登陆注册
5411200000062

第62章

like that.Say, Al, why don't you poetry-makin' fellers try a new one once in a while? Say, 'Her hair's like rope and her face has lost hope.' Eh? Why not, for a change?"The protests on the part of Olive and the housekeeper against the captain's innovation in poetry-making had the effect of distracting attention from Albert's "glorified" appearance.The young man himself was thankful for the respite.

That night before he retired he took Madeline Fosdick's photograph from the back of the drawer among the ties and collars and looked at it for five minutes at least.She was a handsome girl, certainly.Not that that made any difference to him.And she was an intelligent girl; she understood his poetry and appreciated it.

Yes, and she understood him, too, almost as well as Helen....

Helen! He hastily returned the Fosdick photograph to the drawer;but this time he did not put it quite so near the back.

On the following Saturday he was early at the knoll, a brand-new scribbling-pad in his pocket and in his mind divine gems which were later, and with Miss Fosdick's assistance, to be strung into a glittering necklace of lyric song and draped, with the stringer's compliments, about the throat of a grateful muse.But no gems were strung that day.Madeline did not put in an appearance, and by and by it began to rain, and Albert walked home, damp, dejected, and disgusted.When, a day or two later, he met Miss Fosdick at the post office and asked why she had not come he learned that her mother had insisted upon a motor trip to Wapatomac that afternoon.

"Besides," she said, "you surely mustn't expect me EVERY Saturday.""No," he admitted grudgingly, "I suppose not.But you will come sometimes, won't you? I have a perfectly lovely idea for a ballad and I want to ask your advice about it.""Oh, do you really? You're not making fun? You mean that my advice is really worth something? I can't believe it."He convinced her that it was, and the next Saturday afternoon they spent together at the inspiration point among the dunes, at work upon the ballad.It was not finished on that occasion, nor on the next, for it was an unusually long ballad, but progress was made, glorious progress.

And so, during that Summer, as the Fosdick residence upon the Bay Road grew and grew, so did the acquaintanceship, the friendship, the poetic partnership between the Fosdick daughter and the grandson of Captain Zelotes Snow grow and grow.They met almost every Saturday, they met at the post office on week evenings, occasionally they saw each other for a moment after church on Sunday mornings.Mrs.Fletcher Fosdick could not imagine why her only child cared to attend that stuffy little country church and hear that prosy Kendall minister drone on and on."I hope, my dear, that I am as punctilious in my religious duties as the average woman, but one Kendall sermon was sufficient for me, thank you.What you see in THAT church to please you, _I_ can't guess."If she had attended as often as Madeline did she might have guessed and saved herself much.But she was busy organizing, in connection with Mrs.Seabury Calvin, a Literary Society among the summer people of South Harniss.The Society was to begin work with the discussion of the poetry of Rabindranath Tagore.Mrs.Fosdick said she doted on Tagore; Mrs.Calvin expressed herself as being positively insane about him.A warm friendship had sprung up between the two ladies, as each was particularly fond of shining as a literary light and neither under any circumstances permitted a new lion to roar unheard in her neighborhood, provided, of course, that the said roarings had been previously endorsed and well advertised by the critics and the press.

So Mrs.Fosdick was too busy to accompany Madeline to church on Sunday or to walk on Saturday, and the young lady was left to wander pretty much at her own sweet will.That sweet will led her footsteps to trails frequented by Albert Speranza and they walked and talked and poetized together.As for Mr.Fletcher Fosdick, he was busy at his office in New York and came to South Harniss only for infrequent week-ends.

The walks and talks and poetizings were innocent enough.Neither of the partners in poesy had the least idea of anything more than being just that.They liked each other, they had come to call each other by their Christian names, and on Albert's bureau Madeline's photograph now stood openly and without apology.Albert had convinced himself there was nothing to apologize for.She was his friend, that was all.He liked to write and she liked to help him--er--well, just as Helen used to when she was at home.He did not think of Helen quite as often as formerly, nor were his letters to her as frequent or as long.

So the summer passed and late August came, the last Saturday afternoon of that month.Albert and Madeline were together, walking together along the beach from the knoll where they had met so often.It was six o'clock and the beach was deserted.There was little wind, the tiny waves were lapping and plashing along the shore, and the rosy light of the sinking sun lay warm upon the water and the sand.They were thinking and speaking of the summer which was so near its end.

"It has been a wonderful summer, hasn't it?" said Albert.

"Yes, wonderful," agreed Madeline.

"Yes, I--I--by George, I never believed a summer could be so wonderful.""Nor I."

Silence.Then Albert, looking at her, saw her eyes looking into his and saw in them--He kissed her.

That morning Albert Speranza had arisen as usual, a casual, careless, perfectly human young fellow.He went to bed that night a superman, an archangel, a demi-god, with his head in the clouds and the earth a cloth of gold beneath his feet.Life was a pathway through Paradise arched with rainbows.

He and Madeline Fosdick loved each other madly, devotedly.They were engaged to be married.They had plighted troth.They were to be each other's, and no one else's, for ever--and ever--and ever.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 美食从和面开始

    美食从和面开始

    “恭喜宿主获得技能——和面专精。”徐拙帅气的脸上,笑容逐渐凝固。“老子五岁就学会和面了,还用你教?”十分钟后……“诶,这面团,好像不一般啊。”普通群:534939314VIP群:787589893【粉丝值弟子及以上】
  • 我和校草有个婚约

    我和校草有个婚约

    青梅竹马十年后重逢,竟然成为同居的未婚夫妻!明明双方有约定,他却撕毁条约霸道地在学院内公然宣告主权,屡次违约做出令她心跳不已的事……『青梅竹马·1v1超甜宠文·苏到没朋友』【读者群:197263996】
  • 太子殿下呆萌妃

    太子殿下呆萌妃

    【甜宠无虐】皇家有女初长成,各色俊杰纷纷提礼求亲。太子爷俊眉一挑,敢肖想他捧在手心里宠了十几年的小公主,当他是死的吗?费尽心机终于把一众情敌清理干净了,还没有松口气,粉妆玉琢的小公主哭唧唧地跑过来找如今已经是皇帝的腹黑男子,“哥哥,为什么他们都不要我了?”高贵的少年天子不着痕迹地楼紧怀中哭泣的美貌少女,声音温柔地哄着:“因为他们瞎。”伪兄妹文,皇上哥哥在下好大一盘棋啊,小白兔公主妹妹直到最后被吃掉还没明白,为什么自己的恋爱运那么糟?!——深情版文案——“这天下你想要什么我都给,除了,离开我。”
  • 霸道影帝:第一影后

    霸道影帝:第一影后

    戏内,他是唯一的王者。各种角色,完全由他控制。戏外,他霸道而深情,给她极致的宠爱。在被娱乐圈封杀、声名狼藉时,只有他站在身后,对她勾唇微笑——“你是我唯一的影后。”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 四世同堂:足本(全三册)

    四世同堂:足本(全三册)

    《四世同堂》系老舍先生的代表作,分为《惶惑》《偷生》《饥荒》三部,是老舍创作生涯中最具代表性的作品之一。它表现了抗战期间北平沦陷区普通民众生活与抗争,展示了普通人在大时代历史进程中所走过的艰难曲折的道路。这部足本,由翻译家毕冰宾(黑马)据浦爱德与老舍合作翻译的《四世同堂》英文稿回译补全了已经散佚的第三部《饥荒》的最后十六节;在信达雅三重标准上,对已经面世的版本又有所超越。
  • 阴阳异闻录·第四卷:玉玺迷案

    阴阳异闻录·第四卷:玉玺迷案

    传国玉玺,一件遗失已久的秘宝,曾经是王权的象征。如今却出现在了丰都城中,重新燃起了帝王们一争天下的欲望。可这欲望与权力的漩涡却在将丰都城导向毁灭。在这生死存亡之际,苏容斋挺身而出,与野心四溢的帝王们展开了激烈的斗争,一场关乎生死存亡的战斗即将打响。
  • 志新论语

    志新论语

    本书整理、精选了作者3000多条微博中的精华,将作者多年来工作实践和长期从事管理学研究的重要成果,以微博语录的形式来展现,归纳为学问、人生、经济、产业、企业、企业家、创新、商业模式、信息化、综合十个大类,是为经济运行的智慧总结、企业管理的实战经验汇总。
  • 草疯长

    草疯长

    今村昌平师从小津安二郎,在电影表现手法上既有传承的一面,又突破了传统束缚,凭借先锋反叛的风格,与大岛渚等人成为日本电影新浪潮的领军者,并以《鳗鱼》和《楢山节考》两度荣获戛纳电影节金棕榈大奖。他善于从生、死、性这些层面出发,挖掘根植于日本文化中的生死观、情色观和劣根性。 无论在影像处理,还是在题材选择上,常有骇人之举,作品频频惊艳影坛。今村昌平在本书中深刻而质朴地书写了他的电影之梦与人生达观。
  • 北城有陈

    北城有陈

    王小冉从读高二的时候就知道自己有个未婚夫。但是她不知道是谁,只知道是在A城。所以她大学选择了A城,遇见一个人。后来,她才知道,原来名义上的未婚夫是个渣。但是,隔壁病房的阿姨!我真的不是你未来儿媳哦!前来送饭的某男:你答应了我的求婚,还想嫁给谁?
  • 会飞的小公鸡

    会飞的小公鸡

    吐尔地老人的家在北塔山南麓的一个小山村里,老人有个孙子叫亚生江,亚生江养了一只小公鸡,爷爷叫它小亚生江。我们故事里的主人公就是这只爷爷叫它小亚生江而亚生江叫它卡拉库鲁克(维语,黑尾巴)的小公鸡。这是一只与众不同的小公鸡,它外表漂亮:红红的扇形鸡冠、亮亮的红宝石眼睛、山鸡一样缤纷的羽毛、金黄色修长的腿脚、彩旗般飘逸的卡拉库鲁克,而且,它还会展翅高飞,像野鸽子一样。事情还得从一年以前说起。春日里一个温暖的中午,吐尔地老人和往常一样打扫马厩,在马槽里发现了一枚鸡蛋,就顺手放进头顶上方木架子上的野鸽子窝里。