The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) š
- Author: Henry James
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āWell then, goodbye, papa,ā the girl said after a reflection on this that had perceptibly ended for her in a renunciation of further debate. āOf course you understand that it may be for long.ā
Her companion, hereupon, had one of his finest inspirations. āWhy not, frankly, forever? You must do me the justice to see that I donāt do things, that Iāve never done them, by halvesā āthat if I offer you to efface myself, itās for the final, fatal sponge that I ask, well saturated and well applied.ā
She turned her handsome, quiet face upon him at such length that it might well have been for the last time. āI donāt know what youāre like.ā
āNo more do I, my dear. Iāve spent my life in trying, in vain, to discover. Like nothingā āmoreās the pity. If there had been many of us, and we could have found each other out, thereās no knowing what we mightnāt have done. But it doesnāt matter now. Goodbye, love.ā He looked even not sure of what she would wish him to suppose on the subject of a kiss, yet also not embarrassed by his uncertainty.
She forbore in fact for a moment longer to clear it up. āI wish there were someone here who might serveā āfor any contingencyā āas a witness that I have put it to you that Iām ready to come.ā
āWould you like me,ā her father asked, āto call the landlady?ā
āYou may not believe me,ā she pursued, ābut I came really hoping you might have found some way. Iām very sorry, at all events, to leave you unwell.ā He turned away from her, on this, and, as he had done before, took refuge, by the window, in a stare at the street. āLet me put itā āunfortunately without a witness,ā she added after a moment, āthat thereās only one word you really need speak.ā
When he took this up it was still with his back to her. āIf I donāt strike you as having already spoken it, our time has been singularly wasted.ā
āIāll engage with you in respect to my aunt exactly to what she wants of me in respect to you. She wants me to choose. Very well, I will choose. Iāll wash my hands of her for you to just that tune.ā
He at last brought himself round. āDo you know, dear, you make me sick? Iāve tried to be clear, and it isnāt fair.ā
But she passed this over; she was too visibly sincere. āFather!ā
āI donāt quite see whatās the matter with you,ā he said, āand if you canāt pull yourself together Iāllā āupon my honourā ātake you in hand. Put you into a cab and deliver you again safe at Lancaster Gate.ā
She was really absent, distant. āFather.ā
It was too much, and he met it sharply. āWell?ā
āStrange as it may be to you to hear me say it, thereās a good you can do me and a help you can render.ā
āIsnāt it then exactly what Iāve been trying to make you feel?ā
āYes,ā she answered patiently, ābut so in the wrong way. Iām perfectly honest in what I say, and I know what Iām talking about. It isnāt that Iāll pretend I could have believed a month ago in anything to call aid or support from you. The case is changedā āthatās what has happened; my difficultyās a new one. But even now itās not a question of anything I should ask you in a way to ādo.ā Itās simply a question of your not turning me awayā ātaking yourself out of my life. Itās simply a question of your saying: āYes then, since you will, weāll stand together. We wonāt worry in advance about how or where; weāll have a faith and find a way.ā Thatās allā āthat would be the good youād do me. I should have you, and it would be for my benefit. Do you see?ā
If he didnāt it was not for want of looking at her hard. āThe matter with you is that youāre in love, and that your aunt knows andā āfor reasons, Iām sure, perfectā āhates and opposes it. Well she may! Itās a matter in which I trust her with my eyes shut. Go, please.ā Though he spoke not in angerā ārather in infinite sadnessā āhe fairly turned her out. Before she took it up he had, as the fullest expression of what he felt, opened the door of the room. He had fairly, in his deep disapproval, a generous compassion to spare. āIām sorry for her, deluded woman, if she builds on you.ā
Kate stood a moment in the draught. āSheās not the person I pity most, for, deluded in many ways though she may be, sheās not the person whoās most so. I mean,ā she explained, āif itās a question of what you call building on me.ā
He took it as if what she meant might be other than her description of it. āYouāre deceiving two persons then, Mrs. Lowder and somebody else?ā
She shook her head with detachment. āIāve no intention of that sort with respect to anyone nowā āto Mrs. Lowder least of all. If you fail meāā āshe seemed to make it out for herselfā āāthat has the merit at least that it simplifies. I shall go my wayā āas I see my way.ā
āYour way, you mean then, will be to marry some blackguard without a penny?ā
āYou ask a great deal of satisfaction,ā she observed, āfor the little you give.ā
It brought him up again before her as with a sense that she was not to be hustled; and, though he glared at her a little, this had long been the practical
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