The Wings of the Dove Henry James (android based ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Henry James
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The night was, at all events, hot and stale, and it was late enough by the time the four ladies had been gathered in, for their small session, at the hotel, where the windows were still open to the high balconies and the flames of the candles, behind the pink shadesâ âdisposed as for the vigil of watchersâ âwere motionless in the air in which the season lay dead. What was presently settled among them was that Milly, who betrayed on this occasion a preference more marked than usual, should not hold herself obliged to climb that evening the social stair, however it might stretch to meet her, and that, Mrs. Lowder and Mrs. Stringham facing the ordeal together, Kate Croy should remain with her and await their return. It was a pleasure to Milly, ever, to send Susan Shepherd forth; she saw her go with complacency, liked, as it were, to put people off with her, and noted with satisfaction, when she so moved to the carriage, the further denudationâ âa markedly ebbing tideâ âof her little benevolent back. If it wasnât quite Aunt Maudâs ideal, moreover, to take out the new American girlâs funny friend instead of the new American girl herself, nothing could better indicate the range of that ladyâs merit than the spirit in whichâ âas at the present hour for instanceâ âshe made the best of the minor advantage. And she did this with a broad, cheerful absence of illusion; she did itâ âconfessing even as much to poor Susieâ âbecause, frankly, she was good-natured. When Mrs. Stringham observed that her own light was too abjectly borrowed and that it was as a link alone, fortunately not missing, that she was valued, Aunt Maud concurred to the extent of the remark: âWell, my dear, youâre better than nothing.â Tonight, furthermore, it came up for Milly that Aunt Maud had something particular in mind. Mrs. Stringham, before adjourning with her, had gone off for some shawl or other accessory, and Kate, as if a little impatient for their withdrawal, had wandered out to the balcony, where she hovered, for the time, unseen, though with scarce more to look at than the dim London stars and the cruder glow, up the street, on a corner, of a small public-house, in front of which a fagged cab-horse was thrown into relief. Mrs. Lowder made use of the moment: Milly felt as soon as she had spoken that what she was doing was somehow for use.
âDear Susan tells me that you saw, in America, Mr. Densherâ âwhom Iâve never till now, as you may have noticed, asked you about. But do you mind at last, in connection with him, doing something for me?â She had lowered her fine voice to a depth, though speaking with all her rich glibness; and Milly, after a small sharpness of surprise, was already guessing the sense of her appeal. âWill you name him, in any way you like, to herââ âand Aunt Maud gave a nod at the window; âso that you may perhaps find out whether heâs back?â
Ever so many things, for Milly, fell into line at this; it was a wonder, she afterwards thought, that she could be conscious of so many at once. She smiled hard, however, for them all. âBut I donât know that itâs important to me to âfind out.âââ The array of things was further swollen, however, even as she said this, by its striking her as too much to say. She therefore tried as quickly to say less. âExcept you mean, of course, that itâs important to you.â She fancied Aunt Maud was looking at her almost as hard as
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