六月文学网

手机浏览器扫描二维码访问

第30部分(第1页)

errand–boys to marvel that a great lady should walk alone。

At every step she glanced nervously lest some male form should be hiding behind a furze bush or some savage cow be lowering its horns to toss her。 But there were only the rooks flaunting in the sky。 A steel–blue plume from one of them fell among the heather。 She loved wild birds’ feathers。 She had used to collect them as a boy。 She picked it up and stuck it in her hat。 The air blew upon her spirit somewhat and revived it。 As the rooks went whirling and wheeling above her head and feather after feather fell gleaming through the purplish air; she followed them; her long cloak floating behind her; over the moor; up the hill。 She had not walked so far for years。 Six feathers had she picked from the grass and drawn between her fingers and pressed to her lips to feel their smooth; glinting plumage; when she saw; gleaming on the hill–side; a silver pool; mysterious as the lake into which Sir Bedivere flung the sword of Arthur。 A single feather quivered in the air and fell into the middle of it。 Then; some strange ecstasy came over her。 Some wild notion she had of following the birds to the rim of the world and flinging herself on the spongy turf and there drinking forgetfulness; while the rooks’ hoarse laughter sounded over her。 She quickened her pace; she ran; she tripped; the tough heather roots flung her to the ground。 Her ankle was broken。 She could not rise。 But there she lay content。 The scent of the bog myrtle and the meadow–sweet was in her nostrils。 The rooks’ hoarse laughter was in her ears。 ‘I have found my mate;’ she murmured。 ‘It is the moor。 I am nature’s bride;’ she whispered; giving herself in rapture to the cold embraces of the grass as she lay folded in her cloak in the hollow by the pool。 ‘Here will I lie。 (A feather fell upon her brow。) I have found a greener laurel than the bay。 My forehead will be cool always。 These are wild birds’ feathers—the owl’s; the nightjar’s。 I shall dream wild dreams。 My hands shall wear no wedding ring;’ she continued; slipping it from her finger。 ‘The roots shall twine about them。 Ah!’ she sighed; pressing her head luxuriously on its spongy pillow; ‘I have sought happiness through many ages and not found it; fame and missed it; love and not known it; life—and behold; death is better。 I have known many men and many women;’ she continued; ‘none have I understood。 It is better that I should lie at peace here with only the sky above me—as the gipsy told me years ago。 That was in Turkey。’ And she looked straight up into the marvellous golden foam into which the clouds had churned themselves; and saw next moment a track in it; and camels passing in single file through the rocky desert among clouds of red dust; and then; when the camels had passed; there were only mountains; very high and full of clefts and with pinnacles of rock; and she fancied she heard goat bells ringing in their passes; and in their folds were fields of irises and gentian。 So the sky changed and her eyes slowly lowered themselves down and down till they came to the rain–darkened earth and saw the great hump of the South Downs; flowing in one wave along the coast; and where the land parted; there was the sea; the sea with ships passing; and she fancied she heard a gun far out at sea; and thought at first; ‘That’s the Armada;’ and then thought ‘No; it’s Nelson’; and then remembered how those wars were over and the ships were busy merchant ships; and the sails on the winding river were those of pleasure boats。 She saw; too; cattle sprinkled on the dark fields; sheep and cows; and she saw the lights ing here and there in farm–house windows; and lanterns moving among the cattle as the shepherd went his rounds and the cowman; and then the lights went out and the stars rose and tangled themselves about the sky。 Indeed; she was falling asleep with the wet feathers on her face and her ear pressed to the ground when she heard; deep within; some hammer on an anvil; or was it a heart beating? Tick–tock; tick–tock; so it hammered; so it beat; the anvil; or the heart in the middle of the earth; until; as she listened; she thought it changed to the trot of a horse’s hoofs; one; two; three; four; she counted; then she heard a stumble; then; as it came nearer and nearer; she could hear the crack of a twig and the suck of the wet bog in its hoofs。 The horse was almost on her。 She sat upright。 Towering dark against the yellow–slashed sky of dawn; with the plovers rising and falling about him; she saw a man on horseback。 He started。 The horse stopped。

‘Madam;’ the man cried; leaping to the ground; ‘you’re hurt!’

‘I’m dead; sir!’ she replied。

A few minutes later; they became engaged。

The morning after; as they sat at breakfast; he told her his name。 It was Marmaduke Bonthrop Shelmerdine; Esquire。

‘I knew it!’ she said; for there was something romantic and chivalrous; passionate; melancholy; yet determined about him which went with the wild; dark–plumed name—a name which had; in her mind; the steel–blue gleam of rooks’ wings; the hoarse laughter of their caws; the snake–like twisting descent of their feathers in a silver pool; and a thousand other things which will be described presently。

‘Mine is Orlando;’ she said。 He had guessed it。 For if you see a ship in full sail ing with the sun on it proudly sweeping across the Mediterranean from the South Seas; one says at once; ‘Orlando’; he explained。

In fact; though their acquaintance had been so short; they had guessed; as always happens between lovers; everything of any importance about each other in two seconds at the utmost; and it now remained only to fill in such unimportant details as what they were called; where they lived; and whether they were beggars or people of substance。 He had a castle in the Hebrides; but it was ruined; he told her。 Gans feasted in the banqueting hall。 He had been a soldier and a sailor; and had explored the East。 He was on his way now to join his brig at Falmouth; but the wind had fallen and it was only when the gale blew from the South–west that he could put out to sea。 Orlando looked hastily from the breakfast–room window at the gilt leopard on the weather vane。 Mercifully its tail pointed due east and was steady as a rock。 ‘Oh! Shel; don’t leave me!’ she cried。 ‘I’m passionately in love with you;’ she said。 No sooner had the words left her mouth than an awful suspicion rushed into both their minds simultaneously。

‘You’re a woman; Shel!’ she cried。

‘You’re a man; Orlando!’ he cried。

Never was there such a scene of protestation and demonstration as then took place since the world began。 When it was over and they were seated again she asked him; what was this talk of a South–west gale? Where was he bound for?

‘For the Horn;’ he said briefly; and blushed。 (For a man had to blush as a woman had; only at rather different things。) It was only by dint of great pressure on her side and the use of much intuition that she gathered that his life was spent in the most desperate and splendid of adventures—which is to voyage round Cape Horn in the teeth of a gale。 Masts had been snapped off; sails torn to ribbons (she had to drag the admission from him)。 Sometimes the ship had sunk; and he had been left the only survivor on a raft with a biscuit。

‘It’s about all a fellow can do nowadays;’ he said sheepishly; and helped himself to great spoonfuls of strawberry jam。 The vision which she had thereupon of this boy (for he was little more) sucking peppermints; for which he had a passion; while the masts snapped and the stars reeled and he roared brief orders to cut this adrift; to heave that overboard; brought the tears to her eyes; tears; she noted; of a finer flavour than any she had cried before: ‘I am a woman;’ she thought; ‘a real woman; at last。’ She thanked Bonthrop from the bottom of her heart for having given her this rare and unexpected delight。 Had she not been lame in the left foot; she would have sat upon his knee。

‘Shel; my darling;’ she began again; ‘tell me。。。’ and so they talked two hours or more; perhaps about Cape Horn; perhaps not; and really it would profit little to write down what they said; for they knew each other so well that they could say anything; which is tantamount to saying nothing; or saying such stupid; prosy things as how to cook an omelette; or where to buy the best boots in London; things which have no lustre taken from their setting; yet are positively of amazing beauty within it。 For it has e about; by the wise economy of nature; that our modern spirit can almost dispense with language; the monest expressions do; since no expressions do; hence the most ordinary conversation is often the most poetic; and the most poetic is precisely that which cannot be written down。 For which reasons we leave a great blank here; which must be taken to indicate that the space is filled to repletion。

After some days more of this kind of talk;

‘Orlando; my dearest;’ Shel was beginning; when there was a scuffling outside; and Basket the butler entered with the information that there was a couple of Peelers downstairs with a warrant from the Queen。

‘Show ‘em up;’ said Shelmerdine briefly; as if on his own quarter–deck; taking up; by instinct; a stand with his hands behind him in front of the fireplace。 Two officers in bottlegreen uniforms with truncheons at their hips then entered the room and stood at attention。 Formalities being over; they gave into Orlando’s own hands; as their mission was; a legal document of some very impressive sort; judging by the blobs of sealing wax; the ribbons; the oaths; and the signatures; which were all of the highest importance。

Orlando ran her eyes through it and then; using the first finger of her right hand as pointer; read out the following facts as being most germane to the matter。

‘The lawsuits are settled;’ she read out。。。’some in my favour; as for example。。。others not。 Turkish marriage annulled (I was ambassador in Constantinople; Shel;’ she explained) ‘Children pronounced illegitimate; (they said I had three sons by Pepita; a Spanish dancer)。 So they don’t inherit; which is all to the good。。。Sex? Ah! what about sex? My sex’; she read out with some solemnity; ‘is pronounced indisputably; and beyond the shadow of a doubt (what I was telling you a moment ago; Shel?); female。 The estates which are now desequestrated in perpetuity descend and are tailed and entailed upon the heirs male of my body; or in default of marriage’—but here she grew impatient with this legal verbiage; and said; ‘but there won’t be any default of marriage; nor of heirs either; so the rest can be taken as read。’ Whereupon she appended her own signature beneath Lord Palmerston’s and entered from that moment into the undisturbed possession of her titles; her house; and her estate—which was now so much shrunk; for the cost of the lawsuits had been prodigious; that; though she was infinitely noble again; she was also excessively poor。

When the result of the lawsuit was made known (and rumour flew much quicker than the telegraph which has supplanted it); the whole town was filled with rejoicings。

'Horses were put into carriages for the sole purpose of

女性经理人打造术:跟王熙凤学管理  五胡烽火录  丛林战争  草包英雄  东北黑旋风  红色之翼  双子变变变  现在,发现你的优势  在中国做事(全文阅读) - 黄夏君  我的苦难我的大学  演讲论辩技巧  要塞-中世纪领主  亮剑精神  血色使命  蹉跎岁月女人花  冷血悍将  梨园往事  民国演义  销售人员职业教程  生活要懂点博弈学 作 者: 王宇  

热门小说推荐
万人迷C总想暴走【无限】

万人迷C总想暴走【无限】

这是一朵表面白莲内心食人花受与疯批切片老攻相爱相杀的故事。演员楚时意外进入了无限世界,与新人玩家不同就算了,居然让他玩起了角色扮演!副本一顺序已调整任劳任怨捞起自己的老本,尽职尽责扮演着娇柔做作的人设。BOSS想他想他想NPC好漂亮的小东西~玩家他好娇,我好喜欢。副本二已完工凝视着和上个副本毫无差...

误入帝心:娇软美人被宠冠后宫

误入帝心:娇软美人被宠冠后宫

论穿越到甜宠文大结局后是一种什么体验?姜澜雪表示,这金手指压根没用。原身入宫三月,却从未见过宣宁帝,因此,后宫嫔妃压根没将她放在眼里。不曾想姜澜雪穿越第一日就被召侍寝了,对此,众人依旧摇摇头表示不用担心。哪知接下来一连三日,宣宁帝都流连在姜澜雪的清光殿中。对此,众人表示,这不可能,肯定是因为齐王妃的缘故,陛下定然是...

三胞胎死后,我嫁给了渣前夫他小叔

三胞胎死后,我嫁给了渣前夫他小叔

老公小青梅养的狗害两岁女儿得了狂犬病送医。渣老公却为了救他的小青梅和三只狗,延误了救女儿的黄金时间最终惨死医院。同一时间,婆婆的不看管,致使家里的大宝小宝溺死游泳池中。安抒抒痛失三个孩子,一夜白了头。从此,她褪下过去无用的温婉懂事,将自己磨炼成锋利见血的利刃,一刀一刀将恶人凌迟。葬礼上,缺失父爱的孩子们,到死也没等...

娱乐春秋

娱乐春秋

架空异界,武道百家。现代人告诉他们,除了修行,还有很多方法可以得到你想要的东西。要做江湖上人人追捧的少侠?嗯,这个简单,只是要看你的诚意比如让你师妹来...

我有了空间戒指后,财富无限

我有了空间戒指后,财富无限

关于我有了空间戒指后,财富无限父母双亡的林震南继承了一家父亲遗留下来的二手书画店,无意之中,一只修炼万年蜘蛛,在雷电交加之时,元神最弱之时,被林震南一掌手拍碎本体,蜘蛛本命元神入体,机缘巧合下,林震南…传承了它的异能。后来更是得到了一枚上古超级空间戒指,空间更有一方小世界。后来林震南更是鉴宝,赌石,看相,看风水,修真,无一不精,一时喜从天降,富贵逼人!...

每日热搜小说推荐