- Libros en formato ePub -
The
Sacred Fount
IT was an
occasion, I felt—the prospect of a large party—to
look out at the station for others, possible
friends and even possible enemies, who might be
going. Such premonitions, it was true, bred
fears when they failed to breed hopes, though it
was to be added that there were sometimes, in
the case, rather happy ambiguities. One was
glowered at, in the compartment, by people who
on the morrow, after breakfast, were to prove
charming; one was spoken to first by people
whose sociability was subsequently to show as
bleak; and one built with confidence on others
who were never to reappear at all—who were only
going to Birmingham. As soon as I saw Gilbert
Long, some way up the platform, however, I knew
him as an element. It was not so much that the
wish was father to the thought as that I
remembered having already more than once met him
at Newmarch. He was a friend of the house—he
wouldn't be going to Birmingham. I so little
expected him, at the same time, to recognise me
that I stopped short of the carriage near which
he stood—I looked for a seat that wouldn't make
us neighbours...
 The
Awkward Age
Save when it happened to rain Vanderbank
always walked home, but he usually took a hansom
when the rain was moderate and adopted the
preference of the philosopher when it was heavy.
On this occasion he therefore recognised as the
servant opened the door a congruity between the
weather and the “four-wheeler” that, in the
empty street, under the glazed radiance, waited
and trickled and blackly glittered. The butler
mentioned it as on such a wild night the only
thing they could get, and Vanderbank, having
replied that it was exactly what would do best,
prepared in the doorway to put up his umbrella
and dash down to it. At this moment he heard his
name pronounced from behind and on turning found
himself joined by the elderly fellow guest with
whom he had talked after dinner and about whom
later on upstairs he had sounded his hostess. It
was at present a clear question of how this
amiable, this apparently unassertive person
should get home—of the possibility of the other
cab for which even now one of the footmen, with
a whistle to his lips, craned out his head and
listened through the storm. Mr. Longdon wondered
to Vanderbank if their course might by any
chance be the same; which led our young friend
immediately to express a readiness to see him
safely in any direction that should accommodate
him. As the footman’s whistle spent itself in
vain they got together into the four-wheeler,
where at the end of a few moments more
Vanderbank became conscious of having proposed
his own rooms as a wind-up to their drive.
Wouldn’t that be a better finish of the evening
than just separating in the wet? He liked his
new acquaintance, who struck him as in a manner
clinging to him, who was staying at an hotel
presumably at that hour dismal, and who,
confessing with easy humility to a connexion
positively timid with a club at which one
couldn’t have a visitor, accepted his invitation
under pressure. Vanderbank, when they arrived,
was amused at the air of added extravagance with
which he said he would keep the cab: he so
clearly enjoyed to that extent the sense of
making a night of it. “You young men, I believe,
keep them for hours, eh? At least they did in my
time,” he laughed—“the wild ones! But I think of
them as all wild then. I dare say that when one
settles in town one learns how to manage; only
I’m afraid, you know, that I’ve got completely
out of it. I do feel really quite mouldy. It’s a
matter of thirty years—!”...

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