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The Beetle
book iii. the terror by night and the terror by day   Chapter XXIV. A Woman's View
Richard Marsh
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       Sydney Atherton has asked me to be his wife. It is not only annoying; worse, it is absurd.
       This is the result of Paul's wish that our engagement should not be announced. He is afraid of papa;--not really, but for the moment. The atmosphere of the House is charged with electricity. Party feeling runs high. They are at each other, hammer and tongs, about this Agricultural Amendment Act. The strain on Paul is tremendous. I am beginning to feel positively concerned. Little things which I have noticed about him lately convince me that he is being overwrought. I suspect him of having sleepless nights. The amount of work which he has been getting through lately has been too much for any single human being, I care not who he is. He himself admits that he shall be glad when the session is at an end. So shall I.
       In the meantime, it is his desire that nothing shall be said about our engagement until the House rises. It is reasonable enough. Papa is sure to be violent,--lately, the barest allusion to Paul's name has been enough to make him explode. When the discovery does come, he will be unmanageable,--I foresee it clearly. From little incidents which have happened recently I predict the worst. He will be capable of making a scene within the precincts of the House. And, as Paul says, there is some truth in the saying that the last straw breaks the camel's back. He will be better able to face papa's wild wrath when the House has risen.
       So the news is to bide a wee. Of course Paul is right. And what he wishes I wish too. Still, it is not all such plain sailing for me as he perhaps thinks. The domestic atmosphere is almost as electrical as that in the House. Papa is like the terrier who scents a rat,--he is always sniffing the air. He has not actually forbidden me to speak to Paul,--his courage is not quite at the sticking point; but he is constantly making uncomfortable allusions to persons who number among their acquaintance 'political adventurers,' 'grasping carpet-baggers,' 'Radical riff- raff,' and that kind of thing. Sometimes I venture to call my soul my own; but such a tempest invariably follows that I become discreet again as soon as I possibly can. So, as a rule, I suffer in silence.
       Still, I would with all my heart that the concealment were at an end. No one need imagine that I am ashamed of being about to marry Paul,--papa least of all. On the contrary, I am as proud of it as a woman can be. Sometimes, when he has said or done something unusually wonderful, I fear that my pride will out,--I do feel it so strong within me. I should be delighted to have a trial of strength with papa; anywhere, at any time,--I should not be so rude to him as he would be to me. At the bottom of his heart papa knows that I am the more sensible of the two; after a pitched battle or so he would understand it better still. I know papa! I have not been his daughter for all these years in vain. I feel like hot-blooded soldiers must feel, who, burning to attack the enemy in the open field, are ordered to skulk behind hedges, and be shot at.
       One result is that Sydney has actually made a proposal of marriage,--he of all people! It is too comical. The best of it was that he took himself quite seriously. I do not know how many times he has confided to me the sufferings which he has endured for love of other women--some of them, I am sorry to say, decent married women too; but this is the first occasion on which the theme has been a personal one. He was so frantic, as he is wont to be, that, to calm him, I told him about Paul,--which, under the circumstances, to him I felt myself at liberty to do. In return, he was melodramatic; hinting darkly at I know not what, I was almost cross with him.
       He is a curious person, Sydney Atherton. I suppose it is because I have known him all my life, and have always looked upon him, in cases of necessity, as a capital substitute for a brother, that I criticise him with so much frankness. In some respects, he is a genius; in others--I will not write fool, for that he never is, though he has often done some extremely foolish things. The fame of his inventions is in the mouths of all men; though the half of them has never been told. He is the most extraordinary mixture. The things which most people would like to have proclaimed in the street, he keeps tightly locked in his own bosom; while those which the same persons would be only too glad to conceal, he shouts from the roofs. A very famous man once told me that if Mr Atherton chose to become a specialist, to take up one branch of inquiry, and devote his life to it, his fame, before he died, would bridge the spheres. But sticking to one thing is not in Sydney's line at all. He prefers, like the bee, to roam from flower to flower.
       As for his being in love with me; it is ridiculous. He is as much in love with the moon. I cannot think what has put the idea into his head. Some girl must have been ill-using him, or he imagines that she has. The girl whom he ought to marry, and whom he ultimately will marry, is Dora Grayling. She is young, charming, immensely rich, and over head and ears in love with him;--if she were not, then he would be over head and ears in love with her. I believe he is very near it as it is,--sometimes he is so very rude to her. It is a characteristic of Sydney's, that he is apt to be rude to a girl whom he really likes. As for Dora, I suspect she dreams of him. He is tall, straight, very handsome, with a big moustache, and the most extraordinary eyes;--I fancy that those eyes of his have as much to do with Dora's state as anything. I have heard it said that he possesses the hypnotic power to an unusual degree, and that, if he chose to exercise it, he might become a danger to society. I believe he has hypnotised Dora.
       He makes an excellent brother. I have gone to him, many and many a time, for help,--and some excellent advice I have received. I daresay I shall consult him still. There are matters of which one would hardly dare to talk to Paul. In all things he is the great man. He could hardly condescend to chiffons. Now Sydney can and does. When he is in the mood, on the vital subject of trimmings a woman could not appeal to a sounder authority. I tell him, if he had been a dressmaker, he would have been magnificent. I am sure he would.
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本书目录

book i. the house with the open window
   Chapter I. Outside
   Chapter II. Inside
   Chapter III. The Man in the Bed
   Chapter IV. A Lonely Vigil
   Chapter V. An Instruction to Commit Burglary
   Chapter VI. A Singular Felony
   Chapter VII. The Great Paul Lessingham
   Chapter VIII. The Man in the Street
   Chapter IX. The Contents of the Packet
book ii. the haunted man
   Chapter X. Rejected
   Chapter XI. A Midnight Episode
   Chapter XII. A Morning Visitor
   Chapter XIII. The Picture
   Chapter XIV. The Duchess' Ball
   Chapter XV. Mr Lessingham Speaks
   Chapter XVI. Atherton's Magic Vapour
   Chapter XVII. Magic?--or Miracle?
   Chapter XVIII. The Apotheosis of the Beetle
   Chapter XIX. The Lady Rages
   Chapter XX. A Heavy Father
   Chapter XXI. The Terror in the Night
   Chapter XXII. The Haunted Man
book iii. the terror by night and the terror by day
   Chapter XXIII. The Way He Told Her
   Chapter XXIV. A Woman's View
   Chapter XXV. The Man in the Street
   Chapter XXVI. A Father's No
   Chapter XXVII. The Terror by Night
   Chapter XXVIII. The Strange Story of the Man in the Street
   Chapter XXIX. The House on the Road From the Workhouse
   Chapter XXX. The Singular Behaviour of Mr Holt
   Chapter XXXI. The Terror by Day
book iv. in pursuit
   Chapter XXXII. A New Client
   Chapter XXXIII. What Came of Looking Through a Lattice
   Chapter XXXIV. After Twenty Years
   Chapter XXXV. A Bringer of Tidings
   Chapter XXXVI. What the Tidings Were
   Chapter XXXVII. What Was Hidden Under the Floor
   Chapter XXXVIII. The Rest of the Find
   Chapter XXXIX. Miss Louisa Coleman
   Chapter XL. What Miss Coleman Saw Through the Window
   Chapter XLI. The Constable,--His Clue,--and the Cab
   Chapter XLII. The Quarry Doubles
   Chapter XLIII. The Murder at Mrs 'Enderson's
   Chapter XLIV. The Man Who Was Murdered
   Chapter XLV. All That Mrs 'Enderson Knew
   Chapter XLVI. The Sudden Stopping
   Chapter XLVII. The Contents of the Third-Class Carriage
   Chapter XLVIII. The Conclusion of the Matter