登陆注册
20051000000067

第67章 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FIFTH(2)

I know well enough what it was, now. On my oath as an honest woman, I failed to see it at the time. We are not always (suffer me to remind you) consistent with ourselves. The cleverest people commit occasional lapses into stupidity--just as the stupid people light up with gleams of intelligence at certain times. You may have shown your usual good sense in conducting your affairs on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday in the week.

But it doesn't at all follow from this, that you may not make a fool of yourself on Thursday. Account for it as you may--for a much longer time than it suits my self-esteem to reckon up, I suspected nothing and discovered nothing. I noted his behavior in Lucilla's presence as odd behavior and unaccountable behavior--and that was all.

During the first fortnight just mentioned, the London doctor came to see Oscar.

He left again, perfectly satisfied with the results of his treatment. The dreadful epileptic malady would torture the patient and shock the friends about him no more: the marriage might safely be celebrated at the time agreed on. Oscar was cured.

The doctor's visit--reviving our interest in observing the effect of the medicine--also revived the subject of Oscar's false position towards Lucilla. Nugent and I held a debate about it between ourselves. I opened the interview by suggesting that we should unite our forces to persuade his brother into taking the frank and manly course. Nugent neither said Yes nor No to that proposal at the outset. He, who made up his mind at a moment's notice about everything else, took time to decide on this one occasion.

"There is something that I want to know first," he said. "I want to understand this curious antipathy of Lucilla's which my brother regards with so much alarm. Can you explain it?"

"Has Oscar attempted to explain it?" I inquired on my side.

"He mentioned it in one of his letters to me; and he tried to explain it, when I asked (on my arrival at Browndown) if Lucilla had discovered the change in his complexion. But he failed entirely to meet my difficulty in understanding the case."

"What is your difficulty?"

"This. So far as I can see, she fails to discover intuitively the presence of dark people in a room, or of dark colors in the ornaments of a room. It is only when _she is told_ that such persons or such things are present that her prejudice declares itself. In what state of mind does such a strange feeling as this take its rise? It seems impossible that she can have any conscious associations with colors, pleasant or painful--if it is true that she was blind at a year old. How do you account for it? Can there be such a thing as a purely instinctive antipathy; remaining passive until external influences rouse it; and resting on no sort of practical experience whatever?"

"I think there may be," I replied. "Why, when I was a child just able to walk, did I shrink away from the first dog I saw who barked at me? I could not have known, at that age, either by experience or teaching, that a dog's bark is sometimes the prelude to a dog's bite. My terror, on that occasion, was purely instinctive surely?"

"Ingeniously put," he said. "But I am not satisfied yet."

"You must also remember," I continued, "that she has a positively painful association with dark colors, on certain occasions. They sometimes produce a disagreeable impression on her nerves, through her sense of touch. She discovered, in that way, that I had a dark gown on, on the day when I first saw her."

"And yet, she touches my brother's face, and fails to discover any alteration in it."

I met that objection also--to my own satisfaction, though not to his.

"I am far from sure that she might not have made the discovery," I said, "if she had touched him for the first time, since the discoloration of his face. But she examines him now with a settled impression in her mind, derived from previous experience of what she has felt in touching his skin. Allow for the modifying influence of that impression on her sense of touch--and remember at the same time, that it is the color and not the texture of the skin that is changed--and his escape from discovery becomes, to my mind, intelligible."

He shook his head; he owned he could not dispute my view. But he was not content for all that.

"Have you made any inquiries," he asked, "about the period of her infancy before she was blind? She may be still feeling, indirectly and unconsciously, the effect of some shock to her nervous system in the time when she could see."

"I have never thought of making inquiries."

"Is there anybody within our reach, who was familiarly associated with her in the first year of her life? It is hardly likely, I am afraid, at this distance of time?"

"There is a person now in the house," I said. "Her old nurse is still living."

"Send for her directly."

Zillah appeared. After first explaining what he wanted with her, Nugent went straight to the inquiry which he had in view.

"Was your young lady ever frightened when she was a baby by any dark person, or any dark thing, suddenly appearing before her?"

"Never, sir! I took good care to let nothing come near her that could frighten her--so long, poor little thing, as she could see."

"Are you quite sure you can depend on your memory?"

"Quite sure, sir--when it's a long time ago."

Zillah was dismissed. Nugent--thus far, unusually grave, and unusually anxious--turned to me with an air of relief.

"When you proposed to me to join you in forcing Oscar to speak out," he said, "I was not quite easy in my mind about the consequences. After what I have just heard, my fear is removed."

"What fear?" I asked.

同类推荐
  • 金锁流珠引

    金锁流珠引

    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。
  • 平番始末

    平番始末

    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。
  • 六十种曲琵琶记

    六十种曲琵琶记

    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。
  • 六十种曲玉簪记

    六十种曲玉簪记

    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。
  • 孔子改制考

    孔子改制考

    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
  • 花好月缘

    花好月缘

    一次又一次离奇的经历让她与真相越来越近,相爱容易相守难,剪不断理还乱。因为误会而犯下的错误,是否可以弥补?又如何弥补?她以为自己付出的最多,殊不知揭开秘密的同时又有怎样惊人的真相。
  • 网游之天下藏锋

    网游之天下藏锋

    网游天下,逆转未来。天若不公,斩剑焚天。没有枯燥乏味的打怪升级,没有做不完的无聊任务,以轻快、细腻的笔锋,谱写一段热血澎湃,气势浩瀚的传奇人生;江湖,情仇,家仇,国仇,人生飘浮,命运多舛,浩浩荡荡百万字,描绘出一幅追求天下藏锋,世界大同的奇幻网游世界。
  • 妄机

    妄机

    烽火狼烟寂,仙魔妖圣绝。鸥鹭几远近,垂翁已忘机。
  • 梵网经

    梵网经

    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。
  • 佛说释摩男本经

    佛说释摩男本经

    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。
  • 人族血屠

    人族血屠

    世界上六个获得内测激活码的少年少女先行到了“游戏”里面参观了一番,获得了神秘刺客职业的夜雨,将会带着自己的亲人和朋友,在这个充满迷雾与恐怖怪物的异世界,努力地.....活下去!
  • 青石如墨

    青石如墨

    曾经的告白,拒绝的理由很简单,但并没有打败她,而是她并不介意,因为这是事实。因为她长得真的很......五年后的青春她与他再次相遇,她已不再是当年的丑小鸭,再次与他擦出火花。他会如何选择?但是命运的捉弄让她与他再次分离......她的身世扑朔迷离,到底是对还是错,为什么黑衣人会叫她小姐?为什么她对她的妹妹如此疼爱?为什么她如此讨厌那个天天跟在她身后的男生?他的爱到底是真是假?到底是有目的?而她的身上也是有着不可阻挡的魅力和让人感兴趣的秘密!
  • 花枝澪

    花枝澪

    你…被爱人背叛过吗?被爱人伤害过吗?而且还牵连到自己的亲人吗?为了钱……真的可以舍弃一切吗!
  • 鬼才医仙

    鬼才医仙

    纵你权势滔天,坐拥四海,也难逃生死轮回,一针定生,一针断死。得上古传承,一身医术惊天地,敢与阎王争生死。一针百病消,二针断生死,三针定魂,四针逆阴阳,五针洗髓,六针脱轮回,七针仙。超脱生死,唯我鬼才医仙。
  • 武道苍穹

    武道苍穹

    数千年前,大陆上新起四大家族离奇的衰败,四大家主同时消失。烈禹作为一个四大家族之一的后世族人,他是怎样一步步揭开这个谜底的呢?还有数万年前的神魔大战,大战后,神族与魔族也同时消失在大陆上了。四大禁地:神魔之地,万兽森林,修魔海,蛮荒之地。