Transcribed from the 1919 Mills & Boon edition by David Price,

THE HOUSE OF PRIDE

Contents:

The House of Pride
Koolau the Leper
Good-bye, Jack
Aloha Oe
Chun Ah Chun
The Sheriff of Kona
Jack London

THE HOUSE OF PRIDE

Percival Ford wondered why he had come.  He did not dance.  He did not care much for army people.  Yet he knew them all—gliding and revolving there on the broad lanai of the Seaside, the officers in their fresh-starcheduniforms of white, the civilians in white and black, and the women bare of shoulders and arms.  After two years in Honolulu the Twentieth was departing to its new station in Alaska, and Percival Ford, as one of the big men of the Islands, could not help knowing the officers and their women.

But between knowing and liking was a vast gulf.  The armywomen frightened him just a little.  They were in ways quitedifferent from the women he liked best—the elderly women, the spinsters and the bespectacled maidens, and the very serious women of all ages whom he met on church and library and kindergarten committees, who came meekly to him for contributionsand advice.  He ruled those women by virtue of his superior mentality, his great wealth, and the high place he occupied in the commercial baronage of Hawaii.  And he was not afraid ofthem in the least.  Sex, with them, was not obtrusive. Yes, that was it.  There was in them something else, or more, than the assertive grossness of life.  He was fastidious; he acknowledged that to himself; and these army women, with their bare shoulders and naked arms, their straight-looking eyes, their vitality and challenging femaleness,jarred upon his sensibilities.

Nor did he get on better with the army men, who took life lightly, drinking and smoking and swearing their way through lifeand asserting the essential grossness of flesh no less shamelessly than their women.  He was always uncomfortable in the company of the army men.  They seemed uncomfortable, too.  And he felt, always, that they were laughing at him uptheir sleeves, or pitying him, or tolerating him.  Then, too, they seemed, by mere contiguity, to emphasize a lack in him,to call attention to that in them which he did not possess and which he thanked God he did not possess.  Faugh!  They were like their women!

In fact, Percival Ford was no more a woman’s man than hewas a man’s man.  A glance at him told the reason.  He had a good constitution, never was on intimate terms with sickness, nor even mild disorders; but he lacked vitality.  His was a negative organism.  No blood with a ferment in it could have nourished and shaped that long and narrow face, those thin lips, lean cheeks, and the small, sharp eyes.  The thatch of hair, dust-coloured, straight and sparse, advertised the niggard soil, as did the nose, thin, delicately modelled, and just hinting the suggestion of a beak.  His meagre blood had denied him much of life, and permitted him to be an extremist in one thing only, which thing was righteousness.  Over right conduct he pondered and agonized, and that he should do right was as necessary to his nature as loving and being loved were necessary to commoner clay.

He was sitting under the algaroba trees between the lanai and the beach.  His eyes wandered over the dancers and he turned his head away and gazed seaward across the mellow-sounding surf to the Southern Cross burning low on the horizon.  He was irritated by the bare shoulders and arms ofthe women.  If he had a daughter he would never permit it, never.  But his hypothesis was the sheerest abstraction.  The thought process had been accompanied by noinner vision of that daughter.  He did not see a daughter with arms and shoulders.  Instead, he smiled at the remote

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