登陆注册
25463700000016

第16章

"You have a strong will," said Bernard. "I see that."

"No. I have simply a weak mother. But I make sacrifices too, sometimes."

"What do you call sacrifices?"

"Well, spending the winter at Sorrento."

Bernard began to laugh, and then he told her she must have had a very happy life--"to call a winter at Sorrento a sacrifice."

"It depends upon what one gives up," said Miss Vivian.

"What did you give up?"

She touched him with her mocking smile again.

"That is not a very civil question, asked in that way."

"You mean that I seem to doubt your abnegation?"

"You seem to insinuate that I had nothing to renounce. I gave up--I gave up--" and she looked about her, considering a little--"I gave up society."

"I am glad you remember what it was," said Bernard.

"If I have seemed uncivil, let me make it up. When a woman speaks of giving up society, what she means is giving up admiration.

You can never have given up that--you can never have escaped from it.

You must have found it even at Sorrento."

"It may have been there, but I never found it. It was very respectful--it never expressed itself."

"That is the deepest kind," said Bernard.

"I prefer the shallower varieties," the young girl answered.

"Well," said Bernard, "you must remember that although shallow admiration expresses itself, all the admiration that expresses itself is not shallow."

Miss Vivian hesitated a moment.

"Some of it is impertinent," she said, looking straight at him, rather gravely.

Bernard hesitated about as long.

"When it is impertinent it is shallow. That comes to the same thing."

The young girl frowned a little.

"I am not sure that I understand--I am rather stupid.

But you see how right I am in my taste for such places as this.

I have to come here to hear such ingenious remarks."

"You should add that my coming, as well, has something to do with it."

"Everything!" said Miss Vivian.

"Everything? Does no one else make ingenious remarks?

Does n't my friend Wright?"

"Mr. Wright says excellent things, but I should not exactly call them ingenious remarks."

"It is not what Wright says; it 's what he does. That 's the charm!" said Bernard.

His companion was silent for a moment. "That 's not usually a charm; good conduct is not thought pleasing."

"It surely is not thought the reverse!" Bernard exclaimed.

"It does n't rank--in the opinion of most people--among the things that make men agreeable."

"It depends upon what you call agreeable."

"Exactly so," said Miss Vivian. "It all depends on that."

"But the agreeable," Bernard went on--"it is n't after all, fortunately, such a subtle idea! The world certainly is agreed to think that virtue is a beautiful thing."

Miss Vivian dropped her eyes a moment, and then, looking up, "Is it a charm?" she asked.

"For me there is no charm without it," Bernard declared.

"I am afraid that for me there is," said the young girl.

Bernard was puzzled--he who was not often puzzled.

His companion struck him as altogether too clever to be likely to indulge in a silly affectation of cynicism.

And yet, without this, how could one account for her sneering at virtue?

"You talk as if you had sounded the depths of vice!" he said, laughing.

"What do you know about other than virtuous charms?"

"I know, of course, nothing about vice; but I have known virtue when it was very tiresome."

"Ah, then it was a poor affair. It was poor virtue.

The best virtue is never tiresome."

Miss Vivian looked at him a little, with her fine discriminating eye.

"What a dreadful thing to have to think any virtue poor!"

This was a touching reflection, and it might have gone further had not the conversation been interrupted by Mrs. Vivian's appealing to her daughter to aid a defective recollection of a story about a Spanish family they had met at Biarritz, with which she had undertaken to entertain Gordon Wright.

After this, the little circle was joined by a party of American friends who were spending a week at Baden, and the conversation became general.

同类推荐
  • 训世评话

    训世评话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 解老

    解老

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 叙净土往生传

    叙净土往生传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 理智与情感

    理智与情感

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 六十种曲玉环记

    六十种曲玉环记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 契约从欺瞒世界起始

    契约从欺瞒世界起始

    苏阳因为超绝的天赋被赋予“麒麟之才”的称号,然而天之骄子的他一直未能显现契约之种,最终被打落云间,成为平凡人。危机袭来,想要获得力量,普通人苏阳唯有欺骗诸天与世界,订立虚假的契约。
  • 生活故事101

    生活故事101

    生活就是这么牛逼生活就是这么牛批生活就是这么牛逼
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 静静的命运

    静静的命运

    小镇上的平凡小佣兵,随着命运的流淌,驶向远方。
  • 厚黑学

    厚黑学

    作为民国第一奇书,而且是台北国立图书馆镇馆之宝,八十年代畅销于台湾、香港和日本。那么此书奇在何处,宝在何处,为何畅销?作者李宗吾以“正话反说”的形式,把中国历代“明君”、“圣人”脸上画的、头上蒙的那些仁义道德撕扯得干干净净,并统一地给他们一个新的定义“厚黑”。厚黑,简单说就是面厚心黑而已。刘邦因为厚黑而得天下,曹刘孙因为厚黑而三分天下,李世民因为厚黑而坐上皇位,由此可见,这些明君们的“发家史”其实就是“厚黑史”。而所谓的“圣人”也是因时势而造,因为汉武帝尊儒,所以孔子所推崇的人连同他自己就都成了圣人,如果汉武帝尊的是道家或法家,那么圣人们就又要换个名单。李宗吾文笔犀利、言语辛辣,以超凡绝世的思想深度,看透这埋藏数千年的封建历史之根本,并写诸笔端,将其大白于天下,这番高论甚至比鲁迅还要早。由此观之,李宗吾不愧为“二十世纪十大奇才怪杰”之一,也无愧于“近代之新圣人”的称号。
  • 假如可以从来

    假如可以从来

    在她23时,发生了一次意外,一场大雨,让她失去了爱人,父母,朋友,面对敌人的嘲笑,最后她走向自杀,如果,可以重来,她是否会选择离开,或复仇,她的一生…………
  • 哭过的天空

    哭过的天空

    《哭过的天空》是《晴空》的姊妹篇,整个故事匠心独具,从男女主人公人称视角分章落笔,叙述手法精到,骨架干净,血肉丰满,既关注人物的命运,又体察人物的内心。通过对张扬热烈的青春的描写,体现了在亲情缺失的青少年内心渴望爱与被爱的强烈愿望。他们单纯,他们善良,他们果敢,他们无畏,他们热爱生命,他们珍惜所有。合上后一页,从心底萌生而出一种叫感动的情愫。相信你也会。
  • 太可笑了

    太可笑了

    这是一对父子的故事,是情感其深的,是都市生活的
  • 狼督军

    狼督军

    皇帝退位天下为公?不料却土匪横行!为保家业他走出书房,除内贼,杀土匪,剿灭黑风寨!家业已保,却山河破碎,亡国在即,于是他招兵买马征战各大军阀,凭着铁血手段与机智权谋成为一代督军,奋战在这轰轰烈烈的大时代之中……
  • 吾家流氓

    吾家流氓

    像傅梓耀这种任性、蛮横、专断到简直是个流氓的男人,遇见他真是上帝对女人最大的惩罚,在他底下工作更是无比考验与折磨。她完全了解这个可怕性,所以一再地闪避他,偏偏他就是不如她的意,硬要逮她来跟前亲自苦练她,既然躲不掉了,那么她怕也没用,要知道她黎真叶也不是个简单的角色……