登陆注册
26275300000024

第24章 I(1)

THE death of Mrs Maidan occurred on the 4th of August, 1904.

And then nothing happened until the 4th of August, 1913. There is the curious coincidence of dates, but I do not know whether that is one of those sinister, as if half jocular and altogether merciless proceedings on the part of a cruel Providence that we call a coincidence. Because it may just as well have been the superstitious mind of Florence that forced her to certain acts, as if she had been hypnotized. It is, however, certain that the 4th of August always proved a significant date for her. To begin with, she was born on the 4th of August. Then, on that date, in the year 1899, she set out with her uncle for the tour round the world in company with a young man called Jimmy. But that was not merely a coincidence. Her kindly old uncle, with the supposedly damaged heart, was in his delicate way, offering her, in this trip, a birthday present to celebrate her coming of age. Then, on the 4th of August, 1900, she yielded to an action that certainly coloured her whole life--as well as mine. She had no luck. She was probably offering herself a birthday present that morning. . . . On the 4th of August, 1901, she married me, and set sail for Europe in a great gale of wind--the gale that affected her heart. And no doubt there, again, she was offering herself a birthday gift--the birthday gift of my miserable life. It occurs to me that I have never told you anything about my marriage. That was like this: I have told you, as I think, that I first met Florence at the Stuyvesants', in Fourteenth Street. And, from that moment, I determined with all the obstinacy of a possibly weak nature, if not to make her mine, at least to marry her. I had no occupation--I had no business affairs. Isimply camped down there in Stamford, in a vile hotel, and just passed my days in the house, or on the verandah of the Misses Hurlbird. The Misses Hurlbird, in an odd, obstinate way, did not like my presence. But they were hampered by the national manners of these occasions. Florence had her own sitting-room.

She could ask to it whom she liked, and I simply walked into that apartment. I was as timid as you will, but in that matter I was like a chicken that is determined to get across the road in front of an automobile. I would walk into Florence's pretty, little, old-fashioned room, take off my hat, and sit down.

Florence had, of course, several other fellows, too--strapping young New Englanders, who worked during the day in New York and spent only the evenings in the village of their birth. And, in the evenings, they would march in on Florence with almost as much determination as I myself showed. And I am bound to say that they were received with as much disfavour as was my portion--from the Misses Hurlbird. . . .

They were curious old creatures, those two. It was almost as if they were members of an ancient family under some curse--they were so gentlewomanly, so proper, and they sighed so. Sometimes Iwould see tears in their eyes. I do not know that my courtship of Florence made much progress at first. Perhaps that was because it took place almost entirely during the daytime, on hot afternoons, when the clouds of dust hung like fog, right up as high as the tops of the thin-leaved elms. The night, I believe, is the proper season for the gentle feats of love, not a Connecticut July afternoon, when any sort of proximity is an almost appalling thought. But, if I never so much as kissed Florence, she let me discover very easily, in the course of a fortnight, her ****** wants. And I could supply those wants. . . .

She wanted to marry a gentleman of leisure; she wanted a European establishment. She wanted her husband to have an English accent, an income of fifty thousand dollars a year from real estate and no ambitions to increase that income. And--she faintly hinted--she did not want much physical passion in the affair. Americans, you know, can envisage such unions without blinking.

She gave cut this information in floods of bright talk--she would pop a little bit of it into comments over a view of the Rialto, Venice, and, whilst she was brightly describing Balmoral Castle, she would say that her ideal husband would he one who could get her received at the British Court. She had spent, it seemed, two months in Great Britain--seven weeks in touring from Stratford to Strathpeffer, and one as paying guest in an old English family near Ledbury, an impoverished, but still stately family, called Bagshawe. They were to have spent two months more in that tranquil bosom, but inopportune events, apparently in her uncle's business, had caused their rather hurried return to Stamford. The young man called Jimmy had remained in Europe to perfect his knowledge of that continent. He certainly did: he was most useful to us afterwards.

But the point that came out--that there was no mistaking--was that Florence was coldly and calmly determined to take no look at any man who could not give her a European settlement. Her glimpse of English home life had effected this. She meant, on her marriage, to have a year in Paris, and then to have her husband buy some real estate in the neighbourhood of Fordingbridge, from which place the Hurlbirds had come in the year 1688. On the strength of that she was going to take her place in the ranks of English county society. That was fixed.

I used to feel mightily elevated when I considered these details, for I could not figure out that amongst her acquaintances in Stamford there was any fellow that would fill the bill. The most of them were not as wealthy as I, and those that were were not the type to give up the fascinations of Wall Street even for the protracted companionship of Florence. But nothing really happened during the month of July. On the 1st of August Florence apparently told her aunts that she intended to marry me.

同类推荐
  • 渴门

    渴门

    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。
  • 三国演义

    三国演义

    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。
  • 明佛法根本碑

    明佛法根本碑

    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。
  • 后画录

    后画录

    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。
  • 资治通鉴

    资治通鉴

    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
  • 整治花心男

    整治花心男

    台湾作家[[艾珈]]的免费全本小说《整治花心男》。
  • 天生坏脾气

    天生坏脾气

    倘若知道遇见你,会发生这么多的后来。那么,王淼丰,从一开始,我就不应该关注你,无论如何。———夏奇
  • 上古世纪之海盗船长

    上古世纪之海盗船长

    年轻的海盗王一脸坏笑的告诉部下,精灵族美丽的女人是我们的,哈里兰的小金库也是我们的,诺亚的大房子还是我们的……总之这个世界一切都是我们的,什么,你说魔族是坏蛋?开什么玩笑,他们是我们的最佳贸易伙伴。“船长,兽灵部落据说出了个千年不遇的美女,要不要抓来也送给你!”“滚,哥口味有那么重吗!”多年后吟游诗人在大陆各个角落称赞那雷的时候,有人说他是神之子,有人说他是精灵王,有人说他是光明王,他都置之一笑,骨子里他始终认为,自己只是个海盗船长。
  • 就是要惹你

    就是要惹你

    [花雨授权]尽管喜欢狄彦的女生不计其数,但是他却对这个迷糊、体育细胞不发达的洛佑闵产生好感,不仅在她扭伤脚的情况下送她回家,而且还强迫她锻炼身体。一段早已酝酿好的爱情也在慢慢展开……
  • 英雄联盟之无主之地

    英雄联盟之无主之地

    当英雄联盟中的游戏世界与现实世界发生交错,人类以为那游戏异界是一片可以肆意占领的无主之地。然而当各种游戏英雄和技能在现实当中不断出现。正处于鼎盛之时的地球科技文明在异界的影响下轰然崩溃。最终拥有蒸汽朋克风格的新世界在血与火中逐渐建立,这里才是真正的无主之地!**************本文致力于探讨各种游戏技能在现实生活中的实用性,欢迎大家进行讨论和指导。
  • 我与公主

    我与公主

    如果不是跌入谷底,我也不会陪你走过剩余的一生。
  • 重生之天才音医师

    重生之天才音医师

    他:水啸,水氏世家直系第十九公子,水家第五房唯一嫡孙,千年难得的三系天才,也是最难得的音医天赋者。她,水啸,新世纪某镇的姑娘,是被父母兄姐妹捧在手心呵护的珍宝。天才抵不过频频黑手,他,含恨归天,被来自异世同名同姓、倍受宠爱的她附魂。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 风停叶飘澪

    风停叶飘澪

    柳风和亦婷、飘澪在火车上邂逅,后来与女友小沫一起进入职场,柳风与亦婷、小沫、飘澪的友情、爱情交织,小沫与苏林情感交错,在职场尔虞我诈中,爱情是否能经受考验,在患难时,亲情、爱情孰重,到底谁和谁能走到一起?
  • 相见欢·落花如梦(套装共两册)

    相见欢·落花如梦(套装共两册)

    1时间,真的是一个可怕的东西,每天将一个人遗忘去一点点、一点点又一点点,就那样,竟果真能将一个人忘得干干净净,曾经以为会痛不欲生的我们却依旧活得好好的,不,活得甚至比以前更好。2生死那样容易,活着却是那样艰难……可我们依旧倔强地活着,因为只有活着,我们才能看到梦中的那个她,哪怕只是远远的一眼,便已是足够。3我们的爱情,究竟谁比谁更卑微?我们的命运,究竟谁比谁更可怜?我们的前世,究竟谁比谁相欠更多?4一个人,如何替代成另一个人?5三杯酒,一杯祭奠爱,一杯祭奠恨,一杯祭奠前尘过往。三杯饮尽,相逢陌路。
  • 风云战队

    风云战队

    这世间总有一些你所不知道的事,有些事你根本就从来没听说过,更不会相信过。偶然的一次机会在我身上就发生了一件不同寻常的事,而这件事...也彻底改变了我的一生。