The Golden Bowl — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 664 pages of information about The Golden Bowl — Complete.

The Golden Bowl — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 664 pages of information about The Golden Bowl — Complete.
it—­or, rather, positively to conceal it, and to conceal something more as well—­turned short round to one of the windows and awkwardly, pointlessly waited.  “The largest of the three pieces has the rare peculiarity that the garlands, looped round it, which, as you see, are the finest possible vieux Saxe, are not of the same origin or period, or even, wonderful as they are, of a taste quite so perfect.  They have been put on at a later time, by a process of which there are very few examples, and none so important as this, which is really quite unique—­so that, though the whole thing is a little baroque, its value as a specimen is, I believe, almost inestimable.”

So the high voice quavered, aiming truly at effects far over the heads of gaping neighbours; so the speaker, piling it up, sticking at nothing, as less interested judges might have said, seemed to justify the faith with which she was honoured.  Maggie meanwhile, at the window, knew the strangest thing to be happening:  she had turned suddenly to crying, or was at least on the point of it—­the lighted square before her all blurred and dim.  The high voice went on; its quaver was doubtless for conscious ears only, but there were verily thirty seconds during which it sounded, for our young woman, like the shriek of a soul in pain.  Kept up a minute longer it would break and collapse—­so that Maggie felt herself, the next thing, turn with a start to her father.  “Can’t she be stopped?  Hasn’t she done it enough?”—­ some such question as that she let herself ask him to suppose in her.  Then it was that, across half the gallery—­for he had not moved from where she had first seen him—­he struck her as confessing, with strange tears in his own eyes, to sharp identity of emotion.  “Poor thing, poor thing”—­it reached straight—­ “Isn’t she, for one’s credit, on the swagger?” After which, as, held thus together they had still another strained minute, the shame, the pity, the better knowledge, the smothered protest, the divined anguish even, so overcame him that, blushing to his eyes, he turned short away.  The affair but of a few muffled moments, this snatched communion yet lifted Maggie as on air—­so much, for deep guesses on her own side too, it gave her to think of.  There was, honestly, an awful mixture in things, and it was not closed to her aftersense of such passages—­we have already indeed, in other cases, seen it open—­that the deepest depth of all, in a perceived penalty, was that you couldn’t be sure some of your compunctions and contortions wouldn’t show for ridiculous.  Amerigo, that morning, for instance, had been as absent as he at this juncture appeared to desire he should mainly be noted as being; he had gone to London for the day and the night—­a necessity that now frequently rose for him and that he had more than once suffered to operate during the presence of guests, successions of pretty women, the theory of his fond interest in whom had been publicly cultivated. 

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Project Gutenberg
The Golden Bowl — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.