登陆注册
20266000000012

第12章

Having upset every one of our calculations on the first day of her arrival, she next falsified all our predictions before she had been with us a week.Instead of fracturing her skull with the pony, as Morgan had prophesied, she sat the sturdy, sure-footed, mischievous little brute as if she were part and parcel of himself.With an old water-proof cloak of mine on her shoulders, with a broad-flapped Spanish hat of Owen's on her head, with a wild imp of a Welsh boy following her as guide and groom on a bare-backed pony, and with one of the largest and ugliest cur-dogs in England (which she had picked up, lost and starved by the wayside) barking at her heels, she scoured the country in all directions, and came back to dinner, as she herself expressed it, "with the manners of an Amazon, the complexion of a dairy-maid, and the appetite of a wolf."On days when incessant rain kept her indoors, she amused herself with a new freak.Making friends everywhere, as became The Queen of Hearts, she even ingratiated herself with the sour old housekeeper, who had predicted so obstinately that she was certain to run away.To the amazement of everybody in the house, she spent hours in the kitchen, learning to make puddings and pies, and trying all sorts of recipes with very varying success, from an antiquated cookery book which she had discovered at the back of my bookshelves.At other times, when I expected her to be upstairs, languidly examining her finery, and idly polishing her trinkets, I heard of her in the stables, feeding the rabbits, and talking to the raven, or found her in the conservatory, fumigating the plants, and half suffocating the gardener, who was trying to moderate her enthusiasm in the production of smoke.

Instead of finding amusement, as we had expected, in Owen's studio, she puckered up her pretty face in grimaces of disgust at the smell of paint in the room, and declared that the horrors of the Earthquake at Lisbon made her feel hysterical.Instead of showing a total want of interest in my business occupations on the estate, she destroyed my dignity as steward by joining me in my rounds on her pony, with her vagabond retinue at her heels.

Instead of devouring the novels I had ordered for her, she left them in the box, and put her feet on it when she felt sleepy after a hard day's riding.Instead of practicing for hours every evening at the piano, which I had hired with such a firm conviction of her using it, she showed us tricks on the cards, taught us new games, initiated us into the mystics of dominoes, challenged us with riddles, an even attempted to stimulate us into acting charades--in short, tried every evening amusement in the whole category except the amusement of music.Every new aspect of her character was a new surprise to us, and every fresh occupation that she chose was a fresh contradiction to our previous expectations.The value of experience as a guide is unquestionable in many of the most important affairs of life;but, speaking for myself personally, I never understood the utter futility of it, where a woman is concerned, until I was brought into habits of daily communication with our fair guest.

In her domestic relations with ourselves she showed that exquisite nicety of discrimination in studying our characters, habits and tastes which comes by instinct with women, and which even the longest practice rarely teaches in similar perfection to men.She saw at a glance all the underlying tenderness and generosity concealed beneath Owen's external shyness, irresolution, and occasional reserve; and, from first to last, even in her gayest moments, there was always a certain quietly-implied consideration--an easy, graceful, delicate deference--in her manner toward my eldest brother, which won upon me and upon him every hour in the day.

With me she was freer in her talk, quicker in her actions, readier and bolder in all the thousand little familiarities of our daily intercourse.When we met in the morning she always took Owen's hand, and waited till he kissed her on the forehead.In my case she put both her hands on my shoulders, raised herself on tiptoe, and saluted me briskly on both checks in the foreign way.

She never differed in opinion with Owen without propitiating him first by some little artful compliment in the way of excuse.She argued boldly with me on every subject under the sun, law and politics included; and, when I got the better of her, never hesitated to stop me by putting her hand on my lips, or by dragging me out into the garden in the middle of a sentence.

As for Morgan, she abandoned all restraint in his case on the second day of her sojourn among us.She had asked after him as soon as she was settled in her two rooms on the third story; had insisted on knowing why he lived at the top of the tower, and why he had not appeared to welcome her at the door; had entrapped us into all sorts of damaging admissions, and had thereupon discovered the true state of the case in less than five minutes.

From that time my unfortunate second brother became the victim of all that was mischievous and reckless in her disposition.She forced him downstairs by a series of maneuvers which rendered his refuge uninhabitable, and then pretended to fall violently in love with him.She slipped little pink three-cornered notes under his door, entreating him to make appointments with her, or tenderly inquiring how he would like to see her hair dressed at dinner on that day.She followed him into the garden, sometimes to ask for the privilege of smelling his tobacco-smoke, sometimes to beg for a lock of his hair, or a fragment of his ragged old dressing-gown, to put among her keepsakes.She sighed at him when he was in a passion, and put her handkerchief to her eyes when he was sulky.In short, she tormented Morgan, whenever she could catch him, with such ingenious and such relentless malice, that he actually threatened to go back to London, and prey once more, in the unscrupulous character of a doctor, on the credulity of mankind.

Thus situated in her relations toward ourselves, and thus occupied by country diversions of her own choosing, Miss Jessie passed her time at The Glen Tower, excepting now and then a dull hour in the long evenings, to her guardian's satisfaction--and, all things considered, not without pleasure to herself.Day followed day in calm and smooth succession, and five quiet weeks had elapsed out of the six during which her stay was to last without any remarkable occurrence to distinguish them, when an event happened which personally affected me in a very serious manner, and which suddenly caused our handsome Queen of Hearts to become the object of my deepest anxiety in the present, and of my dearest hopes for the future.

同类推荐
  • 小儿未生胎养门

    小儿未生胎养门

    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。
  • 闲情偶寄

    闲情偶寄

    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。
  • 路傍草

    路傍草

    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。
  • 佛说十支居士八城人经

    佛说十支居士八城人经

    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。
  • 存韩

    存韩

    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。
热门推荐
  • 关于我突然成为游戏测试员之后

    关于我突然成为游戏测试员之后

    新人试水作一个关于一群人被修改记忆之后去测试还未发售的次时代游戏机上的游戏的故事。测试员们一次又一次地恢复记忆,却又一次又一次地被修改。介于现实与虚拟世界的各种纠纷,各种峰回路转,各种阴谋。30种游戏,30种不同的玩法!【内容以实物为准】(笑)注:作品在其他小说网站上书名为《关于我突然成为测试员之后》
  • 回到大山

    回到大山

    刘鸣辉是一个普通的打工仔,回家前意外的事件得到一把带有空间的炎帝锄,从此改变了生活轨迹,可是炎帝锄真的只是一个可以慢慢变大的空间吗,到底是刘鸣辉利用炎帝锄,还是炎帝锄有其他未知的功能......
  • 娘子大人,别跟为夫卖节操

    娘子大人,别跟为夫卖节操

    一场错误追踪,她跌进天裕国一轮轮政治阴谋,从此笑看上位者们以天下为注,赌一局成王败寇,是身不由己,还是早有预谋?当楚河与汉界势必水火不容,她,和他,是相爱相杀,还是穷途末路?
  • 魔图天书

    魔图天书

    幻雪大陆风起云涌,看林木小哥如何翻手为云覆手为雨。
  • 云起悠歌

    云起悠歌

    她初次见他,是在南安寺中。他是高高在上的城主长子,她是不足一提的富商庶女。不知谁倾了谁心?她再次见他,是在陋巷之中。他是身无分文的平民百姓,她是名满洛城的丹青画师。“为了配得上你,勤学苦练。如今,终于可以。”“可惜楚江身份卑微,配不上姑娘。”她笑而不语,他亦是抬首相望。“为何?”“不是不愿。只是爱一个人,知她心中有自己,足矣。”
  • 十里红妆醉倾城

    十里红妆醉倾城

    “娘,我会替你报仇的”,小小的身子,冰冷的眸子里的恨意浓浓“我会照顾你一辈子的”某男道,“我不信”冰冷的空气,冰冷的宫殿,那个男人对她说:“我爱你但更爱江山”她哭了,哭了很久。她死了,他也死了。若有来生,便是我负你之时
  • 鬼谷子叫我们精明点

    鬼谷子叫我们精明点

    本书精选出鬼谷子最为经典和实用的名言,通过历史故事、谋略故事以及商场案例对其进行深入的解读,其内容包括:“人心惟危,道心惟微”、“纵横捭阖,进退自如”、“慧眼识人,大胆用人”、“一言之辩,重于九鼎”等七章。
  • 王阳明人生励心课:幸福只在心中求

    王阳明人生励心课:幸福只在心中求

    幸福不是你有装修豪华的房子,也不是有令人艳羡的汽车,更不是富可敌国,当然也不是拥有无边的权势。幸福只是别人通过任何方式都无法感知的属于你自己的一种心灵深处的美好感觉。
  • 喜羊羊与灰太狼之幻影的精灵

    喜羊羊与灰太狼之幻影的精灵

    《喜羊羊与灰太狼之幻影的精灵》正在百度贴吧喜羊羊与灰太狼吧、创世中文网连载中!!
  • 噬尸灵

    噬尸灵

    有一类人他们把灵魂押给死神,虽有转世但记忆不灭。他们依附灵魂和血肉维持生命,杀戮成习,被称为世界上最恐怖的存在。这一世他和他的相遇,再次打开了噬尸灵寻找灵魂的征途。