eugene pickering-第6部分
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in them that he had never seen in any others。 〃It was a jumble of
crudities and inanities;〃 he went on; 〃they must have seemed to her
great rubbish; but I felt the wiser and the stronger; somehow; for
having fired off all my gunsthey could hurt nobody now if they hit…
…and I imagine I might have gone far without finding another woman in
whom such an exhibition would have provoked so little of mere cold
amusement。〃
〃Madame Blumenthal; on the contrary;〃 I surmised; 〃entered into your
situation with warmth。〃
〃Exactly sothe greatest! She has felt and suffered; and now she
understands!〃
〃She told you; I imagine; that she understood you as if she had made
you; and she offered to be your guide; philosopher; and friend。〃
〃She spoke to me;〃 Pickering answered; after a pause; 〃as I had never
been spoken to before; and she offered me; formally; all the offices
of a woman's friendship。〃
〃Which you as formally accepted?〃
〃To you the scene sounds absurd; I suppose; but allow me to say I
don't care!〃 Pickering spoke with an air of genial defiance which
was the most inoffensive thing in the world。 〃I was very much moved;
I was; in fact; very much excited。 I tried to say something; but I
couldn't; I had had plenty to say before; but now I stammered and
bungled; and at last I bolted out of the room。〃
〃Meanwhile she had dropped her tragedy into your pocket!〃
〃Not at all。 I had seen it on the table before she came in。
Afterwards she kindly offered to read German aloud with me; for the
accent; two or three times a week。 'What shall we begin with?' she
asked。 'With this!' I said; and held up the book。 And she let me
take it to look it over。〃
I was neither a cynic nor a satirist; but even if I had been; I might
have been disarmed by Pickering's assurance; before we parted; that
Madame Blumenthal wished to know me and expected him to introduce me。
Among the foolish things which; according to his own account; he had
uttered; were some generous words in my praise; to which she had
civilly replied。 I confess I was curious to see her; but I begged
that the introduction should not be immediate; for I wished to let
Pickering work out his destiny alone。 For some days I saw little of
him; though we met at the Kursaal and strolled occasionally in the
park。 I watched; in spite of my desire to let him alone; for the
signs and portents of the world's action upon himof that portion of
the world; in especial; of which Madame Blumenthal had constituted
herself the agent。 He seemed very happy; and gave me in a dozen ways
an impression of increased self…confidence and maturity。 His mind
was admirably active; and always; after a quarter of an hour's talk
with him; I asked myself what experience could really do; that
innocence had not done; to make it bright and fine。 I was struck
with his deep enjoyment of the whole spectacle of foreign lifeits
novelty; its picturesqueness; its light and shadeand with the
infinite freedom with which he felt he could go and come and rove and
linger and observe it all。 It was an expansion; an awakening; a
coming to moral manhood。 Each time I met him he spoke a little less
of Madame Blumenthal; but he let me know generally that he saw her
often; and continued to admire her。 I was forced to admit to myself;
in spite of preconceptions; that if she were really the ruling star
of this happy season; she must be a very superior woman。 Pickering
had the air of an ingenuous young philosopher sitting at the feet of
an austere muse; and not of a sentimental spendthrift dangling about
some supreme incarnation of levity。
CHAPTER II。
Madame Blumenthal seemed; for the time; to have abjured the Kursaal;
and I never caught a glimpse of her。 Her young friend; apparently;
was an interesting study; and the studious mind prefers seclusion。
She reappeared; however; at last; one evening at the opera; where
from my chair I perceived her in a box; looking extremely pretty。
Adelina Patti was singing; and after the rising of the curtain I was
occupied with the stage; but on looking round when it fell for the
entr'acte; I saw that the authoress of 〃Cleopatra〃 had been joined by
her young admirer。 He was sitting a little behind her; leaning
forward; looking over her shoulder and listening; while she; slowly
moving her fan to and fro and letting her eye wander over the house;
was apparently talking of this person and that。 No doubt she was
saying sharp things; but Pickering was not laughing; his eyes were
following her covert indications; his mouth was half open; as it
always was when he was interested; he looked intensely serious。 I
was glad that; having her back to him; she was unable to see how he
looked。 It seemed the proper moment to present myself and make her
my bow; but just as I was about to leave my place a gentleman; whom
in a moment I perceived to be an old acquaintance; came to occupy the
next chair。 Recognition and mutual greetings followed; and I was
forced to postpone my visit to Madame Blumenthal。 I was not sorry;
for it very soon occurred to me that Niedermeyer would be just the
man to give me a fair prose version of Pickering's lyric tributes to
his friend。 He was an Austrian by birth; and had formerly lived
about Europe a great deal in a series of small diplomatic posts。
England especially he had often visited; and he spoke the language
almost without accent。 I had once spent three rainy days with him in
the house of an English friend in the country。 He was a sharp
observer; and a good deal of a gossip; he knew a little something
about every one; and about some people everything。 His knowledge on
social matters generally had the quality of all German science; it
was copious; minute; exhaustive。
〃Do tell me;〃 I said; as we stood looking round the house; 〃who and
what is the lady in white; with the young man sitting behind her。〃
〃Who?〃 he answered; dropping his glass。 〃Madame Blumenthal! What!
It would take long to say。 Be introduced; it's easily done; you will
find her charming。 Then; after a week; you will tell me what she
is。〃
〃Perhaps I should not。 My friend there has known her a week; and I
don't think he is yet able to give a coherent account of her。〃
He raised his glass again; and after looking a while; 〃I am afraid
your friend is a littlewhat do you call it?a little 'soft。' Poor
fellow! he's not the first。 I have never known this lady that she
has not had some eligible youth hovering about in some such attitude
as that; undergoing the softening process。 She looks wonderfully
well; from here。 It's extraordinary how those women last!〃
〃You don't mean; I take it; when you talk about 'those women;' that
Madame Blumenthal is not embalmed; for duration; in a certain
infusion of respectability?〃
〃Yes and no。 The atmosphere that surrounds her is entirely of her
own making。 There is no reason in her antecedents that people should
drop their voice when they speak of her。 But some women are never at
their ease till they have given some damnable twist or other to their
position before the world。 The attitude of upright virtue is
unbecoming; like sitting too straight in a fauteuil。 Don't ask me
for opinions; however; content yourself with a few facts and with an
anecdote。 Madame Blumenthal is Prussian; and very well born。 I
remember her mother; an old Westphalian Grafin; with principles
marshalled out like Frederick the Great's grenadiers。 She was poor;
however; and her principles were an insufficient dowry for Anastasia;
who was married very young to a vicious Jew; twice her own age。 He
was supposed to have money; but I am afraid he had less than was
nominated in the bond; or else that his pretty young wife spent it
very fast。 She has been a widow these six or eight years; and has
lived; I imagine; in rather a hand…to…mouth fashion。 I suppose she
is some six or eight and thirty years of age。 In winter one hears of
her in Berlin; giving little suppers to the artistic rabble there; in
summer one often sees her across the green table at Ems and
Wiesbaden。 She's very clever; and her cleverness has spoiled her。 A
year after her marriage she published a novel; with her views on
matrimony; in the George Sand mannerbeating the drum to Madame
Sand's trumpet。 No doubt she was very unhappy; Blumenthal was an old
beast。 Since then she has published a lot of literaturenovels and
poems and pamphlets on every conceivable theme; from the conversion
of Lola Montez to the Hegelian philosophy。 Her talk is much better
than her writing。 Her conjugophobiaI can't call it by any other
namemade people think lightly of her at a time when her rebellion
against marriage was probably only theoretic。 She had a taste for
spinning fine phrases; she drove her shuttle; and when she came to
the end of her yarn she found that society had turned its back。 She
tossed her head; declared that at last she could breathe the sacred
air of freedom; and formally announced that she had embraced an
'intellectual' life。 This meant unlimited camaraderie with
scribblers and daubers; Hegelian philosophers and Hungarian pianists。
But she has been admired also by a great many really clever men;
there was a time; in fact; when she turned a head as well set on its
shoulders as this one!〃 And Niedermeyer tapped his forehead。 〃She
has a great charm; and; literally; I know no harm of her。 Yet for
all that; I am not going to speak to her; I am not going near her
box。 I am going to leave her to say; if she does me the honour to
observe the omission; that I too have gone over to the Philistines。
It's not that; it is that there is something sinister about the
woman。 I am too old for it to frighten me; but I am good…natured
enough for it to pain me。 Her quarrel with society has brought her
no happiness; and her outward charm i