登陆注册
20007400000046

第46章

The majority of them, I fear, would show only the tangled, seamy side of human nature, and God knows there is little need for us to point that out to each other, though so many nowadays seem to think it the only work worth doing. A few of them were sweet, but I think they were the saddest; and over one or two a man might laugh, but it would not be a pleasant laugh.

"I never enter the door of a house to which I have been summoned,"she said to me one evening, "without wondering, as I step over the threshold, what the story is going to be. I always feel inside a sick-room as if I were behind the scenes of life. The people come and go about you, and you listen to them talking and laughing, and you look into your patient's eyes, and you just know that it's all a play."The incident that Jephson's remark had reminded me of, she told me one afternoon, as I sat propped up by the fire, trying to drink a glass of port wine, and feeling somewhat depressed at discovering Idid not like it.

"One of my first cases," she said, "was a surgical operation. I was very young at the time, and I made rather an awkward mistake--Idon't mean a professional mistake--but a mistake nevertheless that Iought to have had more sense than to make.

"My patient was a good-looking, pleasant-spoken gentleman. The wife was a pretty, dark little woman, but I never liked her from the first; she was one of those perfectly proper, frigid women, who always give me the idea that they were born in a church, and have never got over the chill. However, she seemed very fond of him, and he of her; and they talked very prettily to each other--too prettily for it to be quite genuine, I should have said, if I'd known as much of the world then as I do now.

"The operation was a difficult and dangerous one. When I came on duty in the evening I found him, as I expected, highly delirious. Ikept him as quiet as I could, but towards nine o'clock, as the delirium only increased, I began to get anxious. I bent down close to him and listened to his ravings. Over and over again I heard the name 'Louise.' Why wouldn't 'Louise' come to him? It was so unkind of her--they had dug a great pit, and were pushing him down into it--oh! why didn't she come and save him? He should be saved if she would only come and take his hand.

"His cries became so pitiful that I could bear them no longer. His wife had gone to attend a prayer-meeting, but the church was only in the next street. Fortunately, the day-nurse had not left the house:

I called her in to watch him for a minute, and, slipping on my bonnet, ran across. I told my errand to one of the vergers and he took me to her. She was kneeling, but I could not wait. I pushed open the pew door, and, bending down, whispered to her, 'Please come over at once; your husband is more delirious than I quite care about, and you may be able to calm him.'

"She whispered back, without raising her head, 'I'll be over in a little while. The meeting won't last much longer.'

"Her answer surprised and nettled me. 'You'll be acting more like a Christian woman by coming home with me,' I said sharply, 'than by stopping here. He keeps calling for you, and I can't get him to sleep.'

"She raised her head from her hands: 'Calling for me?' she asked, with a slightly incredulous accent.

"'Yes,' I replied, 'it has been his one cry for the last hour:

Where's Louise, why doesn't Louise come to him.'

"Her face was in shadow, but as she turned it away, and the faint light from one of the turned-down gas-jets fell across it, I fancied I saw a smile upon it, and I disliked her more than ever.

"'I'll come back with you,' she said, rising and putting her books away, and we left the church together.

"She asked me many questions on the way: Did patients, when they were delirious, know the people about them? Did they remember actual facts, or was their talk mere incoherent rambling? Could one guide their thoughts in any way?

"The moment we were inside the door, she flung off her bonnet and cloak, and came upstairs quickly and softly.

"She walked to the bedside, and stood looking down at him, but he was quite unconscious of her presence, and continued muttering. Isuggested that she should speak to him, but she said she was sure it would be useless, and drawing a chair back into the shadow, sat down beside him.

"Seeing she was no good to him, I tried to persuade her to go to bed, but she said she would rather stop, and I, being little more than a girl then, and without much authority, let her. All night long he tossed and raved, the one name on his lips being ever Louise--Louise--and all night long that woman sat there in the shadow, never moving, never speaking, with a set smile on her lips that made me long to take her by the shoulders and shake her.

"At one time he imagined himself back in his courting days, and pleaded, 'Say you love me, Louise. I know you do. I can read it in your eyes. What's the use of our pretending? We KNOW each other.

Put your white arms about me. Let me feel your breath upon my neck.

Ah! I knew it, my darling, my love!'

"The whole house was deadly still, and I could hear every word of his troubled ravings. I almost felt as if I had no right to be there, listening to them, but my duty held me. Later on, he fancied himself planning a holiday with her, so I concluded. 'I shall start on Monday evening,' he was saying, and you can join me in Dublin at Jackson's Hotel on the Wednesday, and we'll go straight on.'

"His voice grew a little faint, and his wife moved forward on her chair, and bent her head closer to his lips.

"'No, no,' he continued, after a pause, 'there's no danger whatever.

It's a lonely little place, right in the heart of the Galway Mountains--O'Mullen's Half-way House they call it--five miles from Ballynahinch. We shan't meet a soul there. We'll have three weeks of heaven all to ourselves, my goddess, my Mrs. Maddox from Boston--don't forget the name.'

"He laughed in his delirium; and the woman, sitting by his side, laughed also; and then the truth flashed across me.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 最具影响力的政坛伟人(上)

    最具影响力的政坛伟人(上)

    在我们人类历史发展的进程中,涌现了许多可歌可泣、光芒万丈的人间精英,他们用巨擘的手、挥毫的笔、超人的智慧、卓越的才能书写着世界,改变着历史,描绘着未来,不断创造着人类历史的崭新篇章,不断推动着人类文明的飞速发展,为我们留下了许多宝贵的精神财富和物质财富。他们是人间的英杰,不朽的灵魂,是我们人类的骄傲和自豪,我们不能忘记他们在那历史巅峰发出的宏音,应该让他们永垂青史,英名长存,永远记念他们的丰功伟绩,永远作为我们的楷模,以使我们未来的时代拥有更多的出类拔萃者。
  • 《征途苍穹》

    《征途苍穹》

    我要屠尽天下之罪恶!我要杀光世间之恶徒!我要除去负我之奸贼!......请看一位少年的崛起,开始一段属于他的征途!
  • 十生肖之腐烂人

    十生肖之腐烂人

    李浩然来到了地球的平行宇宙,美人鱼、飞碟、外星武器、狼人、吸血鬼、《西游记》中的武器、还有最重要的腐烂人。
  • 鬼话连篇

    鬼话连篇

    一个因为车祸拥有了传说中的“阴阳眼”。一个精通佛、道两家却又不工作四处旅行的怪人。他们的组合堪比是中国的福尔摩斯和华生!他们穿行于古老的乡村和喧嚣的都市之间,编织如寓言般精妙的诡谲世界!带你领略一桩桩或寒入骨髓或暖人心窝的异事件。奇特的降头、古老的茅山术、怪诞的棺床、心惊的婴声、怪事频发的女生寝室、玩死人的迷藏游戏...看似平淡的一言一语,竟步步暗藏玄机、令你心悸……
  • 邪妃来袭

    邪妃来袭

    她本是21世纪杀手榜第一的杀手风璃音,因在一次SSS级任务中,遭到闺蜜与男友的联手陷害,逼到绝境。男友将她亲自枪杀,她却因此穿越到风府的嫡女身上,改写人生。...从此,掀起了一股波涛巨浪...
  • 光明扩张

    光明扩张

    本书原名《永夜之君》*******伊塞尔出生显赫,却因为天生残疾被人遗忘,他向来历不明的魔族求取行走的能力,契约要求他立誓与光明为敌。十年后,魔族并没有完全履行契约,光明的信仰在大陆迅速扩张,而他为了父亲,终究走向了黑暗深处。难道命运真的无法改变吗?既然如此,那就把命运摧毁重来吧!(本文慢热,不11,无cp)*******(worldlins00提供的简介)出身高贵,却背负不幸的家庭;智慧超群,却背负天生的残疾;前程光明,却背负暗夜的命运;伊塞尔,在光与暗交织的道路上,披荆斩棘,踯躅前行;只因有心,所以不弃;只因有爱,所以不悔;面对宿命,他最终唱响的——到底是光明的乐章,还是暗夜的挽歌?
  • 王者归来之重返校园

    王者归来之重返校园

    上官毅,一个传奇的人物,18岁在雇佣兵世界做起了王者,之后的那一次转移给他的兄弟带去的死亡......之后的他回到了京都,开始他的泡校花,少女,空姐.................................谁动她们一下我会让你看不到明天的天空
  • 小国大富

    小国大富

    本书以2010年《福布斯》富豪排行榜中小国家和新兴市场不断增加的富豪为纲,讲述了这些小国家大富豪与众不同的成长经历,从而揭开这些小国家大富豪的神秘面纱。
  • 美男爱女王

    美男爱女王

    生活真的仅仅是一种态度,就像一张洁白无瑕的白纸,纵使有了污点,但凭着自己的双手,一定能将白纸变得五彩缤纷,绚烂夺目,即使身边空无一人也可以屹立于不败之地。
  • 神之兑换空间

    神之兑换空间

    神尊狼狈的看着易池道:“你为什么成长的如此之快?”易池笑着说道:“只要有了兑换空间,你也可以。”幸运的穿越后,易池带着逆天的兑换空间,在异界开始了新的征程。“挡我者,死!!”易池牛气冲天的说完,一道闪电顿时便轰了下来。