登陆注册
20097400000049

第49章 CHAPTER XIII(1)

SKIRMISHING.

"So the Rev. Joseph Bellamy Stoker has called upon you, Susan Posey, has he? And wants you to come and talk religion with him in his study, Susan Posey, does he? Religion is a good thing, my dear, the best thing in the world, and never better than when we are young, and no young people need it more than young girls. There are temptations to all, and to them as often as to any, Susan Posey. And temptations come to them in places where they don't look for them, and from persons they never thought of as tempters. So I am very glad to have your thoughts called to the subject of religion. 'Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth.'

"But Susan Posey, my dear, I think you hard better not break in upon the pious meditations of the Rev. Joseph Bellamy Stoker in his private study. A monk's cell and a minister's library are hardly the places for young ladies. They distract the attention of these good men from their devotions and their sermons. If you think you must go, you had better take Mrs. Hopkins with you. She likes religious conversation, and it will do her good too, and save a great deal of time for the minister, conversing with two at once. She is of discreet age, and will tell you when it is time to come away,--you might stay too long, you know. I've known young persons stay a good deal too long at these interviews,--a great deal too long, Susan Posey!"Such was the fatherly counsel of Master Byles Gridley.

Susan was not very quick of apprehension, but she could not help seeing the justice of Master Gridley's remark, that for a young person to go and break in on the hours that a minister requires for his studies, without being accompanied by a mature friend who would remind her when it was time to go, would be taking an unfair advantage of his kindness in asking her to call upon him. She promised, therefore, that she would never go without having Mrs.

Hopkins as her companion, and with this assurance her old friend rested satisfied.

It is altogether likely that he had some deeper reason for his advice than those with which he satisfied the simple nature of Susan Posey.

Of that it will be easier to judge after a glance at the conditions and character of the minister and his household.

The Rev. Mr. Stoker had, in addition to the personal advantages already alluded to, some other qualities which might prove attractive to many women. He had, in particular, that art of sliding into easy intimacy with them which implies some knowledge of the female nature, and, above all, confidence in one's powers. There was little doubt, the gossips maintained, that many of the younger women of his parish would have been willing, in certain contingencies, to lift for him that other end of his yoke under which poor Mrs. Stoker was fainting, unequal to the burden.

That lady must have been some years older than her husband,--how many we need not inquire too curiously,--but in vitality she had long passed the prime in which he was still flourishing. She had borne him five children, and cried her eyes hollow over the graves of three of them. Household cares had dragged upon her; the routine of village life wearied her; the parishioners expected too much of her as the minister's wife; she had wanted more fresh air and more cheerful companionship; and her thoughts had fed too much on death and sin,--good bitter tonics to increase the appetite for virtue, but not good as food and drink for the spirit.

But there was another grief which lay hidden far beneath these obvious depressing influences. She felt that she was no longer to her husband what she had been to him, and felt it with something of self-reproach,--which was a wrong to herself, for she had been a true and tender wife. Deeper than all the rest was still another feeling, which had hardly risen into the region of inwardly articulated thought, but lay unshaped beneath all the syllabled trains of sleeping or waking consciousness.

The minister was often consulted by his parishioners upon spiritual matters, and was in the habit of receiving in his study visitors who came with such intent. Sometimes it was old weak-eyed Deacon Rumrill, in great iron-bowed spectacles, with hanging nether lip and tremulous voice, who had got his brain onto a muddle about the beast with two horns, or the woman that fled into the wilderness, or other points not settled to his mind in Scott's Commentary. The minister was always very busy at such times, and made short work of his deacon's doubts. Or it might be that an ancient woman, a mother or a grandmother in Israel, came with her questions and her perplexities to her pastor; and it was pretty certain that just at that moment he was very deep in his next sermon, or had a pressing visit to make.

But it would also happen occasionally that one of the tenderer ewe-lambs of the flock needed comfort from the presence of the shepherd.

Poor Mrs. Stoker noticed, or thought she noticed, that the good man had more leisure for the youthful and blooming sister than for the more discreet and venerable matron or spinster. The sitting was apt to be longer; and the worthy pastor would often linger awhile about the door, to speed the parting guest, perhaps, but a little too much after the fashion of young people who are not displeased with each other, and who often find it as hard to cross a threshold single as a witch finds it to get over a running stream. More than once, the pallid, faded wife had made an errand to the study, and, after a keen look at the bright young cheeks, flushed with the excitement of intimate spiritual communion, had gone back to her chamber with her hand pressed against her heart, and the bitterness of death in her soul.

The end of all these bodily and mental trials was, that the minister's wife had fallen into a state of habitual invalidism, such as only women, who feel all the nerves which in men are as insensible as telegraph-wires, can experience.

同类推荐
  • Euthyphro

    Euthyphro

    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。
  • The Strength of the Strong

    The Strength of the Strong

    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。
  • Revolution and Counter-Revolution

    Revolution and Counter-Revolution

    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。
  • 佛说譬喻经

    佛说譬喻经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宋人集

    宋人集

    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
  • 网游之重生杀神

    网游之重生杀神

    重生前,他平平淡淡,但却因为偶然得到一把兵器,而导致杀身之祸,背叛之苦,伤心之痛。重生后,他立下誓言,佛挡杀佛,人挡杀人,神挡杀神。报仇雪恨,站在传奇之颠。问鼎大陆,俯视苍生,天下无敌!求回复求吐槽求收藏求推荐!!!谢谢
  • 异形之邦

    异形之邦

    从蓝星人入侵以来,最后一批“蓝盾”军校毕业的学生罗杰,在一次袭击中罗杰得到了一种特殊能量体Vnzx但也没能逃脱被抓的命运,罗杰被迫关在休眠舱中休眠。罗杰苏醒后,出现了新的敌人,新的政权,在Vnzx的引导下罗杰走出了一条不平凡的路,最后罗杰发现这真正的敌人其实就是自己......
  • 十年清风

    十年清风

    你的前世是死神特工,音杀高手,却因为自己男友和别的女人上床,不知不觉死在了海里。虾米,我这是和小说里一样穿越了?穿越就穿吧,呵还为什么不是个平民家庭?她现在只想过安宁的生活。上天不作美,她想安静的度过一生,却屡次遭人陷害,做个宰相之女容易吗我?很好,我最亲爱的若弱夫君,还有笑面虎的姐妹,你们给我等着!
  • 回族民间文学导论

    回族民间文学导论

    《回族民间文学导论》,内容不仅涉及到回族神话、传说、故事、歌谣、叙事诗、说唱艺术等,而且还对回族民间文学形成与发展史以及理论架构作了比较细致入微的分析与探讨,许多材料与观点较之以往的研究都有较大的充实与突破。
  • 新婚弃妻:错嫁嗜血总裁

    新婚弃妻:错嫁嗜血总裁

    为了救大哥,她阴错阳差的嫁给了自己多年喜欢的人,带着对未来的满心憧憬,她以为她会永远幸福,可是,为什么她的翼哥哥却好像变了一个人,多年不见,他们之间到底发生了什么事情,眼前的这儿男人真的是她的翼哥哥吗?一次次伤害到底是有意的安排还是原本就如此,是她破坏了他的幸福了吗?既然这样,为什么连离开都那么的难?三番几次的伤害,让她的心更是千疮百孔。为什么我救过很多人的心,却唯独却救不了自己的!
  • 网游三国之天下无双

    网游三国之天下无双

    世界上一切统治者都是残酷血腥的屠戮者,不管是“宁可我负天下人,休教天下人负我”的曹孟德,“惟贤惟德,仁服于人”的刘玄德,“明略绝群,英勇无双,雄霸江东”的孙氏父子三杰,还是“四世三公,名门望族”的袁氏二兄,都是杀害蝼蚁百姓的凶手。谋士武将为了欺骗世人的大义,为了拯救苦难苍生的梦想,恬不知耻的甘做刽子手,为屠夫们而驾驭。名?利?混乱的汉末三国中,谁也躲不过,谁也说不清。古人言:止戈为武。如果没有肆无忌惮的杀戮,就换不来短暂虚假的和平。流落鲜卑草原,看刘宇怎么利用社会新思潮,撬动这片乱世中的洪流,为汉末三国增添春天的暖意。(群号:602084804)
  • 铁血文明路

    铁血文明路

    1864年,愚昧,殖民,邪狞,仇杀,各种思潮相互交织冲突,面对“千年未有之变局”,杨华发誓要为华夏文明趟出一条康庄大道。
  • 江湖客传

    江湖客传

    江湖孤客游风,机缘巧合,习得一身高深武功。他艺高胆大,仗义人间。人缘佳处,更是美女相伴。。。本书在刀光剑影中,融入了人生哲理,让读者可以在读书的同时,领略人生佳境。
  • 重生之前妻有毒

    重生之前妻有毒

    上一世,她爱他如命。新婚三日,他目睹她被情敌害死却无动于衷。重生归来,再嫁他为妻,却为让他尝尽痛苦,当初她怎样卑微祈求他的爱意,如今她都要一点一点讨回来!“你敢推开我?”“为什么不敢?你以为我还是以前那只小绵羊,任你宰割?拜托你睁大眼,我是神偷林西娅,不是你的情妇林西娅!”“去哪儿?”她扬了扬下巴:“睡觉啊。”他皱眉,“床就在这儿,你想去哪儿?”她嘴角一扬,“我只说了搬进这个房间,可没说要和你睡在一张床上,合同上写的清清楚楚,难道你想反悔吗?”
  • 我的岳父是韦小宝

    我的岳父是韦小宝

    一个悲催的工作加班男,因为追剧竟然穿越到了古代;而且还是曾经自己最爱的鹿鼎公的年代;是不是应该做些什么超过自己的偶像韦小宝呢?看穿越在清明时代的他,如何超越一代公爵鹿鼎公。