登陆注册
20044300000058

第58章 CHAPTER XIII(2)

But originally you were of the opinion that you had enthusiasms enough for two, and that my lack of them would redress the balance, so to speak. I thought it was a very logical opinion then, and, from my own point of view, I think so now. But if it does not work in practice, at least the responsibility of defending it is not mine.""Delightful!" cried Celia, smiling gayly as she put down her cup again. "You are the only woman I've ever known who was worth arguing with. The mere operation makes me feel as if I were going through Oxford--or passing the final Jesuit examinations. Heaven knows, I would get up arguments with you every day, for the pure enjoyment of the thing--if I weren't eternally afraid of saying something that would hurt your feelings, and then you wouldn't tell me, but would nurse the wound in silence in the dark, and I should know that something was wrong, and have to watch you for weeks to make out what it was--and it would all be too unhappy.

But it comes back, you see, to what I said before.

You don't tell me things!"

Edith smiled in turn, affectionately enough, but with a wistful reserve. "It is a constitutional defect--even national, according to you. How shall I hope to change, at this late day? But what is it you want me to tell you?--I forget.""The Russian thing. To go to Vienna, where we get our passports, and then to Cracow, and through to Kief, which they say is awfully well worth while--and next Moscow--and so on to St. Petersburg, in time to see the ice break up. It is only in winter that you see the characteristic Russia: that one has always heard.

With the furs and the sledges, and the three horses galloping over the snow--it seems to me it must be the best thing in Europe--if you can call Russia Europe.

That's the way it presents itself to me--but then I was brought up in a half-Arctic climate, and I love that sort of thing--in its proper season. It is different with you.

In England you don't know what a real winter is.

And so I have to make quite sure that you think you would like the Russian experiment."The other laughed gently. "But if I don't know what a real winter is, how can I tell whether I will like it or not? All I do know is that I am perfectly willing to go and find out. Oh yes--truly--I should like very much to go."Miss Madden sighed briefly. "All right," she said, but with a notable absence of conviction in her tone.

A space of silence ensued, as she opened and glanced through another note, the envelope of which had borne no postmark.

She pouted her lips over the contents of this missive, and raised her eyebrows in token of surprise, but as she laid it down she looked with a frank smile at her companion.

"It's from our young friend," she explained, genially--"the painter-boy--Mr. D'Aubigny. It is to remind me of a promise he says I made--that when I came to London he should paint my portrait. I don't think I promised anything of the kind--but I suppose that is a detail.

It's all my unfortunate hair. They must have gone by this time--they were to go very early, weren't they?"Lady Cressage glanced at the clock. "It was 8:40, I think--fully half an hour ago," she answered, with a painstaking effect of indifference.

"Curious conglomeration"--mused the other. "The boy and girl are so civilized, and their uncle is so rudimentary.

I'm afraid they are spoiling him just as the missionaries spoil the noble savage. They ought to go away and leave him alone. As a barbarian he was rather effective--but they will whitewash him and gild him and make a tame monstrosity of him. But I suppose it's inevitable.

Having made his fortune, it is the rule that he must set up as a gentleman. We do it more simply in America.

One generation makes the fortune, and leaves it to the next generation to put on the frills. My father, for example, never altered in the slightest degree the habits he formed when he was a poor workman. To the day of his death, blessed old man, he remained what he had always been--simple, pious, modest, hard-working, kindly, and thrifty--a model peasant. Nothing ever tempted him a hair's-breadth out of the path he had been bred to walk in.

But such nobility of mind and temper with it all! He never dreamed of suggesting that I should walk in the same path.

From my earliest childhood I cannot remember his ever putting a limitation upon me that wasn't entirely sensible and generous. I must have been an extremely trying daughter, but he never said so; he never looked or acted as if he thought so.--But I never stop when I begin talking of my father.""It's always very sweet to me to hear you talk of him,"Lady Cressage put in. "One knows so few people who feel that way about their fathers!"Celia nodded gravely, as if in benevolent comment upon something that had been left unsaid. The sight of the young artist's note recalled her earlier subject.

"Of course there is a certain difference," she went on, carelessly,--"this Mr. Thorpe is not at all a peasant, as the phrase goes. He strikes one, sometimes, as having been educated.""Oh, he was at a public school, Lord Plowden tells me,"said the other, with interest. "And his people were booksellers--somewhere in London--so that he got a good smattering of literature and all that. He certainly has more right to set up as a gentleman than nine out of ten of the nouveaux riches one sees flaunting about nowadays.

And he can talk very well indeed--in a direct, practical sort of way. I don't quite follow you about his niece and nephew spoiling him. Of course one can see that they have had a great effect upon him. He sees it himself--and he's very proud of it. He told me so, quite frankly.

But why shouldn't it be a nice effect?"

"Oh, I don't know," Celia replied, idly. "It seemed to me that he was the kind of piratical buccaneer who oughtn't to be shaved and polished and taught drawing-room tricks--Ifeel that merely in the interest of the fitness of things.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 罪恶征程

    罪恶征程

    谁说猪都是丑陋的?谁说人都是唯美的?天啊,这一天竟然真的来了!动物当家做主,人类任人刀俎。素食主义者成为了至高无上的存在,化作人形的动物恶灵们与人越像就越拥有着超强的能力!美女可能不是美女,她可能是猪,可能是兔,也可能是狐狸,更可能是令人垂涎的凤凰......强大的敌人不一定是猛兽的化身,也可能是区区一只老鼠,一只鹦鹉!这样的世界里面,依旧存在着纷争,烧杀掠夺不断,正义与邪恶丛生,或许人并不是最狠心的,或许世界原本就是这个样子的。有生物的地方,就有这个规律,物竞天择,亘古不变,善良的终点终究是嗜杀成性的开端。在这混沌不清的地方,你的眼睛,能看的多远?一起来吧,与猪、牛、羊对抗,征服世界!
  • 我主万宇

    我主万宇

    问苍茫大地,谁主沉浮?大千世界,万族林立,诸圣争霸,群雄荟萃!少年挥剑而出,一笑动乾坤,一怒破苍穹!弹指间风云变幻,天翻地覆!大道争锋,主宰万宇!
  • 影徒

    影徒

    穿越而来的少年无意中目睹了一起凶杀。而自己与被杀者达成协议,用他的身体,换取凶手的性命。——他成为了一名刺客。当他拿起刀,他必须做出选择。他得学会面对死亡,面对阴影。成为阴影之徒。他的敌人不仅是那名凶手,还有来自深渊地狱的恶魔……“我们行走在阴影之中。我们没有伙伴,没有亲人,没有值得信任的人,也不会有人来信任我们。我们身披暗影,脚踏夜幕。唯一能依靠的只有手中的刀。“我们没有心,因为我们不会为了正义或是邪恶而行事。我们不会因正义而停下手中的屠刀,也不会因邪恶放弃前行的脚步。刺客在成为刺客的第一天开始就必须丢掉自己的良心,因为你永远不知道,你杀的下一个人到底是一个好人还是一个坏人。”
  • 王庆林中医世家经验辑要

    王庆林中医世家经验辑要

    本书分“家传史略”、“学术研究”、“临床经验”、“医案医话”四个部分对中医名家姚树锦等五位当代世家的学术及临床经验,进行了系统性的整理和研究。
  • 奇异世界的冒险

    奇异世界的冒险

    我所住的这条狭窄的街道叫光明路,这条街上的老蒋生在五十年代,是个底层的老百姓,我不知道他是什么时候变成吸血鬼的,后来我和他在干田张三哥的山庄里钓鱼,他才跟我说起这个秘密,他说他之所以会成为吸血鬼一族完全是个意外……
  • 租个小妾来回家

    租个小妾来回家

    他说刻上他的印记,这辈子就是他的人,可她等到的却是一具熟悉而又模糊的尸体……他是她的相公费青帆,爱她疼她,却最终将她典租给王爷做妾,为期两年。他是租夫九王爷,为她这样一个传言“残花败柳、不会下蛋、姿色平平、脾气极坏”的女子出手阔绰;租妻成妾,一生质变。
  • 天兮苍苍

    天兮苍苍

    天兮苍苍,九霄。地兮茫茫,五洲。在这王朝林立,道门逐鹿的时代,今古无数布局后手浮现,谁能绝尘而出,羽化成仙?
  • 末世我为王

    末世我为王

    由于外星球研究物品,无良的外星人跑来地球做研究,导致爆炸,大量辐射外泄,笼罩地球,一瞬间全地球动物变异!“骚年,我赐予你拯救地球的实力!”某外星人一本正经的说道。“叫你随便乱放东西进去!”说着,女外星人揍了那个外星人一拳。“啊?啊!”某男的声音响彻天边。
  • 九号半传奇

    九号半传奇

    所谓“九号半”——介于前腰的10号,和中锋的9号之间的队员。慕容楠是一个资深球迷,也是业余球员,他知道自己爱足球,一辈子都舍弃不了足球,既然老天爷给了自己重新再活一次的机会,那便尽我所能,成为世界上最好的球员,让足球这项运动在华夏大地上绽放出最耀眼的光芒。左树声:男子汉就要踢足球。比尔·香克利:足球无关生死,但足球高于生死。本书讲述的就是:一个男子汉燃烧了整个生命来踢足球的故事。当慕容楠一次次倒下,又一次次站起的时候,他说:这就是男子汉的浪漫。当慕容楠功成名就之时,他把鲜花和掌声、钞票和美女,通通置之脑后,对所有人说:那些都是你们的,但足球是我的。这就是足球的骄傲!本文没有所谓的升级系统,也没有各式各样的超能力,有的只是——梦想、坚持、热血以及对足球的爱。
  • 妃你莫属:王爷请娶我

    妃你莫属:王爷请娶我

    他是王爷了怎么了,只要她喜欢,他就得娶她,什么公主什么圣女,她都不要管,因为爱上了,谁也不能来阻止,哪怕是父王母后,哪怕是王公大臣,哪怕是三纲五常,只要她喜欢就够了,只要他答应就够了,爱是两个人的事,就算真的到了那个时候,她会嫁的,但那人必须是…