登陆注册
37747600000085

第85章 Udolpho(5)

"What are they all,"I said,"the old romances?You take Paris and Helen and Menelaus.What's that?You take Launcelot and Arthur and Guinevere.

You take Paola and Francesca and her husband,what's-his-name,or Tristram and Iseult and Mark.Two men,one woman.Triangle and trouble.

Other way around you get Tannhauser and Venus and Elizabeth;two women,one man;more ******** and more trouble.Yes."And I nodded at him again.

The tide of my thought was pulling me hard away from this to other important world-problems,but my will held,struggling,and I kept to it.

"You wait,"I told him."I know what I mean.Trouble is,so hard to advise him right.""Advise who right?"inquired John Mayrant.

It helped me wonderfully.My will gripped my floating thoughts and held them to it."Friend of mine in trouble;though why he asks me when I'm not married--I'd be married now,you know,but afraid of only one wife.

Man doesn't love twice;loves thrice,four,six,lots of times;but they say only one wife.Ought to be two,anyhow.Much easier for man to marry then.""Wouldn't it be rather immoral?"John asked.

"Morality is queer thing.Like kaleidoscope.New patterns all the time.

Abraham and wives--perfectly respectable.You take Pharaohs--or kings of that sort--married own sisters.All right then.Perfectly horrible now,of course.But you ask men about two wives.They'd say something to be said for that idea.Only there are the women,you know.They'd never.But I'm going to tell my friend he's doing wrong.Going to write him to-night.Where's ink?""It won't go to-night,"said John."What are you going to tell him?""Going to tell him,since only one wife,wicked not to break his engagement."John looked at me very hard,as he stood by the window,leaning on the sill.But my will was getting all the while a stronger hold,and my thoughts were less and less inclined to stray to other world-problems;moreover,below the confusion that still a little reigned in them was the primal cunning of the old Adam,the native man,quite untroubled and alert--it saw John's look at me and it prompted my course.

"Yes,"I said."He wants the truth from me.Where's his letter?No harm reading you without names."And I fumbled in my pocket.

"Letter gone.Never mind.Facts are:friend's asked girl.Girl's said yes.Now he thinks he's bound by that.""He thinks right,"said John.

"Not a bit of it.You take Tannhauser.Engagement to Venus all a mistake.

Perfectly proper to break it.Much more than proper.Only honorable thing he could do.I'm going to write it to him.Where's ink?"And I got up.

John came from his window and sat down at the table.His glass was empty,his cigar gone out,and he looked at me.But I looked round the room for the ink,noting in my search the big fireplace,******,wooden,unornamented,but generous,and the plain plaster walls of the lodge,whereon hung two or three old prints of gamebirds;and all the while Isaw John out of the corner of my eye,looking at me.

He spoke first."Your friend has given his word to a lady;he must stand by it like a gentleman.

"Lot of difference,"I returned,still looking round the room,"between spirit and letter.If his heart has broken the word,his lips can't make him a gentleman."John brought his fist down on the table."He had no business to get engaged to her!He must take the consequences."That blow of the fist on the table brought my thoughts wholly clear and fixed on the one subject;my will had no longer to struggle with them,they worked of themselves in just the way that I wanted them to do.

"If he's a gentleman,he must stand to his word,"John repeated,"unless she releases him."I fumbled again for my letter."That's just about what he says himself,"I rejoined,sitting down."He thinks he ought to take the consequences.""Of course!"John Mayrant's face was very stern as he sat in judgment on himself.

"But why should she take the consequences?"I asked.

"What consequences?"

"Being married to a man who doesn't want her,all her life,until death them do part.How's that?Having the daily humiliation of his indif-ference,and the world's knowledge of his indifference.How's that?

Perhaps having the further humiliation of knowing that his heart belongs to another woman.How's that?That's not what a girl bargains for.His standing to his word is not an act of honor,but a deception.And in talking about 'taking the consequences,'he's patting his personal sacrifice on the back and forgetting all about her and the sacrifice he's putting her to.What's the brief suffering of a broken engagement to that?No:the true consequences that a man should shoulder for ****** such a mistake is the poor opinion that society holds of him for placing a woman in such a position;and to free her is the most honorable thing he can do.Her dignity suffers less so than if she were a wife chained down to perpetual disregard."John,after a silence,said:"That is a very curious view.""That is the view I shall give my friend,"I answered."I shall tell him that in keeping on he is not at bottom honestly thinking of the girl and her welfare,but of himself and the public opinion he's afraid of,if he breaks his engagement.And I shall tell him that if I'm in church and they come to the place where they ask if any man knows just cause or impediment,I shall probably call out,'He does!His heart's not in it.

This is not marriage that he's committing.You're pronouncing your blessing upon a fraud.'"John sat now a long time silent,holding his extinct cigar.The lamp was almost burned dry;we had blown out the expiring candles some while since."That is a very curious view,"he repeated."I should like to hear what your friend says in answer."This finished our late sitting.We opened the door and went out for a brief space into the night to get its pure breath into our lungs,and look to the distant place where the moon had sailed.Then we went to bed,or rather,I did;for the last thing that I remembered was John,standing by the window of our bedroom still dressed,looking out into the forest.

同类推荐
  • Henry VIII

    Henry VIII

    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。
  • Of the Origin of Government

    Of the Origin of Government

    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。
  • 佛说地藏菩萨发心因缘十王经

    佛说地藏菩萨发心因缘十王经

    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。
  • 平滇始末

    平滇始末

    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。
  • 千松笔记

    千松笔记

    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
  • 双人床单人房

    双人床单人房

    从来就没有谁非谁不可,那些说要一辈子的人最后都各奔东西了。
  • 长生从武侠开始

    长生从武侠开始

    穿越到倚天世界,开启位面升级之路,追求长生。
  • 文学与情感

    文学与情感

    本书分人间诗意、锦绣文章、剧坛春秋、小说天地四章,分别从诗歌、散文、戏曲、小说四个面向集中对中国文学的源头性质和时段特征给予细致的梳理、解说。
  • 灵舞世间

    灵舞世间

    在一块异世大陆,弱肉强食是规则。但什么是强?什么是弱?楚钦月:“人生自古谁无死,到末沧桑皆如空。”
  • 异世界的祖安杀手

    异世界的祖安杀手

    这是一个杀手穿越到异世界大陆,之后开始修仙的故事,这个故事,就从这位少年杀手与俏丽可爱的少女同学一起穿越到异世界大陆中的魔域开始……
  • 弑杀幻想之人

    弑杀幻想之人

    Campione,弑神者,弑杀了与人类所编织出的神话背道而驰并从中脱离出来,给人间带来灾祸的神,并且篡夺了他们的权能的人类魔王。我,是一个穿越到弑神者世界(?)的普通人(大概),但是,谁能告诉我眼前的这些不从之神是哪个神话的啊,感觉有点乱入了啊!时崎狂三,阿尔托莉雅,艾斯特,帕秋莉,为什么我要对付的是这些人啊,拿来的权能不会是伪造的吧。
  • 程少今天离婚吗

    程少今天离婚吗

    简瑶婚后忙着逃跑,赚钱,搞事情!程煜修忙着追妻,护妻,帮她搞事情!当简瑶再次翻墙逃跑失败被抓,她发誓必须要跟程煜修离婚!“程煜修!我要跟你离婚!”简瑶捂着屁股,涨红着脸怒吼。“你想要什么,想做什么,我都可以帮你,但是离婚?除非我死!”程煜修将她圈在自己得范围内,冷笑道。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 江湖神拳

    江湖神拳

    唐末,名动江湖的破天魔拳张无争受人陷害,死于非命。他的遗腹子张出尘被高人所救,逃过死劫。十年后,张出尘为报前仇,踏入江湖,适逢天下大乱,群雄并起,更兼北方神秘宗派肆虐江湖,他一边历练一边查访十年前的江湖秘事,凭自身修为在江湖中锋芒渐露……江湖仇杀,民族大义,红粉知己,群雄并起,我欲遮天!
  • 大神别跑

    大神别跑

    强是天空之城网游大神,却为了接近婷,掩藏自己的的锋芒。婷是网游菜鸟一只,百战百败,从未赢过的她,在强的带领下慢慢闯关,一次次的指引和带领,婷渐渐丢失了自己的心。缘分使然,强在现实生活中追求到了婷,只是婷不知道强就是灭,所以在得知飞是灭的时候,为此纠结。莱的到来,更是雪上加霜。于强而言,莱是‘妹妹’;于婷而言,莱是最大的威胁。青春最终是否会误了流年?时过境迁物是人非。当初的那个婷已经死了,现在活着的是一个叫做林苏晴的女强人。林苏晴怎么也没有想到,几年后,她居然还可以再见到当初那个令她神魂颠倒的‘强’——许明轩。