登陆注册
5378700000045

第45章

THE Monktons of Wincot Abbey bore a sad character for want of sociability in our county.They never went to other people's houses, and, excepting my father, and a lady and her daughter living near them, never received anybody under their own roof.

Proud as they all certainly were, it was not pride, but dread, which kept them thus apart from their neighbors.The family had suffered for generations past from the horrible affliction of hereditary insanity, and the members of it shrank from exposing their calamity to others, as they must have exposed it if they had mingled with the busy little world around them.There is a frightful story of a crime committed in past times by two of the Monktons, near relatives, from which the first appearance of the insanity was always supposed to date, but it is needless for me to shock any one by repeating it.It is enough to say that at intervals almost every form of madness appeared in the family, monomania being the most frequent manifestation of the affliction among them.I have these particulars, and one or two yet to be related, from my father.

At the period of my youth but three of the Monktons were left at the Abbey--Mr.and Mrs.Monkton and their only child Alfred, heir to the prope rty.The one other member of this, the elder branch of the family, who was then alive, was Mr.Monkton's younger brother, Stephen.He was an unmarried man, possessing a fine estate in Scotland; but he lived almost entirely on the Continent, and bore the reputation of being a shameless profligate.The family at Wincot held almost as little communication with him as with their neighbors.

I have already mentioned my father, and a lady and her daughter, as the only privileged people who were admitted into Wincot Abbey.

My father had been an old school and college friend of Mr.

Monkton, and accident had brought them so much together in later life that their continued intimacy at Wincot was quite intelligible.I am not so well able to account for the friendly terms on which Mrs.Elmslie (the lady to whom I have alluded)lived with the Monktons.Her late husband had been distantly related to Mrs.Monkton, and my father was her daughter's guardian.But even these claims to friendship and regard never seemed to me strong enough to explain the intimacy between Mrs.

Elmslie and the inhabitants of the Abbey.Intimate, however, they certainly were, and one result of the constant interchange of visits between the two families in due time declared itself: Mr.

Monkton's son and Mrs.Elmslie's daughter became attached to each other.

I had no opportunities of seeing much of the young lady; I only remember her at that time as a delicate, gentle, lovable girl, the very opposite in appearance, and apparently in character also, to Alfred Monkton.But perhaps that was one reason why they fell in love with each other.The attachment was soon discovered, and was far from being disapproved by the parents on either side.

In all essential points except that of wealth, the Elmslies were nearly the equals of the Monktons, and want of money in a bride was of no consequence to the heir of Wincot.Alfred, it was well known, would succeed to thirty thousand a year on his father's death.

Thus, though the parents on both sides thought the young people not old enough to be married at once, they saw no reason why Ada and Alfred should not be engaged to each other, with the understanding that they should be united when young Monkton came of age, in two years' time.The person to be consulted in the matter, after the parents, was my father, in his capacity of Ada's guardian.He knew that the family misery had shown itself many years ago in Mrs.Monkton, who was her husband's cousin.The _illness,_ as it was significantly called, had been palliated by careful treatment, and was reported to have passed away.But my father was not to be deceived.He knew where the hereditary taint still lurked; he viewed with horror the bare possibility of its reappearing one day in the children of his friend's only daughter; and he positively refused his consent to the marriage engagement.

The result was that the doors of the Abbey and the doors of Mrs.

Elmslie's house were closed to him.This suspension of friendly intercourse had lasted but a very short time when Mrs.Monkton died.Her husband, who was fondly attached to her, caught a violent cold while attending her funeral.The cold was neglected, and settled on his lungs.In a few months' time he followed his wife to the grave, and Alfred was left master of the grand old Abbey and the fair lands that spread all around it.

At this period Mrs.Elmslie had the indelicacy to endeavor a second time to procure my father's consent to the marriage engagement.He refused it again more positively than before.More than a year passed away.The time was approaching fast when Alfred would be of age.I returned from college to spend the long vacation at home, and made some advances toward bettering my acquaintance with young Monkton.They were evaded--certainly with perfect politeness, but still in such a way as to prevent me from offering my friendship to him again.Any mortification I might have felt at this petty repulse under ordinary circumstances was dismissed from my mind by the occurrence of a real misfortune in our household.For some months past my father's health had been failing, and, just at the time of which I am now writing, his sons had to mourn the irreparable calamity of his death.

This event, through some informality or error in the late Mr.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 葡萄病虫防治原色图谱

    葡萄病虫防治原色图谱

    全书分为5个章节,分别为:果树病虫害防治基础知识、葡萄侵染性的识别与防治、葡萄非侵染性的识别与防治、葡萄虫害的识别与防治,农药使用规则。囊括了葡萄病虫害56种,其中病害45种,虫害11种。书中彩图123幅,所列病虫病原尽可能按新的分类系统核实订正学名。
  • 美眷传

    美眷传

    林府的大小姐和入赘的女婿,他们的命运,随着时代,随着世事,随着人心而改变。婚姻并不是相爱就可以维持,并不是坚持就能得到圆满。
  • 唐三妹

    唐三妹

    烂渔沟村的男人们大多在外打工,剩下的那些老弱病残中排得上号的,都是村里女人们的香饽饽了。水葫芦和纸品店的陈大呆,红蜻蜓和簖上的陈小瘸子,长丫、小霞和学校里的男老师……那些私下里的关系成了大家心照不宣的事。绰号“秃虺蛇”的唐三妹其实是个心地善良的媳妇,一直独自照顾瘫痪在床的婆婆董银花。村长丁文革为开绣花厂的事多次关照唐三妹,惹得唐三妹也对他暗生情愫,然而后来才得知夜里溜进自己房间的,不是丁文革,是年轻时和董银花有过一段关系的陈大呆!唐三妹心灰意冷,在婆婆的严厉管束下也不再做绣花的工作,关起门来过日子。董银花临死前看着自己跟前的儿媳妇,终于释然,催她出门去,去绣花。
  • 最强秘书

    最强秘书

    “伍佰万年薪!”他是年仅二十一岁的正太总裁,脾气火爆,却患有女性厌恶症候群!她是在国际杀手联盟净身出户的最强杀手,以柔克刚,化骨绵掌,擅长冷暴力,次次都把他逼出内伤。为了五百万年薪,她毅然女扮男装进入这间全是男人的公司为他做起了全职秘书!秘书,司机,保镖,她样样接下!
  • 大明诡事

    大明诡事

    洪武三十一年,朱元璋传位于皇孙朱允,号建文,其四子朱棣不服,起兵于顺天府,南下靖难。江湖朝堂风起云涌,登云府的一群年轻人为了完成师命,走上了充满危险的前路…
  • 青鸟晨歌

    青鸟晨歌

    世上最动人的时刻往往很短暂,自然与人的融合同样短暂。5分钟后,它不再响应,牢牢紧贴树干不动,似听出或看出我非同类。为安全计,它完全化身树的一部分。如此做法,属自保习性,往往在天敌眼前蒙混过关。我叫啊叫啊,叫了很久。同样,它把自己当成树也当了很久。最后我看看表,已过两小时,实在挺不住,举相机迈前一步。一直背对我的它像脑后长了眼睛一样,马上振翅起飞,落在10米外的小树上一动不动。只有10步远,还过去吗?它明摆着想引诱我再过去,用它那一动不动的魔法跟我再耗两小时。这才明白它真用心,它鸣叫并非表达愉悦情绪,而是向伴侣报警并兼有吸引我注意力的作用。
  • 那个店小二

    那个店小二

    掌柜:“殿小二,你给我跳柳江去!”殿小二:“掌柜的,这柳江一天跳几回,早腻了……”掌柜:“那你便去切腹谢罪。”殿小二:“不敢,我还没把你拆吃入腹呢。”:“算了,你还是刎颈吧。”殿小二:“……”掌柜:“殿小二,你咬我脖子做什么!”殿小二:“不是你让我吻颈的吗?”掌柜:“你……你怎么不去死!”殿小二:“行,要是你肯给我陪葬的话。”
  • 荀子大讲堂

    荀子大讲堂

    荀子,战国时著名思想家、文学有。名况,当时人们尊重他,称他荀卿。本书以荀子的基本思想为出发点,在荀子对天人的思考范畴上,对做人、做事、处世、言谈、交际、识人、用人等方面作了深入细致、又浅显易懂的探讨,对读者来说是一部很好的研读范本。荀子“人定胜天”思想的提出,则是发展了孔子仁学的实用性,在一定程度上体现了人的主观能动性的发挥,让人的一生更幸福,让社会走上良性发展的轨道。在中国哲学史上和中国文化心理结构的形成上具有不可低估的作用。
  • 科学的黑屋上(破解人类文明与科学之谜)

    科学的黑屋上(破解人类文明与科学之谜)

    宇宙茫茫,星空浩瀚。亿万年来,宇宙每天都在人类的面前,炫示着她的神奇与伟大,灿烂与深邃。
  • 西清笔记

    西清笔记

    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。