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This Side of Paradise
BOOK ONE: The Romantic Egotist   BOOK ONE: The Romantic Egotist - CHAPTER 4. NARCISSUS OFF DUTY
F Scott Fitzgerald
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       _ CHAPTER 4. NARCISSUS OFF DUTY
       DURING Princeton's transition period, that is, during Amory's
       last two years there, while he saw it change and broaden and live
       up to its Gothic beauty by better means than night parades,
       certain individuals arrived who stirred it to its plethoric
       depths. Some of them had been freshmen, and wild freshmen, with
       Amory; some were in the class below; and it was in the beginning
       of his last year and around small tables at the Nassau Inn that
       they began questioning aloud the institutions that Amory and
       countless others before him had questioned so long in secret.
       First, and partly by accident, they struck on certain books, a
       definite type of biographical novel that Amory christened "quest"
       books. In the "quest" book the hero set off in life armed with
       the best weapons and avowedly intending to use them as such
       weapons are usually used, to push their possessors ahead as
       selfishly and blindly as possible, but the heroes of the "quest"
       books discovered that there might be a more magnificent use for
       them. "None Other Gods," "Sinister Street," and "The Research
       Magnificent" were examples of such books; it was the latter of
       these three that gripped Burne Holiday and made him wonder in the
       beginning of senior year how much it was worth while being a
       diplomatic autocrat around his club on Prospect Avenue and
       basking in the high lights of class office. It was distinctly
       through the channels of aristocracy that Burne found his way.
       Amory, through Kerry, had had a vague drifting acquaintance with
       him, but not until January of senior year did their friendship
       commence.
       "Heard the latest?" said Tom, coming in late one drizzly evening
       with that triumphant air he always wore after a successful
       conversational bout.
       "No. Somebody flunked out? Or another ship sunk?"
       "Worse than that. About one-third of the junior class are going
       to resign from their clubs."
       "What!"
       "Actual fact!"
       "Why!"
       Spirit of reform and all that. Burne Holiday is behind it. The
       club presidents are holding a meeting to-night to see if they can
       find a joint means of combating it."
       "Well, what's the idea of the thing?"
       "Oh, clubs injurious to Princeton democracy; cost a lot; draw
       social lines, take time; the regular line you get sometimes from
       disappointed sophomores. Woodrow thought they should be abolished
       and all that."
       "But this is the real thing?"
       "Absolutely. I think it'll go through."
       "For Pete's sake, tell me more about it."
       "Well," began Tom, "it seems that the idea developed
       simultaneously in several heads. I was talking to Burne awhile
       ago, and he claims that it's a logical result if an intelligent
       person thinks long enough about the social system. They had a
       'discussion crowd' and the point of abolishing the clubs was
       brought up by some oneeverybody there leaped at itit had been in
       each one's mind, more or less, and it just needed a spark to
       bring it out."
       "Fine! I swear I think it'll be most entertaining. How do they
       feel up at Cap and Gown?"
       "Wild, of course. Every one's been sitting and arguing and
       swearing and getting mad and getting sentimental and getting
       brutal. It's the same at all the clubs; I've been the rounds.
       They get one of the radicals in the corner and fire questions at
       him."
       "How do the radicals stand up?"
       "Oh, moderately well. Burne's a damn good talker, and so
       obviously sincere that you can't get anywhere with him. It's so
       evident that resigning from his club means so much more to him
       than preventing it does to us that I felt futile when I argued;
       finally took a position that was brilliantly neutral. In fact, I
       believe Burne thought for a while that he'd converted me." "And
       you say almost a third of the junior class are going to resign?"
       "Call it a fourth and be safe."
       "Lord-who'd have thought it possible!"
       There was a brisk knock at the door, and Burne himself came in.
       "Hello, Amory-hello, Tom."
       Amory rose.
       "'Evening, Burne. Don't mind if I seem to rush; I'm going to
       Renwick's."
       Burne turned to him quickly.
       "You probably know what I want to talk to Tom about, and it isn't
       a bit private. I wish you'd stay."
       "I'd be glad to." Amory sat down again, and as Burne perched on a
       table and launched into argument with Tom, he looked at this
       revolutionary more carefully than he ever had before.
       Broad-browed and strong-chinned, with a fineness in the honest
       gray eyes that were like Kerry's, Burne was a man who gave an
       immediate impression of bigness and securitystubborn, that was
       evident, but his stubbornness wore no stolidity, and when he had
       talked for five minutes Amory knew that this keen enthusiasm had
       in it no quality of dilettantism.
       The intense power Amory felt later in Burne Holiday differed from
       the admiration he had had for Humbird. This time it began as
       purely a mental interest. With other men of whom he had thought
       as primarily first-class, he had been attracted first by their
       personalities, and in Burne he missed that immediate magnetism to
       which he usually swore allegiance. But that night Amory was
       struck by Burne's intense earnestness, a quality he was
       accustomed to associate only with the dread stupidity, and by the
       great enthusiasm that struck dead chords in his heart. Burne
       stood vaguely for a land Amory hoped he was drifting towardand it
       was almost time that land was in sight. Tom and Amory and Alec
       had reached an impasse; never did they seem to have new
       experiences in common, for Tom and Alec had been as blindly busy
       with their committees and boards as Amory had been blindly
       idling, and the things they had for dissectioncollege,
       contemporary personality and the likethey had hashed and rehashed
       for many a frugal conversational meal.
       That night they discussed the clubs until twelve, and, in the
       main, they agreed with Burne. To the roommates it did not seem
       such a vital subject as it had in the two years before, but the
       logic of Burne's objections to the social system dovetailed so
       completely with everything they had thought, that they questioned
       rather than argued, and envied the sanity that enabled this man
       to stand out so against all traditions.
       Then Amory branched off and found that Burne was deep in other
       things as well. Economics had interested him and he was turning
       socialist. Pacifism played in the back of his mind, and he read
       the Masses and Lyoff Tolstoi faithfully.
       "How about religion?" Amory asked him.
       "Don't know. I'm in a muddle about a lot of thingsI've just
       discovered that I've a mind, and I'm starting to read."
       "Read what?"
       "Everything. I have to pick and choose, of course, but mostly
       things to make me think. I'm reading the four gospels now, and
       the 'Varieties of Religious Experience.'"
       "What chiefly started you?"
       "Wells, I guess, and Tolstoi, and a man named Edward Carpenter.
       I've been reading for over a year nowon a few lines, on what I
       consider the essential lines."
       "Poetry?"
       "Well, frankly, not what you call poetry, or for your reasonsyou
       two write, of course, and look at things differently. Whitman is
       the man that attracts me."
       "Whitman?"
       "Yes; he's a definite ethical force."
       "Well, I'm ashamed to say that I'm a blank on the subject of
       Whitman. How about you, Tom?"
       Tom nodded sheepishly.
       "Well," continued Burne, "you may strike a few poems that are
       tiresome, but I mean the mass of his work. He's tremendouslike
       Tolstoi. They both look things in the face, and, somehow,
       different as they are, stand for somewhat the same things."
       "You have me stumped, Burne," Amory admitted. "I've read 'Anna
       Karinina' and the 'Kreutzer Sonata' of course, but Tolstoi is
       mostly in the original Russian as far as I'm concerned."
       "He's the greatest man in hundreds of years," cried Burne
       enthusiastically. "Did you ever see a picture of that shaggy old
       head of his?"
       They talked until three, from biology to organized religion, and
       when Amory crept shivering into bed it was with his mind aglow
       with ideas and a sense of shock that some one else had discovered
       the path he might have followed. Burne Holiday was so evidently
       developingand Amory had considered that he was doing the same. He
       had fallen into a deep cynicism over what had crossed his path,
       plotted the imperfectability of man and read Shaw and Chesterton
       enough to keep his mind from the edges of decadencenow suddenly
       all his mental processes of the last year and a half seemed stale
       and futilea petty consummation of himself ... and like a sombre
       background lay that incident of the spring before, that filled
       half his nights with a dreary terror and made him unable to pray.
       He was not even a Catholic, yet that was the only ghost of a code
       that he had, the gaudy, ritualistic, paradoxical Catholicism
       whose prophet was Chesterton, whose claqueurs were such reformed
       rakes of literature as Huysmans and Bourget, whose American
       sponsor was Ralph Adams Cram, with his adulation of
       thirteenth-century cathedralsa Catholicism which Amory found
       convenient and ready-made, without priest or sacraments or
       sacrifice.
       He could not sleep, so he turned on his reading-lamp and, taking
       down the "Kreutzer Sonata," searched it carefully for the germs
       of Burne's enthusiasm. Being Burne was suddenly so much realler
       than being clever. Yet he sighed ... here were other possible
       clay feet.
       He thought back through two years, of Burne as a hurried, nervous
       freshman, quite submerged in his brother's personality. Then he
       remembered an incident of sophomore year, in which Burne had been
       suspected of the leading role.
       Dean Hollister had been heard by a large group arguing with a
       taxi-driver, who had driven him from the junction. In the course
       of the altercation the dean remarked that he "might as well buy
       the taxicab." He paid and walked off, but next morning he entered
       his private office to find the taxicab itself in the space
       usually occupied by his desk, bearing a sign which read "Property
       of Dean Hollister. Bought and Paid for."... It took two expert
       mechanics half a day to dissemble it into its minutest parts and
       remove it, which only goes to prove the rare energy of sophomore
       humor under efficient leadership.
       Then again, that very fall, Burne had caused a sensation. A
       certain Phyllis Styles, an intercollegiate prom-trotter, had
       failed to get her yearly invitation to the Harvard-Princeton
       game.
       Jesse Ferrenby had brought her to a smaller game a few weeks
       before, and had pressed Burne into serviceto the ruination of the
       latter's misogyny.
       "Are you coming to the Harvard game?" Burne had asked
       indiscreetly, merely to make conversation.
       "If you ask me," cried Phyllis quickly.
       "Of course I do," said Burne feebly. He was unversed in the arts
       of Phyllis, and was sure that this was merely a vapid form of
       kidding. Before an hour had passed he knew that he was indeed
       involved. Phyllis had pinned him down and served him up, informed
       him the train she was arriving by, and depressed him thoroughly.
       Aside from loathing Phyllis, he had particularly wanted to stag
       that game and entertain some Harvard friends.
       "She'll see," he informed a delegation who arrived in his room to
       josh him. "This will be the last game she ever persuades any
       young innocent to take her to!"
       "But, Burnewhy did you invite her if you didn't want her?"
       "Burne, you know you're secretly mad about her-that's the real
       trouble."
       "What can you do, Burne? What can you do against Phyllis?"
       But Burne only shook his head and muttered threats which
       consisted largely of the phrase: "She'll see, she'll see!"
       The blithesome Phyllis bore her twenty-five summers gayly from
       the train, but on the platform a ghastly sight met her eyes.
       There were Burne and Fred Sloane arrayed to the last dot like the
       lurid figures on college posters. They had bought flaring suits
       with huge peg-top trousers and gigantic padded shoulders. On
       their heads were rakish college hats, pinned up in front and
       sporting bright orange-and-black bands, while from their
       celluloid collars blossomed flaming orange ties. They wore black
       arm-bands with orange "P's," and carried canes flying Princeton
       pennants, the effect completed by socks and peeping handkerchiefs
       in the same color motifs. On a clanking chain they led a large,
       angry tom-cat, painted to represent a tiger.
       A good half of the station crowd was already staring at them,
       torn between horrified pity and riotous mirth, and as Phyllis,
       with her svelte jaw dropping, approached, the pair bent over and
       emitted a college cheer in loud, far-carrying voices,
       thoughtfully adding the name "Phyllis" to the end. She was
       vociferously greeted and escorted enthusiastically across the
       campus, followed by half a hundred village urchinsto the stifled
       laughter of hundreds of alumni and visitors, half of whom had no
       idea that this was a practical joke, but thought that Burne and
       Fred were two varsity sports showing their girl a collegiate
       time.
       Phyllis's feelings as she was paraded by the Harvard and
       Princeton stands, where sat dozens of her former devotees, can be
       imagined. She tried to walk a little ahead, she tried to walk a
       little behindbut they stayed close, that there should be no doubt
       whom she was with, talking in loud voices of their friends on the
       football team, until she could almost hear her acquaintances
       whispering:
       "Phyllis Styles must be awfully hard up to have to come with
       those two."
       That had been Burne, dynamically humorous, fundamentally serious.
       From that root had blossomed the energy that he was now trying to
       orient with progress....
       So the weeks passed and March came and the clay feet that Amory
       looked for failed to appear. About a hundred juniors and seniors
       resigned from their clubs in a final fury of righteousness, and
       the clubs in helplessness turned upon Burne their finest weapon:
       ridicule. Every one who knew him liked himbut what he stood for
       (and he began to stand for more all the time) came under the lash
       of many tongues, until a frailer man than he would have been
       snowed under.
       "Don't you mind losing prestige?" asked Amory one night.
       They had taken to exchanging calls several times a week.
       "Of course I don't. What's prestige, at best?"
       "Some people say that you're just a rather original politician."
       He roared with laughter.
       "That's what Fred Sloane told me to-day. I suppose I have it
       coming."
       One afternoon they dipped into a subject that had interested
       Amory for a long timethe matter of the bearing of physical
       attributes on a man's make-up. Burne had gone into the biology of
       this, and then:
       "Of course health countsa healthy man has twice the chance of
       being good," he said.
       "I don't agree with youI don't believe in 'muscular
       Christianity.'"
       "I do-I believe Christ had great physical vigor."
       "Oh, no," Amory protested. "He worked too hard for that. I
       imagine that when he died he was a broken-down manand the great
       saints haven't been strong."
       "Half of them have."
       "Well, even granting that, I don't think health has anything to
       do with goodness; of course, it's valuable to a great saint to be
       able to stand enormous strains, but this fad of popular preachers
       rising on their toes in simulated virility, bellowing that
       calisthenics will save the worldno, Burne, I can't go that."
       "Well, let's waive itwe won't get anywhere, and besides I haven't
       quite made up my mind about it myself. Now, here's something I do
       knowpersonal appearance has a lot to do with it."
       "Coloring?" Amory asked eagerly.
       "Yes."
       "That's what Tom and I figured," Amory agreed. "We took the
       year-books for the last ten years and looked at the pictures of
       the senior council. I know you don't think much of that august
       body, but it does represent success here in a general way. Well,
       I suppose only about thirty-five per cent of every class here are
       blonds, are really lightyet two-thirds of every senior council
       are light. We looked at pictures of ten years of them, mind you;
       that means that out of every fifteen light-haired men in the
       senior class one is on the senior council, and of the dark-haired
       men it's only one in fifty."
       "It's true," Burne agreed. "The light-haired man is a higher
       type, generally speaking. I worked the thing out with the
       Presidents of the United States once, and found that way over
       half of them were light-hairedyet think of the preponderant
       number of brunettes in the race."
       People unconsciously admit it," said Amory. "You'll notice a
       blond person is expected to talk. If a blond girl doesn't talk we
       call her a 'doll'; if a light-haired man is silent he's
       considered stupid. Yet the world is full of 'dark silent men' and
       'languorous brunettes' who haven't a brain in their heads, but
       somehow are never accused of the dearth."
       "And the large mouth and broad chin and rather big nose
       undoubtedly make the superior face."
       "I'm not so sure." Amory was all for classical features.
       "Oh, yesI'll show you," and Burne pulled out of his desk a
       photographic collection of heavily bearded, shaggy
       celebrities-Tolstoi, Whitman, Carpenter, and others.
       "Aren't they wonderful?"
       Amory tried politely to appreciate them, and gave up laughingly.
       "Burne, I think they're the ugliest-looking crowd I ever came
       across. They look like an old man's home."
       "Oh, Amory, look at that forehead on Emerson; look at Tolstoi's
       eyes." His tone was reproachful.
       Amory shook his head.
       "No! Call them remarkable-looking or anything you wantbut ugly
       they certainly are."
       Unabashed, Burne ran his hand lovingly across the spacious
       foreheads, and piling up the pictures put them back in his desk.
       Walking at night was one of his favorite pursuits, and one night
       he persuaded Amory to accompany him.
       "I hate the dark," Amory objected. "I didn't use toexcept when I
       was particularly imaginative, but now, I really do-I'm a regular
       fool about it."
       "That's useless, you know."
       "Quite possibly."
       "We'll go east," Burne suggested, "and down that string of roads
       through the woods."
       "Doesn't sound very appealing to me," admitted Amory reluctantly,
       "but let's go."
       They set off at a good gait, and for an hour swung along in a
       brisk argument until the lights of Princeton were luminous white
       blots behind them.
       "Any person with any imagination is bound to be afraid," said
       Burne earnestly. And this very walking at night is one of the
       things I was afraid about. I'm going to tell you why I can walk
       anywhere now and not be afraid."
       "Go on," Amory urged eagerly. They were striding toward the
       woods, Burne's nervous, enthusiastic voice warming to his
       subject.
       "I used to come out here alone at night, oh, three months ago,
       and I always stopped at that cross-road we just passed. There
       were the woods looming up ahead, just as they do now, there were
       dogs howling and the shadows and no human sound. Of course, I
       peopled the woods with everything ghastly, just like you do;
       don't you?"
       "I do," Amory admitted.
       "Well, I began analyzing itmy imagination persisted in sticking
       horrors into the darkso I stuck my imagination into the dark
       instead, and let it look out at meI let it play stray dog or
       escaped convict or ghost, and then saw myself coming along the
       road. That made it all rightas it always makes everything all
       right to project yourself completely into another's place. I knew
       that if I were the dog or the convict or the ghost I wouldn't be
       a menace to Burne Holiday any more than he was a menace to me.
       Then I thought of my watch. I'd better go back and leave it and
       then essay the woods. No; I decided, it's better on the whole
       that I should lose a watch than that I should turn backand I did
       go into themnot only followed the road through them, but walked
       into them until I wasn't frightened any moredid it until one
       night I sat down and dozed off in there; then I knew I was
       through being afraid of the dark."
       "Lordy," Amory breathed. "I couldn't have done that. I'd have
       come out half-way, and the first time an automobile passed and
       made the dark thicker when its lamps disappeared, I'd have come
       in."
       "Well," Burne said suddenly, after a few moments' silence, "we're
       half-way through, let's turn back."
       On the return he launched into a discussion of will.
       "It's the whole thing," he asserted. "It's the one dividing line
       between good and evil. I've never met a man who led a rotten life
       and didn't have a weak will."
       "How about great criminals?"
       "They're usually insane. If not, they're weak. There is no such
       thing as a strong, sane criminal."
       "Burne, I disagree with you altogether; how about the superman?"
       "Well?"
       "He's evil, I think, yet he's strong and sane."
       "I've never met him. I'll bet, though, that he's stupid or
       insane."
       "I've met him over and over and he's neither. That's why I think
       you're wrong."
       "I'm sure I'm notand so I don't believe in imprisonment except
       for the insane."
       On this point Amory could not agree. It seemed to him that life
       and history were rife with the strong criminal, keen, but often
       self-deluding; in politics and business one found him and among
       the old statesmen and kings and generals; but Burne never agreed
       and their courses began to split on that point.
       Burne was drawing farther and farther away from the world about
       him. He resigned the vice-presidency of the senior class and took
       to reading and walking as almost his only pursuits. He
       voluntarily attended graduate lectures in philosophy and biology,
       and sat in all of them with a rather pathetically intent look in
       his eyes, as if waiting for something the lecturer would never
       quite come to. Sometimes Amory would see him squirm in his seat;
       and his face would light up; he was on fire to debate a point.
       He grew more abstracted on the street and was even accused of
       becoming a snob, but Amory knew it was nothing of the sort, and
       once when Burne passed him four feet off, absolutely unseeingly,
       his mind a thousand miles away, Amory almost choked with the
       romantic joy of watching him. Burne seemed to be climbing heights
       where others would be forever unable to get a foothold.
       "I tell you," Amory declared to Tom, "he's the first contemporary
       I've ever met whom I'll admit is my superior in mental capacity."
       "It's a bad time to admit itpeople are beginning to think he's
       odd."
       "He's way over their headsyou know you think so yourself when you
       talk to himGood Lord, Tom, you used to stand out against
       'people.' Success has completely conventionalized you."
       Tom grew rather annoyed.
       "What's he trying to do-be excessively holy?"
       "No! not like anybody you've ever seen. Never enters the
       Philadelphian Society. He has no faith in that rot. He doesn't
       believe that public swimming-pools and a kind word in time will
       right the wrongs of the world; moreover, he takes a drink
       whenever he feels like it."
       "He certainly is getting in wrong."
       "Have you talked to him lately?"
       "No."
       "Then you haven't any conception of him."
       The argument ended nowhere, but Amory noticed more than ever how
       the sentiment toward Burne had changed on the campus.
       "It's odd," Amory said to Tom one night when they had grown more
       amicable on the subject, "that the people who violently
       disapprove of Burne's radicalism are distinctly the Pharisee
       classI mean they're the best-educated men in collegethe editors
       of the papers, like yourself and Ferrenby, the younger
       professors.... The illiterate athletes like Langueduc think he's
       getting eccentric, but they just say, 'Good old Burne has got
       some queer ideas in his head,' and pass onthe Pharisee classGee!
       they ridicule him unmercifully."
       The next morning he met Burne hurrying along McCosh walk after a
       recitation.
       "Whither bound, Tsar?"
       "Over to the Prince office to see Ferrenby," he waved a copy of
       the morning's Princetonian at Amory. "He wrote this editorial."
       "Going to flay him alive?"
       "No-but he's got me all balled up. Either I've misjudged him or
       he's suddenly become the world's worst radical."
       Burne hurried on, and it was several days before Amory heard an
       account of the ensuing conversation. Burne had come into the
       editor's sanctum displaying the paper cheerfully.
       "Hello, Jesse."
       "Hello there, Savonarola."
       "I just read your editorial."
       "Good boy-didn't know you stooped that low."
       "Jesse, you startled me."
       "How so?"
       "Aren't you afraid the faculty'll get after you if you pull this
       irreligious stuff?"
       "What?"
       "Like this morning."
       "What the devil-that editorial was on the coaching system."
       "Yes, but that quotation"
       Jesse sat up.
       "What quotation?"
       "You know: 'He who is not with me is against me.'"
       "Well-what about it?"
       Jesse was puzzled but not alarmed.
       "Well, you say herelet me see." Burne opened the paper and read:
       "'He who is not with me is against me, as that gentleman said who
       was notoriously capable of only coarse distinctions and puerile
       generalities.'"
       "What of it?" Ferrenby began to look alarmed. "Oliver Cromwell
       said it, didn't he? or was it Washington, or one of the saints?
       Good Lord, I've forgotten."
       Burne roared with laughter.
       "Oh, Jesse, oh, good, kind Jesse."
       "Who said it, for Pete's sake?"
       "Well," said Burne, recovering his voice, "St. Matthew attributes
       it to Christ."
       "My God!" cried Jesse, and collapsed backward into the
       waste-basket.
       AMORY WRITES A POEM
       The weeks tore by. Amory wandered occasionally to New York on the
       chance of finding a new shining green auto-bus, that its
       stick-of-candy glamour might penetrate his disposition. One day
       he ventured into a stock-company revival of a play whose name was
       faintly familiar. The curtain rosehe watched casually as a girl
       entered. A few phrases rang in his ear and touched a faint chord
       of memory. Where? When?
       Then he seemed to hear a voice whispering beside him, a very
       soft, vibrant voice: "Oh, I'm such a poor little fool; do tell me
       when I do wrong."
       The solution came in a flash and he had a quick, glad memory of
       Isabelle.
       He found a blank space on his programme, and began to scribble
       rapidly:
       "Here in the figured dark I watch once more,
       There, with the curtain, roll the years away;
       Two years of yearsthere was an idle day
       Of ours, when happy endings didn't bore
       Our unfermented souls; I could adore
       Your eager face beside me, wide-eyed, gay,
       Smiling a repertoire while the poor play
       Reached me as a faint ripple reaches shore.
       Yawning and wondering an evening through,
       I watch alone ... and chatterings, of course,
       Spoil the one scene which, somehow, did have charms;
       You wept a bit, and I grew sad for you
       Right here! Where Mr. X defends divorce
       And What's-Her-Name falls fainting in his arms."
       STILL CALM
       "Ghosts are such dumb things," said Alec, "they're slow-witted. I
       can always outguess a ghost."
       "How?" asked Tom.
       "Well, it depends where. Take a bedroom, for example. If you use
       any discretion a ghost can never get you in a bedroom.
       "Go on, s'pose you think there's maybe a ghost in your
       bedroomwhat measures do you take on getting home at night?"
       demanded Amory, interested.
       "Take a stick" answered Alec, with ponderous reverence, "one
       about the length of a broom-handle. Now, the first thing to do is
       to get the room clearedto do this you rush with your eyes closed
       into your study and turn on the lightsnext, approaching the
       closet, carefully run the stick in the door three or four times.
       Then, if nothing happens, you can look in. Always, always run the
       stick in viciously firstnever look first!"
       "Of course, that's the ancient Celtic school," said Tom gravely.
       "Yes-but they usually pray first. Anyway, you use this method to
       clear the closets and also for behind all doors"
       "And the bed," Amory suggested.
       "Oh, Amory, no!" cried Alec in horror. "That isn't the waythe bed
       requires different tacticslet the bed alone, as you value your
       reasonif there is a ghost in the room and that's only about a
       third of the time, it is almost always under the bed."
       "Well" Amory began.
       Alec waved him into silence.
       "Of course you never look. You stand in the middle of the floor
       and before he knows what you're going to do make a sudden leap
       for the bednever walk near the bed; to a ghost your ankle is your
       most vulnerable partonce in bed, you're safe; he may lie around
       under the bed all night, but you're safe as daylight. If you
       still have doubts pull the blanket over your head."
       "All that's very interesting, Tom."
       "Isn't it?" Alec beamed proudly. "All my own, too-the Sir Oliver
       Lodge of the new world."
       Amory was enjoying college immensely again. The sense of going
       forward in a direct, determined line had come back; youth was
       stirring and shaking out a few new feathers. He had even stored
       enough surplus energy to sally into a new pose.
       "What's the idea of all this 'distracted' stuff, Amory?" asked
       Alec one day, and then as Amory pretended to be cramped over his
       book in a daze: "Oh, don't try to act Burne, the mystic, to me."
       Amory looked up innocently.
       "What?"
       "What?" mimicked Alec. "Are you trying to read yourself into a
       rhapsody withlet's see the book."
       He snatched it; regarded it derisively.
       "Well?" said Amory a little stiffly.
       "'The Life of St. Teresa,'" read Alec aloud. "Oh, my gosh!"
       "Say, Alec."
       "What?"
       "Does it bother you?"
       "Does what bother me?"
       "My acting dazed and all that?"
       "Why, no-of course it doesn't bother me."
       "Well, then, don't spoil it. If I enjoy going around telling
       people guilelessly that I think I'm a genius, let me do it."
       "You're getting a reputation for being eccentric," said Alec,
       laughing, "if that's what you mean."
       Amory finally prevailed, and Alec agreed to accept his face value
       in the presence of others if he was allowed rest periods when
       they were alone; so Amory "ran it out" at a great rate, bringing
       the most eccentric characters to dinner, wild-eyed grad students,
       preceptors with strange theories of God and government, to the
       cynical amazement of the supercilious Cottage Club.
       As February became slashed by sun and moved cheerfully into
       March, Amory went several times to spend week-ends with
       Monsignor; once he took Burne, with great success, for he took
       equal pride and delight in displaying them to each other.
       Monsignor took him several times to see Thornton Hancock, and
       once or twice to the house of a Mrs. Lawrence, a type of
       Rome-haunting American whom Amory liked immediately.
       Then one day came a letter from Monsignor, which appended an
       interesting P. S.:
       "Do you know," it ran, "that your third cousin, Clara Page,
       widowed six months and very poor, is living in Philadelphia? I
       don't think you've ever met her, but I wish, as a favor to me,
       you'd go to see her. To my mind, she's rather a remarkable woman,
       and just about your age."
       Amory sighed and decided to go, as a favor....
       CLARA
       She was immemorial.... Amory wasn't good enough for Clara, Clara
       of ripply golden hair, but then no man was. Her goodness was
       above the prosy morals of the husband-seeker, apart from the dull
       literature of female virtue.
       Sorrow lay lightly around her, and when Amory found her in
       Philadelphia he thought her steely blue eyes held only happiness;
       a latent strength, a realism, was brought to its fullest
       development by the facts that she was compelled to face. She was
       alone in the world, with two small children, little money, and,
       worst of all, a host of friends. He saw her that winter in
       Philadelphia entertaining a houseful of men for an evening, when
       he knew she had not a servant in the house except the little
       colored girl guarding the babies overhead. He saw one of the
       greatest libertines in that city, a man who was habitually drunk
       and notorious at home and abroad, sitting opposite her for an
       evening, discussing girls' boarding-schools with a sort of
       innocent excitement. What a twist Clara had to her mind! She
       could make fascinating and almost brilliant conversation out of
       the thinnest air that ever floated through a drawing-room.
       The idea that the girl was poverty-stricken had appealed to
       Amory's sense of situation. He arrived in Philadelphia expecting
       to be told that 921 Ark Street was in a miserable lane of hovels.
       He was even disappointed when it proved to be nothing of the
       sort. It was an old house that had been in her husband's family
       for years. An elderly aunt, who objected to having it sold, had
       put ten years' taxes with a lawyer and pranced off to Honolulu,
       leaving Clara to struggle with the heating-problem as best she
       could. So no wild-haired woman with a hungry baby at her breast
       and a sad Amelia-like look greeted him. Instead, Amory would have
       thought from his reception that she had not a care in the world.
       A calm virility and a dreamy humor, marked contrasts to her
       level-headednessinto these moods she slipped sometimes as a
       refuge. She could do the most prosy things (though she was wise
       enough never to stultify herself with such "household arts" as
       knitting and embroidery), yet immediately afterward pick up a
       book and let her imagination rove as a formless cloud with the
       wind. Deepest of all in her personality was the golden radiance
       that she diffused around her. As an open fire in a dark room
       throws romance and pathos into the quiet faces at its edge, so
       she cast her lights and shadows around the rooms that held her,
       until she made of her prosy old uncle a man of quaint and
       meditative charm, metamorphosed the stray telegraph boy into a
       Puck-like creature of delightful originality. At first this
       quality of hers somehow irritated Amory. He considered his own
       uniqueness sufficient, and it rather embarrassed him when she
       tried to read new interests into him for the benefit of what
       other adorers were present. He felt as if a polite but insistent
       stage-manager were attempting to make him give a new
       interpretation of a part he had conned for years.
       But Clara talking, Clara telling a slender tale of a hatpin and
       an inebriated man and herself.... People tried afterward to
       repeat her anecdotes but for the life of them they could make
       them sound like nothing whatever. They gave her a sort of
       innocent attention and the best smiles many of them had smiled
       for long; there were few tears in Clara, but people smiled
       misty-eyed at her.
       Very occasionally Amory stayed for little half-hours after the
       rest of the court had gone, and they would have bread and jam and
       tea late in the afternoon or "maple-sugar lunches," as she called
       them, at night.
       "You are remarkable, aren't you!" Amory was becoming trite from
       where he perched in the centre of the dining-room table one six
       o'clock.
       "Not a bit," she answered. She was searching out napkins in the
       sideboard. "I'm really most humdrum and commonplace. One of those
       people who have no interest in anything but their children."
       "Tell that to somebody else," scoffed Amory. "You know you're
       perfectly effulgent." He asked her the one thing that he knew
       might embarrass her. It was the remark that the first bore made
       to Adam.
       "Tell me about yourself." And she gave the answer that Adam must
       have given.
       "There's nothing to tell."
       But eventually Adam probably told the bore all the things he
       thought about at night when the locusts sang in the sandy grass,
       and he must have remarked patronizingly how different he was from
       Eve, forgetting how different she was from him ... at any rate,
       Clara told Amory much about herself that evening. She had had a
       harried life from sixteen on, and her education had stopped
       sharply with her leisure. Browsing in her library, Amory found a
       tattered gray book out of which fell a yellow sheet that he
       impudently opened. It was a poem that she had written at school
       about a gray convent wall on a gray day, and a girl with her
       cloak blown by the wind sitting atop of it and thinking about the
       many-colored world. As a rule such sentiment bored him, but this
       was done with so much simplicity and atmosphere, that it brought
       a picture of Clara to his mind, of Clara on such a cool, gray day
       with her keen blue eyes staring out, trying to see her tragedies
       come marching over the gardens outside. He envied that poem. How
       he would have loved to have come along and seen her on the wall
       and talked nonsense or romance to her, perched above him in the
       air. He began to be frightfully jealous of everything about
       Clara: of her past, of her babies, of the men and women who
       flocked to drink deep of her cool kindness and rest their tired
       minds as at an absorbing play.
       "Nobody seems to bore you," he objected.
       "About half the world do," she admitted, "but I think that's a
       pretty good average, don't you?" and she turned to find something
       in Browning that bore on the subject. She was the only person he
       ever met who could look up passages and quotations to show him in
       the middle of the conversation, and yet not be irritating to
       distraction. She did it constantly, with such a serious
       enthusiasm that he grew fond of watching her golden hair bent
       over a book, brow wrinkled ever so little at hunting her
       sentence.
       Through early March he took to going to Philadelphia for
       week-ends. Almost always there was some one else there and she
       seemed not anxious to see him alone, for many occasions presented
       themselves when a word from her would have given him another
       delicious half-hour of adoration. But he fell gradually in love
       and began to speculate wildly on marriage. Though this design
       flowed through his brain even to his lips, still he knew
       afterward that the desire had not been deeply rooted. Once he
       dreamt that it had come true and woke up in a cold panic, for in
       his dream she had been a silly, flaxen Clara, with the gold gone
       out of her hair and platitudes falling insipidly from her
       changeling tongue. But she was the first fine woman he ever knew
       and one of the few good people who ever interested him. She made
       her goodness such an asset. Amory had decided that most good
       people either dragged theirs after them as a liability, or else
       distorted it to artificial geniality, and of course there were
       the ever-present prig and Pharisee(but Amory never included them
       as being among the saved).
       ST. CECILIA
       "Over her gray and velvet dress,
       Under her molten, beaten hair,
       Color of rose in mock distress
       Flushes and fades and makes her fair;
       Fills the air from her to him
       With light and languor and little sighs,
       Just so subtly he scarcely knows...
       Laughing lightning, color of rose."
       "Do you like me?"
       "Of course I do," said Clara seriously.
       "Why?"
       "Well, we have some qualities in common. Things that are
       spontaneous in each of usor were originally."
       "You're implying that I haven't used myself very well?"
       Clara hesitated.
       "Well, I can't judge. A man, of course, has to go through a lot
       more, and I've been sheltered."
       "Oh, don't stall, please, Clara," Amory interrupted; "but do talk
       about me a little, won't you?"
       "Surely, I'd adore to." She didn't smile.
       "That's sweet of you. First answer some questions. Am I painfully
       conceited?"
       "Well-no, you have tremendous vanity, but it'll amuse the people
       who notice its preponderance."
       "I see."
       "You're really humble at heart. You sink to the third hell of
       depression when you think you've been slighted. In fact, you
       haven't much self-respect."
       "Centre of target twice, Clara. How do you do it? You never let
       me say a word."
       "Of course notI can never judge a man while he's talking. But I'm
       not through; the reason you have so little real self-confidence,
       even though you gravely announce to the occasional philistine
       that you think you're a genius, is that you've attributed all
       sorts of atrocious faults to yourself and are trying to live up
       to them. For instance, you're always saying that you are a slave
       to high-balls."
       "But I am, potentially."
       "And you say you're a weak character, that you've no will." "Not
       a bit of willI'm a slave to my emotions, to my likes, to my
       hatred of boredom, to most of my desires"
       "You are not!" She brought one little fist down onto the other.
       "You're a slave, a bound helpless slave to one thing in the
       world, your imagination."
       "You certainly interest me. If this isn't boring you, go on."
       "I notice that when you want to stay over an extra day from
       college you go about it in a sure way. You never decide at first
       while the merits of going or staying are fairly clear in your
       mind. You let your imagination shinny on the side of your desires
       for a few hours, and then you decide. Naturally your imagination,
       after a little freedom, thinks up a million reasons why you
       should stay, so your decision when it comes isn't true. It's
       biassed."
       "Yes," objected Amory, "but isn't it lack of will-power to let my
       imagination shinny on the wrong side?"
       "My dear boy, there's your big mistake. This has nothing to do
       with will-power; that's a crazy, useless word, anyway; you lack
       judgmentthe judgment to decide at once when you know your
       imagination will play you false, given half a chance."
       "Well, I'll be darned!" exclaimed Amory in surprise, "that's the
       last thing I expected."
       Clara didn't gloat. She changed the subject immediately. But she
       had started him thinking and he believed she was partly right. He
       felt like a factory-owner who after accusing a clerk of
       dishonesty finds that his own son, in the office, is changing the
       books once a week. His poor, mistreated will that he had been
       holding up to the scorn of himself and his friends, stood before
       him innocent, and his judgment walked off to prison with the
       unconfinable imp, imagination, dancing in mocking glee beside
       him. Clara's was the only advice he ever asked without dictating
       the answer himselfexcept, perhaps, in his talks with Monsignor
       Darcy.
       How he loved to do any sort of thing with Clara! Shopping with
       her was a rare, epicurean dream. In every store where she had
       ever traded she was whispered about as the beautiful Mrs. Page.
       "I'll bet she won't stay single long."
       "Well, don't scream it out. She ain't lookin' for no advice."
       "Ain't she beautiful!" (Enter a floor-walkersilence till
       he moves forward, smirking.)
       "Society person, ain't she?"
       "Yeah, but poor now, I guess; so they say."
       "Gee! girls, ain't she some kid!"
       And Clara beamed on all alike. Amory believed that tradespeople
       gave her discounts, sometimes to her knowledge and sometimes
       without it. He knew she dressed very well, had always the best of
       everything in the house, and was inevitably waited upon by the
       head floor-walker at the very least.
       Sometimes they would go to church together on Sunday and he would
       walk beside her and revel in her cheeks moist from the soft water
       in the new air. She was very devout, always had been, and God
       knows what heights she attained and what strength she drew down
       to herself when she knelt and bent her golden hair into the
       stained-glass light.
       "St. Cecelia," he cried aloud one day, quite involuntarily, and
       the people turned and peered, and the priest paused in his sermon
       and Clara and Amory turned to fiery red.
       That was the last Sunday they had, for he spoiled it all that
       night. He couldn't help it.
       They were walking through the March twilight where it was as warm
       as June, and the joy of youth filled his soul so that he felt he
       must speak.
       "I think," he said and his voice trembled, "that if I lost faith
       in you I'd lose faith in God."
       She looked at him with such a startled face that he asked her the
       matter.
       "Nothing," she said slowly, "only this: five men have said that
       to me before, and it frightens me."
       "Oh, Clara, is that your fate!"
       She did not answer.
       "I suppose love to you is" he began.
       She turned like a flash.
       "I have never been in love."
       They walked along, and he realized slowly how much she had told
       him ... never in love.... She seemed suddenly a daughter of light
       alone. His entity dropped out of her plane and he longed only to
       touch her dress with almost the realization that Joseph must have
       had of Mary's eternal significance. But quite mechanically he
       heard himself saying:
       "And I love youany latent greatness that I've got is ... oh, I
       can't talk, but Clara, if I come back in two years in a position
       to marry you-"
       She shook her head.
       "No," she said; "I'd never marry again. I've got my two children
       and I want myself for them. I like youI like all clever men, you
       more than anybut you know me well enough to know that I'd never
       marry a clever man" She broke off suddenly.
       "Amory."
       "What?"
       "You're not in love with me. You never wanted to marry me, did
       you?"
       "It was the twilight," he said wonderingly. "I didn't feel as
       though I were speaking aloud. But I love youor adore youor
       worship you-"
       "There you gorunning through your catalogue of emotions in five
       seconds."
       He smiled unwillingly.
       "Don't make me out such a light-weight, Clara; you are depressing
       sometimes."
       "You're not a light-weight, of all things," she said intently,
       taking his arm and opening wide her eyeshe could see their
       kindliness in the fading dusk. "A light-weight is an eternal
       nay."
       "There's so much spring in the air-there's so much lazy sweetness
       in your heart."
       She dropped his arm.
       "You're all fine now, and I feel glorious. Give me a cigarette.
       You've never seen me smoke, have you? Well, I do, about once a
       month."
       And then that wonderful girl and Amory raced to the corner like
       two mad children gone wild with pale-blue twilight.
       "I'm going to the country for to-morrow," she announced, as she
       stood panting, safe beyond the flare of the corner lamp-post.
       "These days are too magnificent to miss, though perhaps I feel
       them more in the city."
       "Oh, Clara!" Amory said; "what a devil you could have been if the
       Lord had just bent your soul a little the other way!"
       "Maybe," she answered; "but I think not. I'm never really wild
       and never have been. That little outburst was pure spring." "And
       you are, too," said he.
       They were walking along now.
       "No-you're wrong again, how can a person of your own self-reputed
       brains be so constantly wrong about me? I'm the opposite of
       everything spring ever stood for. It's unfortunate, if I happen
       to look like what pleased some soppy old Greek sculptor, but I
       assure you that if it weren't for my face I'd be a quiet nun in
       the convent without"then she broke into a run and her raised
       voice floated back to him as he followed"my precious babies,
       which I must go back and see."
       She was the only girl he ever knew with whom he could understand
       how another man might be preferred. Often Amory met wives whom he
       had known as dibutantes, and looking intently at them imagined
       that he found something in their faces which said:
       "Oh, if I could only have gotten you!" Oh, the enormous conceit
       of the man!
       But that night seemed a night of stars and singing and Clara's
       bright soul still gleamed on the ways they had trod.
       "Golden, golden is the air" he chanted to the little pools of
       water.... "Golden is the air, golden notes from golden mandolins,
       golden frets of golden violins, fair, oh, wearily fair.... Skeins
       from braided basket, mortals may not hold; oh, what young
       extravagant God, who would know or ask it?... who could give such
       gold..."
       AMORY IS RESENTFUL
       Slowly and inevitably, yet with a sudden surge at the last, while
       Amory talked and dreamed, war rolled swiftly up the beach and
       washed the sands where Princeton played. Every night the
       gymnasium echoed as platoon after platoon swept over the floor
       and shuffled out the basket-ball markings. When Amory went to
       Washington the next week-end he caught some of the spirit of
       crisis which changed to repulsion in the Pullman car coming back,
       for the berths across from him were occupied by stinking
       aliens-Greeks, he guessed, or Russians. He thought how much
       easier patriotism had been to a homogeneous race, how much easier
       it would have been to fight as the Colonies fought, or as the
       Confederacy fought. And he did no sleeping that night, but
       listened to the aliens guffaw and snore while they filled the car
       with the heavy scent of latest America.
       In Princeton every one bantered in public and told themselves
       privately that their deaths at least would be heroic. The
       literary students read Rupert Brooke passionately; the
       lounge-lizards worried over whether the government would permit
       the English-cut uniform for officers; a few of the hopelessly
       lazy wrote to the obscure branches of the War Department, seeking
       an easy commission and a soft berth.
       Then, after a week, Amory saw Burne and knew at once that
       argument would be futileBurne had come out as a pacifist. The
       socialist magazines, a great smattering of Tolstoi, and his own
       intense longing for a cause that would bring out whatever
       strength lay in him, had finally decided him to preach peace as a
       subjective ideal.
       "When the German army entered Belgium," he began, "if the
       inhabitants had gone peaceably about their business, the German
       army would have been disorganized in"
       "I know," Amory interrupted, "I've heard it all. But I'm not
       going to talk propaganda with you. There's a chance that you're
       rightbut even so we're hundreds of years before the time when
       non-resistance can touch us as a reality."
       "But, Amory, listen"
       "Burne, we'd just argue"
       "Very well."
       "Just one thingI don't ask you to think of your family or
       friends, because I know they don't count a picayune with you
       beside your sense of dutybut, Burne, how do you know that the
       magazines you read and the societies you join and these idealists
       you meet aren't just plain German?"
       "Some of them are, of course."
       "How do you know they aren't all pro-Germanjust a lot of weak
       oneswith German-Jewish names."
       "That's the chance, of course," he said slowly. "How much or how
       little I'm taking this stand because of propaganda I've heard, I
       don't know; naturally I think that it's my most innermost
       convictionit seems a path spread before me just now."
       Amory's heart sank.
       "But think of the cheapness of itno one's really going to martyr
       you for being a pacifistit's just going to throw you in with the
       worst"
       "I doubt it," he interrupted.
       "Well, it all smells of Bohemian New York to me."
       "I know what you mean, and that's why I'm not sure I'll agitate."
       "You're one man, Burne going to talk to people who won't
       listen with all God's given you."
       "That's what Stephen must have thought many years ago. But he
       preached his sermon and they killed him. He probably thought as
       he was dying what a waste it all was. But you see, I've always
       felt that Stephen's death was the thing that occurred to Paul on
       the road to Damascus, and sent him to preach the word of Christ
       all over the world."
       "Go on."
       "That's all-this is my particular duty. Even if right now I'm
       just a pawnjust sacrificed. God! Amoryyou don't think I like the
       Germans!"
       "Well, I can't say anything elseI get to the end of all the logic
       about non-resistance, and there, like an excluded middle, stands
       the huge spectre of man as he is and always will be. And this
       spectre stands right beside the one logical necessity of
       Tolstoi's, and the other logical necessity of Nietzsche's" Amory
       broke off suddenly. "When are you going?"
       "I'm going next week."
       "I'll see you, of course."
       As he walked away it seemed to Amory that the look in his face
       bore a great resemblance to that in Kerry's when he had said
       good-by under Blair Arch two years before. Amory wondered
       unhappily why he could never go into anything with the primal
       honesty of those two.
       "Burne's a fanatic," he said to Tom, "and he's dead wrong and,
       I'm inclined to think, just an unconscious pawn in the hands of
       anarchistic publishers and German-paid rag waversbut he haunts
       mejust leaving everything worth while"
       Burne left in a quietly dramatic manner a week later. He sold all
       his possessions and came down to the room to say good-by, with a
       battered old bicycle, on which he intended to ride to his home in
       Pennsylvania.
       "Peter the Hermit bidding farewell to Cardinal Richelieu,"
       suggested Alec, who was lounging in the window-seat as Burne and
       Amory shook hands.
       But Amory was not in a mood for that, and as he saw Burne's long
       legs propel his ridiculous bicycle out of sight beyond Alexander
       Hall, he knew he was going to have a bad week. Not that he
       doubted the warGermany stood for everything repugnant to him; for
       materialism and the direction of tremendous licentious force; it
       was just that Burne's face stayed in his memory and he was sick
       of the hysteria he was beginning to hear.
       "What on earth is the use of suddenly running down Goethe," he
       declared to Alec and Tom. "Why write books to prove he started
       the waror that that stupid, overestimated Schiller is a demon in
       disguise?"
       "Have you ever read anything of theirs?" asked Tom shrewdly.
       "No," Amory admitted.
       "Neither have I," he said laughing.
       "People will shout," said Alec quietly, "but Goethe's on his same
       old shelf in the libraryto bore any one that wants to read him!"
       Amory subsided, and the subject dropped.
       "What are you going to do, Amory?"
       "Infantry or aviation, I can't make up my mindI hate mechanics,
       but then of course aviation's the thing for me"
       "I feel as Amory does," said Tom. "Infantry or aviationaviation
       sounds like the romantic side of the war, of courselike cavalry
       used to be, you know; but like Amory I don't know a horse-power
       from a piston-rod."
       Somehow Amory's dissatisfaction with his lack of enthusiasm
       culminated in an attempt to put the blame for the whole war on
       the ancestors of his generation ... all the people who cheered
       for Germany in 1870.... All the materialists rampant, all the
       idolizers of German science and efficiency. So he sat one day in
       an English lecture and heard "Locksley Hall" quoted and fell into
       a brown study with contempt for Tennyson and all he stood forfor
       he took him as a representative of the Victorians.
       "Victorians, Victorians, who never learned to weep
       Who sowed the bitter harvest that your children go to reap"
       scribbled Amory in his note-book. The lecturer was saying
       something about Tennyson's solidity and fifty heads were bent to
       take notes. Amory turned over to a fresh page and began scrawling
       again.
       "They shuddered when they found what Mr. Darwin was about, They
       shuddered when the waltz came in and Newman hurried out"
       But the waltz came in much earlier; he crossed that out.
       "And entitled A Song in the Time of Order," came the professor's
       voice, droning far away. "Time of Order"Good Lord! Everything
       crammed in the box and the Victorians sitting on the lid smiling
       serenely.... With Browning in his Italian villa crying bravely:
       "All's for the best." Amory scribbled again.
       "You knelt up in the temple and he bent to hear you pray, You
       thanked him for your 'glorious gains'reproached him for
       'Cathay.'"
       Why could he never get more than a couplet at a time? Now he
       needed something to rhyme with:
       "You would keep Him straight with science, tho He had gone wrong
       before..."
       Well, anyway....
       "You met your children in your home'I've fixed it up!" you cried,
       Took your fifty years of Europe, and then virtuouslydied."
       "That was to a great extent Tennyson's idea," came the lecturer's
       voice. "Swinburne's Song in the Time of Order might well have
       been Tennyson's title. He idealized order against chaos, against
       waste."
       At last Amory had it. He turned over another page and scrawled
       vigorously for the twenty minutes that was left of the hour. Then
       he walked up to the desk and deposited a page torn out of his
       note-book.
       "Here's a poem to the Victorians, sir," he said coldly. The
       professor picked it up curiously while Amory backed rapidly
       through the door.
       Here is what he had written:
       "Songs in the time of order
       You left for us to sing,
       Proofs with excluded middles,
       Answers to life in rhyme,
       Keys of the prison warder
       And ancient bells to ring,
       Time was the end of riddles,
       We were the end of time...
       Here were domestic oceans
       And a sky that we might reach,
       Guns and a guarded border,
       Gantletsbut not to fling,
       Thousands of old emotions
       And a platitude for each,
       Songs in the time of order
       And tongues, that we might sing."
        
       THE END OF MANY THINGS
       Early April slipped by in a hazea haze of long evenings on the
       club veranda with the graphophone playing "Poor Butterfly" inside
       ... for "Poor Butterfly" had been the song of that last year. The
       war seemed scarcely to touch them and it might have been one of
       the senior springs of the past, except for the drilling every
       other afternoon, yet Amory realized poignantly that this was the
       last spring under the old rigime.
       "This is the great protest against the superman," said Amory.
       "I suppose so," Alec agreed.
       "He's absolutely irreconcilable with any Utopia. As long as he
       occurs, there's trouble and all the latent evil that makes a
       crowd list and sway when he talks."
       "And of course all that he is is a gifted man without a moral
       sense."
       "That's all. I think the worst thing to contemplate is thisit's
       all happened before, how soon will it happen again? Fifty years
       after Waterloo Napoleon was as much a hero to English school
       children as Wellington. How do we know our grandchildren won't
       idolize Von Hindenburg the same way?"
       "What brings it about?"
       "Time, damn it, and the historian. If we could only learn to look
       on evil as evil, whether it's clothed in filth or monotony or
       magnificence."
       "God! Haven't we raked the universe over the coals for four
       years?"
       Then the night came that was to be the last. Tom and Amory, bound
       in the morning for different training-camps, paced the shadowy
       walks as usual and seemed still to see around them the faces of
       the men they knew.
       "The grass is full of ghosts to-night."
       "The whole campus is alive with them."
       They paused by Little and watched the moon rise, to make silver
       of the slate roof of Dodd and blue the rustling trees.
       "You know," whispered Tom, "what we feel now is the sense of all
       the gorgeous youth that has rioted through here in two hundred
       years."
       A last burst of singing flooded up from Blair Archbroken voices
       for some long parting.
       "And what we leave here is more than this class; it's the whole
       heritage of youth. We're just one generationwe're breaking all
       the links that seemed to bind us here to top-booted and
       high-stocked generations. We've walked arm and arm with Burr and
       Light-Horse Harry Lee through half these deep-blue nights."
       "That's what they are," Tom tangented off, "deep bluea bit of
       color would spoil them, make them exotic. Spires, against a sky
       that's a promise of dawn, and blue light on the slate roofsit
       hurts ... rather"
       "Good-by, Aaron Burr," Amory called toward deserted Nassau Hall,
       "you and I knew strange corners of life."
       His voice echoed in the stillness.
       "The torches are out," whispered Tom. "Ah, Messalina, the long
       shadows are building minarets on the stadium"
       For an instant the voices of freshman year surged around them and
       then they looked at each other with faint tears in their eyes.
       "Damn!"
       "Damn!"
       The last light fades and drifts across the landthe low, long
       land, the sunny land of spires; the ghosts of evening tune again
       their lyres and wander singing in a plaintive band down the long
       corridors of trees; pale fires echo the night from tower top to
       tower: Oh, sleep that dreams, and dream that never tires, press
       from the petals of the lotus flower something of this to keep,
       the essence of an hour.
       No more to wait the twilight of the moon in this sequestered vale
       of star and spire, for one eternal morning of desire passes to
       time and earthy afternoon. Here, Heraclitus, did you find in fire
       and shifting things the prophecy you hurled down the dead years;
       this midnight my desire will see, shadowed among the embers,
       furled in flame, the splendor and the sadness of the world.
       INTERLUDE
       May, 1917-February, 1919
       A letter dated January, 1918, written by Monsignor Darcy to
       Amory, who is a second lieutenant in the 171st Infantry, Port of
       Embarkation, Camp Mills, Long Island.
       MY DEAR BOY:
       All you need tell me of yourself is that you still are; for the
       rest I merely search back in a restive memory, a thermometer that
       records only fevers, and match you with what I was at your age.
       But men will chatter and you and I will still shout our
       futilities to each other across the stage until the last silly
       curtain falls plump! upon our bobbing heads. But you are starting
       the spluttering magic-lantern show of life with much the same
       array of slides as I had, so I need to write you if only to
       shriek the colossal stupidity of people....
       This is the end of one thing: for better or worse you will never
       again be quite the Amory Blaine that I knew, never again will we
       meet as we have met, because your generation is growing hard,
       much harder than mine ever grew, nourished as they were on the
       stuff of the nineties.
       Amory, lately I reread Fschylus and there in the divine irony of
       the "Agamemnon" I find the only answer to this bitter ageall the
       world tumbled about our ears, and the closest parallel ages back
       in that hopeless resignation. There are times when I think of the
       men out there as Roman legionaries, miles from their corrupt
       city, stemming back the hordes ... hordes a little more menacing,
       after all, than the corrupt city ... another blind blow at the
       race, furies that we passed with ovations years ago, over whose
       corpses we bleated triumphantly all through the Victorian era....
       And afterward an out-and-out materialistic worldand the Catholic
       Church. I wonder where you'll fit in. Of one thing I'm sureCeltic
       you'll live and Celtic you'll die; so if you don't use heaven as
       a continual referendum for your ideas you'll find earth a
       continual recall to your ambitions.
       Amory, I've discovered suddenly that I'm an old man. Like all old
       men, I've had dreams sometimes and I'm going to tell you of them.
       I've enjoyed imagining that you were my son, that perhaps when I
       was young I went into a state of coma and begat you, and when I
       came to, had no recollection of it ... it's the paternal
       instinct, Amory-celibacy goes deeper than the flesh....
       Sometimes I think that the explanation of our deep resemblance is
       some common ancestor, and I find that the only blood that the
       Darcys and the O'Haras have in common is that of the O'Donahues
       ... Stephen was his name, I think....
       When the lightning strikes one of us it strikes both: you had
       hardly arrived at the port of embarkation when I got my papers to
       start for Rome, and I am waiting every moment to be told where to
       take ship. Even before you get this letter I shall be on the
       ocean; then will come your turn. You went to war as a gentleman
       should, just as you went to school and college, because it was
       the thing to do. It's better to leave the blustering and
       tremulo-heroism to the middle classes; they do it so much better.
       Do you remember that week-end last March when you brought Burne
       Holiday from Princeton to see me? What a magnificent boy he is!
       It gave me a frightful shock afterward when you wrote that he
       thought me splendid; how could he be so deceived? Splendid is the
       one thing that neither you nor I are. We are many other
       thingswe're extraordinary, we're clever, we could be said, I
       suppose, to be brilliant. We can attract people, we can make
       atmosphere, we can almost lose our Celtic souls in Celtic
       subtleties, we can almost always have our own way; but
       splendidrather not!
       I am going to Rome with a wonderful dossier and letters of
       introduction that cover every capital in Europe, and there will
       be "no small stir" when I get there. How I wish you were with me!
       This sounds like a rather cynical paragraph, not at all the sort
       of thing that a middle-aged clergyman should write to a youth
       about to depart for the war; the only excuse is that the
       middle-aged clergyman is talking to himself. There are deep
       things in us and you know what they are as well as I do. We have
       great faith, though yours at present is uncrystallized; we have a
       terrible honesty that all our sophistry cannot destroy and, above
       all, a childlike simplicity that keeps us from ever being really
       malicious.
       I have written a keen for you which follows. I am sorry your
       cheeks are not up to the description I have written of them, but
       you will smoke and read all night
       At any rate here it is:
       A Lament for a Foster Son, and He going to the War Against the
       King of Foreign.
       "Ochone
       He is gone from me the son of my mind
       And he in his golden youth like Angus Oge
       Angus of the bright birds
       And his mind strong and subtle like the mind of Cuchulin on
       Muirtheme.
       Awirra sthrue
       His brow is as white as the milk of the cows of Maeve
       And his cheeks like the cherries of the tree
       And it bending down to Mary and she feeding the Son of God.
       Aveelia Vrone
       His hair is like the golden collar of the Kings at Tara
       And his eyes like the four gray seas of Erin.
       And they swept with the mists of rain.
       Mavrone go Gudyo
       He to be in the joyful and red battle
       Amongst the chieftains and they doing great deeds of valor His
       life to go from him
       It is the chords of my own soul would be loosed.
       A Vich Deelish
       My heart is in the heart of my son
       And my life is in his life surely
       A man can be twice young
       In the life of his sons only.
       Jia du Vaha Alanav
       May the Son of God be above him and beneath him, before him and
       behind him
       May the King of the elements cast a mist over the eyes of the
       King of Foreign,
       May the Queen of the Graces lead him by the hand the way he can
       go through the midst of his enemies and they not seeing him May
       Patrick of the Gael and Collumb of the Churches and the five
       thousand Saints of Erin be better than a shield to him
       And he go into the fight.
       Och Ochone."
       Amory-AmoryI feel, somehow, that this is all; one or both of us
       is not going to last out this war.... I've been trying to tell
       you how much this reincarnation of myself in you has meant in the
       last few years ... curiously alike we are ... curiously unlike.
       Good-by, dear boy, and God be with you. THAYER DARCY.
       EMBARKING AT NIGHT
       Amory moved forward on the deck until he found a stool under an
       electric light. He searched in his pocket for note-book and
       pencil and then began to write, slowly, laboriously:
       "We leave to-night...
       Silent, we filled the still, deserted street,
       A column of dim gray,
       And ghosts rose startled at the muffled beat
       Along the moonless way;
       The shadowy shipyards echoed to the feet
       That turned from night and day.
       And so we linger on the windless decks,
       See on the spectre shore
       Shades of a thousand days, poor gray-ribbed wrecks...
       Oh, shall we then deplore
       Those futile years!
       See how the sea is white!
       The clouds have broken and the heavens burn
       To hollow highways, paved with gravelled light
       The churning of the waves about the stern
       Rises to one voluminous nocturne,
       ...We leave to-night."
       A letter from Amory, headed "Brest, March 11th, 1919," to
       Lieutenant T. P. D'Invilliers, Camp Gordon, Ga.
       DEAR BAUDELAIRE:
       We meet in Manhattan on the 30th of this very mo.; we then
       proceed to take a very sporty apartment, you and I and Alec, who
       is at me elbow as I write. I don't know what I'm going to do but
       I have a vague dream of going into politics. Why is it that the
       pick of the young Englishmen from Oxford and Cambridge go into
       politics and in the U. S. A. we leave it to the muckers?raised in
       the ward, educated in the assembly and sent to Congress,
       fat-paunched bundles of corruption, devoid of "both ideas and
       ideals" as the debaters used to say. Even forty years ago we had
       good men in politics, but we, we are brought up to pile up a
       million and "show what we are made of." Sometimes I wish I'd been
       an Englishman; American life is so damned dumb and stupid and
       healthy.
       Since poor Beatrice died I'll probably have a little money, but
       very darn little. I can forgive mother almost everything except
       the fact that in a sudden burst of religiosity toward the end,
       she left half of what remained to be spent in stained-glass
       windows and seminary endowments. Mr. Barton, my lawyer, writes me
       that my thousands are mostly in street railways and that the said
       Street R.R.s are losing money because of the five-cent fares.
       Imagine a salary list that gives $350 a month to a man that can't
       read and write!yet I believe in it, even though I've seen what
       was once a sizable fortune melt away between speculation,
       extravagance, the democratic administration, and the income
       taxmodern, that's me all over, Mabel.
       At any rate we'll have really knock-out roomsyou can get a job on
       some fashion magazine, and Alec can go into the Zinc Company or
       whatever it is that his people ownhe's looking over my shoulder
       and he says it's a brass company, but I don't think it matters
       much, do you? There's probably as much corruption in zinc-made
       money as brass-made money. As for the well-known Amory, he would
       write immortal literature if he were sure enough about anything
       to risk telling any one else about it. There is no more dangerous
       gift to posterity than a few cleverly turned platitudes.
       Tom, why don't you become a Catholic? Of course to be a good one
       you'd have to give up those violent intrigues you used to tell me
       about, but you'd write better poetry if you were linked up to
       tall golden candlesticks and long, even chants, and even if the
       American priests are rather burgeois, as Beatrice used to say,
       still you need only go to the sporty churches, and I'll introduce
       you to Monsignor Darcy who really is a wonder.
       Kerry's death was a blow, so was Jesse's to a certain extent. And
       I have a great curiosity to know what queer corner of the world
       has swallowed Burne. Do you suppose he's in prison under some
       false name? I confess that the war instead of making me orthodox,
       which is the correct reaction, has made me a passionate agnostic.
       The Catholic Church has had its wings clipped so often lately
       that its part was timidly negligible, and they haven't any good
       writers any more. I'm sick of Chesterton.
       I've only discovered one soldier who passed through the
       much-advertised spiritual crisis, like this fellow, Donald
       Hankey, and the one I knew was already studying for the ministry,
       so he was ripe for it. I honestly think that's all pretty much
       rot, though it seemed to give sentimental comfort to those at
       home; and may make fathers and mothers appreciate their children.
       This crisis-inspired religion is rather valueless and fleeting at
       best. I think four men have discovered Paris to one that
       discovered God.
       But usyou and me and Alecoh, we'll get a Jap butler and dress for
       dinner and have wine on the table and lead a contemplative,
       emotionless life until we decide to use machine-guns with the
       property ownersor throw bombs with the Bolshevik God! Tom, I hope
       something happens. I'm restless as the devil and have a horror of
       getting fat or falling in love and growing domestic.
       The place at Lake Geneva is now for rent but when I land I'm
       going West to see Mr. Barton and get some details. Write me care
       of the Blackstone, Chicago.
       S'ever, dear Boswell,
       SAMUEL JOHNSON. _