登陆注册
5894400000002

第2章

But why should her father have been ignored in these family arrangements? Perhaps it may almost suffice to say, that of all living men her father was the man best conversant with the antiquities of the county in which he lived. He was the Jonathan Oldbuck of Devonshire, and especially of Dartmoor, without that decision of character which enabled Oldbuck to keep his womenkind in some kind of subjection, and probably enabled him also to see that his weekly bills did not pass their proper limits. Our Mr. Oldbuck, of Oxney Colne, was sadly deficient in these. As a parish pastor with but a small cure, he did his duty with sufficient energy, to keep him, at any rate, from reproach. He was kind and charitable to the poor, punctual in his services, forbearing with the farmers around him, mild with his brother clergymen, and indifferent to aught that bishop or archdeacon might think or say of him. I do not name this latter attribute as a virtue, but as a fact. But all these points were as nothing in the known character of Mr. Woolsworthy, of Oxney Colne. He was the antiquarian of Dartmoor. That was his line of life. It was in that capacity that he was known to the Devonshire world; it was as such that he journeyed about with his humble carpet-bag, staying away from his parsonage a night or two at a time; it was in that character that he received now and again stray visitors in the single spare bedroom--not friends asked to see him and his girl because of their friendship--but men who knew something as to this buried stone, or that old land-mark. In all these things his daughter let him have his own way, assisting and encouraging him. That was his line of life, and therefore she respected it. But in all other matters she chose to be paramount at the parsonage.

Mr. Woolsworthy was a little man, who always wore, except on Sundays, grey clothes--clothes of so light a grey that they would hardly have been regarded as clerical in a district less remote. He had now reached a goodly age, being full seventy years old; but still he was wiry and active, and showed but few symptoms of decay. His head was bald, and the few remaining locks that surrounded it were nearly white.

But there was a look of energy about his mouth, and a humour in his light grey eye, which forbade those who knew him to regard him altogether as an old man. As it was, he could walk from Oxney Colne to Priestown, fifteen long Devonshire miles across the moor; and he who could do that could hardly be regarded as too old for work.

But our present story will have more to do with his daughter than with him. A pretty girl, I have said, was Patience Woolsworthy; and one, too, in many ways remarkable. She had taken her outlook into life, weighing the things which she had and those which she had not, in a manner very unusual, and, as a rule, not always desirable for a young lady. The things which she had not were very many. She had not society; she had not a fortune; she had not any assurance of future means of livelihood; she had not high hope of procuring for herself a position in life by marriage; she had not that excitement and pleasure in life which she read of in such books as found their way down to Oxney Colne Parsonage. It would be easy to add to the list of the things which she had not; and this list against herself she made out with the utmost vigour. The things which she had, or those rather which she assured herself of having, were much more easily counted.

She had the birth and education of a lady, the strength of a healthy woman, and a will of her own. Such was the list as she made it out for herself, and I protest that I assert no more than the truth in saying that she never added to it either beauty, wit, or talent.

I began these deions by saying that Oxney Colne would, of all places, be the best spot from which a tourist could visit those parts of Devonshire, but for the fact that he could obtain there none of the accommodation which tourists require. A brother antiquarian might, perhaps, in those days have done so, seeing that there was, as I have said, a spare bedroom at the parsonage. Any intimate friend of Miss Le Smyrger's might be as fortunate, for she was equally well provided at Oxney Combe, by which name her house was known. But Miss Le Smyrger was not given to extensive hospitality, and it was only to those who were bound to her, either by ties of blood or of very old friendship, that she delighted to open her doors. As her old friends were very few in number, as those few lived at a distance, and as her nearest relations were higher in the world than she was, and were said by herself to look down upon her, the visits made to Oxney Combe were few and far between.

But now, at the period of which I am writing, such a visit was about to be made. Miss Le Smyrger had a younger sister, who had inherited a property in the parish of Oxney Colne equal to that of the lady who now lived there; but this the younger sister had inherited beauty also, and she therefore, in early life, had found sundry lovers, one of whom became her husband. She had married a man even then well to do in the world, but now rich and almost mighty; a Member of Parliament, a lord of this and that board, a man who had a house in Eaton Square, and a park in the north of England; and in this way her course of life had been very much divided from that of our Miss Le Smyrger. But the Lord of the Government Board had been blessed with various children; and perhaps it was now thought expedient to look after Aunt Penelope's Devonshire acres. Aunt Penelope was empowered to leave them to whom she pleased; and though it was thought in Eaton Square that she must, as a matter of course, leave them to one of the family, nevertheless a little cousinly intercourse might make the thing more certain. I will not say that this was the sole cause of such a visit, but in these days a visit was to be made by Captain Broughton to his aunt. Now Captain John Broughton was the second son of Alfonso Broughton, of Clapham Park and Eaton Square, Member of Parliament, and Lord of the aforesaid Government Board.

同类推荐
  • 玩遍欧美就这么Easy!用汉语拼音说畅行无阻的英语

    玩遍欧美就这么Easy!用汉语拼音说畅行无阻的英语

    本书分为11章,共72个话题。分别为:和英美人交流、在英美乘坐交通工具、在英美体验生活、在英美工作、在英美学习、在英美就餐、在英美购物、在英美就医、在英美住宿、在英美旅行、在英美恋爱。内容丰富,涉及日常生活中的方方面面,且对每一章的话题都进行了细分,方便学习者针对具体的场景自由学习。
  • 美国名家短篇小说赏析(高级)

    美国名家短篇小说赏析(高级)

    本书精选了八位美国文学巨匠的8篇美国短篇小说的精华之作,每篇文章前有简短的引言,文中还附有编者的评注和分析及作者简介。
  • Never Give Up on Yourself 永不放弃自己

    Never Give Up on Yourself 永不放弃自己

    谁也不能改变你的容貌,但你能通过修炼自己变成一个魅力四射的女人。汪洋的经历就充分证明了这一点。《永不放弃自己》一书告诉大家,只要你不放弃希望,灰姑娘也会变成美丽的公主,你梦想的一切都会实现!
  • 王子与贫儿(双语译林)

    王子与贫儿(双语译林)

    《王子与贫儿》描写了王子爱德华和贫儿汤姆通过一个偶然的机会,阴差阳错地互换了位置,王子变成了贫儿,贫儿变成了王子的故事。汤姆当上了英国的新国王,而真正的王子爱德华却在外四处流浪。在好人霍顿的帮助下,爱德华王子经历了重重劫难,最终回到王宫。而贫儿汤姆在良心的谴责下,将不属于自己的皇位还给了真正的王子。此后,爱德华成了一位仁慈的君主,和他的子民一起过着幸福的生活。
  • 那些来自华尔街的赚钱经(每天读一点英文)

    那些来自华尔街的赚钱经(每天读一点英文)

    该丛书由美国英语教师协会推荐,特点有三:幽默逗趣,文字浅显易懂,让你笑着学英文!
热门推荐
  • 霞笺记

    霞笺记

    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。
  • 锦城夜笙歌

    锦城夜笙歌

    他说,此生只爱笙歌。她说,我爱你。他说,我会给你最繁华的婚礼。她说,我等你。他说,我们要不离不弃。她说,我信你。那时,他叫子遇。后来,他叫锦城。他的此生不再只爱笙歌。他也没有给她婚礼。他和她也没有不离不弃。她说,希望来世我们是相爱的。他们就像词中说的那样:锦城笙歌,青衫远目,心字犹缺,寂景空寥人影乱,昔人去,风景曾谙。
  • 世界那么大所以修个真

    世界那么大所以修个真

    当天道有缺,而万物为刍狗时,灵力潮汐又一次来临,世界过了千千万万年,主宰临世,争夺天命……
  • 在修仙世界里种田

    在修仙世界里种田

    所有人都忙着修行,却有一人不但不奋发图强,反而选择了穿梭在无数异界里种田。每个世界的人都会问他,干嘛不努力修仙出去闯荡看看世界的辽阔?开玩笑,修仙那么辛苦,能有种田好玩吗?这病态的世界动不动打打杀杀的,我有几条命可以死啊?还闯荡,这辈子都不可能出去闯荡了,只有种种田才能维持生活这样子,再说,我的目标,是将无数个世界都种满属于我的田地,区区修仙怎么比得上我这个远大理想?可是……先不说了,我家麦子快要收成了,我得回去看着。
  • 阎典史传

    阎典史传

    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。
  • 顶级经纪人图鉴

    顶级经纪人图鉴

    本书又名《大发!顶级经纪人!》《进击吧,经纪人小姐》《以信仰之光》《偶像战争》她曾说,“如果有一天我进了娱乐圈,一定不是因为我心血来潮,也不是因为我迫于生计,而是因为,我只是无聊了。所以命运选择了我,我选择了那里。”娱乐圈是个大染缸,多少人面目全非,她在其中开出了璀璨的花。
  • 反派毒妃逆袭攻略

    反派毒妃逆袭攻略

    『爽文,甜宠,越作越爱』萧陌对秦柔桑的厌恶让他恨不能将她大卸八块。但一张圣旨逼他迎娶了她。秦柔桑歹毒的用残害亲子来逼迫萧陌现身见面,被萧陌一掌拍死,留下个烂摊子。末世打怪强人秦柔桑穿越而来,重生便面临生死残局,为了活命和自由,她在高深莫测的萧陌面前狂刷厌恶值,在作死的道路上一路欢脱狂奔,拿到休书成还未狂喜便被惊住,她拿到休书的条件是:她必须保住萧家嫡系百十口子的性命。开什么玩笑?皇帝可是下旨要杀了他们!隔着信件她都能感觉到萧陌阴狠毒辣的样子:“你若想和离便同意,不然就和本侯的家人一起见阎王吧。”秦柔桑想怼死萧陌那豺狼,可为了自由,干了!后来的萧陌:“前妻难追,心好痛!”——求收藏推荐留言
  • 田园无小事

    田园无小事

    这地儿依山傍水,土也肥,水也甜只是房子破烂不堪,没吃没穿,而且还附带一只拖油瓶。瞧周围勉强算是资源丰富、物种多样小豆丁,瞧你也是个可怜的,走,姐姐带你种田去!~~~~~~~~~~感谢小无(无名指的束缚)同学的封面还有,本书新建了一个群,喜欢书的同鞋欢迎来加:127657059,进群敲门砖:女主捡来的拖油瓶叫什么?
  • 我在异世界当守墓人

    我在异世界当守墓人

    御宅族叶沐被书架压住了,之后他被异世界——多亚大陆的天神召唤过来。在这里神告诉他:“汝已经被我们神奉命为守墓人,汝的职责便是守护神灵们在凡间的神墓,不要被那些凡人们所得到。”就这样作为守墓人而在异贝雅大陆的叶沐,开始了自己的守墓之旅……
  • 玄天成神记