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    Chapter 2

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    II.

    LANSING threw the end of Strefford's expensive cigar into the
    lake, and bent over his wife. Poor child! She had fallen
    asleep .... He leaned back and stared up again at the
    silver-flooded sky. How queer--how inexpressibly queer--it was
    to think that that light was shed by his honey-moon! A year
    ago, if anyone had predicted his risking such an adventure, he
    would have replied by asking to be locked up at the first
    symptoms ....

    There was still no doubt in his mind that the adventure was a
    mad one. It was all very well for Susy to remind him twenty
    times a day that they had pulled it off--and so why should he
    worry? Even in the light of her far-seeing cleverness, and of
    his own present bliss, he knew the future would not bear the
    examination of sober thought. And as he sat there in the summer
    moonlight, with her head on his knee, he tried to recapitulate
    the successive steps that had landed them on Streffy's
    lake-front.

    On Lansing's side, no doubt, it dated back to his leaving
    Harvard with the large resolve not to miss anything. There
    stood the evergreen Tree of Life, the Four Rivers flowing from
    its foot; and on every one of the four currents he meant to
    launch his little skiff. On two of them he had not gone very
    far, on the third he had nearly stuck in the mud; but the fourth
    had carried him to the very heart of wonder. It was the stream
    of his lively imagination, of his inexhaustible interest in
    every form of beauty and strangeness and folly. On this stream,
    sitting in the stout little craft of his poverty, his
    insignificance and his independence, he had made some notable
    voyages .... And so, when Susy Branch, whom he had sought out
    through a New York season as the prettiest and most amusing girl
    in sight, had surprised him with the contradictory revelation of
    her modern sense of expediency and her old-fashioned standard of
    good faith, he had felt an irresistible desire to put off on one
    more cruise into the unknown.

    It was of the essence of the adventure that, after her one brief
    visit to his lodgings, he should have kept his promise and not
    tried to see her again. Even if her straightforwardness had not

    roused his emulation, his understanding of her difficulties
    would have moved his pity. He knew on how frail a thread the
    popularity of the penniless hangs, and how miserably a girl like
    Susy was the sport of other people's moods and whims. It was a
    part of his difficulty and of hers that to get what they liked
    they so often had to do what they disliked. But the keeping of
    his promise was a greater bore than he had expected. Susy
    Branch had become a delightful habit in a life where most of the
    fixed things were dull, and her disappearance had made
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