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| 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 unyachted Midlanders before him. However, among them, he marked his mother; and his sombre grandeur relaxed momentarily; a more genial light came into his eyes. | 1 |
| Isabel was dancing with the queer-looking duck; and it was to be noted that the lively gentlemans gait was more sedate than it had been with Miss Fanny Minafer, but not less dexterous and authoritative. He was talking to Isabel as gaily as he had talked to Miss 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. | 2 |
| How lovely your mother is! Lucy said. | 3 |
| I think she is, he agreed gently. | 4 |
| Shes the gracefulest woman in that ballroom. She dances like a girl of sixteen. | 5 |
| Most girls of sixteen, said George, are bum dancers. Anyhow, I wouldnt dance with one unless I had to. | 6 |
| Well, youd better dance with your mother! I never saw anybody lovelier. How wonderfully they dance together! | 7 |
| Who? | 8 |
| Your mother andand the queer-looking duck, said Lucy. Im going to dance with him pretty soon. | 9 |
| I dont careso long as you dont give him one of the numbers that belong to me. | 10 |
| Ill try to remember, she said, and thoughtfully lifted to her face the bouquet of violets and lilies, a gesture which George noted without approval. | 11 |
| Look here! Who sent you those flowers you keep makin such a fuss over? | 12 |
| He did. | 13 |
| Whos he? | 14 |
| The queer-looking duck. | 15 |
| George feared no such rival; he laughed loudly. I spose hes some old widower! he said, the object thus described seeming ignominious enough to a person of eighteen, without additional characterization. Some old widower! | 16 |
| Lucy became serious at once. Yes, he is a widower, she said. I ought to have told you before; hes my father. | 17 |
| George stopped laughing abruptly. Well, thats a horse on me. If Id known he was your father, of course I wouldnt have made fun of him. Im sorry. | 18 |
| Nobody could make fun of him, she said quietly. | 19 |
| Why couldnt they? | 20 |
| It wouldnt make him funny: it would only make themselves silly. | 21 |
| Upon this, George had a gleam of intelligence. Well, Im not, going to make myself silly any more, then; I dont want to take chances like that with you. But I thought he was the Sharon girls uncle. He came with them | 22 |
| Yes, she said, Im always late to everything: I wouldnt let them wait for me. Were visiting the Sharons. | 23 |
| About time I knew that! You forget my being so fresh about your father, will you? Of course hes a distinguished looking man, in a way. | 24 |
| Lucy was still serious. In a way? she repeated. You mean, not in your way, dont you? | 25 |
| George was perplexed. How do you mean: not in my way? | 26 |
| People pretty often say in a way and rather distinguished looking, or rather so-and-so, or rather anything, to show that theyre superior. dont they? In New York last month I overheard a climber sort of woman speaking of me as little Miss Morgan, but she didnt 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 were really so terribly unimportant that the only way they knew to pretend to be important was calling people little Miss or Mister so-and-so. Its a kind of snob slang, I think. Of course people dont always say rather or in a way to be superior. | 27 |
| I should say not! I use both of em a great deal myself, said George. One thing I dont see though: Whats the use of a man being six-feet-three? Men that size cant handle themselves as well as a man about five-feet-eleven and a half can. Those long, gangling men, theyre nearly always too kind of wormy to be any good in athletics, and theyre so awkward they keep falling over chairs or | 28 |
| Mr. Pembroke is in the army, said Lucy primly. Hes extraordinarily graceful. | 29 |
| In the army? Oh, I suppose hes some old friend of your fathers. | 30 |
| They got on very well, she said, after I introduced them. | 31 |
| George was a straightforward soul, at least. See here! he said. Are you engaged to anybody? | 32 |
| No. | 33 |
| Not wholly mollified, he shrugged his shoulders. You seem to know a good many people! Do you live in New York? | 34 |
| No. We dont live anywhere. | 35 |
| What you mean: you dont live anywhere? | 36 |
| Weve lived all over, she answered. Papa used to live here in this town, but that was before I was born. | 37 |
| What do you keep moving around so for? Is he a promoter? | 38 |
| No. Hes an inventor. | 39 |
| Whats he invented? | 40 |
| Just lately, said Lucy, hes been working on a new kind of horseless carriage. | 41 |
| Well, Im sorry for him, George said, in no unkindly spirit. Those things are never going to amount to anything. People arent going to spend their lives lying on their backs in the road and letting grease drip in their faces. Horseless carriages are pretty much a failure, and your father better not waste his time on em. | 42 |
| Papad be so grateful, she returned, if he could have your advice. | 43 |
| Instantly Georges face became flushed. I dont know that Ive done anything to be insulted for! he said. I dont see that what I said was particularly fresh. | 44 |
| No, indeed! | 45 |
| Then what do you | 46 |
| She laughed gaily. I dont! And I dont mind your being such a lofty person at all. I think its ever so interestingbut papas a great man! | 47 |
| Is he? George decided to be good-natured, Well, let us hope so. I hope so, Im sure. | 48 |
| 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. Im just beginning to understand, she said. | 49 |
| Understand what? | 50 |
| What it means to be a real Amberson in this town. Papa told me something about it before we came, but I see he didnt say half enough! | 51 |
| George superbly took this all for tribute. Did your father say he knew the family before he left here? | 52 |
| Yes. I believe he was particularly a friend of your Uncle George; and he didnt say so, but I imagine he must have known your mother very well, too. He wasnt an inventor then; he was a young lawyer. The town was smaller in those days, and I believe he was quite well known. | 53 |
| I dare say. Ive 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. | 54 |
| I dont think he meant to boast of it, she said. He spoke of it quite calmly. | 55 |
| George stared at her for a moment in perplexity, then perceiving that her intention was satirical, Girls really ought to go to a mans college, he saidjust a month or two, anyhow. Itd take some of the freshness out of em! | 56 |
| I cant believe it, she retorted, as her partner for the next dance arrived. It would only make them a little politer on the surfacetheyd be really just as awful as ever, after you got to know them a few minutes. | 57 |
| What do you mean: after you got to know them a | 58 |
| 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! | 59 |
| 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 rose-vine arches at the entrance to the room. | 60 |
| Hello, young namesake, said the uncle. Why lingers the laggard heel of the dancer? Havent you got a partner? | 61 |
| Shes sitting around waiting for me somewhere, said George. See here: Who is this fellow Morgan that Aunt Fanny Minafer was dancing with a while ago? | 62 |
| Amberson laughed. Hes a man with a pretty daughter, Georgie. Meseemed youve been spending the evening noticing something of that sortor do I err? | 63 |
| Never mind! What sort is he? | 64 |
| I think well have to give him a character, Georgie. Hes an old friend; used to practise law hereperhaps he had more debts than cases, but he paid em 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 cant | 65 |
| Oh, dry up! said the nephew. I understand this Morgan | 66 |
| Mr. Eugene Morgan, his uncle suggested. Politeness requires that the young should | 67 |
| I guess the young didnt know much about politeness in your day, George interrupted. I understand that Mr. Eugene Morgan used to be a great friend of the family. | 68 |
| Oh, the Minafers? the uncle inquired, with apparent innocence. No, I seem to recall that he and your father were not | 69 |
| I mean the Ambersons, George said impatiently. I understand he was a good deal around the house here. | 70 |
| What is your objection to that, George? | 71 |
| What do you mean: my objection? | 72 |
| You seemed to speak with a certain crossness. | 73 |
| Well, said George, I meant he seems to feel awfully at home here. The way he was dancing with Aunt Fanny | 74 |
| Amberson laughed. Im afraid your Aunt Fannys heart was stirred by ancient recollections, Georgie. | 75 |
| You mean she used to be silly about him? | 76 |
| She wasnt considered singular, said the uncle He washe was popular. Could you bear a question? | 77 |
| What do you mean: could I bear | 78 |
| I only wanted to ask: Do you take this same passionate interest in the parents of every girl you dance with? Perhaps its a new fashion we old bachelors wight to take up. Is it the thing this year to | 79 |
| 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 fulfil his contract with her for this dance. | 80 |
| Pardon f keep wait, he muttered, as she rose brightly to meet him; and she seemed pleased that he came at allbut 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 reasoneven to himselffor this disturbing preponderance. | 81 |
| 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 Minafer, 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. | 82 |
| Gene Morgan! this person exclaimed, rising with great heartiness. Id heard you were in townI dont believe you know me! | 83 |
| Yes, I do, Fred Kinney! Mr. Morgan returned with equal friendliness. Your real facethe one I used to knowits just underneath the one youre masquerading in to-night. You ought to have changed it more if you wanted a disguise. | 84 |
| Twenty years! said Mr. Kinney. It makes some difference in faces, but more in behaviour! | 85 |
| It does so! his friend agreed with explosive emphasis. My own behaviour began to be different about that long agoquite suddenly. | 86 |
| I remember, said Mr. Kinney sympathetically, Well, lifes odd enough as we look back. | 87 |
| Probably its going to be odder stillif we could look forward. | 88 |
| Probably. | 89 |
| They sat and smoked. | 90 |
| However, Mr. Morgan remarked presently, I still dance like an Indian. Dont you? | 91 |
| No. I leave that to my boy Fred. He does the dancing for the family. | 92 |
| I suppose hes upstairs hard at it? | 93 |
| No, hes not here. Mr. Kinney glanced toward the open door and lowered his voice. He wouldnt come. It seems that a couple of years or so ago he had a row with young Georgie Minafer. 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. Freds red-headed, you knowI suppose you remember his mother? You were at the wedding | 94 |
| I remember the wedding, said Mr. Morgan. And I remember your bachelor dinnermost of it, that is. | 95 |
| Well, my boy Freds as red-headed now, Mr. Kinney went on, as his mother was then, and hes very bitter about his row with Georgie Minafer. He says hed 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 mustnt humour Fred in a grudge over such a little thing, and while she despised that Georgie Minafer, herself, as much as any one else did, she wasnt going to miss a big Amberson show just on account of a boys rumpus, and so on and so on; and so we came. | 96 |
| Do people dislike young Minafer generally? | 97 |
| I dont know about generally. I guess he gets plenty of toadying; but theres certainly a lot of people that are glad to express their opinions about him. | 98 |
| Whats the matter with him? | 99 |
| 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. Thats what beats me! I dont have to tell you what Isabel Amberson is, Eugene Morgan. Shes got a touch of the Amberson high stuff about her, but you cant get anybody that ever knew her to deny that shes just about the finest woman in the world. | 100 |
| No, said Eugene Morgan. You cant get anybody to deny that. | 101 |
| Then I cant see how she doesnt see the truth about that boy. He thinks hes a little tin god on wheelsand honestly, it makes some people weak and sick just to think about him! Yet that high-spirited, intelligent woman, Isabel 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? | 102 |
| Morgans 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 that we dont see, he said. | 103 |
| What does she see? | 104 |
| An angel. | 105 |
| Kinney laughed aloud. Well, if she sees an angel when she looks at Georgie Minafer, shes a funnier woman than I thought she was! | 106 |
| Perhaps she is, said Morgan. But thats what she sees. | 107 |
| My Lord! Its easy to see youve only known him an hour or so. In that time have you looked at Georgie and seen an angel? | 108 |
| No. All I saw was a remarkably good-looking fool-boy with the pride of Satan and a set of nice new drawing-room manners that he probably couldnt use more than half an hour at a time without busting. | 109 |
| Then what | 110 |
| Mothers are right, said Morgan. Do you think this young George is the same sort of creature when hes with his mother that he is when hes bulldozing your boy Fred? Mothers see the angel in us because the angel is there. If its shown to the mother, the son has got an angel to show, hasnt he? When a son cuts somebodys throat the mother only sees its possible for a misguided angel to act like a deviland shes entirely right about that! | 111 |
| Kinney laughed, and put his hand on his friends shoulder. I remember what a fellow you always were to argue, he said. You mean Georgie Minafer is as much of an angel as any murderer is, and that Georgies mother is always right. | 112 |
| Im afraid she always has been, Morgan said lightly. | 113 |
| The friendly hand remained upon his shoulder. She was wrong once, old fellow. At least, so it seemed to me. | 114 |
| No, said Morgan, a little awkwardly. No | 115 |
| Kinney relieved the 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 youre going to change your mind about his having an angel to show, if you see anything of him! | 116 |
| You mean beautys in the eye of the beholder, and the angel is all in the eye of the mother. If you were a painter, Fred, youd paint mothers with angels eyes holding imps in their laps. Me, Ill stick to the Old Masters and the cherubs. | 117 |
| Mr. Kinney looked at him musingly. Somebodys eyes must have been pretty angelic, he said, if theyve been persuading you that Georgie Minafer is a cherub! | 118 |
| They are, said Morgan heartily. Theyre more angelic than ever. And as a new flourish of music sounded overhead he threw away his cigarette, and jumped up briskly. Good-bye, Ive got this dance with her. | 119 |
| With whom? | 120 |
| With Isabel! | 121 |
| The grizzled Mr. Kinney affected to rub his eyes. It startles me, your jumping up like that to go and dance with Isabel Amberson! Twenty years seem to have passedbut have they? Tell me, have you danced with poor old Fanny, too, this evening? | 122 |
| Twice! | 123 |
| My Lord! Kinney groaned, half in earnest. Old times starting all over again! My Lord! | 124 |
| Old times? Morgan laughed gaily from the doorway. Not a bit! There arent any old times. When times are gone theyre not old, theyre dead! There arent any times but new times! | 125 |
| And he vanished in such a manner that he seemed already to have begun dancing. | 126 |
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