登陆注册
33142500000009

第9章

She had her fill of music in those days, taking piano lessons from a Monsieur Harmost, a grey-haired native of Liege, with mahogany cheeks and the touch of an angel, who kept her hard at it and called her his "little friend." There was scarcely a concert of merit that she did not attend or a musician of mark whose playing she did not know, and, though fastidiousness saved her from squirming in adoration round the feet of those prodigious performers, she perched them all on pedestals, men and women alike, and now and then met them at her aunt's house in Curzon Street.

Aunt Rosamund, also musical, so far as breeding would allow, stood for a good deal to Gyp, who had built up about her a romantic story of love wrecked by pride from a few words she had once let drop.

She was a tall and handsome woman, a year older than Winton, with a long, aristocratic face, deep-blue, rather shining eyes, a gentlemanly manner, warm heart, and one of those indescribable, not unmelodious drawls that one connects with an unshakable sense of privilege. She, in turn, was very fond of Gyp; and what passed within her mind, by no means devoid of shrewdness, as to their real relationship, remained ever discreetly hidden. She was, so far again as breeding would allow, something of a humanitarian and rebel, loving horses and dogs, and hating cats, except when they had four legs. The girl had just that softness which fascinates women who perhaps might have been happier if they had been born men. Not that Rosamund Winton was of an aggressive type--she merely had the resolute "catch hold of your tail, old fellow"spirit so often found in Englishwomen of the upper classes. Acheery soul, given to long coats and waistcoats, stocks, and a crutch-handled stick, she--like her brother--had "style," but more sense of humour--valuable in musical circles! At her house, the girl was practically compelled to see fun as well as merit in all those prodigies, haloed with hair and filled to overflowing with music and themselves. And, since Gyp's natural sense of the ludicrous was extreme, she and her aunt could rarely talk about anything without going into fits of laughter.

Winton had his first really bad attack of gout when Gyp was twenty-two, and, terrified lest he might not be able to sit a horse in time for the opening meets, he went off with her and Markey to Wiesbaden. They had rooms in the Wilhelmstrasse, overlooking the gardens, where leaves were already turning, that gorgeous September. The cure was long and obstinate, and Winton badly bored. Gyp fared much better. Attended by the silent Markey, she rode daily on the Neroberg, chafing at regulations which reduced her to specified tracks in that majestic wood where the beeches glowed. Once or even twice a day she went to the concerts in the Kurhaus, either with her father or alone.

The first time she heard Fiorsen play she was alone. Unlike most violinists, he was tall and thin, with great pliancy of body and swift sway of movement. His face was pale, and went strangely with hair and moustache of a sort of dirt-gold colour, and his thin cheeks with very broad high cheek-bones had little narrow scraps of whisker. Those little whiskers seemed to Gyp awful--indeed, he seemed rather awful altogether--but his playing stirred and swept her in the most uncanny way. He had evidently remarkable technique; and the emotion, the intense wayward feeling of his playing was chiselled by that technique, as if a flame were being frozen in its swaying. When he stopped, she did not join in the tornado of applause, but sat motionless, looking up at him. Quite unconstrained by all those people, he passed the back of his hand across his hot brow, shoving up a wave or two of that queer-coloured hair; then, with a rather disagreeable smile, he made a short supple bow or two. And she thought, "What strange eyes he has--like a great cat's!" Surely they were green; fierce, yet shy, almost furtive--mesmeric! Certainly the strangest man she had ever seen, and the most frightening. He seemed looking straight at her;and, dropping her gaze, she clapped. When she looked again, his face had lost that smile for a kind of wistfulness. He made another of those little supple bows straight at her--it seemed to Gyp--and jerked his violin up to his shoulder. "He's going to play to me," she thought absurdly. He played without accompaniment a little tune that seemed to twitch the heart. When he finished, this time she did not look up, but was conscious that he gave one impatient bow and walked off.

That evening at dinner she said to Winton:

"I heard a violinist to-day, Dad, the most wonderful playing--Gustav Fiorsen. Is that Swedish, do you think--or what?"Winton answered:

"Very likely. What sort of a bounder was he to look at? I used to know a Swede in the Turkish army--nice fellow, too.""Tall and thin and white-faced, with bumpy cheek-bones, and hollows under them, and queer green eyes. Oh, and little goldy side-whiskers."

"By Jove! It sounds the limit."

Gyp murmured, with a smile:

"Yes; I think perhaps he is."

She saw him next day in the gardens. They were sitting close to the Schiller statue, Winton reading The Times, to whose advent he looked forward more than he admitted, for he was loath by confessions of boredom to disturb Gyp's manifest enjoyment of her stay. While perusing the customary comforting animadversions on the conduct of those "rascally Radicals" who had just come into power, and the account of a Newmarket meeting, he kept stealing sidelong glances at his daughter.

同类推荐
  • 西方确指

    西方确指

    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。
  • 节士

    节士

    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。
  • 黄帝内经素问集注

    黄帝内经素问集注

    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。
  • 麻疹备要方论

    麻疹备要方论

    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。
  • 佛说开觉自性般若波罗蜜多经

    佛说开觉自性般若波罗蜜多经

    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
  • 三笙柒年

    三笙柒年

    负了三年又三年,等了七天又七天,他和她终究逃不过一个情字,无论是上个轮回,还是下个轮回,他们还是彼此的牵绊,你是我的久绊,我是你的情劫。说好的三生,在其念之间,她与他再没错过。他说:“你是我不能说的秘密。”她说“你却一直在我心里。”他在上一世与她错过,在这一世他们虽然忘却了一切,可这一次绝不放手。就算有千万阻隔,却仍是心中最美好的坚定。-----------婚后生活-------------------“当初你为什么要离开?”他轻轻勾起一抹她的秀发,轻声问道。“不是你拒绝了我吗?”她浅浅笑道,并没有注意这一切。“有么?”他微皱眉头,“当然。”她认真点头。“那我们现在就合为一体吧。”他坏笑道。
  • 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!
  • 易烊千玺之我的青春有你

    易烊千玺之我的青春有你

    起源是梦,相遇是偶然,但愿这世上,一切安好,,,
  • 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!
  • 阴阳鬼玺

    阴阳鬼玺

    一件家传护身符,意外发现隐藏着太爷爷生前秘密;一场冥婚,令我身陷阴阳奇缘之中;一条微博,致使我于一场阴谋悬崖彳亍。为了活下去,我不得不去找到事情的起因。原来,这世上有七块鬼玺:生、死、冥、封、妖、文、医。七块鬼玺七种超自然力量,相生相克,令摸金校尉、巫医、神婆、道士四大世族及江湖各路龙神为七块玉玺龙争虎斗、各显神通,甚至不惜与鬼为伍,在追寻七块鬼玺途中,一件件经历让我终身难忘:百年不腐的伏尸、骇人的赶尸、消失的村子、惊悚的养尸豕、生不如死的蛊毒、千里杀人的降头、山海经的妖怪……而我也被逼无奈不得不在这场争夺中得到七块鬼玺,最后却发现一个骇人的秘密……我是谁?
  • 浮生一梦皆为空

    浮生一梦皆为空

    在周围的次元智慧体眼里,Gladys是个很有意思的世界,他的次元屏障非常之脆弱,只要稍稍用力,就可以在上面开出一个大洞来,连接两个不同的世界,只要可以掌握Gladys的位置,或是来到Gladys周围,就有一定几率打通通往Gladys的路;可是Gladys又很坚固,曾经三十四个不同的次元世界在上面打了几百个洞进行侵略,这个世界也没有崩溃掉,还诞生了一位主宰,化身为法则,关闭了大部分通道,削弱了所有来到这个世界的所有非原著居民的各种力量,给了Gladys一个长达千年的,或许有小部分战争,但没有灭亡危机的和平盛世;Gladys的人们或许是习惯了各种各样的异乡人,自身能力发展很高,也很好斗,崇尚力量,并在之上发展出各种各样或让人发笑或囧然无比的文化。然后,这是一个在Gladys历史和观察他们的智慧体眼里一个不被记住,但又造成了重大影的人的故事。爱情少,主友情向。
  • 牧天之皇

    牧天之皇

    千年前,征战八方的牧天之皇‘牧元’遭到师弟楚玄天的偷袭,含恨而亡。千年后,牧元重生在一名少年身上,而此时的仇人楚玄天却成了建立百战皇朝的‘百战天皇’,战威赫赫,皇朝初建之日更是引动天地投影,世界各地皆是流传着百战天皇的传说。此间少年,面对三年之契,面对绝世强敌,自北牧崛起!谁曾想到,一个刚刚迈向修行的少年,竟然意欲颠覆整个百战皇朝......
  • 三生三世:九幽皇妃

    三生三世:九幽皇妃

    武功被废,双眼被剜,她不认命。九幽河边,身死魂伤,她认了命却丢了心。她从地狱归来,索命人间,搅弄一国风云,身边始终有一人助纣为虐。云萝:“欠我的,我自己来收。我欠的,这世上只有一人。”看着面前的人,手中断剑泣血,云萝眉眼带笑道。她以为,人死如灯灭,后来才知,生死不由命。
  • 悲伤农村渣男

    悲伤农村渣男

    一个贫穷的农村帅气男孩,出生在一个平凡的家庭,他一生经历了几翻恋爱故事伤感与幸福到底有怎样的故事与结局,他渴望幸福也期盼悲伤,在这个用金钱横量的社会,到底穷人会不会有真爱,他向往爱情,他永不放弃,他为爱而生,他相信他的真心能打动爱情,他要用一生去诠释真爱的意义!
  • 陆倾一世

    陆倾一世

    许倾:不爱我为什么救下我的时候不杀了我陆寺年:你是我的天使整个北平的人都知道陆寺年是一个杀人不眨眼的恶魔,就连许家大小姐许倾也知道不要轻易的沾染上陆大恶魔,但缘分让两个人遇上的那一刻就已经说不清楚了