登陆注册
19555400000081

第81章 THE FOURTH(8)

That, I think, sets out very fairly the facts of our early relationship.But it is hard to get it true, either in form or texture, because of the bright, translucent, coloured, and refracting memories that come between.One forgets not only the tint and quality of thoughts and impressions through that intervening haze, one forgets them altogether.I don't remember now that I ever thought in those days of passionate love or the possibility of such love between us.I may have done so again and again.But I doubt it very strongly.I don't think I ever thought of such aspects.I had no more sense of any danger between us, seeing the years and things that separated us, than I could have had if she had been an intelligent bright-eyed bird.Isabel came into my life as a new sort of thing; she didn't join on at all to my previous experiences of womanhood.They were not, as I have laboured to explain, either very wide or very penetrating experiences, on the whole, "strangled dinginess" expresses them, but I do not believe they were narrower or shallower than those of many other men of my class.I thought of women as pretty things and beautiful things, pretty rather than beautiful, attractive and at times disconcertingly attractive, often bright and witty, but, because of the vast reservations that hid them from me, wanting, subtly and inevitably wanting, in understanding.My idealisation of Margaret had evaporated insensibly after our marriage.The shrine Ihad made for her in my private thoughts stood at last undisguisedly empty.But Isabel did not for a moment admit of either idealisation or interested contempt.She opened a new sphere of womanhood to me.

With her steady amber-brown eyes, her unaffected interest in impersonal things, her upstanding waistless blue body, her energy, decision and courage, she seemed rather some new and infinitely finer form of boyhood than a feminine creature, as I had come to measure femininity.She was my perfect friend.Could I have foreseen, had my world been more wisely planned, to this day we might have been such friends.

She seemed at that time unconscious of sex, though she has told me since how full she was of protesting curiosities and restrained emotions.She spoke, as indeed she has always spoken, simply, clearly, and vividly; schoolgirl slang mingled with words that marked ample voracious reading, and she moved quickly with the free directness of some graceful young animal.She took many of the easy freedoms a man or a sister might have done with me.She would touch my arm, lay a hand on my shoulder as I sat, adjust the lapel of a breast-pocket as she talked to me.She says now she loved me always from the beginning.I doubt if there was a suspicion of that in her mind those days.I used to find her regarding me with the clearest, steadiest gaze in the world, exactly like the gaze of some nice healthy innocent animal in a forest, interested, inquiring, speculative, but singularly untroubled....

5

Polling day came after a last hoarse and dingy crescendo.The excitement was not of the sort that makes one forget one is tired out.The waiting for the end of the count has left a long blank mark on my memory, and then everyone was shaking my hand and repeating: "Nine hundred and seventy-six."My success had been a foregone conclusion since the afternoon, but we all behaved as though we had not been anticipating this result for hours, as though any other figures but nine hundred and seventy-six would have meant something entirely different."Nine hundred and seventy-six!" said Margaret."They didn't expect three hundred.""Nine hundred and seventy-six," said a little short man with a paper."It means a big turnover.Two dozen short of a thousand, you know."A tremendous hullaboo began outside, and a lot of fresh people came into the room.

Isabel, flushed but not out of breath, Heaven knows where she had sprung from at that time of night! was running her hand down my sleeve almost caressingly, with the innocent bold affection of a girl."Got you in!" she said."It's been no end of a lark.""And now," said I, "I must go and be constructive.""Now you must go and be constructive," she said.

"You've got to live here," she added.

"By Jove! yes," I said."We'll have to house hunt.""I shall read all your speeches."

She hesitated.

"I wish I was you," she said, and said it as though it was not exactly the thing she was meaning to say.

"They want you to speak," said Margaret, with something unsaid in her face.

"You must come out with me," I answered, putting my arm through hers, and felt someone urging me to the French windows that gave on the balcony.

"If you think--" she said, yielding gladly"Oh, RATHER!" said I.

The Mayor of Kinghamstead, a managing little man with no great belief in my oratorical powers, was sticking his face up to mine.

"It's all over," he said, " and you've won.Say all the nice things you can and say them plainly."I turned and handed Margaret out through the window and stood looking over the Market-place, which was more than half filled with swaying people.The crowd set up a roar of approval at the sight of us, tempered by a little booing.Down in one corner of the square a fight was going on for a flag, a fight that even the prospect of a speech could not instantly check."Speech!" cried voices, "Speech!"and then a brief "boo-oo-oo" that was drowned in a cascade of shouts and cheers.The conflict round the flag culminated in the smashing of a pane of glass in the chemist's window and instantly sank to peace.

"Gentlemen voters of the Kinghamstead Division," I began.

"Votes for Women!" yelled a voice, amidst laughter--the first time Iremember hearing that memorable war-cry.

"Three cheers for Mrs.Remington!"

"Mrs.Remington asks me to thank you," I said, amidst further uproar and reiterated cries of "Speech!"Then silence came with a startling swiftness.

同类推荐
  • 敦煌变文选

    敦煌变文选

    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。
  • 沙弥威仪

    沙弥威仪

    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。
  • On the Frontier

    On the Frontier

    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。
  • 歇浦潮

    歇浦潮

    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。
  • 百痴禅师语录

    百痴禅师语录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 她失了心疯

    她失了心疯

    自动看了那副画后,在哪都能看到它,如影随形,无法摆脱......
  • 太霄琅书琼文帝章诀

    太霄琅书琼文帝章诀

    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。
  • 神途进化

    神途进化

    下一世纪,2100年,人类世界发生了翻天覆地的变化。城市之外,凶兽肆虐,人类的科技在凶兽面前毫无作用。然而这时,人类同样进化出了令人恐怖的能力。大能者,翻手之间即可撕裂大地,身形微动即可漫步云端。萧宁只是一名普普通通的学生,然而有一天,当他获得了记忆读取的能力之后,他的人生,完全发生了改变。不断的进化,不断地追求力量的极致。当到达最终的彼岸之后。谓之神!
  • 战族传说系列(三)

    战族传说系列(三)

    但牧野静风的眉头却慢慢皱起!他冷冷地道:“禹诗,你说已有十八个帮派归附我风宫,为何只来了十七人……
  • 《对不起,交给我》

    《对不起,交给我》

    自卑的佳倩遇见了人生第一个对她关注的男孩,她变了。十年后,男孩也为什么也变了,变得不像了。
  • 半生江湖

    半生江湖

    *******************************【起点第四编辑组签约作品】**【平行世界请勿与现实挂钩】*******************************主角的自我介绍:没什么特别的经历,就混过几年社会、当过几年特种兵、坐过几年牢而已。没什么特殊的本事,就是力量比人大点、口才比人好点、知识比人多点、观察力比人稍强点。业余爱好没什么长处,就是唱歌、跳舞、泡妞比人厉害点,其实我只是个普通的保险从业员。买保险吗,朋友?从我这半生不堪回首的江湖生活来看,这个世界太危险了,您想象一下吧。▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃▃
  • 杜欢欢寻爱记

    杜欢欢寻爱记

    大龄单身女青年杜欢欢,在各方压力下开始了漫漫寻爱路。遇到朵朵极品桃花,当真是百般风情,万般折腾!
  • TFBOYS生命契约

    TFBOYS生命契约

    灵灵、心悠、之夏,本是魔族,却从小生活在人类世界,并且初中毕业就一起约定要去重庆旅行,不知不觉,三年过去了,如今那个天真的的小女孩已经长大了,变得更加成熟更加美丽,旅行生活即将进行,3个魔族少女接下来的重庆生活会是怎样的呢,敬请期待
  • 广陵涛尺牍

    广陵涛尺牍

    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。
  • 不可不知的交际心理学

    不可不知的交际心理学

    本书对很多人际交往中的典型案例加以分析,总结出众多的心理策略,如赢在交际第一回合的心理策略、引发他人兴趣的心理策略、让他人赞同你的心理策略、说服他人的心理策略等。