第 81 节
作者:温暖寒冬      更新:2024-04-09 19:50      字数:9293
  hussy?”   (Here   Vixen   tucked   her   tail   between   her   legs   and   ran
  forward into the house。 Subjects are sometimes broached which a
  well…bred female will ignore。)
  “But   where’s   the   use   of   talking   to   a   woman      with   babbies?”
  continued Bartle。 “She’s got no conscience—no conscience; it’s all
  run to milk。”
  George Eliot                                                           ElecBook Classics
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  Book Third
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  Chapter XXII
  Going to the Birthday Feast
  he thirtieth of July was come; and it was one of those half…
  dozen warm days which sometimes occur in the middle of
  T
  a   rainy   English   summer。   No   rain   had   fallen   for   the   last
  three or four days; and the weather was perfect for that time of the
  year: there was less dust than usual on the dark…green hedge…rows
  and on the wild camomile that starred the roadside; yet the grass
  was dry enough for the little children to roll on it; and there was
  no cloud but a   long  dash  of  light;   downy  ripple;   high;   high  up   in
  the   far…off   blue   sky。   Perfect   weather   for   an   outdoor   July   merry…
  making; yet surely not the best time of year to be born in。 Nature
  seems to make a hot pause just then: all the loveliest  flowers   are
  gone; the sweet time of early growth and vague hopes is past; and
  yet   the  time   of  harvest    and   ingathering     is  not  come;   and   we
  tremble at the possible storms that may ruin the precious fruit in
  the    moment      of   its  ripeness。    The    woods     are   all  one   dark
  monotonous green; the waggon…loads of hay no longer creep along
  the    lanes;   scattering    their   sweet…smelling      fragments      on   the
  blackberry branches; the pastures are often a little tanned; yet the
  corn has not got its last splendour of red and gold; the lambs and
  calves   have   lost all   traces   of  their  innocent  frisky  prettiness;   and
  have   become   stupid   young   sheep   and   cows。   But   it   is   a   time   of
  leisure   on   the   farm—that   pause   between   hay   and   corn…harvest;
  and    so   the  farmers     and   labourers    in   Hayslope     and   Broxton
  thought  the captain did well to come of age just then;   when   they
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  could give their undivided minds to the flavour of the great cask of
  ale which had been brewed the autumn after “the heir” was born;
  and   was   to   be   tapped   on   his   twenty…first   birthday。   The   air   had
  been      merry     with    the   ringing     of  church…bells       very    early    this
  morning; and every one had made haste to get through the needful
  work   before   twelve;   when   it   would   be         time    to   think  of   getting
  ready to go to the Chase。
  The   midday  sun  was   streaming   into   Hetty’s   bedchamber;   and
  there   was   no   blind   to   temper   the   heat   with   which   it   fell   on   her
  head   as   she looked at  herself in   the  old   specked   glass。   Still;   that
  was   the   only  glass  she   had   in   which  she   could   see   her   neck   and
  arms; for the small hanging glass she had fetched out of the next
  room—the room that had been Dinah’s—would show her nothing
  below   her   little   chin;    and    that   beautiful   bit   of   neck    where     the
  roundness of her cheek melted into another roundness shadowed
  by   dark   delicate   curls。   And   to…day   she   thought   more   than   usual
  about her neck and arms; for at the dance this evening she was not
  to   wear   any   neckerchief;   and   she   had   been   busy   yesterday   with
  her spotted pink…and…white frock; that she might make the sleeves
  either long or short at will。 She was dressed now just as she was to
  be   in   the   evening;   with   a   tucker   made   of   “real”   lace;   which   her
  aunt     had    lent  her    for  this   unparalleled       occasion;     but   with    no
  ornaments besides; she   had   even   taken   out  her  small   round  ear…
  rings which she wore every day。 But there was something more to
  be   done;   apparently; before   she   put  on   her neckerchief  and long
  sleeves;     which     she   was    to  wear     in  the   day…time;     for   now    she
  unlocked   the   drawer   that   held   her   private   treasures。   It   is   more
  than   a   month   since   we   saw   her   unlock   that   drawer   before;   and
  now it holds new  treasures; so  much more   precious  than   the   old
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  ones that these are thrust into the corner。 Hetty would not care to
  put the   large   coloured   glass   ear…rings into  her  ears now;   for  see!
  she   has   got   a   beautiful   pair   of   gold   and   pearls   and   garnet;   lying
  snugly in a pretty little box lined with white satin。 Oh; the delight
  of   taking   out   that   little   box  and   looking  at   the   ear…rings!   Do   not
  reason about it; my philosophical reader; and say that Hetty; being
  very pretty; must have known that it did not  signify  whether  she
  had on any ornaments or not; and that; moreover; to look at ear…
  rings which she could not possibly wear out of her bedroom could
  hardly be a satisfaction; the essence of vanity being a reference to
  the   impressions   produced   on   others;   you   will   never   understand
  women’s natures   if  you  are   so  excessively   rational。   Try   rather   to
  divest   yourself   of   all   your   rational   prejudices;   as   much   as   if   you
  were studying the psychology of a canary bird; and only watch the
  movements of this pretty round creature as she turns her head on
  one side with an unconscious smile at the ear…rings nestled in the
  little box。  Ah;   you  think;   it  is   for  the   sake  of  the   person   who  has
  given   them   to   her;   and   her   thoughts   are   gone   back   now   to   the
  moment when they were put into her hands。 No; else why should
  she have cared to have ear…rings rather than anything else? And I
  know      that   she   had    longed    for   ear…rings    from    among      all  the
  ornaments she could imagine。
  “Little; little ears!” Arthur had said; pretending to pinch them
  one evening; as Hetty sat beside him on the grass without her hat。
  “I wish I had some pretty ear…rings!” she said in a moment; almost
  before she knew what she was saying—the wish lay so close to her
  lips; it would flutter past them at the slightest breath。 And the next
  day—it was only last week—Arthur had ridden over to Rosseter on
  purpose to buy them。 That little wish so naively uttered seemed to
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  him the prettiest bit of childishness; he had never heard anything
  like   it   before;   and   he   had   wrapped   the   box   up   in   a   great   many
  covers;     that   he   might     see   Hetty    unwrapping        it  with   growing
  curiosity;   till   at   last   her   eyes   flashed   back   their   new   delight   into
  his。
  No; she was not thinking most of the giver when she smiled at
  the   ear…rings;   for   now   she   is   taking   them   out   of   the   box;   not   to
  press them to her lips; but to fasten them in her ears—only for one
  moment; to see how pretty they look; as she peeps at them in the
  glass against the wall; with first one position of the head and then
  another;   like   a   listening   bird。   It   is   impossible   to   be   wise   on   the
  subject of ear…rings as one looks at her; what should those delicate
  pearls and crystals be made for; if not for such ears? One cannot
  even   find   fault   with   the   tiny   round   hole   which   they   leave   when
  they   are   taken   out;   perhaps   water…nixies;   and   such  lovely   things
  without souls; have these little round holes in their ears by nature;
  ready to hang jewels in。 And Hetty must be one of them: it is too
  painful     to   think  that   she   is  a  woman;      with   a  woman’s      destiny
  before her—a wom