These, and more subtle considerations, were the noblest elements of

Bennington de Laney's doubts. But perhaps they were no more potent than

some others which rushed through the breach made for them in the young

man's decision.

He had always lived so much at home that he had come to accept the home

point of view without question. That is to say, he never examined the

value of his parent's ideas, because it never occurred to him to doubt

them. He had no perspective.

In a way, then, he accepted as axioms the social tenets held by his

mother, or the business methods practised by his father. He believed

that elderly men should speak precisely, and in grammatical, but

colourless English. He believed also that people should, in society,

conduct themselves according to the fashion-plate pattern designed by

Mrs. de Laney. He believed these things, not because he was a fool, or

shallow, or lacking in humour, or snobbish, but because nothing had

ever happened to cause him to examine his beliefs closely, that he

might appreciate what they really were. One of these views was, that

cultured people were of a class in themselves, and could not and should

not mix with other classes. Mrs. de Laney entertained a horror of

vulgarity. So deep-rooted was this horror that a remote taint of it was

sufficient to thrust forever outside the pale of her approbation any

unfortunate who exhibited it. She preferred stupidity to common sense,

when the former was allied with good form, and the latter only with

plain kindliness. This was partly instinct and partly the result of

cultivation. She would shrink, with uncontrollable disgust, from any of

the lower classes with whom she came unavoidably in contact. A slight

breach of the conventions earned her distrust of one of her own caste.

As this personal idiosyncrasy fell in line with the de Laney pride, it

was approved by the head of the family. Under encouragement it became

almost a monomania.

Bennington pictured to himself only too vividly the effect of the

Lawtons on this lady's aristocratic prejudices. He knew, only too well,

that Bill Lawton's table manners would not be allowed even in her

kitchen. He could imagine Mrs. Lawton's fatuous conversation in the de

Laney's drawing-room, or Maude Eliza's dressed-up self-consciousness.

The experience of having the three Westerners to dinner just once

would, Bennington knew, drive his lady mother to the verge of nervous

prostration--he remembered his father's one and only experience in

bringing business connections home to lunch--; his imagination failed

to picture the effect of her having to endure them as actual members of

the family! As if this were not bad enough, his restless fancy carried

him a step farther. He perceived the agonies of shame and

mortification, real even though they were conventional, she would have

to endure in the face of society. That the de Laneys, social leaders,

rigid in respectability, should be forced to the humiliation of

acknowledging a misalliance, should be forced to the added humiliation

of confessing that this marriage was not only with a family of inferior

social standing, but with one actually unlettered and vulgar!

Bennington knew only too well the temper of his mother--and of society.




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