Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Victor fancied he must have shuddered when he passed by Jarniman at the door, who was almost now seeing his mistress’s ghost—­would have the privilege to-morrow.  He called a cab and drove to Mrs. John Cormyn’s, at Nataly’s request, for Nesta and mademoiselle:  enjoying the Londonized odour of the cab.  Nataly did not respond to his warm and continued eulogies of Mrs. Burman; she rather disappointed him.  He talked of the gold and white furniture, he just alluded to the Cupid:  reserving his mental comment, that the time-piece was all astray, the Cupid regular on the swing:—­strange, touching, terrible, if really the silly gilt figure symbolized! . . .  And we are a silly figure to be sitting in a cab imagining such things!—­When Nesta and mademoiselle were opposite, he had the pleasure to see Nataly take Nesta’s hand and hold it until they reached home.  Those two talking together in the brief words of their deep feeling, had tones that were singularly alike:  the mezzo-soprano filial to the divine maternal contralto.  Those two dear ones mounted to Nataly’s room.

The two dear ones showed themselves heart in heart together once more; each looked the happier for it.  Dartrey was among their dinner-guests, and Nataly took him to her little blue-room before she went to bed.  He did not speak of their conversation to Victor, but counselled him to keep her from excitement.  ’My dear fellow, if you had seen her with Mrs. Burman!’ Victor said, and loudly praised her coolness.  She was never below a situation, he affirmed.

He followed his own counsel to humour his Nataly.  She began panting at a word about Mr. Barmby’s ready services.  When, however, she related the state of affairs between Dartrey and Nesta, by the avowal of each of them to her, he said, embracing her:  ‘Your wisdom shall guide us, my love,’ and almost extinguished a vexation by concealing it.

She sighed:  ’If one could think, that a girl with Nesta’s revolutionary ideas of the duties of women, and their powers, would be safe—­or at all rightly guided by a man who is both one of the noblest and the wildest in the ideas he entertains!’

Victor sighed too.  He saw the earldom, which was to dazzle the gossips, crack on the sky in a futile rocket-bouquet.

She was distressed; she moaned:  ’My girl! my girl:  I should wish to leave her with one who is more fixed—­the old-fashioned husband.  New ideas must come in politics, but in Society!—­and for women!  And the young having heads, are the most endangered.  Nesta vows her life to it!  Dartrey supports her!’

‘See Colney,’ said Victor.  ’Odd, Colney does you good; some queer way he has.  Though you don’t care for his rival tongues,—­and the last number was funny, with Semhians on the Pacific, impressively addressing a farewell to his cricket-bat, before he whirls it away to Neptune—­and the blue hand of his nation’s protecting God observed to seize it!—­Dead failure with the public, of course!  However, he seems to seem wise with you.  The poor old fellow gets his trouncing from the critics monthly.  See Colney to-morrow, my love.  Now go to sleep.  We have got over the worst.  I speak at my Meeting to-morrow and am a champagne-bottle of notes and points for them.’

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.