"You are honest and straightforward.
Do you want me to be honest and straightforward as a woman is not supposed to be?—to tell you things that will hurt you?—to make confessions that ought to shame me? to behave in what many men would think was an unwomanly manner?"
The arm around her shoulder pressed encouragement, but he did not speak.
"I would dearly like to marry you, but I am afraid.
I am proud and humble at the same time that a man like you should care for me.
But you have too much money.
There's where my abominable common sense steps in.
Even if we did marry, you could never be my man—my lover and my husband.
You would be your money's man.
I know I am a foolish woman, but I want my man for myself.
You would not be free for me.
Your money possesses you, taking your time, your thoughts, your energy, everything, bidding you go here and go there, do this and do that.
Don't you see?
Perhaps it's pure silliness, but I feel that I can love much, give much—give all, and in return, though I don't want all, I want much—and I want much more than your money would permit you to give me.
"And your money destroys you; it makes you less and less nice.
I am not ashamed to say that I love you, because I shall never marry you.
And I loved you much when I did not know you at all, when you first came down from Alaska and I first went into the office.
You were my hero.
You were the Burning Daylight of the gold-diggings, the daring traveler and miner.
And you looked it.
I don't see how any woman could have looked at you without loving you—then.
But you don't look it now.
"Please, please, forgive me for hurting you.
You wanted straight talk, and I am giving it to you.
All these last years you have been living unnaturally.
You, a man of the open, have been cooping yourself up in the cities with all that that means.
You are not the same man at all, and your money is destroying you.
You are becoming something different, something not so healthy, not so clean, not so nice.
Your money and your way of life are doing it.
You know it. You haven't the same body now that you had then.
You are putting on flesh, and it is not healthy flesh.
You are kind and genial with me, I know, but you are not kind and genial to all the world as you were then.
You have become harsh and cruel.
And I know.
Remember, I have studied you six days a week, month after month, year after year; and I know more about the most insignificant parts of you than you know of all of me.
The cruelty is not only in your heart and thoughts, but it is there in face.
It has put its lines there.
I have watched them come and grow.
Your money, and the life it compels you to lead have done all this.
You are being brutalized and degraded.
And this process can only go on and on until you are hopelessly destroyed—"
He attempted to interrupt, but she stopped him, herself breathless and her voice trembling.
"No, no; let me finish utterly.
I have done nothing but think, think, think, all these months, ever since you came riding with me, and now that I have begun to speak I am going to speak all that I have in me.
I do love you, but I cannot marry you and destroy love.
You are growing into a thing that I must in the end despise.
You can't help it.
More than you can possibly love me, do you love this business game.
This business—and it's all perfectly useless, so far as you are concerned—claims all of you.
I sometimes think it would be easier to share you equitably with another woman than to share you with this business.