登陆注册
20334700000029

第29章

We were to go the next day to the races, and I woke with more anxiety about the weather than about the lovers, or potential lovers. But after realising that the day was beautiful, on that large scale of loveliness which seems characteristic of the summer days at Saratoga, where they have them almost the size of the summer days I knew when I was a boy, I was sensible of a secondary worry in my mind, which presently related itself to Kendricks and Miss Gage.

It was a haze of trouble merely, however, such as burns off, like a morning fog, when the sun gets higher, and it was chiefly on my wife's account.

I suppose that the great difference between her conscience and one originating outside of New England (if any conscience can originate outside of New England) is that it cannot leave the moral government of the universe in the hands of divine Providence. I was willing to leave so many things which I could not control to the Deity, who probably could that she accused me of fatalism, and I was held to be little better than one of the wicked because I would not forecast the effects of what I did in the lives of others. I insisted that others were also probably in the hands of the somma sapienza e il primo amore, and that I was so little aware of the influence of other lives upon my own, even where there had been a direct and strenuous effort to affect me, that I could not readily believe others had swerved from the line of their destiny because of me.

Especially I protested that I could not hold myself guilty of misfortunes I had not intended, even though my faulty conduct had caused them. As to this business of Kendricks and Miss Gage, Idenied in the dispute I now began tacitly to hold with Mrs. March's conscience that my conduct had been faulty. I said that there was no earthly harm in my having been interested by the girl's forlornness when I first saw her; that I did not do wrong to interest Mrs. March in her; that she did not sin in going shopping with Miss Gage and Mrs. Deering; that we had not sinned, either of us, in rejoicing that Kendricks had come to Saratoga, or in letting Mrs. Deering go home to her sick husband and leave Miss Gage on our hands; that we were not wicked in permitting the young fellow to help us make her have a good time. In this colloquy I did all the reasoning, and Mrs. March's conscience was completely silenced; but it rose triumphant in my miserable soul when I met Miss Gage at breakfast, looking radiantly happy, and disposed to fellowship me in an unusual confidence because, as I clearly perceived, of our last night's adventure. I said to myself bitterly that happiness did not become her style, and I hoped that she would get away with her confounded rapture before Mrs. March came down. I resolved not to tell Mrs. March if it fell out so, but at the same time, as a sort of atonement, I decided to begin keeping the sharpest kind of watch upon Miss Gage for the outward signs and tokens of love.

She said, "When you began to talk that way last night, Mr. March, it almost took my breath, and if you hadn't gone so far, and mentioned about the sunset through the sleety trees, I never should have suspected you.""Ah, that's the trouble with men, Miss Gage." And when I said "men"I fancied she flushed a little. "We never know when to stop; we always overdo it; if it were not for that we should be as perfect as women. Perhaps you'll give me another chance, though.""No; we shall be on our guard after this." She corrected herself and said, "I shall always be looking out for you now," and she certainly showed herself conscious in the bridling glance that met my keen gaze.

"Good heavens!" I thought. "Has it really gone so far?" and more than ever I resolved not to tell Mrs. March.

I went out to engage a carriage to take us to the races, and to agree with the driver that he should wait for us at a certain corner some blocks distant from our hotel, where we were to walk and find him. We always did this, because there were a number of clergymen in our house, and Mrs. March could not make it seem right to start for the races direct from the door, though she held that it was perfectly right for us to go. For the same reason she made the driver stop short of our destination on our return, and walked home the rest of the way. Almost the first time we practised this deception I was met at the door by the sweetest and dearest of these old divines, who said, "Have you ever seen the races here? I'm told the spectacle is something very fine," and I was obliged to own that I had once had a glimpse of them. But it was in vain that I pleaded this fact with Mrs. March; she insisted that the appearance of not going to the races was something that we owed the cloth, and no connivance on their part could dispense us from it.

As I now went looking up and down the street for the driver who was usually on the watch for me about eleven o'clock on a fair day of the races, I turned over in my mind the several accidents which are employed in novels to bring young people to a realising sense of their feelings toward each other, and wondered which of them I might most safely invoke. I was not anxious to have Kendricks and Miss Gage lovers; it would be altogether simpler for us if they were not;but if they were, the sooner they knew it and we knew it the better.

I thought of a carriage accident, in which he should seize her and leap with her from the flying vehicle, while the horses plunged madly on, but I did not know what in this case would become of Mrs.

March and me. Besides, I could think of nothing that would frighten our driver's horses, and I dismissed the fleeting notion of getting any others because Mrs. March liked their being so safe, and she had, besides, interested herself particularly in the driver, who had a family and counted upon our custom. The poor fellow came in sight presently, and smilingly made the usual arrangement with me, and an hour later he delivered us all sound in wind and limb at the racecourse.

同类推荐
  • Christ in Flanders

    Christ in Flanders

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典五十一岁至六十岁部

    明伦汇编人事典五十一岁至六十岁部

    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。
  • Other Things Being Equal

    Other Things Being Equal

    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。
  • Female Suffrage

    Female Suffrage

    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。
  • 外科启玄

    外科启玄

    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
  • 一本日记本

    一本日记本

    我不知道什么时候学会了,对待所有事情都不再认真,现在莫名的心痛,不能自拔的心痛,赶着我上路,流水无痕,落花相惜,失忆,我知道。
  • 凯源玺的恋爱

    凯源玺的恋爱

    这本书是虚幻的!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!讲的是TFBOYS与女主的一次偶遇,渐渐熟悉,有经过一次次分离,最后甜蜜的在一起
  • 爱情阴谋

    爱情阴谋

    妈妈在屋里给我收拾东西,一边不停的唠叨,现在都大学生了,为人处事可不能再像以前那样任性倔强,要是还像以前那样,动不动耍小姐脾气,有你苦头吃的。
  • 从零开始学英语,“袋”着走

    从零开始学英语,“袋”着走

    这是一本简单易学,同时也能带给你成就感的英语口语入门书!100%从零开始,不论你的英语目前处于什么水平,只要你有信心,随时都可以拿起本书开始从零学起!长期以来,对于英语初学者,尤其是对于自学者来说,都期望拥有一本好的英语学习书。学了十几年英语的人有成百上千万,但是真正能将英语学以致用的人却是凤毛麟角。因此,一本比较切合中国英语学习者实际需要的英语学习书就显得尤为重要。
  • 上清金阙帝君五斗三一图诀

    上清金阙帝君五斗三一图诀

    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。
  • 萌宠制造机

    萌宠制造机

    萌宠制造机,制造一个属于自己的宠物王国。
  • 前任你找虐

    前任你找虐

    登机那一刻,雨晴就特期待着往后的日子必然妥妥得彻底摆脱过去的糟糕烂事,踏上新的旅程,可是谁又能预测命运的安排竟会是如此滑稽呢----全机舱的人集体疯狂穿越。冒险就此开始,在那个奇怪的未知空间大陆,她竟然遇见了自己的前任们,于是上演各种纠缠追逐和各种腹黑嬉戏虐恋,不争不休与藕断丝连。且看她是如何披星戴月,过五关斩六将,俘获奴役那些前任们,最终把那个他乡变故乡。
  • 环月旅行(科幻大师经典译丛)

    环月旅行(科幻大师经典译丛)

    三位旅行家到月球探险,由于途中一颗火流星的影响使他们逸出轨道,无法抵达月球,旅行家们不顾危险,仔细观测月球的面貌并作了笔记。他们乘坐的炮弹最后坠入太平洋,被一艘军舰救起,并受到美国人民的热烈欢迎。本书通过三位旅行家的奇异历险,描绘了太空变幻无穷的美景。
  • 凤妃惊天下之末世轮回

    凤妃惊天下之末世轮回

    -彼岸花开/篇-“帝的女人,我泪歆,不稀罕了!”“对不起,我会陪你一起死。”黄泉那朵朵的彼岸花,此时竟格外鲜艳,像是为女人惆怅着。她悲哀的一生,在她最心爱的男子手中结束了。看着她死,黄泉之中,她是旁观者,而这一幕,却触动了她的心弦。重生异世她劈波斩浪,行走着,从她,一个懦弱无能的公主,成为她,令所有人敬畏的王者。她有一个好的师傅,有一把爱讲废话处处她对着干的破剑,更有一个“追随者,一堆兽兽,还有“他”。前缘再续,一万年前的悲剧是否还会重演?她还会恋上么?
  • 魔王契约之初夏

    魔王契约之初夏

    与魔王交易,变卖是自己的灵魂,浅色的初夏里,蒙上了一层淡淡的血雾...楚林枫是杀手,但他却有一颗与杀手完全不同的心,他痴情,只是,他爱的人,把他当做哥哥,爱他的人,却被他当做妹妹。爱的轮回永无止境,痛的轮回也永无止境。用尽心血缔造的回忆,却等来了一个怎么也想不到的结局~夏日的回忆,成为了秋日的夜语,在每个风起的夜里,静静地述说着离别的思绪~