The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) š
- Author: Henry James
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It was after she had begun her statement of her own idea about Kate that he began, on his side, to reflect thatā āwith her manner of offering it as really sufficient if he would take the trouble to embraceā āit she couldnāt half hate him. That was all, positively, she seemed to show herself for the time as attempting; clearly, if she did her intention justice, she would have nothing more disagreeable to do. āIf I hadnāt been ready to go very much further, you understand, I wouldnāt have gone so far. I donāt care what you repeat to herā āthe more you repeat to her, perhaps the better; and, at any rate, thereās nothing she doesnāt already know. I donāt say it for her; I say it for youā āwhen I want to reach my niece I know how to do it straight.ā So Aunt Maud delivered herselfā āas with homely benevolence, in the simplest, but the clearest terms; virtually conveying that, though a word to the wise was, doubtless, in spite of the advantage, not always enough, a word to the good could never fail to be. The sense our young man read into her words was that she liked him because he was goodā āwas really, by her measure, good enough: good enough, that is, to give up her niece for her and go his way in peace. But was he good enoughā āby his own measure? He fairly wondered, while she more fully expressed herself, if it might be his doom to prove so. āSheās the finest possible creatureā āof course you flatter yourself that you know it. But I know it, quite as well as you possibly canā āby which I mean a good deal better yet; and the tune to which Iām ready to prove my faith compares favourably enough, I think, with anything you can do. I donāt say it because sheās my nieceā āthatās nothing to me: I might have had fifty nieces, and I wouldnāt have brought one of them to this place if I hadnāt found her to my taste. I donāt say I wouldnāt have done something else, but I wouldnāt have put up with her presence. Kateās presence, by good fortune, I marked early; Kateās presenceā āunluckily for youā āis everything I could possibly wish; Kateās presence is, in short, as fine as you know, and Iāve been keeping it for the comfort of my declining years. Iāve watched it long; Iāve been saving it up and letting it, as you say of investments, appreciate, and you may judge whether, now it has begun to pay so, Iām likely to consent to treat for it with any but a high bidder. I can do the best with her, and Iāve my idea of the best.ā
āOh, I quite conceive,ā said Densher, āthat your idea of the best isnāt me.ā
It was an oddity of Mrs. Lowderās that her face in speech was like a lighted window at night, but that silence immediately drew the curtain. The occasion for reply allowed by her silence was never easy to take; yet she was still less easy to interrupt. The great glaze of her surface, at all events, gave her visitor no present help. āI didnāt ask you to come to hear what it isnātā āI asked you to come to hear what it is.ā
āOf course,ā Densher laughed, āitās very great indeed.ā
His hostess went on as if his contribution to the subject
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