登陆注册
4908100000099

第99章

Lord Earle took the letter from his hands--he tried to open it, but the trembling fingers seemed powerless. He signed to Hewson to leave the room, and, placing the letter upon the table, resumed his melancholy watch. But in some strange way his thoughts wandered to the missive. What might it not contain, brought to him, too, in the solemn death chamber? He opened it, and found many sheets of closely covered paper. On the first was written "The Confession of Hugh Fernely."

The name told him nothing. Suddenly an idea came to him--could this confession have anything to do with the fate of the beloved child who lay before him? Kneeling by the dead child's side, he turned over the leaf and read as follows:

"Lord Earle, I am dying--the hand tracing this will soon be cold. Before I die I must confess my crime. Even now, perhaps, you are kneeling by the side of the child lost to you for all time. My lord, I killed her.

"I met her first nearly three years ago, at Knutsford; she was out alone, and I saw her. I loved her then as I love her now.

By mere accident I heard her deplore the lonely, isolated life she led, and that in such terms that I pitied her. She was young, beautiful, full of life and spirits; she was pining away in that remote home, shut out from the living world she longed for with a longing I can not put into words. I spoke to her--do not blame her, she was a beautiful, ignorant child--I spoke to her, asking some questions about the road, and she replied.

Looking at her face, I swore that I would release her from the life she hated, and take her where she would be happy.

"I met her again and again. Heaven pardon me if I did my best to awake an interest in her girlish heart! I told her stories of travel and adventure that stirred all the romance in her nature.

With the keen instinct of love I understood her character, and played upon its weakness while I worshiped its strength.

"She told me of a sad, patient young mother who never smiled, of a father who was abroad and would not return for many years.

Pardon me, my lord, if, in common with many others, I believed this story to be one to appease her. Pardon me, if I doubted as many others did--whether the sad young mother was your wife.

"I imagined that I was going to rescue her from a false position when I asked her to be my wife. She said her mother dreaded all mention of love and lovers, and I prayed her to keep my love a secret from all the world.

"I make no excuses for myself; she was young and innocent as a dreaming child. I ought to have looked on her beautiful face and left her. My lord, am I altogether to blame? The lonely young girl at Knutsford pined for what I could give her--happiness and pleasure did not seem so far removed from me. Had she been in her proper place I could never have addressed her.

"Not to you can I tell the details of my love story--how I worshiped with passionate love the beautiful, innocent child who smiled into my face and drank in my words. I asked her to be my wife, and she promised. My lord, I never for a moment dreamed that she would ever have a home with you--it did not seem to me possible. I intended to return and marry her, firmly believing that in some respects my rank and condition in life were better than her own. She promised to be true to me, to love no one else, to wait for me, and to marry me when I returned.

"I believe now that she never loved me. My love and devotion were but a pleasant interruption in the monotony of her life.

They were to blame also who allowed her no pleasures--who forced her to resort to this stolen one.

"My lord, I placed a ring upon your daughter's finger, and pledged my faith to her. I can not tell you what my love was like; it was a fierce fire that consumed me night and day.

"I was to return and claim her in two years. Absence made me love her more. I came back, rich in gold, my heart full of happiness, hope making everything bright and beautiful. I went straight to Knutsford--alas! she was no longer there! And then I heard that the girl I loved so deeply and so dearly was Lord Earle's daughter.

"I did not dream of losing her; birth, title, and position seemed as nothing beside my mighty, passionate love. I thought nothing of your consent, but only of her; and I went to Earlescourt. My lord, I wrote to her, and my heart was in every line. She sent me a cold reply. I wrote again; I swore I would see her. She sent her sister to me with the reply. Then I grew desperate, and vowed I would lay my claim before you. I asked her to meet me out in the grounds, at night, unseen and unknown. She consented, and on Thursday night I met her near the shrubbery.

"How I remember her pretty pleading words, her beautiful proud face! She asked me to release her. She said that it had all been child's play--a foolish mistake--and that if I would give her her freedom from a foolish promise she would always be my friend. At first I would not hear of it; but who could have refused her? If she had told me to lie down at her feet and let her trample the life out of me, I should have submitted.

"I promised to think of her request, and we walked on to the border of the lake. Every hair upon her head was sacred to me; the pretty, proud ways that tormented me delighted me, too. I promised I would release her, and give her the freedom she asked, if she told me I was not giving her up to another. She would not. Some few words drove me mad with jealous rage--yes, mad; the blood seemed to boil in my veins. Suddenly I caught sight of a golden locket on her neck, and I asked her whose portrait it contained. She refused to tell me. In the madness of my rage I tried to snatch it from her. She caught it in her hands, and, shrinking back from me, fell into the lake.

同类推荐
  • Hard Cash

    Hard Cash

    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。
  • 台湾县志

    台湾县志

    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。
  • 王制

    王制

    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。
  • 言毒篇

    言毒篇

    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。
  • 宦游纪略

    宦游纪略

    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
  • 农门福星:捡个正太来种田

    农门福星:捡个正太来种田

    【1v1双洁】副线cp有耽,介意勿点!穿越到农家小极品身上,爷,奶极品而且偏心眼,不过是偏向她这个小极品…渣爹是怎么也考不上秀才的花钱小能手,二叔三叔被拖累的要求分家。手握纳戒圣水,开山头,种果树,发家致富做个地主婆儿~…………屁股后面跟着的呆萌小跟班,越长大愈加俊俏,简直就是貌比潘安~对别人毒舌+腹黑+冷漠脸,对然然撒娇+卖萌+求抱抱(盛世小黑莲一朵)完结旧文【快穿系统:男神帮我摘绿·帽】
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 不烦恼:我的人生哲学

    不烦恼:我的人生哲学

    本书迹近随笔,在书中,王蒙结合自己几十年体验,剖析人生的各个环节,讲述人行于世的种种道理。全书不到二十万字,不论内容还是体例,都可以看出,本书是一本既好读,又有强烈的现实参照性的读物。传奇的人生经历:十四岁加入中国共产党;十九岁写出了《青春万岁》;“流放”新疆十六年;中华人民共和国第八任文化部长;作品被翻译成二十多种文字。写给广大读者的精进之书:我的人生主线;我的二十一条人际准则;陷入纠纷是一大悲剧;最好的人际关系是“忘却”;“学会”不如“会学”;“最好的东西是舌头”,最坏的呢?人比人,气死人?还是学学老子;恋战“扬己”莫若“拿出货色”;人生最重要的是知道“不做什么”;太想赢的时候反而会输;不要以为自己就是尺度;记住:你永远占不了所有的“点儿”;等待:一个无夺下的积极概念。
  • 狂欢来袭

    狂欢来袭

    她前世,明面上是被宠得不知天高地厚的小公主,暗里确实让人闻风丧胆发的顶级雇佣兵。但却爱错了人,辜负那个一直守在她身旁,一直默默爱着她的男人。一朝惨死,重生到两年前,把心都放在了男人身上,并查出自己亲生父母下落。这一世,她绝不会辜负他!甜文,专~
  • 暴力织女

    暴力织女

    作为一个穿成一本穿越玛丽苏修仙小说中活不到三集的炮灰女配,董知和认为自己还可以被拯救一下。?有完结作品《路人甲日常》、《开挂人生之修真界的假仙》
  • 当小狐狸长成大灰狼

    当小狐狸长成大灰狼

    随依妈妈在她十岁那年和初恋跑了,爸爸也火速勾搭上初恋娶回家,还带回来一个便宜儿子,从此他们一家三口,随依就成了爹不疼娘不爱没人要的小孩。她开始在作死的道路上一起不复返,偏偏老狐狸精带来的小狐狸精要把她往正路里带,她当然不要。可是,为什么她虐小狐狸精千百遍,小狐狸精还待她如初恋呢?她最讨厌初恋了。然而最终,那个小狐狸精还是迷了她的心。后来她说:“我以后再也不欺负你了。”而他却说:“以后你只能欺负我一人。”
  • 八识规矩论义

    八识规矩论义

    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。
  • 重生在s2

    重生在s2

    召唤师,请让我再为你舞一曲利刃华尔兹吗?
  • 新时期40年文学理论与批评发展史

    新时期40年文学理论与批评发展史

    《新时期40年文学理论与批评发展史》是著名学者鲁枢元教授率领团队完成的一部中国近40年文学批评与文学理论发展的总结性著作,是国家社会科学基金重点项目“新时期文学理论建设与文学批评研究”的结项成果,也是“十三五”国家重点出版物出版规划项目之一。本书以新时期以来文学理论建设与文学批评实践的整体发展为思考对象,联系当代社会现实;深入挖掘中华优秀传统文化蕴含的文艺观念、道德规范、人文思想,展现中国古代文论的永恒价值和不朽贡献;结合西方现代文学思潮,在世界文学发展史中确立中国新时期文学发展的独特地位。通过梳理中国近40年来的文学批评及理论建设对传统文化的继承和扬弃,与世界文学思潮间的相互影响和吸收,本书在古今中外的视域下重新确立了新时期中国文学的地位和价值,为新时期中国文学理论建设、文学批评实践的发展轨迹,勾画出一份清晰的蓝图。
  • 三国小郎君

    三国小郎君

    穿越了?三国世界?咦爸妈你们也在啊?“爸昨天我看你去青楼了”“臭小子老子是去找曹老板喝酒去了”“妈别给我找媳妇了”