The Forsyte Saga John Galsworthy (hot novels to read TXT) đ
- Author: John Galsworthy
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But when at length Jimmy Portugal had finished, and gone with Hannah Hobdey, she sat down and mothered young Strumolowski for half an hour, promising him a month, at least, of the American stream; so that he went away with his halo in perfect order. âIn spite of all,â June thought, âBoris is wonderful.â
VIII The Bit Between the TeethTo know that your hand is against everyoneâs isâ âfor some naturesâ âto experience a sense of moral release. Fleur felt no remorse when she left Juneâs house. Reading condemnatory resentment in her little kinswomanâs blue eyesâ âshe was glad that she had fooled her, despising June because that elderly idealist had not seen what she was after.
End it, forsooth! She would soon show them all that she was only just beginning. And she smiled to herself on the top of the bus which carried her back to Mayfair. But the smile died, squeezed out by spasms of anticipation and anxiety. Would she be able to manage Jon? She had taken the bit between her teeth, but could she make him take it too? She knew the truth and the real danger of delayâ âhe knew neither; therein lay all the difference in the world.
âSuppose I tell him,â she thought; âwouldnât it really be safer?â This hideous luck had no right to spoil their love; he must see that! They could not let it! People always accepted an accomplished fact in time! From that piece of philosophyâ âprofound enough at her ageâ âshe passed to another consideration less philosophic. If she persuaded Jon to a quick and secret marriage, and he found out afterward that she had known the truth. What then? Jon hated subterfuge. Again, then, would it not be better to tell him? But the memory of his motherâs face kept intruding on that impulse. Fleur was afraid. His mother had power over him; more power perhaps than she herself. Who could tell? It was too great a risk. Deep-sunk in these instinctive calculations she was carried on past Green Street as far as the Ritz Hotel. She got down there, and walked back on the Green Park side. The storm had washed every tree; they still dripped. Heavy drops fell on to her frills, and to avoid them she crossed over under the eyes of the Iseeum Club. Chancing to look up she saw Monsieur Profond with a tall stout man in the bay window. Turning into Green Street she heard her name called, and saw âthat prowlerâ coming up. He took off his hatâ âa glossy bowler such as she particularly detested.
âGood eveninâ! Miss Forsyde. Isnât there a small thing I can do for you?â
âYes, pass by on the other side.â
âI say! Why do you dislike me?â
âDo I?â
âIt looks like it.â
âWell, then, because you make me feel life isnât worth living.â
Monsieur Profond smiled.
âLook here, Miss Forsyde, donât worry. Itâll be all right. Nothing lasts.â
âThings do last,â cried Fleur; âwith me anyhowâ âespecially likes and dislikes.â
âWell, that makes me a bit unâappy.â
âI should have thought nothing could ever make you happy or unhappy.â
âI donât like to annoy other people. Iâm goinâ on my yacht.â
Fleur looked at him, startled.
âWhere?â
âSmall voyage to the South Seas or somewhere,â said Monsieur Profond.
Fleur suffered relief and a sense of insult. Clearly he meant to convey that he was breaking with her mother. How dared he have anything to break, and yet how dared he break it?
âGood night, Miss Forsyde! Remember me to Mrs. Dartie. Iâm not so bad really. Good night!â Fleur left him standing there with his hat raised. Stealing a look round, she saw him strollâ âimmaculate and heavyâ âback toward his Club.
âHe canât even love with conviction,â she thought. âWhat will Mother do?â
Her dreams that night were endless and uneasy; she rose heavy and unrested, and went at once to the study of Whitakerâs Almanac. A Forsyte is instinctively aware that facts are the real crux of any situation. She might conquer Jonâs prejudice, but without exact machinery to complete their desperate resolve, nothing would happen. From the invaluable tome she learned that they must each be twenty-one; or someoneâs consent would be necessary, which of course was unobtainable; then she became lost in directions concerning licenses, certificates, notices, districts, coming finally to the word âperjury.â But that was nonsense! Who would really mind their giving wrong ages in order to be married for love! She ate hardly any breakfast, and went back to Whitaker. The more she studied the less sure she became; till, idly turning the pages, she came to Scotland. People could be married there without any of this nonsense. She had only to go and stay there twenty-one days, then Jon could come, and in front of two people they could declare themselves married. And what was moreâ âthey would be! It was far the best way; and at once she ran over her schoolfellows. There was Mary Lambe who lived in Edinburgh and was âquite a sport!â
She had a brother too. She could stay with Mary Lambe, who with her brother would serve for witnesses. She well knew that some girls would think all this unnecessary, and that all she and Jon need do was to go away together for a weekend and then say to their people: âWe are married by Nature, we must now be married by Law.â But Fleur was Forsyte enough to feel such a proceeding dubious, and to dread her fatherâs face when he heard of it. Besides, she did not believe that Jon would do it; he had an opinion of her such as she
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