登陆注册
5393500000016

第16章

Pasmer was inveterately selfish in that province of small personal things where his wife left him unmolested. In what related to his own comfort and convenience he was undisputed lord of himself. It was she who ordered their comings and goings, and decided in which hemisphere they should sojourn from time to time, and in what city, street, and house, but always with the understanding that the kitchen and all the domestic appointments were to her husband's mind. He was sensitive to degrees of heat and cold, and luxurious in the matter of lighting, and he had a fine nose for plumbing. If he had not occupied himself so much with these details, he was the sort of man to have thought Mrs. Pasmer, with her buzz of activities and pretences, rather a tedious little woman. He had some delicate tastes, if not refined interests, and was expensively fond of certain sorts of bric-a-brac: he spent a great deal of time in packing and unpacking it, and he had cases stored in Rome and London and Paris;it had been one of his motives in consenting to come home that he might get them out, and set up the various objects of bronze and porcelain in cabinets. He had no vices, unless absolute idleness ensuing uninterruptedly upon a remotely demonstrated unfitness for business can be called a vice. Like other people who have always been idle, he did not consider his idleness a vice. He rather plumed himself upon it, for the man who has done nothing all his life naturally looks down upon people who have done or are doing something. In Europe he had not all the advantage of this superiority which such a man has here; he was often thrown with other idle people, who had been useless for so many generations that they had almost ceased to have any consciousness of it.

In their presence Pasmer felt that his uselessness had not that passive elegance which only ancestral uselessness can give; that it was positive, and to that degree vulgar.

A life like this was not one which would probably involve great passions or affections, and it would be hard to describe exactly the feeling with which he regarded his daughter. He liked her, of course, and he had naturally expected certain things of her, as a ladylike intelligence, behaviour, and appearance; but he had never shown any great tenderness for her, or even pride in her. She had never given him any displeasure, however, and he had not shared his wife's question of mind at a temporary phase of Alice's development when she showed a decided inclination for a religious life. He had apparently not observed that the girl had a pensive temperament in spite of the effect of worldly splendour which her mother contrived for her, and that this pensiveness occasionally deepened to gloom. He had certainly never seen that in a way of her own she was very romantic. Mrs. Pasmer had seen it, with amusement sometimes, and sometimes with anxiety, but always with the courage to believe that she could cope with it when it was necessary.

Whenever it was necessary she had all the moral courage she wanted; it seemed as if she could have it or not as she liked; and in coming home she had taken a flat instead of a house, though she had not talked with her friends three minutes without perceiving that the moment when flats had promised to assert their social equality with houses in Boston was past for ever. There were, of course, cases in which there could be no question of them; but for the most part they were plainly regarded as makeshifts, the resorts of people of small means, or the defiances or errors of people who had lived too much abroad. They stamped their occupants as of transitory and fluctuant character; good people might live in them, and did, as good people sometimes boarded; but they could not be regarded as forming a social base, except in rare instances. They presented peculiar difficulties in calling, and for any sort of entertainment they were too--not public, perhaps, but--evident.

In spite of these objections Mrs. Pasmer took a flat in the Cavendish, and she took it furnished from people who were going abroad for a year.

X.

Mrs. Pasmer stood at the drawing-room window of this apartment, the morning after her call upon Mrs. Saintsbury, looking out on the passage of an express-wagon load of trunks through Cavendish Square, and commenting the fact with the tacit reflection that it was quite time she should be getting away from Boston too, when her daughter, who was looking out of the other window, started significantly back.

"What is it, Alice?"

"Nothing! Mr. Mavering, I think, and that friend of his----""Which friend? But where? Don't look! They will think we were watching them. I can't see them at all. Which way were they going?" Mrs. Pasmer dramatised a careless unconsciousness to the square, while vividly betraying this anxiety to her daughter.

Alice walked away to the furthest part of the room. "They are coming this way," she said indifferently.

Before Mrs. Pasmer had time to prepare a conditional mood, adapted either to their coming that way or going some other, she heard the janitor below in colloquy with her maid in the kitchen, and then the maid came in to ask if she should say the ladies were at home. "Oh, certainly," said Mrs. Pasmer, with a caressing politeness that anticipated the tone she meant to use with Mavering and his friend. "Were you going, Alice?

Better stay. It would be awkward sending out for you. You look well enough.""Well!"

The young men came in, Mavering with his nervous laugh first, and then Boardman with his twinkling black eyes, and his main-force self-possession.

"We couldn't go away as far as New London without coming to see whether you had really survived Class Day," said the former, addressing his solicitude to Mrs. Pasmer. "I tried to find out from, Mrs. Saintsbury, but she was very noncommittal." He laughed again, and shook hands with Alice, whom he now included in his inquiry.

同类推荐
  • 书断列传

    书断列传

    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。
  • 三略直解

    三略直解

    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。
  • 佛说处处经

    佛说处处经

    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。
  • 山中酬杨补阙见过

    山中酬杨补阙见过

    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。
  • 银海精微

    银海精微

    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
  • 若你不弃,执手相依

    若你不弃,执手相依

    傅羽修以为世界上最难过的事情是遗忘,当七年后再见到以为一辈子都不会再相见的秦所依时,他才知道,世界上最难过的事情是舍不得。秦所依以前认为,人和人的缘分总有尽头。当她重新回到荷兰,她觉得自己和傅羽修的缘分到了尽头。这么多年过去,再相见的时候,当她注视着那张熟悉的脸庞,她想,缘分这东西,没有尽头,只看你愿不愿意随缘了。有些人你一旦遇到,就别再分开。若你不弃,执手相依,不离不弃。
  • 心灵地图

    心灵地图

    我们对现实的种种看法,交织成一张心灵地图。要能安然走完人生中美好却又艰辛的长路,最大的挑战在于它需要不断的修订;然而修订的工作往往艰苦,令人却步。人生很苦……由此开启。点出这张地图上的艰难与精采难免在心理学的叙叙连绵和暂歇处,碰触到其与道德和神的话语不相同合之处,开之以浅显而专业的话语佐以平铺直述的详细案例逐步看见神的恩典在其中的奥秘带领读者悠然看自己也是作者从专业医师到神恩典的心路历程是一本容易亲近的心理入门书。
  • 诸天直播求生系统

    诸天直播求生系统

    小主播楚河偶然获得诸天直播求生系统,穿越一座座危险的世界进行直播求生。侏罗纪世界之中,面对霸王龙和迅猛龙的追杀,楚河艰难的生存下来。生化危机世界之中,面对群尸和保护伞公司的追杀,楚河左手一把征服者,右手一支火麒麟,身穿防化服,横扫一切。楚河在逆境之中,强势崛起,一步步吊打诸天万界,威震无穷宇宙!粉丝群455174421
  • 旧爱的秘密,前夫离婚吧!

    旧爱的秘密,前夫离婚吧!

    猫猫开新文啦《再婚难逃①总裁,蓄谋已久》http://m.wkkk.net/a/1029316/宠文,欢迎收藏~~~.莫锦年最大的幸福就是嫁给了简纪庭——蜜月的第一天她却被告知怀上了另一个男人的孩子。夫妻四年,他从不碰她,最后换来一张分居协议书——她说:“简纪庭,你永远都不知道因为爱你,我都付出了什么。”他笑:“生下一个和我有血缘关系的野-种,这就是你爱我的方式?”离婚后,宝贝儿子给穷困落魄的她找了个“临时老公”——这人有相貌,有身段,还有一手只手遮天的本事。他包她吃住,管她穿衣,外送她一份秘书的工作——可是,这个上司的要求也太多了吧?“衣领太低了,裙子太短了,这次的广告代言由你来拍,多加几场吻-戏,男主角换我上。”“……”遇到霍臣商的那一天,莫锦年的人生就没有平凡两个字。当他签着她手,走回那个曾经将她扫地出门的家,他皱了皱眉头问她:“莫锦年,我想娶你当老婆,但是有一个问题——你前夫是我的外甥,他儿子又是我亲生的,这个辈分该怎么算?”“……”
  • 女仆凶猛

    女仆凶猛

    虚拟和现实重叠,末世和预想的不太一样。当她是软萌女仆?NO、NO、NO,女仆是副业,正职是帝国女悍将。“姑娘,我看你很有前途,要不要入伙干票大的。”“我是兵你是匪,咱们一起不合适。”数日后,她一脚踩在财宝猎人的屁股上:“我数三声,交出宝贝就放你走。一、三!”某新手猎人欲哭无泪:“二呢。”萧璟两手一摊,朝身边的人努努嘴:“别愣着,赶紧看看口袋里有什么好宝贝。”某人扯了扯嘴角,一面乖乖扒包一面自省:根正苗红的好青年就这么被他带歪了,真是罪过罪过~~~【女主黑化非小白文,不喜勿喷】
  • 最强福卡

    最强福卡

    【火爆免费!灵气流集五福小说】作为一个冷酷杀手,却重生降临在一个武道兴起的灵气复苏时代。你身份尊贵又如何?老子照杀不误!【都听好了,别惹我!】
  • 特工废后

    特工废后

    她刁蛮任性、胡作非为,依仗雄厚家势逼迫皇上封她为后。结果,家道败落,爹爹惨死,她的皇后身份被废,打入冷宫,受尽欺辱,折磨。而她,二十一世纪最出色的特工,头脑精明,身手迅捷,腹黑狡诈,行事阴狠,为达目的不择手段。当她的灵魂夸越千年成为了她。那些欺压她的宫女、太监和嬷嬷,那些制造阴谋诡计的侧妃,那个不念夫妻情份把她打入冷宫的皇上。她自然不会轻易放过,来一个收拾一个。狂暴皇上——“苏晨,你一日是朕的皇后,一生一世都是朕的女人!”“放屁!”“什么?你竟然说朕放…”“当初是你当着文武百官把我废掉,现在后悔恐怕来不及了!姑奶奶早就不是你的皇后了。”“就算你不是皇后,后宫所有的女人都是朕的。”“你娘太后也是吗?”某人无语。邪恶王爷——“皇嫂,我等这天等了好久。”“等什么?”“等你被废。”“为什么?”“因为…只有你被废,我才可以得到你。”魔教教主——“你生是我的人,死是我的鬼,你永远都逃不出我的手掌心。”“那我只剩下最后一个办法了。”“什么办法?”话未说话,已被敲昏。武林盟主——“我要你做我的女人。”“做你的女人有什么好处?”“你想要什么,我就给你什么!”“我要你武林盟主的位子。”某人狂晕。强宠—失宠皇后
  • 掌印苍穹

    掌印苍穹

    当大汉皇室怀抱着神州大陆唯一一枚超品方印,沉浸在昔日荣光中的时候,当五姓七家为了利益和权利而貌合神离的时候,当无数的世家为了提升家族的品级而尔虞我诈你争我抢的时候,妖魔两族已然紧锣密鼓地洽谈着合作……一位与飞禽走兽为伍,以野果菜蔬为食的山野少年,带着祖传的赤铜古印和神秘的三千大篆,一脚踏进了这个注定要席卷苍穹三千异大陆的漩涡之中……少年人,报仇,征战,称霸,掌印苍穹!一切,都要从大业七年的天赋测试说起……
  • 正义暗流:鲜为人知的交锋

    正义暗流:鲜为人知的交锋

    看看正义保安的四个灵魂人物:一个习武的电脑天才、一个不爱说普通话的大黑汉、一个身材个性都火辣的美女,再加上一个走到哪哪就爆炸的老板——你觉得他们都是负责搞笑的吗?不!他们搞笑从来不耽误维护正义!这本书里的七个故事将告诉你,联邦调查局都不敢碰的案件,他们如何查了个水落石出;让国家缉毒局头痛的大毒枭,如何被他们气得直跳脚;和市政府勾勾搭搭的黑帮,为何也要让他们三分!这里有好玩的故事,峰回路转的情节,紧张不失幽默,让你在体验悬疑的同时开怀大笑!
  • 穿越南唐之乱世佳人

    穿越南唐之乱世佳人

    在她新婚的前一天,他吻了她的额头。为了得到她,他要灭了一个国家。另一个他,只是静静的拥着她说,我们要好好的在一起。两帝争锋,红颜是否真的祸水?剪不断理还乱,终是一江春水向东流......郑重声名:这不是正史,这只是传说!