登陆注册
19624600000052

第52章 XXII.(3)

He said he thought that sort of man was all the more mischievous on account of his sincerity. He instanced a Russian whom a friend of his knew in Berlin, a man of rank like this fellow: he got to brooding upon the condition of working people and that kind of thing, till he renounced his title and fortune and went to work in an iron foundry.

Mr. Ewins also spoke critically of Mrs. Milray. He had met her in Egypt; but you soon exhausted the interest of that kind of woman. He professed a great concern that Clementina should see Florence in just the right way, and he offered his services in showing her the place.

The Russian came the next day, and almost daily after that, in the interest with which Clementina's novel difference from other American girls seemed to inspire him. His imagination had transmuted her simple Yankee facts into something appreciable to a Slav of his temperament.

He conceived of her as the daughter of a peasant, whose beauty had charmed the widow of a rich citizen, and who was to inherit the wealth of her adoptive mother. He imagined that the adoption had taken place at a much earlier period than the time when Clementina's visit to Mrs. Lander actually began, and that all which could he done had been done to efface her real character by indulgence and luxury.

His curiosity concerning her childhood, her home, her father and mother, her brothers and sisters, and his misunderstanding of everything she told him, amused her. But she liked him, and she tried to give him some notion of the things he wished so much to know. It always ended in a dissatisfaction, more or less vehement, with the outcome of American conditions as he conceived them.

"But you," he urged one day, "you who are a daughter of the fields and woods, why should you forsake that pure life, and come to waste yourself here?"

"Why, don't you think it's very nice in Florence?" she asked, with eyes of innocent interest.

"Nice! Nice! Do we live for what is nice? Is it enough that you have what you Americans call a nice time?"

Clementina reflected. "I wasn't doing much of anything at home, and I thought I might as well come with Mrs. Lander, if she wanted me so much."

She thought in a certain way, that he was meddling with what was not his affair, but she believed that he was sincere in his zeal for the ideal life he wished her to lead, and there were some things she had heard about him that made her pity and respect him; his self-exile and his renunciation of home and country for his principles, whatever they were; she did not understand exactly. She would not have liked never being able to go back to Middlemount, or to be cut off from all her friends as this poor young Nihilist was, and she said, now, "I didn't expect that it was going to be anything but a visit, and I always supposed we should go back in the spring; but now Mrs. Lander is beginning to think she won't be well enough till fall."

"And why need you stay with her?"

"Because she's not very well," answered Clementina, and she smiled, a little triumphantly as well as tolerantly.

"She could hire nurses and doctors, all she wants with her money."

"I don't believe it would be the same thing, exactly, and what should I do if I went back?"

"Do? Teach ! Uplift the lives about you."

"But you say it is better for people to live simply, and not read and think so much."

"Then labor in the fields with them."

Clementina laughed outright. "I guess if anyone saw me wo'king in the fields they would think I was a disgrace to the neighbahood."

Belsky gave her a stupified glare through his spectacles. "I cannot undertand you Americans."

"Well, you must come ova to America, then, Mr. Belsky"--he had asked her not to call him by his title--"and then you would."

"No, I could not endure the disappointment. You have the great opportunity of the earth. You could be equal and just, and simple and kind. There is nothing to hinder you. But all you try to do is to get more and more money."

"Now, that isn't faia, Mr. Belsky, and you know it."

Well, then, you joke, joke--always joke. Like that Mr. Hinkle. He wants to make money with his patent of a gleaner, that will take the last grain of wheat from the poor, and he wants to joke--joke!'

Clementina said, "I won't let you say that about Mr. Hinkle. You don't know him, or you wouldn't. If he jokes, why shouldn't he?"

Belsky made a gesture of rejection. "Oh, you are an American, too."

She had not grown less American, certainly, since she had left home; even the little conformities to Europe that she practiced were traits of Americanism. Clementina was not becoming sophisticated, but perhaps she was becoming more conventionalized. The knowledge of good and evil in things that had all seemed indifferently good to her once, had crept upon her, and she distinguished in her actions. She sinned as little as any young lady in Florence against the superstitions of society; but though she would not now have done a skirt-dance before a shipful of people, she did not afflict herself about her past errors. She put on the world, but she wore it simply and in most matters unconsciously. Some things were imparted to her without her asking or wishing, and merely in virtue of her youth and impressionability. She took them from her environment without knowing it, and in this way she was coming by an English manner and an English tone; she was only the less American for being rather English without trying, when other Americans tried so hard. In the region of harsh nasals, Clementina had never spoken through her nose, and she was now as unaffected in these alien inflections as in the tender cooings which used to rouse the misgivings of her brother Jim. When she was with English people she employed them involuntarily, and when she was with Americans she measurably lost them, so that after half an hour with Mr. Hinkle, she had scarcely a trace of them, and with Mrs. Lander she always spoke with her native accent.

同类推荐
  • 醉经楼集

    醉经楼集

    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。
  • 图民录

    图民录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 浮生六记

    浮生六记

    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。
  • 太上老君外日用妙经

    太上老君外日用妙经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 续修台湾府志

    续修台湾府志

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 明星小妖是女友

    明星小妖是女友

    有一个姑娘,她有一些呆萌,她还有一些嚣张;有一个姑娘,她有一些无赖,她还有一些疯狂;没事唱唱小歌,反正醒着也是醒着;无聊谈谈小情,反正闲着也是闲着;整天嘻嘻哈哈遇到男主就改变,也曾迷迷糊糊大祸小祸一起闯,还曾山山水水敢爱敢恨闯娱圈,更曾轰轰烈烈拼死拼活爱一场,白小妖就是这个姑娘!(本文轻松愉悦,幽默可爱,欢喜冤家,逗趣不止。女主不断蜕变,男女主角一路笑虐到底。豪门?娱乐圈?NO,NO,NO.那只是他们生活的调味品而已!)花花携小妖、汤圆儿在这里求推荐、求收藏,如有打赏,嘿嘿嘿……汤圆儿,来来来,给各位哥哥姐姐弟弟妹妹们打两个滚,翻俩跟头……
  • 穿越之你我要定了

    穿越之你我要定了

    她林晓陌只在睡觉而已,谁知道一觉醒自己就华丽地穿到了一个不知名的朝代……
  • 别说没有鬼

    别说没有鬼

    一张回家的火车票,竟然诡异的变更了目的地;火车上古怪的陌生人,似乎想要警告什么;仗义疏财的旅行者,似乎在引导着去往某个地方……与世隔绝的村庄,深通地底的隧道,黑暗的尽头到底藏着些什么?若隐若现的侧脸,声嘶力竭的哭喊,身藏在暗影中的人到底是谁?等一切渐渐清晰,危险已悄然而至,这才发现,那些故事竟然是真的。你可以继续坚持自己的想法,不过……嘘,别说没有鬼。
  • 妖孽王爷的倾城狂妃

    妖孽王爷的倾城狂妃

    她,本是21世纪样样精通的“百变女王”,美食,金钱,头发是她一生的挚爱。哪知在她盗取“皇家食谱”时遭男友陷害,死的不明不白。再次睁开眼睛,她已成为霁夜王朝人人唾弃的废柴小姐。当昔日的废柴大方光华,是否亮瞎他们的狗眼?这一次,且看她如何步步为营,处心积虑,令伤她,害她,辱她者身败名裂!神兽,神器,灵丹妙药都到我碗里来!等等,为什么会多了一个妖孽王爷?
  • 缘来有你很幸福

    缘来有你很幸福

    她是现实版的灰姑娘,而他呢?却是所有人心目中的男神!直到他遇见她,两人会擦出怎样的火花?
  • 一叶封神

    一叶封神

    “神经病人思路广,脑残青年欢乐多。”这句话估计就是内容的高度概括了。为了大家而存在的王二,努力奋斗练叶子,最后功成名就,抱得美人归。
  • 学会来事儿的艺术全集

    学会来事儿的艺术全集

    常人们说某某人“会来事儿”。大都是一种肯定性的评价。可以说,学会来事儿不是一件简单的事,而是一门深谙人情世故的学问,是一门以精通实用社会学和心理学为前提的大学问。只有做到“会来事儿”,才会使自己少吃亏。少碰壁。少栽跟头。只有做到“会来事儿”,才能使自己真正成为在社会上常立不倒和百战不败的人才。
  • 帝心蛊

    帝心蛊

    及笄那年她站在花墙顶端,只为等候一份属于她和他的十里红妆。却不想他跨马而来,牵走的却是她的师姑。她眼睁睁的看着他们完成大婚,本以为这一世她与他缘分已尽,谁曾料大婚之夜皇后失踪,而她与他缱绻一夜。水牢酷刑,困境重重遍体鳞伤她无所畏惧,但却因他夜夜折磨报复而渐生凉意。因着一份痴念,才会卑膝了身心。不爱了,这世间再无能伤她之人,忘川水,了情缘。再回首,与君不相识。他是大宣国的皇上,睥睨一世,威慑八方。却在新婚之夜丢了自己的皇后,在抽丝剥茧的真相排查下,他却发现自己的良人就在身边。帝心蛊,痴情冢,冉冉生孤竹,优昙无尘间。
  • 极品家教

    极品家教

    古氏集团的二少爷,头上顶着“怪才、奇才、全才”头衔的年轻人,大学毕业后,不但没有进入家族集团工作,反而做起了一个让古老爷子十分恼火的职业——家教。
  • 医痴妻主

    医痴妻主

    她是大龄剩女,意外穿越却让她重返年轻,虽然这很好啦,可是这具身体的主人怎么有这么不堪的曾经?强娶夫郎?还爱逛花楼?神马这里还是女尊国?不仅可以一女多夫,还可以男生子?天,她行医天下,却惹来美男朵朵,既然躲不开那就收了又如何?情节虚构,请勿模仿!