登陆注册
18990400000039

第39章

MISS SUSANNAH. The world and my name are not friends. I have left the world, and wish to remain for ever a stranger to all whom I once knew in it.

MR. CHAINMAIL. You can have done nothing to dishonour your name.

MISS SUSANNAH. No, sir. My father has done that of which the world disapproves, in matters of which I pretend not to judge. I have suffered for it as I will never suffer again. My name is my own secret: I have no other, and that is one not worth knowing.

You see what I am, and all I am. I live according to the condition of my present fortune, and here, so living, I have found tranquillity.

MR. CHAINMAIL. Yet, I entreat you, tell me your name.

MISS SUSANNAH. Why, sir?

MR. CHAINMAIL. Why, but to throw my hand, my heart, my fortune, at your feet, if -.

MISS SUSANNAH. If my name be worthy of them.

MR. CHAINMAIL. Nay, nay, not so; if your hand and heart are free.

MISS SUSANNAH. My hand and heart are free; but they must be sought from myself, and not from my name.

She fixed her eyes on him, with a mingled expression of mistrust, of kindness, and of fixed resolution, which the far-gone inamorato found irresistible.

MR. CHAINMAIL. Then from yourself alone I seek them.

MISS SUSANNAH. Reflect. You have prejudices on the score of parentage. I have not conversed with you so often without knowing what they are. Choose between them and me. I too have my own prejudices on the score of personal pride.

MR. CHAINMAIL. I would choose you from all the world, were you even the daughter of the executeur des hautes oeuvres, as the heroine of a romantic story I once read turned out to be.

MISS SUSANNAH. I am satisfied. You have now a right to know my history, and if you repent, I absolve you from all obligations.

She told him her history; but he was out of the reach of repentance. "It is true," as at a subsequent period he said to the captain, "she is the daughter of a money-changer: one who, in the days of Richard the First, would have been plucked by the beard in the streets: but she is, according to modern notions, a lady of gentle blood. As to her father's running away, that is a minor consideration: I have always understood, from Mr. Mac Quedy, who is a great oracle in this way, that promises to pay ought not to be kept; the essence of a safe and economical currency being an interminable series of broken promises. There seems to be a difference among the learned as to the way in which the promises ought to be broken; but I am not deep enough in this casuistry to enter into such nice distinctions."

In a few days there was a wedding, a pathetic leave-taking of the farmer's family, a hundred kisses from the bride to the children, and promises twenty times reclaimed and renewed, to visit them in the ensuing year.

CHAPTER XVII: THE INVITATION

A cup of wine, that's brisk and fine, And drink unto the lemon mine.

Master Silence.

This veridicous history began in May, and the occurrences already narrated have carried it on to the middle of autumn. Stepping over the interval to Christmas, we find ourselves in our first locality, among the chalk hills of the Thames; and we discover our old friend, Mr. Crotchet, in the act of accepting an invitation, for himself, and any friends who might be with him, to pass their Christmas Day at Chainmail Hall, after the fashion of the twelfth century. Mr. Crochet had assembled about him, for his own Christmas festivities, nearly the same party which was introduced to the reader in the spring. Three of that party were wanting.

Dr. Morbific, by inoculating himself once too often with non-contagious matter, had explained himself out of the world. Mr. Henbane had also departed, on the wings of an infallible antidote.

Mr. Eavesdrop, having printed in a magazine some of the after-dinner conversations of the castle, had had sentence of exclusion passed upon him, on the motion of the Reverend Doctor Folliott, as a flagitious violator of the confidences of private life.

Miss Crotchet had become Lady Bossnowl, but Lady Clarinda had not yet changed her name to Crotchet. She had, on one pretence and another, procrastinated the happy event, and the gentleman had not been very pressing; she had, however, accompanied her brother and sister-in-law, to pass Christmas at Crotchet Castle. With these, Mr. Mac Quedy, Mr. Philpot, Mr. Trillo, Mr. Skionar, Mr. Toogood, and Mr. Firedamp were sitting at breakfast, when the Reverend Doctor Folliott entered and took his seat at the table.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Well, Mr. Mac Quedy, it is now some weeks since we have met: how goes on the march of mind?

MR. MAC QUEDY. Nay, sir; I think you may see that with your own eyes.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Sir, I have seen it, much to my discomfiture.

It has marched into my rickyard, and set my stacks on fire, with chemical materials, most scientifically compounded. It has marched up to the door of my vicarage, a hundred and fifty strong; ordered me to surrender half my tithes; consumed all the provisions I had provided for my audit feast, and drunk up my old October. It has marched in through my back-parlour shutters, and out again with my silver spoons, in the dead of the night. The policeman who has been down to examine says my house has been broken open on the most scientific principles. All this comes of education.

MR. MAC QUEDY. I rather think it comes of poverty.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. No, sir. Robbery, perhaps, comes of poverty, but scientific principles of robbery come of education. I suppose the learned friend has written a sixpenny treatise on mechanics, and the rascals who robbed me have been reading it.

MR. CROTCHET. Your house would have been very safe, Doctor, if they had had no better science than the learned friend's to work with.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Well, sir, that may be. Excellent potted char.

The Lord deliver me from the learned friend.

MR. CROTCHET. Well, Doctor, for your comfort, here is a declaration of the learned friend's that he will never take office.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Then, sir, he will be in office next week.

Peace be with him. Sugar and cream.

同类推荐
  • 金阙帝君三元真一经

    金阙帝君三元真一经

    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。
  • 十朝诗乘

    十朝诗乘

    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。
  • 江南别录

    江南别录

    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。
  • 道门语要

    道门语要

    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。
  • THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    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
  • 千世界

    千世界

    大千世界,总有不一样,位面林立的世界,危险并起,既是颓废的年代又有惊艳的奇才世界是靠的追寻。
  • 婚在旦夕

    婚在旦夕

    走投无路时,向暖遇到了顾墨辰。“嫁给他,救你妈一命,很划算的买卖。”他给她一张支票,她嫁给他病重的弟弟。她成了他名正言顺的弟媳,他却强势的闯进她的生活,霸道的占据了她的所有。他宠她,疼她,却在她交付出自己真心的时候,突然从背后伸出双手,毅然将她推入了深渊,从此让她万劫不复。——再次相见,她跟他已成陌路。他看向她的眼神里溢满了柔情:“暖暖,回到我的身边吧。”她却面无表情:“这位先生,我们很熟吗?”“你身体的每一处敏感我都知道,这样还不算熟吗?”他把她壁咚到墙角,勾唇坏笑。
  • 超级强脑

    超级强脑

    超级神脑,能文能武,玩转都市,尽在此中。“天啊,竟然是他,他当年只是进了一所野鸡大学啊,怎么今日……”“蠢蛋,那小子是为了美女才去的,人家那脑子,聪明着呢。”周围论纷纷,投过来的都是惊羡崇拜还有让人热血上涌的波澜媚眼,他拥有超强大脑,他扮猪吃虎,他的平凡人生从大脑运转的那一刻彻底颠覆……
  • 楚宫倾城乱

    楚宫倾城乱

    在国亡宫倾的那一日,她一介小小的亡国妃子,却因为误会被推到那个灭了自己国家,权倾天下的男人怀里……倾国倾城的,向来不只只是因为红颜;轰然一夜间,国灭子离,她又将何去何从?争,三千宠爱却是为何?一介灭国妃子,无权无势,难道又要重头再来?心累,身累,却不能停不能退。天下家国,向来在他掌中反手为云,覆手为雨。赢了天下,能否赢得她的一颗难懂的心,她淡然的眼眸中是否有他的一席之地?他雄心万丈中,是否有她的一方宁静天空。
  • 命运迷雾

    命运迷雾

    茫茫世界,何处是终点?芸芸众生,哪个是我爱的人?
  • 鬼使神差

    鬼使神差

    世人不知,每个人身后都有许多,永远也无法完满的因果线。它们能纠缠你生生世世。我叫卓莫,是行走在人间的冥界职官,被称为因果斩断使。也是来解决这些因果线的人。
  • 武装驱魔人

    武装驱魔人

    郑汪洋是一个鲁中山区的普通年轻人,和很多二十多岁的孩子一样懵懂无知却对社会充满好奇,一次偶然的机会,他踏入了一片自己从未想象过的领域,本以为自己可以跟随师父做一个惩恶扬善的驱魔人,可曾想自己身后潜伏着一个绵延千年的巨大阴谋,驱魔人以驱除妖魔,匡扶正道为己任,但世上最可怕的并不是妖魔,而是人的心魔。他会如何斩妖除魔,又将会如何面对这流传千年的魔咒?
  • 无尘界

    无尘界

    仙魔之界,万族林立;试炼之地,天骄并起!这是一界轮回,亦是一人宿命!白发老,红颜浅;道何难?情维艰!孤衣逆宿命,独步掌轮回!且看吴小言如何一步步崛起,横扫界内界外尘!《无尘界》,精彩尽在!
  • 三月情流感

    三月情流感

    病症来了,你的“爱”病了吗?范逸臣、陈洁倾情演绎拯救你的爱!形态各异的都市情感症候人群,常陷于不同的情感病症中,四位来路不同的男女分别是“爱泛滥”“爱不上”“爱无能”“爱金钱”的爱情重症患者。
  • 医学衷中参西录

    医学衷中参西录

    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。