登陆注册
19594400000171

第171章

When he climbed into the pulpit he tried again to discover Maggie's face as he had already seen it.He could not; it had been, perhaps, a trick of light and, in any case, she was hidden now behind the stout stolidity of Grace.He looked around at the other faces beneath him and saw them settle themselves into their customary expressions of torpor, vacuity and expectation.Very little expectation! They knew well enough, by this time, the kind of thing to expect from him, the turn of phrase, the rise and fall of the voice, the pause dramatic, the whisper expostulatory, the thrust imperative, the smile seductive.

He had often been told, as a curate, that he was a wonderful preacher.His round jolly face, his beaming smile, a certain dramatic gift, had helped him."He is so human," he had heard people say.For many years he had lived on that phrase.For the first time in his life, this morning he distrusted his gift.He was out of touch with them all--because they were dead, killed by forms and repetitions and monotony."We're all dead, you know, and I'm dead too.Let's close the doors and seal this church up.Our day is over." He said of course nothing of the kind.His sermon was stupid, halting and ineffective.

"Naturally," as Colonel Rideout said over his port at lunch, "when a feller's wife's uncle has just hung himself in public, so to speak, it does take the wind out of you.He usen't to preach badly once.

Got stale.They all do."

As Paul dismissed the congregation with the Blessing he felt that everything was over.He was more completely miserable than he had ever been.He had in fact never before been really miserable except when he had the toothache.And now, also, the custom of years made it impossible for him to be miserable for long.He had had no real talk with Maggie since the inquest.Maggie came into his study that afternoon.Their conversation was very quiet and undemonstrative; it happened to be one of the most important conversations in both their lives, and, often afterwards, Paul looked back to it, trying to retrace in it the sentences and movements with which it had been built up.He could never recover anything very much.He could see Maggie sitting in a way that she had on the edge of her chair, looking at him and looking also far beyond him.He knew afterwards that this was the last moment in his life that he had any contact with her.Like a witch, like a ghost, she had come into his life;like a witch, like a ghost, she went out of it, leaving him, for the remainder of his days, a haunted man.

As he looked at her he realised that she had aged in this last fortnight.Yes, that horrible affair had taken it out of her.She seemed to have recovered self-control at some strange and unnatural cost--as though she had taken some potion or drug.

She began by asking Grace's question:

"Paul, what are we going to do?"

But she did not irritate him as Grace had done.His one idea was to help her; unfortunately he had himself thought out nothing clearly.

"Well, Maggie," he answered, smiling, "I thought you might help me about that.I want your advice.I thought--well, as a matter of fact I hadn't settled anything--but I thought that I might get a locum for a month or two and we might go abroad for a trip perhaps.To Paris, or Venice, or somewhere.""And then come back?" she asked.

"For a time--yes--certainly," he answered.

"I don't think I can ever come back to Skeaton," she said in a whisper, as though speaking to herself.He could see that she was controlling herself and steadying her voice with the greatest difficulty."Of course I must come, Paul, if you want me to.It's been all my fault from the very beginning----""Oh no," he broke in, "it hasn't."

"Yes, it has.I've just spoilt your life and Grace's.You were both very happy until I came.I had no right to marry you when I didn't love you.I didn't know then all I know now.But that's no excuse.Ishould have known.I was younger than most girls are, though."Paul said:

"But Maggie, you're not to blame yourself at all.I think if we were somewhere else than Skeaton it would be easier.And now after what has happened--"Maggie broke in: "You couldn't leave Skeaton, Paul.You know you couldn't.It would just break your heart.All the work of your life has been here--everything you've ever done.And Grace too.""No, no, you're wrong," said Paul vigorously."A change is probably what I need.I've been too long in the same place.Time goes so fast that one doesn't realise.And for Grace, too, I expect a change will be better.""And do you think," said Maggie, "that Grace will ever live with me now in the same house when she knows that I've driven you from Skeaton? Grace is quite right.She's just to feel as she does about me.""Then Grace must go," said Paul firmly, looking at Maggie and feeling that the one thing that he needed was that she should be in his arms and he kissing her."Maggie, if we go away, you and I, right away from all of this, perhaps then you can--you will--" he stopped.

She shook her head."Never, Paul.Never.Do you know what I've seen this last week? That I've left all those who really wanted me.My aunts, very much they needed me, and I was selfish and wouldn't give them what they wanted, and tried to escape from them.You and Grace don't need me.Nobody wants anything here in Skeaton.You're all full.It isn't my fault, Paul, but everything seems to me dead here.

They don't mean anything they say in Church, and the Church doesn't mean anything either.The Chapel was wrong in London too, but it was more right than the Church here is.I don't know what religion is or where it is: I don't know anything now except that one ought to be with the people who want one and not with the people who don't.Aunt wanted me and I failed her.Uncle wanted me and I--I--I--"She broke down, crying, her head in her arms.He went over to her and put his arms around her.At his touch she shrank a little, and when he felt that he went away from her and stood, silently, not knowing what to do.

"Maggie, don't--don't, Maggie.I can't bear to hear you cry.""I've done all wrong--I've done all wrong," she answered him."I've been wrong always."His helplessness was intolerable.He knew that she would not allow him to touch her.He went out closing the door softly behind him.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 纳博科夫评传

    纳博科夫评传

    本书完整记述了纳博科夫的文学生涯,他的显赫出身,从俄罗斯到欧洲再到美国的流亡经历,以及他对蝴蝶的痴迷,并在此过程中全面考察了他的俄语、英语诗歌和小说创作。通过对一些重要作品的精确到位的分析,作者令人信服地阐明了纳博科夫独特的风格,同时在他作品的脉络里分析了他的自传、书信、批评文字以及近年出版的《劳拉的原型》,勾勒出了一个完整而全新的纳博科夫形象。本书属漓江出版社最新推出的“人文名家评传”系列,配有数十幅珍贵图片。
  • 四书经纬

    四书经纬

    一个布衣之身,在艰难的人生旅途跋涉中,谁为河广,一苇航之,谁为宋远,跂而望焉,博览群书,广采众长,历二十余年研究整理编纂《四书经纬》一书。批判地继承前人遗产,如《论语》中"学而时习之",历代解释
  • 神秘事件调查员真实口述2

    神秘事件调查员真实口述2

    充满神秘色彩的高原,究竟向世界隐瞒了多少秘密?曾经强盛一时的古格王国,为何会突然间销声匿迹?藏族传说中的“天神”,到底是何方神圣?神秘职业突然再现江湖,四大家族明争暗斗。危机重重,险象环生!古木高和他的龙组队员们,怎样才能从这座人间地狱生还……
  • 唐朝是这样说的嘛

    唐朝是这样说的嘛

    唐朝是当时世界上最强大的帝国,在文化、政治、经济、外交等方面,都取得了辉煌的成就,可以说不仅在唐朝,甚至在古代中国都是公认的黄金鼎盛的时代。然而好景不长,唐玄宗天宝年间,人君德消政易,宰相专权误国,边将包藏祸心;唐朝的政治与经济境况因之而急转直下,安史之乱后,地方藩镇割据,内庭宦官专权,朝中朋党相争,边将报警不已;在纷繁的矛盾中,藩镇连兵可使朝廷流亡,宦官弄权能够废立皇帝,强盛的唐朝帝国没有能够再度辉煌起来。“待到秋来九月八,我花开后百花杀,冲天香阵透长安,满城尽带黄金甲。”
  • 血精灵大领主

    血精灵大领主

    顶着女人的身体行走在艾泽拉斯大陆上!她成了这个世界最大的变数!所谓的命运在她面前一文不值!守护者、古神、恶魔通通靠边。什么天灾军团、燃烧军团一脚踩翻!作为一名穿越者绝对不会甘当棋子!掀翻棋盘一切由我做主!QQ群:1555659
  • 仙慕

    仙慕

    天澜族灭后,六把上古澜剑被剑尊玄老,托付于天澜星士之手。城破族灭,曾经塑造一代神话的天澜星士,手握神剑却只能隐于山野草莽,置身于纷乱世事门外。然而上古澜剑的仙话,并未就此停歇……没落世外的亡族星士,一直在暗幕后扭转乱世乾坤。一边,执掌龙腾神剑的神策少年,邂逅不谙红尘的纯美天使,在光复全族的寄托和携手红颜中,斩灭血与泪的交叠。另一边,继位在即,圣天使翼却私自逃离族城,卷入澜剑纷争,但又收获她的仙侠爱恋,谱写唯美诗话。神谋奇策的战局,恋歌别殇的感动。乱世纷扰,剑仗天澜;一曲折翼舞动,便可倾倒天地……
  • 逆袭千金男神别过来

    逆袭千金男神别过来

    他,是在最高层的捕猎者,只要是他看中的东西,没有人可以抢走和伤害,包括她。她,曾经是人人瞩目的天之娇女,现在她只落得一个爹不疼娘不爱的下场。14岁时,他们彼此约定,等他出国回来时一定会娶他为妻。却不知他一走,她的人生发生了天翻地覆的变化,他们能否逃开命运的捉弄。执子偕老与子携手。
  • 星月游

    星月游

    她是天之骄女,是家族的继承人,却被亲情爱情所背叛。带着记忆和一身功夫,她穿越到一个剑与魔法的世界。重生的她一出生就被抛弃,又恰巧被路过的公爵爷爷收养,从此成为了人见人爱的小公主。魔法师;剑士;杀手;牧师…看她如何在异界混得风生水起,玩转异世…
  • 重生之极限进化

    重生之极限进化

    在未来进化大时代的新世界,每一个新人类都有资格修炼成超武强者,主角生于开端之前,死于新世界激战之中,但他见证过无数强者崛起与陨落。他带着重生记忆,不可思议地重返灾难开端之前。“未来是一个辉煌无比的新世界!我此生必定超越巅峰,凌驾所有新人类王者之上…
  • 杀火车

    杀火车

    本小说有关火车,有关爱情。《杀火车》这本小说的主角风雨,因为踏上了那列火车,错过了和自己一起长大,并且互相深爱着的姑娘;但同样在这列火车上,另一个姑娘对他一见钟情。最纯美的爱情从火车上终结,亦从火车上开始,但火车最终会否把他带到何方……