The Golden Bowl by Henry James (free ebook reader for android TXT) π

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In The Golden Bowl, an impoverished Italian aristocrat comes to London to marry a wealthy American, but meets an old mistress before the wedding and spends time with her, helping her pick out a wedding gift. After their marriage, his wife maintains a close relationship with her father, while their own relationship becomes strained.
Completed in 1904, Henry James himself considered The Golden Bowl one of his best novels, and it remains one of criticsβ favorites. Along with The Wings of the Dove and The Ambassadors, the novel represents Jamesβ βmajor phase,β where he returned to the study of Americans abroad, which dominated his earlier career. The novel focuses almost entirely on four central characters, and explores themes of marriage and adultery in an intricate psychological study, which some critics have even suggested anticipates the style of stream-of-consciousness writing.
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- Author: Henry James
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All this, at present, with Mrs. Assingham, passed through her in quick vibrations. She had expressed, while the revolution of her thought was incomplete, the idea of what Amerigo βought,β on his side, in the premises, to be capable of, and then had felt her companionβs answering stare. But she insisted on what she had meant. βHe ought to wish to see herβ βand I mean in some protected and independent way, as he used toβ βin case of her being herself able to manage it. That,β said Maggie with the courage of her conviction, βhe ought to be ready, he ought to be happy, he ought to feel himself swornβ βlittle as it is for the end of such a history!β βto take from her. Itβs as if he wished to get off without taking anything.β
Mrs. Assingham deferentially mused. βBut for what purpose is it your idea that they should again so intimately meet?β
βFor any purpose they like. Thatβs their affair.β
Fanny Assingham sharply laughed, then irrepressibly fell back to her constant position. βYouβre splendidβ βperfectly splendid.β To which, as the Princess, shaking an impatient head, wouldnβt have it again at all, she subjoined: βOr if youβre not itβs because youβre so sure. I mean sure of him.β
βAh, Iβm exactly not sure of him. If I were sure of him I shouldnβt doubtβ β!β But Maggie cast about her.
βDoubt what?β Fanny pressed as she waited.
βWell, that he must feel how much less than she he paysβ βand how that ought to keep her present to him.β
This, in its turn, after an instant, Mrs. Assingham could meet with a smile. βTrust him, my dear, to keep her present! But trust him also to keep himself absent. Leave him his own way.β
βIβll leave him everything,β said Maggie. βOnlyβ βyou know itβs my natureβ βI think.β
βItβs your nature to think too much,β Fanny Assingham a trifle coarsely risked.
This but quickened, however, in the Princess the act she reprobated. βThat may be. But if I hadnβt thoughtβ β!β
βYou wouldnβt, you mean, have been where you are?β
βYes, because they, on their side, thought of everything but that. They thought of everything but that I might think.β
βOr even,β her friend too superficially concurred, βthat your father might!β
As to this, at all events, Maggie discriminated. βNo, that wouldnβt have prevented them; for they knew that his first care would be not to make me do so. As it is,β Maggie added, βthat has had to become his last.β
Fanny Assingham took it in deeperβ βfor what it immediately made her give out louder. βHeβs splendid then.β She sounded it almost aggressively; it was what she was reduced toβ βshe had positively to place it.
βAh, that as much as you please!β
Maggie said this and left it, but the tone of it had the next moment determined in her friend a fresh reaction. βYou think, both of you, so abysmally and yet so quietly. But itβs what will have saved you.β
βOh,β Maggie returned, βitβs whatβ βfrom the moment they discovered we could think at allβ βwill have saved them. For theyβre the ones who are saved,β she went on. βWeβre the ones who are lost.β
βLostβ β?β
βLost to each otherβ βfather and I.β And then as her friend appeared to demur, βOh yes,β Maggie quite lucidly declared, βlost to each other much more, really, than Amerigo and Charlotte are; since for them itβs just, itβs right, itβs deserved, while for us itβs only sad and strange and not caused by our fault. But I donβt know,β she went on, βwhy I talk about myself, for itβs on father it really comes. I let him go,β said Maggie.
βYou let him, but you donβt make him.β
βI take it from him,β she answered.
βBut what else can you do?β
βI take it from him,β the Princess repeated. βI do what I knew from the first I should do. I get off by giving him up.β
βBut if he gives you?β Mrs. Assingham presumed to object. βDoesnβt it moreover then,β she asked, βcomplete the very purpose with which he marriedβ βthat of making you and leaving you more free?β
Maggie looked at her long. βYesβ βI help him to do that.β
Mrs. Assingham hesitated, but at last her bravery flared. βWhy not call it then frankly his complete success?β
βWell,β said Maggie, βthatβs all thatβs left me to do.β
βItβs a success,β her friend ingeniously developed, βwith which youβve simply not interfered.β And as if to show that she spoke without levity Mrs. Assingham went further. βHe has made it a success for themβ β!β
βAh, there you are!β Maggie responsively mused. βYes,β she said the next moment, βthatβs why Amerigo stays.β
βLet alone itβs why Charlotte goes.β that Mrs. Assingham, and emboldened, smiled βSo he knowsβ β?β
But Maggie hung back. βAmerigoβ β?β After which, however, she blushedβ βto her companionβs recognition.
βYour father. He knows what you know? I mean,β Fanny falteredβ ββwell, how much does he know?β Maggieβs silence and Maggieβs eyes had in fact arrested the push of the questionβ βwhich, for a decent consistency, she couldnβt yet quite abandon. βWhat I should rather say is does he know how much?β She found it still awkward. βHow much, I mean, they did. How farββ βshe touched it upβ ββthey went.β
Maggie had waited, but only with a question. βDo you think he does?β
βKnow at
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