登陆注册
15457300000017

第17章 CHAPTER III(3)

It was thus in all things, for these cousins represented the two poles of womanhood. Miss Armytage without any of Lady O'Moy's insistent and excessive femininity, was nevertheless feminine to the core. But hers was the Diana type of womanliness. She was tall and of a clean-limbed, supple grace, now emphasised by the riding-habit which she was wearing - for she had been in the saddle during the hour which Lady, O'Moy had consecrated to the rites of toilet and devotions done before her mirror. Dark-haired, dark-eyed, vivacity and intelligence lent her countenance an attraction very different from the allurement of her cousin's delicate loveliness.

And because her countenance was a true mirror of her mind, she argued shrewdly now, so shrewdly that she drove O'Moy to entrench himself behind generalisations.

"My dear Sylvia, war is most merciful where it is most merciless," he assured her with the Irish gift for paradox. "At home in the Government itself there are plenty who argue as you argue, and who are wondering when we shall embark for England. That is because they are intellectuals, and war is a thing beyond the understanding of intellectuals. It is not intellect but brute instinct and brute force that will help humanity in such a crisis as the present.

Therefore, let me tell you, my child, that a government of intellectual men is the worst possible government for a nation engaged in a war."

This was far from satisfying Miss Armytage. Lord Wellington himself was an intellectual, she objected. Nobody could deny it.

There was the work he had done as Irish Secretary, and there was the calculating genius he had displayed at Vimeiro, at Oporto, at Talavera.

And then, observing her husband to be in distress, Lady O'Moy put down her fashion plate and brought up her heavy artillery to relieve him.

"Sylvia, dear," she interpolated, "I wonder that you will for ever be arguing about things you don't understand."

Miss Armytage laughed good-humouredly. She was not easily put out of countenance. "What woman doesn't?" she asked.

"I don't, and I am a woman, surely."

"Ah, but an exceptional woman," her cousin rallied her affectionately, tapping the shapely white arm that protruded from a foam of lace.

And Lady O'Moy, to whom words never had any but a literal meaning, set herself to purr precisely as one would have expected.

Complacently she discoursed upon the perfection of her own endowments, appealing ever and anon to her husband for confirmation, and O'Moy, who loved her with all the passionate reverence which Nature working inscrutably to her ends so often inspires in just such strong, essentially masculine men for just such fragile and excessively feminine women, afforded this confirmation with all the enthusiasm of sincere conviction.

Thus until Mullins broke in upon them with the announcement of a visit from Count Samoval, an announcement more welcome to Lady O'Moy than to either of her companions.

The Portuguese nobleman was introduced. He had attained to a degree of familiarity in the adjutant's household that permitted of his being received without ceremony there at that breakfast-table spread in the open. He was a slender, handsome, swarthy man of thirty, scrupulously dressed, as graceful and elegant in his movements as a fencing master, which indeed he might have been; for his skill with the foils was, a matter of pride to himself and notoriety to all the world. Nor was it by any means the only skill he might have boasted, for Jeronymo de Samoval was in many things,, a very subtle, supple gentleman. His friendship with the O'Moys, now some three months old, had been considerably strengthened of late by the fact that he had unexpectedly become one of the most hostile critics of the Council of Regency as lately constituted, and one of the most ardent supporters of the Wellingtonian policy.

He bowed with supremest grace to the ladies, ventured to kiss the fair, smooth hand of his hostess, undeterred by the frosty stare of O'Moy's blue eyes whose approval of all men was in inverse proportion to their approval of his wife - and finally proffered her the armful of early roses that he brought.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 仙人怨

    仙人怨

    鬼入人世,仙落凡间。一对至死不渝的恋人,一段天地不容的情感。
  • 足球双子星

    足球双子星

    一个偶然的机会,一对喜欢足球的兄弟因为一个芯片一起踏上了足球追梦的生涯足球交流群548356855希望大家进来侃足球
  • 你好,我的腹黑校草

    你好,我的腹黑校草

    作为新来的转学生,依依一不留神得到了校草大人的青睐,但是这个情况不对啊,人家都是从此嫁给高富帅走向人生巅峰,而她呢?吃饭的时候她莫名其妙在汤里舀出一大只假蟑螂;上厕所被人反锁在厕所,要不是安微及时出现,依依差点以为她会在里面锁一辈子;走路的时候路上突然出现一片香蕉皮,她一不留神踩上去被摔得眼冒金星……那一刻依依脑海里只有一个念头,夏亦泽,我要和你同归于尽!
  • 边伯贤的小媳妇

    边伯贤的小媳妇

    在过去的一年里,你和边伯贤,也就是著名的大明星结婚了,虽然没有对外界宣布,但你们依然很恩爱~
  • 惹爱成婚:天价老公送上门

    惹爱成婚:天价老公送上门

    一纸契约成为终身监禁,她怀着必死的决心日日在他身边。可他却宠她如命,待她如妻。她无可救药的眼睁睁看着自己掉进他温柔陷阱里。她曾以为这一切成真,却不想他神秘的未婚妻突然出现。她被设计陷害,最后发生车祸失去孩子,香消玉殒,他都熟视无睹。就在他婚礼当天的最后一个电话,得知她死于车祸后,他心痛的恨不得杀了自己,他并非不爱,只是不够相信,所以才导致了今天的悲剧。四年后他遇到跟她一模一样的人,他笃定她没死,对她使劲浑身解数的纠缠不休,死缠烂打。最终激怒某女,某女拿着手术刀威胁他再敢纠缠就要了他的命根子。某男脸皮太厚说没了命根子你以后可不会过得幸福。某女泪流满面竟无言以对。
  • 坏青春之郭弈琳

    坏青春之郭弈琳

    天才少女郭弈琳拥有令人艳羡的所有,显赫的家世和聪慧的头脑,早早的完成了义务教育,17岁拿到了大学双硕士文凭,拥有海外名校的入学邀请函。只是她犯错的几率和她的智商一样的高,因吸毒被劳教的郭弈琳出来后,由于还会不时出现戒断反应,被爸爸安排到一个秘密小镇上去重修高中课程。生命无端空余出大半,以为的可以重新来过却是被往日咄咄逼人的拆毁。而小镇上真的有一个新的人生在等着她,有一个永远都在追逐她的脚步,永远都会等着她的少年,就等在小镇上,准备着救赎。坦率的说坏这是青春附加给我们的权利,多年后,也就不再有这个自由了。
  • 竹马,你别跑!

    竹马,你别跑!

    青梅竹马的爱情是幸福的,但她们之间却隔着重重阻挠,为什么?他们最后能在一起吗?
  • 御界无双

    御界无双

    从平凡的世界里走出一条不平凡的路,从恐怖的世界上走到巅峰。
  • 大地之上的灵

    大地之上的灵

    一个生活在灾难频发地方的孤儿到新的世界经历苦难,快乐。最终修炼成什么,其间他会遇到哪些人哪些事呢。药徒,法术师,魔灵师构成了一个有血有乐的大地。
  • 萌萌的异能者姑娘闯世界

    萌萌的异能者姑娘闯世界

    若不是希溪遇见了贝涵柏。她最好的异能者朋友,她可能就那么平平淡淡地过一辈子。可是,既然她遇到了贝涵柏,就注定她会不一样。大家为她加油吧!