登陆注册
19571500000077

第77章 SALVATION OF A FORSYTE(7)

When he reached the street, however, the girls had disappeared.He hailed a carriage."Drive!" he called to the man, with a flourish of his stick, and as soon as the wheels had begun to clatter on the stones he leaned back, looking sharply to right and left.He soon had to give up thought of finding them, but made the coachman turn round and round again.All day he drove about, far into the country, and kept urging the driver to use greater speed.He was in a strange state of hurry and elation.Finally, he dined at a little country inn; and this gave the measure of his disturbance--the dinner was atrocious.

Returning late in the evening he found a note written by Traquair.

"Are you in your senses, man?" it asked; "we have no more time to waste idling about here.If you want to rejoin us, come on to Danielli's Hotel, Venice." Swithin chuckled when he read it, and feeling frightfully tired, went to bed and slept like a log.

VI

Three weeks later he was still in Salzburg, no longer at the Goldene Alp, but in rooms over a shop near the Boleskeys'.He had spent a small fortune in the purchase of flowers.Margit would croon over them, but Rozsi, with a sober "Many tanks!" as if they were her right, would look long at herself in the glass, and pin one into her hair.Swithin ceased to wonder; he ceased to wonder at anything they did.One evening he found Boleskey deep in conversation with a pale, dishevelled-looking person.

"Our friend Mr.Forsyte--Count D....," said Boleskey.

Swithin experienced a faint, unavoidable emotion; but looking at the Count's trousers, he thought: 'Doesn't look much like one!' And with an ironic bow to the silent girls, he turned, and took his hat.But when he had reached the bottom of the dark stairs he heard footsteps.

Rozsi came running down, looked out at the door, and put her hands up to her breast as if disappointed; suddenly with a quick glance round she saw him.Swithin caught her arm.She slipped away, and her face seemed to bubble with defiance or laughter; she ran up three steps, stopped, looked at him across her shoulder, and fled on up the stairs.Swithin went out bewildered and annoyed.

'What was she going to say to me?' he kept thinking.During these three weeks he had asked himself all sorts of questions: whether he were being made a fool of; whether she were in love with him; what he was doing there, and sometimes at night, with all his candles burning as if he wanted light, the breeze blowing on him through the window, his cigar, half-smoked, in his hand, he sat, an hour or more, staring at the wall.'Enough of this!' he thought every morning.Twice he packed fully--once he ordered his travelling carriage, but countermanded it the following day.What definitely he hoped, intended, resolved, he could not have said.He was always thinking of Rozsi, he could not read the riddle in her face--she held him in a vice, notwithstanding that everything about her threatened the very fetishes of his existence.And Boleskey! Whenever he looked at him he thought, 'If he were only clean?' and mechanically fingered his own well-tied cravatte.To talk with the fellow, too, was like being forced to look at things which had no place in the light of day.

Freedom, equality, self-sacrifice!

'Why can't he settle down at some business,' he thought, 'instead of all this talk?' Boleskey's sudden diffidences, self-depreciation, fits of despair, irritated him."Morbid beggar!" he would mutter;"thank God I haven't a thin skin." And proud too! Extraordinary!

An impecunious fellow like that! One evening, moreover, Boleskey had returned home drunk.Swithin had hustled him away into his bedroom, helped him to undress, and stayed until he was asleep.'Too much of a good thing!' he thought, 'before his own daughters, too!' It was after this that he ordered his travelling carriage.The other occasion on which he packed was one evening, when not only Boleskey, but Rozsi herself had picked chicken bones with her fingers.

Often in the mornings he would go to the Mirabell Garden to smoke his cigar; there, in stolid contemplation of the statues--rows of half-heroic men carrying off half-distressful females--he would spend an hour pleasantly, his hat tilted to keep the sun off his nose.The day after Rozsi had fled from him on the stairs, he came there as usual.It was a morning of blue sky and sunlight glowing on the old prim garden, on its yew-trees, and serio-comic statues, and walls covered with apricots and plums.When Swithin approached his usual seat, who should be sitting there but Rozsi"Good-morning," he stammered; "you knew this was my seat then?"Rozsi looked at the ground."Yes," she answered.

Swithin felt bewildered."Do you know," he said, "you treat me very funnily?"To his surprise Rozsi put her little soft hand down and touched his;then, without a word, sprang up and rushed away.It took him a minute to recover.There were people present; he did not like to run, but overtook her on the bridge, and slipped her hand beneath his arm.

"You shouldn't have done that," he said; "you shouldn't have run away from me, you know."Rozsi laughed.Swithin withdrew his arm; a desire to shake her seized him.He walked some way before he said, "Will you have the goodness to tell me what you came to that seat for?"Rozsi flashed a look at him."To-morrow is the fete," she answered.

Swithin muttered, "Is that all?"

"If you do not take us, we cannot go."

"Suppose I refuse," he said sullenly, "there are plenty of others."Rozsi bent her head, scurrying along."No," she murmured, "if you do not go--I do not wish."Swithin drew her hand back within his arm.How round and soft it was! He tried to see her face.When she was nearly home he said goodbye, not wishing, for some dark reason, to be seen with her.He watched till she had disappeared; then slowly retraced his steps to the Mirabell Garden.When he came to where she had been sitting, he slowly lighted his cigar, and for a long time after it was smoked out remained there in the silent presence of the statues.

VII

同类推荐
  • 吴佩衡医案

    吴佩衡医案

    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。
  • 嘉泰普灯录

    嘉泰普灯录

    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。
  • The Story of an African Farm

    The Story of an African Farm

    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。
  • 朝邑县志

    朝邑县志

    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。
  • 摄大乘论章卷第一

    摄大乘论章卷第一

    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
  • 呀!我最喜欢的童话故事

    呀!我最喜欢的童话故事

    童话里简单、直接的是非观念,能够为小学生搭建一个坚实的道德、是非框架。 童话的世界有小学生们各种各样的梦,男孩梦想着有一天会拿起宝剑开始新的旅行,他们的幻想世界里充满冒险:女孩期待自己有一朵能实现愿望的七色花,她们的美丽王国中充满希望。本书中收录的童话故事会让小学生爱不释手,书中的主人公会带领小学生体会不同的经历,教会他们怎么面对困难、挫折、痛苦、失意。
  • 管理者必备兵学谋略与运筹技巧

    管理者必备兵学谋略与运筹技巧

    本书选取中国古代兵学中15部典籍,择其要点,取其精华,分别从不同角度提取其文化的内涵与管理理念,展现其中精微、玄妙的运筹之道,目的是从中国博大精深的古代兵法中挖掘现代企业管理者必备的商战管理技巧,力求让管理者从中获得教益和启示。
  • 遥不可及的彼岸

    遥不可及的彼岸

    《生命的誓言之永恒的约定》第二部:熟知的酒红色眼瞳,天真烂漫如她,冷漠嗜血如她,淡忘记忆的是她,痴情守护也是她,眼角下的紫红色彼岸是此生逃不过的宿命吗?冰冷孤傲如深潭一般深紫色的眼瞳少年透着她酒红色水晶般的眼睛,微启薄唇:“因为我喜欢你的微笑。”他的声音如羽毛般地轻柔,深情地紫眸凝视着她精致的侧脸,映着湖面微微泛滥的那一刻,冰谭似雪的手卑微地握着她纤细的玉指,幽暗的眸光之中泛着暖暖的淡淡情义遥不可及地望着她,可惜只是自欺欺人,短暂的幸福只能停留在这一刻......天真烂漫的幽景汐会找到最真实的自己吗?柔情似水冰川一般的冷影晨会摆脱束缚的命运吗?彼岸花开开开彼岸,花叶永不相见,是宿命吗?
  • 三年等待:玫瑰情至终身

    三年等待:玫瑰情至终身

    三年不短,三年不长。我喜欢上你,只用了三年确定。我爱上了你,只用了三年认定。
  • tfboys之那一年

    tfboys之那一年

    许多事情,总是在经历过后才会懂得。例如放弃;放下,不再担忧;便不再心痛;从今以后,他便不再是你的什么。只是,在以后的岁月里你将走在少了他的风景里。。。。。
  • 王俊凯我爱你是对还是错

    王俊凯我爱你是对还是错

    六个女孩,三个男孩,意外偶遇,经历风雨,最终幸福快乐在一起。
  • 王俊凯你可曾知道我爱你

    王俊凯你可曾知道我爱你

    这是雪樱的第二本小说。好不好看你们说了算,四叶草们都快到碗里来~
  • 解读浙商:浙商如何基业常青

    解读浙商:浙商如何基业常青

    资源小省造就经济大省,初步答案可以肯定为,是浙江商人创造了浙江经济的奇迹。然而,浙商的崛起又是凭着什么呢?浙商是浙江籍商人的简称,指的是出生于浙江区域内的商人群体。因此,要探究浙商崛起的原因,必须从浙商与其他区域内的商人群体的比较分析中来展开。为什么“三无”(无资金、无技术、无市场)起步,“五低”起飞(起点低,知名度低,文化程度低,企业组织形式低,产业层次低)的浙商,会成为全国第一创富集团?资源不怕少、企业不怕小、身段不,咱低是他们的特色和优势。浙江的民营企业和国有经济的共生共荣,小企业和规模经济的统一,本土化和国际化的互动,专业市场和特色产业区等,这些现象不是浙商的首创,就是浙商做得最好。
  • 霸道校草的斗气小冤家

    霸道校草的斗气小冤家

    她和他原本就是两个没有交接的人,一次邂逅将两人的命运相交一起。她是一个有冤报冤,有仇报仇的女生,谁惹她,那就会加倍的追讨回来。他性格暴躁,家中的天之骄子。因不满家人对他人生的安排,选择了离家出走。男生眼神当中带着危险将她逼近墙角,嘴角上扬,他说:“第一次,你莫名奇妙的拦住了我不就是想跟我套近乎吗?我如你所愿。”第二次,你故意破坏我跟别的女生的好事,你是不是应该赔偿我?第三次,你看了我的身体,是不是应该对我负责?
  • 万法

    万法

    法术入手即会,敌人任何法术只要一眼便能复制,一件逆天法宝,无上机缘,成就一个万法真仙。