登陆注册
15326700000046

第46章

``I've had that joy only since my husband died.It's as well that I didn't have it sooner.One is the better for having served an apprenticeship at self-repression and at pretending to virtues one has not.Only those who earn their freedom know how to use it.If I had had it ten or fifteen years ago I'd have been an intolerable tyrant, making everyone around me unhappy and therefore myself.The ideal world would be one where everyone was born free and never knew anything else.

Then, no one being afraid or having to serve, everyone would have to be considerate in order to get himself tolerated.''

``I wonder if I really ever shall be able to earn a living?'' sighed Mildred.

``You must decide that whatever you can make shall be for you a living,'' said the older woman.``I have lived on my fixed income, which is under two thousand a year.And I am ready to do it again rather than tolerate anything or anybody that does not suit me.''

``I shall have to be extremely careful,'' laughed Mildred.``I shall be a dreadful hypocrite with you.''

Mrs.Brindley smiled; but underneath, Mildred saw --or perhaps felt--that her new friend was indeed not one to be trifled with.She said:

``You and I will get on.We'll let each other alone.

We have to be more or less intimate, but we'll never be familiar.''

After a time she discovered that Mrs.Brindley's first name was Cyrilla, but Mrs.Brindley and Miss Stevens they remained to each other for a long time--until circumstances changed their accidental intimacy into enduring friendship.Not to anticipate, in the course of that same conversation Mildred said:

``If there is anything about me--about my life--that you wish me to explain, I shall be glad to do so.''

``I know all I wish to know,'' replied Cyrilla Brindley.``Your face and your manner and your way of speaking tell me all the essentials.''

``Then you must not think it strange when I say Iwish no one to know anything about me.''

``It will be impossible for you entirely to avoid meeting people,'' said Cyrilla.``You must have some simple explanation about yourself, or you will attract attention and defeat your object.''

``Lead people to believe that I'm an orphan--perhaps of some obscure family--who is trying to get up in the world.That is practically the truth.''

Mrs.Brindley laughed.``Quite enough for New York,'' said she.``It is not interested in facts.All the New-Yorker asks of you is, `Can you pay your bills and help me pay mine?' ''

Competent men are rare; but, thanks to the advantage of the male sex in having to make the struggle for a living, they are not so rare as competent women.

Mrs.Brindley was the first competent woman Mildred had ever known.She had spent but a few hours with her before she began to appreciate what a bad atmosphere she had always breathed--bad for a woman who has her way to make in the world, or indeed for any woman not willing to be content as mere more or less shiftless, more or less hypocritical and pretentious, dependent and parasite.Mrs.Brindley--well bred and well educated--knew all the little matters which Mildred had been taught to regard as the whole of a lady's education.But Mildred saw that these trifles were but a trifling incident in Mrs.Brindley's knowledge.She knew real things, this woman who was a thorough-going housekeeper and who trebled her income by giving music lessons a few hours a day to such pupils as she thought worth the teaching.When she spoke, she always said something one of the first things noticed by Mildred, who, being too lazy to think except as her naturally good mind insisted on exercising itself, usually talked simply to kill time and without any idea of getting anywhere.But while Cyrilla--without in the least intending it--roused her to a painful sense of her own limitations, she did not discourage her.Mildred also began to feel that in this new atmosphere of ideas, of work, of accomplishment, she would rapidly develop into a different sort of person.It was extremely fortunate for her, thought she, that she was living with such a person as Cyrilla Brindley.In the old atmosphere, or with any taint of it, she would have been unable to become a serious person.She would simply have dawdled along, twaddling about ``art'' and seriousness and careers and sacrifice, content with the amateur's methods and the amateur's results--and deluding herself that she was making progress.Now--It was as different as public school from private school --public school where the mind is rudely stimulated, private school where it is sedulously mollycoddled.She had come out of the hothouse into the open.

At first she thought that Jennings was to be as great a help to her as Cyrilla Brindley.Certainly if ever there was a man with the air of a worker and a place with the air of a workshop, that man and that place were Eugene Jennings and his studio in Carnegie Hall.

When Mildred entered, on that Saturday morning, at exactly half-past ten, Jennings--in a plain if elegant house-suit--looked at her, looked at the clock, stopped a girl in the midst of a burst of tremulous noisy melody.

``That will do, Miss Bristow,'' said he.``You have never sung it worse.You do not improve.Another lesson like this, and we shall go back and begin all over again.''

The girl, a fattish, ``temperamental'' blonde, burst into tears.

``Kindly take that out into the hall,'' said Jennings coldly.``Your time is up.We cannot waste Miss Stevens's time with your hysterics.''

Miss Bristow switched from tears to fury.``You brute! You beast!'' she shrieked, and flung herself out of the room, slamming the door after her.Jennings took a book from a pile upon a table, opened it, and set it on a music-stand.Evidently Miss Bristow was forgotten--indeed, had passed out of his mind at half-past ten exactly, not to enter it again until she should appear at ten on Monday morning.He said to Mildred:

``Now, we'll see what you can do.Begin.''

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 芒灵记

    芒灵记

    天生剑才难弃,却又天生无灵。神秘怨灵萝莉附身,化作话唠狂魔,身边一直陪伴着的乐乐竟是王室贵族。芒灵大陆神秘势力来袭,亲妹失踪,娘亲惊人身世,花神时代意志者降临,乐乐被抓,婚约纠葛,无限压力即将降临。
  • 彭迪先全集

    彭迪先全集

    本书内容包括:战时的日本经济、实用经济学大纲、新货币学讲话、世界经济史纲、经济思想史、货币信用论大纲等。
  • 顺手牵‘狼’:惹火娘子

    顺手牵‘狼’:惹火娘子

    老天爷,你不是在玩我吧,我只是想躲避官兵而已,却被一个风流王爷扛上,还显些失了身。咦,再看看这风流王爷,还真不错,神仙画卷里出来的人,被这样一个超酷男盯上,也是不错的事情。好,那我也来个坏的,好好的陪这个风流王爷玩玩,来个新式的鸳鸯戏水。
  • 蛊元纪

    蛊元纪

    集万毒于一皿,任其相杀相啖,终,独活者以怨为魂,以忿为血,形神皆变,破皿者,谓之蛊,操蛊之人,不尽相同,用蛊之道,亦无相似,唯一不变之理,便是:集弱者作肉,为强者所食,君不见,部落,皇朝,人间,天上,万物竞行此道……”上古时期,曾有神祗存在过,这些神祗视人族为口粮,人族就是被圈养的牲畜,直到传说中的初代蛊师和蛊神出现,他们一起创造了蛊术,秘术,给人族带来了足以自保的力量在那惊天一战中,众神皆亡,只留下了一宗大造化,和一把通向那座巨城的钥匙无尽岁月过去,钥匙终是现身世间,被人当做钥匙容器的莫晨……
  • 人际沟通

    人际沟通

    个人之间在人际交往中彼此交流思想、感情和知识等信息的过程。它是沟通的一种主要形式,主要是通过语言、副语言、表情、手势、体态以及社会距离等来实现的。
  • 倭魔

    倭魔

    他,他乃女娲大神在仙界之外。唯一遗留下的神血化身而成。他,他有神的血,人间道的情;他肩负着拯救苍生,背负着血海深仇之重任,追寇除魔而穿越到了一九三七……
  • 噢,我那见鬼大人

    噢,我那见鬼大人

    “亲爱的小姑娘,你掉的是我左手上的金鬼呢?还是我右手上的银鬼呢?”林仙儿转过头一脸幽怨的看向,名叫‘河神’的白胡子老头左右手上,杂乱枯黄的长发,惨白的大半张脸,裂到耳后根的乌黑嘴唇,死灰的双手,尖利的长指甲,以及分不清男女的双胞胎鬼……“掉你妹啊!!!”
  • 最佳萌婚:老公大人求放过

    最佳萌婚:老公大人求放过

    【此文绝对宠,1v1】某一个月黑风高的晚上,他看着她说,“老婆,想要吗?”某男狡猾一笑“唔。。。”某女正在犹豫ing。“那是想,还是不想呢?”某男暧昧试探。“想!”某女下定绝心。“吻我。”某男不要脸起来。“滚,夜凝泫,快把档案袋给我!”某女愤怒。“老婆~”某男委屈。“滚!我说了多少次了,不要叫我老婆,我不是你老婆!”白梧卿彻底怒了。谁能告诉她,她为什么在见到他的第一面,原本高冷的她就被他气的不行?后来发现他居然是她小时候迷路时求救的人?omygod!这个世界玄幻了!
  • 都市狂神记

    都市狂神记

    一代天骄横空出世,天资可谓是前无古人,后无来者。可是却因太过于猖狂,且妖孽无比,而被天道不容并且斩杀,但是却没有让他化为虚无,他的神魂逃离了。来到了一个全新的世界,在这里,他要成神!他一生的宏愿只为复仇!“阎王要我死,我便要阎王死!”“天道要我死,我便捅破天,让天道泯灭在我的手中!”
  • 丧钟镇的回响

    丧钟镇的回响

    一个被遗忘者新兵处在一个波澜壮阔的冲突时代,从新生到走向另一种人生高度。他的故事也是这个世界的一部分,也许会对那个时代的前进产生一点点影响,不过并不影响他成为一个传奇。