登陆注册
6066200000006

第6章

"Then," interrupted Mrs. Fursey, in the voice of many generations, "you shouldn't think. London," continued the good dame, her experience no doubt suggesting that the shortest road to peace would be through my understanding of this matter, "is a big town, and you go there in a train. Some time--soon now--your father will write to your mother that everything is ready. Then you and your mother and your aunt will leave this place and go to London, and I shall be rid of you."

"And shan't we come back here ever any more?"

"Never again."

"And I'll never play in the garden again, never go down to the pebble-ridge to tea, or to Jacob's tower?"

"Never again." I think Mrs. Fursey took a pleasure in the phrase. It sounded, as she said it, like something out of the prayer-book.

"And I'll never see Anna, or Tom Pinfold, or old Yeo, or Pincher, or you, ever any more?" In this moment of the crumbling from under me of all my footholds I would have clung even to that dry tuft, Mrs. Fursey herself.

"Never any more. You'll go away and begin an entirely new life. And I do hope, Master Paul," added Mrs. Fursey, piously, "it may be a better one. That you will make up your mind to--"

But Mrs. Fursey's well-meant exhortations, whatever they may have been, fell upon deaf ears. Here was I face to face with yet another problem. This life into which I had fallen: it was understandable!

One went away, leaving the pleasant places that one knew, never to return to them. One left one's labour and one's play to enter upon a new existence in a strange land. One parted from the friends one had always known, one saw them never again. Life was indeed a strange thing; and, would a body comprehend it, then must a body sit staring into the fire, thinking very hard, unheedful of all idle chatter.

That night, when my mother came to kiss me good-night, I turned my face to the wall and pretended to be asleep, for children as well as grown-ups have their foolish moods; but when I felt the soft curls brush my cheek, my pride gave way, and clasping my arms about her neck, and drawing her face still closer down to mine; I voiced the question that all the evening had been knocking at my heart:

"I suppose you couldn't send me back now, could you? You see, you've had me so long."

"Send you back?"

"Yes. I'd be too big for the stork to carry now, wouldn't I?"

My mother knelt down beside the bed so that her face and mine were on a level, and looking into her eyes, the fear that had been haunting me fell from me.

"Who has been talking foolishly to a foolish little boy?" asked my mother, keeping my arms still clasped about her neck.

"Oh, nurse and I were discussing things, you know," I answered, "and she said you could have done without me. Somehow, I did not mind repeating the words now; clearly it could have been but Mrs. Fursey's fun.

My mother drew me closer to her.

"And what made her think that?"

"Well, you see," I replied, "I came at a very awkward time, didn't I; when you had a lot of other troubles."

My mother laughed, but the next moment looked grave again.

"I did not know you thought about such things," she said; "we must be more together, you and I, Paul, and you shall tell me all you think, because nurse does not quite understand you. It is true what she said about the trouble; it came just at that time. But I could not have done without you. I was very unhappy, and you were sent to comfort me and help me to bear it." I liked this explanation better.

"Then it was lucky, your having me?" I said. Again my mother laughed, and again there followed that graver look upon her childish face.

"Will you remember what I am going to say?" She spoke so earnestly that I, wriggling into a sitting posture, became earnest also.

"I'll try," I answered; "but I ain't got a very good memory, have I?"

"Not very," smiled my mother; "but if you think about it a good deal it will not leave you. When you are a good boy, and later on, when you are a good man, then I am the luckiest little mother in all the world. And every time you fail, that means bad luck for me. You will remember that after I'm gone, when you are a big man, won't you, Paul?"

So, both of us quite serious, I promised; and though I smile now when I remember, seeing before me those two earnest, childish faces, yet I think, however little success it may be I have to boast of, it would perhaps have been still less had I entirely forgotten.

From that day my mother waxes in my memory; Mrs. Fursey, of the many promontories, waning. There were sunny mornings in the neglected garden, where the leaves played round us while we worked and read; twilight evenings in the window seat where, half hidden by the dark red curtains, we would talk in whispers, why I know not, of good men and noble women, ogres, fairies, saints and demons; they were pleasant days.

Possibly our curriculum lacked method; maybe it was too varied and extensive for my age, in consequence of which chronology became confused within my brain, and fact and fiction more confounded than has usually been considered permissible, even in history. I saw Aphrodite, ready armed and risen from the sea, move with stately grace to meet King Canute, who, throned upon the sand, bade her come no further lest she should wet his feet. In forest glade I saw King Rufus fall from a poisoned arrow shot by Robin Hood; but thanks to sweet Queen Eleanor, who sucked the poison from his wound, I knew he lived. Oliver Cromwell, having killed King Charles, married his widow, and was in turn stabbed by Hamlet. Ulysses, in the Argo, it was fixed upon my mind, had discovered America. Romulus and Remus had slain the wolf and rescued Little Red Riding Hood. Good King Arthur, for letting the cakes burn, had been murdered by his uncle in the Tower of London. Prometheus, bound to the Rock, had been saved by good St. George. Paris had given the apple to William Tell. What matter! the information was there. It needed rearranging, that was all.

同类推荐
  • 公冶长听鸟语纲常

    公冶长听鸟语纲常

    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。
  • Autobiographies

    Autobiographies

    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。
  • 郑氏史料三编

    郑氏史料三编

    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。
  • 解蔽

    解蔽

    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。
  • 太上灵宝天尊说延寿妙经

    太上灵宝天尊说延寿妙经

    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
  • 水神注

    水神注

    我循迹宇宙,大道至简,得一颗道心,拥有解释一切,演绎虚实之能力。天下至水,汇聚水经之内,红尘炼心,道心演绎至水,终成就水神。那一年,师傅说,既执着放不下,那么遵从心指引,去寻找她吧。于是,叶休启动了时空装置,踏上了那个宇宙坐标空间,寻找道。美人如玉,英雄热血,故事悲喜,自在其中。
  • 女配总能作

    女配总能作

    【你想活得长长久久吗?你想走上人生巅峰吗?你想成为人生赢家邂逅各色小哥哥吗?你想穿越三千世界拥有一个超级超级可爱的系统君吗?不要犹豫,不要纠结,跟着我迈向新世界的大门吧!】
  • 日月刀剑

    日月刀剑

    这是一个关于刀与剑的传说。当穿越了漫长的黄沙,刀和剑最终联诀,是铜墙铁壁,是无坚不摧的利刃。他们将携手稳定世间的秩序。而大幕却被缓缓揭开,复仇者从远古归来,人类的战役远远没有结束。
  • 无法消失的吻痕

    无法消失的吻痕

    穿越什么的她最憎恨了!特别是自己一个人!你以为在拍电视剧啊?处处遇贵人,逢凶又化吉!不可能的啦!就像她……她是不知道谁让她穿越的啦,要是知道的话一定送个丧礼给那个人享受!她也不知道自己穿越来要干什么啦,就只能傻愣愣地被人家利用……好啦,终于老天有眼让她遇到熟人啦!结果呢?结果……咦?结果她就稀里糊涂地给穿越回来了!感激涕零……真是祖宗保佑啊!只是……她好像不是一个人回来的……啊!怎么会这样子?她的噩梦还没结束吗?
  • 深深深深精病

    深深深深精病

    目光的追随是一种习惯之前我一直看着他,求而不得,后来才知道我的执着只是执着,有时候转过身会有属于你的更好的存在,后来我所有憧憬的未来里都多了那么一个人.
  • 如果人死之后还能活着怎么办

    如果人死之后还能活着怎么办

    一个个世界的重叠,如幻想一幕发生在了世人的眼前……
  • 往仙录

    往仙录

    仙之一道虚无缥缈,自古多少术士遍寻名川大山,又有多少武者红尘试炼。一世之内,万千生灵,芸芸众生之间又有多少生离死别。于是人们求长生,渴望不灭,仙之根源皆在于此。未久,先有隐世高人羽化登仙,后有尘世炼者武破虚空,莫不都是登上了那不灭之境。自此,仙道永久流传下来,可叹后世者得道之人寥寥,但仙之火种却越发辉煌。
  • 牌奕之主

    牌奕之主

    一支科研小队在一次考察中意外发现了神秘的海底洞窟,其中惊现了神秘的文明遗迹,却不曾想这个发现给他们带来了灭顶之灾...数年后,血腥诡秘的案件在小小的城镇内连续发生,超乎常理的犯罪打破了韩旭平静的生活,案件后的神秘一层层被剥开,却将他卷入了更大的旋涡之中...
  • 官人请自重

    官人请自重

    男人有钱就变坏,何况还有权。糟糠之妻都能撇下,亲生儿子都不要,还有人你不敢的?
  • 原来爱你只是我的独角戏

    原来爱你只是我的独角戏

    我会忍不住去想你不管什么时候你的一句话我可以笑上半天不知道为什么我就是喜欢你尽管我知道我们真的不合适但是就是忍不住去想你无数次我打开对话框却不知道说些什么我怕你不喜欢我我就是忘不了你我就是死皮赖脸喜欢你你们真的很合适我也尝试不去见你不去想你但是我控制不住感情是不能强求的不知道我什么时候会忘记你我努力控制自己道理我都懂可是我就是喜欢你