登陆注册
26542500000005

第5章

It would have been droll if it had not been so exemplary to see her tracing the loves of the duchesses beside the innocent cribs of her children.The immoral and the maternal lived together in her diligent days on the most comfortable terms, and she stopped curling the mustaches of her Guardsmen to pat the heads of her babes.She was haunted by solemn spinsters who came to tea from continental pensions, and by unsophisticated Americans who told her she was just loved in THEIR country."I had rather be just paid there," she usually replied; for this tribute of transatlantic opinion was the only thing that galled her.The Americans went away thinking her coarse; though as the author of so many beautiful love-stories she was disappointing to most of these pilgrims, who had not expected to find a shy, stout, ruddy lady in a cap like a crumbled pyramid.She wrote about the affections and the impossibility of controlling them, but she talked of the price of pension and the convenience of an English chemist.She devoted much thought and many thousands of francs to the education of her daughter, who spent three years at a very superior school at Dresden, receiving wonderful instruction in sciences, arts and tongues, and who, taking a different line from Leolin, was to be brought up wholly as a femme du monde.The girl was musical and philological; she made a specialty of languages and learned enough about them to be inspired with a great contempt for her mother's artless accents.Greville Fane's French and Italian were droll; the imitative faculty had been denied her, and she had an unequalled gift, especially pen in hand, of squeezing big mistakes into small opportunities.She knew it, but she didn't care;correctness was the virtue in the world that, like her heroes and heroines, she valued least.Ethel, who had perceived in her pages some remarkable lapses, undertook at one time to revise her proofs;but I remember her telling me a year after the girl had left school that this function had been very briefly exercised."She can't read me," said Mrs.Stormer; "I offend her taste.She tells me that at Dresden--at school--I was never allowed." The good lady seemed surprised at this, having the best conscience in the world about her lucubrations.She had never meant to fly in the face of anything, and considered that she grovelled before the Rhadamanthus of the English literary tribunal, the celebrated and awful Young Person.Iassured her, as a joke, that she was frightfully indecent (she hadn't in fact that reality any more than any other) my purpose being solely to prevent her from guessing that her daughter had dropped her not because she was immoral but because she was vulgar.I used to figure her children closeted together and asking each other while they exchanged a gaze of dismay: "Why should she BE so--and so FEARFULLYso--when she has the advantage of our society? Shouldn't WE have taught her better?" Then I imagined their recognising with a blush and a shrug that she was unteachable, irreformable.Indeed she was, poor lady; but it is never fair to read by the light of taste things that were not written by it.Greville Fane had, in the topsy-turvy, a serene good faith that ought to have been safe from allusion, like a stutter or a faux pas.

She didn't make her son ashamed of the profession to which he was destined, however; she only made him ashamed of the way she herself exercised it.But he bore his humiliation much better than his sister, for he was ready to take for granted that he should one day restore the balance.He was a canny and far-seeing youth, with appetites and aspirations, and he had not a scruple in his composition.His mother's theory of the happy knack he could pick up deprived him of the wholesome discipline required to prevent young idlers from becoming cads.He had, abroad, a casual tutor and a snatch or two of a Swiss school, but no consecutive study, no prospect of a university or a degree.It may be imagined with what zeal, as the years went on, he entered into the pleasantry of there being no manual so important to him as the massive book of life.It was an expensive volume to peruse, but Mrs.Stormer was willing to lay out a sum in what she would have called her premiers frais.

Ethel disapproved--she thought this education far too unconventional for an English gentleman.Her voice was for Eton and Oxford, or for any public school (she would have resigned herself) with the army to follow.But Leolin never was afraid of his sister, and they visibly disliked, though they sometimes agreed to assist, each other.They could combine to work the oracle--to keep their mother at her desk.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 大明度经

    大明度经

    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。
  • 遇見

    遇見

    遇见一切已知,遇见一切未知。这本小集子终会成为我这一生的遇见,包括你在内!
  • 老少皆宜的运动处方

    老少皆宜的运动处方

    该书分4章,分别介绍了运动处方的基本概念和内容,适合青少年健身的运动处方,中老年的运动处方以及防病治病的运动处方等内容。
  • 儿童益智游戏大全

    儿童益智游戏大全

    伴随宝宝成长的儿童益智游戏大全,伴随你的宝宝开心快乐的成长。
  • 推倒富二代——江直树

    推倒富二代——江直树

    这是说一个贫穷女生重生在恶作剧之吻的女主身上的故事,她坚强、世故、聪明、自尊,碰上了不可一世却又犹如迷路小孩的天才,在两个人最美好的年华里擦出最炫目的火花,但是怎么样才能让两个同样骄傲的人紧紧的扣住一生的锁链,当她说出:这一生,我不会为你停下脚步,也不要为你停下脚步时。他还能给出100分的答案吗?
  • 温州人商道

    温州人商道

    作为当今中国最具人气的“财富制造商”,温州人就像播种机,走到哪里,就将温州致富的种子播到哪里,让它生根发芽,长出一片的温州村、温州街和温州商厦……正是这些温州人,推动了全国走向市场经济的进程,或者说起到了催化剂的作用。他们在取得个人财富的同时,也推动了所在地市场繁荣和经济发展。带领大家走近温商,去观赏那斑斓的商业世界,体味那些在中国商业史上散发着熠熠光华,也带给渴望致富的个体许多经商启示的商业理念、商业智慧、商业精神!
  • 火影之开宗立派

    火影之开宗立派

    “奈良张琅,你的理想是什么?”“我梦想仗剑走天涯,看一看世界的繁华!”“那,你能不能,先放下手中的枪?”“呃,不好意思!”==“张琅君,真的不用继续埋伏了吗?”“放心,他们进入了我的符卡阵,逃不掉的!”==“张琅大人,请问你为何会萌生开宗立派的念头呢?”“呃,我其实只想平淡的生活,都是被逼的,你信吗?”“不信!”
  • 道魔之争

    道魔之争

    道魔之争千古不休。自千年前道门领袖清虚子背弃道宗远走北狄之地创立魔门以来,道魔之争便从未休止。历经千年愈演愈烈。近百年魔门势力不断壮大,不甘屈居于北狄荒凉之地,一度将于道门于中土决战。然而十五年前魔门领袖九幽宫宫主突然失踪,导致魔门大乱,内斗不止,道门以道宗为首的十大名门群起攻之,大败魔门于昆仑冰雪之地。经过此役九幽宫彻底破落,魔门四分五裂,散居于神州各地,道门声势日渐上涨,时至今日,已如日中天。其中又以十大名门为首,牢牢地把握着天下走势,纵是皇室也得避其锋芒。
  • 极品小仙

    极品小仙

    拥有着浩然仙气的叶麟,在出生后因为仙神界和家族的有眼无珠,感觉不到任何仙根灵气而被认为是废人,因此被降入凡界自生自灭……一粒能无限结出世间珍果,仙草,奇树,精石的莲花种子一本来自上界的戮仙心法一身奇异神通一段惊为天人的枭仙之途好嘛,这下凡界修仙者要欲哭无泪,叫苦不迭了。
  • 中国农地集体产权制度研究

    中国农地集体产权制度研究

    本书构建基于产权经济学的理论和方法,在梳理我国农地制度变迁的历史经验和现实矛盾的基础上,提出了产权主体的合作人假定与和谐产权关系的理论分析框架,并运用于农地集体产权制度的分析。