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Awkward Age, The
BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK   BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK - CHAPTER II
Henry James
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       BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK#CHAPTER II
       The subject of this eulogy had meanwhile returned to her sofa, where she
       received the homage of her new visitor. "It's not I who am magnificent a
       bit--it's dear Mr. Longdon. I've just had from Van the most wonderful
       piece of news about him--his announcement of his wish to make it worth
       somebody's while to marry my child."
       "'Make it'?"--Mitchy stared. "But ISN'T it?"
       "My dear friend, you must ask Van. Of course you've always thought so.
       But I must tell you all the same," Mrs. Brook went on, "that I'm
       delighted."
       Mitchy had seated himself, but Vanderbank remained erect and became
       perhaps even slightly stiff. He was not angry--no member of the inner
       circle at Buckingham Crescent was ever angry--but he looked grave and
       rather troubled. "Even if it IS decidedly fine"--he addressed his
       hostess straight--"I can't make out quite why you're doing THIS--I mean
       immediately making it known."
       "Ah but what do we keep from Mitchy?" Mrs. Brook asked.
       "What CAN you keep? It comes to the same thing," Mitchy said. "Besides,
       here we are together, share and share alike--one beautiful intelligence.
       Mr. Longdon's 'somebody' is of course Van. Don't try to treat me as an
       outsider."
       Vanderbank looked a little foolishly, though it was but the shade of a
       shade, from one of them to the other. "I think I've been rather an ass!"
       "What then by the terms of our friendship--just as Mitchy says--can he
       and I have a better right to know and to feel with you about? You'll
       want, Mitchy, won't you?" Mrs. Brook went on, "to hear all about THAT?"
       "Oh I only mean," Vanderbank explained, "in having just now blurted my
       tale out to you. However, I of course do know," he pursued to Mitchy,
       "that whatever's really between us will remain between us. Let me then
       tell you myself exactly what's the matter." The length of his pause
       after these words showed at last that he had stopped short; on which his
       companions, as they waited, exchanged a sympathetic look. They waited
       another minute, and then he dropped into a chair where, leaning forward,
       his elbows on the arms and his gaze attached to the carpet, he drew out
       the silence. Finally he looked at Mrs. Brook. "YOU make it clear."
       The appeal called up for some reason her most infantine manner. "I don't
       think I CAN, dear Van--really CLEAR. You know however yourself," she
       continued to Mitchy, "enough by this time about Mr. Longdon and mamma."
       "Oh rather!" Mitchy laughed.
       "And about mamma and Nanda."
       "Oh perfectly: the way Nanda reminds him, and the 'beautiful loyalty'
       that has made him take such a fancy to her. But I've already embraced
       the facts--you needn't dot any i's." With another glance at his fellow
       visitor Mitchy jumped up and stood there florid. "He has offered you
       money to marry her." He said this to Vanderbank as if it were the most
       natural thing in the world.
       "Oh NO" Mrs. Brook interposed with promptitude: "he has simply let him
       know before any one else that the money's there FOR Nanda, and that
       therefore--!"
       "First come first served?" Mitchy had already taken her up. "I see, I
       see. Then to make her sure of the money," he put to Vanderbank, "you
       MUST marry her?"
       "If it depends upon that she'll never get it," Mrs. Brook returned.
       "Dear Van will think conscientiously a lot about it, but he won't do
       it."
       "Won't you, Van, really?" Mitchy asked from the hearth-rug.
       "Never, never. We shall be very kind to him, we shall help him, hope and
       pray for him, but we shall be at the end," said Mrs. Brook, "just where
       we are now. Dear Van will have done his best, and we shall have done
       ours. Mr. Longdon will have done his--poor Nanda even will have done
       hers. But it will all have been in vain. However," Mrs. Brook continued
       to expound, "she'll probably have the money. Mr. Longdon will surely
       consider that she'll want it if she doesn't marry still more than if she
       does. So we shall be SO much at least," she wound up--"I mean Edward and
       I and the child will be--to the good."
       Mitchy, for an equal certainty, required but an instant's thought. "Oh
       there can be no doubt about THAT. The things about which your mind may
       now be at ease--!" he cheerfully exclaimed.
       "It does make a great difference!" Mrs. Brook comfortably sighed. Then
       in a different tone: "What dear Van will find at the end that he can't
       face will be, don't you see? just this fact of appearing to have
       accepted a bribe. He won't want, on the one hand--out of kindness for
       Nanda--to have the money suppressed; and yet he won't want to have the
       pecuniary question mixed up with the matter: to look in short as if he
       had had to be paid. He's like you, you know--he's proud; and it will be
       there we shall break down."
       Mitchy had been watching his friend, who, a few minutes before
       perceptibly embarrassed, had quite recovered himself and, at his ease,
       though still perhaps with a smile a trifle strained, leaned back and let
       his eyes play everywhere but over the faces of the others. Vanderbank
       evidently wished now to show a good-humoured detachment.
       "See here," Mitchy said to him: "I remember your once submitting to me a
       case of some delicacy."
       "Oh he'll submit it to you--he'll submit it even to ME" Mrs. Brook broke
       in. "He'll be charming, touching, confiding--above all he'll be awfully
       INTERESTING about it. But he'll make up his mind in his own way, and his
       own way won't be to accommodate Mr. Longdon."
       Mitchy continued to study their companion in the light of these remarks,
       then turned upon his hostess his sociable glare. "Splendid, isn't it,
       the old boy's infatuation with him?"
       Mrs. Brook just delayed. "From the point of view of the immense interest
       it--just now, for instance--makes for you and me? Oh yes, it's one of
       our best things yet. It places him a little with Lady Fanny--'He will,
       he won't; he won't, he will!' Only, to be perfect, it lacks, as I say,
       the element of real suspense."
       Mitchy frankly wondered. "It does, you think? Not for me--not wholly."
       He turned again quite pleadingly to their friend. "I hope it doesn't for
       yourself totally either?"
       Vanderbank, cultivating his detachment, made at first no more reply than
       if he had not heard, and the others meanwhile showed faces that
       testified perhaps less than their respective speeches had done to the
       absence of anxiety. The only token he immediately gave was to get up and
       approach Mitchy, before whom he stood a minute laughing kindly enough,
       though not altogether gaily. As if then for a better proof of gaiety he
       presently seized him by the shoulders and, still without speaking,
       pushed him backward into the chair he himself had just quitted. Mrs.
       Brook's eyes, from the sofa, while this went on, attached themselves to
       her visitors. It took Vanderbank, as he moved about and his companions
       waited, a minute longer to produce what he had in mind. "What IS
       splendid, as we call it, is this extraordinary freedom and good humour
       of our intercourse and the fact that we do care--so independently of our
       personal interests, with so little selfishness or other vulgarity--to
       get at the idea of things. The beautiful specimen Mrs. Brook had just
       given me of that," he continued to Mitchy, "was what made me break out
       to you about her when you came in." He spoke to one friend, but he
       looked at the other. "What's really 'superior' in her is that, though I
       suddenly show her an interference with a favourite plan, her personal
       resentment's nothing--all she wants is to see what may really happen, to
       take in the truth of the case and make the best of that. She offers me
       the truth, as she sees it, about myself, and with no nasty elation if it
       does chance to be the truth that suits her best. It was a charming,
       charming stroke."
       Mitchy's appreciation was no bar to his amusement. "You're wonderfully
       right about us. But still it was a stroke."
       If Mrs. Brook was less diverted she followed perhaps more closely. "If
       you do me so much justice then, why did you put to me such a cold cruel
       question?--I mean when you so oddly challenged me on my handing on your
       news to Mitchy. If the principal beauty of our effort to live together
       is--and quite according to your own eloquence--in our sincerity, I
       simply obeyed the impulse to do the sincere thing. If we're not sincere
       we're nothing."
       "Nothing!"--it was Mitchy who first responded. "But we ARE sincere."
       "Yes, we ARE sincere," Vanderbank presently said. "It's a great chance
       for us not to fall below ourselves: no doubt therefore we shall continue
       to soar and sing. We pay for it, people who don't like us say, in our
       self-consciousness--"
       "But people who don't like us," Mitchy broke in, "don't matter. Besides,
       how can we be properly conscious of each other--?"
       "That's it!"--Vanderbank completed his idea: "without my finding myself
       for instance in you and Mrs. Brook? We see ourselves reflected--we're
       conscious of the charming whole. I thank you," he pursued after an
       instant to Mrs. Brook--"I thank you for your sincerity."
       It was a business sometimes really to hold her eyes, but they had, it
       must be said for her, their steady moments. She exchanged with
       Vanderbank a somewhat remarkable look, then, with an art of her own,
       broke short off without appearing to drop him. "The thing is, don't you
       think?"--she appealed to Mitchy--"for us not to be so awfully clever as
       to make it believed that we can never be simple. We mustn't see TOO
       tremendous things--even in each other." She quite lost patience with the
       danger she glanced at. "We CAN be simple!"
       "We CAN, by God!" Mitchy laughed.
       "Well, we are now--and it's a great comfort to have it settled," said
       Vanderbank.
       "Then you see," Mrs. Brook returned, "what a mistake you'd make to see
       abysses of subtlety in my having been merely natural."
       "We CAN be natural," Mitchy declared.
       "We can, by God!" Vanderbank laughed.
       Mrs. Brook had turned to Mitchy. "I just wanted you to know. So I spoke.
       It's not more complicated than that. As for WHY I wanted you to know--!"
       "What better reason could there be," Mitchy interrupted, "than your
       being filled to the finger-tips with the sense of how I would want it
       myself, and of the misery, the absolute pathos, of my being left out?
       Fancy, my dear chap"--he had only to put it to Van--"my NOT knowing!".
       Vanderbank evidently couldn't fancy it, but he said quietly enough: "I
       should have told you myself."
       "Well, what's the difference?"
       "Oh there IS a difference," Mrs. Brook loyally said. Then she opened an
       inch or two, for Vanderbank, the door of her dim radiance. "Only I
       should have thought it a difference for the better. Of course," she
       added, "it remains absolutely with us three alone, and don't you already
       feel from it the fresh charm--with it here between us--of our being
       together?"
       It was as if each of the men had waited for the other to assent better
       than he himself could and Mitchy then, as Vanderbank failed, had
       gracefully, to ^cover him, changed the subject. "But isn't Nanda, the
       person most interested, to know?"
       Vanderbank gave on this a strange sound of hilarity. "Ah that would
       finish it off!"
       It produced for a few seconds something like a chill, a chill that had
       for consequence a momentary pause which in its turn added weight to the
       words next uttered. "It's not I who shall tell her," Mrs. Brook said
       gently and gravely. "There!--you may be sure. If you want a promise,
       it's a promise. So that if Mr. Longdon's silent," she went on, "and you
       are, Mitchy, and I am, how in the world shall she have a suspicion?"
       "You mean of course except by Van's deciding to mention it himself."
       Van might have been, from the way they looked at him, some beautiful
       unconscious object; but Mrs. Brook was quite ready to answer. "Oh poor
       man, HE'LL never breathe."
       "I see. So there we are."
       To this discussion the subject of it had for the time nothing to
       contribute, even when Mitchy, rising with the words he had last uttered
       from the chair in which he had been placed, took sociably as well, on
       the hearth-rug, a position before their hostess. This move ministered
       apparently to Vanderbank's mere silence, for it was still without
       speaking that, after a little, he turned away from his friend and
       dropped once more into the same seat. "I've shown you already, you of
       course remember," Vanderbank presently said to him, "that I'm perfectly
       aware of how much better Mrs. Brook would like YOU for the position."
       "He thinks I want him myself," Mrs. Brook blandly explained.
       She was indeed, as they always thought her, "wonderful," but she was
       perhaps not even now so much so as Mitchy found himself able to be. "But
       how would you lose old Van--even at the worst?" he earnestly asked of
       her.
       She just hesitated. "What do you mean by the worst?"
       "Then even at the best," Mitchy smiled. "In the event of his falsifying
       your prediction; which, by the way, has the danger, hasn't it?--I mean
       for your intellectual credit--of making him, as we all used to be called
       by our nursemaids, 'contrairy.'"
       "Oh I've thought of that," Mrs. Brook returned. "But he won't do, on the
       whole, even for the sweetness of spiting me, what he won't want to do.
       _I_ haven't said I should lose him," she went on; "that's only the view
       he himself takes--or, to do him perfeet justice, the idea he candidly
       imputes to me; though without, I imagine--for I don't go so far as that
       --attributing to me anything so unutterably bete as a feeling of
       jealousy."
       "You wouldn't dream of my supposing anything inept of you," Vanderbank
       said on this, "if you understood to the full how I keep on admiring you.
       Only what stupefies me a little," he continued, "is the extraordinary
       critical freedom--or we may call it if we like the high intellectual
       detachment--with which we discuss a question touching you, dear Mrs.
       Brook, so nearly and engaging so your private and most sacred
       sentiments. What are we playing with, after all, but the idea of Nanda's
       happiness?"
       "Oh I'm not playing!" Mrs. Brook declared with a little rattle of
       emotion.
       "She's not playing"--Mr. Mitchett gravely confirmed it. "Don't you feel
       in the very air the vibration of the passion that she's simply too
       charming to shake at the window as the housemaid shakes the tablecloth
       or the jingo the flag?" Then he took up what Vanderbank had previously
       said. "Of course, my dear man, I'm 'aware,' as you just now put it, of
       everything, and I'm not indiscreet, am I, Mrs. Brook? in admitting for
       you as well as for myself that there WAS an impossibility you and I used
       sometimes to turn over together. Only--Lord bless us all!--it isn't as
       if I hadn't long ago seen that there's nothing at all FOR me."
       "Ah wait, wait!" Mrs. Brook put in. "She has a theory"--Vanderbank,
       from his chair, lighted it up for Mitchy, who hovered before them--"that
       your chance WILL come, later on, after I've given my measure."
       "Oh but that's exactly," Mitchy was quick to respond, "what you'll never
       do! You won't give your measure the least little bit. You'll walk in
       magnificent mystery 'later on' not a bit less than you do today; you'll
       continue to have the benefit of everything that our imagination,
       perpetually engaged, often baffled and never fatigued, will continue to
       bedeck you with. Nanda, in the same way, to the end of all her time,
       will simply remain exquisite, or genuine, or generous--whatever we
       choose to call it. It may make a difference to us, who are comparatively
       vulgar, but what difference will it make to HER whether you do or you
       don't decide for her? You can't belong to her more, for herself, than
       you do already--and that's precisely so much that there's no room for
       any one else. Where therefore, without that room, do I come in?"
       "Nowhere, I see," Vanderbank seemed obligingly to muse.
       Mrs. Brook had followed Mitchy with marked admiration, but she gave on
       this a glance at Van that was like the toss of a blossom from the same
       branch. "Oh then shall I just go on with you BOTH? That WILL be joy!"
       She had, however, the next thing, a sudden drop which shaded the
       picture. "You're so divine, Mitchy, that how can you not in the long-run
       break ANY woman down?"
       It was not as if Mitchy was struck--it was only that he was courteous.
       "What do you call the long-run? Taking about till I'm eighty?"
       "Ah your genius is of a kind to which middle life will be particularly
       favourable. You'll reap then somehow, one feels, everything you've
       sown."
       Mitchy still accepted the prophecy only to control it. "Do you call
       eighty middle life? Why, my moral beauty, my dear woman--if that's what
       you mean by my genius--is precisely my curse. What on earth--is left for
       a man just rotten with goodness? It renders necessary the kind of liking
       that renders unnecessary anything else."
       "Now that IS cheap paradox!" Vanderbank patiently sighed. "You're down
       for a fine."
       It was with less of the patience perhaps that Mrs. Brook took this up.
       "Yes, on that we ARE stiff. Five pounds, please."
       Mitchy drew out his pocket-book even though he explained. "What I mean
       is that I don't give out the great thing." With which he produced a
       crisp banknote.
       "DON'T you?" asked Vanderbank, who, having taken it from him to hand to
       Mrs. Brook, held it a moment, delicately, to accentuate the doubt.
       "The great thing's the sacred terror. It's you who give THAT out."
       "Oh!"--and Vanderbank laid the money on the small stand at Mrs. Brook's
       elbow.
       "Ain't I right, Mrs. Brook?--doesn't he, tremendously, and isn't that
       more than anything else what does it?"
       The two again, as if they understood each other, gazed in a unity of
       interest at their companion, who sustained it with an air clearly
       intended as the happy mean between embarrassment and triumph. Then Mrs.
       Brook showed she liked the phrase. "The sacred terror! Yes, one feels
       it. It IS that."
       "The finest case of it," Mitchy pursued, "that I've ever met. So my
       moral's sufficiently pointed."
       "Oh I don't think it can be said to be that," Vanderbank returned, "till
       you've put the whole thing into a box by doing for Nanda what she does
       most want you to do."
       Mitchy caught on without a shade of wonder. "Oh by proposing to the
       Duchess for little Aggie?" He took but an instant to turn it over.
       "Well, I WOULD propose--to please Nanda. Only I've never yet quite made
       out the reason of her wish."
       "The reason is largely," his friend answered, "that, being very fond of
       Aggie and in fact extremely admiring her, she wants to do something good
       for her and to keep her from anything bad. Don't you know--it's too
       charming--she regularly believes in her?" Mitchy, with all his
       recognition, vibrated to the touch. "Isn't it too charming?"
       "Well then," Vanderbank went on, "she secures for her friend a phoenix
       like you, and secures for you a phoenix like her friend. It's hard to
       say for which of you she desires most to do the handsome thing. She
       loves you both in short"--he followed it up--"though perhaps when one
       thinks of it the price she puts on you, Mitchy, in the arrangement, is a
       little the higher. Awfully fine at any rate--and yet awfully odd too--
       her feeling for Aggie's type, which is divided by such abysses from her
       own."
       "Ah," laughed Mitchy, "but think then of her feeling for mine!"
       Vanderbank, still more at his ease now and with his head back, had his
       eyes aloft and far. "Oh there are things in Nanda--!" The others
       exchanged a glance at this, while their companion added: "Little Aggie's
       really the sort of creature she would have liked to be able to be."
       "Well," Mitchy said, "I should have adored her even if she HAD been
       able."
       Mrs. Brook had for some minutes played no audible part, but the acute
       observer we are constantly taking for granted would perhaps have
       detected in her, as one of the effects of the special complexion to-day
       of Vanderbank's presence, a certain smothered irritation. "She couldn't
       possibly have been able," she now interposed, "with so loose--or rather,
       to express it more properly, with so perverse--a mother."
       "And yet, my dear lady," Mitchy promptly qualified, "how if in little
       Aggie's case the Duchess hasn't prevented--?"
       Mrs. Brook was full of wisdom. "Well, it's a different thing. I'm not,
       as a mother--am I, Van?--bad ENOUGH. That's what's the matter with me.
       Aggie, don't you see? is the Duchess's morality, her virtue; which, by
       having it that way outside of you, as one may say, you can make a much
       better thing of. The child has been for Jane, I admit, a capital little
       subject, but Jane has kept her on hand and finished her like some
       wonderful piece of stitching. Oh as work it's of a soigne! There it is--
       to show. A woman like me has to be HERSELF, poor thing, her virtue and
       her morality. What will you have? It's our lumbering English plan."
       "So that her daughter," Mitchy sympathised, "can only, by the
       arrangement, hope to become at the best her immorality and her vice?"
       But Mrs. Brook, without an answer for the question, appeared suddenly to
       have plunged into a sea of thought. "The only way for Nanda to have been
       REALLY nice--!"
       "Would have been for YOU to be like Jane?"
       Mitchy and his hostess seemed for a minute, on this, to gaze together at
       the tragic truth. Then she shook her head. "We see our mistakes too
       late." She repeated the movement, but as if to let it all go, and
       Vanderbank meanwhile, pulling out his watch, had got up with a laugh
       that showed some inattention and made to Mitchy a remark about their
       walking away together. Mitchy, engaged for the instant with Mrs. Brook,
       had assented only with a nod, but the attitude of the two men had become
       that of departure. Their friend looked at them as if she would like to
       keep one of them, and for a purpose connected somehow with the other,
       but was oddly, almost ludicrously, embarrassed to choose. What was in
       her face indeed during this short passage might prove to have been,
       should we penetrate, the flicker of a sense that in spite of all
       intimacy and amiability they could, at bottom and as things commonly
       turned out, only be united against her. Yet she made at the end a sort
       of choice in going on to Mitchy: "He hasn't at all told you the real
       reason of Nanda's idea that you should go in for Aggie."
       "Oh I draw the line there," said Vanderbank. "Besides, he understands
       that too."
       Mitchy, on the spot, did himself and every one justice. "Why it just
       disposes of me, doesn't it?"
       It made Vanderbank, restless now and turning about the room, stop with a
       smile at Mrs. Brook. "We understand too well!"
       "Not if he doesn't understand," she replied after a moment while she
       turned to Mitchy, "that his real 'combination' can in the nature of the
       case only be--!"
       "Oh yes"--Mitchy took her straight up--"with the young thing who is, as
       you say, positively and helplessly modern and the pious fraud of whose
       classic identity with a sheet of white paper has been--ah tacitly of
       course, but none the less practically!--dropped. You've so often
       reminded me. I do understand. If I were to go in for Aggie it would only
       be to oblige. The modern girl, the product of our hard London facts and
       of her inevitable consciousness of them just as they are--she, wonderful
       being, IS, I fully recognise, my real affair, and I'm not ashamed to say
       that when I like the individual I'm not afraid of the type. She knows
       too much--I don't say; but she doesn't know after all a millionth part
       of what _I_ do."
       "I'm not sure!" Mrs. Brook earnestly exclaimed.
       He had rung out and he kept it up with a limpidity unusual. "And product
       for product, when you come to that, I'm a queerer one myself than any
       other. The traditions _I_ smash!" Mitchy laughed.
       Mrs. Brook had got up and Vanderbank had gone again to the window.
       "That's exactly why," she returned. "You're a pair of monsters and your
       monstrosity fits. She does know too much," she added.
       "Well," said Mitchy with resolution, "it's all my fault."
       "Not ALL--unless," Mrs. Brook returned, "that's only a sweet way of
       saying that it's mostly mine."
       "Oh yours too--immensely; in fact every one's. Even Edward's, I dare
       say; and certainly, unmistakably, Harold's. Ah and Van's own--rather!"
       Mitchy continued; "for all he turns his back and will have nothing to
       say to it."
       It was on the back Vanderbank turned that Mrs. Brook's eyes now rested.
       "That's precisely why he shouldn't be afraid of her."
       He faced straight about. "Oh I don't deny my part."
       He shone at them brightly enough, and Mrs. Brook, thoughtful,
       wistful, candid, took in for a moment the radiance. "And yet to think
       that after all it has been mere TALK!"
       Something in her tone again made her hearers laugh out; so it was still
       with the air of good humour that Vanderbank answered: "Mere, mere, mere.
       But perhaps it's exactly the 'mere' that has made us range so wide."
       Mrs. Brook's intelligence abounded. "You mean that we haven't had the
       excuse of passion?"
       Her companions once more gave way to mirth, but "There you are!"
       Vanderbank said after an instant less sociably. With it too he held out
       his hand.
       "You ARE afraid," she answered as she gave him her own; on which, as he
       made no rejoinder, she held him before her. "Do you mean you REALLY
       don't know if she gets it?"
       "The money, if he DOESN'T go in?"--Mitchy broke almost with an air of
       responsibility into Vanderbank's silence. "Ah but, as we said, surely--!"
       It was Mitchy's eyes that Vanderbank met. "Yes, I should suppose she
       gets it."
       "Perhaps then, as a compensation, she'll even get MORE--!"
       "If I don't go in? Oh!" said Vanderbank. And he changed colour.
       He was by this time off, but Mrs. Brook kept Mitchy a moment. "Now--by
       that suggestion--he has something to show. He won't go in."
       Content of BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK: CHAPTER II [Henry James' novel: The Awkward Age]
       _
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PREFACE
BOOK FIRST - LADY JULIA
   BOOK FIRST - LADY JULIA - CHAPTER I
   BOOK FIRST - LADY JULIA - CHAPTER II
   BOOK FIRST - LADY JULIA - CHAPTER III
BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER I
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER II
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER III
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER V
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER VI
BOOK THIRD - MR. LONGDON
   BOOK THIRD - MR. LONGDON - CHAPTER I
   BOOK THIRD - MR. LONGDON - CHAPTER II
   BOOK THIRD - MR. LONGDON - CHAPTER III
BOOK FOURTH - MR. CASHMORE
   BOOK FOURTH - MR. CASHMORE - CHAPTER I
   BOOK FOURTH - MR. CASHMORE - CHAPTER II
   BOOK FOURTH - MR. CASHMORE - CHAPTER III
BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER I
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER II
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER III
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER V
BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK
   BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK - CHAPTER I
   BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK - CHAPTER II
   BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK - CHAPTER III
BOOK SEVENTH - MITCHY
   BOOK SEVENTH - MITCHY - CHAPTER I
   BOOK SEVENTH - MITCHY - CHAPTER II
   BOOK SEVENTH - MITCHY - CHAPTER III
BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON
   BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON - CHAPTER I
   BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON - CHAPTER II
   BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON - CHAPTER III
   BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON - CHAPTER IV
BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK
   BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER I
   BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER II
   BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER III
   BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER IV
BOOK TENTH - NANDA
   BOOK TENTH - NANDA - CHAPTER I
   BOOK TENTH - NANDA - CHAPTER II
   BOOK TENTH - NANDA - CHAPTER III
   BOOK TENTH - NANDA - CHAPTER IV