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第6节

worldly ways and byways-第6节

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daughter hob…nobbing with royalty; and (intoxicating thought!) 

snubbing the 〃swells〃 at home who had shown reluctance to recognize 

him and his family。



It is next to impossible for him to get any reliable information 

about his future son…in…law in a country where; as an American; he 

has few social relations; belongs to no club; and whose idiom is a 

sealed book to him。  Every circumstance conspires to keep the flaws 

on the article for sale out of sight and place the suitor in an 

advantageous light。  Several weeks' 〃courting〃 follows; 

paterfamilias agrees to part with a handsome share of his earnings; 

and a marriage is 〃arranged。〃



In the case where the girl has retained some of her self…respect 

the suitor is made to come to her country for the ceremony。  And; 

that the contrast between European ways and our simple habits may 

not be too striking; an establishment is hastily got together; with 

hired liveries and new…bought carriages; as in a recent case in 

this state。  The sensational papers write up this 〃international 

union;〃 and publish 〃faked〃 portraits of the bride and her noble 

spouse。  The sovereign of the groom's country (enchanted that some 

more American money is to be imported into his land) sends an 

economical present and an autograph letter。  The act ends。  

Limelight and slow music!



In a few years rumors of dissent and trouble float vaguely back to 

the girl's family。  Finally; either a great scandal occurs; and 

there is one dishonored home the more in the world; or an 

expatriated woman; thousands of miles from the friends and 

relatives who might be of some comfort to her; makes up her mind to 

accept 〃anything〃 for the sake of her children; and attempts to 

build up some sort of an existence out of the remains of her lost 

illusions; and the father wakes up from his dream to realize that 

his wealth has only served to ruin what he loved best in all the 

world。



Sometimes the conditions are delightfully comic; as in a well…known 

case; where the daughter; who married into an indolent; happy…go…

lucky Italian family; had inherited her father's business push and 

energy along with his fortune; and immediately set about 〃running〃 

her husband's estate as she had seen her father do his bank。  She 

tried to revive a half…forgotten industry in the district; scraped 

and whitewashed their picturesque old villa; proposed her husband's 

entering business; and in short dashed head down against all his 

inherited traditions and national prejudices; until her new family 

loathed the sight of the brisk American face; and the poor she had 

tried to help; sulked in their newly drained houses and refused to 

be comforted。  Her ways were not Italian ways; and she seemed to 

the nun…like Italian ladies; almost unsexed; as she tramped about 

the fields; talking artificial manure and subsoil drainage with the 

men。  Yet neither she nor her husband was to blame。  The young 

Italian had but followed the teachings of his family; which decreed 

that the only honorable way for an aristocrat to acquire wealth was 

to marry it。  The American wife honestly tried to do her duty in 

this new position; naively thinking she could engraft transatlantic 

〃go〃 upon the indolent Italian character。  Her work was in vain; 

she made herself and her husband so unpopular that they are now 

living in this country; regretting too late the error of their 

ways。



Another case but little less laughable; is that of a Boston girl 

with a neat little fortune of her own; who; when married to the 

young Viennese of her choice; found that he expected her to live 

with his family on the third floor of their 〃palace〃 (the two lower 

floors being rented to foreigners); and as there was hardly enough 

money for a box at the opera; she was not expected to go; whereas 

his position made it necessary for him to have a stall and appear 

there nightly among the men of his rank; the astonished and 

disillusioned Bostonian remaining at home EN TETE…A…TETE with the 

women of his family; who seemed to think this the most natural 

arrangement in the world。



It certainly is astonishing that we; the most patriotic of nations; 

with such high opinion of ourselves and our institutions; should be 

so ready to hand over our daughters and our ducats to the first 

foreigner who asks for them; often requiring less information about 

him than we should consider necessary before buying a horse or a 

dog。



Women of no other nation have this mania for espousing aliens。  

Nowhere else would a girl with a large fortune dream of marrying 

out of her country。  Her highest ideal of a husband would be a man 

of her own kin。  It is the rarest thing in the world to find a 

well…born French; Spanish; or Italian woman married to a foreigner 

and living away from her country。  How can a woman expect to be 

happy separated from all the ties and traditions of her youth?  If 

she is taken abroad young; she may still hope to replace her 

friends as is often done。  But the real reason of unhappiness 

(greater and deeper than this) lies in the fundamental difference 

of the whole social structure between our country and that of her 

adoption; and the radically different way of looking at every side 

of life。



Surely a girl must feel that a man who allows a marriage to be 

arranged for him (and only signs the contact because its pecuniary 

clauses are to his satisfaction; and who would withdraw in a moment 

if these were suppressed); must have an entirely different point of 

view from her own on all the vital issues of life。



Foreigners undoubtedly make excellent husbands for their own women。  

But they are; except in rare cases; unsatisfactory helpmeets for 

American girls。  It is impossible to touch on more than a side or 

two of this subject。  But as an illustration the following 

contrasted stories may be cited:



Two sisters of an aristocratic American family; each with an income 

of over forty thousand dollars a year; recently married French 

noblemen。  They naturally expected to continue abroad the life they 

had led at home; in which opera boxes; saddle horses; and constant 

entertaining were matters of course。  In both cases; our 

compatriots discovered that their husbands (neither of them 

penniless) had entirely different views。  In the first place; they 

were told that it was considered 〃bad form〃 in France for young 

married women to entertain; besides; the money was needed for 

improvements; and in many other ways; and as every well…to…do 

French family puts aside at least a third of its income as DOTS for 

the children (boys as well as girls); these brides found themselves 

cramped for money for the first time in their lives; and obliged; 

during their one month a year in Paris; to put up with hired traps; 

and depend on their friends for evenings at the opera。



This story is a telling set…off to the case of an American wife; 

who one day received a windfall in the form of a check for a tidy 

amount。  She immediately proposed a trip abroad to her husband; but 

found that he preferred to remain at home in the society of his 

horses and dogs。  So our fair compatriot starts off (with his full 

consent); has her outing; spends her little 〃pile;〃 and returns 

after three or four months to the home of her delighted spouse。



Do these two stories need any comment?  Let our sisters and their 

friends think twice before they make themselves irrevocably wheels 

in a machine whose working is unknown to them; lest they be torn to 

pieces as it moves。  Having the good luck to be born in the 

〃paradise of women;〃 let them beware how they leave it; charm the 

serpent never so wisely; for they may find themselves; like the 

Peri; outside the gate。











CHAPTER 6 … The Complacency of Mediocrity





FULL as small intellects are of queer kinks; unexplained turnings 

and groundless likes and dislikes; the bland contentment that buoys 

up the incompetent is the most difficult of all vagaries to account 

for。  Rarely do twenty…four hours pass without examples of this 

exasperating weakness appearing on the surface of those shallows 

that commonplace people so naively call 〃their minds。〃



What one would expect is extreme modesty; in the half…educated or 

the ignorant; and self…approbation higher up in the scale; where it 

might more reasonably dwell。  Experience; however; teaches that 

exactly the opposite is the case among those who have achieved 

success。



The accidents of a life turned by chance out of the beaten tracks; 

have thrown me at times into acquaintanceship with some of the 

greater lights of the last thirty years。  And not only have they 

been; as a rule; most unassuming men and women; but in the majority 

of cases positively self…depreciatory; doubting of themselves and 

their talents; constantly aiming at greater perfect

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