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worldly ways and byways-第12部分

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parvenu。  To be gracious and at ease with all classes and 

professions; one must be perfectly sure of one's own position; and 

with us few feel this security; it being based on too frail a 

foundation; a crisis in the 〃street〃 going a long way towards 

destroying it。



Of course I am generalizing and doubt not that in many cultivated 

homes the right spirit exists; but unfortunately these are not the 

centres which give the tone to our 〃world。〃  Lately at one of the 

most splendid houses in this city a young Italian tenor had been 

engaged to sing。  When he had finished he stood alone; unnoticed; 

unspoken to for the rest of the evening。  He had been paid to sing。  

〃What more; in common sense; could he want?〃 thought the 〃world;〃 

without reflecting that it was probably not the TENOR who lost by 

that arrangement。  It needs a delicate hand to hold the reins over 

the backs of such a fine…mouthed community as artists and singers 

form。  They rarely give their best when singing or performing in a 

hostile atmosphere。



A few years ago when a fancy…dress ball was given at the Academy of 

Design; the original idea was to have it an artists' ball; the 

community of the brush were; however; approached with such a 

complete lack of tact that; with hardly an exception; they held 

aloof; and at the ball shone conspicuous by their absence。



At present in this city I know of but two hospitable firesides 

where you are sure to meet the best the city holds of either 

foreign or native talent。  The one is presided over by the wife of 

a young composer; and the other; oddly enough; by two unmarried 

ladies。  An invitation to a dinner or a supper at either of these 

houses is as eagerly sought after and as highly prized in the great 

world as it is by the Bohemians; though neither 〃salon〃 is open 

regularly。



There is still hope for us; and I already see signs of better 

things。  Perhaps; when my English friend returns in a few years; we 

may be able to prove to her that we have found the road to Prague。









CHAPTER 11 … Social Exiles





BALZAC; in his COMEDIE HUMAINE; has reviewed with a master…hand 

almost every phase of the Social World of Paris down to 1850 and 

Thackeray left hardly a corner of London High Life unexplored; but 

so great have been the changes (progress; its admirers call it;) 

since then; that; could Balzac come back to his beloved Paris; he 

would feel like a foreigner there; and Thackeray; who was among us 

but yesterday; would have difficulty in finding his bearings in the 

sea of the London world to…day。



We have changed so radically that even a casual observer cannot 

help being struck by the difference。  Among other most significant 

〃phenomena〃 has appeared a phase of life that not only neither of 

these great men observed (for the very good reason that it had not 

appeared in their time); but which seems also to have escaped the 

notice of the writers of our own day; close observers as they are 

of any new development。  I mean the class of Social Exiles; 

pitiable wanderers from home and country; who haunt the Continent; 

and are to be found (sad little colonies) in out…of…the…way corners 

of almost every civilized country。



To know much of this form of modern life; one must have been a 

wanderer; like myself; and have pitched his tent in many queer 

places; for they are shy game and not easily raised; frequenting 

mostly quiet old cities like Versailles and Florence; or 

inexpensive watering…places where their meagre incomes become 

affluence by contrast。  The first thought on dropping in on such a 

settlement is; 〃How in the world did these people ever drift here?〃  

It is simple enough and generally comes about in this way:



The father of a wealthy family dies。  The fortune turns out to be 

less than was expected。  The widow and children decide to go abroad 

for a year or so; during their period of mourning; partially for 

distraction; and partially (a fact which is not spoken of) because 

at home they would be forced to change their way of living to a 

simpler one; and that is hard to do; just at first。  Later they 

think it will be quite easy。  So the family emigrates; and after a 

little sight…seeing; settles in Dresden or Tours; casually at 

first; in a hotel。  If there are young children they are made the 

excuse。  〃The languages are so important!〃  Or else one of the 

daughters develops a taste for music; or a son takes up the study 

of art。  In a year or two; before a furnished apartment is taken; 

the idea of returning is discussed; but abandoned 〃for the 

present。〃  They begin vaguely to realize how difficult it will be 

to take life up again at home。  During all this time their income 

(like everything else when the owners are absent) has been slowly 

but surely disappearing; making the return each year more 

difficult。  Finally; for economy; an unfurnished apartment is 

taken。  They send home for bits of furniture and family belongings; 

and gradually drop into the great army of the expatriated。



Oh; the pathos of it!  One who has not seen these poor stranded 

waifs in their self…imposed exile; with eyes turned towards their 

native land; cannot realize all the sadness and loneliness they 

endure; rarely adopting the country of their residence but becoming 

more firmly American as the years go by。  The home papers and 

periodicals are taken; the American church attended; if there 

happens to be one; the English chapel; if there is not。  Never a 

French church!  In their hearts they think it almost irreverent to 

read the service in French。  The acquaintance of a few fellow…

exiles is made and that of a half…dozen English families; mothers 

and daughters and a younger son or two; whom the ferocious 

primogeniture custom has cast out of the homes of their childhood 

to economize on the Continent。



I have in my mind a little settlement of this kind at Versailles; 

which was a type。  The formal old city; fallen from its grandeur; 

was a singularly appropriate setting to the little comedy。  There 

the modest purses of the exiles found rents within their reach; the 

quarters vast and airy。  The galleries and the park afforded a 

diversion; and then Paris; dear Paris; the American Mecca; was 

within reach。  At the time I knew it; the colony was fairly 

prosperous; many of its members living in the two or three 

principal PENSIONS; the others in apartments of their own。  They 

gave feeble little entertainments among themselves; card…parties 

and teas; and dined about with each other at their respective 

TABLES D'HOTE; even knowing a stray Frenchman or two; whom the 

quest of a meal had tempted out of their native fastnesses as it 

does the wolves in a hard winter。  Writing and receiving letters 

from America was one of the principal occupations; and an epistle 

descriptive of a particular event at home went the rounds; and was 

eagerly read and discussed。



The merits of the different PENSIONS also formed a subject of vital 

interest。  The advantages and disadvantages of these rival 

establishments were; as a topic; never exhausted。  MADAME UNE TELLE 

gave five o'clock tea; included in the seven francs a day; but her 

rival gave one more meat course at dinner and her coffee was 

certainly better; while a third undoubtedly had a nicer set of 

people。  No one here at home can realize the importance these 

matters gradually assume in the eyes of the exiles。  Their slender 

incomes have to be so carefully handled to meet the strain of even 

this simple way of living; if they are to show a surplus for a 

little trip to the seashore in the summer months; that an extra 

franc a day becomes a serious consideration。



Every now and then a family stronger…minded than the others; or 

with serious reasons for returning home (a daughter to bring out or 

a son to put into business); would break away from its somnolent 

surroundings and re…cross the Atlantic; alternating between hope 

and fear。  It is here that a sad fate awaits these modern Rip Van 

Winkles。  They find their native cities changed beyond recognition。  

(For we move fast in these days。)  The mother gets out her visiting 

list of ten years before and is thunderstruck to find that it 

contains chiefly names of the 〃dead; the divorced; and defaulted。〃  

The waves of a decade have washed over her place and the world she 

once belonged to knows her no more。  The leaders of her day on 

whose aid she counted have retired from the fray。  Younger; and 

alas! unknown faces sit in the opera boxes and around the dinner 

tables where before she had found only friends。  After a feeble 

little struggle to get again into the 〃swim;〃 the family drifts 

back across the ocean into the quiet back water of a continental 

town; and goes circling around with the other twigs and dry leaves; 

moral flotsam and jetsam; thrown aside by th
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