登陆注册
19863900000203

第203章

"It is close on ten o'clock; I have been dawdling over my diary longer than I supposed.

"No words can describe how weary and languid I feel. Why don't Itake my sleeping drops and go to bed? There is no meeting between Armadale and Miss Milroy to force me into early rising to-morrow morning. Am I trying, for the hundredth time, to see my way clearly into the future--trying, in my present state of fatigue, to be the quick-witted woman I once was, before all these anxieties came together and overpowered me? or am I perversely afraid of my bed when I want it most? I don't know; I am tired and miserable; I am looking wretchedly haggard and old. With a little encouragement, I might be fool enough to burst out crying.

Luckily, there is no one to encourage me. What sort of a night is it, I wonder?

"A cloudy night, with the moon showing at intervals, and the wind rising. I can just hear it moaning among the ins and outs of the unfinished cottages at the end of the street. My nerves must be a little shaken, I think. I was startled just now by a shadow on the wall. It was only after a moment or two that I mustered sense enough to notice where the candle was, and to see that the shadow was my own.

"Shadows remind me of Midwinter; or, if the shadows don't, something else does. I must have another look at his letter, and then I will positively go to bed.

"I shall end in getting fond of him. If I remain much longer in this lonely uncertain state--so irresolute, so unlike my usual self--I shall end in getting fond of him. What madness! As if _I_could ever be really fond of a man again!

"Suppose I took one of my sudden resolutions, and married him.

Poor as he is, he would give me a name and a position if I became his wife. Let me see how the name--his own name--would look, if Ireally did consent to it for mine.

" 'Mrs. Armadale!' Pretty.

" 'Mrs. Allan Armadale!' Prettier still.

"My nerves _must_ be shaken. Here is my own handwriting startling me now! It is so strange; it is enough to startle anybody. The similarity in the two names never struck me in this light before.

Marry which of the two I might, my name would, of course, be the same. I should have been Mrs. Armadale, if I had married the light-haired Allan at the great house. And I can be Mrs. Armadale still, if I marry the dark-haired Allan in London. It's alm ost maddening to write it down--to feel that something ought to come of it--and to find nothing come.

"How _can_ anything come of it? If I did go to London, and marry him (as of course I must marry him) under his real name, would he let me be known by it afterward? With all his reasons for concealing his real name, he would insist--no, he is too fond of me to do that--he would entreat me to take the name which he has assumed. Mrs. Midwinter. Hideous! Ozias, too, when I wanted to address him familiarly, as his wife should. Worse than hideous!

"And yet there would be some reason for humoring him in this if he asked me.

"Suppose the brute at the great house happened to leave this neighborhood as a single man; and suppose, in his absence, any of the people who know him heard of a Mrs. Allan Armadale, they would set her down at once as his wife. Even if they actually saw me--if I actually came among them with that name, and if he was not present to contradict it--his own servants would be the first to say, 'We knew she would marry him, after all!' And my lady-patronesses, who will be ready to believe anything of me now we have quarreled, would join the chorus _sotto voce:_ 'Only think, my dear, the report that so shocked us actually turns out to be true!' No. If I marry Midwinter, I must either be perpetually putting my husband and myself in a false position--or I must leave his real name, his pretty, romantic name, behind me at the church door.

"My husband! As if I was really going to marry him! I am _not_going to marry him, and there's an end of it.

"Half-past ten.--Oh, dear! oh, dear! how my temples throb, and how hot my weary eyes feel! There is the moon looking at me through the window. How fast the little scattered clouds are flying before the wind! Now they let the moon in; and now they shut the moon out. What strange shapes the patches of yellow light take, and lose again, all in a moment! No peace and quiet for me, look where I may. The candle keeps flickering, and the very sky itself is restless to-night.

" 'To bed! to bed!' as Lady Macbeth says. I wonder, by-the-by, what Lady Macbeth would have done in my position? She would have killed somebody when her difficulties first began. Probably Armadale.

"Friday morning.--A night's rest, thanks again to my Drops. Iwent to breakfast in better spirits, and received a morning welcome in the shape of a letter from Mrs. Oldershaw.

"My silence has produced its effect on Mother Jezebel. She attributes it to the right cause, and she shows her claws at last. If I am not in a position to pay my note of hand for thirty pounds, which is due on Tuesday next, her lawyer is instructed to 'take the usual course.' _If_ I am not in a position to pay it!

Why, when I have settled to-day with my landlord, I shall have barely five pounds left! There is not the shadow of a prospect between now and Tuesday of my earning any money; and I don't possess a friend in this place who would trust me with sixpence.

The difficulties that are swarming round me wanted but one more to complete them, and that one has come.

"Midwinter would assist me, of course, if I could bring myself to ask him for assistance. But _that_ means marrying him. Am Ireally desperate enough and helpless enough to end it in that way? No; not yet.

"My head feels heavy; I must get out into the fresh air, and think about it.

"Two o'clock.--I believe I have caught the infection of Midwinter's superstition. I begin to think that events are forcing me nearer and nearer to some end which I don't see yet, but which I am firmly persuaded is now not far off.

"I have been insulted--deliberately insulted before witnesses--by Miss Milroy.

同类推荐
  • 起信论疏

    起信论疏

    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。
  • 六十种曲彩毫记

    六十种曲彩毫记

    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。
  • 五凤吟

    五凤吟

    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。
  • 达磨大师破相论

    达磨大师破相论

    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。
  • 武则天外史

    武则天外史

    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
  • 太古神墓

    太古神墓

    一座截天地造化的神碑,一块聚天地元气的灵石,当朱清从沉睡中苏醒从坟墓中爬出就注定这一世要脚踏诸天,拳破寰宇,战天下至强。
  • 一个人的诗歌史(第三部)

    一个人的诗歌史(第三部)

    《一个人的诗歌史(第三部)》是刘春的“诗歌史”系列著作的第三部。沿袭前两部的整体风格,精辟地论述了近二十个著名诗人的作品和生活经历。其中有孟浪、王寅、陈东东等上个世纪80年代一举成名的诗坛高人,有伊沙、蓝蓝、张执浩、杜涯等90年代引人注目的骁将,还有朵渔、江非、余地等新世纪异军突起的“70后”新秀。全书文风鲜活,见解新颖,具有极强的可读性、现场性和资料性。
  • 金鳌退食笔记

    金鳌退食笔记

    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。
  • 浮世修仙录

    浮世修仙录

    误食异草从而踏入修仙界的凡人;清静无为的门派;神州大陆上妖邪频生,这一切究竟是天数,还是一场蓄谋已久的阴谋?
  • 风水笔记

    风水笔记

    一百多年前,一群道士高人在诡异古墓神秘失踪。百年后,失踪道士两名徒弟之一的后裔,秉承遗愿,继续踏上寻找失踪古墓的旅途……风水,就是相地……
  • 听雨剑

    听雨剑

    大荒历33年,天下妖魔四起,纷争不断,人族。魔族之间大小战役不下千场,身乱世,英雄出,清风本是一个不起眼小门派的弟子,但有道是,英雄不问出处,竟给这乱世之中添下了一笔传说。。。。(本故事以天下3游戏为背景,但是并不抄录游戏主线剧情,本意是为给更多知青们描绘一个以游戏背景中国风格的玄幻世界,第一次写书,写的不好的话勿怪)
  • 邪王追妻:吃货小萌妃

    邪王追妻:吃货小萌妃

    童清妍,现代隐世神医谷师傅的大徒弟,爱整人,爱吃,爱发神经。不就是砍了一只鸡吗?尼玛给我穿越作甚?!穿越就穿越!居然穿越到一个可怜的孩纸身上,沐瑾萱…常常被庶出的妹妹所欺负。童清研:喂!穿越就穿越!为什么我辣么黑?本爷:你洗把脸就好了。好好的,被庶妹欺负的时候,某位王爷正在树上看着她被欺负,还一脸看好戏的样子。某女:没事!欺负我的人,尤其是女的,我下药平她胸!看她嚣不嚣张!哇咔咔咔!某王爷:那男的呢?某女:没事,下药!下泻药和媚药!某王爷:那本王欺负你呢?某女:你太强了,下不了。某王爷:那本王就欺负你一辈子吧。说完就堵住了某女的嘴……
  • 破星穹

    破星穹

    “我杨双没兴趣改变任何人,也不想改变这个世界。我最喜欢做的就是在别人的规则下践踏对手,相比自己制定规则,似乎这更有挑战性!”=====================================================================================千年前,战无双率领铁骑踏遍三道八域铲平所有敌对势力后,接受天幕台斗神庙召唤成为圣主……千年后,带着遗憾降临异世的杨双,愿望只是弥补遗憾,却没想到他的命运和战无双紧密相联……==========←〓点点吧←〓收藏吧←〓投票吧
  • 亿万甜心,腹黑老公轻点爱

    亿万甜心,腹黑老公轻点爱

    人前,他是孤傲不可一世的亿万总裁,人后,他是专门惩治她的恶魔。聪明狡黠的她,被他一步步设计,走进了精心编织的狼窟陷阱。当她想要逃走时,却发现一颗心早已沦陷了!初次见面,她送了他一箱情趣用品,惹得他勃然大怒被丢出了门外!再次见面,她不小心踹中他的要害,怒不可喝的他一瘸一拐追赶,发誓非要杀了她不可!原以为不会有交集,可她偏偏糊里糊涂的签了份天价合约,从此乖乖的当他的小女佣……
  • 无圣

    无圣

    天下无道,仍有一瘸腿老道坐望汴京,仍有一瞎眼瘦僧卧闻汉阳。江北谢封,断魂缺命,不过有仇深,总得做些什么。