Englishwoman's Love Letters - Page 11/59

My Friend: Do you think this a cold way of beginning? I do not: is it not

the true send-off of love? I do not know how men fall in love: but I could

not have had that come-down in your direction without being your friend

first. Oh, my dear, and after, after; it is but a limitless friendship I

have grown into!

I have heard men run down the friendships of women as having little true

substance. Those who speak so, I think, have never come across a real

case of woman's friendship. I praise my own sex, dearest, for I know

some of their loneliness, which you do not: and until a certain date

their friendship was the deepest thing in life I had met with.

For must it not be true that a woman becomes more absorbed in friendship

than a man, since friendship may have to mean so much more to her, and

cover so far more of her life, than it does to the average man? However

big a man's capacity for friendship, the beauty of it does not fill his

whole horizon for the future: he still looks ahead of it for the mate

who will complete his life, giving his body and soul the complement

they require. Friendship alone does not satisfy him: he makes a bigger

claim on life, regarding certain possessions as his right.

But a woman:--oh, it is a fashion to say the best women are sure to find

husbands, and have, if they care for it, the certainty before them of a

full life. I know it is not so. There are women, wonderful ones, who

come to know quite early in life that no men will ever wish to make

wives of them: for them, then, love in friendship is all that remains,

and the strongest wish of all that can pass through their souls with

hope for its fulfillment is to be a friend to somebody.

It is man's arrogant certainty of his future which makes him impatient

of the word "friendship": it cools life to his lips, he so confident

that the headier nectar is his due!

I came upon a little phrase the other day that touched me so deeply: it

said so well what I have wanted to say since we have known each other.

Some peasant rhymer, an Irishman, is singing his love's praises, and

sinks his voice from the height of his passionate superlatives to call

her his "share of the world." Peasant and Irishman, he knew that his

fortune did not embrace the universe: but for him his love was just

that--his share of the world.

Surely when in anyone's friendship we seem to have gained our share of

the world, that is all that can be said. It means all that we can take

in, the whole armful the heart and senses are capable of, or that fate

can bestow. And for how many that must be friendship--especially for how

many women!