The Innocence of Father Brown eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 266 pages of information about The Innocence of Father Brown.
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The Innocence of Father Brown eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 266 pages of information about The Innocence of Father Brown.

Her rigid rapidity and cold impatience had amused Flambeau very much on the first occasion of his entering the flats.  He had lingered outside the lift in the entrance hall waiting for the lift-boy, who generally conducts strangers to the various floors.  But this bright-eyed falcon of a girl had openly refused to endure such official delay.  She said sharply that she knew all about the lift, and was not dependent on boys—­or men either.  Though her flat was only three floors above, she managed in the few seconds of ascent to give Flambeau a great many of her fundamental views in an off-hand manner; they were to the general effect that she was a modern working woman and loved modern working machinery.  Her bright black eyes blazed with abstract anger against those who rebuke mechanic science and ask for the return of romance.  Everyone, she said, ought to be able to manage machines, just as she could manage the lift.  She seemed almost to resent the fact of Flambeau opening the lift-door for her; and that gentleman went up to his own apartments smiling with somewhat mingled feelings at the memory of such spit-fire self-dependence.

She certainly had a temper, of a snappy, practical sort; the gestures of her thin, elegant hands were abrupt or even destructive.

Once Flambeau entered her office on some typewriting business, and found she had just flung a pair of spectacles belonging to her sister into the middle of the floor and stamped on them.  She was already in the rapids of an ethical tirade about the “sickly medical notions” and the morbid admission of weakness implied in such an apparatus.  She dared her sister to bring such artificial, unhealthy rubbish into the place again.  She asked if she was expected to wear wooden legs or false hair or glass eyes; and as she spoke her eyes sparkled like the terrible crystal.

Flambeau, quite bewildered with this fanaticism, could not refrain from asking Miss Pauline (with direct French logic) why a pair of spectacles was a more morbid sign of weakness than a lift, and why, if science might help us in the one effort, it might not help us in the other.

“That is so different,” said Pauline Stacey, loftily.  “Batteries and motors and all those things are marks of the force of man—­yes, Mr. Flambeau, and the force of woman, too!  We shall take our turn at these great engines that devour distance and defy time.  That is high and splendid—­that is really science.  But these nasty props and plasters the doctors sell—­ why, they are just badges of poltroonery.  Doctors stick on legs and arms as if we were born cripples and sick slaves.  But I was free-born, Mr. Flambeau!  People only think they need these things because they have been trained in fear instead of being trained in power and courage, just as the silly nurses tell children not to stare at the sun, and so they can’t do it without blinking.  But why among the stars should there be one star I may not see?  The sun is not my master, and I will open my eyes and stare at him whenever I choose.”

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The Innocence of Father Brown from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.