登陆注册
5592400000014

第14章

"Oh! Conscientious as well as aesthetic. I see. And does Mr. Mavering put his artistic temperament into them?""His father does. He's a very interesting man. He has the best taste in certain things--he knows more about etchings, I suppose, than any one else in Boston.""Is it possible! And does he live at Ponkwasset Falls? It's in Rhode Island, isn't it?""New Hampshire. Yes; the whole family live there.""The whole family? Are there many of them? I'd fancied, somehow, that Mr. Mavering was the only----Do tell me about them, Etta," said Mrs.

Pasmer, leaning back in her chair, and fanning herself with an effect of impartial interest, to which the dim light of the room lent itself.

"He's the only son. But there are daughters, of course--very cultivated girls.""And is he--is the elder Mr. Mavering a--I don't know what made me think so--a widower?""Well, no--not exactly."

"Not exactly! He's not a grass-widower, I hope?""No, indeed. But his wife's a helpless invalid, and always has been.

He's perfectly devoted to her; and he hurried home yesterday, though he wanted very much to stay for Commencement. He's never away from her longer than he can help. She's bedridden; and you can see from the moment you enter it that it's a man's house. Daughters can't change that, you know.""Have you been there?" asked Mrs. Pasmer, surprised that she was getting so much information, but eager for more. "Why, how long have you known them, Etta?""Only since Dan came to Harvard. Mr. Saintsbury took a fancy to him from the start, and the boy was so fond of him that they were always insisting upon a visit; and last summer we stopped there on our way to the mountains.""And the sisters--do they stay there the whole year round? Are they countrified?""One doesn't live in the country without being countrified," said Mrs.

Saintsbury. "They're rather quiet girls, though they've been about a good deal--to Europe with friends, and to New York in the winter.

They're older than Dan; they're more like their father. Are you afraid of that draught at the windows?""Oh no; it's delicious. And he's like the mother?""Yes."

"Then it's the father who has the artistic taste--he gets that from him;and the mother who has the--"

"Temperament--yes."

"How extremely interesting! And so he's going to be a lawyer. Why lawyer, if he's got the talent and the temperament of an artist? Does his father wish him to be a lawyer?""His father wishes him to be a wall-paper maker.""And the young man compromises on the law. I see," said Mrs. Pasmer.

"And you say he's been going into Boston a great deal? Where does he go?"The ladies entered into this social inquiry with a zest which it would be hard to make the reader share, or perhaps to feel the importance of.

It is enough that it ended in the social vindication of Dan Mavering.

It would not have been enough for Mrs Pasmer that he was accepted in the best Cambridge houses; she knew of old how people were accepted in Cambridge for their intellectual brilliancy or solidity, their personal worth, and all sorts of things, without consideration of the mystical something which gives vogue in Boston.

"How superb Alice was!" Mrs. Saintsbury broke off abruptly. "She has such a beautiful manner. Such repose.""Repose! Yes," said her mother, thoughtfully. "But she's very intense.

And I don't see where she gets it. Her father has repose enough, but he has no intensity; and I'm all intensity, and no repose. But I'm no more like my mother than Alice is like me.""I think she has the Hibbins face," said Mrs. Saintsbury.

"Oh! she's got the Hibbins face," said Mrs Pasmer, with a disdain of tone which she did not at all feel; the tone was mere absent-mindedness.

She was about to revert to the question of Mavering's family, when the door-bell rang, and another visitor interrupted her talk with Mrs.

Saintsbury.

IX.

Mrs. Pasmer's husband looked a great deal older than herself, and, by operation of a well-known law of compensation, he was lean and silent, while she was plump and voluble. He had thick eyebrows, which remained black after his hair and beard had become white, and which gave him an aspect of fierceness, expressive of nothing in his character. It was from him that their daughter got her height, and, as Mrs. Pasmer freely owned, her distinction.

Soon after their marriage the Pasmers had gone to live in Paris, where they remained faithful to the fortunes of the Second Empire till its fall, with intervals of return to their own country of a year or two years at a time. After the fall of the Empire they made their sojourn in England, where they lived upon the edges and surfaces of things, as Americans must in Europe everywhere, but had more permanency of feeling than they had known in France, and something like a real social status.

At one time it seemed as if they might end their days there; but that which makes Americans different from all other peoples, and which finally claims their allegiance for their own land, made them wish to come back to America, and to come back to Boston. After all, their place in England was strictly inferior, and must be. They knew titles, and consorted with them, but they had none themselves, and the English constancy which kept their friends faithful to them after they had become an old story, was correlated with the English honesty which never permitted them to mistake themselves for even the lowest of the nobility.

They went out last, and they did not come in first, ever.

The invitations, upon these conditions, might have gone on indefinitely, but they did not imply a future for the young girl in whom the interests of her parents centred. After being so long a little girl, she had become a great girl, and then all at once she had become a young lady.

They had to ask themselves, the mother definitely and the father formlessly, whether they wished their daughter to marry an Englishman, and their hearts answered them, like true Republican hearts, Not an untitled Englishman, while they saw no prospect of her getting any other.

同类推荐
  • The Life of Charlotte Bronte

    The Life of Charlotte Bronte

    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。
  • 清文精选

    清文精选

    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。
  • 宣和北苑贡茶录

    宣和北苑贡茶录

    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。
  • 太上洞玄灵宝上师说救护身命经

    太上洞玄灵宝上师说救护身命经

    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。
  • 金刚般若经

    金刚般若经

    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
  • 放弃我,抓紧我(上)

    放弃我,抓紧我(上)

    一次意外溺水,长时间脑部缺氧让著名服装设计师厉薇薇失去了部分记忆,她的记忆停留在23岁。记忆中热恋的同为设计师的男友竟成了竞争对手,而一个陌生人却成了她的未婚夫。30岁的厉薇薇决定改变现状,她逐步解开过去的误会,和对手冰释前嫌,不但找回了爱情,也重拾了初心和梦想。
  • 冥冥中的爱

    冥冥中的爱

    江涛在爱妻撒手人寰之后,为了完成爱妻的遗愿,卖掉家产,创办了互联网家政服务公司“心心便民网”。他招募了四个创业伙伴:内向,怪僻的软件高手赵天琪;性格开朗,阳光的护士柳絮;刚刚从监狱释放出来的“问题青年”夏东东,以及高冷,美丽的前高盛亚洲投资高管夏夕夕。这四个原始创业成员性格各异,每个人都有自己的秘密和苦衷。他们不但要面临从无到有的创业艰难,而且还要面对商业敌手的残酷打压和市场竞争的阴谋,陷阱。危机一个接一个。创业伙伴们的秘密也被敌手一一曝光,欲置他们于死地!无论狂风暴雨,江涛和他的伙伴们都紧密团结,就像是一家人一样。风暴没有毁灭他们,反而让他们感情更深。在事业成功之余,更收获了甜蜜的爱情。
  • 尼克·亚当斯故事集(译文经典)

    尼克·亚当斯故事集(译文经典)

    尼克·亚当斯是海明威众多短篇中的一个男主角,这个令人难忘的角色从孩子成长为青少年,又成为士兵、复员军人、作家和父亲——这个过程与海明威本人生活中发生的大事亦步亦趋,清晰地凸现为海明威作品中一长串他本人化身中的第一个,之后在海明威各个长篇中出现的男主人公全都有尼克的历史。本书共24篇,系首次结集以单行本形式出版。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 小爵爷

    小爵爷

    出身英国贵族的爸爸去世后,锡德里克和妈妈住在纽约贫民区,生活清苦而快乐。七岁时,他突然成了家族继承人,被接到英国城堡和脾气暴虐的伯爵祖父一起生活。小爵爷诚挚信任的童心渐渐改变了老伯爵的坏脾气。有一天来了个阴险歹毒的女人,声称她的儿子才是真正的继承人……面对这一切神奇变化,小爵爷始终保持着纯真、优雅、善良的童心,他的传奇故事跨越了两个世纪的门槛,滋养了一代又一代的小读者。
  • 中纪委推荐:历史的教训

    中纪委推荐:历史的教训

    本书是响应习近平号召牢记历史的教训,中纪委推介的“2015新年第一书”,王岐山最新推荐!《中国新闻出版报》优秀畅销书榜总榜第一名!美国普利策奖获得者的传世经典,浓缩对历史经验教训的独特见解! 本书是美国著名学者、“普利策奖”获得者威尔杜兰特及其夫人阿里尔杜兰特的代表作。《历史的教训》浓缩了11卷《世界文明史》的精华,通过提纲挈领的线条,勾勒出历史与人类生活各方面的关系,详细说明了地理条件、经济状况、种族优劣、人类本性、宗教活动、社会主义、政府、战争、道德、盛衰定律、生物进化等在历史中所扮演的角色,并总结出历史留给人们的巨大精神遗产。 这些精神遗产给改革中的国人以启迪与警鉴,使其更加智慧地面对当下和未来。
  • 新编实用生活禁忌大全

    新编实用生活禁忌大全

    从家居生活、饮食、养生保健、衣着打扮、社交礼仪、外出旅游等多个角度对生活中的各种禁忌进行了概括和总结,希望对大家有所裨益,帮助大家摆脱生活中的各种困扰。
  • 帝君妖娆:一等狂妃太嚣张

    帝君妖娆:一等狂妃太嚣张

    新文已发《人鱼五小姐:魔尊,请让道!》她是魔界之王,叱咤风云,手段狠辣,却不料被暗害。三百年后重生于九云大陆废材五公主身上,训魔兽,收灵宠,虐渣渣,从此以后只有她虐别人的份。不想一不小心看了某人的出浴,此后上天入地均缠着她要负责。“娘子,你还不负责,等下宝宝都出来了。”某女青筋暴起,反身就是一脚“老娘怀都没怀”“那好我加油,赶快让你怀上”“……”【本文脑洞略大,慎入。】
  • 我亲爱的幻想家

    我亲爱的幻想家

    琳琅在父亲去世以后患上了幻想症,回到学校的她遇见向她疯狂示爱的段越泽。心动,喜欢,爱上,可是难以启齿的病情和未知的未来,她该怎样取舍?
  • 王爷你的面具掉了

    王爷你的面具掉了

    新书《穿书后我成了摄政王的心肝》已发~一道圣旨,家族算计,甜萌的她遇上高冷的他,成了他的小王妃,人人都道,西轩国英王丑颜骇人,冷血残暴,笑她误入虎口,性命堪危,她却笑世人一叶障目,愚昧无知,丑颜实则倾城,冷血实则柔情,她只想将他藏起来,不让人偷窥。“大冰块,摘下面具给本王妃瞧瞧!”她撑着下巴口水直流。“想看?”某人勾唇邪魅道,“那就先付点定金……”这是甜萌女与腹黑男一路打敌杀怪顺带谈情说爱的绝宠搞笑热血的故事。有完结文《请王妃赏口饭吃》《夙大招凤》,《当我家王爷不傻了》,坑品良好,作者软萌欢迎来撩~