登陆注册
15420900000011

第11章

there.My eye," chuckling, "it was queer talk! But I liked it.P'raps it was lies, but it was cheerfle lies that 'elps yer.What I ses is--if THINGS ain't cheerfle, PEOPLE 'S got to be --to fight it out.The women in the 'ouse larft fit to kill theirselves when she fust come 'ome limpin' an'

talked to 'em about what the lidy told 'er.But arter a bit they liked to 'ear 'er--just along o' the cheerfleness.Said it was like a pantermine.Drunken Bet says if she could get 'old 'f it an' believe it sime as Jinny Montaubyn does it'd be as cheerin' as drink an' last longer.""Is it a kind of religion?" Dart asked, having a vague memory of rumors of fantastic new theories and half-born beliefs which had seemed to him weird visions floating through fagged brains wearied by old doubts and arguments and failures.The world was tired--the whole earth was sad--centuries had wrought only to the end of this twentieth century's despair.Was the struggle waking even here--in this back water of the huge city's human tide?

he wondered with dull interest.

"Is it a kind of religion?" he said.

"It 's cheerfler." Glad thrust out her sharp chin uncertainly again.

"There 's no 'ell fire in it.An'

there ain't no blime laid on Godamighty." (The word as she uttered it seemed to have no connection whatever with her usual colloquial invocation of the Deity.) "When a dray run over little Billy an' crushed 'im inter a rag, an' 'is mother was screamin' an' draggin' 'er 'air down, the curick 'e ses, `It 's Gawd's will,'

'e ses--an' 'e ain't no bad sort neither, an' 'is fice was white an' wet with sweat--`Gawd done it,' 'e ses.

An' me, I'd nussed the child an' I clawed me 'air sime as if I was 'is mother an' I screamed out, `Then damn 'im!' An' the curick 'e dropped sittin' down on the curb-stone an' 'id 'is fice in 'is 'ands."

Dart hid his own face after the manner of the wretched curate.

"No wonder," he groaned.His blood turned cold.

"But," said Glad, "Miss Montaubyn's lidy she says Godamighty never done it nor never intended it, an' if we kep' sayin' an' believin' 'e 's close to us an' not millyuns o' miles away, we'd be took care of whilst we was alive an' not 'ave to wait till we was dead."She got up on her feet and threw up her arms with a sudden jerk and involuntary gesture.

"I 'm alive! I 'm alive!" she cried out, "I've got ter be took care of NOW! That 's why I like wot she tells about it.So does the women.

We ain't no more reason ter be sure of wot the curick says than ter be sure o' this.Dunno as I've got ter choose either way, but if I 'ad, I'd choose the cheerflest."Dart had sat staring at her--so had Polly--so had the thief.Dart rubbed his forehead.

"I do not understand," he said.

" 'T ain't understanding! It 's believin'.Bless yer, SHE doesn't understand.I say, let's go an' talk to 'er a bit.She don't mind nothin', an'

she'll let us in.We can leave Polly an' 'im 'ere.They can make some more tea an' drink it."It ended in their going out of the room together again and stumbling once more down the stairway's crookedness.At the bottom of the first short flight they stopped in the darkness and Glad knocked at a door with a summons manifestly expectant of cheerful welcome.She used the formula she had used before.

" 'S on'y me, Miss Montaubyn,"

she cried out." 'S on'y Glad."

The door opened in wide welcome, and confronting them as she held its handle stood a small old woman with an astonishing face.It was astonishing because while it was withered and wrinkled with marks of past years which had once stamped their reckless unsavoriness upon its every line, some strange redeeming thing had happened to it and its expression was that of a creature to whom the opening of a door could only mean the entrance--the tumbling in as it were--of hopes realized.

Its surface was swept clean of even the vaguest anticipation of anything not to be desired.Smiling as it did through the black doorway into the unrelieved shadow of the passage, it struck Antony Dart at once that it actually implied this--and that in this place--and indeed in any place--nothing could have been more astonishing.What could, indeed?

"Well, well," she said, "come in, Glad, bless yer.""I've brought a gent to 'ear yer talk a bit," Glad explained informally.

The small old woman raised her twinkling old face to look at him.

"Ah!" she said, as if summing up what was before her." 'E thinks it 's worse than it is, doesn't 'e, now?

Come in, sir, do."

This time it struck Dart that her look seemed actually to anticipate the evolving of some wonderful and desirable thing from himself.As if even his gloom carried with it treasure as yet undisplayed.As she knew nothing of the ten sovereigns, he wondered what, in God's name, she saw.

The poverty of the little square room had an odd cheer in it.Much scrubbing had removed from it the objections manifest in Glad's room above.There was a small red fire in the grate, a strip of old, but gay carpet before it, two chairs and a table were covered with a harlequin patchwork made of bright odds and ends of all sizes and shapes.The fog in all its murky volume could not quite obscure the brightness of the often rubbed window and its harlequin curtain drawn across upon a string.

"Bless yer," said Miss Montaubyn, "sit down."Dart sat and thanked her.Glad dropped upon the floor and girdled her knees comfortably while Miss Montaubyn took the second chair, which was close to the table, and snuffed the candle which stood near a basket of colored scraps such as, without doubt, had made the harlequin curtain.

"Yer won't mind me goin' on with me bit o' work?" she chirped.

"Tell 'im wot it is," Glad suggested.

"They come from a dressmaker as is in a small way," designating the scraps by a gesture."I clean up for 'er an'

she lets me 'ave 'em.I make 'em up into anythink I can--pin-cushions an'

bags an' curtings an' balls.Nobody'd think wot they run to sometimes.

Now an' then I sell some of 'em.

Wot I can't sell I give away."

"Drunken Bet's biby plays with 'er ball all day," said Glad.

同类推荐
  • 樵云独唱

    樵云独唱

    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。
  • 君子堂日询手镜

    君子堂日询手镜

    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。
  • 省心杂言

    省心杂言

    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。
  • 佛说盂兰盆经

    佛说盂兰盆经

    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。
  • 书法辑要

    书法辑要

    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
  • 傲世女王萌萌哒i

    傲世女王萌萌哒i

    “唔,咳咳,可恶,不行了”拥有瀑布般的银发女孩说道,“呵,还想跑么?乖乖投降吧!法力都消失了,没用的废物,组织要你还干嘛?”没错,世界上令人闻风丧胆的最强组织“冷血”。。而她便是组织幕后的青梅竹马。。。。。
  • 抗战之亮剑

    抗战之亮剑

    外敌入侵必亮剑,亮剑必见血,总有人倒下,不是敌人就是自己。狭路相逢,无论敌人多么强大,必亮剑。(谨以此文向抗战先烈们致敬。)
  • 异世风华之魔影重重

    异世风华之魔影重重

    自古以来,天界与魔界势不两立,两界纷争不断,战乱不休,天界三公主与魔帝相恋,被天帝打下凡间历十世轮回。轮回十世,只为等你,命运的安排也逃不开宿命的纠缠。序幕自此拉开……
  • 妖媚倾城:神女

    妖媚倾城:神女

    一次莫名其妙的穿越,她的身世谜团由谁揭开,以前遭人唾弃的废材,如今是万目敬仰的神女,圣女,她和他的感情之路,坎坎坷坷,天道是吗?我偏要违背,你能奈我何?
  • 丽江艳了北方的雪

    丽江艳了北方的雪

    在云南的丽江古城,艳遇一位北方女子,顾暖心。后来,却发现她并非来旅游。而是因为一个女人来到云南。听着她的故事,追溯着属于80后的爱情婚姻故事,跨过了那些爱恨情仇;也品味了一番属于尴尬一代的凌乱婚姻故事……北方昌乐县城里的现实题材爱情故事……(本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同纯属巧合)
  • 末世域主

    末世域主

    末世来临,我穿上铠甲在末世中游荡,看淡人类的丑陋,打破末世的常规,我从末世归来。
  • 流浪公会

    流浪公会

    刀剑和魔法只不过是强者的道具而已,本就没有强弱之分。正义,永远与失败者无缘,善恶更是如此。所以在这个世界里,弱者只能挣扎求存。或者是用性命,拼出一个把世界踩在脚下的未来。
  • 贵族学院:花开微凉

    贵族学院:花开微凉

    彼岸花生生相错不相见世世轮回血色湮只见花开不见叶黄泉一路两相牵
  • 诛天图

    诛天图

    大道三千,皆可成圣。上古时期,天地崩裂,圣人陨落,大战四起,道统崩溃。三千大道,仅留一道,谓之,画道。它本为三千大道中最不起眼的一个,然而,经过千万年的传承,画道,已然成为唯一的道!画虎,可拥有猛虎之力。画鸟,可翱翔蓝天之上。画鱼,可潜入深海之渊。……————————已完本《超神建模师》,高订1w7,品质保证!PS:新书《黑暗主宰》发布,求各种支持!!!
  • 万古剑祖

    万古剑祖

    少年源澈,从贫瘠之地走出,修逆天剑法,得剑仙传承,踩着血海枯骨逆流而上,一剑出而天下惊。剑之巅峰,手中无剑,可以天下万物为剑。一剑之威,天崩地裂,乾坤翻转!