登陆注册
19700400000070

第70章

"You got him that time,"I laughed,and,being detected,she suddenly blushed.It was this act that drew my attention to her,that defined her as an individual.Before that I had regarded her merely as a shy and provincial girl.Now she was brimming with an unsuspected vitality.Acertain interest was aroused,although her shyness towards me was not altered.I found it rather a flattering shyness.

"It's Hugh,"she explained,"he's always trying to be funny.Speak to Mr.Paret,Hugh.""Why,that's my name,too,"I said.

"Is it?"

"She knocked my hat off a little while ago,"said Hugh."I was only getting square.""Well,you didn't get square,did you?"I asked.

"Are you going to speak in the tows hall to-night?"the boy demanded.Iadmitted it.He went off,pausing once to stare back at me....Maude and I walked on.

"It must be exciting to speak before a large audience,"she said."If Iwere a man,I think I should like to be in politics.""I cannot imagine you in politics,"I answered.

She laughed.

"I said,if I were a man."

"Are you going to the meeting?"

"Oh,yes.Father promised to take me.He has a box."I thought it would be pleasant to have her there.

"I'm afraid you'll find what I have to say rather dry,"I said.

"A woman can't expect to understand everything,"she answered quickly.

This remark struck me favourably.I glanced at her sideways.She was not a beauty,but she was distinctly well-formed and strong.Her face was oval,her features not quite regular,--giving them a certain charm;her colour was fresh,her eyes blue,the lighter blue one sees on Chinese ware:not a poetic comparison,but so I thought of them.She was apparently not sophisticated,as were most of the young women at home whom I knew intimately (as were the Watling twins,for example,with one of whom,Frances,I had had,by the way,rather a lively flirtation the spring before);she seemed refreshingly original,impressionable and plastic....

We walked slowly back to the house,and in the hallway I met Mrs.

Hutchins,a bustling,housewifely lady,inclined to stoutness,whose creased and kindly face bore witness to long acquiescence in the discipline of matrimony,to the contentment that results from an essentially circumscribed and comfortable life.She was,I learned later,the second Mrs.Hutchins,and Maude their only child.The children of the first marriage,all girls,had married and scattered.

Supper was a decorous but heterogeneous meal of the old-fashioned sort that gives one the choice between tea and cocoa.It was something of an occasion,I suspected.The minister was there,the Reverend Mr.

Doddridge,who would have made,in appearance at least,a perfect Puritan divine in a steeple hat and a tippet.Only--he was no longer the leader of the community;and even in his grace he had the air of deferring to the man who provided the bounties of which we were about to partake rather than to the Almighty.Young George was there,Mr.Hutchins's nephew,who was daily becoming more and more of a factor in the management of the mills,and had built the house of yellow brick that stood out so incongruously among the older Hutchinses'mansions,and marked a transition.I thought him rather a yellow-brick gentleman himself for his assumption of cosmopolitan manners.His wife was a pretty,discontented little woman who plainly deplored her environment,longed for larger fields of conquest:George,she said,must remain where he was,for the present at least,--Uncle Ezra depended on him;but Elkington was a prosy place,and Mrs.George gave the impression that she did not belong here.They went to the city on occasions;both cities.

And when she told me we had a common acquaintance in Mrs.Hambleton Durrett--whom she thought so lovely!--I knew that she had taken Nancy as an ideal:Nancy,the social leader of what was to Mrs.George a metropolis.

Presently the talk became general among the men,the subject being the campaign,and I the authority,bombarded with questions I strove to answer judicially.What was the situation in this county and in that?

the national situation?George indulged in rather a vigorous arraignment of the demagogues,national and state,who were hurting business in order to obtain political power.The Reverend Mr.Doddridge assented,deploring the poverty that the local people had brought on themselves by heeding the advice of agitators;and Mrs.Hutchins,who spent much of her time in charity work,agreed with the minister when he declared that the trouble was largely due to a decline in Christian belief.Ezra Hutchins,too,nodded at this.

"Take that man Krebs,for example,"the minister went on,stimulated by this encouragement,"he's an atheist,pure and simple."A sympathetic shudder went around the table at the word.George alone smiled."Old Krebs was a free-thinker;I used to get my glasses of him.He was at least a conscientious man,a good workman,which is more than can be said for the son.Young Krebs has talent,and if only he had devoted himself to the honest practice of law,instead of stirring up dissatisfaction among these people,he would be a successful man to-day."Mr.Hutchins explained that I was at college with Krebs.

"These people must like him,"I said,"or they wouldn't have sent him to the legislature.""Well,a good many of them do like him,"the minister admitted."You see,he actually lives among them.They believe his socialistic doctrines because he's a friend of theirs.""He won't represent this town again,that's sure,"exclaimed George.

"You didn't see in the papers that he was nominated,--did you,Paret?""But if the mill people wanted him,George,how could it be prevented?"his wife demanded.

George winked at me.

"There are more ways of skinning a cat than one,"he said cryptically.

"Well,it's time to go to the meeting,I guess,"remarked Ezra,rising.

Once more he looked at his watch.

同类推荐
  • 本草便读

    本草便读

    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。
  • 佛说苾刍五法经

    佛说苾刍五法经

    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。
  • 力庄严三昧经

    力庄严三昧经

    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。
  • 文房四谱

    文房四谱

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 三命指迷赋

    三命指迷赋

    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
  • LOVE OF LIFE

    LOVE OF LIFE

    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。
  • 焚天画圣

    焚天画圣

    天赐众生以命,又生万物供养之,只有大恩,何来不公?不公,皆为人所造。所以,欲替天行道除尽不公,必杀人!杀那胆敢自称为天,以天之名行恶的人。当缺少关键念元而不能成为修行者的少年,抱定这样的信念踏入茫茫尘世,这天下,必将掀起滔天波澜!
  • 重生之前妻买一送一

    重生之前妻买一送一

    一朝重生,她进入了一个二十二岁女人的身体,醒来时却被迫结婚。然而此时此刻曾跟自己携手步入殿堂的男人正大肆宣传着他的新婚礼!这个她爱了五年之久的男人居然如此无情,既然如此,她又怎么会轻易放过他呢?亲爱的,别忘了你不仁我不义!
  • 九逆仙途

    九逆仙途

    仙道茫茫,多少世俗红尘事。身为外门低阶弟子的齐弦,为了野心,为了红颜,纵然碎骨粉身,万劫不复,也要披荆斩棘,迎难而上!哪怕是九逆仙途!
  • 罪恶迷雾:第二次世界大战纳粹真相

    罪恶迷雾:第二次世界大战纳粹真相

    本书内容包括:希特勒使用反间计、《慕尼黑协定》的出笼、苏德条约的幕后故事、制造进攻波兰的口实、四十万大军逃生揭秘、“珍珠港事件”始末、法西斯造原子弹了吗等。
  • 霍华德·休斯(名人传记丛书)

    霍华德·休斯(名人传记丛书)

    一个孤儿接掌了父亲的产业,并通过自己的天赋和努力最终成为了出色的电影人、飞行家、企业家、航空设计师及慈善家。他热爱飞行事业,以巧夺天工的设计和精湛的驾驶技术刷新了一个又一个航空史上的记录;他具有远见卓识的头脑,建立了世界最大的科研中心,他发展的通讯设备曾随宇宙飞船登陆月球。他是天才的事业家,也是古怪的亿万富豪,失去事业之后,他遁迹荒漠,至死未曾露面。本书讲述了霍华德?休斯为梦想而执著奋斗的人生经历,青少年读者可以通过本书的阅读,来品评这位天才传奇而具争议的一生。
  • 现代公司股票期权方案设计

    现代公司股票期权方案设计

    有数据表明,全球前500家大工业企业中,有89%的企业已对其高级管理人员采取了股票期权激励机制。在西方发达国家,以股票期权为主体的薪酬制度已经取代了以“基本工资+年度奖金”为主体的传统薪酬制度。该书正是基于推动和促进股票期权计划在中国的推广而进行编撰的。全书包括以下几个方面的内容:股票期权计划概述;股票期权计划计划总体方案设计;股票期权计划管理方案设计;股票期权计划推广方案设计;股票期权计划实施方案设计;股票期权计划激励方案设计;股票期权相关方案设计;其他相关激励模式参照。
  • 末世之我是天网

    末世之我是天网

    一场事故,让李无道穿越到了末世,成为了天网;天网明白是什么吗?不明白啊,没事,哥给你解释解释,这天网啊,就是终结者的幕后大boss啊;终结者不认识啊,没事,玩过红警吧?洒家这天网也能捣鼓出来哦;哦,红警也没玩过啊,没关系,哥还能搞出蜂巢来,搞出火焰女皇来,搞出舔食者来,搞出暴君来,搞出异形军团来,就是要搞出绿巨人来,那也不是不可以的;好吧,这些都不认识啊,那没关系,请出门左转,回火星吧孩子,地球很危险,不适合你!
  • 别笑,一本正经的文言文

    别笑,一本正经的文言文

    现代语翻译古代文言文,雷翻宇宙!震撼地球!“《出师表》:你亮叔我跟你讲几句:你爸当年出来混,半道上就给挂了;现在地盘又分成三块了,益州好像咱也罩不住了,这世道眼瞅着要杯具了。但是你爸留下的保镖还很忠心啊,出去砸场的那些二杆子也都不想要命了,这些都是看在你爸往日给钱给女人的份上,现在想报答罢了……”
  • 网王之姑姑大人万万岁

    网王之姑姑大人万万岁

    采访越前一家。问爸爸:您对于您妹妹越前琼言有什么看法?答曰:“起开!别跟我提她!”问妈妈:您想对您妹妹越前琼言说些什么?答曰:“唉!言言,早些回家吧,别去祸害其他人了”问姐姐:你对你姑姑越前琼言的感觉怎么样?答曰:“强大!跟着她绝对有肉吃!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿