登陆注册
37373200000002

第2章

At the time with which we are now concerned Ferdinand Lopez was thirty-three years old, and as he had begun life early he had been long before the world.It was known of him that he had been at a good English private school, and it was reported, on the solitary evidence of one of who had been there as his schoolfellow, that a rumour was current in the school that his school bills were paid by an old gentleman who was not related to him.Thence, at the age of seventeen, he had been sent to a German university, and at the age of twenty-one had appeared in London, in a stockbroker's office, where he was soon known as an accomplished linguist, and as a very clever fellow,--precocious, not given to many pleasures, apt for work, but considered hardly trustworthy by employers, not as being dishonest, but as having a taste for being a master rather than a servant.Indeed his period of servitude was very short.It was not in his nature to be active on behalf of others.He was soon active for himself, and at one time it was supposed that he was ****** a fortune.

Then it was known that he had left his regular business, and it was supposed that he had lost all that he had ever made or had ever possessed.But nobody, not even his own bankers, or his own lawyer,--not even the old woman who looked after his linen,--ever really knew the state of his affairs.

He was certainly a handsome man,--his beauty being of a sort which men are apt to deny and women to admit lavishly.He was nearly six feet tall, very dark and very thin, with regular well-cut features, indicating little to the physiognomist unless it be the great gift of self-possession.His hair was cut short, and he wore no beard beyond an absolutely black moustache.His teeth were perfect, in form and in whiteness,--a characteristic which though it may be a valued item in a general catalogue of personal attraction, does not generally recommend a man to the unconscious judgment of his acquaintance.But about the mouth and chin of this man there was a something of a softness, perhaps in the play of his lips, perhaps in the dimple, which in some degree lessened the feeling of hardness which was produced by the square brow and bold, unflinching, combative eyes.They who knew him and like him were reconciled by the lower face.The greater number who knew him and did not like him, felt and resented,--even though in nine cases out of ten they might, express no resentment even to themselves,--the pugnacity of his steady glance.

For he was essentially one of those men who are always, in the inner workings of their minds, defending themselves and attacking others.He could not give a penny to a woman at a crossing without a look which argued at full length her injustice in ****** her demand, and his ******* from all liability let him walk the crossing as often as he might.He could not seat himself in a railway carriage without a lesson to his opposite neighbour that in all the mutual affairs of travelling, arrangement of feet, disposition of bags, and opening of windows, it would be that neighbour's duty to submit and his to exact.It was, however, for the spirit rather than for the thing itself that he combatted.The woman with the broom got her penny.The opposite gentleman when once by a glance he had expressed submission was allowed his own way with the legs and with the window.I would not say that Ferdinand Lopez was prone to do ill-natured things; but he was imperious, and he had learned to carry his empire in his eye.

The reader must submit to be told one or two further and still smaller details respecting the man, and then the man shall be allowed to make his own way.No one of those around him knew how much care he took to dress himself well, or how careful he was that no one should know it.His very tailor regarded him as being simply extravagant in the number of his coats and trousers, and his friends looked upon him as one of those fortunate beings to whose nature belongs a facility of being well dressed, or almost an impossibility of being ill dressed.We all know the man,--a little man generally, who moves seldom and softly,--who looks always as though he had just been sent home in a bandbox.

Ferdinand Lopez was not a little man, and moved freely enough;but never, at any moment,--going into the city or coming out of it, on horseback or on foot, at home over his book or after the mazes of the dance,--was he dressed otherwise than with perfect care.Money and time did it, but folk thought that it grew with him, as did his hair and his nails.And he always rode a horse which charmed good judges of what a park nag should be;--not a prancing, restless, giggling, sideway-going, useless garran, but an animal well made, well bitted, with perfect paces, on whom a rider if it pleased him could be as quiet as a statue in a monument.It often did please Ferdinand Lopez to be quiet on horseback; and yet he did not look like a statue, for it was acknowledged through all London that he was a good horseman.He lived luxuriously too,--though whether at his ease or not nobody knew,--for he kept a brougham of his own, and during the hunting season, he had two horses down at Leighton.There had once been a belief abroad that he was ruined, but they who interest themselves in such matters had found out,--or at any rate believed that they had found out,--that he paid his tailor regularly: and now there prevailed an opinion that Ferdinand Lopez was a monied man.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 重生八零:老公,超A的!

    重生八零:老公,超A的!

    时千不懂,为什么原主要放着眼前这么个帅得令人血脉上涌,鼻血直流,分分钟腿软的小哥哥不要,去喜欢厂子里那么个小白脸!既然老天让她霸占她的身体重活一遭,那这个男人她就“勉为其难”的收下好了!唐御不懂,为什么之前动不动就一哭二闹三上吊说离婚的女人,现在天天逼着让他亲亲抱抱举高高……一句话简介:这是一个重回八零年代,升职加薪、当上总经理、出任CEO、和黑富帅生一堆胖娃娃、自此走上人生巅峰的故事!
  • 最后的皇后

    最后的皇后

    末代皇后郭布罗?婉容,与世隔绝及离群索居的宫廷内景,社会动荡带给她的心灵冲击,生活变故带给她的巨大的震动,失去人身自由的流亡生活给她造成的巨大精神创伤,使她的一生极富变化和戏剧性,同时也使她的人性开始了异化,她陷入了深层的内心痛苦和重围中无法自拔,是万恶的封建王朝和日本侵略者将她推向了历史的深渊,婉容的一生是悲剧的一生。而21世纪刚刚毕业的女大学生来到这里,成为了这个被历史抛弃的悲情女主,为了摆脱命运的安排,她绞尽脑汁,凭借着对历史熟悉的先知先觉和智慧求取从容人生。
  • T字路口

    T字路口

    有的人,走着走着就散了有的情,磨着磨着就断了缘有尽时,聚有散时。幸好,驶向未来的列车上,某个站点,那个对的人上了车。还好,她不是一个人,走人生的下半程…………“怎么最后,就选了他了?”“大概是因为,看到他,就像看见阳光吧。”“真的决定了?”“我清楚我在做什么”……她觉得这辈子很幸运。有人帮她找回自信,有人给了她追求幸福的勇气,有人陪她阅尽繁华……
  • 听闻花未眠

    听闻花未眠

    庑望林海的风吹不散商山渡的雾,沂澜山的月照不进荒神墟的黑夜,燕都山的烈阳融不化昆仑山的雪。潇潇:你还有来生,希望你不要再遇到我,这样,你就可以一生康健无虞,平安喜乐,我还有余生,可以记得你,不失不忘。安闲:我要她,也要不负这天下。纪辞歆:我能够遇见她,不止是我的幸运,而且是我的命运。顾扶偃:我能够为她揽尽天下财富,也能够为她散尽千金。沈仪:这一隅茅草屋,有我,有他,即使屋漏雨淋,亦心生欢喜。牧北辰:我们都是沧海中飞翔的鱼,渺小到可悲,可叹。凤歌:我忠诚于我的信仰,我从未忘记,也从未改变。《叶戈先生的小飞侠呀。》
  • 你是人间四月天a

    你是人间四月天a

    你说过的不会离开我的可是你骗了我以后我还能相信你吧
  • 记忆:一九八四~二〇一四诗选

    记忆:一九八四~二〇一四诗选

    “朦胧诗”的重要诗人之一。诗风较之其他几位代表性诗人更为平易轻淡,但自有其独特追求和隽永意味。此诗集所辑作品跨度凡三十年,较为全面地反映了作者的心路历程和创作实绩。作者简介林莽(1949—)原名张建中。在北京上小学、中学。1969年到河北白洋淀插队,同年开始诗歌写作,“白洋淀诗歌群落”代表诗人之一。1975年回到北京,曾在中学和大学任教,1992年到中国作协中华文学基金会文学部工作,1998年到《诗刊》工作。著有诗集《林莽的诗》、《我流过这片土地》、《永恒的瞬间》、《林莽诗选》、《林莽诗歌精品集》等七部。另有诗文合集《穿透岁月的光芒》、随笔集《时间瞬间成为以往》、《林莽诗画集》等。
  • 异界召唤与合成

    异界召唤与合成

    我穿越了??这是什么??召唤与合成??异界外挂啊,嘿嘿,我喜欢。
  • 弑天剑道

    弑天剑道

    一个天资纵横的少年,看得透生死,领悟得到任何剑法,却始终看不透女人,领悟不通爱情,因爱失忆。五年时间,受尽人世冷暖,终有一朝觉醒,以情入道。重拾剑道,续天才之路,三尺青锋在手,问天下何人敢战?
  • 一汀烟雨慰风尘

    一汀烟雨慰风尘

    还有白驹过隙的那些年致我们致那些被我们搅的乱七八糟的日子BGM.[heretous]
  • 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!