登陆注册
5144500000023

第23章

On the eve of the wedding he paid Ruth his last visit in the quality of a lover, and was received by her in the garden. He found her looking paler than her wont, and there was a cloud of sadness on her brow, a haunting sadness in her eyes. It touched him to the soul, and for a moment he wavered in his purpose. He stood beside her - she seated on the old lichened seat - and a silence fell between them, during which Mr. Wilding's conscience wrestled with his stronger passion. It was his habit to be glib, talking incessantly what time he was in her company, and seeing to it that his talk was shallow and touched at nothing belonging to the deeps of human life. Thus was it, perhaps, that this sudden and enduring silence affected her most oddly; it was as if she had absorbed some notion of what was passing in his mind. She looked up suddenly into his face, so white and so composed. Their eyes met, and he stooped to her suddenly, his long brown ringlets tumbling forward. She feared his kiss, yet never moved, staring up with fixed, dilated eyes as if fascinated by his dark, brooding gaze. He paused, hovering above her upturned face as hovers the hawk above the dove.

"Child," he said at last, and his voice was soft and winning from very sadness, "child, why do you fear me?"The truth of it went home to her. She feared him; she feared the strength that lay behind that calm; she feared the masterfulness of his wild but inscrutably hidden nature; she was afraid to surrender to such a man as this, afraid that in the hot crucible of his love her own nature would be dissolved, transmuted, and rendered part of his. Yet, though the truth was now made plain to her, she thrust it from her.

"I do not fear you," said she, and her voice at least rang fearlessly.

"Do you hate me, then?" he asked. Her glance grew troubled and fell away from his; it sought the calm of the river, gleaming golden in the sunset. There was a pause. Wilding sighed heavily, and straightened himself from his bending posture.

"You should not have sought thus to compel me, she said presently.

"I own it," he answered a thought bitterly. "I own it. Yet what hope had I but in compulsion?" She returned him no answer. "You see," he said, with increasing bitterness, "you see, that had I not seized the chance that was mine to win you by compulsion I had not won you at all.""It might," said she, "have been better so for both of us.""Better for neither," he replied. "Ah, think it not! In time, Iswear, you shall not think it. For you shall come to love me, Ruth,"he added with a note of such assurance that she turned to meet again his gaze. He answered the wordless question of her eyes. "There is,"said he, "no love of man for woman, so that the man be not wholly unworthy, so that his passion be sincere and strong, that can fail in time to arouse response." She smiled a little pitiful smile of unbelief. "Were I a boy," he rejoined, his earnestness vibrating now in a voice that was usually so calm and level, "offering you protestations of a callow worship, you might have cause to doubt me.

But I am a man, Ruth - a tried, and haply a sinful man, alas! - a man who needs you, and who will have you at all costs.""At all costs?" she echoed, and her lip took on a curl. "And you call this egotism by the name of love! No doubt you are right," she continued with an irony that stung him, "for love it is - love of yourself.""And is not all love of another founded upon the love of self?" he asked her, startling her with a question that revealed to her clear-sighted mind a truth undreamed of. "When some day - please Heaven - I come to find favour in your eyes, and you come to love me, what will it mean but that you have come to find me necessary to yourself and to your happiness? Would you deny me now your love if you felt that you had need of mine? I love you because I love myself, you say. I grant it you. But you'll confess that if you do not love me yet, it is for the same reason, and that when you do come to love me the reason will be still the same.""You are very sure that I shall come to love you, said she, shifting woman-like the ground of argument now that she found insecure the place on which at first she had taken her stand.

"Were I not, think you I should compel you to the church to-morrow?"She trembled at his calm assurance. It was as if she almost feared that what he said might come to pass.

"Since you bear such faith in your heart," said she, "were it not nobler, more generous, that you should set yourself to win me first and wed me afterwards?""It is the course I should, myself, prefer," he answered quietly. "But it is a course denied me. I was viewed here with disfavour, almost denied your house. What chance had I whilst I might not come near you, whilst your mind was poisoned against me by the idle, vicious prattle that goes round and round the countryside, increasing ever in bulk from constant repetition?""Do you say that these tales are groundless?" she asked, with a sudden lifting of the eyes, a sudden keen eagerness that did not escape him.

"I would to God I could," he cried, "since from your manner I see that would improve me in your sight. But there is just sufficient truth in them to forbid me, as I am, I hope, a gentleman, from giving them a full denial. Yet in what am I worse than my fellows? Are you of those who think a husband should come to them as one whose youth has been the youth of cloistered nun? Heaven knows, I am not one to draw parallels `twixt myself and any other, yet you compel me. Whilst you deny me, you receive this fellow Blake - a London night-scourer, a broken gamester who has given his creditors leg-bail, and who woos you that with your fortune he may close the doors of the debtor's gaol that's open to receive him.""This is unworthy in you," she exclaimed, her tone indignant - so indignant that he experienced his first pang of jealousy.

"It would be were I his rival," he answered quietly. "But I am not.

I have saved you from becoming the prey of such as he by forcing you to marry me.""That I may become the prey of such as you, instead," was her retort.

同类推荐
  • 黄帝阴符经疏

    黄帝阴符经疏

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛祖历代通载

    佛祖历代通载

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 禅门锻炼说

    禅门锻炼说

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 毗耶娑问经

    毗耶娑问经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 青龙寺求法目录

    青龙寺求法目录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 清女传

    清女传

    父母家族的高压逼迫下,乔清鱼成长为了一个高能力的女强人,在他人羡慕的目光中活的十分压抑。最悲惨的是被自己的丈夫一酒瓶子给砸到了天元大陆。背后有强悍的家族,身旁有强悍的父母。所以乔清鱼以为自己终于可以过上坐吃等死的幸福人生,再也不用像前世一般的累。可是没想到,这里残酷的生活却逼着她一步步向上,最终家族的破灭,亲人的离去致使她终于看清了现实。为了报仇她毅然决然的踏上了此生都不愿踏足的寻仙问道之路,努力修行,查清真相,一步步走来,终于成就了自己的神位。乔清鱼说:“我愿意傻傻的活着,只要不夺走我在意的人和物。”现实却说:“那是不可能的。”乔清鱼冷笑:“既然不可能,伤我在意之人,我必将其诛于脚下!”
  • 2016中国年度随笔

    2016中国年度随笔

    《2016中国年度随笔》由徐南铁主持编选,选取石湾、傅谨、秦颖等人的文章。这些文章或反思历史与文化、怀念友人、点评文艺作品,臧否历史人物,具有很强的文化内涵与思想性,全书文章以思辨性区别于抒情见长的散文,以视野的广度和历史的纵深感区别于直接针砭时事世风的短小杂文,很多文章读来既有学术性又有趣味性,能引起读者深思,给读者启迪。
  • 凯恩舰哗变

    凯恩舰哗变

    1944年,二战尚未结束,在南太平洋的海面上,漂浮着凯恩号;正是这艘近乎于报废的老式战舰上,却爆发了美国海军史上最著名的一次哗变事件!这已不仅仅是旧时所理解的兵变——只见刀光闪闪,舰长被囚,绝望的水兵成了不法之徒。以副舰长马里克为首的哗变一方,到底是富有责任感和正义感,救军舰地危难之中的英雄,还是阴谋蓄意叛变的暴徒?而舰长奎格,是个刚愎自用的独裁者,还是懦弱胆小的怕死鬼?威利·基思成了这个故事的穿针引线人,这位凯恩号最后一位舰长就像是打开魔法大门的钥匙,将当年整个事件的一层一层展现在我们面前。
  • 洗冤集录

    洗冤集录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 长相思

    长相思

    她,一个淡如素栀的清丽女子,却忍受着命运的劫难。与他相识相知,以为找到了托付终身的良人,却发现自己不过是别受手中一颗谋权夺利的棋子。情伤之后,她步步为营,带着对他的爱与恨走上一条不知结局的路。相府千金祝素栀,寄居王府的沈素素,倚身青楼花动天下的阿凉,驰骋沙场的军医凌霖……在多重身份中她是否迷失了自己。他,幽深如同暗夜苍穹,不知无情还是有情。他拥有着君临天下的豪情,有着翻云覆雨的权势,却不知道该如何重新走进她的心里。他不知道,一步棋错满盘皆输。从放手的那一天开始就注定着这错过是一生的……
  • 汽车精兵

    汽车精兵

    新书《最强侦察兵》上传,求支持推荐投资!这是一个关于汽车兵的故事!在所有人的眼中,汽车兵都是最舒服的,吊儿郎当的模样,但恰恰就是汽车兵,是和平年代最危险的职业之一!这是一群平均年纪二十出头的少年,连续二十小时不间断极限驾驶、特种车辆驾驶、平板漂移、穿越塔克拉玛干、翻过新藏线······上车能驾驶,下车能战斗,是他们的口号。只是为了,当那一天来临,能够奉献出自己的一切,包括生命!建了一个汽车团企鹅群:621965978,不定期会发一些新藏线车队行军照片以及练车的照片,欢迎有兴趣的进群探讨呀。
  • 天才魔妃很妖孽

    天才魔妃很妖孽

    21世纪腹黑又机灵的女佣兵,一朝穿越到圣洛大陆冰家废物五小姐身上,异世中看病猫如何化身为猛虎,狂傲天下。“娘子。”一个美男看着冰璃儿笑眯眯的亲昵叫道。冰璃儿睁大错谔的双眸,一阵风中凌乱,少顷,破口大骂道,“你妹的娘子,你妹夫的娘子,你也不看看你才多大,就想着娘子,告诉你,我不会和你谈恋爱的。”“我没有妹,也没有妹夫!”美男睁着一双水盈盈的桃花眼卖萌道。“………”冰璃儿无语望天。【女佣兵系列四】这是一个强姐姐和强哥哥的故事,各种美男,各种萌,各种爆笑,轻松宠文。
  • 足坛大赢家

    足坛大赢家

    足球胜负场,我是大赢家。李逸,足球场上的最大赢家PS1:已有两本两百万字完本作品《超级足球巨星》《足球之娱乐巨星》PS2:书友群473097865
  • 第六指

    第六指

    关宇蹲在地上,目光一厘一厘在草丛里爬梳。一缕乳白色的絮状物进入了他的视线。它黏在一根草叶尖上,颤颤地抖在风中。关宇用镊子小心地取下来,衬着清亮的天光端详一刻,像是一种合成纤维,黏住草叶的一端呈暗红色,不知是不是血迹。他小心地将它装进透明塑料袋里。“哈,一看‘兰花指’就知道是你。”身后传来响亮的一声。关宇没回头,知道是松岗村派出所所长老傅。老傅在他身边蹲下,一股酒气硬邦邦地砸过来。关宇扭过头,瞧见老傅的一张瘦脸被酒精染得通红。
  • 元阳子五假论

    元阳子五假论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。