 CHAPTER VI Having thus, in a word, revealed his ambition for a career above courts, marts, and polling booths, George breathed more deeply than usual, and turning his face from the lovely companion whom he had just made his confidant, gazed out at the dancers with an expression in which there was both sternness and a contempt for the squalid lives of the unyotted midlenders before him. However, among them he marked his mother, and his sombre grandeur relaxed momentarily. A more genial light came into his eyes. Isabel was dancing with the queer-looking duck, and it was to be noted that the lively gentleman's gait was more sedate than it had been with Ms. Fanny Minifer, but not less dexterous and authoritative. He was talking to Isabel as gaily as he had talked to Ms. Fanny, though with less laughter, and Isabel listened and answered eagerly. Her colour was high, and her eyes had a look of delight. She saw George and the beautiful Lucy on the stairway and nodded to them. George waved his hand vaguely. He had a momentary return of that inexplicable uneasiness and resentment which had troubled him downstairs. How lovely your mother is! Lucy said. I think she is. He agreed gently. She's the gracefulest woman in that ballroom. She dances like a girl of sixteen. Most girls of sixteen, said George, are bum dancers. Anyhow I wouldn't dance with one unless I had to. Well, you'd better dance with your mother. I never saw anybody lovelier. How wonderfully they danced together. Who? Your mother and—and the queer-looking duck, said Lucy. I'm going to dance with him pretty soon. I don't care, as so long as you don't give him one of the numbers that belong to me. I'll try to remember. She said, and thoughtfully lifted to her face the bouquet of violets and lilies, a gesture which George noted without approval. Look here! Who sent you those flowers you keep making such a fuss over? He did. Who's he? The queer-looking duck. George feared no such rival. He laughed loudly. I suppose he's some old widower. He said, the object thus described seeming ignominious enough to a person of eighteen without additional characterization. Some old widower. Lucy became serious at once. Yes, he is a widower. She said, I ought to have told you before. He's my father. George stopped laughing abruptly. Well, that's a horse on me. If I'd known he was your father, of course I wouldn't have made fun of him. I'm sorry. He could make fun of him. She said quietly, Why couldn't they? It wouldn't make him funny. It would only make themselves silly. Upon this George had a gleam of intelligence. Well, I'm not going to make myself silly any more, then. I don't want to take chances like that with you. But I thought he was the sharing-girl's uncle. He came with them. Yes, she said. I'm always late to everything. I wouldn't let them wait for me. We're visiting the Sharon's. About time I knew that. You forget my being so fresh about your father, will you? Of course he's a distinguished-looking man, in a way. Lucy was still serious. In a way, she repeated, You mean not in your way, don't you? George was perplexed. How do you mean not in my way? People pretty often say, in a way, and rather distinguished-looking, or rather so and so, or rather anything, to show that they're superior, don't they? In New York last month I overheard a climber sort of woman speaking of me as Little Miss Morgan. But she didn't mean my height. She meant that she was important. Her husband spoke of a friend of mine as Little Mr. Pembroke, and Little Mr. Pembroke is six feet three. This husband and wife are really so terribly unimportant that the only way they knew to pretend to be important was calling people Little Miss or Mr. So-and-So. It's a kind of snob slang, I think. Of course people don't always say rather, or in a way, to be superior. I should say not. I use both of them a great deal myself. Said George. One thing I don't see, though, what's the use of a man being six feet three? Men that size can't handle themselves, as well as a man about five feet eleven and a half can. Those long-gangling men, they're nearly always too kind of wormy to be any good in athletics, and they're so awkward they keep falling over chairs, or Mr. Pembroke is in the army. Said Lucy, primly. He's extraordinarily graceful. In the army? Oh, I suppose he's some old friend of your father's. They got on very well, she said, after I introduced them. George was a straightforward soul, at least. See here, he said. Are you engaged to anybody? No. Not wholly mollified, he shrugged his shoulders. You seem to know a good many people. Do you live in New York? No, we don't live anywhere. What do you mean you don't live anywhere? We've lived all over, she answered. Papa used to live here in this town, but that was before I was born. What do you keep moving around so for? Is he a promoter? No, he's an inventor. What's he invented? Just lately, said Lucy, he's been working on a new kind of hoarseless carriage. Well, I'm sorry for him, George said, in no unkindly spirit. Those things are never going to amount to anything. People aren't going to spend their lives lying on their backs on the road or letting grease drip in their faces. Hoarseless carriages are pretty much a failure, and your father better not waste his time on them. Papa'd be so grateful, she returned, if he could have your advice. Instantly George's face became flushed. I don't know that I've done anything to be insolid for, he said. I don't see that what I said was particularly fresh. No, indeed. Then what do you—she laughed gaily. I don't, and I don't mind your being such a lofty person at all. I think it's ever so interesting. But Papa's a great man. Is he? George decided to be good-natured. Well, let us hope so. I hope so, I'm sure. Looking at him keenly, she saw that the magnificent youth was incredibly sincere in this bit of graciousness. He spoke as a tolerant, elderly statesman might speak of a promising young politician, and with her eyes still upon him Lucy shook her head in gentle wonder. I'm just beginning to understand, she said. Understand what? What it means to be a real emberson in this town. Papa told me something about it before we came, but I see he didn't say half enough. George superbly took this all for tribute. Did your father say he knew the family before he left here? Yes. I believe he was particularly a friend of your uncle George, and he didn't say so, but I imagine he must have known your mother very well, too. He wasn't an inventor then. He was a young lawyer. The town was smaller in those days, and I believe he was quite well known. I daresay. I've no doubt the family are all very glad to see him back, especially if they used to have him at the house a good deal, as he told you. I don't think he meant to boast of it, she said. He spoke of it quite calmly. George stared at her for a moment in perplexity, then perceiving that her intention was satirical. Girls really ought to go to a man's college, he said. Just a month or two anyhow, it'd take some of the freshness out of them. I can't believe it. She retorted, as her partner for the next dance arrived. It would only make them a little politer on the surface. They'd be really just as awful as ever after you got to know them a few minutes. What do you mean after you got to know them a— She was departing to the dance. Janie and Mary Sharon told me all about what sort of a little boy you were. She said over her shoulder, You must think it out. She took wing away on the breeze of the waltz, and George, having stared gloomily after her for a few moments, postponed filling an engagement, and strolled round the fluctuating outskirts of the dance to where his uncle, George Amberson, stood smilingly watching under one of the Rosevine arches at the entrance to the room. Hello, young namesake, said the uncle. Why lingers the laggard heel of the dancer? Haven't you got a partner? She's sitting around waiting for me somewhere, said George. See here, who is this fellow Morgan that Aunt Fanny Minifer was dancing with a while? He's a man with a pretty daughter, Georgie. Missemed you've been spending the evening noticing something of that sort, or do I err? Never mind. What sort is he? I think we'll have to give him a character, Georgie. He's an old friend, used to practice law here. Perhaps he had more debts than cases, but he paid them all up before he left town. Your question is purely mercenary, I take it. You want to know his true worth before proceeding further with the daughter. I cannot inform you, though I notice signs of considerable prosperity in that becoming dress of hers. However, you never can tell. It is an age when every sacrifice is made for the young, and how your own poor mother managed to provide those genuine pearl studs for you out of her allowance from father. I can't— Oh, dry up, said the nephew. I understand this Morgan, Mr. Eugene Morgan, his uncle suggested. Politeness requires that the young should—I guess the young didn't know much about politeness in your day, George interrupted. I understand that Mr. Eugene Morgan used to be a great friend of the family. Oh, the minifers! the uncle inquired with apparent innocence. No, I seem to recall that he and your father were not. I mean the Ambersons, George said impatiently. I understand he was a good deal around the house here. What is your objection to that, George? What do you mean, my objection? You seem to speak with a certain crossness. Well, said George, I meant he seems to feel awfully at home here. The way he was dancing with Aunt Fanny, Amberson laughed. I'm afraid your Aunt Fanny's heart was stirred by ancient recollections, Georgey. You mean she used to be silly about him? She wasn't considered singular, said the uncle. He was—he was popular. Could you bear a question? What do you mean, could I bear? I only wanted to ask, do you take the same passionate interest in the parents of every girl you dance with? Perhaps it's a new fashion we old bachelors ought to take up. Is it the thing this year to— Oh, go on! said George, moving away. I only wanted to know. He left the sentence unfinished, and crossed the room to where a girl sat waiting for his nobility to find time to fulfill his contract with her for this dance. Pardon for the keep-wait—he muttered as she rose brightly to meet him, and she seemed pleased that he came at all, but George was used to girls looking radiant when he danced with them, and she had little effect upon him. He danced with her perfunctorily, thinking the while of Mr. Eugene Morgan and his daughter. Strangely enough, his thoughts dwelt more upon the father than the daughter, though George could not possibly have given a reason, even to himself, for this disturbing preponderance. By a coincidence, though not an odd one, the thoughts and conversation of Mr. Eugene Morgan at this very time were concerned with George Amberson Minnifer. Rather casually it is true. Mr. Morgan had retired to a room set apart for smoking on the second floor, and had found a grizzled gentleman lounging in solitary possession. "'Gene Morgan!' this person exclaimed, rising with great heartiness. "'I'd heard you were in town. I don't believe you know me.' "'Yes, I do, Fred Kinney!' Mr. Morgan returned with equal friendliness. "'Your real face—the one I used to know—it's just underneath the one you're masquerading in tonight. You ought to have changed it more, if you wanted a disguise.' "'Twenty years!' said Mr. Kinney. It makes some difference in faces, but more in behavior.' "'It does so?' his friend agreed with explosive emphasis. My own behavior began to be different about that long ago—quite suddenly.' "'I remember,' said Mr. Kinney sympathetically. "'Well, life's odd enough as we look back. Probably it's going to be odder still, if we could look forward. Probably.' They sat and smoked. "'However,' Mr. Morgan remarked presently, "'I still dance like an Indian, don't you?' "'No, I leave that to my boy Fred. He does the dancing for the family.' "'I suppose he's upstairs hard at it?' "'No, he's not here.' Mr. Kinney glanced toward the open door and lowered his voice. "'He wouldn't come. It seems that a couple of years or so ago he had a row with young Georgie Minifer. Fred was president of a literary club they had, and he said this young Georgie got himself elected instead in an overbearing sort of way. "'Fred's red-headed, you know. I suppose you remember his mother? You were at the wedding?' "'I remember the wedding,' said Mr. Morgan. "'And I remember your bachelor dinner. Most of it, that is.' "'Well, my boy Fred's is red-headed now,' Mr. Kinney went on, as his mother was then, and he's very bitter about his row with Georgie Minifer. He says he'd rather burn his foot off than set it inside any Amberson house or any place else where young Georgie is. Fact is, the boy seemed to have so much feeling over it I had my doubts about coming myself. But my wife said it was all nonsense. We mustn't humor Fred in a grudge over such a little thing.' And while she despised that Georgie Minifer herself, as much as anyone else did, she wasn't going to miss a big Amberson show just on account of a boy's rumpus, and so on and so on, and so we came. "'Do people dislike young Minifer, generally?' "'I don't know about generally. I guess he gets plenty of toad-ying. But there's certainly a lot of people that are glad to express their opinions about him.' "'What's the matter with him?' "'Too much Amberson, I suppose, for one thing, and for another. His mother just fell down and worshipped him from the day he was born. That's what beats me. I don't have to tell you what Isabelle Amberson is, Eugene Morgan. She's got a touch of the Amberson high stuff about her, but you can't get anybody that ever knew her to deny that she's just about the finest woman in the world.' "'No,' said Eugene Morgan. You can't get anybody to deny that.' "'Then I can't see how she doesn't see the truth about that boy. He thinks he's a little tin god on wheels, and honestly it makes some people weak and sick just to think about him. Yet that high-spirited, intelligent woman, Isabelle Amberson, actually sits and worships him. You can hear it in her voice when she speaks to him, or speaks of him. You can see it in her eyes when she looks at him. My lord, what does she see when she looks at him?' Morgan's odd expression of genial apprehension deepened whimsically, though it denoted no actual apprehension whatever, and cleared away from his face altogether when he smiled. He became surprisingly winning and persuasive when he smiled. He smiled now, after a moment, at this question of his old friend. "'She sees something we don't see,' he said. What does she see?' An angel. Kinney laughed aloud. Well, if she sees an angel when she looks at Georgie Minifer, she's a funnier woman than I thought she was. "'Perhaps she is,' said Morgan. But that's what she sees. My lord, it's easy to see you've only known him an hour or so. In that time have you looked at Georgie and seen an angel?' No. All I saw was a remarkably good-looking fool boy with a pride of Satan, and a set of nice new drawing-room manners that he probably couldn't use more than half an hour at a time without busting. "'Then what?' "'Mothers are right,' said Morgan. "'Do you think this young George is the same sort of creature when he's with his mother, than he is when he's bulldozing your boy, Fred? Mothers see the angels in us because the angel is there. If it's shown to the mother, the son has got an angel to show, hasn't he? When a son cuts somebody's throat, the mother only sees it's impossible for a misguided angel to act like a devil, and she's entirely right about that.' Kinney laughed and put his hand on his friend's shoulder. "'I remember what a fellow you always were to argue,' he said. "'You mean Georgie Minifer is as much of an angel as any murderer is, and that Georgie's mother is always right?' "'I'm afraid she always has been,' Morgan said lightly. The friendly hand remained upon his shoulder. "'She was wrong once, old fellow, at least so it seemed to me.' "'No,' said Morgan, a little awkwardly. "'No.' Kinney relieved a slight embarrassment that had come upon both of them. He laughed again. "'Wait till you know young Georgie a little better,' he said. "'Something tells me you're going to change your mind about his having an angel to show, if you see anything of him. You mean beauty's in the eye of the beholder, and the angel is all in the eye of the mother. If you were a painter, Fred, you'd paint mothers with angels' eyes holding imps in their laps. Me, I'll stick to the old masters and the cherubs.' Mr. Kinney looked at him musingly. "'Somebody's eyes must have been pretty angelic,' he said. "'If they've been persuading you that Georgie Minnifer is a cherub.' "'They are,' said Morgan heartily. "'They're more angelic than ever.' And as a new flourish of music sounded overhead, he threw away his cigarette and jumped up briskly. "'Goodbye, I've got this dance with her.'" "'With who?' "'With Isabelle.' The grizzled Mr. Kinney affected to rub his eyes. "'It startles me you're jumping up like that to go and dance with Isabelle Emerson. Twenty years seem to have passed. But have they? Tell me. Have you danced with poor old Fanny, too, this evening?' "'Twice?' "'My lord!' Kinney groaned half in earnest. "'Old time starting all over again, my lord!' "'Old times!' Morgan laughed gaily from the doorway. "'Not a bit! There aren't any old times. When times are gone, they're not old. They're dead. There aren't any times but new times.' And he vanished in such a manner that he seemed already to have begun dancing.' End of chapter. Chapter 7 of The Magnificent Ambersons This lever-box recording is in the public domain, and is read by Mark Smith of Simpsonville, South Carolina. The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington Chapter 7 The appearance of Miss Lucy Morgan the next day, as she sat in George's Fast Cutter, proved so charming that her escort was stricken to soft words instantly and failed to control a poetic impulse. Her rich little hat was trimmed with black fur. Her hair was almost as dark as the fur. A great boa of black fur was about her shoulders. Her hands were vanished into a black muff, and George's lap-road was black. "'You look like,' he said. "'Your face looks like?' "'It looks like a snowflake on a lump of coal. I mean a—a snowflake that would be a rose-leaf, too.' "'Perhaps you better look at the rains,' she returned. We almost upset just then.' George declined to heed this advice. "'Because there's too much pink in your cheeks for a snowflake,' he continued. "'What's that fairy story about snow-white and rose-red? We're going pretty fast, Mr. Minifer.' "'Well, you see, I'm only here for two weeks.' "'I mean the sleigh,' she explained. "'We're not the only people on the street, you know.' "'Oh, they'll keep out of the way.' "'That's very patrician charioteering, but it seems to me a horse like this needs guidance. I'm sure he's going almost twenty miles an hour.' "'That's nothing,' said George, but he consented to look forward again. "'He can trot under three minutes all right.' He laughed. "'I suppose your father thinks he can build a horseless carriage to go that fast.' "'They go that fast already sometimes.' "'Yes,' said George. "'They do for about a hundred feet. Then they give a yell and burn up.' Evidently she decided not to defend her father's faith and horseless carriages, for she laughed and said nothing. The cold air was polka-dotted with snowflakes, and trembled to the loud continuous jingling of sleigh bells. Boys and girls, all aglow and panting jets of vapor, darted at the passing sleighs to ride on the runners, or sought to rope their sleds to any vehicle whatever, but the fleetists no more than just touched the flying cutter, though a hundred soggy mittens grasped for it, then reeled in world till sometimes the wearers of those daring mittens plunged flat in the snow and lay a sprawl, reflecting. For this was the holiday time, and all the boys and girls in town were out, most of them on National Avenue. But there came panting and chugging up that flat thoroughfare, a thing which some day was to spoil all their sleigh-time merriment, save for the rashest and most disobedient. It was vaguely like a topless surrey, but cumbers with unwholesome excrescences for and aft, while underneath were spinning leather belts and something that word and howled and seemed to stagger. The ride-stealers made no attempt to fasten their sleds to a contrivance so nonsensical and yet so fearsome. Instead they gave over their sport and concentrated all their energies in their lungs, so that up and down the street the one cry shrilled increasingly, Get a horse! Get a horse! Get a horse! Mr., why don't you get a horse? But the mahout in charge, sitting solitary on the front seat, was unconcerned. He laughed, and now and then ducked a snowball without losing any of his good nature. It was Mr. Eugene Morgan who exhibited so cheerful accountants between the forward visor of a deer-stalker cap and the collar of a fuzzy great ulster. Get a horse! The children shrieked and gruffer voices joined them. Get a horse! Get a horse! Get a horse! George Minnifer was correct thus far. The twelve miles an hour of such machine would never overtake George's trotter. The cutter was already scurrying between the stone pillars at the entrance to Amberson Addition. That's my grandfather's! said George, nodding toward the Amberson mansion. I ought to know that! Lucy exclaimed. We stayed there late enough last night. Pop and I were almost the last to go. He and your mother and Miss Fanny Minnifer got the musicians to play another waltz when everybody else had gone downstairs and the fiddles were being put away in their cases. Papa danced part of it with Miss Minnifer and the rest with your mother. Miss Minnifer's your aunt, isn't she? Yes, she lives with us. I tease her a good deal. What about? Oh, anything handy, whatever's easy to tease an old maid about. Doesn't she mind? She usually has sort of a grouch on me, left George. Nothing much. That's our house just beyond grandfather's. He waved a seal-skinned gauntlet to indicate the house Major Amberson had built for Isabelle as a wedding gift. It's almost the same as grandfather's, only not as large and hasn't got a regular ballroom. We gave the dance last night at grandfather's on account of the ballroom and because I'm the only grandchild, you know. Of course, some day that'll be my house, though I expect my mother will most likely go on living where she does now, with father and aunt Fanny. I suppose I'll probably build a country house, too, somewhere east, I guess. He stopped speaking and frowned as they passed a closed carriage in pair. The body of this comfortable vehicle sagged slightly to one side. The paint was old and seemed with hundred of minute cracks like little rivers on a black map. The coachman, a fat and elderly darky, seemed to drowse upon the box, but the open window afforded the occupants of the cutter a glimpse of a tired, fine old face, a silk hat, a pearl tie, and an ostracan collar evidently out to take the air. There's your grandfather now, said Lucy. Isn't it? George's frown was not relaxed. Yes, it is, and he ought to give that rat trap away and sell those old horses. They're a disgrace, all shaggy, not even clipped. I suppose he doesn't notice it. People get awful funny when they get old. They seem to lose their self-respect, sort of. He seemed a real brummel to me, she said. Oh, he keeps up about what he wears well enough, but, well, look at that! He pointed to a statue of Minerva, one of the cast iron sculptures Major Amberson had set up in opening the edition years before. Minerva was intact, but a blackish street descended unpleasantly from her forehead to the point of her straight nose, and a few other streaks were sketched in a repellent dinge upon the folds of her drapery. That must be from Soot, said Lucy. There are so many houses around here. Anyhow, somebody ought to see that these statues are kept clean. My grandfather owns a good many of those houses, I guess, for renting. Of course, he sold most of the lots. There aren't any vacant ones, and there used to be heaps of them when I was a boy. Another thing I don't think he ought to allow, a good many of these people bought big lots and they built houses on them. Then the price of the land kept getting higher, and they'd sell part of their yards and let the people that bought it build houses on it to live in, till they haven't hardly any of them got big open yards anymore, and it's getting all too much built up. The way it used to be, it was like a gentleman's country estate, and that's the way my grandfather ought to keep it. He lets these people take too many liberties. They do anything they want to. But how could he stop them? Lucy asks, surely with reason. If he sold them the land, it's theirs, isn't it? George remains serene in the face of this apparently difficult question. He ought to have had all the tradespeople boycott the families that sell part of their yards that way. All he'd have to do would be to tell the tradespeople they wouldn't get any more orders from the family if they didn't do it. From the family? What family? Our family, said George, unperturbed. The Ambersons. I see. She murmured, and evidently she did see something that he did not for, as she lifted her muff to her face. He asked, What are you laughing at now? Why? You always seem to have some little secret of your own to get happy over. Always, she exclaimed, what a big word when we only met last night. That's another case of it, he said, with obvious sincerity. One of the reasons I don't like you much is you've got that way of seeming quietly superior to everybody else. I, she cried, I have. Oh, you think you keep it sort of confidential to yourself, but it's plain enough. I don't believe in that kind of thing. You don't? No, said George emphatically. Not with me. I think the world's like this. There's a few people that their birth and position and so on puts them at the top, and they ought to treat each other entirely as equals. His voice betrayed a little emotion, as he added. I wouldn't speak like this to everybody. You mean you're confiding your deepest creed or code, whatever it is, to me? Go on, make fun of it then, George said bitterly. You do think you're terribly clever. It makes me tired. Well, as you don't like my seeming quietly superior after this, I'll be noisily superior. She returned cheerfully. We aimed to please. I had a notion before I came for you to-day that we were going to quarrel. He said, No, we won't. It takes two. She laughed and waved her muff toward a new house, not quite completed, standing in a field upon their right. They had passed beyond Amberson Addition and were leaving the northern fringes of the town for the open country. Isn't that a beautiful house? She exclaimed. Papa and I call it our beautiful house. George was not pleased. Does it belong to you? Of course not. Papa brought me out here the other day, driving in his machine, and we both loved it. It's so spacious and dignified and plain. Yes, it's plain enough, George grunted. Yet it's lovely. The gray-green roof and shutters give just enough color with the trees for the long white walls. It seems to me the finest house I've seen in this part of the country. George was outraged by an enthusiasm so ignorant. Not ten minutes ago they had passed the Amberson Mansion. Is that a sample of your taste in architecture? He asked. Yes, why? Because it strikes me you better go somewhere and study the subject a little. Lucy looked puzzled. What makes you have so much feeling about it? Have I offended you? Offended nothing, George returned brusquely. Girls usually think they know it all as soon as they've learned to dance and dress and flirt a little. They never know anything about things like architecture, for instance. That house is about as bum a house as any house I ever saw. Why? Why? George repeated. Did you ask me why? Yes. Well, for one thing he paused. For one thing, well, just look at it. I shouldn't think you'd have to do any more than look at it if you'd ever given any attention to architecture. What is the matter with its architecture, Mr. Minnifer? Well, it's this way, said George. It's like this. Well, for instance, that house, well, it was built like a townhouse. He spoke of it in the past tense because they had now left it far behind them, a human habit of curious significance. It was like a house meant for a street in the city. What kind of a house was that for people of any taste to build out here in the country? But Papa says it's built that way on purpose. There are a lot of other houses being built in this direction, and Papa says the city's coming out this way, and in a year or two that house will be right in town. It was a bum house anyhow, said George Crossley. I don't even know the people that are building it. They say a lot of riff-raff come to town every year nowadays, and there's other riff-raff that have always lived here and have made a little money and act as if they own the place. Uncle Sidney was talking about it yesterday. He says he and some of his friends are organizing a country club, and already some of these riff-raff are worming into it. People he never heard of at all. Anyhow, I guess it's pretty clear you don't know a great deal about architecture. She demonstrated the completeness of her amiability by laughing. I'll know something about the North Pole before long, she said, if we keep going much farther in this direction. At this he was remorseful. All right, we'll turn and drive south awhile till you get warmed up again. I expect we've been going against the wind about long enough. Indeed, I'm sorry. He said, indeed I'm sorry, in a nice way, and looked very strikingly handsome when he said it, she thought. No doubt it's true that there is more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner repented than over all the saints who consistently remain holy, and the rare, sudden gentlenesses of arrogant people have infinitely more effect than the continual gentleness of gentle people. Arrogance turned gentle melts the heart, and Lucy gave her companion a little side-long, sunny nod of acknowledgement. George was dazzled by the quick glow of her eyes, and found himself at a loss for something to say. Having turned about, he kept his horse to a walk, and at this gate the sleigh bells tinkled but intermittently. Gleaming wanly through the whitish vapor that kept rising from the trotter's body and flanks, they were like tiny fog bells and made the only sounds in a great winter silence. The white road ran between lonesome rail fences, and frozen barnyards beyond the fences showed sometimes a barrow left to rust, with its iron seat half filled with stiffened snow, and sometimes an old dead buggy, its wheels forever set, it seemed, in the solid ice of deep ruts. Chickens scratched the metallic earth with an air of protest, and a masterless ragged cult looked up in sudden horror at the mild tinkle of the passing bells, then blew fierce clouds of steam at the sleigh. The snow no longer fell, and far ahead in a grayish cloud that lay upon the land was the town. Lucy looked at this distant thickening reflection. When we get this far out we can see there must be quite a little smoke hanging over the town. She said, I suppose that's because it's growing. As it grows bigger it seems to get ashamed of itself, so it makes this cloud in hides in it. Papa says it used to be a bit nicer when he lived here. He always speaks of it differently. He always has a gentle look, a particular tone of voice, I've noticed. He must have been very fond of it. It must have been a lovely place. Everybody must have been so jolly. From the way he talks you'd think life here then was just one long midsummer serenade. He declares it was always sunshine that the air wasn't like the air anywhere else. That, as he remembers it, there always seemed to be gold dust in the air. I doubt it. I think it doesn't seem to be duller air to him now just on account of having a little soot in it sometimes, but probably because he was twenty years younger then. It seems to me the gold dust he thinks was here is just his being young that he remembers. I think it was just youth. It's pretty pleasant to be young, isn't it? She laughed absently, then appeared to become wistful. I wonder if we really do enjoy it as much as we'll look back and think we did. I don't suppose so. Anyhow, from my part I feel as if I must be missing something about it, somehow, because I don't ever seem to be thinking about what's happening at the present moment. I'm always looking forward to something, thinking about things that will happen when I'm older. You're a funny girl, George said gently, but your voice sounds pretty nice when you think and talk along together like that. The horse shook himself all over, and the impatient sleigh-bells made his wish audible. Accordingly, George tightened the reins, and the cutter was off again at a three-minute trot, no despicable rate of speed. It was not long before they were again passing Lucy's beautiful house, and here George thought fit to put an appendix to his remark. You're a funny girl, and you know a lot, but I don't believe you know much about architecture. Coming toward them, black against the snowy road, was a strange silhouette. It approached moderately and without visible means of progression, so the matter seemed from a distance, but as the cutter shortened the distance, the silhouette was revealed to be Mr. Morgan's horseless carriage, conveying four people atop. Mr. Morgan with George's mother beside him, and in the rear seat Miss Fanny Minifer and the Honorable George Amberson. All four seemed to be in the liveliest humor, like high-spirited people upon a new adventure, and Isabelle waved her handkerchief dashingly as the cutter flashed by them. For the Lord's sake! George gasped. Your mother's a dear, said Lucy, and she does wear the most bewitching things. She looked like a Russian princess, though I doubt if they're that handsome. George said nothing. He drove on till they had crossed Amberson Edition and reached the stone pillars at the head of National Avenue. There he turned. Let's go back and take another look at that old sewing machine. He said, It certainly is the weirdest, craziest— He left the sentence unfinished, and presently they were again in sight of the old sewing machine. George shouted mockingly, Alas, three figures stood in the road, and a pair of legs with the toes turned up, indicated that a fourth figure lay upon its back in the snow, beneath a horseless carriage that had decided to need a horse. George became vociferous with laughter, and coming up at his trotter's best gate, snow spraying from runners in every hoof, swerved to the side of the road and shot by shouting, Get a horse! Get a horse! Get a horse! Three hundred yards away he turned and came back, racing, leaning out as he passed to wave jeeringly at the group about the disabled machine. Get a horse! Get a horse! Get a— The trotter had broken into a gallop, and Lucy cried a warning, Be careful! she said. Look where you're driving! There's a ditch on that side! Look! George turned too late. The cutter's right runner went into the ditch and snapped off. The little sleigh upset, and after dragging its occupants some fifteen yards, left them lying together in a bank of snow. Then the vigorous young horse kicked himself free of all annoyances, and disappeared down the road, galloping cheerfully. End of chapter Chapter 8 When George regained some measure of his presence of mind, Ms. Lucy Morgan's cheek, snowy and cold, was pressing his nose slightly to one side. His right arm was firmly about her neck, and a monstrous amount of her fur boa seemed to mingle with an equally unplausible quantity of snow in his mouth. He was confused, but conscious of no objection to any of these juxtapositions. She was apparently uninjured, for she sat up, hatless, her hair down, and said mildly, Good heavens! Though her father had been under his machine when they passed, he was the first to reach them. He threw himself on his knees beside his daughter, but found her already laughing, and was reassured. They're all right! he called to Isabel, who was running toward them, ahead of her brother and fanny-minifer. This snow bank's a feather bed. Nothing that mattered with them at all. Don't look so pale. Georgie! she gasped. Georgie! Georgie was on his feet, snow all over him. Don't make such a fuss, mother. Nothing's a matter. That darn silly horse! Sudden tears stood in Isabel's eyes. To see you down underneath dragging all—then with shaking hands she began to brush the snow from him. Let me alone, he protested. You'll ruin your gloves. You're getting snow all over you, and— Oh, no! she cried. You'll catch cold. You mustn't catch cold! And she continued to brush him. Amberson had brought Lucy's hat. Miss Fanny acted as ladies made, and both victims of the accident were presently restored to about their usual appearance and condition of apparel. In fact, encouraged by the two older gentlemen, the entire party, with one exception, decided that the episode was, after all, a merry one, and began to laugh about it. But George was glummer than the December twilight now swiftly closing in. That darned horse, he said. I wouldn't bother about Penn Dennis, Georgie, said his uncle. You can set a man out for what's left of the cutter tomorrow, and Penn Dennis will gallop straight home to Isabel. He'll be there a long while before we will, because all we've got to depend on it to get us home is Gene Morgan's broken-down chafing dish yonder. They were approaching the machine as he spoke, and his friend again underneath it heard him. He emerged, smiling. She'll go, he said. What? All aboard! He offered his hand to Isabel. She was smiling but still pale, and her eyes, in spite of the smile, kept upon George in a shocked anxiety. Miss Fanny had already mounted to the rear seat, and George, after helping Lucy Morgan to climb up beside his aunt, was following. Isabel saw that his shoes were light things of patent leather, and that snow was clinging to them. She made a little rush toward him, and as one of his feet rested on the iron step of the machine, in mounting, she began to clean the snow from his shoe with her almost aerial lace handkerchief. You mustn't catch cold, she cried. Stop that, George shouted, and furiously withdrew his foot. Then stamped the snow off, she begged, you mustn't ride with wet feet. There not, George roared, thoroughly outraged. For heaven's sake, get in. You're standing in the snow yourself. Get in. Isabel consented, turning to Morgan, whose habitual expression of apprehensiveness was somewhat accentuated. He climbed up after her, George Amberson having gone to the other side. You're the same Isabel I used to know. He said in a low voice, You're a divinely ridiculous woman. Am I, Eugene? She said, not displeased. Divinely and ridiculous just counterbalance each other, don't they? Plus one and minus one equal nothing. So you mean I'm nothing in particular? No, he answered, tugging at a lever. That doesn't seem to be precisely what I meant. There! This exclamation referred to the subterranean machinery, for dismaying sounds came from beneath the floor, and the vehicle plunged, then rolled noisily forward. Behold! George Amberson exclaimed, She does move. It must be another accident. Accident! Morgan shouted over the din. No! She breathes, she stirs. She seems to feel a thrill of life along her keel. And he began to sing the star-spangled banner. Amberson joined him lustily and sang on when Morgan stopped. The twilight sky cleared, discovering a round moon already risen, and the musical congressman hailed this bright presence with the complete text and melody of the Danube River. His nephew behind was gloomy. He had overheard his mother's conversation with the inventor. It seemed curious to him that this Morgan, of whom he had never heard until last night, should be using the name Isabelle so easily. And George felt that it was not just the thing for his mother to call Morgan Eugene. The resentment of the previous night came upon George again. Meanwhile his mother and Morgan continued their talk, but he could no longer hear what they said, the noise of the car in his uncle's songful mood prevented. He marked how animated Isabelle seemed. It was not strange to see his mother so gay, but it was strange that a man not of the family should be the cause of her gaiety. And George sat frowning. Many men of her had begun to talk to Lucy. Your father wanted to prove that his horseless carriage would run even in the snow, she said. It really does, too. Of course. It's so interesting. He's been telling us how he's going to change it. He says he's going to have wheels all made of rubber and blown up with air. I don't understand what he means at all. I should think they'd explode. But Eugene seems to be very confident. He always was confident, though. It seems so like old times to hear him talk. She became thoughtful, and Lucy turned to George. You tried to swing underneath me and break the fall for me when we went over. She said, I knew you were doing that, and it was nice of you. Wasn't any fall to speak of? He returned brusquely. Couldn't have hurt neither of us. Still it was friendly of you, and awfully quick, too. I'll not—I'll not forget it. Her voice had a sound of genuineness, very pleasant, and George began to forget his annoyance with her father. This annoyance of his had not been alleviated by the circumstance that neither of the seats of the old sewing machine was designed for three people. But when his neighbor spoke thus gratefully, he no longer minded the crowding. In fact, it pleased him so much that he began to wish the old sewing machine would go even slower. And she had spoken no word of blame for his letting that darned horse get the cutter into the ditch. George presently addressed her hurriedly, almost tremulously, speaking close to her ear. I forgot to tell you something. You're pretty nice. I thought so the first second I saw you last night. I'll come for you to-night and take you to the assembly at the Amberson Hotel. You're going, aren't you? Yes, but I'm going with Papa and the Sharons. I'll see you there. Looks to me as if you were awfully conventional. George grumbled, and his disappointment was deeper than he was willing to let her see, though she probably did see. Well, we'll dance the coutillion together anyhow. I'm afraid not. I promise Mr. Kinney. What! George's tone was shocked at this incredible news. Well, you could break that engagement, I guess, if you wanted to. Girls always can get out of things when they want to, won't you? I don't think so. Why not? Because I promised him several days ago. George gulped and lowered his pride. I don't—oh, look here. I only want to go to that thing to-night to get to see something of you. And if you don't dance the coutillion with me, how can I? I'll only be here two weeks, and the others have got all the rest of your visit to see you. Won't you do it, please? I couldn't. See here, said the stricken George. If you're going to decline to dance that coutillion with me simply because you promised a—a—a miserable red-headed outsider like Fred Kinney why we might as well quit. Quit what? You know perfectly well what I mean, he said huskily. I don't. Well, you ought to. But I don't at all. George thoroughly hurt and not a little embittered, expressed himself in a short outburst of laughter. Ha! Ha! Ha! Well, I ought to have seen it. Seen what? That you might turn out to be a girl who'd like a fellow of the red-headed Kinney sort. I ought to have seen it from the first. Lucy bore her disgrace lightly. Oh, dancing a coutillion with a person doesn't mean that you like him. But I don't see anything in particular the matter with Mr. Kinney. What is? If you don't see anything the matter with him for yourself, George responded icily, I don't think pointing it out would help you. You probably wouldn't understand. You might try, she suggested. Of course I'm a stranger here, and if people have done anything wrong or have something unpleasant about them, I wouldn't have any way of knowing it just at first. If poor Mr. Kinney, I prefer not to discuss it, said George Kirtley. He's an enemy of mine. Why? I prefer not to discuss it. Well, but I prefer not to discuss it. Very well. She began to hum the air of the song which Mr. George Amberson was now discoursing, O moon of my delight that knows no wane, there was no further conversation on the back seat. They had entered Amberson addition, and the moon of Mr. Amberson's delight was overlaid by a slender gothic filigree, the branches that sprang from the shade trees lining the street. Through the windows of many of the houses rosy lights were flickering, and silver tinsel and evergreen wreaths, and brilliant little glass globes of silver and wine-color could be seen, and glimpses were caught of Christmas trees, with people decking them by fire-light. Reminders that this was Christmas Eve. The ride-stealers had disappeared from the highway, though now and then, over the gasping and howling of the horseless carriage, there came a shrill jeer from some young passer-by upon the sidewalk. Mr., for heaven's sake, go and get a horse! Get a horse! Get a horse! The contrivance stopped with a heart-shaking jerk before Isabel's house. The gentlemen jumped down, helping Isabel and Fanny to descend. There were friendly leave-takings, and one that was not precisely friendly. It's a revoir to-tonight, isn't it? Lucy asked, laughing. Good afternoon, said George, and he did not wait, as his relatives did, to see the old sewing-machine start briskly down the street toward the Sharon's, its lighter load consisting now of only Mr. Morgan and his daughter. George went into the house at once. He found his father reading the evening paper in the library. Where are your mother and your Aunt Fanny? Mr. Minnifur inquired, not looking up. They're coming, said his son, and casting himself heavily into a chair, stared at the fire. His prediction was verified a few moments later. The two ladies came in cheerfully, unfastening their fur cloaks. It's all right, Georgie, said Isabel. Your uncle George called to us that Pendennis got home safely. Put your shoes close to the fire, dear, or else go and change them. She went to her husband, and patted him lightly on the shoulder, an action which George watched was somber moodiness. You might dress before long, she suggested. We're all going to the assembly after dinner, aren't we? Brother George said he'd go with us. Look here, said George abruptly. How about this man Morgan and his old sewing-machine? Doesn't he want to get grandfather to put money into it? Isn't he trying to work Uncle George for that? Isn't that what he's up to? It was Miss Fanny who responded. You little silly! She cried with surprising sharpness. What on earth are you talking about? Eugene Morgan's perfectly able to finance his own inventions these days. I'll bet he bores money of Uncle George, the nephew insisted. Isabel looked at him in grave perplexity. Why do you say such a thing, George? She asked. He strikes me as that sort of man. He answered doggedly. Isn't he, Father? Minifer sat down his paper for a moment. He was a fairly wild young fellow twenty years ago. He said, glancing at his wife, absently. He was like you in one thing, Georgey. He spent too much money. Only he didn't have any mother to get money out of a grandfather for him, so he was usually in debt. But I believe I've heard he's done fairly well of late years. No, I can't say I think he's a swindler, and I doubt if he needs anybody else's money to back his horseless carriage. Well, what's he brought the old thing here for, then? People that own elephants don't take their elephants around with them when they go visiting. What's he got it here for? I'm sure I don't know, said Mr. Minifer, resuming his paper. You might ask him. Isabelle laughed and patted her husband's shoulder again. Aren't you going to dress? Aren't we all going to the dance? He groaned fatally. Aren't your brother and Georgey escorts enough for you and Fanny? Wouldn't you enjoy it at all? You know I don't. Isabelle let her hand remain upon his shoulder a moment longer. She stood behind him, looking into the fire, and George, watching her broodingly, thought there was more color in her face than the reflection of the flames accounted for. Well, then, she said indulgently, stay at home and be happy. We won't urge you if you'd really rather not. I really wouldn't, he said contentedly. Half an hour later George was passing through the upper hall in a bath-robed stage of preparation for the evening scaties when he encountered his Aunt Fanny. He stopped her. Look here, he said. What in the world is the matter with you? she demanded, regarding him with little amiability. You look as if you were rehearsing for a villain in a play. Do change your expression. His expression gave no sign of yielding to the request. On the contrary, its sovereignness deepened. I suppose you don't know why father doesn't want to go to-night. He said solemnly. You are his only sister and yet you don't know. He never wants to go anywhere that I have heard of, said Fanny. What is the matter with you? He doesn't want to go because he doesn't like this man Morgan. Good gracious! Fanny cried impatiently. Eugene Morgan isn't in your father's thoughts at all, one way or the other. Why should he be? George hesitated. Well, it strikes me. Look here, what makes you and everybody so excited over him? Excited, she jeered. Can't people be glad to see an old friend without silly children like you having to make a to-do about it? I've just been in your mother's room suggesting that she might give a little dinner for them. For who? For whom, Georgie? For Mr. Morgan and his daughter. Look here, George said quickly. Don't do that. Mother mustn't do that. It wouldn't look well. Wouldn't look well, Fanny mocked him, and her suppressed vehemence betrayed a surprising acerberty. See here, Georgie Minifer, I suggest that you just march straight on into your room and finish your dressing. Sometimes you say things that show you have a pretty mean little mind. George was so astounded by this outburst that his indignation was delayed by his curiosity. Why? What upsets you this way? he inquired. I know what you mean. She said, her voice still lowered but not decreasing in sharpness. You're trying to insinuate that I'd get your mother to invite Eugene Morgan here on my account because he's a widower. I am, George gasped nonplussed. I'm trying to insinuate that you're setting your cap at him and getting mother to help you. Is that what you mean? Beyond a doubt that was what Miss Fanny meant. She gave him a white-hot look. You attend to your own affairs. She whispered fiercely and swept away. George, dumbfounded, returned to his room for meditation. He had lived for years in the same house with his Aunt Fanny and it now appeared that during all those years he had been thus intimately associating with a total stranger. Never before had he met the passionate lady with whom he had just held a conversation in the hall. So she wanted to get married and wanted George's mother to help her with this horseless carriage widower. Well, I will be shot, he muttered aloud. I will! I certainly will be shot! And he began to laugh. Lord Almighty! But presently at the thought of the horseless carriage widower's daughter his grimness returned and he resolved upon a line of conduct for the evening. He would nod to her carelessly when he first saw her, and after that he would notice her no more. He would not dance with her. He would not favour her in the coutillion. He would not go near her. He descended to dinner upon the third urgent summons of a coloured butler, having spent two hours dressing and rehearsing. The honourable George Amberson was a congressman who led coutillions. The sort of congressman an Amberson would be. He did it negligently to-night, yet with infallible dexterity, now and then glancing humorously at the spectators, people of his own age. They were seated in a tropical grove at one end of the room whither they had retired at the beginning of the coutillion, which they surrendered entirely to the twenties and the late teens. And here, grouped with that stately pair Sidney and Amelia Amberson, sat Isabelle with Fanny while Eugene Morgan appeared to bestow an amiable devotion impartially upon the three sisters-in-law. Fanny watched his face eagerly, laughing at everything he said. Amelia smiled blandly but rather because of graciousness than because of interest, while Isabelle, looking out at the dancers, rhythmically moved a great fan of blue ostrich feathers, listened to Eugene thoughtfully, yet all the while kept her shining eyes on Georgie. Georgie had carried out his rehearsed projects with precision. He had given Miss Morgan a nod studied into perfection during his lengthy toilette before dinner. Oh, yes! I do seem to remember that curious little outsider. This nod seemed to say. Thereafter all cognizance of her evaporated. The curious little outsider was permitted no further existence worth the struggle. Nevertheless, she flashed in the corner of his eye too often. He was aware of her dancing demurely, and of her viciously flirtatious habit of never looking up at her partner but keeping her eyes concealed beneath downcast lashes. And he had over-sufficient consciousness of her between the dances, though it was not possible to see her at these times even if he had cared to look frankly in her direction. She was invisible in a thicket of young dress-coats. The black thicket moved as she moved, and her location was hatefully apparent, even if he had not heard her voice laughing from the thicket. It was annoying how her voice, though never loud, pursued him. No matter how vociferous were other voices all about, he seemed unable to prevent himself from constantly recognizing hers. It had a quaver in it, not pathetic, rather humorous than pathetic, a quality which annoyed him to the point of rage, because it was so difficult to get away from. She seemed to be having a wonderful time. An unbearable soreness accumulated in his chest, his dislike of the girl and her conduct increased until he thought of leaving this sickening assembly, and going home to bed. That would show her. But just then he heard her laughing and decided that it wouldn't show her. So he remained. When the young couples seated themselves in chairs against the walls, round three sides of the room, for the coutillion, George joined a brazen-faced group clustering about the doorway, youths with no partners, yet eligible to be called out and favored. He marked that his uncle placed the infernal Kinney and Miss Morgan as the leading couple, in the first chairs at the head of the line upon the leader's right, and this disloyalty on the part of Uncle George was inexcusable, for in the family circle the nephew had often expressed his opinion of Fred Kinney. In his bitterness George uttered a significant monosyllable. The music flourished, whereupon Mr. Kinney, Miss Morgan, and six of their neighbors rose in waltz knowingly. Mr. Amberson's whistle blew, then the eight young people went to the Favour table and were given toys and trinkets wherewith to delight the new partners it was now their privilege to select. Around the walls, the seated non-participants in this ceremony looked rather conscious, some chattered, endeavouring not to appear expectant, some tried not to look wistful, and others were frankly solemn. It was a trying moment, and whoever secured a favour, this very first shot, might consider the poor tents happy for a successful evening. Holding their twinkling gougas and their hands, those about to be still honoured came toward the seated lines, where expressions became feverish. Two of the approaching girls seemed to wander, not finding a predetermined object in sight, and these two were Janie Sharon and her cousin Lucy. At this, George Amberson Minnifer, conceiving that he had little to anticipate from either, turned to proud back upon the room and affected to converse with his friend Mr. Charlie Johnson. The next moment a quick little figure intervened between the two. It was Lucy, gaily offering a silver sleigh-bell decked with white ribbon. I almost couldn't find you, she cried. George stared, took her hand, let her forth in silence, danced with her. She seemed content not to talk, but as the whistle blew, signalling that this episode was concluded, and he conducted her to her seat, she lifted the little bell toward him. You haven't taken your favour, you're supposed to pin it on your coat, she said. Don't you want it? If you insist, said George stiffly, and he bowed her into her chair, then turned and walked away, dropping the sleigh-bell haughtily into his trousers pocket. The figure proceeded to its conclusion, and George was given other sleigh-bells, which he easily consented to wear upon his lapel. But as the next figure began, he strolled with a bored air to the tropical grove, where sat his elders, and seated himself beside his Uncle Sidney. His mother leaned across Miss Fanny, raising her voice over the music, to speak to him. Georgey, nobody will be able to see you here. You'll not be favoured. You ought to be where you can dance. Don't care too, he returned. Bore. But you ought—she stopped and laughed, waving her fan to direct his attention behind him. Look over your shoulder! He turned and discovered Miss Lucy Morgan in the act of offering him a purple toy balloon. I found you, she laughed. George was startled. Well, he said. Would you rather sit it out? Lucy asked quickly, as he did not move. I don't care to dance if you— No, he said, rising. It would be better to dance. His tone was solemn, and solemnly he departed with her from the grove. Solomely he danced with her. Four times, with not the slightest encouragement, she brought him a favour. Four times in succession. When the fourth came— Look here, said George Huskley. You're going to keep this up all night. What do you mean by it? For an instant she seemed confused. That's what coutillions are for, aren't they? She murmured. What do you mean, what they're for? So that a girl can dance with a person she wants to? George's huskiness increased. Well, do you mean you— You want to dance with me all the time, all evening? Well, this much of it, evidently— She laughed. Is it because you thought I tried to keep you from getting hurt this afternoon when we upset? She shook her head. Was it because you want to even things up for making me angry? I mean for hurting my feelings on the way home. With her eyes averted, for girls of nineteen can be as shy as boys, sometimes. She said— Well, you only got angry because I couldn't dance the coutillion with you. I—I didn't feel terribly hurt with you for getting angry about that. Was there any other reason? Did my telling you I liked you has something to do with it? She looked up gently, and as George met her eyes something exquisitely touching, yet clearly delightful, gave him a catch in the throat. She looked instantly away, and, turning, ran out from the palm grove where they stood, to the dancing floor. Come on! she cried. Let's dance! He followed her. See here! I—I— He stammered. You mean—do you— No, no! she laughed. Let's dance! He put his arm about her almost tremulously, and they began to waltz. It was a happy dance for both of them. Christmas Day is the children's, but the holidays are youth's dancing time. The holidays belong to the early twenties and the teens, home from school and college. These years possess the holidays for little while, then possess them only in smiling, wistful memories of holly and twinkling lights and dance music, and charming faces all aglow. It is the liveliest time in life, the happiest of the irresponsible times in life. Mothers echo its happiness. Nothing is like a mother who has a son home from college, except another mother with a son home from college. Bloom does actually come upon these mothers. It is a visible thing, and they run like girls, walk like athletes, laugh like sycophants. Yet they give up their sons to the daughters of other mothers, and find it proud rapture enough to be allowed to sit and watch. Thus Isabelle watched George and Lucy dancing, as together they danced away the holidays of that year into the past. They seemed to get along better than they did at first, those two children. Fanny Minifer said, sitting beside her at the Sharon's dance, a week after the assembly. They seemed to be always having little quarrels of some sort at first. At least George did. He seemed to be continually pecking at that lovely dainty little Lucy, and being cross with her over nothing. Pecking, Isabelle laughed. What a word to use about Georgie. I think I never knew a more angelically amiable disposition in my life. Miss Fanny echoed her sister-in-law's laugh, but it was a rueful echo, and not sweet. He's amiable to you, she said. That's all the sight of him you ever happened to see. And why wouldn't he be amiable to anybody that simply fell down and worshipped him every minute of her life most of us would? Isn't he worth worshipping? Just look at him! Isn't he charming with Lucy? See how hard he ran to get it when she dropped her handkerchief back there. Oh, I'm not going to argue with you about George, said Miss Fanny. I'm fond enough of him, for that matter. He can be charming, and he's certainly stunning-looking, if only— Let the if-only go, dear, Isabelle suggested good-naturedly. Let's talk about that dinner you thought I should—I—Miss Fanny interrupted quickly. Didn't you want to give it yourself? Indeed I did, my dear, said Isabelle heartily. I only meant that unless you had proposed it perhaps I wouldn't. But here Eugene came for her to dance, and she left the sentence uncompleted. Holiday dances can be happy for youth renewed, as well as for youth in bud, and yet it was not with the air of a rival that Miss Fanny watched her brother's wife dancing with the widower. Miss Fanny's eyes narrowed a little, but only as if her mind engaged in a hopeful calculation. She looked pleased. CHAPTER X A few days after George's return to the university, it became evident that not quite everybody had gazed with complete benevolence upon the various young collegians at their holiday sports. The Sunday edition of the principal morning paper even expressed some bitterness under the heading, Gilded Youths of the Fondaciecle. This was considered the knowing phrase of the time, especially for Sunday supplements, and there is no doubt that from certain references in this bit of writing some people drew the conclusion that Mr. George Amberson Minnifer had not yet got his comeuppance, a postponement still irritating. Undeniably Fanny Minnifer was one of the people who drew this conclusion, for she cut the article out and enclosed it in a letter to her nephew, having written on the border of the clipping, I wonder whom it can mean? George read part of it. We debate sometimes what is to be the future of this nation when we think that in a few years public affairs may be in the hands of the Fondaciecle, Gilded Youths, we see about us during the Christmas holidays. Such phoppery, such luxury, such insolence, was surely never practiced by the scented, overbearing patricians of the Palatine, even in Rome's most decadent epoch. In all the wild orgy of wastefulness and luxury with which the nineteenth century reaches its close, the Gilded Youth has been surely the worst symptom. With his heirs of young milord, his fast horses, his gold and silver cigarette cases, his clothes from a New York tailor, his recklessness of money showered upon him by indulgent mothers or doting grandfathers, he respects nothing and nobody. He is blasé, if you please. Watch him at a social function, how condescendingly he deigns to select a partner for the popular waltz, or two-step, how carelessly he shoulders older people out of his way. With what a blank stare he returns the salutation of some old acquaintance whom he may choose in his royal whim to forget. The unpleasant part of all this is that the young women he so condescendingly selects as partners for the dance greet him with seeming rapture, though in their hearts they must feel humiliated by his languid hoture, and many older people beam upon him almost fawningly if he unbends so far as to throw them a careless, disdainful word. One wonders what has come over the new generation. Of such as these the Republic was not made, let us pray that the future of our country is not in the hands of these fantasy-ecla Gilded Youths, but rather in the calloused palms of young men yet unknown, laboring upon the farms of the land. When we compare the young manhood of Abraham Lincoln with the specimens we are now producing, we see too well that it bodes ill for the twentieth century. George yawned, and tossed the clipping into his waist-basket, wondering why his aunt thought such dull nonsense worth descending. As for her insinuation, penciled upon the border, he supposed she meant to joke, a supposition which neither surprised him nor altered his life-long opinion of her wit. He read her letter with more interest. The dinner your mother gave for the Morgans was a lovely affair. It was last Monday evening, just ten days after you left. It was peculiarly appropriate that your mother should give this dinner, because her brother George, your uncle, was Mr. Morgans' most intimate friend before he left here a number of years ago, and it was a pleasant occasion for the formal announcement of some news which you heard from Lucy Morgan before you returned to college. At least she told me she had told you the night before you left that her father had decided to return here to live. It was appropriate that your mother, herself an old friend, should assemble a representative selection of Mr. Morgans' old friends around him at such a time. He was in great spirits and most entertaining. As your time was so charmingly taken up during your visit home with a younger member of his family, you probably overlooked opportunities of hearing him talk, and do not know what an interesting man he can be. He will soon begin to build his factory here for the manufacturer of automobiles, which he says is a term he prefers to horseless carriages. Your uncle George told me he would like to invest in this factory, as George thinks there is a future for automobiles, perhaps not for general use, but as an interesting novelty, which people with sufficient means would like to own for their amusement and the sake of variety. However, he said Mr. Morgan laughingly declined his offer, as Mr. M. was fully able to finance this venture, though not starting in a very large way. Your uncle said other people are manufacturing automobiles in different parts of the country with success. Your father is not well, though he is not actually ill, and the doctor tells him he ought not to be so much at his office, as the long years of application indoors with no exercise are beginning to affect him unfavorably. But I believe your father would die if he had to give up his work, which is all that is ever interested him outside of his family. I never could understand it. Mr. Morgan took your mother and me with Lucy to see Mojesca in twelfth night, yesterday evening, and Lucy said she thought the Duke looked rather like you, only much more democratic in his manner. I suppose you will think I have written a great deal about the Morgans in this letter, but thought you would be interested because of your interest in a younger member of his family. Hoping that you are finding college still as attractive as ever, affectionately, and fanny. George read one sentence in this letter several times, then he dropped the missive in his waist-basket to join the clipping, and strolled down the corridor of his dormitory to borrow a copy of twelfth night. Having secured one, he returned to his study and refreshed his memory of the play, but received no enlightenment that enabled him to comprehend Lucy's strange remark. However, he found himself impelled in the direction of correspondence, and presently wrote a letter, not a reply to his Aunt Fanny. Dear Lucy! No doubt you will be surprised at hearing from me so soon again, especially as this makes two an answer to the one received from you since getting back to the old place. I hear you have been making comments about me at the theatre, that some actor was more democratic in his manners than I am, which I do not understand. You know my theory of life because I explained it to you on our first drive together. When I told you I would not talk to everybody about things I feel like the way I spoke to you of my theory of life. I believe those who are able should have a true theory of life, and I developed my theory of life long, long ago. Well, here I sit smoking my faithful briar pipe, indulging in the fragrance of my tobacco as I look out on the campus from my many pained window, and things are different with me from the way they were way back in freshman year. I can see now how boyish in many ways I was then. I believe what has changed me as much as anything was my visit home at the time I met you. So I sit here with my faithful briar and dream the old dreams over, as it were, dreaming of the waltzes we waltzed together, and of that last night before we parted, and you told me the good news you were going to live there, and I would find my friend waiting for me when I get home next summer. I will be glad my friend will be waiting for me. I am not capable of friendship except for the very few, and, looking back over my life, I remember there were times when I doubted if I could feel a great friendship for anybody, especially girls. I do not take a great interest in many people, as you know, for I find most of them shallow. Here in the old place I do not believe in being hail-fellow well met with every Tom, Dick, and Harry, just because he happens to be a classmate any more than I do at home, where I have always been careful who I was seen with, largely on account of the family, but also because my disposition ever since my boyhood has been to encourage real intimacy from but the few. What are you reading now? I have finished both Henry Esmond and the Virginians. I like Thackeray because he is not trashy, and because he writes principally of nice people. My theory of literature is an author who does not indulge in trashiness, writes about people you could introduce into your own home. I agree with my Uncle Sidney, as I once heard him say he did not care to read a book or go to a play about people he would not care to meet at his own dinner table. I believe we should live by certain standards and ideals, as you know from my telling you my theory of life. Well, a letter is no place for deep discussions, so I will not go into the subject. From several letters from my mother, and one from Aunt Fanny, I hear you were seeing a good deal of the family since I laughed. I hope sometimes you think of the member who is absent. I got a silver frame for your photograph in New York, and I keep it on my desk. It is the only girl's photograph I ever took the trouble to have framed, though as I told you frankly I have had any number of other girl's photographs, yet all were only passing fancies, and oftentimes I have questioned in years past if I was capable of much friendship towards the feminine sex, which I usually found shallow until our own friendship began. When I look at your photograph I say to myself, at last, at last here is one that will not prove shallow. My faithful Briar has gone out. I will have to rise and fill it, then once more in the fragrance of my Lady Nicotine. I will sit and dream the old dreams over, and think, too, of the true friend at home awaiting my return in June for the summer vacation. Friend, this is from your friend, G-A-M. George's anticipations were not disappointed. When he came home in June his friend was awaiting him. At least, she was so pleased to see him again that for a few minutes after that first encounter she was a little breathless, and a great deal glowing, and quiet with all. Their sentimental friendship continued, though sometimes he was irritated by her making it less sentimental than he did, and sometimes by what he called her air of superiority. Her air was usually, in truth, that of a fond but amused older sister, and George did not believe such an attitude was warranted by her eight months of seniority. Lucy and her father were living at the Amberson Hotel, while Morgan got his small machine shops built in a western outskirt of the town, and George grumbled about the shabbiness in the old-fashioned look of the hotel, though it was still the best in the place, of course. He remonstrated with his grandfather, declaring that the whole Amberson estate will be getting run down and out at heel if things weren't taken in hand pretty soon. He urged the general need of rebuilding, renovating, varnishing, and lawsuits. But the Major, declining to hear him out, interrupted querelessly, saying that he had enough to bother him without any advice from George, and retired to his library, going so far as to lock the door audibly. Second childhood. George muttered, shaking his head, and he thought sadly that the Major had not long to live. However, this surmised to press him for only a moment or so. Of course people couldn't be expected to live forever, and it would be a good thing to have someone in charge of the estate who wouldn't let it get to looking so rusty that Riffraff dared to make fun of it. For George had lately undergone the annoyance of calling upon the Morgans, and the rather stuffy red velours and gilt parlor of their apartment at the hotel. One evening when Mr. Frederick Kinney also was a caller, and Mr. Kinney had not been tactful. In fact, though he adopted a humorous tone of voice in expressing his sympathy for people who, through the city's poverty and hotels, were obliged to stay at the Amberson, Mr. Kinney's intention was interpreted by the other visitor as not at all humorous, but on the contrary, personal and offensive. George rose abruptly, his face the colour of wrath. Good night, Miss Morgan. Good night, Mr. Morgan, he said. I shall take pleasure in calling at some other time when a more courteous sort of people may be present. Look here, the hot-headed Fred burst out. Don't you try to make me out a boar, George Minifer. I wasn't hinting anything at you. I simply forgot all about your grandfather owning this old building. Don't you try to put me in the light of a boar. I won't— But George walked out in the very course of this vehement protest, and it was necessarily left unfinished. Mr. Kinney remained only a few moments after George's departure, and as the door closed upon him, the distressed Lucy turned to her father. She was plaintively surprised to find him in a condition of immoderate laughter. I—I didn't—I didn't think I could hold out! He gasped, and after choking until tears came to his eyes, felt blindly for the chair from which he had risen to wish Mr. Kinney an indistinct good-night. His hand found the arm of the chair. He collapsed feebly, and sat uttering incoherent sounds. Papa! It brings things back so! he managed to explain. This very Fred Kinney's father and young George's father, Wilbur Minifer, used to do just such things when they were at that age. And for that matter, so did George Amberson and I, and all the rest of us! And in spite of his exhaustion he began to imitate. Don't you try to put me in the light of a bore? I shall take pleasure in calling it some time when a more courteous sort of people—ha ha ha!— he was unable to go on. There is a mirth for every age, and Lucy failed to comprehend her father's, but tolerated it a little ruefully. Papa! I think they were shocking. Weren't they awful? Just—just boys! he moaned, wiping his eyes. But Lucy could not smile at all. She was beginning to look indignant. I can forgive that poor Fred Kinney, she said. He's just blundering, but George—oh, George behaved outrageously. It's a difficult age, her father observed. His calmness somewhat restored. Girls don't seem to have to pass through it quite as boys do. Or their savoir-faire is instinctive, or something. And he gave a way to a return of his convulsion. She came and sat upon the arm of his chair. Papa, why should George behave like that? He's sensitive! Rather. But why is he? He does anything he likes to, without any regard for what people think. Then why should he mind so furiously when the least little thing reflects upon him, or on anything, or anybody connected with him? Eugene Paddiger hand. That's one of the greatest puzzles of human vanity, dear. And I don't pretend to know the answer. In all my life, the most arrogant people that I've known have been the most sensitive. The people who have done the most in contempt of other people's opinion, and who consider themselves the highest above it, have been the most furious if it went against them. Arrogant and domineering people can't stand the least lightest, faintest breath of criticism. It just kills them. Papa, do you think George is arrogant and domineering? Oh, he's still only a boy, said Eugene consolingly. There's plenty of fine stuff in him. Can't help but be, because he's Isabel Amberson's son. Lucy stroked his hair, which was still almost as dark as her own. You liked her pretty well once, I guess, Papa. I do still, he said quietly. She's lovely. Lovely. Papa. She paused, then continued. I wonder sometimes. What? What? I wonder just how she happened to marry Mr. Minifer. Oh, Minifer's all right, said Eugene. He's a quiet sort of man, but he's a good man, and a kind man. He always was, and these things count. But in a way, well, I've heard people say there wasn't anything to him at all, except business and saving money. Ms. Fanny Minifer herself told me that everything George and his mother have of their own. That is, just to spend as they like. She says it has always come from Major Amberson. Thrift oratio, said Eugene lightly. Thrift's an inheritance and a common enough one here. The people who settled the country had to save. So making and saving were taught as virtues. And the people, to the third generation, haven't found out that making and saving are only means to an end. Minifer doesn't believe in money being spent. He believes God made it to be invested and saved. But George isn't saving. He's reckless, and even if he is arrogant and conceited in bad tempered, he's awfully generous. Oh, he's an Amberson, said her father. The Ambersons aren't saving. They're too much the other way, most of them. I don't think I should have called George bad tempered, Lucy said thoughtfully. No, I don't think he is. Only when he's cross about something? Morgan suggested with the semblance of sympathetic gravity. Yes, she said brightly, not perceiving that his intention was humorous. All the rest of the time he's really very amiable. Of course, he's much more a perfect child the whole time than he realizes. He's certainly behaved awfully to-night. She jumped up, her indignation returning. He did indeed, and it won't do to encourage him in it. I think he'll find me pretty cool, for a week or so. Whereupon her father suffered a renewal of his attack of uproarious laughter. End of chapter. Chapter 11 of The Magnificent Ambersons This LibriVox recording is in the public domain and is read by Mark Smith of Simpsonville, South Carolina. The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington Chapter 11 In the matter of coolness George met Lucy upon her own predetermined ground. In fact he was there first, and at their next encounter proved loftier and more formal than she did. Their estrangement lasted three weeks, and then disappeared without any preliminary treating. It had worn itself out, and they forgot it. At times, however, George found other disturbances to the friendship. Lucy was, too much the village bell, he complained, and took a satiric attitude toward his competitors, referring to them as their local swains and bumpkins, sulking for an afternoon when she reminded him that he, too, was at least local. She was a bell with older people as well. Isabelle and Fanny were continually taking her driving, bringing her home with them to lunch or dinner, and making a hundred little engagements with her. And the Major had taken a great fancy to her, insisting upon her presence and her father's at the Amberson Family dinner at the mansion every Sunday evening. She knew how to flirt with old people, he said, as she sat next to him at the table on one of these Sunday occasions, and he had always liked her father, even when Eugene was a terror long ago. Oh yes he was! The Major laughed when she remonstrated. He came up here with my son George and some others for serenade one night, and Eugene stepped into a base fiddle, and the poor musicians just gave up. I had a pretty half-hour getting my son George upstairs. I remember it was the last time Eugene ever touched a drop. But he touched plenty before that young lady, and he daren't deny it. Well, well, there's another thing that's changed. Hardly anybody drinks nowadays. Perhaps it's just as well, but things used to be livelier. That serenade was just before Isabelle was married. And don't you fret, Miss Lucy, your father remembers it well enough. The old gentleman burst into laughter, and shook his finger at Eugene across the table. The fact is, the Major went on hilariously. I believe if Eugene hadn't broken that base fiddle and given himself away, Isabelle would never have taken Wilbur. I shouldn't be surprised if that was about all the reason that Wilbur got her. What do you think? Wilbur? I... I shouldn't be surprised, said Wilbur placidly. If your notion is right, I'm glad Eugene broke the fiddle. He was giving me a hard run. The Major always drank three glasses of champagne at his Sunday dinner, and he was finishing the third. What do you say about it, Isabelle? By Jove! he cried, pounding the table. She's plushing! Isabelle did blush, but she laughed. Who wouldn't blush? she cried, and her sister-in-law came to her assistance. The important thing, said Fanny Jovially, is that Wilbur did get her and not only got her, but kept her. Eugene was as pink as Isabelle, but he laughed without any sign of embarrassment other than his heightened color. There's another important thing. That is, for me, he said. It's the only thing that makes me forgive that base vial for getting in my way. What is it? the Major asked. Lucy, said Morgan gently. Isabelle gave him a quick glance, all warm approval, and there was a murmur of friendliness round the table. George was not one of these who joined in this applause. He considered his grandfather's nonsense indelicate, even for second childhood, and he thought that the sooner the subject was dropped the better. However, he had only a slight recurrence of the resentment which had assailed him during the winter at every sign of his mother's interest in Morgan, though he was still ashamed of his aunt sometimes, when it seemed to him that Fanny was almost publicly throwing herself at the widower's head. Fanny and he had one or two arguments in which her fierceness again astonished and amused him. You drop your criticisms of your relatives, she bade him hotly one day, and begin thinking a little about your own behavior. You say people will talk about my merely being pleasant to an old friend. What do I care how they talk? I guess if people are talking about anybody in this family, they're talking about the impertinent little snippet that hasn't any respect for anything, and doesn't even know enough to attend to his own affairs. Snippet and Fanny, George laughed, how elegant, and little snippet when I'm over five feet eleven. I said it, she snapped, departing. I don't see how Lucy can stand you. You'd make an amiable stepmother-in-law, he called after her. I'll be careful about proposing to Lucy. These were but roughish spots in the summer that glided by evenly and quickly enough, for the most part, and at the end seemed to fly. On the last night before George went back to be a junior, his mother asked him confidently if it had not been a happy summer. He hadn't thought about it, he answered. Oh, I suppose so. Why? I just thought it would be. Nice to hear you say so, she said, smiling. I mean, it's pleasant for people of my age to know that people of your age realize that they're happy. People of your age, he repeated. You know you don't look precisely like an old woman, mother. Not precisely. No, she said. And I suppose I feel about as young as you do inside, but it won't be many years before I must begin to look old. It does come. She sighed, still smiling. It seemed to me that it must have been a happy summer for you. A real summer of roses and wine. Without the wine, perhaps. Gather ye roses while ye may. Or was it prim roses? Time does really fly, or perhaps it's more like the sky, and smoke. George was puzzled. What do you mean, time being like the sky and smoke? I mean the things that we have and what we think are so solid. They're like smoke, and time is like the sky that the smoke disappears into. You know how wreath of smoke goes up from a chimney, and seems all thick and black and busy against the sky, as if it were going to do such important things and last forever, and you see it getting thinner and thinner, and then in such a little while it isn't there at all. Nothing is left but the sky, and the sky keeps on being just the same forever. It strikes me you're getting mixed up, said George cheerfully. I don't see much resemblance between time and the sky, or between things and smoke wreaths, but I do see one reason you like Lucy Morgan so much. She talks that same kind of whistful moony way sometimes. I don't mean to say I'm minded in either of you, because I rather like to listen to it, and you've got a very good voice, Mother. It's nice to listen to, no matter how much smoke and sky and so on you talk. So's Lucy's for that matter, and I see why you're congenial. She talks that way to her father, too, and he's right there with the same kind of guff. Well, it's all right with me. He laughed, teasingly, and allowed her to retain his hand which she had fondly seized. I've got plenty to think about when people drool along. She pressed his hand to her cheek, and a tear made a tiny warm streak across one of his knuckles. For heaven's sake, he said. What's the matter? Isn't everything all right? You're going away. Well, I'm coming back, don't you suppose? Is that all that worries you? She cheered up and smiled again, but shook her head. I never can bear to see you go. That's the most of it. I'm a little bothered about your father, too. Why? It seems to me he looks so badly. Everybody thinks so. What nonsense! George laughed. He's been looking that way all summer. He isn't much different from the way he's looked all his life that I can see. What's the matter with him? He never talks much about his business to me, but I think he's been worrying about some investments he made last year. I think his worry has affected his health. What investments! George demanded. He hasn't gone into Mr. Morgan's automobile concern, has he? No. Isabel smiled. The automobile concern is all you jeans, and it's so small I understand it's taken hardly anything. No. Your father has always prided himself on making only the most absolutely safe investments. But two or three years ago he and your uncle George both put a great deal. Pretty much everything they could get together, I think. Into the stock of rolling mills, some friends of theirs owned. And I'm afraid the mills haven't been doing well. What of that? Father needn't worry. You and I could take care of him the rest of his life on what grandfather. Of course, she agreed. But your father's always lived so for his business, and taken such pride in his sound investments. It's a passion with him. I—sha! He needn't worry. You tell him we'll look after him. We'll build him a little stone bank in the backyard if he busts up, and he can go and put his pennies in it every morning. That'll keep him just as happy as he ever was. He kissed her. Good night. I'm going to tell Lucy good-bye. Don't sit up for me. She walked to the front gate with him, still holding his hand, and he told her again not to sit up for him. Yes, I will, she laughed. You won't be very late. Well, it's my last night. But I know Lucy, and she knows I want to see you, too, your last night. You'll see she'll send you home promptly at eleven. But she was mistaken. Lucy sent him home promptly at ten.