登陆注册
20055000000010

第10章

Before he had met her, the little the priest had said concerning her and her zeal for their common desire had piqued his curiosity, and his imagination had been aroused by the picture of a romantic young woman giving her fortune to save the souls of the people of Messina; his people whom he regarded and who regarded him less as a feudal lord than as a father and a comrade. He had pictured her as a nervous, angular woman with a pale, ascetic face, and with the restless eyes of an enthusiast, dressed in black and badly dressed, and with a severe and narrow intelligence. But he had prepared himself to forgive her personality, for the sake of the high and generous impulse that inspired her. And when he was presented to her as she really was, and found her young, lovable, and nobly fair, the shock of wonder and delight had held him silent during the whole course of her interview with the priest, and when she had left them his brain was in a tumult and was filled with memories of her words and gestures, and of the sweet fearlessness of her manner. Beautiful women he had known before as beautiful women, but the saving grace in his nature had never before been so deeply roused by what was fine as well as beautiful. It seemed as though it were too complete and perfect. For he assured himself that she possessed everything--those qualities which he had never valued before because he believed them to be unattainable, and those others which he had made his idols. She was with him, mind and heart and soul, in the one desire of his life that he took seriously; she was of his religion, she was more noble than his noble sisters, and she was more beautiful than the day. In the first glow of the meeting it seemed to him as though fate had called them to do this work together,--she from the far shore of the Pacific, and he from his rocky island in the Middle Sea. And he saw with cruel distinctness, that if there were one thing wanting, it was himself. He worshipped her before he had bowed his first good-by to her, and that night he walked for miles up and down the long lengths of the avenue of the Champs-Elysees, facing the great change that she had brought into his life, but knowing himself to be utterly unfit for her coming. He felt like an unworthy steward caught at his master's return unprepared, with ungirt loins, and unlighted lamp. Nothing he had done since he was a child gave him the right to consider himself her equal. He was not blinded by the approaches which other daughters and the mothers of daughters had made him. He knew that what was enough to excuse many things in their eyes might find no apology in hers. He looked back with the awakening of a child at the irrevocable acts in his life that could not be altered nor dug up nor hidden away. They marked the road he had trodden like heavy milestones, telling his story to every passer-by. She could read them, as everyone else could read them. He had wasted his substance, he had bartered his birthright for a moment's pleasure; there was no one so low and despicable who could not call him comrade, to whom he had not given himself without reserve. There was nothing left, and now the one thing he had ever wanted had come, and had found him like a bankrupt, his credit wasted and his coffers empty. He had placed himself at the beck and call of every idle man and woman in Paris, and he was as common as the great clock-face that hangs above the boulevards.

Miss Carson's feelings toward Kalonay were not of her own choosing, and had passed through several stages. When they had first met she had thought it most sad that so careless and unprincipled a person should chance to hold so important a part in the task she had set herself to do. She knew his class only by hearsay, but she placed him in it, and, accordingly, at once dismissed him as a person from her mind.

Kalonay had never shown her that he loved her, except by those signs which any woman can read and which no man can conceal;but he did not make love to her, and it was that which first prepossessed her in his favor. One or two other men who knew of her fortune, and to whom she had given as little encouragement as she had to Kalonay, had been less considerate. But his attitude toward her was always that of a fellow-worker in the common cause. He treated her with a gratitude for the help she meant to give his people which much embarrassed her. His seriousness pleased her with him, seeing, as she did, that it was not his nature to be serious, and his enthusiasm and love for his half-civilized countrymen increased her interest in them, and her liking for him. She could not help but admire the way in which he accepted, without forcing her to make it any plainer, the fact that he held no place in her thoughts. And then she found that he began to hold more of a place in her thoughts than she had supposed any man could hold of whom she knew so little, and of whom the little she knew was so ill. She missed him when she went to the priest's and found that he had not sent for Kalonay to bear his part in their councils; and at times she felt an unworthy wish to hear Kalonay speak the very words she had admired him for keeping from her. And at last she learned the truth that she did love him, and it frightened her, and made her miserable and happy. They had not seen each other since he had left Paris for Messina, and though they spoke now only of his mission to the island, there was back of what they said the joy for each of them of being together again and of finding that it meant so much. What it might mean to the other, neither knew.

同类推荐
  • 从军行

    从军行

    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。
  • 钟情丽集

    钟情丽集

    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。
  • 鹤林玉露

    鹤林玉露

    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。
  • The Antiquities of the Jews

    The Antiquities of the Jews

    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。
  • 师友诗传录

    师友诗传录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 画山水赋

    画山水赋

    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。
  • 耍剑的世家无赖

    耍剑的世家无赖

    背剑匣,骑黑驴,小爷下山要抢婚!他是无赖,却傲骨铮铮,要把天捅个窟窿。
  • 彼年豆蔻

    彼年豆蔻

    大学亲密的同窗好友反目成仇,昔日温情的恋人误会重重,相濡以沫的亲人历经坎坷,最潦倒的时候带着家人远赴法国,艰难的开始新的生活;亲情,爱情,友情,当这三者同时摆在眼前的时候,到底该如何抉择?
  • 万界雄主

    万界雄主

    齐峰带领你开启全新的奇幻之旅。收天下之美女,征万里之江山,打怪、升级,轰杀各路天才恶棍,美人如玉,战火如荼,顺我者昌,逆我者杀无赦,尽在《万界雄主》。
  • 超级小医生

    超级小医生

    本是混吃等死的富家子弟,却家族蒙难,父母失踪,落魄街头。同学欺辱,兄弟反叛,订好的婚约无故作废!一朝觉醒,奋勇向前,我虽良善,但绝不懦弱,我虽医者仁心,但绝不放狼归山!
  • 成就人一生的做事好习惯

    成就人一生的做事好习惯

    《成就人一生的做事好习惯》为那些渴望成功的读者提供具体而实用的做事习惯养成方法与实用技巧,如想到的事情就马上去做,明确目标第一步,制定合理计划,事前准备要做好,轻重缓急排一排,不拖沓,不散漫,万事皆有始有终,不能事事依赖人等良好习惯。
  • 洛克王国之风犽

    洛克王国之风犽

    风犽是洛克王国一个村庄的小洛克,有一个神秘人派风犽来到了魔法学院,在那遇到许许多多朋友……
  • 璃曜象境

    璃曜象境

    我是神界之最的孩子,也是魔界之主的孩子神魔之子我是这个世界上最强大的存在可是就是这样最强大的我不能去神界,我的家,因为我有着魔的血脉不能去魔界,因为我有着神的血脉还记得那个神界之最与魔界之主在临死前笑着看了我一眼,然后他们就死了我一个人一个人啊他们又不担心我会死因为我是神魔之子啊……最强大的神与最强大的魔的孩子是的我不会死我绝对不要再见到那个号称我父亲的男人和那个说是我母亲的女人是的绝不!
  • 穿越之浮沉迷惑绝世倾城

    穿越之浮沉迷惑绝世倾城

    我用三世烟火,换你一世迷离。灯影浆声里天犹寒水犹寒梦中丝竹轻唱楼外楼山外山楼山之外人未还人未还雁字回首早过忘川抚琴之人泪满衫看那天地日月,恒静无言;青山长河,世代绵延;就像在我心中,你从未离去,也从未改变。原来只是我一厢情愿。
  • 生命的尊严与临终护理

    生命的尊严与临终护理

    为让每一个生命晚期的人都得到关爱和帮助,舒适、无痛苦、安详、有尊严地走完人生最后的旅程,倡导全社会都来关心和支持临终关怀事业。本书通过人们对生命尊严的需求的揭示,提出具有指导性的临终关怀的具体内容和方法。从临终关怀的概念与观念、临终关怀运动与发展、临终关怀模式与机构类型、临终关怀服务特点和内容、临终病人的生存质量评价、临终关怀护理实践、症状控制、临终患者心理关怀及其家属的忧伤辅导、死亡教育等全面系统阐述了临终关怀这一新兴边缘学科的理论与实践。