第 44 节
作者:温暖寒冬      更新:2024-04-09 19:50      字数:9230
  George Eliot                                                          ElecBook Classics
  … Page 178…
  Adam Bede                                    178
  Chapter XIII
  Evening in the Wood
  t  happened   that   Mrs。   Pomfret   had   had   a   slight   quarrel   with
  Mrs。 Best; the housekeeper; on this Thursday morning—a fact
  I
  which   had   two   consequences   highly   convenient   to   Hetty。   It
  caused Mrs。 Pomfret to have tea sent up to her own room; and it
  inspired that exemplary lady’s maid with so lively a recollection of
  former passages in Mrs。 Best’s conduct; and of dialogues in which
  Mrs。   Best   had   decidedly   the    inferiority   as   an   interlocutor   with
  Mrs。 Pomfret; that Hetty required no more presence of mind than
  was demanded for using her needle; and throwing in an occasional
  “yes”   or   “no。”   She   would   have   wanted   to   put   on   her   hat   earlier
  than    usual;   only   she   had    told  Captain    Donnithorne       that   she
  usually set out about eight o’clock; and if he should go to the Grove
  again   expecting   to   see   her;   and   she   should   be   gone!   Would   he
  come?      Her   little  butterfly   soul   fluttered    incessantly    between
  memory and dubious expectation。 At last the minute…hand   of  the
  old…fashioned   brazen…faced   timepiece   was   on   the   last   quarter   to
  eight; and there   was  every  reason   for  its being  time   to  get  ready
  for   departure。    Even    Mrs。   Pomfret’s     preoccupied     mind    did   not
  prevent her from noticing what looked like a new flush of beauty
  in the little thing as she tied on her hat before the looking…glass。
  “That child  gets   prettier  and   prettier  every  day;   I   do believe;”
  was her inward comment。 “The more’s the pity。 She’ll get neither
  a place nor a husband any the sooner for it。 Sober well…to…do men
  don’t    like  such   pretty   wives。   When     I  was   a  girl;  I  was  more
  George Eliot                                                      ElecBook Classics
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  Adam Bede                                       179
  admired than if I had been so very pretty。 However; she’s reason
  to be grateful to me   for  teaching  her  something  to  get  her  bread
  with;   better   than   farm…house   work。   They   always   told   me   I   was
  good…natured—and            that’s   the   truth;   and    to  my    hurt   too;   else
  there’s them in this house that wouldn’t be here now to lord it over
  me in the housekeeper’s room。”
  Hetty walked hastily across the short space of pleasure…ground
  which she had   to  traverse;   dreading  to  meet  Mr。   Craig;   to  whom
  she could hardly have spoken civilly。 How relieved she was when
  she    had   got   safely   under   the    oaks   and    among     the   fern   of  the
  Chase! Even then she was as ready to be startled as the deer that
  leaped away at her approach。 She thought nothing of the evening
  light   that   lay   gently   in   the   grassy   alleys   between   the   fern;   and
  made the beauty of their living green more visible than it had been
  in the overpowering flood of noon: she thought of nothing that was
  present。   She   only   saw   something   that   was   possible:   Mr。   Arthur
  Donnithorne coming  to  meet  her  again along  the  Fir…tree   Grove。
  That was the foreground of Hetty’s picture; behind it lay a bright
  hazy something—days that were not to be as the other days of her
  life had been。 It was as if she had been wooed by a river…god; who
  might   any   time   take   her   to   his   wondrous   halls   below   a   watery
  heaven。      There    was    no   knowing      what    would     come;    since    this
  strange   entrancing   delight   had   come。   If   a   chest   full   of   lace   and
  satin   and   jewels   had   been   sent   her   from   some   unknown   source;
  how  could   she but  have   thought  that  her   whole   lot   was   going   to
  change; and that to…morrow some still more bewildering joy would
  befall her? Hetty had never read a novel; if she had ever seen one;
  I   think   the   words   would   have   been   too   hard   for   her;   how   then
  could     she    find   a  shape    for   her   expectations?       They     were    as
  George Eliot                                                          ElecBook Classics
  … Page 180…
  Adam Bede                                       180
  formless as the sweet languid odours of the garden at the Chase;
  which had floated past her as she walked by the gate。
  She   is   at   another   gate   now—that   leading   into   Fir…tree   Grove。
  She enters the wood; where it is already twilight; and at every step
  she   takes;  the   fear  at  her  heart  becomes colder。   If  he   should   not
  come!   Oh;   how   dreary   it   was—the   thought   of   going   out   at   the
  other end of the wood; into the unsheltered road; without having
  seen   him。   She   reaches   the   first   turning   towards   the   Hermitage;
  walking   slowly—he   is   not   there。   She   hates   the   leveret   that   runs
  across   the   path;   she   hates   everything   that   is   not   what   she   longs
  for。 She walks on; happy whenever she is coming to a bend in the
  road; for perhaps he is behind it。 No。 She is beginning to cry: her
  heart   has   swelled   so;   the   tears   stand   in   her   eyes;   she   gives   one
  great sob; while the corners of her mouth quiver; and the tears roll
  down。
  She     doesn’t     know     that    there    is  another      turning     to   the
  Hermitage;        that    she    is   close    against     it;  and    that    Arthur
  Donnithorne is only a few yards from her; full of one thought; and
  a thought of which she only is the object。 He is going to see Hetty
  again: that is the longing which has been growing through the last
  three   hours   to   a   feverish   thirst。   Not;   of   course;   to   speak   in   the
  caressing way into which he had unguardedly fallen before dinner;
  but  to  set  things   right  with  her  by  a   kindness   which  would   have
  the air of friendly civility; and prevent her from running away with
  wrong notions about their mutual relation。
  If Hetty had known he was there; she would not have cried; and
  it   would   have   been   better;   for   then   Arthur   would   perhaps   have
  behaved as wisely as he had intended。 As it was; she started when
  he appeared at the end of the side…alley; and looked up at him with
  George Eliot                                                          ElecBook Classics
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  Adam Bede                                      181
  two  great  drops   rolling   down   her   cheeks。   What   else   could   he   do
  but speak to her in a soft;   soothing  tone;   as   if she   were   a   bright…
  eyed spaniel with a thorn in her foot?
  “Has something frightened you; Hetty? Have you seen anything
  in the wood? Don’t be frightened—I’ll take care of you now。”
  Hetty was blushing so; she didn’t know whether she was happy
  or   miserable。   To   be   crying   again—what   did   gentlemen   think   of
  girls who cried in that way? She felt unable even to say “no;” but
  could only look away from him and wipe the tears from her cheek。
  Not before a great drop had fallen on her rose…coloured strings—
  she knew that quite well。
  “Come; be cheerful again。 Smile at me; and tell me what’s the
  matter。 Come; tell me。”
  Hetty turned her head towards him; whispered; “I thought you
  wouldn’t   come;”   and   slowly   got   courage   to   lift   her   eyes   to   him。
  That     look   was   too  much:     he  must    have    had   eyes   of  Egyptian
  granite not to look too lovingly in return。
  “You   little   frightened   bird!   Little   tearful   rose!   Silly   pet!   You
  won’t cry again; now I’m with you; will you?”
  Ah; he doesn’t know in the least what he is saying。 This is not
  what he meant to say。 His arm is stealing round the waist again; it
  is tightening its clasp; he is bending his face nearer and nearer to
  the round cheek; his lips are meeting those pouting child…lips; and
  for  a   long moment  time   has   vanished。   He   may   be   a   shepherd   in
  Arcadia for aught he knows; he may be the first youth kissing the
  first maiden; he may be Eros himself; sipping the lips of Psyche—it
  is all one。
  There   was   no   speaking   for   minutes   after。   They   walked   along
  with  beating  hearts   till  they  came   within   sight   of   the   gate   at   the
  George Eliot