登陆注册
38552900000097

第97章

It was not the footman who had answered the door, as usual, but Mrs.Carling's maid.She had taken the letters from the postman, and she was going away with them upstairs.

He stopped her, and asked her why she did not put the letters on the hall table as usual.The maid, looking very much confused, said that her mistress had desired that whatever the postman had brought that morning should be carried up to her room.He took the letters abruptly from the girl, without asking any more questions, and went back into his study.

Up to this time no shadow of a suspicion had fallen on his mind.

Hitherto there had been a ****** obvious explanation for every unusual event that had occurred during the last three or four days; but this last circumstance in connection with the letters was not to be accounted for.Nevertheless, even now, it was not distrust of his wife that was busy at his mind--he was too fond of her and too proud of her to feel it--the sensation was more like uneasy surprise.He longed to go and question her, and get a satisfactory answer, and have done with it.But there was a voice speaking within him that had never made itself heard before--a voice with a persistent warning in it, that said, Wait; and look at your letters first.

He spread them out on the table with hands that trembled he knew not why.Among them was the back number of the _Times_ for which he had written to London, with a letter from the publisher explaining the means by which the copy had been procured.

He opened the newspaper with a vague feeling of alarm at finding that those letters to the editor which he had been so eager to read, and that perfecting of the mutilated volume which he had been so anxious to accomplish, had become objects of secondary importance in his mind.An inexplicable curiosity about the general contents of the paper was now the one moving influence which asserted itself within him, he spread open the broad sheet on the table.

The first page on which his eye fell was the page on the right-hand side.It contained those very letters--three in number--which he had once been so anxious to see.He tried to read them, but no effort could fix his wandering attention.He looked aside to the opposite page, on the left hand.It was the page that contained the leading articles.

They were three in number.The first was on foreign politics; the second was a sarcastic commentary on a recent division in the House of Lords; the third was one of those articles on social subjects which have greatly and honorably helped to raise the reputation of the _Times_ above all contest and all rivalry.

The lines of this third article which first caught his eye comprised the opening sentence of the second paragraph, and contained these words:

It appears, from the narrative which will be found in another part of our columns, that this unfortunate woman married, in the spring of the year 18--, one Mr.Fergus Duncan, of Glendarn, in the Highlands of Scotland...

The letters swam and mingled together under his eyes before he could go on to the next sentence.His wife exhibited as an object for public compassion in the _Times_ newspaper! On the brink of the dreadful discovery that was advancing on him, his mind reeled back, and a deadly faintness came over him.There was water on a side-table--he drank a deep draught of it--roused himself--seized on the newspaper with both hands, as if it had been a living thing that could feel the desperate resolution of his grasp, and read the article through, sentence by sentence, word by word.

The subject was the Law of Divorce, and the example quoted was the example of his wife.

At that time England stood disgracefully alone as the one civilized country in the world having a divorce law for the husband which was not also a divorce law for the wife.The writer in the _Times_ boldly and eloquently exposed this discreditable anomaly in the administration of justice; hinted delicately at the unutterable wrongs suffered by Mrs.Duncan; and plainly showed that she was indebted to the accident of having been married in Scotland, and to her consequent right of appeal to the Scotch tribunals, for a full and final release from the tie that bound her to the vilest of husbands, which the English law of that day would have mercilessly refused.

He read that.Other men might have gone on to the narrative extracted from the Scotch newspaper.But at the last word of the article _he_ stopped.

The newspaper, and the unread details which it contained, lost all hold on his attention in an instant, and in their stead, living and burning on his mind, like the Letters of Doom on the walls of Belshazzar, there rose up in judgment against him the last words of a verse in the Gospel of Saint Luke--_"Whosoever marrieth her that is put away from her husband, commiteth *****ery."_He had preached from these words, he had warned his hearers, with the whole strength of the fanatical sincerity that was in him, to beware of prevaricating with the prohibition which that verse contained, and to accept it as literally, unreservedly, finally forbidding the marriage of a divorced woman.He had insisted on that plain interpretation of plain words in terms which had made his congregation tremble.And now he stood alone in the secrecy of his own chamber self-convicted of the deadly sin which he had denounced--he stood, as he had told the wicked among his hearers that they would stand at the Last Day, before the Judgment Seat.

He was unconscious of the lapse of time; he never knew whether it was many minutes or few before the door of his room was suddenly and softly opened.It did open, and his wife came in.

In her white dress, with a white shawl thrown over her shoulders;her dark hair, so neat and glossy at other times, hanging tangled about her colorless cheeks, and heightening the glassy brightness of terror in her eyes--so he saw her; the woman put away from her husband--the woman whose love had made his life happy and had stained his soul with a deadly sin.

同类推荐
  • The Hated Son

    The Hated Son

    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。
  • 庭闻录

    庭闻录

    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。
  • 佛说须赖经

    佛说须赖经

    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。
  • THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP

    THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP

    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。
  • 佛说大集会正法经

    佛说大集会正法经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 秣马三朝五十五年

    秣马三朝五十五年

    阿图说要为大清养最好的战马,进献最好的战马。可她殚精竭虑几十年看着长大的,是大清这匹马。哪怕两嫁蒙古,她也要远远眺望两京,那里有她想保护的人,虽然他们不一定需要。当身边的那个男人倒下的时候,她明白,她错了,未来,她会帮所爱之人,守护巴林……
  • 极度威胁

    极度威胁

    一本惊心动魄的纪实之作,亦是一本国际背景下弘扬正能量、塑造当代中国形象的大书。作为“感动中国2014特别致敬”的英雄业迹实录。2014年3月,埃博拉疫情突然在西非爆发。这是一种人类束手无策的病毒,感染性强,死亡率极高。一时间,世界各国谈埃色变。中国选择坚定地与非洲人民站在一起,共抗疫情。9月,中国医疗队和检测队,共59人在9月中旬抵达疫情最为严重塞拉利昂,他们在医疗第一线,也是生死第一线,面对极度威胁,和当地人民一起,稳定了疫情,迎来了转机。
  • 和尚下山记

    和尚下山记

    听《下山》有感小和尚有个大侠梦,想要下山当大侠。临走时问师傅,我如果成为了大侠,师傅回来山口接我吗?师傅说,会来。但是小和尚却再没能上山。终于,月亮圆了又缺,花儿开了又谢。终于,世上再没一人,再没有了小和尚,再没有了白衣郎,在再没有了大将军。有的只是一个神神叨叨的老和尚和一个小姑娘。
  • 学渣恋爱计划

    学渣恋爱计划

    我是时空管理的苏暮雨,我的任务是阻止反派boss黑化,不然我就会死去。这一次的任务是阻止反派boss顾墨然黑化,并且帮助顾墨然考上大学
  • 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!
  • 我的日常憨批生活

    我的日常憨批生活

    某班级群班长任:这次疫情较为严重,根据教育局指示,我们会在某APP上开展线上辅导。南墨(主人公):曾经有一份珍贵的假期在我面前,我没有珍惜,直到它结束时,我才追悔莫急。南墨:慢点,先让我看看是何等APP。
  • 叛逆拽丫头:爱上邪魅老师

    叛逆拽丫头:爱上邪魅老师

    她,作为千金小姐,金融会计,一窍不通,打架逃课,样样都行。父亲送她去读书,她却整天逃学。他,父亲是公司董事长,想要把公司传给他,他却甩手不干,自顾自的教起学来。她整天逃学,他则每天把她逮回来。看他们如何上演一出出追逐戏。【刻意谩骂的书评,一律删除,不给予解释】
  • 无尽的沉沦

    无尽的沉沦

    一个写给自己看的小说,想把自己喜欢的情节放里面!
  • 淮南子全鉴(典藏诵读版)

    淮南子全鉴(典藏诵读版)

    《淮南子》语言如行云流水,文章富于变化,旁涉奇物异类、鬼神灵怪,保存了很多神话传说:开天辟地、共工怒触不周山、女娲补天、后羿射日、嫦娥奔月等,颇有趣味。中国许多传统神话故事均是因此书而得以流传,也因此,它成为了研究中国古代神话的宝典。本书以全新的解读方式,以大量的历史典故丰富哲学思想;语言精练、通俗易懂,让您轻松领略古代圣贤的智慧精华,使之古为今用。
  • 瑕瑜

    瑕瑜

    世家大族之争,皇城风雨飘摇。北域镇北侯之子赵弋,奉命前往皇城太学,实则为质。且看,风云突变间,何人能够安然渡河。