都来读小说网

手机浏览器扫描二维码访问

第29部分(第1页)

but here; by an abrupt movement she spilt the ink ever the page and blotted it from human sight she hoped for ever。 She was all of a quiver; all of a stew。 Nothing more repulsive could be imagined than to feel the ink flowing thus in cascades of involuntary inspiration。 What had happened to her? Was it the damp; was it Bartholomew; was it Basket; what was it? she demanded。 But the room was empty。 No one answered her; unless the dripping of the rain in the ivy could be taken for an answer。

Meanwhile; she became conscious; as she stood at the window; of an extraordinary tingling and vibration all over her; as if she were made of a thousand wires upon which some breeze or errant fingers were playing scales。 Now her toes tingled; now her marrow。 She had the queerest sensations about the thigh bones。 Her hairs seemed to erect themselves。 Her arms sang and twanged as the telegraph wires would be singing and twanging in twenty years or so。 But all this agitation seemed at length to concentrate in her hands; and then in one hand; and then in one finger of that hand; and then finally to contract itself so that it made a ring of quivering sensibility about the second finger of the left hand。 And when she raised it to see what caused this agitation; she saw nothing—nothing but the vast solitary emerald which Queen Elizabeth had given her。 And was that not enough? she asked。 It was of the finest water。 It was worth ten thousand pounds at least。 The vibration seemed; in the oddest way (but remember we are dealing with some of the darkest manifestations of the human soul) to say No; that is not enough; and; further; to assume a note of interrogation; as though it were asking; what did it mean; this hiatus; this strange oversight? till poor Orlando felt positively ashamed of the second finger of her left hand without in the least knowing why。 At this moment; Bartholomew came in to ask which dress she should lay out for dinner; and Orlando; whose senses were much quickened; instantly glanced at Bartholomew’s left hand; and instantly perceived what she had never noticed before—a thick ring of rather jaundiced yellow circling the third finger where her own was bare。

‘Let me look at your ring; Bartholomew;’ she said; stretching her hand to take it。

At this; Bartholomew made as if she had been struck in the breast by a rogue。 She started back a pace or two; clenched her hand and flung it away from her with a gesture that was noble in the extreme。 ‘No;’ she said; with resolute dignity; her Ladyship might look if she pleased; but as for taking off her wedding ring; not the Archbishop nor the Pope nor Queen Victoria on her throne could force her to do that。 Her Thomas had put it on her finger twenty–five years; six months; three weeks ago; she had slept in it; worked in it; washed in it; prayed in it; and proposed to be buried in it。 In fact; Orlando understood her to say; but her voice was much broken with emotion; that it was by the gleam on her wedding ring that she would be assigned her station among the angels and its lustre would be tarnished for ever if she let it out of her keeping for a second。

‘Heaven help us;’ said Orlando; standing at the window and watching the pigeons at their pranks; ‘what a world we live in! What a world to be sure!’ Its plexities amazed her。 It now seemed to her that the whole world was ringed with gold。 She went in to dinner。 Wedding rings abounded。 She went to church。 Wedding rings were everywhere。 She drove out。 Gold; or pinchbeck; thin; thick; plain; smooth; they glowed dully on every hand。 Rings filled the jewellers’ shops; not the flashing pastes and diamonds of Orlando’s recollection; but simple bands without a stone in them。 At the same time; she began to notice a new habit among the town people。 In the old days; one would meet a boy trifling with a girl under a hawthorn hedge frequently enough。 Orlando had flicked many a couple with the tip of her whip and laughed and passed on。 Now; all that was changed。 Couples trudged and plodded in the middle of the road indissolubly linked together。 The woman’s right hand was invariably passed through the man’s left and her fingers were firmly gripped by his。 Often it was not till the horses’ noses were on them that they budged; and then; though they moved it was all in one piece; heavily; to the side of the road。 Orlando could only suppose that some new discovery had been made about the race; that they were somehow stuck together; couple after couple; but who had made it and when; she could not guess。 It did not seem to be Nature。 She looked at the doves and the rabbits and the elk–hounds and she could not see that Nature had changed her ways or mended them; since the time of Elizabeth at least。 There was no indissoluble alliance among the brutes that she could see。 Could it be Queen Victoria then; or Lord Melbourne? Was it from them that the great discovery of marriage proceeded? Yet the Queen; she pondered; was said to be fond of dogs; and Lord Melbourne; she had heard; was said to be fond of women。 It was strange—it was distasteful; indeed; there was something in this indissolubility of bodies which was repugnant to her sense of decency and sanitation。 Her ruminations; however; were acpanied by such a tingling and twanging of the afflicted finger that she could scarcely keep her ideas in order。 They were languishing and ogling like a housemaid’s fancies。 They made her blush。 There was nothing for it but to buy one of those ugly bands and wear it like the rest。 This she did; slipping it; overe with shame; upon her finger in the shadow of a curtain; but without avail。 The tingling persisted more violently; more indignantly than ever。 She did not sleep a wink that night。 Next morning when she took up the pen to write; either she could think of nothing; and the pen made one large lachrymose blot after another; or it ambled off; more alarmingly still; into mellifluous fluencies about early death and corruption; which were worse than no thinking at all。 For it would seem—her case proved it—that we write; not with the fingers; but with the whole person。 The nerve which controls the pen winds itself about every fibre of our being; threads the heart; pierces the liver。 Though the seat of her trouble seemed to be the left hand; she could feel herself poisoned through and through; and was forced at length to consider the most desperate of remedies; which was to yield pletely and submissively to the spirit of the age; and take a husband。

That this was much against her natural temperament has been sufficiently made plain。 When the sound of the Archduke’s chariot wheels died away; the cry that rose to her lips was ‘Life! A Lover!’ not ‘Life! A Husband!’ and it was in pursuit of this aim that she had gone to town and run about the world as has been shown in the previous chapter。 Such is the indomitable nature of the spirit of the age; however; that it batters down anyone who tries to make stand against it far more effectually than those who bend its own way。 Orlando had inclined herself naturally to the Elizabethan spirit; to the Restoration spirit; to the spirit of the eighteenth century; and had in consequence scarcely been aware of the change from one age to the other。 But the spirit of the nieenth century was antipathetic to her in the extreme; and thus it took her and broke her; and she was aware of her defeat at its hands as she had never been before。 For it is probable that the human spirit has its place in time assigned to it; some are born of this age; some of that; and now that Orlando was grown a woman; a year or two past thirty indeed; the lines of her character were fixed; and to bend them the wrong way was intolerable。

So she stood mournfully at the drawing–room window (Bartholomew had so christened the library) dragged down by the weight of the crinoline which she had submissively adopted。 It was heavier and more drab than any dress she had yet worn。 None had ever so impeded her movements。 No longer could she stride through the garden with her dogs; or run lightly to the high mound and fling herself beneath the oak tree。 Her skirts collected damp leaves and straw。 The plumed hat tossed on the breeze。 The thin shoes were quickly soaked and mud–caked。 Her muscles had lost their pliancy。 She became nervous lest there should be robbers behind the wainscot and afraid; for the first time in her life; of ghosts in the corridors。 All these things inclined her; step by step; to submit to the new discovery; whether Queen Victoria’s or another’s; that each man and each woman has another allotted to it for life; whom it supports; by whom it is supported; till death them do part。 It would be a fort; she felt; to lean; to sit down; yes; to lie down; never; never; never to get up again。 Thus did the spirit work upon her; for all her past pride; and as she came sloping down the scale of emotion to this lowly and unaccustomed lodging–place; those twangings and tinglings which had been so captious and so interrogative modulated into the sweetest melodies; till it seemed as if angels were plucking harp–strings with white fingers and her whole being was pervaded by a seraphic harmony。

But whom could she lean upon? She asked that question of the wild autumn winds。 For it was now October; and wet as usual。 Not the Archduke; he had married a very great lady and had hunted hares in Roumania these many years now; nor Mr M。; he was bee a Catholic; nor the Marquis of C。; he made sacks in Botany Bay; nor the Lord O。; he had long been food for fishes。 One way or another; all her old cronies were gone now; and the Nells and the Kits of Drury Lane; much though she favoured them; scarcely did to lean upon。

‘Whom’; she asked; casting her eyes upon the revolving clouds; clasping her hands as she knelt on the window–sill; and looking the very image of appealing womanhood as she did so; ‘can I lean upon?’ Her words formed themselves; her hands clasped themselves; involuntarily; just as her pen had written of its own accord。 It was not Orlando who spoke; but the spirit of the age。 But whichever it was; nobody answered it。 The rooks were tumbling pell–mell among the violet clouds of autumn。 The rain had stopped at last and there was an iridescence in the sky which tempted her to put on her plumed hat and her little stringed shoes and stroll out before dinner。

‘Everyone is mated except myself;’ she mused; as she trailed disconsolately across the courtyard。 There were the rooks; Canute and Pippin even—transitory as their alliances were; still each this evening seemed to have a partner。 ‘Whereas; I; who am mistress of it all;’ Orlando thought; glancing as she passed at the innumerable emblazoned windows of the hall; ‘am single; am mateless; am alone。’

Such thoughts had never entered her head before。 Now they bore her down unescapably。 Instead of thrusting the gate open; she tapped with a gloved hand for the porter to unfasten it for her。 One must lean on someone; she thought; if it is only on a porter; and half wished to stay behind and help him to grill his chop on a bucket of fiery coals; but was too timid to ask it。 So she strayed out into the park alone; faltering at first and apprehensive lest there might be poachers or gamekeepers or even err

在中国做事(全文阅读) - 黄夏君  战锤:这不是草原争霸吗?  蹉跎岁月女人花  双子变变变  销售人员职业教程  重生后,真少爷回村带妻女发家致富  血色使命  五胡烽火录  要塞-中世纪领主  女性经理人打造术:跟王熙凤学管理  现在,发现你的优势  冥仙未世  红色之翼  上门姐夫楚天舒乔诗媛最新更新章节免费阅读  梨园往事  唯爱成神  演讲论辩技巧  冷血悍将  拍遍全网糊咖醉姐终于火了陈醉周望全集免费阅读  从八百只麻雀开始肝成神明  

热门小说推荐
她真的太香了

她真的太香了

很小很小的时候,林塘就从亲在脸上的那些漂亮姐姐的口水中知道,英俊将会是自己此生最大的麻烦之源但是,作为一个志在世界冠军的男人,他眼里只有召唤师奖杯,他的战场也只在召唤师峡谷!女人只会影响我的操作!再多再漂亮的女粉丝,都无法令他多眨一下眼睛。然而竟然会有人为了追星,脑瘫到把整个俱乐部买下来我林塘就算从俱乐部楼顶跳下去!就算从此被封杀,再也上不了赛场!也绝对不会对你说一句软话!一年后不是我真香是她真的太香了如果您喜欢她真的太香了,别忘记分享给朋友...

诡秘降临龙族

诡秘降临龙族

在那个雨夜,灰雾笼罩了高架桥,诡秘之主降临了龙族世界奥丁为何频频被打?楚子航是否改信了愚者?路明非贯彻苟之一道后发生了什么?凯撒的情敌为什么变成了一位金发天使卡塞尔学院外出现的神秘组织到底什么来历?这都要从干掉外神后一脚踩空了的新任诡秘之主说起。诡秘虽然只有愚者先生和正义小姐来到了龙族,但是小克的套娃多诡秘这边贯彻无cp。龙族这里cp大概是路绘,楚夏,凯诺。建了一个交流群914508045,欢迎进来讨论▽如果您喜欢诡秘降临龙族,别忘记分享给朋友...

重生之狱火而来

重生之狱火而来

高冷帅气女主程苏vs魔族纨绔世子爷顾时易1v1双洁重生魔幻爽文她说我从地狱而来,从未想过要多么干净他说苏苏,这条路不好走,我陪你前世,父亲在她出生的那一日去世了,母亲带她改嫁。她是亲戚朋友中的乖孩子,是老师同学中努力上进的好学生。母亲总是说苏苏,妈妈就只有你了,你一定要好好学习,给妈妈争口气,她从未得过第一,这也是令苏然不悦的地方,你是不是根本就不走心?我为你付出了那么多,你怎么连个第一都考不来?她抑郁了,苏然说怎么会呢?她每天都很开心的!昨天晚上还给我们分享学校的趣事呢?重生后,她发誓要活成自己的样子,她不要去讨好任何人。成魔的那一天,他说苏苏,疼么?终于,她的瞳色变得跟他一样了他玩世不恭,却独独敬她,宠她,爱她。苏姐,可以啊苏姐,用不用我找人?,程苏冷冷地瞥他一眼,找什么人啊,你不就是?有人传言,程苏有人罩着,程苏睨了一眼旁边吊儿郎当的人,他们说,你罩着我?顾时易谁说的?苏姐还要保护我呢!喜欢的话就收藏起来呀ˊωˋ如果您喜欢重生之狱火而来,别忘记分享给朋友...

全民领主:只有我没穿越

全民领主:只有我没穿越

全民穿越异界,参与万族领主争霸!重生者李超,知道如何获取神级天赋,知道副本怎么打,知道神器藏在什么地方,知道许多种族的弱点然而,这有什么用?他一个人被留在了蓝星,哪儿也去不了!本书又名不能穿越的我,只好伪装成系统。如果您喜欢全民领主只有我没穿越,别忘记分享给朋友...

战神虎婿

战神虎婿

关于战神虎婿戎马数载,绝代战神荣耀归来,为报恩情,化身上门女婿。手持王帅大印,亮明身份,岳丈仇人全跪!...

皇上隆恩浩荡

皇上隆恩浩荡

大计第一步,得找个金大腿,可没曾想抱错了,扎脸,可否重抱?为何她重新抱谁,谁就倒了八辈子血霉?好吧,她认,反正她有二宝。一,读心术,虽然,独独对卞惊寒失灵。二,缩骨术,虽然,让本是成人的她看起来像个小孩。在三王府众人的眼里,他们的王爷卞惊寒也有二宝。一,竖着走的聂弦音。二,横着走的聂弦音。有人问聂弦音,三王爷对你如此好,你要怎么报答他?聂弦音认真想了想我会把他当成我亲爹一样侍奉!直到那一日,有人当着他的面,跟她说,等她长大了娶她,她点头如捣蒜,卞惊寒便彻底撕破了脸,也撕了她的衣。她哭得惊天动地你禽兽,我还是个孩子。某男淡定穿衣,唇角一抹餍足微弧比本王小两岁,的确算个孩子。...

每日热搜小说推荐