登陆注册
15447800000026

第26章 XIII.(3)

Burnamy was most with Mrs. March, who made him talk about himself when he supposed he was talking about literature, in the hope that she could get him to talk about the Triscoes; but she listened in vain as he poured out-his soul in theories of literary art, and in histories of what he had written and what he meant to write. When he passed them where they sat together, March heard the young fellow's perpetually recurring I, I, I, my, my, my, me, me, me; and smiled to think how she was suffering under the drip-drip of his innocent egotism.

She bore in a sort of scientific patience his attentions to the pivotal girl, and Miss Triscoe's indifference to him, in which a less penetrating scrutiny could have detected no change from meal to meal. It was only at table that she could see them together, or that she could note any break in the reserve of the father and daughter. The signs of this were so fine that when she reported them March laughed in scornful incredulity.

But at breakfast the third day out, the Triscoes, with the authority of people accustomed to social consideration, suddenly turned to the Marches, and began to make themselves agreeable; the father spoke to March of 'Every Other Week', which he seemed to know of in its relation to him; and the young girl addressed herself to Mrs. March's motherly sense not the less acceptably because indirectly. She spoke of going out with her father for an indefinite time, as if it were rather his wish than hers, and she made some inquiries about places in Germany; they had never been in Germany. They had some idea of Dresden; but the idea of Dresden with its American colony seemed rather tiresome; and did Mrs.

March know anything about Weimar?

Mrs. March was obliged to say that she knew nothing about anyplace in Germany; and she explained perhaps too fully where and why she was going with her husband. She fancied a Boston note in that scorn for the tiresomeness of Dresden; but the girl's style was of New York rather than of Boston, and her accent was not quite of either place. Mrs. March began to try the Triscoes in this place and in that, to divine them and to class them. She had decided from the first that they were society people, but they were cultivated beyond the average of the few swells whom she had met; and there had been nothing offensive in their manner of holding themselves aloof from the other people at the table; they had a right to do that if they chose.

When the young Lefferses came in to breakfast, the talk went on between these and the Marches; the Triscoes presently left the table, and Mrs.

March rose soon after, eager for that discussion of their behavior which March knew he should not be able to postpone.

He agreed with her that they were society people, but she could not at once accept his theory that they had themselves been the objects of an advance from them because of their neutral literary quality, through which they were of no social world, but potentially common to any. Later she admitted this, as she said, for the sake of argument, though what she wanted him to see, now, was that this was all a step of the girl's toward finding out something about Burnamy.

The same afternoon, about the time the deck-steward was making his round with his cups, Miss Triscoe abruptly advanced upon her from a neighboring corner of the bulkhead, and asked, with the air of one accustomed to have her advances gratefully received, if she might sit by her. The girl took March's vacant chair, where she had her cup of bouillon, which she continued to hold untasted in her hand after the first sip. Mrs. March did the same with hers, and at the moment she had got very tired of doing it, Burnamy came by, for the hundredth time that day, and gave her a hundredth bow with a hundredth smile. He perceived that she wished to get rid of her cup, and he sprang to her relief.

"May I take yours too?" he said very passively to Miss Triscoe.

"You are very good." she answered, and gave it.

Mrs. March with a casual air suggested, "Do you know Mr. Burnamy, Miss Triscoe? "The girl said a few civil things, but Burnamy did not try to make talk with her while he remained a few moments before Mrs. March.

The pivotal girl came in sight, tilting and turning in a rare moment of isolation at the corner of the music-room, and he bowed abruptly, and hurried off to join her.

Miss Triscoe did not linger; she alleged the necessity of looking up her father, and went away with a smile so friendly that Mrs. March might easily have construed it to mean that no blame attached itself to her in Miss Triscoe's mind.

"Then you don't feel that it was a very distinct success?" her husband asked on his return.

"Not on the surface," she said.

"Better let ill enough alone," he advised.

She did not heed him. "All the same she cares for him. The very fact that she was so cold shows that."

"And do you think her being cold will make him care for her?"

"If she wants it to."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 死后之灵魂世界

    死后之灵魂世界

    人死后会去哪?这个地方叫做,灵界!灵界有很多种人,恐龙人,现代人,原著人等等等等,其中古代人之中有一位叫秦始皇的家伙,统治着全部古代人。冷冰炎意外获得一只美丽的蜘蛛,随后发现自己可以同时拥有现代人与古代人的能力,于是,拯救世界妹子,咳咳!拯救世界的任务就交给我了!
  • 岁月不负你

    岁月不负你

    苏柒第一次见到慕景阳的时候,他的脸上便挂着他那特有的招牌微笑,暖暖的,在这浮躁的年华里,波澜不惊……青春跟我们闹了一个很大的玩笑,让原本不是一个世界的人相遇,然后相互折磨,兜兜转转。
  • 天不任我

    天不任我

    在一片沧涣大陆上有着这么一个传说:魔族中有一种另类:是天生屠戮印记,成长起来便是魔兽之王,而此代屠戮印记却是附着于人类,预示这人将杀伐不断,甚至杀光家人,对魔族亦是一场灾难,如今,这个本应出现于魔族中的怪胎,却是有着圣龙血脉,身体里存在的正义与邪恶的力量,他将何去何从?且看神人如何解开血脉之谜,逃脱扼杀,成功登上人生巅峰,拥美人,拥天下。
  • 哆啦A梦会修仙

    哆啦A梦会修仙

    一个过着平凡生活的上班族收到了一个奇怪的包裹,没想到里面竟然放着一个哆啦A梦,而且还是一只会修仙的哆啦A梦。更神奇的是,这只会修仙的哆啦A梦,还告诉我们的主角一个惊天大秘密,那就是我们的主角竟然是当年给压在五行山下的孙大圣摘果子的那个牧童转世。惊讶之余,我们的主角便跟着这只会修仙的哆啦A梦踏上了修仙之旅。【本书QQ群:511324997。欢迎大家加入】感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持
  • EXO之王道cp

    EXO之王道cp

    主要讲述exo的日常生活,伪现实,喜欢的书友们可以来看,六对西皮。
  • 女王高歌

    女王高歌

    律政俏佳人——高歌,绝恋重生。她从柔弱的小女子成长为有担当的霸气律政女王,玩转商战,代理诉讼无往不胜,是周围人的强大依靠。她抱定单身信仰却偏遇旧爱,侠肝义胆不得不重陷生死之恋······女主非常可敬可爱!毕业党的职场、情场教科书~
  • 萌主乱天下

    萌主乱天下

    一次偶然的飙车,把他们系在了一起。之后的个钟惊喜,他们忽然发现,他们从看到她们的第一眼,就喜欢她们了。她们也亦是。被改苦尽甘来一生一世,他们的爱情却出现了变故。他们为什么不相信我。我恨他们!一年后,她们回归复仇,他们已知道事情的真相,他们赔罪。“对不起,我错了”“错了?呵,你们没有错!是我们错了!”我们错在不该喜欢你!不该和你们相遇!“不是的,是我们的错!求你们原谅我们。”“不会的,我们不会原谅你们的!”“为什么!”“因为我们不爱你们了”对不起,我们只能这样说,求你们不要伤心,我们不像你们卷入危机,只有这样才能守护你们。……
  • 女王驾到——各位夫君请放手

    女王驾到——各位夫君请放手

    “丫头又跑了。”倚天昊。“那该怎么办,呢?”沈逸辰。冷研修冷眼看了看周围的一群男人,径直离去“走吧,继续追吧。”傲黎昕,也跟上去。其他几位两两相视,无奈叹口气,跟上他们去找那个让他们魂牵梦萦的笨蛋女孩。
  • 卫辉府的传说

    卫辉府的传说

    朱翊镠明朝隆庆皇帝朱载垕之子,万历皇帝朱翊钧的同母弟,生于1568年,四岁即册封为潞王,1589年就藩卫辉府至死。这个昏王藩居卫辉几十年里,凭借自己的特殊地位,仗势豪夺、野蛮盘剥,兼并土地四万余顷,遍布九府二十多县。他勾结地方官府横行乡里,肆无忌惮地欺男霸女、杀人害命,给黎民百姓造成了数不清的苦难灾祸。潞王陵中,断碑残竭记满了潞王的污德秽行;殿宇楼台浸透了百姓的辛酸血泪;衰草荒冢、枯骨干骸,昔日的封建王侯早已腐臭于历史的垃圾堆;斗转星移、岁月流逝,永存于人民心中的是善恶爱憎。至今,卫辉流传着多少委婉凄凉、悲壮惨烈的民间传说。
  • 所谓爱情,是一种信仰

    所谓爱情,是一种信仰

    上世纪八十年代,中国正值改革开放初期,所有人都在迷茫,未来将会是什么样子?家里由贫穷变成富有吗?自己可以找到自己的妻子或丈夫吗?农村将来会变样子吗?中国会在将来重振雄风吗?当人们都在考虑对未知的担忧时,有那么一些读着汪国真的诗的年轻人,正在说着,"还在担心未来吗?那是因为你们没有信仰”!“什么是信仰?”有人如果这样问,他们必定异口同声,“别的不清楚,但是所谓爱情,正是一种信仰!”随着时光的流逝,人们在他们身上,仿佛看到了所谓的爱情,常常听到感叹,“这大概就是信仰了吧!”