I will give you the design for the room above, I have
thought it carefully out." And in imagination she papered the
walls, arranged the furniture, and hung up curtains of wondrous
patterns.
"I know, too, how the other rooms are to be done,"
she added. And she went from one to the other, remaining a little
while in each. He followed, like an old horse led by the
bridle.
Before their visit was half over he most coolly
neglected three out of his four guests.
His deep-set eyes twinkled with the liveliest
admiration whenever she approached. He sought in the faces of the
others the admiration which he himself felt: he would amble round
her like an old photographic camera which had the power of setting
itself up.
But from the day when she took down from his
bookshelf a French work on mechanics, a subject with which she was
evidently acquainted and for which she declared that she had a
natural aptitude, it was all over with him. From that day forward,
if she were present, he effaced himself both in word and
action.
In the mornings when he met her in one of her
characteristic costumes he laughed softly, or gazed and gazed at
her, and then glanced towards the others. She did not talk much,
but every word that she uttered aroused his admiration. But he was
most of all captivated when she sat quietly apart, heedless of
every one: at such times he resembled an old parrot expectant of
sugar.
His linen had always been snowy white, but beyond
this he had taken no special pains with his toilet; but now he
strutted about in a Tussore silk coat, which he had bought in
Algiers, but had at once put aside because it was too tight - he
looked like a clipt box hedge in it.
Now, who was this lion-tamer of twenty-one, who,
without in the least wishing to do so, unconsciously even (she was
the quietest of the party), had made the monarch of the forest
crouch at her feet and gaze at her in abject humility?
Look at her, as she sits there, with her loose
shining hair of the prettiest shade of dark red; look at her broad
forehead and prominent nose, but more than all at those large
wondering eyes; look at her throat and neck, her tall slight
figure; notice especially the Renaissance dress which she wears,
its style and colour, and your curiosity will still remain
unsatisfied, for she has an individuality all her own.
Kristen Ravn had lost her mother at her birth and
her father when she was five years old. The latter left her a
handsome fortune, with the express condition that the investments
should not be changed, and that the income should be for her own
use whether she married or not. He hoped by this means to form her
character. She was brought up by three different members of her
wide-branching family, a family which might more properly be termed
a clan, although they had no common characteristics beyond a desire
to go their own way.
When two Ravns meet they, as a rule, differ on every
subject; but as a race they hold religiously together - indeed, in
their eyes there is no other family which is "amusing," the
favourite adjective of the Ravns.
Kristen had a receptive nature; she read everything,
and remembered what she read; that is say, she had a logical mind,
for a retentive memory implies an orderly brain. She was
consequently NUMBER ONE in everything which she took up. This,
coupled with the fact that she lived among those who regarded her
somewhat as a speculation, and consequently flattered her, had
early made an impression on her nature, quite as great, indeed, as
the possession of money.
She was by no means proud, it was not in the Ravn
nature to be so; but at ten years old she had left off playing; she
preferred to wander in the woods and compose ballads. At twelve she
insisted on wearing silk dresses, and, in the teeth of an aunt all
curls and lace and with a terrible flow of words, she carried her
point. She held herself erect and prim in her silks, and still
remained NUMBER ONE. She composed verses about Sir Adge and Maid
Else, about birds and flowers and sad things.
On reaching the age at which other girls, who have
the means, begin to wear silk dresses, she left them off. She was
tired, she said, of the "smooth and glossy."
She now grew enthusiastic for fine wool and
expensive velvet of every shade. Dresses in the Renaissance style
became her favourites, and the subject of her studies. She puffed
out her bodices like those in Leonardo's and Rafael's portraits of
women, and tried in other ways as well to resemble them.
She left off writing verses, and wrote stories
instead; the style was good, though they were anything rather than
spontaneous.
They were short, with a more or less clear pointe.
Stories by a girl of eighteen do not as a general rule make a
sensation, but these were particularly audacious. It was evident
that their only object was to scandalise. Instead of her own name
she used the nom-de-plume of "Puss." This, however, was only to
postpone the announcement that the author who scandalised her
readers most, and that at a time when every author strove to do so,
was a girl of eighteen belonging to one of the first families in
the country.
Soon every one knew that "Puss" was she of the
tumbled red locks, "the tall Renaissance figure with the Titian
hair."
Her hair was abundant, glossy, and slightly curling;
she still wore it hanging loose over her neck and shoulders, as she
had done as a child. Her great eyes seemed to look out upon a new
world; but one felt that the lower part of her face was scarcely in
harmony with the upper. The cheeks fell in a little; the prominent
nose made the mouth look smaller than it actually was; her neck
seemed only to lead the eye downward to her bosom, which almost
appeared to caress her throat, especially when her head was bent
forward, as was generally the case. And very beautiful the throat
was, delicate in colour, superb in contour, and admirably set upon
the bust. For this reason she could never find in her heart to hide
this full white neck, but always kept it uncovered. Her finely
moulded bust surmounting a slender waist and small hips, her
rounded arms, her long hands, her graceful carriage, in her
tightly-fitting dress, formed such a striking picture that one did
more than look - one was obliged to study her, When the elegance
and beauty of her dress were taken into account, one realised how
much intelligence and artistic taste had here been exercised.
She was friendly in society, natural and composed,
always occupied with something, always with that wondering
expression. She spoke very little, but her words were always well
chosen.
All this, and her general disposition, made people
chary of opposing her, more especially those who knew how
intelligent she was and how much knowledge she possessed.
She had no friends of her own, but her innumerable
relations supplied her with society, gossip, and flattery, and were
at once her friends and body-guard. She would have had to go abroad
to be alone.
Among these relations she was a princess: they not
only paid her homage, but had sworn by "Life and Death" that she
must marry without more ado, which was absolutely against her
wish.
From her childhood she had been laying by money, but
the amount of her savings was far less than her relations supposed.
This rather mythical fortune contributed not a little to the fact
that "every one" was in love with her. Not only the bachelors of
the family, that was a matter of course, but artists and amateurs,
even the most blase, swarmed round her, la jeunesse doree (which is
homely enough in Norway), without an exception. A living work of
art, worth more or less money, piquante and admired, how each
longed to carry her home, to gloat over her, to call her his
own!
There was surely more intensity of feeling near her
than near others, a losing of oneself in one only; that
unattainable dream of the world-weary.
With her one could lead a thoroughly stylish life,
full of art and taste and comfort. She was highly cultivated, and
absolutely emancipated - our little country did not, in those days,
possess a more alluring expression.
When face to face with her they were uncertain how
to act, whether to approach her diffidently or boldly, smile or
look serious, talk or be silent.
What these idle wooers gleaned from her stories, her
characteristic dress, her wondering eyes, and her quiet dreaminess,
was not the highest, but they expended their energy thereon; so
that their unbounded discomfiture may be imagined when, in the
autumn, the news spread that Fruken Kristen Ravn was married to
Harald Kaas.
They burst into peals of derisive laughter they
scoffed, they exclaimed; the only explanation they could offer was
that they had too long hesitated to try their fortune.
There were others, who both knew and admired her,
who were no less dismayed.
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