登陆注册
4716000000021

第21章

Cecilia returned to her scattered thoughts. They lay there still, with a gleam of sun from the low window smearing their importance;she felt somehow that it did not now matter very much whether she and Stephen, in the interests of science, saw that man fall from his balloon, or, in the interests of art, heard Herr von Kraaffe sing his Polish songs; she experienced, too, almost a revulsion in favour of tinned milk. After meditatively tearing up her note to Messrs. Rose and Thorn, she lowered the bureau lid and left the room.

Mounting the stairs, whose old oak banisters on either side were a real joy, she felt she was stupid to let vague, sordid rumours, which, after all, affected her but indirectly, disturb her morning's work. And entering Stephen's dressing-room she stood looking at his boots.

Inside each one of them was a wooden soul; none had any creases, none had any holes. The moment they wore out, their wooden souls were taken from them and their bodies given to the poor, whilst--in accordance with that theory, to hear a course of lectures on which a scattered thought was even now inviting her--the wooden souls migrated instantly to other leathern bodies.

Looking at that polished row of boots, Cecilia felt lonely and unsatisfied. Stephen worked in the Law Courts, Thyme worked at Art;both were doing something definite. She alone, it seemed, had to wait at home, and order dinner, answer letters, shop, pay calls, and do a dozen things that failed to stop her thoughts from dwelling on that woman's tale. She was not often conscious of the nature of her life, so like the lives of many hundred women in this London, which she said she could not stand, but which she stood very well. As a rule, with practical good sense, she kept her doubting eyes fixed friendlily on every little phase in turn, enjoying well enough fitting the Chinese puzzle of her scattered thoughts, setting out on each small adventure with a certain cautious zest, and taking Stephen with her as far as he allowed. This last year or so, now that Thyme was a grown girl, she had felt at once a loss of purpose and a gain of liberty. She hardly knew whether to be glad or sorry. It freed her for the tasting of more things, more people, and more Stephen;but it left a little void in her heart, a little soreness round it.

What would Thyme think if she heard this story about her uncle? The thought started a whole train of doubts that had of late beset her.

Was her little daughter going to turn out like herself? If not, why not? Stephen joked about his daughter's skirts, her hockey, her friendship with young men. He joked about the way Thyme refused to let him joke about her art or about her interest in "the people."His joking was a source of irritation to Cecilia. For, by woman's instinct rather than by any reasoning process, she was conscious of a disconcerting change. Amongst the people she knew, young men were not now attracted by girls as they had been in her young days. There was a kind of cool and friendly matter-of-factness in the way they treated them, a sort of almost scientific playfulness. And Cecilia felt uneasy as to how far this was to go. She seemed left behind.

If young people were really becoming serious, if youths no longer cared about the colour of Thyme's eyes, or dress, or hair, what would there be left to care for--that is, up to the point of definite relationship? Not that she wanted her daughter to be married. It would be time enough to think of that when she was twenty-five. But her own experiences had been so different. She had spent so many youthful hours in wondering about men, had seen so many men cast furtive looks at her; and now there did not seem in men or girls anything left worth the other's while to wonder or look furtive about. She was not of a philosophic turn of mind, and had attached no deep meaning to Stephen's jest--"If young people will reveal their ankles, they'll soon have no ankles to reveal."To Cecilia the extinction of the race seemed threatened; in reality her species of the race alone was vanishing, which to her, of course, was very much the same disaster. With her eyes on Stephen's boots she thought: 'How shall I prevent what I've heard from coming to Bianca's ears? I know how she would take it! How shall I prevent Thyme's hearing? I'm sure I don't know what the effect would be on her! I must speak to Stephen. He's so fond of Hilary.'

And, turning away from Stephen's boots, she mused: 'Of course it's nonsense. Hilary's much too--too nice, too fastidious, to be more than just interested; but he's so kind he might easily put himself in a false position. And--it's ugly nonsense! B. can be so disagreeable; even now she's not--on terms with him!' And suddenly the thought of Mr. Purcey leaped into her mind--Mr. Purcey, who, as Mrs. Tallents Smallpeace had declared, was not even conscious that there was a problem of the poor. To think of him seemed somehow at that moment comforting, like rolling oneself in a blanket against a draught. Passing into her room, she opened her wardrobe door.

'Bother the woman!' she thought. 'I do want that gentian dress got ready, but now I simply can't give it to her to do.'

同类推荐
  • 增广贤文

    增广贤文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 谈天

    谈天

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孙真人海上方

    孙真人海上方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大通方广忏悔灭罪庄严成佛经

    大通方广忏悔灭罪庄严成佛经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Who Cares

    Who Cares

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 棠倾月

    棠倾月

    “那位少侠,你好像是我喜欢的类型,我能追你吗?”最好不过豆蔻年华遇到一生所爱,司莫邪愿倒追他七年,为他生儿育女,原谅他的一切误会……可他却未感动一点……儿女不喜她,江湖不容她,天地也要灭她……“留你一命,当救赎回报天地吧!”月圆之夜,她生辰。一剑灭邪,他心冷。“尹方天,我恨你……”一剑如心,“我司莫邪不欠任何人。”魔族来犯世人才念司教主的勇猛,一方白棺天地才知尹尊主也会落泪……【本小说采用插叙和倒叙偏多,请注意分清时间。男女主正邪两强,各有各的原则,您不适请原谅。江湖恩怨为主线,牵扯过多剧情,请您耐心等候其他系列。】
  • 敖子逸0a

    敖子逸0a

    柒七【安柒(qi)七】:“爸妈,你们真是的,自己出去旅游把我丢给别人。”
  • 脚步

    脚步

    《诗歌集:脚步》为诗歌合集,其中包含天下觅景、京城览胜、故乡寻踪、心中有梦四个部分,每一首诗歌都是作者游览过的地方,有出名的有不出名的,作者通过游览景点,抒发自己的感想,表达自己对人生的感悟,道出一个个人生道理,读者不仅可以领略到每个景点的美丽风景,同时也对自己的生活有着些许帮助。
  • 诸天降临

    诸天降临

    神开启了诸天大逃杀游戏,随机被选中的人将会被送入战场,迎接来自诸天世界的杀戮者:半兽人,吸血鬼,外星入侵者,奥创机器人……或者被杀死。或者活下来,得到来自诸天世界的能力、武器、血脉以及黑科技。宿醉昏睡的叶垂,一觉醒来就发现自己来到了一个奇怪的地方,咦?地下有一把刀子,他刚捡起来转过身,就只听噗嗤一声,一个隐身的家伙撞到了他的刀子上——戴着魔戒的咕噜?恭喜你,你获得传奇物品,魔戒。叶垂:“???”……简单来说,这是一个开了隐身挂的老阴逼参加诸天大逃杀的故事……
  • 错爱成殇,总裁的娇蛮妻

    错爱成殇,总裁的娇蛮妻

    当我喜欢你的时候,你不稀罕我现在换你喜欢我,而我却早已不爱你了当爱已成殇,无论过往谁对谁错,孰是孰非,皆已不可追......夏涵,夏氏王国的公主,可惜世人皆说,她太会投胎,明明没颜值,没内涵,却含着金汤勺出生,在家有个妹控的高富帅大哥,在外有个颜值爆表,能力超群,让江城名媛千金梦寐以求的未婚夫——顾绍谦一场盛世婚礼缠住了两颗不在同一频率的心两年后一纸离婚协议书在江城炸开了锅……
  • 宋春归

    宋春归

    周南,一个普通职业者,无所谓宋粉,只是比较喜欢北宋那个繁华风流的、“有一切理由把世界上的其他地方仅仅看作蛮夷之邦”朝代,却在一次旅行中被穿越到了即将灭亡的辽国。耶律家大公主偏偏文静如处子,宋徽宗的小公主却桀骜如小马驹……经历种种曲折困苦后,终于扭转乾坤,在靖康耻的黑暗前夜,让北宋走向了另一条路,创造了一个更辉煌的巅峰盛世。
  • 七月情缘

    七月情缘

    "人与鬼的宿缘,不是前世的依恋,只是今生的依偎。既然前生没有与你牵手,就让此生不再错过。他许她的诺,今生不变,她诺他的誓言,只因为那一句:姑娘我爱你!宿命的安排,缘分的定数,重生后的命途,穿越后的宿命。即便上天无路,下地无门,只因为心中有彼此爱,心中爱彼此,路就在心里。"--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 红杏出墙记3:剪不断,理还乱

    红杏出墙记3:剪不断,理还乱

    本书讲的是一个20世纪30年代发生在江南的故事。情节跌宕起伏,峰回路转,语言流畅自如,灵动传神,体现了作家高超的技巧和天赋。
  • 白富美的艰辛爱情

    白富美的艰辛爱情

    她金手指与生俱来,颇为傲娇,而且有仇必报,略带女王公主病,就这样攻略了一个霸道男而已。但是这个攻略的过程,实在是太辛苦了,要不行,算了?
  • 不娇不惯富养女孩

    不娇不惯富养女孩

    本书语重心长地指出,对于女孩,父母可以给她爱,但是一定要有原则、理智地去爱。父母要充分认识女孩的性格特征、天赋和优势、缺陷与不足,并采取不同于男孩的培养方法,运用最契合女孩心理特征和成长规律的教育方式,才能培养出最优秀的女孩。富养不是娇生惯养,不是任意妄为,而是给孩子安静、平和、精致的生活,在这种健康的成长环境培养女孩的自信,让她从小懂得尊重他人,做一个有品位、有气质的独立女孩。