<h2 class="main">CHAPTER XV</h2>
<p class="first">Cornélie’s premonition regarding Mrs. van
der Staal’s opinion of her intercourse with Duco was confirmed:
mevrouw spoke to her seriously, saying that she would compromise
herself if she went on like that and adding that she had spoken to Duco
in the same sense. But Cornélie answered rather haughtily and
nonchalantly, declared that, after always minding the conventions and
becoming very unhappy in spite of it, she had resolved to mind them no
longer, that she valued Duco’s conversation and that she was not
going to be deprived of it because of what people thought or said. And
then, she asked Mrs. van der Staal, who were “people?”
Their three or four acquaintances at Belloni’s? Who knew her
besides? Where else did she go? Why should she care about the Hague?
And she gave a scornful laugh, loftily parrying Mrs. van der
Staal’s arguments.</p>
<p>The conversation caused a coolness between them. Wounded in her
touchy over-sensitiveness, she did not come to dinner at
Belloni’s that evening. Next day, meeting Duco at their little
table in the <i>osteria</i>, she asked him what he thought of his
mother’s rebuke. He smiled vaguely, raising his eyebrows,
obviously not realizing the commonplace truth of his mother’s
words, saying that those were just Mamma’s ideas, which of course
were all very well and current in the set in which Mamma and his
sisters lived, but which he didn’t enter into or bother about,
unless Cornélie thought that Mamma was right. And
Cornélie blazed out contemptuously, shrugged
her shoulders, asked who or what there was for whose sake she should
allow herself to break off their friendly intercourse. They ordered a
<i>mezzo-fiasco</i> between them and had a long, chatty lunch like two
comrades, like two students. He said that he had been thinking over her
pamphlet; he talked, to please her, about the modern woman, modern
marriage, the modern girl. She condemned the way in which Mrs. van der
Staal was bringing up her daughters, that light, frivolous education
and that endless going about, on the look for a husband. She said that
she spoke from experience.</p>
<p>They walked along the Via Appia that afternoon and went to the
Catacombs, where a Trappist showed them round. When Cornélie
returned home she felt pleasantly light and cheerful. She did not go
out again; she piled up the logs on her fire against the evening, which
was turning chilly, and supped off a little bread and jelly, so as not
to go out for her dinner. Sitting in her tea-gown, with her hands
folded over her head, she stared into the briskly burning logs and let
the evening speed past her. She was satisfied with her life, so free,
independent of everything and everybody. She had a little money, she
could go on living like this. She had no great needs. Her life in
rooms, in little restaurants was not expensive. She wanted no clothes.
She felt satisfied. Duco was an agreeable friend: how lonely she would
be without him! Only her life must acquire some aim. What aim? The
feminist movement? But how, abroad? It was such a different movement to
work at.... She would send her pamphlet now to a newly founded
women’s paper. But then? She wasn’t in Holland and she
didn’t want to go to Holland; and yet there would certainly be
more scope there for her activity, for exchanging views with others.
Whereas here, in Rome.... An indolence overcame her, in the
drowsiness of her cosy room. For Duco had helped her to arrange her
sitting-room. He certainly was a cultivated fellow, even though he was
not modern. What a lot he knew about history, about Italy; and how
cleverly he told it all! The way he explained Italy to her, she was
interested in the country after all.</p>
<p>Only, he wasn’t modern. He had no insight into Italian
politics, into the struggle between the Quirinal and the Vatican, into
anarchism, which was showing its head at Milan, into the riots in
Sicily.... An aim in life: what a difficult thing it was! And, in her
evening drowsiness after a pleasant day, she did not feel the absence
of an aim and enjoyed the soft luxury of letting her thoughts glide on
in unison with the drowsy evening hours, in a voluptuous
self-indulgence. She looked at the sheets of her pamphlet, scattered
over her big writing-table, a real table to work at: they lay yellow
under the light of her reading-lamp; they had not all been recopied,
but she was not in the mood now; she threw a log into the little grate
and the fire smoked and blazed. So pleasant, that foreign habit of
burning wood instead of coal....</p>
<p>And she thought of her husband. She missed him sometimes. Could she
not have managed him, with a little tact and patience? After all, he
was very nice during the period of their engagement. He was rough, but
not bad. He might have sworn at her sometimes, but perhaps he did not
mean any great harm. He waltzed divinely, he swung you round so
firmly.... He was good-looking and, she had to confess, she was in love
with him, if only for his handsome face, his handsome figure. There was
something about his eyes and mouth that she was never able to resist.
When he spoke, she had to look at his mouth. However, that was
all over and done with....</p>
<p>After all, perhaps the life at the Hague was too monotonous for her
temperament. She liked travelling, seeing new people, developing new
ideas; and she had never been able to settle down in her little set.
And now she was free, independent of all ties, of all people. If Mrs.
van der Staal was angry, she didn’t care.... And, all the same,
Duco <i>was</i> rather modern, in his indifference to convention. Or
was it merely the artistic side in him? Or was he, as a man who was not
modern, indifferent to it even as she, a modern woman, was? A man could
allow himself more. A man was not so easily compromised.... A modern
woman. She repeated the words proudly. Her drowsiness acquired a
certain arrogance. She drew herself up, stretching out her arms, looked
at herself in the glass: her slender figure, her delicate little face,
a trifle pale, with the eyes big and grey and bright under their
remarkably long lashes, her light-brown hair in a loose, tangled coil,
the lines of her figure, like those of a drooping lily, very winsome in
the creased folds of her old tea-gown, pale-pink and faded.... What was
her path in life? She felt herself to be something more than a worker
and fighter, to be very complex, felt that she was a woman too, felt a
great womanliness inside her, like a weakness which would hamper her
energy. And she wandered through the room, unable to decide to go to
bed, and, staring into the gloomy ashes of the expiring fire, she
thought of her future, of what she would become and how, of how she
would go and whither, along which curve of life, wandering through what
forests, winding through what alleys, crossing which other curves of
which other, seeking souls.... </p>
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