登陆注册
18911300000012

第12章

"A word of greeting to young Gaos!" She had been greatly affected in writing that sentence, and that name, which now she could not forget.

She often spent her evenings here at the window, like a grand lady.

Her father did not approve of her walking with the other girls of her age, who had been her early playmates. And as he left the cafe, and walked up and down, smoking his pipe with old seamen like himself, he was happy to look up at his daughter among her flowers, in his grand house.

"Young Gaos!" Against her will she gazed seaward; it could not be seen, but she felt it was nigh, at the end of the tiny street crowded with fishermen. And her thoughts travelled through a fascinating and delightful infinite, far, far away to the northern seas, where "/La Marie/, Captain Guermeur," was sailing. A strange man was young Gaos!

retiring and almost incomprehensible now, after having come forward so audaciously, yet so lovingly.

In her long reverie, she remembered her return to Brittany, which had taken place the year before. One December morning after a night of travelling, the train from Paris had deposited her father and herself at Guingamp. It was a damp, foggy morning, cold and almost dark. She had been seized with a previously unknown feeling; she could scarcely recognise the quaint little town, which she had only seen during the summer--oh, that glad old time, the dear old times of the past! This silence, after Paris! This quiet life of people, who seemed of another world, going about their simple business in the misty morning. But the sombre granite houses, with their dark, damp walls, and the Breton charm upon all things, which fascinated her now that she loved Yann, had seemed particularly saddening upon that morning. Early housewives were already opening their doors, and as she passed she could glance into the old-fashioned houses, with their tall chimney-pieces, where sat the old grandmothers, in their white caps, quiet and dignified. As soon as daylight had begun to appear, she had entered the church to say her prayers, and the grand old aisle had appeared immense and shadowy to her--quite different from all the Parisian churches--with its rough pillars worn at the base by the chafing of centuries, and its damp, earthy smell of age and saltpetre.

In a damp recess, behind the columns, a taper was burning, before which knelt a woman, making a vow; the dim flame seemed lost in the vagueness of the arches. Gaud experienced there the feeling of a long-forgotten impression: that kind of sadness and fear that she had felt when quite young at being taken to mass at Paimpol Church on raw, wintry mornings.

But she hardly regretted Paris, although there were many splendid and amusing sights there. In the first place she felt almost cramped from having the blood of the vikings in her veins. And then, in Paris, she felt like a stranger and an intruder. The /Parisiennes/ were tight-laced, artificial women, who had a peculiar way of walking; and Gaud was too intelligent even to have attempted to imitate them. In her head-dress, ordered every year from the maker in Paimpol, she felt out of her element in the capital; and did not understand that if the wayfarers turned round to look at her, it was only because she made a very charming picture.

Some of these Parisian ladies quite won her by their high-bred and distinguished manners, but she knew them to be inaccessible to her, while from others of a lower caste who would have been glad to make friends with her, she kept proudly aloof, judging them unworthy of her attention. Thus she had lived almost without friends, without other society than her father's, who was engaged in business and often away.

So she did not regret that life of estrangement and solitude.

But, none the less, on that day of arrival she had been painfully surprised by the bitterness of this Brittany, seen in full winter. And her heart sickened at the thought of having to travel another five or six hours in a jolting car--to penetrate still farther into the blank, desolate country to reach Paimpol.

All through the afternoon of that same grisly day, her father and herself had journeyed in a little old ramshackle vehicle, open to all the winds; passing, with the falling night, through dull villages, under ghostly trees, black-pearled with mist in drops. And ere long lanterns had to be lit, and she could perceive nothing else but what seemed two trails of green Bengal lights, running on each side before the horses, and which were merely the beams that the two lanterns projected on the never-ending hedges of the roadway. But how was it that trees were so green in the month of December? Astonished at first, she bent to look out, and then she remembered how the gorse, the evergreen gorse of the paths and the cliffs, never fades in the country of Paimpol. At the same time a warmer breeze began to blow, which she knew again and which smelt of the sea.

Towards the end of the journey she had been quite awakened and amused by the new notion that struck her, namely: "As this is winter, I shall see the famous fishermen of Iceland."For in December they were to return, the brothers, cousins, and lovers of whom all her friends, great and small, had spoken to her during the long summer evening walks in her holiday trips. And the thought had haunted her, though she felt chilled in the slow-going vehicle.

Now she had seen them, and her heart had been captured by one of them too.

同类推荐
  • 迦叶结经

    迦叶结经

    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。
  • A Village Stradivarius

    A Village Stradivarius

    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。
  • 佛祖统纪说

    佛祖统纪说

    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。
  • 全真清规

    全真清规

    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。
  • 深沙大将仪轨

    深沙大将仪轨

    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
  • 御灵师之问道

    御灵师之问道

    强者如云,万千位面,祭离的羁绊改如何守护?梦中的呢喃到底预示着什么惊世骇俗的秘密?这一次他是选择退缩还是持剑而上!
  • 寻你念你却爱上他

    寻你念你却爱上他

    故事的开端是你,为了你来到圣英学校,为了你挑灯夜读换来的却是你一次又一次的重击,终于我的心有了正确的归属,他是一个暖男却有霸道的一面“你是希望我抱你去学校,还是想我骑自行车送你去学校”
  • 混元剑祖

    混元剑祖

    恒天世界,宗门林立。以道门,佛门,巫门,魔门,灵门所统领的五大门派为首。世间皆以修练灵力(金.木.水.火.土.风.雷.冰.阴.阳)为主。剑。在他门眼中被视为法宝。现代剑术大师郭少枫,来到了这个世界。揭起了剑修的风暴。
  • 世界上最神奇的心理健康课

    世界上最神奇的心理健康课

    在陷入心理困境的时候,我们只有掌握调适方法后,才能调出一个好心情,享受生活的快乐。《世界上最神奇的心理健康课》从101个方面,以具有代表性的心理案例,加以深人浅出的心理学理论分析,指出心理问题的根源以及危害,讲述不良心理情绪的克服,意志、行为人格障碍的调适,介绍简单易行、具有实效的心理疗法。从而揭开了各种心理疾病的神秘面纱,诠释了一个个心理疾病的密码,让读者可以为自己的心把脉,发现问题,及时纠正,还自己一颗健康的心。本书由吴伟丽编著。
  • 女性排毒与食补

    女性排毒与食补

    本书从女性生理发育特点和疾病常识出发,为女性朋友提供食疗排毒、运动排毒、精神排毒及其他排毒妙招等科学有效的排毒方案,并从生理特性上推荐食疗食补方法,适合年轻爱美女性阅读,让女性朋友无毒一身轻,健康生活每一天。
  • 妖孽兵王

    妖孽兵王

    特种兵王重回都市,本想安逸地给美女老板娘打工,却不想卷进了地下世界势力倾轧之中,为了保护身边众美,他再战江湖,用铁拳和医术,在白道和地下一路横扫,纵横无忌!
  • 激扬游戏

    激扬游戏

    杨秋,不是个坏人,知道的人都这么说。不知道的都说他不是个好人。这家伙一逢闲暇就没羞没臊在学校西门吹口哨,有时候还吟两句醉酒小调:“妹妹那个俏哎~~”这声音妖娆曲折,直往女同学的心里钻。
  • 噬魔逆天

    噬魔逆天

    重生异世,不求风骚惊天下,但求猥琐动世人。纸醉金迷是我的追求,荒.淫无度是我的梦想,功名利禄如过眼云烟!
  • 滇西抗战史论

    滇西抗战史论

    本书以爱国主义为主线,以滇西抗战史实为依据,采用史论结合的形式,对滇西抗战这一重大历史事件进行梳理和评述。
  • 乘风

    乘风

    大师兄又去撩妹啦!二师兄又沉迷辟谷不可自拔啦!三师兄又不要脸啦!四师兄又自恋啦!五师兄别讲荤段子了,六师姐和七师姐在后面看着你呐!麻麻这个门派好可怕啊我要回客栈!!——by被拐卖的方长