登陆注册
26289300000010

第10章 CHAPTER IV(1)

Laetitia Dale That was another surprise to the county.

Let us not inquire into the feelings of patiently starving women; they must obtain some sustenance of their own, since, as you perceive, they live; evidently they are not in need of a great amount of nourishment; and we may set them down for creatures with a rush-light of animal fire to warm them. They cannot have much vitality who are so little exclamatory. A corresponding sentiment of patient compassion, akin to scorn, is provoked by persons having the opportunity for pathos, and declining to use it. The public bosom was open to Laetitia for several weeks, and had she run to it to bewail herself she would have been cherished in thankfulness for a country drama. There would have been a party against her, cold people, critical of her pretensions to rise from an unrecognized sphere to be mistress of Patterne Hall, but there would also have been a party against Sir Willoughby, composed of the two or three revolutionists, tired of the yoke, which are to be found in England when there is a stir; a larger number of born sympathetics, ever ready to yield the tear for the tear; and here and there a Samaritan soul prompt to succour poor humanity in distress. The opportunity passed undramatized. Laetitia presented herself at church with a face mildly devout, according to her custom, and she accepted invitations to the Hall, she assisted at the reading of Willoughby's letters to his family, and fed on dry husks of him wherein her name was not mentioned; never one note of the summoning call for pathos did this young lady blow.

So, very soon the public bosom closed. She had, under the fresh interpretation of affairs, too small a spirit to be Lady Willoughby of Patterne; she could not have entertained becomingly; he must have seen that the girl was not the match for him in station, and off he went to conquer the remainder of a troublesome first attachment, no longer extremely disturbing, to judge from the tenour of his letters; really incomparable letters! Lady Busshe and Mrs. Mountstuart Jenkinson enjoyed a perusal of them.

Sir Willoughby appeared as a splendid young representative island lord in these letters to his family, despatched from the principal cities of the United States of America. He would give them a sketch of "our democratic cousins", he said. Such cousins! They might all have been in the Marines. He carried his English standard over that continent, and by simply jotting down facts, he left an idea of the results of the measurement to his family and friends at home. He was an adept in the irony of incongruously grouping. The nature of the Equality under the stars and stripes was presented in this manner. Equality! Reflections came occasionally: "These cousins of ours are highly amusing. I am among the descendants of the Roundheads. Now and then an allusion to old domestic differences, in perfect good temper. We go on in our way; they theirs, in the apparent belief that Republicanism operates remarkable changes in human nature. Vernon tries hard to think it does. The upper ten of our cousins are the Infernal of Paris. The rest of them is Radical England, as far as I am acquainted with that section of my country."--Where we compared, they were absurd; where we contrasted, they were monstrous. The contrast of Vernon's letters with Willoughby's was just as extreme.

You could hardly have taken them for relatives travelling together, or Vernon Whitford for a born and bred Englishman. The same scenes furnished by these two pens might have been sketched in different hemispheres. Vernon had no irony. He had nothing of Willoughby's epistolary creative power, which, causing his family and friends to exclaim: "How like him that is!" conjured them across the broad Atlantic to behold and clap hands at his lordliness.

They saw him distinctly, as with the naked eye; a word, a turn of the pen, or a word unsaid, offered the picture of him in America, Japan, China, Australia, nay, the continent of Europe, holding an English review of his Maker's grotesques. Vernon seemed a sheepish fellow, without stature abroad, glad of a compliment, grateful for a dinner, endeavouring sadly to digest all he saw and heard. But one was a Patterne; the other a Whitford. One had genius; the other pottered after him with the title of student.

One was the English gentleman wherever he went; the other was a new kind of thing, nondescript, produced in England of late, and not likely to come to much good himself, or do much good to the country.

Vernon's dancing in America was capitally described by Willoughby.

"Adieu to our cousins!" the latter wrote on his voyage to Japan.

"I may possibly have had some vogue in their ball-rooms, and in showing them an English seat on horseback: I must resign myself if I have not been popular among them. I could not sing their national song--if a congery of states be a nation--and I must confess I listened with frigid politeness to their singing of it.

A great people, no doubt. Adieu to them. I have had to tear old Vernon away. He had serious thoughts of settling, means to correspond with some of them." On the whole, forgetting two or more "traits of insolence" on the part of his hosts, which he cited, Willoughby escaped pretty comfortably. The President had been, consciously or not, uncivil, but one knew his origin! Upon these interjections, placable flicks of the lionly tail addressed to Britannia the Ruler, who expected him in some mildish way to lash terga cauda in retiring, Sir Willoughby Patterne passed from a land of alien manners; and ever after he spoke of America respectfully and pensively, with a tail tucked in, as it were. His travels were profitable to himself. The fact is, that there are cousins who come to greatness and must be pacified, or they will prove annoying. Heaven forefend a collision between cousins!

同类推荐
  • 南诏德化碑

    南诏德化碑

    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。
  • 大慈恩寺三藏法师传

    大慈恩寺三藏法师传

    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。
  • 析疑指迷论

    析疑指迷论

    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。
  • 遯斋闲览

    遯斋闲览

    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。
  • 续佐治药言

    续佐治药言

    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。
热门推荐
  • 俏女选夫

    俏女选夫

    女主属明显的欺软怕硬、仗势欺人、有仇必报那类型的人,但偶尔正义的小宇宙还是会爆发一下。游泳池里,她穿着清爽比基尼华丽丽的穿越。东方影,全京城最帅气多金的第一庄庄主,温泉里的“坦诚“相见,对她一见钟情。东方锦,当朝十四王爷,被她的活泼灵气日渐吸引,却自动的被她归为是她的狗腿一类。东方萌,当今圣上,被她视为毒物蛇蝎,唯恐避之不及的小人。端木云,京城黑帮当家少爷,笑面虎一只,让她最头疼的一个男人。
  • 溺宠之至尊狂妃

    溺宠之至尊狂妃

    她,温柔,令黑白两道都闻之色变的冷面杀手,代号“千面”,狠烈决绝,一场意外,灵魂在柔弱不堪的镇国公嫡女身上重生!他,冷澈,外人口中一无是处的病弱王爷,却无人知,真实的他,是怎样的光华万丈。当强势的她遇到强大的他,结果,究竟是谁征服谁?她说,她的温柔,只对于他。他说,他的冷澈,只有她能融化。
  • 索道记

    索道记

    身在哪里不重要,最重要的是有一颗探索大道的心!本文讲述的是一个渡劫失败的修士在异界的索道历程!丹药?你认为一个渡劫期的修士不会炼丹?神器?你认为一个渡劫期的修士不会炼器?看一个渡劫失败的修士如何在异界留下属于自己的传说!
  • 佛说四愿经

    佛说四愿经

    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。
  • 超级特种保镖

    超级特种保镖

    冬冬的第一本小说,不知道大家的喜好怎么样,只当是练手,如果大家不满意,那么加我QQ1004694249尽管向我提出来,冬冬会第一时间改正。作品简介部分:一个神秘部队的教官,在一次剿灭俄罗斯尖刀部队时一个错误判断,导致队友全军覆没,从此隐姓埋名,过着都市生活。
  • 烟花易冷:总裁大人慢一点

    烟花易冷:总裁大人慢一点

    迟易冷是廖烟花的整个青春。廖烟花喜欢了迟易冷十八年,换来的却是伤害以及上流社会的嘲笑。她怀着一颗支离破碎的心准备离开,却被迟易冷的温柔打动,她再次掉进了陷阱。廖烟花傻傻的以为迟易冷真的爱上了她,换来的确实背叛。迟易冷拥着那个他爱了好多年的女人,脸上满是喜悦:“廖烟花,如果你把心脏换给她,我就放你走。”后来廖烟花被迟易冷逼疯了,她点了火,烧了迟家的别墅,烧死了那个痴情的廖烟花。三年后,她变成了毫无绯闻冷酷无情的画家,她的代表作《绝望》轰动海内外。廖烟花笑着说,“我要谢谢那个人,如果不是他的绝情,我不会有今天。”某天,迟易冷堵在她家门口,“廖烟花,你不爱我了吗?你爱累了吗?那好,换我来爱你。”
  • 重生之圣者无敌

    重生之圣者无敌

    重生后的他,带着重生者的霸气面对昔日所不能抗衡的敌人,在圣者中靠着重生的优势探索着无数他人所未知的地方,在天使与恶魔两个强大种族之间游刃有余的捞尽好处。最终,他必然会踩着无数的尸体踏上巅峰,以雷霆之势将前世的敌人一一斩杀!
  • 倾魅天下:废柴逆天传

    倾魅天下:废柴逆天传

    一朝穿越,异世大陆,王者降临一手丹药,一手灵力,谁与争锋闻废柴小姐名震天下,看双生灵力席卷大陆Ps:作者还是学生,所以更新不定时,多在双休日。
  • 镜中万界

    镜中万界

    一个破损的镜子为了回到仙界不得不认主宅男一个混吃等死但乐于助人的宅男被镜子精认主两个心不甘情不愿的合作伙伴穿梭万界,只为了一个最终的目标——飞升仙界。没有功法?仙人遗泽随我挑选!资质不够?我有长生不老药请来大仙易经洗髓!修炼太慢?我有天材地宝嗑药升级!我们不生产天地灵宝,我们只是天地灵宝的搬运工。
  • 石经考异

    石经考异

    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。