登陆注册
19855800000111

第111章

No one had ventured upon the cheerful commonplace of saying that the change of air and of scene would restore his spirits; this would have had, under the circumstances, altogether too silly a sound.

The change in question had done nothing of the sort, and his companions had, at least, the comfort of their perspicacity.

An essential spring had dried up within him, and there was no visible spiritual law for making it flow again.

He was rarely violent, he expressed little of the irritation and ennui that he must have constantly felt; it was as if he believed that a spiritual miracle for his redemption was just barely possible, and was therefore worth waiting for.

The most that one could do, however, was to wait grimly and doggedly, suppressing an imprecation as, from time to time, one looked at one's watch.An attitude of positive urbanity toward life was not to be expected; it was doing one's duty to hold one's tongue and keep one's hands off one's own windpipe, and other people's.Roderick had long silences, fits of profound lethargy, almost of stupefaction.

He used to sit in the garden by the hour, with his head thrown back, his legs outstretched, his hands in his pockets, and his eyes fastened upon the blinding summer sky.He would gather a dozen books about him, tumble them out on the ground, take one into his lap, and leave it with the pages unturned.

These moods would alternate with hours of extreme restlessness, during which he mysteriously absented himself.

He bore the heat of the Italian summer like a salamander, and used to start off at high noon for long walks over the hills.

He often went down into Florence, rambled through her close, dim streets, and lounged away mornings in the churches and galleries.

On many of these occasions Rowland bore him company, for they were the times when he was most like his former self.

Before Michael Angelo's statues and the pictures of the early Tuscans, he quite forgot his own infelicities, and picked up the thread of his old aesthetic loquacity.

He had a particular fondness for Andrea del Sarto, and affirmed that if he had been a painter he would have taken the author of the Madonna del Sacco for his model.He found in Florence some of his Roman friends, and went down on certain evenings to meet them.More than once he asked Mary Garland to go with him into town, and showed her the things he most cared for.

He had some modeling clay brought up to the villa and deposited in a room suitable for his work; but when this had been done he turned the key in the door and the clay never was touched.

His eye was heavy and his hand cold, and his mother put up a secret prayer that he might be induced to see a doctor.

But on a certain occasion, when her prayer became articulate, he had a great outburst of anger and begged her to know, once for all, that his health was better than it had ever been.

On the whole, and most of the time, he was a sad spectacle;he looked so hopelessly idle.If he was not querulous and bitter, it was because he had taken an extraordinary vow not to be;a vow heroic, for him, a vow which those who knew him well had the tenderness to appreciate.Talking with him was like skating on thin ice, and his companions had a constant mental vision of spots designated "dangerous."This was a difficult time for Rowland; he said to himself that he would endure it to the end, but that it must be his last adventure of the kind.

Mrs.Hudson divided her time between looking askance at her son, with her hands tightly clasped about her pocket-handkerchief, as if she were wringing it dry of the last hour's tears, and turning her eyes much more directly upon Rowland, in the mutest, the feeblest, the most intolerable reproachfulness.She never phrased her accusations, but he felt that in the unillumined void of the poor lady's mind they loomed up like vaguely-outlined monsters.Her demeanor caused him the acutest suffering, and if, at the outset of his enterprise, he had seen, how dimly soever, one of those plaintive eye-beams in the opposite scale, the brilliancy of Roderick's promises would have counted for little.

They made their way to the softest spot in his conscience and kept it chronically aching.If Mrs.Hudson had been loquacious and vulgar, he would have borne even a less valid persecution with greater fortitude.

But somehow, neat and noiseless and dismally lady-like, as she sat there, keeping her grievance green with her soft-dropping tears, her displeasure conveyed an overwhelming imputation of brutality.

He felt like a reckless trustee who has speculated with the widow's mite, and is haunted with the reflection of ruin that he sees in her tearful eyes.

He did everything conceivable to be polite to Mrs.Hudson, and to treat her with distinguished deference.Perhaps his exasperated nerves made him overshoot the mark, and rendered his civilities a trifle peremptory.

She seemed capable of believing that he was trying to make a fool of her;she would have thought him cruelly recreant if he had suddenly departed in desperation, and yet she gave him no visible credit for his constancy.

Women are said by some authorities to be cruel; I don't know how true this is, but it may at least be pertinent to remark that Mrs.Hudson was very much of a woman.It often seemed to Rowland that he had too decidedly forfeited his freedom, and that there was something positively grotesque in a man of his age and circumstances living in such a moral bondage.

But Mary Garland had helped him before, and she helped him now--helped him not less than he had assured himself she would when he found himself drifting to Florence.Yet her help was rendered in the same unconscious, unacknowledged fashion as before; there was no explicit change in their relations.

同类推荐
  • The Arrow of Gold

    The Arrow of Gold

    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。
  • 江西舆地图说

    江西舆地图说

    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。
  • 古今图书集成释教部汇考

    古今图书集成释教部汇考

    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。
  • 书辑

    书辑

    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。
  • 汉魏六朝百三家集张华集

    汉魏六朝百三家集张华集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 中美建交:邓小平与卡特握手纪实

    中美建交:邓小平与卡特握手纪实

    1972年毛泽东和尼克松结束了中美关系史的一个时代,1979年邓小平和卡特却开始了一个新的时代。中美建交无疑是改变世界的一件大事。本书全景式地逼真再现了邓小平、卡特、“卡特的基辛格”布热津斯基以及黄镇、老布什、伍德科克等为中美建交作出的贡献和他们极富个性化的形象。如实披露了毛主席派中国“空军一号”赴美接尼克松再访华、老布什“自行车外交”、卡特严打台湾特工、邓小平访美专机强行起飞以及三K党徒刺杀邓小平等鲜为人知的秘闻真事。视野开阔,内蕴丰厚,图文并茂,读之爱不释手,是了解和研究中美关系史和新中国外交史的必读书。
  • 配角

    配角

    他亲手把她送到了绑匪的手上换取了他心中的白莲花,从此他失去了她的爱。等到失去她的时候,他才知道自己已经爱她入骨。他缠她,囚她。他说:“别想逃,你生是我的人,死是我的鬼。”可她却说:“我一辈子都不会爱上你这种人!”他输了,输得彻彻底底。但是,一切都太晚了。有另外一个人,替他来爱她!情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • The Point of View

    The Point of View

    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。
  • 芳心暗度

    芳心暗度

    是婚姻的不幸还是精神的需要?精神出轨……她是好妈妈,她是好儿媳,她不是……合格的好妻子,哪怕她对丈夫的生活照顾的无微不至。她是独居的女强人,有丈夫的单身女人。她在网上认识了他,他给她带来心灵的慰籍。情感的困惑,现实的挣扎,出轨的丈夫,乖巧的女儿,依赖她的公婆,还有牵挂她的他……相爱却不能爱……无爱婚姻中的挣扎,情感的困扰,现实的束缚……她怎么处理?他如何对待?
  • 中国老板演讲录

    中国老板演讲录

    有这样一句话:君子生非异也,善假于物也。意思是说,君子和常人没有什么区别,只是善于借助外物罢了。因此,对于一个梦想取得事业成功的人来说,善于从这些成功的企业领导者身上学习到闪光点,必将受益匪浅。追求梦想,获得事业成功,是胸怀大志的人们奋斗的目标,编者从这个角度出发,收集了大量的著名企业领导者的演讲,内容广泛,包括创业、经营智慧、创新、国际竞争、企业文化、社会责任以及资本运作等共10个方面,从不同的角度展现了优秀企业家的风采。通过这本书,读者可以了解企业家成功背后的感人故事和经营哲学,相信本书,必将给那些谋求事业成功的人们,以很好的启迪和鼓舞。
  • 卫国者

    卫国者

    卫国者。护一方大国者也。水之浊,民之死,国之殇。从强者的眼光去看乾坤
  • 亿万小老婆

    亿万小老婆

    她是电脑黑客兼杀手,他是她的新目标,有人出资十亿要他的人头,她三番两次地与他交手,却意外遭遇车祸,失忆,变成一只被他圈养在身边的宠物。有一天,她突然对他说,如果我的记恢复了,第一件想起的事会是什么呢?一支冰冷的枪口对准了他的眉心。她声音冷酷如冰:原来是杀你。
  • 玺墨

    玺墨

    桂花树下,只因她的回眸一笑而牵动了他的心。从那时起她的生活里有着他的陪伴,她也见证了他幕布下的辛苦。从那时起他的生活里只有她,每天想着怎么宠她爱她,她就是他的动力,为她,不管什么都可以做。(本书属虚幻,切勿信真)
  • 恶魔总裁的萝莉娇妻

    恶魔总裁的萝莉娇妻

    没有任何筹码的爱情,只是单纯的爱恋?孙宝恩是否能够得偿所愿?司徒浩明对赵美研说过:“曾经以为失去了你我就会死掉!但是现在我却发现,原来并不是这样,当黑夜向我袭来,当我习惯了哭泣,和想念之后,我变得欲哭无泪,因为得不到,我便欺骗自己,我不喜欢你!我擦干了眼泪,把孤独,藏在深海之中!”当一个你爱的同时又是爱你的人,紧紧牵着你的手时,千万不要轻易的放开,否则你会发现,你曾经轻易放弃的,是再也追不回的美好!豁然回首,你埋葬了最初的美好!
  • 每天读一点哲学常识

    每天读一点哲学常识

    本书从哲学本体、哲学流派、哲学术语、哲学名家、哲学名著、经典命题、名家名言、哲人轶事八个方面普及与哲学有关的常识。《每天读一点哲学常识》将指导读者爬上思想阶梯,从异彩纷呈的哲人流派中体会博大精深的哲学内涵,力图给读者提供一部了解中西哲学的基础常识,使大家在轻松愉悦的状态下畅游哲学的乐园。