登陆注册
5195600000184

第184章

'It is easy for me to leave all judgment in the matter to yourself, Miss--I beg your pardon; I know we have met; but for the moment Icannot recall your name.'

'Lady Georgina Betterton,' drawled the visitor carelessly, hiding whatever annoyance she may have felt.

Falconer bowed.Lady Georgina resumed.

'Of course it only affects myself; and I am willing to take the risk, notwithstanding the natural desire to stand well in the opinion of any one with whom even my boldness could venture such a step.'

A smile, intended to be playful, covered the retreat of the sentence.Falconer bowed again.Lady Georgina had yet again to resume.

'From the little I have seen, and the much I have heard of you--excuse me, Mr.Falconer--I cannot help thinking that you know more of the secret of life than other people--if indeed it has any secret.'

'Life certainly is no burden to me,' returned Falconer.'If that implies the possession of any secret which is not common property, Ifear it also involves a natural doubt whether such secret be communicable.'

'Of course I mean only some secret everybody ought to know.'

'I do not misunderstand you.'

'I want to live.You know the world, Mr.Falconer.I need not tell you what kind of life a girl like myself leads.I am not old, but the gilding is worn off.Life looks bare, ugly, uninteresting.Iask you to tell me whether there is any reality in it or not;whether its past glow was only gilt; whether the best that can be done is to get through with it as fast as possible?'

'Surely your ladyship must know some persons whose very countenances prove that they have found a reality at the heart of life.'

'Yes.But none whose judgment I could trust.I cannot tell how soon they may find reason to change their minds on the subject.Their satisfaction may only be that they have not tried to rub the varnish off the gilding so much as I, and therefore the gilding itself still shines a little in their eyes.'

'If it be only gilding, it is better it should be rubbed off.'

'But I am unwilling to think it is.I am not willing to sign a bond of farewell to hope.Life seemed good once.It is bad enough that it seems such no longer, without consenting that it must and shall be so.Allow me to add, for my own sake, that I speak from the bitterness of no chagrin.I have had all I ever cared--or condescended to wish for.I never had anything worth the name of a disappointment in my life.'

'I cannot congratulate you upon that,' said Falconer, seriously.

'But if there be a truth or a heart in life, assurance of the fact can only spring from harmony with that truth.It is not to be known save by absolute contact with it; and the sole guide in the direction of it must be duty: I can imagine no other possible conductor.We must do before we can know.'

'Yes, yes,' replied Lady Georgina, hastily, in a tone that implied, 'Of course, of course: we know all about that.' But aware at once, with the fine instinct belonging to her mental organization, that she was thus shutting the door against all further communication, she added instantly: 'But what is one's duty? There is the question.'

'The thing that lies next you, of course.You are, and must remain, the sole judge of that.Another cannot help you.'

'But that is just what I do not know.'

I interrupt Lady Georgina to remark--for I too have been a pupil of Falconer--that I believe she must have suspected what her duty was, and would not look firmly at her own suspicion.She added:

'I want direction.'

But the same moment she proceeded to indicate the direction in which she wanted to be directed; for she went on:

'You know that now-a-days there are so many modes in which to employ one's time and money that one does not know which to choose.The lower strata of society, you know, Mr.Falconer--so many channels!

I want the advice of a man of experience, as to the best investment, if I may use the expression: I do not mean of money only, but of time as well.'

'I am not fitted to give advice in such a matter.'

'Mr.Falconer!'

'I assure you I am not.I subscribe to no society myself--not one.'

'Excuse me, but I can hardly believe the rumours I hear of you--people will talk, you know--are all inventions.They say you are for ever burrowing amongst the poor.Excuse the phrase.'

'I excuse or accept it, whichever you please.Whatever I do, I am my own steward.'

'Then you are just the person to help me! I have a fortune, not very limited, at my own disposal: a gentleman who is his own steward, would find his labours merely facilitated by administering for another as well--such labours, I mean.'

'I must beg to be excused, Lady Georgina.I am accountable only for my own, and of that I have quite as much as I can properly manage.

It is far more difficult to use money for others than to spend it for yourself.'

'Ah!' said Lady Georgina, thoughtfully, and cast an involuntary glance round the untidy room, with its horse-hair furniture, its ragged array of books on the wall, its side-table littered with pamphlets he never read, with papers he never printed, with pipes he smoked by chance turns.He saw the glance and understood it.

'I am accustomed,' he said, 'to be in such sad places for human beings to live in, that I sometimes think even this dingy old room an absolute palace of comfort.--But,' he added, checking himself, as it were, 'I do not see in the least how your proposal would facilitate an answer to your question.'

'You seem hardly inclined to do me justice,' said Lady Georgina, with, for the first time, a perceptible, though slight shadow crossing the disc of her resolution.'I only meant it,' she went on, 'as a step towards a further proposal, which I think you will allow looks at least in the direction you have been indicating.'

She paused.

'May I beg of you to state the proposal?' said Falconer.

But Lady Georgina was apparently in some little difficulty as to the proper form in which to express her object.At last it appeared in the cloak of a question.

'Do you require no assistance in your efforts for the elevation of the lower classes?' she asked.

同类推荐
  • 本愿药师经古迹

    本愿药师经古迹

    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。
  • 己亥杂诗

    己亥杂诗

    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。
  • Days with Sir Roger de Coverley

    Days with Sir Roger de Coverley

    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。
  • 唱论

    唱论

    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。
  • 竹叶亭杂记

    竹叶亭杂记

    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
  • 字海寻趣

    字海寻趣

    《趣说中华字源、词源、句源:词海拾贝》以故事为载体,把词源融合在民风民俗、社会制度、审美情趣和思维习惯中,展现出词语丰富的内涵和持久的美丽,构建了一个由词语点缀的万花筒,让读者从中了解丰富的词语知识和文化。
  • 腹黑总裁的美女保镖

    腹黑总裁的美女保镖

    镜头一:稀里糊涂被夺去了初夜,始作俑者振振有词:“你强要了我,得对我负责!”“女人强要男人?说出去也没信”“女上男下式,还说不是?”。镜头二:“你到底喜欢我哪一点,我改还不行吗?”“我就是喜欢你不喜欢我,你改啊。”镜头三:“老公,我像什么呀?”“你像孙悟空。”“啊?我像只猴子?”“你永远逃不出我如来的手心。”
  • 耙耧系列Ⅰ

    耙耧系列Ⅰ

    作者通过描绘耙耧人的生存环境、生存状态和生命意识,揭示他们在现实生活中的诸多矛盾、苦闷、痛苦和挣扎,藉此寄寓自己的人生思考和忧患情绪。在这耙耧世界里,作者对于命运力量的阐释都具有双关性,它既是个人的,又是人类的;既是特殊的,又是普遍的。人物在毫无意义的挣扎、冲突后,最终仍陷入命运的网罗之中。
  • 形象

    形象

    一个娓娓道来的、关于这本旧书的奇特来源的故事。一种存在于绘画之中的,理想与现实的冲突。一场因为城市而起的失踪。一个异乡人倒霉的梦境。一次情绪低落时的追忆……它就是一段独白,同时也是十个严肃的玩笑。不能把它理解为几个分裂的故事,它们联系紧密;另外,请保持轻松状态,它从不“深入灵魂”。
  • 江湖听风录

    江湖听风录

    一段段离奇的江湖诡事,一个个多情的江湖儿女,刀剑交错间,是谁的泪晕染了那个江湖?(Q群:723861514)
  • 清代扬州盐商的诗酒风流

    清代扬州盐商的诗酒风流

    本书研究清代扬州盐商的诗文、戏剧活动;梳理其文学艺术活动的基本面貌和对地方文事活动的贡献,探究盐商作家文学创作的内在动机,重新认识、评价盐商文人群体的精神追求及其创作的社会价值、盐商作家的文化品格;探究商人群体与文人阶层的互动影响,揭示造就地域文化繁荣的特点、机制等。其中重点研究清初的盐商诗人孙枝蔚、雍乾和乾隆时期的盐商诗人马曰琯和马曰璐兄弟、乾隆时期以布衣交天子的盐商文学活动家江春等人的文学活动经历。
  • 清纱仙侣

    清纱仙侣

    几世轮回,换不回一个完整的你。作品上部分完结撒花,这不是终点,而是起点。
  • 小女巫训练营·魔帚之战

    小女巫训练营·魔帚之战

    五金杂货店里的魔钟滴答滴答地走着,魔帚骑手们学飞行的时间就要到了。正在接受女巫训练课程的小主人公杰西卡,此刻正盘腿坐在史崔格小姐五金杂货店里的柜台上。
  • 带着女帝玩穿越

    带着女帝玩穿越

    王宇死了,他需要完成各类位面的剧本任务。而他遇到的队友又是些什么人呢?一个来自高武世界的女帝,一个退伍特种兵。第一个剧本就遇到了白无常,玩我吧!
  • 最上大乘金刚大教宝王经

    最上大乘金刚大教宝王经

    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。