South Wind eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 503 pages of information about South Wind.

South Wind eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 503 pages of information about South Wind.

One thing was dead certain.  To circumnavigate the globe in the arms of a dozen chorus-girls was not his ideal.  He was not built on those lines.  He purposed, God Willing, to spend the evening of his days in another and more respectable manner.  A vision arose before his imagination—­a vision of a peaceful homestead among the green lanes of England, where he would lead a life of study and of kindly, unostentatious acts, with family and friends; old friends of College days, and London days, and African days; new friends from among the rising generation—­straightforward and decent-minded youngsters, whom he would take to his heart like a father.

Why could not van Koppen see the beauty of such dreamings?

And yet, he argued, if the man does seclude them in this fashion—­supposing they really exist—­who can blame him?  No woman is safe on Nepenthe with persons like Muhlen about.  From chance meetings in the street, from stray conversations overheard, he had been led to take an unreasoning dislike to this foreigner, whose attitude towards the gentle sex struck him as that of a cur.  Muhlen, if the yacht were his, would flaunt these ladies about the streets.  The American, in keeping them secluded on board, betrayed a sense of shame, almost of delicacy; a sense of his obligations towards society which, so far as it went, was rather a laudable trait of character than otherwise.

And then—­the difference between himself and the millionaire in life, training, antecedents!  A career such as van Koppen’s called for qualities different, often actually antagonistic, to his own.  You could not possibly expect to find in a successful American merchant those features which go to form a successful English ecclesiastic.  Certain human attributes were mutually exclusive—­avarice and generosity, for instance; others no doubt mysteriously but inextricably intertwined.  A man was an individual; he could not be divided or taken to pieces; he could not be expected to possess virtues incompatible with the rest of his mental equipment, however desirable such virtues might be.  Who knows?  Van Koppen’s doubtful acts might be an unavoidable expression of his personality, an integral part of that nature under whose ferocious stimulus he had climbed to his present enviable position.  And Mr. Heard was both shocked and amused to reflect that but for the co-operation of certain coarse organic impulses to which these Nepenthe legends testified, the millionaire might never have been able to acquire the proud title of “Saviour of his Country.”

“That’s queer,” he mused.  “It never struck me before.  Shows how careful one must be.  Dear me!  Perhaps the ladies have inevitable organic impulses of a corresponding kind.  Decidedly queer.  H’m.  Ha.  Now I wonder. . . .  And perhaps, if the truth were known, these young persons are having quite a good time of it—­”

He paused abruptly in his reflections.  He had caught himself in the act; in the very act of condoning vice.  Mr. Thomas Heard was seriously concerned.

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Project Gutenberg
South Wind from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.