登陆注册
15447100000068

第68章 CHAPTER X(5)

Janet, too, was momentarily amused, drawn out of that reverie in which she had dwelt all day, ever since Ditmar had left for Boston. Now she began to wonder what would happen if she were suddenly to announce "I'm going to marry Mr. Ditmar." After the first shock of amazement, she could imagine her father's complete and complacent acceptance of the news as a vindication of au inherent quality in the Bumpus blood. He would begin to talk about the family. For, despite what might have been deemed a somewhat disillusionizing experience, in the depths of his being he still believed in the Providence who had presided over the perilous voyage of the Mayflower and the birth of Peregrine White, whose omniscient mind was peculiarly concerned with the family trees of Puritans. And what could be a more striking proof of the existence of this Providence, or a more fitting acknowledgment on his part of the Bumpus virtues, than that Janet should become the wife of the agent of the Chippering Mills? Janet smiled. She was amused, too, by the thought that Lise's envy would be modified by the prospect of a heightened social status; since Lise, it will be remembered, had her Providence likewise.

Hannah's god was not a Providence, but one deeply skilled in persecution, in ingenious methods of torture; one who would not hesitate to dangle baubles before the eyes of his children--only to snatch them away again.

Hannah's pessimism would persist as far as the altar, and beyond!

On the whole, such was Janet's notion of the Deity, though deep within her there may have existed a hope that he might be outwitted; that, by dint of energy and brains, the fair things of life might be obtained despite a malicious opposition. And she loved Ditmar. This must be love she felt, this impatience to see him again, this desire to be with him, this agitation possessing her so utterly that all day long she had dwelt in an unwonted state like a somnambulism: it must be love, though not resembling in the least the generally accepted, virginal ideal. She saw him as he was, crude, powerful, relentless in his desire; his very faults appealed. His passion had overcome his prudence, he had not intended to propose, but any shame she felt on this score was put to flight by a fierce exultation over the fact that she had brought him to her feet, that he wanted her enough to marry her. It was wonderful to be wanted like that! But she could not achieve the mental picture of herself as Ditmar's wife--especially when, later in the evening, she walked up Warren Street and stood gazing at his house from the opposite pavement.

She simply could not imagine herself living in that house as its mistress. Notwithstanding the testimony of the movies, such a Cinderella-like transition was not within the realm of probable facts; things just didn't happen that way.

She recalled the awed exclamation of Eda when they had walked together along Warren Street on that evening in summer: "How would you like to live there!"--and hot with sudden embarrassment and resentment she had dragged her friend onward, to the corner. In spite of its size, of the spaciousness of existence it suggested, the house had not appealed to her then. Janet did not herself realize or estimate the innate if undeveloped sense of form she possessed, the artist-instinct that made her breathless on first beholding Silliston Common. And then the vision of Silliston had still been bright; but now the light of a slender moon was as a gossamer silver veil through which she beheld the house, as in a stage setting, softening and obscuring its lines, lending it qualities of dignity and glamour that made it seem remote, unreal, unattainable. And she felt a sudden, overwhelming longing, as though her breast would burst....

Through the drawn blinds the lights in the second storey gleamed yellow.

A dim lamp burned in the deep vestibule, as in a sanctuary. And then, as though some supernaturally penetrating ray had pierced a square hole in the lower walls, a glimpse of the interior was revealed to her, of the living room at the north end of the house. Two figures chased one another around the centre table--Ditmar's children! Was Ditmar there?

Impelled irresistibly by a curiosity overcoming repugnance and fear, she went forward slowly across the street, gained the farther pavement, stepped over the concrete coping, and stood, shivering violently, on the lawn, feeling like an interloper and a thief, yet held by morbid fascination. The children continued to romp. The boy was strong and swift, the girl stout and ungainly in her movements, not mistress of her body; he caught her and twisted her arm, roughly--Janet could hear her cries through the window-=when an elderly woman entered, seized him, struggling with him. He put out his tongue at her, but presently released his sister, who stood rubbing her arm, her lips moving in evident recrimination and complaint. The faces of the two were plain now; the boy resembled Ditmar, but the features of the girl, heavy and stamped with self-indulgence, were evidently reminiscent of the woman who had been his wife. Then the shade was pulled down, abruptly; and Janet, overcome by a sense of horror at her position, took to flight....

When, after covering the space of a block she slowed down and tried to imagine herself as established in that house, the stepmother of those children, she found it impossible. Despite the fact that her attention had been focussed so strongly on them, the fringe of her vision had included their surroundings, the costly furniture, the piano against the farther wall, the music rack. Evidently the girl was learning to play.

She felt a renewed, intenser bitterness against her own lot: she was aware of something within her better and finer than the girl, than the woman who had been her mother had possessed--that in her, Janet, had lacked the advantages of development. Could it--could it ever be developed now? Had this love which had come to her brought her any nearer to the unknown realm of light she craved?...

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 一直都是你

    一直都是你

    我们都知道,你是我的永恒,我是你的永远。不管怎样,记得幸福………………。同是一直在一起的两人,谁都是谁的一切。东隅,将是我们的起点……洛星的爱。程轩的信任。萧月,慕婉儿,陈可的较量!在谎言里何去何从?…………到最后,一直都是你
  • 葬幽纪

    葬幽纪

    从根骨废柴,依靠自身奋斗,一步步踏上修仙路,顺着自己的路,摸索自身的道,迈向了精彩纷呈的无尽宇宙,尽情地征战。QQ群号:513863405
  • 假面公主

    假面公主

    从小就是孤儿的贝拉被神秘人收养...从神秘人口中得知知妈妈是被人害死的她意图报复...凭借着绝世美貌和极高智慧成为银圣的公主。在学校中遇到同样天才少年的辰银烨,以及缠绕在他身边的仇人之女。同时,一直守护在贝拉身边的乔因向她亮相绝密身份,多重震惊下的贝拉,终于打破心中的重重阻碍,接纳乔因成为她的“守护骑士”。在乔因的帮助下,贝拉稳坐“暗夜公主”宝座。然而贝拉的仇人被她打入万劫不复之地..辰银烨为了摆脱组织发生了一场恶战,路遇公主的救护,两人的感情...又引发了贝拉前生与另两名女生的结盟,她竟是精灵族的公主.
  • 超能力学员

    超能力学员

    世界观设定:弱水是一个独特的空间,地是平而方的,大气层如一半圆罩在大地的上方,也可以用古代中国的天圆地方来形容。源是构成整个空间的基础物质。而这个空间的人类,也利用源利用转化仪器Creator来将源转化为自己的超能力。简而言之,超能力就是利用源来将自己大脑中的潜在能力所具象化。同时,弱水这个空间的完整名称叫做弱水自由城市。统治这座特殊城市的则是弱水市理事会TCR(TrusteeCouncilofRuoshui)。理事会下属的市立高中则汇聚着一大批来自各地的精英能力者学员。而自从文昊入学以来,各种奇怪的事件就开始层出不穷......
  • 离天大道

    离天大道

    离天珠,得之天妒!一名天赋少年,却顶着重重风险。踏上了开启天门的大道!!!
  • 盗义

    盗义

    我叫唐义,广口唐,义气的气。这是属于我的故事......那一年,我还年轻,心却老了。那一年,我刚毕业,却又要开学了。那一天,我被砍了,却变男人了...那一晚,我真的变成男人了,却被砍了...
  • 旷世异能传

    旷世异能传

    天地初开之时,也就是古代时,人类还不知自己从何而来从而正因这样,人们的大脑中出现了关于女娲造人之类的想法,不过随着时代发展让人们对于这种想法有了新的改变,人类不再相信这种想法。不过,有两个字深深的印在了一些人的大脑中——异能。。。
  • 千殇岁

    千殇岁

    暮光萧萧,无痕国在邵辰的庇护下,显得勃勃生机,邵辰隐居于一座名为荒无崖的山峰中,正闭关修行,修行期间,他的劲敌岑溪劫……前面是正文写玄清的,邵辰部分正在写,精彩尽在其中。
  • 师爱:教育可以如此智慧

    师爱:教育可以如此智慧

    本书是“中小学教师教学丛书”中的第三十二册,无论时代怎样变化,教育如何改革,师爱都是教育永恒的主题。本书将为您细致阐述在这种无价的爱中如何使您的教育充满智慧。其中技巧、情感、沟通等搭建的方法全都融会于本书之中,是一本教师必备的实用手册。
  • 异界之命魂天下

    异界之命魂天下

    我会为了守护,而不惜一切代价变强,不计任何后果的扫平所有障碍离天