登陆注册
19651700000047

第47章 Chapter XVII(2)

"It is an old and just custom for parents to be consulted by their children upon their choice of husband or wife. In France the parents are consulted before the daughter; it is not a bad plan. It often saves some unnecessary pangs--for the daughter. I am sorry in this case that we are not living in France."

"Then you object?" Kemp almost hurled the words at him.

"I crave your patience," answered the old man, slowly; "I have grown accustomed to doing things deliberately, and will not be hurried in this instance. But as you have put the question, I may answer you now. I do most solemnly and seriously object."

Ruth, sitting intently listening to her father, paled slowly. The doctor also changed color.

"My child," Levice continued, looking her sadly in the face, "by allowing you to fall blindly into this trouble, without warning, with my apparent sanction for any relationship with Christians, I have done you a great wrong; I admit it with anguish. I ask your forgiveness."

"Don't, Father!"

Dr. Kemp's clinched hand came down with force upon his knee. He was white to the lips, for though Levice spoke so quietly, a strong decisiveness rang unmistakably in every word.

"Mr. Levice, I trust I am not speaking disrespectfully," he began, his manly voice plainly agitated, "but I must say that it was a great oversight on your part when you threw your daughter, equipped as she is, into Christian society, --put her right in the way of loving or being loved by any Christian, knowing all along that such a state of affairs could lead to nothing. It was not only wrong, but, holding such views, it was cruel."

"I acknowledge my culpability; my only excuse lies in the fact that such an event never presented itself as a possibility to my imagination. If it had, I should probably have trusted that her own Jewish conscience and bringing-up would protest against her allowing herself to think seriously upon such an issue."

"But, sir, I do not understand your exception; you are not orthodox."

"No; but I am intensely Jewish," answered the old man, proudly regarding his antagonist. "I tell you I object to this marriage; that is not saying I oppose it. There are certain things connected with it of which neither you nor my daughter have probably thought. To me they are all-powerful obstacles to your happiness. Being an old man and more experienced, will you permit me to suggest these points? My friend, I am seeking nothing but my child's happiness; if, by opening the eyes of both of you to what menaces her future welfare, I can avert what promises but a sometime misery, I must do it, late though it may be. If, when I have stated my view, you can convince me that I am wrong, I shall be persuaded and admit it. Will you accept my plan?"

Kemp bowed his head. The dogged earnestness about his mouth and eyes deepened; he kept his gaze steadily and attentively fixed upon Levice.

Ruth, who was the cause of the whole painful scene, seemed remote and shadowy.

"As you say," began Levice, "we are not orthodox; but before we become orthodox or reform, we are born, and being born, we are invested with certain hereditary traits that are unconvertible. Every Jew bears in his blood the glory, the triumph, the misery, the abjectness of Israel. The farther we move in the generations, the fainter grown the inheritance. In most countries in these times the abjectness is vanishing; we have been set upon our feet; we have been allowed to walk; we are beginning to smile, --that is, some of us. Those whose fathers were helped on are nearer the man as he should be than those whose fathers are still grovelling. My child, I think, stands a perfect type of what culture and refinement can give. She is not an exception; there are thousands like her among our Jewish girls. Take any intrinsically pure-souled Jew from his coarser surroundings and give him the highest advantages, and he will stand forth the equal, at least, of any man; but he could not mix forever with pitch and remain undefiled."

"No man could," observed Kemp, as Levice paused. "But what are these things to me?"

"Nothing; but to Ruth, much. That is part of the bar-sinister between you.

Possibly your sense of refinement has never been offended in my family; but there are many families, people we visit and love, who, though possessing all the substrata of goodness, have never been moved to cast off the surface thorns that would prick your good taste as sharply as any physical pain. This, of course, is not because they are Jews, but because they lack refining influences in their surroundings. We look for and excuse these signs; many Christians take them as the inevitable marks of the race, and without looking further, conclude that a cultured Jew is an impossibility."

"Mr. Levice, I am but an atom in the Christian world, and you who number so many of them among your friends should not make such sweeping assertions.

The world is narrow-minded; individuals are broader."

"True; but I speak of the majority, who decide the vote, and by whom my child would be, without doubt, ostracized. This only by your people; by ours it would be worse, --for she will have raised a terrible barrier by renouncing her religion."

"I shall never renounce my religion, Father."

"Such a marriage would mean only that to the world; and so you would be cut adrift from both sides, as all women are who move from where they rightfully belong to where they are not wanted."

"Sir," interrupted Kemp, "allow me to show you wherein such a state of affairs would, if it should happen, be of no consequence. The friends we care for and who care for us will not drop off if we remain unchanged.

Because I love your daughter and she loves me, and because we both desire our love to be honored in the sight of God and man, wherein have we erred?

We shall still remain the same man and woman."

"Unhappily the world would not think so."

"Then let them hold to their bigoted opinion; it is valueless, and having each other, we can dispense with them."

同类推荐
  • 康熙政要

    康熙政要

    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。
  • 送覃二判官

    送覃二判官

    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。
  • 医方集宜

    医方集宜

    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。
  • Returning Home

    Returning Home

    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。
  • 分别功德论

    分别功德论

    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。
热门推荐
  • 大黑的毒蛇铺子

    大黑的毒蛇铺子

    大黑的毒蛇铺子嬉笑怒骂只因为这样我很爽!被我毒舌你最好不要生气,因为你也没法报复我,气坏了身子就不好了。
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • 天那边有颗明亮的星

    天那边有颗明亮的星

    本文用温婉的笔锋向我们展示了不一样的生活意境,从中我们可以体会到满满的温情与感动。
  • 女校最强门卫

    女校最强门卫

    职业不分贵贱,能看美女就行。他是女校的门卫,偶然中获得了“地煞七十二术”的修炼法门,生活从此发生翻天覆地的变化,开启了强势崛起的精彩人生:他被《福布斯》评选为“全球最具美女吸引力的人物”,他就是门卫界的一段传奇。
  • 网游之魔剑修罗

    网游之魔剑修罗

    夏影左手陨星魔剑右手破灭魔剑,掌控虚空星辰之力,破碎虚空陨落星辰。在一次次打击中沉沦,最终化身修罗,再次踏上星皇之路,成就不败王者。
  • 麻雀变凤凰——丫头皇后

    麻雀变凤凰——丫头皇后

    纠缠在同一具躯体里的两缕香魂彼此深爱着各自的男人。最终谁将战胜谁?谁又将湮灭了谁?曾经是最好的两个姐妹,如今是为爱争夺躯体的两缕幽魂。一切都是冥冥中的安排,前世欠下的孽债两个为爱同样执着的女子,然,只有一具躯体,她们是将彼此融合化为一人,还是凭借那爱入骨髓的坚强意志力,奋力将对方压抑在灵魂的最深处?
  • 穿越之兰琪

    穿越之兰琪

    一朝穿越成了宰相之女,本想轻松度日,不想被卷进宫廷,两年沉淀,换来家族的遗弃,同父异母的妹妹的陷害。兰琪想过自己应该就是要在冷宫这样过下去了,奈何命运总是爱戏弄人。那人对她说跟他走,他不在乎她的过往,他想护她一辈子。接受,便是再次的适应拒绝,寂寥一生,最后消逝
  • 缠丝归梦

    缠丝归梦

    有一个高冷腹黑却又温柔如水的帅公子在身边生活会如何?当女主受伤抱怨时,他轻瞟一眼说:“自己笨,怪我?”然后自己默默跟在女主身后送女主回家。当女主为吃果子爬树受伤依旧死性不改时,他轻蔑道:“还想爬树?”然后玩味十足的贴着女主,当女主一脸警惕的时候他摘下树上果子递给女主一脸“你想多了”的表情。当跟女主一起走路时,他却收敛自己的长腿阔步,将就女主的步子并肩走在她身侧。当女主有危险时,他一把长剑架在对方脖子上:“再动她一下,别怪我不客气。”当有女人靠近他时,他十分配合,然后看着她吃醋的样子微微一笑。当有男人靠近她时,他却一副“我是家长”的黑脸拽走女主。……千丝环,千丝万缕环绕我心,让我怎能舍得放手?
  • 爱情有约:高冷boss乐悠悠

    爱情有约:高冷boss乐悠悠

    报告少爷少奶奶在选佣人,还选了好几个。坐在办公桌后面的薄天爵抬起头来看着站在办公桌前面像他汇报的李寄,皱着眉头说;半个月前不是选了吗?怎么还选、家里不够用?薄天爵想想说;算了,由她去,只要她开心就行。李寄站在那儿吞吞吐吐的说;少奶奶全选的是美男,说是美女看多了腻,还说天天要美男伺候全套。薄天爵听了气的脸都青了,騰的一下就站起来说;把车开过来。李寄在心里非议,少奶奶你这又在和少爷闹哪样,三五天闹一次说什么家里太安静了,要热闹。以前少爷都是睁一只眼闭一只眼,现在好了少爷真的生气了,少奶奶你就自己,自求多福吧。
  • 吴耿尚孔四王全传

    吴耿尚孔四王全传

    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。