The Brimming Cup | Page 2

Dorothy Canfield Fisher
and can attend to nothing else.
She said, "Oh, Neale, how ridiculous of you. He couldn't possibly have
the least idea what he's done to deserve getting paid for."
At the sound of her voice, the tone in which these words were
pronounced, the ticket-seller looked at her hard, with a bold, intrusive,
diagnosing stare: "Lovers!" he told himself conclusively. He accepted
with a vast incuriosity as to reason the coin which the young foreigner
put into his hand, and, ringing it suspiciously on his table, divided his
appraising attention between its clear answer to his challenge, and the
sound of the young man's voice as he answered his sweetheart, "Of
course he hasn't any idea what he's done to deserve it. Who ever has?
You don't suppose for a moment I've any idea what I've done to deserve
mine?"
The ticket-seller smiled secretly into his dark mustache. "I wonder if
my voice quivered and deepened like that, when I was courting
Annunziata?" he asked himself. He glanced up from pocketing the coin,
and caught the look which passed between the two. He felt as though
someone had laid hands on him and shaken him. "Dio mio" he thought.
"They are in the hottest of it."
The young foreigners went across the tracks and established themselves

on the rocks, partly out of sight, just at the brink of the great drop to the
Campagna. The setting sun was full in their faces. But they did not see
it, seeing only each other.
Below them spread the divinely colored plain, crossed by the ancient
yellow river, rolling its age-old memories out to the sea, a blue
reminder of the restfulness of eternity, at the rim of the weary old land.
Like a little cluster of tiny, tarnished pearls, Rome gleamed palely,
remote and legendary.
* * * * *
The two young people looked at each other earnestly, with a passionate,
single-hearted attention to their own meaning, thrusting away
impatiently the clinging brambles of speech which laid hold on their
every effort to move closer to each other. They did not look down, or
away from each other's eyes as they strove to free themselves, to step
forward, to clasp the other's outstretched hands. They reached down
blindly, tearing at those thorny, clutching entanglements, pulling and
tugging at those tenuous, tough words which would not let them say
what they meant: sure, hopefully sure that in a moment . . . now . . .
with the next breath, they would break free as no others had ever done
before them, and crying out the truth and glory that was in them, fall
into each other's arms.
The girl was physically breathless with this effort, her lips parted, her
eyebrows drawn together. "Neale, Neale dear, if I could only tell you
how I want it to be, how utterly utterly true I want us to be. Nothing's
of any account except that."
She moved with a shrugging, despairing gesture. "No, no, not the way
that sounds. I don't mean, you know I don't mean any old-fashioned
impossible vows never to change, or be any different! I know too much
for that. I've seen too awfully much unhappiness, with people trying to
do that. You know what I told you about my father and mother. Oh,
Neale, it's horribly dangerous, loving anybody. I never wanted to. I
never thought I should. But now I'm in it, I see that it's not at all
unhappiness I'm afraid of, your getting tired of me or I of you . . .

everybody's so weak and horrid in this world, who knows what may be
before us? That's not what would be unendurable, sickening. That
would make us unhappy. But what would poison us to death . . . what
I'm afraid of, between two people who try to be what we want to be to
each other . . . how can I say it?" She looked at him in an anguish of
endeavor, ". . . not to be true to what is deepest and most living in us . . .
that would be the betrayal I'm afraid of. That's what I mean. No matter
what it costs us personally, or what it brings, we must be true to that.
We must!"
He took her hand in his silently, and held it close. She drew a long
troubled breath and said, "You do think we can always have between us
that loyalty to what is deep and living? It does not seem too much to
ask, when we are willing to give up everything else for it, even
happiness?"
He gave her a long, profound look. "I'm trying to give that loyalty to
you this minute, Marise darling," he said slowly, "when I tell
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