The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âAh, if you mean that we shall reward her as hard as ever we can, nothing is more certain. But sheâs an idealist,â Milly continued, âand idealists, in the long run, I think, donât feel that they lose.â
Lord Mark seemed, within the limits of his enthusiasm, to find this charming. âAh, she strikes you as an idealist?â
âShe idealises us, my friend and me, absolutely. She sees us in a light,â said Milly. âThatâs all Iâve got to hold on by. So donât deprive me of it.â
âI wouldnât for the world. But do you think,â he continued as if it were suddenly important for himâ ââdo you think she sees me in a light?â
She neglected his question for a little, partly because her attention attached itself more and more to the handsome girl, partly because, placed so near their hostess, she wished not to show as discussing her too freely. Mrs. Lowder, it was true, steering in the other quarter a course in which she called at subjects as if they were islets in an archipelago, continued to allow them their ease, and Kate Croy, at the same time, steadily revealed herself as interesting. Milly in fact found, of a sudden, her easeâ âfound it allâ âas she bethought herself that what Mrs. Lowder was really arranging for was a report on her quality and, as perhaps might be said, her value from Lord Mark. She wished him, the wonderful lady, to have no pretext for not knowing what he thought of Miss Theale. Why his judgment so mattered remained to be seen; but it was this divination, in any case, that now determined Millyâs rejoinder. âNo. She knows you. She has probably reason to. And you all, here, know each otherâ âI see thatâ âso far as you know anything. You know what youâre used to, and itâs your being used to itâ âthat, and that onlyâ âthat makes you. But there are things you donât know.â
He took it in as if it might fairly, to do him justice, be a point. âThings that I donâtâ âwith all the pains I take and the way Iâve run about the world to leave nothing unlearned?â
Milly thought, and it was perhaps the very truth of his claimâ âits not being negligibleâ âthat sharpened her impatience and thereby her wit. âYouâre blasĂ©, but youâre not enlightened. Youâre familiar with everything, but conscious, really of nothing. What I mean is that youâve no imagination.â
Lord Mark, at this, threw back his head, ranging with his eyes the opposite side of the room and showing himself at last so much more completely as diverted that it fairly attracted their hostessâs notice. Mrs. Lowder, however, only smiled on Milly for a sign that something racy was what she had expected, and resumed, with a splash of her screw, her cruise among the islands. âOh, Iâve heard that,â the young man replied, âbefore!â
âThere it is then. Youâve heard everything before. Youâve heard me of course before, in my country, often enough.â
âOh, never too often,â he protested; âIâm sure I hope I shall still hear you again and again.â
âBut what good then has it done you?â the girl went on as if now frankly to amuse him.
âOh, youâll see when you know me.â
âBut, most assuredly, I shall never know you.â
âThen that will be exactly,â he laughed, âthe good!â
If it established thus that they couldnât or wouldnât mix, why did Milly nonetheless feel through it a perverse quickening of the relation to which she had been, in spite of herself, appointed?
What queerer consequence of their not mixing than their talkingâ âfor it was what they had arrived atâ âalmost intimately? She wished to get away from him, or indeed, much rather, away from herself so far as she was present to him. She saw alreadyâ âwonderful creature, after all, herself tooâ âthat there would be a good deal more of him to come for her, and that the special sign of their intercourse would be to keep herself out of the question. Everything else might come inâ âonly never that; and with such an arrangement they might even go far. This in fact might quite have begun, on the spot, with her returning again to the topic of the handsome girl. If she was to keep herself out she could naturally best do so by putting in somebody else. She accordingly put in Kate Croy, being ready to that extentâ âas she was not at all afraid for herâ âto sacrifice her if necessary. Lord Mark himself, for that matter, had made it easy by saying a little while before that no one among them did anything for nothing. âWhat thenââ âshe was aware of being abruptâ ââdoes Miss Croy, if sheâs so interested, do it for? What has she to gain by her lovely welcome? Look at her now!â Milly broke out with characteristic freedom of praise, though pulling herself up also with a compunctious âOh!â as the direction thus given to their eyes happened to coincide with a turn of Kateâs face to them. All she had meant to do was to insist that this face was fine; but what she had in fact done was to renew again her effect of showing herself to its possessor as conjoined with Lord Mark for some interested view of it. He had, however, promptly met her question.
âTo gain? Why, your acquaintance.â
âWell, whatâs my acquaintance to her? She can care for meâ âshe must feel thatâ âonly by being sorry for me; and thatâs why sheâs lovely: to be already willing to take the trouble to be. Itâs the height of the disinterested.â
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