登陆注册
14718600000056

第56章 ONLY GOOD-NIGHT(6)

The troubled glory passed--it throbbed itself away; the spiritual gusts of thought grew continually fainter, till, like the echoes of a dying harp, like the breath of a falling gale, they slowly sank to nothingness. Then wearied with an extreme of wild emotion Beatrice sought her bed again and presently was lost in sleep.

When Geoffrey woke on the next morning, after a little reflection, he came to the decision that he had experienced a very curious and moving dream, consequent on the exciting events of the previous day, or on the pain of his impending departure. He rose, packed his bag--everything else was ready--and went in to breakfast. Beatrice did not appear till it was half over. She looked very pale, and said that she had been packing Effie's things. Geoffrey noticed that she barely touched his fingers when he rose to shake hands with her, and that she studiously avoided his glance. Then he began to wonder if she also had strangely dreamed.

Next came the bustle of departure. Effie was despatched in the fly with the luggage and Betty, the fat Welsh servant, to look after her.

Beatrice and Geoffrey were to walk to the station.

"Time for you to be going, Mr. Bingham," said Mr. Granger. "There, good-bye, good-bye! God bless you! Never had such charming lodgers before. Hope you will come back again, I'm sure. By the way, they are certain to summon you as a witness at the trial of that villain Jones.""Good-bye, Mr. Granger," Geoffrey answered; "you must come and see me in town. A change will do you good.""Well, perhaps I may. I have not had a change for twenty-five years.

Never could afford it. Aren't you going to say good-bye to Elizabeth?""Good-bye, Miss Granger," said Geoffrey politely. "Many thanks for all your kindness. I hope we shall meet again.""Do you?" answered Elizabeth; "so do I. I am sure that we shall meet again, and I am sure that I shall be glad to see you when we do, Mr.

Bingham," she added darkly.

In another minute he had left the Vicarage and, with Beatrice at his side, was walking smartly towards the station.

"This is very melancholy," he said, after a few moments' silence.

"Going away generally is," she answered--"either for those who go or those who stay behind," she added.

"Or for both," he said.

Then came another pause; he broke it.

"Miss Beatrice, may I write to you?"

"Certainly, if you like."

"And will you answer my letters?"

"Yes, I will answer them."

"If I had my way, then, you should spend a good deal of your time in writing," he said. "You don't know," he added earnestly, "what a delight it has been to me to learn to know you. I have had no greater pleasure in my life.""I am glad," Beatrice answered shortly.

"By the way," Geoffrey said presently, "there is something I want to ask you. You are as good as a reference book for quotations, you know.

Some lines have been haunting me for the last twelve hours, and Icannot remember where they come from."

"What are they?" she asked, looking up, and Geoffrey saw, or thought he saw, a strange fear shining in her eyes.

"Here are four of them," he answered unconcernedly; "we have no time for long quotations:

"'That shall be to-morrow, Not to-night:

I must bury sorrow Out of sight.'"

Beatrice heard--heard the very lines which had been upon her lips in the wild midnight that had gone. Her heart seemed to stop; she became white as the dead, stumbled, and nearly fell. With a supreme effort she recovered herself.

"I think that you must know the lines, Mr. Bingham," she said in a low voice. "They come from a poem of Browning's, called 'A Woman's Last Word.'"Geoffrey made no answer; what was he to say? For a while they walked on in silence. They were getting close to the station now. Separation, perhaps for ever, was very near. An overmastering desire to know the truth took hold of him.

"Miss Beatrice," he said again, "you look pale. Did you sleep well last night?""No, Mr. Bingham."

"Did you have curious dreams?"

"Yes, I did," she answered, looking straight before her.

He turned a shade paler. Then it was true!

"Beatrice," he said in a half whisper, "what do they mean?""As much as anything else, or as little," she answered.

"What are people to do who dream such dreams?" he said again, in the same constrained voice.

"Forget them," she whispered.

"And if they come back?"

"Forget them again."

"And if they will not be forgotten?"

She turned and looked him full in the eyes.

"Die of them," she said; "then they will be forgotten, or----""Or what, Beatrice?"

"Here is the station," said Beatrice, "and Betty is quarrelling with the flyman."Five minutes more and Geoffrey was gone.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 鬼异者

    鬼异者

    一个小人物,经过几次挫折后浴火重生,渐渐变强,拯救人间!
  • 魅惑天承

    魅惑天承

    天性凉薄,对什么事情都没有兴趣,觉得无所谓,却在遇到顾忆宁的时候,天雷勾地火般!两人恋爱了!看穿越女如何收服冷面皇帝!
  • 异世重生之逆天崛起

    异世重生之逆天崛起

    他,曾是天界至强神,却不得不转世重生。出生时异像冲天,却被断为资质平平,幸得前世神剑,重修前世仙功,统四国,战群魔,身边绝美娇妻常伴左右,这生活......小军粉丝群欢迎加入:370191775(群内不定时红包雨奉上)
  • 虫胎

    虫胎

    自打苗寨的蛊婆子从我身体里挖出一勺虫卵后,我便过起了生不如死的日子,直到肚子一天天大起来.......
  • 问题解决专家

    问题解决专家

    你有烦恼么?你有问题么?无论多么异想天开,只要报酬足够,他都能为您解决,因为他是最强的问题解决专家。里世界生物、外星人、恶灵、妖鬼……神秘的沙漠古墓,悠久的荒古遗迹,隐秘的海底城市……发掘被虚假掩埋的真相,让我们一起与主人公介入世界的“真实”!有惊悚刺激,有宏大战争,有神魔冒险,有悬疑猎奇……
  • 弃妇有喜之金牌农家媳

    弃妇有喜之金牌农家媳

    美容专家赵惜儿一朝穿越为俏生生的农家怀孕新媳妇,虽一家亲戚恶毒极品外加一命呜呼的便宜郎君,但姐不怕,统统站墙根唱征服去!姐研发化妆品开连锁店、带着魔王小包子日子过得真红火!可这位骗他钱,又摸脸的还敢!真真是羞死人了!这一下被某狼君套牢啦!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 都市至尊王者

    都市至尊王者

    金麟岂是池中物,一遇风云变化龙。少年高手林风接受到各种各样的任务,这些任务几乎都有一个共同的特点,那就是和美女有关。行走在万花丛中,他要做的就是冷静冷静再冷静。
  • 阴阳通吃

    阴阳通吃

    横扫阴阳两界,笑傲阴阳江湖,这就是英俊小伙子李山!
  • 中国电视娱乐文化批评

    中国电视娱乐文化批评

    本书试图解答以下问题:在我国当下的媒介文化具体语境下,电视娱乐是如何建构和影响人们的生活方式、思维方式、行为方式?在“娱乐为王”的时代,如何打造优质的娱乐产品?电视娱乐化的道德伦理底线在哪里?其合理的内核、价值和边界在哪里?我们应该如何对娱乐进行审美救赎?应该塑造和架构一种什么样的娱乐精神、审美精神和“快乐文化”?
  • 逆战之铁血军魂

    逆战之铁血军魂

    身经百战的特种兵逆战(姓逆名战)凭借百步穿杨的射术,屡次立下战功,赢得无数荣誉和勋章。在无数次反恐斗争中,外冷内热的他历经种种生离死别,目睹被恐怖势力所残害的人们,心中形成了坚定的信念和决心--为保护人民群众生命而和黑恶势力血战到底!十年前的一次射击失手,直接导致他的养父壮烈牺牲!在后来的十年里,他从不计较别人的眼光和世俗的态度,始终用“心有坚定、一往无前”的逆态度待人处事!然而关于他的身世却是如此的扑朔迷离,随着一份机密档案的出现,他的亲生父亲和家世也逐渐浮出水面,他竟是前恐怖黑暗组织首领的唯一儿子!面对家世和自己的信仰、同事的怀疑和世俗的偏见,他将何去何从?欢迎收看《逆战之铁血军魂》!