登陆注册
5380000000039

第39章

The young girl, without casting a glance either at Roderick or at Rowland, looked about for a chair, and, on perceiving one, sank into it listlessly, pulled her poodle towards her, and began to rearrange his top-knot.Rowland saw that, even with her eyes dropped, her beauty was still dazzling.

"I trust we are at liberty to enter," said the elder lady, with majesty.

"We were told that Mr.Hudson had no fixed day, and that we might come at any time.Let us not disturb you."Roderick, as one of the lesser lights of the Roman art-world, had not hitherto been subject to incursions from inquisitive tourists, and, having no regular reception day, was not versed in the usual formulas of welcome.He said nothing, and Rowland, looking at him, saw that he was looking amazedly at the young girl and was apparently unconscious of everything else."By Jove!" he cried precipitately, "it 's that goddess of the Villa Ludovisi!" Rowland in some confusion, did the honors as he could, but the little old gentleman begged him with the most obsequious of smiles to give himself no trouble.

"I have been in many a studio!" he said, with his finger on his nose and a strong Italian accent.

"We are going about everywhere," said his companion.

"I am passionately fond of art!"

Rowland smiled sympathetically, and let them turn to Roderick's statue.

He glanced again at the young sculptor, to invite him to bestir himself, but Roderick was still gazing wide-eyed at the beautiful young mistress of the poodle, who by this time had looked up and was gazing straight at him.There was nothing bold in her look;it expressed a kind of languid, imperturbable indifference.

Her beauty was extraordinary; it grew and grew as the young man observed her.In such a face the maidenly custom of averted eyes and ready blushes would have seemed an anomaly;nature had produced it for man's delight and meant that it should surrender itself freely and coldly to admiration.

It was not immediately apparent, however, that the young lady found an answering entertainment in the physiognomy of her host;she turned her head after a moment and looked idly round the room, and at last let her eyes rest on the statue of the woman seated.

It being left to Rowland to stimulate conversation, he began by complimenting her on the beauty of her dog.

"Yes, he 's very handsome," she murmured."He 's a Florentine.

The dogs in Florence are handsomer than the people."And on Rowland's caressing him: "His name is Stenterello,"she added."Stenterello, give your hand to the gentleman."This order was given in Italian."Say buon giorno a lei."Stenterello thrust out his paw and gave four short, shrill barks;upon which the elder lady turned round and raised her forefinger.

"My dear, my dear, remember where you are! Excuse my foolish child,"she added, turning to Roderick with an agreeable smile.

"She can think of nothing but her poodle.""I am teaching him to talk for me," the young girl went on, without heeding her mother; "to say little things in society.

It will save me a great deal of trouble.Stenterello, love, give a pretty smile and say tanti complimenti!"The poodle wagged his white pate--it looked like one of those little pads in swan's-down, for applying powder to the face--and repeated the barking process.

"He is a wonderful beast," said Rowland.

"He is not a beast," said the young girl."A beast is something black and dirty--something you can't touch.""He is a very valuable dog," the elder lady explained.

"He was presented to my daughter by a Florentine nobleman.""It is not for that I care about him.It is for himself.

He is better than the prince."

"My dear, my dear!" repeated the mother in deprecating accents, but with a significant glance at Rowland which seemed to bespeak his attention to the glory of possessing a daughter who could deal in that fashion with the aristocracy.

Rowland remembered that when their unknown visitors had passed before them, a year previous, in the Villa Ludovisi, Roderick and he had exchanged conjectures as to their nationality and social quality.

Roderick had declared that they were old-world people; but Rowland now needed no telling to feel that he might claim the elder lady as a fellow-countrywoman.She was a person of what is called a great deal of presence, with the faded traces, artfully revived here and there, of once brilliant beauty.Her daughter had come lawfully by her loveliness, but Rowland mentally made the distinction that the mother was silly and that the daughter was not.The mother had a very silly mouth--a mouth, Rowland suspected, capable of expressing an inordinate degree of unreason.The young girl, in spite of her childish satisfaction in her poodle, was not a person of feeble understanding.

Rowland received an impression that, for reasons of her own, she was playing a part.What was the part and what were her reasons?

She was interesting; Rowland wondered what were her domestic secrets.

If her mother was a daughter of the great Republic, it was to be supposed that the young girl was a flower of the American soil;but her beauty had a robustness and tone uncommon in the somewhat facile loveliness of our western maidenhood.She spoke with a vague foreign accent, as if she had spent her life in strange countries.

The little Italian apparently divined Rowland's mute imaginings, for he presently stepped forward, with a bow like a master of ceremonies.

"I have not done my duty," he said, "in not announcing these ladies.

Mrs.Light, Miss Light!"

Rowland was not materially the wiser for this information, but Roderick was aroused by it to the exercise of some slight hospitality.

He altered the light, pulled forward two or three figures, and made an apology for not having more to show."I don't pretend to have anything of an exhibition--I am only a novice.""Indeed?--a novice! For a novice this is very well," Mrs.Light declared.

"Cavaliere, we have seen nothing better than this."The Cavaliere smiled rapturously."It is stupendous!" he murmured.

同类推荐
  • Lazarillo of Tormes

    Lazarillo of Tormes

    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。
  • 八关斋经

    八关斋经

    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。
  • 佐治药言

    佐治药言

    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。
  • 黄帝太乙八门入式秘诀

    黄帝太乙八门入式秘诀

    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。
  • 佛说树提伽经

    佛说树提伽经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 林家三少

    林家三少

    箫婉,就是随便跺跺脚,都会让整个东南亚震三震的大小姐。鬼使神差,情迷林家大公子林慕。为了待在他的身边,不惜与她的老爹翻脸。为了他的事业,她甘愿入娱乐圈,一步步登上天后巨星的位子。整整八年,陪在他的身边,最终换来他的一句,“我要订婚了!”她伤心欲绝,意外遇袭,身中数枪,魂归西天。再次醒来,灵魂附体,摇身一变,竟成为林家三“少”。命运捉弄,她重获新生,女扮男装,进入林家。她,重生归来,一改昔日温婉性子,再现她大小姐凶悍本色!相传林家三“少”差点把林二少给废了?相传林家三“少”一怒之下将林四少踹进了小黑屋?相传…从此,林家三“少”无人不知,悍名远扬。
  • 情似菩提爱如佛

    情似菩提爱如佛

    《成长密码:情似菩提爱如佛》由幸福开花;月亮的味道;用我的安分等着你;幸福不是单选题;幸福的结局;幸福就是将错就错六辑构成。主要包括:幸福开花;甜蜜的拖累;我听到了幸福的声音;抱你走过红地毯;找回我们的幸福;那个一直被嫌弃的人去了;幸福的爱没有终点;结婚十一年等构成。
  • 乱臣贼奴

    乱臣贼奴

    一个狼烟四起的地方...一个五国相互攻伐的世界...只身一人的少年,在这里一无所有...刀口舔血,苟且偷生...前路不知会走向何方...
  • 别让不懂拒绝害了你

    别让不懂拒绝害了你

    《别让不懂拒绝害了你》内容涵盖了生活方面和工作方面的各个情况和分析。如如何拒绝熟人的“帮忙”;如何拒绝上司的无条件“加班要求”;在面对他人的“厚脸皮”时,有哪几种拒绝艺术,不驳他人面子,又不使自己为难;如何把握与同事与上司之间的关系等。本书文字幽默、轻松,有深度。通过一个个故事和实例,手把手教我们如何真正做到“拒绝”。可以说,这是一本有关人际关系的书,一本有关如何轻松生活的书,一本有关如何真正做自己的书,还是一本有趣的故事书。
  • 花屿小记

    花屿小记

    张宗子早已在散文爱好者中负有盛名,气质雍容闲雅,冲淡飘逸,直追他的四百年前同名人张岱张宗子。《花屿小记》书名来自杜甫的诗句“花屿读书床”,收录了张宗子近年来的数十篇读书随笔。都是与读书有关的文字,有记人、记书的,有读书随感,有购书经历,有考证事物的,还有为前贤挑错的,还有类似传记或小说的文字,旁征博引,纵横捭阖,充满着人文的气质和深厚的功底,令人心旌神摇,美不胜收。
  • 少年侠(守卫者系列1)

    少年侠(守卫者系列1)

    本书讲述刘秀、张布、朱甫和班骠四个结义兄弟,合力推翻了暴君的统治,但在朝廷奸臣的奸计挑拨下反目为仇,只有皇帝刘秀活到了最后。五年后,刘秀的次子刘阳私自出宫,途中遇上土匪,幸而被同龄少女张小龙出手相救……
  • 茨里要找一个女朋友

    茨里要找一个女朋友

    茨里是一个在校大学生,为了找到女朋友,他决心去拜师,结果却陷入了一场骗局,误打误撞的遇到了自己喜欢的女生,而这个女生和他不在一个学校,为了追到自己喜欢的女生,他转校了。在学校认识了新的同学朋友,志同道合的他们组成一个队伍,集体追求属于自己的爱情,这样一个人的战斗变成了集体的战斗,谱写一个个激动人心的青春故事。
  • 剑寺

    剑寺

    天地有时尽,道法亦有缺。大道残缺,岂容成道?一片大陆,两种道则!不经一番血与难,哪能得见道真章。而在人体之内,分正经、奇经;正经十二、奇经有八,争鸣大陆的修真主流,乃是以十二正经为主,少年甘亥无意中得知以奇经八脉为主的功法,引人追逐,生死之间的磨练,由此踏上了他的修真之旅……
  • 末日猎魔记

    末日猎魔记

    丧尸,异怪,异兽,进化人,主人公历经艰险,获得逆天技能,干倒了女神,给地球末日带来了一线希望!
  • 北风扬沙录

    北风扬沙录

    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。