登陆注册
5592400000016

第16章

Pasmer was inveterately selfish in that province of small personal things where his wife left him unmolested. In what related to his own comfort and convenience he was undisputed lord of himself. It was she who ordered their comings and goings, and decided in which hemisphere they should sojourn from time to time, and in what city, street, and house, but always with the understanding that the kitchen and all the domestic appointments were to her husband's mind. He was sensitive to degrees of heat and cold, and luxurious in the matter of lighting, and he had a fine nose for plumbing. If he had not occupied himself so much with these details, he was the sort of man to have thought Mrs. Pasmer, with her buzz of activities and pretences, rather a tedious little woman. He had some delicate tastes, if not refined interests, and was expensively fond of certain sorts of bric-a-brac: he spent a great deal of time in packing and unpacking it, and he had cases stored in Rome and London and Paris;it had been one of his motives in consenting to come home that he might get them out, and set up the various objects of bronze and porcelain in cabinets. He had no vices, unless absolute idleness ensuing uninterruptedly upon a remotely demonstrated unfitness for business can be called a vice. Like other people who have always been idle, he did not consider his idleness a vice. He rather plumed himself upon it, for the man who has done nothing all his life naturally looks down upon people who have done or are doing something. In Europe he had not all the advantage of this superiority which such a man has here; he was often thrown with other idle people, who had been useless for so many generations that they had almost ceased to have any consciousness of it.

In their presence Pasmer felt that his uselessness had not that passive elegance which only ancestral uselessness can give; that it was positive, and to that degree vulgar.

A life like this was not one which would probably involve great passions or affections, and it would be hard to describe exactly the feeling with which he regarded his daughter. He liked her, of course, and he had naturally expected certain things of her, as a ladylike intelligence, behaviour, and appearance; but he had never shown any great tenderness for her, or even pride in her. She had never given him any displeasure, however, and he had not shared his wife's question of mind at a temporary phase of Alice's development when she showed a decided inclination for a religious life. He had apparently not observed that the girl had a pensive temperament in spite of the effect of worldly splendour which her mother contrived for her, and that this pensiveness occasionally deepened to gloom. He had certainly never seen that in a way of her own she was very romantic. Mrs. Pasmer had seen it, with amusement sometimes, and sometimes with anxiety, but always with the courage to believe that she could cope with it when it was necessary.

Whenever it was necessary she had all the moral courage she wanted; it seemed as if she could have it or not as she liked; and in coming home she had taken a flat instead of a house, though she had not talked with her friends three minutes without perceiving that the moment when flats had promised to assert their social equality with houses in Boston was past for ever. There were, of course, cases in which there could be no question of them; but for the most part they were plainly regarded as makeshifts, the resorts of people of small means, or the defiances or errors of people who had lived too much abroad. They stamped their occupants as of transitory and fluctuant character; good people might live in them, and did, as good people sometimes boarded; but they could not be regarded as forming a social base, except in rare instances. They presented peculiar difficulties in calling, and for any sort of entertainment they were too--not public, perhaps, but--evident.

In spite of these objections Mrs. Pasmer took a flat in the Cavendish, and she took it furnished from people who were going abroad for a year.

X.

Mrs. Pasmer stood at the drawing-room window of this apartment, the morning after her call upon Mrs. Saintsbury, looking out on the passage of an express-wagon load of trunks through Cavendish Square, and commenting the fact with the tacit reflection that it was quite time she should be getting away from Boston too, when her daughter, who was looking out of the other window, started significantly back.

"What is it, Alice?"

"Nothing! Mr. Mavering, I think, and that friend of his----""Which friend? But where? Don't look! They will think we were watching them. I can't see them at all. Which way were they going?" Mrs. Pasmer dramatised a careless unconsciousness to the square, while vividly betraying this anxiety to her daughter.

Alice walked away to the furthest part of the room. "They are coming this way," she said indifferently.

Before Mrs. Pasmer had time to prepare a conditional mood, adapted either to their coming that way or going some other, she heard the janitor below in colloquy with her maid in the kitchen, and then the maid came in to ask if she should say the ladies were at home. "Oh, certainly," said Mrs. Pasmer, with a caressing politeness that anticipated the tone she meant to use with Mavering and his friend. "Were you going, Alice?

Better stay. It would be awkward sending out for you. You look well enough.""Well!"

The young men came in, Mavering with his nervous laugh first, and then Boardman with his twinkling black eyes, and his main-force self-possession.

"We couldn't go away as far as New London without coming to see whether you had really survived Class Day," said the former, addressing his solicitude to Mrs. Pasmer. "I tried to find out from, Mrs. Saintsbury, but she was very noncommittal." He laughed again, and shook hands with Alice, whom he now included in his inquiry.

同类推荐
  • 黄帝八十一难经注义图序论

    黄帝八十一难经注义图序论

    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。
  • 无常三启经

    无常三启经

    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。
  • 如实论反质难品

    如实论反质难品

    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。
  • Up From Slavery

    Up From Slavery

    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。
  • 严氏济生方

    严氏济生方

    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
  • 穿越之贫民王妃

    穿越之贫民王妃

    新婚就遭遇丈夫离家出走,一生被众人讥讽,不料穿越至富家女身上!好哇,这一世她要潇洒过!而前世丈夫竟然是那富家女同父异母妹妹的姘头!好哇,这一世,谁负她,她定让对方付出代价! —— 潇洒?不!她穿越还背负着破除家族诅咒的沉重使命!!
  • 二次元解忧杂货店

    二次元解忧杂货店

    白天,这是一家普普通通的杂货店。夜晚,这是一家为各种二次元人排忧解难的神秘商铺。
  • 凰医帝临七神

    凰医帝临七神

    (原名《焚尽七神:狂傲女帝》)前世,她贵为巅峰女帝,一夕之间局势逆转,沦为废材之质。魂灵双修,医毒无双,血脉觉醒,一御万兽。天现异象,凰命之女,自此归来,天下乱之。这一次,所有欺她辱她之人必杀之!他自上界而来,怀有目的,却因她动摇内心深处坚定的道义。“你曾说,你向仰我,你想像我一样,步入光明,是我对不起你,又让你重新回到黑暗。”“你都不在了,你让我一个人,怎么像向仰你?!”爱与不爱,从来都是我们自己的事,与他人无关。带走了所有的光明与信仰。
  • 快穿系统之崩坏宿主有点方

    快穿系统之崩坏宿主有点方

    【新书首发,不喜勿喷】哈喽,这里是主角系统!编号000,有什么可以为你服务的吗?有不同方案可以供宿主选择使用……诶诶诶!宿主大大又崩坏啦!有什么办法可以让宿主不崩坏吗?在线的,挺急的……(本书全属原创,若有雷同纯属巧合)
  • 一片冰心在金融

    一片冰心在金融

    书分为“北京银行的创新实践”“金融发展的理论思考”“走向未来的积极探索”三个部分。第一部分主要是闫冰竹委员对北京银行成立及其发展中的一些感悟、感想、思索。第二部分在各主流媒体上发表的理论文章。内容包括对新经济常态、互联网金融、利率市场化、大数据、人民币国际化、商业银行业务转型发展等经济金融热点问题的理论思考,不仅体现了闫委员对改革发展重大理论问题的深入思考,还展示了其对市场经济金融热点的独到见解。第三部分,主要收集了闫冰竹委员在一些高层论坛的发言。
  • 元史是个什么玩意儿:话说元朝十五帝

    元史是个什么玩意儿:话说元朝十五帝

    纵观蒙元历史,就是血淋淋的征服与统治的历史。成吉思汗及其后继者在50多年的时间里, 以总数不到40万人的军队,建立了人类历史上版图最大的国家一一蒙古帝国。本书以元朝十五位帝王为主线,从不同的角度再现了成吉思汗家族的兴衰荣辱。文中既有小故事的穿插, 又再现了历史原貌,极具知识性,是一部完整的元朝历史。
  • 混世魔王要修仙

    混世魔王要修仙

    一个奇葩到不能再奇葩的穿越,不仅来到了修仙界,更是穿越成一个修仙之人喊打喊杀的混世魔王?明明只是想要回家,却被迫走进了一团又一团的迷雾之中,破开云雾才发现,这一切竟然是迫使她来此的理由?
  • 金手指

    金手指

    六月,苦夏,骄阳如火。我从艮山门车站坐去牛头山的慢车,到长山县城,五小时;再从县城转乘长途汽车,到石岗公社,两小时。好在我这天起得早,找到石岗中学时,也已经下午六点多钟了。我汗流浃背,喉咙口直冒烟。我不期待全校师生能夹道欢迎我,但求凉茶一碗,让我喝个痛快。却很意外,学校空空荡荡的,没有一个人。简陋的房屋,倒是东一排西一排的,错落有致,其中有所高大雄伟的建筑物,一看便知是大会堂。那年头,全国人民的精力都倾注在这种地方了。有一群顽皮的阳光和麻雀,在操场上玩耍,起起落落,不肯回家。或许,这儿就是它们的家。
  • 冷宫废后:穿越皇后最嚣张

    冷宫废后:穿越皇后最嚣张

    《完结,放心看》新文推荐《冷少的神秘小新娘:女人,别逃》,网址:http://m.pgsk.com/origin/book/?workid=2483804
  • 大学的改革(第二卷·学院篇)

    大学的改革(第二卷·学院篇)

    钱颖一是“文革”后第一届大学生,毕业于清华大学。2006年,在美国留学和任教25年后,他回到清华大学,担任经济管理学院院长至今10年。无论从事何种工作,钱颖一总是与中国改革同行,肩负起时代赋予的责任。当改革大幕初启,他远渡重洋,探寻现代化之道,成为世界一流的经济学者;当改革如火如荼,他频繁回国讲学,为改革建言献策;当中国呼唤更多杰出人才时,他放弃国外一流大学终身教授职位,回国投身教育事业。《大学的改革》是钱颖一过去10年在清华大学经济管理学院担任院长,过去15年在中国教育领域不懈耕耘的实录。