第 117 节
作者:温暖寒冬      更新:2024-04-09 19:50      字数:9227
  own。 Come; come; now;” he went on; becoming jocose; as soon as
  Hetty had   kissed   her  aunt  and   the   old   man;  “Adam   wants   a kiss
  too; I’ll warrant; and he’s a right to one now。”
  Hetty turned away; smiling; towards her empty chair。
  “Come;   Adam;   then;   take   one;”   persisted   Mr。   Poyser;   “else   y’
  arena half a man。”
  Adam got up; blushing like a small maiden—great strong fellow
  as   he   was—and; putting  his   arm   round   Hetty   stooped   down   and
  gently kissed her lips。
  It   was   a   pretty   scene   in   the   red   fire…light;   for   there   were   no
  candles—why   should   there   be;   when   the   fire   was   so   bright   and
  was   reflected   from   all   the   pewter   and   the   polished   oak?  No   one
  wanted to work on a Sunday evening。 Even Hetty  felt  something
  like contentment in the midst of all this love。 Adam’s attachment
  to   her;   Adam’s   caress;   stirred   no   passion   in   her;   were   no   longer
  enough to satisfy her vanity; but they were the best her life offered
  her now—they promised her some change。
  George Eliot                                                          ElecBook Classics
  … Page 474…
  Adam Bede                                      474
  There was a great deal   of discussion   before   Adam   went  away;
  about the possibility of his finding a house that would do for him
  to   settle  in。  No   house    was    empty    except    the   one   next   to  Will
  Maskery’s in the village; and that was too small for Adam now。 Mr。
  Poyser     insisted    that  the   best   plan   would    be   for  Seth    and   his
  mother to move and leave Adam in the old home; which might be
  enlarged      after   a  while;   for   there   was    plenty   of   space    in  the
  woodyard   and   garden; but   Adam   objected   to   turning   his   mother
  out。
  “Well; well;” said Mr。 Poyser at last; “we needna fix everything
  to…night。    We    must    take   time    to  consider。    You    canna    think    o’
  getting married afore Easter。 I’m not for long courtships; but there
  must be a bit o’ time to make things comfortable。”
  “Aye;    to   be  sure;”    said   Mrs。   Poyser;    in  a   hoarse    whisper;
  “Christian folks can’t be married like cuckoos; I reckon。”
  “I’m a bit daunted; though;” said Mr。 Poyser; “when I think as
  we   may   have   notice   to   quit;   and   belike   be   forced   to   take   a   farm
  twenty mile off。”
  “Eh;” said the old man; staring at the floor and lifting his hands
  up and down; while his arms rested on the elbows of his chair; “it’s
  a poor tale if I mun leave th’ ould spot an be buried in a strange
  parish。    An’   you’ll   happen     ha’  double     rates  to  pay;”    he  added;
  looking up at his son。
  “Well;   thee   mustna   fret   beforehand;   father;”   said   Martin   the
  younger。 “Happen the captain ’ull come home and make our peace
  wi’ th’ old squire。 I build upo’ that; for  I   know  the   captain   ’ll  see
  folks righted if he can。”
  George Eliot                                                         ElecBook Classics
  … Page 475…
  Adam Bede                                   475
  Chapter XXXV
  The Hidden Dread
  t was a busy time for Adam—the time between the beginning
  of November and the beginning of February; and he could see
  I
  little   of  Hetty;    except    on   Sundays。     But    a  happy     time;
  nevertheless;   for   it   was   taking   him   nearer   and   nearer   to   March;
  when   they  were   to  be   married; and   all   the little   preparations   for
  their new housekeeping marked the progress towards the longed…
  for day。 Two new rooms had been “run up” to the old house; for
  his mother and Seth were to live with them after all。 Lisbeth had
  cried so piteously at the thought of leaving Adam that he had gone
  to  Hetty  and   asked   her  if;   for   the   love   of   him;   she   would   put   up
  with his mother’s ways and consent to live with her。 To his great
  delight;   Hetty   said;   “Yes;   I’d   as   soon   she   lived   with   us   as   not。”
  Hetty’s mind was oppressed at that moment with a worse difficulty
  than poor Lisbeth’s ways; she could not care about them。 So Adam
  was   consoled   for   the   disappointment   he   had   felt   when   Seth   had
  come   back   from   his   visit   to   Snowfield   and   said   “it   was   no   use—
  Dinah’s heart wasna turned towards marrying。” For when he told
  his mother that Hetty was willing they should all live together and
  there was no more need of them to think of parting; she said; in a
  more contented tone than he had heard her speak in since it had
  been settled that he was to be married; “Eh; my lad; I’ll be as still
  as th’ ould tabby; an’ ne’er want to do aught but th’ offal work; as
  she   wonna   like   t’   do。   An’   then   we   needna   part   the   platters   an’
  things;    as  ha’  stood   on  the   shelf  together   sin’  afore   thee  wast
  George Eliot                                                     ElecBook Classics
  … Page 476…
  Adam Bede                                    476
  born。”
  There     was    only  one   cloud    that  now    and   then   came    across
  Adam’s sunshine: Hetty seemed unhappy sometimes。 But to all his
  anxious; tender questions; she replied with an assurance that she
  was   quite   contented   and   wished   nothing   different;   and   the   next
  time he saw her she was more lively than usual。 It might be that
  she was a little overdone with work and anxiety now; for soon after
  Christmas Mrs。 Poyser had taken another cold; which had brought
  on inflammation; and this illness had confined her to her room all
  through January。 Hetty had to manage everything downstairs; and
  half…supply   Molly’s   place   too;   while   that   good   damsel   waited   on
  her mistress; and she seemed to throw herself so entirely into her
  new functions; working with a grave steadiness which was new in
  her; that Mr。 Poyser often told Adam she was wanting to show him
  what a good housekeeper he would have; but he “doubted the lass
  was o’erdoing it—she must have a bit o’ rest when her aunt could
  come downstairs。”
  This     desirable    event    of  Mrs。    Poyser’s    coming     downstairs
  happened in the early part of February; when some mild weather
  thawed the last patch of snow on the Binton Hills。 On one of these
  days; soon after her aunt came down; Hetty went to Treddleston to
  buy some of the   wedding  things  which  were   wanting;   and   which
  Mrs。   Poyser   had   scolded   her   for   neglecting;   observing   that   she
  supposed “it was because they were not for th’ outside; else she’d
  ha’ bought ’em fast enough。”
  It was about ten o’clock when Hetty set off; and the slight hoar…
  frost   that   had   whitened     the  hedges    in  the   early  morning     had
  disappeared       as   the   sun    mounted      the   cloudless    sky。   Bright
  February   days   have   a   stronger   charm   of   hope   about   them   than
  George Eliot                                                      ElecBook Classics
  … Page 477…
  Adam Bede                                     477
  any other days in the year。 One likes to pause in the mild rays of
  the    sun;  and    look   over   the  gates   at  the   patient   plough…horses
  turning at the end of the furrow; and think that the beautiful year
  is all before one。 The birds seem to feel just the same: their notes
  are as clear as the clear air。 There are no leaves on the trees and
  hedgerows; but how green all the grassy fields are! And the dark
  purplish brown of the ploughed earth and of the bare branches is
  beautiful   too。 What  a   glad   world   this   looks   like;   as   one   drives   or
  rides along the valleys and over the hills! I have often thought so
  when;     in   foreign   countries;    where     the  fields   and   woods     have
  looked to me like our English Loamshire—the rich land tilled with
  just as much care; the woods rolling down the gentle slopes to the
  green meadows—I have come on something by the roadside which
  has reminded me that I am not in Loamshire: an image of a great
  agony—the        agony    of   the  Cross。    It  has   stood   perhaps     by   the
  clustering      apple…blossoms;       or  in   the   broad    sunshine      by   the
  cornfield;   or   at   a   turning   by   the   wood   where   a   clear   brook   was
  gurgling below; and surely; if there came a traveller to this world
  who knew nothing of the story o