登陆注册
34936800000078

第78章

Helen treated the discovery at first with mortifying indifference. But he hoped she would appreciate Nature's bounty more when she saw the practical use of this extraordinary production. He endeavored to lead her to that view. She shook her head sorrowfully. He persisted. She met him with silence. He thought this peevish, and ungrateful to Heaven; we have all different measures of the wonderful; and to him a fountain of pitch was a thing to admire greatly and thank God for; he said as much.

To Helen it was nasty stuff, and who cares where it came from? She conveyed as much by a shrug of the shoulders, and then gave a sigh that told her mind was far away.

He was a little mortified, and showed it. One word led to another, and at last what had been long fermenting came out.

"Mr. Hazel," said she, "you and I are at cross purposes. You mean to live here. I do not."

Hazel left off working, and looked greatly perplexed; the attack was so sudden in its form, though it had been a long time threatening. He found nothing to say, and she was impatient now to speak her mind, so she replied to his look.

"You are ****** yourself at home here. You are contented. Contented? You are _happy_ in this horrible prison."

"And why not?" said Hazel. But he looked rather guilty. "Here are no traitors; no murderers. The animals are my friends, and the one human being I see makes me better to look at her."

"Mr. Hazel, I am in a state of mind, that romantic nonsense jars on me.

Be honest with me, and talk to me like a man. I say that you beam all over with happiness and content, and that you-- Now answer me one question; why have you never lighted the bonfire on Telegraph Point?"

"Indeed I don't know," said he, submissively. "I have been so occupied."

"You have, and how? Not in trying to deliver us both from this dreadful situation, but to reconcile me to it. Yes, sir, under pretense (that is a harsh word, but I can't help it) of keeping out the rain. Your rain is a _bugbear;_ it never rains, it never will rain. You are killing yourself almost to make me comfortable in this place. Comfortable?" She began to tremble all over with excitement long restrained. "And do you really suppose you can make me live on like this, by building me a nice hut. Do you think I am all body and no soul, that shelter and warmth and enough to eat can keep my heart from breaking, and my cheeks from blushing night and day? When I wake in the morning I find myself blushing to my fingers' ends." Then she walked away from him. Then she walked back. "Oh, my dear father, why did I ever leave you! Keep me here? make me live months and years on this island? Have you sisters? Have you a mother? Ask yourself, is it likely? No; if you will not help me, and they don't love me enough to come and find me and take me home, I'll go to another home without your help or any man's." Then she rose suddenly to her feet. "I'll tie my clothes tight round me, and fling myself down from that point on to the sharp rocks below. I'll find a way from this place to heaven, if there's no way from it to those I love on earth."

Then she sank down and rocked herself and sobbed hard.

The strong passion of this hitherto gentle creature quite frightened her unhappy friend, who knew more of books than women. He longed to soothe her and comfort her; but what could he say? He cried out in despair, "My God, can I do nothing for her?"

She turned on him like lightning. "You can do anything--everything. You can restore us both to our friends. You can save my life, my reason. For that will go first, I think. What _had_ I done? what had I _ever_ done since I was born, to be so brought down? Was ever an English lady-- And then I have such an irritation on my skin, all over me. I sometimes wish the tiger would come and tear me all to pieces; yes, all to pieces." And with that her white teeth clicked together convulsively. "Do?" said she, darting back to the point as swiftly as she had rushed away from it.

"Why, put down that nasty stuff; and leave off inventing fifty little trumpery things for me, and do one great thing instead. Oh, do not fritter that great mind of yours away in painting and patching my prison; but bring it all to bear on getting me _out_ of my prison. Call sea and land to our rescue. Let them know a poor girl is here in unheard-of, unfathomable misery--here, in the middle of this awful ocean."

Hazel sighed deeply. "No ships seem to pass within sight of us," he muttered.

"What does that matter to _you?_ You are not a common man; you are an inventor. Rouse all the powers of your mind. There must be some way.

Think for me. THINK! THINK! or my blood will be on your head."

Hazel turned pale and put his head in his hands, and tried to think.

She leaned toward him with great flashing eyes of purest hazel.

The problem dropped from his lips a syllable at a time. "To diffuse--intelligence--a hundred leagues from a fixed point--an island?"

She leaned toward him with flashing, expectant eyes.

But he groaned, and said: "That seems impossible."

"Then _trample_ on it," said she, bringing his own words against him; for she used to remember all he said to her in the day, and ponder it at night--"trample on it, subdue it, or never speak to me again. Ah, I am an ungrateful wretch to speak so harshly to you. It is my misery, not me.

Good, kind Mr. Hazel, oh, pray, pray, pray bring all the powers of that great mind to bear on this one thing, and save a poor girl, to whom you have been so kind, so considerate, so noble, so delicate, so forbearing; now save me from despair."

Hysterical sobs cut her short here, and Hazel, whose loving heart she had almost torn out of his body, could only falter out in a broken voice, that he would obey her. "I'll work no more for you at present," said he, "sweet as it has been. I will think instead. I will go this moment beneath the stars and think all night."

The young woman was now leaning her head languidly back against one of the trees, weak as water after her passion. He cast a look of ineffable love and pity on her, and withdrew slowly to think beneath the tranquil stars.

Love has set men hard tasks in his time. Whether this was a light one, our reader shall decide.

TO DIFFUSE INTELLIGENCE FROM A FIXED ISLAND OVER A HUNDRED LEAGUES OF OCEAN.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 重生之天道神音

    重生之天道神音

    双眸失明,但却获得太子长琴传承的美貌少年。一个美貌少年在女权世界的日常"生存"的故事!(好无力的简介,这是作者第二本书,放心入坑,当然也可以去第老书光顾一下=A=~)
  • 财富的秘密

    财富的秘密

    财富是一种心理状态,或者更确切地说,财富是通过一种心理状态而被创造。几乎没有人一下就变得富有的人才会变得富有,个人财富的成长与发展有时很少被繁忙的男人或女人注意到,这样的人差不多是无意识地增长财富。
  • UT传说之下FS的日记

    UT传说之下FS的日记

    传说之下同人小说,篇为sans和frisk的日记
  • 征战九霄天

    征战九霄天

    跟我比家门吗?我有一国统帅的爷爷,威武大将军的爹和叔叔,我有神秘莫测的外公和师傅。和我比无耻吗?好吧!你确实比我无耻。和我比帅?根本不用比,明眼人都知道我比你帅,为什么?那还用说因为我是主角。什么!想跟我混,你以为我是什么人都会收做小弟的吗?我要变强,没有梦想的最好别和我套近乎,什么!你喜欢我,这么直白不好吧!其实我好像也有点喜欢你哦,既然你喜欢我我也喜欢你,那我们一起战天下吧!
  • 方舟星球

    方舟星球

    2336年,未知的超时空大门在世界各地展开,从其中出现的侵略者,拥有坚硬外壳和强大破坏力的怪物,将人类由旧时代的内战时期带入了新世纪的战争世代。这些被人们称之为鬼的怪物,彻底颠覆了人类旧时代的社会系统,将人类带入了超大型战争学院世代。为了对抗鬼的入侵,人类建立了七大超能力战争学院,用于超能力士兵培养、武器研发、生命保障、药物研制、超以及时空数据分析等。位于亚洲区的超能力学院——亚加洛斯,是七大超能力学院中排行第三,拥有正面对抗大规模鬼入侵强大作战能力,本故事主体由此展开。
  • 相遇巾皮国

    相遇巾皮国

    小说讲述的是一位名叫班笛的中国人,酷爱中华武术,精通各种武艺技巧。他最大的兴趣就是健身练武和研究中国古代的战争历史。。。在一次旅行中,意外地来到了巾皮国,让班笛惊奇的是:这个国家还处于类似于中国古代的战争时期,这样巧合地班笛将他的功夫和军事智慧都运用在帮助巾皮国人抵御外敌上面了。和敌人斗智斗勇的过程就此拉开,同时在这里,班笛还遇到了自己的另一半:晨阳采露,以及收的徒弟丹六等人。。。
  • 贪恋红尘三千尺

    贪恋红尘三千尺

    本是青灯不归客,却因浊酒恋红尘。人有生老三千疾,唯有相思不可医。佛曰:缘来缘去,皆是天意;缘深缘浅,皆是宿命。她本是出家女,一心只想着远离凡尘逍遥自在。不曾想有朝一日唯一的一次下山随手救下一人竟是改变自己的一生。而她与他的相识,不过是为了印证,相识只是孽缘一场。
  • 嫡女重生:丹灵小王妃

    嫡女重生:丹灵小王妃

    前世种种,已如昨日灯灭。明明有一手最好的牌,却被她打出了最烂的成绩。既然老天爷让她重新来过,那么且看今夕谁能赢。解百毒,成丹灵。看这个世上,谁还能让她低头。却意外被一个男子攻破了心房,这生这世,一双人。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 不应该是这样的展开呀

    不应该是这样的展开呀

    好像我到达的是一个安全的世界,而且家庭身世还挺不错的么。应该没有什么好担心的…
  • 乱世问鼎

    乱世问鼎

    天下崩析,宇内分离,五王裂疆;东北以“苍茫”为国名,西方以“漠”为国名,北方“临洋”,东方“赤炎”,南方“云辉”。云辉帝萧刚将薨,云辉国王爷萧云逸以24岁之龄被定为候选继承者之一,携家臣萧玉臣、友边飞鸿及30余随从从边城顺州城向国都云州城进发。路上遇世间冷暖,有悲欢离合,屡遇险境的他们是否能够活下来?见惯了尔虞我诈的他能否迈向自己的王者之路?而他又能否保持初心,不忘始终?