登陆注册
20060200000034

第34章 CHAPTER IX(4)

"He has only to please me, my dear, and he will be launched and protected."

"But if he does not succeed in pleasing you?"

"Is it so difficult?"

"Oh!" Clara fretted.

"You see, my love, I answer you," said Sir Willoughby.

He resumed: "But let old Vernon have his trial with the lad. He has his own ideas. Let him carry them out. I shall watch the experiment."

Clara was for abandoning her task in sheer faintness.

"Is not the question one of money?" she said, shyly, knowing Mr. Whitford to be poor.

"Old Vernon chooses to spend his money that way." replied Sir Willoughby. "If it saves him from breaking his shins and risking his neck on his Alps, we may consider it well employed."

"Yes," Clara's voice occupied a pause.

She seized her languor as it were a curling snake and cast it off.

"But I understand that Mr. Whitford wants your assistance. Is he not--not rich? When he leaves the Hall to try his fortune in literature in London, he may not be so well able to support Crossjay and obtain the instruction necessary for the boy: and it would be generous to help him."

"Leaves the Hall!" exclaimed Willoughby. "I have not heard a word of it. He made a bad start at the beginning, and I should have thought that would have tamed him: had to throw over his Fellowship; ahem. Then he received a small legacy some time back, and wanted to be off to push his luck in Literature: rank gambling, as I told him. Londonizing can do him no good. I thought that nonsense of his was over years ago. What is it he has from me?--about a hundred and fifty a year: and it might be doubled for the asking: and all the books he requires: and these writers and scholars no sooner think of a book than they must have it. And do not suppose me to complain. I am a man who will not have a single shilling expended by those who serve immediately about my person. I confess to exacting that kind of dependency. Feudalism is not an objectionable thing if you can be sure of the lord. You know, Clara, and you should know me in my weakness too, I do not claim servitude, I stipulate for affection. I claim to be surrounded by persons loving me. And with one? ... dearest! So that we two can shut out the world; we live what is the dream of others. Nothing imaginable can be sweeter. It is a veritable heaven on earth. To be the possessor of the whole of you! Your thoughts, hopes, all."

Sir Willoughby intensified his imagination to conceive more: he could not, or could not express it, and pursued: "But what is this talk of Vernon's leaving me? He cannot leave. He has barely a hundred a year of his own. You see, I consider him. I do not speak of the ingratitude of the wish to leave. You know, my dear, I have a deadly abhorrence of partings and such like. As far as I can, I surround myself with healthy people specially to guard myself from having my feelings wrung; and excepting Miss Dale, whom you like --my darling does like her?"--the answer satisfied him; "with that one exception, I am not aware of a case that threatens to torment me. And here is a man, under no compulsion, talking of leaving the Hall! In the name of goodness, why? But why? Am I to imagine that the sight of perfect felicity distresses him? We are told that the world is 'desperately wicked'. I do not like to think it of my friends; yet otherwise their conduct is often hard to account for."

"If it were true, you would not punish Crossjay?" Clara feebly interposed.

"I should certainly take Crossjay and make a man of him after my own model, my dear. But who spoke to you of this?"

"Mr. Whitford himself. And let me give you my opinion, Willoughby, that he will take Crossjay with him rather than leave him, if there is a fear of the boy's missing his chance of the navy."

"Marines appear to be in the ascendant," said Sir Willoughby, astonished at the locution and pleading in the interests of a son of one. "Then Crossjay he must take. I cannot accept half the boy.

I am," he laughed, "the legitimate claimant in the application for judgement before the wise king. Besides, the boy has a dose of my blood in him; he has none of Vernon's, not one drop."

"Ah!"

"You see, my love?"

"Oh, I do see; yes."

"I put forth no pretensions to perfection," Sir Willoughby continued. "I can bear a considerable amount of provocation; still I can be offended, and I am unforgiving when I have been offended. Speak to Vernon, if a natural occasion should spring up. I shall, of course, have to speak to him. You may, Clara, have observed a man who passed me on the road as we were cantering home, without a hint of a touch to his hat. That man is a tenant of mine, farming six hundred acres, Hoppner by name: a man bound to remember that I have, independently of my position, obliged him frequently. His lease of my ground has five years to run. I must say I detest the churlishness of our country population, and where it comes across me I chastise it. Vernon is a different matter: he will only require to be spoken to. One would fancy the old fellow laboured now and then under a magnetic attraction to beggary. My love," he bent to her and checked their pacing up and down, "you are tired?"

"I am very tired to-day," said Clara.

His arm was offered. She laid two fingers on it, and they dropped when he attempted to press them to his rib.

He did not insist. To walk beside her was to share in the stateliness of her walking.

He placed himself at a corner of the door-way for her to pass him into the house, and doated on her cheek, her ear, and the softly dusky nape of her neck, where this way and that the little lighter-coloured irreclaimable curls running truant from the comb and the knot--curls, half-curls, root-curls, vine-ringlets, wedding-rings, fledgling feathers, tufts of down, blown wisps--waved or fell, waved over or up or involutedly, or strayed, loose and downward, in the form of small silken paws, hardly any of them much thicker than a crayon shading, cunninger than long round locks of gold to trick the heart.

Laetitia had nothing to show resembling such beauty.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 穿越之我要做怪医

    穿越之我要做怪医

    一个怪异的穿越,遇到怪怪的他。难得他第一次有想法,想把这个小女人留在身边,她却不屑和他在一起,还要闯荡江湖,做什么怪医!还是和他最好朋友。那怎么行,不管用什么办法也要将她留下。
  • 制霸老公,请放手

    制霸老公,请放手

    她为了保住父亲生前的心血,被迫和他分手。从此他们形同陌路却又日日相见。他和别人相亲高调喊话,让众人关注。“相亲就相亲,我不在乎,我不在乎,我不在乎!”她无动于衷。正式订婚时她却意外出现,包中藏刀。“你敢和别人结婚,我就敢死在当场。”“张兮兮,是不是我把手里的股份给你,你就会和我睡。”他邪魅的问道。“你就不能把股份分几次给我,多睡几次!”捂脸~~
  • 飘絮浮沉

    飘絮浮沉

    无为出生高贵,父亲是这个星球的掌控者,他自然从小丰衣足食。他很聪明,但无意中得到一块破损不堪的“玉碟”后,开始研究,终于大乘道法。在妻子死后,心灰意冷的他消沉了很久,在好友的勉励下振奋起来,开始一心研究功法。
  • 诺贝尔文学奖文集:米洛依

    诺贝尔文学奖文集:米洛依

    诺贝尔文学奖,以其人类理想主义的伟大精神,为世界文学提供了永恒的标准。其中所包含的诗、小说、散文、戏剧、哲学、史学等不同体裁。不同风格的杰作,流光溢彩,各具特色,全面展现了20世纪世界文学的总体各局。这些路数迥异的作家,虽语种不同、观念不同、背景不同,但他们那高擎思想主义旗帜的雄姿是相同的,他们那奋勇求索的自由精神是相同的。而他们的雄姿,无不闪现于他们的作品之中;他们的精神,无不渗透于这些作品的字里行间。这套丛书所承载的,正是他们那令万世崇敬的全部精华。一套丛书,为我们竖起了一座20世纪的文学丰碑。
  • 梦之彼端I北夷之旅

    梦之彼端I北夷之旅

    传说,有一家店,只在月蚀之夜营业,为人类和亡魂实现愿望,但是得付出难以预料的代价这家店,来无影,去无踪,只有有缘者才能进入
  • 潜思维的力量

    潜思维的力量

    本书从人文哲学的角度剖析思维,创新地提出了“潜思维”这一突破性的概念。潜思维的力量相当惊人,足以改变人的一生。“潜思维”的提出,必将为人们打开一个崭新的思维视界。本书本着实用、管用、好用的宗旨,将潜思维细化成若干种思维,对其进行了通俗易懂的讲解。
  • LOL之九洲纵横录

    LOL之九洲纵横录

    重生异世大陆,没有武魂?没有关系,我有英雄系统。变成风女吹一波,再变亚索连大招,再跳螳螂收割,任你手眼通天,也要跪倒在地!什么,你说你有神器傍身?水火不灭,万法不侵?不好意思,我左手饮血剑,右手无尽之刃,身穿狂徒铠甲,脚蹬狂战士胫甲,就是干你丫的。你说你天赋异禀?不好意思,九大基石天赋任我切换,战争热诚,冥火之拥,战争领主的嗜血,一秒一个,换着玩。
  • 极品县令

    极品县令

    【起点草根阶级签约作品】何为逍遥?何是逍遥?醉卧美人膝?醒掌天下权?为人心?是志趣?此来古今谁能知?晨昏饮佳酿,醉望孤月浩空灵,知心相陪,天下赋之笑,随我意,不为心,不枉人世走一遭。他是一个另类的县令,文不能定国,武不能安邦。却是一个做到封王的县令,一个说做宰相不如做县令的强人,当然,还是一个穿越史上艳遇排名第一的县令。这是一个英雄辈出的年代。外抗强敌驱除胡虏、内解纷乱救济百姓,成为每一个大唐儿女的梦想。看那桃花山谷里剑影似舞,听那苍山凌松下拳风如歌。我辈英才亦当后生可畏。且看这小小县令如何玩转初唐,笑谈天下事,嬉戏花丛,终成大唐极品县令!
  • 二十几岁女孩必须读懂的7种情感色彩

    二十几岁女孩必须读懂的7种情感色彩

    本书介绍了7种情感色彩,并分别介绍绿色信号、橙色信号、红色信号、灰色信号、黑色信号、蓝色信号、紫色信号在爱情中代表的情感。
  • 胡适的北大哲学课(卷三)

    胡适的北大哲学课(卷三)

    本书以胡适在北京大学的所有哲学讲义为母本,再综合胡适关于中国哲学的其他著作整理而成,力求为读者构建一个最全的胡适哲学体系,让读者最直接的感受哲学大师的风采。卷三主讲近世哲学。