登陆注册
19555300000128

第128章 AFTERCOURSES(3)

At the top of the pole were crossed hoops decked with small flowers; beneath these came a milk-white zone of Maybloom; then a zone of bluebells, then of cowslips, then of lilacs, then of ragged-robins, daffodils, and so on, till the lowest stage was reached.Thomasin noticed all these, and was delighted that the May revel was to be so near.

When afternoon came people began to gather on the green, and Yeobright was interested enough to look out upon them from the open window of his room.Soon after this Thomasin walked out from the door immediately below and turned her eyes up to her cousin's face.She was dressed more gaily than Yeobright had ever seen her dressed since the time of Wildeve's death, eighteen months before;since the day of her marriage even she had not exhibited herself to such advantage.

"How pretty you look today, Thomasin!" he said.

"Is it because of the Maypole?"

"Not altogether." And then she blushed and dropped her eyes, which he did not specially observe, though her manner seemed to him to be rather peculiar, considering that she was only addressing himself.Could it be possible that she had put on her summer clothes to please him?

He recalled her conduct towards him throughout the last few weeks, when they had often been working together in the garden, just as they had formerly done when they were boy and girl under his mother's eye.

What if her interest in him were not so entirely that of a relative as it had formerly been? To Yeobright any possibility of this sort was a serious matter; and he almost felt troubled at the thought of it.Every pulse of loverlike feeling which had not been stilled during Eustacia's lifetime had gone into the grave with her.

His passion for her had occurred too far on in his manhood to leave fuel enough on hand for another fire of that sort, as may happen with more boyish loves.

Even supposing him capable of loving again, that love would be a plant of slow and laboured growth, and in the end only small and sickly, like an autumn-hatched bird.

He was so distressed by this new complexity that when the enthusiastic brass band arrived and struck up, which it did about five o'clock, with apparently wind enough among its members to blow down his house, he withdrew from his rooms by the back door, went down the garden, through the gate in the hedge, and away out of sight.

He could not bear to remain in the presence of enjoyment today, though he had tried hard.

Nothing was seen of him for four hours.When he came back by the same path it was dusk, and the dews were coating every green thing.The boisterous music had ceased;but, entering the premises as he did from behind, he could not see if the May party had all gone till he had passed through Thomasin's division of the house to the front door.

Thomasin was standing within the porch alone.

She looked at him reproachfully."You went away just when it began, Clym," she said.

"Yes.I felt I could not join in.You went out with them, of course?""No, I did not."

"You appeared to be dressed on purpose."

"Yes, but I could not go out alone; so many people were there.One is there now."Yeobright strained his eyes across the dark-green patch beyond the paling, and near the black form of the Maypole he discerned a shadowy figure, sauntering idly up and down.

"Who is it?" he said.

"Mr.Venn," said Thomasin.

"You might have asked him to come in, I think, Tamsie.

He has been very kind to you first and last.""I will now," she said; and, acting on the impulse, went through the wicket to where Venn stood under the Maypole.

"It is Mr.Venn, I think?" she inquired.

Venn started as if he had not seen her--artful man that he was--and said, "Yes.""Will you come in?"

"I am afraid that I--"

"I have seen you dancing this evening, and you had the very best of the girls for your partners.Is it that you won't come in because you wish to stand here, and think over the past hours of enjoyment?""Well, that's partly it," said Mr.Venn, with ostentatious sentiment."But the main reason why I am biding here like this is that I want to wait till the moon rises.""To see how pretty the Maypole looks in the moonlight?""No.To look for a glove that was dropped by one of the maidens."Thomasin was speechless with surprise.That a man who had to walk some four or five miles to his home should wait here for such a reason pointed to only one conclusion--the man must be amazingly interested in that glove's owner.

"Were you dancing with her, Diggory?" she asked, in a voice which revealed that he had made himself considerably more interesting to her by this disclosure.

"No," he sighed.

"And you will not come in, then?"

"Not tonight, thank you, ma'am."

"Shall I lend you a lantern to look for the young person's glove, Mr.Venn?""O no; it is not necessary, Mrs.Wildeve, thank you.

The moon will rise in a few minutes."

Thomasin went back to the porch."Is he coming in?"said Clym, who had been waiting where she had left him.

"He would rather not tonight," she said, and then passed by him into the house; whereupon Clym too retired to his own rooms.

When Clym was gone Thomasin crept upstairs in the dark, and, just listening by the cot, to assure herself that the child was asleep, she went to the window, gently lifted the corner of the white curtain, and looked out.Venn was still there.

She watched the growth of the faint radiance appearing in the sky by the eastern hill, till presently the edge of the moon burst upwards and flooded the valley with light.

Diggory's form was now distinct on the green; he was moving about in a bowed attitude, evidently scanning the grass for the precious missing article, walking in zigzags right and left till he should have passed over every foot of the ground.

同类推荐
  • 大涅槃经义记卷第四

    大涅槃经义记卷第四

    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。
  • 颂古合响集

    颂古合响集

    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。
  • 集异记

    集异记

    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。
  • Andre Cornelis

    Andre Cornelis

    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。
  • 人物志

    人物志

    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。
热门推荐
  • 木槿花西月锦绣4

    木槿花西月锦绣4

    重伤的木槿醒来后,看到了令她更头疼的宋明磊……宋明磊为了永远地把木槿留在身边,为她整了一双紫眼睛,并且逼她服用日渐痴呆的秋光散。木槿被一个神秘的少年僧人兰生所救,在回西安的途中遇到幽冥教的追杀,从明风卿口中第一次得知那诡异的三十二字真言,正是这真言引起四大家族仇杀。好在被离家出走的撒鲁尔(非珏)所救,可惜那时木槿眼睛中了石灰,没有认出非珏,可怜的非珏虽然记忆大部分恢复了,却从没有见过木槿的真实面目,也没有认出木槿,等到木槿再睁开眼时,非珏已走远了,木槿感叹两人终是此生无缘……
  • 家庭教育指导手册:小学生

    家庭教育指导手册:小学生

    家庭教育是最早期的教育,也是对儿童影响最深的教育。在家庭教育中,父母扮演着第一任教师的角色。德国著名教育家,幼儿园运动的创始人福禄培尔曾说过:“国家的命运,与其说是操在掌权者手中,倒不如说是握在母亲的手中。”可见,家长(主要是父母)以及由家长所进行的家庭教育在社会发展中具有的不可估量的作用。
  • 帝王将相论时事

    帝王将相论时事

    秦皇汉武,唐宗宋祖,这些风流一时的英雄人物都已“俱往矣”。但他们所留给后人的功过是非与政治智慧却投有因时代的流逝和朝代的更替而消失。相反,正是随着时间的流失和朝代的更替,我们对这些帝王将相的一些精辟言论所透露出来的智慧谋略才倍加折服。作为一个国家的最高统治者,身为天子、将相他们有责任和义务维持社会的秩序,保持国家的安定,而这前提就是要对其统治下的国家,当时的时事要具有深刻的认识,这关乎国家的兴亡,社会的治乱。因此,他们对时事的论断往往准确而又精辟。
  • 苦泪迎春

    苦泪迎春

    家庭破碎,亲情离去,留给小凤的只有痛苦和孤独。她渴望亲情,渴望关爱。可在漫长的人间岁月里,他迎来的却是一次又一次的伤害,春天何时才能来。。。。。。
  • 搞恶公主冰山男

    搞恶公主冰山男

    乌龙的穿越了!哎呦我去。。。咦~专宠的公主,不错嘛,麻雀变凤凰,我喜欢。“喂,你个死男人,长得帅很了不起嘛?快给我道歉!要不然信不信我打死你然后横尸街头没人敢来收尸!”仲夏一活像一个泼妇一样指着男人的鼻子骂个不停。“我平生第一次见你这么没有教养的女子,像一个泼妇一样。”男子没有正眼看她,可恶,被这小丫头说的面子都碎一地了!
  • 阴阳师传人

    阴阳师传人

    我相信,很多人都不信鬼神,都认为那些东西都是人们虚构的。但我要在这里告诉你们,人在做,天在看,总会有那么一双眼睛在看着你!
  • 神算之子

    神算之子

    陈修,一个经历了穿越的侦探,可是穿越之后却并没有迎来自己的春天,反而落魄无比。为了活下去他只得以算卦为生,虽然有骗人的嫌疑,到也能为自己混口饭吃,本来日子可以因此一天天变好,但机缘巧合之下他却变成了血魔之中的一员!而原因则正是有人看上了他的本事!“嘿嘿,真没想到,血魔一族竟然还要靠一个侦探来拯救,真是想不成为英雄都难啊!”就这样,陈修以血魔和侦探的身份开始在四大种族、狼人还有人类之间周旋,并和自己的美女搭档一起,一点点将血魔一族的安危抗在了肩膀上……
  • 倾世孤傲:千劫殇

    倾世孤傲:千劫殇

    她,是天之骄女,神界第一神将。神帝最宠爱的女儿,更曾为爱痴狂,却落的父皇怀疑,被爱人利用而遭受九道弑神而亡。数年后,她又重生,拥有人人觊觎的十四大神器。这一世她没有心,她要逆天改命。她杀伐果断冰冷无情。步步重回巅峰。“你敢欺我,纯属找死,我,你永远望尘莫及!上一辈子的债我要你万倍奉还。”他,魔族至尊,实力无双神秘莫测,本也无心的他,当他的生命与她的生命蓦然交织,他们都为彼此融化,最后的决战,她不解他的用心良苦而肝肠寸断。她说:“我此生最大的错处就是为了你还相信爱情!”他慌了,而她已然被别人带走再无踪影,结局,他是否还可以挽回?
  • 上古世纪之守候

    上古世纪之守候

    《上古世纪》这款新型网游,经历了玫瑰与光芒的时代。再次迎来了荣耀的时代!数以亿万玩家们前赴后继,参与到这荣耀时代当中,只为获得那无上的荣耀!书友群:(凊竹盟)群号:285905542(推荐竹子正在写的网游书《网游之傲世天下》欢迎大家搜阅!)
  • 庶女国色

    庶女国色

    胡非非表示很无辜,随便逛个街都能碰上“电梯逆天故障”这种事。她做自由落体运动被穿越后,发现……总而言之,这是一个普通公司小职员,穿越成绝色小庶女,各种幸福卖萌秀恩爱,扁扁渣男,揍揍碧池,最终抱得美男归,还顺便把小日子过得有滋有味的“励志甜宠”故事!