登陆注册
5237500000054

第54章 XXI THE SKY LINE WIDENS(2)

Her idea of pleasure was an ever-changing circle of admirers to fetch and carry for her, the more publicly the better; incessant chaff and laughter and vivacious conversation, made eloquent and effective by arch looks and telling glances. She had a habit of confiding her conquests to less fortunate girls and bewailing the incessant havoc and damage she was doing; a damage she avowed herself as innocent of, in intention, as any new-born lamb. It does not take much of this sort of thing to wreck an ordinary friendship, so before long Rebecca and Emma Jane sat in one end of the railway train in going to and from Riverboro, and Huldah occupied the other with her court.

Sometimes this was brilliant beyond words, including a certain youthful Monte Cristo, who on Fridays expended thirty cents on a round trip ticket and traveled from Wareham to Riverboro merely to be near Huldah; sometimes, too, the circle was reduced to the popcorn-and-peanut boy of the train, who seemed to serve every purpose in default of better game.

Rebecca was in the normally unconscious state that belonged to her years; boys were good comrades, but no more; she liked reciting in the same class with them, everything seemed to move better; but from vulgar and precocious flirtations she was protected by her ideals. There was little in the lads she had met thus far to awaken her fancy, for it habitually fed on better meat. Huldah's school-girl romances, with their wealth of commonplace detail, were not the stuff her dreams were made of, when dreams did flutter across the sensitive plate of her mind.

Among the teachers at Wareham was one who influenced Rebecca profoundly, Miss Emily Maxwell, with whom she studied English literature and composition. Miss Maxwell, as the niece of one of Maine's ex-governors and the daughter of one of Bowdoin's professors, was the most remarkable personality in Wareham, and that her few years of teaching happened to be in Rebecca's time was the happiest of all chances. There was no indecision or delay in the establishment of their relations;

Rebecca's heart flew like an arrow to its mark, and her mind, meeting its superior, settled at once into an abiding attitude of respectful homage.

It was rumored that Miss Maxwell "wrote," which word, when uttered in a certain tone, was understood to mean not that a person had command of penmanship, Spencerian or otherwise, but that she had appeared in print.

"You'll like her; she writes," whispered Huldah to Rebecca the first morning at prayers, where the faculty sat in an imposing row on the front seats.

"She writes; and I call her stuck up."

Nobody seemed possessed of exact information with which to satisfy the hungry mind, but there was believed to be at least one person in existence who had seen, with his own eyes, an essay by Miss Maxwell in a magazine. This height of achievement made Rebecca somewhat shy of her, but she looked her admiration; something that most of the class could never do with the unsatisfactory organs of vision given them by Mother Nature. Miss Maxwell's glance was always meeting a pair of eager dark eyes; when she said anything particularly good, she looked for approval to the corner of the second bench, where every shade of feeling she wished to evoke was reflected on a certain sensitive young face.

One day, when the first essay of the class was under discussion, she asked each new pupil to bring her some composition written during the year before, that she might judge the work, and know precisely with what material she had to deal. Rebecca lingered after the others, and approached the desk shyly.

"I haven't any compositions here, Miss Maxwell, but I can find one when I go home on Friday.

They are packed away in a box in the attic."

"Carefully tied with pink and blue ribbons?" asked Miss Maxwell, with a whimsical smile.

"No," answered Rebecca, shaking her head decidedly; "I wanted to use ribbons, because all the other girls did, and they looked so pretty, but I used to tie my essays with twine strings on purpose; and the one on solitude I fastened with an old shoelacing just to show it what I thought of it!"

"Solitude!" laughed Miss Maxwell, raising her eyebrows. "Did you choose your own subject?"

"No; Miss Dearborn thought we were not old enough to find good ones."

"What were some of the others?"

"Fireside Reveries, Grant as a Soldier, Reflections on the Life of P. T. Barnum, Buried Cities;

I can't remember any more now. They were all bad, and I can't bear to show them; I can write poetry easier and better, Miss Maxwell."

"Poetry!" she exclaimed. "Did Miss Dearborn require you to do it?"

"Oh, no; I always did it even at the farm. Shall I bring all I have? It isn't much."

Rebecca took the blank-book in which she kept copies of her effusions and left it at Miss Maxwell's door, hoping that she might be asked in and thus obtain a private interview; but a servant answered her ring, and she could only walk away, disappointed.

A few days afterward she saw the black-covered book on Miss Maxwell's desk and knew that the dreaded moment of criticism had come, so she was not surprised to be asked to remain after class.

The room was quiet; the red leaves rustled in the breeze and flew in at the open window, bearing the first compliments of the season. Miss Maxwell came and sat by Rebecca's side on the bench.

"Did you think these were good?" she asked, giving her the verses.

同类推荐
  • 三厨经

    三厨经

    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。
  • 佛说持明藏瑜伽大教尊那菩萨大明成就仪轨经

    佛说持明藏瑜伽大教尊那菩萨大明成就仪轨经

    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。
  • 洛阳记

    洛阳记

    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。
  • 和韩郎中扬子津玩雪

    和韩郎中扬子津玩雪

    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。
  • The Innocents Abroad

    The Innocents Abroad

    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
  • 诡局

    诡局

    买了个娃娃变石膏。打电话给卖家,卖家居然来一句,石膏有生命,既然买下就成为了我的妻子。几次扔掉它感到诡异的回来,更是缠上了我。自从有了这石膏,各种离奇古怪的事发生在我身上。
  • 盛世倾城狂妃

    盛世倾城狂妃

    嗷呜!一不小心居然穿越到古代!上有帝皇后妃,下有姨娘嫡姐,她从坐立难安,到大杀四方。哼哼哼,谁说女子不如男,她就要好好活着,潇潇洒洒,笑看四海八方!纳尼?皇帝他居然妄想纳她为妃?不好意思,她才不要
  • 孽宠妖后:魔帝,晚上战!

    孽宠妖后:魔帝,晚上战!

    魂穿成妖也就算了,为什么是只恶毒的妖呢?她余蒙蒙没别的,就是天性善良聪明可爱,做不了坏妖怎么办呢?急,在线等!本是因利益结合的婚姻,但说好的对她没兴趣的魔王大人,怎么说变就变了呢?还对她说什“此生挚爱唯卿一人,其余皆不过浮云而已”。余蒙蒙捂住耳朵,死都不听。何况这个美得造孽一样的男人可是一只货真价实的妖孽!一定会被吃的连渣都不剩的。
  • 嘉靖东南平倭通录

    嘉靖东南平倭通录

    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。
  • 撩个鬼王当老公

    撩个鬼王当老公

    十二岁那年,我不小心打破家里的观音像,把封印在里面的厉鬼放出来了。我以为我会被死,可是厉鬼却对我说……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 女人要懂点色彩心理学

    女人要懂点色彩心理学

    女人是视觉动物,对色彩有着天生的敏感和与生俱来的偏爱。每个女人都有自己所钟爱的色彩,并用不同的色彩演绎着自己的千般妩媚与万种风情。而色彩本身也极具个性,它们在替女人展现内心情绪变化的同时,更对女人的心理产生着潜移默化的影响,于不知不觉间左右女人的情绪,影响女人的心情。可以说,色彩心理学是热爱生活的女人不可不了解的一门学问。《女人要懂点色彩心理学》在向女人讲解了色彩与人的心理之间的关系的同时,更让女人体味色彩的趣味、了解色彩的用途、掌握运用色彩的技巧,从而帮助女人真正成为“深知色彩、善用色彩”的画师,以描绘出七彩斑斓的人生画卷。
  • 竹马律师请站住

    竹马律师请站住

    他曾是她的阳光,却亲手把她推入悬崖;她年少时不知对他是爱,多年后归来,已经懂爱的她,是否可以带着满身伤痕和满目疮痍的心,再一次飞蛾扑火的扑向他?
  • 第一权少是忠犬

    第一权少是忠犬

    撩上帝国第一权少什么感受?那就是多了一只忠犬!
  • 医画江山:弃后不好惹

    医画江山:弃后不好惹

    她是现代医学高材生,刚穿越就身处冷宫,是位有名无实的越国皇后……对于那个手握皇权的男人,她表示不屑一顾。反正自己也是个不受宠的“皇后”,做几年假夫妻就可以各奔东西了。但为什么她的“真命天子”出现的这么快,让她早早的红杏出墙……面对皇室子孙的权力纠葛、大越王朝的云诡波谲,还有那个风姿秀雅的镇国寺主持,她当机立断:抱走美男要紧!她笑得倾城:“无问,你注定踏不出这万丈红尘了……”
  • 叶罗丽精灵梦之倾城绝恋

    叶罗丽精灵梦之倾城绝恋

    仙境深处,有一位绝美的女孩站在湖边,看着湖中心的冰棺,眼角不自觉的流下了一滴眼泪,女孩对着冰棺说:“姐姐,为何你当初那么傻,我会替你报仇的,一定让那些伤害我们的人一个个还回来。”【本文纯属娱乐,有些是接着原版的,本文不支持王默,真爱粉误进】