able to “speak” and that he would; the
word itself being romantic, pressing for him the spring
of association with stories and plays where handsome
and ardent young men, in uniforms, tights, cloaks,
high-boots, had it, in soliloquies, ever on their
lips; and the sense on the first day that he should
probably have taken the great step before the second
was over conduced already to make him say to his companion
that they must spend more than their mere night or
two. At his ease on the ground of what was before
him he at all events definitely desired to be, and
it was strongly his impression that he was proceeding
step by step. He was acting—it kept
coming back to that—not in the dark, but
in the high golden morning; not in precipitation,
flurry, fever, dangers these of the path of passion
properly so called, but with the deliberation of a
plan, a plan that might be a thing of less joy than
a passion, but that probably would, in compensation
for that loss, be found to have the essential property,
to wear even the decent dignity, of reaching further
and of providing for more contingencies. The
season was, in local parlance, “on,” the
elements were assembled; the big windy hotel, the draughty
social hall, swarmed with “types,” in
Charlotte’s constant phrase, and resounded with
a din in which the wild music of gilded and befrogged
bands, Croatian, Dalmatian, Carpathian, violently
exotic and nostalgic, was distinguished as struggling
against the perpetual popping of corks. Much
of this would decidedly have disconcerted our friends
if it hadn’t all happened, more preponderantly,
to give them the brighter surprise. The noble
privacy of Fawns had left them—had left
Mr. Verver at least— with a little accumulated
sum of tolerance to spend on the high pitch and high
colour of the public sphere. Fawns, as it had
been for him, and as Maggie and Fanny Assingham had
both attested, was out of the world, whereas the scene
actually about him, with the very sea a mere big booming
medium for excursions and aquariums, affected him
as so plump in the conscious centre that nothing could
have been more complete for representing that pulse
of life which they had come to unanimity at home on
the subject of their advisedly not hereafter forgetting.
The pulse of life was what Charlotte, in her way,
at home, had lately reproduced, and there were positively
current hours when it might have been open to her
companion to feel himself again indebted to her for
introductions. He had “brought” her,
to put it crudely, but it was almost as if she were
herself, in her greater gaiety, her livelier curiosity
and intensity, her readier, happier irony, taking
him about and showing him the place. No one, really,
when he came to think, had ever taken him about before—it
had always been he, of old, who took others and who
in particular took Maggie. This quickly fell
into its relation with him as part of an experience—marking
for him, no doubt, what people call, considerately,
a time of life; a new and pleasant order, a flattered
passive state, that might become—why shouldn’t
it?— one of the comforts of the future.