登陆注册
5380000000089

第89章

If one is doing something, I suppose one feels a certain strength within one to contradict it.But if one is idle, surely it is depressing to live, year after year, among the ashes of things that once were mighty.

If I were to remain here I should either become permanently 'low,'

as they say, or I would take refuge in some dogged daily work.""What work?"

"I would open a school for those beautiful little beggars;though I am sadly afraid I should never bring myself to scold them.""I am idle," said Rowland, "and yet I have kept up a certain spirit.""I don't call you idle," she answered with emphasis.

"It is very good of you.Do you remember our talking about that in Northampton?""During that picnic? Perfectly.Has your coming abroad succeeded, for yourself, as well as you hoped?""I think I may say that it has turned out as well as I expected.""Are you happy?"

"Don't I look so?"

"So it seems to me.But"--and she hesitated a moment--"I imagine you look happy whether you are so or not.""I 'm like that ancient comic mask that we saw just now in yonder excavated fresco: I am made to grin.""Shall you come back here next winter?"

"Very probably."

"Are you settled here forever?"

" 'Forever' is a long time.I live only from year to year.""Shall you never marry?"

Rowland gave a laugh." 'Forever'--'never!' You handle large ideas.

I have not taken a vow of celibacy."

"Would n't you like to marry?"

"I should like it immensely."

To this she made no rejoinder: but presently she asked, "Why don't you write a book?"Rowland laughed, this time more freely."A book!

What book should I write?"

"A history; something about art or antiquities.""I have neither the learning nor the talent."She made no attempt to contradict him; she simply said she had supposed otherwise."You ought, at any rate,"she continued in a moment, "to do something for yourself.""For myself? I should have supposed that if ever a man seemed to live for himself"--"I don't know how it seems," she interrupted, "to careless observers.

But we know--we know that you have lived--a great deal--for us."Her voice trembled slightly, and she brought out the last words with a little jerk.

"She has had that speech on her conscience," thought Rowland;"she has been thinking she owed it to me, and it seemed to her that now was her time to make it and have done with it."She went on in a way which confirmed these reflections, speaking with due solemnity."You ought to be made to know very well what we all feel.

Mrs.Hudson tells me that she has told you what she feels.Of course Roderick has expressed himself.I have been wanting to thank you too;I do, from my heart."

Rowland made no answer; his face at this moment resembled the tragic mask much more than the comic.But Miss Garland was not looking at him;she had taken up her Murray again.

In the afternoon she usually drove with Mrs.Hudson, but Rowland frequently saw her again in the evening.He was apt to spend half an hour in the little sitting-room at the hotel-pension on the slope of the Pincian, and Roderick, who dined regularly with his mother, was present on these occasions.Rowland saw him little at other times, and for three weeks no observations passed between them on the subject of Mrs.Hudson's advent.

To Rowland's vision, as the weeks elapsed, the benefits to proceed from the presence of the two ladies remained shrouded in mystery.Roderick was peculiarly inscrutable.

He was preoccupied with his work on his mother's portrait, which was taking a very happy turn; and often, when he sat silent, with his hands in his pockets, his legs outstretched, his head thrown back, and his eyes on vacancy, it was to be supposed that his fancy was hovering about the half-shaped image in his studio, exquisite even in its immaturity.He said little, but his silence did not of necessity imply disaffection, for he evidently found it a deep personal luxury to lounge away the hours in an atmosphere so charged with feminine tenderness.

He was not alert, he suggested nothing in the way of excursions (Rowland was the prime mover in such as were attempted), but he conformed passively at least to the tranquil temper of the two women, and made no harsh comments nor sombre allusions.

Rowland wondered whether he had, after all, done his friend injustice in denying him the sentiment of duty.

He refused invitations, to Rowland's knowledge, in order to dine at the jejune little table-d'hote; wherever his spirit might be, he was present in the flesh with religious constancy.

Mrs.Hudson's felicity betrayed itself in a remarkable tendency to finish her sentences and wear her best black silk gown.

Her tremors had trembled away; she was like a child who discovers that the shaggy monster it has so long been afraid to touch is an inanimate terror, compounded of straw and saw-dust, and that it is even a safe audacity to tickle its nose.

As to whether the love-knot of which Mary Garland had the keeping still held firm, who should pronounce?

The young girl, as we know, did not wear it on her sleeve.

She always sat at the table, near the candles, with a piece of needle-work.This was the attitude in which Rowland had first seen her, and he thought, now that he had seen her in several others, it was not the least becoming.

同类推荐
  • 老残游记

    老残游记

    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。
  • 山舍南溪小桃花

    山舍南溪小桃花

    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。
  • 上清天心正法

    上清天心正法

    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。
  • BRIDE OF LAMMERMOOR

    BRIDE OF LAMMERMOOR

    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 Unknown Guest

    The Unknown Guest

    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
  • 景定严州新定续志

    景定严州新定续志

    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。
  • 华严大意

    华严大意

    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。
  • 客窗闲话

    客窗闲话

    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。
  • 乱世风华

    乱世风华

    吴尔芬中国作家协会会员,厦门市作家协会副主席。获福建省政府百花文艺奖、厦门市政府文学艺术奖。出版长篇小说《雕版》、《九号房》、《姐妹》、《人皮鼓》,历史专著《厦门与台湾:交融共进》、《话说台湾地方文化根系中华》等。汀州——历练千年的历史名城。唐开元二十四年(公元七百三十六年)建汀州,从此,历经城垣变迁,古城汀州处万山之中,成为盛唐至清末历代州、郡、路、府的治所和闽西政治、经济、文化的中心。汀州——名扬天下的客家首府。自隋唐始,中原汉人为避战乱,筚路蓝缕以启山林,入闽粤蛮地,经千年繁衍,终于开创出一片举世瞩目的客家祖地。
  • 大乘遍照光明藏无字法门经

    大乘遍照光明藏无字法门经

    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。
  • 有思文丛:秘密呼喊自己的名字

    有思文丛:秘密呼喊自己的名字

    本书是小说家张楚的一本散文集,由“野草在唱歌”“窥书窥心”“风行水上”“人与事”4辑27篇文章组成。内容涉及对青年时代的回忆、对读书交友的回望、对创作历程的回顾;语言流畅平和,平和之中又饱含深情。
  • 妃誘

    妃誘

    一场饕餮盛宴,如狼般狠戾的尹王,如虎般霸气的楚皇,如狐狸般妖冶的风皇,如玉般温润的秦国太子…与这样的男人们展开纠缠,究竟是命中注定的灾难还是劫数…大婚之日,她花轿内失身、失声,沦为一群男人的玩物仅一夜,她的一切被剥夺绝望间,她听到冷峻残虐的男人轻笑:“死?”冷峻的眼,阴鸶的神情,慑人的戾气……及隐藏在眼底噬骨的仇恨:“不,我要你生、不、如、死。”是误会还是设计,他心爱的女人被众多乞丐凌辱,至此,他恨意入骨,她灾难开始……妤宁轻云,一个云淡风轻的女子,避其锋芒,掩其羽翼,只为过平淡的生活,可终是不得所愿…仅一夜,她便体会到了什么叫生不如死,可他却告诉她,这还仅仅是一个开始。究竟是低头认命,还是绝地反击,绽放傲世光芒?——等着吧,你们这群疯子,只要我活着,总有一天,我会将你们一个个千、刀、万、剐、★★★尹王,丰神俊美,冷峻残虐“对你,我只有恨,没有爱。”可午夜梦回,身侧女子冰冷的身体,微颤地耸动,意识迷蒙间的低声哭泣,成为他一生的劫数。★★★楚皇,狂妄霸气,残暴狠洌“女人,不过是男人手中的玩物,只需臣服既可。”可终究是谁征服了谁?★★★风皇,俊美妖冶,绝代风华“女人,我只要身,不要心。”可终究是谁为求一心,甘愿倾尽天下?★★★舒尘隐,绝色神医,谪仙美男★★★秦少阳,秦国太子,温润如玉......——————————领养列表:陌苍<由亲亲仲夏柒殇领养>凨飏阎<由亲亲聆听悲伤恋歌领养>秦少阳<由亲亲247066002领养>舒尘隐<由亲亲凝如烟领养>沐衿言<由亲亲越er领养>竺银&白雕<由亲亲gaosuziji领养>尹少卿<由亲亲夜月尘领养>——————————推荐小舞自己的文:《残疾总裁不离婚》结婚三年,等到离婚之时才开始同床共枕!(温馨宠文、完结)《一品皇后》艳阳天,人潮涌动!“知道么,今日元帝封的皇后,曾是云帝结发六年的皇妃!”(一生一世一双人)好友文文推荐:《我们的妻主是鬼后》
  • 神话时代来的人

    神话时代来的人

    沙加?阿释密达,在神话时代,作为海神波塞冬的身体,以人类的姿态降生。成年后,波塞冬的灵魂进入体内,继续神的生活。本书讲述的是,沙加在履行神的职责之前,即作为人类、还没有成年之前,参加猎人考试,被送到当代社会,开始现代人生活的故事。
  • 摩天岭的那个约定

    摩天岭的那个约定

    夜晚的天空夜晚的梦耀眼的星星曾经的约定,曾经的嬉闹他们一起追逐的欢乐、奔跑的汗水和努力的步伐以及许下的摩天岭誓言,也许在旁人看来微微一笑而已,但你所不知道的是,因为经历改变了他们……。
  • 迷茫魔法师与堕落者公会

    迷茫魔法师与堕落者公会

    被当做尸体卖给死灵法师后,身体中被种下了古代魔法的灵种。想要放弃生命的魔法训练兵也正因此,邂逅了一个宛如传说的杀手公会。相遇即是奇迹。在和杀手们的行动中,迷茫魔法师与命运相遇了。这只是一个简单的,关于成长的故事。