友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!
恐怖书库 返回本书目录 加入书签 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 『收藏到我的浏览器』

east lynne-第74部分

快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部! 如果本书没有阅读完,想下次继续接着阅读,可使用上方 "收藏到我的浏览器" 功能 和 "加入书签" 功能!


; to see after you; now that you are alone again; and to take care; as far as I can; that you do not lapse lower。〃

He might have spared her that stab。 But she scarcely understood him。 She looked at him; wondering whether she did understand。

〃You have not a shilling in the world;〃 he resumed。 〃How do you propose to live?〃

〃I have some money yet。 When〃

〃/His/ money?〃 sharply and haughtily interposed the earl。

〃No;〃 she indignantly replied。 〃I am selling my trinkets。 Before they are all gone; I shall look out to get a living in some way; by teaching; probably。〃

〃Trinkets!〃 repeated Lord Mount Severn。 〃Mr。 Carlyle told me that you carried nothing away with you from East Lynne。〃

〃Nothing that he had given me。 These were mine before I married。 You have seen Mr。 Carlyle; then?〃 she faltered。

〃Seen him?〃 echoed the indignant earl。 〃When such a blow was dealt him by a member of my family; could I do less than hasten to East Lynne to tender my sympathies? I went with another subject tooto discover what could have been the moving springs of your conduct; for I protest; when the black tidings reached me; I believed that you must have gone mad。 You were one of the last whom I should have feared to trust。 But I learned nothing; and Carlyle was as ignorant as I。 How could you strike him such a blow?〃

Lower and lower drooped her head; brighter shone the shame on her hectic cheek。 An awful blow to Mr。 Carlyle it must have been; she was feeling it in all its bitter intensity。 Lord Mount Severn read her repentant looks。

〃Isabel;〃 he said; in a tone which had lost something of its harshness; and it was the first time he had called her by her Christian name; 〃I see that you are reaping the fruits。 Tell me how it happened。 What demon prompted you to sell yourself to that bad man?〃

〃He is a bad man!〃 she exclaimed。 〃A base; heartless man!〃

〃I warned you at the commencement of your married life to avoid him; to shun all association with him; not to admit him to your house。〃

〃His coming to East Lynne was not my doing;〃 she whispered。 〃Mr。 Carlyle invited him。〃

〃I know he did。 Invited him in his unsuspicious confidence; believing his wife to /be/ his wife; a trustworthy woman of honor;〃 was the severe remark。

She did not reply; she could not gainsay it; she only sat with her meek face of shame and her eyelids drooping。

〃If ever a woman had a good husband; in every sense of the word; you had; in Carlyle; if ever man loved his wife; he loved you。 /How/ could you so requite him?〃

She rolled; in a confused manner; the corners of her warm shawl over her unconscious fingers。

〃I read the note you left for your husband。 He showed it to me; the only one; I believe; to whom he did show it。 It was to him entirely inexplicable; it was so to me。 A notion had been suggested to him; after your departure; that his sister had somewhat marred your peace at East Lynne; and he blamed you much; if it was so; for not giving him your full confidence on the point; that he might set matters on the right footing。 But it was impossible; and there was the evidence in the note besides; that the presence of Miss Carlyle at East Lynne could be any excuse for your disgracing us all and ruining yourself。〃

〃Do not let us speak of these things;〃 said Lady Isabel; faintly。 〃It cannot redeem the past。〃

〃But I must speak of them; I came to speak of them;〃 persisted the earl; 〃I could not do it as long as that man was here。 When these inexplicable things take place in the career of a woman; it is a father's duty to look into motives and causes and actions; although the events in themselves may be; as in this case; irreparable。 Your father is gone; but I stand in his place; there is no one else to stand in it。〃

Her tears began to fall。 And she let them fallin silence。 The earl resumed。

〃But for that extraordinary letter; I should have supposed you had been actuated by a mad infatuation for the cur; Levison; its tenor gave the matter a different aspect。 To what did you allude when you asserted that your husband had driven you to it?〃

〃He knew;〃 she answered; scarcely above her breath。

〃He did not know;〃 sternly replied the earl。 〃A more truthful; honorable man than Carlyle does not exist on the face of the earth。 When he told me then; in his agony of grief; that he was unable to form even a suspicion of your meaning; I could have staked my earldom on his veracity。 I would stake it still。〃

〃I believed;〃 she began; in a low; nervous voice; for she knew that there was no evading the questions of Lord Mount Severn; when he was resolute in their being answered; and; indeed she was too weak; both in body and spirit; to resist〃I believed that his love was no longer mine; that he had deserted me; for another。〃

The earl stared at her。 〃What can you mean by 'deserted!' He was with you。〃

〃There is a desertion of the heart;〃 was her murmured answer。

〃Desertion of a fiddlestick!〃 retorted his lordship。 〃The interpretation we gave to the note; I and Carlyle; was; that you had been actuated by motives of jealousy; had penned it in a jealous mood。 I put the question to Carlyleas between man and mando you listen; Isabel!whether he had given you cause; and he answered me; as with God over us; he had never given you cause; he had been faithful to you in thought; word and deed; he had never; so far as he could call to mind; even looked upon another woman with covetous feelings; since the hour that he made you his wife; his whole thoughts had been of you; and of you alone。 It is more than many a husband can say;〃 significantly coughed Lord Mount Severn。

Her pulses were beating wildly。 A powerful conviction that the words were true; that her own blind jealousy had been utterly mistaken and unfounded; was forcing its way to her brain。

〃After that I could only set your letter down as a subterfuge;〃 resumed the earl〃a false; barefaced plea; put forth to conceal your real motives; and I told Carlyle so。 I inquired how it was he had never detected any secret understanding between you and thatthat beast; located; as the fellow was; in the house。 He replied that no such suspicion had ever occurred to him。 He placed the most implicit confidence in you; and would have trusted you with the creature around the world; aye; with any one else。〃

She entwined her hands one within the other; pressing them to pain。 It would not deaden the pain at her heart。

〃Carlyle told me he had been unusually occupied during the stay of that man。 Besides his customary office work; his time was taken up with some private business for a family in the neighborhood; and he had repeatedly to see them; more particularly the daughter; after office hours。 Very old acquaintances of his; he said; relatives of the Carlyle family; and he was as anxious about the secreta painful one as they were。 This; I observed to him; may have rendered him unobservant to what was passing at home。 He told me; I remember; that on the very evening of thethe catastrophe; he ought to have gone with you to a dinner party; but most important circumstances arose; in connection with the affair; which obliged him to meet two gentlemen at his office; and to receive them in secret; unknown to 
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 2 2
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!