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    Chapter 4 - Page 2

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    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 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.

    To the general relief the Countess Olenska was not
    present in her grandmother's drawing-room during the
    visit of the betrothed couple. Mrs. Mingott said she
    had gone out; which, on a day of such glaring sunlight,
    and at the "shopping hour," seemed in itself an indelicate
    thing for a compromised woman to do. But at any
    rate it spared them the embarrassment of her presence,
    and the faint shadow that her unhappy past might
    seem to shed on their radiant future. The visit went off
    successfully, as was to have been expected. Old Mrs.
    Mingott was delighted with the engagement, which,
    being long foreseen by watchful relatives, had been
    carefully passed upon in family council; and the
    engagement ring, a large thick sapphire set in invisible

    claws, met with her unqualified admiration.

    "It's the new setting: of course it shows the stone
    beautifully, but it looks a little bare to old-fashioned
    eyes," Mrs. Welland had explained, with a conciliatory
    side-glance at her future son-in-law.

    "Old-fashioned eyes? I hope you don't mean mine,
    my dear? I like all the novelties," said the ancestress,
    lifting the stone to her small bright orbs,
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