登陆注册
19642700000023

第23章

According to plans made earlier in the day, a small shooting party left the Hall immediately after luncheon and did not return until late in the afternoon. Julian, therefore, saw nothing more of Catherine until she came into the drawing-room, a few minutes before the announcement of dinner, wearing a wonderful toilette of pale blue silk, with magnificent pearls around her neck and threaded in her Russian headdress. As is the way with all women of genius, Catherine's complete change of toilette indicated a parallel change in her demeanour. Her interesting but somewhat subdued manner of the previous evening seemed to have vanished.

At the dinner table she dominated the conversation. She displayed an intimate acquaintance with every capital of Europe and with countless personages of importance. She exchanged personal reminiscences with Lord Shervinton, who had once been attached to the Embassy at Rome, and with Mr. Hannaway Wells, who had been first secretary at Vienna. She spoke amusingly of Munich, at which place, it appeared, she had first studied art, but dilated, with all the artist's fervour, on her travellings in Spain, on the soft yet wonderfully vivid colouring of the southern cities. She seemed to have escaped altogether from the gravity of which she had displayed traces on the previous evening. She was no longer the serious young woman with a purpose. From the chrysalis she had changed into the butterfly, the brilliant and cosmopolitan young queen of fashion, ruling easily, not with the arrogance of rank, but with the actual gifts of charm and wit. Julian himself derived little benefit from being her neighbour, for the conversation that evening, from first to last, was general. Even after she had left the room, the atmosphere which she had created seemed to linger behind her.

"I have never rightly understood Miss Abbeway," the Bishop declared. "She is a most extraordinarily brilliant young woman."

Lord Shervinton assented.

"To-night you have Catherine Abbeway," he expounded, "as she might have been but for these queer, alternating crazes of hers - art and socialism. Her brain was developed a little too early, and she was unfortunately, almost in her girlhood, thrown in with a little clique of brilliant young Russians who attained a great influence over her. Most of them are in Siberia or have disappeared by now. One Anna Katinski - was brought back from Tobolsk like a royal princess on the first day of the revolution."

"It is strange," the Earl pronounced didactically, "that a young lady of Miss Abbeway's birth and gifts should espouse the cause of this Labour rabble, a party already cursed with too many leaders."

"A woman, when she takes up a cause," Mr. Hannaway Wells observed, "always seeks either for the picturesque or for something which appeals to the emotions. So long as she doesn't mix with them, the cause of the people has a great deal to recommend it. One can use beautiful phrases, can idealise with a certain amount of logic, and can actually achieve things."

Julian shrugged his shoulders.

"I think we are all a little blind," he remarked, "to the danger in which we stand through the great prosperity of Labour to-day."

The Bishop leaned across the table.

"You have been reading Fiske this week."

"Did I quote?" Julian asked carelessly. "I have a wretched memory. I should never dare to become a politician. I should always be passing off other people's phrases as my own."

"Fiske is quite right in his main contention," Mr. Stenson interposed. "The war is rapidly creating a new class of bourgeoisie. The very differences in the earning of skilled labourers will bring trouble before long - the miner with his fifty or sixty shillings, and the munition worker with his seven or eight pounds - men drawn from the same class."

"England," declared the Earl, indulging in his favourite speech, "was never so contented as when wages were at their lowest."

"Those days will never come again," Mr. Hannaway Wells foretold grimly. "The working man has tasted blood. He has begun to understand his power. Our Ministers have been asleep for a generation. The first of these modern trades unions should have been treated like a secret society in Italy. Look at them now, and what they represent! Fancy what it will mean when they have all learnt to combine! - when Labour produces real leaders!"

"Can any one explain the German democracy?" Lord Shervinton enquired.

"The ubiquitous Fiske was trying to last week in one of the Reviews," Mr. Stenson replied. "His argument was that Germany alone, of all the nations in the world, possessed an extra quality or an extra sense - I forget which he called it - the sense of discipline. It's born in their blood. Generations of military service are responsible for it. Discipline and combination - that might be their motto. Individual thought has been drilled into grooves, just as all individual effort is specialised. The Germans obey because it is their nature to obey. The only question is whether they will stand this, the roughest test they have ever had - whether they'll see the thing through."

"Personally, I think they will," Hannaway Wells pronounced, "but if I should be wrong - if they shouldn't - the French Revolution would be a picnic compared with the German one. It takes a great deal to drive a national idea out of the German mind, but if ever they should understand precisely and exactly how they have been duped for the glorification of their masters - well, I should pity the junkers."

"Do your essays in journalism," the Bishop asked politely, "ever lead you to touch upon Labour subjects, Julian?"

"Once or twice, in a very mild way," was the somewhat diffident reply.

"I had an interesting talk with Furley this morning," the Prime Minister observed. "He tells me that they are thinking of making an appeal to this man Paul Fiske to declare himself. They want a leader - they want one very badly - and thank heavens they don't know where to look for him!"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 高中祭之难以启齿的柔弱

    高中祭之难以启齿的柔弱

    这是一段无悔的青春,这是一段纯情的故事。或许是缘分,让他们相遇在了这个高考的战场上,每一次生命都好像是在开玩笑一样,明明是彼此喜欢着,却又不断掩饰着,然后就只能是看着彼此渐行渐远,只是到最后也没能说出那句该说的话.....感情里最无奈的就是心里有过你,但也只能到喜欢为止了。
  • 冷师将军老鼠妻

    冷师将军老鼠妻

    现代人思念穿越成为夜樱国的公主并下嫁大将军欧阳哲凡,但二人并无夫妻之实。欧阳哲凡天性爱女人,多次与其他女子相会。后夜樱国突发战事,欧阳哲凡带兵抵御外侮,不料兵败。思念不顾危险营救夫君。二人渐渐产生情愫。思念凭借自己的聪慧助欧阳哲凡为国家立功。二人终修正果!
  • 霸爱绝恋:殿下,请放手

    霸爱绝恋:殿下,请放手

    “哎呀,四哥花瓶破了。”“四哥,去游乐园玩吧。”她眨眨眼,拽着面前人人见了都敬畏的四殿下的衣摆,嘟着嘴说着自己的要求。”他微笑着答应她所有的要求。他对她宠溺之至,最终却选择无声地离开,像是一场笑话,他无话可说,再相见,他如狂风暴雨般向她靠近,她拼命想要逃离,却怎么也也挣不脱……再次相遇,他的吻炙烈而狂野,有如暴风骤雨般,她拼命想要挣脱,却怎么敌不过他的力气……
  • 教外别传

    教外别传

    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。
  • 伊人笑

    伊人笑

    血族少女不在西方玩乐,竟来东方学人家修真?开什么玩笑!!可偏偏这不是什么玩笑,亦不是贵族小姐的消遣,而是——逃亡!
  • 帝凰:冷帝的毒医王妃

    帝凰:冷帝的毒医王妃

    她是隐去了风华的北溟国相府千金,他是匿去了锋芒的夜轩国一代“病王”。一朝穿越,是命中注定,亦或情深缘浅?她清冷绝伦,出尘如仙;他强势霸道,冷清冷酷。他说:“如若能留她在我身边,弃了这君临天下,半壁江山又何妨?”她说:“我将他放在心上三年,他惜我如金,爱我如命,这个男人,我怎可相负?”【以我天下为礼,聘你一世为妻;用我江山如画,换你笑靥如花。】
  • 古武高手在都市

    古武高手在都市

    他是神秘古武者,是令各国忌惮的杀手,为任务踏足都市,桃运征途从此开始,意外进入校园,从此结识我的校花俏老婆!
  • 海内十洲记

    海内十洲记

    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。
  • 我是藏獒

    我是藏獒

    正义勇敢的藏獒、勤劳善良的人类、阴险毒辣的狼、狡猾卑鄙的狐……一切物种仿佛一开始就被贴上了标签。在人与自然的对抗中,藏獒是该忠诚还是正义?《我是藏獒》打破了僵硬的道德脸谱,以藏獒纯净的心灵来观察这个世界,獒与人最终的改变,是獒性对人性的最好映射。在猎枪和鲜血换来金钱的日子里,人逐渐迷失自我,迷失在杀戮中。通过藏獒的不断矛盾和反省,刻画出人在金钱与道德旋涡中挣扎的景象。獒群对血统的痴迷,揭示了血统荣耀的苍白,并予之绝妙讽刺。藏獒爱上人类,一开始便染上了悲剧色彩。人獒一战后它能见到的究竟是谁?这不是一群英雄,也不是一个英雄,这是一只有血有肉、有情有义、颠覆了以往藏獒定义的反叛者,一只真正的藏獒。
  • An Accursed Race

    An Accursed Race

    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。