The Forsyte Saga John Galsworthy (hot novels to read TXT) đ
- Author: John Galsworthy
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Jon murmured a rapturous assent.
âSix oâclock, then. I think your motherâs beautiful.â
Jon said fervently: âYes, she is.â
âI love all kinds of beauty,â went on Fleur, âwhen itâs exciting. I donât like Greek things a bit.â
âWhat! Not Euripides?â
âEuripides? Oh! no, I canât bear Greek plays; theyâre so long. I think beautyâs always swift. I like to look at one picture, for instance, and then run off. I canât bear a lot of things together. Look!â She held up her blossom in the moonlight. âThatâs better than all the orchard, I think.â
And, suddenly, with her other hand she caught Jonâs.
âOf all things in the world, donât you think cautionâs the most awful? Smell the moonlight!â
She thrust the blossom against his face; Jon agreed giddily that of all things in the world caution was the worst, and bending over, kissed the hand which held his.
âThatâs nice and old-fashioned,â said Fleur calmly. âYouâre frightfully silent, Jon. Still I like silence when itâs swift.â She let go his hand. âDid you think I dropped my handkerchief on purpose?â
âNo!â cried Jon, intensely shocked.
âWell, I did, of course. Letâs get back, or theyâll think weâre doing this on purpose too.â And again she ran like a ghost among the trees. Jon followed, with love in his heart, Spring in his heart, and over all the moonlit white unearthly blossom. They came out where they had gone in, Fleur walking demurely.
âItâs quite wonderful in there,â she said dreamily to Holly.
Jon preserved silence, hoping against hope that she might be thinking it swift.
She bade him a casual and demure good night, which made him think he had been dreaming.â ââ âŠ
In her bedroom Fleur had flung off her gown, and, wrapped in a shapeless garment, with the white flower still in her hair, she looked like a mousmé, sitting cross-legged on her bed, writing by candlelight.
âDearest Cherry,
âI believe Iâm in love. Iâve got it in the neck, only the feeling is really lower down. Heâs a second cousin-such a child, about six months older and ten years younger than I am. Boys always fall in love with their seniors, and girls with their juniors or with old men of forty. Donât laugh, but his eyes are the truest things I ever saw; and heâs quite divinely silent! We had a most romantic first meeting in London under the Vospovitch Juno. And now heâs sleeping in the next room and the moonlightâs on the blossom; and tomorrow morning, before anybodyâs awake, weâre going to walk off into Down fairyland. Thereâs a feud between our families, which makes it really exciting. Yes! and I may have to use subterfuge and come on you for invitationsâ âif so, youâll know why! My father doesnât want us to know each other, but I canât help that. Lifeâs too short. Heâs got the most beautiful mother, with lovely silvery hair and a young face with dark eyes. Iâm staying with his sisterâ âwho married my cousin; itâs all mixed up, but I mean to pump her tomorrow. Weâve often talked about love being a spoilsport; well, thatâs all tosh, itâs the beginning of sport, and the sooner you feel it, my dear, the better for you.
âJon (not simplified spelling, but short for Jolyon, which is a name in my family, they say) is the sort that lights up and goes out; about five feet ten, still growing, and I believe heâs going to be a poet. If you laugh at me Iâve done with you forever. I perceive all sorts of difficulties, but you know when I really want a thing I get it. One of the chief effects of love is that you see the air sort of inhabited, like seeing a face in the moon; and you feelâ âyou feel dancey and soft at the same time, with a funny sensationâ âlike a continual first sniff of orange-blossomâ âJust above your stays. This is my first, and I feel as if it were going to be my last, which is absurd, of course, by all the laws of Nature and morality. If you mock me I will smite you, and if you tell anybody I will never forgive you. So much so, that I almost donât think Iâll send this letter. Anyway, Iâll sleep over it. So good night, my Cherryâ âoh!
âYour,
âFleur.â
VIII Idyll on GrassWhen those two young Forsytes emerged from the chine lane, and set their faces east toward the sun, there was not a cloud in heaven, and the Downs were dewy. They had come at a good bat up the slope and were a little out of breath; if they had anything to say they did not say it, but marched in the early awkwardness of unbreakfasted morning under the songs of the larks. The stealing out had been fun, but with the freedom of the tops the sense of conspiracy ceased, and gave place to dumbness.
âWeâve made one blooming error,â said Fleur, when they had gone half a mile. âIâm hungry.â
Jon produced a stick of chocolate. They shared it and their tongues were loosened. They discussed the nature of their homes and previous existences, which had a kind of fascinating unreality up on that lonely height. There remained but one thing solid in Jonâs pastâ âhis mother; but one thing solid in Fleurâsâ âher father; and of these figures, as though seen in the distance with disapproving faces, they spoke little.
The Down dipped and rose again toward Chanctonbury Ring; a sparkle of far sea came into view, a sparrow-hawk hovered in the sunâs eye so that the blood-nourished brown of his wings gleamed nearly red. Jon had a passion for birds, and an aptitude for sitting very still to watch them; keen-sighted, and with a memory for what interested him, on birds he was almost worth listening to. But in Chanctonbury Ring there were noneâ âits great beech temple was empty of life, and almost chilly at this early hour; they came out willingly again into
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