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PAGE 12

Anglicization
by [?]

‘But Lucy—-‘ his mother interrupted.

His vehement self-assertion passed into an affectionate smile.

‘Lucy was dimpling all over her face. She knows the old boy’s vanity. Of course she couldn’t side with me openly.’

‘But what will happen? Will you go there again?’

The cloud returned to his brow. ‘Oh, well, we’ll see.’

A letter from Lucy saved him the trouble of deciding the point.


‘DEAR SILLY OLD SIM,’ it ran,

‘Father has been going on dreadfully, so you had better wait a few Sundays till he has cooled down. After all, you yourself admit there is a grievance of congestion and high rents in the East End. And it is only natural–isn’t it?–that after shedding our blood and treasure for the Empire we should not be in a mood to see our country overrun by dirty aliens.’

‘Dirty!’ muttered Simon, as he read. ‘Has she seen the Christian slums–Flower and Dean Street?’ And his handsome Oriental brow grew duskier with anger. It did not clear till he came to:


‘Let us meet at the Crystal Palace next Saturday, dear quarrelsome person. Three o’clock, in the Pompeian Room. I
have got an aunt at Sydenham, and I can go in to tea after the concert and hear all about the missionary work in the South Sea Islands.’

XIII

Ensued a new phase in the relation of Simon and Lucy. Once they had met in freedom, neither felt inclined to revert to the restricted courtship of the drawing-room. Even though their chat was merely of books and music and pictures, it was delicious to make their own atmosphere, untroubled by the flippancy of the brother or the earnestness of the father. In the presence of Lucy’s artistic knowledge Simon was at once abashed and stimulated. She moved in a delicate world of symphonies and silver-point drawings of whose very existence he had been unaware, and reverence quickened the sense of romance which their secret meetings had already enhanced.

Once or twice he spoke of resuming his visits to Harrow, but the longer he delayed the more difficult the conciliatory visit grew.

‘Father is now deeper in the League than ever,’ she told him. ‘He has joined the committee, and the prospectus has gone forth in all its glorious self-contradiction.’

‘But, considering I am the son of an alien, and I have fought for—-‘

‘There, there! quarrelsome person,’ she interrupted laughingly. ‘No, no, no, you had better not come till you can forget your remote genealogy. You see, even now father doesn’t quite realize you are a Jew. He thinks you have a strain of Jewish blood, but are in every other respect a decent Christian body.’

‘Christian!’ cried Simon in horror.

‘Why not? You fought side by side with my brother; you ate ham with us.’

Simon blushed hotly. ‘But, Lucy, you don’t think religion is ham?’

‘What, then? Merely Shem?’ she laughed.

Simon laughed too. How clever she was! ‘But you know I never could believe in the Trinity and all that. And, what’s more, I don’t believe you do yourself.’

‘It isn’t exactly what one believes. I was baptized into the Church of England–I feel myself a member. Really, Sim, you are a dreadfully argumentative and quarrelsome person.’

‘I’ll never quarrel with you, Lucy,’ he said half entreatingly; for somehow he felt a shiver of cold at the word ‘baptized,’ as though himself plunged into the font.

In this wise did both glide away from any deep issue or decision till the summer itself glided away. Mrs. Cohn, anxiously following the courtship through Sim’s love-smitten eyes, her suggestion that the girl be brought to see her received with equal postponement, began to fret for the great thing to come to pass. One cannot be always heroically stiffened to receive the cavalry of communal criticism. Waiting weakens the backbone. But she concealed from her boy these flaccid relapses.

‘You said you’d bring her to see me when she returned from the seaside,’ she ventured to remind him.