登陆注册
5254800000061

第61章 CHAPTER XX LORNA BEGINS HER STORY(1)

'I cannot go through all my thoughts so as to make them clear to you, nor have I ever dwelt on things, to shape a story of them. I know not where the beginning was, nor where the middle ought to be, nor even how at the present time I feel, or think, or ought to think.

If I look for help to those around me, who should tell me right and wrong (being older and much wiser), I meet sometimes with laughter, and at other times with anger.

'There are but two in the world who ever listen and try to help me; one of them is my grandfather, and the other is a man of wisdom, whom we call the Counsellor.

My grandfather, Sir Ensor Doone, is very old and harsh of manner (except indeed to me); he seems to know what is right and wrong, but not to want to think of it.

The Counsellor, on the other hand, though full of life and subtleties, treats my questions as of play, and not gravely worth his while to answer, unless he can make wit of them.

'And among the women there are none with whom I can hold converse, since my Aunt Sabina died, who took such pains to teach me. She was a lady of high repute and lofty ways, and learning, but grieved and harassed more and more by the coarseness, and the violence, and the ignorance around her. In vain she strove, from year to year, to make the young men hearken, to teach them what became their birth, and give them sense of honour. It was her favourite word, poor thing! and they called her "Old Aunt Honour." Very often she used to say that Iwas her only comfort, and I am sure she was my only one; and when she died it was more to me than if I had lost a mother.

'For I have no remembrance now of father or of mother, although they say that my father was the eldest son of Sir Ensor Doone, and the bravest and the best of them.

And so they call me heiress to this little realm of violence; and in sorry sport sometimes, I am their Princess or their Queen.

'Many people living here, as I am forced to do, would perhaps be very happy, and perhaps I ought to be so.

We have a beauteous valley, sheltered from the cold of winter and power of the summer sun, untroubled also by the storms and mists that veil the mountains; although I must acknowledge that it is apt to rain too often.

The grass moreover is so fresh, and the brook so bright and lively, and flowers of so many hues come after one another that no one need be dull, if only left alone with them.

'And so in the early days perhaps, when morning breathes around me, and the sun is going upward, and light is playing everywhere, I am not so far beside them all as to live in shadow. But when the evening gathers down, and the sky is spread with sadness, and the day has spent itself; then a cloud of lonely trouble falls, like night, upon me. I cannot see the things I quest for of a world beyond me; I cannot join the peace and quiet of the depth above me; neither have I any pleasure in the brightness of the stars.

'What I want to know is something none of them can tell me--what am I, and why set here, and when shall I be with them? I see that you are surprised a little at this my curiosity. Perhaps such questions never spring in any wholesome spirit. But they are in the depths of mine, and I cannot be quit of them.

'Meantime, all around me is violence and robbery, coarse delight and savage pain, reckless joke and hopeless death. Is it any wonder that I cannot sink with these, that I cannot so forget my soul, as to live the life of brutes, and die the death more horrible because it dreams of waking? There is none to lead me forward, there is none to teach me right; young as Iam, I live beneath a curse that lasts for ever.'

Here Lorna broke down for awhile, and cried so very piteously, that doubting of my knowledge, and of any power to comfort, I did my best to hold my peace, and tried to look very cheerful. Then thinking that might be bad manners, I went to wipe her eyes for her.

'Master Ridd,' she began again, 'I am both ashamed and vexed at my own childish folly. But you, who have a mother, who thinks (you say) so much of you, and sisters, and a quiet home; you cannot tell (it is not likely) what a lonely nature is. How it leaps in mirth sometimes, with only heaven touching it; and how it falls away desponding, when the dreary weight creeps on.

'It does not happen many times that I give way like this; more shame now to do so, when I ought to entertain you. Sometimes I am so full of anger, that Idare not trust to speech, at things they cannot hide from me; and perhaps you would be much surprised that reckless men would care so much to elude a young girl's knowledge. They used to boast to Aunt Sabina of pillage and of cruelty, on purpose to enrage her; but they never boast to me. It even makes me smile sometimes to see how awkwardly they come and offer for temptation to me shining packets, half concealed, of ornaments and finery, of rings, or chains, or jewels, lately belonging to other people.

'But when I try to search the past, to get a sense of what befell me ere my own perception formed; to feel back for the lines of childhood, as a trace of gossamer, then I only know that nought lives longer than God wills it. So may after sin go by, for we are children always, as the Counsellor has told me; so may we, beyond the clouds, seek this infancy of life, and never find its memory.

'But I am talking now of things which never come across me when any work is toward. It might have been a good thing for me to have had a father to beat these rovings out of me; or a mother to make a home, and teach me how to manage it. For, being left with none--I think; and nothing ever comes of it. Nothing, I mean, which I can grasp and have with any surety; nothing but faint images, and wonderment, and wandering. But often, when I am neither searching back into remembrance, nor asking of my parents, but occupied by trifles, something like a sign, or message, or a token of some meaning, seems to glance upon me. Whether from the rustling wind, or sound of distant music, or the singing of a bird, like the sun on snow it strikes me with a pain of pleasure.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 侦探思维游戏

    侦探思维游戏

    据科学家研究得出:人脑中有2000亿个脑细胞,可储存1000多亿条信息,思想每小时游走300多公里,拥有超过100兆的交叉路线,平均每小时产生4000种思想,是世界上最精密、最灵敏的器官。 爱因斯坦、牛顿的成长经历告诉我们:超凡的想象力靠的是长期不懈的培养和锻炼。《看图推理:侦探思维游戏3》并非是枯燥乏味的习题,而是有趣好玩的推理游戏。要破解书中的各种谜题,读者除了拥有多方面的知识、同时必须细心寻找各种足丝马迹,认真分析,假设推理,最终才能破解它。通过这个过程中,读者的注意力、观察力和分析能力,都可以得到很好的锻炼。
  • 密室

    密室

    一切的偶然都是必然——致所有“不可能”的杀人案件。没有出口的迷宫,凶手就在拐角处,7个不可能的杀人案件,7个深埋心底的无限怨恨……就像一只巨大的食人花,用妖娆的美梦编织一张大网,只等你掉入的那刻,了无痕迹地将你消化干净……
  • 幸福还有多远

    幸福还有多远

    人们常说,知足者常乐。这是一条真理,可我们每一个生活在现实中的人,又有多少时间是知足常乐的呢?于是,快乐就远离了我们。我们在忙碌与愁苦中,不知疲倦地去追求我们认为的那个幸福。
  • 竹马先生姗姗来迟

    竹马先生姗姗来迟

    某男:“那晚你吻了我。”某女:“那只是轻轻碰触而已。”某男:“那你说对不起是几个意思?”某女:“因为怕负责。”某男:“那你逃跑了又怎么解释?”某女:“那是因为我尿急。”某男被打败,某女继续光明正大地当鸵鸟。======他遇到她时,她已是人人口中他人的女朋友;待他奋勇追求她时,她已从他的世界销声匿迹;多年后,她出现并笑着告诉他,她已有小孩。她是青梅,他是她那个姗姗来迟的竹马……感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持
  • 趣味线索分析(侦探趣味推理故事)

    趣味线索分析(侦探趣味推理故事)

    探案故事的模式由4部分构成:一是神秘的环境。二是严密的情节,包括介绍侦探、列出犯罪事实及犯罪线索、调查、宣布案件侦破、解释破案和结局。三是人物和人物间关系。主要有4类人物:①受害者;②罪犯;③侦探;④侦探的朋友,牵涉进罪案的好人。四是特定的故事背景。
  • 都市之天才绝禀

    都市之天才绝禀

    当一个少年从他国最可怕的重地归来,他又会成为什么样的人?
  • 带来子

    带来子

    丁秋香带着儿子丁五斤乞讨流浪,被田白村单身农民白旦收留成家。母子二人在苦难屈辱中艰难度日。白旦看护果园时,不慎点燃草棚,葬身火海。白旦族人怀疑秋香母子纵火杀人,将其告到官家。审问时,丁五斤遭毒打,种下仇恨。他怀恨寻仇,将仇家打成重伤,自己也因此锒铛入狱。出狱回家路上,丁五斤勇敢地从歹徒手上解救了遭绑架的果汁厂老板张志清。
  • 夜帝盛宠恶魔小王后

    夜帝盛宠恶魔小王后

    改成记录文了,咳,我也不知道我写的是什么,这文是我的黑历史,已改行写耽美,再见
  • 奈何BOSS又如何(宣璐、赵志伟主演)

    奈何BOSS又如何(宣璐、赵志伟主演)

    七年前,他宠她入骨、视她如命,她却剪碎结婚证毅然离去;七年后,他光环笼罩、商界争霸,却唯独不记得她是谁!他的记忆没能唤醒,却为她再次沦陷。两次爱上同一个女人,他气焰嚣张:“这辈子,你休想逃出我的手心!”而她嘴角上扬,“遇见你,是我的命,而我,认命。”--情节虚构,请勿模仿初次见面,聂星辰(宣璐饰)就对“难搞”BOSS严景致(赵志伟饰)的日常习惯了如指掌,一次出击hold住总裁办全场。究竟是什么让初次见面的二人似乎相识多年,蜜恋开始之后,霸总屡出bug,聂星辰如何见招拆招,出奇制胜,再获霸总心?同名电视剧芒果TV正在热播。
  • 苏霍多尔

    苏霍多尔

    《苏霍多尔》是一部俄罗斯中篇小说,讲述一个庄园的兴衰,居住其中的人们的生活和他们的爱恨情仇。在小说中,作者以第一人称回忆了苏霍多尔,从头至尾以一种追寻家族踪迹的姿态出现。但是其真正的主人公是娜达莉娅,她的回忆构成了小说的主体。加上其他人物的零碎而片段的记忆构建了一个完整的关于苏霍多尔的记忆。