The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âAnd why,â Mrs. Stringham presently asked, âis Mr. Densher so dreadful?â
Milly had, she thought, an hesitationâ âsomething that suggested a fuller talk with Mrs. Condrip than she inclined perhaps to report. âIt isnât so much he himself.â Then the girl spoke a little as for the romance of it; one could never tell, with her, where romance would come in. âItâs the state of his fortunes.â
âAnd is that very bad?â
âHe has no âprivate means,â and no prospect of any. He has no income, and no ability, according to Mrs. Condrip, to make one. Heâs as poor, she calls it, as âpoverty,â and she says she knows what that is.â
Again Mrs. Stringham considered, and it presently produced something. âBut isnât he brilliantly clever?â
Milly had also then an instant that was not quite fruitless. âI havenât the least idea.â
To which, for the time, Susie only answered âOh!ââ âthough by the end of a minute she had followed it with a slightly musing âI seeâ; and that in turn with: âItâs quite what Maud Lowder thinks.â
âThat heâll never do anything?â
âNoâ âquite the contrary: that heâs exceptionally able.â
âOh yes; I knowââ âMilly had again, in reference to what her friend had already told her of this, her little tone of a moment before. âBut Mrs. Condripâs own great point is that Aunt Maud herself wonât hear of any such person. Mr. Densher, she holds thatâs the way, at any rate, it was explained to meâ âwonât ever be either a public man or a rich man. If he were public sheâd be willing, as I understand, to help him; if he were richâ âwithout being anything elseâ âsheâd do her best to swallow him. As it is, she taboos him.â
âIn short,â said Mrs. Stringham as with a private purpose, âshe told you, the sister, all about it. But Mrs. Lowder likes him,â she added.
âMrs. Condrip didnât tell me that.â
âWell, she does, all the same, my dear, extremely.â
âThen there it is!â On which, with a drop and one of those sudden, slightly sighing surrenders to a vague reflux and a general fatigue that had recently more than once marked themselves for her companion, Milly turned away. Yet the matter was not left so, that night, between them, albeit neither perhaps could afterwards have said which had first come back to it. Millyâs own nearest approach, at least, for a little, to doing so, was to remark that they appeared allâ âeveryone they sawâ âto think tremendously of money. This prompted in Susie a laugh, not untender, the innocent meaning of which was that it came, as a subject for indifference, money did, easier to some people than to others: she made the point in fairness, however, that you couldnât have told, by any too crude transparency of air, what place it held for Maud Manningham. She did her worldliness with grand proper silencesâ âif it mightnât better be put perhaps that she did her detachment with grand occasional pushes. However Susie put it, in truth, she was really, in justice to herself, thinking of the difference, as favourites of fortune, between her old friend and her new. Aunt Maud sat somehow in the midst of her money, founded on it and surrounded by it, even if with a clever high manner about it, her manner of looking, hard and bright, as if it werenât there. Milly, about hers, had no manner at allâ âwhich was possibly, from a point of view, a fault: she was at any rate far away on the edge of it, and you hadnât, as might be said, in order to get at her nature, to traverse, by whatever avenue, any piece of her property. It was clear, on the other hand, that Mrs. Lowder was keeping her wealth as for purposes, imaginations, ambitions, that would figure as large, as honourably unselfish, on the day they should take effect. She would impose her will, but her will would be only that a person or two shouldnât lose a benefit by not submitting if they could be made to submit. To Milly, as so much younger, such far views couldnât be imputed: there was nobody she was supposable as interested for. It was too soon, since she wasnât interested for herself. Even the richest woman, at her age, lacked motive, and Millyâs motive doubtless had plenty of time to arrive. She was meanwhile beautiful, simple, sublime without itâ âwhether missing it and vaguely reaching out for it or not; and with it, for that matter, in the event, would really be these things just as much. Only then she might very well have, like Aunt Maud, a manner. Such were the connections, at all events, in which the colloquy of our two ladies freshly flickered upâ âin which it came round that the elder asked the younger if she had herself, in the afternoon, named Mr. Densher as an acquaintance.
âOh noâ âI said nothing of having seen him. I remembered,â the girl explained, âMrs. Lowderâs wish.â
âBut that,â her friend observed after a moment, âwas for silence to Kate.â
âYesâ âbut Mrs. Condrip would immediately have told Kate.â
âWhy so?â âsince she must dislike to talk about him.â
âMrs. Condrip must?â Milly thought. âWhat she would like most is that her sister should be brought to think ill of him; and if anything she can tell her will help thatâ ââ But Milly dropped suddenly here, as if her companion would see.
Her companionâs interest, however, was all for what she herself saw. âYou mean sheâll
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