The Fortunate Youth eBook

William John Locke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about The Fortunate Youth.

The Fortunate Youth eBook

William John Locke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about The Fortunate Youth.

Jane hesitated for an answer.  Her life had been passed in a sphere where men carpentered or drove horses or sold things in shops.  Deeply impressed by the knowledge of Paul’s romantic birth and high destiny she could not suggest any such lowly avocations, and she did not know what men’s jobs were usually executed by scions of the nobility.  A clerk’s work was certainly genteel; but even that would be lowering to the hero.  She glanced at him again, swiftly.  No, he was too beautiful to be penned up in an office from nine to six-thirty every day of his life.  On the other hand her feminine intuition appreciated keenly the withering criticism of Higgins.  Ever since Paul had first told her of his engagements at the Life Schools she had shrunk from the idea.  It was all very well for the boy; but for the man—­and being younger than he, she regarded him now as a man—­there was something in it that offended her nice sense of human dignity.

“Well,” he said.  “Tell me, what do you call a man’s job?”

“Oh, I don’t know,” she said in distress; “something you do with your hands or your brain.”

“You think being a model is undignified.”

“Yes.”

“So do I,” said Paul.  “But I’m doing things with my brain, too, you know,” he added quickly, anxious to be seen again on his pedestal.  “I am getting on with my epic poem.  I’ve done a lot since you last heard it.  I’ll read you the rest when we get home.”

“That will be lovely,” said Jane, to whom the faculty of rhyming was a never-ceasing wonder.  She would sit bemused by the jingling lines and wrapt in awe at the minstrel.

They sat on a bench by the flower-beds, gay in their spring charm of belated crocus and hyacinth and daffodil, with here and there a precocious tulip.  Paul, sensitive to beauty, discoursed on flowers.  Max Field had a studio in St. John’s Wood opening out into a garden, which last summer was a dream of delight.  He described it.  When he came into his kingdom he intended to have such a garden.

“You’ll let me have a peep at it sometimes, won’t you?” said Jane.

“Of course,” said Paul.

The lack of enthusiasm in his tone chilled the girl’s heart.  But she did not protest.  In these days, in spite of occasional outspokenness she was still a humble little girl worshipping her brilliant companion from afar.

“How often could I come?” she asked.

“That,” said he, in his boyish pashadom, “would depend on how good you were.”

Obedient to the thought processes of her sex, she made a bee line to the particular.

“Oh, Paul, I hope you’re not angry.”

“At what?”

“At what I said about your being a model.”

“Not a bit,” said he.  “If I hadn’t wanted to know your opinion, I wouldn’t have asked you.”

She brightened.  “You really wanted to know what I thought?”

“Naturally,” said Paul.  “You’re the most commonsense girl I’ve ever met.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Fortunate Youth from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.