登陆注册
15684900000026

第26章

But Rowland had two substantial aids for giving patience the air of contentment: he was an inquisitive reader and a passionate rider.He plunged into bulky German octavos on Italian history, and he spent long afternoons in the saddle, ranging over the grassy desolation of the Campagna.

As the season went on and the social groups began to constitute themselves, he found that he knew a great many people and that he had easy opportunity for knowing others.

He enjoyed a quiet corner of a drawing-room beside an agreeable woman, and although the machinery of what calls itself society seemed to him to have many superfluous wheels, he accepted invitations and made visits punctiliously, from the conviction that the only way not to be overcome by the ridiculous side of most of such observances is to take them with exaggerated gravity.

He introduced Roderick right and left, and suffered him to make his way himself--an enterprise for which Roderick very soon displayed an all-sufficient capacity.Wherever he went he made, not exactly what is called a favorable impression, but what, from a practical point of view, is better--a puzzling one.

He took to evening parties as a duck to water, and before the winter was half over was the most freely and frequently discussed young man in the heterogeneous foreign colony.Rowland's theory of his own duty was to let him run his course and play his cards, only holding himself ready to point out shoals and pitfalls, and administer a friendly propulsion through tight places.

Roderick's manners on the precincts of the Pincian were quite the same as his manners on Cecilia's veranda:

that is, they were no manners at all.But it remained as true as before that it would have been impossible, on the whole, to violate ceremony with less of lasting offense.

He interrupted, he contradicted, he spoke to people he had never seen, and left his social creditors without the smallest conversational interest on their loans;he lounged and yawned, he talked loud when he should have talked low, and low when he should have talked loud.

Many people, in consequence, thought him insufferably conceited, and declared that he ought to wait till he had something to show for his powers, before he assumed the airs of a spoiled celebrity.

But to Rowland and to most friendly observers this judgment was quite beside the mark, and the young man's undiluted naturalness was its own justification.He was impulsive, spontaneous, sincere; there were so many people at dinner-tables and in studios who were not, that it seemed worth while to allow this rare specimen all possible freedom of action.

If Roderick took the words out of your mouth when you were just prepared to deliver them with the most effective accent, he did it with a perfect good conscience and with no pretension of a better right to being heard, but simply because he was full to overflowing of his own momentary thought and it sprang from his lips without asking leave.There were persons who waited on your periods much more deferentially, who were a hundred times more capable than Roderick of a reflective impertinence.

Roderick received from various sources, chiefly feminine, enough finely-adjusted advice to have established him in life as an embodiment of the proprieties, and he received it, as he afterwards listened to criticisms on his statues, with unfaltering candor and good-humor.Here and there, doubtless, as he went, he took in a reef in his sail;but he was too adventurous a spirit to be successfully tamed, and he remained at most points the florid, rather strident young Virginian whose serene inflexibility had been the despair of Mr.Striker.All this was what friendly commentators (still chiefly feminine) alluded to when they spoke of his delightful freshness, and critics of harsher sensibilities (of the other sex) when they denounced his damned impertinence.

His appearance enforced these impressions--his handsome face, his radiant, unaverted eyes, his childish, unmodulated voice.

Afterwards, when those who loved him were in tears, there was something in all this unspotted comeliness that seemed to lend a mockery to the causes of their sorrow.

Certainly, among the young men of genius who, for so many ages, have gone up to Rome to test their powers, none ever made a fairer beginning than Roderick.

He rode his two horses at once with extraordinary good fortune;he established the happiest modus vivendi betwixt work and play.

He wrestled all day with a mountain of clay in his studio, and chattered half the night away in Roman drawing-rooms.

It all seemed part of a kind of divine facility.

He was passionately interested, he was feeling his powers;now that they had thoroughly kindled in the glowing aesthetic atmosphere of Rome, the ardent young fellow should be pardoned for believing that he never was to see the end of them.

He enjoyed immeasurably, after the chronic obstruction of home, the downright act of production.He kept models in his studio till they dropped with fatigue; he drew, on other days, at the Capitol and the Vatican, till his own head swam with his eagerness, and his limbs stiffened with the cold.

He had promptly set up a life-sized figure which he called an "Adam," and was pushing it rapidly toward completion.

There were naturally a great many wiseheads who smiled at his precipitancy, and cited him as one more example of Yankee crudity, a capital recruit to the great army of those who wish to dance before they can walk.They were right, but Roderick was right too, for the success of his statue was not to have been foreseen; it partook, really, of the miraculous.

He never surpassed it afterwards, and a good judge here and there has been known to pronounce it the finest piece of sculpture of our modern era.To Rowland it seemed to justify superbly his highest hopes of his friend, and he said to himself that if he had invested his happiness in fostering a genius, he ought now to be in possession of a boundless complacency.

同类推荐
  • 北使录

    北使录

    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。
  • 蠲戏斋诗话

    蠲戏斋诗话

    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。
  • 游宦纪闻

    游宦纪闻

    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。
  • 乙未日记摘录

    乙未日记摘录

    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。
  • 邓天君玄灵八门报应内旨

    邓天君玄灵八门报应内旨

    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
  • 重生之御姐萌妹

    重生之御姐萌妹

    她,正值花样年华,虽不是品学兼优,但也名列前十。青春年少的她,在爱情的面前懵懵懂懂、跌跌撞撞,吃了不少苦头。最后终于得到老天的眷顾,找到了属于自己的白马王子。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 【男生寝室:死亡真相】

    【男生寝室:死亡真相】

    一年前302寝室里面有个女生上吊而死,一年后的今天,我们住进了这个寝室,接着就发生了一连串可怕的事情,心肌梗塞,发疯,楼管上吊自杀之前的警告,“下一个就是你”,车祸,失踪,这些都是意味着什么?难道有鬼在作祟?还是有人故意的安排?一个更大的阴谋正在酝酿着,302寝室里的每一个都是可以牺牲的对象。悬疑顿起,情节刺激,带给你最紧张的校园恐怖小说。
  • 御冰仙帝

    御冰仙帝

    御书九界,由宇宙九种元素衍成!上善若水,水利万物而不争!稚嫩少年横空出世!掌控最‘鸡肋’的水元素!经历千辛万苦,一路崛起!摧毁神话!势必成为“仙帝”的少年!隐凌落坑2016年仙侠巨献,值得各位客官细细品尝!
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 最强帝神

    最强帝神

    穿越?穿越就穿越吧,怎么还带了一个打怪系统?德玛西亚之力?流浪法师?寒冰射手?嗜血猎手?这些不都是英雄联盟之中的英雄么?怎么一瞬间就变成了一个不可思议的修炼体系?作为一个英雄联盟的骨灰级玩家,这不就是我的世界吗?
  • 妖灵旧事

    妖灵旧事

    想把我们的故事记录下来,也许我的他们能见到,想起我们纵情逍遥山河水的岁月。不知道我们存在了多久,也许与天地同岁,但不是与日月同辉。遥遥岁月,也许万载吧,我们从上古洪荒而来,无善无恶的蛮荒时代,吸万物之精华而成形,而可化万物。我们五只共生,自为一体。而今,与你请一杯桃花酒,同你讲,我们曾与诸神一战,也览万千河山。
  • 清朝独宠双子

    清朝独宠双子

    我穿越到清朝,变成王妃,与朋友并肩作战。
  • 公主殿下有何吩咐

    公主殿下有何吩咐

    【温柔的哥哥】她是菡灵国的落姬公主,三岁那年被扔进了绯空国的森林,是他救了她,如果没有他,她真的不知道自己还能活到现在【却有个很不、良的弟弟】第一次见面救不明不白的吻她,后来还把她推下楼梯,在班级内掀她的桌子,如果不是他,她真的没有想过自杀,“你到底想让我怎么样?”“我喜欢你。”“我拒绝!”“我喜欢你。”“离我远点。”“我喜欢你……”【公主殿下,有何吩咐?】
  • 天灵神州

    天灵神州

    人类拥有龙的基因分子,经过天地能量的融合便能激发基因,产生特殊能量灵洛力,灵洛力强到一定程度甚至可以将肢体龙体化…
  • 智力加油大派队(中小学生奥林匹克集训与选拔)

    智力加油大派队(中小学生奥林匹克集训与选拔)

    “中小学生奥林匹克集训与选拔”丛书旨在通过向青少年提供集知识性和趣味性于一体的科学文化知识,激发他们学习科学和热爱科学的积极性,引导他们拓宽视野,不断创新,最终达到提升综合性素质的目的。其中涉及到青少年必须知道的许多知识领域,具有很强的系统性、实用性和现代性,是青少年学习的最佳读本。