登陆注册
15483200000088

第88章 CHAPTER XVII LIVE COALS FROM MISS CLENDENNING'(6)

"Oh, I should certainly say so. It is nothing but books all over the house. Really, he has more books than Dad." This statement was to strengthen the one regarding the family ancestors--both telling arguments about Kennedy Square.

"And this girl--is she a lady?"

The question somehow put to flight all his mental manoeuvres. "She is more than a lady, mother.

She is the dearest--" He stopped, hesitated for an instant, and slipping his arm around his mother's neck drew her close to him. Then, in a torrent of words--his cheeks against hers--the whole story came out. He was a boy again now; that quality in him that would last all his life. She listened with her eyes on the floor, her heart torn with varying. emotions. She was disturbed, but not alarmed.

One phase of the situation stood out clearly in her practical mind--his poverty and the impossibility of any immediate marriage. Before that obstacle could be removed she felt sure his natural vacillation regarding women would save him. He would forget her as he had Sue.

"And you say her brother works in the fields and that her father and mother permitted this girl to leave home and sit night after night with you young men with no other protection than that of a common Irishwoman?" There was a tone of censure now in her voice that roused a slight antagonism in Oliver.

"Why not? What could harm her? There was no other place for her to go where she could learn anything."

Mrs. Horn kept still for a moment, looking on the floor. Oliver sat watching her face.

"And your family, my son," she protested with a certain patient disapproval in her tones. "Do they count for nothing? I, of course, would love anybody you would make your wife, but you have others about you. No man has a right to marry beneath him. Do not be in a hurry over this matter.

Come home for your wife when you are ready to marry. Give yourself time to compare this girl, who seems to have fascinated you, with--Sue, for instance, or any of the others you have been brought up with."

Oliver shrugged his shoulders at the mention of Sue's name. He had compared her.

"You would not talk this way, dearie; if you could see her," he replied in a hopeless way as if the futility of making his mother understand was now becoming apparent to him. "She is different from anyone you ever met--she is so strong, so fine--such a woman in all that the word means. Not something you fondle and make love to, remember, but a woman more like a Madonna that you worship, or a Greek goddess that you might fear. As to the family part of it, I am getting tired of it all, mother.

What good is Grandfather Horn or anybody else to me? I have got to dig my way out just as they did.

Just as dear old Dad is doing. If he succeeds in his work who will help him but himself? There have been times when I used to love to remember him sitting by his reading-lamp or with his violin tucked under his chin, and I was proud to think he was my father. Do you know what sets my blood on fire now? It is when I think of him standing over his forge and blowing his bellows, his hands black with coal. I understand many things, dearie, that I knew nothing about when I left home. You used to tell me yourself that everybody had to work, and you sent me away to do it. I looked upon it then as a degradation. I see it differently now. I have worked with all my might all summer, and I have brought back a whole lot of sketches that the boys like. Now I am going to work again with Mr. Slade.

I do not like his work, and I do love mine, but I am going to stick to his all the same. I have got something to work for now," and his face brightened.

"I am going to win!"

She did not interrupt him. It was better he should unburden his heart. She was satisfied with his record; if he went wrong she only was to blame.

But he was not going wrong; nor was there anything to worry about--not even his art--not so long as he kept his place with Mr. Slade and only took it up as a relaxation from more weighty cares. It was only the girl that caused her a moment's thought.

She saw too, through all his outburst, a certain independence and a fearlessness and a certain fixedness of purpose that sent an exultant thrill through her even when her heart was burdened with the thought of this new danger that threatened him.

She had sent him away for the fault of instability, and he had overcome it. Should she not now hold fast, as she had before, and save him the second time from this girl who was beneath him in station and who would drag him down to her level, and so perhaps ruin him?

"We will not talk any more about it to-night, my son," she said, in tender tones, leaning forward and kissing him on the cheek--it was through his affections that she controlled him. "You should be tired out with your day's journey and ought to rest.

Take my advice--do not ask her to be your wife yet.

Think about it a little and see some other women before you make up your mind."

A delicious tremor passed through Oliver. He HAD asked her, and she HAD promised! He remembered just the very day, the hour, the minute. That was the bliss of it all! But this he did not tell his mother. He would not hurt her any further now.

Some other day he would tell her; when she could see Madge and judge for herself. No, not to-night, and so with the secret untold he kissed her and led her to her room.

And yet strange to say it was the one only thing in all his life that he had kept from her.

Ah! these mothers! who make lovers of their only sons, dominating their lives! How bitter must be the hours when they realize that another's arms are opening for them!

And these boys--what misgivings come; what doubts. How the old walls, impregnable from childhood, begin to crumble! How little now the dear mother knows--she so wise but a few moons since.

How this new love steps in front of the old love and claims every part of the boy as its very own.

同类推荐
  • 华严心要法门注

    华严心要法门注

    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。
  • 八阵合变图说

    八阵合变图说

    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。
  • 佛说大乘流转诸有经

    佛说大乘流转诸有经

    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。
  • 金液大丹诗

    金液大丹诗

    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。
  • 驻梦词

    驻梦词

    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
  • 凯源玺之雪颖染

    凯源玺之雪颖染

    人气偶像天团tfboys和新生偶像天团shey相恋,最后迈上了婚姻的
  • 恶魔总裁:娘子,别跑

    恶魔总裁:娘子,别跑

    “那人是谁?”男子幽深的看着她,眼里就快冒火了,“呵,你还在意啊?他是谁,又关你何事?”……从多久开始,他们变成这般模样,“婧儿,你永远是我的!”(男女主,身心干净噢……大大的宠~)
  • 仙之难

    仙之难

    修仙难,难于上青天。仙有难,何人可力挽?异世重生少年,踏上修仙之路!懵懵懂懂之间,卷入天大危机!且看他能否逃脱大难,挽天倾!
  • 凌修传

    凌修传

    六道轮回,三千世界,天地万法!自蛮荒伊始,无数个岁月轮回,谁又能不入轮回,超脱六道之外!?
  • 卿与君歌:墨锦流年馥不忘

    卿与君歌:墨锦流年馥不忘

    她是三百年前他亲手救下的一条小小锦鲤,自此对他暗许下一颗锦鲤心。他轮回,她不惜一切代价陪他经历人世苦难。第一世,他是当朝丞相之子,她只能远远看着他,爱而不得。第二世,她是骁勇善战的女将军,他是敌国二皇子,爱而不能。第三世,他化身众界不容的魔君,只为救她一命,爱不善终。她爱的萧瑟荡然,他痛的不能自已。忘川河畔,奈何桥前,他抱着满身是血的她说:“馥儿,你若敢死,我就焚了这八荒众界,只换一个你。”
  • 夏果青青

    夏果青青

    永不能忘,那阵阵花香。也许我从未准备好再次遇见你。也许你也无法掌控自己的命运。只因为,我和你,都各自背负家族的使命。五年来,南宫城并没有什么变化。就是过去的四百年,它也改变得极少极少。有一条通贯全程南北的直路,当时的你和我就分别住在这条路的南北两端。你在南,我在北。如今,你在北,我在南。而南宫城,却从未改变。
  • 老公,离婚吧!

    老公,离婚吧!

    余安安醒来发现自己在医院,真好,居然没死!然后她发现,咦,她居然多了个老公?太好了,不用再相亲了!咦,她居然多了一对龙凤胎萌娃,太棒了,不用生孩子了!咦,便宜老公外面有真爱,噢,那好吧,老公,离婚吧!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 男侠女盗

    男侠女盗

    男主腹黑强大,内心火热;女主灵巧萝莉,小财迷。这样的组合会怎样?他们相识相知到相互分享自己的痛苦和欢乐!在森林中体验浪漫,在魔兽攻城中见证忠诚,在古墓中相互陪伴!
  • 有一种明白叫糊涂

    有一种明白叫糊涂

    本书主要内容包括:以曲为直的智慧;平白放弃的智慧;假装糊涂的智慧;忍辱装傻的智慧;难得糊涂的智慧等。本书针对心态、淡泊、宽容、尊重、爱、友谊、善良、逆境、选择与放弃等重大人生课题,用启迪思想的哲理和触动情感的文字,帮助读者洗去心灵的浮躁与疲乏,让心灵得到呵护和润泽,重新焕发生命的热情与活力,让你以一颗健康的心灵和积极乐观的心态去创造幸福美好的人生。
  • 上古龙荒

    上古龙荒

    上古时代,盘古开天辟地,女娲挥泥成人,一切生活是那样平静。最后王者的来临,让一切平静都化为一阵腥风血雨。