登陆注册
19554500000008

第8章

It remained in my mind, that little thing that Dacres had taken the trouble to tell my daughter; I thought about it a good deal.It seemed to me the most serious and convincing circumstances that had yet offered itself to my consideration.Dacres was no longer content to bring solace and support to the more appealing figure of the situation; he must set to work, bless him! to improve the situation itself.He must try to induce Miss Farnham, by telling her everything he could remember to my credit, to think as well of her mother as possible, in spite of the strange and secret blows which that mother might be supposed to sit up at night to deliver to her.Cecily thought very well of me already; indeed, with private reservations as to my manners and--no, NOT my morals, I believe Iexceeded her expectations of what a perfectly new and untrained mother would be likely to prove.It was my theory that she found me all she could understand me to be.The maternal virtues of the outside were certainly mine; I put them on with care every morning and wore them with patience all day.Dacres, I assured myself, must have allowed his preconception to lead him absurdly by the nose not to see that the girl was satisfied, that my impatience, my impotence, did not at all make her miserable.Evidently, however, he had created our relations differently; evidently he had set himself to their amelioration.There was portent in it; things seemed to be closing in.I bit off a quarter of an inch of wooden pen-handle in considering whether or not I should mention it in my letter to John, and decided that it would be better just perhaps to drop a hint.Though I could not expect John to receive it with any sort of perturbation.Men are different; he would probably think Tottenham well enough able to look after himself.

I had embarked on my letter, there at the end of a corner-table of the saloon, when I saw Dacres saunter through.He wore a very conscious and elaborately purposeless air; and it jumped with my mood that he had nothing less than the crisis of his life in his pocket, and was looking for me.As he advanced towards me between the long tables doubt left me and alarm assailed me.'I'm glad to find you in a quiet corner,' said he, seating himself, and confirmed my worst anticipations.

'I'm writing to John,' I said, and again applied myself to my pen-handle.It is a trick Cecily has since done her best in vain to cure me of.

'I am going to interrupt you,' he said.'I have not had an opportunity of talking to you for some time.'

'I like that!' I exclaimed derisively.

'And I want to tell you that I am very much charmed with Cecily.'

'Well,' I said, 'I am not going to gratify you by saying anything against her.'

'You don't deserve her, you know.'

'I won't dispute that.But, if you don't mind--I'm not sure that I'll stand being abused, dear boy.'

'I quite see it isn't any use.Though one spoke with the tongues of men and of angels--'

'And had not charity,' I continued for him.'Precisely.I won't go on, but your quotation is very apt.'

'I so bow down before her simplicity.It makes a wide and beautiful margin for the rest of her character.She is a girl Ruskin would have loved.'

'I wonder,' said I.'He did seem fond of the simple type, didn't he?'

'Her mind is so clear, so transparent.The motive spring of everything she says and does is so direct.Don't you find you can most completely depend upon her?'

'Oh yes,' I said; 'certainly.I nearly always know what she is going to say before she says it, and under given circumstances I can tell precisely what she will do.'

'I fancy her sense of duty is very beautifully developed.'

'It is,' I said.'There is hardly a day when I do not come in contact with it.'

'Well, that is surely a good thing.And I find that calm poise of hers very restful.'

'I would not have believed that so many virtues could reside in one young lady,' I said, taking refuge in flippancy, 'and to think that she should be my daughter!'

'As I believe you know, that seems to me rather a cruel stroke of destiny, Mrs.Farnham.'

'Oh yes, I know! You have a constructive imagination, Dacres.You don't seem to see that the girl is protected by her limitations, like a tortoise.She lives within them quite secure and happy and content.How determined you are to be sorry for her!'

Mr.Tottenham looked at the end of this lively exchange as though he sought for a polite way of conveying to me that I rather was the limited person.He looked as if he wished he could say things.The first of them would be, I saw, that he had quite a different conception of Cecily, that it was illuminated by many trifles, nuances of feeling and expression, which he had noticed in his talks with her whenever they had skirted the subject of her adoption by her mother.He knew her, he was longing to say, better than I did;when it would have been natural to reply that one could not hope to compete in such a direction with an intelligent young man, and we should at once have been upon delicate and difficult ground.So it was as well perhaps that he kept silence until he said, as he had come prepared to say, 'Well, I want to put that beyond a doubt--her happiness--if I'm good enough.I want her, please, and I only hope that she will be half as willing to come as you are likely to be to let her go.'

It was a shock when it came, plump, like that; and I was horrified to feel how completely every other consideration was lost for the instant in the immense relief that it prefigured.To be my whole complete self again, without the feeling that a fraction of me was masquerading about in Cecily! To be freed at once, or almost, from an exacting condition and an impossible ideal! 'Oh!' I exclaimed, and my eyes positively filled.'You ARE good, Dacres, but Icouldn't let you do that.'

His undisguised stare brought me back to a sense of the proportion of things.I saw that in the combination of influences that had brought Mr.Tottenham to the point of proposing to marry my daughter consideration for me, if it had a place, would be fantastic.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 盗天

    盗天

    斤声明:1.本书已被起点中文网买断,严禁转载!2.本书已由花山文艺出版社出版,各大书店有售.首汽公司的出租车司机穆春江是一个有情有意、有胆有识,却又不乏玩世不恭的“京油子”,“拉活儿”时结识了广东商人吴俊。为了将穆家祖上传承下来的那对弥足珍贵的“四棱狮子头”山核桃变卖出高价,穆、吴二人开始了一番历险,并由此获知了一个有关明代宝藏的天大秘密。为了找寻宝藏,穆春江饱览群书、苦修古玩、拜师学艺,从蛛丝马迹中获取线索,并和日本人展开了一番疏死较量。在一次次充满冒险、刺激的偷盗生涯中,穆春江逐渐领会到了偷盗的真谛,最终步入了偷盗界。在历经八方魔难、九死一生,终于找寻到明代宝藏之时,穆春江和吴俊才真正明白:更大的危险在等待着他们……
  • 死亡招待所

    死亡招待所

    新交了个漂亮的女朋友,看她前凸后翘一张范爷似的狐狸脸,叫什么其实不重要。何况她特别开放,交往没多久便拉着我去招待所,说要给我一个大大的惊喜?!哇哈哈,女人半夜拉男人进招待所还能有啥惊喜?准备好全套装备,今晚我就要开副本拿下她!没想到这荒僻的招待所中,只有惊悚和恐怖。
  • 48色铅笔的优雅手绘

    48色铅笔的优雅手绘

    飞乐鸟所有色铅笔中颜色最多的高级手绘,与国际通用的颜色接轨,并由飞乐鸟最顶级的画师亲手创作。初高级画手一定要看噢!这本《48色铅笔的优雅手绘》比一般中国人画画只用到24种颜色色足足增加了24种,与国际顶尖的画手所用到的颜色保持一致。只要这48种颜色在手,就可以画出任何一种颜色的物体。其次,本书仍然是从最初级的画线开始,一步一步教会你画好成熟的素描画,以及从入门到成熟的上色步骤,对于初高级画手或者业余画画的同学来说,是一次难得学习的机会。掌握这本书的主要知识点,可以给你瞬间就成为用色高手和色铅笔画画高手。
  • 柳絮漫天飘

    柳絮漫天飘

    我从来不明白承诺的意义和作用,现在,我知道了,因为你,我觉得承诺是一件我终身想为你做的事,虽然我能为你做的明显比其他人都多,但是本质是一样的,那就是:我,欧阳文骐,要对你的全部负责,血液,心脏,身体,情绪以及灵魂......
  • Eugene Pickering

    Eugene Pickering

    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。
  • 兽满天下

    兽满天下

    前世一部奇书,成就今生万古传说......前世三字真言,今生各显伟力。幻师与幻兽的融合,让他们脚踏星辰,手摘日月。融合幽灵蛇,他们是天生的刺客。融合九爪恶蛟,他们上可飞天,下可入海。融合迷幻天鼠,他们一念之间,控人生死。融合反天龟,他们不动如山,幽幽万载。可当三只幻兽降临后,他们却慌了......
  • 大唐西域记

    大唐西域记

    《大唐西域记》,为唐代著名高僧唐玄奘口述,门人辩机奉唐太宗之敕令笔受编集而成。这是玄奘游历印度、西域旅途19年间之游历见闻录。全书内容丰富、文字流畅、叙事翔实。
  • 魔将之魂

    魔将之魂

    不堪世道里,少年身负魔将之魂,执剑前行,历经爱恨情仇,看遍金戈铁马,力压万千名将,大战各路魔王,最终找到明君,助她一统天下,完成霸业,拯救苍生于水深火热的战乱之中。天下动荡,江山八分,英雄辈出,良将济济。中土大陆,妖魔鬼怪占据四方。此间天地之中,飞龙神兽,妖剑神兵,千军万马,名将良臣。凡此种种,尽在此书中。感谢创世书评团提供论坛书评支持
  • 努力工作,不折腾

    努力工作,不折腾

    本书传达了许多极具指导意义的观念和想法,也引入了些引人入胜的例子,相信可以为你的职业生涯提供使用而富有创意的忠告和建议。阅读并思考本书,它将为你扫除心灵迷雾,指引成功之路。相信只要“努力工作,不折腾”,你定会取得更加辉煌的业绩,你定会取得更加令人羡慕的成就!
  • 雨天里传奇

    雨天里传奇

    相同的故事,却有着不一样的传奇!拥有着雨的特性的主角到底会有怎样的传奇!