登陆注册
20044300000105

第105章 CHAPTER XXII(2)

There had been no physical comfort in it for him, and little more mental satisfaction, for Londoners, or rather people in London, seemed all to be making an invidious distinction in their minds between him and his wife. The fact that she continued to be called Lady Cressage was not of itself important to him.

But in the incessant going about in London, their names were called out together so often that his ear grew sensitive and sore to the touch of the footmen's reverberations.

The meaning differentiation which the voices of the servants insisted upon, seemed inevitably reflected in the glance and manner of their mistresses. More than anything else, that made him hate London, and barred the doors of his mind to all thoughts of buying a town-house.

His newly-made wife, it is true, had not cared much for London, either, and had agreed to his decision against a town-house almost with animation. The occasion of their return from the hot bustle of the metropolis to these cool home shades--in particular the minute in which, at a bend in the winding carriage-way down below, they had silently regarded together the spectacle uplifted before them, with the big, welcoming house, and the servants on the terrace--had a place of its own in his memory.

Edith had pressed his arm, as they sat side by side in the landau, on the instant compulsion of a feeling they had in common. He had never, before or since, had quite the same assurance that she shared an emotion with him.

He was very far, however, from finding fault with his wife.

It was in the nature of the life he chose to lead that he should see a great deal of her, and think a great deal about her, and she bore both tests admirably.

If there was a fault to be found, it was with himself for his inability to altogether understand her. She played the part she had undertaken to play with abundant skill and discretion and grace, and even with an air of nice good-fellowship which had some of the aspects of affection.

He was vaguely annoyed with himself for having insight enough to perceive that it was a part she was playing, and yet lacking the added shrewdness to divine what her own personal attitude to her role was like.

He had noticed sometimes the way good women looked at their husbands when the latter were talking over their heads--with the eager, intent, non-comprehending admiration of an affectionate dog. This was a look which he could not imagine himself discovering in his wife's eves.

It was not conceivable to him that he should talk over her head. Her glance not only revealed an ample understanding of all he said, but suggested unused reserves of comprehension which he might not fathom. It was as if, intellectually no less than socially, she possessed a title and he remained an undistinguished plebeian.

He made no grievance, however, even in his own thoughts, of either inequality. She had been charmingly frank and fair about the question of the names, when it first arose.

The usage had latterly come to be, she explained, for a widow bearing even a courtesy title derived from her late husband, to retain it on marrying again.

It was always the easiest course to fall in with usage, but if he had any feelings on the subject, and preferred to have her insist on being called Mrs. Thorpe, she would meet his wishes with entire willingness.

It had seemed to him, as to her, that it was wisest to allow usage to settle the matter. Some months after their marriage there appeared in the papers what purported to be an authoritative announcement that the Queen objected to the practice among ladies who married a second time, of retaining titles acquired by the earlier marriages, and that the lists of precedency at Buckingham Palace would henceforth take this into account. Lady Cressage showed this to her husband, and talked again with candour on the subject.

She said she had always rather regretted the decision they originally came to, and even now could wish that it might be altered, but that to effect a change in the face of this newspaper paragraph would seem servile--and in this as in most other things he agreed with her. As she said, they wanted nothing of Buckingham Palace.

She wanted equally little, it seemed, of the society which the neighbouring district might afford. There was a meagre routine of formal calls kept in languid operation, Thorpe knew, but it was so much in the background that he never came in contact with it. His own notions of the part he ought to take in County affairs had undergone a silent and unnoted, yet almost sweeping, change. What little he saw of the gentry and strong local men with whom he would have to work, quietly undermined and dismantled all his ambitions in that direction. They were not his sort;their standards for the measurement of things were unintelligible to him. He did not doubt that, if he set himself about it, he could impose his dominion upon them, any more than he doubted that, if he mastered the Chinese language, he could lift himself to be a Mandarin, but the one would be as unnatural and unattractive an enterprise as the other. He came to be upon nodding terms with most of the "carriage-people" round about;some few he exchanged meaningless words with upon occasion, and understood that his wife also talked with, when it was unavoidable, but there his relationship to the County ended, and he was well pleased that it should be so. It gave him a deep satisfaction to see that his wife seemed also well pleased.

He used the word "seemed" in his inmost musings, for it was never quite certain what really did please and displease her.

同类推荐
  • 彭文宪公笔记

    彭文宪公笔记

    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。
  • 大毗卢遮那经广大仪轨

    大毗卢遮那经广大仪轨

    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。
  • 藤阴杂记

    藤阴杂记

    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。
  • 牧云和尚宗本投机颂

    牧云和尚宗本投机颂

    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。
  • English Stories France

    English Stories France

    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。
热门推荐
  • 清玄人族

    清玄人族

    一个古老的民族希望生活在平静的生活中,但现实的残酷.与黑暗.却让他们不得不做出选择。本小说安全是菠萝我自己的幻想。一只队伍为了家园不断冒着危险。走遍三个不同的世界。(菠萝第一次写小说,请朋友们多多支持,你们的支持是菠萝的动力,谢谢大家,不好之处请大家回复,菠萝会不断的改进。)
  • 欲天痕

    欲天痕

    一生的不平坦也造就了他的不平凡。命是弱者的借辞,运是强者的谦辞。年少成坚破红尘,红颜娇碎欲天痕。霸气长存天地间,我命由我不由天。
  • 馨语心愿

    馨语心愿

    故事讲述了一个单纯善良的女孩所经历的酸甜苦辣的青春,有初尝爱情的甜蜜,有遭受背叛的痛苦,有情同姐妹的友情,有生死离别的痛苦……但所有的轰轰烈烈都将深深地刻入记忆,最终归于平淡的生活。若生命直到这里从此没有我我会找个天使替我去爱你
  • 必知的世界战争

    必知的世界战争

    军事科技是一切科学技术的先锋,能够极大地促进基础科技的发展。军事战争既有保卫和平反对侵略的正义战争,也有进行武力占领践踏正义的侵略战争,但不论什么战争,都具有极大的破坏性,我们都应当避免发生。军事人物既有和平的护卫者,也有发动战争的恶魔。无论是军事领袖,还是元帅将领或英雄,他们都是人类和平的守护神,是人类正义的化身和良知的体现,他们的聪明才智和大无畏的精神是人类宝贵的精神财富,我们必须不断学习和发扬,让其精神永垂不朽。军事历史是我们了解人类发展的主要窗口。224053
  • 倘若爱没有搁浅

    倘若爱没有搁浅

    他俊帅多金,红颜无数,却弱水三千,只取一瓢饮,为她打造一个幸福的城堡,给她无尽的宠爱。她以为可以永沐爱河,谁料他的爱却戛然而止,取而代之的是对她无情的伤害。她伤痕累累,却换不回他一个怜惜的眼神。夜店里他与别的女人举止亲密,宾馆里他私会神秘男人……当爱已搁浅,是否他们注定辜负一生?
  • 魔刀

    魔刀

    一柄黑色的神秘飞刀!一个桀骜的不屈少年!一个默默守候,不离不弃的倩影!融兵炼体,吞噬神器,少年宫天羽由人人蔑视的废柴,一步步逐渐变强!刀是魔刀,一个没有失去良知的少年手中,却为了守护而执掌魔刀!那些惹他的人都会感到恐惧,他虽不是魔,却比魔鬼还要放肆,还要恐怖!而一切的开端,就是那场血腥的杀戮……
  • 承认太伤醉了那个夏

    承认太伤醉了那个夏

    他温柔对她说:“等我,到时候我一定会娶你的,给你一个幸福的家的”三年后,他是最高的人物,他的身边有太多的眼中钉,有太多的人想害他。她却坚定得对上他那黑瞳:“你曾经说过给我一个家,我不希望毁在我们的手中”
  • 有魅力不是我的错

    有魅力不是我的错

    体会她们整体魅力的过程,本身懿充满魅力。如果说中拉女足是铿锵玫瑰。直销女性懿是当代生意场上的花木兰。如果说中拉女足使的是武当拳,直销女……
  • 随身带着葫芦走

    随身带着葫芦走

    韩东是一个外企的小业务,无意中捡到一个吊坠葫芦,不曾想这个吊坠葫芦竟然让他从二十六岁变回了十九岁的容貌。当他读出葫芦底部的咒语后,意外地走了葫芦空间中,从此开始了对葫芦空间的偷盗生活,里面的物产丰富……
  • 萌三国

    萌三国

    刘备关羽张飞是女的?那该不会出现了传说中的「百合三结义」吧?曹操许褚典韦是女的?慢着慢着…这本东西还是三国作品吗?孙权孙策孙坚是女的?那麽孙尚香和大小二乔三个江东美女却又是甚麽了?董卓吕布也是女的?那麽貂蝉该是男的还是女的?还是说董吕两人是传说中的百合?诸葛亮庞统郭嘉贾诩李儒周瑜徐庶司马懿也是女的?那好吧……就来组个「四正四邪八大LOLI谋士」好了!某炽誓要打造最邪恶丶最颠覆丶最恶搞的三国作品!萌.三.国!不了解「萌」的定义请自行去询问百度大神。炽的QQ:910875721群:52801549(雪月华提供)(已满)群:57087464(刃舞霜华提供)(新群)