登陆注册
5414200000070

第70章

A long silence.Then he said abruptly: ``IF we loved each other.But I know that we don't.I know that you would hate me when you realized that you couldn't move me.And I know that Ishould soon get over the infatuation for you.As soon as it became a question of sympathies--common tastes--congeniality--I'd find you hopelessly lacking.''

She felt that he was contrasting her with some one else--with a certain some one.And she veiled her eyes to hide their blazing jealousy.A movement on his part made her raise them in sudden alarm.He had risen.His expression told her that the battle was lost--for the day.Never had she loved him as at that moment, and never had longing to possess him so dominated her willful, self-indulgent, spoiled nature.Yet she hated him, too;she longed to crush him, to make him suffer--to repay him with interest for the suffering he was inflicting upon her--the humiliation.But she dared not show her feelings.It would be idle to try upon this man any of the coquetries indicated for such cases--to dismiss him coldly, or to make an appeal through an exhibition of weakness or reckless passion.

``You will see the truth, for yourself, as you think things over,'' said he.

She rose, stood before him with downcast eyes, with mouth sad and sweet.``No,'' she said, ``It's you who are hiding the truth from yourself.I hope--for both our sakes--that you'll see it before long.Good-by-- dear.'' She stretched out her hand.

Hesitatingly he took it.As their hands met, her pulse beating against his, she lifted her eyes.And once more he was holding her close, was kissing her.And she was lying in his arms unresisting, with two large tears shining in the long lashes of her closed eyes.

``Oh, Jane--forgive me!'' he cried, releasing her.``I must keep away from you.I will--I WILL!'' And he was rushing down the steep slope--direct, swift, relentless.But she, looking after him with a tender, dreamy smile, murmured: ``He loves me.He will come again.If not--I'll go and get him!''

To Jane Victor Dorn's analysis of his feeling toward her and of the reasons against yielding to it seemed of no importance whatever.Side by side with Selma's``One may not trifle with love'' she would have put ``In matters of love one does not reason,'' as equally axiomatic.Victor was simply talking; love would conquer him as it had conquered every man and every woman it had ever entered.Love--blind, unreasoning, irresistible-- would have its will and its way.

And about most men she would have been right-- about any man practically, of the preceding generation.But Victor represented a new type of human being-- the type into whose life reason enters not merely as a theoretical force, to be consulted and disregarded, but as an authority, a powerful influence, dominant in all crucial matters.Only in our own time has science begun to make a notable impression upon the fog which formerly lay over the whole human mind, thicker here, thinner there, a mere haze yonder, but present everywhere.This fog made clear vision impossible, usually made seeing of any kind difficult; there was no such thing as finding a distinct line between truth and error as to any subject.And reason seemed almost as faulty a guide as feeling--was by many regarded as more faulty, not without justification.

But nowadays for some of us there are clear or almost clear horizons, and such fog banks as there are conceal from them nothing that is of importance in shaping a rational course of life.Victor Dorn was one of these emancipated few.All successful men form their lives upon a system of some kind.Even those who seem to live at haphazard, like the multitude, prove to have chart and compass and definite port in objective when their conduct is more attentively examined.Victor Dorn's system was as perfect as it was simple, and he held himself to it as rigidly as the father superior of a Trappist monastery holds his monks to their routine.Also, Victor had learned to know and to be on guard against those two arch-enemies of the man who wishes to ``get somewhere''--self-excuse and optimism.He had got a good strong leash upon his vanity --and a muzzle, too.When things went wrong he instantly blamed HIMSELF, and did not rest until he had ferreted out the stupidity or folly of which HE had been guilty.He did not grieve over his failures; he held severely scientific post mortems upon them to discover the reason why--in order that there should not again be that particular kind of failure at least.Then, as to the other arch-enemy, optimism, he simply cut himself off from indulgence in it.He worked for success; he assumed failure.He taught himself to care nothing about success, but only about doing as intelligently and as thoroughly as he could the thing next at hand.

What has all this to do with his infatuation for Jane? It serves to show not only why the Workingmen's League was growing like a plague of gypsy moth, but also why Victor Dorn was not the man to be conquered by passion.Naturally, Jane, who had only the vaguest conception of the size and power of Victor Dorn's mind, could not comprehend wherein lay the difference between him and the men she read about in novels or met in her wanderings among the people of her own class in various parts of the earth.It is possible for even the humblest of us to understand genius, just as it is possible to view a mountain from all sides and get a clear idea of it bulk and its dominion.But the hasty traveler contents himself with a glance, a ``How superb,'' and a quick passing on; and most of us are hasty travelers in the scenic land of intellectuality.Jane saw that he was a great man.But she was deceived by his frankness and his simplicity.She evoked in him only the emotional side of his nature, only one part of that.

Because it--the only phase of him she attentively examined--was so impressive, she assumed that it was the chief feature of the man.

同类推荐
  • 南山经

    南山经

    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。
  • 春风堂随笔

    春风堂随笔

    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。
  • 易纬是类谋

    易纬是类谋

    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。
  • 鬻子古文龙虎经

    鬻子古文龙虎经

    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。
  • 分别善恶报应经

    分别善恶报应经

    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
  • 帝尊又皮了

    帝尊又皮了

    末世,妖怪纵横全球。失‘手’错成千古恨,不慎被反吃,尸骨无存。 一朝穿越,她重回巅峰,身旁美男作伴,一路追随。 “这是你笔下的我?”美男笑了,颠了众生。 “哼!谁让你长得辣么好看,我就画下来了。”少女傲娇哼哼道。 “哦……”美男意味深长的看着少女,“原来我在你心里这么重要,是酱紫的模样?”
  • 诸神煮酒论英雄

    诸神煮酒论英雄

    一份数据,三个黑客巨头,一件凶杀案。“我回来了!”不能让他回来!得阻止他!心怀鬼胎,各路英雄揭竿而起……“区区蝼蚁,你们阻止不了我……你们……都要为自己的罪业付出代价!”撒旦已燃起滔天怒火,造就了“红色的13区”,看当初从死神手里逃出生天的王子铭如何推动事件的发展,还这死亡区一片清明!
  • 海上玩家

    海上玩家

    江宁:我不想成为什么船王,也不想要什么私人码头。系统:不,你想!开局只有一条渔船,到数百条和自己私人大型万吨码头,他就这样被系统逼的向着渔业大佬前进。
  • 青木遗秘

    青木遗秘

    【Day出品】(绝属精品)一悲苦的孤儿却英年离奇死去,带着记忆转生,成为豪门家的二少,废材的他,却意外的发现一个耳钉随着他转生,为他开启了强者的大门,转生的青木大陆,传承几多年却只有五千年的记忆,幕后暗藏着什么秘密,一切且随着主角花凤宇闯遍青木,一起为我们开启秘密之门。此小说属于慢热型,不过等花凤宇处理完学院之事离开学院,精彩也将展开!
  • 洪昭光谈心血管病防治

    洪昭光谈心血管病防治

    本书首先介绍了人类现阶段健康的基本状况,随后又介绍了危害生命的种种病状,特别是心血管疾病,并提出了维护健康的基本方法。本书会给中老年朋友在健康、养生方面提供帮助。
  • 极品王妃

    极品王妃

    一招穿越竟然变成了傻子加花痴!一道圣旨竟然变成冷酷王爷的妻子!
  • 李嘉诚给青少年的10条准则

    李嘉诚给青少年的10条准则

    《李嘉诚给青少年的10条准则》一书从十个方面归纳总结了李嘉诚做人做事的准则,可以给青少年朋友带去奋斗的目标和生命的启迪,十条准则包括:理想与求知;勤恳与律己;谦虚与骄傲;思想与智慧;诚信与责任;为人与处世;思维与创新;分享与合作;让利与得利;富贵与博大。
  • 与花交谈

    与花交谈

    进入21世纪,文化市场上出现一个引人注目的现象:许多文学刊物纷纷改头换面,改为专门刊登微型小说或主要刊登微型小说,有的甚至连刊名也子以更改。报亭书摊处可见微型小说的身影。
  • 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。
  • 痴情天子

    痴情天子

    慈宁宫位于紫禁城的最深处,两尊威猛高大的麒麟镇守在门前,四周古柏森森,优雅恬静,因为是皇太后的寝宫所以显得神秘和庄重。东暖阁里,皇太后——大清顺治皇帝爱新觉罗·福临的额娘端坐在上首,四周围坐着一群妃嫔命妇。她们喝着奶茶聊着天,消磨时光。今天皇太后有点特别,没有像往日掺和妃嫔命妇的闲聊,两眼紧盯着暖阁门外,不住询问时间,像是在等待什么人。“苏嘛,现在什么时辰啦?” 皇太后问。苏嘛答道:“皇太后,今儿怎么啦?您已是第三遍问我了。回太后,现在辰时已过,巳时未到。”“哦,快到巳时。”