, 1921 The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton 

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and sister to call on Mrs. Welland, after which he and Mrs. Welland and May drove out to old Mrs. Manson
Mingott's to receive that venerable ancestress's blessing.
A visit to Mrs. Manson Mingott was always an amusing episode to the young man. The house in itself was
already an historic document, though not, of course, as venerable as certain other old family houses in
University Place and lower Fifth Avenue. Those were of the purest 1830, with a grim harmony of cabbage-
rose-garlanded carpets, rosewood consoles, round-arched fire-places with black marble mantels, and
immense glazed book-cases of mahogany; whereas old Mrs. Mingott, who had built her house later, had
bodily cast out the massive furniture of her prime, and mingled with the Mingott heirlooms the frivolous
upholstery of the Second Empire. It was her habit to sit in a window of her sitting-room on the ground floor,
as if watching calmly for life and fashion to flow northward to her solitary doors. She seemed in no hurry to
have them come, for her patience was equalled by her confidence. She was sure that presently the hoardings,
the quarries, the one-story saloons, the wooden green-houses in ragged gardens, and the rocks from which
goats surveyed the scene, would vanish before the advance of residences as stately as her own--perhaps (for
she was an impartial woman) even statelier; and that the cobble- stones over which the old clattering
omnibuses bumped would be replaced by smooth asphalt, such as people reported having seen in Paris.
Meanwhile, as every one she cared to see came to HER (and she could fill her rooms as easily as the
Beauforts, and without adding a single item to the menu of her suppers), she did not suffer from her
geographic isolation.
The immense accretion of flesh which had descended on her in middle life like a flood of lava on a doomed
city had changed her from a plump active little woman with a neatly-turned foot and ankle into something as
vast and august as a natural phenomenon. She had accepted this submergence as philosophically as all her
other trials, and now, in extreme old age, was rewarded by presenting to her mirror an almost unwrinkled
expanse of firm pink and white flesh, in the centre of which the traces of a small face survived as if awaiting
excavation. A flight of smooth double chins led down to the dizzy depths of a still-snowy bosom veiled in
snowy muslins that were held in place by a miniature portrait of the late Mr. Mingott; and around and below,
wave after wave of black silk surged away over the edges of a capacious armchair, with two tiny white hands
poised like gulls on the surface of the billows.
The burden of Mrs. Manson Mingott's flesh had long since made it impossible for her to go up and down
stairs, and with characteristic independence she had made her reception rooms upstairs and established herself
(in flagrant violation of all the New York proprieties) on the ground floor of her house; so that, as you sat in
Information about Project Gutenberg 15
her sitting-room window with her, you caught (through a door that was always open, and a looped- back
yellow damask portiere) the unexpected vista of a bedroom with a huge low bed upholstered like a sofa, and a
toilet-table with frivolous lace flounces and a gilt-framed mirror.
Her visitors were startled and fascinated by the foreignness of this arrangement, which recalled scenes in
French fiction, and architectural incentives to immorality such as the simple American had never dreamed of.
That was how women with lovers lived in the wicked old societies, in apartments with all the rooms on one
floor, and all the indecent propinquities that their novels described. It amused Newland Archer (who had
secretly situated the love-scenes of "Monsieur de Camors" in Mrs. Mingott's bedroom) to picture her
blameless life led in the stage-setting of adultery; but he said to himself, with considerable admiration, that if
a lover had been what she wanted, the intrepid woman would have had him too. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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