Mike Fletcher by George Moore (ebook pc reader .txt) π
Decorated By The Pink Of A Silk Skirt, The Crimson Of An Opera-Cloak
Vivid In The Light Of A Carriage-Lamp, With Women's Faces, Necks,
And Hair. The Women Sprang Gaily From Hansoms And Pushed Through The
Swing-Doors. It Was Lubini's Famous Restaurant. Within The Din Was
Deafening.
Read free book Β«Mike Fletcher by George Moore (ebook pc reader .txt) πΒ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: George Moore
Read book online Β«Mike Fletcher by George Moore (ebook pc reader .txt) πΒ». Author - George Moore
The Back Narrowed Like A Leaf, And Expanded In Shapes As Subtle. He
Was Really A Superb Animal As He Stepped Out Of His Bath.
"I Wish To Heavens You'd Dress. Leave Off Messing Yourself About.
I Want Breakfast. Lizzie's Waiting. What Are You Putting On Those
Clothes For? Where Are You Going?"
"I Am Going To See Lily Young. She Wrote To Me This Morning Saying
She Had Her Mother's Permission To Ask Me To Come."
"She Won't Like You Any Better For All That Scent And Washing."
"Which Of These Neckties Do You Like?"
"I Don't Know.... I Wish You'd Be Quick. Come On!"
As He Fixed His Tie With A Pearl Pin He Whistled The "Wedding March."
Catching Frank's Eyes, He Laughed And Sang At The Top Of His Voice As
He Went Down The Passage.
Lizzie Was Reading In One Of The Arm-Chairs That Stood By The High
Chimney-Piece Tall With Tiles And Blue Vases. The Stiffness And Glare
Of The Red Cloth In Which The Room Was Furnished, Contrasted With The
Soft Colour Of The Tapestry Which Covered One Wall. The Round Table
Shone With Silver, And An Agreeable Smell Of Coffee And Sausages
Pervaded The Room. Lizzie Looked Up Astonished; But Without Giving
Her Time To Ask Questions, Mike Seized Her And Rushed Her Up And
Down.
"Let Me Go! Let Me Go!" She Exclaimed. "Are You Mad?"
Frank Caught Up His Fiddle. At Last Lizzie Wrenched Herself From
Mike.
"What Do You Mean? ... Such Nonsense!"
Laughing, Mike Placed Her In A Chair, And Uncovering A Dish, Said--
"What Shall I Give You This Happy Day?"
"What Do You Mean? I Don't Like Being Pulled About."
"You Know What Tune That Is? That's The 'Wedding March.'"
"Who's Going To Be Married? Not You."
"I Don't Know So Much About That. At All Events I Am In Love. The
Sensation Is Delicious--Like An Ice Or A Glass Of Chartreuse. Real
Love--All The Others Were Coarse Passions--I Feel It Here, The
Genuine Article. You Would Not Believe That I Could Fall In Love."
"Listen To Me," Said Lizzie. "You Wouldn't Talk Like That If You Were
In Love."
"I Always Talk; It Relieves Me. You Have No Idea How Nice She Is; So
Frail, So White--A White Blonde, A Seraphita. But You Haven't Read
Balzac; You Do Not Know Those White Women Of The North. '_Plus
Chapter 4 Pg 31Blanche Que La Blanche Hermine_,' Etc. So Pure Is She That I Cannot
Think Of Kissing Her Without Sensations Of Sacrilege. My Lips Are Not
Pure Enough For Hers. I Would I Were Chaste. I Never Was Chaste."
Mike Laughed And Chattered Of Everything. Words Came From Him Like
Flour From A Mill.
The _Pilgrim_ Was Published On Wednesday. Wednesday Was The Day,
Therefore, For Walking In The Park; For Lunching Out; For Driving In
Hansoms. Like A Fish On The Crest Of A Wave He Surveyed
London--Multitudinous London, Circulating About Him; And He Smiled
With Pleasure When He Caught Sight Of Trees Spreading Their Summer
Green Upon The Curling Whiteness Of The Clouds. He Loved The Park.
The Park Had Always Been His Friend; It Had Given Him Society When No
Door Was Open To Him; It Had Been The Inspiration Of All His
Ambitions; It Was The Park That Had First Showed Him Ladies And
Gentlemen In All The Gaud And Charm Of Town Leisure. There He Had
Seen For The First Time The Panorama Of Slanting Sunshades, Patent
Leather Shoes, Horses Cantering In The Dusty Sunlight, Or Proudly
Grouped, The Riders Flicking The Flies Away With Gold-Headed Whips.
He Loved The Androgynous Attire Of The Horsewomen--Collars, Silk
Hats, And Cravats. The Park Appealed To Him Intensely And Strangely
As Nothing Else Did. He Loved The Park For The Great Pasture It
Afforded To His Vanity. It Was In The Park He Saw The Fashionable
Procuress Driving--She Who Would Not Allow Him To Pay Even For
Champagne In Her House; It Was In The Park He Met The Little Actress
Who Looked So Beseechingly In His Face; It Was In The Park He Met
Fashionable Ladies Who Asked Him To Dinner And Took Him To The
Theatre; It Was In The Park He Had Found Life And Fortune, And,
Saturated With Happiness, With Health, Tingling With Consciousness Of
His Happiness, Mike Passed Among The Various Crowd, Which In Its
Listlessness Seemed To Balance And Air Itself Like A Many-Petalled
Flower. But Much As The Crowd Amused And Pleased Him, He Was More
Amused And Pleased With The Present Vision Of His Own Personality,
Which In A Long Train Of Images And Stories Passed Within Him. He
Loved To Dream Of Himself; In Dreams He Entered His Soul Like A
Temple, Seeing Himself In Various Environment, And Acting In Manifold
Circumstances.
"Here Am I--A Poor Boy From The Bogs Of Ireland--Poor People" (The
Reflection Was An Unpleasant One, And He Escaped From It); "At All
Events A Poor Boy Without Money Or Friends. I Have Made Myself What I
Am.... I Get The Best Of Everything--Women, Eating, Clothes; I Live
In Beautiful Rooms Surrounded With Pretty Things. True, They Are Not
Mine, But What Does That Matter?--I Haven't The Bother Of Looking
After Them.... If I Could Only Get Rid Of That Cursed Accent, But I
Haven't Much; Escott Has Nearly As Much, And He Was Brought Up At An
English School. How Pleasant It Is To Have Money! Heigho! How
Pleasant It Is To Have Money! Six Pounds A Week From The Paper, And I
Could Make Easily Another Four If I Chose. Sometimes I Don't Get Any
Presents; Women Seem As If They Were Going To Chuck It Up, And Then
They Send All Things--Money, Jewelry, And Comestibles. I Am Sure It
Was Ida Who Sent That Hundred Pounds. What Should I Do If It Ever
Came Out? But There's Nothing To Come Out. I Believe I Am Suspected,
But Nothing Can Be Proved Against Me.
"Why Do They Love Me? I Always Treat Them Badly. Often I Don't Even
Pretend To Love Them, But It Makes No Difference. Pious Women, Wicked
Women, Stupid Women, Clever Women, High-Class Women, Low-Class Women,
It Is All The Same--All Love Me. That Little Girl I Picked Up In The
Strand Liked Me Before She Had Been Talking To Me Five Minutes. And
What Sudden Fancies! I Come Into A Room, And Every Feminine Eye Fills
With Sudden Emotion. I Wonder What It Is. My Nose Is Broken, And My
Chin Sticks Out Like A Handle. And Men Like Me Just As Much As Women
Do. It Is Inexplicable. True, I Never Say Disagreeable Things; And It
Is So Natural To Me To Wheedle. I Twist Myself About Them Like A
Twining Plant About A Window. Women Forgive Me Everything, And Are
Glad To See Me After Years. But They Are Never Wildly Jealous.
Perhaps I Have Never Been Really Loved.... I Don't Know Though--Lady
Seeley Loved Me. There Was An Old Lady At Margate, Sixty If She Was A
Day (Of Course There Was Nothing Improper), And She Worshipped Me.
Chapter 4 Pg 32How Nicely She Used To Smile When She Said, 'Come Round Here That I
May Look At You!'--And Her Husband Was Quite As Bad; He'd Run All
Over The Place After Me. So-And-So Was Quite Offended Because I
Didn't Rush To See Him; He'd Put Me Up For Six Months.... Servants
Hate Frank; For Me They'd Do Anything. I Never Was In A Lodging-House
In My Life That The Slavey Didn't Fall In Love With Me. People
Dislike Me; I Speak To Them For Five Minutes, And Henceforth They Run
After Me. I Make Friends Everywhere.
"Those Americans Wanted Me To Come And Stay Six Months With Them In
New York. How She Did Press Me To Come! ... The Brookes, They Want Me
To Come And Stay In The Country With Them; They'd Give Me Horses To
Ride, Guns To Shoot, And I'd Get The Girls Besides. They Looked
Rather Greedily At Me Just Now. How Jealous Poor Old Emily Is Of
Them! She Says I'd 'Go To The End Of The Earth For Them'--And Would
Not Raise A Little Finger For Her. Dear Old Emily, She Wasn't A Bit
Cross The Other Night When I Wouldn't Go Home With Her. I Must Go And
See Her. She Says She Loved Me--Really Loved Me! ... She Used To Lie
And Dream Of Pulling Me Out Of Burning Houses. I Wonder Why I Am
Liked! How Intangible, And Yet How Real! What A Wonderful Character I
Would Make In A Novel!"
At That Moment He Saw Mrs. Byril In The Crowd; But Notwithstanding
His Kind Thoughts Of Her, He Prayed She Might Pass Without Seeing
Him. Perceiving Lady Helen Walking With Her Husband And Harding, He
Followed Her Slim Figure With His Eyes, Remembering What Seymour's
Good Looks Had Brought Him, For He Envied All Love, Desiring To Be
Himself All That Women Desire. Then His Thoughts Wandered. The
Decoration Of The Park Absorbed Him--The Nobility Of A Group Of
Horses, The Attractiveness Of Some Dresses; And Amid All This
Elegance And Parade He Dreamed Of Tragedy--Of Some Queen Blowing Her
Brains Out For Him--And He Saw The Fashionable Dress And The Blood
Oozing From The Temple, Trickling Slowly Through The Sand. Then Lords
Muchross And Snowdown Passed, And They Passed Without Acknowledging
Him!
"Cads, Cads, Damn Them!" His Face Changed Expression. "I May Rise To
Any Height, Queens May Fall Down And Worship Me, But I May Never Undo
My Birth. Not To Have Been Born A Gentleman! That Is To Say, Of A
Long Line--A Family With A History. Not To Be Able To Whisper, 'I May
Lose Everything, All Troubles May Be Mine, But The Fact Remains That
I Was Born A Gentleman!' Those Two Men Who Cut Me Are Lords. What A
Delight In One's Life To Have A Name All To One's Self!" And Then
Mike Lost Himself In A Maze Of Little Dreams. A Gleam Of Mail;
Escutcheons And Castles; A Hawk Flew From Fingers Fair; A Lady
Clasped Her Hands When The Lances Shivered In The Tourney; And Mike
Was The Hero That Persisted In The Course Of This Shifting Little
Dream.
The Brookes--Sally And Maggie--Stopped To Speak To Him, And He Went
To Lunch With Them. His Interest In All They Did And Said Was
Unbounded, And That He Might Not Be Able To Reproach Himself With
Waste Of Time, He Contrived By Hint And Allusion To Lay The
Foundation For A Future Intrigue With One Of The Girls.
Lily Young, However, Had Never Been Forgotten; She Had Been As
Constantly Present In His Mind As This Sense Of The Sunshine And His
Own Happy Condition. She Had Been Parcel Of And One With These But
Now; As He Drove To See Her, He Separated Her From The Morning
Phenomena Of His Life, And Began To Think Definitely Of Her.
Smiling, He Called Himself A Brute, And Regretted His Failure. But In
Her Presence His Cynicism Was Evanescent. She Sat On A Little Sofa,
Covered With An Indian Shawl; Behind Her Was A Great Bronze, The
Celebrated Gift Of A Celebrated Rajah To Her Mother. Mrs. Young Had
Been On A Tour In The East With Her Husband, And Ever Since
Comments (0)