登陆注册
6169600000038

第38章

I saw little of Dora Harris at this time.Making no doubt that she was enjoying her triumph as she deserved, I took the liberty of supposing that she would hardly wish to share so intimate a source of satisfaction.I met them both several times at people's houses--certain things had apparently been taken for granted--but I was only one of the little circle that wondered how soon it might venture upon open congratulations.The rest of us knew as much, it seemed, as Edward Harris did.Lady Pilkey asked him point-blank, and he said what his daughter found to like in the fellow the Lord only knew, and he was glad to say that at present he had no announcement to make.Lady Pilkey told me she thought it very romantic--like marrying a newspaper correspondent--but I pointed to a lifelong task, with a pension attached, of teaching fat young Bengalis to draw, and asked her if she saw extravagant romance in that.

They wrote up from Calcutta that they would like to have a look at Armour before ****** the final recommendation, and he left us, Iremember, by the mail tonga of the third of June.He dropped into my office to say goodbye, but I was busy with the Member and could see nobody, so he left a card with 'P.P.C.' on it.I kept the card by accident, and I keep it still by design, for the sake of that inscription.

Strobo had given up his hotel in Simla to start one in Calcutta.It never occurred to me that Armour might go to Strobo's; but it was, of course, the natural thing for him to do, especially as Strobo happened to be in Calcutta himself at the time.He went and stayed with Strobo, and every day he and the Signor, clad in bath-towels, lay in closed rooms under punkahs and had iced drinks in the long tumblers of the East, and smoked and talked away the burden of the hours.

Strobo was in Calcutta to meet a friend, an Austrian, who was shortly leaving India in the Messagerie Maritimes steamer Dupleix after agreeable wanderings disguised as a fakir in Tibet; and to this friend was attached, in what capacity I never thought well to inquire, a lady who was a Pole, and played and sang as well as Strobo fiddled.I believe they dined together every night, this precious quartet, and exchanged in various tongues their impressions of India under British control.'A houri in stays,' the lady who was a Pole described it.I believe she herself was a houri without them.And at midnight, when the south wind was cool and strong from the river, Strobo and Armour would walk up Chowringhee Road and look at the red brick School of Art from the outside in the light of the street lamps, as a preliminary to our friend's final acceptance of the task of superintending it from within.

We in Simla, of course, knew nothing of all this at the time; the details leaked out later when Strobo came up again.I began to feel some joyful anxiety when in a letter dated a week after Armour's arrival in Calcutta, the Director of Public Instruction wrote to inquire whether he had yet left Simla; but the sweet blow did not fall with any precision or certainty until the newspaper arrived containing his name immediately under that of Herr Vanrig and Mme.

Dansky in the list of passengers who had sailed per S.S.Dupleix on the fifteenth of June for Colombo.There it was, 'I.Armour,' as significant as ever to two persons intimately concerned with it, but no longer a wrapping of mystery, rather a radiating centre of light.

Its power of illumination was such that it tried my eyes.I closed them to recall the outlines of the School of Art--it had been built in a fit of economy--and the headings of the last Director's report, which I had kindly sent after Armour to Calcutta.Perhaps that had been the last straw.

The real meaning of the task of implanting Western ideals in the Eastern mind rose before me when I thought of Armour's doing it--how they would dwindle in the process, and how he must go on handling them and looking at them withered and shrunken for twenty-odd years.

I understood--there was enough left in me to understand--Armour's terrified escape.I was happy in the thought of him, sailing down the Bay.The possibilities of marriage, social position, assured income, support in old age, the strands in the bond that held him, the bond that holds us all, had been untwisting, untwisting, from the third of June to the fifteenth.The strand that stood for Dora doubtless was the last to break, but it did not detract from my beatitude to know that even this consideration, before the Dupleix and liberty, failed to hold.

I kept out of Miss Harris's way so studiously for the next week or two that she was kind enough in the end to feel compelled to send for me.I went with misgivings--I expected, as may be imagined, to be very deeply distressed.She met me with a storm of gay reproaches.I had never seen her in better health or spirits.My surprise must have been more evident than I supposed or intended, for before I went away she told me the whole story.By that time she had heard from Ceylon, a delicious letter with a pen-and-ink sketch at the top.I have it still; it infallibly brought the man back to me.But it was all over; she assured me with shining eyes that it was.The reason of her plainly boundless thankfulness that Armour had run away from the School of Art did not come to the surface until I was just going.Then I gathered that if he had taken the post she would have felt compelled, compelled by all she had done for him, to share its honours with him; and this, ever since at her bidding he had begun to gather such things up, was precisely what she had lost all inclination to do.

We were married the following October.We had a big, gorgeous official wedding, which we both enjoyed enormously.I took furlough, and we went home, but we found London very expensive and the country very slow; and with my K.C.S.I.came the offer of the Membership, so we went back to Simla for three perfectly unnecessary years, which we now look back upon with pleasure and regret.I fear that we, no more than Ingersoll Armour, were quite whole-hearted Bohemians; but I don't know that we really ever pretended to be.

同类推荐
  • 心意六合拳谱

    心意六合拳谱

    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。
  • Capital-2

    Capital-2

    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。
  • 至真子龙虎大丹诗

    至真子龙虎大丹诗

    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。
  • 效特牲

    效特牲

    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。
  • 执节

    执节

    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
  • 快穿之反派三观有点歪

    快穿之反派三观有点歪

    洛染柒身为21世纪根正苗红伟大的一名……幼儿教师!整个幼儿园的正能量典范幼师。没想到和闺蜜吃个烧烤还能碰上爆炸,把自己弄成了植物人,还无意中和正三观系统绑定。从此洛染柒走上了穿梭各个世界掰正世界三观的道路,还要帮助世界真正的主角夺回他们的主角光环,带领他们走向人生巅峰。可是……这位仁兄怎么回事?你不是一个反派吗?系统君没说要我把你也掰回来啊!等等,你先别过来,我告诉你哦,我很厉害的,你别过来!某男,“染染,你别怕,我是你男人。”洛染柒:呜呜呜呜~~~系统君!你这样子不负责我是要多收劳务费的!系统君:反派无法检测,反派无法检测!请宿主继续完成任务,请宿主继续完成任务!(系统君:麻溜的吧,宿主!这个反派惹不起,恕我无能为力。)
  • 哭鼻子大王

    哭鼻子大王

    小丢丢是个一年级的小男生,他长着两只眼睛,两只耳朵,一个鼻子,一张嘴巴,还有一个略微扁了点儿的脑袋——总之,模样跟旁人没什么两样。可有一样,小丢丢跟旁人不一样,是什么?哭鼻子。没错,很多小朋友都哭过鼻子。
  • 玄灵仙庭

    玄灵仙庭

    这里有武人控制的武林大陆!这里有残酷争斗的修真星球!这里是绚丽多姿的玄灵仙侠世界!天真淳朴的赵安弘,穿越至此,微微煽动他纤细的蝴蝶翅膀……凭着一个平凡华夏青年的见识,掀开了这个世界的进化大幕……带着自己的族群,向着永恒迈进……书友群:959259556
  • 历史第一

    历史第一

    以我手中之剑,为何不能护你周全?沉醉于无敌之姿,终于还是死在你的手里。
  • 神战之未来

    神战之未来

    科技的发展不是为了证明神的存在,而是为了创造神。
  • 回望你我从未走远

    回望你我从未走远

    遇见只是偶然,但有藏着必然。夜很深,爱不绝,心中的那一抹绿风,干涩干涩。感谢生病,让我们遇见,你我总栽成长的路上,不断前进,越过荆棘藤蔓。也许我们都惊叹时光匆匆,想回到曾经的时光,可是我们都回不到原点,因为我们总在路上,总在改变。那是你吗?时常萦绕在我梦中,从未走远。回望你的模样,仍想当初那般美好……风轻轻翻动日记,使她猛然惊醒,恍惚中惘然若失。非要跨过千山万水才能看见他对她的好吗?最后,终究背影成双。
  • 我在异界待了五千年

    我在异界待了五千年

    初心易得,始终难守。当你能在一个平行空间熬过五千年时你就明白了了无敌是多么寂寞...
  • 穿越之倾世恋歌

    穿越之倾世恋歌

    【机灵逗比王妃VS冷漠腹黑王爷】曲潇潇意外穿越成了南越国的小乞丐,为了银子,去花魁选举现场踢馆,却不料,花魁的奖励竟然是到翊王府当王妃,并且暗中为太子打探消息……(场景1)“王爷,王妃把信鸽累死了。”“王妃为了赚钱,真是辛苦了。”“王爷,王妃把小金鱼吃了。”“还不快请太医!”“王爷,王妃夜闯女子闺房。”“什么!?”某王怒,他非把她抓回来不可!(场景2)“太子,不好了,翊王府正在排练新的阵法。”“什么阵法?”“名曰蹦迪。”“杀伤力如何?”“尚且不知,属下观那阵法中人,身姿轻盈,身形灵活,出其不意。”“派人潜伏进去,尽快学回来,以便研究破解之法。”“是。”数日后,太子看着下面一群蹦迪的人。“军师可有破解之法?”“恕臣无能,看不出这阵法的杀招在何处。”太子冷声问一旁的心腹。“翊王府近日请来了何方高人?”“回太子,是新来的翊王妃。”
  • 万界专属外卖员

    万界专属外卖员

    吕布:“我吕奉先从来不尊重谁,但是唯独陈天值得我尊重,尤其是这个美食多么美味啊”华佗:“幸亏有陈天救了老夫一命,但是这么美味的食物,老夫还没吃够呢?”萧薰儿:“陈天哥哥,我还要喝鸡汤”——我是万界专属外卖员陈天,只要你给我发起订单,什么样的食物你都能吃到,别忘了五星好评哦~
  • 赋光者

    赋光者

    身为京城首富之女的宋雪染,在一次前往松延县订购水质丝绸时。意外碰见身系七年前重大命案,正处于被幕后凶手追杀灭口之际的目击证人黄源。危急之中,宋雪染冒险从对方手里救下黄源。然而,在一次夜袭中,为了报答宋雪染的救命之恩,黄源为宋雪染挡了致命一刀。临死前,他将重于生命的信物交给宋雪染,恳请她送到京城丞相之子沈非世手里。本以为送完信物,自己生活就会回到以前那样。但万万没想到的是,她的人生轨迹从她即使违背祖训被逐出族谱,也要完成黄源的嘱托,把信物送到丞相府,亲自交付于沈非世手里的那一刻开始,便走向了另一条荆棘丛生,腥风血雨的冒险旅程。她和沈非世原本是两条互不交错的平衡线,却因一份君子之诺,彼此有了交集。