have needed a more visible disposition to unrest in
him to make the account perfectly fit. Fanny
herself limited indeed, she minimised, her office;
you didn’t need a jailor, she contended, for
a domesticated lamb tied up with pink ribbon.
This was not an animal to be controlled—it
was an animal to be, at the most, educated. She
admitted accordingly that she was educative—which
Maggie was so aware that she herself, inevitably,
wasn’t; so it came round to being true that what
she was most in charge of was his mere intelligence.
This left, goodness knew, plenty of different calls
for Maggie to meet—in a case in which so
much pink ribbon, as it might be symbolically named,
was lavished on the creature. What it all amounted
to, at any rate, was that Mrs. Assingham would be
keeping him quiet now, while his wife and his father-in-law
carried out their own little frugal picnic; quite
moreover, doubtless, not much less neededly in respect
to the members of the circle that were with them there
than in respect to the pair they were missing almost
for the first time. It was present to Maggie
that the Prince could bear, when he was with his wife,
almost any queerness on the part of people, strange
English types, who bored him, beyond convenience,
by being so little as he himself was; for this was
one of the ways in which a wife was practically sustaining.
But she was as positively aware that she hadn’t
yet learned to see him as meeting such exposure in
her absence. How did he move and talk, how above
all did he, or how
would he, look—he
who, with his so nobly handsome face, could look such
wonderful things—in case of being left
alone with some of the subjects of his wonder?
There were subjects for wonder among these very neighbours;
only Maggie herself had her own odd way—which
didn’t moreover the least irritate him—of
really liking them in proportion as they could strike
her as strange. It came out in her by heredity,
he amused himself with declaring, this love of chinoiseries;
but she actually this evening didn’t mind—he
might deal with her Chinese as he could.
Maggie indeed would always have had for such moments,
had they oftener occurred, the impression made on
her by a word of Mrs. Assingham’s, a word referring
precisely to that appetite in Amerigo for the explanatory
which we have just found in our path. It wasn’t
that the Princess could be indebted to another person,
even to so clever a one as this friend, for seeing
anything in her husband that she mightn’t see
unaided; but she had ever, hitherto, been of a nature
to accept with modest gratitude any better description
of a felt truth than her little limits—
terribly marked, she knew, in the direction of saying
the right things—enabled her to make.
Thus it was, at any rate, that she was able to live
more or less in the light of the fact expressed so
lucidly by their common comforter—the fact
that the Prince was saving up, for some very mysterious
but very fine eventual purpose, all the wisdom, all