登陆注册
25176000000099

第99章

All one's life one's tried to have a single heart. Death comes, and out you go! Then why did one love, if there's to be no meeting after?""Yes; except for that, who would care? But does the wanting to meet make it any more likely, Dad? The world couldn't go on without love; perhaps loving somebody or something with all your heart is all in itself."Winton stared; the remark was a little deep.

"Ye-es," he said at last. "I often think the religious johnnies are saving their money to put on a horse that'll never run after all. I remember those Yogi chaps in India. There they sat, and this jolly world might rot round them for all they cared--they thought they were going to be all right themselves, in Kingdom Come. But suppose it doesn't come?"Gyp murmured with a little smile:

"Perhaps they were trying to love everything at once.""Rum way of showing it. And, hang it, there are such a lot of things one can't love! Look at that!" He pointed upwards.

Against the grey bole of a beech-tree hung a board, on which were the freshly painted words:

PRIVATE

TRESPASSERS WILL BE PROSECUTED

"That board is stuck up all over this life and the next. Well, WEwon't give them the chance to warn us off, Gyp."Slipping her hand through his arm, she pressed close up to him.

"No, Dad; you and I will go off with the wind and the sun, and the trees and the waters, like Procris in my picture."VI

The curious and complicated nature of man in matters of the heart is not sufficiently conceded by women, professors, clergymen, judges, and other critics of his conduct. And naturally so, since they all have vested interests in his simplicity. Even journalists are in the conspiracy to make him out less wayward than he is, and dip their pens in epithets, if his heart diverges inch or ell.

Bryan Summerhay was neither more curious nor more complicated than those of his own *** who would condemn him for getting into the midnight express from Edinburgh with two distinct emotions in his heart--a regretful aching for the girl, his cousin, whom he was leaving behind, and a rapturous anticipation of the woman whom he was going to rejoin. How was it possible that he could feel both at once? "Against all the rules," women and other moralists would say. Well, the fact is, a man's heart knows no rules. And he found it perfectly easy, lying in his bunk, to dwell on memories of Diana handing him tea, or glancing up at him, while he turned the leaves of her songs, with that enticing mockery in her eyes and about her lips; and yet the next moment to be swept from head to heel by the longing to feel Gyp's arms around him, to hear her voice, look in her eyes, and press his lips on hers. If, instead of being on his way to rejoin a mistress, he had been going home to a wife, he would not have felt a particle more of spiritual satisfaction, perhaps not so much. He was returning to the feelings and companionship that he knew were the most deeply satisfying spiritually and bodily he would ever have. And yet he could ache a little for that red-haired girl, and this without any difficulty. How disconcerting! But, then, truth is.

From that queer seesawing of his feelings, he fell asleep, dreamed of all things under the sun as men only can in a train, was awakened by the hollow silence in some station, slept again for hours, it seemed, and woke still at the same station, fell into a sound sleep at last that ended at Willesden in broad daylight.

Dressing hurriedly, he found he had but one emotion now, one longing--to get to Gyp. Sitting back in his cab, hands deep-thrust into the pockets of his ulster, he smiled, enjoying even the smell of the misty London morning. Where would she be--in the hall of the hotel waiting, or upstairs still?

Not in the hall! And asking for her room, he made his way to its door.

She was standing in the far corner motionless, deadly pale, quivering from head to foot; and when he flung his arms round her, she gave a long sigh, closing her eyes. With his lips on hers, he could feel her almost fainting; and he too had no consciousness of anything but that long kiss.

Next day, they went abroad to a little place not far from Fecamp, in that Normandy countryside where all things are large--the people, the beasts, the unhedged fields, the courtyards of the farms guarded so squarely by tall trees, the skies, the sea, even the blackberries large. And Gyp was happy. But twice there came letters, in that too-well-remembered handwriting, which bore a Scottish postmark. A phantom increases in darkness, solidifies when seen in mist. Jealousy is rooted not in reason, but in the nature that feels it--in her nature that loved desperately, felt proudly. And jealousy flourishes on scepticism. Even if pride would have let her ask, what good? She would not have believed the answers. Of course he would say--if only out of pity--that he never let his thoughts rest on another woman. But, after all, it was only a phantom. There were many hours in those three weeks when she felt he really loved her, and so--was happy.

They went back to the Red House at the end of the first week in October. Little Gyp, home from the sea, was now an almost accomplished horsewoman. Under the tutelage of old Pettance, she had been riding steadily round and round those rough fields by the linhay which they called "the wild," her firm brown legs astride of the mouse-coloured pony, her little brown face, with excited, dark eyes, very erect, her auburn crop of short curls flopping up and down on her little straight back. She wanted to be able to "go out riding" with Grandy and Mum and Baryn. And the first days were spent by them all more or less in fulfilling her new desires. Then term began, and Gyp sat down again to the long sharing of Summerhay with his other life.

VII

One afternoon at the beginning of November, the old Scotch terrier, Ossian, lay on the path in the pale sunshine. He had lain there all the morning since his master went up by the early train.

同类推荐
  • Areopagitica

    Areopagitica

    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。
  • 清真居士年谱

    清真居士年谱

    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。
  • 仁王般若念诵法

    仁王般若念诵法

    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。
  • The Provincial Letters

    The Provincial Letters

    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。
  • 临安集

    临安集

    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
  • 绝世道主

    绝世道主

    本是落难少年,机缘巧合之下,学会了两个字。‘衍’‘赋’两个代表着‘推衍’和‘赋予’能力的字。‘衍’可知过去,可推未来,可问凶吉,可断前程,可推衍出高级功法,可算出何地有天材地宝,面对阴谋,他不屑一笑,谈笑间,敌手灰飞烟灭。‘赋’可让妖兽提前有灵智,可点化千年枯木,可让江河湖海有灵,可让山川大泽有智。万物皆可点化,‘天’亦是万物。当他点化‘天’的时候,终于悟出了第三字……
  • 江山应犹在

    江山应犹在

    梦魇江山,不过是一座埋葬活人的空坟。若失你得它,这江山不要也罢。
  • 一条狗的悲伤往事

    一条狗的悲伤往事

    一只狗的眼中人类世界。一条狗的悲伤,犹如江水,冲刷在人世。。。。
  • 青春情缘

    青春情缘

    讲述男女主角相爱。。一段泣人恋爱史。。请欣赏
  • 非凡弃少

    非凡弃少

    林家的废物林湮,因天生废柴体质不能修炼,其父林峰爱子心切,为了林湮私自动用家族的修炼药材,并孤身一人前往火炎巫山的轩辕古洞寻找内劲丹……就在这时,林峰竟然失踪了……林家老大林穆为了争夺家主之位,蛊惑林家家主将林湮逐出了家门…正当林湮走投无路的时候,一次奇妙的巧遇改变了林湮的人生……被家族摈弃的“弃少”——林湮,于此地,立下了誓言,“你今看‘废物’二字冠我之名,待我翻手为云覆手为雨之时,你再看那时的我,且将欺我、辱我,轻视我的人逐一的踩在脚下!”
  • 伴夏时光

    伴夏时光

    茫茫人海中遇见你是偶然,茫茫人海中爱上你是缘分。爱上你又分离是无缘,再遇见是作孽。
  • 我们,都曾年少

    我们,都曾年少

    80后的青春其实很单纯,至少我那时是,没有堕胎没有流产没有自杀没有强奸。我只想描述当年那单纯美好的情愫,即使没有大风大浪的磨难,仍刻骨铭心。那个默默陪伴的男生,那个如水一样慢慢的温润着你的心的男生,你终究还是没有珍惜。从此,你知道,他将是你生命里那个永远的缺口。
  • 掌门父亲

    掌门父亲

    一时心软答应了某老头的请求来到飞升大陆教化越来越不像话的修仙者。可是谁来告诉我这是怎么回事说好的三个帮手居然是三个小婴儿,自己成为了他们的父亲。更要命的是有绝世天赋和天龙八部技能的小婴儿,其中一个还不能随便给别人养因为这个孩子名叫段誉有着北冥神功会吸收别人的修为T^T本文乃系统文
  • 未初

    未初

    听说鲛人之语到并肩不离不弃再多风雨何所畏惧愿此间山有木兮君有意昨夜星辰恰似你身无双翼却心有一点灵犀
  • 寄董武

    寄董武

    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。