登陆注册
5459900000005

第5章 PREFACE.(5)

Let any man remember what ladies' society was when he had an opportunity of seeing them among themselves, as What-d'ye-call'im does in the Thesmophoria--(I beg pardon, I was on the verge of a classical allusion, which I abominate)--I mean at that period of his life when the intellect is pretty acute, though the body is small--namely, when a young gentleman is about eleven years of age, dining at his father's table during the holidays, and is requested by his papa to quit the dinner-table when the ladies retire from it.

Corbleu! I recollect their whole talk as well as if it had been whispered but yesterday; and can see, after a long dinner, the yellow summer sun throwing long shadows over the lawn before the dining-room windows, and my poor mother and her company of ladies sailing away to the music-room in old Boodle Hall. The Countess Dawdley was the great lady in our county, a portly lady who used to love crimson satin in those days, and birds-of-paradise. She was flaxen-haired, and the Regent once said she resembled one of King Charles's beauties.

When Sir John Todcaster used to begin his famous story of the exciseman (I shall not tell it here, for very good reasons), my poor mother used to turn to Lady Dawdley, and give that mystic signal at which all females rise from their chairs. Tufthunt, the curate, would spring from his seat, and be sure to be the first to open the door for the retreating ladies; and my brother Tom and I, though remaining stoutly in our places, were speedily ejected from them by the governor's invariable remark, "Tom and George, if you have had QUITE enough of wine, you had better go and join your mamma." Yonder she marches, heaven bless her! through the old oak hall (how long the shadows of the antlers are on the wainscot, and the armor of Rollo Fitz-Boodle looks in the sunset as if it were emblazoned with rubies)--yonder she marches, stately and tall, in her invariable pearl-colored tabbinet, followed by Lady Dawdley, blazing like a flamingo; next comes Lady Emily Tufthunt (she was Lady Emily Flintskinner), who will not for all the world take precedence of rich, vulgar, kind, good-humored Mrs. COLONEL Grogwater, as she would be called, with a yellow little husband from Madras, who first taught me to drink sangaree. He was a new arrival in our county, but paid nobly to the hounds, and occupied hospitably a house which was always famous for its hospitality--Sievely Hall (poor Bob Cullender ran through seven thousand a year before he was thirty years old). Once when I was a lad, Colonel Grogwater gave me two gold mohurs out of his desk for whist-markers, and I'm sorry to say I ran up from Eton and sold them both for seventy-three shillings at a shop in Cornhill. But to return to the ladies, who are all this while kept waiting in the hall, and to their usual conversation after dinner.

Can any man forget how miserably flat it was? Five matrons sit on sofas, and talk in a subdued voice:--

First Lady (mysteriously).--"My dear Lady Dawdley, do tell me about poor Susan Tuckett."

Second Lady.--"All three children are perfectly well, and I assure you as fine babies as I ever saw in my life. I made her give them Daffy's Elixir the first day; and it was the greatest mercy that I had some of Frederick's baby-clothes by me; for you know I had provided Susan with sets for one only, and really--"

Third Lady.--"Of course one couldn't; and for my part I think your ladyship is a great deal too kind to these people. A little gardener's boy dressed in Lord Dawdley's frocks indeed! I recollect that one at his christening had the sweetest lace in the world!"

Fourth Lady.--"What do you think of this, ma'am--Lady Emily, I mean? I have just had it from Howell and James:--guipure, they call it. Isn't it an odd name for lace! And they charge me, upon my conscience, four guineas a yard!"

Third Lady.--"My mother, when she came to Flintskinner, had lace upon her robe that cost sixty guineas a yard, ma'am! 'Twas sent from Malines direct by our relation, the Count d'Araignay."

Fourth Lady (aside).--"I thought she would not let the evening pass without talking of her Malines lace and her Count d'Araignay.

Odious people! they don't spare their backs, but they pinch their--"

Here Tom upsets a coffee-cup over his white jean trousers, and another young gentleman bursts into a laugh, saying, "By Jove, that's a good 'un!"

"George, my dear," says mamma, "had not you and your young friend better go into the garden? But mind, no fruit, or Dr. Glauber must be called in again immediately!" And we all go, and in ten minutes I and my brother are fighting in the stables.

If, instead of listening to the matrons and their discourse, we had taken the opportunity of attending to the conversation of the Misses, we should have heard matter not a whit more interesting.

First Miss.--"They were all three in blue crape; you never saw anything so odious. And I know for a certainty that they wore those dresses at Muddlebury, at the archery-ball, and I dare say they had them in town."

Second Miss.--"Don't you think Jemima decidedly crooked? And those fair complexions, they freckle so, that really Miss Blanche ought to be called Miss Brown."

Third Miss.--"He, he, he!"

Fourth Miss.--"Don't you think Blanche is a pretty name?"

First Miss.--"La! do you think so, dear? Why, it's my second name!"

Second Miss.--"Then I'm sure Captain Travers thinks it a BEAUTIFUL name!"

Third Miss.--"He, he, he!"

Fourth Miss.--"What was he telling you at dinner that seemed to interest you so?"

First Miss.--"O law, nothing!--that is, yes! Charles--that is,--Captain Travers, is a sweet poet, and was reciting to me some lines that he had composed upon a faded violet:--"'The odor from the flower is gone, That like thy--, like thy something, I forget what it was; but his lines are sweet, and so original too! I wish that horrid Sir John Todcaster had not begun his story of the exciseman, for Lady Fitz-Boodle always quits the table when he begins."

同类推荐
  • The Strength of the Strong and Other Stories

    The Strength of the Strong and Other Stories

    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。
  • 杜骗新书

    杜骗新书

    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。
  • 太上瑶台益算宝籍延年忏

    太上瑶台益算宝籍延年忏

    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。
  • 远山堂曲品

    远山堂曲品

    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。
  • 四阿含暮抄解

    四阿含暮抄解

    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
  • 太上通灵八史圣文真形图

    太上通灵八史圣文真形图

    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。
  • 如何与“麻烦的人”不麻烦的相处

    如何与“麻烦的人”不麻烦的相处

    在我们的日常交际中,时常会遇到爱抱怨的人、木讷的人、不讲诚信的人、行事拖沓的人,还有的人自私、狭隘、功利、猜忌、城府很深……我们把这样的人称为麻烦人。对于麻烦人,我们如果选择忍受,那么自己就会痛苦;如果选择逃避,又会感到孤独。本书从从古代历史与现实生活中取材,通过独特的角度去思考和揣摩麻烦人的心理特点,详细描述了我们与各种麻烦的人相处时遇到的种种麻烦,分析了产生这些麻烦的原因,并提出了与他们打交道的实用建议。翻开本书,看透麻烦人的本来面目,正视人性的弱点,理解和包容他们,增进彼此了解,从而与他们和谐共处。
  • 党的基本知识

    党的基本知识

    党的性质是党的本质特征集中而科学的体现,它指一个政党所固有的质的规定性。中国共产党第十八次全国代表大会通过的党章明确规定:“中国共产党是中国工人阶级的先锋队,同时是中国人民和中华民族的先锋队,是中国特色社会主义事业的领导核心,代表中国先进生产力的发展要求,代表中国先进文化的前进方向,代表中国最广大人民的根本利益。党的最高理想和最终目标是实现共产义。”这是对中国共产党的性质的集中概括。
  • 陕北爱情故事

    陕北爱情故事

    陕北黄土高原上,十八岁的女孩俞静,在退了父母介绍的婚姻之后,离开了小山村,来到了城市,开始了自己的奋斗和拼搏……
  • 伏魔祖师

    伏魔祖师

    一枚伏魔令让一个国家消失了,重新回来的国主要复仇?找不到主谋啊,还是先吃饱肚子修好仙养个娃儿吧。不过你这冰块脸跑过来作甚?帮我复仇?你确定?我以前是做的不对,可是我改了还不成吗?报仇啥的就算了吧。你确定不是你自己看不惯
  • 吾欲成凰

    吾欲成凰

    原名《重生最强女帝》前世,她灵根被挖,一心正道,却被判为邪魔妖道!重回少年之时,她力挽狂澜,逆天改命,前世欺她辱她之人,都将百倍奉还!自修血脉,重铸极品灵根!斩尽无赖族人,荣归第一望门!世间规矩不能束她分毫,这一世,她要杀出自己的正道!他是众人敬仰的神帝,高冷孤傲,却天天跟在她身后。
  • 饮酒误我还是再来一杯

    饮酒误我还是再来一杯

    看着面前的这坛百年仙酿,到底要不要喝,陈克一时犹豫不决。大师姐挑了挑眉威胁说:“你喝啊!”小师妹言笑晏晏柔声道:“师兄喝吧。”陈克左右为难,所以是饮酒误我,还是再来一杯?
  • 锦衣媚行之毒医嫡女

    锦衣媚行之毒医嫡女

    特工军医开启重生之眼,开膛破肚,缝皮接骨,银针在手,医治妙招我有!一针扎渣男作女,二针治锦绣江山,三针还我结发良夫!她就是要此一生锦衣媚行,还天下一个太平安宁!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 封骥

    封骥

    东风吹破少年梦,从此再无赤子心。大陆因长安而聚变。
  • 魔王的异世餐厅

    魔王的异世餐厅

    圣历1374年春,一百岁的三代魔王成年,在此之际,被魔族大总管丢出魔族领地。之后,一家餐厅在边境之城——黑角城落户了。