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                <title>The Yellow Book: An Illustrated Quarterly, Volume 5 April 1895</title>
                <title type="YBV5_leverson_suggestion"/>
                <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
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                    <date>2019</date>
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                            <persName>Henry Harland</persName>
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                        <author>Mrs. Ernest Leverson</author>
                        <title>Suggestion</title>
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                            <publisher>John Lane</publisher>
                            <pubPlace> London </pubPlace>
                            <publisher>Copeland &amp; Day</publisher>
                            <pubPlace>Boston</pubPlace>
                            <date>April 1895</date>
                            <biblScope>Leverson, Mrs. Ernest. [Ada Leverson]. "Suggestion." <emph
                                    rend="italic">The Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 5, April 1895, pp. 249-57.
                                    <emph rend="italic">Yellow Book Digital Edition</emph>, edited by
                                Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>,
                                Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019.
                                https://1890s.ca/YBV5_leverson_suggestion/
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            <div n="YBV5_34pr" type="prose">
                <pb n="277"/>
                <head><title level="a">Suggestion </title></head>

                <byline>By <docAuthor>Mrs. <ref target="#ALE">Ernest Leverson</ref></docAuthor>
                </byline>

                <p>IF Lady Winthrop had not spoken of me as " that intolerable, <lb/> effeminate
                    boy," she might have had some chance : of marrying <lb/> my father. She was a
                    middle-aged widow ; prosaic, fond of <lb/> domineering, and an alarmingly
                    excellent housekeeper ; the serious <lb/> work of her life was paying visits ;
                    in her lighter moments she <lb/> collected autographs. She was highly suitable
                    and altogether <lb/> insupportable; and this unfortunate remark about me was, as
                    <lb/> people say, the last straw. Some encouragement from father Lady <lb/>
                    Winthrop must, I think, have received ; for she took to calling at <lb/> odd
                    hours, asking my sister Marjorie sudden abrupt questions, and <lb/> being
                    generally impossible. A tradition existed that her advice <lb/> was of use to
                    our father in his household, and when, last year, he <lb/> married his
                    daughter's school-friend, a beautiful girl of twenty, it <lb/> surprised every
                    one except Marjorie and myself. </p>

                <p>The whole thing was done, in fact, by suggestion. I shall <lb/> never forget that
                    summer evening when father first realised, with <lb/> regard to Laura Egerton,
                    the possible. He was giving a little dinner <lb/> of eighteen people. <emph
                        rend="italic">Through a mistake of Marjorie's</emph> (my idea) Lady <lb/>
                    Winthrop did not receive her invitation till the very last minute. <lb/> Of
                    course she accepted&#x2014;we knew she would&#x2014;but unknowing that <lb/> it
                    was a dinner party, she came without putting on evening-dress. <lb/></p>
                <fw type="catchword"> Nothing </fw>
                <fw type="footer"> The Yellow Book&#x2014;Vol. V. <emph>P</emph>
                </fw>


                <pb n="278"/>

                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">250</fw> Suggestion </fw>

                <p>Nothing could be more trying to the average woman than such <lb/> a <emph
                        rend="italic">contretemps</emph> ; and Lady Winthrop was not one to rise,
                    sublimely, <lb/> and laughing, above the situation. I can see her now, in a
                    plaid <lb/> blouse and a vile temper, displaying herself, mentally and
                    physically, <lb/> to the utmost disadvantage, while Marjorie apologised the
                    whole <lb/> evening, in pale blue crèpe-de-chine ; and Laura, in yellow, with
                    <lb/> mauve orchids, sat&#x2014;an adorable contrast&#x2014;on my father's other
                    side, <lb/> with a slightly conscious air that was perfectly fascinating. It is
                    <lb/> quite extraordinary what trifles have their little effect in these <lb/>
                    matters. <emph rend="italic">I</emph> had sent Laura the orchids, anonymously ;
                    I could not <lb/> help it if she chose to think they were from my father. Also,
                    I <lb/> had hinted of his secret affection for her, and lent her Verlaine. I
                    <lb/> said I had found it in his study, turned down at her favourite page. <lb/>
                    Laura has, like myself, the artistic temperament ; she is cultured, <lb/> rather
                    romantic, and in search of the <emph rend="italic">au-delà</emph>. My father has
                    at <lb/> times&#x2014;never to me&#x2014;rather charming manners ; also he is
                    still <lb/> handsome, with that look of having suffered that comes from <lb/>
                    enjoying oneself too much. That evening his really sham melan- <lb/> choly and
                    apparently hollow gaiety were delightful for a son to <lb/> witness, and
                    appealed evidently to her heart. Yes, strange as it <lb/> may seem, while the
                    world said that pretty Miss Egerton married <lb/> old Carington for his money,
                    she was really in love, or thought <lb/> herself in love, with our father. Poor
                    girl ! She little knew what <lb/> an irritating, ill-tempered, absent-minded
                    person he is in private <lb/> life ; and at times I have pangs of remorse. </p>

                <p>A fortnight after the wedding, father forgot he was married, <lb/> and began
                    again treating Laura with a sort of <emph rend="italic">distrait</emph>
                    gallantry as <lb/> Marjorie's friend, or else ignoring her altogether. When,
                    from <lb/> time to time, he remembers she is his wife, he scolds her about <lb/>
                    the houskeeping in a fitful, perfunctory way, for he does not know <lb/> that
                    Marjorie does it still. Laura bears the rebukes like an angel ; </p>

                <fw type="catchword">indeed, </fw>

                <pb n="279"/>

                <fw type="runningHead">By Mrs. Ernest Leverson <fw type="pageNum">251</fw>
                </fw>

                <p>indeed, rather than take the slightest practical trouble she would <lb/> prefer
                    to listen to the strongest language in my father's <lb/> vocabulary. </p>

                <p>But she is sensitive ; and when father, speedily resuming his <lb/> bachelor
                    manners, recommenced his visits to an old friend who <lb/> lives in one of the
                    little houses opposite the Oratory, she seemed <lb/> quite vexed. Father is
                    horribly careless, and Laura found a <lb/> letter. They had a rather serious
                    explanation, and for a little <lb/> time after, Laura seemed depressed. She soon
                    tried to rouse <lb/> herself, and is at times cheerful enough with Marjorie and
                    myself, <lb/> but I fear she has had a disillusion. They never quarrel now, and
                    <lb/> I think we all three dislike father about equally, though Laura <lb/>
                    never owns it, and is gracefully attentive to him in a gentle, <lb/> filial sort
                    of way. </p>

                <p>We are fond of going to parties&#x2014;not father&#x2014;and Laura is a <lb/>
                    very nice chaperone for Marjorie. They are both perfectly devoted <lb/> to me. "
                    Cecil knows everything," they are always saying, and <lb/> they do
                    nothing&#x2014;not even choosing a hat&#x2014;without asking my <lb/> advice. </p>

                <p>Since I left Eton I am supposed to be reading with a tutor, but <lb/> as a matter
                    of fact I have plenty of leisure ; and am very glad to <lb/> be of use to the
                    girls, of whom I'm, by the way, quite proud. <lb/> They are rather a sweet
                    contrast ; Marjorie has the sort of fresh <lb/> rosy prettiness you see in the
                    park and on the river. She is tall, <lb/> and slim as a punt-pole, and if she
                    were not very careful how she <lb/> dresses, she would look like a drawing by
                    Pilotelle in the <emph rend="italic">Lady's <lb/> Pictorial</emph>. She is
                    practical and lively, she rides and drives and <lb/> dances ; skates, and goes
                    to some mysterious haunt called <emph rend="italic">The</emph>
                    <lb/>
                    <emph rend="italic">Stores</emph>, and is, in her own way, quite a modern
                    English type.</p>

                <p>Laura has that exotic beauty so much admired by Philistines ; <lb/> dreamy dark
                    eyes, and a wonderful white complexion. She loves </p>

                <fw type="catchword">music </fw>

                <pb n="280"/>

                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">252</fw> Suggestion </fw>

                <p>music and poetry and pictures and admiration in a lofty sort of <lb/> way ; she
                    has a morbid fondness for mental gymnastics, and a <lb/> dislike to physical
                    exertion, and never takes any exercise except <lb/> waving her hair. Sometimes
                    she looks bored, and I have heard <lb/> her sigh. </p>

                <p>" Cissy," Marjorie said, coming one day into my study, " I <lb/> want to speak to
                    you about Laura."</p>

                <p>" Do you have pangs of conscience too ? " I asked, lighting a <lb/> cigarette. </p>

                <p>" Dear, we took a great responsibility. Poor girl ! Oh, <lb/> couldn't we make
                    Papa more&#x2014;&#x2014; " </p>

                <p>"Impossible," I said ; "no one has any influence with him. <lb/> He cant't bear
                    even me, though if he had a shade of decency he <lb/> would dash away an
                    unbidden tear every time I look at him with <lb/> my mother's blue eyes." </p>

                <p>My poor mother was a great beauty, and I am supposed to be <lb/> her living
                    image.</p>

                <p>" Laura has no object in life," said Marjorie. " I have, all <lb/> girls have, I
                    suppose. By the way, Cissy, I am quite sure <lb/> Charlie Winthrop is
                    serious."</p>

                <p>" How sweet of him ! I am so glad. I got father off my hands <lb/> last season." </p>

                <p>"Must I really marry him, Cissy ? He bores me." </p>

                <p>"What has that to do with it? Certainly you must. You <lb/> are not a beauty, and
                    I doubt your ever having a better <lb/> chance." </p>

                <p>Marjorie rose and looked at herself in the long pier-glass that <lb/> stands
                    opposite my writing-table. I could not resist the tempta- <lb/> tion to go and
                    stand beside her. </p>

                <p>" I am just the style that is admired now," said Marjorie, dis- <lb/>
                    passionately. </p>

                <fw type="catchword">"So </fw>

                <pb n="281"/>

                <fw type="runningHead">By Mrs. Ernest Leverson <fw type="pageNum">253</fw>
                </fw>

                <p>" So am I," I said reflectively. "But <emph rend="italic">you</emph> will soon be
                    out of date."</p>

                <p>Every one says I am strangely like my mother. Her face was <lb/> of that pure and
                    perfect oval one so seldom sees, with delicate <lb/> features, rosebud mouth,
                    and soft flaxen hair. A blondness without <lb/> insipidity, for the dark-blue
                    eyes are fringed with dark lashes, and <lb/> from their languorous depths looks
                    out a soft mockery. I have a <lb/> curious ideal devotion to my mother ; she
                    died when I was quite <lb/> young&#x2014;only two months old&#x2014;and I often
                    spend hours thinking <lb/> of her, as I gaze at myself in the mirror. </p>

                <p>" Do come down from the clouds," said Marjorie impatiently, for <lb/> I had sunk
                    into a reverie. " I came to ask you to think of some- <lb/> thing to amuse
                    Laura&#x2014;to interest her."</p>

                <p>" We ought to make it up to her in some way. Haven't you <lb/> tried anything ?
                    "</p>

                <p>" Only palmistry ; and Mrs. Wilkinson prophesied her all that <lb/> she detests,
                    and depressed her dreadfully."</p>

                <p>" What do you think she really needs most ? " I asked.</p>

                <p>Our eyes met. </p>

                <p>" Really, Cissy, you're too disgraceful," said Marjorie. There <lb/> was a pause. </p>

                <p>" And so I'm to accept Charlie ? "</p>

                <p>" What man do you like better ? " I asked.</p>

                <p>" I don't know what you mean," said Marjorie, colouring.</p>

                <p>" <emph rend="italic">I</emph> thought Adrian Grant would have been more
                    sympathetic <lb/> to Laura than to you. I have just had a note from him, asking
                    <lb/> me to tea at his studio to-day." I threw it to her. " He says <lb/> I'm to
                    bring you both. Would that amuse Laura ? " </p>

                <p>"Oh," cried Marjorie, enchanted, "of course we'll go. I <lb/> wonder what he
                    thinks of me," she added wistfully.</p>

                <p>" He didn't say. He is going to send Laura his verses, 'Hearts- <lb/> ease and
                    Heliotrope.'" </p>

                <fw type="footer">*</fw>
                <fw type="catchword">She </fw>

                <pb n="282"/>

                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">254</fw> Suggestion</fw>

                <p>She sighed. Then she said, " Father was complaining again <lb/> to-day of your
                    laziness."</p>

                <p>" I, lazy ! Why, I've been swinging the censer in Laura's <lb/> boudoir because
                    she wants to encourage the religious temperament, <lb/> and I've designed your
                    dress for the Clives fancy ball."</p>

                <p>" Where's the design ? " </p>

                <p>" In my head. You're not to wear white ; Miss Clive must <lb/> wear white."</p>

                <p>" I wonder you don't marry her," said Marjorie, " you admire <lb/> her so much." </p>

                <p>" I never marry. Besides, I know she's pretty, but that furtive <lb/>
                    Slade-school manner of hers gets on my nerves. You don't know <lb/> how
                    dreadfully I suffer from my nerves." </p>

                <p>She lingered a little, asking me what I advised her to choose for <lb/> a
                    birthday present for herself&#x2014;an American organ, a black poodle, <lb/> or
                    an <emph rend="italic">édition de luxe</emph> of Browning. I advised the last,
                    as being <lb/> least noisy. Then I told her I felt sure that in spite of her
                    <lb/> admiration for Adrian, she was far too good-natured to interfere <lb/>
                    with Laura's prospects. She said I was incorrigible, and left the <lb/> room
                    with a smile of resignation. </p>

                <p>And I returned to my reading. On my last birthday&#x2014;I was <lb/>
                    seventeen&#x2014;my father&#x2014;who has his gleams of dry humour&#x2014; <lb/>
                    gave me <emph rend="italic">Robinson Crusoe !</emph> I prefer Pierre Loti, and
                    intend to <lb/> have an onyx-paved bath-room, with soft apricot-coloured light
                    <lb/> shimmering through the blue-lined green curtains in my chambers, <lb/> as
                    soon as I get Margery married, and Laura more&#x2014;settled down. <lb/></p>

                <p>I met Adrian Grant first at a luncheon party at the Clives'. I <lb/> seemed to
                    amuse him ; he came to see me, and became at once <lb/> obviously enamoured of
                    my step-mother. He is rather an im- <lb/> pressionable impressionist, and a
                    delightful creature, tall and <lb/> graceful and beautiful, and altogether most
                    interesting. Every one</p>

                <fw type="catchword">admits </fw>

                <pb n="283"/>

                <fw type="runningHead">By Mrs. Ernest Leverson <fw type="pageNum">255</fw>
                </fw>

                <p>admits he's fascinating ; he is very popular and very much disliked. <lb/> He is
                    by way of being a painter ; he has a little money of his own <lb/>
                    &#x2014;enough for his telegrams, but not enough for his buttonholes&#x2014;
                    <lb/> and nothing could be more incongruous than the idea of his <lb/> marrying.
                    I have never seen Marjorie so much attracted. But <lb/> she is a good loyal
                    girl, and will accept Charlie Winthrop, who is <lb/> a dear person, good-natured
                    and ridiculously rich&#x2014;just the sort of <lb/> man for a brother-in-law. It
                    will annoy my old enemy Lady <lb/> Winthrop&#x2014;he is her nephew, and she
                    wants him to marry that <lb/> little Miss Clive. Dorothy dive has her failings,
                    but she could <lb/> not&#x2014;to do her justice&#x2014;be happy with Charlie
                    Winthrop. </p>

                <p>Adrian's gorgeous studio gives one the complex impression of <lb/> being at once
                    the calm retreat of a mediaeval saint and the luxurious <lb/> abode of a modern
                    Pagan. One feels that everything could be <lb/> done there, everything from
                    praying to flirting&#x2014;everything except <lb/> painting. The tea-party
                    amused me, I was pretending to listen to <lb/> a brown person who was talking
                    absurd worn-out literary clichés&#x2014; <lb/> as that the New Humour is not
                    funny, or that Bourget understood <lb/> women, when I overheard this fragment of
                    conversation. </p>

                <p>" But don't you like Society ? " Adrian was saying.</p>

                <p>" I get rather tired of it. People are so much alike. They all <lb/> say the same
                    things," said Laura.</p>

                <p>"Of course they all say the same things to <emph rend="italic">you</emph>,"
                    murmured <lb/> Adrian, as he affected to point out a rather curious old silver
                    <lb/> crucifix.</p>

                <p>" That," said Laura, " is one of the things they say."</p>
                <p>* * * * * </p>

                <p>About three weeks later I found myself dining alone with <lb/> Adrian Grant, at
                    one of the two restaurants in London. (The <lb/> cooking is better at the other,
                    this one is the more becoming.) I <lb/> had lilies-of-the-valley in my
                    button-hole, Adrian was wearing a</p>

                <fw type="catchword">red </fw>

                <pb n="284"/>

                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">256</fw> Suggestion</fw>

                <p>red carnation. Several people glanced at us. Of course he is <lb/> very well
                    known in Society. Also, I was looking rather nice, <lb/> and I could not help
                    hoping, while Adrian gazed rather absently <lb/> over my head, that the shaded
                    candles were staining to a richer <lb/> rose the waking wonder of my face.</p>

                <p>Adrian was charming of course, but he seemed worried and a <lb/> little
                    preoccupied, and drank a good deal of champagne. </p>

                <p>Towards the end of dinner, he said&#x2014;almost abruptly for him <lb/>
                    &#x2014;"Carington." </p>

                <p>" Cecil," I interrupted. He smiled.</p>

                <p>" Cissy ... it seems an odd thing to say to you, but though you <lb/> are so
                    young, I think you know everything. I am sure you know <lb/> everything. You
                    know about me. I am in love. I am quite <lb/> miserable. What on earth am I to
                    do ! " He drank more cham- <lb/> pagne. " Tell me," he said, " what to do." For
                    a few minutes, <lb/> while we listened to that interminable hackneyed <emph
                        rend="italic">Intermezzo</emph>, I <lb/> reflected ; asking myself by what
                    strange phases I had risen to the <lb/> extraordinary position of giving advice
                    to Adrian on such a subject ? </p>

                <p>Laura was not happy with our father. From a selfish motive, <lb/> Marjorie and I
                    had practically arranged that monstrous marriage. <lb/> That very day he had
                    been disagreeable, asking me with a clumsy <lb/> sarcasm to raise his allowance,
                    so that he could afford my favourite <lb/> cigarettes. If Adrian were free,
                    Marjorie might refuse Charlie <lb/> Winthrop. I don't want her to refuse him.
                    Adrian has treated <lb/> me as a friend. I like him&#x2014;I like him
                    enormously. I am quite <lb/> devoted to him. And how can I rid myself of the
                    feeling of <lb/> responsibility, the sense that I owe some compensation to poor
                    <lb/> beautiful Laura ? </p>

                <p>We spoke of various matters. Just before we left the table, <lb/> I said, with
                    what seemed, but was not, irrelevance, " Dear Adrian, <lb/> Mrs.
                    Carington&#x2014;&#x2014;" </p>

                <fw type="catchword">"Go </fw>

                <pb n="285"/>

                <fw type="runningHead">By Mrs. Ernest Leverson <fw type="pageNum">257</fw>
                </fw>

                <p>" Go on, Cissy." </p>

                <p>"She is one of those who must be appealed to, at first, by her <lb/> imagination.
                    She married our father because she thought he was <lb/> lonely and
                    misunderstood." </p>

                <p>" <emph rend="italic">I</emph> am lonely and misunderstood," said Adrian, his
                    eyes flashing <lb/> with delight. </p>

                <p>" Ah, not twice ! She doesn't like that now."</p>

                <p>I finished my coffee slowly, and then I said,</p>

                <p>" Go to the Clives' fancy-ball as Tristan." </p>

                <p>Adrian pressed my hand. . . . </p>

                <p>At the door of the restaurant we parted, and I drove home <lb/> through the cool
                    April night, wondering, wondering. Suddenly I <lb/> thought of my
                    mother&#x2014;my beautiful sainted mother, who would <lb/> have loved me, I am
                    convinced, had she lived, with an extraordinary <lb/> devotion. What would she
                    have said to all this ? What would <lb/> she have thought ? I know not why, but
                    a mad reaction seized <lb/> me. I felt recklessly conscientious. My father !
                    After all, he <lb/> was my father. I was possessed by passionate scruples. If I
                    went <lb/> back now to Adrian&#x2014;if I went back and implored him,
                    supplicated <lb/> him never to see Laura again ! </p>

                <p>I felt I could persuade him. I have sufficient personal <lb/> magnetism to do
                    that, if I make up my mind. After one glance <lb/> in the looking-glass, I put
                    up my stick and stopped the hansom. I <lb/> had taken a resolution. I told the
                    man to drive to Adrian's rooms. </p>

                <p>He turned round with a sharp jerk. In another second a <lb/> brougham passed
                    us&#x2014;a swift little brougham that I knew. It <lb/> slackened&#x2014;it
                    stopped&#x2014;we passed it&#x2014;I saw my father. He was <lb/> getting out at
                    one of the little houses opposite the Brompton <lb/> Oratory. </p>

                <p>" Turn round again," I shouted to the cabman. And he drove <lb/> me straight
                    home. </p>
            </div>
        </body>
    </text>
</TEI>
