登陆注册
15744500000047

第47章 THE WALK(1)

'OH, dear! I wish Hatfield had not been so precipitate!' said Rosalie next day at four P.M., as, with a portentous yawn, she laid down her worsted-work and looked listlessly towards the window.

'There's no inducement to go out now; and nothing to look forward to. The days will be so long and dull when there are no parties to enliven them; and there are none this week, or next either, that Iknow of.'

'Pity you were so cross to him,' observed Matilda, to whom this lamentation was addressed. 'He'll never come again: and I suspect you liked him after all. I hoped you would have taken him for your beau, and left dear Harry to me.'

'Humph! my beau must be an Adonis indeed, Matilda, the admired of all beholders, if I am to be contented with him alone. I'm sorry to lose Hatfield, I confess; but the first decent man, or number of men, that come to supply his place, will be more than welcome.

It's Sunday to-morrow - I do wonder how he'll look, and whether he'll be able to go through the service. Most likely he'll pretend he's got a cold, and make Mr. Weston do it all.'

'Not he!' exclaimed Matilda, somewhat contemptuously. 'Fool as he is, he's not so soft as that comes to.'

Her sister was slightly offended; but the event proved Matilda was right: the disappointed lover performed his pastoral duties as usual. Rosalie, indeed, affirmed he looked very pale and dejected:

he might be a little paler; but the difference, if any, was scarcely perceptible. As for his dejection, I certainly did not hear his laugh ringing from the vestry as usual, nor his voice loud in hilarious discourse; though I did hear it uplifted in rating the sexton in a manner that made the congregation stare; and, in his transits to and from the pulpit and the communion-table, there was more of solemn pomp, and less of that irreverent, self-confident, or rather self-delighted imperiousness with which he usually swept along - that air that seemed to say, 'You all reverence and adore me, I know; but if anyone does not, I defy him to the teeth!'

But the most remarkable change was, that he never once suffered his eyes to wander in the direction of Mr. Murray's pew, and did not leave the church till we were gone.

Mr. Hatfield had doubtless received a very severe blow; but his pride impelled him to use every effort to conceal the effects of it. He had been disappointed in his certain hope of obtaining not only a beautiful, and, to him, highly attractive wife, but one whose rank and fortune might give brilliance to far inferior charms: he was likewise, no doubt, intensely mortified by his repulse, and deeply offended at the conduct of Miss Murray throughout. It would have given him no little consolation to have known how disappointed she was to find him apparently so little moved, and to see that he was able to refrain from casting a single glance at her throughout both services; though, she declared, it showed he was thinking of her all the time, or his eyes would have fallen upon her, if it were only by chance: but if they had so chanced to fall, she would have affirmed it was because they could not resist the attraction. It might have pleased him, too, in some degree, to have seen how dull and dissatisfied she was throughout that week (the greater part of it, at least), for lack of her usual source of excitement; and how often she regretted having 'used him up so soon,' like a child that, having devoured its plumcake too hastily, sits sucking its fingers, and vainly lamenting its greediness.

At length I was called upon, one fine morning, to accompany her in a walk to the village. Ostensibly she went to get some shades of Berlin wool, at a tolerably respectable shop that was chiefly supported by the ladies of the vicinity: really - I trust there is no breach of charity in supposing that she went with the idea of meeting either with the Rector himself, or some other admirer by the way; for as we went along, she kept wondering 'what Hatfield would do or say, if we met him,' &c. &c.; as we passed Mr. Green's park-gates, she 'wondered whether he was at home - great stupid blockhead'; as Lady Meltham's carriage passed us, she 'wondered what Mr. Harry was doing this fine day'; and then began to abuse his elder brother for being 'such a fool as to get married and go and live in London.'

'Why,' said I, 'I thought you wanted to live in London yourself.'

'Yes, because it's so dull here: but then he makes it still duller by taking himself off: and if he were not married I might have him instead of that odious Sir Thomas.'

Then, observing the prints of a horse's feet on the somewhat miry road, she 'wondered whether it was a gentleman's horse,' and finally concluded it was, for the impressions were too small to have been made by a 'great clumsy cart-horse'; and then she 'wondered who the rider could be,' and whether we should meet him coming back, for she was sure he had only passed that morning; and lastly, when we entered the village and saw only a few of its humble inhabitants moving about, she 'wondered why the stupid people couldn't keep in their houses; she was sure she didn't want to see their ugly faces, and dirty, vulgar clothes - it wasn't for that she came to Horton!'

Amid all this, I confess, I wondered, too, in secret, whether we should meet, or catch a glimpse of somebody else; and as we passed his lodgings, I even went so far as to wonder whether he was at the window. On entering the shop, Miss Murray desired me to stand in the doorway while she transacted her business, and tell her if anyone passed. But alas! there was no one visible besides the villagers, except Jane and Susan Green coming down the single street, apparently returning from a walk.

'Stupid things!' muttered she, as she came out after having concluded her bargain. 'Why couldn't they have their dolt of a brother with them? even he would be better than nothing.'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 末日之校园求生

    末日之校园求生

    我叫白水,是一名初二学生,在我身边发生了一些不可思议的事情,我带着我的同桌,铁哥们捍卫者我们读书的校园,而如今的校园早已不是曾经的热闹嘈杂,我不求末日之中称王称霸,只求我和我的同学们平安活下来!
  • 墨书流风

    墨书流风

    世人都爱说史,可没有人知道历史中真正发生了什么。那慢慢崛起的没落,悄然没落的辉煌,道不清的民生疾苦,世间百态。穿越到书中的林风,抱着改变历史的心活在了书的世界里,到头来他又能改变些什么呢?诗云:人事有代谢,往来成古今,江山留胜迹,我辈复登临。..................
  • 一句话照亮一个世界

    一句话照亮一个世界

    改变一个人有时候就是一句话彷徨的时候, 这一句话让你豁然开朗;不知所措的时候,这一句话指一个支点,让阅读者时时心有磐石和灵犀。本书从畅销杂志中选文,智慧,励志,给人正能量,一篇文,一句话,如同一束光,照耀读者的心。
  • 想象与现实的差距

    想象与现实的差距

    萧雨想找一个富二代结婚,或者找一个有钱人结婚,于是她又向着这方面奋斗着,为了不让自己和这些有钱人差距太大,于是她努力的赚钱。当她有了不少存款后,就开始去追一个自己觉得他就是自己要找的那个人后。但是现实与她想象的不一样,经过努力的追求,那个富二代成了她的男朋友,但是她觉得这不是自己想要的,自己和有钱人的差距太大,自己的想象和发生的现实的差距很大,她失落的走在街上。但走在街上的萧雨不是想的和他男朋友的事,而是想的是怎样去当兵,萧雨从小就喜欢兵哥哥,所以一直想去,想着想着天空就飘起了毛毛细雨。萧雨抬起头看着天空,想着现在要是自己也穿越了多好啊,老天好像听见了她说的一样........
  • 青春是毒药

    青春是毒药

    在最美的时光遇见最爱的人是最幸福的事!林果:爱情不知道是什么时候开始,感觉来了,或许它就开始了。如果我没有先开口说爱你,会不会这辈子都要错过。如果我没有闯入你的生活,是不是你的生活如你所愿。欧亦轩:简单爱我心里所爱的人!我发誓不让她为我掉一滴眼泪,却还是让她伤心若是曾经的她是我们的阻碍,我愿除了她。
  • 眼科秘诀

    眼科秘诀

    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。
  • 异界之法泽天下

    异界之法泽天下

    生在一个人杰地灵的山村,泽恩的魔法亲和超高却没有一个魔法体系能修炼,一次偶然的机会让他体会到自然魔法电系,于是在他浑浑噩噩中,就走到洪泽大陆的巅峰。
  • 狂妄三小姐:天才儿子鬼医娘

    狂妄三小姐:天才儿子鬼医娘

    她生了一个蛋!嗯,然后孵出俩儿子。——这世上没有什么是一个儿子解决不了的,如果有,那就两个一起上!五年前,草包三小姐死而复生,从此身边多了两个小保镖。五年后,大儿子面无表情道:“娘,父亲来了。”小儿子腹黑阴险笑眯眯:“娘,我可以把父亲抽筋剥皮挫骨扬灰吗?”“嗯,如此甚好!”当娘的老怀大慰,哪知俩娃临阵倒戈搞叛变。——夜,男人步步紧逼。“女人,你真是好胆,看你把我两个儿子养成什么样!”“天尊大人呵呵哒,那俩小子是一个意外……啊!你要干神马?放开偶!!”男人冷笑...“我决定了,再生一个,这次我要亲自教育,免得再被你养歪!”我艹,还生?你当老娘是猪啊!
  • 断灵剑

    断灵剑

    林仇说:“我的兄弟不会一厢情愿。”沈觉晗说:“我心已绝,我命不悔。”邢凯说:“以吾光,照亮吾兄之道。”林仇说他这一生最爱白诗芯,没有亏欠没有惭愧只是单纯的爱她。且看林仇到最后如何带领兄弟和爱人到巅峰!“我的梦想,就是登上武道巅峰!兄弟在旁!爱人拥怀!我的道……要么有情,要么,无我!”
  • 退路决定出路

    退路决定出路

    《退路决定出路》,从人生智慧和处世哲学两个方面来诠释退守的哲学,编者撷取了古今中外众多退而求进的事例典范,同时也列举了一些不懂退守之道,一味张扬卖弄而导致失败的例子,广大读者在欣赏生动精彩案例的同时,不难体会到退的智慧。