登陆注册
15462600000065

第65章 ETHELBERTA'S HOUSE (continued) - THE BRITISH M

'But, Berta, you are not going to marry any stranger who may turn up?' said Picotee, who had creeping sensations of dread when Ethelberta talked like this.

'I had no such intention. But, having once put my hand to the plough, how shall I turn back?'

'You might marry Mr. Ladywell,' said Picotee, who preferred to look at things in the concrete.

'Yes, marry him villainously; in cold blood, without a moment to prepare himself.'

'Ah, you won't!'

'I am not so sure about that. I have brought mother and the children to town against her judgment and against my father's; they gave way to my opinion as to one who from superior education has larger knowledge of the world than they. I must prove my promises, even if Heaven should fall upon me for it, or what a miserable future will theirs be! We must not be poor in London. Poverty in the country is a sadness, but poverty in town is a horror. There is something not without grandeur in the thought of starvation on an open mountain or in a wide wood, and your bones lying there to bleach in the pure sun and rain; but a back garret in a rookery, and the other starvers in the room insisting on keeping the window shut--anything to deliver us from that!'

'How gloomy you can be, Berta! It will never be so dreadful. Why, I can take in plain sewing, and you can do translations, and mother can knit stockings, and so on. How much longer will this house be yours?'

'Two years. If I keep it longer than that I shall have to pay rent at the rate of three hundred a year. The Petherwin estate provides me with it till then, which will be the end of Lady Petherwin's term.'

'I see it; and you ought to marry before the house is gone, if you mean to marry high,' murmured Picotee, in an inadequate voice, as one confronted by a world so tragic that any hope of her assisting therein was out of the question.

It was not long after this exposition of the family affairs that Christopher called upon them; but Picotee was not present, having gone to think of superhuman work on the spur of Ethelberta's awakening talk. There was something new in the way in which Ethelberta received the announcement of his name; passion had to do with it, so had circumspection; the latter most, for the first time since their reunion.

'I am going to leave this part of England,' said Christopher, after a few gentle preliminaries. 'I was one of the applicants for the post of assistant-organist at Melchester Cathedral when it became vacant, and I find I am likely to be chosen, through the interest of one of my father's friends.'

'I congratulate you.'

'No, Ethelberta, it is not worth that. I did not originally mean to follow this course at all; but events seemed to point to it in the absence of a better.'

'I too am compelled to follow a course I did not originally mean to take.' After saying no more for a few moments, she added, in a tone of sudden openness, a richer tincture creeping up her cheek, 'I want to put a question to you boldly--not exactly a question--a thought.

Have you considered whether the relations between us which have lately prevailed are--are the best for you--and for me?'

'I know what you mean,' said Christopher, hastily anticipating all that she might be going to say; 'and I am glad you have given me the opportunity of speaking upon that subject. It has been very good and considerate in you to allow me to share your society so frequently as you have done since I have been in town, and to think of you as an object to exist for and strive for. But I ought to have remembered that, since you have nobody at your side to look after your interests, it behoved me to be doubly careful. In short, Ethelberta, I am not in a position to marry, nor can I discern when I shall be, and I feel it would be an injustice to ask you to be bound in any way to one lower and less talented than you. You cannot, from what you say, think it desirable that the engagement should continue. I have no right to ask you to be my betrothed, without having a near prospect of making you my wife. I don't mind saying this straight out--I have no fear that you will doubt my love; thank Heaven, you know what that is well enough! However, as things are, I wish you to know that I cannot conscientiously put in a claim upon your attention.'

A second meaning was written in Christopher's look, though he scarcely uttered it. A woman so delicately poised upon the social globe could not in honour be asked to wait for a lover who was unable to set bounds to the waiting period. Yet he had privily dreamed of an approach to that position--an unreserved, ideally perfect declaration from Ethelberta that time and practical issues were nothing to her; that she would stand as fast without material hopes as with them; that love was to be an end with her henceforth, having utterly ceased to be a means. Therefore this surreptitious hope of his, founded on no reasonable expectation, was like a guilty thing surprised when Ethelberta answered, with a predominance of judgment over passion still greater than before:

'It is unspeakably generous in you to put it all before me so nicely, Christopher. I think infinitely more of you for being so unreserved, especially since I too have been thinking much on the indefiniteness of the days to come. We are not numbered among the blest few who can afford to trifle with the time. Yet to agree to anything like a positive parting will be quite unnecessary. You did not mean that, did you? for it is harsh if you did.' Ethelberta smiled kindly as she said this, as much as to say that she was far from really upbraiding him. 'Let it be only that we will see each other less. We will bear one another in mind as deeply attached friends if not as definite lovers, and keep up friendly remembrances of a sort which, come what may, will never have to be ended by any painful process termed breaking off. Different persons, different natures; and it may be that marriage would not be the most favourable atmosphere for our old affection to prolong itself in.

When do you leave London?'

同类推荐
  • 荆釵记

    荆釵记

    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。
  • 汉官旧仪

    汉官旧仪

    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。
  • 明伦汇编皇极典创守部

    明伦汇编皇极典创守部

    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。
  • Crotchet Castle

    Crotchet Castle

    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。
  • 五凤吟

    五凤吟

    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
  • 红尘终有仙

    红尘终有仙

    人道渺渺。仙道莽莽。鬼道乐兮。当人生门。仙道贵生。鬼道贵终。
  • 史佚书

    史佚书

    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。
  • 阎罗殿主

    阎罗殿主

    “阎罗是亡灵世界的第一主宰!”“错,他是生灵,就活在这世界上。”“那这个人是谁?”“谁能掌握世间万物的生灭规则,谁就是阎罗。”
  • 霸爱

    霸爱

    她只是替好友哄了几天孩子,竟然被好友老公强夺了身子。原本简单的生活,变成万劫不复的地狱,他就像一个魔鬼,无论她怎么逃脱,都离不开他的手掌。看到她与别的男人约会,他竟然霸道的骂她淫荡,不但威胁男子一方,还直接命她成为他的情妇。她不从,他就用那晚之事威胁她。不想被好友误会,更不想好友失去幸福,她默默忍下。他的霸道,他的容情,他的强硬,让她慢慢迷失自我,甘愿成为情妇,将心也交给了他。最后,当她知道一切真相时,一切又会变得怎么样?
  • 呆萌萝莉:恶魔校草吃定你

    呆萌萝莉:恶魔校草吃定你

    他和她,是青梅竹马。从此,一场大灰狼和小绵羊的故事就上演了。她整天被某男欺负,某男还一脸无辜,正是让人气愤。可是,我们可怜的萌萌还是从了他。狼抓羊的故事正式开始了……
  • 违法心理矫治

    违法心理矫治

    本书从司法应用心理社会实践任务出发设计总体框架,分为三大部分,第一部分是违法心理基础技能;第二部分是违法心理实用技能;第三部分是违法心理危机干预。
  • 恶魔校草恋上黑道校花

    恶魔校草恋上黑道校花

    她是有恩报恩,有仇报仇并外送千百倍利息的腹黑女王,容颜倾城却心狠手辣。他是被各大黑道龙头老大点头哈腰俯首称臣,让商界帝国主宰者甚至是军区上校分为座上宾的神秘暗夜帝王,冷酷霸道,黑白通吃,却独独对这个女人上了心。黑吃黑,究竟是她吃了他还是他扑倒她
  • 扑倒甜心:大饿狼一口吃掉呆萌兔

    扑倒甜心:大饿狼一口吃掉呆萌兔

    颜朵朵本来打算低调度过高中的生活。但是…没想到,她居然会和目前超人气偶像明星夏玖住在同一个房间里。而且…一不小心,还发现夏玖其实是……男孩子!?女装癖?还是变态?不管怎么样,颜朵朵倒霉了。为了防止自己的秘密被暴露,夏玖趁着颜朵朵不备的时候,脱光了她衣服,拍下她的羞耻照片作为筹码威胁她。“我什么都没看见。我什么都没听见。我会言听计从,所以请不要把照片散播出去。”颜朵朵恳求道。……【本文风格:甜宠溺爱、风趣幽默、腹黑VS呆萌。】
  • 邪王刺

    邪王刺

    从山上下来的懵懂小子在大洋彼岸闯出一片天地
  • 豪门影后之盛世宠婚

    豪门影后之盛世宠婚

    萧婠婠高昂着头颅嚣张了半辈子。虽然年少轻狂眼瞎误将狼人当良人,但幸好她迷途知返,硬是披着忍者神龟的壳子,揣着副蛇蝎心肠把那对渣男贱女给弄死了,最终成功当上了王朝最尊贵的女人。谁知道莫名其妙一朝穿越,却从权掌天下、被万万人敬畏尊崇的太后凉凉变成了二十一世纪的一个无权无势、无爹无妈、还惨被渣男劈腿被情敌打压,甚至连三餐都不济的小可怜!嚣张了半辈子的太后娘娘心塞了。更心塞的是这个小可怜的身份竟然还是个“低贱”的戏子!什么?叫她堂堂太后凉凉去供人肆意娱乐?放肆!拖出去砍砍砍!等等!当戏子来钱快赚钱多?呃……这个可以考虑!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)