登陆注册
5297800000150

第150章 The Blind God.(1)

The Miss Mayhew that crossed the artist's threshold the following morning might have been taken as a model of graceful self-possession,but she disguised a maiden with as fluttering a heart and trembling a soul as ever faced one of the supreme moments of destiny.Her father,however,proved a faithful and intelligent ally,and his manner towards Van Berg was a fine blending of courtesy and dignity,suggesting a man as capable of conferring as of receiving favors.

His host would indeed have been blind and stupid if he had tried to patronize Mr.Mayhew that morning.

Although unconscious of the fact,Van Berg was for a time subjected to the closest scrutiny.Love had deep if not dark designs against him,and the glances he bent on Ida might suggest that he was only too ready to become a victim.He had welcomed to his study two conspirators who were committed to their plot by the strongest of motives,and yet they were such novel conspirators that a word,a glance,an expression even of "ennui"or indifference would have so touched their pride that they would have abandoned their wiles at every cost to themselves.Were they trying to ensnare him?

Never were such films and gossamer threads used in like entanglement before.He could have brushed them all away by one cold sweep of his eyes,and the maiden who had not scrupled at death to gain merely his respect,would have left the studio with a colder glance than his,nor would her womanly strength have failed her until she reached a refuge which his eye could not penetrate;but then--God pity her.The tragedies over which the angels weep are the bloodless wounds of the spirit.

But it would seem that the atmosphere of Van Berg's studio that summer morning was not at all conducive to tragedy of any kind,nor were there in his face or manner any indications of comedy,which to poor Ida would have been far worse;for an air of careless "bonhomie"on his part when she was so desperately in earnest would have made his smiles and jests like heartless mockery.

And yet,in spite of his manner the previous day,the poor girl had come to the studio fearing far more than she hoped,and burdened also with a troubled conscience.She was almost sure she was not doing right,and yet the temptation was too strong to be resisted.

But when he took her hand in greeting that morning,and said with a smile that seemed to flash out from the depths of his soul,"I won't hurt you any more if I can help it,"all scruples,all hesitancy vanished for a time,like frostwork in the sun.His magnetism was irresistible,and she felt that it would require all her tact and resolution to keep him by some careless,random word or act,from brushing aside the veil behind which shrank her trembling,and as yet,unsought love.

But Van Berg was even a rarer study than the maiden,and his manner towards both Ida and her father might well lead one to think that he was inclined to become the chief conspirator in the design against himself.He had scarcely been conscious of time or place since parting the previous day with the friend he was so bent on securing,and when at last he slept in the small hours of the morning he dreamt that he had been caught by a mighty tidal wave that was bearing him swiftly towards heaven on its silver crest.

When he awoke,the wave,so far from being a bubble,seemed a grand spiritual reality,and he felt as if he had already reached a seventh heaven of vague,undefined exhilaration.Never before had life appeared so rich a possession and so full of glorious possibilities.Never in the past had he felt his profession to be so noble and worthy of his devotion,and never had the fame he hoped to grasp by means of it seemed so near.Beauty became to him so infinitely beautiful and divine that he felt he could worship it were it only embodied,and then with a strange and exquisite thrill of exultation he exclaimed:"Right or wrong,to my eye it is embodied in Ida Mayhew,and she will fill my studio with light again to-day and many days to come.If ever an artist was fortunate in securing as a friend,as an inspiration,a perfect and budding flower of personal and spiritual loveliness,I am that happy man."The Van Berg of other days would have called the Van Berg that waited impatiently for his guests that morning a rhapsodical fool,and the greater part of the world would offer no dissent.The world is very prone to call every man who is possessed by a little earnestness or enthusiasm a fool,but it is usually an open question which is the more foolish--the world or the man;and perhaps we shall all learn some day that there was more of sanity in our rhapsodies than in the shrewd calculations that verged towards meanness.Be this as it may in the abstract,Van Berg regarded himself as the most rational man in the city that morning.He did not try to account for his mental state by musty and proverbial wisdom or long-established principles of psychology.The glad,strong consciousness of his own soul satisfied him and made everything appear natural.Since he HAD this strong and growing friendship for this maiden,who was evidently pleased to come again to his studio,though so coy and shy in admitting it,why should he not have it?There was nothing in his creed against such a friendship,and everything for it.

Men of talent,not to mention genius,had ever sought inspiration from those most capable of imparting it,and this girl's beauty and character were kindling his mind to that extent that he began to hope he could now do some of the finest work of his life.The fact that he felt towards her the strongest friendly regard was in itself enough,and Van Berg was too good a modern thinker to dispute with facts,especially agreeable ones.

同类推荐
  • Under Western Eyes

    Under Western Eyes

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典贫富部

    明伦汇编人事典贫富部

    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。
  • 杌近志

    杌近志

    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。
  • 吴逆始末记

    吴逆始末记

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典疾病部

    明伦汇编人事典疾病部

    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
  • 糖是怎样恋成的

    糖是怎样恋成的

    糖是恋成的,爱也是恋成的。当青涩傻丫头遇上腹黑钻石男,狗血乌龙剧正式上演!
  • 汉末之横扫三国

    汉末之横扫三国

    泽国江山入战图,生民何计乐樵苏。凭君莫话封侯事,一将功成万骨枯。我为黑山张燕,编练百万精兵;纵横天下逐鹿,横扫天下群雄!……
  • 诸天万界之房车

    诸天万界之房车

    一个无敌的房车,穿梭在诸天万界。科技,仙侠的汇集!有小说,动漫,幻想,仙侠世界,在穿越各个世界的过程中证那万古无双大帝!!!
  • 小鸣稿

    小鸣稿

    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。
  • 时光行者的你

    时光行者的你

    他说:“这世界上没人能够操控时间,而我们这类人唯一能做的,就是让时光更美的流淌。”——木浮生
  • 神医毒后太妖娆

    神医毒后太妖娆

    穿越之后的楚夕颜,为了将命运掌握在自己的手中,开始奋力反抗、步步谋划,一一揭开萧家的秘密,最后竟然发现自己的贴身婢女是前世的、重生后的楚夕颜……穿越撞上了重生,但这却并不是终点,因为还有隐藏的大boss出没……他说,与其命运被他人掌控,不如他来掌控别人的命运!可是,他却甘愿将自己的命运交到她的手上,是生、是死,是荣华、是淡泊,都由她……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 焚天神帝

    焚天神帝

    看着亲近之人在他面前倒下,他要让九天在剑下颤抖。
  • 爱情回归

    爱情回归

    菱果说:过客终究会擦身而过,你只是比别人多了次回眸!小米说:我减肥是为了给洪水一个机会,这么多年不管多大的水都冲不走我!叶子说:女人如水而我是一锅沸水,最擅长的是让人受伤而且是受内伤!李礼说:聪明的女人并不可怕,可怕的是聪明的女人还心狠手辣!辰宇说:戒爱比戒毒难多了!莎莎说:我活着的目的是为了赚钱,我赚钱的目的是为了赚更多的钱,结果我被钱给害死了!李源说:女人如同毒酒,虽有不同,但每一杯都是致命的!
  • 宠上甜辣小狂妻

    宠上甜辣小狂妻

    (咳咳,你肥皂掉了,偶巴!)叶南希楚楚可怜:“司徒易,你偷心偷的如此嗨皮,让我情何以堪?我可以弱弱的问一句,什么时候把我的心还给我吗?”司徒易霸气无比:“叶南希,你听好了,你的人是我的,心是我的,将来你孩子也是我的。还给你?我把我还给你好了!”叶南希有些委屈,但眼中却闪过狡黠之色:“嘻嘻,对付男人嘛,女人就要有办法才行!”叶南希心中暗笑!
  • 读菜根谭悟经典人生

    读菜根谭悟经典人生

    毛泽东曾说,嚼得菜根者百事可做,读懂一部《菜根谭》体味人生的百种滋味,就能做到“风斜雨急处,立得脚定。花浓柳艳处,着得眼高。路危径险处,回得头早。”的确,《菜根谭》可以帮助人们找到人生的方向,因为它将儒、释、道三家之精髓熔于一炉,并加之高妙的文字表达,深刻的展示了一种博大的文化视野和人生世路的锤炼。本书就是对《菜根谭》的深刻感悟,书中总结了为人处世之策略,求学问道之真假,功业政事之智慧,修身养性之要义,生死名利的玄妙,居家交友之心得。它通过充满审美情趣的佛教与道教思维方法,简单明了的语言,跌宕起伏的故事情节,传达出一种深刻的人生感悟,帮助人们破解人生中遇到的诸多难题。