Chance - Page 130/275

Looking back at the occasion when we first got on speaking terms on the

road by the quarry, I had to admit that she presented some points of a

problematic appearance. I don't know why I imagined Captain Anthony as

the sort of man who would not be likely to take the initiative; not

perhaps from indifference but from that peculiar timidity before women

which often enough is found in conjunction with chivalrous instincts,

with a great need for affection and great stability of feelings. Such

men are easily moved. At the least encouragement they go forward with

the eagerness, with the recklessness of starvation. This accounted for

the suddenness of the affair. No! With all her inexperience this girl

could not have found any great difficulty in her conquering enterprise.

She must have begun it. And yet there she was, patient, almost unmoved,

almost pitiful, waiting outside like a beggar, without a right to

anything but compassion, for a promised dole.

Every moment people were passing close by us, singly, in two and threes;

the inhabitants of that end of the town where life goes on unadorned by

grace or splendour; they passed us in their shabby garments, with sallow

faces, haggard, anxious or weary, or simply without expression, in an

unsmiling sombre stream not made up of lives but of mere unconsidered

existences whose joys, struggles, thoughts, sorrows and their very hopes

were miserable, glamourless, and of no account in the world. And when

one thought of their reality to themselves one's heart became oppressed.

But of all the individuals who passed by none appeared to me for the

moment so pathetic in unconscious patience as the girl standing before

me; none more difficult to understand. It is perhaps because I was

thinking of things which I could not ask her about.

In fact we had nothing to say to each other; but we two, strangers as we

really were to each other, had dealt with the most intimate and final of

subjects, the subject of death. It had created a sort of bond between

us. It made our silence weighty and uneasy. I ought to have left her

there and then; but, as I think I've told you before, the fact of having

shouted her away from the edge of a precipice seemed somehow to have

engaged my responsibility as to this other leap. And so we had still an

intimate subject between us to lend more weight and more uneasiness to

our silence. The subject of marriage. I use the word not so much in

reference to the ceremony itself (I had no doubt of this, Captain Anthony

being a decent fellow) or in view of the social institution in general,

as to which I have no opinion, but in regard to the human relation. The

first two views are not particularly interesting. The ceremony, I

suppose, is adequate; the institution, I dare say, is useful or it would

not have endured. But the human relation thus recognized is a mysterious

thing in its origins, character and consequences. Unfortunately you

can't buttonhole familiarly a young girl as you would a young fellow. I

don't think that even another woman could really do it. She would not be

trusted. There is not between women that fund of at least conditional

loyalty which men may depend on in their dealings with each other. I

believe that any woman would rather trust a man. The difficulty in such

a delicate case was how to get on terms.