“He does care for you, now. You can see it. Why do you encourage him to come here?”
“I don’t,” said Alma. “I will tell him to keep away if you like. But whether he comes or goes, it will be the same.”
“Not to him, Alma! He is in love with you!”
“He has never said so.”
“And you would really let him say so, when you intend to refuse him?”
“I can’t very well refuse him till he does say so.”
This was undeniable. Mrs. Leighton could only demand, in an awful tone, “May I ask why—if you cared for him; and I know you care for him still you will refuse him?”
Alma laughed. “Because—because I’m wedded to my Art, and I’m not going to commit bigamy, whatever I do.”
“Alma!”
“Well, then, because I don’t like him—that is, I don’t believe in him, and don’t trust him. He’s fascinating, but he’s false and he’s fickle. He can’t help it, I dare say.”
“And you are perfectly hard. Is it possible that you were actually pleased to have Mr. Fulkerson tease you about Mr. Dryfoos?”
“Oh, good-night, now, mamma! This is becoming personal”
PG EDITOR’S BOOKMARKS:
Artists never do anything
like other people
Ballast of her instinctive
despondency
Clinging persistence of such
natures
Dividend: It’s
a chicken before it’s hatched
Gayety, which lasted beyond
any apparent reason for it
Hopeful recklessness
How much can a man honestly
earn without wronging or oppressing
I cannot endure this—this
hopefulness of yours
If you dread harm enough it
is less likely to happen
It must be your despair that
helps you to bear up
Marry for love two or three
times
No man deserves to sufer at
the hands of another
Patience with mediocrity putting
on the style of genius
Person talks about taking
lessons, as if they could learn it
Say when he is gone that the
woman gets along better without him
Shouldn’t ca’
fo’ the disgrace of bein’ poo’—its
inconvenience
Timidity of the elder in the
presence of the younger man
A HAZARD OF NEW FORTUNES
By William Dean Howells
PART THIRD
I.
The scheme of a banquet to celebrate the initial success of ’Every Other Week’ expanded in Fulkerson’s fancy into a series. Instead of the publishing and editorial force, with certain of the more representative artists and authors sitting down to a modest supper in Mrs. Leighton’s parlors, he conceived of a dinner at Delmonico’s, with the principal literary and artistic, people throughout the country as guests, and an inexhaustible hospitality to reporters and correspondents, from whom paragraphs, prophetic and historic, would flow weeks before and after the