登陆注册
20291900000042

第42章

Blanche Evers was what the French call an article of fantasy, and Gordon had taken a pleasure in finding her deliciously useless.

He cultivated utility in other ways, and it pleased and flattered him to feel that he could afford, morally speaking, to have a kittenish wife. He had within himself a fund of common sense to draw upon, so that to espouse a paragon of wisdom would be but to carry water to the fountain.

He could easily make up for the deficiencies of a wife who was a little silly, and if she charmed and amused him, he could treat himself to the luxury of these sensations for themselves.

He was not in the least afraid of being ruined by it, and if Blanche's birdlike chatter and turns of the head had made a fool of him, he knew it perfectly well, and simply took his stand upon his rights. Every man has a right to a little flower-bed, and life is not all mere kitchen-gardening. Bernard rapidly extemporized this rough explanation of the surprise his friend had offered him, and he found it all-sufficient for his immediate needs. He wrote Blanche a charming note, to which she replied with a great deal of spirit and grace.

Her little letter was very prettily turned, and Bernard, reading it over two or three times, said to himself that, to do her justice, she might very well have polished her intellect a trifle during these two or three years.

As she was older, she could hardly help being wiser.

It even occurred to Bernard that she might have profited by the sort of experience that is known as the discipline of suffering.

What had become of Captain Lovelock and that tender passion which was apparently none the less genuine for having been expressed in the slang of a humorous period? Had they been permanently separated by judicious guardians, and had she been obliged to obliterate his image from her lightly-beating little heart?

Bernard had felt sure at Baden that, beneath her contemptuous airs and that impertinent consciousness of the difficulties of conquest by which a pretty American girl attests her allegiance to a civilization in which young women occupy the highest place--he had felt sure that Blanche had a high appreciation of her handsome Englishman, and that if Lovelock should continue to relish her charms, he might count upon the advantages of reciprocity. But it occurred to Bernard that Captain Lovelock had perhaps been faithless; that, at least, the discourtesy of chance and the inhumanity of an elder brother might have kept him an eternal prisoner at the Hotel de Hollande (where, for all Bernard knew to the contrary, he had been obliged to work out his destiny in the arduous character of a polyglot waiter); so that the poor young girl, casting backward glances along the path of Mrs. Vivian's retreat, and failing to detect the onward rush of a rescuing cavalier, had perforce believed herself forsaken, and had been obliged to summon philosophy to her aid. It was very possible that her philosophic studies had taught her the art of reflection; and that, as she would have said herself, she was tremendously toned down. Once, at Baden, when Gordon Wright happened to take upon himself to remark that little Miss Evers was bored by her English gallant, Bernard had ventured to observe, in petto, that Gordon knew nothing about it. But all this was of no consequence now, and Bernard steered further and further away from the liability to detect fallacies in his friend.

Gordon had engaged himself to marry, and our critical hero had not a grain of fault to find with this resolution.

It was a capital thing; it was just what he wanted; it would do him a world of good. Bernard rejoiced with him sincerely, and regretted extremely that a series of solemn engagements to pay visits in England should prevent his being present at the nuptials.

They were well over, as I have said, when he reached New York.

The honeymoon had waned, and the business of married life had begun.

Bernard, at the end, had sailed from England rather abruptly.

A friend who had a remarkably good cabin on one of the steamers was obliged by a sudden detention to give it up, and on his offering it to Longueville, the latter availed himself gratefully of this opportunity of being a little less discomposed than usual by the Atlantic billows.

He therefore embarked at two days' notice, a fortnight earlier than he had intended and than he had written to Gordon to expect him. Gordon, of course, had written that he was to seek no hospitality but that which Blanche was now prepared--they had a charming house--so graciously to dispense; but Bernard, nevertheless, leaving the ship early in the morning, had betaken himself to an hotel. He wished not to anticipate his welcome, and he determined to report himself to Gordon first and to come back with his luggage later in the day. After purifying himself of his sea-stains, he left his hotel and walked up the Fifth Avenue with all a newly-landed voyager's enjoyment of terrestrial locomotion.

It was a charming autumn day; there was a golden haze in the air; he supposed it was the Indian summer. The broad sidewalk of the Fifth Avenue was scattered over with dry leaves--crimson and orange and amber.

He tossed them with his stick as he passed; they rustled and murmured with the motion, and it reminded him of the way he used to kick them in front of him over these same pavements in his riotous infancy.

It was a pleasure, after many wanderings, to find himself in his native land again, and Bernard Longueville, as he went, paid his compliments to his mother-city. The brightness and gayety of the place seemed a greeting to a returning son, and he felt a throb of affection for the freshest, the youngest, the easiest and most good-natured of great capitals.

On presenting himself at Gordon's door, Bernard was told that the master of the house was not at home; he went in, however, to see the mistress.

同类推荐
  • 内丹秘诀

    内丹秘诀

    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。
  • 明穆宗宝训

    明穆宗宝训

    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。
  • 慈悲药师宝忏

    慈悲药师宝忏

    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。
  • 抚州曹山本寂禅师语录

    抚州曹山本寂禅师语录

    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。
  • 观自在菩萨如意轮咒课法

    观自在菩萨如意轮咒课法

    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。
热门推荐
  • 夜之语:第七色

    夜之语:第七色

    丫头,本大爷可是吸血僵尸,你不怕?他问。吸血僵尸不是应该这样举着手跳着走吗?而且吸血僵尸怎么可能这么帅。她答。以后谁敢欺负你你就报本大爷的大名,保你平安。他急。以后谁敢欺负你你就报本小娘的大名,一样保你安稳。她乐。
  • 早安,我的监护人老公

    早安,我的监护人老公

    "一段阴谋,让她假装失忆,被他收养。那时她在他的身边,人人都笑她是个傻子,对她指指点点,而他始终不为所动,将她拥入怀中。与他来往的形形色色的人纷传,“慕北收养了一个傻子,还是个不漂亮的傻子。”
  • 穿越错误成宠物小精灵

    穿越错误成宠物小精灵

    一只路边精灵,成为世界最强精灵的故事,四处游历冒险,邂逅,怎么样的主角就会有怎么样的传说,而传说,以此开幕……ps:本书只以轻松为乐,略带黑暗与乱入,没有所谓的游戏版,也没有所谓的特别版,只是纯粹的,跟着主角混吃等死而已,嗯,就这样,不喜请点右上角的×。
  • 蜜恋狐仙娘娘

    蜜恋狐仙娘娘

    我叫童洛檩,原本平凡普通逍遥自在的生活,只因为一次奇葩奇遇而改变。这一切都不像是个巧合。入学时,饱经嘲笑;入学后,还得看人眼色。这还让不让我这样萌萌哒的小狐狸活了!神蛋?那是什么可以吃吗?我警告你们,我是无辜的,神蛋什么的从来没有听说过哟。再遇千年挚友,不知是福是祸。历史的记忆揭开一辈子不想回想起的伤疤。“童洛檩,我说过我会等你,不管多少年……”
  • 法集名数经

    法集名数经

    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。
  • 冥穹录

    冥穹录

    另一个维度,另一个时间。罗刹大陆,风云再起。五位少年,从五域中崛起,凭借坚毅与勇气,终于问鼎大陆。然而,少年们此时才明白,强者之路才刚刚开始,未来!迷茫!
  • 毛泽东瞩目的巾帼红颜

    毛泽东瞩目的巾帼红颜

    本书里收进了毛泽东对终生难忘的世界友人的评点及其这些友人的传记。毛泽东是一位具有崇高民族气节和革命正义立场的人,他受憎分明,对支援过中国革命的白求恩、柯棣华等世界友人,他的评述饱含着无产阶段的深情厚谊,是中国人民和世界各国人民长期团结一致、和平共处、睦邻友好的意愿和真实写照。本书作者全面地反映毛泽东对历代巾帼红颜的评价并将她们的生平传记予以介绍,以便读者了解历史上一些著名的女政治家、女革命家、女文学家及杰出的巾帼英雄。
  • 天使湾

    天使湾

    她,一个偶尔精神百倍,偶尔懒散的一个女孩他,只是因为长的像某个人,被她的闯入扰乱了一切他,和她青梅竹马,却只是有缘无份她,是她的好姐妹,却不能陪她走完最后他说:如果可以重来一次,我再也不要遇见你,我宁愿做一辈子的陌生人也不要再见到你。她说:有时候我在真的在想,你是不是上天的宠儿?为什么那么多人对你那么好,不求回报的为你付出。她说:你知道吗,这是我的眼泪,你看他静静的待在这里多么清澈,可是我的眼睛却永远不会那么清澈了,我多么的不想再哭了,我多害怕哭着哭着就看不见了。他说:你有没有后悔过我们的相遇?-新人求支持~~~~
  • 江上抗倭

    江上抗倭

    这本绘图本《江上抗倭》(江上,江阴别称),描绘明朝江南(以江阴为主)抗倭的历史,着重描述嘉靖江阴知县钱錞率领兵民抗击倭寇而英勇献身的故事。本书分主体和附属两部分内容,主体内容图文并茂,适合所有读者阅读;附属内容(褐色文字)是抗倭历史资料,和主体内容基本对应,适合爱好、研究明朝抗倭历史的读者阅读。这是一本老少咸宜、俗雅兼备的反侵略的爱国主义读物。
  • 先婚厚爱:霸上温柔大叔

    先婚厚爱:霸上温柔大叔

    未婚夫要分手?没关系,她决定带着闺蜜砸了他的新婚礼!新娘竟是闺蜜?没关系,嫁给你叔叔做你婶婶给你穿小鞋!叔叔是个智障?没关系,她用聪明一样搅得你家天翻地覆!智障是假装的?没关系?有关系!新婚夜七岁智商的老公突然反转,变身霸道大叔,霸妻行凶的时候,她才知道,大叔很聪明,大叔很睿智,大叔很霸道……