登陆注册
5386000000064

第64章

THE SHADOW OF THE FUTURE.

WHEN Mr. Hawbury joined his guests in the breakfast-room, the strange contrast of character between them which he had noticed already was impressed on his mind more strongly than ever. One of them sat at the well-spread table, hungry and happy, ranging from dish to dish, and declaring that he had never made such a breakfast in his life. The other sat apart at the window; his cup thanklessly deserted before it was empty, his meat left ungraciously half-eaten on his plate. The doctor's morning greeting to the two accurately expressed the differing impressions which they had produced on his mind.

He clapped Allan on the shoulder, and saluted him with a joke. He bowed constrainedly to Midwinter, and said, "I am afraid you have not recovered the fatigues of the night.""It's not the night, doctor, that has damped his spirits," said Allan. "It's something I have been telling him. It is not my fault, mind. If I had only known beforehand that he believed in dreams, I wouldn't have opened my lips.""Dreams?" repeated the doctor, looking at Midwinter directly, and addressing him under a mistaken impression of the meaning of Allan's words. "With your constitution, you ought to be well used to dreaming by this time.""This way, doctor; you have taken the wrong turning!" cried Allan. "I'm the dreamer, not he. Don't look astonished; it wasn't in this comfortable house; it was on board that confounded timber-ship. The fact is, I fell asleep just before you took us off the wreck; and it's not to be denied that I had a very ugly dream. Well, when we got back here--""Why do you trouble Mr. Hawbury about a matter that cannot possibly interest him?" asked Midwinter, speaking for the first time, and speaking very impatiently.

"I beg your pardon," returned the doctor, rather sharply; "so far as I have heard, the matter does interest me.""That's right, doctor!" said Allan. "Be interested, I beg and pray; I want you to clear his head of the nonsense he has got in it now. What do you think? He will have it that my dream is a warning to me to avoid certain people; and he actually persists in saying that one of those people is--himself! Did you ever hear the like of it? I took great pains; I explained the whole thing to him. I said, warning be hanged; it's all indigestion! You don't know what I ate and drank at the doctor's supper-table; Ido. Do you think he would listen to me? Not he. You try him next;you're a professional man, and he must listen to you. Be a good fellow, doctor, and give me a certificate of indigestion; I'll show you my tongue with pleasure.""The sight of your face is quite enough," said Mr. Hawbury. "Icertify, on the spot, that you never had such a thing as an indigestion in your life. Let's hear about the dream, and see what we can make of it, if you have no objection, that is to say."Allan pointed at Midwinter with his fork.

"Apply to my friend, there," he said; "he has got a much better account of it than I can give you. If you'll believe me, he took it all down in writing from my own lips; and he made me sign it at the end, as if it was my 'last dying speech and confession'

before I went to the gallows. Out with it, old boy--I saw you put it in your pocket-book--out with it!""Are you really in earnest?" asked Midwinter, producing his pocketbook with a reluctance which was almost offensive under the circumstances, for it implied distrust of the doctor in the doctor's own house.

Mr. Hawbury's color rose. "Pray don't show it to me, if you feel the least unwillingness," he said, with the elaborate politeness of an offended man.

"Stuff and nonsense!" cried Allan. "Throw it over here!"Instead of complying with that characteristic request, Midwinter took the paper from the pocket-book, and, leaving his place, approached Mr. Hawbury. "I beg your pardon," he said, as he offered the doctor the manuscript with his own hand. His eyes dropped to the ground, and his face darkened, while he made the apology. "A secret, sullen fellow," thought the doctor, thanking him with formal civility; "his friend is worth ten thousand of him." Midwinter went back to the window, and sat down again in silence, with the old impenetrable resignation which had once puzzled Mr. Brock.

"Read that, doctor," said Allan, as Mr. Hawbury opened the written paper. "It's not told in my roundabout way; but there's nothing added to it, and nothing taken away. It's exactly what Idreamed, and exactly what I should have written myself, if I had thought the thing worth putting down on paper, and if I had had the knack of writing--which," concluded Allan, composedly stirring his coffee, "I haven't, except it's letters; and Irattle _them_ off in no time."

Mr. Hawbury spread the manuscript before him on the breakfast-table, and read these lines:

"ALLAN ARMADALE'S DREAM.

"Early on the morning of June the first, eighteen hundred and fifty-one, I found myself (through circumstances which it is not important to mention in this place) left alone with a friend of mine--a young man about my own age--on board the French timber-ship named _La Grace de Dieu,_ which ship then lay wrecked in the channel of the Sound between the main-land of the Isle of Man and the islet called the Calf. Having not been in bed the previous night, and feeling overcome by fatigue, I fell asleep on the deck of the vessel. I was in my usual good health at the time, and the morning was far enough advanced for the sun to have risen. Under these circumstances, and at that period of the day, I passed from sleeping to dreaming. As clearly as I can recollect it, after the lapse of a few hours, this was the succession of events presented to me by the dream:

"1. The first event of which I was conscious was the appearance of my father. He took me silently by the hand; and we found ourselves in the cabin of a ship.

"2. Water rose slowly over us in the cabin; and I and my father sank through the water together.

"3. An interval of oblivion followed; and then the sense came to me of being left alone in the darkness.

"4. I waited.

同类推荐
  • 圣妙吉祥真实名经

    圣妙吉祥真实名经

    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。
  • 日本访书志

    日本访书志

    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。
  • 李太白全集

    李太白全集

    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。
  • 佛说太子刷护经

    佛说太子刷护经

    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。
  • The Congo & Other Poems

    The Congo & Other Poems

    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
  • 槁木逢韶华

    槁木逢韶华

    如果人的一生仅有十二个月,那所谓的韶华应该在四月吧!而我所期待的四月,恰如珙桐花开,洁白繁茂,似白绫裁成,垂于苍翠欲滴的桐叶间,美丽奇特,恰如白鸽舒展双翅穿梭绿荫,尽管途中遭受风雨摧残,但仍能不忘初心地去追寻十月的果,以求重生。我期待着我的一生,我期待着的......
  • 全民养鲲进化

    全民养鲲进化

    末世降临,异种来袭。若想活命,唯有养鲲。当第一头鲲坠入地星,灾难由此开启。强大的外星异种,可怕的域外凶兽,狰狞的神秘古神。地星人民唯一的抵抗手段就是养鲲、进化鲲,以鲲为武器。吞噬进化之路无穷尽,究竟谁能将鲲给进化到最终形态!……覃某打麻将时操作失误,竟误打误撞进化出机械舰鲲!七岁小孩什么都不懂,竟然进化出暴食九头蛇!隔壁大叔本以为进化失败,结果没想到出现亡灵灾鲲!厉害了我的天!蓝觉炉火营地竟有人抓到了噬鲲巨猿!书友群:584382505。
  • 父亲的花园

    父亲的花园

    在我们的一再要求下,父亲终于从遥远的新疆坐了几天几夜的火车回家了,而没有临时改变主意,和他的两位兄弟一道在中途下车。我私下里以为,父亲背井离乡的历史可能要画上句号了。几年前,我们就呼吁,不让他出远门了。可他还是像一只疲惫的老候鸟一样裹着一身稀薄的羽毛年年东出景阳关。他扔给我的理由,无非是“靠你一个人,怎么搞得走呢?”我这个只是动动嘴皮子的泥菩萨,每每都是抱愧以对。今年他又出去了,这让我更加不安。老父亲为生活所迫而年年远走他乡,我们却无力阻止,这算不算大不孝?他就要满六十岁了,可还得忍气吞声。这会不会成为乡人在背后揶揄他和嘲讽我们的把柄?
  • 和亲公主

    和亲公主

    现代女孩冯陈楚杨无意间救了一个小孩,向前来为弟弟报恩的丁小仙提出了穿越到古代的请求。变身周国福荣公主的楚杨被逼去和亲,瓦勒国三皇子承德一路上对她百般刁难,但是却慢慢显露出情愫。中途福荣逃跑出来,遇见受人之托来救她的侠客南宫越,无意间介入一场阴谋……福荣被劫回皇宫,承德带她去了西北征战。回来后得知福荣的母亲竟是瓦勒先皇的私生女,承德想让父亲改变福荣的身份,却被瓦勒皇帝降旨命令去当女道士,而福荣慢慢发现这一切都起源于阴谋,周围的人都不是那么简单。经历过种种趣事、种种磨难,楚杨和承德这两个小冤家最后是否能“执子之手,与子偕老”?
  • 你终将配得上更好的生活

    你终将配得上更好的生活

    子在川上曰:“逝者如斯夫”,时光从岁月的那头到岁月的这头,串起我们所有的人。透过岁月的红尘,我们依稀看到前面似有无数龙钟老人正伴夕阳西下,也有无数初生幼儿正刚呱呱坠地——我们就这样被分割成了一代又一代的人。这就是我们“80后”和“90后”流行语中所说的“长江后浪推前浪,前浪撞死在沙滩上”。其中似有莫名其妙的豪迈,有令人费解的冷漠,也有一丝难以言状的淡定!
  • 孝子三部曲之二:孝缘情梦

    孝子三部曲之二:孝缘情梦

    孝廉公的姑姑秋姑与汪县丞乱搞关系,使被称为二十四孝之一的“姜诗孝亲,涌泉跃鲤,一门三孝,安安送米”的孝廉姜家蒙上了阴影;引出人们围绕真孝还是假孝的生与死,血与火的斗争,还有对“孝”的拷问!小说以谐戏的笔调刻画了几组男女人物群像,使你能读到一部全新好看的小说。
  • 第一毒妃

    第一毒妃

    她,一身傲骨,惊世丑颜,两世为人,却均为孤煞之星,贵为公主,却囚与地牢,八十一根毒/针见血封喉,无人能及,不信天,不信地,不信命,却在那一眼之后相信了他!国/乱,战起,终是披上嫁衣远嫁他国!他,清贵绝伦,所向披靡,却在洞房花烛之前披甲上战场,战败,至双腿残废,但却没想到的是连拜堂后的妻子也换作她人!她说,你我各自心有所属,合,亦是分,最终却在他设下的柔情陷阱里欲罢不能!他说,这世间唯独想的便是夺回发妻,不惜一切,将她置于万劫不复之深渊。亲手将她换送皇兄,换回发妻,却不知被拉入更深的陷阱......犹记当年,蒲公英漫天飞舞,他一身青衣坐于轮椅,波如静水,音如温玉:“以后就唤你阿丑如何?”她笑如夏荷,半边丑颜被放下来的青丝遮住,粉唇轻启:“只要是夫君取的我都喜欢”经年之后,女子一身火红,妖娆绽放:“怎么?想救你心爱之人?那就拿自己的心来换回我哥的命!”男子激动不已:“你...是...我的阿丑”原名《丑颜天下,换/妻》
  • 黄帝阴符经心法

    黄帝阴符经心法

    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。
  • 水浒逐鹿传

    水浒逐鹿传

    穿越水浒,逐鹿天下!交流群:294684407(需要粉丝认证,老新书均可)。
  • 民间笑话(民间幽默笑话集)

    民间笑话(民间幽默笑话集)

    笑话在古今民间文学中都大量存在。为了给读者提供精神食粮并使之读后内心发笑、精神受益、心灵得到陶冶,编者从古今笑话中精选了一些优秀篇章,根据现代人口味作适当修改,并根据国内外笑话分类学的方法,主要从便于读者阅读的角度出发进行了分类。