登陆注册
20268200000006

第6章

"Oh, never mind him!" said Bessie, with the brevity of contempt.

"You speak as if you did n't like him."

"I don't!" Bessie affirmed, and put Rowland to bed again.

The hammock was swung at the end of the veranda, in the thickest shade of the vines, and this fragment of dialogue had passed unnoticed.Rowland submitted a while longer to be cradled, and contented himself with listening to Mr.Hudson's voice.

It was a soft and not altogether masculine organ, and was pitched on this occasion in a somewhat plaintive and pettish key.

The young man's mood seemed fretful; he complained of the heat, of the dust, of a shoe that hurt him, of having gone on an errand a mile to the other side of the town and found the person he was in search of had left Northampton an hour before.

"Won't you have a cup of tea?" Cecilia asked."Perhaps that will restore your equanimity.""Aye, by keeping me awake all night!" said Hudson.

"At the best, it 's hard enough to go down to the office.

With my nerves set on edge by a sleepless night, I should perforce stay at home and be brutal to my poor mother.""Your mother is well, I hope."

"Oh, she 's as usual."

"And Miss Garland?"

"She 's as usual, too.Every one, everything, is as usual.

Nothing ever happens, in this benighted town.""I beg your pardon; things do happen, sometimes," said Cecilia.

"Here is a dear cousin of mine arrived on purpose to congratulate you on your statuette." And she called to Rowland to come and be introduced to Mr.Hudson.The young man sprang up with alacrity, and Rowland, coming forward to shake hands, had a good look at him in the light projected from the parlor window.

Something seemed to shine out of Hudson's face as a warning against a "compliment" of the idle, unpondered sort.

"Your statuette seems to me very good," Rowland said gravely.

"It has given me extreme pleasure."

"And my cousin knows what is good," said Cecilia.

"He 's a connoisseur."

Hudson smiled and stared."A connoisseur?" he cried, laughing."He 's the first I 've ever seen! Let me see what they look like;" and he drew Rowland nearer to the light."Have they all such good heads as that?

I should like to model yours."

"Pray do," said Cecilia."It will keep him a while.

He is running off to Europe."

"Ah, to Europe!" Hudson exclaimed with a melancholy cadence, as they sat down."Happy man!"But the note seemed to Rowland to be struck rather at random, for he perceived no echo of it in the boyish garrulity of his later talk.Hudson was a tall, slender young fellow, with a singularly mobile and intelligent face.

Rowland was struck at first only with its responsive vivacity, but in a short time he perceived it was remarkably handsome.

The features were admirably chiseled and finished, and a frank smile played over them as gracefully as a breeze among flowers.

The fault of the young man's whole structure was an excessive want of breadth.The forehead, though it was high and rounded, was narrow; the jaw and the shoulders were narrow;and the result was an air of insufficient physical substance.

But Mallet afterwards learned that this fair, slim youth could draw indefinitely upon a mysterious fund of nervous force, which outlasted and outwearied the endurance of many a sturdier temperament.

And certainly there was life enough in his eye to furnish an immortality! It was a generous dark gray eye, in which there came and went a sort of kindling glow, which would have made a ruder visage striking, and which gave at times to Hudson's harmonious face an altogether extraordinary beauty.

There was to Rowland's sympathetic sense a slightly pitiful disparity between the young sculptor's delicate countenance and the shabby gentility of his costume.

He was dressed for a visit--a visit to a pretty woman.

He was clad from head to foot in a white linen suit, which had never been remarkable for the felicity of its cut, and had now quite lost that crispness which garments of this complexion can as ill spare as the back-scene of a theatre the radiance of the footlights.He wore a vivid blue cravat, passed through a ring altogether too splendid to be valuable;he pulled and twisted, as he sat, a pair of yellow kid gloves;he emphasized his conversation with great dashes and flourishes of a light, silver-tipped walking-stick, and he kept constantly taking off and putting on one of those slouched sombreros which are the traditional property of the Virginian or Carolinian of romance.When this was on, he was very picturesque, in spite of his mock elegance; and when it was off, and he sat nursing it and turning it about and not knowing what to do with it, he could hardly be said to be awkward.

He evidently had a natural relish for brilliant accessories, and appropriated what came to his hand.This was visible in his talk, which abounded in the florid and sonorous.

He liked words with color in them.

Rowland, who was but a moderate talker, sat by in silence, while Cecilia, who had told him that she desired his opinion upon her friend, used a good deal of characteristic finesse in leading the young man to expose himself.

She perfectly succeeded, and Hudson rattled away for an hour with a volubility in which boyish unconsciousness and manly shrewdness were singularly combined.He gave his opinion on twenty topics, he opened up an endless budget of local gossip, he described his repulsive routine at the office of Messrs.

Striker and Spooner, counselors at law, and he gave with great felicity and gusto an account of the annual boat-race between Harvard and Yale, which he had lately witnessed at Worcester.

He had looked at the straining oarsmen and the swaying crowd with the eye of the sculptor.Rowland was a good deal amused and not a little interested.Whenever Hudson uttered some peculiarly striking piece of youthful grandiloquence, Cecilia broke into a long, light, familiar laugh.

"What are you laughing at?" the young man then demanded.

"Have I said anything so ridiculous?"

"Go on, go on," Cecilia replied."You are too delicious!

同类推荐
  • 昌言

    昌言

    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。
  • 莲月禅师语录

    莲月禅师语录

    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。
  • 药征

    药征

    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。
  • 寺塔记

    寺塔记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 淡水厅筑城案卷

    淡水厅筑城案卷

    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
  • 网游之初代血族

    网游之初代血族

    身为华夏龙组的成员,龙轩遵从组长的遗命,进入了曙光公司最新研发的拟真网游《命运》,在这个令众人疯狂的世界中,创造了一个血族的传说,一段惊天动地的神话!
  • 行货商诡闻录

    行货商诡闻录

    我叫黄岩,是个典当行的伙计。做典当这一行无论是老的旧的还是稀罕的,只要值钱是来者不拒的。偶然一次我收到了一件残破的玉器,这件玉器和我失踪多年的父亲有着千丝万缕的联系。同时也让我卷入了一场惊人的漩涡之中!一个延续千年的惊天隐秘,一个诡异的家族诅咒!而这一切的背后竟是一个颠覆一切的弥天谎言……
  • 辱妻

    辱妻

    这男人凭什么?不爱她却设计她与他结婚,逼她假怀孕好瞒天过海养他在外的私生子!还动不动就标明她是他的所有物,不许她见其他男人!是可忍孰不可忍,男人,不爱就滚开!
  • 魔武至神

    魔武至神

    轰动世界的武道天才、格斗之神,莫名陨落,来到异界大陆。一个魔法士与斗士林立的大陆,一个强者为尊的大陆。这里没有他熟悉的武道和格斗,但,这里有炫丽的魔法和强悍的斗气。别人修炼斗气和斗技,他却修炼武道,每招每式都胜过强悍的斗技!别人修炼普通魔法,他却修炼更加诡异的血赋魔法,潜力无人能敌!别人进入名满天下的大学院,他只进入籍籍无名的小学院,却照样披荆斩棘!踏着天才的身躯,以武道魔法征服天下,终成魔武至神!
  • 南濠诗话

    南濠诗话

    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。
  • 浅墨纵衡

    浅墨纵衡

    一穿越就成了公主??!!还有美男任选??!!一个腹黑,一个温柔,嗯……她该如何选呢??这是本人写的第一本书,有什么不好的地方请大家多多指教,喜欢的话就动动手指,推荐+收藏!!本人不胜感激!!!
  • 豪门纯爱:冷氏总裁甜蜜宠妻

    豪门纯爱:冷氏总裁甜蜜宠妻

    为救母亲,她毅然和他签下了为期三个月的情人契约。她本以为契约结束,两人便可以从此桥归桥路归路,男婚女嫁各不相干。却不想,当三月之期结束时,夏晓柠才发现,惨了!总裁套上小白兔,原来还是自己太纯萌!“契约到期,拜拜喽!”“不好意思,租约到期?你,我买了!”“总裁大人,求放过!”“想逃?好啊!我倒要看看谁敢碰我的女人!”“我根本就不是你的女人,好不好?”“没关系,马上你就是了。”“……”
  • 至尊绝鼎

    至尊绝鼎

    传说进入青铜仙殿,即可得到成仙之秘!万古第一人,无双至尊魂!这是世人对无双至尊的评价,可当这样的一位绝世至尊,进入隐藏着成仙之秘的青铜仙殿后发现,仙殿内除了一口青铜鼎外,空无一物!他忍不住破口大骂:“我日你仙人板板!”
  • 魄虚

    魄虚

    太虚大陆,太虚之心,化为五虚,五虚即五族,生亡一瞬息。于魄虚之中诞生的灵子,迫近的危机在碎裂的荒野上,称道魄虚。虚无的意志终有一天会从沉睡中复苏。...........
  • 天下无仙

    天下无仙

    修仙者,逍遥长生;为凡者,生死由命;为妖者,苟且偷生。悠悠天道万年梦,哪个今生注定?我,周靖,一介凡人,要让这……天下无仙!