您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Legacy of Cain, The
Second Period: 1875   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 18. Eunice's Diary
Wilkie Collins
下载:Legacy of Cain, The.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ SECOND PERIOD: 1875
       CHAPTER XVIII. EUNICE'S DIARY
       Here I am, writing my history of myself, once more, by my own bedside. Some unexpected events have happened while I have been away. One of them is the absence of my sister.
       Helena has left home on a visit to a northern town by the seaside. She is staying in the house of a minister (one of papa's friends), and is occupying a position of dignity in which I should certainly lose my head. The minister and his wife and daughters propose to set up a Girls' Scripture Class, on the plan devised by papa; and they are at a loss, poor helpless people, to know how to begin. Helena has volunteered to set the thing going. And there she is now, advising everybody, governing everybody, encouraging everybody--issuing directions, finding fault, rewarding merit--oh, dear, let me put it all in one word, and say: thoroughly enjoying herself.
       Another event has happened, relating to papa. It so distressed me that I even forgot to think of Philip--for a little while.
       Traveling by railway (I suppose because I am not used to it) gives me the headache. When I got to our station here, I thought it would do me more good to walk home than to ride in the noisy omnibus. Half-way between the railway and the town, I met one of the doctors. He is a member of our congregation; and he it was who recommended papa, some time since, to give up his work as a minister and take a long holiday in foreign parts.
       "I am glad to have met with you," the doctor said. "Your sister, I find, is away on a visit; and I want to speak to one of you about your father."
       It seemed that he had been observing papa, in chapel, from what he called his own medical point of view. He did not conceal from me that he had drawn conclusions which made him feel uneasy. "It may be anxiety," he said, "or it may be overwork. In either case, your father is in a state of nervous derangement, which is likely to lead to serious results--unless he takes the advice that I gave him when he last consulted me. There must be no more hesitation about it. Be careful not to irritate him--but remember that he must rest. You and your sister have some influence over him; he won't listen to me."
       Poor dear papa! I did see a change in him for the worse--though I had only been away for so short a time.
       When I put my arms round his neck, and kissed him, he turned pale, and then flushed up suddenly: the tears came into his eyes. Oh, it was hard to follow the doctor's advice, and not to cry, too; but I succeeded in controlling myself. I sat on his knee, and made him tell me all that I have written here about Helena. This led to our talking next of the new lady, who is to live with us as a member of the family. I began to feel less uneasy at the prospect of being introduced to this stranger, when I heard that she was papa's cousin. And when he mentioned her name, and saw how it amused me, his poor worn face brightened into a smile. "Go and find her," he said, "and introduce yourself. I want to hear, Eunice, if you and my cousin are likely to get on well together."
       The servants told me that Miss Jillgall was in the garden.
       I searched here, there, and everywhere, and failed to find her. The place was so quiet, it looked so deliciously pure and bright, after smoky dreary London, that I sat down at the further end of the garden and let my mind take me back to Philip. What was he doing at that moment, while I was thinking of him? Perhaps he was in the company of other young ladies, who drew all his thoughts away to themselves? Or perhaps he was writing to his father in Ireland, and saying something kindly and prettily about me? Or perhaps he was looking forward, as anxiously as I do, to our meeting next week.
       I have had my plans, and I have changed my plans.
       On the railway journey, I thought I would tell papa at once of the new happiness which seems to have put a new life into me. It would have been delightful to make my confession to that first and best and dearest of friends; but my meeting with the doctor spoiled it all. After what he had said to me, I discovered a risk. If I ventured to tell papa that my heart was set on a young gentleman who was a stranger to him, could I be sure that he would receive my confession favorably? There was a chance that it might irritate him--and the fault would then be mine of doing what I had been warned to avoid. It might be safer in every way to wait till Philip paid his visit, and he and papa had been introduced to each other and charmed with each other. Could Helena herself have arrived at a wiser conclusion? I declare I felt proud of my own discretion.
       In this enjoyable frame of mind I was disturbed by a woman's voice. The tone was a tone of distress, and the words reached my ears from the end of the garden: "Please, miss, let me in."
       A shrubbery marks the limit of our little bit of pleasure-ground. On the other side of it there is a cottage standing on the edge of the common. The most good-natured woman in the world lives here. She is our laundress--married to a stupid young fellow named Molly, and blessed with a plump baby as sweet-tempered at herself. Thinking it likely that the piteous voice which had disturbed me might be the voice of Mrs. Molly, I was astonished to hear her appealing to anybody (perhaps to me?) to "let her in." So I passed through the shrubbery, wondering whether the gate had been locked during my absence in London. No; it was as easy to open as ever.
       The cottage door was not closed.
       I saw our amiable laundress in the passage, on her knees, trying to open an inner door which seemed to be locked. She had her eye at the keyhole; and, once again, she called out: "Please, miss, let me in." I waited to see if the door would be opened--nothing happened. I waited again, to hear if some person inside would answer--nobody spoke. But somebody, or something, made a sound of splashing water on the other side of the door.
       I showed myself, and asked what was the matter.
       Mrs. Molly looked at me helplessly. She said: "Miss Eunice, it's the baby."
       "What has the baby done?" I inquired.
       Mrs. Molly got on her feet, and whispered in my ear: "You know he's a fine child?"
       "Yes."
       "Well, miss, he's bewitched a lady."
       "What lady?"
       "Miss Jillgall."
       The very person I had been trying to find! I asked where she was.
       The laundress pointed dolefully to the locked door: "In there."
       "And where is your baby?"
       The poor woman still pointed to the door: "I'm beginning to doubt, miss, whether it is my baby."
       "Nonsense, Mrs. Molly. If it isn't yours, whose baby can it be?"
       "Miss Jillgall's."
       Her puzzled face made this singular reply more funny still. The splashing of water on the other side of the door began again. "What is Miss Jillgall doing now?" I said.
       "Washing the baby, miss. A week ago, she came in here, one morning; very pleasant and kind, I must own. She found me putting on the baby's things. She says: 'What a cherub!' which I took as a compliment. She says: 'I shall call again to-morrow.' She called again so early that she found the baby in his crib. 'You be a good soul,' she says, 'and go about your work, and leave the child to me.' I says: 'Yes, miss, but please to wait till I've made him fit to be seen.' She says: 'That's just what I mean to do myself.' I stared; and I think any other person would have done the same in my place. 'If there's one thing more than another I enjoy,' she says, 'it's making myself useful. Mrs. Molly, I've taken a fancy to your boy-baby,' she says, 'and I mean to make myself useful to _him_.' If you will believe me, Miss Jillgall has only let me have one opportunity of putting my own child tidy. She was late this morning, and I got my chance, and had the boy on my lap, drying him--when in she burst like a blast of wind, and snatched the baby away from me. 'This is your nasty temper,' she says; 'I declare I'm ashamed of you!' And there she is, with the door locked against me, washing the child all over again herself. Twice I've knocked, and asked her to let me in, and can't even get an answer. They do say there's luck in odd numbers; suppose I try again?" Mrs. Molly knocked, and the proverb proved to be true; she got an answer from Miss Jillgall at last: "If you don't be quiet and go away, you shan't have the baby back at all." Who could help it?--I burst out laughing. Miss Jillgall (as I supposed from the tone of her voice) took severe notice of this act of impropriety. "Who's that laughing?" she called out; "give yourself a name." I gave my name. The door was instantly thrown open with a bang. Papa's cousin appeared, in a disheveled state, with splashes of soap and water all over her. She held the child in one arm, and she threw the other arm round my neck. "Dearest Euneece, I have been longing to see you. How do you like Our baby?"
       To the curious story of my introduction to Miss Jillgall, I ought perhaps to add that I have got to be friends with her already. I am the friend of anybody who amuses me. What will Helena say when she reads this? _
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

First Period: 1858-1859
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 1. The Governor Explains
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 2. The Murderess Asks Questions
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 3. The Child Appears
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 4. The Minister Says Yes
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 5. Miss Chance Asserts Herself
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 6. The Doctor Doubts
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 7. The Murderess Consults The Authorities
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 8. The Minister Says Good-By
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 9. The Governor Receives A Visit
   First Period: 1858-1859 - Chapter 10. Miss Chance Reappears
Second Period: 1875
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 11. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 12. Eunice's Diary.
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 13. Eunice's Diary.
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 14. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 15. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 16. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 17. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 18. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 19. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 20. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 21. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 22. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 23. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 24. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 25. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 26. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 27. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 28. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 29. Helena's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 30. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 31. Eunice's Diary
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 32. The Middle-Aged Lady
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 33. The Minister's Misfortune
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 34. The Lively Old Maid
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 35. The Future Looks Gloomy
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 36. The Wandering Mind
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 37. The Shameless Sister
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 38. The Girls' Ages
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 39. The Adopted Child
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 40. The Bruised Heart
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 41. The Whispering Voice
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 42. The Quaint Philosopher
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 43. The Masterful Masseuse
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 44. The Resurrection Of The Past
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 45. The Fatal Portrait
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 46. The Cumbersome Ladies
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 47. The Journey To The Farm
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 48. The Decision Of Eunice
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 49. The Governor On His Guard
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 50. The News From The Farm
   Second Period: 1875 - Chapter 51. The Triumph Of Mrs. Tenbruggen
Third Period: 1876
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 52. Helena's Diary Resumed
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 53. Helena's Diary Resumed
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 54. Helena's Diary Resumed
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 55. Helena's Diary Resumed
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 56. Helena's Diary Resumed
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 57. Helena's Diary Resumed
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 58. Danger
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 59. Defense
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 60. Discovery
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 61. Atrocity
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 62. The Sentence Pronounced
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 63. The Obstacle Removed
   Third Period: 1876 - Chapter 64. The Truth Triumphant