登陆注册
15483200000088

第88章 CHAPTER XVII LIVE COALS FROM MISS CLENDENNING'(6)

"Oh, I should certainly say so. It is nothing but books all over the house. Really, he has more books than Dad." This statement was to strengthen the one regarding the family ancestors--both telling arguments about Kennedy Square.

"And this girl--is she a lady?"

The question somehow put to flight all his mental manoeuvres. "She is more than a lady, mother.

She is the dearest--" He stopped, hesitated for an instant, and slipping his arm around his mother's neck drew her close to him. Then, in a torrent of words--his cheeks against hers--the whole story came out. He was a boy again now; that quality in him that would last all his life. She listened with her eyes on the floor, her heart torn with varying. emotions. She was disturbed, but not alarmed.

One phase of the situation stood out clearly in her practical mind--his poverty and the impossibility of any immediate marriage. Before that obstacle could be removed she felt sure his natural vacillation regarding women would save him. He would forget her as he had Sue.

"And you say her brother works in the fields and that her father and mother permitted this girl to leave home and sit night after night with you young men with no other protection than that of a common Irishwoman?" There was a tone of censure now in her voice that roused a slight antagonism in Oliver.

"Why not? What could harm her? There was no other place for her to go where she could learn anything."

Mrs. Horn kept still for a moment, looking on the floor. Oliver sat watching her face.

"And your family, my son," she protested with a certain patient disapproval in her tones. "Do they count for nothing? I, of course, would love anybody you would make your wife, but you have others about you. No man has a right to marry beneath him. Do not be in a hurry over this matter.

Come home for your wife when you are ready to marry. Give yourself time to compare this girl, who seems to have fascinated you, with--Sue, for instance, or any of the others you have been brought up with."

Oliver shrugged his shoulders at the mention of Sue's name. He had compared her.

"You would not talk this way, dearie; if you could see her," he replied in a hopeless way as if the futility of making his mother understand was now becoming apparent to him. "She is different from anyone you ever met--she is so strong, so fine--such a woman in all that the word means. Not something you fondle and make love to, remember, but a woman more like a Madonna that you worship, or a Greek goddess that you might fear. As to the family part of it, I am getting tired of it all, mother.

What good is Grandfather Horn or anybody else to me? I have got to dig my way out just as they did.

Just as dear old Dad is doing. If he succeeds in his work who will help him but himself? There have been times when I used to love to remember him sitting by his reading-lamp or with his violin tucked under his chin, and I was proud to think he was my father. Do you know what sets my blood on fire now? It is when I think of him standing over his forge and blowing his bellows, his hands black with coal. I understand many things, dearie, that I knew nothing about when I left home. You used to tell me yourself that everybody had to work, and you sent me away to do it. I looked upon it then as a degradation. I see it differently now. I have worked with all my might all summer, and I have brought back a whole lot of sketches that the boys like. Now I am going to work again with Mr. Slade.

I do not like his work, and I do love mine, but I am going to stick to his all the same. I have got something to work for now," and his face brightened.

"I am going to win!"

She did not interrupt him. It was better he should unburden his heart. She was satisfied with his record; if he went wrong she only was to blame.

But he was not going wrong; nor was there anything to worry about--not even his art--not so long as he kept his place with Mr. Slade and only took it up as a relaxation from more weighty cares. It was only the girl that caused her a moment's thought.

She saw too, through all his outburst, a certain independence and a fearlessness and a certain fixedness of purpose that sent an exultant thrill through her even when her heart was burdened with the thought of this new danger that threatened him.

She had sent him away for the fault of instability, and he had overcome it. Should she not now hold fast, as she had before, and save him the second time from this girl who was beneath him in station and who would drag him down to her level, and so perhaps ruin him?

"We will not talk any more about it to-night, my son," she said, in tender tones, leaning forward and kissing him on the cheek--it was through his affections that she controlled him. "You should be tired out with your day's journey and ought to rest.

Take my advice--do not ask her to be your wife yet.

Think about it a little and see some other women before you make up your mind."

A delicious tremor passed through Oliver. He HAD asked her, and she HAD promised! He remembered just the very day, the hour, the minute. That was the bliss of it all! But this he did not tell his mother. He would not hurt her any further now.

Some other day he would tell her; when she could see Madge and judge for herself. No, not to-night, and so with the secret untold he kissed her and led her to her room.

And yet strange to say it was the one only thing in all his life that he had kept from her.

Ah! these mothers! who make lovers of their only sons, dominating their lives! How bitter must be the hours when they realize that another's arms are opening for them!

And these boys--what misgivings come; what doubts. How the old walls, impregnable from childhood, begin to crumble! How little now the dear mother knows--she so wise but a few moons since.

How this new love steps in front of the old love and claims every part of the boy as its very own.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 邪帝之吸血鬼师叔

    邪帝之吸血鬼师叔

    尹诺作为一只有节操的吸血鬼,她绝不会告诉你她是因为觉得蜀山的饭很好吃所以才待在蜀山的,但是却被蜀山长老喊出来捉妖了,说是蜀山要没了,某诺也要没饭吃了“什么?~!怎么可以!!!”。于是,某诺就开始打怪捉妖的生涯。但是……这个男人明明是妖,为什么一直缠着她这个道士!!!“女人,你以为你装的很像?”“额……我一直,都是这么以为的。”
  • 告诉学生聪慧机敏的机智故事(让学生受益一生的故事)

    告诉学生聪慧机敏的机智故事(让学生受益一生的故事)

    从古到今,由中而外,流传着许多令人频频赞叹、拍案叫绝的机智故事。这些机智故事里的主人公们,或面对刁难机智反击,或面对困境沉稳渡过,或面对尴尬巧妙应对,或面对困难勇敢解决……总之,它们都有一个共同的特点,就是主人公机敏灵活、随机应变,以机智的方式解决突发事件。这些故事不但丰富了我们的视野,更让我们从中学到了智慧。看到这些充满睿智的故事,我们总是会会心一笑,或是由衷佩服主人公的聪明机智,我们还会反问自己:我也能拥有过人的智慧吗?
  • 都市之龙耀天下

    都市之龙耀天下

    我写的市都市文,身手可能有点强但是不会有异能的那种。
  • 末日杀戮指南

    末日杀戮指南

    带着末日中挣扎九年的记忆,丁修回到了高中课堂上,这个周末,兽人的燃烧军团将会降临。在一切堕入黑暗之前,他能做些什么?一张金色卡牌,召唤出手握巨剑的重装骑士,他的名字是:德玛西亚之力?盖伦。“愿意为您效劳。”丁修笑而不语,这一世,神挡杀神!PS:轻度YY,摒弃种马,绝不圣母,这是一条孤寂血腥的旅途,一个玩家反抗NPC的故事,一个超级大杂烩!
  • 剑以魂人至圣

    剑以魂人至圣

    南海舰队某驱逐舰支队上尉枪炮长杨阳在一次海眼科考护航任务中卷入涡流,穿越到了一个修者世界,豪华变身为没落家族的败家子,他该何去何从,是沉沦还是在异世崛起……且看柳传素异世剑圣成长路
  • 士途

    士途

    士不可以不弘毅,任重而道远。仁以为己任,不亦重乎?死而后已,不亦远乎?文有文仕,武亦有武士。武徒、武者、武士、武师、大武师、玄武师、地武师、天武师、武圣童生、秀才、举人、进士、谋士、玄谋、鬼谋、天谋、神谋!一百零八个国家,书写了一段又一段史诗传奇!
  • 执念所在,WoWorld

    执念所在,WoWorld

    魔兽电影的上映,却引发了一场凡人与时间守护者的较量。毫无战斗力可言的我们,又将凭借什么与各大势力进行对抗?这一切到底是梦还是时间的乱流?拯救世界?不,这还太遥远……
  • 心理游戏训练营(超级智商训练营)

    心理游戏训练营(超级智商训练营)

    著名科学家霍金说过:“有一个聪明的大脑,你就会比别人更接近成功。”思维能力在人的成功过程中起着举足轻重的作用,青少年无论将来从事什么职业,处于什么岗位,面对什么问题,拥有活跃的思维,都是你能否快速走向成功的最关健因素。全面开发青少年的思维能力,其重要性远排在教授具体知识技能之上。
  • 使东川·邮亭月

    使东川·邮亭月

    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。
  • 柯云笔记

    柯云笔记

    这不是一部小说,这是一个传记,专属于我的故事。当世界迈步向前,当人类千方百计为幸福而努力着,那一年,那一天,一个高二的学生就此失去了所有,他不知道他还剩下什么……拿起手中的笔,茫然的望着蓝色的天空,就这样简简单单的记录起他的一生。