 drawn him aside. »You're right; we
haven't quite known what you mean, Mother and I, but now we see. Chad's
magnificent; what can one want more? If this is the kind of thing -!« On which
they might, as it were, have embraced and begun to work together.
    Ah how much, as it was, for all her bridling brightness - which was merely
general and noticed nothing - would they work together? Strether knew he was
unreasonable; he set it down to his being nervous; people couldn't notice
everything and speak of everything in a quarter of an hour. Possibly, no doubt,
also, he made too much of Chad's display. Yet, none the less, when, at the end
of five minutes, in the cab, Jim Pocock had said nothing either - hadn't said,
that is, what Strether wanted, though he had said much else - it all suddenly
bounced back to their being either stupid or wilful. It was more probably on the
whole the former; so that that would be the drawback of the bridling brightness.
Yes, they would bridle and be bright; they would make the best of what was
before them, but their observation would fail; it would be beyond them; they
simply wouldn't understand. Of what use would it be then that they had come? -
if they weren't to be intelligent up to that point: unless indeed he himself
were utterly deluded and extravagant? Was he, on this question of Chad's
improvement, fantastic and away from the truth? Did he live in a false world, a
world that had grown simply to suit him, and was his present slight irritation -
in the face now of Jim's silence in particular - but the alarm of the vain thing
menaced by the touch of the real? Was this contribution of the real possibly the
mission of the Pococks? - had they come to make the work of observation, as he
had practised observation, crack and crumble, and to reduce Chad to the plain
terms in which honest minds could deal with him? Had they come in short to be
sane where Strether was destined to feel that he himself had only been silly?
    He glanced at such a contingency, but it failed to hold him long when once
he had reflected that he would have been silly, in this case, with Maria Gostrey
and little Bilham, with Madame de Vionnet and little Jeanne, with Lambert
Strether, in fine, and above all with Chad Newsome
