登陆注册
19633900000064

第64章 ETHELBERTA'S HOUSE (continued) - THE BRITISH M

Mrs. Chickerel, in deploring the risks of their present speculative mode of life, was far from imagining that signs of the foul future so much dreaded were actually apparent to Ethelberta at the time the lament was spoken. Hence the daughter's uncommon sensitiveness to prophecy. It was as if a dead-reckoner poring over his chart should predict breakers ahead to one who already beheld them.

That her story-telling would prove so attractive Ethelberta had not ventured to expect for a moment; that having once proved attractive there should be any falling-off until such time had elapsed as would enable her to harvest some solid fruit was equally a surprise.

Future expectations are often based without hesitation upon one happy accident, when the only similar condition remaining to subsequent sets of circumstances is that the same person forms the centre of them. Her situation was so peculiar, and so unlike that of most public people, that there was hardly an argument explaining this triumphant opening which could be used in forecasting the close; unless, indeed, more strategy were employed in the conduct of the campaign than Ethelberta seemed to show at present.

There was no denying that she commanded less attention than at first: the audience had lessened, and, judging by appearances, might soon be expected to be decidedly thin. In excessive lowness of spirit, Ethelberta translated these signs with the bias that a lingering echo of her mother's dismal words naturally induced, reading them as conclusive evidence that her adventure had been chimerical in its birth. Yet it was very far less conclusive than she supposed. Public interest might without doubt have been renewed after a due interval, some of the falling-off being only an accident of the season. Her novelties had been hailed with pleasure, the rather that their freshness tickled than that their intrinsic merit was appreciated; and, like many inexperienced dispensers of a unique charm, Ethelberta, by bestowing too liberally and too frequently, was destroying the very element upon which its popularity depended.

Her entertainment had been good in its conception, and partly good in its execution; yet her success had but little to do with that goodness. Indeed, what might be called its badness in a histrionic sense--that is, her look sometimes of being out of place, the sight of a beautiful woman on a platform, revealing tender airs of domesticity which showed her to belong by character to a quiet drawing-room--had been primarily an attractive feature. But alas, custom was staling this by improving her up to the mark of an utter impersonator, thereby eradicating the pretty abashments of a poetess out of her sphere; and more than one well-wisher who observed Ethelberta from afar feared that it might some day come to be said of her that she had 'Enfeoffed herself to popularity:

That, being daily swallowed by men's eyes, They surfeited with honey, and began To loathe the taste of sweetness, whereof a little More than a little is by much too much.'

But this in its extremity was not quite yet.

We discover her one day, a little after this time, sitting before a table strewed with accounts and bills from different tradesmen of the neighbourhood, which she examined with a pale face, collecting their totals on a blank sheet. Picotee came into the room, but Ethelberta took no notice whatever of her. The younger sister, who subsisted on scraps of notice and favour, like a dependent animal, even if these were only an occasional glance of the eye, could not help saying at last, 'Berta, how silent you are. I don't think you know I am in the room.'

'I did not observe you,' said Ethelberta. 'I am very much engaged: these bills have to be paid.'

'What, and cannot we pay them?' said Picotee, in vague alarm.

'O yes, I can pay them. The question is, how long shall I be able to do it?'

'That is sad; and we are going on so nicely, too. It is not true that you have really decided to leave off story-telling now the people don't crowd to hear it as they did?'

'I think I shall leave off.'

'And begin again next year?'

'That is very doubtful.'

'I'll tell you what you might do,' said Picotee, her face kindling with a sense of great originality. 'You might travel about to country towns and tell your story splendidly.'

'A man in my position might perhaps do it with impunity; but I could not without losing ground in other domains. A woman may drive to Mayfair from her house in Exonbury Crescent, and speak from a platform there, and be supposed to do it as an original way of amusing herself; but when it comes to starring in the provinces she establishes herself as a woman of a different breed and habit. Iwish I were a man! I would give up this house, advertise it to be let furnished, and sally forth with confidence. But I am driven to think of other ways to manage than that.'

Picotee fell into a conjectural look, but could not guess.

'The way of marriage,' said Ethelberta. 'Otherwise perhaps the poetess may live to become what Dryden called himself when he got old and poor--a rent-charge on Providence. . . . . Yes, I must try that way,' she continued, with a sarcasm towards people out of hearing. I must buy a "Peerage" for one thing, and a "Baronetage,"and a "House of Commons," and a "Landed Gentry," and learn what people are about me. 'I must go to Doctors' Commons and read up wills of the parents of any likely gudgeons I may know. I must get a Herald to invent an escutcheon of my family, and throw a genealogical tree into the bargain in consideration of my taking a few second-hand heirlooms of a pawnbroking friend of his. I must get up sham ancestors, and find out some notorious name to start my pedigree from. It does not matter what his character was; either villain or martyr will do, provided that he lived five hundred years ago. It would be considered far more creditable to make good my descent from Satan in the age when he went to and fro on the earth than from a ministering angel under Victoria.'

同类推荐
  • 续焚书

    续焚书

    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。
  • 湘雨楼词钞

    湘雨楼词钞

    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。
  • 元始天尊说梓童帝君本愿经

    元始天尊说梓童帝君本愿经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宣和书谱

    宣和书谱

    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。
  • 太上无极总真文昌大洞仙经

    太上无极总真文昌大洞仙经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 错嫁阴夫

    错嫁阴夫

    阴差阳错之下,我替得急性肠胃炎动不了的姐姐和姐夫走一下婚礼仪式,没想到竟误惹了一霸道鬼夫,从此被他夜夜纠缠……
  • 亲爱的爱情

    亲爱的爱情

    前世被男友抛弃的顾宝贝,摆脱过去,展望未来。没有什么创举、特异功能、玛丽苏,只是踏踏实实过日子,学着爱与被爱。重生后,她遇见了他——傅君颜。然后,这个暖心的男人,缓缓地走进她的生命,温暖她的心,抚平她的孤苦,任她依,予她爱。在这真爱的难寻的世上,他们,共同谱写了一段温润动人的爱情。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 超级桃运行

    超级桃运行

    一个整天做泡妞美梦的家伙,突得超能,桃运大爆发,桃花运源源不断,南北佳丽,清纯的,妩媚的……一网打尽!
  • 抖落一地的相思

    抖落一地的相思

    寂寞的天,伤心的雨,相思的人,熟悉的往事,抖落一地的相思,牵出冗长的记忆,如果说爱一个人是幸福的,那么思念一个人则是痛苦的。曾经的爱情花已经随风飘下,抖落成了一地的相思,化为春泥,无处寻找。
  • ALMAYER'  S FOLLY

    ALMAYER' S FOLLY

    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。
  • 傲游九天

    傲游九天

    一代剑仙,被迫使出全力与最强仙帝拼命一击,莫明的被传送到了异世大路。一代剑仙,在异世的成长称霸之路。只有你想不到的。没有傲天做不到的。
  • 现代逆境心理学

    现代逆境心理学

    在人的一生中,不可能任何事情都是一帆风顺的,总会遇到各种各样的困难和障碍,无论是来自外界的,还是来自自身的,都在所能免的。每当遇到困难和障碍无法克服时,人就会产生不愉快的情感,有时甚至痛不欲生,这便是逆境。用心理学术语准确地表达:逆境是指个体从事目的活动受到主客观因素的阴碍干扰,以致使预期的动机和目的不能实现、需要不能得满足时而产生的情绪状态。可见,逆境是人的一种心理现象,而且是人类个体普遍存在的心理现象。这种心理现象是以负性情绪为主要特征的。所谓负性情绪即至少包括了失望、痛苦、紧张、焦虑、悲伤、抑郁、恐惧、愤怒等情绪,而非单一的情绪。
  • 爱不成谶

    爱不成谶

    失忆于异乡的安然,在名校偶遇温润如玉、人中翘楚的多尔。她怦然心动,费尽力气追求。为他返校,为他努力,为他挑灯夜读,终成为别人眼中的翘楚,也获得他的心。一场变故,他们分离,失忆的真相逐渐浮出水面。锦瑟年华里的卢必,原来占据了她所有的年少青春。他出现了,他回来了。——————————————————————————————————都市悬疑+豪门商战+现代伪种田~~~~文文走可悲可喜,可虐可宠,可冷酷可暖萌路线~~~~
  • 唐宋明月

    唐宋明月

    他是一名医科大学的学生,穿越到了这个南北对立的时代,南宋与北唐。这是一个被女神嫌弃的书生逆袭的故事。他是读书人,却修不得文,入不得道。这个世界道修、文修、妖修鼎立,为何依然是凡人统治世界?没有灵石,没有法宝,也没有漫天的飞剑。有的是读书人为了人族大义而战,有的是道者长生路的求索,有的是南北分裂和统一的角逐。看一个失却重要记忆的医科学生解开世界之秘,找回失却的记忆。
  • 胡适日记:离开大陆这些年

    胡适日记:离开大陆这些年

    胡适的日记不仅是个人生活的记录,也涉及了中国近现代社会的方方面面。本书收录了胡适离开中国大陆至离世前(1950—1962)十二年间的日记。选编的大部分内容,反映了胡适在文学、历史、哲学、语言文字学等学术领域的观点和研究成果,从中可以看出他的学问之广博、治学之严谨、方法之科学。这样的内容,极具研究价值,可资借鉴。