登陆注册
5290200000001

第1章 I(1)

H. R. H. the Princess Aline of Hohenwald came into the life of Morton Carlton--or "Morney" Carlton, as men called him--of New York city, when that young gentleman's affairs and affections were best suited to receive her. Had she made her appearance three years sooner or three years later, it is quite probable that she would have passed on out of his life with no more recognition from him than would have been expressed in a look of admiring curiosity.

But coming when she did, when his time and heart were both unoccupied, she had an influence upon young Mr. Carlton which led him into doing several wise and many foolish things, and which remained with him always. Carlton had reached a point in his life, and very early in his life, when he could afford to sit at ease and look back with modest satisfaction to what he had forced himself to do, and forward with pleasurable anticipations to whatsoever he might choose to do in the future. The world had appreciated what he had done, and had put much to his credit, and he was prepared to draw upon this grandly.

At the age of twenty he had found himself his own master, with excellent family connections, but with no family, his only relative being a bachelor uncle, who looked at life from the point of view of the Union Club's windows, and who objected to his nephew's leaving Harvard to take up the study of art in Paris. In that city (where at Julian's he was nicknamed the junior Carlton, for the obvious reason that he was the older of the two Carltons in the class, and because he was well dressed) he had shown himself a harder worker than others who were less careful of their appearance and of their manners.

His work, of which he did not talk, and his ambitions, of which he also did not talk, bore fruit early, and at twenty-six he had become a portrait-painter of international reputation. Then the French government purchased one of his paintings at an absurdly small figure, and placed it in the Luxembourg, from whence it would in time depart to be buried in the hall of some provincial city; and American millionaires, and English Lord Mayors, members of Parliament, and members of the Institute, masters of hounds in pink coats, and ambassadors in gold lace, and beautiful women of all nationalities and conditions sat before his easel. And so when he returned to New York he was welcomed with an enthusiasm which showed that his countrymen had feared that the artistic atmosphere of the Old World had stolen him from them forever. He was particularly silent, even at this date, about his work, and listened to what others had to say of it with much awe, not unmixed with some amusement, that it should be he who was capable of producing anything worthy of such praise. We have been told what the mother duck felt when her ugly duckling turned into a swan, but we have never considered how much the ugly duckling must have marvelled also.

"Carlton is probably the only living artist," a brother artist had said of him, "who fails to appreciate how great his work is." And on this being repeated to Carlton by a good-natured friend, he had replied cheerfully, "Well, I'm sorry, but it is certainly better to be the only one who doesn't appreciate it than to be the only one who does."

He had never understood why such a responsibility had been intrusted to him. It was, as he expressed it, not at all in his line, and young girls who sought to sit at the feet of the master found him making love to them in the most charming manner in the world, as though he were not entitled to all the rapturous admiration of their very young hearts, but had to sue for it like any ordinary mortal. Carlton always felt as though some day some one would surely come along and say:

"Look here, young man, this talent doesn't belong to you; it's mine. What do you mean by pretending that such an idle good-natured youth as yourself is entitled to such a gift of genius?" He felt that he was keeping it in trust, as it were; that it had been changed at birth, and that the proper guardian would eventually relieve him of his treasure.

Personally Carlton was of the opinion that he should have been born in the active days of knights-errant--to have had nothing more serious to do than to ride abroad with a blue ribbon fastened to the point of his lance, and with the spirit to unhorse any one who objected to its color, or to the claims of superiority of the noble lady who had tied it there. There was not, in his opinion, at the present day any sufficiently pronounced method of declaring admiration for the many lovely women this world contained. A proposal of marriage he considered to be a mean and clumsy substitute for the older way, and was uncomplimentary to the many other women left unasked, and marriage itself required much more constancy than he could give. He had a most romantic and old-fashioned ideal of women as a class, and from the age of fourteen had been a devotee of hundreds of them as individuals; and though in that time his ideal had received several severe shocks, he still believed that the "not impossible she" existed somewhere, and his conscientious efforts to find out whether every women he met might not be that one had led him not unnaturally into many difficulties.

"The trouble with me is," he said, "that I care too much to make Platonic friendship possible, and don't care enough to marry any particular woman--that is, of course, supposing that any particular one would be so little particular as to be willing to marry me. How embarrassing it would be, now," he argued, "if, when you were turning away from the chancel after the ceremony, you should look at one of the bridesmaids and see the woman whom you really should have married! How distressing that would be! You couldn't very well stop and say: `I am very sorry, my dear, but it seems I have made a mistake. That young woman on the right has a most interesting and beautiful face. I am very much afraid that she is the one.' It would be too late then; while now, in my free state, I can continue my, search without any sense of responsibility."

同类推荐
  • 平石如砥禅师语录

    平石如砥禅师语录

    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。
  • 大乘修行菩萨行门诸经要集

    大乘修行菩萨行门诸经要集

    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。
  • 胜宗十句义论

    胜宗十句义论

    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。
  • 蒙训

    蒙训

    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。
  • The Illustrious Gaudissart

    The Illustrious Gaudissart

    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
  • 被弃小宫女:天价皇妃

    被弃小宫女:天价皇妃

    “你只能是本王的!”他看着身下哭的梨花带雨,不断颤抖的黎昕,发狠道,“他已经用一百两把你卖给本王了。”她默默的承受着他给的痛,想起那个忘恩负义的男人,嘴边咧开一个苦涩的笑意,既然他以贱价一百两把自己卖了,那么自己就要做最最高贵的女人。他日登帝,她是他捧在手心的天价皇妃,他再想要挽回,而她莞尔一笑,“本宫无价。”
  • 春去春会来

    春去春会来

    热烈欢迎参加云州蓝焰燃气有限公司开业庆典的贵宾!红色的电子字幕,渲染着热烈的气氛。而陈旭,亦是一团炽火在胸,像加足了燃料的蒸汽机车,呼隆隆地就闯进了宾馆。步幅大,频率也快,就显出急匆匆的样子来。不料,脚下一闪,身便打了个趔趄。低头看看,虽未有异常发现,还是往虚空处狠踢了一脚:“操!”刚“操”罢,丝绒旗袍就过来了:“先生,有什么需要帮助的吗?”他眼一斜:“你帮得了吗!”旗袍竭力把笑容留在脸上,声音却低了下来:“对不起!”来到餐厅,周光伟热情地招呼道:“快坐吧,就等你了。”
  • 阴真君还丹歌诀注

    阴真君还丹歌诀注

    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。
  • 万界至尊债主系统

    万界至尊债主系统

    秦皇嬴政,一统六国,向我借粮,许我十二金人。修建长城,再次借粮,三十万旦,许我阿房宫。项羽渡江,八千子弟,借万旦灵米,许我霸王枪。鸿钧讲道,借玉虚宫,传道授业,许我无尽永恒。“石昊,你独断万古,是为了阻止我要债吗?”冷逸站在星空彼岸喊话。
  • 神厨萌嫁

    神厨萌嫁

    小姐,你最大的愿望是什么?”某丫鬟一脸坏笑。“靠这身厨艺赢遍天下!”某神厨倒一脸正经。“不对不对!”丫鬟笑得诡异。“那你说是什么?”小姐问得心虚。“当然是找个如意郎君!”“……”她哪儿来的理直气壮?“像逍遥王那样的如意郎君!”“……”某神厨只觉脸上好热好热。“难道不好吗?”“他过于英俊位高权重受人追捧又喜怒多变,我实在看不出哪里比较靠得住!”“靠不住?那我今天不该来咯?”身后忽然传来男声。她吃惊地回头,却见他笑意暖暖,已手捧大红吉服向自己走来……
  • 闲庭扫叶集

    闲庭扫叶集

    古典文化散文,贴近现世的心音,化解嫩寒的春温。《闲庭扫叶集》主要内容包括:韩愈的“八小时”、虎中奸计、李清照读书、菠萝蜜的沉思、宰相不谋私产、运动健身老不忘、饮酒与吃糟、批评家的胆识、鸡声断梦、情种、下定义的困难、零食等。
  • 诸天万界老司机

    诸天万界老司机

    作为一个老司机,最重要的是什么?当然是恪守职位啦!什么?你被人追杀?没问题!老司机带你反败为胜!什么?你在异世界?没问题!老司机带你走出新风采!什么?你莫有钱?抱歉,我们不接受赊账!我们的口号是:随叫随到,钱付车开。
  • 靠自己成功

    靠自己成功

    《靠自己成功》是成功学之父奥里森·马登的代表作之一,也是国学大师林语堂推荐给青年们的一本励志经典。作者马登在该书中列举了很多经典案例,由细节入手,探讨了如何依靠自己取得成功。
  • 影响中国历史进程的战役(世界军事之旅)

    影响中国历史进程的战役(世界军事之旅)

    战争带来劳民伤财、废墟残骸的同时,也推动了历史车轮的进程。本书就是一本收集了影响中国历史进程的战争书籍。它集聚了历史上的秦赵长平之战、汉匈平城之战、赤壁之战、山海关之战、镇南关大捷、台儿庄战役、淮海战役等重大战役,详述了它们的深远影响及重大意义。
  • 槿木花开,绝世毒妃有点萌

    槿木花开,绝世毒妃有点萌

    我愿以吾之血,奉吾所爱。她是陌槿啼,一个宛如罂粟一般的彻头彻尾的坏人,手段残忍,笑容明睸,年仅十岁时便只身浴血与千人,成就毒医,一朝穿越,她已傲世大陆傲兰国陌府本该受尽宠爱却因痴傻懦弱废柴而下人亦可践踏受尽屈辱而死的四小姐。再睁眼,万千风华,废物?她抿唇一笑,那么被废物打败的你又算什么?一世轻狂,却在不知不觉中掉入了他名为宠爱的网,她最终只能叹息一声:罢了,你终是我的劫,不逃了,也懒得逃了。……恶毒庶姐:羽王殿下乃是九天之上的神祗,不是你这废物可以配的上的。陌槿啼:……你说的是后面那个牛皮糖一样的东西吗?