登陆注册
15518900000004

第4章

I don't know how to approach aunt Celia.She is formidable.By a curious accident of feature,for which she is not in the least responsible,she always wears an unfortunate expression as of one perceiving some offensive odor in the immediate vicinity.This may be a mere accident of high birth.It is the kind of nose often seen in the "first families,"and her name betrays the fact that she is of good old Knickerbocker origin.We go to Wells to-morrow.At least I think we do.

SHE

GLOUCESTER,June 9

The Spread Eagle.

I met him at Wells,and again at Bath.We are always being ridiculous,and he is always rescuing us.Aunt Celia never really sees him,and thus never recognizes him when he appears again,always as the flower of chivalry and guardian of ladies in distress.

I will never again travel abroad without a man,even if I have to hire one from a Feeble-Minded Asylum.We work like galley slaves,aunt Celia and I,finding out about trains and things.Neither of us can understand Bradshaw,and I can't even grapple with the lesser intricacies of the A B C railway guide.The trains,so far as I can see,always arrive before they go out,and I can never tell whether to read up the page or down.It is certainly very queer that the stupidest man that breathes,one that barely escapes idiocy,can disentangle a railway guide,when the brightest woman fails.Even the Boots at the inn in Wells took my book,and,rubbing his frightfully dirty finger down the row of puzzling figures,found the place in a minute,and said,"There ye are,miss."It is very humiliating.All the time I have left from the study of routes and hotels I spend on guide-books.Now I'm sure that if any one of the men I know were here,he could tell me all that is necessary as we walk along the streets.I don't say it in a frivolous or sentimental spirit in the least,but I do affirm that there is hardly any juncture in life where one isn't better off for having a man about.I should never dare divulge this to aunt Celia,for she doesn't think men very nice.She excludes them from conversation as if they were indelicate subjects.

But,to go on,we were standing at the door of Ye Olde Bell and Horns,at Bath,waiting for the fly which we had ordered to take us to the station,when who should drive up in a four-wheeler but the flower of chivalry.Aunt Celia was saying very audibly,"We shall certainly miss the train if the man doesn't come at once."

"Pray take this fly,"said the flower of chivalry."I am not leaving till the next train."

Aunt Celia got in without a murmur;I sneaked in after her.I don't think she looked at him,though she did vouchsafe the remark that he seemed to be a civil sort of person.

At Bristol,I was walking about by myself,and I espied a sign,"Martha Huggins,Licensed Victualer."It was a nice,tidy little shop,with a fire on the hearth and flowers in the window,and,as it was raining smartly,I thought no one would catch me if I stepped inside to chat with Martha.I fancied it would be so delightful and Dickensy to talk quietly with a licensed victualer by the name of Martha Huggins.

Just after I had settled myself,the flower of chivalry came in and ordered ale.I was disconcerted at being found in a dramshop alone,for I thought,after the bag episode,he might fancy us a family of inebriates.But he didn't evince the slightest astonishment;he merely lifted his hat,and walked out after he had finished his ale.

He certainly has the loveliest manners!

And so it goes on,and we never get any further.I like his politeness and his evident feeling that I can't be flirted and talked with like a forward boarding-school miss,but I must say I don't think much of his ingenuity.Of course one can't have all the virtues,but,if I were he,I would part with my distinguished air,my charming ease,in fact almost anything,if I could have in exchange a few grains of common sense,just enough to guide me in the practical affairs of life.

I wonder what he is?He might be an artist,but he doesn't seem quite like an artist;or a dilettante,but he doesn't seem in the least like a dilettante.Or he might be an architect;I think that is the most probable guess of all.Perhaps he is only "going to be"

one of these things,for he can't be more than twenty-five or twenty-six.Still he looks as if he were something already;that is,he has a kind of self-reliance in his mien,--not self-assertion,nor self-esteem,but belief in self,as if he were able,and knew that he was able,to conquer circumstances.

HE

GLOUCESTER,June 10

The Bell.

Nothing accomplished yet.Her aunt is a Van Tyck,and a stiff one,too.I am a Copley,and that delays matters.Much depends upon the manner of approach.A false move would be fatal.We have six more towns (as per itinerary),and if their thirst for cathedrals isn't slaked when these are finished we have the entire continent to do.

If I could only succeed in making an impression on the retina of aunt Celia's eye!Though I have been under her feet for ten days,she never yet has observed me.This absent-mindedness of hers serves me ill now,but it may prove a blessing later on.

SHE

OXFORD,June 12

The Mitre.

It was here in Oxford that a grain of common sense entered the brain of the flower of chivalry.You might call it the dawn of reason.

We had spent part of the morning in High Street,"the noblest old street in England,"as our dear Hawthorne calls it.As Wordsworth had written a sonnet about it,aunt Celia was armed for the fray,--a volume of Wordsworth in one hand,and one of Hawthorne in the other.

(I wish Baedeker didn't give such full information about what one ought to read before one can approach these places in a proper spirit.)When we had done High Street,we went to Magdalen College,and sat down on a bench in Addison's Walk,where aunt Celia proceeded to store my mind with the principal facts of Addison's career,and his influence on the literature of the something or other century.The cramming process over,we wandered along,and came upon "him"sketching a shady corner of the walk.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 篮球之我的王朝

    篮球之我的王朝

    从小羡慕乔帮主的他,梦想成为一名NBA球星,事实证明他有这个天赋,从小苦练,最终父亲带他进入了NBA,而在肯塔基大学,碰见了令他终身难忘的那个人
  • 灵琊纪

    灵琊纪

    有这样一群人,他们有着别人没有的力量,或是力大无比,或是行如闪电……他们小隐于世,他们出没各个奇异地点,他们是国家的坚强后盾,他们撑起那,那只属于他们的天空……
  • 传说哈密

    传说哈密

    由中共哈密地委宣传部、哈密地区文联组织编纂的“哈密文库”第一辑七册著作包括《红色哈密》《甜蜜哈密》《亲情哈密》《大美哈密》《传说哈密》《名人与哈密》《创业哈密》《援疆干部看哈密》,这套书为广大读者认识哈密、热爱哈密打开了一扇窗。
  • 火影之辉月明

    火影之辉月明

    勘九郎说:“从木叶到这里需要三天。”自来也说:“从这里到妙木山要一个月。”从木叶到砂忍村要三天,而从木叶到妙木山要一个月,那么,妙木山在哪儿?木叶和妙木山之间那么远的地方到底有什么?忍者五大国是不是这个世界的主体?死神、邪神这些神是什么样的存在?这里会试着给你个并不算完美的解答。前期尊重原著,后期可能远远偏离原著。
  • 小城春暖:错缝花开

    小城春暖:错缝花开

    改编自作者真实经历,灵感自谢春花唱的《无终》一袭清风,一盏思念,没有大城市夜晚的灯火阑珊,只有着小城镇午夜摇曳的火花,就像凌晨独自一人踏着漆黑的步伐,听不到耳畔凛冽的呼啸,却抹不掉心底最后的绝望......仅仅15岁的年华,母亲不在了,父亲也另寻新欢,战战兢兢的可笑模样每天都在她的生活上演,于是在胆怯与放肆中,她选择了后者。十年后,又是一个夏天,她看着碧绿中掺杂的一抹洁白,浅浅的笑了笑,栀子花....又开了呢...
  • 姻缘神之冒牌新娘

    姻缘神之冒牌新娘

    作为掌管三界姻缘的姻缘神,银雪莲觉得她把所有的姻缘任务交给了月老之后,她变得无聊了,于是她经过自己的大哥的提示,所以打算下凡界历练,顺便再牵牵红线,再不找点事做她觉得自己就要无聊倒发霉了……
  • 中夏传之帝歌

    中夏传之帝歌

    当他离开了帝都,背着皇命去向七族借宝。所有人都认为他不可能再回来了,他在和大太子的斗争中输的一败涂地。十年之后,新帝登基之日,他却带着七宝又一次踏入了帝都。他用十年的时间,完成了从男孩到男人的成长,用了十年的时间,完成了谱出了自己的一首帝歌。
  • 锦绣独宠:爱上无良小丞相

    锦绣独宠:爱上无良小丞相

    温凉第一次碰到崔语言的时候还不叫温凉,后来历经不幸,决心用余生温暖俞凉,故化名温凉。崔语言第一次碰到莫循的时候莫循已是温凉,后来命运弄人,崔语言决心用余生让温凉重回莫循。崔语言常默默言语:“若人生初见莫循时该有多好!”
  • 佛说铁城泥犁经

    佛说铁城泥犁经

    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。
  • 傲娇学长你别跑

    傲娇学长你别跑

    初次见面,他便好好的耍了她一次。接着开始不由自主的调戏她,“哟,原来我的脸还有这疗效,难怪让某人一直盯着我看。”“我从未见过如此厚颜无耻之人!”听人说,最傻的不是单恋,而是互相暗恋。“你..这是在脸红吗...”“才没有,因为太热了。”“可是外面在下雨啊”最后的,表明心意。“捕捉野生害羞学长一枚!取名为:小可爱!”“魂淡!谁是小可爱啊!”“哈哈哈哈炸毛了!”“呸劳资可是大男人好么!大男人!”“那我当你小女人咯~”“嘁,你这个白痴。那我就...勉为其难的答应好了...”看到上面的对话有没有被甜到!让单身哈士奇怎么想!言归正传,看够了那些揪心的虐的黑暗的看着都累的,不如试试这款欢脱治愈向小说~