登陆注册
26499300000015

第15章 ACT II(6)

If rumours should get about of anything that offends people's prejudices, you may be quite certain that the whole cause of ******* of thought will suffer for it. Good-bye, Mr. Rosmer.

Rosmer. Good-bye.

Mortensgaard. I shall go straight to the printing-office now and have the great piece of news inserted in the "Searchlight".

Rosmer. Put it all in.

Mortensgaard. I will put in as much as there is any need for the public to know. (Bows, and goes out. ROSMER stands at the door, while MORTENSGAARD goes downstairs. The front door is heard shutting.)Rosmer (still standing in the doorway, calls softly). Rebecca!

Reb--ahem! (Calls loudly.) Mrs. Helseth--is Miss West downstairs?

Mrs. Helseth (from below). No, sir, she is not here.

(The curtain at the end of the room is drawn back, disclosing REBECCA standing in the doorway.)Rebecca. John!

Rosmer (turning round). What! Were you in there, in my bedroom!

My dear, what were you doing there?

Rebecca (going up to him). I have been listening.

Rosmer. Rebecca! Could you do a thing like that?

Rebecca. Indeed I could. It was so horrid the way he said that--about my morning wrapper.

Rosmer. Ah, so you were in there too when Kroll--?

Rebecca. Yes. I wanted to know what was at the bottom of his mind.

Rosmer. You know I would have told you.

Rebecca. I scarcely think you would have told me everything--certainly not in his own words.

Rosmer. Did you hear everything, then?

Rebecca. Most of it, I think. I had to go down for a moment when Mortensgaard came.

Rosmer. And then came up again?

Rebecca. Do not take it ill of me, dear friend.

Rosmer. Do anything that you think right and proper. You have full ******* of action.--But what do you say to it all, Rebecca?

Ah, I do not think I have ever stood so much in need of you as Ido to-day.

Rebecca. Surely both you and I have been prepared for what would happen some day.

Rosmer. No, no--not for this.

Rebecca. Not for this?

Rosmer. It is true that I used to think that sooner or later our beautiful pure friendship would come to be attacked by calumny and suspicion--not on Kroll's part, for I never would have believed such a thing of him--but on the part of the coarse-minded and ignoble-eyed crowd. Yes, indeed; I had good reason enough for so jealously drawing a veil of concealment over our compact. It was a dangerous secret.

Rebecca. Why should we pay any heed to what all these other people think? You and I know that we have nothing to reproach ourselves with.

Rosmer. I? Nothing to reproach myself with? It is true enough that I thought so until to-day. But now, now, Rebecca--Rebecca. Yes? Now?

Rosmer. How am I to account to myself for Beata's horrible accusation?

Rebecca (impetuously). Oh, don't talk about Beata! Don't think about Beata any more! She is dead, and you seemed at last to have been able to get away from the thought of her.

Rosmer. Since I have learnt of this, it seems just as if she had come to life again in some uncanny fashion.

Rebecca. Oh no--you must not say that, John! You must not!

Rosmer. I tell you it is so. We must try and get to the bottom of it. How can she have strayed into such a woeful misunderstanding of me?

Rebecca. Surely you too are not beginning to doubt that she was very nearly insane?

Rosmer. Well, I cannot deny it is just of that fact that I feel Icannot be so altogether certain any longer. And besides if it were so--Rebecca. If it were so? What then?

Rosmer. What I mean is--where are we to look for the actual cause of her sick woman's fancies turning into insanity?

Rebecca. What good can it possibly do for you to indulge in such speculations!

Rosmer. I cannot do otherwise, Rebecca. I cannot let this doubt go on gnawing at my heart, however unwilling I may be to face it.

Rebecca. But it may become a real danger to you to be perpetually dwelling on this one lugubrious topic.

Rosmer (walking about restlessly and absorbed in the idea). Imust have betrayed myself in some way or other. She must have noticed how happy I began to feel from the day you came to us.

Rebecca. Yes; but dear, even if that were so--Rosmer. You may be sure she did not fail to notice that we read the same books; that we sought one another's company, and discussed every new topic together. But I cannot understand it--because I was always so careful to spare her. When I look back, it seems to me that I did everything I could to keep her apart from our lives. Or did I not, Rebecca?

Rebecca. Yes, yes--undoubtedly you did.

Rosmer. And so did you, too. And notwithstanding that--! Oh, it is horrible to think of! To think that here she was--with her affection all distorted by illness --never saying a word--watching us--noticing everything and--and--misconstruing everything.

Rebecca (wringing her hands). Oh, I never ought to have come to Rosmersholm.

Rosmer. Just think what she must have suffered in silence! Think of all the horrible things her poor diseased brain must have led her to believe about us and store up in her mind about us! Did she never speak to you of anything that could give you any kind of clue?

Rebecca (as if startled). To me! Do you suppose I should have remained here a day longer, if she had?

Rosmer. No, no--that is obvious. What a fight she must have fought--and fought alone, Rebecca! In despair, and all alone. And then, in the end, the poignant misery of her victory--which was also her accusation of us--in the mill-race! (Throws himself into a chair, rests his elbows on the table, and hides his face in his hands.)Rebecca (coming quietly up behind him). Listen to me, John. If it were in your power to call Beata back--to you--to Rosmersholm--would you do it?

Rosmer. How can I tell what I would do or what I would not do! Ihave no thoughts for anything but the one thing which is irrevocable.

Rebecca. You ought to be beginning to live now, John. You were beginning. You had freed yourself completely on all sides. You were feeling so happy and so light--hearted Rosmer. I know--that is true enough. And then comes this overwhelming blow.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • tfboys唯爱

    tfboys唯爱

    三个从小到大的闺蜜第一次来到重庆,会发生什么呢!和我一起来看吧!
  • 律条公案

    律条公案

    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。
  • 麻雀女王

    麻雀女王

    《麻雀女王》共分为多卷阅读第一卷:麻雀女王的诞生第二卷:型男天下,又名《奇异恶魔王子与混血公主》已经发表第三卷:花样网王的双面女佣——故事情节生动,讲述女主角为了生计而进入豪门给一帅哥做女佣,由此而产生的一段兄妹情感纠葛第四卷:贵族学院之幽灵出没——型男天下继篇,以灵异玄幻为主,讲述男女主角为了弄清贵族校园里,不明不白的死了几个学生,为此而展开调查,从此与恶魔展开了激烈的战斗,胆小的请注意。
  • 狂暴之战1

    狂暴之战1

    这是一部热血的战斗小说。主角是可怕的狂暴种族幸存者,且看它如何成长吧!
  • 致命宫情

    致命宫情

    她是千年前被诅咒的“无情灾星”,被人咒尽了生生世世,咒她每一生每一世,都将凄惨孤独,痛不欲生。她天真的以为,只是一句简单的“对不起”,便能将一切破解,到头来却发现自己辜负了那么多的深情,明诚王,天朝帝王,昙王谁才是她的命定男子!
  • 洪恩灵济真君灵签

    洪恩灵济真君灵签

    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。
  • 逆世煞凰:绝色冥帝妃

    逆世煞凰:绝色冥帝妃

    她,是万年前的斗气大天才,大陆的骄傲,却因为师兄师妹师傅的背叛,师门多年的算计,肉身被毁,最终还被人污蔑冠上了莫须有的罪名。她的名字从那时便遗臭万年。好在老天有眼,让她重生,只可惜那已是万年之后的世界,而那也不再是她原本的身体。青龙城墨家废物七小姐?天生无法修炼魔力或是斗气?她淡然一笑,毫不在意,强大的灵魂力一动,强制冲破了身体与精神力的封印,重创下封印之人,从此废物变天才,魔武双修,却绝不锋芒毕露,让自己置身于危险之中。她发誓,这一世要低调做人,不再受任何势力的束缚,轻轻松松逍遥一世。只是,一只强大到变态的妖孽半路尾随,从此开始了一段你追我赶的日子。
  • 穿越火线之生化交响曲

    穿越火线之生化交响曲

    穿越火线同人小说以生化金字塔地图为背景展开,赋予游戏人物新鲜血液
  • 豪门盛宠:首席第101次追妻

    豪门盛宠:首席第101次追妻

    她隐藏在他身边只想帮父亲偷到一份文件而已,不料却被当场抓包,稀里糊涂睡了号称第一权少的男人。事后,她没想悄悄溜走,磁性的嗓音在她耳边响起:“怎么,睡了我就想跑吗?”
  • 化千劫

    化千劫

    用一千世的轮回来化解仇人的毒咒,用上百万年光阴查出幕后真相。此生注定不可阻挡,哪怕天地不在,万界大劫,萧恒都将踏上彼岸。这一世的萧恒必将用积攒千世的力量来掌乾坤!定阴阳!蹬须弥!