登陆注册
20099800000015

第15章 II(8)

"As if I cared whether he was at the dinner or not! Why couldn't he have fixed it so I might have dined with his sisters alone? We would never have missed him. I'll never meet her now. I know it; I feel it. Fate is against me. Now I will have to follow them on to Athens, and something will turn up there to keep me away from her. You'll see; you'll see. I wonder where they go from Athens?"

The Hohenwalds departed the next morning, and as their party had engaged all the state-rooms in the little Italian steamer, Carlton was forced to wait over for the next. He was very gloomy over his disappointment, and Miss Morris did her best to amuse him. She and her aunt were never idle now, and spent the last few days of their stay in Constantinople in the bazars or in excursions up and down the river.

"These are my last days of freedom," Miss Morris said to him once, "and I mean to make the most of them. After this there will be no more travelling for me. And I love it so!" she added, wistfully.

Carlton made no comment, but he felt a certain contemptuous pity for the young man in America who had required such a sacrifice. "She is too nice a girl to let him know she is making a sacrifice," he thought, "or giving up anything for him, but SHE won't forget it." And Carlton again commended himself for not having asked any woman to make any sacrifices for him.

They left Constantinople for Athens one moonlight night, three days after the Hohenwalds had taken their departure, and as the evening and the air were warm, they remained upon the upper deck until the boat had entered the Dardanelles. There were few passengers, and Mrs. Downs went below early, leaving Miss Morris and Carlton hanging over the rail, and looking down upon a band of Hungarian gypsies, who were playing the weird music of their country on the deck beneath them. The low receding hills lay close on either hand, and ran back so sharply from the narrow waterway that they seemed to shut in the boat from the world beyond. The moonlight showed a little mud fort or a thatched cottage on the bank fantastically, as through a mist, and from time to time as they sped forward they saw the camp-fire of a sentry, and his shadow as he passed between it and them, or stopped to cover it with wood.

The night was so still that they could hear the waves in the steamer's wake washing up over the stones on either shore, and the muffled beat of the engines echoed back from either side of the valley through which they passed. There was a great lantern hanging midway from the mast, and shining down upon the lower deck. It showed a group of Greeks, Turks, and Armenians, in strange costumes, sleeping, huddled together in picturesque confusion over the bare boards, or wide-awake and voluble, smoking and chatting together in happy company. The music of the tizanes rose in notes of passionate ecstasy and sharp, unexpected bursts of melody. It ceased and be-an again, as though the musicians were feeling their way, and then burst out once more into shrill defiance. It stirred Carlton with a strange turbulent unrest. From the banks the night wind brought soft odors of fresh earth and of heavy foliage.

"The music of different countries," Carlton said at last, "means many different things. But it seems to me that the music of Hungary is the music of love."

Miss Morris crossed her arms comfortably on the rail, and he heard her laugh softly. "Oh no, it is not," she said, undisturbed. "It is a passionate, gusty, heady sort of love, if you like, but it's no more like the real thing than burgundy is like clear, cold, good water. It's not the real thing at all."

"I beg your pardon," said Carlton, meekly.

"Of course I don't know anything about it." He had been waked out of the spell which the night and the tizanes had placed upon him as completely as though some one had shaken him sharply by the shoulder. "I bow," he said, "to your superior knowledge. I know nothing about it."

"No; you are quite right. I don't believe you do know anything about it," said the girl, "or you wouldn't have made such a comparison."

"Do you know, Miss Morris," said Carlton, seriously, "that I believe I'm not able to care for a woman as other men do--at least as some men do; it's just lacking in me, and always will be lacking. It's like an ear for music; if you haven't got it, if it isn't born in you, you'll never have it. It's not a thing you can cultivate, and I feel that it's not only a misfortune, but a fault. Now I honestly believe that I care more for the Princess Aline, whom I have never met, than many other men could care for her if they knew her well; but what they feel would last, and I have doubts from past experience that what I feel would. I don't doubt it while it exists, but it never does exist long, and so I am afraid it is going to be with me to the end of the chapter." He paused for a moment, but the girl did not answer. "I am speaking in earnest now," he added, with a rueful laugh.

"I see you are," she replied, briefly. She seemed to be considering his condition as he had described it to her, and he did not interrupt her. From below them came the notes of the waltz the gypsies played. It was full of the undercurrent of sadness that a waltz should have, and filled out what Carlton said as the music from the orchestra in a theatre heightens the effect without interrupting the words of the actor on the stage.

"It is strange," said Miss Morris. "I should have thought you were a man who would care very much and in just the right way.

But I don't believe really--I'm sorry, but I don't believe you do know what love means at all."

"Oh, it isn't as bad as that," said Carlton. "I think I know what it is, and what it means to other people, but I can't feel it myself. The best idea I ever got of it--the thing that made it clear to me--was a line in a play. It seemed to express it better than any of the love-poems I ever read. It was in Shenandoah."

Miss Morris laughed.

"I beg your pardon," said Carlton.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 逆境中的自在

    逆境中的自在

    领悟佛语经典,参透人生百味,看破荣辱得失,活得自在安然。一桩桩禅宗公案,一则则佛家故事,在轻松自然的享受中,让你参透人生的禅机,发现人生的真谛,升华人生的意义。
  • 都市惊云

    都市惊云

    “我能有今天,不是我自己给的,而是所有人。”——杨号天他是一个考上大专的学生,他是一个才能非浅的男孩儿,然而想要成为真正的王者,必定会有人为他付出,“我只想做一个平凡人,但是命运却不容我。”——杨号天波折坎坷、悲欢离合是他人生的真实写照,“一路走来,我得到的和我失去的一样多。”——杨号天兄弟们的情深、爱人们的关爱却不能同时让他兼得……
  • 特艳攻略

    特艳攻略

    夜/潜伏着漆黑的影子/我是黑夜之狼/不需要灯光照耀/我的路途不需要光明!
  • 天天营养百味:风味拿手菜

    天天营养百味:风味拿手菜

    你想烧制几道与众不同的特色风味拿手菜吗?你想看到亲朋好友因为你的厨艺而大饱口福吗?本书汇百家之所长,让您可以在自家的厨房里,利用最简单的器具,轻松制作出好吃、好看、好营养、好创意的各种美味、风味拿手菜。您只需要举一反三,便能让普通的家常菜因独特的做法而与众不同。爱上拿手菜,爱上新生活。
  • 终生等你

    终生等你

    主要内容:李静与关涛是初中同班同学,关涛见李静漂亮就天天去缠她,而李静不爱他,可是李静被人欺负时,关涛挺身而出却失去了英俊的面容,从此变成一个丑男,也离李静而去……若干年后李静终于等到他一起走进结婚的礼堂。
  • 王之盛宴梦骁尧著

    王之盛宴梦骁尧著

    这是一个元气与机械文明并存的大陆。这里有天使的羽毛、恶魔的黑翼、众神的战枪。这里也有神剑、古刀、火枪、烈马、军徽。还有叛逆、冷漠、热血、成长、温暖。以及冲破所有封锁的爱情。这是一个堕落的时代、弱肉强食的时代,适者生存的时代、混乱征伐的时代!欲望、毁灭、占领、统治即是一切!那个名为林焱的少年默默许愿,他的愿望是毁灭那个国家,赶走那些鸠占鹊巢的侵略者!他一路从荆棘和烈火硝烟中走来,他势必要毁灭那国,
  • 屠夫寡妇的极品生活

    屠夫寡妇的极品生活

    五大三黑,是她的代名词,一把杀猪刀,展开她古代的极品生活。别人也穿越,为毛她穿越后竟然是一个寡妇,长得还五大三黑,音信全无的丈夫竟然还能回来,回来就回来还是个将军。郡主抢夫?开什么玩笑,她能和别人共事一夫,还有郡主了不起吗,她敢杀猪吗?下个月正式恢复更新
  • 妖孽王爷绝色妃

    妖孽王爷绝色妃

    她,21世纪的王牌杀手!一朝被害魂穿异世!却屡遭姨娘陷害,庶姐欺凌,多年隐忍,只为最后的惊艳绽放。他,轩辕皇帝最宠爱的皇子,人人惧怕的冷酷溟爷!他无情,残忍,而且不近女色,逆天洁癖!他视女人如衣物,凡是接近他一米之内的女子,全部暴毙身亡,死相恐怖……他,温文尔雅且风度翩翩,万年前在她遁入轮回之时,不惜自封力量,坠入轮回只为找寻她的踪影。寻觅万年之久,只为与她再续前缘!万年追寻,万年纠葛,为博她一笑,他甘愿倾尽所有。。。。。。当冷酷邪魅的王爷,霸道的闯进她的生活,住进她的心房,却再次遇到万年追寻,只为她而来的翩翩美男!当废物变成天才,丑颜变得倾城,面对万年前的恋人和妖孽霸道的冥王,她会如何选择?
  • 太宇武帝

    太宇武帝

    宇宙的始末,命运的流转,命运,征途,一个赌局,惊天赌局,看申修养以武论道,以拳逆天,如何修长而道远
  • 清水红颜

    清水红颜

    楚怀殇说:”遇见你,是我最美丽的意外。“谢清水娇羞道:”因为一切有你。“