登陆注册
5435100000111

第111章

A prolonged tour had been proposed to him which to most young men might seem to have great attraction. To him it would have had attraction enough, had it not been for Ayala. There would have been hardly any limit to the allowance made to him, and he would have gone forth armed with introductions, which would have made every port a happy home to him. But as soon as the tour was suggested he resolved at once that he could not move himself to a distance from Ayala. What he expected -- what he even hoped -- he could not tell himself. But while Ayala was in London, and Ayala was unmarried, he could not be made to take himself far away.

He was thoroughly ashamed of himself. He was not at all the man who could bear a week of imprisonment and not think himself disgraced.

For a day or two he shut himself up altogether in his lodgings, and never once showed himself at the Mountaineers. Faddle came to him, but he snubbed Faddle at first, remembering all the severe things his father had said about the Faddles in general. But he soon allowed that feeling to die away when the choice seemed to be between Faddle and solitude. Then he crept out in the dark and ate his dinners with Faddle at some tavern, generally paying the bill for both of them. After dinner he would play half a dozen games of billiards with his friend at some unknown billiard-room, and then creep home to his lodgings -- a blighted human being!

At last, about the end of the first week in January, he was induced to go down to Merle Park. There Mr and Mrs Traffick were still sojourning, the real grief which had afflicted Sir Thomas having caused him to postpone his intention in regard to his son-in-law.

At Merle Park Tom was cosseted and spoilt by the women very injudiciously.

It was not perhaps the fact that they regarded him as a hero simply because he had punched a policeman in the stomach and then been locked up in vindication of the injured laws of his country; but that incident in combination with his unhappy love did seem to make him heroic. Even Lucy regarded him with favour because of his constancy to her sister; whereas the other ladies measured their admiration for his persistency by the warmth of their anger against the silly girl who was causing so much trouble.

His mother told him over and over again that his cousin was not worth his regard; but then, when he would throw himself on the sofa in an agony of despair -- weakened perhaps as much by the course of champagne as by the course of his love -- then she, too, would bid him hope, and at last promised that she herself would endeavour to persuade Ayala to look at the matter in a more favourable light. "It would all be right if it were not for that accursed Stubbs," poor Tom would say to his mother.

"The man whom I called my friend! The man I lent a horse to when he couldn't get one anywhere else! The man to whom I confided everything, even about the necklace! If it hadn't been for Stubbs I never should have hurt that policeman! When I was striking him I thought that it was Stubbs!" Then the mother would heap feminine maledictions on the poor Colonel's head, and so together they would weep and think of revenge.

From the moment Tom had heard Colonel Stubbs's name mentioned as that of his rival he had meditated revenge. It was quite true when he said that he had been thinking of Stubbs when he struck the policeman. He had consumed the period of his confinement in gnashing his teeth, all in regard to our poor friend Jonathan.

He told his father that he could not go upon his long tour because of Ayala. But in truth his love was now so mixed up with ideas of vengeance that he did not himself know which prevailed. If he could first have slaughtered Stubbs then perhaps he might have started! But how was he to slaughter Stubbs? Various ideas occurred to his mind. At first he thought that he would go down to Aldershot with the biggest cutting-whip he could find in any shop in Piccadilly; but then it occurred to him that at Aldershot he would have all the British army against him, and that the British army might do something to him worse even than the London magistrate. Then he would wait till the Colonel could be met elsewhere. He ascertained that the Colonel was still at Stalham, where he had passed the Christmas, and he thought how it might be if he were to attack the Colonel in the presence of his friends, the Alburys. He assured himself that, as far as personal injury went, he feared nothing. He had no disinclination to be hit over the head himself, if he could be sure of hitting the Colonel over the head. If it could be managed that they two should fly at each other with their fists, and be allowed to do the worst they could to each other for an hour, without interference, he would be quite satisfied. But down at Stalham that would not be allowed. All the world would be against him, and nobody there to see that he got fair play. If he could encounter the man in the streets of London it would be better; but were he to seek the man down at Stalham he would probably find himself in the County Lunatic Asylum. What must he do for his revenge? He was surely entitled to it. By all the laws of chivalry, as to which he had his own ideas, he had a right to inflict an injury upon a successful -- even upon an unsuccessful -- rival. Was it not a shame that so excellent an institution as duelling should have been stamped out? Wandering about the lawns and shrubberies at Merle Park he thought of all this, and at last he came to a resolution.

The institution had been stamped out, as far as Great Britain was concerned. He was aware of that. But it seemed to him that it had not been stamped out in other more generous countries.

He had happened to notice that a certain enthusiastic politician in France had enjoyed many duels, and had never been severely repressed by the laws of his country. Newspaper writers were always fighting in France, and were never guillotined. The idea of being hanged was horrible to him -- so distasteful that he saw at a glance that a duel in England was out of the question.

同类推荐
  • 玉笑零音

    玉笑零音

    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。
  • 施设论

    施设论

    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。
  • 诊家枢要

    诊家枢要

    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。
  • Concerning Letters

    Concerning 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。
  • 万氏家传养生四要

    万氏家传养生四要

    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
  • 法律的灯绳

    法律的灯绳

    本书稿收录了刘仁文教授近年来在《法制日版》《新京报》《检察日报》等报纸上撰写的专栏文章若干篇,同时也收录了一些媒体与他的访谈。文字流畅质朴,通俗易懂,合适法律爱好者和法学学生阅读。
  • 404之见龙在天

    404之见龙在天

    凌晨时分。我抽完烟,回到键盘前,信心十足地敲击出一行文字:“老子的墓志铭就是——我还会回来的。”经典台词,霸气十足。怎样,怕了吧,你们?!读者群里一众90后、00后顿时笑晕,表情包在二十七寸的显示器上乱飞。“大叔,你太落伍了吧?”有人好心安慰我,“《终结者5》的票房很差啊,阿诺肯定回不来了!”“靠,老子就要在墓碑上刻这句话,到时候你们来查!”我咬牙切齿。
  • 幼幼新书

    幼幼新书

    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。
  • 醉红颜

    醉红颜

    有些人,有些事情总是适合在恰当的时候将他忘却;有些人,有些事情总是在恰当的时候将他记起;曾经有过一段无花果一样的爱情;那么的刻骨铭心;曾经有一段刻骨铭心的回忆;在新的生活面前显得那么的苍白无力……故事情节纯属虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 青萍

    青萍

    为了厂里的业务,青萍经常很晚才回家。一个人走在凌水湾静静的夜街上,看天上的弦月,听河边的蛙声,心总会再次缠绵起来。不管吴德发有什么样的缺点,她还是感觉自己对他的感情越来越浓,越来越炙热了。不管她要和万庭福过下去的决心有多大,也大不过对吴德发的思念。看破看透那都是糊弄别人的话,是理智占上风时候的无奈和沧桑。有个女作家说过,男人的爱情是女人的鸦片,一旦染上,想戒掉也难。而女人对男人的爱,也是鸦片,一旦染上,想戒也没门。明知山有虎,偏向虎山行,这是青萍的命,也是这世上所有女人的命。吴德发会懂得万青萍的心吗?他是个被青萍的贞洁镇住的男人哦!
  • 奥世迷踪

    奥世迷踪

    奥丁神创造了萨雅大陆,暴风神伊萨考会有怎样的阴谋?发生在萨雅大陆的两代王者跌荡起伏的传奇经历,带您步入西式奇幻的动人世界!不可不看的经典西版奇幻大戏,近期将有外篇加盟,望多加关注! 本人另一部系列奇幻剧《小丑班尼》同时在各媒体发表,希望大家支持!
  • 逍遥小神农

    逍遥小神农

    新时代大学生农民,意外得到药皇传承,逆天崛起!每天晚上十一点左右更新!!!!新书《修道千年归来》发布了,请各位道友一起去观赏,多多支持,在此拜谢了!
  • 废柴太子妃呀

    废柴太子妃呀

    21世纪的金牌杀手,意外穿越到古代将军府,替代傻女栖月,智斗庶妹和恶姨娘赵氏,重获将军府势力!捉采花大盗,斗魁梧使者,在皇子东方伯灵的多次相助之下,二人情愫暗生,她最终帮助东方伯灵夺取了皇位,闯下了半边天!
  • 取暖

    取暖

    一个刚出狱的男子,在临近除夕夜流落到一个边远的小镇。在这里他受到人们的白眼,落魄而孤独,他遇到了一个特别的女人。女人是一个小店主,遭到莫名的流言与人们的白眼。男子住进了这家小店,他们相互取暖,度过一个美好的除夕……
  • 俳谐文辑佚

    俳谐文辑佚

    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。