登陆注册
5167300000181

第181章

Wakem in a New Light BEFORE three days had passed after the conversation you have just overheard between Lucy and her father, she had contrived to have a private interview with Philip during a pre-arranged absence of Maggie's at her aunt Glegg's.

For a day and a night Philip turned over in his mind with restless agitation all that Lucy had told him in that interview, till he had thoroughly resolved on a course of action.He thought he saw before him now a possibility of altering his position with respect to Maggie and removing at least one obstacle between them.He laid his plan and calculated all his moves with the fervid deliberation of a chess-player in the days of his first ardour, and was amazed himself at his sudden genius as a tactician.His plan was as bold as it was thoroughly calculated.Having watched for a moment when his father had nothing more urgent on his hands than the newspaper, he went behind him, laid a hand on his shoulder, and said, `Father, will you come up into my sanctum, and look at my new sketches? I've arranged them now.'

`I'm getting terribly stiff in the joints, Phil, for climbing those stairs of yours,' said Wakem, looking kindly at his son as he laid down his paper.`But come along, then.'

`This is a nice place for you, isn't it, Phil? - a capital light that from the roof, eh?' was, as usual, the first thing he said on entering the painting room.He liked to remind himself and his son too that his fatherly indulgence had provided the accommodation.He had been a good father.Emily would have nothing to reproach him with there, if she came back again from her grave.

`Come, come,' he said, putting his double eye-glass over his nose, and seating himself to take a general view while he rested, `you've got a famous show here.Upon my word, I don't see that your things aren't as good as that London artist's - what's his name - that Leyburn gave so much money for.'

Philip shook his head and smiled.He had seated himself on his painting-stool, and had taken a lead pencil in his hand, with which he was making strong marks to counteract the sense of tremulousness.He watched his father get up, and walk slowly round, goodnaturedly dwelling on the pictures much longer than his amount of genuine taste for landscape would have prompted, till he stopped before a stand on which two pictures were placed - one much larger than the other - the smaller one in a leather case.

`Bless me! what have you here?' said Wakem, startled by a sudden transition from landscape to portrait.`I thought you'd left off figures.Who are these?'

`They are the same person,' said Philip, with calm promptness, `at different ages.'

`And what person?' said Wakem, sharply, fixing his eyes with a growing look of suspicion on the larger picture.

`Miss Tulliver.The small one is something like what she was when Iwas at school with her brother at King's Lorton: the large one is not quite so good a likeness of what she was when I came from abroad.'

Wakem turned round fiercely, with a flushed face, letting his eye-glass fall, and looking at his son with a savage expression for a moment as if he was ready to strike that daring feebleness from the stool.But he threw himself into the armchair again and thrust his hands into his trouser-pockets, still looking angrily at his son, however.Philip did not return the look but sat quietly watching the point of his pencil.

`And do you mean to say, then, that you have had any acquaintance with her since you came from abroad?' said Wakem, at last, with that vain effort which rage always makes, to throw as much punishment as it desires to inflict into words and tones, since blows are forbidden.

`Yes: I saw a great deal of her for a whole year before her father's death.We met often, in that thicket - the Red Deeps - near Dorlcote Mill.

I love her dearly: I shall never love any other woman.I have thought of her ever since she was a little girl.'

`Go on, sir! - And you have corresponded with her all this while?'

`No.I never told her I loved her till just before we parted, and she promised her brother not to see me again or to correspond with me.I am not sure that she loves me, or would consent to marry me.But if she would consent - if she did love me well enough - I should marry her.'

`And this is the return you make me for all the indulgences I've heaped on you?' said Wakem, getting white and beginning to tremble under an enraged sense of impotence before Philip's calm defiance and concentration of purpose.

`No, father,' said Philip, looking up at him for the first time.`Idon't regard it as a return.You have been an indulgent father to me -but I have always felt that it was because you had an affectionate wish to give me as much happiness as my unfortunate lot would admit of - not that it was a debt you expected me to pay by sacrificing all my chances of happiness to satisfy feelings of yours which I can never share.'

`I think most sons would share their father's feelings in this case,'

said Wakem, bitterly.`The girl's father was an ignorant mad brute, who was within an inch of murdering me - the whole town knows it.And the brother is just as insolent: only in a cooler way.He forbade her seeing you, you say: he'll break every bone in your body, for your greater happiness, if you don't take care.But you seem to have made up your mind: you have counted the consequences, I suppose.Of course you are independent of me: you can marry this girl tomorrow, if you like: you are a man of six-and-twenty - you can go your way, and I can go mine.We need have no more to do with each other.'

Wakem rose and walked towards the door, but something held him back, and instead of leaving the room he walked up and down it.Philip was slow to reply, and when he spoke, his tone had a more incisive quietness and clearness than ever.

`No: I can't marry Miss Tulliver, even if she would have me - if I have only my own resources to maintain her with.I have been brought up to no profession.I can't offer her poverty as well as deformity.'

同类推荐
  • 闲情偶寄

    闲情偶寄

    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。
  • 花严经疏卷第三

    花严经疏卷第三

    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。
  • 回波辞

    回波辞

    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。
  • Joy

    Joy

    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。
  • 小儿语_续小儿语_女小儿语

    小儿语_续小儿语_女小儿语

    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。
热门推荐
  • 影帝的女人是大佬

    影帝的女人是大佬

    某微博爆料:娱乐圈最年轻影帝和三流女星深夜拥吻网上顿时炸锅了“哪个不要脸的攀龙附凤?”“影帝是大家的,xx滚出娱乐圈。”就在大家义愤填膺时,三流女星突然掉马竟是明星最想攀附之人,某行业大佬,娱乐圈‘干爹’此书又名《影帝老公抱了金大腿,认了干爹,粉丝含泪送嫁》 【本书内容全是作者幻想,不影射任何现实娱乐圈的人和事,若有任何不符实情,敬请见谅!】
  • 穿越杠上暴君:独宠弃后

    穿越杠上暴君:独宠弃后

    秋依水无意中得到一本叫做《古书奇缘》的书,睡前翻看时正好看到懦弱皇后被无良暴君欺压嫌弃的一段,气愤填膺,怒而睡觉。谁知一觉醒来,她竟变成了那个懦弱的皇后,而且第一次与暴君见面,就同他杠上了。皇帝怎么了?她才不要在他面前示弱,就是龙须她也敢捋一捋。而随着她的变化,暴君看向她的目光也在悄悄发生着变化……
  • 如何和老板谈加薪(财蜜eMook)

    如何和老板谈加薪(财蜜eMook)

    人在职场飘,钱多少是道绕不开的槛。跟老板谈加薪,往正规了说叫个人价值诉求,往随意了说就是需要个认可,本质上就是“谈判”。既然是谈判,就由你和对方手中的筹码来决定结果。所以呢,别担心,想加薪先要做好充足的准备,不加薪也不必甩脸走人。温馨提示:所有的跳槽都是源于更好的机会而不是赌气。本期会有“工资班”的资深财蜜帮你弄明白自己的工资单构成;也会有妹纸指路如何摸清薪酬水平好谈判;更有多位加薪狂人分享她们正常的、疯狂的和歪打正着的加薪经验。 你和老板都在相互试探,寻找雇佣关系的最佳模式。所以,你并不是一个人在战斗,在你身后有着历史悠久、经验丰富、百态千姿的职场女斗士走过的路……
  • 卡耐基当众演讲的艺术

    卡耐基当众演讲的艺术

    开发你所拥有但却不曾利用的潜能,这正是这本书要教会你的东西。哈佛大学著名教授詹姆斯曾这样说:“和我们所应该取得的成就相比,我们只是处于半醒的状态。现在我们只利用了我们身心资源的很小一部分。从广义上来说,人类现在还只是生活在自身潜能远远没有得到开发的狭小天地中。人类具有各种潜力,但却不曾开发和利用。”卡耐基曾坦言,这些年来他维持生活的,不是靠教授演讲术的收入,那不过是偶然而已。他说,他主要的工作是帮助人们,怎样展示他们的勇气,克服自身的恐惧。通过本书的强化训练,可以强化你的勇气、自信和热情,并很自然地将所学应用到私人谈话中,你将会发现,当众演讲将不是一件难事,自己也将可以展现魅力口才。
  • 穿越古代种田忙

    穿越古代种田忙

    计算机系元宝穿越乱世成古代大力女被爹娘卖进农家做童养媳。败家婆婆、黑心贪兄嫂、懒癌大姑子……腹黑汉:谁要欺负我媳妇儿,我让他跪着哭。“小元宝过来给我锤一锤。”元宝小拳拳打在某男心口,某男胸口痛痛痛,宛若胸口碎大石……里的大石,赶快求饶。“娘子辛苦了,快放下你的手,为夫给你揉肩锤腿。”腹黑好丈夫VS巨力小媳妇,农家欢乐多,尽在此文中
  • 独宠妖妃:皇后太嚣张

    独宠妖妃:皇后太嚣张

    情正浓时,他说:“牙儿,做我皇后好不好”,云牙儿微笑应下。后来,当她被误会与人私通时,他如同修罗地狱的煞神般紧紧捏着她的下巴,把一碗堕胎药灌入她口中,语气阴冷:“你这样肮脏的女人,怎么配做我的皇后”一道圣旨,把她打入冷宫。云牙儿被逼至绝路,站在摘星楼顶端的时候,她听见他惊慌的声音:“牙儿!不要”,云牙儿却义无反顾地跳了下去,独留一句话在风中消散:“慕容霆,我恨你。”PS:我说这不是虐恋有人相信吗【哭笑不得】
  • 凤棺谜咒

    凤棺谜咒

    本书是从全国著名通俗文学作家叶雪松先生已发表的悬疑故事作品中精心筛选出来的,这20篇故事,有万字左右的中篇,有数千字的短篇,既有怪案奇破,有江湖豪情,也有当代传奇,悬疑惊悚,多角度,多侧面,映射出了人生百态,读之令人爱不释手,欲罢不能,或掩卷深思,或催人泪下,无疑是一道不可多得的精食大餐。
  • 嫡女生存手札

    嫡女生存手札

    上一世,丞相嫡女景宁,遇人不淑,被最心爱的人害死。重生回到了十年前,景宁决定奋起反击,以牙还牙,整治恶毒后母,手撕白莲庶妹!逆天改命,前世欺她辱她之人,都将百倍奉还!女主:“敢欺负我夫君,皇帝也可以换人当!!!”
  • 斗罗大陆之未唱完的歌

    斗罗大陆之未唱完的歌

    戴雨浩继承情绪之神的神位后与唐舞桐一起回归斗罗大陆会有何际遇?伊老破碎的神识能否找回?戴雨浩的遗憾能否弥补?他们又会有怎样一场盛大的婚礼?请大家关注《斗罗大陆之未唱完的歌》
  • 无宠弃后金灿灿

    无宠弃后金灿灿

    云絮会的很简单,那就是招财,敛财和散财。眨着眼睛对刺客说:“你先别杀我,你腰上的青玉翡翠卖不卖?"无辜的看着一脸黑线的皇帝道:"不好意思,你的国家我帮你卖了,比行价高了点,这是你的分红……”黄昏十分,在后宫摆了一个摊子,对妃嫔娘娘们说:“给皇上侍寝一夜三百两,有包月,团购的面谈……”无宠可以,却不能无尊。无爱可以,却不能无财………当云絮揽够大批财富的时候,皇帝还不乖乖的靠上来:“朕亲爱的皇后,借点银子救急吧?”“亲爱的夫君,你上次借的银子利息已经滚到一百倍了,这次你恐怕要拿皇位来抵了呢。”把胸前的爪子拍下去,怒道,“少来这招,色诱早就过时了……”风格轻松幽默,爱情甜蜜浪漫,小打小闹,无伤大雅。每日一更,敬请期待……