The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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Not many minutes probably, yet they had not seemed few, and they had given her so much to think of, not only while creeping home, but while waiting afterwards at the inn, that she was still busy with them when, late in the afternoon, Milly reappeared. She had stopped at the point of the path where the Tauchnitz lay, had taken it up and, with the pencil attached to her watch-guard, had scrawled a wordâ âĂ bientĂŽt!â âacross the cover; then, even under the girlâs continued delay, had measured time without a return of alarm. For she now saw that the great thing she had brought away was precisely a conviction that the future was not to exist for her princess in the form of any sharp or simple release from the human predicament. It wouldnât be for her a question of a flying leap and thereby of a quick escape. It would be a question of taking full in the face the whole assault of life, to the general muster of which indeed her face might have been directly presented as she sat there on her rock. Mrs. Stringham was thus able to say to herself, even after another interval of some length, that if her young friend still continued absent it wouldnât be becauseâ âwhatever the opportunityâ âshe had cut short the thread. She wouldnât have committed suicide; she knew herself unmistakably reserved for some more complicated passage; this was the very vision in which she had, with no little awe, been discovered. The image that thus remained with the elder lady kept the character of revelation. During the breathless minutes of her watch she had seen her companion afresh; the latterâs type, aspect, marks, her history, her state, her beauty, her mystery, all unconsciously betrayed themselves to the Alpine air, and all had been gathered in again to feed Mrs. Stringhamâs flame. They are things that will more distinctly appear for us, and they are meanwhile briefly represented by the enthusiasm that was stronger on our friendâs part than any doubt. It was a consciousness she was scarce yet used to carrying, but she had as beneath her feet a mine of something precious. She seemed to herself to stand near the mouth, not yet quite cleared. The mine but needed working and would certainly yield a treasure. She was not thinking, either, of Millyâs gold.
IIThe girl said nothing, when they met, about the words scrawled on the Tauchnitz, and Mrs. Stringham then noticed that she had not the book with her. She had left it lying and probably would never remember it at all. Her comradeâs decision was therefore quickly made not to speak of having followed her; and within five minutes of her return, wonderfully enough, the preoccupation denoted by her forgetfulness further declared itself. âShould you think me quite abominable if I were to say that after allâ â?â
Mrs. Stringham had already thought, with the first sound of the question, everything she was capable of thinking, and had immediately made such a sign that Millyâs words gave place to visible relief at her assent. âYou donât care for our stop hereâ âyouâd rather go straight on? Weâll start then with the peep of tomorrowâs dawnâ âor as early as you like; itâs only rather late now to take the road again.â And she smiled to show how she meant it for a joke that an instant onward rush was what the girl would have wished. âI bullied you into stopping,â she added; âso it serves me right.â
Milly made in general the most of her good friendâs jokes; but she humoured this one a little absently. âOh yes, you do bully me.â And it was thus arranged between them, with no discussion at all, that they would resume their journey in the morning. The younger touristâs interest in the detail of the matterâ âin spite of a declaration from the elder that she would consent to be dragged anywhereâ âappeared almost immediately afterwards quite to lose itself; she promised, however, to think till supper of where, with the world all before them, they might goâ âsupper having been ordered for such time as permitted of lighted candles. It had been agreed between them that lighted candles at wayside inns, in strange countries, amid mountain scenery, gave the evening meal a peculiar poetryâ âsuch being the mild adventures, the refinements of impression, that they, as they would have said, went in for. It was now as if, before this repast, Milly had designed to âlie downâ; but at the end of three minutes more she was not lying down, she was saying instead, abruptly, with a transition that was like a jump of four thousand miles: âWhat was it that, in New York, on the ninth, when you saw him alone, Dr. Finch said to you?â
It was not till later that Mrs. Stringham fully knew why the question had startled her still more than its suddenness explained; though the effect of it even at the moment was almost to frighten her into a false answer. She had to think, to remember the occasion,
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