china not quite up to his own fastidious mark, and
at least two rather doubtful Barbizon pictures, at
Christmastides. He himself, who had done extremely
well with the Barbizons, had for some years past moved
towards the Marises, Israels, and Mauve, and was hoping
to do better. In the riverside house which he
now inhabited near Mapledurham he had a gallery, beautifully
hung and lighted, to which few London dealers were
strangers. It served, too, as a Sunday afternoon
attraction in those week-end parties which his sisters,
Winifred or Rachel, occasionally organised for him.
For though he was but a taciturn showman, his quiet
collected determinism seldom failed to influence his
guests, who knew that his reputation was grounded
not on mere aesthetic fancy, but on his power of gauging
the future of market values. When he went to
Timothy’s he almost always had some little tale
of triumph over a dealer to unfold, and dearly he
loved that coo of pride with which his aunts would
greet it. This afternoon, however, he was differently
animated, coming from Roger’s funeral in his
neat dark clothes—not quite black, for after
all an uncle was but an uncle, and his soul abhorred
excessive display of feeling. Leaning back in
a marqueterie chair and gazing down his uplifted nose
at the sky-blue walls plastered with gold frames,
he was noticeably silent. Whether because he
had been to a funeral or not, the peculiar Forsyte
build of his face was seen to the best advantage this
afternoon—a face concave and long, with
a jaw which divested of flesh would have seemed extravagant:
altogether a chinny face though not at all ill-looking.
He was feeling more strongly than ever that Timothy’s
was hopelessly ‘rum-ti-too’ and the souls
of his aunts dismally mid-Victorian. The subject
on which alone he wanted to talk—his own
undivorced position—was unspeakable.
And yet it occupied his mind to the exclusion of
all else. It was only since the Spring that this
had been so and a new feeling grown up which was egging
him on towards what he knew might well be folly in
a Forsyte of forty-five. More and more of late
he had been conscious that he was ‘getting on.’
The fortune already considerable when he conceived
the house at Robin Hill which had finally wrecked
his marriage with Irene, had mounted with surprising
vigour in the twelve lonely years during which he
had devoted himself to little else. He was worth
to-day well over a hundred thousand pounds, and had
no one to leave it to—no real object for
going on with what was his religion. Even if
he were to relax his efforts, money made money, and
he felt that he would have a hundred and fifty thousand
before he knew where he was. There had always
been a strongly domestic, philoprogenitive side to
Soames; baulked and frustrated, it had hidden itself
away, but now had crept out again in this his ‘prime
of life.’ Concreted and focussed of late
by the attraction of a girl’s undoubted beauty,
it had become a veritable prepossession.