登陆注册
5298100000144

第144章

In spite of the thirty-odd guests,people of very moderate incomes who knew the place and had come here year after year,I was as much alone as if I had been the only sojourner.The place was so remote,so peaceful in contrast to the city I had left,which had become intolerable.And at night,during hours of wakefulness,the music of the waters falling over the dam was soothing.I used to walk down there and sit on the stones of the ruined mill;or climb to the crests on the far side of the pond to gaze for hours westward where the green billows of the Alleghenies lost themselves in the haze.I had discovered a new country;here,when our trials should be over,I would bring Nancy,and I found distraction in choosing sites for a bungalow.In my soul hope flowered with little watering.Uncertain news was good news.After two days of an impatience all but intolerable,her first letter arrived,I learned that the specialists had not been able to make a diagnosis,and I began to take heart again.At times,she said,Ham was delirious and difficult to manage;at other times he sank into a condition of coma;and again he seemed to know her and Ralph,who had come up from Southampton,where he had been spending the summer.One doctor thought that Ham's remarkable vitality would pull him through,in spite of what his life had been.The shock--as might have been surmised--had affected the brain....The letters that followed contained no additional news;she did not dwell on the depressing reactions inevitable from the situation in which she found herself--one so much worse than mine;she expressed a continual longing for me;and yet I had trouble to convince myself that they did not lack the note of reassurance for which I strained as I eagerly scanned them--of reassurance that she had no intention of permitting her husband's condition to interfere with that ultimate happiness on which it seemed my existence depended.I tried to account for the absence of this note by reflecting that the letters were of necessity brief,hurriedly scratched off at odd moments;and a natural delicacy would prevent her from referring to our future at such a time.They recorded no change in Ham's condition save that the periods of coma had ceased.The doctors were silent,awaiting the arrival in this country of a certain New York specialist who was abroad.She spent most of her days at the hospital,returning to the hotel at night exhausted:the people she knew in the various resorts around Boston had been most kind,sending her flowers,and calling when in town to inquire.At length came the news that the New York doctor was home again;and coming to Boston.In that letter was a sentence which rang like a cry in my ears:"Oh,Hugh,I think these doctors know now what the trouble is,I think I know.They are only waiting for Dr.Jameson to confirm it."It was always an effort for me to control my impatience after the first rattling was heard in the morning of the stage that brought the mail,and I avoided the waiting group in front of the honeycombed partition of boxes beside the "office."On the particular morning of which I am now writing the proprietor himself handed me a letter of ominous thickness which I took with me down to the borders of the lake before tearing open the flap.In spite of the calmness and restraint of the first lines,because of them,I felt creeping over me an unnerving sensation I knew for dread....

"Hugh,the New York doctor has been here.It is as I have feared for some weeks,but I couldn't tell you until I was sure.Ham is not exactly insane,but he is childish.Sometimes I think that is even worse.Ihave had a talk with Dr.Jameson,who has simply confirmed the opinion which the other physicians have gradually been forming.The accident has precipitated a kind of mental degeneration,but his health,otherwise,will not be greatly affected.

"Jameson was kind,but very frank,for which I was grateful.He did not hesitate to say that it would have been better if the accident had been fatal.Ham won't be helpless,physically.Of course he won't be able to play polo,or take much active exercise.If he were to be helpless,Icould feel that I might be of some use,at least of more use.He knows his friends.Some of them have been here to see him,and he talks quite rationally with them,with Ralph,with me,only once in a while he says something silly.It seems odd to write that he is not responsible,since he never has been,--his condition is so queer that I am at a loss to describe it.The other morning,before I arrived from the hotel and when the nurse was downstairs,he left the hospital,and we found him several blocks along Commonwealth Avenue,seated on a bench,without a hat--he was annoyed that he had forgotten it,and quite sensible otherwise.We began by taking him out every morning in an automobile.To-day he had a walk with Ralph,and insisted on going into a club here,to which they both belong.Two or three men were there whom they knew,and he talked to them about his fall from the pony and told them just how it happened.

At such times only a close observer can tell from his manner that everything is not right.

"Ralph,who always could manage him,prevented his taking anything to drink.He depends upon Ralph,and it will be harder for me when he is not with us.His attitude towards me is just about what it has always been.I try to amuse him by reading the newspapers and with games;we have a chess-board.At times he seems grateful,and then he will suddenly grow tired and hard to control.Once or twice I have had to call in Dr.Magruder,who owns the hospital.

同类推荐
  • 佛说阿惟越致遮经

    佛说阿惟越致遮经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 初仕录

    初仕录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 黥

    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。
  • 朝野新谭

    朝野新谭

    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。
  • 哭京兆庞尹

    哭京兆庞尹

    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
  • Madame Chiang Kai-shek
  • 怎么回头再爱你

    怎么回头再爱你

    我叫路柏然这些年我一个人带着我们得回忆走小心看管不敢弄丢顾可欣又下雪了回家吗你已经离开一年多了我开始学着做一些琐碎的家务被人爱过也跟人在一起过个中滋味大概只有自己清楚没有给别人提起过你不知道开口要用什么情绪我把我们的故事写下来然后路柏然要开始他新的人生了
  • 给不了你想要的幸福

    给不了你想要的幸福

    他说,让他爱她是一件恶心至极的事情。她伤心离去,消失他的世界,他却疯了似的,想要让她回来……
  • Meno

    Meno

    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。
  • 草阁集

    草阁集

    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。
  • 南门天玺录

    南门天玺录

    长夜冥冥,万家灯火。白月清风,夜幕笼垂。深山里,窗棂下,垂暮老者望向窗外……夜寐晨兴,老者面容枯槁却目光炯远。身边少年俯身贴近,老者凝神沉思,蓦然道:“那个人……他还会回来吗……”——————————————————————讲述昔年太子南门修大难未死,化身梅山才子左子丘回到未央帝都,步步为营、立排奸佞、重正星轨的志士历程。南门三兄弟恩怨情仇,终坦诚相待一致对外,谱写了一曲当属于碧血丹心、英发男儿的热血史诗。
  • 震撼中学生的101个故事

    震撼中学生的101个故事

    当我们阅读历史,阅读生活,总会被一些人的经历和故事所感动,不仅仅是这样,我们还会在他们的身上,得到一些十分有益的启示,而这些启示会激发我们奔向未来的勇气。本书根据社会发展的需求和学生们对知识的实际需要,通过大量查阅资料,耐心细致地筛选出101个故事,其中既有名人小传、民间故事,又有情感小语、心灵故事、生活小文,还有人生哲理、生存之道,这些无不影响着我们对待生活的态度,使我们积极勇敢地面对自己的人生。
  • 以孝树人:孝与古代教育(中国孝文化丛书)

    以孝树人:孝与古代教育(中国孝文化丛书)

    中国古代孝教育包括国家对于孝的教育、学校对于孝的教育、家庭对于孝的教育、文学作品中关于孝的教育。本书也分别从这几个方面进行了论述。其中在国家对于孝的教育中,重点论述了古代统治者为了提倡孝道而作出的表率和不同历史时期国家采取的一系列有关孝的政策措施。
  • 诊宗三昧

    诊宗三昧

    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。
  • 扫除成长心理障碍(培养学生心灵成长的经典故事)

    扫除成长心理障碍(培养学生心灵成长的经典故事)

    在这套丛书里,我们针对青少年的心理特点,专门选择了一些特殊的故事,分别对他们在这一时期将会遭遇的情感问题、生活问题、学习问题、交友问题以及各种心理健康问题,从心理学的角度进行剖析和讲解,并提出了解决问题的方法和措施,以供同学们参考借鉴。