登陆注册
19624600000005

第5章 II.(2)

She as a woman, who in spite of her bulk and the jellylike majesty with which she shook in her smoothly casing brown silks, as she entered hotel dining-rooms, and the severity with which she frowned over her fan down the length of the hotel drawing-rooms, betrayed more than her husband the commonness of their origin. She could not help talking, and her accent and her diction gave her away for a middle-class New England person of village birth and unfashionable sojourn in Boston. He, on the contrary, lurked about the hotels where they passed their days in a silence so dignified that when his verbs and nominatives seemed not to agree, you accused your own hearing. He was correctly dressed, as an elderly man should be, in the yesterday of the fashions, and he wore with impressiveness a silk hat whenever such a hat could be worn. A pair of drab cloth gaiters did much to identify him with an old school of gentlemen, not very definite in time or place. He had a full gray beard cut close, and he was in the habit of pursing his mouth a great deal.

But he meant nothing by it, and his wife meant nothing by her frowning.

They had no wish to subdue or overawe any one, or to pass for persons of social distinction. They really did not know what society was, and they were rather afraid of it than otherwise as they caught sight of it in their journeys and sojourns. They led a life of public seclusion, and dwelling forever amidst crowds, they were all in all to each other, and nothing to the rest of the world, just as they had been when they resided (as they would have said) on Pinckney street. In their own house they had never entertained, though they sometimes had company, in the style of the country town where Mrs. Lander grew up. As soon as she was released to the grandeur of hotel life, she expanded to the full measure of its responsibilities and privileges, but still without seeking to make it the basis of approach to society. Among the people who surrounded her, she had not so much acquaintance as her husband even, who talked so little that he needed none. She sometimes envied his ease in getting on with people when he chose; and his boldness in speaking to fellow guests and fellow travellers, if he really wanted anything. She wanted something of them all the time, she wanted their conversation and their companionship; but in her ignorance of the social arts she was thrown mainly upon the compassion of the chambermaids. She kept these talking as long as she could detain them in her rooms; and often fed them candy (which she ate herself with childish greed) to bribe them to further delays. If she was staying some days in a hotel, she sent for the house-keeper, and made all she could of her as a listener, and as soon as she settled herself for a week, she asked who was the best doctor in the place. With doctors she had no reserves, and she poured out upon them the history of her diseases and symptoms in an inexhaustible flow of statement, conjecture and misgiving, which was by no means affected by her profound and inexpugnable ignorance of the principles of health. From time to time she forgot which side her liver was on, but she had been doctored (as she called it) for all her organs, and she was willing to be doctored for any one of them that happened to be in the place where she fancied a present discomfort. She was not insensible to the claims which her husband's disorders had upon science, and she liked to end the tale of her own sufferings with some such appeal as: "I wish you could do something for Mr. Landa, too, docta." She made him take a little of each medicine that was left for her; but in her presence he always denied that there was anything the matter with him, though he was apt to follow the doctor out of the room, and get a prescription from him for some ailment which he professed not to believe in himself, but wanted to quiet Mrs. Lander's mind about.

同类推荐
  • 六十种曲四贤记

    六十种曲四贤记

    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。
  • 佛说文殊尸利行经

    佛说文殊尸利行经

    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。
  • 景善日记

    景善日记

    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。
  • The Congo & Other Poems

    The Congo & Other Poems

    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。
  • 双卿笔记

    双卿笔记

    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。
热门推荐
  • 灵师之神

    灵师之神

    突破自身修行,笑傲神魔之间。历万劫而不灭,掌天道于虚无PS:虽然书名不咋样,但是还是看看吧、、、、、、、。PS:本书不11,不11,不色情。PS:本书从100章左右将开始出现准确的等级划分
  • 陆云传

    陆云传

    陆云,身怀流云苏、闯荡了z国半边天的女人被至亲锁杀害、穿越到古代萧国小公主身上,且看她如何逆天改命,搅乱五国,又是谁,可以降服她。。第一次写书,不喜勿喷。
  • 鬼纪事

    鬼纪事

    什么是英雄?临危无惧者,算是。马革裹尸者,算是。可断大是大非者,算是。动辄惊雷霆于九霄云外者,算是。然而,最可歌泣的,乃是生平维诺之辈,于极危之时敢舍生忘死者。介绍朋友的几本好书给大家:《花边》
  • 蓦然回首

    蓦然回首

    因其短小,在构思和行文时才更讲究字句的凝炼,不允许文章中有赘词冗句。它的创作,是将时间、场所、人物压缩到一个小舞台上尽情展现,它的创作犹如做一件微雕的工艺品,精巧之间尽显功力。在某种程度上,微型小说就是一种敏感,从一个点、一个画面、一个对比、一声赞叹、一瞬间之中,捕捉住了小说的——一种智慧、一种美、一个耐人寻味的场景,一种新鲜的思想。也正是因为这些,微型小说自出现至今,一直深受读者的喜爱。
  • 一个乡村的冬夜

    一个乡村的冬夜

    八月天,河南省作家协会会员。发表小说《遥远的麦子》《黑神的别样人生》《低腰裤》《父亲的王国》等。现任某报社记者。
  • 南北朝那些事儿(MBook随身读)

    南北朝那些事儿(MBook随身读)

    文宣帝高洋相貌平平,在没当皇帝前装傻充愣,面对皇帝老哥的猜忌和挑衅沉默隐忍;北周武帝宇文邕在权臣宇文护的压迫下忍辱负重,在12年的韬光养晦后等来了机会;才智很高的隋文帝年轻时就有雄心大志,但为人低调,不露锋芒……展露才华要注意时机,有时候,纵使你有远大的抱负,但因为时机不成熟,也只有藏锋芒?收锐气,静待时机的到来。
  • 学会妥协、懂得进取(学会做人学会生活系列)

    学会妥协、懂得进取(学会做人学会生活系列)

    妥协,是一种谈判策略,其目的就是为了避免在谈判过程中出现僵局,从而促使双方谈判成功。《学会妥协懂得进取》针对谈判过程中可能遇到的问题,从不同角度提出在运用妥协策略时,如何最有效、最切合实际地去解决问题。进取,工作中最令人激动的力量,即“全力以赴”,它是推动企业进步的真正动力源泉。进取,是奋斗的目标,是指引命运之舟的灯塔:是积极的心态,是打开成功之门的钥匙;是巨大的潜能,是自动自发的动力源泉;是开拓的精神,是积极人生理念;是综合的素质,是成功人士必备的要件。
  • 强国梦

    强国梦

    一场地震使主人公穿越到了1928年的东北磐石,伴随他穿越的还有大量的书籍。那些书籍在后世不过是只有收藏爱好者才会关注的故纸堆,但在民国初年却成为强国梦的依托。主人公苦心孤诣,依靠划时代的技术、文化优势,开工厂、办企业,暗中发展军事实力,九一八事变日本法西斯发动过了侵略战争,主人公率领部下积极投身轰轰烈烈的抗日战场。
  • 吊丝的智慧之源

    吊丝的智慧之源

    这本书,告诉你们怎样将不能变为可能,告诉你怎样将人生变的精彩,让这本引导成功的枕边书,陪伴在你的床头吧,让这本书在你的人生成为你的一把成功的钥匙,成为你打开成功之门。
  • 搭车旅行

    搭车旅行

    150天,236辆顺风车,走过大半个中国。杭州小伙藏獒为了实现自己心中那个自由的梦想,毅然辞职,从兰州出发,全程独自搭顺风车、睡帐篷,经过新疆、青海、西藏、四川、云南等11省,完成了朝圣之旅。一路上曾走过最艰险的道路,感受过最冷漠的白眼,也见过了最震撼的风景,受到最热情的欢迎,当然还有最纯洁的爱情。这场旅行也让藏獒理解了生命的真谛,实现了人生境界的升华。