登陆注册
19863900000026

第26章

"Listen to me," persisted the rector. "I'm not talking about the yacht now; that is to say, I am only referring to the yacht as all illustration--""And a very pretty illustration, too," remarked the incorrigible Allan. "Find me a smarter little vessel of her size in all England, and I'll give up yacht-building to-morrow. Whereabouts were we in our conversation, sir? I'm rather afraid we have lost ourselves somehow.""I am rather afraid one of us is in the habit of losing himself every time he opens his lips," retorted Mr. Brock. "Come, come, Allan, this is serious. You have been rendering yourself liable for expenses which you may not be able to pay. Mind, I am far from blaming you for your kind feeling toward this poor friendless man--""Don't be low-spirited about him, sir. He'll get over it--he'll be all right again in a week or so. A capital fellow, I have not the least doubt!" continued Allan, whose habit it was to believe in everybody and to despair of nothing. "Suppose you ask him to dinner when he gets well, Mr. Brock? I should like to find out (when we are all three snug and friendly together over our wine, you know) how he came by that extraordinary name of his. Ozias Midwinter! Upon my life, his father ought to be ashamed of himself.""Will you answer me one question before I go in?" said the rector, stopping in despair at his own gate. "This man's bill for lodging and medical attendance may mount to twenty or thirty pounds before he gets well again, if he ever does get well. How are you to pay for it?""What's that the Chancellor of the Exchequer says when he finds himself in a mess with his accounts, and doesn't see his way out again?" asked Allan. "He always tells his honorable friend he is quite willing to leave a something or other--""A margin?" suggested Mr. Brock.

"That's it," said Allan. "I'm like the Chancellor of the Exchequer. I'm quite willing to leave a margin. The yacht (bless her heart!) doesn't eat up everything. If I'm short by a pound or two, don't be afraid, sir. There's no pride about me; I'll go round with the hat, and get the balance in the neighborhood.

Deuce take the pounds, shillings, and pence! I wish they could all three get rid of themselves, like the Bedouin brothers at the show. Don't you remember the Bedouin brothers, Mr. Brock? 'Ali will take a lighted torch, and jump down the throat of his brother Muli; Muli will take a lighted torch, and jump down the throat of his brother Hassan; and Hassan, taking a third lighted torch, will conclude the performances by jumping down his own throat, and leaving the spectators in total darkness.'

Wonderfully good, that--what I call real wit, with a fine strong flavor about it. Wait a minute! Where are we? We have lost ourselves again. Oh, I remember--money. What I can't beat into my thick head," concluded Allan, quite unconscious that he was preaching socialist doctrines to a clergyman; "is the meaning of the fuss that's made about giving money away. Why can't the people who have got money to spare give it to the people who haven't got money to spare, and make things pleasant and comfortable all the world over in that way? You're always telling me to cultivate ideas, Mr. Brock There's an idea, and, upon my life, I don't think it's a bad one."Mr. Brock gave his pupil a good-humored poke with the end of his stick. "Go back to your yacht," he said. "All the little discretion you have got in that flighty head of yours is left on board in your tool-chest. How that lad will end," pursued the rector, when he was left by himself, "is more than any human being can say. I almost wish I had never taken the responsibility of him on my shoulders."Three weeks passed before the stranger with the uncouth name was pronounced to be at last on the way to recovery.

During this period Allan had made regular inquiries at the inn, and, as soon as the sick man was allowed to see visitors, Allan was the first who appeared at his bedside. So far Mr. Brock's pupil had shown no more than a natural interest in one of the few romantic circumstances which had varied the monotony of the village life: he had committed no imprudence, and he had exposed himself to no blame. But as the days passed, young Armadale's visits to the inn began to lengthen considerably, and the surgeon (a cautious elderly man) gave the rector a private hint to bestir himself. Mr. Brock acted on the hint immediately, and discovered that Allan had followed his usual impulses in his usual headlong way. He had taken a violent fancy to the castaway usher and had invited Ozias Midwinter to reside permanently in the neighborhood in the new and interesting character of his bosom friend.

Before Mr. Brock could make up his mind how to act in this emergency, he received a note from Allan's mother, begging him to use his privilege as an old friend, and to pay her a visit in her room.

He found Mrs. Armadale suffering under violent nervous agitation, caused entirely by a recent interview with her son. Allan had been sitting with her all the morning, and had talked of nothing but his new friend. The man with the horrible name (as poor Mrs.

Armadale described him) had questioned Allan, in a singularly inquisitive manner, on the subject of himself and his family, but had kept his own personal history entirely in the dark. At some former period of his life he had been accustomed to the sea and to sailing. Allan had, unfortunately, found this out, and a bond of union between them was formed on the spot. With a merciless distrust of the stranger--simply _because_ he was a stranger--which appeared rather unreasonable to Mr. Brock, Mrs.

同类推荐
  • 佛说鞞摩肃经

    佛说鞞摩肃经

    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。
  • 清微斋法

    清微斋法

    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。
  • 曾文正公年谱

    曾文正公年谱

    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。
  • 唐朝名画录

    唐朝名画录

    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。
  • The Woman-Haters

    The Woman-Haters

    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
  • 轮回的判官

    轮回的判官

    我是判官。生于幽冥,掌控生死。这个人世太污秽,太多轮回也洗不尽的罪恶。战,争,邪,欲,悲,离,散。如此人世,太可悲了。太可恶了!让我灭世!让我劫却此世间所有的恶与欲!破世重生!
  • 书劫无量

    书劫无量

    很多人修仙的时候,所拥有的是什么剑啊,笔啊,棍啊,但是这个家伙只有一本书,一本跟他从微末崛起的书。但是,在那本书上面,记录了世间万千劫难。何为大劫,我为无量量劫。
  • 种族命脉

    种族命脉

    当你拥有一个不会死的身体,用它来修炼,你就什么都不用怕了,因为你不管修炼多么危险的功法,都不用担心会因此而死掉。这是一个亿万种族的世界,这是一个固执男人的修炼奋斗史。
  • 清鸢蔻

    清鸢蔻

    她被封为‘格格’赐予胤慎。本文陈述了女主‘钮祜禄凌璃茉’从婢女变成‘格格’后,被四阿哥胤禛纳为妾侍。她历经‘九子夺嫡’,从雍王府到景仁宫,她步步为营,颠覆了传统形象。
  • 星斗纵横

    星斗纵横

    浩瀚星空,强者如林!————修炼等级:星士,星师,大星师、星宿,星君,星皇、星帝、星圣、星尊、星斗神。星斗V1铁杆群:117909871(未满)
  • 灵梦桥魂

    灵梦桥魂

    事事无常,永为三界,始终生灭,灯火不息,视为轮回。一个稀奇古怪的梦,伴随着我成长。千年老石桥居然也会有灵魂,一颗老柳默默守候着石桥。一个瞎子,一段不寻常的人生际遇,牵扯出三世情缘,三个女人。古墓/灵尸/鬼魂/幽灵/将臣,古老湘西巫术,阴险狠毒的九菊一派。成为地府的代言人,我穿行于阴阳两界。
  • 娶个仙女做老婆

    娶个仙女做老婆

    控杀伐,握生死,一令下,山!河!变!色!掌运势,断天机,一指出,苍!穹!破!碎!一个等待了四百年的仇恨,一个降生在没落家族子弟!跪在五彩凤凰的背上,指天盟誓,今日辱我者,他日必将十倍奉还!
  • 闲情偶寄 窥词管见

    闲情偶寄 窥词管见

    本书将李渔这两部著作编在一起,据国家图书馆藏康熙翼圣堂本与雍正八年芥子园本、以及中国社会科学院文学研究所藏康熙翼圣堂本,作了认真校勘,是一个比较可靠的本子,可供研究者使用;对个别难懂的字句,尤其是典故、术语、人名和地名等等,校勘者尽量详细地作了注释,可作研究生、大学生、文化工作者、艺术工作者、演艺人员以及中等以上文化程度的读者之良好读物。书末所附(《笠翁对韵》,是训练写诗、填词、作对子,掌握声韵格律的通俗读物,广泛流传,今天仍有重要参考价值;里面充满丰富的典故和各种文化知识,经过注释,一般读者易于理解。
  • 九阳焚天

    九阳焚天

    山外青山楼外楼,山是覆雨翻云山,楼是烟云风雨楼,风雨江湖路,问道江湖行……
  • 竹岩集

    竹岩集

    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。