登陆注册
26207000000193

第193章

'Poor girl! poor girl!' he said, as if to himself: 'was this the only way left?'

Then he spoke tenderly to her.What he said I could not hear--Ionly heard the tone.

'O sir!' she cried, in piteous entreaty, 'do let me go.Why should a wretched creature like me be forced to live? It's no good to you, sir.Do let me go.'

'Come here,' he said, drawing her close to the fence.'Stand up again on the beam.Look down.'

She obeyed, in a mechanical kind of way.But as he talked, and she kept looking down on the dark mystery beneath, flowing past with every now and then a dull vengeful glitter--continuous, forceful, slow, he felt her shudder in his still clasping arm.

'Look,' he said, 'how it crawls along--black and slimy! how silent and yet how fierce! Is that a nice place to go to down there?

Would there be any rest there, do you think, tumbled about among filth and creeping things, and slugs that feed on the dead; among drowned women like yourself drifting by, and murdered men, and strangled babies? Is that the door by which you would like to go out of the world?'

'It's no worse,' she faltered, '--not so bad as what I should leave behind.'

'If this were the only way out of it, I would not keep you from it.

I would say, "Poor thing! there is no help: she must go." But there is another way.'

'There is no other way, sir--if you knew all,' she said.

'Tell me, then.'

'I cannot.I dare not.Please--I would rather go.'

She looked, from the mere glimpses I could get of her, somewhere about five-and-twenty, ****** due allowance for the wear of suffering so evident even in those glimpses.I think she might have been beautiful if the waste of her history could have been restored.

That she had had at least some advantages of education, was evident from both her tone and her speech.But oh, the wild eyes, and the tortured lips, drawn back from the teeth with an agony of hopelessness, as she struggled anew, perhaps mistrusting them, to escape from the great arms that held her!

'But the river cannot drown you,' Falconer said.'It can only stop your breath.It cannot stop your thinking.You will go on thinking, thinking, all the same.Drowning people remember in a moment all their past lives.All their evil deeds come up before them, as if they were doing them all over again.So they plunge back into the past and all its misery.While their bodies are drowning, their souls are coming more and more awake.'

'That is dreadful,' she murmured, with her great eyes fixed on his, and growing steadier in their regard.She had ceased to struggle, so he had slackened his hold of her, and she was leaning back against the fence.

'And then,' he went on, 'what if, instead of closing your eyes, as you expected, and going to sleep, and forgetting everything, you should find them come open all at once, in the midst of a multitude of eyes all round about you, all looking at you, all thinking about you, all judging you? What if you should hear, not a tumult of voices and noises, from which you could hope to hide, but a solemn company talking about you--every word clear and plain, piercing your heart with what you could not deny,--and you standing naked and shivering in the midst of them?'

'It is too dreadful!' she cried, ****** a movement as if the very horror of the idea had a fascination to draw her towards the realization of it.'But,' she added, yielding to Falconer's renewed grasp, 'they wouldn't be so hard upon me there.They would not be so cruel as men are here.'

'Surely not.But all men are not cruel.I am not cruel,' he added, forgetting himself for a moment, and caressing with his huge hand the wild pale face that glimmered upon him as it were out of the infinite night--all but swallowed up in it.

She drew herself back, and Falconer, instantly removing his hand, said,'Look in my face, child, and see whether you cannot trust me.'

As he uttered the words, he took off his hat, and stood bare-headed in the moon, which now broke out clear from the clouds.She did look at him.His hair blew about his face.He turned it towards the wind and the moon, and away from her, that she might be undisturbed in her scrutiny.But how she judged of him, I cannot tell; for the next moment he called out in a tone of repressed excitement,'Gordon, Gordon, look there--above your head, on the other bridge.'

I looked and saw a gray head peering over the same gap through which Falconer had looked a few minutes before.I knew something of his personal quest by this time, and concluded at once that he thought it was or might be his father.

'I cannot leave the poor thing--I dare not,' he said.

I understood him, and darted off at full speed for the Surrey end of the bridge.What made me choose that end, I do not know; but I was right.

I had some reason to fear that I might be stopped when I reached it, as I had no business to be upon the new bridge.I therefore managed, where the upper bridge sank again towards a level with the lower, to scramble back upon it.As I did so the tall gray-headed man passed me with an uncertain step.I did not see his face.Ifollowed him a few yards behind.He seemed to hear and dislike the sound of my footsteps, for he quickened his pace.I let him increase the distance between us, but followed him still.He turned down the river.I followed.He began to double.I doubled after him.Not a turn could he get before me.He crossed all the main roads leading to the bridges till he came to the last--when he turned toward London Bridge.At the other end, he went down the stairs into Thames Street, and held eastward still.It was not difficult to keep up with him, for his stride though long was slow.

He never looked round, and I never saw his face; but I could not help fancying that his back and his gait and his carriage were very like Falconer's.

We were now in a quarter of which I knew nothing, but as far as Ican guess from after knowledge, it was one of the worst districts in London, lying to the east of Spital Square.It was late, and there were not many people about.

As I passed a court, I was accosted thus:

''Ain't you got a glass of ale for a poor cove, gov'nor?'

同类推荐
  • WAVERLEY

    WAVERLEY

    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。
  • 重楼玉钥续编

    重楼玉钥续编

    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。
  • Thoughts on Man

    Thoughts on Man

    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。
  • 岫岩志略

    岫岩志略

    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。
  • 守城机要

    守城机要

    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
  • 左手在前右手在后

    左手在前右手在后

    在岁月的蹉跎中,我们有过欢笑,有过泪水,有过伤痛,也有过安慰。青春是年少时代的一场春梦,让人掩面还羞,在沉默中体味孤独的美好。那些回不去的年少时光,我们一起在这样那样的风里,吹散了流年,感怀了一代又一代的哭诉与成长。
  • 风声语

    风声语

    他在茫茫大雪中从毁于一旦的房屋里拿出来了那封信,好看的眉眼在看到那以后盛满了哀伤,所有的说不爱的逞强话语在那一刻瞬间崩溃。“程立,我爱你。”……“习折,我也爱你。”可是我现在..好像找不到你了。这是一个错爱与逞强的故事,结局是虐的求你们不要打我ovo。我还是很萌的十四语!(???????)
  • 某骑士的道路

    某骑士的道路

    宅男穿越了,成了骑士,却便当后成为英灵,然后莫名其妙地参加了黑心杯子争夺战,然后?然后就没有然后了
  • 青少年应该知道的载人宇宙飞船

    青少年应该知道的载人宇宙飞船

    本书带我们了解和认识人类征服太空的载体——宇宙飞船,以探究式的方法详细解密了载人宇宙飞船的制造、基本原理、升空发射、分离、出舱登月等方面的航空航天基础知识。
  • 绝顶武道

    绝顶武道

    江湖路,逆天行,唯武是尊!千世英豪,盖代人雄,参不透武道巅峰!觅古人路,脚踩诸王,会当凌绝顶!小李飞刀,重现人间,谁与争雄?敢问武道谁为峰?神器一出俱成空!而,武道巅峰之后,又是一个怎样的境界?
  • 2011年度微型小说排行榜

    2011年度微型小说排行榜

    这是一片神秘的土地,在大山掩映之中,一个小村庄出现在我们面前。我们带的地图上根本没有标注,就连我们的向导,都不知道有这么一个小村庄。我们惊喜地走了进去。小小的村落,散布着几十户人家,过着世外桃源般的生活。家家户户的门,都是敞开着的。最后,我们来到了小村唯一的一家代销店,我们想在这里补充点物资。小店里只有最基本的日常生活品卖:盐、酱油、一两种劣质烟、坛装的老白干……都是村民们需要的东西,而我们需要补充的矿泉水和方便面,竟然都没有。店主解释说,矿泉水,村民根本不需要。方便面?那么贵的东西,小村可没几个人吃得起。
  • 深宅风云

    深宅风云

    辛婉玗,慧质兰心的绝色佳人,奉父之命嫁至富甲玉城的候家,深宅寂寂,冷血无情的夫君,花心不羁的小叔,在这样一个深宅里,在情感和世俗中,辛婉玗该何去何从——她说,只求休书一纸。他说,死生契阔,与子成说。他说,你我此生,永不相负。胭脂泪,留人醉,几时重。
  • 妃色难为

    妃色难为

    一个是皇家的六皇子,一个是无权将军的大女儿,他们的相识源于皇子一时的兴趣,他们的姻缘来自皇上的补偿心理。本以为姻缘很快会索然无趣,不成想两人都越陷越深,不能自拔。他爱她,一直不甚明了,等到她离开后,才知心中痛。正印了那句话,真正失去才知珍贵。她爱他,清清楚楚,明白他的困难,一再纵容。心被困住,只求身的自由。
  • 黑道校草的小小丫头

    黑道校草的小小丫头

    “既然你醒了,就赶快走吧,本小姐做好事从来不求回报,慢走,不送。”宋佳媛在一次意外中闯进了上官沐帆的生活。两个人在一起经历了一些事情后,渐渐的走到了一起。
  • 渡九劫

    渡九劫

    书生问道,一手持书卷,一手拔荒草。炼一身铮铮铁骨,还天地正气浩然。脊骨如剑,宁折不弯。持手中之剑,奉心中之剑,则行天下而无所惧。问众生有何不同?天地大同。历三灾,渡九劫。心无阴沟,证道何难?