登陆注册
19972100000049

第49章

He had originally thought of lines and tones as things to be taken, but these possibilities had now quite melted away.There was no computing at all what the young man before him would think or feel or say on any subject whatever.This intelligence Strether had afterwards, to account for his nervousness, reconstituted as he might, just as he had also reconstituted the promptness with which Chad had corrected his uncertainty.An extraordinarily short time had been required for the correction, and there had ceased to be anything negative in his companion's face and air as soon as it was made."Your engagement to my mother has become then what they call here a fait accompli?"--it had consisted, the determinant touch, in nothing more than that.

Well, that was enough, Strether had felt while his answer hung fire.He had felt at the same time, however, that nothing could less become him than that it should hang fire too long."Yes," he said brightly, "it was on the happy settlement of the question that I started.You see therefore to what tune I'm in your family.

Moreover," he added, "I've been supposing you'd suppose it.""Oh I've been supposing it for a long time, and what you tell me helps me to understand that you should want to do something.To do something, I mean," said Chad, "to commemorate an event so--what do they call it?--so auspicious.I see you make out, and not unnaturally," he continued, "that bringing me home in triumph as a sort of wedding-present to Mother would commemorate it better than anything else.You want to make a bonfire in fact," he laughed, "and you pitch me on.Thank you, thank you!" he laughed again.

He was altogether easy about it, and this made Strether now see how at bottom, and in spite of the shade of shyness that really cost him nothing, he had from the first moment been easy about everything.The shade of shyness was mere good taste.People with manners formed could apparently have, as one of their best cards, the shade of shyness too.He had leaned a little forward to speak;his elbows were on the table; and the inscrutable new face that he had got somewhere and somehow was brought by the movement nearer to his critics There was a fascination for that critic in its not being, this ripe physiognomy, the face that, under observation at least, he had originally carried away from Woollett.Strether found a certain freedom on his own side in defining it as that of a man of the world--a formula that indeed seemed to come now in some degree to his relief; that of a man to whom things had happened and were variously known.In gleams, in glances, the past did perhaps peep out of it; but such lights were faint and instantly merged.Chad was brown and thick and strong, and of old Chad had been rough.Was all the difference therefore that he was actually smooth? Possibly; for that he WAS smooth was as marked as in the taste of a sauce or in the rub of a hand.The effect of it was general--it had retouched his features, drawn them with a cleaner line.It had cleared his eyes and settled his colour and polished his fine square teeth--the main ornament of his face; and at the same time that it had given him a form and a surface, almost a design, it had toned his voice, established his accent, encouraged his smile to more play and his other motions to less.

He had formerly, with a great deal of action, expressed very little; and he now expressed whatever was necessary with almost none at all.It was as if in short he had really, copious perhaps but shapeless, been put into a firm mould and turned successfully out.The phenomenon--Strether kept eyeing it as a phenomenon, an eminent case--was marked enough to be touched by the finger.He finally put his hand across the table and laid it on Chad's arm.

"If you'll promise me--here on the spot and giving me your word of honour--to break straight off, you'll make the future the real right thing for all of us alike.You'll ease off the strain of this decent but none the less acute suspense in which I've for so many days been waiting for you, and let me turn in to rest.Ishall leave you with my blessing and go to bed in peace."Chad again fell back at this and, his hands pocketed, settled himself a little; in which posture he looked, though he rather anxiously smiled, only the more earnest.Then Strether seemed to see that he was really nervous, and he took that as what he would have called a wholesome sign.The only mark of it hitherto had been his more than once taking off and putting on his wide-brimmed crush hat.He had at this moment made the motion again to remove it, then had only pushed it back, so that it hung informally on his strong young grizzled crop.It was a touch that gave the note of the familiar--the intimate and the belated--to their quiet colloquy; and it was indeed by some such trivial aid that Strether became aware at the same moment of something else.The observation was at any rate determined in him by some light too fine to distinguish from so many others, but it was none the less sharply determined.Chad looked unmistakeably during these instants--well, as Strether put it to himself, all he was worth.Our friend had a sudden apprehension of what that would on certain sides be.

He saw him in a flash as the young man marked out by women; and for a concentrated minute the dignity, the comparative austerity, as he funnily fancied it, of this character affected him almost with awe.There was an experience on his interlocutor's part that looked out at him from under the displaced hat, and that looked out moreover by a force of its own, the deep fact of its quantity and quality, and not through Chad's intending bravado or swagger.

同类推荐
  • 非烟传

    非烟传

    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。
  • 分别经

    分别经

    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。
  • 溪山卧游录

    溪山卧游录

    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。
  • 汉学师承记

    汉学师承记

    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。
  • Alcibiades I

    Alcibiades I

    It seems impossible to separate by any exact line the genuine writings of Plato from the spurious. The only external evidence to them which is of much value is that of Aristotle; for the Alexandrian catalogues of a century later include manifest forgeries.汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 夫君太妖娆:娘子惹不起

    夫君太妖娆:娘子惹不起

    他们的相遇是跨越千年的缘分!他,风华绝代,孤世而立……她,冰冷高傲,倾国倾城……那不经意的相遇让他彻底沉迷,他的纠缠不清,死皮赖脸,孩子气……却只为融化那颗冰冷的心……她不相信爱情,却愿意为他再次打开心扉……他为了她,可以对她恶意中伤,她亦为了他,对他刀剑相向!他们的爱情因为一场误会而濒临破碎……千年的爱恋,不朽的誓言,他们能否回到当初……
  • 女神的杀手护卫

    女神的杀手护卫

    作为天下第一杀手的项宇,完成最后一单,决定浪迹天涯。岂料保护美女总裁,让项宇的人生再次波澜壮阔。哥本低调,不想逆天!纵横商场,叱咤江湖,终与美人朝朝暮暮……
  • 皇朝法则

    皇朝法则

    他们来自五湖四海,为了心中各自理想,为了逢时命中注定,不约而同地走向一条黑色深渊的道路上,他们靠着睿智的谋略,他们挥洒着时代的青春,搏击着新时代的蓝天!哪怕是黎明的曙光不照耀我们,也要撕裂半边天!弱肉强食,这是遵循社会的法则!成王败寇,更是永恒不变的真理!退役特种军人,一生中的绝境逆转,时控欲望中的金权帝国。没有谁是孤军奋战你的敌人会始终陪着你凡是不能将你打败的最终都会让你更强——林琰
  • 爱就疯狂,不爱就坚强

    爱就疯狂,不爱就坚强

    超级媒体大腕杨锦麟、台湾两性作家郑匡宇联合力荐!著名情感作家、实战派顶级婚恋导师、“微观爱情”理论的创始人陈保才,迄今最犀利的“红尘法则”。作为“两性鬼才”,陈保才在新书中通过一个个现实中鲜活的案例,层层剖析,贡献独家婚恋方法论,揭示情爱中最大的秘密!用多少力去爱?怎样爱才能不受伤?如何获得真正的幸福?知道这些问题的答案,比得到爱情本身重要得多。在准备婚礼之前,请先准备婚姻。
  • 时之后传

    时之后传

    同时代的不同世界,一个又一个小故事的串联,最终是怎样的惊天秘密。有着超乎常人的能力,不可思议的犯案手法,与恶魔的交易......
  • 婚后掠爱

    婚后掠爱

    青春岁月里,他们有过一段不清不楚的,有点暧昧却又有点苦涩的关系,最终这场关系伴随着青春只留下了许多的叹息,26岁的剩女岁月里,她爱着另一个男人,她认为他们会走到一起,他却凭空出现了,将她拖进了婚姻的殿堂。
  • 格萨尔王全传

    格萨尔王全传

    本书对古代藏族部联盟社会生活的各个方面,如人民的经济生活、生产劳动、意识形态、理想愿望等,都作了生动真实的、充满诗情画意的描绘。
  • 幻之戀曲

    幻之戀曲

    一场体验虚拟游戏的打工,让她以三种不同的身分结识了七位男人,孰不知这七位皆以现实中的人物作为设定,她意外地在现实与这七位男人相逢,究竟游戏中的她和现实的她选择是否会一样?令人好奇又不可思议的体验虚拟恋爱游戏正式启动。
  • 庄列十论

    庄列十论

    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。
  • 倾尽一生来爱你

    倾尽一生来爱你

    一个偶然,她随师傅穿越古代,让她遇见两个极品帅哥三个人的江湖旅程渐渐的开始,可是竟意外的进入了妖界“汗,又是个帅哥,只不过,是个妖精”。爱,总是要经历曲折的在世间的流逝中,经历了重重磨难冷翊的守护,姬千尘的帮助,他们的执着愿舍弃大好江山,只为与你“执其手,携与老”