A LONDON LIFE
AND OTHER TALES
[Illustration: Publisher's logo]
A LONDON LIFE
THE PATAGONIA
THE LIAR
MRS. TEMPERLY
BY
HENRY JAMES
London MACMILLAN AND CO. AND NEW YORK 1889
COPYRIGHT 1889
_BY_
HENRY JAMES
CONTENTS
PAGE
A LONDON LIFE 1
THE PATAGONIA 159
THE LIAR 241
MRS. TEMPERLY 317
NOTE
The last of the following four Tales originally appeared under a different name.
A LONDON LIFE
I
It was raining, apparently, but she didn't mind--she would put on stout shoes and walk over to Plash. She was restless and so fidgety that it was a pain; there were strange voices that frightened her--they threw out the ugliest intimations--in the empty rooms at home. She would see old Mrs. Berrington, whom she liked because she was so simple, and old Lady Davenant, who was staying with her and who was interesting for reasons with which simplicity had nothing to do. Then she would come back to the children's tea--she liked even better the last half-hour in the schoolroom, with the bread and butter, the candles and the red fire, the little spasms of confidence of Miss Steet the nursery-governess, and the society of Scratch and Parson (their nicknames would have made you think they were dogs) her small, magnificent nephews, whose flesh was so firm yet so soft and their eyes so charming when they listened to stories. Plash was the dower-house and about a mile and a half, through the park, from Mellows. It was not raining after all, though it had been; there was only a grayness in the air, covering all the strong, rich green, and a pleasant damp, earthy smell, and the walks were smooth and hard, so that the expedition was not arduous.
The girl had been in England more than a year, but there were some satisfactions she had not got used to yet nor ceased to enjoy, and one of these was the accessibility, the convenience of the country. Within the lodge-gates or without them it seemed all alike a park--it was all so intensely 'property.' The very name of Plash, which was quaint and old, had not lost its effect upon her, nor had it become indifferent to her that the place was a dower-house--the little red-walled, ivied asylum to which old Mrs. Berrington had retired when, on his father's death, her son came into the estates. Laura
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A London Life and Other Tales by Henry James
- 2: Lady Davenant was in the drawing room
- 3: Lady Davenant I don't understand
- 4: Could Lady Davenant not teach them
- 5: ' Lady Davenant added before Laura had time to reply
- 6: 'Lady Davenant burst out laughing
- 7: ''That Lionel had taken a fancy to
- 8: My poor father my dear father
- 9: Because she had promised Selina
- 10: Selina was wonderfully thorough
- 11: Berrington that week but was it not already Thursday
- 12: While Laura told Ferdy that he must never
- 13: And while he spoke Laura saw Miss Steet get up suddenly
- 14: During which Miss Steet turned away delicately
- 15: She's with Lady Ringrose what do you say to that
- 16: She knew who Lady Ringrose was
- 17: Miss Steet was pusillanimous she retreated on the spot
- 18: It made Lionel Berrington stare
- 19: ''You have little enough to gratify you
- 20: ''Did you never hear of Lord Deepmere
- 21: And he exclaimed to himself 'The bloody brute
- 22: Her interlocutress was her sister
- 23: Miss Steet at last came back for the children
- 24: Selina are you hideously deceiving us
- 25: Berrington to be the cause of her changing colour
- 26: As Selina described the pressure
- 27: Laura had found herself listening hard
- 28: A kind of profanity to doubt of Selina and judge her
- 29: Berrington had the field to herself
- 30: Wendover gave her all possible information about them
- 31: Whether Lady Ringrose were not particularly so
- 32: Wendover did not disappoint her
- 33: Berrington a very important phenomenon
- 34: Wendover to ask her if she had known Charles Lamb
- 35: Wendover had passed into the hall
- 36: But I have a frantic appeal from Lady Watermouth
- 37: Wendover was decorous but he was increasingly gay
- 38: The cab stopped at the Soane Museum
- 39: Wendover think of her behaviour
- 40: And Selina constantly went without her husband
- 41: As Selina was always dreadfully late for everything
- 42: They were spinning along Park Lane
- 43: Attached people like the Collingwoods
- 44: And she felt that Selina would have a kind of advantage
- 45: Selina drew the diamonds out of her hair
- 46: Laura remained with her for an hour
- 47: Lady Davenant didn't remember his name
- 48: Lady Davenant for you it was different
- 49: Lady Davenant stared an instant
- 50: Wendover awaiting them in the portico
- 51: Selina never mentioned a name when the pronoun would do
- 52: Wendover said something about looking up his friend
- 53: ''Isn't she with Lady Ringrose
- 54: That he didn't realise brutalities
- 55: Booker returning in all haste with another
- 56: 'Lady Davenant looked at her visitor a moment
- 57: Lady Davenant got up again and went to her
- 58: Wendover was staying in George Street
- 59: 'I have very little money indeed
- 60: 'Of course I know I'm meddling
- 61: Laura has told me what took place
- 62: Though this was not the opinion of Lady Davenant
- 63: Lady Davenant took him up to see Laura
- 64: Wendover instantly closed the door
- 65: The presence of Miss Steet had been dispensed with
- 66: But as she was on the wrong side it was also humiliating
- 67: If only Miss Steet would learn from them whether Mr
- 68: Laura knew that Miss Steet knew the truth
- 69: Wendover did not get into another compartment
- 70: Projected a glow upon the dusky vagueness of the Common
- 71: 'Jasper Nettlepoint came into the room at that moment
- 72: Nettlepoint and her handmaiden
- 73: Nettlepoint is going in that ship
- 74: Nettlepoint looked at her often
- 75: Greeted Miss Mavis with a handshake and an 'Oh
- 76: ' And Jasper slowly drained his glass
- 77: Nettlepoint replied that it would probably be freezing cold
- 78: 'That charming girl is your telegram
- 79: If he were changeable ' But here my interlocutress paused
- 80: ''It's a pity our ship is not one of the fast ones
- 81: Nettlepoint looked at me a moment
- 82: Nettlepoint said nothing for a moment
- 83: Nettlepoint continued to repeat my words
- 84: Porterfield has taken it seriously for some years
- 85: Porterfield as the least of her evils
- 86: Of regarding Grace Mavis almost as a married woman
- 87: Nettlepoint the lady under whose protection she is
- 88: Miss Mavis then has given him half of her dinner
- 89: Nettlepoint that he might be glanced at without indelicacy
- 90: Nettlepoint said this caused me to exclaim in real surprise
- 91: Beneath the swinging lamps and the racks of tumblers
- 92: Gotch was evidently surprised at my little protest
- 93: 'Outside the saloon I hesitated
- 94: Jasper and his companion were still behind their lifeboat
- 95: She was alone and Jasper Nettlepoint
- 96: ''Not till Miss Mavis is tired of me
- 97: Nettlepoint said to me that evening
- 98: ''That's exactly what I said to Jasper this morning
- 99: ''Do you call it tattle that Miss Mavis is in love with you
- 100: Nettlepoint came up as she had announced
- 101: Nettlepoint returned early to her cabin
- 102: It's better than something else
- 103: Grace Mavis was neither on deck nor at dinner
- 104: And especially in speaking to Jasper Nettlepoint
- 105: Nettlepoint had not yet been informed
- 106: Gotch a wide berth I couldn't talk to them
- 107: He could no longer think of himself as very young
- 108: Arthur Ashmore was a fresh coloured
- 109: Lyon confessed he had never heard of him
- 110: Capadose was in love with her husband
- 111: She was altogether the most delightful thing in Munich
- 112: So that Lyon found himself opposite to Colonel Capadose
- 113: Colonel Capadose looked at him a moment
- 114: Colonel Capadose gave no heed to this observation
- 115: 'She rested her good gray eyes on Lyon
- 116: Capadose must really bring the little girl
- 117: That panelled corridor is admirable
- 118: As he had said to Colonel Capadose
- 119: General Capadose was an old crony
- 120: Capadose was attached to her husband
- 121: Capadose fortunately did not hunt
- 122: In one particular Lyon acquitted his successful rival
- 123: Rarely swagger about his military exploits
- 124: Lyon finished his picture and took his departure
- 125: Not that Lyon cared much for that however
- 126: Lyon listened to her without protest
- 127: And then Lyon felt that the picture also languished
- 128: Lyon went on with his painting
- 129: Checking himself Miss Geraldine
- 130: Grenadine Geraldine the jump was easy
- 131: Oliver Lyon listened intently a moment
- 132: ''Damn him damn him damn him
- 133: ' Lyon heard the Colonel object
- 134: Lyon considered this prospect rather ruefully
- 135: Lyon looked from one to the other
- 136: ''But I don't understand her motive
- 137: Capadose exclaimed in a tone of exquisite reproach
- 138: She hasn't finished her education
- 139: Temperly in that airy way about going back
- 140: Dora will marry some foreign prince
- 141: Raymond was highly gratified by this fact
- 142: Effie and Tishy sat in the circle
- 143: He succeeded at last in drawing Dora away
- 144: Temperly had 'known enough' to select
- 145: For Effie asked him no questions
- 146: The unexplained must preponderate till Dora came in
- 147: Temperly to the foreign gentleman
- 148: Then came Effie and Mademoiselle Bourde
- 149: I have had a great many serious bothers and worries
- 150: 'Some protege of Madame de Brives
- 151: But she remained the Marquise par excellence
- 152: So Raymond interpreted certain signs
- 153: Whom she was providing with programmes
- 154: Raymond had no interest at present in the great Gregorini
- 155: 'Is it true that you wish to remain with Effie and Tishy
- 156: 'Perhaps after Tishy is married
- 157: As much as she can be closeted now
- 158: The end advertisements macmillan and co
