登陆注册
5460700000002

第2章 ENTER MR. FEUERSTEIN(2)

She blushed and was painfully ill at ease in presence of his grand and lofty courtesy--she who had been used to the offhand manners which prevail wherever there is equality of the sexes and the custom of frank sociability. And when he asked her to dance she would have refused had she been able to speak at all. But he bore her off and soon made her forget herself in the happiness of being drifted in his strong arm upon the rhythmic billows of the waltz. At the end he led her to a seat and fell to complimenting her--his eyes eloquent, his voice, it seemed to her, as entrancing as the waltz music. When he spoke in German it was without the harsh sputtering and growling, the slovenly slurring and clipping to which she had been accustomed. She could answer only with monosyllables or appreciative looks, though usually she was a great talker and, as she had much common sense and not a little wit, a good talker. But her awe of him, which increased when she learned that he was on the stage, did not prevent her from getting the two main impressions he wished to make upon her--that Mr. Feuerstein was a very grand person indeed, and that he was condescending to be profoundly smitten of her charms.

She was the ``catch'' of Avenue A, taking prospects and looks together, and the men she knew had let her rule them. In Mr. Feuerstein she had found what she had been unconsciously seeking with the Idealismus of genuine youth--a man who compelled her to look far up to him, a man who seemed to her to embody those vague dreams of a life grand and beautiful, away off somewhere, which are dreamed by all young people, and by not a few older ones, who have less excuse for not knowing where happiness is to be found. He spent the whole evening with her; Mrs. Liebers and Sophie, with whom she had come, did not dare interrupt her pleasure, but had to stay, yawning and cross, until the last strain of Home, Sweet Home.

At parting he pressed her hand. ``I have been happy,'' he murmured in a tone which said, ``Mine is a sorrow-shadowed soul that has rarely tasted happiness.''

She glanced up at him with ingenuous feeling in her eyes and managed to stammer: ``I hope we'll meet again.''

``Couldn't I come down to see you Sunday evening?''

``There's a concert in the Square. If you're there I might see you.''

``Until Sunday night,'' he said, and made her feel that the three intervening days would be for him three eternities.

She thought of him all the way home in the car, and until she fell asleep. His sonorous name was in her mind when she awoke in the morning; and, as she stood in the store that day, waiting on the customers, she looked often at the door, and, with the childhood-surviving faith of youth in the improbable and impossible, hoped that he would appear. For the first time she was definitely discontented with her lot, was definitely fascinated by the idea that there might be something higher and finer than the simple occupations and simple enjoyments which had filled her life thus far.

In the evening after supper her father and mother left her and her brother August in charge, and took their usual stroll for exercise and for the profound delight of a look at their flat-houses--those reminders of many years of toil and thrift.

They had spent their youth, she as cook, he as helper, in one of New York's earliest delicatessen shops. When they had saved three thousand dollars they married and put into effect the plan which had been their chief subject of conversation every day and every evening for ten years-- they opened the ``delicatessen'' in Avenue A, near Second Street. They lived in two back rooms; they toiled early and late for twenty-three contented, cheerful years --she in the shop when she was not doing the housework or caring for the babies, he in the great clean cellar, where the cooking and cabbage-cutting and pickling and spicing were done. And now, owners of three houses that brought in eleven thousand a year clear, they were about to retire. They had fixed on a place in the Bronx, in the East Side, of course, with a big garden, where every kind of gay flower and good vegetable could be grown, and an arbor where there could be pinochle, beer and coffee on Sunday afternoons. In a sentence, they were honorable and exemplary members of that great mass of humanity which has the custody of the present and the future of the race--those who live by the sweat of their own brows or their own brains, and train their children to do likewise, those who maintain the true ideals of happiness and progress, those from whom spring all the workers and all the leaders of thought and action.

They walked slowly up the Avenue, speaking to their neighbors, pausing now and then for a joke or to pat a baby on the head, until they were within two blocks of Tompkins Square. They stopped before a five-story tenement, evidently the dwelling-place of substantial, intelligent, self-respecting artisans and their families, leading the natural life of busy usefulness. In its first floor was a delicatessen-- the sign read ``Schwartz and Heilig.'' Paul Brauner pointed with his long-stemmed pipe at the one show-window.

``Fine, isn't it? Beautiful!'' he exclaimed in Low-German--they and almost all their friends spoke Low-German, and used English only when they could not avoid it.

The window certainly was well arranged. Only a merchant who knew his business thoroughly--both his wares and his customers--could have thus displayed cooked chickens, hams and tongues, the imported sausages and fish, the jelly-inclosed paste of chicken livers, the bottles and jars of pickled or spiced meats and vegetables and fruits. The spectacle was adroitly arranged to move the hungry to yearning, the filled to regret, and the dyspeptic to rage and remorse. And behind the show-window lay a shop whose shelves, counters and floor were clean as toil could make and keep them, and whose air was saturated with the most delicious odors.

同类推荐
  • 白华山人诗说

    白华山人诗说

    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。
  • 春日重至南徐旧居

    春日重至南徐旧居

    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。
  • 西湖游览志余

    西湖游览志余

    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。
  • 男女丹工异同辩

    男女丹工异同辩

    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 Persians

    The Persians

    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
  • 抗战之铁血烽烟

    抗战之铁血烽烟

    日寇毁我家园,杀我同胞,无数热血青年前赴后继,无谓生死,投身抗战洪流。山河破碎之际,当血性未泯的华夏儿女终于明白,只有战争才能制止战争的时候,东方巨龙彻底从沉睡中苏醒!21世纪特种军迷张戈,意外穿越成白洋淀鬼不灵的小兵张嘎,开启了全新烽火人生。杀鬼子,守家园,铸就铁血传奇!
  • 平常家事

    平常家事

    第二代农民工钟小兵,用十年的努力完成了从村民到城市居民的华丽转身,却遇到了一个无法回避的事情:80岁高龄的祖母固守在乡村的老屋,拒绝进城。围绕着祖母的养老问题,钟小兵由幼稚走向成熟,最终较为妥善地安排了老人的晚年生活。
  • 南朝大争霸4:萧梁风云

    南朝大争霸4:萧梁风云

    南朝是中国历史上一个重要的承上启下的时代,这一时期虽然短暂,但对后来的隋唐大一统产生了极为正能量的影响,了解这段历史,是时代及读者的需要。本系列图书以轻松诙谐的笔调纵深讲述南朝宋、齐、梁、陈四个朝代的异彩纷呈的历史,对南北朝期间的重大历史事件、重要历史人物以及铁马金戈的战争场景、波谲云诡的宫廷阴谋、离散破碎的皇权亲情、无边泛滥的情色欲望等方面都有全面的描述与评论,帝国争霸兴衰史在轻松幽默的叙述中娓娓道来本书为该系列的第四册,讲述了南朝政权——萧梁,从繁盛到走向衰亡的过程。
  • 腹黑宝宝超霸气:爹地,我要退货

    腹黑宝宝超霸气:爹地,我要退货

    相亲到一半凭空出来的小鬼竟然拉着他的衣角叫爹地?宝宝:爹地你会穿裙子吗?不会。宝宝:爹地你会喂奶吗?不会。宝宝:那爹地你会怀孕吗他嘴角抽搐:不会!宝宝鄙夷:什么都不会,妈咪给你真是亏大了,妈咪我能退货吗?他仰天长啸:老子是男的!
  • 错嫁成妃:王爷,请自重

    错嫁成妃:王爷,请自重

    大婚之夜,王爷夫君就给她送了两个极/品美男侍//寝,她怎能拒绝?欢欢乐乐入洞房,却气得他前来搅局,她勾着他的脖颈:“美人,哪个馆子的?以后爷去找你。”他直接扯开她的衣服:“本王是你夫君!”她的手划过他脸:“夫君,我不碰!”联系QQ:2378264528
  • 杰出青少年一生的行动计划

    杰出青少年一生的行动计划

    青少年风华正茂,无不渴望杰出。要成就杰出,就必须付出实际行动。但如何去行动,先做什么,后做什么?又该如何站在整个人生的高度,协调各方面因素制定贯穿一生的行动计划?本书总结众多杰出人物的人生经历,为青少年展现出一幅全面规划人生的宏伟蓝图,引导青少年有条不紊地开创成功卓越的人生。
  • 履痕韵语

    履痕韵语

    诗是心灵深处的感情。或高昂,或低沉,或伤春,或悲秋,或咏物,或抒怀,皆与心灵深处的情有关。因此,我以为,情之所致便成诗。由于此,加之自己是学汉语言文学专业的,每当意气昂扬时,心情烦闷时,以及睹物感怀时,会有措词成诗为快的欲望,逐渐便有了一首一首的诗。最早的诗完全是情绪的宣泄,非意在创作,故没有存留的欲念。这次出版的诗稿按写作或发表的先后顺序排列,并注明年份,意在彰示自己写作近体诗和词的学习、探索、提高过程。
  • 禀告王爷:王妃又写休书了

    禀告王爷:王妃又写休书了

    21世纪金牌杀手苏清俞遭师父背叛死去,穿越重生到南国废柴苏二小姐身上,爹不疼后母恨,姐姐欲杀之,难得善心大发救下的公子哥竟然是未婚夫南国七王爷洛见荀,更糟糕的是这个未婚夫一言不合就要寄休书……某日。“王爷,你的休书掉了~”某君脸一别,“瞎说,分明是给你的情书!”
  • 石隐园藏稿

    石隐园藏稿

    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。
  • 凤萧引

    凤萧引

    愿得一人心,免得老相亲……刚遭逼婚团炮轰的某女正在碎碎念,结果天降不明物,一命呜呼。再次睁开眼,没想到竟穿越到了即将出嫁的林家大小姐身上。可面对眼瞎原主挑中的不良夫君,她只能三十六计逃为上——天大地大,保命最大。然而……萧某人看着面前想借他车出逃的某女,暗暗握拳磨牙:想嫁就嫁,不想嫁就逃,当他是死的么!公子红妆梦魂牵,江山沉浮笑中谈。