<h2><SPAN name="page215"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ON THE TIME WASTED IN LOOKING BEFORE ONE LEAPS</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Have</span> you ever noticed the going out
of a woman?</p>
<p>When a man goes out, he says—“I’m going out,
shan’t be long.”</p>
<p>“Oh, George,” cries his wife from the other end of
the house, “don’t go for a moment. I want you
to—” She hears a falling of hats, followed by
the slamming of the front door.</p>
<p>“Oh, George, you’re not gone!” she
wails. It is but the voice of despair. As a matter of
fact, she knows he is gone. She reaches the hall,
breathless.</p>
<p>“He might have waited a minute,” she mutters to
herself, as she picks up the hats, “there were so many
things I wanted him to do.”</p>
<p>She does not open the door and attempt to stop him, she knows
he is already half-way down the street. It is a mean,
paltry way of going out, she thinks; so like a man.</p>
<p>When a woman, on the other hand, goes out, people know about
it. She does not sneak out. She says she is going
out. She says it, generally, on the afternoon of the day
before; and she repeats it, at intervals, until tea-time.
At tea, she suddenly decides that she won’t, that she will
leave it till the day after to-morrow instead. An hour
later she thinks she will go to-morrow, after all, and makes
arrangements to wash her hair overnight. For the next hour
or so she alternates between fits of exaltation, during which she
looks forward to going out, and moments of despondency, when a
sense of foreboding falls upon her. At dinner she persuades
some other woman to go with her; the other woman, once persuaded,
is enthusiastic about going, until she recollects that she
cannot. The first woman, however, convinces her that she
can.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replies the second woman, “but then,
how about you, dear? You are forgetting the
Joneses.”</p>
<p>“So I was,” answers the first woman, completely
non-plussed. “How very awkward, and I can’t go
on Wednesday. I shall have to leave it till Thursday,
now.”</p>
<p>“But <i>I</i> can’t go Thursday,” says the
second woman.</p>
<p>“Well, you go without me, dear,” says the first
woman, in the tone of one who is sacrificing a life’s
ambition.</p>
<p>“Oh no, dear, I should not think of it,” nobly
exclaims the second woman. “We will wait and go
together, Friday!”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what we’ll do,” says
the first woman. “We will start early” (this is
an inspiration), “and be back before the Joneses
arrive.”</p>
<p>They agree to sleep together; there is a lurking suspicion in
both their minds that this may be their last sleep on
earth. They retire early with a can of hot water. At
intervals, during the night, one overhears them splashing water,
and talking.</p>
<p>They come down very late for breakfast, and both very
cross. Each seems to have argued herself into the belief
that she has been lured into this piece of nonsense, against her
better judgment, by the persistent folly of the other one.
During the meal each one asks the other, every five minutes, if
she is quite ready. Each one, it appears, has only her hat
to put on. They talk about the weather, and wonder what it
is going to do. They wish it would make up its mind, one
way or the other. They are very bitter on weather that
cannot make up its mind. After breakfast it still looks
cloudy, and they decide to abandon the scheme altogether.
The first woman then remembers that it is absolutely necessary
for her, at all events, to go.</p>
<p>“But there is no need for you to come, dear,” she
says.</p>
<p>Up to that point the second woman was evidently not sure
whether she wished to go or whether she didn’t. Now
she knows.</p>
<p>“Oh yes, I’ll come,” she says, “then
it will be over!”</p>
<p>“I am sure you don’t want to go,” urges the
first woman, “and I shall be quicker by myself. I am
ready to start now.”</p>
<p>The second woman bridles.</p>
<p>“<i>I</i> shan’t be a couple of minutes,”
she retorts. “You know, dear, it’s generally
<i>I</i> who have to wait for <i>you</i>.”</p>
<p>“But you’ve not got your boots on,” the
first woman reminds her.</p>
<p>“Well, they won’t take <i>any</i> time,” is
the answer. “But of course, dear, if you’d
really rather I did not come, say so.” By this time
she is on the verge of tears.</p>
<p>“Of course, I would like you to come, dear,”
explains the first in a resigned tone. “I thought
perhaps you were only coming to please me.”</p>
<p>“Oh no, I’d <i>like</i> to come,” says the
second woman.</p>
<p>“Well, we must hurry up,” says the first; “I
shan’t be more than a minute myself, I’ve merely got
to change my skirt.”</p>
<p>Half-an-hour later you hear them calling to each other, from
different parts of the house, to know if the other one is
ready. It appears they have both been ready for quite a
long while, waiting only for the other one.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid,” calls out the one whose turn
it is to be down-stairs, “it’s going to
rain.”</p>
<p>“Oh, don’t say that,” calls back the other
one.</p>
<p>“Well, it looks very like it.”</p>
<p>“What a nuisance,” answers the up-stairs woman;
“shall we put it off?”</p>
<p>“Well, what do <i>you</i> think, dear?” replies
the down-stairs.</p>
<p>They decide they will go, only now they will have to change
their boots, and put on different hats.</p>
<p>For the next ten minutes they are still shouting and running
about. Then it seems as if they really were ready, nothing
remaining but for them to say “Good-bye,” and go.</p>
<p>They begin by kissing the children. A woman never leaves
her house without secret misgivings that she will never return to
it alive. One child cannot be found. When it is found
it wishes it hadn’t been. It has to be washed,
preparatory to being kissed. After that, the dog has to be
found and kissed, and final instructions given to the cook.</p>
<p>Then they open the front door.</p>
<p>“Oh, George,” calls out the first woman, turning
round again. “Are you there?”</p>
<p>“Hullo,” answers a voice from the distance.
“Do you want me?”</p>
<p>“No, dear, only to say good-bye. I’m
going.”</p>
<p>“Oh, good-bye.”</p>
<p>“Good-bye, dear. Do you think it’s going to
rain?”</p>
<p>“Oh no, I should not say so.”</p>
<p>“George.”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Have you got any money?”</p>
<p>Five minutes later they come running back; the one has
forgotten her parasol, the other her purse.</p>
<p>And speaking of purses, reminds one of another essential
difference between the male and female human animal. A man
carries his money in his pocket. When he wants to use it,
he takes it out and lays it down. This is a crude way of
doing things, a woman displays more subtlety. Say she is
standing in the street, and wants fourpence to pay for a bunch of
violets she has purchased from a flower-girl. She has two
parcels in one hand, and a parasol in the other. With the
remaining two fingers of the left hand she secures the
violets. The question then arises, how to pay the
girl? She flutters for a few minutes, evidently not quite
understanding why it is she cannot do it. The reason then
occurs to her: she has only two hands and both these are
occupied. First she thinks she will put the parcels and the
flowers into her right hand, then she thinks she will put the
parasol into her left. Then she looks round for a table or
even a chair, but there is not such a thing in the whole
street. Her difficulty is solved by her dropping the
parcels and the flowers. The girl picks them up for her and
holds them. This enables her to feel for her pocket with
her right hand, while waving her open parasol about with her
left. She knocks an old gentleman’s hat off into the
gutter, and nearly blinds the flower-girl before it occurs to her
to close it. This done, she leans it up against the
flower-girl’s basket, and sets to work in earnest with both
hands. She seizes herself firmly by the back, and turns the
upper part of her body round till her hair is in front and her
eyes behind. Still holding herself firmly with her left
hand—did she let herself go, goodness knows where she would
spin to;—with her right she prospects herself. The
purse is there, she can feel it, the problem is how to get at
it. The quickest way would, of course, be to take off the
skirt, sit down on the kerb, turn it inside out, and work from
the bottom of the pocket upwards. But this simple idea
never seems to occur to her. There are some thirty folds at
the back of the dress, between two of these folds commences the
secret passage. At last, purely by chance, she suddenly
discovers it, nearly upsetting herself in the process, and the
purse is brought up to the surface. The difficulty of
opening it still remains. She knows it opens with a spring,
but the secret of that spring she has never mastered, and she
never will. Her plan is to worry it generally until it does
open. Five minutes will always do it, provided she is not
flustered.</p>
<p>At last it does open. It would be incorrect to say that
she opens it. It opens because it is sick of being mauled
about; and, as likely as not, it opens at the moment when she is
holding it upside down. If you happen to be near enough to
look over her shoulder, you will notice that the gold and silver
lies loose within it. In an inner sanctuary, carefully
secured with a second secret spring, she keeps her coppers,
together with a postage-stamp and a draper’s receipt, nine
months old, for elevenpence three-farthings.</p>
<p>I remember the indignation of an old Bus-conductor,
once. Inside we were nine women and two men. I sat
next the door, and his remarks therefore he addressed to
me. It was certainly taking him some time to collect the
fares, but I think he would have got on better had he been less
bustling; he worried them, and made them nervous.</p>
<p>“Look at that,” he said, drawing my attention to a
poor lady opposite, who was diving in the customary manner for
her purse, “they sit on their money, women do. Blest
if you wouldn’t think they was trying to ’atch
it.”</p>
<p>At length the lady drew from underneath herself an exceedingly
fat purse.</p>
<p>“Fancy riding in a bumpby bus, perched up on that
thing,” he continued. “Think what a stamina
they must have.” He grew confidential.
“I’ve seen one woman,” he said, “pull out
from underneath ’er a street doorkey, a tin box of
lozengers, a pencil-case, a whopping big purse, a packet of
hair-pins, and a smelling-bottle. Why, you or me would be
wretched, sitting on a plain door-knob, and them women goes about
like that all day. I suppose they gets used to it.
Drop ’em on an eider-down pillow, and they’d
scream. The time it takes me to get tuppence out of them,
why, it’s ’eart-breaking. First they tries one
side, then they tries the other. Then they gets up and
shakes theirselves till the bus jerks them back again, and there
they are, a more ’opeless ’eap than ever. If I
’ad my way I’d make every bus carry a female searcher
as could over’aul ’em one at a time, and take the
money from ’em. Talk about the poor pickpocket.
What I say is, that a man as finds his way into a woman’s
pocket—well, he deserves what he gets.”</p>
<p>But it was the thought of more serious matters that lured me
into reflections concerning the over-carefulness of women.
It is a theory of mine—wrong possibly; indeed I have so
been informed—that we pick our way through life with too
much care. We are for ever looking down upon the
ground. Maybe, we do avoid a stumble or two over a stone or
a brier, but also we miss the blue of the sky, the glory of the
hills. These books that good men write, telling us that
what they call “success” in life depends on our
flinging aside our youth and wasting our manhood in order that we
may have the means when we are eighty of spending a rollicking
old age, annoy me. We save all our lives to invest in a
South Sea Bubble; and in skimping and scheming, we have grown
mean, and narrow, and hard. We will put off the gathering
of the roses till to-morrow, to-day it shall be all work, all
bargain-driving, all plotting. Lo, when to-morrow comes,
the roses are blown; nor do we care for roses, idle things of
small marketable value; cabbages are more to our fancy by the
time to-morrow comes.</p>
<p>Life is a thing to be lived, not spent, to be faced, not
ordered. Life is not a game of chess, the victory to the
most knowing; it is a game of cards, one’s hand by skill to
be made the best of. Is it the wisest who is always the
most successful? I think not. The luckiest
whist-player I ever came across was a man who was never
<i>quite</i> certain what were trumps, and whose most frequent
observation during the game was “I really beg your
pardon,” addressed to his partner; a remark which generally
elicited the reply, “Oh, don’t apologize.
All’s well that ends well.” The man I knew who
made the most rapid fortune was a builder in the outskirts of
Birmingham, who could not write his name, and who, for thirty
years of his life, never went to bed sober. I do not say
that forgetfulness of trumps should be cultivated by
whist-players. I think my builder friend might have been
even more successful had he learned to write his name, and had he
occasionally—not overdoing it—enjoyed a sober
evening. All I wish to impress is, that virtue is not the
road to success—of the kind we are dealing with. We
must find other reasons for being virtuous; maybe, there are
some. The truth is, life is a gamble pure and simple, and
the rules we lay down for success are akin to the infallible
systems with which a certain class of idiot goes armed each
season to Monte Carlo. We can play the game with coolness
and judgment, decide when to plunge and when to stake small; but
to think that wisdom will decide it, is to imagine that we have
discovered the law of chance. Let us play the game of life
as sportsmen, pocketing our winnings with a smile, leaving our
losings with a shrug. Perhaps that is why we have been
summoned to the board and the cards dealt round: that we may
learn some of the virtues of the good gambler; his self-control,
his courage under misfortune, his modesty under the strain of
success, his firmness, his alertness, his general indifference to
fate. Good lessons these, all of them. If by the game
we learn some of them our time on the green earth has not been
wasted. If we rise from the table having learned only
fretfulness and self-pity I fear it has been.</p>
<p>The grim Hall Porter taps at the door: “Number Five
hundred billion and twenty-eight, your boatman is waiting,
sir.”</p>
<p>So! is it time already? We pick up our counters.
Of what use are they? In the country the other side of the
river they are no tender. The blood-red for gold, and the
pale-green for love, to whom shall we fling them? Here is
some poor beggar longing to play, let us give them to him as we
pass out. Poor devil! the game will amuse him—for a
while.</p>
<p>Keep your powder dry, and trust in Providence, is the motto of
the wise. Wet powder could never be of any possible use to
you. Dry, it may be, <i>with</i> the help of
Providence. We will call it Providence, it is a prettier
name than Chance—perhaps also a truer.</p>
<p>Another mistake we make when we reason out our lives is this:
we reason as though we were planning for reasonable
creatures. It is a big mistake. Well-meaning ladies
and gentlemen make it when they picture their ideal worlds.
When marriage is reformed, and the social problem solved, when
poverty and war have been abolished by acclamation, and sin and
sorrow rescinded by an overwhelming parliamentary majority!
Ah, then the world will be worthy of our living in it. You
need not wait, ladies and gentlemen, so long as you think for
that time. No social revolution is needed, no slow
education of the people is necessary. It would all come
about to-morrow, <i>if only we were reasonable creatures</i>.</p>
<p>Imagine a world of reasonable beings! The Ten
Commandments would be unnecessary: no reasoning being sins, no
reasoning creature makes mistakes. There would be no rich
men, for what reasonable man cares for luxury and
ostentation? There would be no poor: that I should eat
enough for two while my brother in the next street, as good a man
as I, starves, is not reasonable. There would be no
difference of opinion on any two points: there is only one
reason. You, dear Reader, would find, that on all subjects
you were of the same opinion as I. No novels would be
written, no plays performed; the lives of reasonable creatures do
not afford drama. No mad loves, no mad laughter, no
scalding tears, no fierce unreasoning, brief-lived joys, no
sorrows, no wild dreams—only reason, reason everywhere.</p>
<p>But for the present we remain unreasonable. If I eat
this mayonnaise, drink this champagne, I shall suffer in my
liver. Then, why do I eat it? Julia is a charming
girl, amiable, wise, and witty; also she has a share in a
brewery. Then, why does John marry Ann? who is
short-tempered, to say the least of it, who, he feels, will not
make him so good a house-wife, who has extravagant notions, who
has no little fortune. There is something about Ann’s
chin that fascinates him—he could not explain to you
what. On the whole, Julia is the better-looking of the
two. But the more he thinks of Julia, the more he is drawn
towards Ann. So Tom marries Julia and the brewery fails,
and Julia, on a holiday, contracts rheumatic fever, and is a
helpless invalid for life; while Ann comes in for ten thousand
pounds left to her by an Australian uncle no one had ever heard
of.</p>
<p>I have been told of a young man, who chose his wife with
excellent care. Said he to himself, very wisely, “In
the selection of a wife a man cannot be too
circumspect.” He convinced himself that the girl was
everything a helpmate should be. She had every virtue that
could be expected in a woman, no faults, but such as are
inseparable from a woman. Speaking practically, she was
perfection. He married her, and found she was all he had
thought her. Only one thing could he urge against
her—that he did not like her. And that, of course,
was not her fault.</p>
<p>How easy life would be did we know ourselves. Could we
always be sure that to-morrow we should think as we do
to-day. We fall in love during a summer holiday; she is
fresh, delightful, altogether charming; the blood rushes to our
head every time we think of her. Our ideal career is one of
perpetual service at her feet. It seems impossible that
Fate could bestow upon us any greater happiness than the
privilege of cleaning her boots, and kissing the hem of her
garment—if the hem be a little muddy that will please us
the more. We tell her our ambition, and at that moment
every word we utter is sincere. But the summer holiday
passes, and with it the holiday mood, and winter finds us
wondering how we are going to get out of the difficulty into
which we have landed ourselves. Or worse still, perhaps,
the mood lasts longer than is usual. We become formally
engaged. We marry—I wonder how many marriages are the
result of a passion that is burnt out before the altar-rails are
reached?—and three months afterwards the little lass is
broken-hearted to find that we consider the lacing of her boots a
bore. Her feet seem to have grown bigger. There is no
excuse for us, save that we are silly children, never sure of
what we are crying for, hurting one another in our play, crying
very loudly when hurt ourselves.</p>
<p>I knew an American lady once who used to bore me with long
accounts of the brutalities exercised upon her by her
husband. She had instituted divorce proceedings against
him. The trial came on, and she was highly
successful. We all congratulated her, and then for some
months she dropped out of my life. But there came a day
when we again found ourselves together. One of the problems
of social life is to know what to say to one another when we
meet; every man and woman’s desire is to appear sympathetic
and clever, and this makes conversation difficult, because,
taking us all round, we are neither sympathetic nor
clever—but this by the way.</p>
<p>Of course, I began to talk to her about her former
husband. I asked her how he was getting on. She
replied that she thought he was very comfortable.</p>
<p>“Married again?” I suggested.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she answered.</p>
<p>“Serve him right,” I exclaimed, “and his
wife too.” She was a pretty, bright-eyed little
woman, my American friend, and I wished to ingratiate
myself. “A woman who would marry such a man, knowing
what she must have known of him, is sure to make him wretched,
and we may trust him to be a curse to her.”</p>
<p>My friend seemed inclined to defend him.</p>
<p>“I think he is greatly improved,” she argued.</p>
<p>“Nonsense!” I returned, “a man never
improves. Once a villain, always a villain.”</p>
<p>“Oh, hush!” she pleaded, “you mustn’t
call him that.”</p>
<p>“Why not?” I answered. “I have heard
you call him a villain yourself.”</p>
<p>“It was wrong of me,” she said, flushing.
“I’m afraid he was not the only one to be blamed; we
were both foolish in those days, but I think we have both learned
a lesson.”</p>
<p>I remained silent, waiting for the necessary explanation.</p>
<p>“You had better come and see him for yourself,”
she added, with a little laugh; “to tell the truth, I am
the woman who has married him. Tuesday is my day, Number 2,
K— Mansions,” and she ran off, leaving me staring
after her.</p>
<p>I believe an enterprising clergyman who would set up a little
church in the Strand, just outside the Law Courts, might do quite
a trade, re-marrying couples who had just been divorced. A
friend of mine, a respondent, told me he had never loved his wife
more than on two occasions—the first when she refused him,
the second when she came into the witness-box to give evidence
against him.</p>
<p>“You are curious creatures, you men,” remarked a
lady once to another man in my presence. “You never
seem to know your own mind.”</p>
<p>She was feeling annoyed with men generally. I do not
blame her, I feel annoyed with them myself sometimes. There
is one man in particular I am always feeling intensely irritated
against. He says one thing, and acts another. He will
talk like a saint and behave like a fool, knows what is right and
does what is wrong. But we will not speak further of
him. He will be all he should be one day, and then we will
pack him into a nice, comfortably-lined box, and screw the lid
down tight upon him, and put him away in a quiet little spot near
a church I know of, lest he should get up and misbehave himself
again.</p>
<p>The other man, who is a wise man as men go, looked at his fair
critic with a smile.</p>
<p>“My dear madam,” he replied, “you are
blaming the wrong person. I confess I do not know my mind,
and what little I do know of it I do not like. I did not
make it, I did not select it. I am more dissatisfied with
it than you can possibly be. It is a greater mystery to me
than it is to you, and I have to live with it. You should
pity not blame me.”</p>
<p>There are moods in which I fall to envying those old hermits
who frankly, and with courageous cowardice, shirked the problem
of life. There are days when I dream of an existence
unfettered by the thousand petty strings with which our souls lie
bound to Lilliputia land. I picture myself living in some
Norwegian sater, high above the black waters of a rockbound
fiord. No other human creature disputes with me my
kingdom. I am alone with the whispering fir forests and the
stars. How I live I am not quite sure. Once a month I
could journey down into the villages and return laden. I
should not need much. For the rest, my gun and fishing-rod
would supply me. I would have with me a couple of big dogs,
who would talk to me with their eyes, so full of dumb thought,
and together we would wander over the uplands, seeking our
dinner, after the old primitive fashion of the men who dreamt not
of ten-course dinners and Savoy suppers. I would cook the
food myself, and sit down to the meal with a bottle of good wine,
such as starts a man’s thoughts (for I am inconsistent, as
I acknowledge, and that gift of civilization I would bear with me
into my hermitage). Then in the evening, with pipe in
mouth, beside my log-wood fire, I would sit and think, until new
knowledge came to me. Strengthened by those silent voices
that are drowned in the roar of Streetland, I might, perhaps,
grow into something nearer to what it was intended that a man
should be—might catch a glimpse, perhaps, of the meaning of
life.</p>
<p>No, no, my dear lady, into this life of renunciation I would
not take a companion, certainly not of the sex you are thinking
of, even would she care to come, which I doubt. There are
times when a man is better without the woman, when a woman is
better without the man. Love drags us from the depths,
makes men and women of us, but if we would climb a little nearer
to the stars we must say good-bye to it. We men and women
do not show ourselves to each other at our best; too often, I
fear, at our worst. The woman’s highest ideal of man
is the lover; to a man the woman is always the possible
beloved. We see each other’s hearts, but not each
other’s souls. In each other’s presence we
never shake ourselves free from the earth. Match-making
mother Nature is always at hand to prompt us. A woman lifts
us up into manhood, but there she would have us stay.
“Climb up to me,” she cries to the lad, walking with
soiled feet in muddy ways; “be a true man that you may be
worthy to walk by my side; be brave to protect me, kind and
tender, and true; but climb no higher, stay here by my
side.” The martyr, the prophet, the leader of the
world’s forlorn hopes, she would wake from his dream.
Her arms she would fling about his neck holding him down.</p>
<p>To the woman the man says, “You are my wife. Here
is your America, within these walls, here is your work, your
duty.” True, in nine hundred and ninety-nine cases
out of every thousand, but men and women are not made in moulds,
and the world’s work is various. Sometimes to her
sorrow, a woman’s work lies beyond the home. The duty
of Mary was not to Joseph.</p>
<p>The hero in the popular novel is the young man who says,
“I love you better than my soul.” Our favourite
heroine in fiction is the woman who cries to her lover, “I
would go down into Hell to be with you.” There are men and
women who cannot answer thus—the men who dream dreams, the
women who see visions—impracticable people from the
Bayswater point of view. But Bayswater would not be the
abode of peace it is had it not been for such.</p>
<p>Have we not placed sexual love on a pedestal higher than it
deserves? It is a noble passion, but it is not the
noblest. There is a wider love by the side of which it is
but as the lamp illumining the cottage, to the moonlight bathing
the hills and valleys. There were two women once.
This is a play I saw acted in the daylight. They had been
friends from girlhood, till there came between them the usual
trouble—a man. A weak, pretty creature not worth a
thought from either of them; but women love the unworthy; there
would be no over-population problem did they not; and this poor
specimen, ill-luck had ordained they should contend for.</p>
<p>Their rivalry brought out all that was worst in both of
them. It is a mistake to suppose love only elevates; it can
debase. It was a mean struggle for what to an onlooker must
have appeared a remarkably unsatisfying prize. The loser
might well have left the conqueror to her poor triumph, even
granting it had been gained unfairly. But the old, ugly,
primeval passions had been stirred in these women, and the
wedding-bells closed only the first act.</p>
<p>The second is not difficult to guess. It would have
ended in the Divorce Court had not the deserted wife felt that a
finer revenge would be secured to her by silence.</p>
<p>In the third, after an interval of only eighteen months, the
man died—the first piece of good fortune that seems to have
occurred to him personally throughout the play. His
position must have been an exceedingly anxious one from the
beginning. Notwithstanding his flabbiness, one cannot but
regard him with a certain amount of pity—not unmixed with
amusement. Most of life’s dramas can be viewed as
either farce or tragedy according to the whim of the
spectator. The actors invariably play them as tragedy; but
then that is the essence of good farce acting.</p>
<p>Thus was secured the triumph of legal virtue and the
punishment of irregularity, and the play might be dismissed as
uninterestingly orthodox were it not for the fourth act, showing
how the wronged wife came to the woman she had once wronged to
ask and grant forgiveness. Strangely as it may sound, they
found their love for one another unchanged. They had been
long parted: it was sweet to hold each other’s hands
again. Two lonely women, they agreed to live
together. Those who knew them well in this later time say
that their life was very beautiful, filled with graciousness and
nobility.</p>
<p>I do not say that such a story could ever be common, but it is
more probable than the world might credit. Sometimes the
man is better without the woman, the woman without the man.</p>
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