登陆注册
19594600000041

第41章

"Seriously speaking," said he, "don't you think that there are some experiences great enough to break up and re-form a man's nature?""To break up," I replied, "yes; but to re-form, no. Passing through a great experience may shatter a man, or it may strengthen a man, just as passing through a furnace may melt or purify metal, but no furnace ever lit upon this earth can change a bar of gold into a bar of lead, or a bar of lead into one of gold."I asked Jephson what he thought. He did not consider the bar of gold simile a good one. He held that a man's character was not an immutable element. He likened it to a drug--poison or elixir--compounded by each man for himself from the pharmacopoeia of all things known to life and time, and saw no impossibility, though some improbability, in the glass being flung aside and a fresh draught prepared with pain and labour.

"Well," I said, "let us put the case practically; did you ever know a man's character to change?""Yes," he answered, "I did know a man whose character seemed to me to be completely changed by an experience that happened to him. It may, as you say, only have been that he was shattered, or that the lesson may have taught him to keep his natural disposition ever under control. The result, in any case, was striking."We asked him to give us the history of the case, and he did so.

"He was a friend of some cousins of mine," Jephson began, "people Iused to see a good deal of in my undergraduate days. When I met him first he was a young fellow of twenty-six, strong mentally and physically, and of a stern and stubborn nature that those who liked him called masterful, and that those who disliked him--a more numerous body--termed tyrannical. When I saw him three years later, he was an old man of twenty-nine, gentle and yielding beyond the border-line of weakness, mistrustful of himself and considerate of others to a degree that was often unwise. Formerly, his anger had been a thing very easily and frequently aroused. Since the change of which I speak, I have never known the shade of anger to cross his face but once. In the course of a walk, one day, we came upon a young rough terrifying a small child by pretending to set a dog at her. He seized the boy with a grip that almost choked him, and administered to him a punishment that seemed to me altogether out of proportion to the crime, brutal though it was.

"I remonstrated with him when he rejoined me.

"'Yes,' he replied apologetically; 'I suppose I'm a hard judge of some follies.' And, knowing what his haunted eyes were looking at, I said no more.

"He was junior partner in a large firm of tea brokers in the City.

There was not much for him to do in the London office, and when, therefore, as the result of some mortgage transactions, a South Indian tea plantation fell into the hands of the firm, it was suggested that he should go out and take the management of it. The plan suited him admirably. He was a man in every way qualified to lead a rough life; to face a by no means contemptible amount of difficulty and danger, to govern a small army of native workers more amenable to fear than to affection. Such a life, demanding thought and action, would afford his strong nature greater interest and enjoyment than he could ever hope to obtain amid the cramped surroundings of civilisation.

"Only one thing could in reason have been urged against the arrangement, that thing was his wife. She was a fragile, delicate girl, whom he had married in obedience to that instinct of attraction towards the opposite which Nature, for the purpose of maintaining her average, has implanted in our breasts--a timid, meek-eyed creature, one of those women to whom death is less terrible than danger, and fate easier to face than fear. Such women have been known to run screaming from a mouse and to meet martyrdom with heroism. They can no more keep their nerves from trembling than an aspen tree can stay the quivering of its leaves.

"That she was totally unfitted for, and would be made wretched by the life to which his acceptance of the post would condemn her might have readily occurred to him, had he stopped to consider for a moment her feelings in the matter. But to view a question from any other standpoint than his own was not his habit. That he loved her passionately, in his way, as a thing belonging to himself, there can be no doubt, but it was with the love that such men have for the dog they will thrash, the horse they will spur to a broken back. To consult her on the subject never entered his head. He informed her one day of his decision and of the date of their sailing, and, handing her a handsome cheque, told her to purchase all things necessary to her, and to let him know if she needed more; and she, loving him with a dog-like devotion that was not good for him, opened her big eyes a little wider, but said nothing. She thought much about the coming change to herself, however, and, when nobody was by, she would cry softly; then, hearing his footsteps, would hastily wipe away the traces of her tears, and go to meet him with a smile.

"Now, her timidity and nervousness, which at home had been a butt for mere chaff, became, under the new circumstances of their life, a serious annoyance to the man. A woman who seemed unable to repress a scream whenever she turned and saw in the gloom a pair of piercing eyes looking out at her from a dusky face, who was liable to drop off her horse with fear at the sound of a wild beast's roar a mile off, and who would turn white and limp with horror at the mere sight of a snake, was not a companionable person to live with in the neighbourhood of Indian jungles.

"He himself was entirely without fear, and could not understand it.

To him it was pure affectation. He had a muddled idea, common to men of his stamp, that women assume nervousness because they think it pretty and becoming to them, and that if one could only convince them of the folly of it they might be induced to lay it aside, in the same way that they lay aside mincing steps and simpering voices.

同类推荐
  • 无上黄箓大斋立成仪

    无上黄箓大斋立成仪

    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。
  • The Soul of the Far East

    The Soul of the Far East

    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。
  • On the Track

    On the Track

    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。
  • 四家语录

    四家语录

    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。
  • 声音门

    声音门

    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
  • 神皇纪

    神皇纪

    兽皇山中生死历练,帝国学院展露头角,大陆精英联赛折得桂冠。小人物陈潇一步步成神,被美女调戏、吃豆腐,那叫一个羞啊!要命的是他还深深的爱上这个调戏他的美女,泥足深陷。美女被抓他寝食难安,美女被觊觎,他想杀人,小人物终能抱得美人归?
  • 巫妃来袭袖转天下

    巫妃来袭袖转天下

    某男邪笑:“你治好了本王的眼,本王准备以身相许。”某女冷笑:“本姑娘治好的男人都这么说,你算老几!”他本以为此生孑然,直到遇到她。她躲避爱恋,却甩不掉他。看这乱世中的爱恋,是否挡的住硝烟。男主女主强强联手,袖转天下再相见,“锦儿,不要再离开我,好不好?”男人穷尽一生力气抱紧怀中女子。女子推开男人,神色冷漠:“对不起,我不再爱你了。”所有的伤害,只不过是为了对方更好的存在。他们能否并肩一身?如何面对上辈恩怨?
  • 喻老

    喻老

    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。
  • 二胎萌纪

    二胎萌纪

    “唐芯同学,让你家长到学校来一趟。”隔天,她就抱着八个月大的舅舅来报道。“唐芯同学,我妹妹萌的不要不要。要不,咋们定个娃娃亲吧?”想也不想,她就把未出生的弟弟,卖给某土豪做上门女婿——美其名曰为父母减轻,经济压力。“唐芯,我和妹妹都是天枰座,你弟弟是什么星座?”几小时后,她含泪抬头望天:“原来,父母是处女座根本不是事儿,最惨的莫过于她还有个处女座弟弟。”“唐芯同学,请简单描述一下你的课余生活。”自从有了弟弟,她的生活好的不得了。每天吃饭、睡觉、打弟弟——完美!
  • 超级淘宝

    超级淘宝

    一道天雷从天降,手机淘宝软件竟然变异了,新世界购物系统,只要你有足够金币,应有尽有的宝物随便买。画道灵符,竟然能看到隔壁的漂亮妹子,炼出宝丹,这东西能祛疤治病,韩武,一个来自普通家庭的平凡学生,终于开始走上改变人生之路。
  • 末路狂妃

    末路狂妃

    她,爱上一个男人,被这个男人利用,身陷囹圄,却在最末路的时刻为另一个男人华丽变身,一场自杀唤醒了身体内部最真实的灵魂,引发了身体最深处的记忆,从此走上一条张扬、精彩的复仇之路。
  • 卐古盘月

    卐古盘月

    《意诀》意道,幻也,想到及做到。只有你想不到,没有你做不到。《物诀》一发一世界,一毛一宇宙。集万千宇宙与一身。《盘诀》.............《力诀》.............太古大陆。今夜,不再寂静,魔兽山脉,无数魔兽仰天而啸,无数强者仰望星空深处,一脸无奈的悲痛,今夜魔神出世。天际。云丝游带似乎想与月争辉,久久的,遮挡着流淌的月光,不肯离去。而今夜还是月光的世界,故谓之为“月夜”,如梦如幻。不过这片银色的美不代表“天罚”劫云的意志。
  • 腹黑妖孽齐登场:坏坏相公不良妻

    腹黑妖孽齐登场:坏坏相公不良妻

    她一朝穿越,却被人打个半死,谁能告诉她到底发生了神马???为神马自己已经是个“废柴”“花痴”“刁婆娘”,却还会有人“投怀送抱”????司临夏:“你注定只能是我的妻,永远逃不掉.....”冷墨晴:“....”邪魅如他,腹黑如他,霸道如他....谁又是谁的劫???风紫宸:“小晴晴,人家嫁给你当相公好不好???”冷墨晴:“.......”绝情如他,善变如他,痴心如他.....谁又是谁的殇???景倾城:“我爱你,那是我的事,能守护你,此生足矣.....”冷墨晴:“.....”温润如他,坚定如他,体贴如他.....谁又是谁的注???待风云过后,她绝代风华,傲临天下....(一对一,完美结局)
  • 逆天重生:首席学职师

    逆天重生:首席学职师

    她是二十一世纪的第一杀手,可是却因爱上一个人变成了哑巴。她不怕,可是那人却是要取她性命。她也不怕,既然你要取我性命,我给你就行,但是,你的命也给我留下。她一朝婚穿,架空到异世大陆,她注定光芒不会被覆盖掉。随身戴的项链里面有一个人,她受她(他)帮助教育,终于登上了最高位。一温宛如日,一霸道如血,一妖娆如狐,一温柔如玉,他们都对她说:“我娶你可好”她也都对他们说:“不嫁”……
  • 脑残粉的暴走

    脑残粉的暴走

    他是一名追书狂热者,雷雨天(作死)竟被电到自己最爱看的书里,还遇到了主角和他的小伙伴,他跟着主角一行人走南闯北(?)却发现剧情发生了一些细微的变化,他作为一枚脑残粉怎能坐得住!可谁能告诉他为什么这细微的变动还搭上了他自己?