登陆注册
5238100000037

第37章 CHAPTER XIII(1)

NOT CURED YET

WE visited France, Germany, and Italy; and we were absent from England nearly two years. Had time and change justified my confidence in them? Was the image of Mrs. Van Brandt an image long since dismissed from my mind? No! Do what I might, I was still (in the prophetic language of Dame Dermody) taking the way to reunion with my kindred spirit in the time to come. For the first two or three months of our travels I was haunted by dreams of the woman who had so resolutely left me. Seeing her in my sleep, always graceful, always charming, always modestly tender toward me, I waited in the ardent hope of again beholding the apparition of her in my waking hours--of again being summoned to meet her at a given place and time. My anticipations were not fulfilled; no apparition showed itself. The dreams themselves grew less frequent and less vivid and then ceased altogether. Was this a sign that the days of her adversity were at an end? Having no further need of help, had she no further remembrance of the man who had tried to help her? Were we never to meet again? I said to myself: "I am unworthy of the name of man if I don't forget her now!" She still kept her place in my memory, say what I might. I saw all the wonders of Nature and Art which foreign countries could show me. I lived in the dazzling light of the best society that Paris, Rome, Vienna could assemble. I passed hours on hours in the company of the most accomplished and most beautiful women whom Europe could produce--and still that solitary figure at Saint Anthony's Well, those grand gray eyes that had rested on me so sadly at parting, held their place in my memory, stamped their image on my heart. Whether I resisted my infatuation, or whether I submitted to it, I still longed for her. I did all I could to conceal the state of my mind from my mother. But her loving eyes discovered the secret: she saw that I suffered, and suffered with me. More than once she said: "George, the good end is not to be gained by traveling; let us go home." More than once I answered, with the bitter and obstinate resolution of despair: "No. Let us try more new people and more new scenes." It was only when I found her health and strength beginning to fail under the stress of continual traveling that I consented to abandon the hopeless search after oblivion, and to turn homeward at last. I prevailed on my mother to wait and rest at my house in London before she returned to her favorite abode at the country-seat in Perthshire. It is needless to say that I remained in town with her. My mother now represented the one interest that held me nobly and endearingly to life. Politics, literature, agriculture--the customary pursuits of a man in my position--had none of them the slightest attraction for me. We had arrived in London at what is called "the height of the season." Among the operatic attractions of that year--I am writing of the days when the ballet was still a popular form of public entertainment--there was a certain dancer whose grace and beauty were the objects of universal admiration. I was asked if I had seen her, wherever I went, until my social position, as the one man who was indifferent to the reigning goddess of the stage, became quite unendurable. On the next occasion when I was invited to take a seat in a friend's box, I accepted the proposal; and (far from willingly) I went the way of the world--in other words, I went to the opera. The first part of the performance had concluded when we got to the theater, and the ballet had not yet begun. My friends amused themselves with looking for familiar faces in the boxes and stalls. I took a chair in a corner and waited, with my mind far away from the theater, from the dancing that was to come. The lady who sat nearest to me (like ladies in general) disliked the neighborhood of a silent man. She determined to make me talk to her.

同类推荐
  • 咏史

    咏史

    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。
  • 禅林僧宝传

    禅林僧宝传

    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。
  • 金刚顶普贤瑜伽大教王经大乐不空金刚萨埵一切时方成就仪

    金刚顶普贤瑜伽大教王经大乐不空金刚萨埵一切时方成就仪

    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。
  • THE POISON BELT

    THE POISON BELT

    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。
  • 王艮杂著

    王艮杂著

    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
  • 冰山总裁的小娇妻

    冰山总裁的小娇妻

    这是什么状况?就因为昨夜喝了点酒,怎么就。。。不管了。脑子好乱,一定要离开!........该死的女人,竟敢就这么走了,等我找到你一定要你好看!等等什么结婚?才一下飞机去公司报道,却出现了被我抛弃的?未婚夫?
  • 捡了块穿越石

    捡了块穿越石

    某天,赵启的手机意外下载了一个叫做‘穿越’的APP,然后身边开始接二连三地发生怪事,直到他捡到了一块神奇的石头。至此,他获得了都市和万界之间来回穿越的超能力。用地球的文化和科技在万界镇压四方。用万界得来的外挂装备,在现实走上另类异能者之路。
  • 管人用人要有“手腕”

    管人用人要有“手腕”

    手腕,是一种本领,一种能耐。如何管人用人历来是社会关注的焦点,因为在社会这个大的组织系统当中,除了最基层的群众,其他所有处于管理层次的人,都有自己的属下,都有一个如何处理与属下关系的问题。这个关系处理得好与坏,对于每一个管理者影响极大。因此,对于大多数人来说,管人,用人需要有本领、有能耐,即要有手腕。
  • 每天懂点买房风水学·居家装修学·生活创意学

    每天懂点买房风水学·居家装修学·生活创意学

    如果你手里有2000万以上,买房前可以不看这本书;如果你不介意装修后处处都是遗憾,装修前可以不看这本书;如果你家里有保姆为你收拾得窗明几净,你可以不看这本书!否则,这是你的必读书!
  • 梨园传奇:戏曲脸谱故事

    梨园传奇:戏曲脸谱故事

    浙江文艺出版社编著的《梨园传奇——戏曲脸谱故事》为山海经故事丛书中的一册,为我社早期山海经丛书的再版本。内容均以从民间搜集整理的传说故事为主,且各册都有一个核心的人物或主题,内容丰富,风格活泼,保留了很多的民间智慧,体现了民俗风情与历史面貌。《梨园传奇——戏曲脸谱故事》内容围绕海宁潮主题,将从民间搜集整理的传说故事进行整合。
  • 危机

    危机

    工作是嘉兴市中级法院的一名法官。已发表小说100万余字,散见于《小说选刊》、《中篇小说选刊》、《中国作家》、《江南》、《山花》、《百花洲》等期刊。
  • 我当驴友的诡异经历

    我当驴友的诡异经历

    我是一个野外探险俱乐部的驴友,在俱乐部里的代号是“玄子”。那天,我在论坛灌水帖子里发现了一个叫做“中国第一鬼村封门纪实录”的帖子,粗粗的看了一下点击率,才两千多。好奇心驱使下,我点开了论坛的帖子。中国第一鬼村封门村到底埋藏了什么秘密?1963年到1981年期间封门村到底发生了什么事情?村民们为何集体迁出?被勾起好奇心的我背上背包去鬼村探险,九死一生才回到城市。为了分享这个经历,我决定将这个故事告诉所有人……
  • 老李家的废柴

    老李家的废柴

    这是个关于能量的世界,背负着家族仇恨的痞子曾经的一代天才,让众多同龄都黯然。就在家人因为痞子而嘴笑得跟拉链似的时候,灾难降临,痞子一度沉睡,就这样浑浑噩噩的过了四年之久。“羽儿,醒醒”...“羽儿,醒醒”张绣一次次的呼唤,但是换来的只是整天的以泪洗面....突然有一天李羽醒来,可是随之而来的是阵阵的失落,自己已然为一个废人....
  • 巫庙

    巫庙

    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。
  • 让学生勤劳俭朴的故事

    让学生勤劳俭朴的故事

    一个最好的医生,一次昆虫长跑比赛,梦寐以求的金币,发愤努力的后进生,要拥有一颗坚强不屈的心,考拉尔和他的"思想者,使人心境平和的灵方,一个家庭主妇的梦想,魔鬼最有用的工具,一个种果树的农民和野兔。