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Awkward Age, The
BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK   BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK - CHAPTER III
Henry James
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       BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK#CHAPTER III
       Her visitors had been gone half an hour, but she was still in the
       drawing-room when Nanda came back. The girl found her, on the sofa, in a
       posture that might have represented restful oblivion, but that, after a
       glance, our young lady appeared to interpret as mere intensity of
       thought. It was a condition from which at all events Mrs. Brook was
       quickly roused by her daughter's presence: she opened her eyes and put
       down her feet, so that the two were confronted as closely as persons may
       be when it is only one of them who looks at the other. Nanda, gazing
       vaguely about and not seeking a seat, slowly drew off her gloves while
       her mother's sad eyes considered her from top to toe. "Tea's gone," Mrs.
       Brook then said as if there were something in the loss peculiarly
       irretrievable. "But I suppose," she added, "he gave you all you want."
       "Oh dear yes, thank you--I've had lots."
       Nanda hovered there slim and charming, feathered and ribboned, dressed
       in thin fresh fabrics and faint colours, with something in the effect of
       it all to which the sweeter deeper melancholy in her mother's eyes
       seemed happily to testify. "Just turn round, dear." The girl immediately
       obeyed, and Mrs. Brook once more took everything in. "The back's best--
       only she didn't do what she said she would. How they do lie!" she gently
       quavered.
       "Yes, but we lie so to THEM." Nanda had swung round again, producing
       evidently on her mother's part, by the admirable "hang" of her light
       skirts, a still deeper peace. "Do you mean the middle fold?--I knew she
       wouldn't. I don't want my back to be best--I don't walk backward."
       "Yes," Mrs. Brook resignedly mused; "you dress for yourself."
       "Oh how can you say that," the girl asked, "when I never stick in a pin
       but what I think of YOU!"
       "Well," Mrs. Brook moralised, "one must always, I consider, think, as a
       sort of point de repere, of some one good person. Only it's best if it's
       a person one's afraid of. You do very well, but I'm not enough. What one
       really requires is a kind of salutary terror. I never stick in a pin
       without thinking of your Cousin Jane. What is it that some one quotes
       somewhere about some one's having said that 'Our antagonist is our
       helper--he prevents our being superficial'? The extent to which with my
       poor clothes the Duchess prevents ME--!" It was a measure Mrs. Brook
       could give only by the general soft wail of her submission to fate.
       "Yes, the Duchess isn't a woman, is she? She's a standard."
       The speech had for Nanda's companion, however, no effect of pleasantry
       or irony, and it was a mark of the special intercourse of these good
       friends that though they showed each other, in manner and tone, such
       sustained consideration as might almost have given it the stamp of
       diplomacy, there was yet in it also something of that economy of
       expression which is the result of a common experience. The recurrence of
       opportunity to observe them together would have taught a spectator that
       --on Mrs. Brook's side doubtless more particularly--their relation was
       governed by two or three remarkably established and, as might have been
       said, refined laws, the spirit of which was to guard against the
       vulgarity so often coming to the surface between parent and child. That
       they WERE as good friends as if Nanda had not been her daughter was a
       truth that no passage between them might fail in one way or another to
       illustrate. Nanda had gathered up, for that matter, early in life, a
       flower of maternal wisdom: "People talk about conscience, but it seems
       to me one must just bring it up to a certain point and leave it there.
       You can let your conscience alone if you're nice to the second
       housemaid." Mrs. Brook was as "nice" to Nanda as she was to Sarah Curd--
       which involved, as may easily be imagined, the happiest conditions for
       Sarah. "Well," she resumed, reverting to the Duchess on a final
       appraisement of the girl's air, "I really think I do well by you and
       that Jane wouldn't have anything to say to-day. You look awfully like
       mamma," she then threw off as if for the first time of mentioning it.
       "Oh Cousin Jane doesn't care for that," Nanda returned. "What I don't
       look like is Aggie, for all I try."
       "Ah you shouldn't try--you can do nothing with it. One must be what one
       is."
       Mrs. Brook was almost sententious, but Nanda, with civility, let it
       pass. "No one in London touches her. She's quite by herself. When one
       sees her one feels her to be the real thing."
       Mrs. Brook, without harshness, wondered. "What do you mean by the real
       thing?"
       Even Nanda, however, had to think a moment.
       "Well, the real young one. That's what Lord Petherton calls her," she
       mildly joked--"'the young 'un'"
       Her mother's echo was not for the joke, but for something else. "I know
       what you mean. What's the use of being good?"
       "Oh I didn't mean that," said Nanda. "Besides, isn't Aggie of a
       goodness--?"
       "I wasn't talking of her. I was asking myself what's the use of MY
       being."
       "Well, you can't help it any more than the Duchess can help--!"
       "Ah but she could if she would!" Mrs. Brook broke in with a sharper ring
       than she had yet given. "We can't help being good perhaps, if that
       burden's laid on us--but there are lengths in other directions we're not
       absolutely obliged to go. And what I think of when I stick in the pins,"
       she went on, "is that Jane seems to me really never to have had to pay."
       She appeared for a minute to brood on this till she could no longer bear
       it; after which she jerked out: "Why she has never had to pay for
       ANYthing!"
       Nanda had by this time seated herself, taking her place, under the
       interest of their talk, on her mother's sofa, where, except for the
       removal of her long soft gloves, which one of her hands again and again
       drew caressingly through the other, she remained very much as if she
       were some friendly yet circumspect young visitor to whom Mrs. Brook had
       on some occasion dropped "DO come." But there was something perhaps more
       expressly conciliatory in the way she had kept everything on: as if, in
       particular serenity and to confirm kindly Mrs. Brook's sense of what had
       been done for her, she had neither taken off her great feathered hat nor
       laid down her parasol of pale green silk, the "match" of hat and ribbons
       and which had an expensive precious knob. Our spectator would possibly
       have found too much earnestness in her face to be sure if there was also
       candour. "And do you mean that YOU have had to pay--?"
       "Oh yes--all the while." With this Mrs. Brook was a little short, and
       also as she added as if to banish a slight awkwardness: "But don't let
       it discourage you."
       Nanda seemed an instant to weigh the advice, and the whole thing would
       have been striking as another touch in the picture of the odd want, on
       the part of each, of any sense of levity in the other. Whatever escape,
       face to face, mother or daughter might ever seek would never be the
       humorous one--a circumstance, notwithstanding, that would not in every
       case have failed to make their interviews droll for a third person. It
       would always indeed for such a person have produced an impression of
       tension beneath the surface. "I could have done much better at the start
       and have lost less time," the girl at last said, "if I hadn't had the
       drawback of not really remembering Granny."
       "Oh well, _I_ remember her!" Mrs. Brook moaned with an accent that
       evidently struck her the next moment as so much out of place that she
       slightly deflected. She took Nanda's parasol and held it as if--a more
       delicate thing much than any one of hers--she simply liked to have it.
       "Her clothes--at your age at least--must have been hideous. Was it at
       the place he took you to that he gave you tea?" she then went on.
       "Yes, at the Museum. We had an orgy in the refreshment-room. But he took
       me afterwards to Tishy's, where we had another."
       "He went IN with you?" Mrs. Brook had suddenly flashed into eagerness.
       "Oh yes--I made him."
       "He didn't want to?"
       "On the contrary--very much. But he doesn't do everything he wants,"
       said Nanda.
       Mrs. Brook seemed to wonder. "You mean you've also to want it?"
       "Oh no--THAT isn't enough. What I suppose I mean," Nanda continued, "is
       that he doesn't do anything he doesn't want. But he does quite enough,"
       she added.
       "And who then was at Tishy's?"
       "Oh poor old Tish herself, naturally, and Carrie Donner."
       "And no one else?"
       The girl just waited. "Yes, Mr. Cashmore came in."
       Her mother gave a groan of impatience. "Ah AGAIN?"
       Nanda thought an instant. "How do you mean, 'again'? He just lives there
       as much as he ever did, and Tishy can't prevent him."
       "I was thinking of Mr. Longdon--of THEIR meeting. When he met him here
       that time he liked it so little. Did he like it any more to-day?" Mrs.
       Brook quavered.
       "Oh no, he hated it."
       "But hadn't he--if he should go in--known he WOULD?"
       "Yes, perfectly. But he wanted to see."
       "To see--?" Mrs. Brook just threw out.
       "Well, where I go so much. And he knew I wished it,"
       "I don't quite see why," Mrs. Brook mildly observed. And then as her
       daughter said nothing to help her: "At any rate he did loathe it?"
       Nanda, for a reply, simply after an instant put a question. "Well, how
       can he understand?"
       "You mean, like me, why you do go there so much? How can he indeed?"
       "I don't mean that," the girl returned--"it's just that he understands
       perfectly, because he saw them all, in such an extraordinary way--well,
       what can I ever call it?--clutch me and cling to me."
       Mrs. Brook, with full gravity, considered this picture. "And was Mr.
       Cashmore to-day so ridiculous?"
       "Ah he's not ridiculous, mamma--he's very unhappy. He thinks now Lady
       Fanny probably won't go, but he feels that may be after all only the
       worse for him."
       "She WILL go," Mrs. Brook answered with one of her roundabout approaches
       to decision. "He IS too great an idiot. She was here an hour ago, and if
       ever a woman was packed--!"
       "Well," Nanda objected, "but doesn't she spend her time in packing and
       unpacking?"
       This enquiry, however, scarce pulled up her mother. "No--though she HAS,
       no doubt, hitherto wasted plenty of labour. She has now a dozen boxes--I
       could see them there in her wonderful eyes--just waiting to be called
       for. So if you're counting on her not going, my dear--!" Mrs. Brook gave
       a head-shake that was the warning of wisdom.
       "Oh I don't care what she does!" Nanda replied. "What I meant just now
       was that Mr. Longdon couldn't understand why, with so much to make them
       so, they couldn't be decently happy."
       "And did he wish you to explain?"
       "I tried to, but I didn't make it any better. He doesn't like them. He
       doesn't even care for Tish."
       "He told you so--right out?"
       "Oh," Nanda said, "of course I asked him. I didn't press him, because I
       never do--!"
       "You never do?" Mrs. Brook broke in as with the glimpse of a new light.
       The girl showed an indulgence for this interest that was for a moment
       almost elderly. "I enjoy awfully with him seeing just how to take him."
       Her tone and her face evidently put forth for her companion at this
       juncture something freshly, even quite supremely suggestive; and yet the
       effect of them on Mrs. Brook's part was only a question so off-hand that
       it might already often have been asked. The mother's eyes, to ask it, we
       may none the less add, attached themselves closely to the daughter's,
       and her face just glowed. "You like him so very awfully?"
       It was as if the next instant Nanda felt herself on her guard. Yet she
       spoke with a certain surrender. "Well, it's rather intoxicating to be
       one's self--!" She had only a drop over the choice of her term.
       "So tremendously made up to, you mean--even by a little fussy ancient
       man? But DOESN'T he, my dear," Mrs. Brook continued with encouragement,
       "make up to you?"
       A supposititious spectator would certainly on this have imagined in the
       girl's face the delicate dawn of a sense that her mother had suddenly
       become vulgar, together with a general consciousness that the way to
       meet vulgarity was always to be frank and simple and above all to
       ignore. "He makes one enjoy being liked so much--liked better, I do
       think, than I've ever been liked by any one."
       If Mrs. Brook hesitated it was, however, clearly not because she had
       noticed. "Not better surely than by dear Mitchy? Or even if you come to
       that by Tishy herself."
       Nanda's simplicity maintained itself. "Oh Mr. Longdon's different from
       Tishy."
       Her mother again hesitated. "You mean of course he knows more?"
       The girl considered it. "He doesn't know MORE. But he knows other
       things. And he's pleasanter than Mitchy."
       "You mean because he doesn't want to marry you?"
       It was as if she had not heard that Nanda continued: "Well, he's more
       beautiful."
       "O-oh!" cried Mrs. Brook, with a drawn-out extravagance of comment that
       amounted to an impugnment of her taste even by herself.
       It contributed to Nanda's quietness. "He's one of the most beautiful
       people in the world."
       Her companion at this, with a quick wonder, fixed her. "DOES he, my
       dear, want to marry you?"
       "Yes--to all sorts of ridiculous people."
       "But I mean--would you take HIM?"
       Nanda, rising, met the question with a short ironic "Yes!" that showed
       her first impatience. "It's so charming being liked without being
       approved."
       But Mrs. Brook only wanted to know. "He doesn't approve--?"
       "No, but it makes no difference. It's all exactly right--it doesn't
       matter."
       Mrs. Brook seemed to wonder, however, exactly how these things could be.
       "He doesn't want you to give up anything?" She looked as if swiftly
       thinking what Nanda MIGHT give up.
       "Oh yes, everything."
       It was as if for an instant she found her daughter inscrutable; then she
       had a strange smile. "Me?"
       The girl was perfectly prompt. "Everything. But he wouldn't like me
       nearly so much if I really did."
       Her mother had a further pause. "Does he want to ADOPT you?" Then more
       quickly and sadly, though also a little as if lacking nerve to push the
       research: "We couldn't give you up, Nanda."
       "Thank you so much, mamma. But we shan't be very much tried," Nanda
       said, "because what it comes to seems to be that I'm really what you may
       call adopting HIM. I mean I'm little by little changing him--gradually
       showing him that, as I couldn't possibly have been different, and as
       also of course one can't keep giving up, the only way is for him not to
       mind, and to take me just as I am. That, don't you see? is what he would
       never have expected to do."
       Mrs. Brook recognised in a manner the explanation, but still had her
       wistfulness. "But--a--to take you, 'as you are,' WHERE?"
       "Well, to the South Kensington Museum."
       "Oh!" said Mrs. Brook. Then, however, in a more exemplary tone: "Do you
       enjoy so very much your long hours with him?"
       Nanda appeared for an instant to think how to express it. "Well, we're
       great friends."
       "And always talking about Granny?"
       "Oh no--really almost never now."
       "He doesn't think so awfully much of her?" There was an oddity of
       eagerness in the question--a hope, a kind of dash, for something that
       might have been in Nanda's interest.
       The girl met these things only with obliging gravity. "I think he's
       losing any sense of my likeness. He's too used to it--or too many things
       that are too different now cover it up."
       "Well," said Mrs. Brook as she took this in, "I think it's awfully
       clever of you to get only the good of him and have none of the worry."
       Nanda wondered. "The worry?"
       "You leave that all to ME," her mother went on, but quite forgivingly.
       "I hope at any rate that the good, for you, will be real."
       "Real?" the girl, remaining vague, again echoed.
       Mrs. Brook showed for this not perhaps an irritation, but a flicker of
       austerity. "You must remember we've a great many things to think about.
       There are things we must take for granted in each other--we must all
       help in our way to pull the coach. That's what I mean by worry, and if
       you don't have any so much the better for you. For me it's in the day's
       work. Your father and I have most to think about always at this time, as
       you perfectly know--when we have to turn things round and manage somehow
       or other to get out of town, have to provide and pinch, to meet all the
       necessities, with money, money, money at every turn running away like
       water. The children this year seem to fit into nothing, into nowhere,
       and Harold's more dreadful than he has ever been, doing nothing at all
       for himself and requiring everything to be done for him. He talks about
       his American girl, with millions, who's so awfully taken with him, but I
       can't find out anything about her: the only one, just now, that people
       seem to have heard of is the one Booby Manger's engaged to. The Mangers
       literally snap up everything," Mrs. Brook quite wailingly now continued:
       "the Jew man, so gigantically rich--who is he? Baron Schack or Schmack--
       who has just taken Cumberland House and who has the awful stammer--or
       what is it? no roof to his mouth--is to give that horrid little Algie,
       to do his conversation for him, four hundred a year, which Harold
       pretended to me that, of all the rush of young men--dozens!--HE was most
       in the running for. Your father's settled gloom is terrible, and I bear
       all the brunt of it; we get literally nothing this year for the Hovel,
       yet have to spend on it heaven knows what; and everybody, for the next
       three months, in Scotland and everywhere, has asked us for the wrong
       time and nobody for the right: so that I assure you I don't know where
       to turn--which doesn't however in the least prevent every one coming to
       me with their own selfish troubles." It was as if Mrs. Brook had found
       the cup of her secret sorrows suddenly jostled by some touch of which
       the perversity, though not completely noted at the moment, proved, as
       she a little let herself go, sufficient to make it flow over; but she
       drew, the next thing, from her daughter's stillness a reflexion of the
       vanity of such heat and speedily recovered herself as if in order with
       more dignity to point the moral. "I can carry my burden and shall do so
       to the end; but we must each remember that we shall fall to pieces if we
       don't manage to keep hold of some little idea of responsibility. I
       positively can't arrange without knowing when it is you go to him."
       "To Mr. Longdon? Oh whenever I like," Nanda replied very gently and
       simply.
       "And when shall you be so good as to like?"
       "Well, he goes himself on Saturday, and if I want I can go a few days
       later."
       "And what day can you go if I want?" Mrs. Brook spoke as with a small
       sharpness--just softened indeed in time--produced by the sight of a
       freedom in her daughter's life that suddenly loomed larger than any
       freedom of her own. It was still a part of the unsteadiness of the
       vessel of her anxieties; but she never after all remained publicly long
       subject to the influence she often comprehensively designated to others
       as well as to herself as "nastiness." "What I mean is that you might go
       the same day, mightn't you?"
       "With him--in the train? I should think so if you wish it."
       "But would HE wish it? I mean would he hate it?"
       "I don't think so at all, but I can easily ask him."
       Mrs. Brook's head inclined to the chimney and her eyes to the window.
       "Easily?"
       Nanda looked for a moment mystified by her mother's insistence. "I can
       at any rate perfectly try it."
       "Remembering even that mamma would never have pushed so?"
       Nanda's face seemed to concede even that condition. "Well," she at all
       events serenely replied, "I really think we're good friends enough for
       anything."
       It might have been, for the light it quickly produced, exactly what her
       mother had been working to make her say. "What do you call that then, I
       should like to know, but his adopting you?"
       "Ah I don't know that it matters much what it's called."
       "So long as it brings with it, you mean," Mrs. Brook asked, "all the
       advantages?"
       "Well yes," said Nanda, who had now begun dimly to smile--"call them
       advantages."
       Mrs. Brook had a pause. "One would be quite ready to do that if one only
       knew a little more exactly what they're to consist of."
       "Oh the great advantage, I feel, is doing something for HIM."
       Nanda's companion, at this, hesitated afresh. "But doesn't that, my
       dear, put the extravagance of your surrender to him on rather an odd
       footing? Charity, love, begins at home, and if it's a question of merely
       GIVING, you've objects enough for your bounty without going so far."
       The girl, as her stare showed, was held a moment by her surprise, which
       presently broke out. "Why, I thought you wanted me so to be nice to
       him!"
       "Well, I hope you won't think me very vulgar," said Mrs. Brook, "if I
       tell you that I want you still more to have some idea of what you'll get
       by it. I've no wish," she added, "to keep on boring you with Mitchy--"
       "Don't, don't!" Nanda pleaded.
       Her mother stopped as short as if there had been something in her tone
       to set the limit the more utterly for being unstudied. Yet poor Mrs.
       Brook couldn't leave it there. "Then what do you get instead?"
       "Instead of Mitchy? Oh," said Nanda, "I shall never marry."
       Mrs. Brook at this turned away, moving over to the window with quickened
       weariness. Nanda, on her side, as if their talk had ended, went across
       to the sofa to take up her parasol before leaving the room, an impulse
       rather favoured than arrested by the arrival of her brother Harold, who
       came in at the moment both his relatives had turned a back to the door
       and who gave his sister, as she faced him, a greeting that made their
       mother look round. "Hallo, Nan--you ARE lovely! Ain't she lovely,
       mother?"
       "No!" Mrs. Brook answered, not, however, otherwise noticing him. Her
       domestic despair centred at this instant all in her daughter. "Well
       then, we shall consider--your father and I--that he must take the
       consequence."
       Nanda had now her hand on the door, while Harold had dropped on the
       sofa. "'He'?" she just sounded.
       "I mean Mr. Longdon."
       "And what do you mean by the consequence?"
       "Well, it will do for the beginning of it that you'll please go down
       WITH him."
       "On Saturday then? Thanks, mamma," the girl returned.
       She was instantly gone, on which Mrs. Brook had more attention for her
       son. This, after an instant, as she approached the sofa and raised her
       eyes from the little table beside it, came straight out. "Where in the
       world is that five-pound note?"
       Harold looked vacantly about him. "What five-pound note?"
       Content of BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK: CHAPTER III [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