Beale and Mr. Farange to account for. Mrs. Beale clearly
was, like Sir Claude, on Maisie's, and papa, it was to be supposed,
on Mrs. Beale's. Here indeed was a slight ambiguity, as papa's
being on Mrs. Beale's didn't somehow seem to place him quite on his
daughter's. It sounded, as this young lady thought it over, very
much like puss-in-the-corner, and she could only wonder if the
distribution of parties would lead to a rushing to and fro and a
changing of places. She was in the presence, she felt, of restless
change: wasn't it restless enough that her mother and her
stepfather should already be on different sides? That was the great
thing that had domestically happened. Mrs. Wix, besides, had turned
another face: she had never been exactly gay, but her gravity was
now an attitude as public as a posted placard. She seemed to sit in
her new dress and brood over her lost delicacy, which had become
almost as doleful a memory as that of poor Clara Matilda. "It
is hard for him," she often said to her companion; and it
was surprising how competent on this point Maisie was conscious of
being to agree with her. Hard as it was, however, Sir Claude had
never shown to greater advantage than in the gallant generous
sociable way he carried it off: a way that drew from Mrs. Wix a
hundred expressions of relief at his not having suffered it to
embitter him. It threw him more and more at last into the
schoolroom, where he had plainly begun to recognise that if he was
to have the credit of perverting the innocent child he might also
at least have the amusement. He never came into the place without
telling its occupants that they were the nicest people in the
house—a remark which always led them to say to each other "Mr.
Perriam!" as loud as ever compressed lips and enlarged eyes could
make them articulate. He caused Maisie to remember what she had
said to Mrs. Beale about his having the nature of a good nurse,
and, rather more than she intended before Mrs. Wix, to bring the
whole thing out by once remarking to him that none of her good
nurses had smoked quite so much in the nursery. This had no more
effect than it was meant to on his cigarettes: he was always
smoking, but always declaring that it was death to him not to lead
a domestic life.
He led one after all in the schoolroom, and there were hours of
late evening, when she had gone to bed, that Maisie knew he sat
there talking with Mrs. Wix of how to meet his difficulties. His
consideration for this unfortunate woman even in the midst of them
continued to show him as the perfect gentleman and lifted the
subject of his courtesy into an upper air of beatitude in which her
very pride had the hush of anxiety. "He leans on me—he leans on
me!" she only announced from time to time; and she was more
surprised than amused when, later on, she accidentally found she
had given her pupil the impression of a support literally supplied
by her person. This glimpse of a misconception led her to be
explicit—to put before the child, with an air of mourning indeed
for such a stoop to the common, that what they talked about in the
small hours, as they said, was the question of his taking right
hold of life. The life she wanted him to take right hold of was the
public: "she" being, I hasten to add, in this connexion, not the
mistress of his fate, but only Mrs. Wix herself. She had phrases
about him that were full of easy understanding, yet full of
morality. "He's a wonderful nature, but he can't live like the
lilies. He's all right, you know, but he must have a high
interest." She had more than once remarked that his affairs were
sadly involved, but that they must get him—Maisie and she together
apparently—into Parliament.
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