登陆注册
20034000000085

第85章 XXIX(1)

Robert--there is no occasion to mention his surname: he was a young farmer of some education who tried to coax the aged soil of Wiltshire scientifically--came to Cadover on business and fell in love with Mrs. Elliot. She was there on her bridal visit, and he, an obscure nobody, was received by Mrs. Failing into the house and treated as her social equal. He was good-looking in a bucolic way, and people sometimes mistook him for a gentleman until they saw his hands. He discovered this, and one of the slow, gentle jokes he played on society was to talk upon some cultured subject with his hands behind his back and then suddenly reveal them. "Do you go in for boating?" the lady would ask; and then he explained that those particular weals are made by the handles of the plough. Upon which she became extremely interested, but found an early opportunity of talking to some one else.

He played this joke on Mrs. Elliot the first evening, not knowing that she observed him as he entered the room. He walked heavily, lifting his feet as if the carpet was furrowed, and he had no evening clothes. Every one tried to put him at his ease, but she rather suspected that he was there already, and envied him. They were introduced, and spoke of Byron, who was still fashionable.

Out came his hands--the only rough hands in the drawing-room, the only hands that had ever worked. She was filled with some strange approval, and liked him.

After dinner they met again, to speak not of Byron but of manure.

The other people were so clever and so amusing that it relieved her to listen to a man who told her three times not to buy artificial manure ready made, but, if she would use it, to make it herself at the last moment. Because the ammonia evaporated.

Here were two packets of powder. Did they smell? No. Mix them together and pour some coffee--An appalling smell at once burst forth, and every one began to cough and cry. This was good for the earth when she felt sour, for he knew when the earth was ill.

He knew, too, when she was hungry he spoke of her tantrums--the strange unscientific element in her that will baffle the scientist to the end of time. "Study away, Mrs. Elliot," he told her; "read all the books you can get hold of; but when it comes to the point, stroll out with a pipe in your mouth and do a bit of guessing." As he talked, the earth became a living being--or rather a being with a living skin,--and manure no longer dirty stuff, but a symbol of regeneration and of the birth of life from life. "So it goes on for ever!" she cried excitedly. He replied:

"Not for ever. In time the fire at the centre will cool, and nothing can go on then."He advanced into love with open eyes, slowly, heavily, just as he had advanced across the drawing room carpet. But this time the bride did not observe his tread. She was listening to her husband, and trying not to be so stupid. When he was close to her--so close that it was difficult not to take her in his arms--he spoke to Mr. Failing, and was at once turned out of Cadover.

"I'm sorry," said Mr. Failing, as he walked down the drive with his hand on his guest's shoulder. "I had no notion you were that sort. Any one who behaves like that has to stop at the farm.""Any one?"

"Any one." He sighed heavily, not for any personal grievance, but because he saw how unruly, how barbaric, is the soul of man.

After all, this man was more civilized than most.

"Are you angry with me, sir?" He called him "sir," not because he was richer or cleverer or smarter, not because he had helped to educate him and had lent him money, but for a reason more profound--for the reason that there are gradations in heaven.

"I did think you--that a man like you wouldn't risk making people unhappy. My sister-in-law--I don't say this to stop you loving her; something else must do that--my sister-in-law, as far as Iknow, doesn't care for you one little bit. If you had said anything, if she had guessed that a chance person was in--this fearful state, you would simply--have opened hell. A woman of her sort would have lost all--""I knew that."

Mr. Failing removed his hand. He was displeased.

"But something here," said Robert incoherently. "This here." He struck himself heavily on the heart. "This here, doing something so unusual, makes it not matter what she loses--I--" After a silence he asked, "Have I quite followed you, sir, in that business of the brotherhood of man?""How do you mean?"

"I thought love was to bring it about."

"Love of another man's wife? Sensual love? You have understood nothing--nothing." Then he was ashamed, and cried, "I understand nothing myself." For he remembered that sensual and spiritual are not easy words to use; that there are, perhaps, not two Aphrodites, but one Aphrodite with a Janus face. "I only understand that you must try to forget her.""I will not try."

"Promise me just this, then--not to do anything crooked.""I'm straight. No boasting, but I couldn't do a crooked thing--No, not if I tried."

And so appallingly straight was he in after years, that Mr. Failing wished that he had phrased the promise differently.

Robert simply waited. He told himself that it was hopeless; but something deeper than himself declared that there was hope. He gave up drink, and kept himself in all ways clean, for he wanted to be worthy of her when the time came. Women seemed fond of him, and caused him to reflect with pleasure, "They do run after me.

There must be something in me. Good. I'd be done for if there wasn't." For six years he turned up the earth of Wiltshire, and read books for the sake of his mind, and talked to gentlemen for the sake of their patois, and each year he rode to Cadover to take off his hat to Mrs. Elliot, and, perhaps, to speak to her about the crops. Mr. Failing was generally present, and it struck neither man that those dull little visits were so many words out of which a lonely woman might build sentences. Then Robert went to London on business. He chanced to see Mr. Elliot with a strange lady. The time had come.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 寻仙东方

    寻仙东方

    重生一世,我与世皆敌又何妨!上一世我没有成为仙人,这一世,我必成仙!重回苍穹两千年,历经劫难,寻仙东方,得道成仙,只为弥补前世的遗憾,此为我夏后羿之寻仙。小桑村,我来了,我不会再让你血流成河!宁海的师兄弟们,上辈子欠你们的我会还给你们!石塘的道友,再来一世,我助你们得道成仙!冷血,无情,妹妹,阿飞,我的兄弟姐妹们,我回来了。伪君子,恶魔双煞,九曜,魔姑,我的仇人们,我回来了。我要改变太多人的命运。我的嫦娥仙子,我回来了。苍穹纪年,两千年,我还没瞎眼,我还没有成为瘸子,我还没有那令人恐惧的峥嵘面容。
  • 改变千万人命运的33种创业特质

    改变千万人命运的33种创业特质

    本书介绍了成功创业者必备的33种特质,揭开了成功创业者之所以成功的面纱,为正在商海中创业的人士、正筹划创业或有志于创业的人士廓清大道。
  • 枕上男神:总裁不服来嫁!

    枕上男神:总裁不服来嫁!

    婚礼休息室里,她亲眼看到自己的新郎出轨。万念俱灰之后,她现场征婚:“谁敢娶我,我现在就嫁,只要不是弯的!”全场哗然之时,一个坐着轮椅的男人出了声,“我娶!不过,是弯是直,你要不要先验验货?”当她知道这个腰部以下高位瘫痪的男人,竟是新郎亲舅舅时,毅然嫁给了他!婚后,面对一个洗澡都要她亲自伺候的老公,她开始后悔自己一时冲动,伺机找茬离婚。离婚还未提出,他却先撂下一句话,“只要不离婚,你要什么都可以!”“这是你说的,那我要这座大厦!”她随手指向窗外。第二天,她便看到那座大楼到了自己名下。“我要星星!”几天后,一块巨大的陨石出现在花园里。
  • 末路良缘:天才宝贝俏妈咪

    末路良缘:天才宝贝俏妈咪

    五年前,一夜之间安夏夜家破人亡,害她痛失所有的人竟然是从小就抛弃她的亲生父亲。在她最无助时,自己与苏薄的恋情产生了危机,重重误会让她被迫离开,远走他乡。五年后,安夏夜带着最后三个月的生命重回故乡,开始步步策划,要将那个害她家破人亡的恶魔拉下地狱。再遇昔日恋人,他与仇人之女痴缠相恋,并掐着她的脖子叫她滚。当夏夜的生命即将走向尽头,拥有超强商业天赋的女儿是否能帮她挽回这场末路爱情,痴情罗马公爵的守护她又是否会被打动。
  • 绝品司机:护卫美女同事

    绝品司机:护卫美女同事

    恶人飞扬跋扈,身怀绝技的小司机张云凯在不知不觉中把护卫和帮助公司美女同事视为己任,且不计回报,可没想到人家基本上都不答应,非要以身相许或者不求天长地久什么的,搞得他真有些应接不暇了,有时候都想逃跑。
  • tfboys之始终输给你

    tfboys之始终输给你

    沫沫,是我的计划才造成对你的伤害,失去了你我才知道你对我是多么重要。——易烊千玺Jackson,你没错,错的是我,我赢了太多人,却唯独输给了你。——安雨沫背叛让她变得坚强,但三年来累积的坚强却在他的面前完全倒塌。“我这一生赢了那么多人!却输给了他!”她崩溃地跌坐在地上,脑子全是那个狠心的男人带给她的算计,哈哈哈哈这就是她爱的人!这就是她拼了信命也要保护的人!到头来都是他的出卖与背叛。她又悄无声息的走了,带走的不仅仅是她内心仅存的温柔和善良,带走的还有让她又爱又恨的人的心。“这辈子,你只能输给我。”
  • 明星正能量

    明星正能量

    人生不如意事十之八九。生活中,情场之路、职场之路、心灵之路,皆是歧路多多。生如梦幻泡影,须臾即变。如何行进到一条正确的道路上,如何把成长路途中的负能量转化为正能量,如何探究到那最真实不虚的部分,是每个人或迟或早都要面临的选择,也是一门生命的功课。本书介绍了国内诸多一线明星们的能量转化之道。正如李光洁曾在接受访问时说:任何事情都看你从哪个角度看,人生就像多棱镜,不同的角度会看到不同的颜色。从这个角度看,是阴霾和晦涩的,转换个角度,也许就看到了明亮的色彩。萨提亚也说过:改变是可以发生的,并且需要内在的改变。
  • 梦魅之偶

    梦魅之偶

    黑夜的罂粟指引灾难的梦魇。空洞的冷漠,冰冷的木枷,宁静的国度沾染残破的鲜血。血色勾勒着绝望,杀戮引领着毁灭。它是绽放在黑夜里的杀戮之花,承载着灭亡的命运.他背负着仇恨无家可归,他们的相遇伴随着血色.他们的灵魂在孤独中相互依偎,拼命地变强,只为守护它的笑颜.
  • 魔途重归

    魔途重归

    一切都在一夜间灰飞烟灭,万象归零。荒古魔域曾经无上的王被众魔推上了十字魔焰的绞刑架,与昔日的王座一同湮灭在叛离的熊熊火光中,远处皆是冷酷嘲讽的目光。没有怜悯,没有惋惜······然而,一场结束只是众多开始的一部分,另一扇命运眷顾他的大门,传奇般地轰然打开。轮回的进程没有人能够掌控,而我悠弗,则要利用它给予的机会铸就另一次的辉煌。这一次,失败将从我的命运中被划去····
  • 佛说大如意宝珠轮牛王守护神咒经

    佛说大如意宝珠轮牛王守护神咒经

    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。