The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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That came up in all connections during the rest of these first days; came up in especial under pressure of the fact that each time our plighted pair snatched, in its passage, at the good fortune of half an hour together, they were doomedâ âthough Densher felt it as all by his actâ âto spend a part of the rare occasion in wonder at their luck and in study of its queer character. This was the case after he might be supposed to have got, in a manner, used to it; it was the case after the girlâ âready always, as we say, with the last wordâ âhad given him the benefit of her righting of every wrong appearance, a support familiar to him now in reference to other phases. It was still the case after he possibly might, with a little imagination, as she freely insisted, have made out, by the visible working of the crisis, what idea on Mrs. Lowderâs part had determined it. Such as the idea wasâ âand that it suited Kateâs own book she openly professedâ âhe had only to see how things were turning out to feel it strikingly justified. Densherâs reply to all this vividness was that of course Aunt Maudâs intervention hadnât been occult, even for his vividness, from the moment she had written him, with characteristic concentration, that if he should see his way to come to Venice for a fortnight she should engage he would find it no blunder. It took Aunt Maud really to do such things in such ways; just as it took him, he was ready to confess, to do such others as he must now strike them allâ âdidnât he?â âas committed to. Mrs. Lowderâs admonition had been of course a direct reference to what she had said to him at Lancaster Gate before his departure the night Milly had failed them through illness; only it had at least matched that remarkable outbreak in respect to the quantity of good nature it attributed to him. The young manâs discussions of his situationâ âwhich were confined to Kate; he had none with Aunt Maud herselfâ âsuffered a little, it may be divined, by the sense that he couldnât put everything off, as he privately expressed it, on other people. His ears, in solitude, were apt to burn with the reflection that Mrs. Lowder had simply tested him, seen him as he was and made out what could be done with him. She had had but to whistle for him and he had come. If she had taken for granted his good nature she was as justified as Kate declared. This awkwardness of his conscience, both in respect to his general plasticity, the fruit of his feeling plasticity, within limits, to be a mode of life like anotherâ âcertainly better than some, and particularly in respect to such confusion as might reign about what he had really come forâ âthis inward ache was not wholly dispelled by the style, charming as that was, of Kateâs poetic versions. Even the high wonder and delight of Kate
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