登陆注册
15480400000022

第22章 Chapter IX(2)

"How shall I begin? Do you like fairy tales? Well, this is the soul of one without the fictional wings. Once upon a time, --I think that is the very best introduction extant, --a woman was left a widow with one little girl. She lived in New Orleans, where the blow of her husband's death and the loss of her good fortune came almost simultaneously. She must have had little moral courage, for as soon as she could, she left her home, not being able to bear the inevitable falling off of friends that follows loss of fortune. She wandered over the intermediate States between here and Louisiana, stopping nowhere long, but endeavoring to keep together the bodies and souls of herself and child by teaching. They kept this up for years until the mother succumbed. They were on the way from Nevada to Los Angeles when she died. The daughter, then not eighteen, went on to Los Angeles, where she buried her mother, and endeavored to continue teaching as she had been doing. She was young, unsophisticated, sad, and in want in a strange town. She applied for advice to a man highly honored and recommended by his fellow-citizens. The man played the brute. The girl fled--anywhere. Had she been less brave, she would have fled from herself.

She came to San Francisco and took a position as nurse-girl; children, she thought, could not play her false, and she might outlive it. The hope was cruel. She was living near my home, had seen my sign probably, and in the extremity of her distress came to me. There is a good woman who keeps a lodging-house, and who delights in doing me favors. I left the poor child in her hands, and she is now fully recovered. As a physician I can do no more for her, and yet melancholy has almost made a wreck of her. Nothing I say has any effect; all she answers is, 'It isn't worth while.' I understand her perfectly, but I wished to infuse into her some of her old spirit of independence. This morning I asked her if she intended to let herself drift on in this way. I may have spoken a little more harshly than necessary, for my words broke down completely the wall of dogged silence she had built around herself. 'Oh, sir,' she cried, weeping like the child she is, 'what can I do? Can I dare to take little children by the hand, stained as I am? Can I go as an impostor where, if people knew, they would snatch their loved ones from me? Oh, it would be too wretched!' I tried to remonstrate with her, told her that the lily in the dust is no less a lily than is her spotless sister held high above contamination. She looked at me miserably from her tear-stained face, and then said, 'Men may think so, but women don't; a stain with them is ignoble whether made by one's self or another. No woman knowing my story would think me free from dishonor, and hold out her clean hands to me.' 'Plenty,' I contradicted.

'Maybe,' she said humbly; 'but what would it mean? The hand would be held out at arm's length by women safe in their position, who would not fail to show me how debased they think me. I am young yet; can you show me a girl, like myself in years, but white as snow, kept safe from contamination, as you say, who, knowing my story, would hold out her hand to me and not feel herself besmirched by the contact? Do not say you can, for I know you cannot.' She was crying so violently that she would not listen to me.

When I left her, I myself could think of none of my young friends to whom I could propound the question. I know many sweet, kind girls, but I could count not one among them all who in such a case would be brave as she was womanly--until I thought of you."

Complete silence followed his words. He did not turn his glance from the street ahead of him. He had made no appeal, would make none, in fact. He had told the story with scarcely a reflection on its impropriety, that would have arrested another man from introducing such an element into his gentle fellowship with a girl like Ruth. His lack of hesitancy was born of his manly view of the outcast's blamelessness, of her dire necessity for help, and of a premonition that Ruth Levice would be as free from the artificiality of conventional surface modesty as was he, through the earnestness of the undertaking.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 灵破

    灵破

    比仙术更带劲,比魔法更炫,比灵气更狂暴。破灵大陆,是与灵意有很大关联,从古至今,已不知过去多久,破灵大陆流传着这样的流言:欲纵灵武修千年,却难脱凡化天神,待得黑莲显世时,灵意大劫近眼前!霖天后天生出黑莲,受族唾弃,举世皆敌.....举望天穹怒沧桑,不留今昔化悲恸。欲问灵意亦何物,手指苍穹灵破天。
  • 狩猎小女人

    狩猎小女人

    她和妹妹从小就被父母亲扔给视财如命的舅舅和舅妈,18岁那年被迫缀学。23岁那年,一向待她如珍宝的未婚夫却另娶她人....她伤心,绝望,从此带上面具生活。经过她5年的努力,终于在HS国际集团坐上了副总经理的位置。冰山美人,冷漠优雅...忽然被爱情之神丘比特的神箭射中.....
  • 昙花一现等君千年

    昙花一现等君千年

    一朝背叛,被逼上绝路的她,跳下悬崖。凤凰涅槃,在悬崖下她学会了救人和杀人。她,是江湖上人人闻风丧胆的冥风。而他,是姜国的六王爷。皇帝赐婚,让风轻狂和独孤尘这两个冤家被绑在同一条绳索上。明明没有任何感情的两个人,住在同一个屋檐下,每天抬头不见低头见的,日久见真情。独孤尘一怒之下一掌把毫无准备的风轻狂拍飞了出去,风轻狂被拍飞撞到柱子上,突然喉咙一股腥甜,风轻狂捂着胸口吼道:“独孤尘,有种你打死我!”“狂儿!别跑!为夫要和你造孩子!”独孤尘妖孽的对风轻狂说道。只见风轻狂朝独孤尘拍了拍屁股撒腿就跑。边跑边喊:“有本事你来抓我啊!”
  • 抢个师尊当相公

    抢个师尊当相公

    青离从不会亏待自己,看上的东西,盗回来慢慢欣赏。想吃的美食,学过来做了慢慢品尝。一手做天下美味,一手盗奇珍异宝。然而她却一朝穿越到古代,入了仙门。遇到了一位颜值爆表的师尊。青离从前总是吹嘘,这天底下还没有她偷不到的东西,可如今她第一次有点儿犯难了。这盗宝容易,盗人也不难,可是这心好盗不?【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 我是送餐员

    我是送餐员

    经朋友介绍来到了大都市,当了一名送餐员……
  • 诛仙变

    诛仙变

    亦正亦邪,天地为界,谁可伴我纵横,一统江山?仙墓道行,无终魔镜,我欲封印,谁来破缚?变身、召唤、征服,一切传说尽在诛仙变!
  • 白色眷恋

    白色眷恋

    因为不满皇马6比2的比分,中国青年律师沈星怒砸啤酒瓶,结果电光火石间,他穿越成了佛罗伦蒂诺的儿子,且看来自09年的小伙子如何玩转03年的欧洲足坛
  • 原机启微

    原机启微

    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。
  • 创世遗迹

    创世遗迹

    创世之初,灵气充盈,万物共存,天下一片祥和宁静。一日,创世神突降天书三卷便飘然而去,天书落入创世遗迹,等待有缘之人。直到有一天,三个孩童误入创世遗迹,天书各自入主,与身相合。天书传人超然物外,异于常人,不老不死,能力非凡,各司其责,共担使命。更有传言,天书与心相合,足以窥破天机!
  • 一把小铁锤

    一把小铁锤

    作为一个屌丝宅男,当然是游戏人间啦,被同伴嫌弃的他,立志要做一个有用的人,当他打开锻造术愉快的打造升级时,一切都随之改变。