The dancing circle might have been
skilfully fitted into the Dawnside patio, and goodness knew what
shameless creatures have supplied the bodies of the dancers.
Dexter had often told her that it was a common blackmailing trick.
Even if the photograph were genuine, Pauline could understand and
make allowances. She had never seen anything of the kind herself
at Dawnside—heaven forbid!—but whenever she had gone there for a
lecture, or a new course of exercises, she had suspected that the
bare whitewashed room, with its throned Buddha, which received her
and other like–minded ladies of her age, all active, earnest and
eager for self–improvement, had not let them very far into the
mystery. Beyond, perhaps, were other rites, other settings: why
not? Wasn't everybody talking about "the return to Nature," and
ridiculing the American prudery in which the minds and bodies of
her generation had been swaddled? The Mahatma was one of the
leaders of the new movement: the Return to Purity, he called it.
He was always celebrating the nobility of the human body, and
praising the ease of the loose Oriental dress compared with the
constricting western garb: but Pauline had supposed the draperies
he advocated to be longer and less transparent; above all, she had
not expected familiar faces above those insufficient scarves…
But here she was at her own door. There was just time to be ready
for the Mothers; none in which to telephone to Dexter, or buy up
the whole edition of the "Looker–on" (fantastic vision!), or try
and get hold of its editor, who had once dined with her, and was
rather a friend of Lita's. All these possibilities and
impossibilities raced through her brain to the maddening tune of
"too late" while she slipped off her street–dress and sat twitching
with impatience under the maid's readjustment of her ruffled head.
The gown prepared for the meeting, rich, matronly and just the
least bit old–fashioned—very different from the one designed for
the Birth Control committee—lay spread out beside the copy of her
speech, and Maisie Bruss, who had been hovering within call, dashed
back breathless from a peep over the stairs.
"They're arriving—"
"Oh, Maisie, rush down! Say I'm telephoning—"
Her incurable sincerity made her unhook the receiver and call out
Manford's office number. Almost instantly she heard him. "Dexter,
this Mahatma investigation must be stopped! Don't ask me why—
there isn't time. Only promise—"
She heard his impatient laugh.
"No?"
"Impossible," came back.
She supposed she had hung up the receiver, fastened on her jewelled
"Motherhood" badge, slipped on rings and bracelets as usual. But
she remembered nothing clearly until she found herself on the
platform at the end of the packed ball–room, looking across rows
and rows of earnest confiding faces, with lips and eyes prepared
for the admiring reception of her "message." She was considered a
very good speaker: she knew how to reach the type of woman
represented by this imposing assemblage—delegates from small towns
all over the country, united by a common faith in the infinite
extent of human benevolence and the incalculable resources of
American hygiene. Something of the moral simplicity of her own
bringing–up brought her close to these women, who had flocked to
the great perfidious city serenely unaware of its being anything
more, or other, than the gigantic setting of a Mothers' Meeting.
Pauline, at such times, saw the world through their eyes, and was
animated by a genuine ardour for the cause of motherhood and
domesticity.
As she turned toward her audience a factitious serenity descended
on her. She felt in control of herself and of the situation. She
spoke.
"Personality—first and last, and at all costs. I've begun my talk
to you with that one word because it seems to me to sum up our
whole case. Personality—room to develop in: not only elbow–room
but body–room and soul–room, and plenty of both. That's what every
human being has a right to. No more effaced wives, no more
drudging mothers, no more human slaves crushed by the eternal round
of housekeeping and child–bearing—"
She stopped, drew a quick breath, met Nona's astonished gaze over
rows of bewildered eye–glasses, and felt herself plunging into an
abyss. But she caught at the edge, and saved herself from the
plunge—
"That's what our antagonists say—the women who are afraid to be
mothers, ashamed to be mothers, the women who put their enjoyment
and their convenience and what they call their happiness before the
mysterious heaven–sent joy, the glorious privilege, of bringing
children into the world—"
A round of applause from the reassured mothers. She had done it!
She had pulled off her effect from the very jaws of disaster. Only
the swift instinct of recovery had enabled her, before it was too
late, to pass off the first sentences of her other address, her
Birth Control speech, as the bold exordium of her hymn to
motherhood! She paused a moment, still inwardly breathless, yet
already sure enough of herself to smile back at Nona across her
unsuspecting audience—sure enough to note that her paradoxical
opening had had a much greater effect than she could have hoped to
produce by the phrases with which she had meant to begin.
A hint for future oratory—
Only—the inward nervousness subsisted. The discovery that she
could lose not only her self–control but her memory, the very sense
of what she was saying, was like a hand of ice pointing to an
undecipherable warning.
Nervousness, fatigue, brain–exhaustion … had her fight against
them been vain? What was the use of all the months and years of
patient Taylorized effort against the natural human fate: against
anxiety, sorrow, old age—if their menace was to reappear whenever
events slipped from her control?
The address ended in applause and admiring exclamations. She had
won her way straight to those trustful hearts, still full of
personal memories of a rude laborious life, or in which its stout
tradition lingered on in spite of motors, money and the final word
in plumbing.
Pauline, after the dispersal of the Mothers, had gone up to her
room still dazed by the narrowness of her escape. Thank heaven she
had a free hour! She threw herself on her lounge and turned her
gaze inward upon herself: an exercise for which she seldom had the
leisure.
Now that she knew she was safe, and had done nothing to discredit
herself or the cause, she could penetrate an inch or two farther
into the motive power of her activities; and what she saw there
frightened her. To be Chairman of the Mothers' Day Association,
and a speaker at the Birth Control banquet! It did not need her
daughter's derisive chuckle to give her the measure of her
inconsequence. Yet to reconcile these contradictions had seemed as
simple as to invite the Chief Rabbi and the Bishop of New York to
meet Amalasuntha's Cardinal. Did not the Mahatma teach that, to
the initiated, all discords were resolved into a higher harmony?
When her hurried attention had been turned for a moment on the
seeming inconsistency of encouraging natality and teaching how to
restrict it, she had felt it was sufficient answer to say that the
two categories of people appealed to were entirely different, and
could not be "reached" in the same way. In ethics, as in
advertising, the main thing was to get at your public. Hitherto
this argument had satisfied her. Feeling there was much to be said
on both sides, she had thrown herself with equal zeal into the
propagation of both doctrines; but now, surveying her attempt with
a chastened eye, she doubted its expediency.
Maisie Bruss, appearing with notes and telephone messages, seemed
to reflect this doubt in her small buttoned–up face.
"Oh, Maisie! Is there anything important? I'm dead tired." It
was an admission she did not often make.
"Nothing much. Three or four papers have 'phoned for copies of
your address. It was a great success."
A faint glow of satisfaction wavered through Pauline's
perplexities.
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