However there was no time and no necessity for any one to do anything.

The situation itself vanished in the financial crash as a building

vanishes in an earthquake--here one moment and gone the next with only an

ill-omened, slight, preliminary rumble. Well, to say 'in a moment' is an

exaggeration perhaps; but that everything was over in just twenty-four

hours is an exact statement. Fyne was able to tell me all about it; and

the phrase that would depict the nature of the change best is: an instant

and complete destitution. I don't understand these matters very well,

but from Fyne's narrative it seemed as if the creditors or the

depositors, or the competent authorities, had got hold in the twinkling

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of an eye of everything de Barral possessed in the world, down to his

watch and chain, the money in his trousers' pocket, his spare suits of

clothes, and I suppose the cameo pin out of his black satin cravat.

Everything! I believe he gave up the very wedding ring of his late wife.

The gloomy Priory with its damp park and a couple of farms had been made

over to Mrs. de Barral; but when she died (without making a will) it

reverted to him, I imagine. They got that of course; but it was a mere

crumb in a Sahara of starvation, a drop in the thirsty ocean. I dare say

that not a single soul in the world got the comfort of as much as a

recovered threepenny bit out of the estate. Then, less than crumbs, less

than drops, there were to be grabbed, the lease of the big Brighton

house, the furniture therein, the carriage and pair, the girl's riding

horse, her costly trinkets; down to the heavily gold-mounted collar of

her pedigree St. Bernard. The dog too went: the most noble-looking item

in the beggarly assets.

What however went first of all or rather vanished was nothing in the

nature of an asset. It was that plotting governess with the trick of a

"perfect lady" manner (severely conventional) and the soul of a

remorseless brigand. When a woman takes to any sort of unlawful

man-trade, there's nothing to beat her in the way of thoroughness. It's

true that you will find people who'll tell you that this terrific

virulence in breaking through all established things, is altogether the

fault of men. Such people will ask you with a clever air why the servile

wars were always the most fierce, desperate and atrocious of all wars.

And you may make such answer as you can--even the eminently feminine one,

if you choose, so typical of the women's literal mind "I don't see what

this has to do with it!" How many arguments have been knocked over (I

won't say knocked down) by these few words! For if we men try to put the

spaciousness of all experiences into our reasoning and would fain put the

Infinite itself into our love, it isn't, as some writer has remarked, "It

isn't women's doing." Oh no. They don't care for these things. That

sort of aspiration is not much in their way; and it shall be a funny

world, the world of their arranging, where the Irrelevant would

fantastically step in to take the place of the sober humdrum Imaginative

. . . "




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