登陆注册
19625400000214

第214章 Chapter 36 (2)

‘Leave us,' he said, looking at her over his shoulder. She looked back over her shoulder and waited as if she didn't care to go. ‘Do you hear?' he roared out, ‘leave the room.' ‘Speak to me civilly,' says she, getting red in the face. ‘Turn the idiot out,' says he, looking my way. She had always had crazy notions of her own about her dignity, and that word ‘idiot' upset her in a moment. Before I could interfere she stepped up to him in a fine passion. ‘Beg my pardon, directly,' says she, ‘or I'll make it the worse for you. I'll let out your Secret. I can ruin you for life if I choose to open my lips.' My own words! -- repeated exactly from what I had said the day before -- repeated, in his presence, as if they had come from herself.

He sat speechless, as white as the paper I am writing on, while I pushed her out of the room. When he recovered himself --

No! I am too respectable a woman to mention what he said when he recovered himself. My pen is the pen of a member of the rector's congregation, and a subscriber to the ‘Wednesday Lectures on justification by Faith' -- how can you expect me to employ it in writing bad language? Suppose, for yourself, the raging, swearing frenzy of the lowest ruffian in England, and let us get on together, as fast as may be, to the way in which it all ended.

It ended, as you probably guess by this time, in his insisting on securing his own safety by shutting her up.

I tried to set things right. I told him that she had merely repeated, like a parrot, the words she had heard me say and that she knew no particulars whatever, because I had mentioned none. I explained that she had affected, out of crazy spite against him, to know what she really did not know -- that she only wanted to threaten him and aggravate him for speaking to her as he had just spoken -- ad that my unlucky words gave her just the chance of doing mischief of which she was in search. I referred him to other queer ways of hers, and to his own experience of the vagaries of half-witted people -- it was all to no purpose -- he would not believe me on my oath -- he was absolutely certain I had betrayed the whole Secret.

In short, he would hear of nothing but shutting her up.

Under these circumstances, I did my duty as a mother. ‘No pauper Asylum,'

I said, ‘I won't have her put in a pauper Asylum. A Private Establishment, if you please. I have my feelings as a mother, and my character to preserve in the town, and I will submit to nothing but a Private Establishment, of the sort which my genteel neighbours would choose for afflicted relatives of their own.' Those were my words. It is gratifying to me to reflect that I did my duty. Though never overfond of my late daughter, I had a proper pride about her. No pauper stain -- thanks to my firmness and resolution -- ever rested on My child.

Having carried my point (which I did the more easily, in consequence of the facilities offered by private Asylums), I could not refuse to admit that there were certain advantages gained by shutting her up. In the first place, she was taken excellent care of -- being treated (as I took care to mention in the town) on the footing of a lady. In the second place, she was kept away from Welmingham, where she might have set people suspecting and inquiring, by repeating my own incautious words.

The only drawback of putting her under restraint was a very slight one.

We merely turned her empty boast about knowing the Secret into a fixed delusion. Having first spoken in sheer crazy spitefulness against the man who had offended her, she was cunning enough to see that she had seriously frightened him, and sharp enough afterwards to discover that he was concerned in shutting her up. The consequence was she flamed out into a perfect frenzy of passion against him, going to the Asylum, and the fist words she said to the nurses, after they had quieted her, were, that she was put in confinement for knowing his Secret, and that she meant to open her lips and ruin him, when the right time came.

She may have said the same thing to you, when you thoughtlessly assisted her escape. She certainly said it (as I heard last summer) to the unfortunate woman who married our sweet-tempered, nameless gentleman lately deceased.

If either you, or that unlucky lady, had questioned my daughter closely, and had insisted on her explaining what she really meant, you would have found her lose all her self-importance suddenly, and get vacant, and restless, and confused -- you would have discovered that I am writing nothing here but the plain truth. She knew that there was a Secret -- she knew who was connected with it -- she knew who would suffer by its being known -- and beyond that, whatever airs of importance she may have given herself, whatever crazy boasting she may have indulged in with strangers, she never to her dying day knew more.

Have I satisfied your curiosity? I have taken pains enough to satisfy it at any rate. There is really nothing else I have to tell you about myself or my daughter. My worst responsibilities, so far as she was concerned, were all over when she was secured in the Asylum. I had a form of letter relating to the circumstances under which she was shut up, given me to write, in answer to one Miss Halcombe, who was curious in the matter, and who must have heard plenty of lies about me from a certain tongue well accustomed to the telling of the same. And I did what I could afterwards to trace my runaway daughter, and prevent her from doing mischief by making inquiries myself in the neighbourhood where she was falsely reported to have been seen. But these, and other trifles like them, are of little or no interest to you after what you have heard already.

So far, I have written in the friendliest possible spirit. But I cannot close this letter, without adding a word here of serious remonstrance and reproof, addressed to yourself.

同类推荐
  • 五岳真形序论

    五岳真形序论

    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。
  • Uncle Remus

    Uncle Remus

    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。
  • 灵宝施食法

    灵宝施食法

    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。
  • 万善同归集

    万善同归集

    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。
  • 五灯严统解惑编

    五灯严统解惑编

    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
  • 命世之才

    命世之才

    善恶一念之间,向经典武侠致敬,用最新颖的故事讲述武侠故事。
  • 火爆甜心,首席请签字

    火爆甜心,首席请签字

    他是S市有名的多金总裁,一场乌龙的偷拍,苏离竟被他盯上,为了和渣男解除婚约,她不得不做了这个恶魔的秘书和女仆!她天真的以为可以过上普通生活,结果某天,他将她压在身下,强抱在怀中……“呜呜呜我不跟你玩了,放开我!”他幽深黑眸里透露着得逞神色,嗓音低沉而迷人,“可是我想继续玩。”最好跟你“玩”到天荒地老。
  • 镇杀诸天万界

    镇杀诸天万界

    苏雨放目远眺,心情沉重而悲伤:“这个世界如此宏伟,如此宁静,一点也不像我们家乡那末日般的岁月……”“永远不要为过去悲伤,年轻的战士。正因为你,我们的种族才得以延续。当你力所能及时,就做得漂亮些。”老者鼓励安慰。“老人家教训的是,或许多年以后,我们的子孙会问我们,当异族占领我们家乡的时候,你们在哪里?那时我们可以自豪地回答说,我们从未放弃过战斗!”“锵!”利剑出鞘……
  • 八系全神

    八系全神

    复而又漫步一世,生死从未幻灭,诛杀了异己野心,又能平得天地动荡,辗转时光不复,会立顶峰而下望,原来这芸芸众生早已匍匐在我的脚下,鼻贴泥沙,一动不动。--我是肌肉哥叶小年,我为自己代言
  • 欲望少一点幸福多一点

    欲望少一点幸福多一点

    本书结合欲望少一点,幸福就会多一点这个主题展开,通过生活中心灵励志小故事,多层次、多角度地揭示了欲望与幸福关系,帮助读者克服各种不良的欲望,引导和保持合理的欲望,以开启幸福的生活。
  • 天澜忆梦录

    天澜忆梦录

    他是孤儿,在“上有天堂,下有苏杭”之称的苏杭邂逅一位女子,女子正好是他心中“丁香一般的姑娘”,自此,姑娘的颜容刻在了他的心上。奈何天灾人祸,他死后,依然无法忘记那位姑娘,便要踏破穹宇,以求再见之日。“以我之名,让我们两个的名字响彻天澜!”少年立下宏愿,只是为了以后与女子的相见缥缈之期,且看少年在这条路上,风云相伴!一曲琴音说天澜,万载幽冥亘古传,踏入长生不死地,唯求千年心中兰!血海骨山妖娆翩,此生定与风云伴。九霄云外天外天,堕入凡尘为容颜
  • 非卿不娶:倾世青鸾

    非卿不娶:倾世青鸾

    她,自幼父母双亡,本以为阿岚是真心疼她,可谁知阿岚对她好,仅仅是因为她像阿岚夭折的独女,她只是个替身,从此冷漠如冰,拒人于千里,不顾下任天后的身份,毅然离去;他,人们都只知他是苍黎学院的风云人物,苍黎学院四王中最厉害的,而他的真实身份却鲜为人知。。。。。当腹黑冰山遇上邪魅,将上演怎样一场精彩绝伦的好戏!
  • 华严发菩提心章

    华严发菩提心章

    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。
  • 古龙文集:剑客行(下)

    古龙文集:剑客行(下)

    古龙在他的早期名篇《剑客行》中,赋予了他对“武侠世界”的期待与想象:要成长为武林传奇,必先经历常人难以忍受的痛苦与磨难。成长,就是要如此沉痛,才会精彩。少年展白初出江湖,却背负一代江湖传说——“霹雳剑”展云天的弑父之仇。展白资质平平,却不得不面对接二连三的江湖强敌。在一次次几殒性命的拼杀中,少年死里逃生,忍受难以忍受的痛苦和折磨,终于学成惊世奇招,为父报仇。然而,中原面临着史无前例的巨大威胁,而少年一人,将要肩负起整个江湖的生死大任……
  • 写给孩子的恐龙小百科

    写给孩子的恐龙小百科

    本书详细阐述了中生代的庞然大物——恐龙,以一种全新的视角向孩子展示了神秘的恐龙世界,揭秘古生物学家对恐龙的考察、发掘过程,带领孩子探寻世界各地的恐龙化石遗址,解读从中挖掘出的珍贵化石,系统讲解形形色色的恐龙以及恐龙生活的方方面面。