The Golden Bowl Henry James (spicy books to read txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âHow can she ânotâ? Why, of course,â said the Princess limpidly, âshe must!â
âWell thenâ â?â
âWell then, you think, he must have told her? Why, exactly what I mean,â said Maggie, âis that he will have done nothing of the sort; will, as I say, have maintained the contrary.â
Fanny Assingham weighed it. âUnder her direct appeal for the truth?â
âUnder her direct appeal for the truth.â
âHer appeal to his honour?â
âHer appeal to his honour. Thatâs my point.â
Fanny Assingham braved it. âFor the truth as from him to her?â
âFrom him to anyone.â
Mrs. Assinghamâs face lighted. âHeâll simply, heâll insistently have lied?â
Maggie brought it out roundly. âHeâll simply, heâll insistently have lied.â
It held again her companion, who next, however, with a single movement, throwing herself on her neck, overflowed. âOh, if you knew how you help me!â
Maggie had liked her to understand, so far as this was possible; but had not been slow to see afterwards how the possibility was limited, when one came to think, by mysteries she was not to sound. This inability in her was indeed not remarkable, inasmuch as the Princess herself, as we have seen, was only now in a position to boast of touching bottom. Maggie lived, inwardly, in a consciousness that she could but partly open even to so good a friend, and her own visitation of the fuller expanse of which was, for that matter, still going on. They had been duskier still, however, these recesses of her imaginationâ âthat, no doubt, was what might at present be said for them. She had looked into them, on the eve of her leaving town, almost without penetration: she had made out in those hours, and also, of a truth, during the days which immediately followed, little more than the strangeness of a relation having for its chief markâ âwhether to be prolonged or notâ âthe absence of any âintimateâ result of the crisis she had invited her husband to recognise. They had dealt with this crisis again, face to face, very briefly, the morning after the scene in her roomâ âbut with the odd consequence of her having appeared merely to leave it on his hands. He had received it from her as he might have received a bunch of keys or a list of commissionsâ âattentive to her instructions about them, but only putting them, for the time, very carefully and safely, into his pocket. The instructions had seemed, from day to day, to make so little difference for his behaviourâ âthat is for his speech or his silence; to produce, as yet, so little of the fruit of action. He had taken from her, on the spot, in a word, before going to dress for dinner, all she then had to giveâ âafter which, on the morrow, he had asked her for more, a good deal as if she might have renewed her supply during the night; but he had had at his command for this latter purpose an air of extraordinary detachment and discretion, an air amounting really to an appeal which, if she could have brought herself to describe it vulgarly, she would have described as cool, just as he himself would have described it in anyone else as âcheekyâ; a suggestion that she should trust him on the particular ground since she didnât on the general. Neither his speech nor his silence struck her as signifying more, or less, under this pressure, than they had seemed to signify for weeks past; yet if her sense hadnât been absolutely closed to the possibility in him of any thought of wounding her, she might have taken his undisturbed manner, the perfection of his appearance of having recovered himself, for one of those intentions of high impertinence by the aid of which great people, les grands seigneurs, persons of her husbandâs class and type, always know how to reestablish a violated order.
It was her one purely good fortune that she could feel thus sure impertinenceâ âto her at any rateâ âwas not among the arts on which he proposed to throw himself; for though he had, in so almost mystifying a manner, replied to nothing, denied nothing, explained nothing, apologised for nothing, he had somehow conveyed to her that this was not because of any determination to treat her case as not âworthâ it. There had been consideration, on both occasions, in the way he had listened to herâ âeven though at the same time there had been extreme reserve; a reserve indeed, it was also to be remembered, qualified by the fact that, on their second and shorter interview, in Portland Place, and quite at the end of this passage, she had imagined him positively proposing to her a temporary accommodation. It had been but the matter of something in the depths of the eyes he finally fixed upon her, and she had found in it, the more she kept it before her, the tacitly-offered sketch of a working arrangement. âLeave me my reserve; donât question itâ âitâs all I have, just now, donât you see? so that, if youâll make me the concession of letting me alone with it for as long a time as I require, I promise you something or other, grown under cover of it, even though I donât yet quite make out what, as a return for your patience.â She had turned away from him with some such unspoken words as that in her ear, and indeed she had to represent to herself that she had spiritually heard them, had to listen to them still again, to explain her particular patience in face of his particular failure. He hadnât so much as pretended to meet for an instant the question raised by her of her accepted ignorance of the point in time, the period before their own marriage, from which his
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