登陆注册
14821300000022

第22章

1. AUGUST THE EIGHTH. MORNING AND AFTERNOON

At post-time on that following Monday morning, Cytherea watched so anxiously for the postman, that as the time which must bring him narrowed less and less her vivid expectation had only a degree less tangibility than his presence itself. In another second his form came into view. He brought two letters for Cytherea.

One from Miss Aldclyffe, simply stating that she wished Cytherea to come on trial: that she would require her to be at Knapwater House by Monday evening.

The other was from Edward Springrove. He told her that she was the bright spot of his life: that her existence was far dearer to him than his own: that he had never known what it was to love till he had met her. True, he had felt passing attachments to other faces from time to time; but they all had been weak inclinations towards those faces as they then appeared. He loved her past and future, as well as her present. He pictured her as a child: he loved her. He pictured her of sage years: he loved her. He pictured her in trouble; he loved her. Homely friendship entered into his love for her, without which all love was evanescent.

He would make one depressing statement. Uncontrollable circumstances (a long history, with which it was impossible to acquaint her at present) operated to a certain extent as a drag upon his wishes. He had felt this more strongly at the time of their parting than he did now--and it was the cause of his abrupt behaviour, for which he begged her to forgive him. He saw now an honourable way of freeing himself, and the perception had prompted him to write. In the meantime might he indulge in the hope of possessing her on some bright future day, when by hard labour generated from her own encouraging words, he had placed himself in a position she would think worthy to be shared with him?

Dear little letter; she huddled it up. So much more important a love-letter seems to a girl than to a man. Springrove was unconsciously clever in his letters, and a man with a talent of that kind may write himself up to a hero in the mind of a young woman who loves him without knowing much about him. Springrove already stood a cubit higher in her imagination than he did in his shoes.

During the day she flitted about the room in an ecstasy of pleasure, packing the things and thinking of an answer which should be worthy of the tender tone of the question, her love bubbling from her involuntarily, like prophesyings from a prophet.

In the afternoon Owen went with her to the railway-station, and put her in the train for Carriford Road, the station nearest to Knapwater House.

Half-an-hour later she stepped out upon the platform, and found nobody there to receive her--though a pony-carriage was waiting outside. In two minutes she saw a melancholy man in cheerful livery running towards her from a public-house close adjoining, who proved to be the servant sent to fetch her. There are two ways of getting rid of sorrows: one by living them down, the other by drowning them. The coachman drowned his.

He informed her that her luggage would be fetched by a spring-waggon in about half-an-hour; then helped her into the chaise and drove off.

Her lover's letter, lying close against her neck, fortified her against the restless timidity she had previously felt concerning this new undertaking, and completely furnished her with the confident ease of mind which is required for the critical observation of surrounding objects. It was just that stage in the slow decline of the summer days, when the deep, dark, and vacuous hot-weather shadows are beginning to be replaced by blue ones that have a surface and substance to the eye. They trotted along the turnpike road for a distance of about a mile, which brought them just outside the village of Carriford, and then turned through large lodge-gates, on the heavy stone piers of which stood a pair of bitterns cast in bronze. They then entered the park and wound along a drive shaded by old and drooping lime-trees, not arranged in the form of an avenue, but standing irregularly, sometimes leaving the track completely exposed to the sky, at other times casting a shade over it, which almost approached gloom--the under surface of the lowest boughs hanging at a uniform level of six feet above the grass--the extreme height to which the nibbling mouths of the cattle could reach.

'Is that the house?' said Cytherea expectantly, catching sight of a grey gable between the trees, and losing it again.

'No; that's the old manor-house--or rather all that's left of it.

The Aldycliffes used to let it sometimes, but it was oftener empty.

'Tis now divided into three cottages. Respectable people didn't care to live there.'

'Why didn't they?'

'Well, 'tis so awkward and unhandy. You see so much of it has been pulled down, and the rooms that are left won't do very well for a small residence. 'Tis so dismal, too, and like most old houses stands too low down in the hollow to be healthy.'

'Do they tell any horrid stories about it?'

'No, not a single one.'

'Ah, that's a pity.'

'Yes, that's what I say. 'Tis jest the house for a nice ghastly hair-on-end story, that would make the parish religious. Perhaps it will have one some day to make it complete; but there's not a word of the kind now. There, I wouldn't live there for all that. In fact, I couldn't. O no, I couldn't.'

'Why couldn't you?'

'The sounds.'

'What are they?'

'One is the waterfall, which stands so close by that you can hear that there waterfall in every room of the house, night or day, ill or well. 'Tis enough to drive anybody mad: now hark.'

He stopped the horse. Above the slight common sounds in the air came the unvarying steady rush of falling water from some spot unseen on account of the thick foliage of the grove.

'There's something awful in the timing o' that sound, ain't there, miss?'

'When you say there is, there really seems to be. You said there were two--what is the other horrid sound?'

同类推荐
  • Ten Years Later

    Ten Years Later

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 教女遗规

    教女遗规

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Representative Government

    Representative Government

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 旅次江亭

    旅次江亭

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金台集

    金台集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 恋爱碟中谍

    恋爱碟中谍

    因为种种机缘巧合,上大一的辰腾喜欢上了一个叫恬小柔女孩,为了能顺利追到恬小柔,他精心策划了一场长久的计划!他借着追求恬小柔好友徐霏霏的名义,把恬小柔当做是自己的“线人”,帮他在“追求”徐霏霏的道路上出谋划策,从而制造更多接近恬小柔的机会,恬小柔始终不知道辰腾真正的目标是她自己!就当辰腾想要坦白一切时,一直充当真正线人的徐霏霏,却发现自己意外爱上了辰腾,事情突然复杂起来……(一心只为写出精品剧情,觉得本书文采不错,有看头的,记得收藏、点击、订阅、打赏、推荐给身边的朋友看看,好书共分享!!!谈论Q群251143911,一定记得加噢!)
  • 血曼星球恋:爱你是我最深的执念

    血曼星球恋:爱你是我最深的执念

    “柯亚奈儿,爱你是我最深的执念。”哲平落下两行清泪。
  • 你来的那天风景刚好

    你来的那天风景刚好

    这是一部短篇言情文集。他们也许年少相识却擦肩而过;有些萍水相逢又如久生情;也有从相看两相厌到相互依存……一切有关于美妙的相遇和美好的爱情,都是平凡生活中的英雄梦想。但是,这些都需要一个前提——“遇见”。
  • 憨夫家的小王妃

    憨夫家的小王妃

    人穿越她穿越,她居然就穿越到一个不受宠,又被姨娘虐待的嫡女身上。没爹亲娘不在,连老奶奶都不待见她。遇上有情人,却又不能结伴一生。更要嫁给一个傻子……顾安然面对这个傻夫君,却是毫无招架之力,而且和这傻夫君待在一起,使她每天累得下不了床……这……这还算话吗?【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 学校废弃楼的故事

    学校废弃楼的故事

    在某学校的一栋废弃大楼的秘密…………(本书可能会有一些不真实的内容)
  • 大熊灿

    大熊灿

    灿是一只熊,秋月是一个人熊的生命很短暂,灿为了能和秋月在一起,修炼成了妖,却又刚好碰上杀母仇人……
  • 信念之塔

    信念之塔

    我没有放弃我会再来这一次让我看到了很多不足这条路不是那么顺畅但关键是我没有放弃……
  • 末日之星球崛起

    末日之星球崛起

    公元2012年,地球爆发了病毒危机,感染病毒者皆变成了丧尸,病源体之一的秦明,秦明发生了异变,却机缘巧合得到了未来世界在太阳系留下的基地,秦明因此得救并且掌控着强大的能力,与七大病源体相争,末世之后,秦明得知这是外星文明的阴谋并开始追踪该文明,由于地球已经不在适合进化下来的人类生存,人类联邦建立太阳系星际战队,充分开发太阳系六大星球可居住的星球,但由于是病源体并且异变为超能战士,因此秦明率领着超能战队前往浩瀚的宇宙,驶出太阳系,征战诸多文明,只为求人类得到生存之地。
  • 易烊千玺之六世情缘

    易烊千玺之六世情缘

    孟婆念一对痴情男女,便许给两人六世的情缘,但最后一世情缘了解之后下一世便再无瓜葛,这是代价。不过,孟婆心善死后的灵魂每一世的记忆都会恢复,但转世投胎记忆将会被孟婆汤抹去。第一世:他君临天下却许不了她的一世繁华第二世:同是生在虎门将家,却终究还是相隔千里第三世:天下神医的易烊千玺答应救助东绾绾暗生情愫第四世:生于帝王之家身边永远留着都是那个小丫环第五世:富家公子的他却好不巧爱上薄情的大明星第六世:芸芸众人两人只是从小到大的青梅竹马六世情缘,生生死死,却唯独爱你一人。[名字固定不换每一世都是易烊千玺与东绾绾,不然会错乱的]
  • 最游记

    最游记

    他是世间最后一个神,被仙鹤所养,故取名白灵。她是天上的仙子,出生时祥云漫天,故取名云梦瑶。不同世界的两个人,共同生活在并不存在的虚无的时间里,西游的故事该如何续写?最游记,从这里开始。