The Forsyte Saga John Galsworthy (hot novels to read TXT) đ
- Author: John Galsworthy
Book online «The Forsyte Saga John Galsworthy (hot novels to read TXT) đ». Author John Galsworthy
Soames, who had passed through all the sensations of being choked, repeated dully:
âI require you to give up this friendship.â
âAnd if I do not?â
âThenâ âthen I will cut you out of my will.â
Somehow it did not seem to meet the case. Annette laughed.
âYou will live a long time, Soames.â
âYouâ âyou are a bad woman,â said Soames suddenly.
Annette shrugged her shoulders.
âI do not think so. Living with you has killed things in me, it is true; but I am not a bad woman. I am sensibleâ âthat is all. And so will you be when you have thought it over.â
âI shall see this man,â said Soames sullenly, âand warn him off.â
âMon cher, you are funny. You do not want me, you have as much of me as you want; and you wish the rest of me to be dead. I admit nothing, but I am not going to be dead, Soames, at my age; so you had better be quiet, I tell you. I myself will make no scandal; none. Now, I am not saying any more, whatever you do.â
She reached out, took a French novel off a little table, and opened it. Soames watched her, silenced by the tumult of his feelings. The thought of that man was almost making him want her, and this was a revelation of their relationship, startling to one little given to introspective philosophy. Without saying another word he went out and up to the picture-gallery. This came of marrying a Frenchwoman! And yet, without her there would have been no Fleur! She had served her purpose.
âSheâs right,â he thought; âI can do nothing. I donât even know that thereâs anything in it.â The instinct of self-preservation warned him to batten down his hatches, to smother the fire with want of air. Unless one believed there was something in a thing, there wasnât.
That night he went into her room. She received him in the most matter-of-fact way, as if there had been no scene between them. And he returned to his own room with a curious sense of peace. If one didnât choose to see, one neednât. And he did not chooseâ âin future he did not choose. There was nothing to be gained by itâ ânothing! Opening the drawer he took from the sachet a handkerchief, and the framed photograph of Fleur. When he had looked at it a little he slipped it down, and there was that other oneâ âthat old one of Irene. An owl hooted while he stood in his window gazing at it. The owl hooted, the red climbing roses seemed to deepen in colour, there came a scent of lime-blossom. God! That had been a different thing! Passionâ âMemory! Dust!
VII June Takes a HandOne who was a sculptor, a Slav, a sometime resident in New York, an egoist, and impecunious, was to be found of an evening in June Forsyteâs studio on the bank of the Thames at Chiswick. On the evening of July 6, Boris Strumolowskiâ âseveral of whose works were on show there because they were as yet too advanced to be on show anywhere elseâ âhad begun well, with that aloof and rather Christlike silence which admirably suited his youthful, round, broad cheek-boned countenance framed in bright hair banged like a girlâs. June had known him three weeks, and he still seemed to her the principal embodiment of genius, and hope of the future; a sort of Star of the East which had strayed into an unappreciative West. Until that evening he had conversationally confined himself to recording his impressions of the United States, whose dust he had just shaken from off his feetâ âa country, in his opinion, so barbarous in every way that he had sold practically nothing there, and become an object of suspicion to the police; a country, as he said, without a race of its own, without liberty, equality, or fraternity, without principles, traditions, taste, withoutâ âin a wordâ âa soul. He had left it for his own good, and come to the only other country where he could live well. June had dwelt unhappily on him in her lonely moments, standing before his creationsâ âfrightening, but powerful and symbolic once they had been explained! That he, haloed by bright hair like an early Italian painting, and absorbed in his genius to the exclusion of all elseâ âthe only sign of course by which real genius could be toldâ âshould still be a lame duck agitated her warm heart almost to the exclusion of Paul Post. And she had begun to take steps to clear her Gallery, in order to fill it with Strumolowski masterpieces. She had at once encountered trouble. Paul Post had kicked; Vospovitch had stung. With all the emphasis of a genius which she did not as yet deny them, they had demanded another six weeks at least of her Gallery. The American stream, still flowing in, would soon be flowing out. The American stream was their right, their only hope, their salvationâ âsince nobody in this âbeastlyâ country cared for art. June had yielded to the demonstration. After all Boris would not mind their having the full benefit of an American stream, which he himself so violently despised.
This evening she had put that to Boris with nobody else present, except Hannah Hobdey, the medieval black-and-whitist, and Jimmy Portugal, editor of the Neo-Artist. She had put it to him with that sudden confidence which continual contact with the neo-artistic world had never been able to dry up in her warm and generous nature. He had not broken his Christlike silence, however, for more than two minutes before she began to move her blue eyes from side to side, as a cat moves its tail. Thisâ âhe saidâ âwas characteristic of England, the most selfish country in the world; the country which sucked the blood of other countries; destroyed the
Comments (0)