登陆注册
34906600000072

第72章

After dinner that evening, Hugh did not go to the drawingroom with Mr. Arnold, but out into the woods about the house. It was early in the twilight; for now the sun set late. The month was June; and the even a rich, dreamful, rosy even--the sleep of a gorgeous day. "It is like the soul of a gracious woman," thought Hugh, charmed into a lucid interval of passion by the loveliness of the nature around him. Strange to tell, at that moment, instead of the hushed gloom of the library, towards which he was hoping and leaning in his soul, there arose before him the bare, stern, leafless pine-wood--for who can call its foliage leaves?--with the chilly wind of a northern spring morning blowing through it with a wailing noise of waters;and beneath a weird fir-tree, lofty, gaunt, and huge, with bare goblin arms, contorted sweepily, in a strange mingling of the sublime and the grotesque--beneath this fir-tree, Margaret sitting on one of its twisted roots, the very image of peace, with a face that seemed stilled by the expected approach of a sacred and unknown gladness; a face that would blossom the more gloriously because its joy delayed its coming. And above it, the tree shone a "still,"almost "awful red," in the level light of the morning.

The vision came and passed, for he did not invite its stay: it rebuked him to the deepest soul. He strayed in troubled pleasure, restless and dissatisfied. Woods of the richest growth were around him; heaps on heaps of leaves floating above him like clouds, a trackless wilderness of airy green, wherein one might wish to dwell for ever, looking down into the vaults and aisles of the long-ranging boles beneath. But no peace could rest on his face;only, at best, a false mask, put on to hide the trouble of the unresting heart. Had he been doing his duty to Harry, his love for Euphra, however unworthy she might be, would not have troubled him thus.

He came upon an avenue. At the further end the boughs of the old trees, bare of leaves beneath, met in a perfect pointed arch, across which were barred the lingering colours of the sunset, transforming the whole into a rich window full of stained glass and complex tracery, closing up a Gothic aisle in a temple of everlasting worship. A kind of holy calm fell upon him as he regarded the dim, dying colours; and the spirit of the night, a something that is neither silence nor sound, and yet is like both, sank into his soul, and made a moment of summer twilight there. He walked along the avenue for some distance; and then, leaving it, passed on through the woods.--Suddenly it flashed upon him that he had crossed the Ghost's Walk. A slight but cold shudder passed through the region of his heart. Then he laughed at himself, and, as it were in despite of his own tremor, turned, and crossed yet again the path of the ghost.

A spiritual epicure in his pleasures, he would not spoil the effect of the coming meeting, by seeing Euphra in the drawingroom first: he went to his own study, where he remained till the hour had nearly arrived. He tried to write some verses. But he found that, although the lovely form of its own Naiad lay on the brink of the Well of Song, its waters would not flow: during the sirocco of passion, its springs withdraw into the cool caves of the Life beneath. At length he rose, too much preoccupied to mind his want of success; and, going down the back stair, reached the library.

There he seated himself, and tried to read by the light of his chamber-candle. But it was scarcely even an attempt, for every moment he was looking up to the door by which he expected her to enter.

Suddenly an increase of light warned him that she was in the room.

How she had entered he could not tell. One hand carried her candle, the light of which fell on her pale face, with its halo of blackness--her hair, which looked like a well of darkness, that threatened to break from its bonds and overflood the room with a second night, dark enough to blot out that which was now looking in, treeful and deep, at the uncurtained windows. The other hand was busy trying to incarcerate a stray tress which had escaped from its net, and made her olive shoulders look white beside it.

"Let it alone," said Hugh, "let it be beautiful."But she gently repelled the hand he raised to hers, and, though she was forced to put down her candle first, persisted in confining the refractory tress; then seated herself at the table, and taking from her pocket the manuscript which Hugh had been criticising in the morning, unfolded it, and showed him all the passages he had objected to, neatly corrected or altered. It was wonderfully done for the time she had had. He went over it all with her again, seated close to her, their faces almost meeting as they followed the lines. They had just finished it, and were about to commence reading from the original, when Hugh, who missed a sheet of Euphra's translation, stooped under the table to look for it. A few moments were spent in the search, before he discovered that Euphra's foot was upon it. He begged her to move a little, but received no reply either by word or act. Looking up in some alarm, he saw that she was either asleep or in a faint. By an impulse inexplicable to himself at the time, he went at once to the windows, and drew down the green blinds. When he turned towards her again, she was reviving or awaking, he could not tell which.

"How stupid of me to go to sleep!" she said. "Let us go on with our reading."They had read for about half an hour, when three taps upon one of the windows, slight, but peculiar, and as if given with the point of a finger, suddenly startled them. Hugh turned at once towards the windows; but, of course, he could see nothing, having just lowered the blinds. He turned again towards Euphra. She had a strange wild look; her lips were slightly parted, and her nostrils wide; her face was rigid, and glimmering pale as death from the cloud of her black hair.

同类推荐
  • 难儞计湿嚩啰天说支轮经

    难儞计湿嚩啰天说支轮经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • TYPHOON

    TYPHOON

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说四谛经

    佛说四谛经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 双槐岁钞

    双槐岁钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 客滇述

    客滇述

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 遇见你已是足矣

    遇见你已是足矣

    小甜文双向暗恋“夏天,操场,白衬衫,惊鸿一瞥,晚霞”是我校园暗恋的开始我暗恋了他五年,从初中到高一,因为一场运动会而认识他,他那帅气阳光的脸庞使我怦然心动。沈清然喜欢宋一,没有人知道,默默的喜欢,宋一对沈清然一见钟情,默默的把沈清然拐回家。
  • 天落云海

    天落云海

    讲述一名少年在地球异变之下寻求生存空间的故事
  • 帝王少盛,冷傲凤妃

    帝王少盛,冷傲凤妃

    虐白莲花,斗神魔,她是神女转世。爱她保护她不离开他,他离不开她,他是天慧之子。“娘子今晚...”“不!”尽请期待。
  • 诸天星主

    诸天星主

    天域皓天宫的神子洛凡,遭人算计围攻致死。机缘巧合之下,转世重生于边境小城,但丹田却天生变异,不能修炼武道,从小遭受世人冷眼。后天降神石,得星辰大道,从此开启逆天之旅,曾经失去的一切将加倍讨回,今世的所有敌人阻碍全部轰碎成渣。真人,至人,贤人,圣人,四极登天,证无上大道。纵横天下,星辰剑出,谁与争锋?
  • 长门风云

    长门风云

    不谙世事的渔人少年,在父亲的嘱咐下走出深山,闯荡仙林......
  • 语文教学的趣味故事设计(下)

    语文教学的趣味故事设计(下)

    语文教学正从应试教育向素质教育转化,在此情况下,怎样从语文教学自身特点中寻找突破点,激发学生的学习兴趣,创新教学,提高教学质量,已成为语文教师探索的问题。根据广大青年学生好奇、求知欲强、思维活跃、学习从兴趣出发的特点,充分利用语文本身独具的内容丰富、趣味性强等特点,努力挖掘各种趣味因素,创设情境,以各种教学形式诱发、激励学生的学习兴趣与求知欲望,使他们由被动的“要我学”转变为主动的“我要学”,从而搞活教学,并取得良好的教学效果。
  • 美厨皇妃

    美厨皇妃

    太子、王爷、状元、将军、教主、皇帝、大富豪,各类型帅哥、无数佳肴、一点宝藏,还有老皇帝的宠爱!当代金牌美女厨师萧香香的奇妙古代行。艳遇不断,游山玩水,欢声笑语,连吃带喝,惬意的生活!喜剧有点惊险的幸福人生。
  • 彼岸天朝

    彼岸天朝

    穿越到各色美男盛产的五胡十六国时期,落个悲惨身份---清河公主。不行,美男不绝,不能虚度!来来来,前有英挺俊美的少年皇帝--苻凌,后有绝世好颜呆萌小弟--慕容冲,还有姑娘最爱的高丽黛玉体质的三皇子欧巴--苏郁,更有温润如玉的南照国护她周全的大哥--钟兆陵,各种美男,各种虐。红颜罗道场,谁述谁非的悲歌!看我一个个将你们收服在手心,独奏倾一世。
  • 江爱止于夏

    江爱止于夏

    年少的惊鸿一瞥。成为了岁月年华的眷念。以前,夏初的喜欢是春天。现在,夏初的爱只有江路。