The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âIt satisfies me beautifully,â Densher declared, âbut it doesnât, my dear child, very greatly enlighten me. You donât, you know, really tell me anything. Itâs so vague that what am I to think but that you may very well be mistaken? What has he done, if no one can name it?â
âHe has done everything.â
âOhâ âeverything! Everythingâs nothing.â
âWell then,â said Kate, âhe has done some particular thing. Itâs knownâ âonly, thank God, not to us. But it has been the end of him. You could doubtless find out with a little trouble. You can ask about.â
Densher for a moment said nothing; but the next moment he made it up. âI wouldnât find out for the world, and Iâd rather lose my tongue than put a question.â
âAnd yet itâs a part of me,â said Kate.
âA part of you?â
âMy fatherâs dishonour.â Then she sounded for him, but more deeply than ever yet, her note of proud, still pessimism. âHow can such a thing as that not be the great thing in oneâs life?â
She had to take from him again, on this, one of his long looks, and she took it to its deepest, its headiest dregs. âI shall ask you, for the great thing in your life,â he said, âto depend on me a little more.â After which, just hesitating, âDoesnât he belong to some club?â he inquired.
She had a grave headshake. âHe used toâ âto many.â
âBut he has dropped them?â
âTheyâve dropped him. Of that Iâm sure. It ought to do for you. I offered him,â the girl immediately continuedâ ââand it was for that I went to himâ âto come and be with him, make a home for him so far as is possible. But he wonât hear of it.â
Densher took this in with visible, but generous, wonder. âYou offered himâ ââimpossibleâ as you describe him to meâ âto live with him and share his disadvantages?â The young man saw for the moment but the high beauty of it. âYou are gallant!â
âBecause it strikes you as being brave for him?â She wouldnât in the least have this. âIt wasnât courageâ âit was the opposite. I did it to save myselfâ âto escape.â
He had his air, so constant at this stage, as of her giving him finer things than anyone to think about. âEscape from what?â
âFrom everything.â
âDo you by any chance mean from me?â
âNo; I spoke to him of you, told himâ âor what amounted to itâ âthat I would bring you, if he would allow it, with me.â
âBut he wonât allow it,â said Densher.
âWonât hear of it on any terms. He wonât help me, wonât save me, wonât hold out a finger to me,â Kate went on; âhe simply wriggles away, in his inimitable manner, and throws me back.â
âBack then, after all, thank goodness,â Densher concurred, âon me.â
But she spoke again as with the sole vision of the whole scene she had evoked. âItâs a pity, because youâd like him. Heâs wonderfulâ âheâs charming.â Her companion gave one of the laughs that marked in him, again, his feeling in her tone, inveterately, something that banished the talk of other women, so far as he knew other women, to the dull desert of the conventional, and she had already continued. âHe would make himself delightful to you.â
âEven while objecting to me?â
âWell, he likes to please,â the girl explainedâ ââpersonally. He would appreciate you and be clever with you. Itâs to me he objectsâ âthat is as to my liking you.â
âHeaven be praised then,â Densher exclaimed, âthat you like me enough for the objection!â
But she met it after an instant with some inconsequence. âI donât. I offered to give you up, if necessary, to go to him. But it made no difference, and thatâs what I mean,â she pursued, âby his declining me on any terms. The point is, you see, that I donât escape.â
Densher wondered. âBut if you didnât wish to escape me?â
âI wished to escape Aunt Maud. But he insists that itâs through her and through her only that I may help him; just as Marian insists that itâs through her, and through her only, that I can help her. Thatâs what I mean,â she again explained, âby their turning me back.â
The young man thought. âYour sister turns you back too?â
âOh, with a push!â
âBut have you offered to live with your sister?â
âI would in a moment if sheâd have me. Thatâs all my virtueâ âa narrow little family feeling. Iâve a small stupid pietyâ âI donât know what to call it.â Kate bravely sustained it; she made it out. âSometimes, alone, Iâve to smother my shrieks when I think of my poor mother. She went through thingsâ âthey pulled her down; I know what they were nowâ âI didnât then, for I was a pig; and my position, compared with
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