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VIII Philosophy of the Grey-haired

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the evening and all lilian's emotions seemed to start afresh. the look of the restaurant was changed. the tables had been cleared of the grosser apparatus of eating, and showed white cloths with only white plates, fruit, small glasses, small cups, ash-trays. most of the waiters had vanished; the remainder stood aside, moveless, inobtrusive, watchful. the diners had abandoned themselves to intimacy or the sweet coma of digestion. some talked rather loudly, others in a murmur. women leaned back, or put their elbows on the table, letting cigarette smoke float upwards across their eyes. a few tables were already deserted, and the purity of their emptiness seemed bafflingly to demonstrate that events may happen and leave behind absolutely no trace. without consulting lilian mr. grig gave an order and two small glasses were slowly filled to the brim with a green liquid. lilian recognized it for the very symbol of delicate licence. she was afraid to sip, lest she might be disillusioned concerning it, and also lest the drinking of it might malignly hasten the moment of departure of the last train for brighton.

mr. grig was of those who murmured. his wrists lay one over the other on the table and his face was over the table; and it seemed strange, so low and even was his speech, that lilian could catch every word, as she did. the people at the next table could have heard nothing. all the animation and variety were in his features, none in his tone. he had been telling her about brighton. he saw the town of brighton as a living, developing whole, discussing it as a single organism, showing how its evolution was still in active process, and making the small group of men who were exploiting it and directing it appear like creative giants and the mass of inhabitants like midgets utterly unconscious of their own manipulation. and in his account of the vast affair there was no right and no wrong; there were merely the dark aims and the resolution of the giants determined to wax in power and to imprint themselves on the municipality. lilian had never heard such revealing talk; she could not follow all of it, but she was fascinated, wonderstruck; profoundly impressed by the quality of the brain opposite to her and the contemptibleness of her own ignorance of life; amazed and enraptured that this brain could be interested in herself. mr. grig related the story of the middle-aged proprietor of one of the chief hotels who had married a young wife.

"he had broken up his family, and the family is the real unit of society--and there was no need for it! no need at all! but then, you see, he'd never had time in his existence to understand that a middle-aged man who has already had experience of marriage and marries a girl young enough to be his daughter is either a coward or a fool or without taste. he would only do it because he's mad for her, and that's the very reason for not doing it. when romance comes in that way it wants the sauce of secrecy and plotting--the double life, and so on. the feeling of naughtiness--naughtiness is simply a marvellous feeling; you must sometimes have guessed that, haven't you?--perversity, doing society in the eye. it's a continual excitement. of course, it needs cleverness on both sides. you haven't got to be clumsy over it. the woman runs risks, but nothing to the risks she'd run in marriage. and if the thing dies out in her, and they haven't been clumsy, she's free as air to start again. she's got her experience gratis, and there's a mysterious flavour about her that's nearly the most enticing flavour on earth. naturally people will talk. let 'em. no harm in rumour. in fact, the more rumour the better." he went on with no pause. "you've not looked at me for about five hours. look at me now and tell me you're disgusted. tell me you're frightened."

she lifted her eyes and gazed at him for a few seconds, not smiling. her skin tingled and crept. then she sipped the crême de menthe and at first it tasted just like water.

"a woman wants making. only a man can make a woman. she has to be formed. she can't do it herself. a young man may be able to do it, but he's like a teacher who swots up the night before what he has to teach the next day. and he's a fearful bungler, besides being cruel--unconsciously. whereas an older man, a much older man--he knows! it's a unique chance for both of them. she has so much to give, and she has so much to learn. it's a fair bargain. perhaps the woman has a little the best of it. because after all she loses nothing that it isn't her business to lose--and the man may--well, he may kill himself. and the chance for a clever girl to be 'made' without any clumsiness! what a chance! ... well, i won't say which of 'em has the best of it.... i'm speaking impartially. if you live to be as old as ninon de l'enclos you'll never meet a more honest man than i am."

lilian felt intoxicated, but not with the burgundy nor with the crême de menthe. rather with sudden fresh air. she thought: "be careful! be careful! you aren't yourself. something queer's come over you." she was not happy. she was alarmed. once before she had been alarmed by herself, but this time she was really alarmed. she was glad that she had always despised boys of her own age. what did mr. grig mean by saying that a man might kill himself? she didn't know.... yes, she knew.... she saw clearly that a woman must be formed by a man, and that until she was formed she would not be worthy of herself. she longed ardently to be formed. as she stood she was futile. she could exercise no initiative, make use of no opportunities; and her best wisdom was to remain negative--in order to avoid mistakes. something that looked like a woman but wasn't one. she had the intelligence to realize how insipid she was. ambition surged through her anew and with fresh power.

mr. grig drove her home, and the taxi was a little dark vibrating room in which they were alone together, and safe from all scrutiny. she was painfully constrained.

"yes," said mr. grig, after an interminable silence. "my sister was quite right."

"what about?" lilian asked in a child's voice.

"i'm in love. what are you going to do about it?" he turned his head impulsively towards her, gazed at her in the dim twilight of the taxi, and then kissed her. in spite of herself she yearned to give, and the yearning thrilled her.

"please! please!" she murmured in modest, gentle, passive protest.

another pause.

"i shall write to you to-morrow," he said. "in the meantime, believe me, you're entirely marvellous." he was looking straight in front of him at the driver's shaggy shoulders. that was all that occurred, except the handshake.

when she let herself into the house the servant was just going upstairs to bed, after her usual sixteen-hour day.

"so you're back, miss."

"no!" thought lilian. "it's somebody else that's come back. the girl you mean will never come back."

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