The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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He smiled for her at the portrait. âThan she? Youâd scarce need to be better, for surely thatâs well enough. But you are, one feels, as it happens, better; because, splendid as she is, one doubts if she was good.â
He hadnât understood. She was before the picture, but she had turned to him, and she didnât care if, for the minute, he noticed her tears. It was probably as good a moment as she should ever have with him. It was perhaps as good a moment as she should have with anyone, or have in any connection whatever. âI mean that everything this afternoon has been too beautiful, and that perhaps everything together will never be so right again. Iâm very glad therefore youâve been a part of it.â
Though he still didnât understand her he was as nice as if he had; he didnât ask for insistence, and that was just a part of his looking after her. He simply protected her now from herself, and there was a world of practice in it. âOh, we must talk about these things!â
Ah, they had already done that, she knew, as much as she ever would; and she was shaking her head at her pale sister the next moment with a world, on her side, of slowness. âI wish I could see the resemblance. Of course her complexionâs green,â she laughed; âbut mineâs several shades greener.â
âItâs down to the very hands,â said Lord Mark.
âHer hands are large,â Milly went on, âbut mine are larger. Mine are huge.â
âOh, you go her, all round, âone betterââ âwhich is just what I said. But youâre a pair. You must surely catch it,â he added as if it were important to his character as a serious man not to appear to have invented his plea.
âI donât know one never knows oneâs self. Itâs a funny fancy, and I donât imagine it would have occurredâ ââ
âI see it has occurredââ âhe has already taken her up. She had her back, as she faced the picture, to one of the doors of the room, which was open, and on her turning, as he spoke, she saw that they were in the presence of three other persons, also, as appeared, interested inquirers. Kate Croy was one of these; Lord Mark had just become aware of her, and she, all arrested, had immediately seen, and made the best of it, that she was far from being first in the field. She had brought a lady and a gentleman to whom she wished to show what Lord Mark was showing Milly, and he took her straightway as a reinforcement. Kate herself had spoken, however, before he had had time to tell her so.
âYou had noticed too?ââ âshe smiled at him without looking at Milly. âThen Iâm not originalâ âwhich one always hopes one has been. But the likeness is so great.â And now she looked at Millyâ âfor whom again it was, all round indeed, kind, kind eyes. âYes, there you are, my dear, if you want to know. And youâre superb.â She took now but a glance at the picture, though it was enough to make her question to her friends not too straight. âIsnât she superb?â
âI brought Miss Theale,â Lord Mark explained to the latter, âquite off my own bat.â
âI wanted Lady Aldershaw,â Kate continued to Milly, âto see for herself.â
âLes grands esprits se rencontrent!â laughed her attendant gentleman, a high, but slightly stooping, shambling and wavering person, who represented urbanity by the liberal aid of certain prominent front teeth and whom Milly vaguely took for some sort of great man.
Lady Aldershaw meanwhile looked at Milly quite as if Milly had been the Bronzino and the Bronzino only Milly. âSuperb, superb. Of course I had noticed you. It is wonderful,â she went on with her back to the picture, but with some other eagerness which Milly felt gathering, directing her motions now. It was enoughâ âthey were introduced, and she was saying âI wonder if you could give us the pleasure of comingâ ââ She was not fresh,
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