The Pretty Lady , by Arnold E. 
Bennett 
 
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Title: The Pretty Lady 
Author: Arnold E. Bennett 
Release Date: June 21, 2004 [eBook #12673] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: iso-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
PRETTY LADY *** 
E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Bill Hershey, and the Project 
Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team 
 
THE PRETTY LADY 
A Novel
by 
ARNOLD BENNETT 
1918 
 
"Virtue has never yet been adequately represented by any who have 
had any claim to be considered virtuous. It is the sub-vicious who best 
understand virtue. Let the virtuous people stick to describing 
vice--which they can do well enough." 
SAMUEL BUTLER 
 
CONTENTS 
Chapter 
1. 
THE PROMENADE 
2. THE POWER 
3. THE FLAT 
4. CONFIDENCE 
5. OSTEND 
6. THE ALBANY 
7. FOR THE EMPIRE 
8. BOOTS 
9. THE CLUB
10. THE MISSION 
11. THE TELEGRAM 
12. RENDEZVOUS 
13. IN COMMITTEE 
14. QUEEN 
15. EVENING OUT 
16. THE VIRGIN 
17. SUNDAY AFTERNOON 
18. THE MYSTIC 
19. THE VISIT 
20. MASCOT 
21. THE LEAVE-TRAIN 
22. GETTING ON WITH THE WAR 
23. THE CALL 
24. THE SOLDIER 
25. THE RING 
26. THE RETURN 
27. THE CLYDE 
28. SALOME 
29. THE STREETS
30. THE CHILD'S ARM 
31. "ROMANCE" 
32. MRS. BRAIDING 
33. THE ROOF 
34. IN THE BOUDOIR 
35. QUEEN DEAD 
36. COLLAPSE 
37. THE INVISIBLE POWERS 
38. THE VICTORY 
39. IDYLL 
40. THE WINDOW 
41. THE ENVOY 
Chapter I 
THE PROMENADE 
The piece was a West End success so brilliant that even if you belonged 
to the intellectual despisers of the British theatre you could not hold up 
your head in the world unless you had seen it; even for such as you it 
was undeniably a success of curiosity at least. 
The stage scene flamed extravagantly with crude orange and viridian 
light, a rectangle of bedazzling illumination; on the boards, in the midst 
of great width, with great depth behind them and arching height above, 
tiny squeaking figures ogled the primeval passion in gesture and 
innuendo. From the arc of the upper circle convergent beams of light 
pierced through gloom and broke violently on this group of the
half-clad lovely and the swathed grotesque. The group did not quail. In 
fullest publicity it was licensed to say that which in private could not be 
said where men and women meet, and that which could not be printed. 
It gave a voice to the silent appeal of pictures and posters and 
illustrated weeklies all over the town; it disturbed the silence of the 
most secret groves in the vast, undiscovered hearts of men and women 
young and old. The half-clad lovely were protected from the satyrs in 
the audience by an impalpable screen made of light and of ascending 
music in which strings, brass, and concussion exemplified the naïve 
sensuality of lyrical niggers. The guffaw which, occasionally leaping 
sharply out of the dim, mysterious auditorium, surged round the 
silhouetted conductor and drove like a cyclone between the barriers of 
plush and gilt and fat cupids on to the stage--this huge guffaw seemed 
to indicate what might have happened if the magic protection of the 
impalpable screen had not been there. 
Behind the audience came the restless Promenade, where was the 
reality which the stage reflected. There it was, multitudinous, 
obtainable, seizable, dumbly imploring to be carried off. The stage, 
very daring, yet dared no more than hint at the existence of the bright 
and joyous reality. But there it was, under the same roof. 
Christine entered with Madame Larivaudière. Between shoulders and 
broad hats, as through a telescope, she glimpsed in the far distance the 
illusive, glowing oblong of the stage; then the silhouetted conductor 
and the tops of instruments; then the dark, curved concentric rows of 
spectators. Lastly she took in the Promenade, in which she stood. She 
surveyed the Promenade with a professional eye. It instantly shocked 
her, not as it might have shocked one ignorant of human nature and 
history, but by reason of its frigidity, its constraint, its solemnity, its 
pretence. In one glance she embraced all the figures, moving or 
stationary, against the hedge of shoulders in front and against the 
mirrors behind--all of them: the programme girls, the cigarette girls, the 
chocolate girls, the cloak-room girls, the waiters, the overseers, as well 
as the vivid courtesans and their clientèle in black, tweed, or khaki. 
With scarcely an exception they all had the same strange look, the same 
absence of gesture. They were northern, blond, self-contained, terribly
impassive. Christine impulsively    
    
		
	
	
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