登陆注册
5432800000089

第89章 XXX(1)

Stephen, the son of these people, had one instinct that troubled him. At night--especially out of doors--it seemed rather strange that he was alive. The dry grass pricked his cheek, the fields were invisible and mute, and here was he, throwing stones at the darkness or smoking a pipe. The stones vanished, the pipe would burn out. But he would be here in the morning when the sun rose, and he would bathe, and run in the mist. He was proud of his good circulation, and in the morning it seemed quite natural. But at night, why should there be this difference between him and the acres of land that cooled all round him until the sun returned?

What lucky chance had heated him up, and sent him, warm and lovable, into a passive world? He had other instincts, but these gave him no trouble. He simply gratified each as it occurred, provided he could do so without grave injury to his fellows. But the instinct to wonder at the night was not to be thus appeased.

At first he had lived under the care of Mr. Failing the only person to whom his mother spoke freely, the only person who had treated her neither as a criminal nor as a pioneer. In their rare but intimate conversations she had asked him to educate her son.

"I will teach him Latin," he answered. "The rest such a boy must remember." Latin, at all events, was a failure: who could attend to Virgil when the sound of the thresher arose, and you knew that the stack was decreasing and that rats rushed more plentifully each moment to their doom? But he was fond of Mr. Failing, and cried when he died. Mrs. Elliot, a pleasant woman, died soon after.

There was something fatal in the order of these deaths. Mr. Failing had made no provision for the boy in his will: his wife had promised to see to this. Then came Mr. Elliot's death, and, before the new home was created, the sudden death of Mrs. Elliot.

She also left Stephen no money: she had none to leave. Chance threw him into the power of Mrs. Failing. "Let things go on as they are," she thought. "I will take care of this pretty little boy, and the ugly little boy can live with the Silts. After my death--well, the papers will be found after my death, and they can meet then. I like the idea of their mutual ignorance. It is amusing."He was then twelve. With a few brief intervals of school, he lived in Wiltshire until he was driven out. Life had two distinct sides--the drawing-room and the other. In the drawing-room people talked a good deal, laughing as they talked. Being clever, they did not care for animals: one man had never seen a hedgehog. In the other life people talked and laughed separately, or even did neither. On the whole, in spite of the wet and gamekeepers, this life was preferable. He knew where he was. He glanced at the boy, or later at the man, and behaved accordingly. There was no law--the policeman was negligible. Nothing bound him but his own word, and he gave that sparingly.

It is impossible to be romantic when you have your heart's desire, and such a boy disappointed Mrs. Failing greatly. His parents had met for one brief embrace, had found one little interval between the power of the rulers of this world and the power of death. He was the child of poetry and of rebellion, and poetry should run in his veins. But he lived too near the things he loved to seem poetical. Parted from them, he might yet satisfy her, and stretch out his hands with a pagan's yearning. As it was, he only rode her horses, and trespassed, and bathed, and worked, for no obvious reason, upon her fields. Affection she did not believe in, and made no attempt to mould him; and he, for his part, was very content to harden untouched into a man. His parents had given him excellent gifts--health, sturdy limbs, and a face not ugly,--gifts that his habits confirmed. They had also given him a cloudless spirit--the spirit of the seventeen days in which he was created. But they had not given him the spirit of their sit years of waiting, and love for one person was never to be the greatest thing he knew.

"Philosophy" had postponed the quarrel between them. Incurious about his personal origin, he had a certain interest in our eternal problems. The interest never became a passion: it sprang out of his physical growth, and was soon merged in it again. Or, as he put it himself, "I must get fixed up before starting." He was soon fixed up as a materialist. Then he tore up the sixpenny reprints, and never amused Mrs. Failing so much again.

About the time he fixed himself up, he took to drink. He knew of no reason against it. The instinct was in him, and it hurt nobody. Here, as elsewhere, his motions were decided, and he passed at once from roaring jollity to silence. For those who live on the fuddled borderland, who crawl home by the railings and maunder repentance in the morning, he had a biting contempt.

A man must take his tumble and his headache. He was, in fact, as little disgusting as is conceivable; and hitherto he had not strained his constitution or his will. Nor did he get drunk as often as Agnes suggested. Thc real quarrel gathered elsewhere.

Presentable people have run wild in their youth. But the hour comes when they turn from their boorish company to higher things.

This hour never came for Stephen. Somewhat a bully by nature, he kept where his powers would tell, and continued to quarrel and play with the men he had known as boys. He prolonged their youth unduly. "They won't settle down," said Mr. Wilbraham to his wife.

"They're wanting things. It's the germ of a Trades Union. I shall get rid of a few of the worst." Then Stephen rushed up to Mrs.

Failing and worried her. "It wasn't fair. So-and-so was a good sort. He did his work. Keen about it? No. Why should he be? Why should he be keen about somebody else's land? But keen enough.

同类推荐
  • 薛仁贵征东

    薛仁贵征东

    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。
  • 阳羡茗壶系

    阳羡茗壶系

    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。
  • 佛说嗟袜曩法天子受三归依获免恶道经

    佛说嗟袜曩法天子受三归依获免恶道经

    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。
  • 王舍人诗集

    王舍人诗集

    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。
  • 金箓斋启坛仪

    金箓斋启坛仪

    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
  • 故事会(2017年12月上)

    故事会(2017年12月上)

    《故事会》是中国最通俗的民间文学小本杂志,是中国的老牌刊物之一。先后获得两届中国期刊的最高奖——国家期刊奖。1998年,它在世界综合类期刊中发行量排名第5。从1984年开始,《故事会》由双月刊改为月刊,2003年11月份开始试行半月刊,2007年正式改为半月刊。现分为红、绿两版,其中红版为上半月刊,绿版为下半月刊。
  • 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。
  • 极限尽头

    极限尽头

    三百年前,天地巨变,世界迎来翻天覆地的改变。所有生物高度进化,对统治地球近万年的人类展开疯狂的反扑。三位英雄横空出世,建立起人类的防线,守护了文明的秩序。然而人与自然的争斗从未停止,当老一代的英雄成为传说,新一代的天之骄子们,能否挑战命运,重写谱写属于自己的传奇乐章?
  • 七里樱

    七里樱

    年少时,我们,似乎成为了世界的主角,遗憾过,苦恼过,伤心心过,但庆幸的是在那个即将逝去的青春里,你世界的男主随着四季辗转在你身旁,陪你笑,陪你哭……终有一天,你发现他只是喜欢你身边的那个人而已…“你知道的,我喜欢她哎。”“没事…”至少我的青春,你来过就好。
  • 泽暮而栖

    泽暮而栖

    “既然能让她爱上我第一次,就能让她爱上我第二次!”这是某泽这辈子说过最瞎的话。三年前,他车祸消失,未留下只言片语。三年后,他卷土重来,历经九死一生,才将一身黑色风衣的少女拥入怀中。“我来晚了。”
  • 盘破门

    盘破门

    《盘破门》是一部中国传统式小说,既有根据历史演绎的痕迹,又有作者虚构的江湖故事,同时不失对地方文化遗产的披露。包含《刺杀端方》和《木棉袈裟》两卷。
  • 离神明最近的街道

    离神明最近的街道

    他,史上最伟大的法术师,为了最爱的她能得到永生,宁愿得罪全天下的人,然而使她获得永生的代价竟然是自己的生命。他,为了最爱的她,整整爱了上千年,使用传说中的禁术,转移着自己的灵魂,仅仅只是想得到她的一丝关注,却犯下了天理难容的错。她和她,为了深爱的人,又该何去何从?一个关于永生和真爱的故事。【男主天才法术师VS女主黑化性格】“我能不能用我的生生世世,换和你的一生?”“我不怕死,因为只有我死了,你才能更好地活下去。”“如果你真的爱我,就和我一起消失在这个世界吧。”
  • 四川当代作家研究:王火卷

    四川当代作家研究:王火卷

    王火老友的长篇巨著,三卷本,一百六十多万字的小说《战争和人》终于出齐了。当我拿到最后一卷《枫叶荻花秋瑟瑟》时,心中有些酸楚,喉头有些哽咽,我被他的顽强所感动,为他的得胜而欣慰,也为四川文坛有这样一位道德、文章都令人敬佩的作家而高兴。
  • 梁山外传

    梁山外传

    少小未曾锥刺骨,又无江淹得笔聪。 弄斧班门涂鸦事,诸君见笑多批评。 遥想当年水浒寨,天罡地煞逞英雄。 纷纷扰扰几多事,尽在《梁山外传》中! 宋朝水泊梁山英雄聚义,百员战将,万名兵丁,难坏了大寨主及时雨宋江,那么,他怎样处理复杂的人事纠纷呢? 这里,将展开梁山生活画面,莫道物是人非事事休,待我梁山故事说从头。
  • 如酥似宝

    如酥似宝

    五年前,秦言说,他不喜欢唐酥。所以为了乔薇,他逼着唐酥跳下了跨江大桥。说好了老死不相往来,五年后他又找上了门来。而这次,居然又是要找她的麻烦!黑她公司,断她财路,拆她的台,最后变本加厉,将她唯一的追求者给击退了!秦言:“你很期待投入别人怀抱?哦,想都别想。”唐酥大拍桌子之际,却被他拖到了民政局……秦言:“男,秦言,女,唐酥,愿结百年,盖章。”不不不,我不愿意呀。