<h2><SPAN name="2HCH0033"></SPAN> CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“No man,” says a Rabbi, by way of indisputable instance, “may
turn the bones of his father and mother into spoons”—sure that his
hearers felt the checks against that form of economy. The market for spoons has
never expanded enough for any one to say, “Why not?” and to argue
that human progress lies in such an application of material. The only check to
be alleged is a sentiment, which will coerce none who do not hold that
sentiments are the better part of the world’s wealth.</p>
<p>Deronda meanwhile took to a less fashionable form of exercise than riding in
Rotten Row. He went often rambling in those parts of London which are most
inhabited by common Jews. He walked to the synagogues at times of service, he
looked into shops, he observed faces:—a process not very promising of
particular discovery. Why did he not address himself to an influential Rabbi or
other member of a Jewish community, to consult on the chances of finding a
mother named Cohen, with a son named Ezra, and a lost daughter named Mirah? He
thought of doing so—after Christmas. The fact was, notwithstanding all
his sense of poetry in common things, Deronda, where a keen personal interest
was aroused, could not, more than the rest of us, continuously escape suffering
from the pressure of that hard unaccommodating Actual, which has never
consulted our taste and is entirely unselect. Enthusiasm, we know, dwells at
ease among ideas, tolerates garlic breathed in the middle ages, and sees no
shabbiness in the official trappings of classic processions: it gets squeamish
when ideals press upon it as something warmly incarnate, and can hardly face
them without fainting. Lying dreamily in a boat, imagining one’s self in
quest of a beautiful maiden’s relatives in Cordova elbowed by Jews in the
time of Ibn-Gebirol, all the physical incidents can be borne without shock. Or
if the scenery of St. Mary Axe and Whitechapel were imaginatively transported
to the borders of the Rhine at the end of the eleventh century, when in the
ears listening for the signals of the Messiah, the Hep! Hep! Hep! of the
Crusaders came like the bay of blood-hounds; and in the presence of those
devilish missionaries with sword and firebrand the crouching figure of the
reviled Jew turned round erect, heroic, flashing with sublime constancy in the
face of torture and death—what would the dingy shops and unbeautiful
faces signify to the thrill of contemplative emotion? But the fervor of
sympathy with which we contemplate a grandiose martyrdom is feeble compared
with the enthusiasm that keeps unslacked where there is no danger, no
challenge—nothing but impartial midday falling on commonplace, perhaps
half-repulsive, objects which are really the beloved ideas made flesh. Here
undoubtedly lies the chief poetic energy: in the force of imagination that
pierces or exalts the solid fact, instead of floating among cloud-pictures. To
glory in a prophetic vision of knowledge covering the earth, is an easier
exercise of believing imagination than to see its beginning in newspaper
placards, staring at you from the bridge beyond the corn-fields; and it might
well happen to most of us dainty people that we were in the thick of the battle
of Armageddon without being aware of anything more than the annoyance of a
little explosive smoke and struggling on the ground immediately about us.</p>
<p>It lay in Deronda’s nature usually to contemn the feeble, fastidious
sympathy which shrinks from the broad life of mankind; but now, with Mirah
before him as a living reality, whose experience he had to care for, he saw
every common Jew and Jewess in the light of a comparison with her, and had a
presentiment of the collision between her idea of the unknown mother and
brother and the discovered fact—a presentiment all the keener in him
because of a suppressed consciousness that a not unlike possibility of
collision might lie hidden in his own lot. Not that he would have looked with
more complacency of expectation at wealthy Jews, outdoing the lords of the
Philistines in their sports; but since there was no likelihood of Mirah’s
friends being found among that class, their habits did not immediately affect
him. In this mood he rambled, without expectation of a more pregnant result
than a little preparation of his own mind, perhaps for future theorizing as
well as practice—very much as if, Mirah being related to Welsh miners, he
had gone to look more closely at the ways of those people, not without wishing
at the same time to get a little light of detail on the history of Strikes.</p>
<p>He really did not long to find anybody in particular; and when, as his habit
was, he looked at the name over a shop door, he was well content that it was
not Ezra Cohen. I confess, he particularly desired that Ezra Cohen should not
keep a shop. Wishes are held to be ominous; according to which belief the order
of the world is so arranged that if you have an impious objection to a squint,
your offspring is the more likely to be born with one; also, that if you
happened to desire a squint you would not get it. This desponding view of
probability the hopeful entirely reject, taking their wishes as good and
sufficient security for all kinds of fulfilment. Who is absolutely neutral?
Deronda happening one morning to turn into a little side street out of the
noise and obstructions of Holborn, felt the scale dip on the desponding side.</p>
<p>He was rather tired of the streets and had paused to hail a hansom cab which he
saw coming, when his attention was caught by some fine old clasps in chased
silver displayed in the window at his right hand. His first thought was that
Lady Mallinger, who had a strictly Protestant taste for such Catholic spoils,
might like to have these missal-clasps turned into a bracelet: then his eyes
traveled over the other contents of the window, and he saw that the shop was
that kind of pawnbroker’s where the lead is given to jewelry, lace and
all equivocal objects introduced as <i>bric-à-brac</i>. A placard in one corner
announced—<i>Watches and Jewelry exchanged and repaired</i>. But his
survey had been noticed from within, and a figure appeared at the door, looking
round at him and saying in a tone of cordial encouragement, “Good day,
sir.” The instant was enough for Deronda to see the face, unmistakably
Jewish, belonged to a young man about thirty, and wincing from the
shopkeeper’s persuasiveness that would probably follow, he had no sooner
returned the “good day,” than he passed to the other side of the
street and beckoned to the cabman to draw up there. From that station he saw
the name over the shop window—<i>Ezra Cohen</i>.</p>
<p>There might be a hundred Ezra Cohens lettered above shop windows, but Deronda
had not seen them. Probably the young man interested in a possible customer was
Ezra himself; and he was about the age to be expected in Mirah’s brother,
who was grown up while she was still a little child. But Deronda’s first
endeavor as he drove homeward was to convince himself that there was not the
slightest warrantable presumption of this Ezra being Mirah’s brother; and
next, that even if, in spite of good reasoning, he turned out to be that
brother, while on inquiry the mother was found to be dead, it was not
his—Deronda’s—duty to make known the discovery to Mirah. In
inconvenient disturbance of this conclusion there came his lately-acquired
knowledge that Mirah would have a religious desire to know of her
mother’s death, and also to learn whether her brother were living. How
far was he justified in determining another life by his own notions? Was it not
his secret complaint against the way in which others had ordered his own life,
that he had not open daylight on all its relations, so that he had not, like
other men, the full guidance of primary duties?</p>
<p>The immediate relief from this inward debate was the reflection that he had not
yet made any real discovery, and that by looking into the facts more closely he
should be certified that there was no demand on him for any decision whatever.
He intended to return to that shop as soon as he could conveniently, and buy
the clasps for Lady Mallinger. But he was hindered for several days by Sir
Hugo, who, about to make an after-dinner speech on a burning topic, wanted
Deronda to forage for him on the legal part of the question, besides wasting
time every day on argument which always ended in a drawn battle. As on many
other questions, they held different sides, but Sir Hugo did not mind this, and
when Deronda put his point well, said, with a mixture of satisfaction and
regret,</p>
<p>“Confound it, Dan! why don’t you make an opportunity of saying
these things in public? You’re wrong, you know. You won’t succeed.
You’ve got the massive sentiment—the heavy artillery of the country
against you. But it’s all the better ground for a young man to display
himself on. When I was your age, I should have taken it. And it would be quite
as well for you to be in opposition to me here and there. It would throw you
more into relief. If you would seize an occasion of this sort to make an
impression, you might be in Parliament in no time. And you know that would
gratify me.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry not to do what would gratify you, sir,” said Deronda.
“But I cannot persuade myself to look at politics as a profession.”</p>
<p>“Why not? if a man is not born into public life by his position in the
country, there’s no way for him but to embrace it by his own efforts. The
business of the country must be done—her Majesty’s Government
carried on, as the old Duke said. And it never could be, my boy, if everybody
looked at politics as if they were prophecy, and demanded an inspired vocation.
If you are to get into Parliament, it won’t do to sit still and wait for
a call either from heaven or constituents.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want to make a living out of opinions,” said
Deronda; “especially out of borrowed opinions. Not that I mean to blame
other men. I dare say many better fellows than I don’t mind getting on to
a platform to praise themselves, and giving their word of honor for a
party.”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what, Dan,” said Sir Hugo, “a man who
sets his face against every sort of humbug is simply a three-cornered,
impracticable fellow. There’s a bad style of humbug, but there is also a
good style—one that oils the wheels and makes progress possible. If you
are to rule men, you must rule them through their own ideas; and I agree with
the Archbishop at Naples who had a St. Januarius procession against the plague.
It’s no use having an Order in Council against popular shallowness. There
is no action possible without a little acting.”</p>
<p>“One may be obliged to give way to an occasional necessity,” said
Deronda. “But it is one thing to say, ‘In this particular case I am
forced to put on this foolscap and grin,’ and another to buy a pocket
foolscap and practice myself in grinning. I can’t see any real public
expediency that does not keep an ideal before it which makes a limit of
deviation from the direct path. But if I were to set up for a public man I
might mistake my success for public expediency.”</p>
<p>It was after this dialogue, which was rather jarring to him, that Deronda set
out on his meditated second visit to Ezra Cohen’s. He entered the street
at the end opposite to the Holborn entrance, and an inward reluctance slackened
his pace while his thoughts were transferring what he had just been saying
about public expediency to the entirely private difficulty which brought him
back again into this unattractive thoroughfare. It might soon become an
immediate practical question with him how far he could call it a wise
expediency to conceal the fact of close kindred. Such questions turning up
constantly in life are often decided in a rough-and-ready way; and to many it
will appear an over-refinement in Deronda that he should make any great point
of a matter confined to his own knowledge. But we have seen the reasons why he
had come to regard concealment as a bane of life, and the necessity of
concealment as a mark by which lines of action were to be avoided. The prospect
of being urged against the confirmed habit of his mind was naturally grating.
He even paused here and there before the most plausible shop-windows for a
gentleman to look into, half inclined to decide that he would not increase his
knowledge about that modern Ezra, who was certainly not a leader among his
people—a hesitation which proved how, in a man much given to reasoning, a
bare possibility may weigh more than the best-clad likelihood; for
Deronda’s reasoning had decided that all likelihood was against this
man’s being Mirah’s brother.</p>
<p>One of the shop-windows he paused before was that of a second-hand book-shop,
where, on a narrow table outside, the literature of the ages was represented in
judicious mixture, from the immortal verse of Homer to the mortal prose of the
railway novel. That the mixture was judicious was apparent from Deronda’s
finding in it something that he wanted—namely, that wonderful bit of
autobiography, the life of the Polish Jew, Salomon Maimon; which, as he could
easily slip it into his pocket, he took from its place, and entered the shop to
pay for, expecting to see behind the counter a grimy personage showing that
<i>nonchalance</i> about sales which seems to belong universally to the
second-hand book-business. In most other trades you find generous men who are
anxious to sell you their wares for your own welfare; but even a Jew will not
urge Simson’s Euclid on you with an affectionate assurance that you will
have pleasure in reading it, and that he wishes he had twenty more of the
article, so much is it in request. One is led to fear that a second-hand
bookseller may belong to that unhappy class of men who have no belief in the
good of what they get their living by, yet keep conscience enough to be morose
rather than unctuous in their vocation.</p>
<p>But instead of the ordinary tradesman, he saw, on the dark background of books
in the long narrow shop, a figure that was somewhat startling in its
unusualness. A man in threadbare clothing, whose age was difficult to
guess—from the dead yellowish flatness of the flesh, something like an
old ivory carving—was seated on a stool against some bookshelves that
projected beyond the short counter, doing nothing more remarkable than reading
yesterday’s <i>Times</i>; but when he let the paper rest on his lap and
looked at the incoming customer, the thought glanced through Deronda that
precisely such a physiognomy as that might possibly have been seen in a prophet
of the Exile, or in some New Hebrew poet of the mediæval time. It was a fine
typical Jewish face, wrought into intensity of expression apparently by a
strenuous eager experience in which all the satisfaction had been indirect and
far off, and perhaps by some bodily suffering also, which involved that absence
of ease in the present. The features were clear-cut, not large; the brow not
high but broad, and fully defined by the crisp black hair. It might never have
been a particularly handsome face, but it must always have been forcible; and
now with its dark, far-off gaze, and yellow pallor in relief on the gloom of
the backward shop, one might have imagined one’s self coming upon it in
some past prison of the Inquisition, which a mob had suddenly burst upon; while
the look fixed on an incidental customer seemed eager and questioning enough to
have been turned on one who might have been a messenger either of delivery or
of death. The figure was probably familiar and unexciting enough to the
inhabitants of this street; but to Deronda’s mind it brought so strange a
blending of the unwonted with the common, that there was a perceptible interval
of mutual observation before he asked his question; “What is the price of
this book?”</p>
<p>After taking the book and examining the fly-leaves without rising, the supposed
bookseller said, “There is no mark, and Mr. Ram is not in now. I am
keeping the shop while he is gone to dinner. What are you disposed to give for
it?” He held the book close on his lap with his hand on it and looked
examiningly at Deronda, over whom there came the disagreeable idea, that
possibly this striking personage wanted to see how much could be got out of a
customer’s ignorance of prices. But without further reflection he said,
“Don’t you know how much it is worth?”</p>
<p>“Not its market-price. May I ask have you read it?”</p>
<p>“No. I have read an account of it, which makes me want to buy it.”</p>
<p>“You are a man of learning—you are interested in Jewish
history?” This was said in a deepened tone of eager inquiry.</p>
<p>“I am certainly interested in Jewish history,” said Deronda,
quietly, curiosity overcoming his dislike to the sort of inspection as well as
questioning he was under.</p>
<p>But immediately the strange Jew rose from his sitting posture, and Deronda felt
a thin hand pressing his arm tightly, while a hoarse, excited voice, not much
above a loud whisper, said,</p>
<p>“You are perhaps of our race?”</p>
<p>Deronda colored deeply, not liking the grasp, and then answered with a slight
shake of the head, “No.” The grasp was relaxed, the hand withdrawn,
the eagerness of the face collapsed into uninterested melancholy, as if some
possessing spirit which had leaped into the eyes and gestures had sunk back
again to the inmost recesses of the frame; and moving further off as he held
out the little book, the stranger said in a tone of distant civility, “I
believe Mr. Ram will be satisfied with half-a-crown, sir.”</p>
<p>The effect of this change on Deronda—he afterward smiled when he recalled
it—was oddly embarrassing and humiliating, as if some high dignitary had
found him deficient and given him his <i>congé</i>. There was nothing further
to be said, however: he paid his half-crown and carried off his <i>Salomon
Maimon’s Lebensgeschichte</i> with a mere “good-morning.”</p>
<p>He felt some vexation at the sudden arrest of the interview, and the apparent
prohibition that he should know more of this man, who was certainly something
out of the common way—as different probably as a Jew could well be from
Ezra Cohen, through whose door Deronda was presently entering, and whose
flourishing face glistening on the way to fatness was hanging over the counter
in negotiation with some one on the other side of the partition, concerning two
plated stoppers and three teaspoons, which lay spread before him. Seeing
Deronda enter, he called out “Mother! Mother!” and then with a
familiar nod and smile, said, “Coming, sir—coming directly.”</p>
<p>Deronda could not help looking toward the door from the back with some anxiety,
which was not soothed when he saw a vigorous woman beyond fifty enter and
approach to serve him. Not that there was anything very repulsive about her:
the worst that could be said was that she had that look of having made her
toilet with little water, and by twilight, which is common to unyouthful people
of her class, and of having presumably slept in her large earrings, if not in
her rings and necklace. In fact, what caused a sinking of heart in Deronda was
her not being so coarse and ugly as to exclude the idea of her being
Mirah’s mother. Any one who has looked at a face to try and discern signs
of known kinship in it will understand his process of conjecture—how he
tried to think away the fat which had gradually disguised the outlines of
youth, and to discern what one may call the elementary expressions of the face.
He was sorry to see no absolute negative to his fears. Just as it was
conceivable that this Ezra, brought up to trade, might resemble the scapegrace
father in everything but his knowledge and talent, so it was not impossible
that this mother might have had a lovely refined daughter whose type of feature
and expression was like Mirah’s. The eyebrows had a vexatious similarity
of line; and who shall decide how far a face may be masked when the
uncherishing years have thrust it far onward in the ever-new procession of
youth and age? The good-humor of the glance remained and shone out in a
motherly way at Deronda, as she said, in a mild guttural tone,</p>
<p>“How can I serve you, sir?”</p>
<p>“I should like to look at the silver clasps in the window,” said
Deronda; “the larger ones, please, in the corner there.”</p>
<p>They were not quite easy to get at from the mother’s station, and the son
seeing this called out, “I’ll reach ’em, mother; I’ll
reach ’em,” running forward with alacrity, and then handing the
clasps to Deronda with the smiling remark,</p>
<p>“Mother’s too proud: she wants to do everything herself.
That’s why I called her to wait on you, sir. When there’s a
particular gentleman customer, sir, I daren’t do any other than call her.
But I can’t let her do herself mischief with stretching.”</p>
<p>Here Mr. Cohen made way again for his parent, who gave a little guttural,
amiable laugh while she looked at Deronda, as much as to say, “This boy
will be at his jokes, but you see he’s the best son in the world,”
and evidently the son enjoyed pleasing her, though he also wished to convey an
apology to his distinguished customer for not giving him the advantage of his
own exclusive attention.</p>
<p>Deronda began to examine the clasps as if he had many points to observe before
he could come to a decision.</p>
<p>“They are only three guineas, sir,” said the mother, encouragingly.</p>
<p>“First-rate workmanship, sir—worth twice the money; only I get
’em a bargain from Cologne,” said the son, parenthetically, from a
distance.</p>
<p>Meanwhile two new customers entered, and the repeated call, “Addy!”
brought from the back of the shop a group that Deronda turned frankly to stare
at, feeling sure that the stare would be held complimentary. The group
consisted of a black-eyed young woman who carried a black-eyed little one, its
head already covered with black curls, and deposited it on the counter, from
which station it looked round with even more than the usual intelligence of
babies: also a robust boy of six and a younger girl, both with black eyes and
black-ringed hair—looking more Semitic than their parents, as the puppy
lions show the spots of far-off progenitors. The young woman answering to
“Addy”—a sort of paroquet in a bright blue dress, with coral
necklace and earrings, her hair set up in a huge bush—looked as
complacently lively and unrefined as her husband; and by a certain difference
from the mother deepened in Deronda the unwelcome impression that the latter
was not so utterly common a Jewess as to exclude her being the mother of Mirah.
While that thought was glancing through his mind, the boy had run forward into
the shop with an energetic stamp, and setting himself about four feet from
Deronda, with his hands in the pockets of his miniature knickerbockers, looked
at him with a precocious air of survey. Perhaps it was chiefly with a
diplomatic design to linger and ingratiate himself that Deronda patted the
boy’s head, saying,</p>
<p>“What is your name, sirrah?”</p>
<p>“Jacob Alexander Cohen,” said the small man, with much ease and
distinctness.</p>
<p>“You are not named after your father, then?”</p>
<p>“No, after my grandfather; he sells knives and razors and
scissors—my grandfather does,” said Jacob, wishing to impress the
stranger with that high connection. “He gave me this knife.” Here a
pocket-knife was drawn forth, and the small fingers, both naturally and
artificially dark, opened two blades and a cork-screw with much quickness.</p>
<p>“Is not that a dangerous plaything?” said Deronda, turning to the
grandmother.</p>
<p>“<i>He</i>’ll never hurt himself, bless you!” said she,
contemplating her grandson with placid rapture.</p>
<p>“Have <i>you</i> got a knife?” says Jacob, coming closer. His small
voice was hoarse in its glibness, as if it belonged to an aged commercial soul,
fatigued with bargaining through many generations.</p>
<p>“Yes. Do you want to see it?” said Deronda, taking a small penknife
from his waistcoat-pocket.</p>
<p>Jacob seized it immediately and retreated a little, holding the two knives in
his palms and bending over them in meditative comparison. By this time the
other clients were gone, and the whole family had gathered to the spot,
centering their attention on the marvelous Jacob: the father, mother, and
grandmother behind the counter, with baby held staggering thereon, and the
little girl in front leaning at her brother’s elbow to assist him in
looking at the knives.</p>
<p>“Mine’s the best,” said Jacob, at last, returning
Deronda’s knife as if he had been entertaining the idea of exchange and
had rejected it.</p>
<p>Father and mother laughed aloud with delight. “You won’t find Jacob
choosing the worst,” said Mr. Cohen, winking, with much confidence in the
customer’s admiration. Deronda, looking at the grandmother, who had only
an inward silent laugh, said,</p>
<p>“Are these the only grandchildren you have?”</p>
<p>“All. This is my only son,” she answered in a communicative tone,
Deronda’s glance and manner as usual conveying the impression of
sympathetic interest—which on this occasion answered his purpose well. It
seemed to come naturally enough that he should say,</p>
<p>“And you have no daughter?”</p>
<p>There was an instantaneous change in the mother’s face. Her lips closed
more firmly, she looked down, swept her hands outward on the counter, and
finally turned her back on Deronda to examine some Indian handkerchiefs that
hung in pawn behind her. Her son gave a significant glance, set up his
shoulders an instant and just put his fingers to his lips,—then said
quickly, “I think you’re a first-rate gentleman in the city, sir,
if I may be allowed to guess.”</p>
<p>“No,” said Deronda, with a preoccupied air, “I have nothing
to do with the city.”</p>
<p>“That’s a bad job. I thought you might be the young principal of a
first-rate firm,” said Mr. Cohen, wishing to make amends for the check on
his customer’s natural desire to know more of him and his. “But you
understand silver-work, I see.”</p>
<p>“A little,” said Deronda, taking up the clasps a moment and laying
them down again. That unwelcome bit of circumstantial evidence had made his
mind busy with a plan which was certainly more like acting than anything he had
been aware of in his own conduct before. But the bare possibility that more
knowledge might nullify the evidence now overpowered the inclination to rest in
uncertainty.</p>
<p>“To tell you the truth,” he went on, “my errand is not so
much to buy as to borrow. I dare say you go into rather heavy transactions
occasionally.”</p>
<p>“Well, sir, I’ve accommodated gentlemen of
distinction—I’m proud to say it. I wouldn’t exchange my
business with any in the world. There’s none more honorable, nor more
charitable, nor more necessary for all classes, from the good lady who wants a
little of the ready for the baker, to a gentleman like yourself, sir, who may
want it for amusement. I like my business, I like my street, and I like my
shop. I wouldn’t have it a door further down. And I wouldn’t be
without a pawn-shop, sir, to be the Lord Mayor. It puts you in connection with
the world at large. I say it’s like the government revenue—it
embraces the brass as well as the gold of the country. And a man who
doesn’t get money, sir, can’t accommodate. Now, what can I do for
<i>you</i>, sir?”</p>
<p>If an amiable self-satisfaction is the mark of earthly bliss, Solomon in all
his glory was a pitiable mortal compared with Mr. Cohen—clearly one of
those persons, who, being in excellent spirits about themselves, are willing to
cheer strangers by letting them know it. While he was delivering himself with
lively rapidity, he took the baby from his wife and holding it on his arm
presented his features to be explored by its small fists. Deronda, not in a
cheerful mood, was rashly pronouncing this Ezra Cohen to be the most unpoetic
Jew he had ever met with in books or life: his phraseology was as little as
possible like that of the Old Testament: and no shadow of a suffering race
distinguished his vulgarity of soul from that of a prosperous, pink-and-white
huckster of the purest English lineage. It is naturally a Christian feeling
that a Jew ought not to be conceited. However, this was no reason for not
persevering in his project, and he answered at once in adventurous ignorance of
technicalities,</p>
<p>“I have a fine diamond ring to offer as security—not with me at
this moment, unfortunately, for I am not in the habit of wearing it. But I will
come again this evening and bring it with me. Fifty pounds at once would be a
convenience to me.”</p>
<p>“Well, you know, this evening is the Sabbath, young gentleman,”
said Cohen, “and I go to the <i>Shool</i>. The shop will be closed. But
accommodation is a work of charity; if you can’t get here before, and are
any ways pressed—why, I’ll look at your diamond. You’re
perhaps from the West End—a longish drive?”</p>
<p>“Yes; and your Sabbath begins early at this season. I could be here by
five—will that do?” Deronda had not been without hope that by
asking to come on a Friday evening he might get a better opportunity of
observing points in the family character, and might even be able to put some
decisive question.</p>
<p>Cohen assented; but here the marvelous Jacob, whose <i>physique</i> supported a
precocity that would have shattered a Gentile of his years, showed that he had
been listening with much comprehension by saying, “You are coming again.
Have you got any more knives at home?”</p>
<p>“I think I have one,” said Deronda, smiling down at him.</p>
<p>“Has it two blades and a hook—and a white handle like that?”
said Jacob, pointing to the waistcoat-pocket.</p>
<p>“I dare say it has.”</p>
<p>“Do you like a cork-screw?” said Jacob, exhibiting that article in
his own knife again, and looking up with serious inquiry.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Deronda, experimentally.</p>
<p>“Bring your knife, then, and we’ll shwop,” said Jacob,
returning the knife to his pocket, and stamping about with the sense that he
had concluded a good transaction.</p>
<p>The grandmother had now recovered her usual manners, and the whole family
watched Deronda radiantly when he caressingly lifted the little girl, to whom
he had not hitherto given attention, and seating her on the counter, asked for
her name also. She looked at him in silence, and put her fingers to her gold
earrings, which he did not seem to have noticed.</p>
<p>“Adelaide Rebekah is her name,” said her mother, proudly.
“Speak to the gentleman, lovey.”</p>
<p>“Shlav’m Shabbes fyock on,” said Adelaide Rebekah.</p>
<p>“Her Sabbath frock, she means,” said the father, in explanation.
“She’ll have her Sabbath frock on this evening.”</p>
<p>“And will you let me see you in it, Adelaide?” said Deronda, with
that gentle intonation which came very easily to him.</p>
<p>“Say yes, lovey—yes, if you please, sir,” said her mother,
enchanted with this handsome young gentleman, who appreciated remarkable
children.</p>
<p>“And will you give me a kiss this evening?” said Deronda with a
hand on each of her little brown shoulders.</p>
<p>Adelaide Rebekah (her miniature crinoline and monumental features corresponded
with the combination of her names) immediately put up her lips to pay the kiss
in advance; whereupon her father rising in still more glowing satisfaction with
the general meritoriousness of his circumstances, and with the stranger who was
an admiring witness, said cordially,</p>
<p>“You see there’s somebody will be disappointed if you don’t
come this evening, sir. You won’t mind sitting down in our family place
and waiting a bit for me, if I’m not in when you come, sir? I’ll
stretch a point to accommodate a gent of your sort. Bring the diamond, and
I’ll see what I can do for you.”</p>
<p>Deronda thus left the most favorable impression behind him, as a preparation
for more easy intercourse. But for his own part those amenities had been
carried on under the heaviest spirits. If these were really Mirah’s
relatives, he could not imagine that even her fervid filial piety could give
the reunion with them any sweetness beyond such as could be found in the strict
fulfillment of a painful duty. What did this vaunting brother need? And with
the most favorable supposition about the hypothetic mother, Deronda shrank from
the image of a first meeting between her and Mirah, and still more from the
idea of Mirah’s domestication with this family. He took refuge in
disbelief. To find an Ezra Cohen when the name was running in your head was no
more extraordinary than to find a Josiah Smith under like circumstances; and as
to the coincidence about the daughter, it would probably turn out to be a
difference. If, however, further knowledge confirmed the more undesirable
conclusion, what would be wise expediency?—to try and determine the best
consequences by concealment, or to brave other consequences for the sake of
that openness which is the sweet fresh air of our moral life.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />