Can one do it, Mr. Landholm? -- one with whom it is not born?"
"I believe so."
"After all, you can"t tell much about it," said Elizabeth, "for it belongs to your nature."
"No credit to him," said Rufus returning; -- "it comes of the stock. An inch of self-control in one not accustomed to it, is worth more honour than all Governor"s, which he can"t help."
"I wouldn"t give a pin for self-control in one not accustomed to it!" said Elizabeth; "it is the _habitual_ command over oneself, that I value."
"No let-up to it?" said Rufus.
"No; -- or only so much as to shew in what strength it exists.
I am glad, for instance, that Washington for once forgot himself -- or no, he didn"t _forget_ himself; but I am glad that pa.s.sion got the better of him once. I respect the rest of his life infinitely more."
"Than that instance?"
"No, no! -- _for_ that instance."
"I am afraid you have a little tendency to hero-worship, Miss Elizabeth."
"A very safe tendency," said the young lady. "There aren"t many heroes to call it out."
"Living heroes?"
"No, nor dead ones, -- if one could get at more than the great facts of their lives, which don"t shew us the men."
"Then you are of opinion that "trifles make the sum of human things?""
"I don"t know what are trifles," said Elizabeth.
"Dere is nozing is no trifle," said Mr. Herder, coming in from the other room. "Dere is no such thing as trifle. Miss Elisabet" hang her head a little one side and go softly, -- and people say, "Miss Elisabet" is sad in her spirit -- what is the matter?" -- and you hold up your head straight and look bright out of your eyes, and they say, "Miss Elisabet" is fiere -- she feels herself goot; she do not fear nozing, she do not care for nozing.""
"I am sure it is a trifle whether I look one way or another, Mr. Herder," said Elizabeth, laughing a little.
"Ozer people do not think so," said the naturalist.
"Besides, it is not true, that I fear nothing and care for nothing."
"But then you do not want to tell everybody what you do think," said the naturalist.
"I don"t care much about it!" said Elizabeth. "I think that is a trifle, Mr. Herder."
"Which is?" -- said the naturalist.
"What people think about me."
"You do not think so?"
"I do."
"I am sorry," said the naturalist.
"Why?"
"It is not goot, for people to not care what ozer people thinks about them."
"Why isn"t it good? I think it is. I am sure it is comfortable."
"It shews they have a mind to do something what ozer people will not like."
"Very well! --"
"Dat is not goot."
"Maybe it is good, Mr. Herder. People are not always right in their expectations."
"It is better to go smooth wiz people," said the naturalist shaking his head a little.
"Or without them," said Elizabeth.
"Question, can you do that?" said Rufus.
"What?" said his brother.
"Live smoothly, or live at all, without regard to other people."
"It is of the world at large I was speaking," said Elizabeth.
"Of course there are some few, a very few, whose word -- and whose thought -- one would care for and strive for, -- that is not what I mean."
"And who are those few fine persons?" said Mr. Herder significantly.
"He is unhappy that doesn"t know one or two," Elizabeth answered with infinite gravity.
"And the opinions of the rest of men you would despise?" said Rufus.
"Utterly! -- so far as they trenched upon my freedom of action."
"You can"t live so," said Rufus shaking his head.
"I _will_ live so, if I live at all."
"Wint"rop, you do not say nozing," said the naturalist.
"What need, sir?"
"Dere is always need for everybody to say what he thinks,"
said Mr. Herder. "Here we have all got ourselves in a puzzle, and we don"t know which way we stand."
"I am afraid every man must get out of that puzzle for himself, sir."