The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âAh, you naturally want to marry her to a duke, and are eager to smooth away any hitch.â
She gave him so, on this, the mere effect of the drawn blind that it quite forced him, at first, into the sense, possibly just, of having affected her as flip pant, perhaps even as low. He had been looked at so, in blighted moments of presumptuous youth, by big cold public men, but never, so far as he could recall, by any private lady. More than anything yet it gave him the measure of his companionâs subtlety, and thereby of Kateâs possible career. âDonât be too impossible!ââ âhe feared from his friend, for a moment, some such answer as that; and then felt, as she spoke otherwise, as if she were letting him off easily. âI want her to marry a great man.â That was all; but, more and more, it was enough; and if it hadnât been her next words would have made it so. âAnd I think of her what I think. There you are.â
They sat for a little face to face upon it, and he was conscious of something deeper still, of something she wished him to understand if he only would. To that extent she did appealâ âappealed to the intelligence she desired to show she believed him to possess. He was meanwhile, at all events, not the man wholly to fail of comprehension. âOf course Iâm aware how little I can answer to any fond, proud dream. Youâve a viewâ âa magnificent one; into which I perfectly enter. I thoroughly understand what Iâm not, and Iâm much obliged to you for not reminding me of it in any rougher way.â She said nothingâ âshe kept that up; it might even have been to let him go further, if he was capable of it, in the way of poorness of spirit. It was one of those cases in which a man couldnât show, if he showed at all, save for poor; unless indeed he preferred to show for asinine. It was the plain truth: he wasâ âon Mrs. Lowderâs basis, the only one in questionâ âa very small quantity, and he did know, damnably, what made quantities large. He desired to be perfectly simple; yet in the midst of that effort a deeper apprehension throbbed. Aunt Maud clearly conveyed it, though he couldnât later on have said how. âYou donât really matter, I believe, so much as you think, and Iâm not going to make you a martyr by banishing you. Your performances with Kate in the Park are ridiculous so far as theyâre meant as consideration for me; and I had much rather see you myselfâ âsince youâre, in your way, my dear young man, delightfulâ âand arrange with you, count with you, as I easily, as I perfectly should. Do you suppose me so stupid as to quarrel with you if itâs not really necessary? It wonâtâ âit would be too absurd!â âbe necessary. I can bite your head off any day, any day I really open my mouth; and Iâm dealing with you now, seeâ âand successfully judgeâ âwithout opening it. I do things handsomely all roundâ âI place you in the presence of the plan with which, from the moment itâs a case of taking you seriously, youâre incompatible. Come then as near it as you like, walk all round itâ âdonât be afraid youâll hurt it!â âand live on with it before you.â
He afterwards felt that if she hadnât absolutely phrased all this it was because she so soon made him out as going with her far enough. He was so pleasantly affected by her asking no promise of him, her not proposing he should pay for her indulgence by his word of honour not to interfere, that he gave her a kind of general assurance of esteem. Immediately afterwards, then, he spoke of these things to Kate, and what then came back to him first of all was the way he had said to herâ âhe mentioned it to the girlâ âvery much as one of a pair of lovers says in a rupture by mutual consent: âI hope immensely, of course, that youâll always regard me as a friend.â This had perhaps been going farâ âhe submitted it all to Kate; but really there had been so much in it that it was to be looked at, as they might say, wholly in its own light. Other things than those we have presented had come up before the close of his scene with Aunt Maud, but this matter of her not treating him as a peril of the first order easily predominated. There was moreover plenty to talk about on the occasion of his subsequent passage with our young woman, it having been put to him abruptly, the night before, that he might give himself a lift and do his newspaper a serviceâ âso flatteringly was the case expressedâ âby going, for fifteen or twenty weeks, to America. The idea of a series of letters from the United States from the strictly social point of view had for some time been nursed in the inner sanctuary at whose door he sat, and the moment was now deemed happy for letting it loose. The imprisoned thought had, in a word, on the opening of the door, flown straight out into Densherâs face, or perched at least on his shoulder, making him look up in surprise from his mere inky office-table. His account of the matter to Kate was that he couldnât refuseâ ânot being in a position, as yet, to refuse anything; but that his being chosen for such an errand confounded his sense of proportion. He was definite as to his scarce knowing how to measure the honour, which struck him as equivocal; he had not quite supposed himself the man for the class of job. This confused consciousness, he intimated, he had promptly enough betrayed to his manager; with the effect, however, of seeing the question surprisingly
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