登陆注册
4709100000095

第95章

The hour came, and with the very stroke of the clock, lady Arctura and Davie were in the schoolroom. A moment more, and they set out to climb the spiral of Baliol's tower.

But what a different lady was Arctura this afternoon! She was cheerful, even merry--with Davie, almost jolly. Her soul had many alternating lights and glooms, but it was seldom or never now so clouded as when first Donal saw her. In the solitude of her chamber, where most the simple soul should be conscious of life as a blessedness, she was yet often haunted by ghastly shapes of fear; but there also other forms had begun to draw nigh to her; sweetest rays of hope would ever and anon break through the clouds, and mock the darkness from her presence. Perhaps God might mean as thoroughly well by her as even her imagination could wish!

Does a dull reader remark that hers was a diseased state of mind?--I answer, The more she needed to be saved from it with the only real deliverance from any ill! But her misery, however diseased, was infinitely more reasonable than the healthy joy of such as trouble themselves about nothing. Some sicknesses are better than any but the true health.

"I never thought you were like this, Arkie!" said Davie. "You are just as if you had come to school to Mr. Grant! You would soon know how much happier it is to have somebody you must mind!"

"If having me, Davie," said Donal, "doesn't help you to be happy without me, there will not have been much good done. What I want most to teach you is, to leave the door always on the latch, for some one--you know whom I mean--to come in."

"Race me up the stair, Arkie," said Davie, when they came to the foot of the spiral.

"Very well," assented his cousin.

"Which side will you have--the broad or the narrow?"

"The broad."

"Well then--one, two, three, and away we go!"

Davie mounted like a clever goat, his hand and arm on the newel, and slipping lightly round it. Arctura's ascent was easier but slower: she found her garments in her way, therefore yielded the race, and waited for Donal. Davie, thinking he heard her footsteps behind him all the time, flew up shrieking with the sweet terror of love's pursuit.

"What a darling the boy has grown!" said Arctura when Donal overtook her.

"Yes," answered Donal; "one would think such a child might run straight into the kingdom of heaven; but I suppose he must have his temptations and trials first: out of the storm alone comes the true peace."

"Will peace come out of all storms?"

"I trust so. Every pain and every fear, every doubt is a cry after God. What mother refuses to go to her child because he is only crying--not calling her by name!"

"Oh, if I could but believe so about God! For if it be all right with God--I mean if God be such a God as to be loved with the heart and soul of loving, then all is well. Is it not, Mr. Grant?"

"Indeed it is!--And you are not far from the kingdom of heaven," he was on the point of saying, but did not--because she was in it already, only unable yet to verify the things around her, like the man who had but half-way received his sight.

When they reached the top, he took them past his door, and higher up the stair to the next, opening on the bartizan. Here he said lady Arctura must come with him first, and Davie must wait till he came back for him. When he had them both safe on the roof, he told Davie to keep close to his cousin or himself all the time. He showed them first his stores of fuel--his ammunition, he said, for fighting the winter. Next he pointed out where he stood when first he heard the music the night before, and set down his bucket to follow it; and where he found the bucket, blown thither by the wind, when he came back to feel for it in the dark. Then he began to lead them, as nearly as he could, the way he had then gone, but with some, for Arctura's sake, desirable detours: over one steep-sloping roof they had to cross, he found a little stair up the middle, and down the other side.

They came to a part where he was not quite sure about the way. As he stopped to bethink himself, they turned and looked eastward. The sea was shining in the sun, and the flat wet country between was so bright that they could not tell where the land ended and the sea began. But as they gazed a great cloud came over the sun, the sea turned cold and gray as death--a true March sea, and the land lay low and desolate between. The spring was gone and the winter was there. A gust of wind, full of keen hail, drove sharp in their faces.

"Ah, that settles the question!" said Donal. "The music-bird must wait. We will call upon her another day.--It is funny, isn't it, Davie, to go a bird's-nesting after music on the roof of a house?"

"Hark!" said Arctura; "I think I heard the music-bird!--She wants us to find her nest! I really don't think we ought to go back for a little blast of wind, and a few pellets of hail! What do you think, Davie?"

"Oh, for me, I wouldn't turn for ever so big a storm!" said Davie;

"but you know, Arkie, it's not you or me, Arkie! Mr. Grant is the captain of this expedition, and we must do as he bids us."

"Oh, surely, Davie! I never meant to dispute that. Only Mr. Grant is not a tyrant; he will let a lady say what she thinks!"

"Oh, yes, or a boy either! He likes me to say what I think! He says we can't get at each other without. And do you know--he obeys me sometimes!"

Arctura glanced a keen question at the boy.

"It is quite true!" said Davie, while Donal listened smiling. "Last winter, for days together--not all day, you know: I had to obey him most of the time! but at certain times, I was as sure of Mr. Grant doing as I told him, as he is now of me doing as he tells me."

"What times were those?" asked Arctura, thinking to hear of some odd pedagogic device.

"When I was teaching him to skate!" answered Davie, in a triumph of remembrance. "He said I knew better than he there, and so he would obey me. You wouldn't believe how splendidly he did it, Arkie--out and out!" concluded Davie, in a tone almost of awe.

"Oh, yes, I would believe it--perfectly!" said Arctura.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 踏仙途之东帝

    踏仙途之东帝

    小友老夫看你根骨奇佳天赋异凛特来只指点迷津,让尔等不再迷惘
  • 万道神皇

    万道神皇

    一代神皇因灭世天劫陨落,却意外转生在一个家族废柴身上,由此揭开他重新争霸三界,主宰万道神皇之路。杜天说,在这个世界上只有两种天才,一种是我,一种是被我轰杀的天才。
  • 茶道(最新21世纪生活百科手册)

    茶道(最新21世纪生活百科手册)

    本文主要讲述的是茶的起源、采制工具、制造、器皿、烤煮方法、饮用习俗以及产地等。
  • 影响孩子一生的阅读(蓝色卷)

    影响孩子一生的阅读(蓝色卷)

    这是作家们在以真诚、朴实而又温馨的文字,讲述关于阅读的故事;这是作家们伸出有力的大手,牵着小手快乐地走在成长之路的证明。这些文章,有的是作家们在讲述自己阅读的经验,告诉读者,要想在成长之路上走得从容些,阅读是很重要的;有的是作家们在谈阅读的技巧和方法,他们或直接告诉小读者怎样选择图书,或间接地表达阅读的一些诀窍;有的是作者在阅读过程中发生的故事,或幽默有趣,或富有启发,让你感受到最初的生命脚步的韵律……凡此种种,这些作品很亲切很友好,它们会给你展示一个美好的文字世界,让你感受到阅读的重要与快乐。书的最后收录了一些作家给小读者推荐的书单,让小读者学会选书,学会阅读。
  • 故事会(2015年10月下)

    故事会(2015年10月下)

    《故事会》是中国最通俗的民间文学小本杂志,办刊时间长,知名度极大。该刊以短小精悍的篇幅,讲述老百姓最喜爱的精彩故事。
  • 旷野呼告

    旷野呼告

    俄罗斯思想家列夫·舍斯托夫毕生规避理性,倡导神明启示,远离思辨,崇尚信仰。在本书中,作者尤其以独特的感悟理论向人们阐释了西方思想界与文化界巨擘克尔凯郭尔与陀思妥耶夫斯基在神明启示下所显露出来的思维的魅力。同时,作者更深刻地向人性的深处拷问理性,在思想旷野发出在他认为没有回音的无声的呼告。
  • 落英缤纷谁细数

    落英缤纷谁细数

    本小说故事主要讲新文化运动期间,民国时期的中国青年慢慢把旧思想、旧文化摈弃,很多人为提升女性的地位而不懈努力,很多青年女性有了自主意识、越来越独立自信,努力提升自我价值,不再任人摆布,把“女子无才便是德”视为错误思想,努力学习新文化,传播新思想。本故事重点讲长辈与晚辈们相互关心,无论年轻人怎么折腾总有最温暖的的港湾为他们遮风挡雨,长辈总是无条件赋予晚辈们力量,教会他们做人处事,让谈他们切身体会和谐的家庭关系更有利于成事。小说的背景是1921年至1923年间旧上海几大家受新文化思潮的青年一代与老年一代斗智斗勇,在“争斗”的过程中,晚辈逐渐体会到家的温暖。本文情节纯属虚构,背景不偏离历史,带有一定教育意义;以芩菥两人的爱情故事为主要线索,主要讲述民国上海滩江·陆·苏三大家兴衰。主人公是一位弱小的女子,身为商贾千金,却要面临和商品一样因利益而被置换的命运,她深受新文化运动的影响,她心有不甘想要反抗命运,可自己的力量很渺小,充满商业味道的婚姻,两家人该如何宛转?
  • 张中行散文:生活卷

    张中行散文:生活卷

    张中行思维方式很像一位道人,许多事都被他定位在广阔的文化背景和充满亲情的人生趣味里。他以平常心待事,又以学者的视角思索生活,让人在不急不躁、不冷不热中悟出许多道理,它让人清醒、让人回味,让人从世俗中猛然转向静谧、超然的境地。
  • 空台

    空台

    林依寒的女友悄然消失,失魂落魄的他终日沉浸在伤痛中。工作不顺,对什么都没有兴趣,日复一日,形如枯木。来应聘的andy如他消失女友的克隆版,枯木终于逢春。西饼屋的生意在他的努力下快速发展。anby很爱他,但她不愿只是一种替代,最后也离开了他。再次受伤的他没有颓废,努力的寻找。比他小一点的老板欧阳若语,一直爱着他,只是没有表白,陪着他找她。终寻不见,两人修成正果。而andy离开前已经……
  • 圣麟怒

    圣麟怒

    “修炼无用,凡人当跪。”“究极”,是一个世人少知但皆惧怕之物,无人知道它是什么东西,只有上古流传至今的歌谣中依旧唱响着它的名字!四陆三海一虚空,无尽迷雾隐神踪!这将会是一个有趣的故事,就像现在的你,耳边是否已经浮现出一个声音了呢……