登陆注册
5363100000196

第196章

Every morning he shambled across from the deanery to the cathedral, and attended the morning service, sitting in the stall which he had occupied for fifty years. The distance was very short, not exceeding, indeed a hundred yards from a side-door in the deanery to another side-door into the cathedral; but short as it was there had come to be a question whether he should be allowed to go alone. It had been feared that he might fall on his passage and hurt himself; for there was a step here, and a step there, and the light was not very good in the purlieus of the old cathedral. A word or two had been said once, and the offer of an arm to help him had been made; but he had rejected the offered assistance--softly, indeed, but still firmly--and every day he tottered off by himself hardly lifting his feet as he went, and aiding himself on his journey by a hand upon the wall when he thought that nobody was looking at him. But many did see him, and they who knew him--ladies generally of the city--would offer him a hand. Nobody was milder in his dislikings than Mr Harding; but there were ladies in Barchester upon whose arm he would always decline to lean, bowing courteously as he did so, and saying a word or two of constrained civility. There were others whom he would allow to accompany him home to the door of the deanery, with whom he delighted to linger and chat if the morning was warm, and to whom he would tell little stories of his own doings in the cathedral services in the old days, when Bishop Grantly had ruled the diocese.

Never a word did he say against Bishop Proudie, or against Bishop Proudie's wife; but the many words which he did say in praise of Bishop Grantly--who, by his showing, was surely one of the best of churchmen who ever walked through this vale of sorrow--were as eloquent in dispraise of the existing prelate as could ever have been any more clearly-pointed phrases. This daily visit to the cathedral, where he would say his prayers as he had said them for so many years, and listen to the organ, of which he knew all the power and every blemish as though he himself had made the stops and fixed the pipes, was the chief occupation of his life. It was a pity that it could not have been made to cover a larger portion of his day.

It was sometimes sad enough to watch him as he sat alone. He would have a book near him, and for a while would keep it in his hands. It would generally be some volume of good old standard theology with which he had been, or supposed himself to have been, conversant from his youth. But the book would soon be laid aside, and gradually he would move himself away from it, and he would stand about the room, looking now out of a window from which he would fancy that he could not be seen, or gazing up at some print which he had known for years; and then he would sit down for a while in one chair, and for a while in another, while his mind was wandering back into the old days, thinking of old troubles and remembering old joys. And he had a habit, when he was sure that he that he was not watched, of creeping up to a great black wooden case, which always stood in one corner of the sitting-room which he occupied in the deanery. Mr Harding, when he was younger, had been a performer on the violoncello, and in this case there was still the instrument from which he had been wont to extract the sounds which he had so dearly loved. Now in these latter days he never made any attempt to play. Soon after he had come to the deanery there had fallen upon him an illness, and after that he had never again asked for his bow. They who were around him--his daughter chiefly and her husband--had given the matter much thought, arguing with themselves whether or no it would be better to invite him to resume the task he so loved; for of all the works of his life this playing on the violoncello had been the sweetest to him; but even before that illness his hand had greatly failed him, and the dean and Mrs Arabin had agreed that it would be better to let the matter pass without a word. He had never asked to be allowed to play. He had expressed no regrets. When he himself would propose that his daughter should 'give them a little music'--and he would make such a proposition on every evening that was suitable--he would never say a word of those former performances at which he himself had taken a part. But it had become known to Mrs Arabin, through the servants, that he had once dragged the instrument forth from its case when he thought the house to be nearly deserted; and a wail of sounds had been heard, very low, very short-lived, recurring now and again at fitful intervals. He had at those times attempted to play, as though with a muffled bow--so that none should know of his vanity and folly. Then there had been further consultations at the deanery, and it had been again agreed that it would be best to say nothing to him of his music.

In these latter days of which I am now speaking he would never draw the instrument out of its case. Indeed he was aware that it was too heavy for him to handle without assistance. But he would pass his fingers among the broad strings, and ever and anon would produce from one of them a low, melancholy, almost unearthly sound. And then he would pause, never daring to produce such notes in succession--one close upon the other. And these last sad moans of the old fiddle were now known through the household. They were the ghosts of the melody of days long past. He imagined that his visits to the box were unsuspected--that none knew of the folly of his old fingers which could not keep themselves from touching the wires; but the voice of the old violoncello had been recognised by the servants and by his daughter, and when that low wail was heard through the house--like the last dying note of a dirge--they would all know that Mr Harding was visiting his ancient friend.

同类推荐
  • 布萨文等

    布萨文等

    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。
  • 玉堂嘉话

    玉堂嘉话

    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。
  • 理智与情感

    理智与情感

    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。
  • 四讳篇

    四讳篇

    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 Letters

    The Letters

    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
  • 与既定的轨道说拜拜

    与既定的轨道说拜拜

    幼年留下心里阴影。内心深处的自卑,支配着她年纪轻轻离开故土。本以为外面的世界会是精彩,却不知没有文化,没有一技之长的人,只能生活于社的最底层。经历了第一次恋爱,刻骨铭心,明明应该在一起,心中的阴影面积不断放大,支配着她放弃并离开那个一心爱着她的男人。再经历了婚姻的不幸之后,回应过来才知道,人的一生不可以将就。幸运重生,避过了幼时的灾难,引领一家人过不一样的生活,创造属于自己的财富,弥补前世的遗憾,开启不一样的人生。《来自双胞胎姐妹的佛系逆袭》已完结,虽然被封了N多内容,作者无力更改,但请各位小可爱支持!
  • 都市之最强极品神豪

    都市之最强极品神豪

    一封深夜送达的神秘遗嘱,被夏天打开之后,他的余生就只有一个目标“把钱花完!”
  • 天之魂

    天之魂

    本书包括的文章有:大漠魂、大水、温多尔·罕山上的圆石、哭润的沙坨子、古犄角、荒漠三魂、大漠的落日、空谷、沙路、狼子本无野心、一只老蝈蝈。
  • 小海蒂

    小海蒂

    在海蒂五岁的那一年,姨妈像甩包袱一样地把她送到了阿鲁姆大叔那儿。可是,当小海蒂爱上这座大山之后,又被姨妈骗到富兰克托,和终日坐在轮椅上的富家女做伴……小海蒂犹如拥有快乐魔杖的天使,她所到之处,总是能点化出意想不到的变化。
  • 贵女谋略

    贵女谋略

    徐妙筠,徐氏第三女,享年九十。在徐家家谱上,描述徐妙筠的便是这几个简单的字,不是因为她平凡,而是因为她太过不平凡。她是徐家最得宠的小女儿,是泰宁大长公主的金兰姐妹,是报了抄家之仇和杀父之恨的徐氏功臣,是景宣帝的皇后,是成毅公的妹妹,她身负多重身份,内心却从未改变,即便站在九重台阶上,依旧是那个在紫藤花架下看姐姐们下棋却闷得睡着的小姑娘。
  • 我是你的目之所及

    我是你的目之所及

    一切都是假的吗,平日里粉丝们说的全能男神竟如此可恶,他冷酷,他冷酷,他甚至无理取闹。“都说了,我要找一个像爸爸一样宠我的男朋友,而不是又冰又冷的大石头”某女抓狂道。“乖,别闹,待会儿好好宠你”某男看着抓狂的小女人挑眉道。
  • 快穿之金牌炮灰

    快穿之金牌炮灰

    一个像是生来就要当做他人背景板的十八线小龙套苏念筝,意外在系统101的带领下为各个同病相怜的炮灰们逆袭,从刚开始毫无演技的一次次失败,到后来因为炉火纯青的演技获得三千小世界的各个路人心。年华已逝,佳人依在。谁曾想,大名鼎鼎的金牌炮灰撩动众人心的原由只是愿得一人心……当她踏碎一地心,重返二十岁,那个她年少最心心念念的人,究竟会不会因为她重生后的灼灼光华怦然心动?【本文无cp,cp在不可抗力的缘故下被狗吃了。最终结局可能是最精彩的部分,所以绝不会太监。大纲已拟好,欢迎可爱的小天使萌跳坑2333】
  • 大国关系与文化本原

    大国关系与文化本原

    本书内容包括:大国文化要义、西方外交文化本原、俄罗斯外交文化本原与战略文化变化趋势、日本外交文化本原、中国外交文化本原。
  • 末世之女神降临

    末世之女神降临

    千凤翎,明里是千氏集团的CEO,暗里是个黑帮老大(夙夜就是黑道第一帮),还没准备好,这所谓的末世就来了,本可以逍遥的过生活却被这末世给打破了,于是决定推了这末世,建起属于自己的王国。片段一:千千,带我去打丧尸吧!我不是小孩子了,我可以。女主,太危险了,你不可以去,在空间里等我。实际上是怕他抢经验,他一出去别人也不用打了,他一挑百都没问题片段二:女人,我终于找到你了,跟我私奔去吧。女主汗,我不就是当年就了你一命吗?你至于这样缠这我吗?片段三:千凤翎,你一个人挑十个丧尸累不累?我帮你吧!女主,丫的又来一个抢经验的。本文比简介好看多了,欢迎各位来看。
  • 三国战神之吕布

    三国战神之吕布

    一个普通的少年,意外穿越到三国。且看他如何斗名将,泡美眉,玩转三国,成就一代战神神话。