登陆注册
26329700000002

第2章 I(2)

"Why"--he would exclaim--"I have walked miles to get a glimpse of a beautiful woman in a suburban window, and time and time again when I have seen a face in a passing brougham I have pursued it in a hansom, and learned where the owner of the face lived, and spent weeks in finding some one to present me, only to discover that she was self-conscious or uninteresting or engaged. Still I had assured myself that she was not the one. I am very conscientious, and I consider that it is my duty to go so far with every woman I meet as to be able to learn whether she is or is not the one, and the sad result is that I am like a man who follows the hounds but is never in at the death."

"Well," some married woman would say, grimly, "I hope you will get your deserts some day; and you WILL, too. Some day some girl will make you suffer for this."

"Oh, that's all right," Carlton would answer, meekly. "Lots of women have made me suffer, if that's what you think I need."

"Some day," the married woman would prophesy, "you will care for a woman so much that you will have no eyes for any one else. That's the way it is when one is married."

"Well, when that's the way it is with ME," Carlton would reply, "I certainly hope to get married; but until it is, I think it is safer for all concerned that I should not."

Then Carlton would go to the club and complain bitterly to one of his friends.

"How unfair married women are!" he would say. "The idea of thinking a man could have no eyes but for one woman! Suppose I had never heard a note of music until I was twenty-five years of age, and was then given my hearing. Do you suppose my pleasure in music would make me lose my pleasure in everything else? Suppose I met and married a girl at twenty-five. Is that going to make me forget all the women I knew before I met her? I think not. As a matter of fact, I really deserve a great deal of credit for remaining single, for I am naturally very affectionate; but when I see what poor husbands my friends make, I prefer to stay as I am until I am sure that I will make a better one. It is only fair to the woman."

Carlton was sitting in the club alone. He had that sense of superiority over his fellows and of irresponsibility to the world about him that comes to a man when he knows that his trunks are being packed and that his state-room is engaged.

He was leaving New York long before most of his friends could get away. He did not know just where he was going, and preferred not to know. He wished to have a complete holiday, and to see Europe as an idle tourist, and not as an artist with an eye to his own improvement. He had plenty of time and money; he was sure to run across friends in the big cities, and acquaintances he could make or not, as he pleased, en route. He was not sorry to go. His going would serve to put an end to what gossip there might be of his engagement to numerous young women whose admiration for him as an artist, he was beginning to fear, had taken on a more personal tinge. "I wish," he said, gloomily, "I didn't like people so well. It seems to cause them and me such a lot of trouble."

He sighed, and stretched out his hand for a copy of one of the English illustrated papers. It had a fresher interest to him because the next number of it that he would see would be in the city in which it was printed. The paper in his hands was the St. James Budget, and it contained much fashionable intelligence concerning the preparations for a royal wedding which was soon to take place between members of two of the reigning families of Europe. There was on one page a half-tone reproduction of a photograph, which showed a group of young people belonging to several of these reigning families, with their names and titles printed above and below the picture. They were princesses, archdukes, or grand-dukes, and they were dressed like young English men and women, and with no sign about them of their possible military or social rank.

One of the young princesses in the photograph was looking out of it and smiling in a tolerant, amused way, as though she had thought of something which she could not wait to enjoy until after the picture was taken. She was not posing consciously, as were some of the others, but was sitting in a natural attitude, with one arm over the back of her chair, and with her hands clasped before her. Her face was full of a fine intelligence and humor, and though one of the other princesses in the group was far more beautiful, this particular one had a much more high-bred air, and there was something of a challenge in her smile that made any one who looked at the picture smile also. Carlton studied the face for some time, and mentally approved of its beauty; the others seemed in comparison wooden and unindividual, but this one looked like a person he might have known, and whom he would certainly have liked. He turned the page and surveyed the features of the Oxford crew with lesser interest, and then turned the page again and gazed critically and severely at the face of the princess with the high-bred smile. He had hoped that he would find it less interesting at a second glance, but it did not prove to be so.

"`The Princess Aline of Hohenwald,'" he read. "She's probably engaged to one of those Johnnies beside her, and the Grand-Duke of Hohenwald behind her must be her brother." He put the paper down and went into luncheon, and diverted himself by mixing a salad dressing; but after a few moments he stopped in the midst of this employment, and told the waiter, with some unnecessary sharpness, to bring him the last copy of the St. James Budget.

"Confound it!" he added, to himself.

He opened the paper with a touch of impatience and gazed long and earnestly at the face of the Princess Aline, who continued to return his look with the same smile of amused tolerance.

同类推荐
  • The Portygee

    The Portygee

    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。
  • 撼龙经

    撼龙经

    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。
  • 华严经疏

    华严经疏

    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。
  • 易象图说外篇

    易象图说外篇

    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。
  • 大音希声论

    大音希声论

    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
  • 仙风绝
  • 驯养小王子

    驯养小王子

    狐狸说:“对我而言,你只不过是个小女孩,就像其他千万个小女孩一样。我不需要你,你也同样用不着我。对你来说。我也只不过是一个长的有些帅气的男生,就跟其他千万长得长得帅气的男生一样。然而,你养了我。我们将会彼此需要,对我而言,你将是宇宙唯一的了,我对你来说,也是世界上唯一的了。狐狸:“你养了我,那我的生命就充满阳光,你的脚步声会变得跟其他人的不一样。其他人的脚步声会让我迅速躲开,而你的脚步声则会像音乐一样,把我召唤出到你的身边。”狐涂涂说:“狐狸,我养你那么大,不管怎么说你都该叫我一声妈妈,要不然你也叫我姐姐,你不能就这样爬到我头上之后还压在我身上,这样的压力会很大。”狐狸:“既然你压力已经那么大,那么就不在乎再添一点帮我生一窝狐狸宝宝吧。”
  • 靠近

    靠近

    刘浪,生于70年代,中国作家协会会员,黑龙江省作家协会签约作家,鲁迅文学院第十五期高研班学员。若干诗歌、中短篇小说发表于《飞天》《文学界》《山花》《作品》等数十家期刊,多篇小说被《小说选刊》等报刊转载。
  • 发觉净心经卷上

    发觉净心经卷上

    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。
  • 荒芜剑帝

    荒芜剑帝

    剑出鞘,必见血。你若不从,覆手灭之。剑、剑意、剑道,剑在手,谁有能奈我何?剑在人在,剑就是我,我就是剑,人剑合一,我为剑帝,天下第一。。。
  • 时光之翼:星辰上的情书

    时光之翼:星辰上的情书

    高冷英俊的理科天才郑书辰,毕业回国的第一天,在音乐庄园弹奏《时光之翼》,初次遇见到此参加高中毕业聚会的校花高材生关星晴,为残疾服务员打抱不平的她引起了郑书辰的注意,关星晴聚会途中避酒离席,好奇弹奏起钢琴上的琴谱《时光之翼》,知音相遇,首次四手联弹。郑书辰意外发现关星晴的同学许迁偷偷在酒中下药,不顾一切赶至抢喝完剩下的半杯酒,并强行将昏沉沉的关星晴带走。在药物作用下,二人不由自主发生了关系……关星晴第二天独自离开出国留学,后来郑书辰以网友身份陪伴身边,相约圣诞节见面,不料郑书辰却因工作室企划案出了紧急状况匆忙回国,并出了交通意外截肢了一条腿……半年后,关心晴回国,缘分的巨轮再次转动……
  • 咒灵师

    咒灵师

    叶辰的家族每一代都受着一个诅咒,他亲眼看到自己的父亲死于他的影之口,就那样一口一口被吞食干净……他永远也忘记不了,父亲死前曾拍着自己的肩膀说:永远也别召唤你的影!但那被诅咒的影之咒,能轻易逃脱么?
  • 萌妻太骄傲老婆,饶命!

    萌妻太骄傲老婆,饶命!

    '小晴,你原谅我好不好“某男深情的。。额。。拿着结婚证对着某女的眼睛。某女心想:别人不都是拿着戒指的吗?怎么到他这变成结婚证了“某男突然把某女强行抱起来。。。”啊啊啊,冷傲,你他妈给我起来啊啊“某女尖叫着,’宝贝,等等,我压着你啦‘某男奸笑着“废话”某女看白痴一样看着他’宝贝我既然压着你了,不然把那事也做了呗!‘隔日,某女心想着:这男的,精力旺盛啊!
  • 动手做实验丛书--热学实验改进设计实践

    动手做实验丛书--热学实验改进设计实践

    该系列丛书主要介绍动手做实验,本书详细讲解了热学实验改进设计实践。
  • A Child's History of England

    A Child's History of England

    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。