The Visioning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 455 pages of information about The Visioning.

The Visioning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 455 pages of information about The Visioning.

“I’m sure I’m very glad,” said Clara, “that somebody is to have something that might be called a future.  Certainly a woman with barely enough to live on isn’t in much danger of being confronted with one.”

Katie made no apology to herself for the pleasure she took in “rubbing it in.”  She remembered too many things too vividly.

“It’s pretty hard,” said Clara, “when one has a—­duty to society, and nothing to go on.”

Katie was thinking that society must be a very vigorous thing, persisting through all the “duties” people had to it.

She smiled now in seeing that the thing which had brought her to Clara that day was in the nature of a “duty to society” and that in her case, too, a duty to society and a personal inclination moved happily together.

Katie was there that afternoon to buy Worth.

So she put it to herself in what Clara would have called her characteristically brutal fashion.

She was sure Worth could be had for a price.  She had that price and she believed the psychological moment was at hand for offering it.

The reason for its being the psychological moment was that Clara wanted to join a party at Nice and did not have money enough to buy the clothes which would make her going worth while.  For there was a man there—­an American, a rich westerner—­whom Clara’s duty to society moved her to marry.

That was Katie’s indelicate deduction from Clara’s delicate hints.

And Katie wanted Worth.  It wasn’t wholly a matter of either affection or convenience.  It had to do, and in almost passionate sense, with something which was at least in the category with such things as duties to society.  Worth seemed to her too fine, too real, to be reared by a “truly feminine woman,” as Clara had been known to call herself.  Clara’s great idea for Worth was that he be well brought up.  That was Clara’s idea of her duty to society.  And it was Katie’s notion of her duty to society to save him from being too well brought up.

The things she had been seeing, and suffering, in the past year made her feel almost savagely on the subject.

Katie had been there since October.  Clara had magnanimously permitted Worth to remain with his Aunt Kate most of the time, with the provision that Katie bring him to her as often as she wanted him.  This was unselfish of Clara, and cheaper.

Clara’s alimony was not small, but neither were her tastes.  Indeed the latter rose to the proportions of duties to society.

Katie knew it was as such she must treat them in the next half hour.  She must save the “maternal instinct” Clara was always talking about—­usually adding that it was a thing which Katie, of course, could not understand—­by taking it under the sheltering wing of the “child’s good.”

Katie knew just how to reach the emotions which Clara had, without outraging too much the emotions she persuaded herself she had.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Visioning from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.