登陆注册
4907200000089

第89章

'Yes--my duty to society,' she murmured. 'But ah, Owen, it is difficult to adjust our outer and inner life with perfect honesty to all! Though it may be right to care more for the benefit of the many than for the indulgence of your own single self, when you consider that the many, and duty to them, only exist to you through your own existence, what can be said? What do our own acquaintances care about us? Not much. I think of mine. Mine will now (do they learn all the wicked frailty of my heart in this affair) look at me, smile sickly, and condemn me. And perhaps, far in time to come, when I am dead and gone, some other's accent, or some other's song, or thought, like an old one of mine, will carry them back to what I used to say, and hurt their hearts a little that they blamed me so soon. And they will pause just for an instant, and give a sigh to me, and think, "Poor girl!" believing they do great justice to my memory by this. But they will never, never realize that it was my single opportunity of existence, as well as of doing my duty, which they are regarding; they will not feel that what to them is but a thought, easily held in those two words of pity, "Poor girl!" was a whole life to me; as full of hours, minutes, and peculiar minutes, of hopes and dreads, smiles, whisperings, tears, as theirs: that it was my world, what is to them their world, and they in that life of mine, however much I cared for them, only as the thought I seem to them to be. Nobody can enter into another's nature truly, that's what is so grievous.'

'Well, it cannot be helped,' said Owen.

'But we must not stay here,' she continued, starting up and going.

'We shall be missed. I'll do my best, Owen--I will, indeed.'

It had been decided that on account of the wretched state of the roads, the newly-married pair should not drive to the station till the latest hour in the afternoon at which they could get a train to take them to Southampton (their destination that night) by a reasonable time in the evening. They intended the next morning to cross to Havre, and thence to Paris--a place Cytherea had never visited--for their wedding tour.

The afternoon drew on. The packing was done. Cytherea was so restless that she could stay still nowhere. Miss Aldclyffe, who, though she took little part in the day's proceedings, was, as it were, instinctively conscious of all their movements, put down her charge's agitation for once as the natural result of the novel event, and Manston himself was as indulgent as could be wished.

At length Cytherea wandered alone into the conservatory. When in it, she thought she would run across to the hot-house in the outer garden, having in her heart a whimsical desire that she should also like to take a last look at the familiar flowers and luxuriant leaves collected there. She pulled on a pair of overshoes, and thither she went. Not a soul was in or around the place. The gardener was making merry on Manston's and her account.

The happiness that a generous spirit derives from the belief that it exists in others is often greater than the primary happiness itself.

The gardener thought 'How happy they are!' and the thought made him happier than they.

Coming out of the forcing-house again, she was on the point of returning indoors, when a feeling that these moments of solitude would be her last of freedom induced her to prolong them a little, and she stood still, unheeding the wintry aspect of the curly-leaved plants, the straw-covered beds, and the bare fruit-trees around her.

The garden, no part of which was visible from the house, sloped down to a narrow river at the foot, dividing it from the meadows without.

A man was lingering along the public path on the other side of the river; she fancied she knew the form. Her resolutions, taken in the presence of Owen, did not fail her now. She hoped and prayed that it might not be one who had stolen her heart away, and still kept it. Why should he have reappeared at all, when he had declared that he went out of her sight for ever?

She hastily hid herself, in the lowest corner of the garden close to the river. A large dead tree, thickly robed in ivy, had been considerably depressed by its icy load of the morning, and hung low over the stream, which here ran slow and deep. The tree screened her from the eyes of any passer on the other side.

She waited timidly, and her timidity increased. She would not allow herself to see him--she would hear him pass, and then look to see if it had been Edward.

But, before she heard anything, she became aware of an object reflected in the water from under the tree which hung over the river in such a way that, though hiding the actual path, and objects upon it, it permitted their reflected images to pass beneath its boughs.

The reflected form was that of the man she had seen further off, but being inverted, she could not definitely characterize him.

He was looking at the upper windows of the House--at hers--was it Edward, indeed? If so, he was probably thinking he would like to say one parting word. He came closer, gazed into the stream, and walked very slowly. She was almost certain that it was Edward. She kept more safely hidden. Conscience told her that she ought not to see him. But she suddenly asked herself a question: 'Can it be possible that he sees my reflected image, as I see his? Of course he does!'

He was looking at her in the water.

She could not help herself now. She stepped forward just as he emerged from the other side of the tree and appeared erect before her. It was Edward Springrove--till the inverted vision met his eye, dreaming no more of seeing his Cytherea there than of seeing the dead themselves.

'Cytherea!'

'Mr. Springrove,' she returned, in a low voice, across the stream.

He was the first to speak again.

'Since we have met, I want to tell you something, before we become quite as strangers to each other.'

'No--not now--I did not mean to speak--it is not right, Edward.'

She spoke hurriedly and turned away from him, beating the air with her hand.

同类推荐
  • 佛说观经

    佛说观经

    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。
  • Early Kings of Norway

    Early Kings of Norway

    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。
  • 寓圃雜記

    寓圃雜記

    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。
  • 婆罗岸全传

    婆罗岸全传

    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 Man From Glengarry

    The Man From Glengarry

    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
  • 儿子们与情人们(英文版)

    儿子们与情人们(英文版)

    《儿子们与情人们》是D.H.劳伦斯于1913年发表的小说。美国现代图书馆将此小说列为20世纪最伟大的100部小说中的一部,名列第九。可见重要性的一斑。而且随时间流逝,今天很多著名批评家都承认这是一部杰作,并被视为劳伦斯最伟大的作品中的一部。
  • 符氏三皇后

    符氏三皇后

    五代十国时期,中国历史上的乱世,风云变幻,诡谲动荡。陈州人符彦卿的三个女儿符金玉、符金环、符金锭相继辅助后周皇帝柴荣及宋太宗赵光义,一个随夫征战,共襄统一天下;一个垂帘听政,偕子治理国家;一个深明大义,助君成就帝业。一门三后的故事,中国历史上最且鲜为人知。她们忠义贤良,聪明智慧,累朝袭宠,堪称人臣之贵极也,却身处乱世,命运多舛,令人扼腕!本书反映符氏三姐妹的人生命运,深入解读宫廷政治,折射出历史大动荡时期各种文化的交流、碰撞和融合,是一部人物生动,故事传奇,可读性强,有独特价值的历史长篇小说。
  • 末世之原型体崛起

    末世之原型体崛起

    当天边出现诡异的陨石,从此世界开始变得不同,奇形怪状的生物从感染区之中冲出似要改变这个世界!人性开始在这里释放,一切从这里崩坏!偶然获得系统的凌墨在其中搏杀,进化,直到最后一刻!弹奏起孤傲的交响乐!
  • 这个半精灵不仅有系统

    这个半精灵不仅有系统

    “这是哪里?是森林吗?我刚才不是死了么?这里是天国吗?”“被动技能:语言能力,动态视力,温度感知,限定EX技能天罚。”“等一下这是啥东西?谁在说话?动态视力和温度感知?是不是还能自动合成热成像自瞄?”“动态视力,温度感知,技能合成,热成自瞄。”
  • 黄帝内经(中华国学经典精粹)

    黄帝内经(中华国学经典精粹)

    《黄帝内经》是中国汉族传统医学四大经典著作之一。是研究人的生理学、病理学、诊断学、治疗原则和药物学的医学巨著。在理论上建立了中医学上的“阴阳五行学说”、“脉象学说”“藏象学说”等。
  • 浮生未末锦瑟弦

    浮生未末锦瑟弦

    思君未光光已灭,渺渺悲望如思何。洛氏一族乃百年世家,自弦铭开国以来便是位居高官,朝中重臣,其女洛云琬更是集万千宠爱于一身。本以为可以就此过完一生的洛云婉,却被卷入一场场迷雾之中,不知自己是局中之人,亦或是局外人,究竟是谁在操控一切,她又将揭开怎样的陈年旧事……每个人的无名指上都有一根红线,红线的那一头可能在你的身边,也可能在远方,不过你只要相信,总有一个人在等你,总有一个人在爱着你,找到红线另一头的洛云琬表示自己是幸运的,因为:在我爱着他的岁月里,他也正好爱着我……
  • 以胖为美

    以胖为美

    李媛媛觉得自己终于变成了一个绝世美女,但没想到在时光荏苒,岁月变幻,沧海桑田之后这个世界的审美居然特么的变了……
  • 吞天丹帝

    吞天丹帝

    乾元大世界最强者丹帝墨砺因炼化至宝[元始界],莫名其妙重生回少年草根时代。掌至宝[元始界],自成一界,种仙花、栽圣药、养圣兽、关键金屋可藏娇。修[北冥仙诀],演化终极鲲鹏吞天术,吞天、吞地、无物不吞。掌无上炼丹术,持圣药青龙木,炼气丹、淬体丹、长生不老丹,无丹不可炼。左手杀人于千里,右手救人于危难。他就是独一无二,吞天丹帝!
  • 亿万宠妻:入骨相思谁能知

    亿万宠妻:入骨相思谁能知

    若羽气愤的瞪着天修“离婚吧,我哥不同意我们在一起”天修皱了皱眉“就你有哥哥啊,我哥还不同意我们离婚呢。”次日,若羽把天修哥哥草拟的离婚协议放在天修面前“这是你哥帮我草拟的离婚协议,这下你没话说了吧。”天修立刻十分狗腿的抱着若羽“老婆,我们不要离婚好不好,你想要什么我都可以送你。”若羽指着电视上的帅哥“我喜欢小鲜肉,你送我一个呗”
  • 痴心王爷冷情妃

    痴心王爷冷情妃

    酒壮怂人胆,职场失意后醉酒想来个美女救美女,却意外穿越,还是个王妃身上,但是这个王妃似乎也太弱了些吧,难怪不得宠。不过,好像哪里不对,为什么这个王爷一直缠着她不放?还有那个杀手,你不是来行刺的吗?美男退散,美男退散。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】