登陆注册
20049700000056

第56章 CHAPTER XXII THE COUNTRY HOUSE(1)

The luncheon hour at Holm Oaks, was, as in many well-bred country houses--out of the shooting season, be it understood--the soulful hour. The ferment of the daily doings was then at its full height, and the clamour of its conversation on the weather, and the dogs, the horses, neighbours, cricket, golf, was mingled with a literary murmur; for the Dennants were superior, and it was quite usual to hear remarks like these "Have you read that charmin' thing of Poser's?" or, "Yes, I've got the new edition of old Bablington: delightfully bound--so light." And it was in July that Holm Oaks, as a gathering-place of the elect, was at its best. For in July it had become customary to welcome there many of those poor souls from London who arrived exhausted by the season, and than whom no seamstress in a two-pair back could better have earned a holiday.

The Dennants themselves never went to London for the season. It was their good pleasure not to. A week or fortnight of it satisfied them. They had a radical weakness for fresh air, and Antonia, even after her presentation two seasons back, had insisted on returning home, stigmatising London balls as "stuffy things."When Shelton arrived the stream had only just begun, but every day brought fresh, or rather jaded, people to occupy the old, dark, sweet-smelling bedrooms. Individually, he liked his fellow-guests, but he found himself observing them. He knew that, if a man judged people singly, almost all were better than himself; only when judged in bulk were they worthy of the sweeping criticisms he felt inclined to pass on them. He knew this just as he knew that the conventions, having been invented to prevent man following his natural desires, were merely the disapproving sums of innumerable individual approvals.

It was in the bulk; then, that he found himself observing. But with his amiability and dread of notoriety he remained to all appearance a well-bred, docile creature, and he kept his judgments to himself.

In the matter of intellect he made a rough division of the guests--those who accepted things without a murmur, those who accepted them with carping jocularity; in the matter of morals he found they all accepted things without the semblance of a kick. To show sign of private moral judgment was to have lost your soul, and, worse, to be a bit of an outsider. He gathered this by intuition rather than from conversation; for conversation naturally tabooed such questions, and was carried on in the loud and cheerful tones peculiar to people of good breeding. Shelton had never been able to acquire this tone, and he could not help feeling that the inability made him more or less an object of suspicion. The atmosphere struck him as it never had before, causing him to feel a doubt of his gentility. Could a man suffer from passion, heart-searchings, or misgivings, and remain a gentleman? It seemed improbable. One of his fellow-guests, a man called Edgbaston, small-eyed and semi-bald, with a dark moustache and a distinguished air of meanness, disconcerted him one day by remarking of an unknown person, "A half-bred lookin' chap; did n't seem to know his mind." Shelton was harassed by a horrid doubt.

Everything seemed divided into classes, carefully docketed and valued. For instance, a Briton was of more value than a man, and wives than women. Those things or phases of life with which people had no personal acquaintance were regarded with a faint amusement and a certain disapproval. The principles of the upper class, in fact, were strictly followed.

He was in that hypersenstive and nervous state favourable for recording currents foreign to itself. Things he had never before noticed now had profound effect on him, such as the tone in which men spoke of women--not precisely with hostility, nor exactly with contempt best, perhaps, described as cultured jeering; never, of course, when men spoke of their own wives, mothers, sisters, or immediate friends, but merely when they spoke of any other women. He reflected upon this, and came to the conclusion that, among the upper classes, each man's own property was holy, while other women were created to supply him with gossip, jests, and spice. Another thing that struck him was the way in which the war then going on was made into an affair of class. In their view it was a baddish business, because poor hack Blank and Peter Blank-Blank had lost their lives, and poor Teddy Blank had now one arm instead of two. Humanity in general was omitted, but not the upper classes, nor, incidentally, the country which belonged to them. For there they were, all seated in a row, with eyes fixed on the horizon of their lawns.

Late one evening, billiards and music being over and the ladies gone, Shelton returned from changing to his smoking-suit, and dropped into one of the great arm-chairs that even in summer made a semicircle round the fendered hearth. Fresh from his good-night parting with Antonia, he sat perhaps ten minutes before he began to take in all the figures in their parti-coloured smoking jackets, cross-legged, with glasses in their hands, and cigars between their teeth.

The man in the next chair roused him by putting down his tumbler with a tap, and seating himself upon the cushioned fender. Through the mist of smoke, with shoulders hunched, elbows and knees crooked out, cigar protruding, beak-ways, below his nose, and the crimson collar of his smoking jacket buttoned close as plumage on his breast, he looked a little like a gorgeous bird.

"They do you awfully well," he said.

A voice from the chair on Shelton's right replied, "They do you better at Verado's.""The Veau d'Or 's the best place; they give you Turkish baths for nothing!" drawled a fat man with a tiny mouth.

The suavity of this pronouncement enfolded all as with a blessing.

同类推荐
  • 佛说兜沙经

    佛说兜沙经

    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。
  • 饮食须知

    饮食须知

    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。
  • 北轩笔记

    北轩笔记

    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。
  • 白沙语录

    白沙语录

    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。
  • 伤寒杂病论

    伤寒杂病论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 撒旦总裁的前妻

    撒旦总裁的前妻

    十年前他赐给她的痛,她早已埋进心间。本以为早已忘却的疼,在面对他时却又时时撕扯她的心。为何不能忘啊,忘了不是会更好吗?嫁他非她所愿,当知晓他就是那个他时,她默然。新婚之夜,他给她立了三条规矩,让她签下一份协议。不许出门,不许和别的男人来往,不许管他的事。七年之内如果她主动提出离婚,她将一分钱也得不到。她答应,因为,本来她就没有想在他身上得到什么。小心翼翼收起自己的心,不想与他有一丝的纠缠。
  • 我的爱人(兄妹恋)

    我的爱人(兄妹恋)

    天使的性格也不是完全一致的:有温柔体贴的有搞笑开心的有虚假的也有对事情漠不关心的;还有凶悍得可怕的,但也有凶悍中带有内心善良美好又可爱的。每种开端未必就有一定令人满意的结局:其实,悲伤的结局是美好的结合结局是美满的。美好的,是留给观者们动感的流下真诚的泪水,令人们知道珍惜;幸福的,是给观者们感到自己的心情也能开朗露出温欣的笑容,分享一份温欣。不管是哪种结局,我们应该带着幸运的笑容去尝试。像我的天使
  • 三生伴君

    三生伴君

    女主绝不圣母,她有血有肉,有点儿小心计,有点小善良,有仇必报,有恩必还,是她的信条,虽不至于锱铢必较,却也不会被人陷害差点挂掉后以德报怨,她会反击,会设计她执念太深,坠了魔道他一心追随,伴其入魔他是六界最强战仙陆饮白他成了她一生的追求和求而不得,而她却成了他唯一的软肋和让他此生唯一一次为之流泪的人作为一个人参精,她浑身都是宝,误打误撞的走上修仙路,被妖怪追,被神经质仙友坑,被美人师父丢,还被当作破坏人家基情的第三者叉了出来什么?师傅收她为徒只为了她这个人参精浑身是宝?还是个便携式移动药箱?!直到他的风华沉寂,他才明白,追索了一生,无非是想再听她应一声“徒儿在呢”仙又如何,我愿伴你入魔
  • 咖啡公主一号店

    咖啡公主一号店

    她是人人崇拜的端庄优雅千金大小姐,也是理论满分、操作零分的名不副实咖啡公主!可谁知道,她这个一伪咖啡公主一竟然会被一个有咖啡狂热症的天神给看上,并且该天神还因为喝下她世界第一难喝的咖啡而失去所有的魔力:最恐怖的是,这个天神似乎一神一品不佳,失去法力后,他以前的老对手全都找上门来算账了!
  • 仙河图

    仙河图

    仙道一途,练气、筑基、聚灵、天虚,纵是经历无数岁月与磨难到达五劫三变,仙?亦仙。然,天道之下,众生皆凡
  • 蜉蝣沉

    蜉蝣沉

    很喜欢一个女生,她不高,不胖,不瘦,不漂亮。放在人群中都找不到。偶尔还有点小暴脾气,有点天真。那个时候,能想到浪漫的事情就是能与她一起走入婚姻的殿堂。往往天不遂人愿,无论最后怎么折腾也没能在一起。她很喜欢蜉蝣,却从来没见过。有时想一想是为了完成自己的一个心愿吧,也是为了思念。
  • 习惯是种爱

    习惯是种爱

    “今天天气好晴朗,处处是春光,鸟儿唱,姑娘靓,老子抢个回家乡……”
  • 超级之梦境奇缘

    超级之梦境奇缘

    每个人心中都有一个梦,无论你是一贫如洗的宅男,还是腰缠万贯的富豪。当这个梦能为你带来力量的时候,世界将会变得怎么样?梦中佛国、梦中花园,每个梦都有他自有的体系,也就是道,想出梦,那就先入梦吧!吴名因少一魂一魄,导致不能修练,成为一名超级废柴。当地球人吴铭穿越到这个世界之后,补足宿主魂力不足之问题,而且以超越所有人的起点步入修练,走出一条超越神级之路,同时揭开梦元大陆那神秘的面纱。梦里我是神,规则由我定。这是一条强者之路,也是一条有着快意恩仇、儿女情长的江湖之路。
  • 神奇宝贝真嗣之旅

    神奇宝贝真嗣之旅

    以“爱”来培养神奇宝贝,才是正确的训练方式?别开玩笑了。他,真嗣,会证明给那些人看。成为强者的方式,可不只有那一种。
  • 洞玄灵宝斋说光烛戒罚灯祝愿仪

    洞玄灵宝斋说光烛戒罚灯祝愿仪

    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。