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Thomas Wingfold, Curate
Volume 2   Volume 2 - Chapter 31. George And Leopold
George MacDonald
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       _ VOLUME II CHAPTER XXXI. GEORGE AND LEOPOLD
       George went again to Leopold's room, and sat down by him. The youth lay with his eyes half closed, and a smile--a faint sad one--flickered over his face. He was asleep: from infancy he had slept with his eyes open.
       "Emmeline!" he murmured, in the tone of one who entreats forgiveness.
       "Strange infatuation!" said George to himself: "even his dreams are mad! Good God! there can't be anything in it--can there? I begin to feel as if I were not quite safe myself. Mad-doctors go mad themselves, they say. I wonder what sort of floating sporule carries the infection--reaching the brain by the nose, I fancy. Or perhaps there is latent madness in us all, requiring only the presence of another madness to set it free."
       Leopold was awake and looking at him.
       "Is it a very bad way of dying?" he asked.
       "What is, old boy!"
       "Hanging."
       "Yes, very bad--choking, you know," answered George, who wanted to make the worst of it.
       "I thought the neck was broken and all was over," returned Leopold, with a slight tremor in his voice.
       "Yes, that's how it ought to be; but it fails so often!"
       "At least there's no more hanging in public, and that's a comfort," said Leopold.
       "What a queer thing," said George to himself, "that a man should be ready to hang for an idea! Why should he not do his best to enjoy what is left of the sunlight, seeing, as their own prophet says, the night cometh when no man can work? A few more whiffs of his cigar before it goes out, would hurt no one. It is one thing to hang a murderer, and quite another to hang yourself if you happen to be the man. But he's stark raving mad, and must be humoured. Dance upon nothing for an idea! Well, it's not without plenty of parallels in history!--I wonder whether his one idea would give way now, if it were brought to the actual test of hanging! It is a pity it couldn't be tried, just for experiment's sake. But a strait-waistcoat would be better."
       Leopold's acquaintance with George had been but small, and of his favourite theories he knew nothing. But he had always known that he was not merely his sister's cousin, but the trusted friend both of her and of her aunt; and since he had come to know of his frequent visits, he had begun to believe him more to Helen than a friend. Hence the moment he had made up his mind to confess, he was ready to trust George entirely, and although he was disappointed to find him receive his communication in a spirit so different from that of Wingfold and his friend, he felt no motion of distrust on that account, seeing Helen, who had been to him true as steel, took the same view of his resolution.
       "What would you do yourself then, George, if you had committed a crime like mine?" he asked, after lying silent for a while.
       None of George's theories had greatly taxed his imagination. He had not been in any habit of fancying himself in this or that situation--and when he did, it was always in some pleasant one of victory or recognition. Possible conditions of humanity other than pleasant, he had been content to regard from the outside, and come to logical conclusions concerning, without, as a German would say, thinking himself into them at all; and it would have been to do the very idea of George Bascombe a wrong to imagine him entangled in any such net of glowing wire as a crime against society! Therefore, although for most questions George had always an answer ready, for this he had none at hand, and required a moment, and but a moment, to think.
       "I would say to myself," he replied, "'What is done, is done, and is beyond my power to alter or help.' And so I would be a man and bear it--not a weakling, and let it crush me. No, by Jove! it shouldn't crush ME!"
       "Ah, but you haven't tried the weight of it, George!" returned Leopold.
       "God forbid!" said George.
       "God forbid! indeed," rejoined Leopold; "but there 'tis done for all his forbidding!"
       "What's done is done, God or devil, and must be borne, I say," said Bascombe, stretching out his legs. He was aware it sounded heartless, but how could he help it? What else was there to be said?
       "But if you can't bear it? If it is driving you mad--mad--mad? If you must do something or kill yourself?" cried Leopold.
       "You haven't done your best at trying yet," returned George. "But you are ill, and not very able to try, I daresay, and so we can't help it. On Monday we shall go to Mr. Hooker, and see what he says to it."
       He rose and went to get a book from the library. On the stair he met the butler: Mr. Wingfold had called to see Mr. Lingard.
       "He can't see him to-day. He is too much exhausted," said Bascombe; and the curate left the house thoughtful and sorry, feeling as if a vulture had settled by the side of the youth--a good-natured vulture, no doubt, but not the less one bent on picking out the eyes of his mind.
       He walked away along the street towards the church with down-bent head, seeing no one. He entered the churchyard, not looking whither he went: a lovely soul was in pain and peril, and he could not get near to help it. They were giving it choke-damp to breathe, instead of mountain-air. They were washing its sores with anodynes instead of laying them open with the knife of honesty, that they might be cleansed and healed. He found himself stumbling among the level gravestones, and stopped and sat down.
       He sat a while, seeming to think of nothing, his eyes resting on a little tuft of moss that shone like green gold in the sunlight on the shoulder of an awkward little cherub's wing. Ere long he found himself thinking how not the soul of Leopold, but that of Helen, was in chief danger. Poor Leopold had the serpent of his crime to sting him alive, but Helen had the vampyre of an imperfect love to fan her asleep with the airs of a false devotion. It was Helen he had to be anxious about more than Leopold.
       He rose and walked back to the house.
       "Can I see Miss Lingard?" he asked.
       It was a maid who opened the door this time. She showed him into the library, and went to inquire. _
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本书目录

Volume 1
   Volume 1 - Chapter 1. Helen Lingard
   Volume 1 - Chapter 2. Thomas Wingfold
   Volume 1 - Chapter 3. The Diners
   Volume 1 - Chapter 4. Their Talk
   Volume 1 - Chapter 5. A Staggering Question
   Volume 1 - Chapter 6. The Curate In The Churchyard
   Volume 1 - Chapter 7. The Cousins
   Volume 1 - Chapter 8. The Garden
   Volume 1 - Chapter 9. The Park
   Volume 1 - Chapter 10. The Dwarfs
   Volume 1 - Chapter 11. The Curate At Home
   Volume 1 - Chapter 12. An Incident
   Volume 1 - Chapter 13. A Report Of Progress
   Volume 1 - Chapter 14. Jeremy Taylor
   Volume 1 - Chapter 15 The Park Gate
   Volume 1 - Chapter 16. The Attic
   Volume 1 - Chapter 17. Polwarth's Plan
   Volume 1 - Chapter 18. Joseph Polwarth
   Volume 1 - Chapter 19. The Conclusion Of The Whole Matter
   Volume 1 - Chapter 20. A Strange Sermon
   Volume 1 - Chapter 21. A Thunderbolt
   Volume 1 - Chapter 22. Leopold
   Volume 1 - Chapter 23. The Refuge
   Volume 1 - Chapter 24. Helen With A Secret
   Volume 1 - Chapter 25. A Daylight Visit
   Volume 1 - Chapter 26. Leopold's Story
   Volume 1 - Chapter 27. Leopold's Story Concluded
   Volume 1 - Chapter 28. Sisterhood
   Volume 1 - Chapter 29. The Sick-Chamber
   Volume 1 - Chapter 30. The Curate's Progress
   Volume 1 - Chapter 31. The Curate Makes A Discovery
   Volume 1 - Chapter 32. Hopes
   Volume 1 - Chapter 33. The Ride
Volume 2
   Volume 2 - Chapter 1. Rachel And Her Uncle
   Volume 2 - Chapter 2. A Dream
   Volume 2 - Chapter 3. Another Sermon
   Volume 2 - Chapter 4. Nursing
   Volume 2 - Chapter 5. Glaston And The Curate
   Volume 2 - Chapter 6. The Linen-Draper
   Volume 2 - Chapter 7. Rachel
   Volume 2 - Chapter 8. The Butterfly
   Volume 2 - Chapter 9. The Common-Place
   Volume 2 - Chapter 10. Home Again
   Volume 2 - Chapter 11. The Sheath
   Volume 2 - Chapter 12. Invitation
   Volume 2 - Chapter 13. A Sermon To Helen
   Volume 2 - Chapter 14. A Sermon To Himself
   Volume 2 - Chapter 15. Criticism
   Volume 2 - Chapter 16. A Vanishing Glimmer
   Volume 2 - Chapter 17. Let Us Pray!
   Volume 2 - Chapter 18. Two Letters
   Volume 2 - Chapter 19. Advice In The Dark
   Volume 2 - Chapter 20. Intercession
   Volume 2 - Chapter 21. Helen Alone
   Volume 2 - Chapter 22. A Haunted Soul
   Volume 2 - Chapter 23. Compelled Confidence
   Volume 2 - Chapter 24. Willing Confidence
   Volume 2 - Chapter 25. The Curate's Counsel
   Volume 2 - Chapter 26. Sleep
   Volume 2 - Chapter 27. Divine Service
   Volume 2 - Chapter 28. A Shop In Heaven
   Volume 2 - Chapter 29. Polwarth And Lingard
   Volume 2 - Chapter 30. The Strong Man
   Volume 2 - Chapter 31. George And Leopold
   Volume 2 - Chapter 32. Wingfold And Helen
   Volume 2 - Chapter 33. A Review
   Volume 2 - Chapter 34. A Sermon To Leopold
Volume 3
   Volume 3 - Chapter 1. After The Sermon
   Volume 3 - Chapter 2. Bascombe And The Magistrate
   Volume 3 - Chapter 3. The Confession
   Volume 3 - Chapter 4. The Mask
   Volume 3 - Chapter 5. Further Decision
   Volume 3 - Chapter 6. The Curate And The Doctor
   Volume 3 - Chapter 7. Helen And The Curate
   Volume 3 - Chapter 8. An Examination
   Volume 3 - Chapter 9. Immortality
   Volume 3 - Chapter 10. Passages From The Autobiography Of The Wandering Jew
   Volume 3 - Chapter 11. The Wandering Jew
   Volume 3 - Chapter 12. The Wandering Jew
   Volume 3 - Chapter 13. Remarks
   Volume 3 - Chapter 14. Struggles
   Volume 3 - Chapter 15. The Lawn
   Volume 3 - Chapter 16. How Jesus Spoke To Women
   Volume 3 - Chapter 17. Deliverance
   Volume 3 - Chapter 18. The Meadow
   Volume 3 - Chapter 19. Rachel And Leopold
   Volume 3 - Chapter 20. The Blood-Hound
   Volume 3 - Chapter 21. The Blood-Hound Traversed
   Volume 3 - Chapter 22. The Bedside
   Volume 3 - Chapter 23. The Garden
   Volume 3 - Chapter 24. The Departure
   Volume 3 - Chapter 25. The Sunset
   Volume 3 - Chapter 26. An Honest Spy
   Volume 3 - Chapter 27. What Helen Heard
   Volume 3 - Chapter 28. What Helen Heard More
   Volume 3 - Chapter 29. The Curate's Resolve
   Volume 3 - Chapter 30. Helen Awake
   Volume 3 - Chapter 31. Thou Didst Not Leave