Visionaries eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 298 pages of information about Visionaries.

Visionaries eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 298 pages of information about Visionaries.

“She is chic, your little girl,” she confided in her deep tones to Mrs. Sheldam, whose tired New England face almost beamed at the compliment.

“We were in Hamburg at the Zooelogical Garden; I always go to see animals,” declaimed the princess, in the midst of a thick silence.  “For you know, my friends, one studies humanity there in the raw.  Well, I dragged our party to the large monkey cage, and we enjoyed ourselves—­immensely!  And what do you think we saw!  A genuine novelty.  Some mischievous sailor had given an overgrown ape a mirror, and the poor wretch spent its time staring at its image, neglecting its food and snarling at its companions.  The beast would catch the reflection of another ape in the glass and quickly bound to a more remote perch.  The keeper told me that for a week his charge had barely eaten.  It slept with the mirror held tightly in its paws.  Now, what did the mirror mean to the animal!  I believe”—­here she became very vivacious—­“I really believe that it was developing self-consciousness, and in time it would become human.  On our way back from Heligoland, where we were entertained on the emperor’s yacht at the naval manoeuvres, we paid another visit to our monkey house.  The poor, misguided brute had died of starvation.  It had become so vain, so egotistical, so superior, that it refused food and wasted away in a corner, gazing at itself, a hairy Narcissus, or rather the perfect type of your modern Superman, who contemplates his ego until his brain sickens and he dies quite mad.”

Every one laughed.  Mrs. Sheldam wondered what a Superman was, and Ermentrude felt annoyed.  Zarathustra was another of her gods, and this brusquely related anecdote did not seem to her very spirituelle.  But she had not formulated an answer when she heard a name announced, a name that set her heart beating.  At last!  The poet had kept his word.  She was to meet in the flesh the man whose too few books were her bibles of art, of philosophy, of all that stood for aspiration toward a lovely ideal in a dull, matter-of-fact world.

“Now,” said the princess, as if smiling at some hidden joke, “now you will meet my Superman.”  And she led the young American girl to Octave Keroulan and his wife, and, after greeting them in her masculine manner, she burst forth:—­

“Dear poet! here is one of your adorers from overseas.  Guard your husband well, Madame Lys.”

So he was married.  Well, that was not such a shocking fact.  Nor was Madame Keroulan either—­a very tall, slim, English-looking blonde, who dressed modishly and evidently knew that she was the wife of a famous man.  Ermentrude found her insipid; she had studied her face first before comparing the mental photograph of the poet with the original.  Nor did she feel, with unconscious sex rivalry, any sense of inferiority to the wife of her admired one.  He was nearly forty, but he looked older; gray hairs tinged his finely modelled head.  His face was

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Project Gutenberg
Visionaries from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.