登陆注册
19594400000041

第41章

Maggie wondered often as to Aunt Anne's, real thoughts.But Aunt Anne only smiled her dim cold smile, gave her cold hand into the girl's warm one and said, "Good afternoon, Caroline.I hope your father and mother are well." "They're dears, you know," Caroline said to Maggie; "I do admire your Aunt Anne; she keeps to herself so.I wish I could keep to myself, but I never was able to.Poor mother used to say when I was quite little, 'You'll only make yourself cheap, Carrie, if you go on like that.Don't make yourself cheap, dear.' But what I say is, one's only young once and the people who don't want one needn't have one."Nevertheless there were, even in these very early days, directions into which Maggie did not follow her new friend.Young as she was in many things, in some ways she was very old indeed.She had been trained in another school from Caroline; she felt from the very first that upon certain questions her lovely friend was inexperienced, foolish and dangerously reckless.On the question of "men," for instance, Maggie, with clear knowledge of her father and her uncle, refused to follow Caroline's light and easy excursions.

Caroline was disappointed; she had a great deal to say on the subject and could speak, she assured Maggie, from a vast variety of experience: "Men are all the same.What I say is, show them you don't care 'that' about them and they'll come after you.Not that Icare whether they do or no.Only it's fun the way they go on.You just try, Maggie."But Maggie had her own thoughts.They were not imparted to her friend.Nothing indeed appeared to her more odd than that Caroline should be so wise in some things and so foolish in others.She did not know that it was her own strange upbringing that gave her independent estimates and judgments.

The second influence that, during these first weeks, developed her soul and body was, strangely enough, her aunt's elderly friend, Mr.

Magnus.If Caroline introduced her to affairs of the world, Mr.

Magnus introduced her to affairs of the brain and spirit.

She had never before known any one who might be called "clever." Her father was not, Uncle Mathew was not; no one in St.Dreots had been clever.Mr.Magnus, of course, was "clever" because he wrote books, two a year.

But to be an author, was not a claim to Maggie's admiration.As has been said before, she did not care for reading, and considered that the writing of books was a second-rate affair.The things that Mr.

Magnus might have done with his life if he had not spent it in writing books! She regarded him with the kind indulgence of an elder who watches a child brick-building.He very quickly discovered her attitude and it amused him.They became the most excellent friends over it.She on her side very quickly discovered the true reason of his coming so often to their house; he loved Aunt Anne.At its first appearance this discovery was so strange and odd that Maggie refused to indulge it.Love seemed so far from Aunt Anne.She greeted Mr.

Magnus from the chill distance whence she greeted the rest of the world--she gave him no more than she gave any one else--But Mr.

Magnus did not seem to desire more.He waited patiently, a slightly ironical and self-contemptuous worshipper at a shrine that very seldom opened its doors, and never admitted him to its altar.It was this irony that Maggie liked in him; she regarded herself in the same way.Their friendship was founded on a mutual detachment.It prospered exceedingly.

Maggie soon discovered that Mr.Magnus was very happy to sit in their house even though Aunt Anne was not present.His attitude seemed to be that the atmosphere that she left behind her was enough for him and that he could not, in justice, expect any more.Before Maggie's arrival he had had but a slender excuse for his continual presence.He could not sit in the empty drawing-room surveying the large and ominous portrait of the Cardinal childhood, quite alone save for Thomas, without seeming a very considerable kind of fool.

And to appear that in the eyes of Aunt Anne, who already regarded mankind in general with pity, would be a mistake.

Now that Maggie was here he might come so often as he pleased.Many was the dark afternoon through the long February and March months that they sat together in the dim drawing-room, Maggie straining her eyes over an attempted reform of some garment, Mr.Magnus talking in his mild ironical voice with his large moon-like spectacles fixed upon nothing in particular.

Mr.Magnus did all the talking.Maggie fancied that, all his life, he had persisted in the same gentle humorous fashion without any especial attention as to the wisdom, agreement or even existence of his audience.She fancied that all men who wrote books did that.

They had to talk to "clear their ideas." She raised her eyes sometimes and looked at him as he sat there.His shabby, hapless appearance always appealed to her.She knew that he was, in reality, anything but hapless, but his clothes never fitted him, and it was impossible for him to escape from the Quixotic embarrassments of his thin hair, his high cheek-bones, his large spectacles.His smile, however, gave him his character; when he smiled--and he was always smiling--you saw a man independent, proud, wise and gentle.He was not a fool, Mr.Magnus, although he did love Aunt Anne.

To a great deal that he said Maggie paid but little attention; it was, she felt, not intended for her.She had, in all her relations with him, to struggle against the initial disadvantage that she regarded all men who wrote books with pity.She was not so stupid as not to realise that there were a great many fine books in the world and that one was the better for reading them, but, just because there were, already, so many fine ones, why write more that would almost certainly be not so fine? He tried to explain, to her that some men were compelled to write and could not help themselves.

"I wrote my first book when I was nineteen.One morning I just began to write, and then it was very easy.Then everything else was easy.

同类推荐
  • 华严五教止观

    华严五教止观

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 广嗣五种备要

    广嗣五种备要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大乘同性经

    大乘同性经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 啸亭续录

    啸亭续录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 学治说赘

    学治说赘

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 二战史·大漠厮杀

    二战史·大漠厮杀

    第二次世界大战的胜利具有伟大的历史意义。我们历史地辨证地看待这段人类惨痛历史,可以说,第二次世界大战的爆发给人类造成了巨大灾难,使人类文明惨遭浩劫,但同时,第二次世界大战的胜利,也开创了人类历史的新纪元,极大地推动了人类社会向前发展,给战后世界带来了广泛而深刻的影响。促进了世界进入力量制衡的相对和平时期;促进了殖民地国家的民族解放;促进了许多社会主义国家的诞生;促进了资本主义国家的经济、政治和社会改革;促进了世界科学技术的进步;促进了军事科技和理论的进步;促进了人类认识的真理革命;促进了世界人民对和平的认识。
  • 别让电脑“杀”了你

    别让电脑“杀”了你

    你知道每天坐在电脑前的你,皮肤变得干燥、晦暗,究竟是怎么回事吗?你知道在不经意中你的记忆力开始下降是什么原因吗?……也许,你头歪一歪,脖子就酸疼;握一会儿鼠标,整条手臂就麻了。坐久了,就腰酸背痛。……小心点儿,这些可能都是电脑惹的祸。辐射会慢慢"杀"了你!
  • 总裁的独宠

    总裁的独宠

    一场奋不顾身的爱情,如傅氿霄;一个永不言弃的爱人,如司韩;一份似水流年的温存,如叶寻;还有一见钟情的怦然心动,如顾彦。传说中的上天注定,不过是多少偶然之后的必然相遇。某一天,我会遇见你,而你,会在那个地方等我。活着,成了我最痛苦的事——傅氿霄有你的以后,才叫未来——司韩“你的生命中注定有我,”见她一脸茫然,指着无意间写出的她的名字解释,“枔,树叶的意思。”如果你不在这里,我又要到哪里去找你?——顾彦
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • 女子日记

    女子日记

    重生为音乐系女生。这里没有肖邦,没有杰伦,许多经典音乐还没有诞生。没有《凡人》,没有《斗破》,网络小说刚处于萌芽状态。这是一个魑魅魍魉群魔乱舞的时代。这也是一个女神养成的故事。
  • 冰焰战神

    冰焰战神

    一本仙魔道三界禁忌功法,开启了主角修炼之路,身含天阴之气,吸纳万物之魂,丹有天地奇火,燃尽焚天之力。冰魂雪魄!血染焰阳!
  • 异世吾弑天

    异世吾弑天

    当时代扭转,世界会发生怎样的变化?意识来临,洛谦如何面对?人要灭我,我杀人。兽要灭我,我斩兽。天要灭我,我定弑天!
  • 左邻右舍

    左邻右舍

    尹守国,2006年开始小说创作,发表中短篇小说70多万字,作品多次被《新华文摘》、《小说选刊》、《北京文学中篇小说月报》等选载,中国作家协会会员,辽宁省作协签约作家。
  • 灵虚传

    灵虚传

    灵动太虚,怒战八荒,至尊圣体,神明传承。他有覆灭天地之能,却终不敌时光流逝,只得颓看挚友离去,伊人化为一培黄土……修炼的尽头是什么?人力终究定不了天吗……无法改变,那便……超脱在外吧!
  • 穿越帝皇时代

    穿越帝皇时代

    一个流入世界的小伙子他叫启明,他爱上了网络游戏,玩的正是上古的后来一道八卦玄光把启明送到了(公元5000年前,)但是启明带着帝皇不断的穿越某个不同的时空。后来魔族的妖魔将要夺取帝皇手中的神剑,帝皇拿起手中的神剑杀尽天下所有的妖魔。