登陆注册
20049700000027

第27章 CHAPTER XI THE VISION(1)

A few days later he received a letter from Antonia which filled him with excitement:

. . . Aunt Charlotte is ever so much better, so mother thinks we can go home-hurrah! But she says that you and I must keep to our arrangement not to see each other till July. There will be something fine in being so near and having the strength to keep apart . . .

All the English are gone. I feel it so empty out here; these people are so funny-all foreign and shallow. Oh, Dick! how splendid to have an ideal to look up to! Write at once to Brewer's Hotel and tell me you think the same . . . . We arrive at Charing Cross on Sunday at half-past seven, stay at Brewer's for a couple of nights, and go down on Tuesday to Holm Oaks.

Always your ANTONIA.

"To-morrow!" he thought; "she's coming tomorrow!" and, leaving his neglected breakfast, he started out to walk off his emotion. His square ran into one of those slums that still rub shoulders with the most distinguished situations, and in it he came upon a little crowd assembled round a dogfight. One of the dogs was being mauled, but the day was muddy, and Shelton, like any well-bred Englishman, had a horror of making himself conspicuous even in a decent cause; he looked for a policeman. One was standing by, to see fair play, and Shelton made appeal to him. The official suggested that he should not have brought out a fighting dog, and advised him to throw cold water over them.

"It is n 't my dog," said Shelton.

"Then I should let 'em be," remarked the policeman with evident surprise.

Shelton appealed indefinitely to the lower orders. The lower orders, however, were afraid of being bitten.

"I would n't meddle with that there job if I was you," said one.

"Nasty breed o' dawg is that."

He was therefore obliged to cast away respectability, spoil his trousers and his gloves, break his umbrella, drop his hat in the mud, and separate the dogs. At the conclusion of the "job," the lower orders said to him in a rather shamefaced spanner:

"Well, I never thought you'd have managed that, sir"; but, like all men of inaction, Shelton after action was more dangerous.

"D----n it!" he said, "one can't let a dog be killed"; and he marched off, towing the injured dog with his pocket-handkerchief, and looking scornfully at harmless passers-by. Having satisfied for once the smouldering fires within him, he felt entitled to hold a low opinion of these men in the street. "The brutes," he thought, "won't stir a finger to save a poor dumb creature, and as for policemen---"But, growing cooler, he began to see that people weighted down by "honest toil" could not afford to tear their trousers or get a bitten hand, and that even the policeman, though he had looked so like a demi-god, was absolutely made of flesh and blood. He took the dog home, and, sending for a vet., had him sewn up.

He was already tortured by the doubt whether or no he might venture to meet Antonia at the station, and, after sending his servant with the dog to the address marked on its collar, he formed the resolve to go and see his mother, with some vague notion that she might help him to decide. She lived in Kensington, and, crossing the Brompton Road, he was soon amongst that maze of houses into the fibre of whose structure architects have wrought the motto: " Keep what you have--wives, money, a good address, and all the blessings of a moral state!"Shelton pondered as he passed house after house of such intense respectability that even dogs were known to bark at them. His blood was still too hot; it is amazing what incidents will promote the loftiest philosophy. He had been reading in his favourite review an article eulogising the freedom and expansion which had made the upper middle class so fine a body; and with eyes wandering from side to side he nodded his head ironically. "Expansion and freedom," ran his thoughts: "Freedom and expansion!"Each house-front was cold and formal, the shell of an owner with from three to five thousand pounds a year, and each one was armoured against the opinion of its neighbours by a sort of daring regularity.

"Conscious of my rectitude; and by the strict observance of exactly what is necessary and no more, I am enabled to hold my head up in the world. The person who lives in me has only four thousand two hundred and fifty-five pounds each year, after allowing for the income tax."Such seemed the legend of these houses.

Shelton passed ladies in ones and twos and threes going out shopping, or to classes of drawing, cooking, ambulance. Hardly any men were seen, and they were mostly policemen; but a few disillusioned children were being wheeled towards the Park by fresh-cheeked nurses, accompanied by a great army of hairy or of hairless dogs.

There was something of her brother's large liberality about Mrs.

Shelton, a tiny lady with affectionate eyes, warm cheeks, and chilly feet; fond as a cat of a chair by the fire, and full of the sympathy that has no insight. She kissed her son at once with rapture, and, as usual, began to talk of his engagement. For the first time a tremor of doubt ran through her son; his mother's view of it grated on him like the sight of a blue-pink dress; it was too rosy. Her splendid optimism, damped him; it had too little traffic with the reasoning powers.

"What right," he asked himself, "has she to be so certain? It seems to me a kind of blasphemy.""The dear!" she cooed. "And she is coming back to-morrow? Hurrah! how I long to see her!"

"But you know, mother, we've agreed not to meet again until July."Mrs. Shelton rocked her foot, and, holding her head on one side like a little bird, looked at her son with shining eyes.

"Dear old Dick!" she said, "how happy you must be!"Half a century of sympathy with weddings of all sorts--good, bad, indifferent--beamed from her.

"I suppose," said Shelton gloomily, "I ought not to go and see her at the station.""Cheer up!" replied the mother, and her son felt dreadfully depressed.

同类推荐
  • 台湾资料清宣宗实录选辑

    台湾资料清宣宗实录选辑

    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。
  • 斥谬

    斥谬

    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。
  • 转法轮菩萨摧魔怨敌法

    转法轮菩萨摧魔怨敌法

    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。
  • 金刚般若波罗蜜经论

    金刚般若波罗蜜经论

    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。
  • Boyhood

    Boyhood

    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
  • 紫诺皇家学院之恋

    紫诺皇家学院之恋

    她们是黑道的统治者,白道的公主,为母亲走上复仇之路。他们是温室里的王子,同样也是血殇帮的帮主。他/她们之间会擦出怎样的火花呢?
  • 大俗人

    大俗人

    死而复生的姜新研立志要做一名纨绔大少,溜溜鸟,抢抢人,调戏调戏花姑娘…………QQ群:528743840
  • 猫妖月菲菲

    猫妖月菲菲

    一朝穿越,成猫妖!还被异世大魔头捡去当灵宠。大魔头只知修炼,不懂男女之情。小猫妖只想过人类生活,懒怠修炼。不过,偶尔练个丹什么的还可以啦,因为仙丹好好吃!
  • 皇家公主的冰山王子

    皇家公主的冰山王子

    本人第一次写小说,不好的地方请见谅~(^V^)~
  • 战神之路系列第三部

    战神之路系列第三部

    为了追求真爱,我进入了另一个陌生的国度--幻魔大陆。在这里,我拥有数种身份,却发现了又一个强大的自己。是什么力量能复制幻魔大陆人、神、魔三界第一强者的身体?会有谁拥有控制三界的能力?为了摆脱命运的安排,无奈之下踏入了挑战自己的战神之路!
  • 零浅缘

    零浅缘

    一袭白袍,一笑恩仇。又是谁人能在清浅的时光下守住初心,逃过地狱的劫难。
  • 凡人触摸不到阳光

    凡人触摸不到阳光

    夏沐阳,有没有人曾经告诉过你,你什么都好,可是就是有女朋友了。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 爱已成荒:隔着天堂的相爱

    爱已成荒:隔着天堂的相爱

    同一天,他失去了父亲;她来到了这个世界。时隔多年,他学成归来,带着仇恨和阴谋进入韩氏,不料遇到了让他可以以最快最狠的方式去报复“杀父仇人”的对象。“我从来没有后悔过爱上你。”这是冷泽辰第一次听到韩雪妍说爱他,也是最后一次。
  • 天上掉下个中二仙

    天上掉下个中二仙

    叶凝泣被天界亘古不变的规则打入凡间。“我靠,你敢踢我!我敢踢我,我就敢不回去!”(其实已经回不去了。)却不料,男主成了一个玩世不恭、桀骜不驯、中二病晚期的少年。冥山,九仙,重生!原来所谓的天界只是个......?!看来被踢下来不止这么简单?!且看男主如何谈笑风生闯江湖!
  • 一个人的修罗路

    一个人的修罗路

    一个人的修罗道,要埋葬多少无辜的人,成功的人从来不在乎这一点,正是因为没有多余的怜悯他们才能走向顶峰。永远都不要去恨你的敌人,那会使你丧失判断能力———维多柯里昂不要把一切都想的很天真,好多事情并没有表面看起来那么简单。多思考才不会成为阴沟里的一具尸体。我是一个杀手,从某种意义上来说也是一个富家公子,我这一辈子却没有活在孤独里,因为上帝说你不该这样孤独,于是我有了爱情。上帝说你不该早早的死去,所以我犯了很多错,杀了很多人还心安理得的活着。我不允许自己失去什么,所以我把一切都紧紧的撰在手里,像一个自私而又贪婪的恶魔。