Roderick Hudson by Henry James
page 53 of 463 (11%)
page 53 of 463 (11%)
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yourself, in an attitude too, I suppose, on the other, and your pile of
clay in the middle, building up, as you say. So you pass the morning. After that I hope you go out and take a walk, and rest from your exertions." "Unquestionably. But to a sculptor who loves his work there is no time lost. Everything he looks at teaches or suggests something." "That 's a tempting doctrine to young men with a taste for sitting by the hour with the page unturned, watching the flies buzz, or the frost melt on the window-pane. Our young friend, in this way, must have laid up stores of information which I never suspected!" "Very likely," said Rowland, with an unresentful smile, "he will prove some day the completer artist for some of those lazy reveries." This theory was apparently very grateful to Mrs. Hudson, who had never had the case put for her son with such ingenious hopefulness, and found herself disrelishing the singular situation of seeming to side against her own flesh and blood with a lawyer whose conversational tone betrayed the habit of cross-questioning. "My son, then," she ventured to ask, "my son has great--what you would call great powers?" "To my sense, very great powers." Poor Mrs. Hudson actually smiled, broadly, gleefully, and glanced at Miss Garland, as if to invite her to do likewise. But the young girl's face remained serious, like the eastern sky when the opposite sunset is |
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