登陆注册
14821000000071

第71章

She began to see that she must take a stronger tone if she meant to bring this importunity to an end, and she answered:--"I do not doubt your affection or your sincerity, Mr. Ratcliffe. It is myself I doubt. You have been kind enough to give me much of your confidence this winter, and if I do not yet know about politics all that is to be known, I have learned enough to prove that I could do nothing sillier than to suppose myself competent to reform anything. If I pretended to think so, I should be a mere worldly, ambitious woman, such as people think me. The idea of my purifying politics is absurd. I am sorry to speak so strongly, but I mean it. I do not cling very closely to life, and do not value my own very highly, but I will not tangle it in such a way; I will not share the profits of vice; I am not willing to be made a receiver of stolen goods, or to be put in a position where I am perpetually obliged to maintain that immorality is a virtue!"

As she went on she became more and more animated and her words took a sharper edge than she had intended. Ratcliffe felt it, and showed his annoyance. His face grew dark and his eyes looked out at her with their ugliest expression. He even opened his mouth for an angry retort, but controlled himself with an effort, and presently resumed his argument.

"I had hoped," he began more solemnly than ever, "that I should find in you a lofty courage which would disregard such risks. If all tme men and women were to take the tone you have taken, our government would soon perish. If you consent to share my career, I do not deny that you may find less satisfaction than I hope, but you will lead a mere death in life if you place yourself like a saint on a solitary column. I plead what I believe to be your own cause in pleading mine. Do not sacrifice your life!"

Mrs. Lee was in despair. She could not reply what was on her lips, that to marry a murderer or a thief was not a sure way of diminishing crime. She had already said something so much like this that she shrank from speaking more plainly. So she fell back on her old theme.

"We must at all events, Mr. Ratcliffe, use our judgments according to our own consciences. I can only repeat now what I said at first. I am sorry to seem insensible to your expressions towards me, but I cannot do what you wish. Let us maintain our old relations if you will, but do not press me further on this subject."

Ratcliffe grew more and more sombre as he became aware that defeat was staring him in the face. He was tenacious of purpose, and he had never in his life abandoned an object which he had so much at heart as this. He would not abandon it. For the moment, so completely had the fascination of Mrs.

Lee got the control of him, he would rather have abandoned the Presidency itself than her. He really loved her as earnestly as it was in his nature to love anything. To her obstinacy he would oppose an obstinacy greater still; but in the meanwhile his attack was disconcerted, and he was at a loss what next to do. Was it not possible to change his ground; to offer inducements that would appeal even more strongly to feminine ambition and love of display than the Presidency itself? He began again:--"Is there no form of pledge I can give you? no sacrifice I can make? You dislike politics. Shall I leave political life? I will do anything rather than lose you. I can probably control the appointment of Minister to England. The President would rather have me there than here. Suppose I were to abandon politics and take the English mission. Would that sacrifice not affect you? You might pass four years in London where there would be no politics, and where your social position would be the best in the world; and this would lead to the Presidency almost as surely as the other."

Then suddenly, seeing that he was making no headway, he threw off his studied calmness and broke out in an appeal of almost equally studied violence.

"Mrs. Lee! Madeleine! I cannot live without you. The sound of your voice--the touch of your hand--even the rustle of your dress--are like wine to me. For God's sake, do not throw me over!"

He meant to crush opposition by force. More and more vehement as he spoke he actually bent over and tried to seize her hand. She drew it back as though he were a reptile. She was exasperated by this obstinate disregard of her forbearance, this gross attempt to bribe her with office, this flagrant abandonment of even a pretence of public virtue; the mere thought of his touch on her person was more repulsive than a loathsome disease. Bent upon teaching him a lesson he would never forget, she spoke out abruptly, and with evident signs of contempt in her voice and manner:

"Mr. Ratcliffe, I am not to be bought. No rank, no dignity, no consideration, no conceivable expedient would induce me to change my mind.

Let us have no more of this!"

Ratcliffe had already been more than once, during this conversation, on the verge of losing his temper. Naturally dictatorial and violent, only long training and severe experience had taught him self-control, and when he gave way to passion his bursts of fury were still tremendous. Mrs. Lee's evident personal disgust, even more than her last sharp rebuke, passed the bounds of his patience. As he stood before her, even she, high-spirited as she was, and not in a calm frame of mind, felt a momentary shock at seeing how his face flushed, his eyes gleamed, and his hands trembled with rage.

"Ah!" exclaimed he, turning upon her with a harshness, almost a savageness, of manner that startled her still more; "I might have known what to expect!

Mrs. Clinton warned me early. She said then that I should find you a heartless coquette!"

"Mr. Ratcliffe!" exclaimed Madeleine, rising from her chair, and speaking in a warning voice almost as passionate as his own.

"A heartless coquette!" he repeated, still more harshly than before;

"she said you would do just this! that you meant to deceive me! that you lived on flattery! that you could never be anything but a coquette, and that if you married me, I should repent it all my life.

I believe her now!"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 终结刺客

    终结刺客

    十步杀人,千里不留行。重生三年前,有恩报恩,有仇报仇。杀人遇上不死人……不敢相信的事实!
  • 黑道老大教学生

    黑道老大教学生

    白冰刚刚踏入高二z班,就听见‘哐’的一声,门被踹开了,白冰刚想开骂哪个混蛋这么没教养,就听带头的那个说:‘谁家的佣人,不在家打扫卫生,来学校干什么?’班里同学不留情面的哈哈大笑,个个笑的肚子都抽筋了。白冰怒视带头的那个,心里想:‘我现在是老师,要淡定,以后有你们好受的。’
  • 奔流如兮

    奔流如兮

    一兮往事,一兮愁苦,一场梦,一种殇;一种欢乐里,是一场浮生的幻境;她总奢望能在一片天空下呼吸,他却渴望在一种恬淡里宁静生活,或许有些梦是有些温暖的回忆,可他们的梦,带着畏惧和期盼,在一步步走向未来的生活中,慢慢消散,亦或者是,更加凝实。
  • 送王书记归邠州

    送王书记归邠州

    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。
  • 我的爸爸是死宅

    我的爸爸是死宅

    壮年男子为何死宅家中?单亲家庭为何有妹空降?无良父亲又为何不管不顾?校园欺凌惨案,究竟是为何所为?隔壁少女门夜夜被敲,究竟是人是鬼?宅男父亲突然消失的背后又隐藏着什么?这一切的背后,是人性的扭曲还是道德的沦丧?是矛盾的爆发还是蛰伏的无奈?敬请关注大黑欧巴的年度巨献《我的爸爸是死宅》让我们跟随着镜头走进坚强少年的内心世界。“崽,阿爸没有完成的东西,就交给你了。
  • 召唤神话传奇

    召唤神话传奇

    宅男:我是咋死的?神秘人:你睡觉摔下床摔死。宅男:噢上帝!宅男全身发出淡淡的光。。。。。穿越了
  • 刘备发迹史

    刘备发迹史

    三国是个战国纷飞,群雄并起的时代,就像《三国演义》片尾曲中所唱“黯淡了刀光剑影,远去了鼓角铮鸣”,可是时空变化,岁月流逝,那一串串熟悉的姓名却不曾被带走,那些在历史的天地中纵横驰骋的鲜活面孔,跨越前年,依然在眼前飞扬,在我们心中永恒……谨以《刘备发迹史》献给不向命运屈服的英雄刘备,向非一般的刘玄德致敬!
  • 美子的村上

    美子的村上

    美子,生于北方的农村,排行老三。虽然父亲重男轻女,但是美子从小聪明伶俐,古灵精怪,颇受村里的大人喜欢。不管是青梅竹马的李冬,还是大学认识的徐然,都是对她呵护有加,甚至连刁难痞性的陈猛都对她心生爱意。但是美子的家也因为父亲的病故,发生了些许变化,不管是对于坚强的母亲王妮,还是两个懂事的姐姐。。。。。。
  • tfboys幸福迷香

    tfboys幸福迷香

    世界上有一种人普通而又让人羡慕的,他们的爱与恨、痛苦与兴奋宛如一个硬币一样,你不知道他会翻到那一面,但是你知道不管他翻到那一面他的几率是一样的,但,你要是稍稍动一下手脚。就会改变他的命运....
  • 神无情道

    神无情道

    青天大陆,神的起点被所有人认为呆子的楚枫,却因此而获得奇遇,从此一步步踏上他的传奇修炼路他的历程,是神的终结,还是......