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England To America
By MARGARET PRESCOTT MONTAGUE
From Atlantic Monthly
I.
"Lord, but English people are funny!"
This was the perplexed mental ejaculation that young Lieutenant Skipworth Cary, of
Virginia, found his thoughts constantly reiterating during his stay in Devonshire. Had he
been, he wondered, a confiding fool, to accept so trustingly Chev Sherwood's suggestion
that he spend a part of his leave, at least, at Bishopsthorpe, where Chev's people lived?
But why should he have anticipated any difficulty here, in this very corner of England
which had bred his own ancestors, when he had always hit it off so splendidly with his
English comrades at the Front? Here, however, though they were all awfully kind,--at
least, he was sure they meant to be kind,--something was always bringing him up short:
something that he could not lay hold of, but which made him feel like a blind man
groping in a strange place, or worse, like a bull in a china-shop. He was prepared enough
to find differences in the American and English points of view. But this thing that baffled
him did not seem to have to do with that; it was something deeper, something very
definite, he was sure--and yet, what was it? The worst of it was that he had a curious
feeling as if they were all--that is, Lady Sherwood and Gerald; not Sir Charles so much--
protecting him from himself--keeping him from making breaks, as he phrased it. That
hurt and annoyed him, and piqued his vanity. Was he a social blunderer, and weren't a
Virginia gentleman's manners to be trusted in England without leading-strings? He had
been at the Front for several months with the Royal Flying Corps, and when his leave
came, his Flight Commander, Captain Cheviot Sherwood, discovering that he meant to
spend it in England, where he hardly knew a soul, had said his people down in
Devonshire would be jolly glad to have him stop with them; and Skipworth Cary,
knowing that, if the circumstances had been reversed, his people down in Virginia would
indeed have been jolly glad to entertain Captain Sherwood, had accepted unhesitatingly.
The invitation had been seconded by a letter from Lady Sherwood,--Chev's mother,--and
after a few days sight-seeing in London, he had come down to Bishopsthorpe, very eager
to know his friend's family, feeling as he did about Chev himself. "He's the finest man
that ever went up in the air," he had written home; and to his own family's disgust, his
letters had been far more full of Chev Sherwood than they had been of Skipworth Cary.
And now here he was, and he almost wished himself away--wished almost that he was
back again at the Front, carrying on under Chev. There, at least, you knew what you were
up against. The job might be hard enough, but it wasn't baffling and queer, with hidden
undercurrents that you couldn't chart. It seemed to him that this baffling feeling of
constraint had rushed to meet him on the very threshold of the drawing-room, when he
made his first appearance.
 

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