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The Gilded Age
CHAPTER XLI
Mark Twain
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       CHAPTER XLI
       Henry Brierly was at the Dilwortby's constantly and on such terms of
       intimacy that he came and went without question. The Senator was not an
       inhospitable man, he liked to have guests in his house, and Harry's gay
       humor and rattling way entertained him; for even the most devout men and
       busy statesmen must have hours of relaxation.
       Harry himself believed that he was of great service in the University
       business, and that the success of the scheme depended upon him to a great
       degree. He spent many hours in talking it over with the Senator after
       dinner. He went so far as to consider whether it would be worth his
       while to take the professorship of civil engineering in the new
       institution.
       But it was not the Senator's society nor his dinners--at which this
       scapegrace remarked that there was too much grace and too little wine--
       which attracted him to the horse. The fact was the poor fellow hung
       around there day after day for the chance of seeing Laura for five
       minutes at a time. For her presence at dinner he would endure the long
       bore of the Senator's talk afterwards, while Laura was off at some
       assembly, or excused herself on the plea of fatigue. Now and then he
       accompanied her to some reception, and rarely, on off nights, he was
       blessed with her company in the parlor, when he sang, and was chatty and
       vivacious and performed a hundred little tricks of imitation and
       ventriloquism, and made himself as entertaining as a man could be.
       It puzzled him not a little that all his fascinations seemed to go for so
       little with Laura; it was beyond his experience with women. Sometimes
       Laura was exceedingly kind and petted him a little, and took the trouble
       to exert her powers of pleasing, and to entangle him deeper and deeper.
       But this, it angered him afterwards to think, was in private; in public
       she was beyond his reach, and never gave occasion to the suspicion that
       she had any affair with him. He was never permitted to achieve the
       dignity of a serious flirtation with her in public.
       "Why do you treat me so?" he once said, reproachfully.
       "Treat you how?" asked Laura in a sweet voice, lifting her eyebrows.
       "You know well enough. You let other fellows monopolize you in society,
       and you are as indifferent to me as if we were strangers."
       "Can I help it if they are attentive, can I be rude? But we are such old
       friends, Mr. Brierly, that I didn't suppose you would be jealous."
       "I think I must be a very old friend, then, by your conduct towards me.
       By the same rule I should judge that Col. Selby must be very new."
       Laura looked up quickly, as if about to return an indignant answer to
       such impertinence, but she only said, "Well, what of Col. Selby, sauce-
       box?"
       "Nothing, probably, you'll care for. Your being with him so much is the
       town talk, that's all?"
       "What do people say?" asked Laura calmly.
       "Oh, they say a good many things. You are offended, though, to have me
       speak of it?"
       "Not in the least. You are my true friend. I feel that I can trust you.
       You wouldn't deceive me, Harry?" throwing into her eyes a look of trust
       and tenderness that melted away all his petulance and distrust. "What do
       they say?"
       "Some say that you've lost your head about him; others that you don't
       care any more for him than you do for a dozen others, but that he is
       completely fascinated with you and about to desert his wife; and others
       say it is nonsense to suppose you would entangle yourself with a married
       man, and that your intimacy only arises from the matter of the cotton,
       claims, for which he wants your influence with Dilworthy. But you know
       everybody is talked about more or less in Washington. I shouldn't care;
       but I wish you wouldn't have so much to do with Selby, Laura," continued
       Harry, fancying that he was now upon such terms that his, advice, would
       be heeded.
       "And you believed these slanders?"
       "I don't believe anything against you, Laura, but Col. Selby does not
       mean you any good. I know you wouldn't be seen with him if you knew his
       reputation."
       "Do you know him?" Laura asked, as indifferently as she could.
       "Only a little. I was at his lodgings' in Georgetown a day or two ago,
       with Col. Sellers. Sellers wanted to talk with him about some patent
       remedy he has, Eye Water, or something of that sort, which he wants to
       introduce into Europe. Selby is going abroad very soon."
       Laura started; in spite of her self-control.
       "And his wife!--Does he take his family? Did you see his wife?"
       "Yes. A dark little woman, rather worn--must have been pretty once
       though. Has three or four children, one of them a baby. They'll all
       go of course. She said she should be glad enough to get away from
       Washington. You know Selby has got his claim allowed, and they say he
       has had a run, of luck lately at Morrissey's."
       Laura heard all this in a kind of stupor, looking straight at Harry,
       without seeing him. Is it possible, she was thinking, that this base
       wretch, after, all his promises, will take his wife and children and
       leave me? Is it possible the town is saying all these things about me?
       And a look of bitterness coming into her face--does the fool think he can
       escape so?
       "You are angry with me, Laura," said Harry, not comprehending in the
       least what was going on in her mind.
       "Angry?" she said, forcing herself to come back to his presence.
       "With you? Oh no. I'm angry with the cruel world, which, pursues an
       independent woman as it never does a man. I'm grateful to you Harry;
       I'm grateful to you for telling me of that odious man."
       And she rose from her chair and gave him her pretty hand, which the silly
       fellow took, and kissed and clung to. And he said many silly things,
       before she disengaged herself gently, and left him, saying it was time to
       dress, for dinner.
       And Harry went away, excited, and a little hopeful, but only a little.
       The happiness was only a gleam, which departed and left him thoroughly,
       miserable. She never would love him, and she was going to the devil,
       besides. He couldn't shut his eyes to what he saw, nor his ears to what
       he heard of her.
       What had come over this trilling young lady-killer? It was a pity to see
       such a gay butterfly broken on a wheel. Was there something good in him,
       after all, that had been touched? He was in fact madly in love with this
       woman.
       It is not for us to analyze the passion and say whether it was a worthy
       one. It absorbed his whole nature and made him wretched enough. If he
       deserved punishment, what more would you have? Perhaps this love was
       kindling a new heroism in him.
       He saw the road on which Laura was going clearly enough, though he did
       not believe the worst he heard of her. He loved her too passionately to
       credit that for a moment. And it seemed to him that if he could compel
       her to recognize her position, and his own devotion, she might love him,
       and that he could save her. His love was so far ennobled, and become a
       very different thing from its beginning in Hawkeye. Whether he ever
       thought that if he could save her from ruin, he could give her up
       himself, is doubtful. Such a pitch of virtue does not occur often in
       real life, especially in such natures as Harry's, whose generosity and
       unselfishness were matters of temperament rather than habits or
       principles.
       He wrote a long letter to Laura, an incoherent, passionate letter,
       pouring out his love as he could not do in her presence, and warning her
       as plainly as he dared of the dangers that surrounded her, and the risks
       she ran of compromising herself in many ways.
       Laura read the letter, with a little sigh may be, as she thought of other
       days, but with contempt also, and she put it into the fire with the
       thought, "They are all alike."
       Harry was in the habit of writing to Philip freely, and boasting also
       about his doings, as he could not help doing and remain himself.
       Mixed up with his own exploits, and his daily triumphs as a lobbyist,
       especially in the matter of the new University, in which Harry was to
       have something handsome, were amusing sketches of Washington society,
       hints about Dilworthy, stories about Col. Sellers, who had become a well-
       known character, and wise remarks upon the machinery of private
       legislation for the public-good, which greatly entertained Philip in his
       convalescence.
       Laura's name occurred very often in these letters, at first in casual
       mention as the belle of the season, carrying everything before her with
       her wit and beauty, and then more seriously, as if Harry did not exactly
       like so much general admiration of her, and was a little nettled by her
       treatment of him.
       This was so different from Harry's usual tone about women, that Philip
       wondered a good deal over it. Could it be possible that he was seriously
       affected? Then came stories about Laura, town talk, gossip which Harry
       denied the truth of indignantly; but he was evidently uneasy, and at
       length wrote in such miserable spirits that Philip asked him squarely
       what the trouble was; was he in love?
       Upon this, Harry made a clean breast of it, and told Philip all he knew
       about the Selby affair, and Laura's treatment of him, sometimes
       encouraging him--and then throwing him off, and finally his belief that
       she would go, to the bad if something was not done to arouse her from her
       infatuation. He wished Philip was in Washington. He knew Laura, and she
       had a great respect for his character, his opinions, his judgment.
       Perhaps he, as an uninterested person whom she would have some
       confidence, and as one of the public, could say some thing to her that
       would show her where she stood.
       Philip saw the situation clearly enough. Of Laura he knew not much,
       except that she was a woman of uncommon fascination, and he thought from
       what he had seen of her in Hawkeye, her conduct towards him and towards
       Harry, of not too much principle. Of course he knew nothing of her
       history; he knew nothing seriously against her, and if Harry was
       desperately enamored of her, why should he not win her if he could.
       If, however, she had already become what Harry uneasily felt she might
       become, was it not his duty to go to the rescue of his friend and try to
       save him from any rash act on account of a woman that might prove to be
       entirely unworthy of him; for trifler and visionary as he was, Harry
       deserved a better fate than this.
       Philip determined to go to Washington and see for himself. He had other
       reasons also. He began to know enough of Mr. Bolton's affairs to be
       uneasy. Pennybacker had been there several times during the winter, and
       he suspected that he was involving Mr. Bolton in some doubtful scheme.
       Pennybacker was in Washington, and Philip thought he might perhaps find
       out something about him, and his plans, that would be of service to Mr.
       Bolton.
       Philip had enjoyed his winter very well, for a man with his arm broken
       and his head smashed. With two such nurses as Ruth and Alice, illness
       seemed to him rather a nice holiday, and every moment of his
       convalescence had been precious and all too fleeting. With a young
       fellow of the habits of Philip, such injuries cannot be counted on to
       tarry long, even for the purpose of love-making, and Philip found himself
       getting strong with even disagreeable rapidity.
       During his first weeks of pain and weakness, Ruth was unceasing in her
       ministrations; she quietly took charge of him, and with a gentle firmness
       resisted all attempts of Alice or any one else to share to any great
       extent the burden with her. She was clear, decisive and peremptory in
       whatever she did; but often when Philip, opened his eyes in those first
       days of suffering and found her standing by his bedside, he saw a look of
       tenderness in her anxious face that quickened his already feverish pulse,
       a look that, remained in his heart long after he closed his eyes.
       Sometimes he felt her hand on his forehead, and did not open his eyes for
       fear she world take it away. He watched for her coming to his chamber;
       he could distinguish her light footstep from all others. If this is what
       is meant by women practicing medicine, thought Philip to himself, I like
       it.
       "Ruth," said he one day when he was getting to be quite himself,
       "I believe in it?"
       "Believe in what?"
       "Why, in women physicians."
       "Then, I'd better call in Mrs. Dr. Longstreet."
       "Oh, no. One will do, one at a time. I think I should be well tomorrow,
       if I thought I should never have any other."
       "Thy physician thinks thee mustn't talk, Philip," said Ruth putting her
       finger on his lips.
       "But, Ruth, I want to tell you that I should wish I never had got well
       if--"
       "There, there, thee must not talk. Thee is wandering again," and Ruth
       closed his lips, with a smile on her own that broadened into a merry
       laugh as she ran away.
       Philip was not weary, however, of making these attempts, he rather
       enjoyed it. But whenever he inclined to be sentimental, Ruth would cut
       him off, with some such gravely conceived speech as, "Does thee think
       that thy physician will take advantage of the condition of a man who is
       as weak as thee is? I will call Alice, if thee has any dying confessions
       to make."
       As Philip convalesced, Alice more and more took Ruth's place as his
       entertainer, and read to him by the hour, when he did not want to talk--
       to talk about Ruth, as he did a good deal of the time. Nor was this
       altogether unsatisfactory to Philip. He was always happy and contented
       with Alice. She was the most restful person he knew. Better informed
       than Ruth and with a much more varied culture, and bright and
       sympathetic, he was never weary of her company, if he was not greatly
       excited by it. She had upon his mind that peaceful influence that Mrs.
       Bolton had when, occasionally, she sat by his bedside with her work.
       Some people have this influence, which is like an emanation. They bring
       peace to a house, they diffuse serene content in a room full of mixed
       company, though they may say very little, and are apparently, unconscious
       of their own power;
       Not that Philip did not long for Ruth's presence all the same. Since he
       was well enough to be about the house, she was busy again with her
       studies. Now and then her teasing humor came again. She always had a
       playful shield against his sentiment. Philip used sometimes to declare
       that she had no sentiment; and then he doubted if he should be pleased
       with her after all if she were at all sentimental; and he rejoiced that
       she had, in such matters what he called the airy grace of sanity. She
       was the most gay serious person he ever saw.
       Perhaps he waw not so much at rest or so contented with her as with
       Alice. But then he loved her. And what have rest and contentment to do
       with love?
       Content of CHAPTER XLI [Mark Twain/C. D. Warner's novel: The Gilded Age]
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