登陆注册
20268200000035

第35章

It is a question whether the reader will know why, but this letter gave Rowland extraordinary pleasure.He liked its very brevity and meagreness, and there seemed to him an exquisite modesty in its saying nothing from the young girl herself.

He delighted in the formal address and conclusion;they pleased him as he had been pleased by an angular gesture in some expressive girlish figure in an early painting.

The letter renewed that impression of strong feeling combined with an almost rigid simplicity, which Roderick's betrothed had personally given him.And its homely stiffness seemed a vivid reflection of a life concentrated, as the young girl had borrowed warrant from her companion to say, in a single devoted idea.

The monotonous days of the two women seemed to Rowland's fancy to follow each other like the tick-tick of a great time-piece, marking off the hours which separated them from the supreme felicity of clasping the far-away son and lover to lips sealed with the excess of joy.He hoped that Roderick, now that he had shaken off the oppression of his own importunate faith, was not losing a tolerant temper for the silent prayers of the two women at Northampton.

He was left to vain conjectures, however, as to Roderick's actual moods and occupations.He knew he was no letter-writer, and that, in the young sculptor's own phrase, he had at any time rather build a monument than write a note.But when a month had passed without news of him, he began to be half anxious and half angry, and wrote him three lines, in the care of a Continental banker, begging him at least to give some sign of whether he was alive or dead.

A week afterwards came an answer--brief, and dated Baden-Baden."Iknow I have been a great brute," Roderick wrote, "not to have sent you a word before; but really I don't know what has got into me.

I have lately learned terribly well how to be idle.I am afraid to think how long it is since I wrote to my mother or to Mary.

Heaven help them--poor, patient, trustful creatures!

I don't know how to tell you what I am doing.It seems all amusing enough while I do it, but it would make a poor show in a narrative intended for your formidable eyes.I found Baxter in Switzerland, or rather he found me, and he grabbed me by the arm and brought me here.

I was walking twenty miles a day in the Alps, drinking milk in lonely chalets, sleeping as you sleep, and thinking it was all very good fun; but Baxter told me it would never do, that the Alps were 'd----d rot,' that Baden-Baden was the place, and that if I knew what was good for me I would come along with him.

It is a wonderful place, certainly, though, thank the Lord, Baxter departed last week, blaspheming horribly at trente et quarante.

But you know all about it and what one does--what one is liable to do.

I have succumbed, in a measure, to the liabilities, and I wish I had some one here to give me a thundering good blowing up.

Not you, dear friend; you would draw it too mild; you have too much of the milk of human kindness.I have fits of horrible homesickness for my studio, and I shall be devoutly grateful when the summer is over and I can go back and swing a chisel.

I feel as if nothing but the chisel would satisfy me;as if I could rush in a rage at a block of unshaped marble.

There are a lot of the Roman people here, English and American;I live in the midst of them and talk nonsense from morning till night.

There is also some one else; and to her I don't talk sense, nor, thank heaven, mean what I say.I confess, I need a month's work to recover my self-respect."These lines brought Rowland no small perturbation;the more, that what they seemed to point to surprised him.

During the nine months of their companionship Roderick had shown so little taste for dissipation that Rowland had come to think of it as a canceled danger, and it greatly perplexed him to learn that his friend had apparently proved so pliant to opportunity.

But Roderick's allusions were ambiguous, and it was possible they might simply mean that he was out of patience with a frivolous way of life and fretting wholesomely over his absent work.

It was a very good thing, certainly, that idleness should prove, on experiment, to sit heavily on his conscience.Nevertheless, the letter needed, to Rowland's mind, a key: the key arrived a week later.

"In common charity," Roderick wrote, "lend me a hundred pounds!

I have gambled away my last franc--I have made a mountain of debts.

Send me the money first; lecture me afterwards!" Rowland sent the money by return of mail; then he proceeded, not to lecture, but to think.He hung his head; he was acutely disappointed.

He had no right to be, he assured himself; but so it was.

Roderick was young, impulsive, unpracticed in stoicism; it was a hundred to one that he was to pay the usual vulgar tribute to folly.

But his friend had regarded it as securely gained to his own belief in virtue that he was not as other foolish youths are, and that he would have been capable of looking at folly in the face and passing on his way.Rowland for a while felt a sore sense of wrath.

What right had a man who was engaged to that fine girl in Northampton to behave as if his consciousness were a common blank, to be overlaid with coarse sensations? Yes, distinctly, he was disappointed.

He had accompanied his missive with an urgent recommendation to leave Baden-Baden immediately, and an offer to meet Roderick at any point he would name.The answer came promptly; it ran as follows:

"Send me another fifty pounds! I have been back to the tables.

I will leave as soon as the money comes, and meet you at Geneva.

There I will tell you everything."

There is an ancient terrace at Geneva, planted with trees and studded with benches, overlooked by gravely aristocratic old dwellings and overlooking the distant Alps.A great many generations have made it a lounging-place, a great many friends and lovers strolled there, a great many confidential talks and momentous interviews gone forward.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 古武小农民

    古武小农民

    想不到随变买的戒指,竟然自成空间,里面竟然还有一口灵泉,这样就能过着种种田的自由职业者的生活了。平时顺便修修炼,别人来找茬时,再也不用害怕了,安全的生活有保障。从此过着逍遥肆意的生活。
  • 厚黑学全书(全4卷)

    厚黑学全书(全4卷)

    本书是一部以史为例、集文学性欣赏性可读性于一身的全书,适于阅读,是青少年朋友和读者为人处世不可多得的精品读物。
  • 穿越无国界

    穿越无国界

    无故穿越时空,吃恶魔果实,扫平三国,战海贼,灭火影;登高达,拯救地球军。季小白与小黄狗的征程开始了.....
  • 高唐梦

    高唐梦

    李饮家贫,从小习毛体,喜诗词,上高中不久,便开始了大唐开元之旅。本书风格写实,文笔先下重墨,之后会浓淡相宜。——这是芹菜的第一本书,肯定会有许多不尽如人意的地方,真心希望得到大家的宽容、理解与支持。——以下附庸风雅——香草美人,当从那馨香之物始。至于仗剑去国,游历天涯的情志,大唐除了这白之侠气和饮之儒雅,竟是难寻其右。饮穿大唐,唯有缚鸡之力,未得莫测神功。此人生存之道太差,只运气极佳,又因儿时于那诗词歌赋的些许嗜好,竟在大唐成了正果。至于正果究竟为何物,以愚拙见,当是免不了正头娘子以齐家,偏枕美妾以风流。再如治国、平天下者,当是凭栏浊酒咏醉之词,不足为据,只做流年笑谈罢了。
  • 极品瞳术

    极品瞳术

    被高压电击中双眼后,江少游因祸得福,令双眼产生异变。不但能够透视,而且可以一眼看到病人的病灶所在,一代神医即将问鼎花都……
  • 半夏琉璃

    半夏琉璃

    他是出了名的校草,闯进了黎盛夏的人生,他承诺要给她一辈子,虽然总是有些小插曲,但还是幸福的在一起。
  • 网游之御龙耀九天

    网游之御龙耀九天

    东汉末年,纷乱并起,豪杰并立,枭雄展露,辩才无数,兵家、儒家、法家、道家、阴阳等皆悉数粉墨登场,争雄一时,比之战国亦不逊色,当现代人走入三国,是否能决定历史走向、九大诸侯国随之而生,最终能否将实现九大诸侯国的统一,成就玩家自己的三国传奇。
  • 那些不回头的岁月

    那些不回头的岁月

    没有人/能贯穿生命的始终/人生中/总有一段路程/要你独自行走……
  • 混元战纪之封神

    混元战纪之封神

    混元者,元气未分,混沌为一,元气之始也!混沌演化万物,万物兴兴向荣,终于因人的贪欲而引起的一场浩劫,打破了世间宁静,大陆各处纷争不断,最终导致许多物种灭绝,仙道教派落寞,仙法遗失·····纷争终不知其多少年,一代战神崛起,终于结束了这纷争的局面,建立了新的秩序。
  • 绝艳召唤师:废物五小姐

    绝艳召唤师:废物五小姐

    那男子仍是没有开口,隔了好一会儿,终于慢悠悠地开口了:“小丫头,你倒挺有意思的。”说到这,莫汐凉才知道他早就到了这里。不耐烦的说道:“关你什么事?你是谁?你要干什么?”男子笑了笑,“想不到,这左相府的废物竟会隔空点穴。看来,这次的北宣之行也不是这么无聊啊。记住了,小丫头。五个月后的学院选拔一定要去哟,我会到场的。记住了,我的名字,魇。”