipped him before.  It has made me very unhappy; or it would have made me so if I didn’t love you.  You can tell when a person speaks to you as if—as if—”

“As if what?”

“As if they despised you!” said Catherine passionately.  “He spoke that way the night before we sailed.  It wasn’t much, but it was enough, and I thought of it on the voyage, all the time.  Then I made up my mind.  I will never ask him for anything again, or expect anything from him.  It would not be natural now.  We must be very happy together, and we must not seem to depend upon his forgiveness.  And Morris, Morris, you must never despise me!”

This was an easy promise to make, and Morris made it with fine effect.  But for the moment he undertook nothing more onerous.

XXVII

The Doctor, of course, on his return, had a good deal of talk with his sisters.  He was at no great pains to narrate his travels or to communicate his impressions of distant lands to Mrs. Penniman, upon whom he contented himself with bestowing a memento of his enviable experience, in the shape of a velvet gown.  But he conversed with her at some length about matters nearer home, and lost no time in assuring her that he was still an inflexible father.

“I have no doubt you have seen a great deal of Mr. Townsend, and done your best to console him for Catherine’s absence,” he said.  “I don’t ask you, and you needn’t deny it.  I wouldn’t put the question to you for the world, and expose you to the inconvenience of having to—a—excogitate an answer.  No one has betrayed you, and there has been no spy upon your proceedings.  Elizabeth has told no tales, and has never mentioned you except to praise your good looks and good spirits.  The thing is simply an inference of my own—an induction, as the philosophers say.  It seems to me likely that you would have offered an asylum to an interesting sufferer.  Mr. Townsend has been a good deal in the house; there is something in the house that tells me so.  We doctors, you know, end by acquiring fine perceptions, and it is impressed upon my sensorium that he has sat in these chairs, in a very easy attitude, and warmed himself at that fire.  I don’t grudge him the comfort of it; it is the only one he will ever enjoy at my expense.  It seems likely, indeed, that I shall be able to economise at his own.  I don’t know what you may have said to him, or what you may say hereafter; but I should like you to know that if you have encouraged him to believe that he will gain anything by hanging on, or that I have budged a hair’s-breadth from the position I took up a year ago, you have played him a trick for which he may exact reparation.  I’m not sure that he may not bring a suit against you.  Of course you have done it conscientiously; you have made yourself believe that I can be tired out.  This is the most baseless hallucination that ever visited the brain of a genial optimist.  I am not in the least tired; I am as fresh as when I started; I am good for fifty years yet.  Catherine appears not to have budged an inch either; she is equally fresh; so we are about where we were before.  This, however, you know as well as I.  What I wish is simply to give you notice of my own state of mind!  Take it to heart, dear Lavinia.  Beware of the just resentment of a deluded fortune-hunter!”

“I can’t say I expected it,” said Mrs. Penniman.  “And I had a sort of foolish hope that you would come home without that odious ironical tone with which you treat the most sacred subjects.”

“Don’t undervalue irony, it is often of great use.  It is not, however, always necessary, and I will show you how gracefully I can lay it aside.  I should like to know whether you think Morris Townsend will hang on.”

“I will answer you with your own weapons,” said Mrs. Penniman.  “You had better wait and see!”

“Do you call such a speech as that one of my own weapons?  I never said anything so rough.”

“He will hang on long enough to make you very uncomfortable, then.”

“My dear Lavinia,” exclaimed the Doctor, “do you call that irony?  I call it pugilism.”

Mrs. Penniman, however, in spite of her pugilism, was a good deal frightened, and she took counsel of her fears.  Her brother meanwhile took counsel, with many reservations, of Mrs. Almond, to whom he was no less generous than to Lavinia, and a good deal more communicative.

“I suppose she has had him there all the while,” he said.  “I must look into the state of my wine!  You needn’t mind telling me now; I have already said all I mean to say to her on the subject.”

“I believe he was in the house a good deal,” Mrs. Almond answered.  “But you must admit that your leaving Lavinia quite alone was a great change for her, and that it was natural she should want some society.”

 

“I do admit that, and that is why I shall make no row about the wine; I shall set it down as compensation to Lavinia.  She is capable of telling me that she drank it all herself.  Think of the inconceivable bad taste, in the circumstances, of that fellow making free with the house—or coming there at all!  If that doesn’t describe him, he is indescribable.”

“His plan is to get what he can.  Lavinia will have supported him for a year,” said Mrs. Almond.  “It’s so much gained.”

“She will have to support him for the rest of his life, then!” cried the Doctor.  “But without wine, as they say at the tables d’hôte.”

“Catherine tells me he has set up a business, and is making a great deal of money.”

The Doctor stared.  “She has not told me that—and Lavinia didn’t deign.  Ah!” he cried, “Catherine has given me up.  Not that it matters, for all that the business amounts to.”

“She has not given up Mr. Townsend,” said Mrs. Almond.  “I saw that in the first half minute.  She has come home exactly the same.”

“Exactly the same; not a grain more intelligent.  She didn’t notice a stick or a stone all the while we were away—not a picture nor a view, not a statue nor a cathedral.”

“How could she notice?  She had other things to think of; they are never for an instant out of her mind.  She touches me very much.”

“She would touch me if she didn’t irritate me.  That’s the effect she has upon me now.  I have tried everything upon her; I really have been quite merciless.  But it is of no use whatever; she is absolutely glued.  I have passed, in consequence, into the exasperated stage.  At first I had a good deal of a certain genial curiosity about it; I wanted to see if she really would stick.  But, good Lord, one’s curiosity is satisfied!  I see she is capable of it, and now she can let go.”

“She will never let go,” said Mrs. Almond.

“Take care, or you will exasperate me too.  If she doesn’t let go, she will be shaken off—sent tumbling into the dust!  That’s a nice position for my daughter.  She can’t see that if you are going to be pushed you had better jump.  And then she will complain of her bruises.”

“She will never complain,” said Mrs. Almond.

“That I shall object to even more.  But the deuce will be that I can’t prevent anything.”

“If she is to have a fall,” said Mrs. Almond, with a gentle laugh, “we must spread as many carpets as we can.”  And she carried out this idea by showing a great deal of motherly kindness to the girl.

Mrs. Penniman immediately wrote to Morris Townsend.  The intimacy between these two was by this time consummate, but I must content myself with noting but a few of its features.  Mrs. Penniman’s own share in it was a singular sentiment, which might have been misinterpreted, but which in itself was not discreditable to the poor lady.  It was a romantic interest in this attractive and unfortunate young man, and yet it was not such an interest as Catherine might have been jealous of.  Mrs. Penniman had not a particle of jealousy of her niece.  For herself, she felt as if she were Morris’s mother or sister—a mother or sister of an emotional temperament—and she had an absorbing desire to make him comfortable and happy.  She had striven to do so during the year that her brother left her an open field, and her efforts had been attended with the success that has been pointed out.  She had never had a child of her own, and Catherine, whom she had done her best to invest with the importance that would naturally belong to a youthful Penniman, had only partly rewarded her zeal.  Catherine, as an object of affection and solicitude, had never had that picturesque charm which (as it seemed to her) would have been a natural attribute of her own progeny.  Even the maternal passion in Mrs. Penniman would have been romantic and factitious, and Catherine was not constituted to inspire a romantic passion.  Mrs. Penniman was as fond of her as ever, but she had grown to feel that with Catherine she lacked opportunity.  Sentimentally speaking, therefore, she had (though she had not disinherited her niece) adopted Morris Townsend, who gave her opportunity in abundance.  She would have been very happy to have a handsome and tyrannical son, and would have taken an extreme interest in his love affairs.  This was the light in which she had come to regard Morris, who had conciliated her at first, and made his impression by his delicate and calculated deference—a sort of exhibition to which Mrs. Penniman was particularly sensitive.  He had largely abated his deference afterwards, for he economised his resources, but the impression was made, and the young man’s very brutality came to have a sort of filial value.  If Mrs. Penniman had had a son, she would probably have been afraid of him, and at this stage of our narrative she was certainly afraid of Morris Townsend.  This was one of the results of his domestication in Washington Square.  He took his ease with her—as, for that matter, he would certainly have done with his own mother.

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