登陆注册
15460200000037

第37章 CHAPTER VIII(4)

It was 'Mr. Thorpe' here and 'Mr. Thorpe' there, all over the place. Ladies of title, mind you--all to myself at breakfast two days running. And such ladies--finer than silk. Oh, it's clear as daylight--I was intended for a fashionable career."She smiled in a faint, passive way. "Well--they say 'better late than never,' you know." "And after all, IS it so very late?" he said, adopting her phrase as an expression of his thought. "I'm just turned forty, and Ifeel like a boy. I was looking at that 'Peerage' there, the other day--and do you know, I'm sixteen years younger than the first Lord Plowden was when they made him a peer?

Why he didn't even get into the House of Commons until he was seven-and-forty.""You seem to have the Plowden family on the brain,"she commented.

"I might have worse things. You've no idea, Lou, how nice it all is. The mother, Lady Plowden--why she made me feel as if I was at the very least a nephew of hers.

And so simple and natural! She smiled at me, and listened to me, and said friendly things to me--why, just as anybody might have done. You'll just love her, when you know her."Louisa laughed in his face. "Don't be a fool, Joel,"she adjured him, with a flash of scornful mirth.

He mingled a certain frowning impatience with the buoyancy of his smile. "Why, of course, you'll know her,"he protested. "What nonsense you're thinking of! Do you suppose I'm going to allow you to mess about here with second-hand almanacs, and a sign in your window of 'threepence in the shilling discount for cash,' while I'm a millionaire? It's too foolish, Lou. You annoy me by supposing such a thing!""There's no good talking about it at all," she observed, after a little pause. "It hasn't come off yet, for one thing. And as I said the other night, if you want to do things for the children, that's another matter.

They're of an age when they can learn whatever anybody chooses to teach them.""Where are they now?" he asked. Upon the instant another plan began to unfold itself in the background of his mind.

"They're both at Cheltenham, though they're at different places, of course. I was recommended to send Julia there--one of our old customers is a Governor, or whatever it's called--and he got special terms for her.

She was rather old, you know, to go to school, but he arranged it very nicely for her--and there is such a good boys' college there, it seemed the wisest thing to send Alfred too.

Julia is to finish at Christmas-time--and what I'm going to do with her afterward is more than I know.""Is she pretty?" the uncle of Julia enquired.

"She's very nice," the mother answered, with vague extenuation in her tone. "I don't know about her looks--she varies so much. Sometimes I think she's pretty--and then again I can't think it. She's got good features, and she holds herself well, and she's very much the lady--rather too much, I think, sometimes--but it all depends upon what you call pretty. She's not tall, you know. She takes after her father's family. The Dabneys are all little people."Thorpe seemed not to care about the Dabneys. "And what's Alfred like?" he asked.

"He wants to be an artist!" There was a perceptible note of apprehension in the mother's confession.

"Well--why shouldn't he--if he's got a bent that way?"demanded Thorpe, with reproof in his tone. "Did you want him to be a shop-keeper?""I should like to see him a doctor," she replied with dignity.

"It was always my idea for him."

"Well, it's no good--even as an idea," he told her.

"Doctors are like parsons--they can't keep up with the times.

The age is outgrowing them. Only the fakirs in either profession get anything out of it, nowadays. It's all mystery and sleight-of-hand and the confidence trick--medicine is--and if you haven't got just the right twist of the wrist, you're not in it. But an artist stands on his merits.

There is his work--done by his own hands. It speaks for itself. There's no deception--it's easy enough to tell whether it's good or bad. If the pictures are good, people buy them. If they're bad, people don't buy them.

Of course, it won't matter to Alfred, financially speaking, whether his pictures sell well or not. But probably he'd give it up, if he didn't make a hit of it.

同类推荐
  • 五家宗旨纂要

    五家宗旨纂要

    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。
  • 皇经集注

    皇经集注

    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。
  • 飞龙全传

    飞龙全传

    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。
  • 瑶石山人稿

    瑶石山人稿

    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。
  • 佛说十八泥犁经

    佛说十八泥犁经

    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
  • 虐文短篇集:痴念

    虐文短篇集:痴念

    唯美却让人心碎的短篇古风虐恋文集,痴念之中的爱恨交织,相爱相杀得宿命,错过之后的痛苦,明明完美的初见,却美到让人心碎……【皆为本人原创】谢谢观赏
  • 秘陆

    秘陆

    神秘的大陆暗藏汹涌,机遇重重!漫漫修行之路,我要傲世九天!谁与争锋!我不信修行要看透世事,冷若冰霜!如真要如此,我要逆这修行之道!!我要这苍穹因我而颤抖!!!我永远记着对你的承诺!即使你早已忘记我的存在!可我会用尽毕生精力去追赶你的步伐!即使你不愿停下等我!我相信!我会找回最初的你!命运之轮会让我们在生命的某个点上重叠!!这时,如果可以,我将用我全部修为、用我的生命,去好好爱你!!!
  • 妃常轻尘

    妃常轻尘

    她是现代一个平凡的女孩,和很多人一样:无忧无虑父母宠极却又没心没肺,然而,一夕巨变。父母双双遇难,她也没有逃过这一劫而原因竟是…她是凌府几代来唯一的一个女儿,父母兄长独宠却是天下皆知的废物,花痴成性,才貌全无…一朝穿越,她成了她,她们的父母如此相似,她也不想再一次失去这份温暖,且看其如何来守护这份重归的温暖…
  • 寄续尊师

    寄续尊师

    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。
  • 永明草

    永明草

    带有所有种族血脉的木灵族孤儿木灵,从木灵族起步,在所有的大陆上惊起涛天巨浪,力挽狂澜,救大陆众生于危难之间。与凰族诸位的爱恨情仇,与圣光族的种种关联,最终使他返回上古大陆,为从新返回位面的琉光大陆撑起一片天。看今朝,春草永明,风起云涌;怎耐何,昨日苦凄,战火连绵!!!
  • 星空下的仰望

    星空下的仰望

    一个弱者成为强者的故事,一个小人物成为大人物的成长史,一个武者横行,武学破天的大世界。请看榨菜作品《星空下的仰望》……
  • 鸿爪心印

    鸿爪心印

    中国是诗的国度。古典诗歌是历史长河中经久不衰的花朵,多少文人墨客为事而唱,为情而歌,无数脍炙人口的诗词华章代代相传。作者的许多作品,用精巧的语言和真摯的情感艺术地再现了时代风貌。
  • 修真十书武夷集

    修真十书武夷集

    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。
  • 云烟诀

    云烟诀

    “骝马新跨白玉鞍,战罢沙场月色寒。城头铁鼓声犹震,匣里金刀血未干。”绵延数里的军队在黄土砌成的谷中穿行,士兵有力的步伐扬起漫天黄沙,烈日当空照下,直射得将士们的铁甲泛起寒光湛湛,从远处看,军队犹如一条闪着银光的巨龙,嘶吼着前进。正当将士们缓步而行时,中军中传来一阵吟诗之声,若说是吟诗却不如说是喊诗,这首唐代大诗人王昌龄的《出塞》由此人喊出,当真是豪气干云,听得中军的兵士们无不慷慨激昂,有几人闻此声如钟如磬,心下敬佩,但一时间又不知是哪位将军所发,便回头向后瞥去。
  • 神医毒妃:无良皇家商女

    神医毒妃:无良皇家商女

    选秀被皇帝当众羞辱,成为家族耻辱。当夜兄长欲行不轨,她只能以死抵抗!再次醒来不过区区几日对她却是第二次重生!冲喜丫鬟所生又怎样?暗杀挑衅陷害,都难敌她步步为营洞察先机!内斗主母兄妹,外斗王爷宠妃!再让曾羞辱过她的皇帝成为裙下之臣!然而谁料曾深爱的男人,却视她为仇人欲除之而后快……