Anson was the eldest of six children who would some day divide a fortune of fifteen
million dollars, and he reached the age of reason — is it seven? — at the beginning of
the century when daring young women were already gliding along Fifth Avenue in
electric "mobiles". In those days he and his brother had an English governess who
spoke the language very clearly and crisply and well, so that the two boys grew to
speak as she did — their words and sentences were all crisp and clear. They didn’t talk
exactly like English children but got an accent that is peculiar to fashionable people
in the city of New York.
In the summer the six children were moved from the house in New York to a big
estate in northern Connecticut. It was not a fashionable locality — Anson’s father
was a man somewhat superior to his class, which composed New York society, which
was snobbish and vulgar, and he wanted his sons to learn habits of concentration
and have sound constitutions and grow up into right-living and successful men. He
and his wife kept an eye on them as well as they were able until the two older boys
went away to school, but in huge establishments this is difficult — it was much
simpler in the series of small and medium-sized houses in which my own youth was
spent — I was never far out of the reach of my mother’s voice, of the sense of her
presence, her approval or disapproval.
Anson’s first sense of his superiority came to him when he realized the respect that
was paid to him in the Connecticut village. The parents of the boys he played with
always inquired after his father and mother, and were excited when their own
children were asked to play with him in his parents’ house. He accepted this as the
natural state of things, and a sort of impatience with all groups of which he was not
the center — in money, in position, in authority — remained with him for the rest of
his life. He didn’t want to struggle with other boys for precedence — he expected it
to be given him freely, and when it wasn’t he withdrew into his family. His family was
enough for him.
At eighteen, Anson was tall and thick-set, with a clear complexion and a healthy color
from the ordered life had led in school. His hair was yellow and grew in a funny way
on his head, his nose was beaked — these two things kept him from being handsome
— but he had a confident charm, and the upper-class men who passed him on the
street knew without being told that he was a rich boy and had gone to one of the
best schools. Nevertheless, his very superiority kept him from being success in
college — the independence was mistaken for egotism, and the refusal to accept the
Yale standards with the proper awe seemed to belittle all those who had. So, long
before he graduated, he began to shift the center of his life to New York.
He was at home in New York — there was his own house with "the kind of servants
you can’t get any more" — and his own family, and the correct manly world of the
men’s clubs. His aspirations were conventional enough — they included even the decent girl he would some day marry.
He and I first met in the late summer of 1917 when he was out of Yale, and, like the
rest of us, was swept up into the hysteria of the war.