The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âWell?â She hadnât filled out her idea, but neither, it seemed, could Milly.
âWell, might but do what that often doesâ âby all our blessed little laws and arrangements at least; excite Kateâs own sentiment instead of depressing it.â
The idea was bright, yet the girl but beautifully stared. âKateâs own sentiment? Oh, she didnât speak of that. I donât think,â she added as if she had been unconsciously giving a wrong impression, âI donât think Mrs. Condrip imagines sheâs in love.â
It made Mrs. Stringham stare in turn. âThen whatâs her fear?â
âWell, only the fact of Mr. Densherâs possibly himself keeping it upâ âthe fear of some final result from that.
âOh,â said Susie, intellectually a little disconcertedâ ââshe looks far ahead!â
At this, however, Milly threw off another of her sudden vague âsports.â âNoâ âitâs only we who do.â
âWell, donât let us be more interested for them than they are for themselves!â
âCertainly notââ âthe girl promptly assented. A certain interest nevertheless remained; she appeared to wish to be clear. âIt wasnât of anything on Kateâs own part she spoke.â
âYou mean she thinks her sister does not care for him?â
It was still as if, for an instant, Milly had to be sure of what she meant; but there it presently was. âIf she did care Mrs. Condrip would have told me.â
What Susan Shepherd seemed hereupon for a little to wonder was why then they had been talking so. âBut did you ask her?â
âAh, no!â
âOh!â said Susan Shepherd.
Milly, however, easily explained that she wouldnât have asked her for the world.
Book V ILord Mark looked at her today in particular as if to wring from her a confession that she had originally done him injustice; and he was entitled to whatever there might be in it of advantage or merit that his intention really in a manner took effect: he cared about something, that is, after all, sufficiently to make her feel absurdly as if she were confessingâ âall the while it was quite the case that neither justice nor injustice was what had been in question between them. He had presented himself at the hotel, had found her and had found Susan Shepherd at home, had been âcivilâ to Susanâ âit was just that shade, and Susanâs fancy had fondly caught it; and then had come again and missed them, and then had come and found them once more: besides letting them easily see that if it hadnât by this time been the end of everythingâ âwhich they could feel in the exhausted air, that of the season at its last gaspâ âthe places they might have liked to go to were such as they would have had only to mention. Their feeling wasâ âor at any rate their modest general pleaâ âthat there was no place they would have liked to go to; there was only the sense of finding they liked, wherever they were, the place to which they had been brought. Such was highly the case as to their current consciousnessâ âwhich could be indeed, in an equally eminent degree, but a matter of course; impressions this afternoon having by a happy turn of their wheel been gathered for them into a splendid cluster, an offering like an armful of the rarest flowers. They were in presence of the offeringâ âthey had been led up to it; and if it had been still their habit to look at each other across distances for increase of unanimity his hand would have been silently named between them as the hand applied to the wheel. He had administered the touch that, under light analysis, made the differenceâ âthe difference of their not having lost, as Susie on the spot and at the hour phrased it again and again, both for herself and for such others as the question might concern, so beautiful and interesting an experience; the difference also, in fact, of Mrs. Lowderâs not having lost it either, though it was with Mrs. Lowder, superficially, they had come, and though it was further with that lady that our young woman was directly engaged during the half-hour or so of her most agreeably inward response to the scene.
The great historic house had, for Milly, beyond terrace and garden, as the centre of an almost extravagantly grand Watteau-composition, a tone as of old gold kept âdownâ by the quality of the air, summer full-flushed, but attuned to the general perfect taste. Much, by her measure, for the previous hour, appeared, in connection with this revelation of it, to have happened to herâ âa quantity expressed in introductions of charming new people, in walks through halls of armour, of pictures, of cabinets, of tapestry, of tea-tables, in an assault of reminders that this largeness of style was the sign of appointed felicity. The largeness of style was the great containing vessel, while everything else, the pleasant personal affluence, the easy, murmurous welcome, the honoured age of illustrious host and hostess, all at once so distinguished and so plain, so public and so shy, became but this or that element of the infusion. The elements melted together and seasoned the draught, the essence of which might have struck the girl as distilled into the small cup of iced coffee she had vaguely accepted from somebody, while a fuller flood, somehow, kept bearing her upâ âall the freshness of response of her young life the freshness of the first and only prime. What had perhaps brought on just now a kind of climax was the fact of her appearing to make out, through Aunt Maud, what was really the matter.
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