English 版 (精华区)
发信人: vincent (GiGi), 信区: English
标 题: The Diamond as Big as the Ritz
发信站: 大红花的国度 (Tue Jun 13 09:59:16 2000), 转信
发信人: tanso (哑哑·卖身求荣), 信区: EnglishWorld
标 题: THE DIAMOND AS BIG AS THE RITZ (5)
发信站: BBS 水木清华站 (Sat Jan 1 23:46:34 2000)
IV
AFTER BREAKFAST, John found his way out the great marble entrance and looked
curiously at the scene before him. The whole valley, from the diamond
mountain to the steep granite cliff five miles away, still gave off a breath
of golden haze which hovered
idly above the fine sweep of lawns and lakes and gardens. Here and there
clusters of elms made delicate groves of shade, contrasting strangely with
the tough masses of pine forest that held the hills in a grip of dark-blue
green. Even as John looked he
saw three fawns in single file patter out from one clump about a half mile
away and disappear with awkward gayety into the black-ribbed half-light of
another. John would not have been surprised to see a goat-foot piping his way
among the trees or to
catch a glimpse of pink nymph-skin and flying yellow hair between the
greenest of the green leaves.
In some such cool hope he descended the marble steps, disturbing faintly the
sleep of two silky Russian wolfhounds at the bottom, and set off along a walk
of white and blue brick that seemed to lead in no particular direction.
He was enjoying himself as much as he was able. It is youth's felicity as
well as its insufficiency that it can never live in the present, but must
always be measuring up the day against its own radiantly imagined
future--flowers and gold, girls and
stars, they are only prefigurations and prophecies of that incomparable,
unattainable young dream.
John rounded a soft corner where the massed rose-bushes filled the air with
heavy scent, and struck off across a park toward a patch of moss under some
trees. He had never lain upon moss, and he wanted to see whether it was
really soft enough to
justify the use of its name as an adjective. Then he saw a girl coming toward
him over the grass. She was the most beautiful person he had ever seen
She was dressed in a white little gown that came just below her knees, and a
wreath of mignonettes clasped with blue slices of sapphire bound up her hair.
Her pink bare feet scattered the dew before them as she came. She was younger
than John--not more
than sixteen.
"Hello," she cried softly, "I'm Kismine."
She was much more than that to John already. He advanced toward her, scarcely
moving as he drew near lest he should tread on her bare toes.
"You haven't met me," said her soft voice. Her blue eyes added, "Oh, but
you've missed a great deal!" . . . "You met my sister, Jasmine, last night. I
was sick with lettuce poisoning," went on her soft voice, and her eyes
continued, "and when I'm sick
I'm sweet--and when I'm well."
"You have made an enormous impression on me," said John's eyes, "and I'm not
so slow myself"--"How do you do?" said his voice. "I hope you're better this
morning."--"You darling," added his eyes tremulously.
John observed that they had been walking along the path. On her suggestion
they sat down together upon the moss, the softness of which he failed to
determine.
He was critical about women. A single defect--a thick ankle, a hoarse voice,
a glass eye--was enough to make him utterly indifferent. And here for the
first time in his life he was beside a girl who seemed to him the incarnation
of physical perfection.
"Are you from the East?" asked Kismine with charming interest.
"No," answered John simply. "I'm from Hades."
Either she had never heard of Hades, or she could think of no pleasant
comment to make upon it, for she did not discuss it further.
"I'm going East to school this fall," she said. "D'you think I'll like it?
I'm going to New York to Miss Bulge's. It's very strict, but you see over the
weekends I'm going to live at home with the family in our New York house,
because father heard that
the girls had to go walking two by two."
"Your father wants you to be proud," observed John.
"We are," she answered, her eyes shining with dignity."None of us has ever
been punished. Father said we never should be. Once when my sister Jasmine
was a little girl she pushed him down-stairs and he just got up and limped
away.
"Mother was--well, a little startled," continued Kismine, "when she heard
that you were from--from where you are from, you know. She said that when she
was a young girl--but then, you see, she's a Spaniard and old-fashioned."
"Do you spend much time out here?" asked John, to conceal the fact that he
was somewhat hurt by this remark. It seemed an unkind allusion to his
provincialism.
"Percy and Jasmine and I are here every summer, but next summer Jasmine is
going to Newport. She's coming out in London a year from this fall. She'll be
presented at court."
"Do you know, " began John hesitantly, "you're much more sophisticated than I
thought you were when I first saw you?"
"Oh, no, I'm not," she exclaimed hurriedly. "Oh, I wouldn't think of being. I
think that sophisticated young people are terriblycommon, don't you? I'm not
at all, really. If you say I am, I'm going to cry."
She was so distressed that her lip was trembling. John was impelled to
protest:
I didn't mean that; I only said it to tease you."
"Because I wouldn't mind if I were," she persisted. "but I'm not. I'm very
innocent and girlish. I never smoke, or drink, or read anything except
poetry. I know scarcely any mathematics or chemistry. I dress very simply--in
fact, I scarcely dress at
all. I think sophisticated is the last thing you can say about me. I believe
that girls ought to enjoy their youths in a wholesome way."
"I do, too," said John heartily.
Kismine was cheerful again. She smiled at him, and a still-born tear dripped
from the corner of one blue eye.
"I like you," she whispered, intimately. "Are you going to spend all your
time with Percy while you're here, or will you be nice to me. Just think--I'm
absolutely fresh ground. I've never had a boy in love with me in all my life.
I've never been
allowed even to see boys alone--except Percy. I came all the way out here
into this grove hoping to run into you, where the family wouldn't be around.
Deeply flattered, John bowed from the hips as he had been taught at dancing
school in Hades.
"We'd better go now," said Kismine sweetly. "I have to be with mother at
eleven. You haven't asked me to kiss you once. I thought boys always did that
nowadays."
John drew himself up proudly.
"Some of them do," he answered, "but not me. Girls don't do that sort of
thing--in Hades."
Side by side they walked back toward the house.
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tanso最大的愿望,就是在明年夏天,和一个穿着
裙子的女孩吃饭……
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