Man and Maid - Page 79/185

I laughed--he puffed one of my pre-war cigars--.

"Women have no natural sense of truth--they only rise to it through

sublime effort,"-"And men?"

"It is ingrained in them, they only sink from it to cover their natural

instincts of infidelity."

His voice was contemplative now--.

"How we lie to the little darlings, Nicholas! How we tell them we have

no time to write--when of course we have always time if we really want

to--we never are at a loss for the moments before the creatures are a

secure possession!"

"The whole thing gets back to the hunting instinct, my dear George--I

can't see that one can be blamed for it--."

"I am not blaming, I am merely analysing. Have you remarked that when a

man feels perfectly secure about the woman he will give his hours of

duty to his country, his hours of leisure to his friends who flatter

him, and the crumbs snatched from either to the poor lady of his heart!

But if she excites his senses, and remains problematic, he will skimp

his duty, neglect his friends, and snatch even hours from sleep to spend

them in her company!"

"You don't think then that there is something higher and beyond all this

in love, George?--something which you and I have never come across

perhaps?"

"If one met a woman who was all man in mind, all woman in body, and all

child in soul--it is possible--but where are these phoenixes to be

discovered, my son?--It is wiser not to dissatisfy oneself by thinking

of them--but just go on accepting that which is always accorded to the

very rich!--By the way, I saw Suzette la Blonde dining last night with

old Solly Jesse--Monsieur le Comte Jessé!--She had a new string of

pearls on and was stroking his fat hand, while her lips curled with

love--I thought--??"

I lay back in my chair and laughed and laughed--And I had imagined that

Suzette really felt for me, and would grieve for at least a week or

two--but I am replaced in four days--!

I do not think I even felt bitter--all those things seem so far away

now.

When George had gone, I said to myself--"All man in mind"--yes I am sure

she is--"All woman in body"--Certainly that--"All child in soul"--I want

to know about her soul--if we have souls, as Nina says--by the way, I

will send a messenger into the Ritz with a note to ask Nina to spend the

day with me to-morrow. We have got accustomed to the impossible

difficulty of telephoning to Paris, and waiting hours for telegrams--a

messenger is the quickest in the end.