登陆注册
5189200000036

第36章 CHAPTER THE SECOND(5)

The natural development of his position under the influence of Lady Marayne had enormously enlarged the circle of his acquaintances.He had taken part in all sorts of social occasions, and sat and listened to a representative selection of political and literary and social personages, he had been several times to the opera and to a great number and variety of plays, he had been attentively inconspicuous in several really good week-end parties.He had spent a golden October in North Italy with his mother, and escaped from the glowing lassitude of Venice for some days of climbing in the Eastern Alps.In January, in an outbreak of enquiry, he had gone with Lionel Maxim to St.Petersburg and had eaten zakuska, brightened his eyes with vodka, talked with a number of charming people of the war that was then imminent, listened to gipsy singers until dawn, careered in sledges about the most silent and stately of capitals, and returned with Lionel, discoursing upon autocracy and assassination, Japan, the Russian destiny, and the government of Peter the Great.That excursion was the most after his heart of all the dispersed employments of his first year.Through the rest of the winter he kept himself very fit, and still further qualified that nervous dislike for the horse that he had acquired from Prothero by hunting once a week in Essex.He was incurably a bad horseman; he rode without sympathy, he was unready and convulsive at hedges and ditches, and he judged distances badly.His white face and rigid seat and a certain joylessness of bearing in the saddle earned him the singular nickname, which never reached his ears, of the "Galvanized Corpse." He got through, however, at the cost of four quite trifling spills and without damaging either of the horses he rode.And his physical self-respect increased.

On his writing-desk appeared a few sheets of manuscript that increased only very slowly.He was trying to express his Cambridge view of aristocracy in terms of Finacue Street, West.

The artistic and intellectual movements of London had made their various demands upon his time and energies.Art came to him with a noble assumption of his interest and an intention that presently became unpleasantly obvious to sell him pictures that he did not want to buy and explain away pictures that he did.He bought one or two modern achievements, and began to doubt if art and aristocracy had any necessary connection.At first he had accepted the assumption that they had.After all, he reflected, one lives rather for life and things than for pictures of life and things or pictures arising out of life and things.This Art had an air of saying something, but when one came to grips with it what had it to say?

Unless it was Yah! The drama, and more particularly the intellectual drama, challenged his attention.In the hands of Shaw, Barker, Masefield, Galsworthy, and Hankin, it, too, had an air of saying something, but he found it extremely difficult to join on to his own demands upon life anything whatever that the intellectual drama had the air of having said.He would sit forward in the front row of the dress-circle with his cheek on his hand and his brow slightly knit.His intentness amused observant people.The drama that did not profess to be intellectual he went to with Lady Marayne, and usually on first nights.Lady Marayne loved a big first night at St.James's Theatre or His Majesty's.Afterwards, perhaps, Sir Godfrey would join them at a supper party, and all sorts of clever and amusing people would be there saying keen intimate things about each other.He met Yeats, who told amusing stories about George Moore, and afterwards he met George Moore, who told amusing stories about Yeats, and it was all, he felt, great fun for the people who were in it.But he was not in it, and he had no very keen desire to be in it.It wasn't his stuff.He had, though they were nowadays rather at the back of his mind, quite other intentions.In the meanwhile all these things took up his time and distracted his attention.

There was, as yet, no practicable aviation to beguile a young man of spirit, but there were times when Benham found himself wondering whether there might not be something rather creditable in the possession and control of a motor-car of exceptional power.Only one might smash people up.Should an aristocrat be deterred by the fear of smashing people up? If it is a selfish fear of smashing people up, if it is nerves rather than pity? At any rate it did not come to the car.

6

Among other things that delayed Benham very greatly in the development of his aristocratic experiments was the advice that was coming to him from every quarter.It came in extraordinary variety and volume, but always it had one unvarying feature.It ignored and tacitly contradicted his private intentions.

We are all of us disposed to be propagandists of our way of living, and the spectacle of a wealthy young man quite at large is enough to excite the most temperate of us without distinction of age or sex.

"If I were you," came to be a familiar phrase in his ear.This was particularly the case with political people; and they did it not only from the natural infirmity of humanity, but because, when they seemed reluctant or satisfied with him as he was, Lady Marayne egged them on.

There was a general assumption that he was to go into Parliament, and most of his counsellors assumed further that on the whole his natural sympathies would take him into the Conservative party.But it was pointed out to him that just at present the Liberal party was the party of a young man's opportunity; sooner or later the swing of the pendulum which would weed the Conservatives and proliferate Liberals was bound to come, there was always more demand and opportunity for candidates on the Liberal side, the Tariff Reformers were straining their ministerial majority to the splitting point, and most of the old Liberal leaders had died off during the years of exile.The party was no longer dominated; it would tolerate ideas.

同类推荐
  • 孤忠后录

    孤忠后录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 茶酒论

    茶酒论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 耕余剩技

    耕余剩技

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 旧京琐记

    旧京琐记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 红楼别梦之溶黛情缘

    红楼别梦之溶黛情缘

    一卷红楼思几重,只缘此情与君同。恨无生花妙笔在,唯将终夜述文中。他,叱咤风云的一代侠王;他,负剑而行的青年侠客;她,美貌与才情并重的江南弱女。穿不尽绫罗与绸缎,谁曾见骨肉相残;咽不下玉粒与金波,谁曾知孤女心寒;道不尽甜言与蜜语,却不见落井石下.又是水溶与黛玉的故事。不过这里没有穿越,没有魔法异能,有的只是情比金坚。
  • 王火文集·第七卷:心上的海潮 隐私权 众生百态

    王火文集·第七卷:心上的海潮 隐私权 众生百态

    《王火文集·第七卷》为中短篇和小小说合集,共分为三个部分。第一部分为中篇小说集《心上的海潮》,由七篇小说组成。多为不同时代背景下婚姻与爱情主题的故事,讲述主人公或因价值观,或因误会,或因懦弱,或因金钱,或因性格等的悲剧。第二部分为中篇小说《隐私权》,探讨爱人之间隐私权的尺度。第三部分为短篇和小小说集《众生百态》,由四十余篇小说组成,作品涉及领域广泛。有人生哲理,有对世事的慨叹与礼赞,刻画了种种人物,构成了丰富多彩的社会画面。
  • 假凤虚凰

    假凤虚凰

    同名网剧《假凤虚凰》5月5日爱奇艺上线,画风清奇引热议。女扮男装的太子叶清歌迫于无奈迎娶了一位男扮女装的太子妃苏域的故事,两人打打闹闹本以为是嬉笑姻缘,却慢慢揭开二十年前一场李代桃僵的大秘密。苏域素来有“女战神”的名声,叶清歌在成婚前担心事迹败漏,曾逃婚一次,结果逃婚路上遇到了被行刺的苏域,两个人有一场尴尬的初遇,导致第二次正式见面就大打出手,奠定了两人欢喜冤家的基础。之后两人达成协议,叶清歌帮助苏域取得“她”想要的,苏域也协助叶清歌站稳脚跟,这时,叶清歌的太傅谢子兰隐约透漏出一桩多年前的秘密,而谢子兰的儿子谢清运也出现,叶清歌、苏域、谢清运之间会发生一些什么意想不到的事情……
  • 他从人间来

    他从人间来

    山外,是人间。去往人间万万里,不为长生。(不定期更新)
  • 草莓的节日

    草莓的节日

    不知是山风吹红了草莓,还是太阳晒红了草莓,反正N县今年的草莓特别好吃——带着太阳的味道和风的味道的那种鲜美,把所有亲近它的人都熏醉了。N县政府就干脆举办了一个声势浩大的草莓节,吸引八方来客。那一天,在通往四面八方的公路口,人们都挂起了暖洋洋的横幅标语:在这美好的四月,去那草莓熟了的地方!时下中国的节日,个个都是人海大战,N县草莓节人潮如水的热闹不必细说。我们必须注意到市邮政局营业员郝雪雁所带领的这一个采摘草莓的姐妹群体——她们是一群四十岁上下的女人,不那么艳丽、不那么娇美,但她们提着小篮在草莓夥里咿咿呀呀地恣意欢笑,就和结在藤蔓上的草莓一样惹人爱恋了。
  • 战兽隼狼(兽王系列)

    战兽隼狼(兽王系列)

    兰虎加入到东联邦政府谈判组保镖队中,暗中保护着谈判组中的重要人物。在东西联邦政府各自派出最高规格的代表与对方谈判时,为了在谈判桌上获得优势,谈判桌外的争斗也逐渐白热化……沙祖为了在谈判桌上获得胜利,手段百出,无所不用其极,但是军队的频频失利令他决定孤注一掷,密谋将东西联邦政府的谈判组成员杀得干干净净,这样一来东西联邦政府群龙无首,很有可能就此被沙祖扳回局面。一时间,沙祖身边集中了苏尔、黑鹰王纳特和独孤霸三大超一流高手,并由加利亚城城主金铎率众强者围杀东西联邦政府的护卫队和保镖队。千钧一发之际,兰虎挺身而出,与隼狼合体……
  • 霸总你逃不掉了

    霸总你逃不掉了

    【新文:霸总又让我继承亿万家产】“霍先生,媒体都说,你跟我是金主和情人的关系。”她打趣的跟他说。第二天,他将名下所有资产都转移到了她名下,“你现在可以跟媒体说,你才是金主。”——霍南琛跟顾偏偏是所有人眼中最不可能成的一对,可有一天两本结婚证亮瞎了所有人的狗眼!传闻中霍太太凶恶泼辣,众人纷纷同情霍先生家有恶妻。得知此事,霍先生十分不满,“胡说八道!我太太温柔贤惠,以夫为天,我说一她从来不敢说二!”一旁助理小声嘟囔:“先生,您要不先从搓衣板上起来再说?”
  • 劳动关系管理焦点实务百问百答

    劳动关系管理焦点实务百问百答

    本书根据作者的亲身实践,以及近几年来社会上出现的案例,从中提取了100个相对独立的问题,来阐述企业人力资源管理相关的法律问题。这些问题很有代表性,重点突出,可谓针对性强;与人力资源管理实际工作联系很紧密,可谓实用性强;涵盖了整个人力资源管理全过程,内容比较系统,可谓整体性强。
  • 打开心灵的锁

    打开心灵的锁

    打开心灵的锁主要内容:沉重的锁围绕着你的心灵,让你的心灵受到积压,使你的头一片空白,没有哲理,也没有智慧。只有打开那把锁,你的灵才会绽放出智慧的花朵。
  • 华尔街规则:培养具有金钱思维和赚钱能力的孩子

    华尔街规则:培养具有金钱思维和赚钱能力的孩子

    在经济高度发展的社会,商业发达,物质丰富。生活在这样的社会中,孩子们从小就有很多向往,他们想拥有钢琴,想拥有画板,想报特长班,想出去旅游……然而,生活是很实际的。这些向往的实现都离不开钱。在孩子小的时候,作为家长,我们可以想尽办法,甚至省吃俭用满足孩子的愿望。那么,等孩子大了呢?他能靠自己的劳动满足自己日益增长的欲望吗?给孩子金钱,不如培养孩子赚钱的思维和能力。培养孩子的金钱思维并不是教给孩子具体的赚钱技能,而要重视综合素质的培养,比如学习能力、个性品质、创新思维和理财能力等等。本书揭示了华尔街精英的成功秘诀,帮父母共同打造高财商、了不起的孩子。