登陆注册
6066200000072

第72章

Listening to her, it was difficult, as she herself would frankly admit, to imagine her the once "arch Miss Lucretia Barry;" looking at her, to remember there had been an evening when she had been "the cynosure of every eye." One found it necessary to fortify oneself with perusal of underlined extracts from ancient journals, much thumbed and creased, thoughtfully lent to one for the purpose. Since those days Fate had woven round her a mantle of depression. She was now a faded, watery-eyed little woman, prone on the slightest provocation to sit down suddenly On the nearest chair and at once commence a history of her troubles. Quite unconscious of this failing, it was an idea of hers that she was an exceptionally cheerful person.

"But there, fretting's no good. We must grin and bear things in this world," she would conclude, wiping her eyes upon her apron. "It's better to laugh than to cry, I always say." And to prove that this was no mere idle sentiment, she would laugh then and there upon the spot.

Much stair-climbing had bestowed upon her a shortness of breath, which no amount of panting in her resting moments was able to make good.

"You don't know 'ow to breathe," explained our second floor front to her on one occasion, a kindly young man; "you don't swallow it, you only gargle with it. Take a good draught and shut your mouth; don't be frightened of it; don't let it out again till it's done something: that's what it's 'ere for."

He stood over her with his handkerchief pressed against her mouth to assist her; but it was of no use.

"There don't seem any room for it inside me," she explained.

Bells had become to her the business of life; she lived listening for them. Converse to her was a filling in of time while waiting for interruptions.

A bottle of whiskey fell into my hands that Christmas time, a present from a commercial traveller in the way of business. Not liking whiskey myself, it was no sacrifice for me to reserve it for the occasional comfort of Mrs. Peedles, when, breathless, with her hands to her side, she would sink upon the chair nearest to my door. Her poor, washed-out face would lighten at the suggestion.

"Ah, well," she would reply, "I don't mind if I do. It's a poor heart that never rejoices."

And then, her tongue unloosened, she would sit there and tell me stories of my predecessors, young men lodgers who like myself had taken her bed-sitting-rooms, and of the woes and misfortunes that had overtaken them. I gathered that a more unlucky house I could not have selected. A former tenant of my own room, of whom I strangely reminded her, had written poetry on my very table. He was now in Portland doing five years for forgery. Mrs. Peedles appeared to regard the two accomplishments as merely different expressions of the same art. Another of her young men, as she affectionately called us, had been of studious ambition. His career up to a point appeared to have been brilliant. "What he mightn't have been," according to Mrs.

Peedles, there was practically no saying; what he happened to be at the moment of conversation was an unpromising inmate of the Hanwell lunatic asylum.

"I've always noticed it," Mrs. Peedles would explain; "it's always the most deserving, those that try hardest, to whom trouble comes. I'm sure I don't know why."

I was glad on the whole when that bottle of whiskey was finished. A second might have driven me to suicide.

There was no Mr. Peedles--at least, not for Mrs. Peedles, though as an individual he continued to exist. He had been "general utility" at the Princess's--the old terms were still in vogue at that time--a fine figure of a man in his day, so I was given to understand, but one easily led away, especially by minxes. Mrs. Peedles spoke bitterly of general utilities as people of not much use.

For working days Mrs. Peedles had one dress and one cap, both black and void of ostentation; but on Sundays and holidays she would appear metamorphosed. She had carefully preserved the bulk of her stage wardrobe, even to the paste-decked shoes and tinsel jewelry.

Shapeless in classic garb as Hermia, or bulgy in brocade and velvet as Lady Teazle, she would receive her few visitors on Sunday evenings, discarded puppets like herself, with whom the conversation was of gayer nights before their wires had been cut; or, her glory hid from the ribald street beneath a mackintosh, pay her few calls. Maybe it was the unusual excitement that then brought colour into her furrowed cheeks, that straightened and darkened her eyebrows, at other times so singularly unobtrusive. Be this how it may, the change was remarkable, only the thin grey hair and the work-worn hands remaining for purposes of identification. Nor was the transformation merely one of surface. Mrs. Peedles hung on her hook behind the kitchen door, dingy, limp, discarded; out of the wardrobe with the silks and satins was lifted down to be put on as an undergarment Miss Lucretia Barry, like her costumes somewhat aged, somewhat withered, but still distinctly "arch."

In the room next to me lived a law-writer and his wife. They were very old and miserably poor. The fault was none of theirs. Despite copy-books maxims, there is in this world such a thing as ill-luck-persistent, monotonous, that gradually wears away all power of resistance. I learned from them their history: it was hopelessly ******, hopelessly uninstructive. He had been a schoolmaster, she a pupil teacher; they had married young, and for a while the world had smiled upon them. Then came illness, attacking them both: nothing out of which any moral could be deduced, a mere case of bad drains resulting in typhoid fever. They had started again, saddled by debt, and after years of effort had succeeded in clearing themselves, only to fall again, this time in helping a friend. Nor was it even a case of folly: a poor man who had helped them in their trouble, hardly could they have done otherwise without proving themselves ungrateful.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 大荒第一修真者

    大荒第一修真者

    现代都市,灵气匮乏,一个资质出众的修真者,却因为修炼所需灵气太过庞大而成了废材,始终停留在炼气期无法寸进,遭人不少白眼;一次偶然的机会,因为丹房爆炸,他的元神被吸入一颗金丹之中穿越到了另外一个世界,这里的灵气充裕的能够让人发疯,然而却偏偏一个修真者也没有,天才地宝无数,却无人懂得炼丹炼器,最让人不平衡的是,这里的人类比地球上的人类修真效果要好上十倍!这个世界叫作大荒,李清风稀里糊涂就成了大荒第一修真者
  • 散见简牍合辑

    散见简牍合辑

    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。
  • 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!
  • 幽狼啸月:三世轮回之倾世魔尊

    幽狼啸月:三世轮回之倾世魔尊

    你说,继儿,待吾归来,日月作媒,天下为聘,可好?你说,继儿,待吾归来,定携汝之手,看尽这世间繁华,可好?当这一切华丽落幕,却不料,狼牙一殇,毁灭了你心中的一切美好的幻想,当她那唯美的倩影消散在眼前,你终于清醒,却发现,一切,都已枉然。你将自己封印于这苍山之巅,千年万载,只为等待她的出现。待繁华落尽,万载轮回,火莲出,博继现,王者归。
  • 低调仙王

    低调仙王

    杨峥魂穿修真界,一路乾坤入袖锦衣夜行,从一个小小的外门弟子,成长为仙界的至尊仙王的故事,其中有亲情,友情,爱情,有阴谋,背叛,凌辱,有欢声,笑语。。。。。。
  • 染指天下:倾君策之

    染指天下:倾君策之

    她,是一位天才杀手。因为被男友逼上绝路,同归于尽。没想到就穿越到古代,还是史记上没有的朝代。13岁的叶家傻女,一朝重生!坐拥万能神鼎,身怀灵植空间,她不再是人见人欺的废材弃女!药毒无双,神医也要靠边站;灵兽求契约,不好意思,兽神都喊咱老大;渣爹,敢抛妻弃女,她就让他家破人亡;世人,敢欺她辱她,她必百倍还之;再世为人,她王者归来,岂料惹上了邪魅嗜血的他。
  • 上帝的通假字1

    上帝的通假字1

    造物主在第七天,写了一个通假字……我的记忆是从一片火海里的刀光剑影中开始的。直到今天我依然努力回忆过去但所能记起的都是从那一刻以后的事情之前完全是一片空白绝对的空白!仿佛我一出生就是在那片火海刀光人生一开始面对的就是那个修罗场。我一睁开眼周围的空间充满了火红色混杂的声音在耳边回响着。
  • 都市妖孽崛起

    都市妖孽崛起

    都市少年一夜之间突然多出来了十万年的修仙记忆和一个神秘小瓶子……丹药治百病,符箓驱万邪,武道定乾坤,仙术惊鬼神!妖孽崛起,挡我者——死!
  • 苍烈之心

    苍烈之心

    “这一生艰辛修炼,泰山境界又如何!除了与人切磋互学,没有一次拼尽全力舍命相博之时---文人十年读书就能育民治国,修炼者百年苦修却无用武之地。”尘封三千年的恐惧将要再次笼罩苍烈,一样满怀希望的开始会不会依然尸满天下,还能有下一次吗?承载着超越神的使命,扛起亿万人族的存亡。看夏末如何砥砺奋进,书写苍烈的世界。
  • 犀利神捕侯赛雷

    犀利神捕侯赛雷

    侯赛雷出生那晚,电闪雷鸣,他的啼哭却盖过了雷声,而且他一哭雷就停了,紧接着电也停了,于是他爹便顺着大女儿侯赛男的名字给他取名——侯赛雷。