登陆注册
5217500000003

第3章 HOW HE LIED TO HER HUSBAND(1)

It is eight o'clock in the evening.The curtains are drawn and the lamps lighted in the drawing room of Her flat in Cromwell Road.Her lover,a beautiful youth of eighteen,in evening dress and cape,with a bunch of flowers and an opera hat in his hands,comes in alone.The door is near the corner;and as he appears in the doorway,he has the fireplace on the nearest wall to his right,and the grand piano along the opposite wall to his left.Near the fireplace a small ornamental table has on it a hand mirror,a fan,a pair of long white gloves,and a little white woollen cloud to wrap a woman's head in.On the other side of the room,near the piano,is a broad,square,softly up-holstered stool.The room is furnished in the most approved South Kensington fashion:that is,it is as like a show room as possible,and is intended to demonstrate the racial position and spending powers of its owners,and not in the least to make them comfortable.

He is,be it repeated,a very beautiful youth,moving as in a dream,walking as on air.He puts his flowers down carefully on the table beside the fan;takes off his cape,and,as there is no room on the table for it,takes it to the piano;puts his hat on the cape;crosses to the hearth;looks at his watch;puts it up again;notices the things on the table;lights up as if he saw heaven opening before him;goes to the table and takes the cloud in both hands,nestling his nose into its softness and kissing it;kisses the gloves one after another;kisses the fan:gasps a long shuddering sigh of ecstasy;sits down on the stool and presses his hands to his eyes to shut out reality and dream a little;takes his hands down and shakes his head with a little smile of rebuke for his folly;catches sight of a speck of dust on his shoes and hastily and carefully brushes it off with his handkerchief;rises and takes the hand mirror from the table to make sure of his tie with the gravest anxiety;and is looking at his watch again when She comes in,much flustered.As she is dressed for the theatre;has spoilt,petted ways;and wears many diamonds,she has an air of being a young and beautiful woman;but as a matter of hard fact,she is,dress and pretensions apart,a very ordinary South Kensington female of about 37,hopelessly inferior in physical and spiritual distinction to the beautiful youth,who hastily puts down the mirror as she enters.

HE [kissing her hand]At last!

SHE.Henry:something dreadful has happened.

HE.What's the matter?

SHE.I have lost your poems.

HE.They were unworthy of you.I will write you some more.

SHE.No,thank you.Never any more poems for me.Oh,how could Ihave been so mad!so rash!so imprudent!

HE.Thank Heaven for your madness,your rashness,your imprudence!

SHE [impatiently]Oh,be sensible,Henry.Can't you see what a terrible thing this is for me?Suppose anybody finds these poems!

What will they think?

HE.They will think that a man once loved a woman more devotedly than ever man loved woman before.But they will not know what man it was.

SHE.What good is that to me if everybody will know what woman it was?

HE.But how will they know?

SHE.How will they know!Why,my name is all over them:my silly,unhappy name.Oh,if I had only been christened Mary Jane,or Gladys Muriel,or Beatrice,or Francesca,or Guinevere,or something quite common!But Aurora!Aurora!I'm the only Aurora in London;and everybody knows it.I believe I'm the only Aurora in the world.And it's so horribly easy to rhyme to it!Oh,Henry,why didn't you try to restrain your feelings a little in common consideration for me?Why didn't you write with some little reserve?

HE.Write poems to you with reserve!You ask me that!

SHE [with perfunctory tenderness]Yes,dear,of course it was very nice of you;and I know it was my own fault as much as yours.I ought to have noticed that your verses ought never to have been addressed to a married woman.

HE.Ah,how I wish they had been addressed to an unmarried woman!

How I wish they had!

SHE.Indeed you have no right to wish anything of the sort.They are quite unfit for anybody but a married woman.That's just the difficulty.What will my sisters-in-law think of them?

HE [painfully jarred]Have you got sisters-in-law?

SHE.Yes,of course I have.Do you suppose I am an angel?

HE [biting his lips]I do.Heaven help me,I do--or I did--or [he almost chokes a sob].

SHE [softening and putting her hand caressingly on his shoulder]

Listen to me,dear.It's very nice of you to live with me in a dream,and to love me,and so on;but I can't help my husband having disagreeable relatives,can I?

HE [brightening up]Ah,of course they are your husband's relatives:I forgot that.Forgive me,Aurora.[He takes her hand from his shoulder and kisses it.She sits down on the stool.He remains near the table,with his back to it,smiling fatuously down at her].

SHE.The fact is,Teddy's got nothing but relatives.He has eight sisters and six half-sisters,and ever so many brothers--but Idon't mind his brothers.Now if you only knew the least little thing about the world,Henry,you'd know that in a large family,though the sisters quarrel with one another like mad all the time,yet let one of the brothers marry,and they all turn on their unfortunate sister-in-law and devote the rest of their lives with perfect unanimity to persuading him that his wife is unworthy of him.They can do it to her very face without her knowing it,because there are always a lot of stupid low family jokes that nobody understands but themselves.Half the time you can't tell what they're talking about:it just drives you wild.

There ought to be a law against a man's sister ever entering his house after he's married.I'm as certain as that I'm sitting here that Georgina stole those poems out of my workbox.

HE.She will not understand them,I think.

SHE.Oh,won't she!She'll understand them only too well.She'll understand more harm than ever was in them:nasty vulgar-minded cat!

HE [going to her]Oh don't,don't think of people in that way.

同类推荐
  • 除恐灾患经

    除恐灾患经

    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。
  • 陆清河集

    陆清河集

    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。
  • 大学章句集注

    大学章句集注

    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。
  • 坛溪梓舟船禅师语录

    坛溪梓舟船禅师语录

    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。
  • 北京梨园金石文字录

    北京梨园金石文字录

    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
  • 大汉三合明珠宝剑全传

    大汉三合明珠宝剑全传

    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。
  • 天昏地觉

    天昏地觉

    天地九州,各有其幽,万古道统,吾辈长修!
  • 第一等弃妃

    第一等弃妃

    正经版当二十一世纪的顶尖杀手,一朝穿越,变成被人抓奸在床的可怜小弃妇。当古代封建的冷血王爷,老马失蹄,被昔日呆傻的弃妃用刀抵在咽喉。究竟谁,才是真正隐藏不露的高手?“妈的,再敢对老娘说脏话,小心割了你的舌头!”*“果真是不知廉耻的贱人,居然在光天化日之下与人苟合,给本王滚出王府。”男子冷冷的望着躺在床上,只穿了一件肚兜的女人。“王爷,你这是要休了臣妾啊,那臣妾以后可怎么活啊!”女人眼珠一转,随即哭哭啼啼的拉住男子的衣袖,顺便揩了把鼻涕和眼泪。男子嫌恶的一手将她推开,“残花败柳!稍后本王自会差人将休书和嫁妆送来,收拾东西,立刻滚出去。”大袖一挥,头也不回的走了。再次相见,他却错愕当场,这真是她那胆小愚笨,唯唯诺诺以七出之“淫”,惨遭休弃的女子吗?“来人,将这贱人的嫁妆抬过来。”男子冷笑,一张休书也顺便扔在了她的脚下。躺在贵妃椅上的女人缓缓起身,盈盈一笑,霎时风华万千,“谢王爷赐下休书。实不相瞒,本小姐实在是求之不得啊。不过我还得提醒王爷一件事,我不叫贱——人,我叫孟如药;或者,我可以理解成王爷认为我是个人见人爱的女人?”男子怔在当场,这还是他那唯唯诺诺的小妻子吗,怎么倒像个十足的刁妇?不等男子回答,她便叫上丫鬟,旁若无人的打开箱子,霎时宝光四溢,“小绿,跟本小姐一起点点,看看有没有少了什么?”男子额头青筋暴起,咬着牙狠狠说道:“本王还不至于穷到那种地步,去贪图一个女人的财物。”“那可不一定,知人知面,不知心嘛。”红唇轻启,话中不留半点情意。下一秒,男子彻底暴走。等他幡然悔悟,想要重拾旧爱,却发现,她的身边,已经站着一个恍如谪仙般的男子。她的身边,再也容不下他的位置。二逼版司空南哀怨的看着某人:药药,你到底什么时候才肯嫁给我?孟如药冷冷一笑:想要我嫁给你,除非天上没了太阳和月亮。司南抬头看天,顿时狂喜:你的意思是,只要一阴天,你就嫁给我咯?!孟如药:......去屎。**寺庙旁,司空未站在庙门前,高举着“回头是岸”横幅,大声喊道:施主看这里!马车内男子撩帘笑骂道:白痴!随即马车加快速度,10秒之后,碰撞惨叫坠落声接连传来。司空未转头,疑惑的对孟如药说:“药药,咱们是不是直接写“前方桥梁已断”好一些’?孟如药老僧入定,意味不明一笑:不用,佛曰,早死早超生。他们不入地狱,难道我入地狱?**
  • 桃花乱:倾世王妃太惹火

    桃花乱:倾世王妃太惹火

    她穿越而来,坚强而又固执。可是在她褪掉她的坚强的伪装,有了他的孩子之后,他却留恋于新欢,让她独守空房,还多疑的怀疑她的孩子不是他的。一怒之下,在寒冰的腊月,拿起一桶冰水当头而下。孩子,爱情,记忆,都随之而去。最主要的还是让一个妖孽的男人拐骗到了另一个国家。开始了没有从前的生活……丹药塑身,苦心学武,重新创出一片辉煌。
  • 平民王后

    平民王后

    “懒猪起床,懒猪起床!懒……猪……”闪电般,一条纤细的手臂自被子里探出,打蟑螂似的猛然拍下不停叫嚣的闹钟,再轻轻一弹将闹钟推入绝崖峭壁底下,而后,「凶」手悄悄缩回被子里去。又过了半会,被子才慢吞吞的一点一点的移开。一张半梦半醒,睡眼惺忪的可爱娃娃脸慢慢露出,可爱的萝莉娃娃脸顶着蓬蓬松松的乱发慢慢的坐了起来,一手在干瘪瘪的无肉的胸前抓了抓。然后她又茫然呆坐着,不知……
  • 拳道神宗

    拳道神宗

    诸神黄昏之后,一道神光降临“微尘国土”……一代剑修天才全身修为尽废,得遇奇缘,进而从拳法之中开辟出属于自己的道路在这个过度依赖器具的修真世界里,仅凭自己的双拳,他是否能够石破惊天?威胁,阴谋,谎言……一个又一个设局如套娃一般投向这位少年,他又该如何避开重重要害,突破这被人掌控的人生呢?这天地间,有一道桎梏,一道坚不可摧的桎梏。少年郎,你是否能握起那双属于你自己的拳头,去挑战、去冲击、去打破这层桎梏呢?预知后事如何,请您麻溜儿地进来慢慢观赏本瞎(小)说咧~
  • 创造生活的科技文明

    创造生活的科技文明

    科学技术渗透到生活的每一个角落,不仅方便了我们的生活,也促使着社会的不断发展和变化。本书选取了对于人类发展过程中具有重要意义的一些科技发明,以通俗的语言和简单的故事方式进行讲述。我们不仅应该认识到科技的重要性,还应该努力学习科学技术,要热爱科学,尊重科学。
  • 帝玉封神

    帝玉封神

    得‘帝玉’者,便能掌控天地万物,日月星辰,可倒转乾坤,时空穿梭,改变过往未来;一切规则尽归于其中...得帝玉者便是世界之主,再无神衰之日,身躯永生不朽,神识不死不灭。
  • 后来不再来

    后来不再来

    后来,我们总算学会了如何去爱,可是有些事早已远去消失在人海。本书讲述了发生在水沥二中的青春励志和疼痛故事。性格开朗的杜若与沉默寡言的苏霖,默默守护杜若的简辰乐,杜若的生死之交沈依一,以及其他性格各异的男女生。故事围绕着这些青春少年,书写了最难忘,最热血的高中三年。
  • 紫夜吟

    紫夜吟

    三百年前,被兄弟与爱人出卖,葬身龙腹;三百年后从龙腹出来,却已是物是人非,战乱纷纷。曾经显耀一时的皇族太子,变成了一个无处可归的漂泊浪人。面对爱恨情仇的纠缠、战争的践踏与压迫,这位天性乐观开朗却把痛苦深埋心底的落魄太子,将何去何从?是顺从命运安排?还是逆流而上、把握命运?是浑浑噩噩、安于现状?还是努力探求、追寻那神秘的亘古传奇?面对民不聊生的战火,是奋起抗争?还是冷眼旁观?他的生命将走向何方......