登陆注册
5605100000055

第55章

On the day of Mr.Palford's departure a thick fog had descended and seemed to enwrap the world in the white wool.Tembarom found it close to his windows when he got up, and he had dressed by the light of tall wax candles, the previous Mr.Temple Barholm having objected to more modern and vulgar methods of illumination.

"I guess this is what you call a London fog," he said to Pearson.

"No, not exactly the London sort, sir," Pearson answered."A London fog is yellow--when it isn't brown or black.It settles on the hands and face.A fog in the country isn't dirty with smoke.It's much less trying, sir."When Palford had departed and he was entirely alone, Tembarom found a country fog trying enough for a man without a companion.A degree of relief permeated his being with the knowledge that he need no longer endeavor to make suitable reply to his solicitor's efforts at conversation.He had made conversational efforts himself.You couldn't let a man feel that you wouldn't talk to him if you could when he was doing business for you, but what in thunder did you have to talk about that a man like that wouldn't be bored stiff by? He didn't like New York, he didn't know anything about it, and he didn't want to know, and Tembarom knew nothing about anything else, and was homesick for the very stones of the roaring city's streets.When he said anything, Palford either didn't understand what he was getting at or he didn't like it.And he always looked as if he was watching to see if you were trying to get a joke on him.Tembarom was frequently not nearly so much inclined to be humorous as Mr.Palford had irritably suspected him of being.His modes of expression might on numerous occasions have roused to mirth when his underlying idea was almost entirely serious.

The mode of expression was merely a result of habit.

Mr.Palford left by an extremely early train, and after he was gone, Tembarom sat over his breakfast as long as possible, and then, going to the library, smoked long.The library was certainly comfortable, though the fire and the big wax candles were called upon to do their best to defy the chill, mysterious dimness produced by the heavy, white wool curtain folding itself more and more thickly outside the windows.

But one cannot smoke in solitary idleness for much more than an hour, and when he stood up and knocked the ashes out of his last pipe, Tembarom drew a long breath.

"There's a hundred and thirty-six hours in each of these days," he said."That's nine hundred and fifty-two in a week, and four thousand and eighty in a month--when it's got only thirty days in it.I'm not going to calculate how many there'd be in a year.I'll have a look at the papers.There's Punch.That's their comic one."He looked out the American news in the London papers, and sighed hugely.He took up Punch and read every joke two or three times over.

He did not know that the number was a specially good one and that there were some extremely witty things in it.The jokes were about bishops in gaiters, about garden-parties, about curates or lovely young ladies or rectors' wives and rustics, about Royal Academicians or esthetic poets.Their humor appealed to him as little and seemed as obscure as his had seemed to Mr.Palford.

"I'm not laughing my head off much over these," he said."I guess I'm not on to the point."He got up and walked about.The "L" in New York was roaring to and fro loaded with men and women going to work or to do shopping.Some of them were devouring morning papers bearing no resemblance to those of London, some of them carried parcels, and all of them looked as though they were intent on something or other and hadn't a moment to waste.

They were all going somewhere in a hurry and had to get back in time for something.When the train whizzed and slackened at a station, some started up, hastily caught their papers or bundles closer, and pushed or were pushed out on the platform, which was crowded with other people who rushed to get in, and if they found seats, dropped into them hastily with an air of relief.The street-cars were loaded and rang their bells loudly, trucks and carriages and motors filled the middle of the thoroughfares, and people crowded the pavements.The store windows were dressed up for Christmas, and most of the people crowded before them were calculating as to what they could get for the inadequate sums they had on hand.

The breakfast at Mrs.Bowse's boarding-house was over, and the boarders had gone on cars or elevated trains to their day's work.Mrs.

Bowse was getting ready to go out and do some marketing.Julius and Jim were down-town deep in the work pertaining to their separate "jobs." They'd go home at night, and perhaps, if they were in luck, would go to a "show" somewhere, and afterward come and sit in their tilted chairs in the hall bedroom and smoke and talk it over.And he wouldn't be there, and the Hutchinsons' rooms would be empty, unless some new people were in them.Galton would be sitting among his papers, working like mad.And Bennett--well, Bennett would be either "getting out his page," or would be rushing about in the hundredth streets to find items and follow up weddings or receptions.

"Gee!" he said, "every one of them trying their best to put something over, and with so much to think of they've not got time to breathe!

It'd be no trouble for THEM to put in a hundred and thirty-six hours.

They'd be darned glad of them.And, believe me, they'd put something over, too, before they got through.And I'm here, with three hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year round my neck and not a thing to spend it on, unless I pay some one part of it to give me lessons in tatting.What is tatting, anyhow?

He didn't really know.It was vaguely supposed to imply some intensely feminine fancy-work done by old ladies, and used as a figure of speech in jokes.

"If you could ride or shoot, you could amuse yourself in the country,"Palford had said.

同类推荐
  • All For Love

    All For Love

    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。
  • 墨池琐录

    墨池琐录

    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。
  • 西湖杂记

    西湖杂记

    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。
  • 广百论本

    广百论本

    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。
  • 画鉴

    画鉴

    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
  • 海峡两岸网络原创文学大赛入围作品选(22)短篇小说

    海峡两岸网络原创文学大赛入围作品选(22)短篇小说

    本书选录“海峡两岸网络原创文学大赛”第三届入围作品选,包括5个短篇小说。《乡曲乡愁》描写淮北平原的民俗风情,《被命运刺上鲸刑的人》探究深圳打工族的悲喜人生,《寻找泽林嘉措》以自赎为主题探讨生存意义,《没有署名的画》一幅拍卖画作引发的怀想,《梦一样的青春》讲述当年高考大学与订婚结婚的旧故事。
  • 网游之航海世界

    网游之航海世界

    2041年,一款跨时代游戏巨作横空出世,以模拟的形式通过传感器进入虚拟游戏世界,逼真的感受游戏人物的喜怒哀乐、爱恨情仇;切实的以触觉、视觉、嗅觉等感受游戏世界。
  • 田园女讼师

    田园女讼师

    这是一个身负武艺的女讼师与当朝第一书画枪手联手赚钱,并为人写诉状伸冤的故事。女主桑雾,一朝穿越,从身负绝技的青年国手变成无依无靠的奴籍女子——这还是桑雾能争取到的最好结果。死里逃生的桑雾,只能和一个身份疑点重重的书生做邻居,同时凭借着自己那点可怜的逻辑推理能力,逐步发展为神出鬼没的女讼师。
  • 快穿女主又逆袭

    快穿女主又逆袭

    #####暂停更新#####祁芁从第一次睁开眼睛开始,就知道自己的命运。不再过问自己的曾经,不再期待自己的未来。她在每一个世界穿梭,为别人改变人生,只为了有朝一日,可以回到过去,改写命运。————【无cp快穿】————不签约,权当福利文喜欢请五星鸭好看指数:☆☆☆☆☆
  • 跟着郭明义学雷锋:小学低年级版

    跟着郭明义学雷锋:小学低年级版

    本书以雷锋和郭明义两位先进人物的精神契合点贯穿全书,用雷锋、郭明义的典型故事诠释了助人、敬业、进取、勤俭、信念等雷锋精神的内涵。
  • 过往匆匆片刻安宁

    过往匆匆片刻安宁

    离家出走的富家公子,遇到流落民间的千金小姐……
  • 名门庶女残君嫡王很妖孽

    名门庶女残君嫡王很妖孽

    人家穿越当公主王妃,而她穿越了却只是个小小的不受宠的庶女。庶女也就罢了,为何嫡母会想着法子来害她?为何嫡姐总是欺负她?连她的嫁妆也要抢去?好吧,既然好不容易重生了一回,她决定要抡圆了再活一把。嫡母虐待是吧,不要紧,你用阴谋,我就用阳谋来让你没脸。嫡姐抢我嫁妆是吧,没关系,穿越女岂能由你们来揉圆搓扁?在娘家,她看似柔弱但小,实则狡诈如狐,智机百出,硬是将自己姨娘身份的母亲抬为了平妻,更是让嫡姐一嫁后便成怨妇。不能怪她心狠,她向来禀承人不犯我,我不犯人的原则。不能怪她太会耍手段,在这个人吃人的封建社会里,你不用手段,便会被他人生吞活剥了。但再机智百出,她还是遵循家族安排,嫁给了一个身有残疾的亲王嫡子。、新婚之衣,盖头揭开那一瞬,她看着自己的新郎错不开眼,天下还有更美的人么?怎么会有人长得如此美艳又妖孽啊……嫁入王府后,她斗姨娘,保相公,揭阴谋,更是用柔弱的肩膀,担起了辅助这个国家的重任。
  • 宁负流年不负航

    宁负流年不负航

    一个家境不怎么好的鹿筱筱,一直在努力成为一个优秀的人,为家庭减轻一份负担,爸妈是离异,鹿筱筱跟着爸爸那一方,女主的爸爸在男主爸爸的公司上班,女主初到班级,被班上人看不起,无意间当上了班长,慢慢的女主被班级的同学认可,班级上的人也慢慢的认可了这个班长,女主在与男主的相处过程中慢慢的认知彼此在自己心中的地位,男主男二是从小玩到大的好兄弟,可因为两个人都彼此喜欢着女主。而产生了矛盾,女二喜欢着女主,处处与女主作对,女三呢?出国留学回来以后,赴约了当年男二爷爷与女三的爷爷的定亲,临近高考,男主女主决定考同一所大学,有所成就
  • 要有多坚强,才敢念念不忘

    要有多坚强,才敢念念不忘

    "每个人都有一颗年轻而伤感的心。在遇见自己的另一半前我们总会在生活的小道上漫步前行。有错过的时候。有疼过的时候。一路上总会有许许多多的陌生人在自己的生命中稍作停留,然后他们最终都慢慢的消失了。甚至此生不会再见。后来当我们再想起这些人的时候,仿佛在回忆另一个人的故事一般。
  • 抱朴子外篇

    抱朴子外篇

    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。