Let me tell you that I was
an advanced man before you were born.
TANNER. I knew it was a long time ago.
RAMSDEN. I am as advanced as ever I was. I defy you
to prove that I have ever hauled down the flag. I am more advanced
than ever I was. I grow more advanced every day.
TANNER. More advanced in years, Polonius.
RAMSDEN. Polonius! So you are Hamlet, I suppose.
TANNER. No: I am only the most impudent person
you've ever met. That's your notion of a thoroughly bad character.
When you want to give me a piece of your mind, you ask yourself, as
a just and upright man, what is the worst you can fairly say of me.
Thief, liar, forger, adulterer, perjurer, glutton, drunkard? Not
one of these names fit me. You have to fall back on my deficiency
in shame. Well, I admit it. I even congratulate myself; for if I
were ashamed of my real self, I should cut as stupid a figure as
any of the rest of you. Cultivate a little impudence, Ramsden; and
you will become quite a remarkable man.
RAMSDEN. I have no -
TANNER. You have no desire for that sort of
notoriety. Bless you, I knew that answer would come as well as I
know that a box of matches will come out of an automatic machine
when I put a penny in the slot: you would be ashamed to say
anything else.
The crushing retort for which Ramsden has been
visibly collecting his forces is lost for ever; for at this point
Octavius returns with Miss Ann Whitefield and her mother; and
Ramsden springs up and hurries to the door to receive them. Whether
Ann is good-looking or not depends upon your taste; also and
perhaps chiefly on your age and sex. To Octavius she is an
enchantingly beautiful woman, in whose presence the world becomes
transfigured, and the puny limits of individual consciousness are
suddenly made infinite by a mystic memory of the whole life of the
race to its beginnings in the east, or even back to the paradise
from which it fell. She is to him the reality of romance, the
leaner good sense of nonsense, the unveiling of his eyes, the
freeing of his soul, the abolition of time, place and circumstance,
the etherealization of his blood into rapturous rivers of the very
water of life itself, the revelation of all the mysteries and the
sanctification of all the dogmas. To her mother she is, to put it
as moderately as possible, nothing whatever of the kind. Not that
Octavius's admiration is in any way ridiculous or discreditable.
Ann is a well formed creature, as far as that goes; and she is
perfectly ladylike, graceful, and comely, with ensnaring eyes and
hair. Besides, instead of making herself an eyesore, like her
mother, she has devised a mourning costume of black and violet silk
which does honor to her late father and reveals the family
tradition of brave unconventionality by which Ramsden sets such
store.
But all this is beside the point as an explanation
of Ann's charm. Turn up her nose, give a cast to her eye, replace
her black and violet confection by the apron and feathers of a
flower girl, strike all the aitches out of her speech, and Ann
would still make men dream. Vitality is as common as humanity; but,
like humanity, it sometimes rises to genius; and Ann is one of the
vital geniuses. Not at all, if you please, an oversexed person:
that is a vital defect, not a true excess. She is a perfectly
respectable, perfectly self-controlled woman, and looks it; though
her pose is fashionably frank and impulsive. She inspires
confidence as a person who will do nothing she does not mean to do;
also some fear, perhaps, as a woman who will probably do everything
she means to do without taking more account of other people than
may be necessary and what she calls right. In short, what the
weaker of her own sex sometimes call a cat.
Nothing can be more decorous than her entry and her
reception by Ramsden, whom she kisses. The late Mr Whitefield would
be gratified almost to impatience by the long faces of the men
(except Tanner, who is fidgety), the silent handgrasps, the
sympathetic placing of chairs, the sniffing of the widow, and the
liquid eye of the daughter, whose heart, apparently, will not let
her control her tongue to speech.
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