The Golden Bowl - Henry James [222]
It was so much as if everything would come out right that she had fallen to thinking of her father’s birthday, had given herself this as a reason for trying what she could pick up for it. They would keep it at Fawns, where they had kept it before – since it would be the twenty-first of the month; and she mightn’t have another chance of making sure of something to offer him. There was always of course the impossibility of finding him anything, the least bit ‘good’, that he wouldn’t already long ago in his rummagings have seen himself – and only not to think a quarter good enough; this however was an old story, and one couldn’t have had any fun with him but for his sweet theory that the individual gift, the friendship’s offering, was by a rigorous law of nature a foredoomed aberration, and that the more it was so the more it showed, and the more one cherished it for showing, how friendly it had been. The infirmity of art was the candour of affection, the grossness of pedigree the refinement of sympathy; the ugliest objects in fact as a general thing were the bravest, the tenderest mementoes, and, as such, figured in glass cases apart, worthy doubtless of the home but not worthy of the temple – dedicated to the grimacing, not to the clear-faced gods. She herself, naturally, through the past years, had come to be much represented in those receptacles; against the thick locked panes of which she still liked to flatten her nose, finding in its place each time everything she had on successive anniversaries tried to believe he might pretend at her suggestion to be put off with or at least to think curious. She was now ready to try it again: they had always, with his pleasure in her pretence and her pleasure in his, with the funny betrayal of the sacrifice to domestic manners on either side, played the game so happily. To this end, on her way home, she had loitered everywhere; quite too deludedly among the old books and the old prints, which had yielded nothing to her purpose, but with a strange inconsequence in one of the other shops, that of a small antiquarian, a queer little foreign man who had shown her a number of things, shown her finally something that, struck with it as rather a rarity and thinking it would, compared to some of her ventures, quite superlatively do, she had bought – bought really, when it came to that, for a price. ‘It appears now it won’t do at all,’ said Maggie; ‘something has happened since that puts it quite out of the question. I had only my