您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
The Broad Highway
book two. the woman   Chapter XXIX. In Which Charmian Answers My Question
Jeffrey Farnol
下载:The Broad Highway.txt
本书全文检索:
       "Peter!"
       "Yes?"
       "I wish you wouldn't."
       "Wouldn't what, Charmian?"
       "Stir your tea round and round and round--it is really most --exasperating!"
       "I beg your pardon!" said I humbly.
       "And you eat nothing; and that is also exasperating!"
       "I am not hungry."
       "And I was so careful with the bacon--see it is fried --beautifully--yes, you are very exasperating, Peter!"
       Here, finding I was absent-mindedly stirring my tea round and round again, I gulped it down out of the way, whereupon Charmian took my cup and refilled it; having done which, she set her elbows upon the table, and, propping her chin in her hands, looked at me.
       "You climbed out through your window last night, Peter?"
       "Yes."
       "It must have been a--dreadfully tight squeeze!"
       "Yes."
       "And why did you go by the window?"
       "I did not wish to disturb you."
       "That was very thoughtful of you--only, you see, I was up and dressed; the roar of the thunder woke me. It was a dreadful storm, Peter!"
       "Yes."
       "The lightning was awful!"
       "Yes."
       "And you were out in it?"
       "Yes."
       "Oh, you poor, poor Peter! How cold you must have been!"
       "On the contrary," I began, "I--"
       "And wet, Peter--miserably wet and clammy!"
       "I did not notice it," I murmured.
       "Being a philosopher, Peter, and too much engrossed in your thoughts?"
       "I was certainly thinking."
       "Of yourself!"
       "Yes--"
       "You are a great egoist, aren't you, Peter?"
       "Am I, Charmian?"
       "Who but an egoist could stand with his mind so full of himself and his own concerns as to be oblivious to thunder and lightning, and not know that he is miserably clammy and wet?"
       "I thought of others besides myself."
       "But only in connection with yourself; everything you have ever read or seen you apply to yourself, to make that self more worthy in Mr. Vibart's eyes. Is this worthy of Peter Vibart? Can Peter Vibart do this, that, or the other, and still retain the respect of Peter Vibart? Then why, being in all things so very correct and precise, why is Peter Vibart given to prowling abroad at midnight, quite oblivious to thunder, lightning, wet and clamminess? I answer: Because Peter Vibart is too much engrossed by--Peter Vibart. There! that sounds rather cryptic and very full of Peter Vibart; but that is as it should be," and she laughed.
       "And what does it mean, Charmian?"
       "Good sir, the sibyl hath spoken! Find her meaning for yourself."
       "You have called me, on various occasions, a 'creature,' a 'pedant'--very frequently a 'pedant,' and now, it seems I am an 'egoist,' and all because--"
       "Because you think too much, Peter; you never open your lips without having first thought out just what you are going to say; you never do anything without having laboriously mapped it all out beforehand, that you may not outrage Peter Vibart's tranquillity by any impulsive act or speech. Oh! you are always thinking and thinking--and that is even worse than stirring, and stirring at your tea, as you are doing now." I took the spoon hastily from my cup, and laid it as far out of reach as possible. "If ever you should write the book you once spoke of, it would be just the very sort of book that I should--hate."
       "Why, Charmian?"
       "Because it would be a book of artfully turned phrases; a book in which all the characters, especially women, would think and speak and act by rote and rule--as according to Mr. Peter Vibart; it would be a scholarly book, of elaborate finish and care of detail, with no irregularities of style or anything else to break the monotonous harmony of the whole--indeed, sir, it would be a most unreadable book!"
       "Do you think so, Charmian?" said I, once more taking up the teaspoon.
       "Why, of course!" she answered, with raised brows; "it would probably be full of Greek and Latin quotations! And you would polish and rewrite it until you had polished every vestige of life and spontaneity out of it, as you do out of yourself, with your thinking and thinking."
       "But I never quote you Greek or Latin; that is surely something, and, as for thinking, would you have me a thoughtless fool or an impulsive ass?"
       "Anything rather than a calculating, introspective philosopher, seeing only the mote in the sunbeam, and nothing of the glory." Here she gently disengaged the teaspoon from my fingers and laid it in her own saucer, having done which she sighed, and looked at me with her head to one side. "Were they all like you, Peter, I wonder--those old philosophers, grim and stern, and terribly repressed, with burning eyes, Peter, and with very long chins? Epictetus was, of course!"
       "And you dislike Epictetus, Charmian?"
       "I detest him! He was just the kind of person, Peter, who, being unable to sleep, would have wandered out into a terrible thunderstorm, in the middle of the night, and, being cold and wet and clammy, Peter, would have drawn moral lessons, and made epigrams upon the thunder and lightning. Epictetus, I am quite sure, was a--person!"
       "He was one of the wisest, gentlest, and most lovable of all the Stoics!" said I.
       "Can a philosopher possibly be lovable, Peter?" Here I very absent-mindedly took up a fork, but, finding her eye upon me, laid it down again.
       "You are very nervous, Peter, and very pale and worn and haggard, and all because you habitually--overthink yourself; and indeed, there is something very far wrong with a man who perseveringly stirs an empty cup--with a fork!" And, with a laugh, she took my cup and, having once more refilled it, set it before me.
       "And yet, Peter--I don't think--no, I don't think I would have you very much changed, after all."
       "You mean that you would rather I remained the pedantic, egotistical creature--"
       "I mean, Peter, that, being a woman, I naturally love novelty, and you are very novel--and very interesting."
       "Thank you!" said I, frowning.
       "And more contradictory than any woman!"
       "Hum!" said I.
       "You are so strong and simple--so wise and brave--and so very weak and foolish and timid!"
       "Timid?" said I.
       "Timid!" nodded she.
       "I am a vast fool!" I acknowledged.
       "And I never knew a man anything like you before, Peter!"
       "And you have known many, I understand?"
       "Very many."
       "Yes--you told me so once before, I believe."
       "Twice, Peter; and each time you became very silent and gloomy! Now you, on the other hand," she continued, "have known very few women?"
       "And my life has been calm and unruffled in consequence!"
       "You had your books, Peter, and your horseshoes."
       "My books and horseshoes, yes."
       "And were content?"
       "Quite content."
       "Until, one day--a woman--came to you."
       "Until, one day--I met a woman."
       "And then--?"
       "And then--I asked her to marry me, Charmian." Here there ensued a pause, during which Charmian began to pleat a fold in the tablecloth.
       "That was rather--unwise of you, wasn't it?" said she at last.
       "How unwise?"
       "Because--she might--have taken you at your word, Peter."
       "Do you mean that--that you won't, Charmian?"
       "Oh dear, no! I have arrived at no decision yet how could I? You must give me time to consider." Here she paused in her pleating to regard it critically, with her head on one side. "To be sure," said she, with a little nod, "to be sure, you need some one to--to look after you--that is very evident!"
       "Yes."
       "To cook--and wash for you."
       "Yes."
       "To mend your clothes for you."
       "Yes."
       "And you think me--sufficiently competent?"
       "Oh, Charmian, I--yes."
       Thank you!" said she, very solemnly, and, though her lashes had drooped, I felt the mockery of her eyes; wherefore I took a sudden great gulp of tea, and came near choking, while Charmian began to pleat another fold in the tablecloth.
       "And so Mr. Vibart would stoop to wed so humble a person as Charmian Brown? Mr. Peter Vibart would, actually, marry a woman of whose past he knows nothing?"
       "Yes," said I.
       "That, again, would be rather--unwise, wouldn't it?"
       "Why?"
       "Considering Mr. Vibart's very lofty ideals in regard to women."
       "What do you mean?"
       "Didn't you once say that your wife's name must be above suspicion--like Caesar's--or something of the kind?"
       "Did I?--yes, perhaps I did--well?"
       "Well, this woman--this Humble Person has no name at all, and no shred of reputation left her. She has compromised herself beyond all redemption in the eyes of the world."
       "But then," said I, "this world and I have always mutually despised each other."
       "She ran away, this woman--eloped with the most notorious, the most accomplished rake in London."
       "Well?"
       "Oh!--is not that enough?"
       "Enough for what, Charmian?" I saw her busy fingers falter and tremble, but her voice was steady when she answered:
       "Enough to make any--wise man think twice before asking this Humble Person to--to marry him."
       "I might think twenty times, and it would be all one!"
       "You--mean--?"
       "That if Charmian Brown will stoop to marry a village blacksmith, Peter Vibart will find happiness again; a happiness that is not of the sunshine--nor the wind in the trees--Lord, what a fool I was!" Her fingers had stopped altogether now, but she neither spoke nor raised her head.
       "Charmian," said I, leaning nearer across the table, "speak."
       "Oh, Peter!" said she, with a sudden break in her voice, and stooped her head lower. Yet in a little she looked up at me, and her eyes were very sweet and shining.
       Now, as our glances met thus, up from throat to brow there crept that hot, slow wave of color, and in her face and in her eyes I seemed to read joy, and fear, and shame, and radiant joy again. But now she bent her head once more, and strove to pleat another fold, and could not; while I grew suddenly afraid of her and of myself, and longed to hurl aside the table that divided us; and thrust my hands deep into my pockets, and, finding there my tobacco-pipe, brought it out and fell to turning it aimlessly over and over. I would have spoken, only I knew that my voice would tremble, and so I sat mum-chance, staring at my pipe with unseeing eyes, and with my brain in a ferment. And presently came her voice, cool and sweet and sane:
       "Your tobacco, Peter," and she held the box towards me across the table.
       "Ah, thank you!" said I, and began to fill my pipe, while she watched me with her chin propped in her hands.
       "Peter!"
       "Yes, Charmian?"
       "I wonder why so grave a person as Mr. Peter Vibart should seek to marry so impossible a creature as--the Humble Person?"
       "I think," I answered, "I think, if there is any special reason, it is because of--your mouth."
       "My mouth?"
       "Or your eyes--or the way you have with your lashes."
       Charmian laughed, and forthwith drooped them at me, and laughed again, and shook her head.
       "But surely, Peter, surely there are thousands, millions of women with mouths and eyes like--the Humble Person's?"
       "It is possible," said I, "but none who have the same way with their lashes."
       "What do you mean?"
       "I can't tell; I don't know."
       "Don't you, Peter?"
       "No--it is just a way."
       "And so it is that you want to marry this very Humble Person?"
       "I think I have wanted to from the very first, but did not know it--being a blind fool!"
       "And--did it need a night walk in a thunderstorm to teach you?"
       "No--that is, yes--perhaps it did."
       "And--are you quite, quite sure?"
       "Quite--quite sure!" said I, and, as I spoke, I laid my pipe upon the table and rose; and, because my hands were trembling, I clenched my fists. But, as I approached her, she started up and put out a hand to hold me off, and then I saw that her hands were trembling also. And standing thus, she spoke, very softly:
       "Peter."
       "Yes, Charmian?"
       "Do you remember describing to me the--the perfect woman who should be your--wife?"
       "Yes."
       "How that you must be able to respect her for her intellect?"
       "Yes."
       "Honor her for her virtue?"
       "Yes, Charmian."
       "And worship her--for her--spotless purity?"
       "I dreamed a paragon--perfect and impossible; I was a fool!" said I.
       "Impossible! Oh, Peter! what--what do you mean?"
       "She was only an impalpable shade quite impossible of realization--a bloodless thing, as you said, and quite unnatural --a sickly figment of the imagination. I was a fool!"
       "And you are--too wise now, to expect--such virtues--in any woman?"
       "Yes," said I; "no--oh, Charmian! I only know that you have taken this phantom's place--that you fill all my thoughts --sleeping, and waking--"
       "No! No!" she cried, and struggled in my arms, so that I caught her hands, and held them close, and kissed them many times.
       "Oh, Charmian! Charmian!--don't you know--can't you see--it is you I want--you, and only you forever; whatever you were --whatever you are--I love you--love you, and always must! Marry me, Charmian!--marry me! and you shall be dearer than my life--more to me than my soul--" But, as I spoke, her hands were snatched away, her eyes blazed into mine, and her lips were all bitter scorn, and at the sight, fear came upon me.
       "Marry you!" she panted; "marry you?--no and no and no!" And so she stamped her foot, and sobbed, and turning, fled from me, out of the cottage.
       And now to fear came wonder, and with wonder was despair.
       Truly, was ever man so great a fool!
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

Ante Scriptum
book one
   Chapter I. Chiefly Concerning My Uncle's Last Will and Testament
   Chapter II. I Set Out
   Chapter III. Concerns Itself Mainly with a Hat
   Chapter IV. I Meet with a Great Misfortune
   Chapter V. The Bagman
   Chapter VI. What Befell Me at "The White Hart"
   Chapter VII. Of the Further Puzzling Behavior of Tom Cragg, the Pugilist
   Chapter VIII. Which Concerns Itself with a Farmer's Whiskers and a Waistcoat
   Chapter IX. In Which I Stumble Upon an Affair of Honor.
   Chapter X. Which Relates the End of an Honorable Affair
   Chapter XI. Which Relates a Brief Passage-at-Arms at "The Chequers" Inn
   Chapter XII. The One-Legged Soldier
   Chapter XIII. In Which I Find an Answer to My Riddle
   Chapter XIV. Further Concerning the Gentleman in the Battered Hat
   Chapter XV. In Which I Meet with a Pedler by the Name of "Gabbing" Dick
   Chapter XVI. How I Heard the Steps of One Who Dogged Me in the Shadows
   Chapter XVII. How I Talked with a Madman in a Wood by Moonlight
   Chapter XVIII. The Hedge-Tavern
   Chapter XIX. In Which I Become a Squire of Dames
   Chapter XX. Concerning Daemons in General and One in Particular
   Chapter XXI. "Journeys End in Lovers' Meetings"
   Chapter XXII. In Which I Meet with a Literary Tinker
   Chapter XXIII. Concerning Happiness, a Ploughman, and Silver Buttons
   Chapter XXIV. Which Introduces the Reader to the Ancient
   Chapter XXV. Of Black George, the Smith, and How We Threw the Hammer
   Chapter XXVI. Wherein I Learn More Concerning the GHost of the Ruined Hut
   Chapter XXVII. Which Tells How and in What MAnner I Saw the Ghost
   Chapter XXVIII. The Highland Piper
   Chapter XXIX. How Black George and I Shook Hands
   Chapter XXX. In Which I Forswear Myself and Am Accused of Possessing the "Evil Eye"
   Chapter XXXI. In Which Donald Bids Me Farewell
   Chapter XXXII. In Which This First Book Begins to Draw to a Close
   Chapter XXXIII. In Which We Draw Yet Nearer to the End of This First Book
   Chapter XXXIV. Which Describes Sundry Happenings at the Fair, and Ends This First Book
   A Word to the Reader
book two. the woman
   Chapter I. Of Storm, and TEmpest, and of the Coming of Charmian
   Chapter II. The Postilion
   Chapter III. Which Bears Ample Testimony to the Strength of the Gentleman's Fists
   Chapter IV. Which, Among Other Matters, Has to Do with Bruises and Bandages
   Chapter V. In Which I Hear Ill News of George
   Chapter VI. In Which I Learn of an Impending Danger
   Chapter VII. Which Narrates a Somewhat Remarkable Conversation
   Chapter VIII. In Which I See a Vision in the Glory of the Moon, and Eat of a Poached Rabbit
   Chapter IX. Which Relates Somewhat of Charmian Brown
   Chapter X. I Am Suspected of the Black Art
   Chapter XI. A Shadow in the Hedge
   Chapter XII. Who Comes?
   Chapter XIII. A Pedler in Arcadia
   Chapter XIV. Concerning Black George's Letter
   Chapter XV. Which, Being in Parenthesis, May Be Skipped if the Reader so Desire
   Chapter XVI. Concerning, Among Other Matters, the Price of Beef, and the Lady Sophia Sefton of Cambourne
   Chapter XVII. The Omen
   Chapter XVIII. In Which I Hear News of Sir Maurice Vibart
   Chapter XIX. How I Met Black George Again, and Wherein the Patient Reader Shall Find a "Little Blood"
   Chapter XX. How I Came Up Out of the Dark
   Chapter XXI. Of the Opening of the Door, and How Charmian Blew Out the Light
   Chapter XXII. In Which the Ancient Discourses on Love
   Chapter XXIII. How Gabbing Dick, the Pedler, Set a Hammer Going in My Head
   Chapter XXIV. The Virgil Book
   Chapter XXV. In Which the Reader Shall Find Little to Do with the Story, and May, Therefore, Skip
   Chapter XXVI. Of Storm, and Tempest, and How I Met One Praying in the Dawn
   Chapter XXVII. The Epileptic
   Chapter XXVIII. In Which I Come to a Determination
   Chapter XXIX. In Which Charmian Answers My Question
   Chapter XXX. Concerning the Fate of Black George
   Chapter XXXI. In Which the Ancient is Surprised
   Chapter XXXII. How We Set Out for Burnham Hall
   Chapter XXXIII. In Which I Fall from Folly into Madness
   Chapter XXXIV. In Which I Find Peace and Joy and an Abiding Sorrow
   Chapter XXXV. How Black George Found Prudence in the Dawn
   Chapter XXXVI. Which Sympathizes with a Brass Jack, a Brace of Cutlasses, and Divers Pots and Pans
   Chapter XXXVII. The Preacher
   Chapter XXXVIII. In Which I Meet My Cousin, Sir Maurice Vibart
   Chapter XXXIX. How I Went Down into the Shadows
   Chapter XL. How, in Place of Death, I Found the Fulness of Life
   Chapter XLI. Light and Shadow
   Chapter XLII. How Sir Maurice Kept His Word
   Chapter XLIII. How I Set Out to Face My Destiny
   Chapter XLIV. The Bow Street Runners
   Chapter XLV. Which Concerns Itself, Among Other Matters, with the Boots of the Saturnine Jeremy
   Chapter XLVI. How I Came to London
   Chapter XLVII. In Which this History is Ended