The Forsyte Saga - Volume 1 - Page 170/251

But it was many years since he had been to the mountains. He had taken

June there two seasons running, after his wife died, and had realized

bitterly that his walking days were over.

To that old mountain--given confidence in a supreme order of things he

had long been a stranger.

He knew himself to be old, yet he felt young; and this troubled him. It

troubled and puzzled him, too, to think that he, who had always been

so careful, should be father and grandfather to such as seemed born

to disaster. He had nothing to say against Jo--who could say anything

against the boy, an amiable chap?--but his position was deplorable, and

this business of June's nearly as bad. It seemed like a fatality, and

a fatality was one of those things no man of his character could either

understand or put up with.

In writing to his son he did not really hope that anything would come

of it. Since the ball at Roger's he had seen too clearly how the land

lay--he could put two and two together quicker than most men--and, with

the example of his own son before his eyes, knew better than any Forsyte

of them all that the pale flame singes men's wings whether they will or

no.

In the days before June's engagement, when she and Mrs. Soames were

always together, he had seen enough of Irene to feel the spell she cast

over men. She was not a flirt, not even a coquette--words dear to the

heart of his generation, which loved to define things by a good, broad,

inadequate word--but she was dangerous. He could not say why. Tell him

of a quality innate in some women--a seductive power beyond their own

control! He would but answer: 'Humbug!' She was dangerous, and there was

an end of it. He wanted to close his eyes to that affair. If it was, it

was; he did not want to hear any more about it--he only wanted to save

June's position and her peace of mind. He still hoped she might once

more become a comfort to himself.

And so he had written. He got little enough out of the answer. As to

what young Jolyon had made of the interview, there was practically only

the queer sentence: 'I gather that he's in the stream.' The stream! What

stream? What was this new-fangled way of talking?

He sighed, and folded the last of the papers under the flap of the bag;

he knew well enough what was meant.

June came out of the dining-room, and helped him on with his summer

coat. From her costume, and the expression of her little resolute face,

he saw at once what was coming.