Page:The Europeans (1st edition) Volume 2.djvu/147

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
IV.]
THE EUROPEANS.
135

especially inclined to inhale and by which she liked to see herself surrounded—a species of vegetation for which she carried a collection of seedlings, as we may say, in her pocket. She found her chief happiness in the sense of exerting a certain power and making a certain impression; and now she felt the annoyance of a rather wearied swimmer who, on nearing shore, to land, finds a smooth straight wall of rock when he had counted upon a clean firm beach. Her power, in the American air, seemed to have lost its prehensile attributes; the smooth wall of rock was insurmountable. "Surely je n'en suis pas là" she said to herself, "that I let it make me uncomfortable that a Mr. Robert Acton shouldn't honour me