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re moulded under that, and they are our true American classics. Nothing like them will happen again." "Perhaps," I suggested, "our generation is uneasily living in a 'bad quarter-of-an-hour'--good old childhood gone, good new manhood not yet come, and a state of chicken-pox between whiles." And on this I made to him a much-used and consoling quotation about the old order changing. "Who says that?" he inquired; and upon my telling him, "I hope so," he said, "I hope so. But just now Uncle Sam 'aspires to descend.'" I laughed at his counter-quotation. "You know your classics, if you don't know Tennyson." He, too, laughed. "Don't tell Aunt Eliza!" "Tell her what?" "That I didn't recognize Tennyson. My Aunt Eliza educated me--and she thinks Tennyson about the only poet worth reading since--well, since Byron and Sir Walter at the very latest!" "Neither she nor Sir Walter come down to modern poetry--or to alcoholic girls." His tone, on these last words, changed. Again, as when he had said "an urgent matter," I seemed to feel hovering above us what must be his ceaseless preoccupation; and I wondered if he had found, upon visiting Newport, Miss Hortense sitting and calling for "high-balls." I gave him a lead. "The worst of it is that a girl who would like to behave herself decently finds that propriety puts her out of the running. The men flock off to the other kind." He was following me with watching eyes. "And you know," I continued, "what an anxious Newport parent does on finding her girl on the brink of being a failure." "I can imagine," he answered, "that she scolds her like the dickens." "Oh, nothing so ineffectual! She makes her keep up with the others, you know. Makes her do things she'd rather not do." "High-balls, you mean?" "Anything, my friend; anything to keep up." He had a comic suggestion. "Driven to drink by her mother! Well, it's, at any rate, a new cause for old effects." He paused. It seemed strangely to bring to him some sort of relief. "That would explain a great deal," he said. Was he thus explaining to himself his lady-love, or rather certain Newport aspects of her which had, so to speak, jarred upon his Kings Port notions of what a lady might properly do? I sat on my gravestone with my wonder, and my now-dawning desire to help him (if improbably I could), to get him out of it, if he were really in it; and he sat on his gravestone opposite, with the path between us, a
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