第 124 节
作者:温暖寒冬      更新:2024-04-09 19:50      字数:9305
  would   make   life   hateful   to   her;   and   no   one;   she   said   to   herself;
  should ever know her misery and humiliation。 No; she would not
  confess even to Dinah。 She would wander out of sight; and drown
  herself where her body would never be found; and no one should
  know what had become of her。
  When she got off this coach; she began to walk again; and take
  cheap rides in carts; and get cheap meals; going on and on without
  distinct   purpose;   yet   strangely;   by   some       fascination;    taking   the
  way she had come; though she was determined not to go back to
  her own country。 Perhaps it was because she had fixed her mind
  on   the   grassy   Warwickshire   fields;   with   the   bushy   tree…studded
  hedgerows   that  made a   hiding…place   even   in   this   leafless   season。
  She went more slowly than she came; often getting over the stiles
  and sitting for hours under the hedgerows; looking before her with
  blank; beautiful eyes; fancying herself at the edge of a hidden pool;
  low   down;   like   that  in   the   Scantlands;   wondering   if  it   were   very
  painful to be drowned; and if there would be anything worse after
  George Eliot                                                         ElecBook Classics
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  Adam Bede                                       504
  death than what she dreaded in life。 Religious doctrines had taken
  no hold on Hetty’s mind。 She was one of  those numerous   people
  who      have     had     godfathers      and     godmothers;        learned      their
  catechism; been confirmed; and gone to church every Sunday; and
  yet;   for   any   practical   result   of   strength   in   life;   or   trust   in   death;
  have     never    appropriated       a  single    Christian     idea   or   Christian
  feeling。    You     would    misunderstand         her   thoughts     during     these
  wretched days; if you imagined that they were influenced either by
  religious fears or religious hopes。
  She    chose    to   go   to   Stratford…on…Avon      again;   where     she   had
  gone before by mistake; for she remembered some grassy fields on
  her  former  way   towards   it—fields   among   which   she   thought   she
  might find just the sort of pool she had in her mind。 Yet she took
  care of her money still; she carried her basket; death seemed still a
  long  way  off;   and life   was   so strong   in   her。   She   craved   food   and
  rest—she   hastened   towards   them   at   the           very   moment   she      was
  picturing to herself the bank from which she would leap towards
  death。 It was already five days since she had left Windsor; for she
  had wandered about; always avoiding speech or questioning looks;
  and   recovering   her   air   of   proud   self…dependence   whenever   she
  was under observation; choosing her decent lodging at night; and
  dressing herself neatly in the morning; and setting off on her way
  steadily;   or   remaining   under   shelter   if   it   rained;   as   if   she   had   a
  happy life to cherish。
  And yet; even in her most self…conscious moments; the face was
  sadly   different   from      that   which   had    smiled   at   itself  in  the   old
  specked       glass;   or  smiled     at  others     when     they   glanced      at  it
  admiringly。   A   hard   and   even   fierce   look   had   come   in   the   eyes;
  though   their   lashes   were   as   long   as   ever;   and   they   had   all   their
  George Eliot                                                          ElecBook Classics
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  Adam Bede                                      505
  dark   brightness。   And   the   cheek   was   never   dimpled   with   smiles
  now。   It   was   the   same   rounded;   pouting;   childish   prettiness;   but
  with all love and belief in love departed from it—the sadder for its
  beauty;     like   that   wondrous      Medusa…face;       with   the   passionate;
  passionless lips。
  At last she was among the fields she had been dreaming of; on a
  long narrow pathway leading towards a wood。 If there should be a
  pool in that wood! It would be better hidden than one in the fields。
  No;   it   was   not   a   wood;   only  a   wild   brake;   where   there   had   once
  been     gravel…pits;     leaving    mounds       and    hollows     studded     with
  brushwood   and   small   trees。   She   roamed   up   and   down;   thinking
  there was perhaps a pool in every hollow before she came to it; till
  her limbs were weary; and she sat down to rest。 The afternoon was
  far advanced; and the leaden sky was darkening; as if the sun were
  setting behind it。 After a little while Hetty started up again; feeling
  that darkness would soon come   on; and   she   must  put  off  finding
  the pool till to…morrow; and make her way to some shelter for the
  night。 She had quite lost her way in the fields; and might as well
  go   in   one   direction   as   another;   for   aught   she   knew。   She   walked
  through field after field; and no village; no house was in sight; but
  there;    at  the  corner    of  this   pasture;    there   was    a  break    in  the
  hedges; the land seemed to dip down a little; and two trees leaned
  towards each other across the opening。 Hetty’s heart gave a great
  heat    as   she   thought    there    must    be   a  pool   there。   She    walked
  towards it heavily over the tufted grass; with pale lips and a sense
  of trembling。 It was as if   the   thing  were   come   in   spite   of   herself;
  instead of being the object of her search。
  There   it   was;   black   under   the   darkening   sky:   no   motion;   no
  sound near。 She set down her basket; and then sank down herself
  George Eliot                                                         ElecBook Classics
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  Adam Bede                                      506
  on the grass; trembling。 The pool had its wintry depth now: by the
  time it got shallow; as she remembered the pools did at Hayslope;
  in   the   summer;   no   one   could   find   out   that   it   was   her   body。   But
  then    there   was    her   basket—she      must    hide   that   too。  She    must
  throw it into the water—make it heavy with stones first; and then
  throw it in。 She got up to look about for stones; and soon brought
  five   or   six;   which   she   laid   down   beside   her  basket;   and   then   sat
  down again。 There was no need to hurry—there was all the night
  to drown herself in。 She sat leaning her elbow on the basket。 She
  was weary; hungry。 There were   some   buns   in   her  basket—three;
  which she had supplied herself with at the place where she ate her
  dinner。 She took them out now and ate them eagerly; and then sat
  still   again;   looking   at   the   pool。   The   soothed   sensation   that   came
  over her from the satisfaction of her hunger; and this fixed dreamy
  attitude;    brought     on   drowsiness;     and    presently    her   head    sank
  down on her knees。 She was fast asleep。
  When she awoke it was deep night; and she felt chill。 She was
  frightened   at   this   darkness—frightened   at   the   long   night   before
  her。 If she could but throw herself into the water! No; not yet。 She
  began   to   walk   about   that   she   might   get   warm      again;   as   if  she
  would   have   more   resolution   then。   Oh   how   long   the   time   was   in
  that darkness! The bright hearth and the warmth and the voices of
  home; the secure uprising and lying down; the familiar fields; the
  familiar people; the Sundays and holidays with their simple joys of
  dress and feasting—all the sweets of her young life rushed before
  her now; and she seemed to be stretching her arms towards them
  across a great gulf。 She set her teeth when she thought of Arthur。
  She cursed him; without knowing what her cursing would do。 She
  wished he too might know desolation; and cold; and a life of shame
  George Eliot                                                         ElecBook Classics
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  Adam Bede                                       507
  that he dared not end by death。
  The horror of this cold; and   darkness; and   solitude—out  of  all
  human reach—became greater every long minute。 It was almost as
  if she were dead already; and knew that she was dead; and longed
  to  get  back   to   life   again。   But   no:   she   was   alive   still;   she   had   not
  taken      the    dreadful     leap。    She    felt   a   strange     contradictory
  wretchedness and exultation: wretchedness; that she did not dare
  to face death; exultation; that she was still in life—that she might
  yet   know   light   and     warmth   again。      She   walked