This strong
physical attribute had perhaps made his abilities more fertile, but
the family claimed the abilities, too, as their own.
Through Hans Ravn, Rafael had learned to value the
companionship of his relations; now he had it in perfection. For
every word that he said appreciative laughter was ready - it really
sparkled round him. When he disagreed with prevailing tastes,
prejudices, and morals, they disagreed too. When his precocious
intelligence burst upon them, they were always ready to applaud.
They even met him half-way - they could foresee the direction of
his thoughts. As he was young in years and disposition, and at the
same time knew more than most young people, he suited both old and
young. Ah! how he prospered in Norway!
His mother went with him everywhere. Her life had at
one time appeared to her relations to be most objectless, but how
much she had made of it! They respected her persevering efforts to
attain the goal, and she became aware of this. In the most elegant
toilettes, with her discreet manner and distinguished deportment,
she was hurried from party to party, from excursion to excursion,
until it became too much for her.
It went too far, too; her taste was offended by it;
she grew frightened. But the train of dissipation went on without
her, like a string of carriages which bore him along with it while
she was shaken off. Her eyes followed the cloud of dust far away,
and the roll of the wheels echoed back to her.
Helene - how about Helene? Was she too out in the
cold? Far from it. Rafael was as certain that she was with him as
that his gold watch was next his heart. The very first day that he
arrived he wrote a letter to her. It was not long, he had not time
for that, but it was thoroughly characteristic. He received an
answer at once; the hostess of the pension brought it to him
herself. He was so immensely delighted that the lady, who was
related to the Dean and who had noticed the post mark, divined the
whole affair - a thing which amused him greatly.
But Helene's letter was evasive; she evidently knew
him too little to dare to speak out.
He never found time to draw the hostess into
conversation on the subject, however. He came home late, he got up
late, and then there were always friends waiting for him; so that
he was not seen in the pension again until he returned to dress for
dinner, during which time the carriage waited at the door, for he
never got home till the last moment.
When could he write? It would soon all be done with,
and then home to Helene!
The business respecting the cement detained him
longer than he had anticipated. His mother made complications; not
that she opposed the formation of a company, but she raised many
difficulties: she should certainly prefer to have the whole affair
postponed. He had no time to talk her round, besides, she irritated
him. He told it to the hostess.
A curious being, this hostess, who directed the
pension, the business of the inmates, and a number of children,
without apparent effort. She was a widow; two of her children were
nearly twenty, but she looked scarcely thirty. Tall, dark, clever,
with eyes like glowing coals; decided, ready in conversation as in
business, like an officer long used to command, always trusted,
always obeyed; one yielded oneself involuntarily to her
matter-of-course way of arranging everything, and she was obliging,
even self-sacrificing, to those she liked - it was true that that
was not everybody. This absence of reserve was especially
characteristic of her, and was another reason why all relied on
her. She had long ago taken up Fru Kaas - entertained her first and
foremost. Angelika Nagel used in conversation modern Christiania
slang which is the latest development of the language. In the
choice of expressions, words such as hideous were applied to what
was the very opposite of hideous, such as "hideously amusing,"
"hideously handsome." "Snapping" to anything that was liquid, as
"snapping good punch." One did not say "PRETTY" but "quite too
pretty" or "hugely pretty." On the other hand, one did not say
"bad" for anything serious, but with comical moderation "baddish."
Anything that there was much of went by miles; for instance, "miles
of virtue." This slipshod style of talk, which the idlers of large
towns affect, had just become the fashion in Christiania. All this
seemed new and characteristic to the careless emancipated party
which had arisen as a protest against the prudery which Fru Kaas,
in her time, had combated. The type therefore amused her: - she
studied it.
Angelika Nagel relieved her of all her business
cares, which were only play to her. It was the same thing with the
question of the cement undertaking. In an apparently careless
manner she let drop what had been said and done about it, which had
its effect on Fru Kaas. Soon things had progressed so far that it
became necessary to consult Rafael about it, and as he was
difficult to catch, she sat up for him at night.
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