登陆注册
5163700000044

第44章

Still her thoughts did not dwell on Philip. He was simply a part of that dull mass of pain that beset her and made her feel, as she had felt when drowning, that her heart had left her breast and nothing but will remained. She felt now, as then, the capacity to act with more than her accustomed resolution, though all that was within her seemed boiling up into her brain. As for Philip, all seemed a mere negation; there was a vacuum where his place had been. At most the thought of him came to her as some strange, vague thrill of added torture, penetrating her soul and then passing; just as ever and anon there came the sound of the fog-whistle on Brenton's Reef, miles away, piercing the dull air with its shrill and desolate wail, then dying into silence.

What a hopeless cloud lay upon them all forever,--upon Kate, upon Harry, upon their whole house! Then there was John Lambert; how could they keep it from him? how could they tell him? Who could predict what he would say? Would he take the worst and coarsest view of his young wife's mad action or the mildest? Would he be strong or weak; and what would be weakness, and what strength, in a position so strange? Would he put Emilia from him, send her out in the world desolate, her soul stained but by one wrong passion, yet with her reputation blighted as if there were no good in her? Could he be asked to shield and protect her, or what would become of her? She was legally a wife, and could only be separated from him through convicted shame.

Then, if separated, she could only marry Philip. Hope nerved herself to think of that, and it cost less effort than she expected.

There seemed a numbness on that side, instead of pain. But granting that he loved Emilia ever so deeply, was he a man to surrender his life and his ease and his fair name, in a hopeless effort to remove the ban that the world would place on her. Hope knew he would not; knew that even the simple-hearted and straightforward Harry would be far more capable of such heroism than the sentimental Malbone. Here the pang suddenly struck her; she was not so numb, after all!

As the leaves beside the window drooped motionless in the dank air, so her mind drooped into a settled depression. She pitied herself,--that lowest ebb of melancholy self-consciousness. She went back to Emilia, and, seating herself, studied every line of the girl's face, the soft texture of her hair, the veining of her eyelids. They were so lovely, she felt a sort of physical impulse to kiss them, as if they belonged to some utter stranger, whom she might be nursing in a hospital. Emilia looked as innocent as when Hope had tended her in the cradle. What is there, Hope thought, in sleep, in trance, and in death, that removes all harsh or disturbing impressions, and leaves only the most delicate and purest traits? Does the mind wander, and does an angel keep its place? Or is there really no sin but in thought, and are our sleeping thoughts incapable of sin? Perhaps even when we dream of doing wrong, the dream comes in a shape so lovely and misleading that we never recognize it for evil, and it makes no stain. Are our lives ever so pure as our dreams?

This thought somehow smote across her conscience, always so strong, and stirred it into a kind of spasm of introspection. "How selfish have I, too, been!" she thought. "I saw only what I wished to see, did only what I preferred. Loving Philip" (for the sudden self-reproach left her free to think of him), "I could not see that I was separating him from one whom he might perhaps have truly loved. If he made me blind, may he not easily have bewildered her, and have been himself bewildered? How I tried to force myself upon him, too! Ungenerous, unwomanly! What am I, that I should judge another?"She threw herself on her knees at the bedside.

Still Emilia slept, but now she stirred her head in the slightest possible way, so that a single tress of silken hair slipped from its companions, and lay across her face. It was a faint sign that the trance was waning; the slight pressure disturbed her nerves, and her lips trembled once or twice, as if to relieve themselves of the soft annoyance. Hope watched her in a vague, distant way, took note of the minutest motion, yet as if some vast weight hung upon her own limbs and made all interference impossible. Still there was a fascination of sympathy in dwelling on that atom of discomfort, that tiny suffering, which she alone could remove. The very vastness of this tragedy that hung about the house made it an inexpressible relief to her to turn and concentrate her thoughts for a moment on this slight distress, so easily ended.

Strange, by what slender threads our lives are knitted to each other! Here was one who had taken Hope's whole existence in her hands, crushed it, and thrown it away. Hope had soberly said to herself, just before, that death would be better than life for her young sister. Yet now it moved her beyond endurance to see that fair form troubled, even while unconscious, by a feather's weight of pain; and all the lifelong habit of tenderness resumed in a moment its sway.

She approached her fingers to the offending tress, very slowly, half withholding them at the very last, as if the touch would burn her. She was almost surprised that it did not. She looked to see if it did not hurt Emilia. But it now seemed as if the slumbering girl enjoyed the caressing contact of the smooth fingers, and turned her head, almost imperceptibly, to meet them. This was more than Hope could bear. It was as if that slight motion were a puncture to relieve her overburdened heart; a thousand thoughts swept over her,--of their father, of her sister's childhood, of her years of absent expectation; she thought how young the girl was, how fascinating, how passionate, how tempted; all this swept across her in a great wave of nervous reaction, and when Emilia returned to consciousness, she was lying in her sister's arms, her face bathed in Hope's tears.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 恋爱主打歌

    恋爱主打歌

    【恋】的难分难舍【爱】的轰轰烈烈【主】的以我为尊【打】的神不守舍【歌】的荡然回味爱情的故事本就不知何时开始,又在何时结束,杨仑不过是依照感觉浑浑噩噩的走在爱情旅途上,却在不知不觉间谱写出了一曲恋爱主打歌。 他放弃了学业,放弃了梦想,放弃了深爱他的人,只为打造那个由他们编织的梦,结果换来了什么? ps1:谁是谁的主打歌? ps2:本书并非纯爱恋小说,书中想要表达的是这个物欲横流的社会上在理想与现实间的苦苦挣扎,希望在唏嘘之余,能和大家产生点小共鸣,成为大家生活的辅料,这就是作者的思想。 (喜欢本书的麻烦点下加入书架,O(∩_∩)O)
  • 傲视凌天

    傲视凌天

    这是一个波澜壮阔的世界,五域鼎立,禁地现世,魔王破封,中州圣战,书写着可歌可泣的故事。百族鼎力,争斗不断,谁将问鼎乾坤?三大神体,十大圣体依次出世,书写出一代人的辉煌。少年身负阴阳神体,踏五域,闯禁地,剑指魔族。嬉笑怒骂中高歌猛进,书写出属于自己的不朽传奇!
  • 元代法律资料辑存

    元代法律资料辑存

    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。
  • 那些美好而忧伤的记忆(每天读一点英文)

    那些美好而忧伤的记忆(每天读一点英文)

    《那些美好而忧伤的记忆》选取亲情、友谊、爱情等主题美文,让你在阅读中,感恩那些你爱的、爱你的人们!《每天读一点英文》是一套与美国人同步阅读的中英双语丛书。该丛书由美国英语教师协会推荐,讲解单词、精华句型、翻译、检验阅读成果,升级英语能力!
  • 元始无量度人上品妙经注

    元始无量度人上品妙经注

    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。
  • 君安可未迟

    君安可未迟

    在深深的夜里,我可以看到你明亮的眼睛,自那时起,我忘不了你,亲爱的你。全文大约是爱,大约是暖。
  • 曲洧旧闻

    曲洧旧闻

    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。
  • 山里汉的绝色农妻

    山里汉的绝色农妻

    沐泽是柳河村的猎户,据说是前几年才来到柳河村的,宋慈筠是柳河村的农女,家里有弟弟和妹妹因家庭变故不得已来到柳河村居住。
  • 塔罗女神探之茧镇奇缘

    塔罗女神探之茧镇奇缘

    占卜就是这样,把玄机藏得牢牢的,把一切归功于牌理,其实,一切均源于内心。《塔罗女神探之茧镇奇缘》是“塔罗女神探”系列之一,青云镇上死亡事件接连上演,首富黄家纠纷不断,所谓爱情不过一场你方唱罢我方登场的上位游戏……过去牌:正位的命运之轮。意指她生命力旺盛,原是可以长寿的。现状牌:逆位的节制与正位的倒吊男。情欲放纵,内心矛盾,加速了她的死亡进程。未来牌:正位的死神。死神已悄然贴近,正在不远处对她微笑,手中执一把锃亮的镰刀……
  • 识人用人管人并不难

    识人用人管人并不难

    杰克·韦尔奇曾说过:“一个成功的管理者,一定要有识人、用人的能力,并且不断提高管人的技巧。作为一个合格的现代管理者,既需要有‘才智’,又需要有‘直觉’;既需要有‘理性’,又需要有‘感情’;既要分析研究问题,得出科学结论,又要善于学习和借鉴别人的经验。”对各个层次的管理者来说,张易山编著的《识人用人管人并不难》都有一定的实用性、仿效性或借鉴性。从本书中,您可以轻而易举地学会如何使用人才、管理人才,并能够通过潜移默化的方式将其运用到实践中。愿此书成为您管理生涯中的一盏明灯,为您的前程增添一份永恒的光亮!