登陆注册
5257500000009

第9章 CHAPTER III(3)

Laetitia did continue. She saw Miss Durham at Patterne on several occasions. She admired the pair. She had a wish to witness the bridal ceremony. She was looking forward to the day with that mixture of eagerness and withholding which we have as we draw nigh the disenchanting termination of an enchanting romance, when Sir Willoughby met her on a Sunday morning, as she crossed his park solitarily to church. They were within ten days of the appointed ceremony. He should have been away at Miss Durham's end of the county. He had, Laetitia knew, ridden over to her the day before; but there he was; and very unwontedly, quite surprisingly, he presented his arm to conduct Laetitia to the church-door, and talked and laughed in a way that reminded her of a hunting gentleman she had seen once rising to his feet, staggering from an ugly fall across hedge and fence into one of the lanes of her short winter walks. "All's well, all sound, never better, only a scratch!" the gentleman had said, as he reeled and pressed a bleeding head. Sir Willoughby chattered of his felicity in meeting her. "I am really wonderfully lucky," he said, and he said that and other things over and over, incessantly talking, and telling an anecdote of county occurrences, and laughing at it with a mouth that would not widen. He went on talking in the church porch, and murmuring softly some steps up the aisle, passing the pews of Mrs.

Mountstuart Jenkinson and Lady Busshe. Of course he was entertaining, but what a strangeness it was to Laetitia! His face would have been half under an antique bonnet. It came very close to hers, and the scrutiny he bent on her was most solicitous.

After the service, he avoided the great ladies by sauntering up to within a yard or two of where she sat; he craved her hand on his arm to lead her forth by the park entrance to the church, all the while bending to her, discoursing rapidly, appearing radiantly interested in her quiet replies, with fits of intentness that stared itself out into dim abstraction. She hazarded the briefest replies for fear of not having understood him.

One question she asked: "Miss Durham is well, I trust?"

And he answered "Durham?" and said, "There is no Miss Durham to my knowledge."

The impression he left with her was, that he might yesterday during his ride have had an accident and fallen on his head.

She would have asked that, if she had not known him for so thorough an Englishman, in his dislike to have it thought that accidents could hurt even when they happened to him.

He called the next day to claim her for a walk. He assured her she had promised it, and he appealed to her father, who could not testify to a promise he had not heard, but begged her to leave him to have her walk. So once more she was in the park with Sir Willoughby, listening to his raptures over old days. A word of assent from her sufficed him. "I am now myself," was one of the remarks he repeated this day. She dilated on the beauty of the park and the Hall to gratify him.

He did not speak of Miss Durham, and Laetitia became afraid to mention her name.

At their parting, Willoughby promised Laetitia that he would call on the morrow. He did not come; and she could well excuse him, after her hearing of the tale.

It was a lamentable tale. He had ridden to Sir John Durham's mansion, a distance of thirty miles, to hear, on his arrival, that Constantia had quitted her father's house two days previously on a visit to an aunt in London, and had just sent word that she was the wife of Captain Oxford, hussar, and messmate of one of her brothers. A letter from the bride awaited Willoughby at the Hall.

He had ridden back at night, not caring how he used his horse in order to get swiftly home, so forgetful of himself was he under the terrible blow. That was the night of Saturday. On the day following, being Sunday, he met Laetitia in his park, led her to church, led her out of it, and the day after that, previous to his disappearance for some weeks, was walking with her in full view of the carriages along the road.

He had, indeed, you see, been very fortunately, if not considerately, liberated by Miss Durham. He, as a man of honour, could not have taken the initiative, but the frenzy of a jealous girl might urge her to such a course; and how little he suffered from it had been shown to the world. Miss Durham, the story went, was his mother's choice for him against his heart's inclinations; which had finally subdued Lady Patterne. Consequently, there was no longer an obstacle between Sir Willoughby and Miss Dale. It was a pleasant and romantic story, and it put most people in good humour with the county's favourite, as his choice of a portionless girl of no position would not have done without the shock of astonishment at the conduct of Miss Durham, and the desire to feel that so prevailing a gentleman was not in any degree pitiable.

Constantia was called "that mad thing". Laetitia broke forth in novel and abundant merits; and one of the chief points of requisition in relation to Patterne--a Lady Willoughby who would entertain well and animate the deadness of the Hall, became a certainty when her gentleness and liveliness and exceeding cleverness were considered. She was often a visitor at the Hall by Lady Patterne's express invitation, and sometimes on these occasions Willoughby was there too, superintending the filling up of his laboratory, though he was not at home to the county; it was not expected that he should be yet. He had taken heartily to the pursuit of science, and spoke of little else. Science, he said, was in our days the sole object worth a devoted pursuit. But the sweeping remark could hardly apply to Laetitia, of whom he was the courteous, quiet wooer you behold when a man has broken loose from an unhappy tangle to return to the lady of his first and strongest affections.

Some months of homely courtship ensued, and then, the decent interval prescribed by the situation having elapsed, Sir Willoughby Patterne left his native land on a tour of the globe.

同类推荐
  • 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。
  • A LOVER'S COMPLAINT

    A LOVER'S COMPLAINT

    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。
  • 太上灵宝净明洞神上品经

    太上灵宝净明洞神上品经

    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。
  • 眼病二首

    眼病二首

    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。
  • 醉经楼集

    醉经楼集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 歌不尽青衣

    歌不尽青衣

    青衣冢,酒半梢。纵成仙,不逍遥。待我天下傲骄,情一字,终难逃。
  • 无敌转修系统

    无敌转修系统

    系统在手,天下我有,踏斗破,游盘龙,直达万界,成就万天至尊
  • 尚书(全集)

    尚书(全集)

    《尚书》又称“书”或“书经”,是我国现存较早的一部政治文献汇编类史书,它保存了商周特别是西周初期的一些重要史料。战国时总称为《书》,汉人改称《尚书》,意即“上古帝王之书”。《尚书》相传由孔子编撰而成,但有些篇是后来儒家学者补充进去的,包括“虞书”“夏书”“商书”和“周书”四部分。其中,“虞书”是虞舜(五帝之一)在位时的政治文献汇编,“夏书”是传说中夏代的政治文献汇编,“商书”和“周书”则为商代和周代的政治文献汇编。本书以六种文体划分,分别为典、谟、誓、诰、训、命。每一篇都包括了原文、注释和译文三部分,便于读者阅读和理解。
  • 教授大人有点甜

    教授大人有点甜

    问,为什么高远最近倒霉连连?答,应为他碰到了一个叫霍商的男人。自从高远再次遇到多年未见的霍商,他就预感到他平静的生活将再次被彻底打乱。什么被夜闯民宅,什么爱车被拖,什么被小混混追的满街逃窜,什么泡妹不成反被压啊,这些都弱爆了。书友群:297652967期待各位大大的大驾光临本文走的是轻松搞笑路线,好吧,可能有些小剧情有点那个什么什么,但是,请别问我逻辑君在哪,我只能说,它跟节操君一样,被狗狗给叼走了。
  • 藏地密码9

    藏地密码9

    一部关于西藏的百科全书式小说!了解西藏,就读《藏地密码》!十年经典,强势回归!火爆热销10周年!数千万粉丝的真爱之选!揭开藏传佛教灵魂转世之谜!这是一个西藏已经开放为全世界的旅游胜地却依旧守口如瓶的秘密——公元838年,吐蕃末代赞普朗达玛登位,随即宣布禁佛。在禁佛运动中,僧侣们提前将宝物埋藏,随后将其秘密转移,他们修建了一座神庙,称为帕巴拉神庙。随着时光流失,战火不断,那座隐藏着无尽佛家珍宝的神庙彻底消失于历史尘埃之中……1938年和1943年,希特勒曾派助手希姆莱两次带队深入西藏;上世纪67年代,斯大林曾派苏联专家团前后五次考察西藏,他们的秘密行动意味深远,没有人知道他们的真实目的。多年之后,藏獒专家卓木强巴突然收到一封信,里面是两张远古神兽的照片……不久后,一支由特种兵、考古学家、密修高手等各色人物组成的神秘科考队,悄悄出发,开始了一场穿越生死禁地的探险之旅,他们要追寻藏传佛教千年隐秘历史的真相……西藏,到底向我们隐瞒了什么?
  • 一桩事后张扬的凶杀

    一桩事后张扬的凶杀

    他们看见告示那天是礼拜天的早晨。它突然出现在石林县尾博邑乡浑水塘村委会所有的电线杆子上。它们统一使用A4纸打印,字体是仿宋3号字,由于有的地方特别加了黑体,因此整张告示看上去惊心动魄:是我杀了毕春。因为他贪赃枉法、徇私舞弊、行贿受贿、吃喝嫖赌、无恶不作,他死有余辜。他是靠贿选才当上村委会主任的。就是这样一个恶霸,把我逼上了不归路。我要告诉父老乡亲,杀死这种人不算什么,可是我却要为这样一个恶霸离开你们,离开我生长了40年的家乡故土……署名是江世兴。谁不知道江世兴呢?
  • 奈何雷总追妻套路深

    奈何雷总追妻套路深

    “哈哈哈,别闹了…饶了我吧…”“嫁给我,我就停,不然…”他伸手又要挠她痒痒。“总裁大人,我们打个商量。”她勾住他的脖子,在他怀里撒娇。他捏着她的小脸摇头,“想逃,没门!”她一阵汗颜,都怪那夜黑风高,血腥四溅的夜晚,她躲过了枪林弹雨,却没躲过他,莫名其妙被劫持就算了,从此他就缠上了她,真是欲哭无泪……而他自从遇上她,被她偷了心,他疯狂追妻,不料却是襄王有梦,神女无心,被逼无奈他挖坑给她跳,将她牢牢捆在身边,做他的第一夫人。“雷天扬,你这个坑货,竟然骗婚!”“我这是知恩图报,以身相许!”“老娘要退货!”他邪魅一笑,“货已既出,恕不退换!”
  • 多铎妃刘氏外传

    多铎妃刘氏外传

    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。
  • 猎鹰计划

    猎鹰计划

    长生不老这个人类梦寐以求的愿望终于在今天得以实现。如果你想永生永世守护自己所珍惜的东西,如果你想永葆青春,如果你想亲眼见证几千年以后人类的发展,就不妨加入鹰组织。你的愿望马上就会实现,长生之术将呈现在你的面前。谎言是需要用眼睛去发现的。长生不老的谎言注定要被猎鹰集团所揭穿,而市民们被蛊惑的心也将注定被猎鹰集团所唤回。一场史无前例的猎鹰计划即将展开!
  • 快穿之接近我的男神

    快穿之接近我的男神

    推荐新书《女扮男装之绝世幻瞳师》,欢迎入坑!“前世今生,只要你出现在我的世界里,我就会疯狂爱上你,眼里再也容不下其他人。”“我也和他同样的爱着你啊!为什么你永远只看到他?”“我们重新来过,这一次忘却记忆的你是否会爱上他,如果是,我认了,我会认真祝福你们”。一觉苏醒,忘却前尘的她被坑到一个叫做女配逆袭的系统开始了她的穿梭之路。为什么会遇到两个一模一样的男人追着她不放,究竟谁才是她心中的那个他呢!双面性格的他们?互换身份的总裁or影帝?隐藏身份的质子or丞相?黑化魔尊or无情师尊?谁才是她的那个他呢?就让本宝宝带着大家穿梭一个个位面,去见证他们的奇迹!喜欢的小伙伴们入坑吧!不喜欢的就路过吧。