登陆注册
5695500000007

第7章 CHAPTER III.(3)

She was little and slight of her age,and her father never seemed to understand how she was passing out of childhood.Yet while in stature she was like a child;in intellect,in force of character,in strength of clinging affection,she was a woman.There might be much of the simplicity of a child about her,there was little of the undeveloped girl,varying from day to day like an April sky,careless as to which way her own character is tending.So the two young people sat with their elders,and both relished the company they were thus prematurely thrown into.Mr.Corbet talked as much as either of the other two gentlemen;opposing and disputing on any side,as if to find out how much he could urge against received opinions.Ellinor sat silent;her dark eyes flashing from time to time in vehement interest--sometimes in vehement indignation if Mr.Corbet,riding a-tilt at everyone,ventured to attack her father.He saw how this course excited her,and rather liked pursuing it in consequence;he thought it only amused him.

Another way in which Ellinor and Mr.Corbet were thrown together occasionally was this:Mr.Ness and Mr.Wilkins shared the same Times between them;and it was Ellinor's duty to see that the paper was regularly taken from her father's house to the parsonage.Her father liked to dawdle over it.Until Mr.Corbet had come to live with him,Mr.Ness had not much cared at what time it was passed on to him;but the young man took a strong interest in all public events,and especially in all that was said about them.He grew impatient if the paper was not forthcoming,and would set off himself to go for it,sometimes meeting the penitent breathless Ellinor in the long lane which led from Hamley to Mr.Wilkins's house.At first he used to receive her eager "Oh!I am so sorry,Mr.Corbet,but papa has only just done with it,"rather gruffly.After a time he had the grace to tell her it did not signify;and by-and-by he would turn back with her to give her some advice about her garden,or her plants--for his mother and sisters were first-rate practical gardeners,and he himself was,as he expressed it,"a capital consulting physician for a sickly plant."All this time his voice,his step,never raised the child's colour one shade the higher,never made her heart beat the least quicker,as the slightest sign of her father's approach was wont to do.She learnt to rely on Mr.Corbet for advice,for a little occasional sympathy,and for much condescending attention.He also gave her more fault-finding than all the rest of the world put together;and,curiously enough,she was grateful to him for it,for she really was humble and wished to improve.He liked the attitude of superiority which this implied and exercised right gave him.They were very good friends at present.Nothing more.

All this time I have spoken only of Mr.Wilkins's life as he stood in relation to his daughter.But there is far more to be said about it.

After his wife's death,he withdrew himself from society for a year or two in a more positive and decided manner than is common with widowers.It was during this retirement of his that he riveted his little daughter's heart in such a way as to influence all her future life.

When he began to go out again,it might have been perceived--had any one cared to notice--how much the different characters of his father and wife had influenced him and kept him steady.Not that he broke out into any immoral conduct,but he gave up time to pleasure,which both old Mr.Wilkins and Lettice would have quietly induced him to spend in the office,superintending his business.His indulgence in hunting,and all field sports,had hitherto been only occasional;they now became habitual,as far as the seasons permitted.He shared a moor in Scotland with one of the Holsters one year,persuading himself that the bracing air was good for Ellinor's health.But the year afterwards he took another,this time joining with a comparative stranger;and on this moor there was no house to which it was fit to bring a child and her attendants.He persuaded himself that by frequent journeys he could make up for his absences from Hamley.But journeys cost money;and he was often away from his office when important business required attending to.There was some talk of a new attorney setting up in Hamley,to be supported by one or two of the more influential county families,who had found Wilkins not so attentive as his father.Sir Frank Holster sent for his relation,and told him of this project,speaking to him,at the same time,in pretty round terms on the folly of the life he was leading.Foolish it certainly was,and as such Mr.Wilkins was secretly acknowledging it;but when Sir Frank,lashing himself,began to talk of his hearer's presumption in joining the hunt,in aping the mode of life and amusements of the landed gentry,Edward fired up.He knew how much Sir Frank was dipped,and comparing it with the round sum his own father had left him,he said some plain truths to Sir Frank which the latter never forgave,and henceforth there was no intercourse between Holster Court and Ford Bank,as Mr.Edward Wilkins had christened his father's house on his first return from the Continent.

The conversation had two consequences besides the immediate one of the quarrel.Mr.Wilkins advertised for a responsible and confidential clerk to conduct the business under his own superintendence;and he also wrote to the Heralds'College to ask if he did not belong to the family bearing the same name in South Wales--those who have since reassumed their ancient name of De Winton.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 捡个将军来种田

    捡个将军来种田

    水一一穿了,家徒四壁,还有两个小包子,没爹没娘却有一群黑心的极品亲戚。穷?没事。咱能文能武,种田,经商完全不是问题。啥?刚有点钱,极品就来打劫了?也没事,我明的暗的玩死他们。可这傻子哪里来的,“你喊那个媳妇呢?”“媳妇,我要吃包子!”“媳妇,二狗说只要我挣到钱,晚上媳妇就带我睡,媳妇今晚你带我睡吧?”某傻子兴奋的看着她。“松开,你添我干嘛?”“二狗说我没尝过媳妇的味道,我就试试媳妇啥味的,奇怪怎么不是五香味的……”“天啊,来道雷劈了这丫的吧!”水一一只觉得浑身都不好了,谁来收了这傻子。
  • 余生忘北辰

    余生忘北辰

    我们总是为了缅怀过去,而止步于现在。相似的故事都有着一套不变的说词,可当人心变了的那一刻,那么一切就都变了。或许所有的事情在冥冥之中兜兜转转又因因果循环而回到了故事初始的原点。余生,还好有你伴我,漫步那些年错过的匆匆岁月,经历过所有的艰辛只为让彼此相守幸福。余笙说过最绝情的话不过是:“对你,我绝不妥协,对你,我永远憎恨!”凌晨佑望着她决绝的背影:“还好,你会记得。”
  • 甜田农妇很可餐

    甜田农妇很可餐

    成亲当日,新娘半路跟着别的男人跑了,众人都等着看他笑话。她却一身嫁衣,上了他的花轿。倾城之貌,众人羡煞。公婆吝啬贪财,兄嫂尖酸刻薄,财主刻意刁难,何妨?有夫如此,妻复何求?白手起家,一遭致富。逃嫁新娘想吃回头草?她笑:“不好意思,农药已打,想死趁早。”各方亲戚上门打秋风?他笑:“媳妇有旨,慢走不送。”“我只知道,与我拜堂成亲的是你,我疼着爱着的也是你,其他的什么,我都不在乎。”“我既然已经嫁给了你,本该与你同甘共苦,你疼我爱我,我便知足。”大嫂污蔑:长得就是一副狐媚样子,专门勾引男人,一看便知道不是清清白白的良家女子,谁知道是不是被人用烂了的破鞋。她却道:照这个说法,以大嫂的容貌,一定是世上最清白的良家女子了。二嫂忠告:都说男人一有钱就变坏,你家那口子你可得看紧点儿。她轻笑:我宁愿相信母猪能下蛋都不信他会对我变心。她问道:相公你会一直这样宠我爱我事事顺着我吗?他宠溺道:娘子请下旨,若是抗旨不尊,就地正法。
  • 结局怎么会这样

    结局怎么会这样

    对李周周来说,平生最不能忍受的莫过于两件事:喜欢看的电视剧烂尾和喜欢看的小说太监。每当发生上述两件事的时候,作为戏精本人,她都要怒骂编剧作者三百遍,甚至恨不得自己能够亲自上阵给故事创造出一个幸福美满的完美结局。老天有眼,神佛垂怜,她真的得到了能够进入故事的机会,只是……结局怎么会这样?
  • 巅峰

    巅峰

    邺城内的芙蓉山庄内,少年脚步蹒跚地从远处的黑暗里走来,他的目光同样带着漂浮的黑色,如同一只只锋利的蝙蝠飞翔在他瞳孔内。他的目光接触到了三丈外的芙蓉山庄的大门,红色的大门。一行十几个蓝衣捕快围拢在芙蓉山庄庄外,迟疑着望着庄内。“孙、孙捕头呢?”一个捕快问。“他随着一个不知道身份的人进到了芙蓉山庄里面,孙捕头走时让我们留下来,不允许任何人再进去。”“这么说,我们不用进去?” 为首的一人叫安灰,是邺城衙门里的老捕快,除了捕头外,其他年轻捕快都以安灰马首是瞻。
  • 潜书

    潜书

    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。
  • 失忆的亡魂

    失忆的亡魂

    当你发现你爱上他时,你可知道我已爱了你好久。当你开始为她流泪时,你可知道我已为你流干了泪水。当你发现你的生命中缺她不可时,你可知道为了你我可以放弃生命。你十分的爱她,可你又怎么知道,你对她的爱却比不过我爱你的十分之一。当你和她甜密的在一起时,你可知道我已听到了自己心碎的声音?但是当我看到了你如此幸福,便转身悄然摸去了脸上的泪水,真心实意为你而高兴,因为,我爱你。用最爱你的女孩的生命,来换你最爱的女孩的性命,你愿意吗?
  • 我的搞笑老爸(老妈真烦)

    我的搞笑老爸(老妈真烦)

    我妈爱面子,爱管闲事。这本来不关我的事,可是,让我愤愤不平的是,当我和老爸讲点儿面子、管点儿闲事的时候,她总会看不惯。说句公道话,我爸除了爱吹牛外,还算是一个很不错的老爸。虽然身上的毛病不少,但他总能给我,还有我的那帮“狐朋狗友”带来快乐。在这点上,可比我妈好上N加N倍。
  • 客杭日记

    客杭日记

    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。
  • 团队精神(大全集)

    团队精神(大全集)

    任何企业间的竞争,不仅仅是战略、财力、关系、人才等单方面的竞争,更是一个团队与另一个团队的精神竞争。弘扬团结协作精神对于建设好一个组织、一个企业具有极其重要的意义。