登陆注册
5214500000079

第79章

"Now, Mary, what's all this about America?"There was a brotherly kindness in his voice which seemed to her magnanimous, when she reflected that she had cut short his explanations and shown little interest in his change of plan. She gave him her reasons for thinking that she might profit by such a journey, omitting the one reason which had set all the rest in motion. He listened attentively, and made no attempt to dissuade her. In truth, he found himself curiously eager to make certain of her good sense, and accepted each fresh proof of it with satisfaction, as though it helped him to make up his mind about something. She forgot the pain he had caused her, and in place of it she became conscious of a steady tide of well-being which harmonized very aptly with the tramp of their feet upon the dry road and the support of his arm. The comfort was the more glowing in that it seemed to be the reward of her determination to behave to him simply and without attempting to be other than she was. Instead of making out an interest in the poets, she avoided them instinctively, and dwelt rather insistently upon the practical nature of her gifts.

In a practical way she asked for particulars of his cottage, which hardly existed in his mind, and corrected his vagueness.

"You must see that there's water," she insisted, with an exaggeration of interest. She avoided asking him what he meant to do in this cottage, and, at last, when all the practical details had been thrashed out as much as possible, he rewarded her by a more intimate statement.

"One of the rooms," he said, "must be my study, for, you see, Mary, I'm going to write a book." Here he withdrew his arm from hers, lit his pipe, and they tramped on in a sagacious kind of comradeship, the most complete they had attained in all their friendship.

"And what's your book to be about?" she said, as boldly as if she had never come to grief with Ralph in talking about books. He told her unhesitatingly that he meant to write the history of the English village from Saxon days to the present time. Some such plan had lain as a seed in his mind for many years; and now that he had decided, in a flash, to give up his profession, the seed grew in the space of twenty minutes both tall and lusty. He was surprised himself at the positive way in which he spoke. It was the same with the question of his cottage. That had come into existence, too, in an unromantic shape --a square white house standing just off the high road, no doubt, with a neighbor who kept a pig and a dozen squalling children; for these plans were shorn of all romance in his mind, and the pleasure he derived from thinking of them was checked directly it passed a very sober limit. So a sensible man who has lost his chance of some beautiful inheritance might tread out the narrow bounds of his actual dwelling-place, and assure himself that life is supportable within its demesne, only one must grow turnips and cabbages, not melons and pomegranates. Certainly Ralph took some pride in the resources of his mind, and was insensibly helped to right himself by Mary's trust in him. She wound her ivy spray round her ash-plant, and for the first time for many days, when alone with Ralph, set no spies upon her motives, sayings, and feelings, but surrendered herself to complete happiness.

Thus talking, with easy silences and some pauses to look at the view over the hedge and to decide upon the species of a little gray-brown bird slipping among the twigs, they walked into Lincoln, and after strolling up and down the main street, decided upon an inn where the rounded window suggested substantial fare, nor were they mistaken. For over a hundred and fifty years hot joints, potatoes, greens, and apple puddings had been served to generations of country gentlemen, and now, sitting at a table in the hollow of the bow window, Ralph and Mary took their share of this perennial feast. Looking across the joint, half-way through the meal, Mary wondered whether Ralph would ever come to look quite like the other people in the room. Would he be absorbed among the round pink faces, pricked with little white bristles, the calves fitted in shiny brown leather, the black-and-white check suits, which were sprinkled about in the same room with them? She half hoped so; she thought that it was only in his mind that he was different.

She did not wish him to be too different from other people. The walk had given him a ruddy color, too, and his eyes were lit up by a steady, honest light, which could not make the simplest farmer feel ill at ease, or suggest to the most devout of clergymen a disposition to sneer at his faith. She loved the steep cliff of his forehead, and compared it to the brow of a young Greek horseman, who reins his horse back so sharply that it half falls on its haunches. He always seemed to her like a rider on a spirited horse. And there was an exaltation to her in being with him, because there was a risk that he would not be able to keep to the right pace among other people. Sitting opposite him at the little table in the window, she came back to that state of careless exaltation which had overcome her when they halted by the gate, but now it was accompanied by a sense of sanity and security, for she felt that they had a feeling in common which scarcely needed embodiment in words. How silent he was! leaning his forehead on his hand, now and then, and again looking steadily and gravely at the backs of the two men at the next table, with so little self-consciousness that she could almost watch his mind placing one thought solidly upon the top of another; she thought that she could feel him thinking, through the shade of her fingers, and she could anticipate the exact moment when he would put an end to his thought and turn a little in his chair and say:

"Well, Mary--?" inviting her to take up the thread of thought where he had dropped it.

And at that very moment he turned just so, and said:

"Well, Mary?" with the curious touch of diffidence which she loved in him.

同类推荐
  • 在园杂志

    在园杂志

    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。
  • 痘疹门

    痘疹门

    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。
  • 绪言

    绪言

    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。
  • 能断金刚般若波罗蜜经

    能断金刚般若波罗蜜经

    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。
  • 赤松领禅师语录

    赤松领禅师语录

    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
  • 洞玄灵宝八仙王教诫经

    洞玄灵宝八仙王教诫经

    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。
  • 溯源纪

    溯源纪

    仙变,大劫渡世,道中一切将归于寂灭,上苍破碎,前人埋骨仙路中,轮回不出,古今法无用,唯苍生道真正超脱!
  • 光之烙印

    光之烙印

    准大学生陆杨“意外”结识了千年鼠仙麦格,从此打开了新世界的大门,一向自认为平凡的他,唤醒了“光之烙印”,从此拥有了超能力,他在俗世和异世界中无缝切换,其中发生了许许多多故事,他开始了自省、成长,开始重新定义这个世界。
  • 尸王我要揍你

    尸王我要揍你

    末世中,肖岩身边的一众小弟表示:嫂子你能不要再欺负我们大哥了吗?我们看着心痛胃痛全身痛啊……这是一个关于残忍暴力外星女与冷面实则妻奴属性丧尸王,两人一路打怪升级生包子的故事……
  • 御选语录

    御选语录

    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。
  • 报与荷花为你开

    报与荷花为你开

    第一次,曲意与姑苏卿皊漪台共赏荷花。她:“挚爱荷花,行动处是说之不尽的风流。”他:“你最像荷花,明明一颗心是黑的,却仍是高贵纯粹的样子。迷惑了众生的眼睛,让人不敢亵渎。”第二次,太子逼宫,三方兵马齐聚莲池。曲意怜惜道:“荷花本是宛然的东西,被你们一池鲜血染得夭夭了。”太子割发起誓:“意儿,我若为王,你必为后。”姑苏卿皊扯出张扬的笑:“曲意,你若为后,我必为王。”第三次,妃色荷花绵延十里迎她为后。姑苏卿皊与她并肩站在瑾荷宫九重白玉石台上,相视一笑,似乎望进了彼此的眼眸中,“今朝我已为皇帝,报与荷花为你开。”报与荷花为你开,这是一个千古帝王倾尽一生的宠溺与爱恋,只给了那个两度为后的女子。花曲意:爱一个人,就是你在她与其他人和事之间的取舍。你既已选择了权倾天下,又何必在意我一个小小女子!花曲意:“殿下,回吧。从此君在庙堂之高,我在江湖之远,此生不复相见。”姑苏卿皊:“天下都是朕的,你就在朕的天下里,有什么可选择的。依你那么贪心,朕若舍弃了天下,可还能入了你的眼?”红尘乱世,铅华尽染,只有此处流水静逸。他在夜色中执扇遮去半边邪肆容颜,唯见唇角上翘,抵过荷花美好。我这一生的笑是为你而笑,我这一生的哭是为你而哭。我这至高无上的繁华,因为有你,才不寂寞。~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~华丽丽的线~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~强推:姚斯落——《婚非迫散》http://wkkk.net/a/423172/奚紫煜——《玉露不施恩》http://wkkk.net/a/468431/
  • 静春堂集

    静春堂集

    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。
  • 搜诡录

    搜诡录

    世界上有太多离奇古怪的事,而我偏偏可以很容易撞见,是幸运还是不幸呢?每一次都是胆战心惊,每一次都是荒诞无稽,好吧好吧,与其说出来别人不信,我不如写下来权当纪念罢了。那个……有偷窥者,发现我的秘密了吗?
  • 鸿蒙九幽诀

    鸿蒙九幽诀

    一代魔尊惨遭天帝陷害被封印千年,却意外获得了一本来自上古的玄妙心诀,重生在了一个二流家族的废柴少爷身上。千年轮回,魔尊重生,且看叶无涯这一世如何再攀上巅峰,复仇归来!
  • 胡雪岩官商智慧全集

    胡雪岩官商智慧全集

    被誉为“旷世不遇的商贾奇人”的胡雪岩,白手起家,纵横商场江湖之间,出入朝廷庙堂之上,创建起庞大的“商业帝国”,既富且贵,当然有许多常人所不及之处。每天汲取一点他在经商、处世、做人、用人等方面的智慧,能帮助我们在职场上左右逢源,游刃有余,商场上风生水起,立于不败之地。