登陆注册
25531300000051

第51章

A very different scene was in the mean time passing in the Tower of Wolf's Crag. When the Master of Ravenswood left the courtyard, too much busied with his own perplexed reflections to pay attention to the manoeuvre of Caleb, he ushered his guests into the great hall of the castle.

The indefatigable Balderstone, who, from choice or habit, worked on from morning to night, had by degrees cleared this desolate apartment of the confused relics of the funeral banquet, and restored it to some order. But not all his skill and labour, in disposing to advantage the little furniture which remained, could remove the dark and disconsolate appearance of those ancient and disfurnished walls. The narrow windows, flanked by deep indentures into the walls, seemed formed rather to exclude than to admit the cheerful light; and the heavy and gloomy appearance of the thunder-sky added still farther to the obscurity.

As Ravenswood, with the grace of a gallant of that period, but not without a certain stiffness and embarrassment of manner, handed the young lady to the upper end of the apartment, her father remained standing more near to the door, as if about to disengage himself from his hat and cloak. At this moment the clang of the portal was heard, a sound at which the stranger started, stepped hastily to the window, and looked with an air of alarm at Ravenswood, when he saw that the gate of the court was shut, and his domestics excluded.

"You have nothing to fear, sir," said Ravenswood, gravely; "this roof retains the means of giving protection, though not welcome.

Methinks," he added, "it is time that I should know who they are that have thus highly honoured my ruined dwelling!"The young lady remained silent and motionless, and the father, to whom the question was more directly addressed, seemed in the situation of a performer who has ventured to take upon himself a part which he finds himself unable to present, and who comes to a pause when it is most to be expected that he should speak. While he endeavoured to cover his embarrassent with the exterior ceremonials of a well-bred demeanour, it was obvious that, in ****** his bow, one foot shuffled forward, as if to advance, the other backward, as if with the purpose of escape; and as he undid the cape of his coat, and raised his beaver from his face, his fingers fumbled as if the one had been linked with rusted iron, or the other had weighed equal with a stone of lead. The darkness of the sky seemed to increase, as if to supply the want of those mufflings which he laid aside with such evident reluctance. The impatience of Ravenswood increased also in proportion to the delay of the stranger, and he appeared to struggle under agitation, though probably from a very different cause. He laboured to restrain his desire to speak, while the stranger, to all appearance, was at a loss for words to express what he felt necessary to say.

At length Ravenswood's impatience broke the bounds he had imposed upon it. "I perceive," he said, "that Sir William Ashton is unwilling to announced himself in the Castle of Wolf's Crag.""I had hoped it was unnecessary," said the Lord Keeper, relieved from his silence, as a spectre by the voice of the exorcist, "and I am obliged to you, Master of Ravenswood, for breaking the ice at once, where circumstances--unhappy circumstances, let me call them--rendered self-introduction peculiarly awkward.""And I am not then," said the Master of Ravenswood, gravely, "to consider the honour of this visit as purely accidental?""Let us distinguish a little," said the Keeper, assuming an appearance of ease which perhaps his heart was a stranger to;"this is an honour which I have eagerly desired for some time, but which I might never have obtained, save for the accident of the storm. My daughter and I are alike grateful for this opportunity of thanking the brave man to whom she owes her life and I mine."The hatred which divided the great families in the feudal times had lost little of its bitterness, though it no longer expressed itself in deeds of open violence. Not the feelings which Ravenswood had begun to entertain towards Lucy Ashton, not the hospitality due to his guests, were able entirely to subdue, though they warmly combated, the deep passions which arose within him at beholding his father's foe standing in the hall of the family of which he had in a great measure accelerated the ruin.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 喇叭线,相交线

    喇叭线,相交线

    他,普瑞资本最年轻的合伙人,世故圆滑、霸道冲动,顶着压力与上市公司一起完成一单并购重组案之后实现了财务自由;她,音乐学院年轻讲师,天真浪漫。一对郎才女貌,却把婚姻经营的一塌糊涂,除了两个人的个性,还有着多少故事?在他们婚姻濒临崩溃之际,外婆假借生病之名把两人骗到一起回老家,准备调和矛盾,却不想因为外婆隐瞒了自己是明代建文帝的元神守护者的秘密,两个年轻人被卷入了一场古老的皇权争斗中,在经历生死斗魔之后,两个渐行渐远的灵魂重新交汇在一起,也重新认识了幸福的本质其实就是一种简单的相守……
  • 我是不是该忘记你

    我是不是该忘记你

    一个任务,一段历史,我们能做什么?当我无能为力之时我也曾抱怨命运。只要我不死,我就会走下去,直到倒下。
  • 会吾良人

    会吾良人

    他是帝王家的无人能敌的“祸害”,一心于宫廷之争,那宝座历来为他的囊中之物,人前彬彬有礼,人后......她是当朝宰相之女,人说貌比西施,温婉如玉,可就是这么个人成了父亲和他的交易,他只要他的皇位,她却只想要一个良人,那个她记忆里优雅绝伦的男子,那个带给她安宁的男子却已经离她而去,就在她伤心欲绝之时,他却一再的伤害她,为什么,他继续他的皇位之争,她继续她的平淡的生活变得那么难......
  • 三界之灵异人界

    三界之灵异人界

    在现实世界中,很多人都是无神论者,他们从来不相信有除人以外的“东西”存在,也从来不相信有阴阳师以及任何可以和那种东西打交道的人存在,可是当他们遇到那种“东西”的时候才真正感觉到手足无措……几个青年大学生凭借一股热血,妄图探寻学院深处的秘密。传奇的身世、反目成仇的友情、家庭的牵连、阴阳师与道士的比拼,随着逐步接近真相,他们又该何去何从?跟随作者的笔锋,带你进入灵异的玄妙世界。
  • 火影之假面

    火影之假面

    每一张面具之后,都藏着一只吃人的恶鬼。当英雄不复存在之时,‘我’该如何……
  • 同诚共想

    同诚共想

    我为梦想写本书,仁爱慈善,同诚共想,一个草根创业者的心路历程,机缘巧合,生活孤寂落寞的我,得了一个梦想-同诚共想,梦想的力量让我提起了笔,策划,方案让我习惯了用笔,同诚共想的思想也漫天飞舞,即使拙笔我也鼓起勇气记录我的心声,同诚共想是希望做一种思想,做一种文化,做一种生活态度,书中内容不乏遭受质疑不屑和沉重打击下的感概牢骚,些许创业感悟事事看法,也有自我人生感怀和抒情吹嘘。这是一本关于梦想和生活的书,可以说是作者作为草根创客的悲吹心得,也可以说是一个励志的故事。
  • 意欲成仙

    意欲成仙

    21世纪的一个普通推销员,在另一个世界做着不普通的事,似在说着一个层面很多人的心声,又似在铸造着一个辉煌的传奇!我欲成仙为何戮仙?主角成长型,不YY!新人新书,请大家多指点。有群,号为200594414(长天界)
  • 蓝鸢

    蓝鸢

    30年的守护,可否换得鸢尾花开?用生命诀别的痴恋,震痛了谁是谁非的一夜缠绵?蓝色鸢尾,宿命中的游离和破碎的激情,精致的美丽,易碎且易逝……
  • 江变纪略

    江变纪略

    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。
  • 村路像条河

    村路像条河

    记忆是一个作家最为宝贵的财富。久留在心底的陈年旧事,在作家们看似漫不经心地回忆里,走进各色人等的内心世界,或悲或欢或苦或乐或恨或爱地去感悟逝去的岁月,普通人的朴素情怀瞬间跃然纸上。本书《村路像条河》精选了作者近七十篇在报刊上公开发表过的精美小小说,篇篇构思精巧,视角独特,读来亲切可人,回味无穷。