The Ambassadors by Henry James (read people like a book .TXT) đ
Description
A middle-aged man named Lambert Strether is sent to Paris by his wealthy wife-to-be in order to convince her son Chad to return home to America and take over the lucrative family business. This turns out to be much easier said than done, as Strether finds Chad much better adapted to European life than anyone expected.
Jamesâ characteristically dense prose is matched by a cast of subtly-realized characters who rarely say exactly what they mean. Widely regarded as one of Jamesâ best novels, The Ambassadors explores themes of love, duty, and aging, all told through the eyes of a man who wonders if life hasnât passed him by.
This ebook follows the 1909 New York Edition, with one important exception: Since 1950, it has been generally agreed that the New York Edition had incorrectly ordered the first two chapters of Book XI. This text follows the convention of most printings since then, and the chapters have been returned to what is believed to have been Jamesâ intended order.
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- Author: Henry James
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Waymarsh looked already rather sick of him. âWhere is he from?â
Strether thought. âI donât know that, either. But heâs ânotoriously,â as he put it himself, not from Boston.â
âWell,â Waymarsh moralised from dry depths, âeveryone canât notoriously be from Boston. Why,â he continued, âis he curious?â
âPerhaps just for thatâ âfor one thing! But really,â Strether added, âfor everything. When you meet him youâll see.â
âOh I donât want to meet him,â Waymarsh impatiently growled. âWhy donât he go home?â
Strether hesitated. âWell, because he likes it over here.â
This appeared in particular more than Waymarsh could bear. âHe ought then to be ashamed of himself, and, as you admit that you think so too, why drag him in?â
Stretherâs reply again took time. âPerhaps I do think so myselfâ âthough I donât quite yet admit it. Iâm not a bit sureâ âitâs again one of the things I want to find out. I liked him, and can you like peopleâ â? But no matter.â He pulled himself up. âThereâs no doubt I want you to come down on me and squash me.â
Waymarsh helped himself to the next course, which, however proving not the dish he had just noted as supplied to the English ladies, had the effect of causing his imagination temporarily to wander. But it presently broke out at a softer spot. âHave they got a handsome place up there?â
âOh a charming place; full of beautiful and valuable things. I never saw such a placeââ âand Stretherâs thought went back to it. âFor a little artist-manâ â!â He could in fact scarce express it.
But his companion, who appeared now to have a view, insisted. âWell?â
âWell, life can hold nothing better. Besides, theyâre things of which heâs in charge.â
âSo that he does doorkeeper for your precious pair? Can life,â Waymarsh enquired, âhold nothing better than that?â Then as Strether, silent, seemed even yet to wonder, âDoesnât he know what she is?â he went on.
âI donât know. I didnât ask him. I couldnât. It was impossible. You wouldnât either. Besides I didnât want to. No more would you.â Strether in short explained it at a stroke. âYou canât make out over here what people do know.â
âThen what did you come over for?â
âWell, I suppose exactly to see for myselfâ âwithout their aid.â
âThen what do you want mine for?â
âOh,â Strether laughed, âyouâre not one of them! I do know what you know.â
As, however, this last assertion caused Waymarsh again to look at him hardâ âsuch being the latterâs doubt of its implicationsâ âhe felt his justification lame. Which was still more the case when Waymarsh presently said: âLook here, Strether. Quit this.â
Our friend smiled with a doubt of his own. âDo you mean my tone?â
âNoâ âdamn your tone. I mean your nosing round. Quit the whole job. Let them stew in their juice. Youâre being used for a thing you ainât fit for. People donât take a fine-tooth comb to groom a horse.â
âAm I a fine-tooth comb?â Strether laughed. âItâs something I never called myself!â
âItâs what you are, all the same. You ainât so young as you were, but youâve kept your teeth.â
He acknowledged his friendâs humour. âTake care I donât get them into you! Youâd like them, my friends at home, Waymarsh,â he declared; âyouâd really particularly like them. And I knowââ âit was slightly irrelevant, but he gave it sudden and singular forceâ ââI know theyâd like you!â
âOh donât work them off on me!â Waymarsh groaned.
Yet Strether still lingered with his hands in his pockets. âItâs really quite as indispensable as I say that Chad should be got back.â
âIndispensable to whom? To you?â
âYes,â Strether presently said.
âBecause if you get him you also get Mrs. Newsome?â
Strether faced it. âYes.â
âAnd if you donât get him you donât get her?â
It might be merciless, but he continued not to flinch. âI think it might have some effect on our personal understanding. Chadâs of real importanceâ âor can easily become so if he willâ âto the business.â
âAnd the business is of real importance to his motherâs husband?â
âWell, I naturally want what my future wife wants. And the thing will be much better if we have our own man in it.â
âIf you have your own man in it, in other words,â Waymarsh said, âyouâll marryâ âyou personallyâ âmore money. Sheâs already rich, as I understand you, but sheâll be richer still if the business can be made to boom on certain lines that youâve laid down.â
âI havenât laid them down,â Strether promptly returned. âMr. Newsomeâ âwho knew extraordinarily well what he was aboutâ âlaid them down ten years ago.â
Oh well, Waymarsh seemed to indicate with a shake of his mane, that didnât matter! âYouâre fierce for the boom anyway.â
His friend weighed a moment in silence the justice of the charge. âI can scarcely be called fierce, I think, when I so freely take my chance of the possibility, the danger, of being influenced in a sense counter to Mrs. Newsomeâs own feelings.â
Waymarsh gave this proposition a long hard look. âI see. Youâre afraid yourself of being squared. But youâre a humbug,â he added, âall the same.â
âOh!â Strether quickly protested.
âYes, you ask me for protectionâ âwhich makes you very interesting; and then you wonât take it. You say you want to be squashedâ ââ
âAh but not so easily! Donât you see,â Strether demanded, âwhere my interest, as already shown you, lies? It lies in my not being squared. If Iâm squared whereâs my marriage? If I miss my errand I miss that; and if I miss that I miss everythingâ âIâm nowhere.â
Waymarshâ âbut all relentlesslyâ âtook this in. âWhat do I care where you are if youâre spoiled?â
Their eyes met on it an instant. âThank you awfully,â Strether at last said. âBut donât you think her judgement of thatâ â?â
âOught to content
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