Amory
Blaine inherited from his mother every trait, except the stray
inexpressible few, that made him worth while. His father, an
ineffectual, inarticulate man with a taste for Byron and a habit of
drowsing over the Encyclopedia Britannica, grew wealthy at thirty
through the death of two elder brothers, successful Chicago
brokers, and in the first flush of feeling that the world was his,
went to Bar Harbor and met Beatrice O’Hara. In consequence, Stephen
Blaine handed down to posterity his height of just under six feet
and his tendency to waver at crucial moments, these two
abstractions appearing in his son Amory. For many years he hovered
in the background of his family’s life, an unassertive figure with
a face half-obliterated by lifeless, silky hair, continually
occupied in “taking care” of his wife, continually harassed by the
idea that he didn’t and couldn’t understand her.
But Beatrice Blaine! There was a
woman! Early pictures taken on her father’s estate at Lake Geneva,
Wisconsin, or in Rome at the Sacred Heart Convent—an educational
extravagance that in her youth was only for the daughters of the
exceptionally wealthy—showed the exquisite delicacy of her
features, the consummate art and simplicity of her clothes. A
brilliant education she had—her youth passed in renaissance glory,
she was versed in the latest gossip of the Older Roman Families;
known by name as a fabulously wealthy American girl to Cardinal
Vitori and Queen Margherita and more subtle celebrities that one
must have had some culture even to have heard of. She learned in
England to prefer whiskey and soda to wine, and her small talk was
broadened in two senses during a winter in Vienna. All in all
Beatrice O’Hara absorbed the sort of education that will be quite
impossible ever again; a tutelage measured by the number of things
and people one could be contemptuous of and charming about; a
culture rich in all arts and traditions, barren of all ideas, in
the last of those days when the great gardener clipped the inferior
roses to produce one perfect bud.
In her less important moments she
returned to America, met Stephen Blaine and married him—this almost
entirely because she was a little bit weary, a little bit sad. Her
only child was carried through a tiresome season and brought into
the world on a spring day in ninety-six.
When Amory was five he was
already a delightful companion for her. He was an auburn-haired
boy, with great, handsome eyes which he would grow up to in time, a
facile imaginative mind and a taste for fancy dress. From his
fourth to his tenth year he did the country with his mother in her
father’s private car, from Coronado, where his mother became so
bored that she had a nervous breakdown in a fashionable hotel, down
to Mexico City, where she took a mild, almost epidemic consumption.
This trouble pleased her, and later she made use of it as an
intrinsic part of her atmosphere—especially after several
astounding bracers.
So, while more or less fortunate
little rich boys were defying governesses on the beach at Newport,
or being spanked or tutored or read to from “Do and Dare,” or
“Frank on the Mississippi,” Amory was biting acquiescent bell-boys
in the Waldorf, outgrowing a natural repugnance to chamber music
and symphonies, and deriving a highly specialized education from
his mother.
“Amory.”
“Yes, Beatrice.” (Such a quaint
name for his mother; she encouraged it.)
“Dear, don’t think of getting out
of bed yet. I’ve always suspected that early rising in early life
makes one nervous. Clothilde is having your breakfast brought
up.”
“All right.”
“I am feeling very old to-day,
Amory,” she would sigh, her face a rare cameo of pathos, her voice
exquisitely modulated, her hands as facile as Bernhardt’s. “My
nerves are on edge—on edge. We must leave this terrifying place
to-morrow and go searching for sunshine.”
Amory’s penetrating green eyes
would look out through tangled hair at his mother. Even at this age
he had no illusions about her.
“Amory.”
“Oh, yes.”
“I want you to take a red-hot
bath as hot as you can bear it, and just relax your nerves. You can
read in the tub if you wish.”
She fed him sections of the
“Fetes Galantes” before he was ten; at eleven he could talk glibly,
if rather reminiscently, of Brahms and Mozart and Beethoven. One
afternoon, when left alone in the hotel at Hot Springs, he sampled
his mother’s apricot cordial, and as the taste pleased him, he
became quite tipsy. This was fun for a while, but he essayed a
cigarette in his exaltation, and succumbed to a vulgar, plebeian
reaction. Though this incident horrified Beatrice, it also secretly
amused her and became part of what in a later generation would have
been termed her “line.”
“This son of mine,” he heard her
tell a room full of awestruck, admiring women one day, “is entirely
sophisticated and quite charming—but delicate—we’re all delicate;
here, you know.” Her hand was radiantly outlined against her
beautiful bosom; then sinking her voice to a whisper, she told them
of the apricot cordial. They rejoiced, for she was a brave
raconteuse, but many were the keys turned in sideboard locks that
night against the possible defection of little Bobby or
Barbara....
These domestic pilgrimages were
invariably in state; two maids, the private car, or Mr. Blaine when
available, and very often a physician. When Amory had the
whooping-cough four disgusted specialists glared at each other
hunched around his bed; when he took scarlet fever the number of
attendants, including physicians and nurses, totalled fourteen.
However, blood being thicker than broth, he was pulled
through.
The Blaines were attached to no
city. They were the Blaines of Lake Geneva; they had quite enough
relatives to serve in place of friends, and an enviable standing
from Pasadena to Cape Cod. But Beatrice grew more and more prone to
like only new acquaintances, as there were certain stories, such as
the history of her constitution and its many amendments, memories
of her years abroad, that it was necessary for her to repeat at
regular intervals. Like Freudian dreams, they must be thrown off,
else they would sweep in and lay siege to her nerves. But Beatrice
was critical about American women, especially the floating
population of ex-Westerners.
“They have accents, my dear,” she
told Amory, “not Southern accents or Boston accents, not an accent
attached to any locality, just an accent”—she became dreamy. “They
pick up old, moth-eaten London accents that are down on their luck
and have to be used by some one. They talk as an English butler
might after several years in a Chicago grand-opera company.” She
became almost incoherent—“Suppose—time in every Western woman’s
life—she feels her husband is prosperous enough for her to
have—accent—they try to impress me, my dear—”
Though she thought of her body as
a mass of frailties, she considered her soul quite as ill, and
therefore important in her life. She had once been a Catholic, but
discovering that priests were infinitely more attentive when she
was in process of losing or regaining faith in Mother Church, she
maintained an enchantingly wavering attitude. Often she deplored
the bourgeois quality of the American Catholic clergy, and was
quite sure that had she lived in the shadow of the great
Continental cathedrals her soul would still be a thin flame on the
mighty altar of Rome. Still, next to doctors, priests were her
favorite sport.
“Ah, Bishop Wiston,” she would
declare, “I do not want to talk of myself. I can imagine the stream
of hysterical women fluttering at your doors, beseeching you to be
simpatico”—then after an interlude filled by the clergyman—“but my
mood—is—oddly dissimilar.”
Only to bishops and above did she
divulge her clerical romance. When she had first returned to her
country there had been a pagan, Swinburnian young man in Asheville,
for whose passionate kisses and unsentimental conversations she had
taken a decided penchant—they had discussed the matter pro and con
with an intellectual romancing quite devoid of sappiness.
Eventually she had decided to marry for background, and the young
pagan from Asheville had gone through a spiritual crisis, joined
the Catholic Church, and was now—Monsignor Darcy.
“Indeed, Mrs. Blaine, he is still
delightful company—quite the cardinal’s right-hand man.”
“Amory will go to him one day, I
know,” breathed the beautiful lady, “and Monsignor Darcy will
understand him as he understood me.”
Amory became thirteen, rather
tall and slender, and more than ever on to his Celtic mother. He
had tutored occasionally—the idea being that he was to “keep up,”
at each place “taking up the work where he left off,” yet as no
tutor ever found the place he left off, his mind was still in very
good shape. What a few more years of this life would have made of
him is problematical. However, four hours out from land, Italy
bound, with Beatrice, his appendix burst, probably from too many
meals in bed, and after a series of frantic telegrams to Europe and
America, to the amazement of the passengers the great ship slowly
wheeled around and returned to New York to deposit Amory at the
pier. You will admit that if it was not life it was
magnificent.
After the operation Beatrice had
a nervous breakdown that bore a suspicious resemblance to delirium
tremens, and Amory was left in Minneapolis, destined to spend the
ensuing two years with his aunt and uncle. There the crude, vulgar
air of Western civilization first catches him—in his underwear, so
to speak.
A KISS FOR AMORY
His lip curled when he read
it.
“I am going to have a bobbing
party,” it said, “on Thursday,
December the seventeenth, at
five o’clock, and I would like it
very much if you could
come.
Yours
truly,
R.S.V.P.
Myra St. Claire.
He had been two months in
Minneapolis, and his chief struggle had been the concealing from
“the other guys at school” how particularly superior he felt
himself to be, yet this conviction was built upon shifting sands.
He had shown off one day in French class (he was in senior French
class) to the utter confusion of Mr. Reardon, whose accent Amory
damned contemptuously, and to the delight of the class. Mr.
Reardon, who had spent several weeks in Paris ten years before,
took his revenge on the verbs, whenever he had his book open. But
another time Amory showed off in history class, with quite
disastrous results, for the boys there were his own age, and they
shrilled innuendoes at each other all the following week:
“Aw—I b’lieve, doncherknow, the
Umuricun revolution was lawgely an affair of the middul clawses,”
or
“Washington came of very good
blood—aw, quite good—I b’lieve.”
Amory ingeniously tried to
retrieve himself by blundering on purpose. Two years before he had
commenced a history of the United States which, though it only got
as far as the Colonial Wars, had been pronounced by his mother
completely enchanting.
His chief disadvantage lay in
athletics, but as soon as he discovered that it was the touchstone
of power and popularity at school, he began to make furious,
persistent efforts to excel in the winter sports, and with his
ankles aching and bending in spite of his efforts, he skated
valiantly around the Lorelie rink every afternoon, wondering how
soon he would be able to carry a hockey-stick without getting it
inexplicably tangled in his skates.
The invitation to Miss Myra St.
Claire’s bobbing party spent the morning in his coat pocket, where
it had an intense physical affair with a dusty piece of peanut
brittle. During the afternoon he brought it to light with a sigh,
and after some consideration and a preliminary draft in the back of
Collar and Daniel’s “First-Year Latin,” composed an answer:
My dear Miss St. Claire:
Your truly charming envitation
for the evening of next Thursday
evening was truly delightful to
receive this morning. I will be
charm and inchanted indeed to
present my compliments on next
Thursday evening.
Faithfully,
Amory Blaine.
On Thursday, therefore, he walked
pensively along the slippery, shovel-scraped sidewalks, and came in
sight of Myra’s house, on the half-hour after five, a lateness
which he fancied his mother would have favored. He waited on the
door-step with his eyes nonchalantly half-closed, and planned his
entrance with precision. He would cross the floor, not too hastily,
to Mrs. St. Claire, and say with exactly the correct
modulation:
“My dear Mrs. St. Claire, I’m
frightfully sorry to be late, but my maid”—he paused there and
realized he would be quoting—“but my uncle and I had to see a
fella—Yes, I’ve met your enchanting daughter at
dancing-school.”
Then he would shake hands, using
that slight, half-foreign bow, with all the starchy little females,
and nod to the fellas who would be standing ’round, paralyzed into
rigid groups for mutual protection.
A butler (one of the three in
Minneapolis) swung open the door. Amory stepped inside and divested
himself of cap and coat. He was mildly surprised not to hear the
shrill squawk of conversation from the next room, and he decided it
must be quite formal. He approved of that—as he approved of the
butler.
“Miss Myra,” he said.
To his surprise the butler
grinned horribly.
“Oh, yeah,” he declared, “she’s
here.” He was unaware that his failure to be cockney was ruining
his standing. Amory considered him coldly.
“But,” continued the butler, his
voice rising unnecessarily, “she’s the only one what is here. The
party’s gone.”
Amory gasped in sudden
horror.
“What?”
“She’s been waitin’ for Amory
Blaine. That’s you, ain’t it? Her mother says that if you showed up
by five-thirty you two was to go after ’em in the Packard.”
Amory’s despair was crystallized
by the appearance of Myra herself, bundled to the ears in a polo
coat, her face plainly sulky, her voice pleasant only with
difficulty.
“’Lo, Amory.”
“’Lo, Myra.” He had described the
state of his vitality.
“Well—you got here,
anyways.”
“Well—I’ll tell you. I guess you
don’t know about the auto accident,” he romanced.
Myra’s eyes opened wide.
“Who was it to?”
“Well,” he continued desperately,
“uncle ’n aunt ’n I.”
“Was any one killed?”
Amory paused and then
nodded.
“Your uncle?”—alarm.
“Oh, no just a horse—a sorta gray
horse.”
At this point the Erse butler
snickered.
“Probably killed the engine,” he
suggested. Amory would have put him on the rack without a
scruple.
“We’ll go now,” said Myra coolly.
“You see, Amory, the bobs were ordered for five and everybody was
here, so we couldn’t wait—”
“Well, I couldn’t help it, could
I?”
“So mama said for me to wait till
ha’past five. We’ll catch the bobs before it gets to the Minnehaha
Club, Amory.”
Amory’s shredded poise dropped
from him. He pictured the happy party jingling along snowy streets,
the appearance of the limousine, the horrible public descent of him
and Myra before sixty reproachful eyes, his apology—a real one this
time. He sighed aloud.
“What?” inquired Myra.
“Nothing. I was just yawning. Are
we going to surely catch up with ’em before they get there?” He was
encouraging a faint hope that they might slip into the Minnehaha
Club and meet the others there, be found in blasé seclusion before
the fire and quite regain his lost attitude.
“Oh, sure Mike, we’ll catch ’em
all right—let’s hurry.”
He became conscious of his
stomach. As they stepped into the machine he hurriedly slapped the
paint of diplomacy over a rather box-like plan he had conceived. It
was based upon some “trade-lasts” gleaned at dancing-school, to the
effect that he was “awful good-looking and English, sort of.”
“Myra,” he said, lowering his
voice and choosing his words carefully, “I beg a thousand pardons.
Can you ever forgive me?” She regarded him gravely, his intent
green eyes, his mouth, that to her thirteen-year-old, arrow-collar
taste was the quintessence of romance. Yes, Myra could forgive him
very easily.
“Why—yes—sure.”
He looked at her again, and then
dropped his eyes. He had lashes.
“I’m awful,” he said sadly. “I’m
diff’runt. I don’t know why I make faux pas. ’Cause I don’t care, I
s’pose.” Then, recklessly: “I been smoking too much. I’ve got
t’bacca heart.”
Myra pictured an all-night
tobacco debauch, with Amory pale and reeling from the effect of
nicotined lungs. She gave a little gasp.
“Oh, Amory, don’t smoke. You’ll
stunt your growth!”
“I don’t care,” he persisted
gloomily. “I gotta. I got the habit. I’ve done a lot of things that
if my fambly knew”—he hesitated, giving her imagination time to
picture dark horrors—“I went to the burlesque show last
week.”
Myra was quite overcome. He
turned the green eyes on her again. “You’re the only girl in town I
like much,” he exclaimed in a rush of sentiment. “You’re
simpatico.”
Myra was not sure that she was,
but it sounded stylish though vaguely improper.
Thick dusk had descended outside,
and as the limousine made a sudden turn she was jolted against him;
their hands touched.
“You shouldn’t smoke, Amory,” she
whispered. “Don’t you know that?”
He shook his head.
“Nobody cares.”
Myra hesitated.
“I care.”
Something stirred within
Amory.
“Oh, yes, you do! You got a crush
on Froggy Parker. I guess everybody knows that.”
“No, I haven’t,” very
slowly.
A silence, while Amory thrilled.
There was something fascinating about Myra, shut away here cosily
from the dim, chill air. Myra, a little bundle of clothes, with
strands of yellow hair curling out from under her skating
cap.
“Because I’ve got a crush, too—”
He paused, for he heard in the distance the sound of young
laughter, and, peering through the frosted glass along the lamp-lit
street, he made out the dark outline of the bobbing party. He must
act quickly. He reached over with a violent, jerky effort, and
clutched Myra’s hand—her thumb, to be exact.
“Tell him to go to the Minnehaha
straight,” he whispered. “I wanta talk to you—I got to talk to
you.”
Myra made out the party ahead,
had an instant vision of her mother, and then—alas for
convention—glanced into the eyes beside. “Turn down this side
street, Richard, and drive straight to the Minnehaha Club!” she
cried through the speaking tube. Amory sank back against the
cushions with a sigh of relief.
“I can kiss her,” he thought.
“I’ll bet I can. I’ll bet I can!”
Overhead the sky was half
crystalline, half misty, and the night around was chill and vibrant
with rich tension. From the Country Club steps the roads stretched
away, dark creases on the white blanket; huge heaps of snow lining
the sides like the tracks of giant moles. They lingered for a
moment on the steps, and watched the white holiday moon.
“Pale moons like that one”—Amory
made a vague gesture—“make people mysterieuse. You look like a
young witch with her cap off and her hair sorta mussed”—her hands
clutched at her hair—“Oh, leave it, it looks good.”
They drifted up the stairs and
Myra led the way into the little den of his dreams, where a cosy
fire was burning before a big sink-down couch. A few years later
this was to be a great stage for Amory, a cradle for many an
emotional crisis. Now they talked for a moment about bobbing
parties.
“There’s always a bunch of shy
fellas,” he commented, “sitting at the tail of the bob, sorta
lurkin’ an’ whisperin’ an’ pushin’ each other off. Then there’s
always some crazy cross-eyed girl”—he gave a terrifying
imitation—“she’s always talkin’ hard, sorta, to the
chaperon.”
“You’re such a funny boy,”
puzzled Myra.
“How d’y’ mean?” Amory gave
immediate attention, on his own ground at last.
“Oh—always talking about crazy
things. Why don’t you come ski-ing with Marylyn and I
to-morrow?”
“I don’t like girls in the
daytime,” he said shortly, and then, thinking this a bit abrupt, he
added: “But I like you.” He cleared his throat. “I like you first
and second and third.”
Myra’s eyes became dreamy. What a
story this would make to tell Marylyn! Here on the couch with this
wonderful-looking boy—the little fire—the sense that they were
alone in the great building—
Myra capitulated. The atmosphere
was too appropriate.
“I like you the first
twenty-five,” she confessed, her voice trembling, “and Froggy
Parker twenty-sixth.”
Froggy had fallen twenty-five
places in one hour. As yet he had not even noticed it.
But Amory, being on the spot,
leaned over quickly and kissed Myra’s cheek. He had never kissed a
girl before, and he tasted his lips curiously, as if he had munched
some new fruit. Then their lips brushed like young wild flowers in
the wind.
“We’re awful,” rejoiced Myra
gently. She slipped her hand into his, her head drooped against his
shoulder. Sudden revulsion seized Amory, disgust, loathing for the
whole incident. He desired frantically to be away, never to see
Myra again, never to kiss any one; he became conscious of his face
and hers, of their clinging hands, and he wanted to creep out of
his body and hide somewhere safe out of sight, up in the corner of
his mind.
“Kiss me again.” Her voice came
out of a great void.
“I don’t want to,” he heard
himself saying. There was another pause.
“I don’t want to!” he repeated
passionately.
Myra sprang up, her cheeks pink
with bruised vanity, the great bow on the back of her head
trembling sympathetically.
“I hate you!” she cried. “Don’t
you ever dare to speak to me again!”
“What?” stammered Amory.
“I’ll tell mama you kissed me! I
will too! I will too! I’ll tell mama, and she won’t let me play
with you!”
Amory rose and stared at her
helplessly, as though she were a new animal of whose presence on
the earth he had not heretofore been aware.
The door opened suddenly, and
Myra’s mother appeared on the threshold, fumbling with her
lorgnette.
“Well,” she began, adjusting it
benignantly, “the man at the desk told me you two children were up
here—How do you do, Amory.”
Amory watched Myra and waited for
the crash—but none came. The pout faded, the high pink subsided,
and Myra’s voice was placid as a summer lake when she answered her
mother.
“Oh, we started so late, mama,
that I thought we might as well—”
He heard from below the shrieks
of laughter, and smelled the vapid odor of hot chocolate and
tea-cakes as he silently followed mother and daughter down-stairs.
The sound of the graphophone mingled with the voices of many girls
humming the air, and a faint glow was born and spread over
him:
“Casey-Jones—mounted to the
cab-un
Casey-Jones—’th his orders in
his hand.
Casey-Jones—mounted to the
cab-un
Took his farewell journey to
the prom-ised land.”
SNAPSHOTS OF THE YOUNG
EGOTIST
Amory spent nearly two years in
Minneapolis. The first winter he wore moccasins that were born
yellow, but after many applications of oil and dirt assumed their
mature color, a dirty, greenish brown; he wore a gray plaid
mackinaw coat, and a red toboggan cap. His dog, Count Del Monte,
ate the red cap, so his uncle gave him a gray one that pulled down
over his face. The trouble with this one was that you breathed into
it and your breath froze; one day the darn thing froze his cheek.
He rubbed snow on his cheek, but it turned bluish-black just the
same.
The Count Del Monte ate a box of
bluing once, but it didn’t hurt him. Later, however, he lost his
mind and ran madly up the street, bumping into fences, rolling in
gutters, and pursuing his eccentric course out of Amory’s life.
Amory cried on his bed.
“Poor little Count,” he cried.
“Oh, poor little Count!”
After several months he suspected
Count of a fine piece of emotional acting.
Amory and Frog Parker considered
that the greatest line in literature occurred in Act III of “Arsene
Lupin.”
They sat in the first row at the
Wednesday and Saturday matinees. The line was:
“If one can’t be a great artist
or a great soldier, the next best thing is to be a great
criminal.”
Amory fell in love again, and
wrote a poem. This was it:
“Marylyn and Sallee,
Those are the girls for
me.
Marylyn stands above
Sallee in that sweet, deep
love.”
He was interested in whether
McGovern of Minnesota would make the first or second All-American,
how to do the card-pass, how to do the coin-pass, chameleon ties,
how babies were born, and whether Three-fingered Brown was really a
better pitcher than Christie Mathewson.
Among other things he read: “For
the Honor of the School,” “Little Women” (twice), “The Common Law,”
“Sapho,” “Dangerous Dan McGrew,” “The Broad Highway” (three times),
“The Fall of the House of Usher,” “Three Weeks,” “Mary Ware, the
Little Colonel’s Chum,” “Gunga Din,” The Police Gazette, and
Jim-Jam Jems.
He had all the Henty biasses in
history, and was particularly fond of the cheerful murder stories
of Mary Roberts Rinehart.
School ruined his French and gave
him a distaste for standard authors. His masters considered him
idle, unreliable and superficially clever.
He collected locks of hair from
many girls. He wore the rings of several. Finally he could borrow
no more rings, owing to his nervous habit of chewing them out of
shape. This, it seemed, usually aroused the jealous suspicions of
the next borrower.
All through the summer months
Amory and Frog Parker went each week to the Stock Company.
Afterward they would stroll home in the balmy air of August night,
dreaming along Hennepin and Nicollet Avenues, through the gay
crowd. Amory wondered how people could fail to notice that he was a
boy marked for glory, and when faces of the throng turned toward
him and ambiguous eyes stared into his, he assumed the most
romantic of expressions and walked on the air cushions that lie on
the asphalts of fourteen.
Always, after he was in bed,
there were voices—indefinite, fading, enchanting—just outside his
window, and before he fell asleep he would dream one of his
favorite waking dreams, the one about becoming a great half-back,
or the one about the Japanese invasion, when he was rewarded by
being made the youngest general in the world. It was always the
becoming he dreamed of, never the being. This, too, was quite
characteristic of Amory.
CODE OF THE YOUNG EGOTIST
Before he was summoned back to
Lake Geneva, he had appeared, shy but inwardly glowing, in his
first long trousers, set off by a purple accordion tie and a
“Belmont” collar with the edges unassailably meeting, purple socks,
and handkerchief with a purple border peeping from his breast
pocket. But more than that, he had formulated his first philosophy,
a code to live by, which, as near as it can be named, was a sort of
aristocratic egotism.
He had realized that his best
interests were bound up with those of a certain variant, changing
person, whose label, in order that his past might always be
identified with him, was Amory Blaine. Amory marked himself a
fortunate youth, capable of infinite expansion for good or evil. He
did not consider himself a “strong char’c’ter,” but relied on his
facility (learn things sorta quick) and his superior mentality
(read a lotta deep books). He was proud of the fact that he could
never become a mechanical or scientific genius. From no other
heights was he debarred.
Physically.—Amory thought that he
was exceedingly handsome. He was. He fancied himself an athlete of
possibilities and a supple dancer.
Socially.—Here his condition was,
perhaps, most dangerous. He granted himself personality, charm,
magnetism, poise, the power of dominating all contemporary males,
the gift of fascinating all women.
Mentally.—Complete, unquestioned
superiority.
Now a confession will have to be
made. Amory had rather a Puritan conscience. Not that he yielded to
it—later in life he almost completely slew it—but at fifteen it
made him consider himself a great deal worse than other boys...
unscrupulousness... the desire to influence people in almost every
way, even for evil... a certain coldness and lack of affection,
amounting sometimes to cruelty... a shifting sense of honor... an
unholy selfishness... a puzzled, furtive interest in everything
concerning sex.
There was, also, a curious strain
of weakness running crosswise through his make-up... a harsh phrase
from the lips of an older boy (older boys usually detested him) was
liable to sweep him off his poise into surly sensitiveness, or
timid stupidity... he was a slave to his own moods and he felt that
though he was capable of recklessness and audacity, he possessed
neither courage, perseverance, nor self-respect.
Vanity, tempered with
self-suspicion if not self-knowledge, a sense of people as
automatons to his will, a desire to “pass” as many boys as possible
and get to a vague top of the world... with this background did
Amory drift into adolescence.
PREPARATORY TO THE GREAT
ADVENTURE
The train slowed up with
midsummer languor at Lake Geneva, and Amory caught sight of his
mother waiting in her electric on the gravelled station drive. It
was an ancient electric, one of the early types, and painted gray.
The sight of her sitting there, slenderly erect, and of her face,
where beauty and dignity combined, melting to a dreamy recollected
smile, filled him with a sudden great pride of her. As they kissed
coolly and he stepped into the electric, he felt a quick fear lest
he had lost the requisite charm to measure up to her.
“Dear boy—you’re so tall... look
behind and see if there’s anything coming...”
She looked left and right, she
slipped cautiously into a speed of two miles an hour, beseeching
Amory to act as sentinel; and at one busy crossing she made him get
out and run ahead to signal her forward like a traffic policeman.
Beatrice was what might be termed a careful driver.
“You are tall—but you’re still
very handsome—you’ve skipped the awkward age, or is that sixteen;
perhaps it’s fourteen or fifteen; I can never remember; but you’ve
skipped it.”
“Don’t embarrass me,” murmured
Amory.
“But, my dear boy, what odd
clothes! They look as if they were a set—don’t they? Is your
underwear purple, too?”
Amory grunted impolitely.
“You must go to Brooks’ and get
some really nice suits. Oh, we’ll have a talk to-night or perhaps
to-morrow night. I want to tell you about your heart—you’ve
probably been neglecting your heart—and you don’t know.”
Amory thought how superficial was
the recent overlay of his own generation. Aside from a minute
shyness, he felt that the old cynical kinship with his mother had
not been one bit broken. Yet for the first few days he wandered
about the gardens and along the shore in a state of
superloneliness, finding a lethargic content in smoking “Bull” at
the garage with one of the chauffeurs.
The sixty acres of the estate
were dotted with old and new summer houses and many fountains and
white benches that came suddenly into sight from foliage-hung
hiding-places; there was a great and constantly increasing family
of white cats that prowled the many flower-beds and were
silhouetted suddenly at night against the darkening trees. It was
on one of the shadowy paths that Beatrice at last captured Amory,
after Mr. Blaine had, as usual, retired for the evening to his
private library. After reproving him for avoiding her, she took him
for a long tete-a-tete in the moonlight. He could not reconcile
himself to her beauty, that was mother to his own, the exquisite
neck and shoulders, the grace of a fortunate woman of thirty.
“Amory, dear,” she crooned
softly, “I had such a strange, weird time after I left you.”
“Did you, Beatrice?”
“When I had my last
breakdown”—she spoke of it as a sturdy, gallant feat.
“The doctors told me”—her voice
sang on a confidential note—“that if any man alive had done the
consistent drinking that I have, he would have been physically
shattered, my dear, and in his grave—long in his grave.”
Amory winced, and wondered how
this would have sounded to Froggy Parker.
“Yes,” continued Beatrice
tragically, “I had dreams—wonderful visions.” She pressed the palms
of her hands into her eyes. “I saw bronze rivers lapping marble
shores, and great birds that soared through the air, parti-colored
birds with iridescent plumage. I heard strange music and the flare
of barbaric trumpets—what?”
Amory had snickered.
“What, Amory?”
“I said go on, Beatrice.”
“That was all—it merely recurred
and recurred—gardens that flaunted coloring against which this
would be quite dull, moons that whirled and swayed, paler than
winter moons, more golden than harvest moons—”
“Are you quite well now,
Beatrice?”
“Quite well—as well as I will
ever be. I am not understood, Amory. I know that can’t express it
to you, Amory, but—I am not understood.”
Amory was quite moved. He put his
arm around his mother, rubbing his head gently against her
shoulder.
“Poor Beatrice—poor
Beatrice.”
“Tell me about you, Amory. Did
you have two horrible years?”
Amory considered lying, and then
decided against it.
“No, Beatrice. I enjoyed them. I
adapted myself to the bourgeoisie. I became conventional.” He
surprised himself by saying that, and he pictured how Froggy would
have gaped.
“Beatrice,” he said suddenly, “I
want to go away to school. Everybody in Minneapolis is going to go
away to school.”
Beatrice showed some alarm.
“But you’re only fifteen.”
“Yes, but everybody goes away to
school at fifteen, and I want to, Beatrice.”
On Beatrice’s suggestion the
subject was dropped for the rest of the walk, but a week later she
delighted him by saying:
“Amory, I have decided to let you
have your way. If you still want to, you can go to school.”
“Yes?”
“To St. Regis’s in
Connecticut.”
Amory felt a quick
excitement.
“It’s being arranged,” continued
Beatrice. “It’s better that you should go away. I’d have preferred
you to have gone to Eton, and then to Christ Church, Oxford, but it
seems impracticable now—and for the present we’ll let the
university question take care of itself.”
“What are you going to do,
Beatrice?”
“Heaven knows. It seems my fate
to fret away my years in this country. Not for a second do I regret
being American—indeed, I think that a regret typical of very vulgar
people, and I feel sure we are the great coming nation—yet”—and she
sighed—“I feel my life should have drowsed away close to an older,
mellower civilization, a land of greens and autumnal browns—”
Amory did not answer, so his
mother continued:
“My regret is that you haven’t
been abroad, but still, as you are a man, it’s better that you
should grow up here under the snarling eagle—is that the right
term?”
Amory agreed that it was. She
would not have appreciated the Japanese invasion.
“When do I go to school?”
“Next month. You’ll have to start
East a little early to take your examinations. After that you’ll
have a free week, so I want you to go up the Hudson and pay a
visit.”
“To who?”
“To Monsignor Darcy, Amory. He
wants to see you. He went to Harrow and then to Yale—became a
Catholic. I want him to talk to you—I feel he can be such a help—”
She stroked his auburn hair gently. “Dear Amory, dear Amory—”
“Dear Beatrice—”
So early in September Amory,
provided with “six suits summer underwear, six suits winter
underwear, one sweater or T shirt, one jersey, one overcoat,
winter, etc.,” set out for New England, the land of schools.
There were Andover and Exeter
with their memories of New England dead—large, college-like
democracies; St. Mark’s, Groton, St. Regis’—recruited from Boston
and the Knickerbocker families of New York; St. Paul’s, with its
great rinks; Pomfret and St. George’s, prosperous and well-dressed;
Taft and Hotchkiss, which prepared the wealth of the Middle West
for social success at Yale; Pawling, Westminster, Choate, Kent, and
a hundred others; all milling out their well-set-up, conventional,
impressive type, year after year; their mental stimulus the college
entrance exams; their vague purpose set forth in a hundred
circulars as “To impart a Thorough Mental, Moral, and Physical
Training as a Christian Gentleman, to fit the boy for meeting the
problems of his day and generation, and to give a solid foundation
in the Arts and Sciences.”
At St. Regis’ Amory stayed three
days and took his exams with a scoffing confidence, then doubling
back to New York to pay his tutelary visit. The metropolis, barely
glimpsed, made little impression on him, except for the sense of
cleanliness he drew from the tall white buildings seen from a
Hudson River steamboat in the early morning. Indeed, his mind was
so crowded with dreams of athletic prowess at school that he
considered this visit only as a rather tiresome prelude to the
great adventure. This, however, it did not prove to be.
Monsignor Darcy’s house was an
ancient, rambling structure set on a hill overlooking the river,
and there lived its owner, between his trips to all parts of the
Roman-Catholic world, rather like an exiled Stuart king waiting to
be called to the rule of his land. Monsignor was forty-four then,
and bustling—a trifle too stout for symmetry, with hair the color
of spun gold, and a brilliant, enveloping personality. When he came
into a room clad in his full purple regalia from thatch to toe, he
resembled a Turner sunset, and attracted both admiration and
attention. He had written two novels: one of them violently
anti-Catholic, just before his conversion, and five years later
another, in which he had attempted to turn all his clever jibes
against Catholics into even cleverer innuendoes against
Episcopalians. He was intensely ritualistic, startlingly dramatic,
loved the idea of God enough to be a celibate, and rather liked his
neighbor.
Children adored him because he
was like a child; youth revelled in his company because he was
still a youth, and couldn’t be shocked. In the proper land and
century he might have been a Richelieu—at present he was a very
moral, very religious (if not particularly pious) clergyman, making
a great mystery about pulling rusty wires, and appreciating life to
the fullest, if not entirely enjoying it.
He and Amory took to each other
at first sight—the jovial, impressive prelate who could dazzle an
embassy ball, and the green-eyed, intent youth, in his first long
trousers, accepted in their own minds a relation of father and son
within a half-hour’s conversation.
“My dear boy, I’ve been waiting
to see you for years. Take a big chair and we’ll have a
chat.”
“I’ve just come from school—St.
Regis’s, you know.”
“So your mother says—a remarkable
woman; have a cigarette—I’m sure you smoke. Well, if you’re like
me, you loathe all science and mathematics—”
Amory nodded vehemently.
“Hate ’em all. Like English and
history.”
“Of course. You’ll hate school
for a while, too, but I’m glad you’re going to St. Regis’s.”
“Why?”
“Because it’s a gentleman’s
school, and democracy won’t hit you so early. You’ll find plenty of
that in college.”
“I want to go to Princeton,” said
Amory. “I don’t know why, but I think of all Harvard men as
sissies, like I used to be, and all Yale men as wearing big blue
sweaters and smoking pipes.”
Monsignor chuckled.
“I’m one, you know.”
“Oh, you’re different—I think of
Princeton as being lazy and good-looking and aristocratic—you know,
like a spring day. Harvard seems sort of indoors—”
“And Yale is November, crisp and
energetic,” finished Monsignor.
“That’s it.”
They slipped briskly into an
intimacy from which they never recovered.
“I was for Bonnie Prince
Charlie,” announced Amory.
“Of course you were—and for
Hannibal—”
“Yes, and for the Southern
Confederacy.” He was rather sceptical about being an Irish
patriot—he suspected that being Irish was being somewhat common—but
Monsignor assured him that Ireland was a romantic lost cause and
Irish people quite charming, and that it should, by all means, be
one of his principal biasses.
After a crowded hour which
included several more cigarettes, and during which Monsignor
learned, to his surprise but not to his horror, that Amory had not
been brought up a Catholic, he announced that he had another guest.
This turned out to be the Honorable Thornton Hancock, of Boston,
ex-minister to The Hague, author of an erudite history of the
Middle Ages and the last of a distinguished, patriotic, and
brilliant family.
“He comes here for a rest,” said
Monsignor confidentially, treating Amory as a contemporary. “I act
as an escape from the weariness of agnosticism, and I think I’m the
only man who knows how his staid old mind is really at sea and
longs for a sturdy spar like the Church to cling to.”
Their first luncheon was one of
the memorable events of Amory’s early life. He was quite radiant
and gave off a peculiar brightness and charm. Monsignor called out
the best that he had thought by question and suggestion, and Amory
talked with an ingenious brilliance of a thousand impulses and
desires and repulsions and faiths and fears. He and Monsignor held
the floor, and the older man, with his less receptive, less
accepting, yet certainly not colder mentality, seemed content to
listen and bask in the mellow sunshine that played between these
two. Monsignor gave the effect of sunlight to many people; Amory
gave it in his youth and, to some extent, when he was very much
older, but never again was it quite so mutually spontaneous.
“He’s a radiant boy,” thought
Thornton Hancock, who had seen the splendor of two continents and
talked with Parnell and Gladstone and Bismarck—and afterward he
added to Monsignor: “But his education ought not to be intrusted to
a school or college.”
But for the next four years the
best of Amory’s intellect was concentrated on matters of
popularity, the intricacies of a university social system and
American Society as represented by Biltmore Teas and Hot Springs
golf-links.
... In all, a wonderful week,
that saw Amory’s mind turned inside out, a hundred of his theories
confirmed, and his joy of life crystallized to a thousand
ambitions. Not that the conversation was scholastic—heaven forbid!
Amory had only the vaguest idea as to what Bernard Shaw was—but
Monsignor made quite as much out of “The Beloved Vagabond” and “Sir
Nigel,” taking good care that Amory never once felt out of his
depth.
But the trumpets were sounding
for Amory’s preliminary skirmish with his own generation.
“You’re not sorry to go, of
course. With people like us our home is where we are not,” said
Monsignor.
“I am sorry—”
“No, you’re not. No one person in
the world is necessary to you or to me.”
“Well—”
“Good-by.”
THE EGOTIST DOWN
Amory’s two years at St. Regis’,
though in turn painful and triumphant, had as little real
significance in his own life as the American “prep” school, crushed
as it is under the heel of the universities, has to American life
in general. We have no Eton to create the self-consciousness of a
governing class; we have, instead, clean, flaccid and innocuous
preparatory schools.
He went all wrong at the start,
was generally considered both conceited and arrogant, and
universally detested. He played football intensely, alternating a
reckless brilliancy with a tendency to keep himself as safe from
hazard as decency would permit. In a wild panic he backed out of a
fight with a boy his own size, to a chorus of scorn, and a week
later, in desperation, picked a battle with another boy very much
bigger, from which he emerged badly beaten, but rather proud of
himself.
He was resentful against all
those in authority over him, and this, combined with a lazy
indifference toward his work, exasperated every master in school.
He grew discouraged and imagined himself a pariah; took to sulking
in corners and reading after lights. With a dread of being alone he
attached a few friends, but since they were not among the elite of
the school, he used them simply as mirrors of himself, audiences
before which he might do that posing absolutely essential to him.
He was unbearably lonely, desperately unhappy.
There were some few grains of
comfort. Whenever Amory was submerged, his vanity was the last part
to go below the surface, so he could still enjoy a comfortable glow
when “Wookey-wookey,” the deaf old housekeeper, told him that he
was the best-looking boy she had ever seen. It had pleased him to
be the lightest and youngest man on the first football squad; it
pleased him when Doctor Dougall told him at the end of a heated
conference that he could, if he wished, get the best marks in
school. But Doctor Dougall was wrong. It was temperamentally
impossible for Amory to get the best marks in school.
Miserable, confined to bounds,
unpopular with both faculty and students—that was Amory’s first
term. But at Christmas he had returned to Minneapolis, tight-lipped
and strangely jubilant.
“Oh, I was sort of fresh at
first,” he told Frog Parker patronizingly, “but I got along
fine—lightest man on the squad. You ought to go away to school,
Froggy. It’s great stuff.”
INCIDENT OF THE WELL-MEANING
PROFESSOR
On the last night of his first
term, Mr. Margotson, the senior master, sent word to study hall
that Amory was to come to his room at nine. Amory suspected that
advice was forthcoming, but he determined to be courteous, because
this Mr. Margotson had been kindly disposed toward him.