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a laodicean-第38部分

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representative。

In Sir William's villa were small engravings after many of the
portraits in the castle galleries; some of them hanging in the
dining…room in plain oak and maple frames; and others
preserved in portfolios。  De Stancy spent much of his time
over these; and in getting up the romances of their originals'
lives from memoirs and other records; all which stories were
as great novelties to him as they could possibly be to any
stranger。  Most interesting to him was the life of an Edward
De Stancy; who had lived just before the Civil Wars; and to
whom Captain De Stancy bore a very traceable likeness。  This
ancestor had a mole on his cheek; black and distinct as a fly
in cream; and as in the case of the first Lord Amherst's wart;
and Bennet Earl of Arlington's nose…scar; the painter had
faithfully reproduced the defect on canvas。  It so happened
that the captain had a mole; though not exactly on the same
spot of his face; and this made the resemblance still greater。

He took infinite trouble with his dress that day; showing an
amount of anxiety on the matter which for him was quite
abnormal。  At last; when fully equipped; he set out with his
sister to make the call proposed。  Charlotte was rather
unhappy at sight of her brother's earnest attempt to make an
impression on Paula; but she could say nothing against it; and
they proceeded on their way。

It was the darkest of November weather; when the days are so
short that morning seems to join with evening without the
intervention of noon。  The sky was lined with low cloud;
within whose dense substance tempests were slowly fermenting
for the coming days。  Even now a windy turbulence troubled the
half…naked boughs; and a lonely leaf would occasionally spin
downwards to rejoin on the grass the scathed multitude of its
comrades which had preceded it in its fall。  The river by the
pavilion; in the summer so clear and purling; now slid onwards
brown and thick and silent; and enlarged to double size。



II。

Meanwhile Paula was alone。  Of anyone else it would have been
said that she must be finding the afternoon rather dreary in
the quaint halls not of her forefathers:  but of Miss Power it
was unsafe to predicate so surely。  She walked from room to
room in a black velvet dress which gave decision to her
outline without depriving it of softness。  She occasionally
clasped her hands behind her head and looked out of a window;
but she more particularly bent her footsteps up and down the
Long Gallery; where she had caused a large fire of logs to be
kindled; in her endeavour to extend cheerfulness somewhat
beyond the precincts of the sitting…rooms。

The fire glanced up on Paula; and Paula glanced down at the
fire; and at the gnarled beech fuel; and at the wood…lice
which ran out from beneath the bark to the extremity of the
logs as the heat approached them。  The low…down ruddy light
spread over the dark floor like the setting sun over a moor;
fluttering on the grotesque countenances of the bright
andirons; and touching all the furniture on the underside。

She now and then crossed to one of the deep embrasures of the
windows; to decipher some sentence from a letter she held in
her hand。  The daylight would have been more than sufficient
for any bystander to discern that the capitals in that letter
were of the peculiar semi…gothic type affected at the time by
Somerset and other young architects of his school in their
epistolary correspondence。  She was very possibly thinking of
him; even when not reading his letter; for the expression of
softness with which she perused the page was more or less with
her when she appeared to examine other things。

She walked about for a little time longer; then put away the
letter; looked at the clock; and thence returned to the
windows; straining her eyes over the landscape without; as she
murmured; 'I wish Charlotte was not so long coming!'

As Charlotte continued to keep away; Paula became less
reasonable in her desires; and proceeded to wish that Somerset
would arrive; then that anybody would come; then; walking
towards the portraits on the wall; she flippantly asked one of
those cavaliers to oblige her fancy for company by stepping
down from his frame。  The temerity of the request led her to
prudently withdraw it almost as soon as conceived:  old
paintings had been said to play queer tricks in extreme cases;
and the shadows this afternoon were funereal enough for
anything in the shape of revenge on an intruder who embodied
the antagonistic modern spirit to such an extent as she。
However; Paula still stood before the picture which had
attracted her; and this; by a coincidence common enough in
fact; though scarcely credited in chronicles; happened to be
that one of the seventeenth…century portraits of which De
Stancy had studied the engraved copy at Myrtle Villa the same
morning。

Whilst she remained before the picture; wondering her
favourite wonder; how would she feel if this and its
accompanying canvases were pictures of her own ancestors; she
was surprised by a light footstep upon the carpet which
covered part of the room; and turning quickly she beheld the
smiling little figure of Charlotte De Stancy。

'What has made you so late?' said Paula。  'You are come to
stay; of course?'

Charlotte said she had come to stay。  'But I have brought
somebody with me!'

'Ahwhom?'

'My brother happened to be at home; and I have brought him。'

Miss De Stancy's brother had been so continuously absent from
home in India; or elsewhere; so little spoken of; and; when
spoken of; so truly though unconsciously represented as one
whose interests lay wholly outside this antiquated
neighbourhood; that to Paula he had been a mere nebulosity
whom she had never distinctly outlined。  To have him thus
cohere into substance at a moment's notice lent him the
novelty of a new creation。

'Is he in the drawing…room?' said Paula in a low voice。

'No; he is here。  He would follow me。  I hope you will forgive
him。'

And then Paula saw emerge into the red beams of the dancing
fire; from behind a half…drawn hanging which screened the
door; the military gentleman whose acquaintance the reader has
already made。

'You know the house; doubtless; Captain De Stancy?' said
Paula; somewhat shyly; when he had been presented to her。

'I have never seen the inside since I was three weeks old;'
replied the artillery officer gracefully; 'and hence my
recollections of it are not remarkably distinct。  A year or
two before I was born the entail was cut off by my father and
grandfather; so that I saw the venerable place only to lose
it; at least; I believe that's the truth of the case。  But my
knowledge of the transaction is not profound; and it is a
delicate point on which to question one's father。'

Paula assented; and looked at the interesting and noble figure
of the man whose parents had seemingly righted themselves at
the expense of wronging him。

'The pictures and furniture were sold about the same time; I
think?' said Charlotte。

'Yes;' murmured De Stancy。  'They went in a mad bargain of my
father with his visitor; as they sat over their wine。  My
father sat down as host on that occasion; and arose as guest。'

He seemed to speak with such a courteous absence of regret for
the alienation; that Paula; who was always fearing that the
recollection would rise as a painful shadow between herself
and the De Stancys; felt reassured by his magnanimity。

De Stancy looked with interest round the gallery; seeing which
Paula said she would have lights brought in a moment。

'No; please not;' said De Stancy。  'The room and ourselves are
of so much more interesting a colour by this light!'

As they moved hither and thither; the various expressions of
De Stancy's face made themselves picturesquely visible in the
unsteady shine of the blaze。  In a short time he had drawn
near to the painting of the ancestor whom he so greatly
resembled。  When her quick eye noted the speck on the face;
indicative of inherited traits strongly pronounced; a new and
romantic feeling that the De Stancys had stretched out a
tentacle from their genealogical tree to seize her by the hand
and draw her in to their mass took possession of Paula。  As
has been said; the De Stancys were a family on whom the hall…
mark of membership was deeply stamped; and by the present
light the representative under the portrait and the
representative in the portrait seemed beings not far removed。
Paula was continually starting from a reverie and speaking
irrelevantly; as if such reflections as those seized hold of
her in spite of her natural unconcern。

When candles were brought in Captain De Stancy ardently
contrived to make the pictures the theme of conversation。
From the nearest they went to the next; whereupon Paula as
hostess took up one of the candlesticks and held it aloft to
light up the painting。  The candlestick being tall and heavy;
De Stancy relieved her of it; and taking another candle in the
other hand; he imperceptibly slid into the position of
exhibitor rather than spectator。  Thus he walked in advance
holding the two candles on high; his shadow forming a gigantic
figu
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