登陆注册
19625400000163

第163章 Chapter 27 (1)

PART THE SECOND THE STORY CONTINUED BY WALTER HARTRIGHT I OPEN a new page. I advance my narrative by one week.

The history of the interval which I thus pass over must remain unrecorded.

My heart turns faint, my mind sinks in darkness and confusion when I think of it. This must not be, if I who write am to guide, as I ought, you who read. This must not be, if the clue that leads through the windings of the story is to remain from end to end untangled in my hands.

A life suddenly changed -- its whole purpose created afresh, its hopes and fears, its struggles, its interests, and its sacrifices all turned at once and for ever into a new direction -- this is the prospect which now opens before me, like the burst of view from a mountain's top. I left my narrative in the quiet shadow of Limmeridge church -- I resume it, one week later, in the stir and turmoil of a London street.

The street is in a populous and a poor neighbourhood. The ground floor of one of the houses in it is occupied by a small news-vendor's shop, and the first floor and the second are let as furnished lodgings of the humblest kind.

I have taken those two floors in an assumed name. On the upper floor I live, with a room to work in, a room to sleep in. On the lower floor, under the same assumed name, two women live, who are described as my sisters.

I get my bread by drawing and engraving on wood for the cheap periodicals.

My sisters are sup posed to help me by taking in a little needlework. Our poor place of abode, our humble calling, our assumed relationship, and our assumed name, are all used alike as a means of hiding us in the house-forest of London. We are numbered no longer with the people whose lives are open and known. I am an obscure, unnoticed man, without patron or friend to help me. Marian Halcombe is nothing now but my eldest sister, who provides for our household wants by the toil of her own hands. We two, in the estimation of others, are at once the dupes and the agents of a daring imposture.

We are supposed to be the accomplices of mad Anne Catherick, who claims the name, the Place, and the living personality of dead Lady Glyde.

That is our situation. That is the changed aspect in which we three must appear, henceforth, in this narrative, for many and many a page to come.

In the eye of reason and of law, in the estimation of relatives and friends, according to every received formality of civilised society, ‘Laura, Lady Glyde,' lay buried with her mother in Limmeridge churchyard. Torn in her own lifetime from the list of the living, the daughter of Philip Fairlie and the wife of Percival Glyde might still exist for her sister, might still exist for me, but to all the world besides she was dead. Dead to her uncle, who had renounced her; dead to the servants of the house, who had failed to recognise her; dead to the persons in authority, who had transmitted her fortune to her husband and her aunt; dead to my mother and my sister, who believed me to be the dupe of an adventuress and the victim of a fraud; socially, morally, legally -- dead.

And yet alive! Alive in poverty and in hiding. Alive, with the poor drawing-master to fight her battle, and to win the way back for her to her place in the world of living beings.

Did no suspicion, excited by my own knowledge of Anne Catherick's resemblance to her, cross my mind, when her face was first revealed to me? Not the shadow of a suspicion, from the moment when she lifted her veil by the side of the inscription which recorded her death.

Before the sun of that day had set, before the last glimpse of the home which was closed against her had passed from our view, the farewell words I spoke, when we parted at Limmeridge House, had been recalled by both of us -- repeated by me, recognised by her. ‘If ever the time comes, when the devotion of my whole heart and soul and strength will give you a moment's happiness, or spare you a moment's sorrow, will you try to remember the poor drawing-master who has taught you?' She, who now remembered so little of the trouble and terror of a later time, remembered those words, and laid her poor head innocently and trustingly on the bosom of the man who had spoken them. In that moment, when she called me by my name, when she said, ‘They have tried to make me forget everything, Walter, but I remember Marian, and I remember you' -- in that moment, I, who had long since given her my love, gave her my life, and thanked God that it was mine to bestow on her. Yes! the time had come, from thousands on thousands of miles away -- through forest and wilderness, where companions stronger than I had fallen by my side, through peril of death thrice renewed, and thrice escaped, the Hand that leads men on the dark road to the future had led me to meet that time. Forlorn and disowned, sorely tried and sadly changed -- her Beauty faded, her mind clouded -- robbed of her station in the world, of her place among living creatures -- the devotion I had promised, the devotion of my whole heart and soul and strength, might be laid blamelessly now at those dear feet. In the right of her calamity, in the right of her friendlessness, she was mine at last! Mine to support, to protect, to cherish, to restore.

Mine to love and honour as father and brother both. Mine to vindicate through all risks and all sacrifices -- through the hopeless struggle against Rank and Power, through the long fight with armed deceit and fortified Success, through the waste of my reputation, through the loss of my friends, through the hazard of my life. II My position is defined -- my motives are acknowledged. The story of Marian and the story of Laura must come next.

I shall relate both narratives, not in the words (often interrupted, often inevitably confused) of the speakers themselves, but in the words of the brief, plain, studiously simple abstract which I committed to writing for my own guidance, and for the guidance of my legal adviser. So the tangled web will be most speedily and most intelligibly unrolled.

The story of Marian begins where the narrative of the housekeeper at Blackwater Park left off.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 星丹

    星丹

    地球上世界末日,霍启,一个基因克隆的完美的人,在另外一个星球上,融合道、佛、儒三家,结合现代物理量子理论、天体理论,创建出与其他门派完全不一样的修真之路且看霍启与众不同的道法,堪比核弹爆炸全文情节波澜起伏,且看霍启在龙笑、蓝雨、寒山雪三个美女之间如何抉择……
  • 末日创世

    末日创世

    红尘往事,随风去。兄弟情深,生死劫。生死离别,血染巾。兄弟并肩,战尸王。忠肝义胆,平天下。兄弟在旁,创天堂。QQ交流群487024056
  • 创业型老板

    创业型老板

    本书运用作者首创的对称方法与“五度空间”方法与模式,以知识经济与人类二次创业为背景,以主体与客体相对称、主体性与科学性相统一为基本原则与基本线索,指出创业不仅是企业形成的一个阶段,而且是管理的一种模式;而创业型老板,既是与时代要求相对称的新型老板,也是与时代要求相对称的老板新的素质结构。创业型老板,是以领袖的心态经商的,人格型、创新型、学习型、合作型、和谐型老板。创业型老板的素质建设是一个系统工程。本书提出了这一系统工程的基本框架。本书夹叙夹议,深入浅出,逻辑严密,文笔流畅;把理论阐述和案例分析、学者的分析力度和畅销书的写作风格结合起来。
  • 撒旦总裁的宠妻

    撒旦总裁的宠妻

    雪心,一个孤儿,从小在孤儿院长大并认识了他,多年后,他们再次相遇,他竟是高高在上的总裁,而她,却成了他报复和发泄的工具,尽管如此,雪心竟爱上了这个撒旦般的男人,她甚至怀疑自己是受虐狂...“撒旦总裁,如果爱,请深爱,若不爱,请离开!爱情的游戏,我,玩不起!
  • 大明倒爷

    大明倒爷

    文不能提笔安天下,武不能上马定乾坤。但是,做为一个现代人,他有他自己的优势。崇祯是他的拜把子兄弟。李自成是他的小弟。皇太极?懒得搭理那个鞑子。他的财富足够改变整个帝国的国运。
  • 关于我爱你并不是游戏

    关于我爱你并不是游戏

    爱情,从来就不是游戏,不管玩玩而已,还是许诺一生,只要心动过,就不是游戏。#这是男男恋的时代#【排斥同性恋者勿看,看了勿喷,谢谢】你能忘掉你的初恋吗?不管是甜蜜的告白,还是痛苦的暗恋,谁都没办法忘掉初恋,就算时隔很久后再见,也会有心动的感觉,那种美,恰到好处。
  • 夺命娇妻:致命危机

    夺命娇妻:致命危机

    年柒这辈子最遗憾的事情,就是没有最先认识林杋,继而爱上了一个让她心力交瘁的男人;林樾这辈子最后悔的事情,则是未能及时向年柒透露爱意,反而被哥哥捷足先登,娶了年柒为妻,纵使知道年柒爱的是自己,但他仍旧不能横插一刀,选择成全哥哥之时,他就清楚的知道,自己一辈子错过了什么;若说林杋最渴望的事情,就是能和年柒一辈子走下去,即便她不爱自己,可他还是想这样自私下去,自私一辈子。但他心知肚明,他的一辈子究竟有多短,短到闭上眼,几乎可以看到未知的不久。“给不了你想要的爱,我只愿你能够平安健康的活下来。林杋,求求你,为了我活下来,好吗?”
  • 死神修行录

    死神修行录

    地狱不公,幽冥锁链加身,望乡台前七十年。仰天怒号天不应,无边冤屈地不灵。一朝时机成,夺取天机逃地府,踏足异世修真身。待得大道回归时,手中长剑再问道。夺得生死判官笔,寻觅黑铁镰刀在后背,重塑轮回在人间。
  • 神皇之后逆修无敌甁辰九

    神皇之后逆修无敌甁辰九

    我的血铺了这一路,梦醒时,都归入尘与土。几多轮回,终是命运噬心剖骨,镜花水月不如逆天千回。一念起万水千山,一念落沧海桑田,终于知晓你存在的意义。请看甁辰九作品《神皇之后逆修无敌》,希望大家支持。
  • 不灭邪尊

    不灭邪尊

    萧擎穿越到异界一个废物的身上,这个废物还是一个上门女婿,各种职业技能,流星一般崛起,继承人皇宝库,向着新一代人皇之位发起冲锋。