“Well, it’s gorgeous, and he said I could bring you to see him. The boys tell me he’s awfully1 kind about giving people a lift, and you might get something out of it.”
Hedger started up and pushed his canvas out of the way. “What could I possibly get from Burton Ives? He’s almost the worst painter in the world; the stupidest, I mean.”
Eden was annoyed. Burton Ives had been very nice to her and had begged her to sit for him. “You must admit that he’s a very successful one,” she said coldly.
“Of course he is! Anybody can be successful who will do that sort of thing. I wouldn’t paint his pictures for all the money in New York.”
“Well, I saw a lot of them, and I think they are beautiful.”
Hedger bowed stiffly.
“What’s the use of being a great painter if nobody knows about you?” Eden went on persuasively2. “Why don’t you paint the kind of pictures people can understand, and then, after you’re successful, do whatever you like?”
“As I look at it,” said Hedger brusquely, “I am successful.”
Eden glanced about. “Well, I don’t see any evidences of it,” she said, biting her lip. “He has a Japanese servant and a wine cellar, and keeps a riding horse.”
Hedger melted a little. “My dear, I have the most expensive luxury in the world, and I am much more extravagant3 than Burton Ives, for I work to please nobody but myself.”
“You mean you could make money and don’t? That you don’t try to get a public?”
“Exactly. A public only wants what has been done over and over. I’m painting for painters, — who haven’t been born.”
“What would you do if I brought Mr. Ives down here to see your things?”
“Well, for God’s sake, don’t! Before he left I’d probably tell him what I thought of him.”
Eden rose. “I give you up. You know very well there’s only one kind of success that’s real.”
“Yes, but it’s not the kind you mean. So you’ve been thinking me a scrub painter, who needs a helping4 hand from some fashionable studio man? What the devil have you had anything to do with me for, then?”
“There’s no use talking to you,” said Eden walking slowly toward the door. “I’ve been trying to pull wires for you all afternoon, and this is what it comes to.” She had expected that the tidings of a prospective5 call from the great man would be received very differently, and had been thinking as she came home in the stage how, as with a magic wand, she might gild6 Hedger’s future, float him out of his dark hole on a tide of prosperity, see his name in the papers and his pictures in the windows on Fifth Avenue.
Hedger mechanically snapped the midsummer leash7 on Caesar’s collar and they ran downstairs and hurried through Sullivan Street off toward the river. He wanted to be among rough, honest people, to get down where the big drays bumped over stone paving blocks and the men wore corduroy trowsers and kept their shirts open at the neck. He stopped for a drink in one of the sagging8 bar-rooms on the water front. He had never in his life been so deeply wounded; he did not know he could be so hurt. He had told this girl all his secrets. On the roof, in these warm, heavy summer nights, with her hands locked in his, he had been able to explain all his misty9 ideas about an unborn art the world was waiting for; had been able to explain them better than he had ever done to himself. And she had looked away to the chattels10 of this uptown studio and coveted11 them for him! To her he was only an unsuccessful Burton Ives.
Then why, as he had put it to her, did she take up with him? Young, beautiful, talented as she was, why had she wasted herself on a scrub? Pity? Hardly; she wasn’t sentimental12. There was no explaining her. But in this passion that had seemed so fearless and so fated to be, his own position now looked to him ridiculous; a poor dauber without money or fame, — it was her caprice to load him with favours. Hedger ground his teeth so loud that his dog, trotting13 beside him, heard him and looked up.
While they were having supper at the oyster-man’s, he planned his escape. Whenever he saw her again, everything he had told her, that he should never have told any one, would come back to him; ideas he had never whispered even to the painter whom he worshipped and had gone all the way to France to see. To her they must seem his apology for not having horses and a valet, or merely the puerile14 boastfulness of a weak man. Yet if she slipped the bolt tonight and came through the doors and said, “Oh, weak man, I belong to you!” what could he do? That was the danger. He would catch the train out to Long Beach tonight, and tomorrow he would go on to the north end of Long Island, where an old friend of his had a summer studio among the sand dunes15. He would stay until things came right in his mind. And she could find a smart painter, or take her punishment.
When he went home, Eden’s room was dark; she was dining out somewhere. He threw his things into a hold-all he had carried about the world with him, strapped16 up some colours and canvases, and ran downstairs.
点击收听单词发音
1 awfully | |
adv.可怕地,非常地,极端地 | |
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2 persuasively | |
adv.口才好地;令人信服地 | |
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3 extravagant | |
adj.奢侈的;过分的;(言行等)放肆的 | |
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4 helping | |
n.食物的一份&adj.帮助人的,辅助的 | |
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5 prospective | |
adj.预期的,未来的,前瞻性的 | |
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6 gild | |
vt.给…镀金,把…漆成金色,使呈金色 | |
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7 leash | |
n.牵狗的皮带,束缚;v.用皮带系住 | |
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8 sagging | |
下垂[沉,陷],松垂,垂度 | |
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9 misty | |
adj.雾蒙蒙的,有雾的 | |
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10 chattels | |
n.动产,奴隶( chattel的名词复数 ) | |
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11 coveted | |
adj.令人垂涎的;垂涎的,梦寐以求的v.贪求,觊觎(covet的过去分词);垂涎;贪图 | |
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12 sentimental | |
adj.多愁善感的,感伤的 | |
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13 trotting | |
小跑,急走( trot的现在分词 ); 匆匆忙忙地走 | |
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14 puerile | |
adj.幼稚的,儿童的 | |
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15 dunes | |
沙丘( dune的名词复数 ) | |
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16 strapped | |
adj.用皮带捆住的,用皮带装饰的;身无分文的;缺钱;手头紧v.用皮带捆扎(strap的过去式和过去分词);用皮带抽打;包扎;给…打绷带 | |
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