登陆注册
18990400000038

第38章

CAPTAIN FITZCHROME. Well, your ballad is very pleasant: you shall show me the scene, and I will sketch it; but just now I am more interested about your love. What heroine of the twelfth century has risen from the ruins of the old castle, and looked down on you from the ivied battlements?

MR. CHAINMAIL. You are nearer the mark than you suppose. Even from those battlements a heroine of the twelfth century has looked down on me.

CAPTAIN FITZCHROME. Oh! some vision of an ideal beauty. I suppose the whole will end in another tradition and a ballad.

MR. CHAINMAIL. Genuine flesh and blood; as genuine as Lady Clarinda. I will tell you the story.

Mr. Chainmail narrated his adventures.

CAPTAIN FITZCHROME. Then you seem to have found what you wished.

Chance has thrown in your way what none of the gods would have ventured to promise you.

MR. CHAINMAIL. Yes, but I know nothing of her birth and parentage.

She tells me nothing of herself, and I have no right to question her directly.

CAPTAIN FITZCHROME. She appears to be expressly destined for the light of your baronial hall. Introduce me in this case, two heads are better than one.

MR. CHAINMAIL. No, I thank you. Leave me to manage my chance of a prize, and keep you to your own chance of a -

CAPTAIN FITZCHROME. Blank. As you please. Well, I will pitch my tent here, till I have filled my portfolio, and shall be glad of as much of your company as you can spare from more attractive society.

Matters went on pretty smoothly for several days, when an unlucky newspaper threw all into confusion. Mr. Chainmail received newspapers by the post, which came in three times a week. One morning, over their half-finished breakfast, the Captain had read half a newspaper very complacently, when suddenly he started up in a frenzy, hurled over the breakfast table, and, bouncing from the apartment, knocked down Harry Ap Heather, who was coming in at the door to challenge his supposed rival to a boxing-match.

Harry sprang up, in a double rage, and intercepted Mr. Chainmail's pursuit of the Captain, placing himself in the doorway, in a pugilistic attitude. Mr. Chainmail, not being disposed for this mode of combat, stepped back into the parlour, took the poker in his right hand, and displacing the loose bottom of a large elbow chair, threw it over his left arm as a shield. Harry, not liking the aspect of the enemy in this imposing attitude, retreated with backward steps into the kitchen, and tumbled over a cur, which immediately fastened on his rear.

Mr. Chainmail, half-laughing, half-vexed, anxious to overtake the Captain, and curious to know what was the matter with him, pocketed the newspaper, and sallied forth, leaving Harry roaring for a doctor and tailor, to repair the lacerations of his outward man.

Mr. Chainmail could find no trace of the Captain. Indeed, he sought him but in one direction, which was that leading to the farm; where he arrived in due time, and found Miss Susan alone. He laid the newspaper on the table, as was his custom, and proceeded to converse with the young lady: a conversation of many pauses, as much of signs as of words. The young lady took up the paper, and turned it over and over, while she listened to Mr. Chainmail, whom she found every day more and more agreeable, when suddenly her eye glanced on something which made her change colour, and dropping the paper on the ground, she rose from her seat, exclaiming:

"Miserable must she be who trusts any of your faithless sex! never, never, never, will I endure such misery twice." And she vanished up the stairs. Mr. Chainmail was petrified. At length, he cried aloud: "Cornelius Agrippa must have laid a spell on this accursed newspaper;" and was turning it over, to look for the source of the mischief, when Mrs. Ap Llymry made her appearance.

MRS. AP LLYMRY. What have you done to poor dear Miss Susan? she is crying ready to break her heart.

MR. CHAINMAIL. So help me the memory of Richard Coeur-de-Lion, I have not the most distant notion of what is the matter.

MRS. AP LLYMRY. Oh, don't tell me, sir; you must have ill-used her. I know how it is. You have been keeping company with her, as if you wanted to marry her; and now, all at once, you have been insulting her. I have seen such tricks more than once, and you ought to be ashamed of yourself.

MR. CHAINMAIL. My dear madam, you wrong me utterly. I have none but the kindest feelings and the most honourable purposes towards her. She has been disturbed by something she has seen in this rascally paper.

MRS. AP LLYMRY. Why, then, the best thing you can do is to go away, and come again tomorrow.

MR. CHAINMAIL. Not I, indeed, madam. Out of this house I stir not, till I have seen the young lady, and obtained a full explanation.

MRS. AP LLYMRY. I will tell Miss Susan what you say. Perhaps she will come down.

Mr. Chainmail sat with as much patience as he could command, running over the paper, from column to column. At length he lighted on an announcement of the approaching marriage of Lady Clarinda Bossnowl with Mr. Crotchet the younger. This explained the Captain's discomposure, but the cause of Miss Susan's was still to be sought: he could not know that it was one and the same.

Presently, the sound of the longed-for step was heard on the stairs; the young lady reappeared, and resumed her seat: her eyes showed that she had been weeping. The gentleman was now exceedingly puzzled how to begin, but the young lady relieved him by asking, with great simplicity: "What do you wish to have explained, sir?"

MR. CHAINMAIL. I wish, if I may be permitted, to explain myself to you. Yet could I first wish to know what it was that disturbed you in this unlucky paper. Happy should I be if I could remove the cause of your inquietude!

MISS SUSANNAH. The cause is already removed. I saw something that excited painful recollections; nothing that I could now wish otherwise than as it is.

MR. CHAINMAIL. Yet, may I ask why it is that I find one so accomplished living in this obscurity, and passing only by the name of Miss Susan?

同类推荐
  • 宁古塔山水记

    宁古塔山水记

    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。
  • 法句经

    法句经

    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。
  • 药性赋

    药性赋

    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。
  • 温病条辨

    温病条辨

    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。
  • 北帝伏魔经法建坛仪

    北帝伏魔经法建坛仪

    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。
热门推荐
  • 龙骨凡胎

    龙骨凡胎

    刚来到新世界就面临贞操危机,竟然被卖去入赘,女人还是面首三千的虎豹之辈!
  • 变态心理学

    变态心理学

    有病不可怕,可怕的是不知道自己有病,心理疾病尤其如此。你是否经常无意识重复同一行为?你是否每天郁郁寡欢、无所适从?你是否总是认为自己身体有问题?难道得了绝症?你是否怎么吃都觉得不饱,还是恨不得全世界的人都比自己胖?你有没有发现身边的他总是真诚地说着一个又一个谎言?你有没有发现原本熟悉的世界突然间变得无比陌生?你已经身处危机边缘,请对号入座。
  • 至尊召唤师

    至尊召唤师

    堂堂皇子天生聪慧却是个废材,一个奇怪老人的出现改变了他的一生,让他走上了强者之路。生死中的拼搏,逆境中的成长,使他一步步强大了起来,最终站在了这个世界的顶峰!且看穆文峰如何从一个亡国的废物皇子成为超越神的至尊召唤师!
  • 诡闻异案

    诡闻异案

    一起离奇古怪的神秘杀人事件,使得警方始终未能破案,警方派异能局上任的美女警官韩蕊,前去说服专门调查异能犯罪的私家侦探莫邪。一直不相信有异能存在的韩蕊,也第一次看到了这个男人的不同之处——狼眸!
  • 人间梦冢

    人间梦冢

    联邦《梦之法案》规定,联邦公民每人每年至少强制休眠五个月,休眠期间必须购买价格不同的梦境。人类世界已经成为一片梦冢,人们不知是为了活着而做梦,还是为了做梦而活着,连梦都没有自由,人类将如何生存?是该卑微苟活,还是挣脱枷锁,亦或Dreamingtodie......方,一个立志成为联邦特勤异能战士的孤儿,如何拯救梦冢中的人类世界!(本文是末世异能文,喜欢的加qq群387259557,欢迎大家参与,共同打造爽文)
  • 花都大牛人

    花都大牛人

    他是成天泡妞的大少爷,被卷入正邪两派的纷争后,两派的人居然都想搞他。火力这么猛,根本不怕搞。当他一脚踩死邪派,拍着正派的脸说——去你的!
  • 培养优秀男孩的100个要领

    培养优秀男孩的100个要领

    本书从独立、勇敢、做人、做事、学习等10个方面分析了男孩的弱点或缺点,也指出了父母在教育孩子时所疏忽的细节,并提出了相关建议。
  • 丧尸女王末世记

    丧尸女王末世记

    其实这就是一个妹纸在变成丧尸后,不断奋斗,最后掌控一方的故事虽然数据看起来比较可怜,但小舞是真的用心在写,希望看到的亲们戳进来看看,真的不喜欢再点×小舞新书《杀手种田二三事迹》(书号3685936),女王的姐妹篇
  • 八度正能量:引爆你的强大小宇宙

    八度正能量:引爆你的强大小宇宙

    唤醒正能量,激发内心的光明力量,是我们一生的心灵修炼。本书通过一系列的训练方法,帮助我们远离自私、猜疑、沮丧、消沉等破坏性能量;引导和激活信任、豁达、阳光、责任、勇气等正向能量。通过本书,你将了解自身的能量,知道如何散发并引导这股能量。当你身陷消极能量之中时,尝试解脱或改变破坏性的能量。当积极的能量被引爆时,你的人生将会得到神奇的大转变!
  • 假情真爱

    假情真爱

    谁说只有重生后才能有仇报仇,有冤报冤?以现实版职业真人秀演员的身份一样可以游戏人间,如鱼得水,为了找出父亲死亡的真相,卧底仇人家宅,斗亲戚?没问题,绝对不NG,斗夫家?小意思,保证入最佳,这明明是她一个人的戏台,那谁谁谁,跑上来想演男一号?亲爱的,你有演员资格证咩?