登陆注册
14821300000010

第10章

'He says that your true lover breathlessly finds himself engaged to a sweetheart, like a man who has caught something in the dark. He doesn't know whether it is a bat or a bird, and takes it to the light when he is cool to learn what it is. He looks to see if she is the right age, but right age or wrong age, he must consider her a prize. Sometime later he ponders whether she is the right kind of prize for him. Right kind or wrong kind--he has called her his, and must abide by it. After a time he asks himself, "Has she the temper, hair, and eyes I meant to have, and was firmly resolved not to do without?" He finds it is all wrong, and then comes the tussle--'

'Do they marry and live happily?'

'Who? O, the supposed pair. I think he said--well, I really forget what he said.'

'That IS stupid of you!' said the young lady with dismay.

'Yes.'

'But he's a satirist--I don't think I care about him now.'

'There you are just wrong. He is not. He is, as I believe, an impulsive fellow who has been made to pay the penalty of his rashness in some love affair.'

Thus ended the dialogue of Thursday, but Cytherea read the verses again in private. On Friday her brother remarked that Springrove had informed him he was going to leave Mr. Gradfield's in a fortnight to push his fortunes in London.

An indescribable feeling of sadness shot through Cytherea's heart.

Why should she be sad at such an announcement as that, she thought, concerning a man she had never seen, when her spirits were elastic enough to rebound after hard blows from deep and real troubles as if she had scarcely known them? Though she could not answer this question, she knew one thing, she was saddened by Owen's news.

4. JULY THE TWENTY-FIRST

A very popular local excursion by steamboat to Lulstead Cove was announced through the streets of Budmouth one Thursday morning by the weak-voiced town-crier, to start at six o'clock the same day.

The weather was lovely, and the opportunity being the first of the kind offered to them, Owen and Cytherea went with the rest.

They had reached the Cove, and had walked landward for nearly an hour over the hill which rose beside the strand, when Graye recollected that two or three miles yet further inland from this spot was an interesting mediaeval ruin. He was already familiar with its characteristics through the medium of an archaeological work, and now finding himself so close to the reality, felt inclined to verify some theory he had formed respecting it. Concluding that there would be just sufficient time for him to go there and return before the boat had left the shore, he parted from Cytherea on the hill, struck downwards, and then up a heathery valley.

She remained on the summit where he had left her till the time of his expected return, scanning the details of the prospect around.

Placidly spread out before her on the south was the open Channel, reflecting a blue intenser by many shades than that of the sky overhead, and dotted in the foreground by half-a-dozen small craft of contrasting rig, their sails graduating in hue from extreme whiteness to reddish brown, the varying actual colours varied again in a double degree by the rays of the declining sun.

Presently the distant bell from the boat was heard, warning the passengers to embark. This was followed by a lively air from the harps and violins on board, their tones, as they arose, becoming intermingled with, though not marred by, the brush of the waves when their crests rolled over--at the point where the check of the shallows was first felt--and then thinned away up the slope of pebbles and sand.

She turned her face landward and strained her eyes to discern, if possible, some sign of Owen's return. Nothing was visible save the strikingly brilliant, still landscape. The wide concave which lay at the back of the hill in this direction was blazing with the western light, adding an orange tint to the vivid purple of the heather, now at the very climax of bloom, and free from the slightest touch of the invidious brown that so soon creeps into its shades. The light so intensified the colours that they seemed to stand above the surface of the earth and float in mid-air like an exhalation of red. In the minor valleys, between the hillocks and ridges which diversified the contour of the basin, but did not disturb its general sweep, she marked brakes of tall, heavy-stemmed ferns, five or six feet high, in a brilliant light-green dress--a broad riband of them with the path in their midst winding like a stream along the little ravine that reached to the foot of the hill, and delivered up the path to its grassy area. Among the ferns grew holly bushes deeper in tint than any shadow about them, whilst the whole surface of the scene was dimpled with small conical pits, and here and there were round ponds, now dry, and half overgrown with rushes.

The last bell of the steamer rang. Cytherea had forgotten herself, and what she was looking for. In a fever of distress lest Owen should be left behind, she gathered up in her hand the corners of her handkerchief, containing specimens of the shells, plants, and fossils which the locality produced, started off to the sands, and mingled with the knots of visitors there congregated from other interesting points around; from the inn, the cottages, and hired conveyances that had returned from short drives inland. They all went aboard by the primitive plan of a narrow plank on two wheels--the women being assisted by a rope. Cytherea lingered till the very last, reluctant to follow, and looking alternately at the boat and the valley behind. Her delay provoked a remark from Captain Jacobs, a thickset man of hybrid stains, resulting from the mixed effects of fire and water, peculiar to sailors where engines are the propelling power.

'Now then, missy, if you please. I am sorry to tell 'ee our time's up. Who are you looking for, miss?'

'My brother--he has walked a short distance inland; he must be here directly. Could you wait for him--just a minute?'

同类推荐
  • 佛说稻秆经

    佛说稻秆经

    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。
  • 陶真人内丹赋

    陶真人内丹赋

    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。
  • The Lamplighter

    The Lamplighter

    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。
  • 檐曝杂记

    檐曝杂记

    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。
  • TARTARIN OF TARASCON

    TARTARIN OF TARASCON

    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
  • 我漂亮但不温柔(完结)

    我漂亮但不温柔(完结)

    她叫冯雨,生于雨天。仅听名字,所有人都以为这是个温柔的女孩子,是女孩子没错,可是,她一点也不温柔。她是独生女,生于一个极度重男轻女的家庭,但是,为了继承家业,她从小就被当作假小子养活着。有一天,她也会温柔吗?当然哦!
  • 无上天域

    无上天域

    天地大域分五等,为低等凡域,中等灵域,上等仙域,高等神域和传说中的无上天域!凡域少年周天偶得天机造化玉蝶,冲击无上天域之主之位!
  • 末世重生:炮灰黑化史

    末世重生:炮灰黑化史

    本书已移坑(末世重生之炮灰黑化史)多谢支持
  • 龙咁威

    龙咁威

    龙星大陆以修龙气为主,雷泽大陆则以雷气为主。花家少爷带着一身龙气穿越到雷泽大陆这个未知的世界,在腥风血雨的异界!花天巧将一切的恩怨情仇演绎得淋漓尽致,将龙气与雷气结合,在武道上另辟奚径!走上一条前无古人的巅峰之路!
  • 这些年,我也活着

    这些年,我也活着

    自传体小说,做为小人物,我们也有自己的理想,也有自己的生活态度,也有自己的喜怒哀乐。这本小说,是一本以第一人称为视角的励志小说。
  • 【锦】花语系列之二:梨花殇

    【锦】花语系列之二:梨花殇

    【晴语】编辑旗下出品花语系列之二:梨花殇(原名:梨花落尽)他从来没有想过,他的生命,会用这样一种方式,从这个美丽的梨园开始,他也不知道,从这一刻开始,雪白的梨花,在他的生命里,永远都不会消失,将成为永久的烙印,左右他一生的爱恨,一生的追求。富贵,贫穷,天有不测风云……欺骗,隐瞒,是谁在推波助澜……寂寥的院落里,漫天梨花即将落尽,她,萧索的背影,渐行渐远——他凄婉的声音唤住她:如果一切可以从头来过,我愿,倾尽万贯家财,换你再重新爱我一次……雨下,梨花无言,尽现斑斑泪痕……博客地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/u/2120110982微博地址:http://weibo.com/2120110982?source=blog风的台湾版《倾城泪》现已上市,淘宝网地址:http://item.taobao.com/item.htm?id=10645487557文文要上架了,希望继续看的读者,就要注册VIP会员了。注册充值方法:第一步,登录红袖首页点击右上方方框处“免费注册”。第二步,注册完毕后,点击方框“我要充值”,进入充值页面,选择自己合适的充值方式。首充30元,就是VIP会员了。
  • 井盖上的童话

    井盖上的童话

    在每个人心中,前任是不可割舍的,现任更胜。对于孟千扬来说,当初恋遇上现任,前任遇上现任,那种锥心的痛更加表现得体无完肤,放手是他必须学会的技能。叶灼想,她永远也不想见他,可是啊!时间并不这样想,所以,云淡风轻是最好的状态。风过无痕,情过无悔。
  • 丧尸末世之战

    丧尸末世之战

    2300年,从初中就认识的炒饭、歌德、WYY等人,亲眼目睹城市市民感染流感病毒,最终尸变的过程,他们如何战胜灾难,离开灾区寻求一个安全的庇护所。。。。。。
  • 半神域

    半神域

    八级宇宙多拉索为了冲击宇宙的至尊九级宇宙,而利用天道能量构建了一个不圆满的宇宙半神域。目的为了培养攻破宇宙的宇宙战士。一个地球少年无意间进入了半神域。九死一生。百里挑一。万里选一。为了回家,不择手段完成任务,活下去。在这里,一个梦却是活下去的希望。任务开始。。。系统检测中。。。。世界观判定。。。。
  • 有一种美德叫微笑

    有一种美德叫微笑

    本书主要内容包括:有一种美德叫微笑;给宽容一个微笑;爱从一个微笑开始;把微笑送给自己;诚信——开往春天的地铁等。