The Death of the Lion | Page 3

Henry James
impression. Then thinking to commend myself to Mr. Pinhorn by
my celerity, I walked out and posted my little packet before luncheon.
Once my paper was written I was free to stay on, and if it was
calculated to divert attention from my levity in so doing I could reflect
with satisfaction that I had never been so clever. I don't mean to deny
of course that I was aware it was much too good for Mr. Pinhorn; but I
was equally conscious that Mr. Pinhorn had the supreme shrewdness of
recognising from time to time the cases in which an article was not too
bad only because it was too good. There was nothing he loved so much
as to print on the right occasion a thing he hated. I had begun my visit
to the great man on a Monday, and on the Wednesday his book came
out. A copy of it arrived by the first post, and he let me go out into the
garden with it immediately after breakfast, I read it from beginning to
end that day, and in the evening he asked me to remain with him the
rest of the week and over the Sunday.

That night my manuscript came back from Mr. Pinhorn, accompanied
with a letter the gist of which was the desire to know what I meant by
trying to fob off on him such stuff. That was the meaning of the
question, if not exactly its form, and it made my mistake immense to
me. Such as this mistake was I could now only look it in the face and
accept it. I knew where I had failed, but it was exactly where I couldn't
have succeeded. I had been sent down to be personal and then in point
of fact hadn't been personal at all: what I had dispatched to London was
just a little finicking feverish study of my author's talent. Anything less
relevant to Mr. Pinhorn's purpose couldn't well be imagined, and he
was visibly angry at my having (at his expense, with a second-class
ticket) approached the subject of our enterprise only to stand off so
helplessly. For myself, I knew but too well what had happened, and
how a miracle--as pretty as some old miracle of legend--had been
wrought on the spot to save me. There had been a big brush of wings,
the flash of an opaline robe, and then, with a great cool stir of the air,
the sense of an angel's having swooped down and caught me to his
bosom. He held me only till the danger was over, and it all took place
in a minute. With my manuscript back on my hands I understood the
phenomenon better, and the reflexions I made on it are what I meant, at
the beginning of this anecdote, by my change of heart. Mr. Pinhorn's
note was not only a rebuke decidedly stern, but an invitation
immediately to send him--it was the case to say so--the genuine article,
the revealing and reverberating sketch to the promise of which, and of
which alone, I owed my squandered privilege. A week or two later I
recast my peccant paper and, giving it a particular application to Mr.
Paraday's new book, obtained for it the hospitality of another journal,
where, I must admit, Mr. Pinhorn was so far vindicated as that it
attracted not the least attention.

CHAPTER III.

I was frankly, at the end of three days, a very prejudiced critic, so that
one morning when, in the garden, my great man had offered to read me
something I quite held my breath as I listened. It was the written

scheme of another book--something put aside long ago, before his
illness, but that he had lately taken out again to reconsider. He had been
turning it round when I came down on him, and it had grown
magnificently under this second hand. Loose liberal confident, it might
have passed for a great gossiping eloquent letter--the overflow into talk
of an artist's amorous plan. The theme I thought singularly rich, quite
the strongest he had yet treated; and this familiar statement of it, full
too of fine maturities, was really, in summarised splendour, a mine of
gold, a precious independent work. I remember rather profanely
wondering whether the ultimate production could possibly keep at the
pitch. His reading of the fond epistle, at any rate, made me feel as if I
were, for the advantage of posterity, in close correspondence with
him--were the distinguished person to whom it had been affectionately
addressed. It was a high distinction simply to be told such things. The
idea he now communicated had all the freshness, the flushed fairness,
of the conception untouched and untried: it was Venus rising from
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