Henry James Fullscreen Wings of the Dove (1902)

Pause

This wider view showed him all Lord Mark—Lord Mark as encountered, several weeks before, the day of the first visit of each to Palazzo Leporelli.

For it had been all Lord Mark that was going out, on that occasion, as he came in—he had felt it, in the hall, at the time; and he was accordingly the less at a loss to recognise in a few seconds, as renewed meeting brought it to the surface, the same potential quantity.

It was a matter, the whole passage—it could only be—but of a few seconds; for as he might neither stand there to stare nor on the other hand make any advance from it, he had presently resumed his walk, this time to another pace.

It had been for all the world, during his pause, as if he had caught his answer to the riddle of the day.

Lord Mark had simply faced him—as he had faced him, not placed by him, not at first—as one of the damp shuffling crowd.

Recognition, though hanging fire, had then clearly come; yet no light of salutation had been struck from these certainties.

Acquaintance between them was scant enough for neither to take it up.

That neither had done so was not, however, what now mattered, but that the gentleman at Florian's should be in the place at all.

He couldn't have been in it long; Densher, as inevitably a haunter of the great meeting-ground, would in that case have seen him before.

He paid short visits; he was on the wing; the question for him even as he sat there was of his train or of his boat.

He had come back for something—as a sequel to his earlier visit; and whatever he had come back for it had had time to be done.

He might have arrived but last night or that morning; he had already made the difference.

It was a great thing for Densher to get this answer.

He held it close, he hugged it, quite leaned on it as he continued to circulate.

It kept him going and going—it made him no less restless.

But it explained—and that was much, for with explanations he might somehow deal.

The vice in the air, otherwise, was too much like the breath of fate.

The weather had changed, the rain was ugly, the wind wicked, the sea impossible, because of Lord Mark.

It was because of him, a fortiori, that the palace was closed.

Densher went round again twice; he found the visitor each time as he had found him first.

Once, that is, he was staring before him; the next time he was looking over his Figaro, which he had opened out.

Densher didn't again stop, but left him apparently unconscious of his passage—on another repetition of which Lord Mark had disappeared.

He had spent but the day; he would be off that night; he had now gone to his hotel for arrangements.

These things were as plain to Densher as if he had had them in words.

The obscure had cleared for him—if cleared it was; there was something he didn't see, the great thing; but he saw so round it and so close to it that this was almost as good.

He had been looking at a man who had done what he had come for, and for whom, as done, it temporarily sufficed.

The man had come again to see Milly, and Milly had received him.

His visit would have taken place just before or just after luncheon, and it was the reason why he himself had found her door shut.

He said to himself that evening, he still said even on the morrow, that he only wanted a reason, and that with this perception of one he could now mind, as he called it, his business.

His business, he had settled, as we know, was to keep thoroughly still; and he asked himself why it should prevent this that he could feel, in connexion with the crisis, so remarkably blameless.

He gave the appearances before him all the benefit of being critical, so that if blame were to accrue he shouldn't feel he had dodged it.

But it wasn't a bit he who, that day, had touched her, and if she was upset it wasn't a bit his act.

The ability so to think about it amounted for Densher during several hours to a kind of exhilaration.

The exhilaration was heightened fairly, besides, by the visible conditions—sharp, striking, ugly to him—of Lord Mark's return.

His constant view of it, for all the next hours, of which there were many, was as a demonstration on the face of it sinister even to his own actual ignorance. He didn't need, for seeing it as evil, seeing it as, to a certainty, in a high degree "nasty," to know more about it than he had so easily and so wonderfully picked up.

You couldn't drop on the poor girl that way without, by the fact, being brutal.

Such a visit was a descent, an invasion, an aggression, constituting precisely one or other of the stupid shocks he himself had so decently sought to spare her.

Densher had indeed drifted by the next morning to the reflexion—which he positively, with occasion, might have brought straight out—that the only delicate and honourable way of treating a person in such a state was to treat her as he, Merton Densher, did.

With time, actually—for the impression but deepened—this sense of the contrast, to the advantage of Merton Densher, became a sense of relief, and that in turn a sense of escape.

It was for all the world—and he drew a long breath on it—as if a special danger for him had passed.

Lord Mark had, without in the least intending such a service, got it straight out of the way.

It was he, the brute, who had stumbled into just the wrong inspiration and who had therefore produced, for the very person he had wished to hurt, an impunity that was comparative innocence, that was almost like purification.

The person he had wished to hurt could only be the person so unaccountably hanging about.

To keep still meanwhile was, for this person, more comprehensively, to keep it all up; and to keep it all up was, if that seemed on consideration best, not, for the day or two, to go back to the palace.

The day or two passed—stretched to three days; and with the effect, extraordinarily, that Densher felt himself in the course of them washed but the more clean.

Some sign would come if his return should have the better effect; and he was at all events, in absence, without the particular scruple.

It wouldn't have been meant for him by either of the women that he was to come back but to face Eugenio.

That was impossible—the being again denied; for it made him practically answerable, and answerable was what he wasn't.

There was no neglect either in absence, inasmuch as, from the moment he didn't get in, the one message he could send up would be some hope on the score of health.

Since accordingly that sort of expression was definitely forbidden him he had only to wait—which he was actually helped to do by his feeling with the lapse of each day more and more wound up to it.