“Now, Jocko, for the stirrup cup!”
Jack boots and a faithful squire, probably.
During the long and dreamy session with his neck gear he went back to the softer motif:
“Oh, years so fair;
oh, night so rare!
For life is but a golden dream
so sweetly.”
Then, pausing abruptly to look at his coat, so smoothly folded upon the bed, he addressed it: “O noblest sample of the tailor’s dext’rous art!”
This was too much courtesy, for the coat was “ready-made,” and looked nobler upon the bed than upon its owner. In fact, it was by no means a dext’rous sample; but evidently Noble believed in it with a high and satisfying faith; and he repeated his compliment to it as he put it on:
“Come, noblest sample of the tailor’s art; I’ll don thee!”
During these processes he had been repeatedly summoned to descend to the family dinner, and finally his mother came lamenting and called up from the front hall that “everything” was “all getting cold!”
But by this time he was on his way, and though he went back to leave his hat in his room, unwilling to confide it to the hat-rack below, he presently made his appearance in the dining-room and took his seat at the table. This mere sitting, however, appeared to be his whole conception of dining; he seemed as unaware of his mother’s urging food upon him as if he had been a Noble Dill of waxwork. Several tunes he lifted a fork and set it down without guiding it to its accustomed destination. Food was far from his thoughts or desires, and if he really perceived its presence at all, it appeared to him as something vaguely ignoble upon the horizon.
But he was able to partake of coffee; drank two cups feverishly, his hand visibly unsteady; and when his mother pointed out this confirmation of many prophecies that cigarettes would ruin him, he asked if anybody had noticed whether or not it was cloudy outdoors. At that his father looked despondent, for the open windows of the dining-room revealed an evening of fragrant clarity.
“I see, I see,” Noble returned pettishly when the fine state of this closely adjacent weather was pointed out to him by his old-maid sister. “It wouldn’t be raining, of course. Not on a night like this.” He jumped up. “It’s time for me to go.”
Mrs. Dill laughed. “It’s only a little after seven. Julia won’t be through her own dinner yet. You mustn’t——”
But with a tremulous smile, Noble shook his head and hurriedly left the room. He went upstairs for his hat, and while there pinned a geranium blossom upon his lapel, for it may be admitted that in boutonnieres his taste was as yet unformed.
Coming down again, he took a stick under his arm and was about to set forth when he noticed a little drift of talcum powder upon one of his patent leather shoes. After carefully removing this accretion and adding a brighter lustre to the shoe by means of friction against the back of his ankle, he decided to return to his room and brush the affected portion of his trousers. Here a new reverie arrested him; he stood with the brush in his hand for some time; then, not having used it, he dropped it gently upon the bed, lit an Orduma cigarette, descended, and went forth to the quiet street.