登陆注册
37821200000003

第3章 I.(3)

He had suddenly arrived in Tuskingum from one of the villages of the county, where he had been teaching school, and had found something to do as reporter on the Tuskingum 'Intelligencer', which he was instinctively characterizing with the spirit of the new journalism, and was pushing as hardily forward on the lines of personality as if he had dropped down to it from the height of a New York or Chicago Sunday edition. The judge said, with something less than his habitual honesty, that he did not mind his being a reporter, but he minded his being light and shallow; he minded his being flippant and mocking; he minded his bringing his cigarettes and banjo into the house at his second visit. He did not mind his push; the fellow had his way to make and he had to push; but he did mind his being all push; and his having come out of the country with as little simplicity as if he had passed his whole life in the city. He had no modesty, and he had no reverence; he had no reverence for Ellen herself, and the poor girl seemed to like him for that.

He was all the more offensive to the judge because he was himself to blame for their acquaintance, which began when one day the fellow had called after him in the street, and then followed down the shady sidewalk beside him to his hour, wanting to know what this was he had heard about his history, and pleading for more light upon his plan in it. At the gate he made a flourish of opening and shutting it for the judge, and walking up the path to his door he kept his hand on the judge's shoulder most offensively; but in spite of this Kenton had the weakness to ask him in, and to call Ellen to get him the most illustrative documents of the history.

The interview that resulted in the 'Intelligencer' was the least evil that came of this error. Kenton was amazed, and then consoled, and then afflicted that Ellen was not disgusted with it; and in his conferences with his wife he fumed and fretted at his own culpable folly, and tried to get back of the time he had committed it, in that illusion which people have with trouble that it could somehow be got rid of if it could fairly be got back of; till the time came when his wife could no longer share his unrest in this futile endeavor.

She said, one night when they had talked late and long, "That can't be helped now; and the question is what are we going to do to stop it."The judge evaded the point in saying, "The devil of it is that all the nice fellows are afraid of her; they respect her too much, and the very thing which ought to disgust her with this chap is what gives him his power over her. I don't know what we are going to do, but we must break it off, somehow.""We might take her with us somewhere," Mrs. Kenton suggested.

"Run away from the fellow? I think I see myself! No, we have got to stay and face the thing right here. But I won't have him about the house any more, understand that. He's not to be let in, and Ellen mustn't see him; you tell her I said so. Or no! I will speak to her myself." His wife said that he was welcome to do that; but he did not quite do it. He certainly spoke to his daughter about her, lover, and he satisfied himself that there was yet nothing explicit between them. But she was so much less frank and open with him than she had always been before that he was wounded as well as baffled by her reserve. He could not get her to own that she really cared for the fellow; but man as he was, and old man as he was, he could not help perceiving that she lived in a fond dream of him.

He went from her to her mother. "If he was only one-half the man she thinks he is!"--he ended his report in a hopeless sigh.

"You want to give in to her!" his wife pitilessly interpreted. "Well, perhaps that would be the best thing, after all.""No, no, it wouldn't, Sarah; it would be the easiest for both of us, Iadmit, but it would be the worst thing for her. We've got to let it run along for a while yet. If we give him rope enough he may hang himself;there's that chance. We can't go away, and we can't shut her up, and we can't turn him out of the house. We must trust her to find him out for herself.""She'll never do that," said the mother. "Lottie says Ellen thinks he's just perfect. He cheers her up, and takes her out of herself. We've always acted with her as if we thought she was different from other girls, and he behaves to her as if she was just like all of them, just as silly, and just as weak, and it pleases her, and flatters her; she likes it.""Oh, Lord!" groaned the father. "I suppose she does."This was bad enough; it was a blow to his pride in Ellen; but there was something that hurt him still worse. When the fellow had made sure of her, he apparently felt himself so safe in her fondness that he did not urge his suit with her. His content with her tacit acceptance gave the bitterness of shame to the promise Kenton and his wife had made each other never to cross any of their children in love. They were ready now to keep that promise for Ellen, if he asked it of them, rather than answer for her lifelong disappointment, if they denied him. But, whatever he meant finally to do, he did not ask it; he used his footing in their house chiefly as a basis for flirtations beyond it. He began to share his devotions to Ellen with her girl friends, and not with her girl friends alone. It did not come to scandal, but it certainly came to gossip about him and a silly young wife; and Kenton heard of it with a torment of doubt whether Ellen knew of it, and what she would do; he would wait for her to do herself whatever was to be done. He was never certain how much she had heard of the gossip when she came to her mother, and said with the gentle eagerness she had, "Didn't poppa talk once of going South this winter?""He talked of going to New York," the mother answered, with a throb of hope.

"Well," the girl returned, patiently, and Mrs. Kenton read in her passivity an eagerness to be gone from sorrow that she would not suffer to be seen, and interpreted her to her father in such wise that he could not hesitate.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 忘记去拥抱你

    忘记去拥抱你

    很抱歉,给了你太多充斥着我的回忆,可能不太美好。没关系,其实那些回忆很好,谢谢你来到过我的世界。
  • 都市之召唤战争游戏

    都市之召唤战争游戏

    买不起跑车,家里有虎式坦克;买不起游艇,家里有小炮艇和鱼雷艇,未来还有战列舰和航母;买不起私人客机,那个B29暂时凑合着用;要是有人敢找麻烦,亲,你冲的过撕布机的弹雨再说吧。黑帮红帮又怎么样,你有几支手枪或步枪又怎么样,劳资这里子弹管够,虽然都是二战武器,秒掉你们黑帮也够了。你说英雄连基地在都市没什么用,开玩笑,和黑帮械斗就靠他们了。咱是什么人,是文明人,五讲四美三热爱的好青年。
  • 望木有灵

    望木有灵

    熙十四年间,忘忧茶馆开张,两人十年后再相遇……盼望你没有为我又再渡暗中流淌泪。
  • 课堂教学的颠覆与重建

    课堂教学的颠覆与重建

    本书为教育学者陶继新与著名教育改革校长李升勇的对话录,书中既有李升勇校长对改革过程的叙述,也有他高屋建瓴地理论升华,更有陶继新画龙点睛的评论,可以说本书是关于学校改革特别是大语文教育的一部“写真集”,适合学校管理者、教育学者阅读。
  • 彭彦

    彭彦

    彭彦,一个忘记所有,只记得自己名字的家伙,开启自己的装逼之路。能不装逼吗?没事泡泡妞、旅旅游、踩踩人、交点朋友,叙叙老友,一不小心还能穿个越.......(适合慢慢读的小说,喜欢历史的朋友,可以多进来看看。)
  • 兮我往矣彧雪霏霏

    兮我往矣彧雪霏霏

    南风彧(yu),富可飞月球上官泽轩,富可敌国林兮乔,“富”可随意街边撸串。。。。有人要”潜规则“她,公司顷刻易主,有人设计她,霎时连滚带爬去给她道歉,有人害了她,亲自上门以牙还牙。。。。”你干脆把财团送给我。““好。”“你对朋友也太他妈大方了,我男人上官泽轩也未必做的到。”林兮乔几乎忘记南风彧的性别,他这是成了自己的假想备胎了,最终等着等着,虐着虐着还是上位了。
  • 冷酷总裁:不爱了,请放手!

    冷酷总裁:不爱了,请放手!

    她艰难的说:“真的不是我,不是我,言以轩,你为什么不信我?!你既然不信我,又为什么要娶我。”他粗暴的将她的下颌抬起来,对着他阴沉深邃的眼睛,一字一句地说:“是么?谁允许你指名道姓的叫?你有什么权利叫我的名字?不如,你叫一声姐夫听听?“
  • 暖婚入骨:封少放肆宠

    暖婚入骨:封少放肆宠

    一场代嫁,她被逼嫁给封逸。结果,和他结婚的第一个晚上,他丢给了她一份协议,冷冷道:“我们的婚姻有效期是两年,结束后,我会给你五千万分手费。”详细看完协议,她总结为三点。第一:她是他有名无实的妻子。第二:她不能喜欢上他。第三:她不能行使妻子的权利。既然对方不想跟她做夫妻,她决定混吃等死,坐等两年后五千万分手费到手,愉快地拿钱走人。不料,日后封逸撕毁了协议,将她狠狠压在身下,“想跑?萧轻语,我告诉你,你永远只能是我的妻子。”萧轻语一脸懵逼:卧槽,男人都是大猪蹄子!*-*-*小剧场:某日,当红女明星萧轻语被传出被某大佬包养,才能得以在娱乐圈青云直上的负面新闻。结果,传闻中的大佬搂着萧轻语出现,面对着媒体记者的提问,勾唇一笑,“我才是被包养的那一位。”众媒体记者:卧槽,现在大佬也这么爱开玩笑的么!阅读提示:双c,1v1。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!