登陆注册
26093900000131

第131章 At Christminster Again(24)

He did not turn his head,but took up his blanket,which she had not seen,and went straight out.As he passed the end of the church she heard his coughs mingling with the rain on the windows,and in a last instinct of human affection,even now unsubdued by her fetters,she sprang up as if to go and succour him.But she knelt down again,and stopped her ears with her hands till all possible sound of him had passed away.

He was by this time at the corner of the green,from which the path ran across the fields in which he had scared rooks as a boy.He turned and looked back,once,at the building which still contained Sue;and then went on,knowing that his eyes would light on that scene no more.

There are cold spots up and down Wes*** in autumn and winter weather;but the coldest of all when a north or east wind is blowing is the crest of the down by the Brown House,where the road to Alfredston crosses the old Ridgeway.Here the first winter sleets and snows fall and lie,and here the spring frost lingers last unthawed.Here in the teeth of the north-east wind and rain Jude now pursued his way,wet through,the necessary slowness of his walk from lack of his former strength being insufficent to maintain his heat.He came to the milestone,and,raining as it was,spread his blanket and lay down there to rest.Before moving on he went and felt at the back of the stone for his own carving.It was still there;but nearly obliterated by moss.He passed the spot where the gibbet of his ancestor and Sue's had stood,and descended the hill.

It was dark when he reached Alfredston,where he had a cup of tea,the deadly chill that began to creep into his bones being too much for him to endure fasting.To get home he had to travel by a steam tram-car,and two branches of railway,with much waiting at a junction.He did not reach Christminster till ten o'clock.

On the platform stood Arabella.She looked him up and down.

'You've been to see her?'she asked.

'I have,'said Jude,literally tottering with cold and lassitude.

'Well,now you'd best march along home.'

The water ran out of him as he went,and he was compelled to lean against the wall to support himself while coughing.

'You've done for yourself by this,young man,'said she.'I don't know whether you know it.'

'Of course I do.I meant to do for myself.'

'What -to commit suicide?'

'Certainly.'

'Well,I'm blest!Kill yourself for a woman.'

'Listen to me,Arabella.You think you are the stronger;and so you are,in a physical sense,now.You could push me over like a nine-pin.

You did not send that letter the other day,and I could not resent your conduct.But I am not so weak in another way as you think.I made up my mind that a man confined to his room by inflammation of the lungs,a fellow who had only two wishes left in the world,to see a particular woman,and then to die,could neatly accomplish those two wishes at one stroke by taking this journey in the rain.That I've done.I have seen her for the last time,and I've finished myself -put an end to a feverish life which ought never to have been begun!'

'Lord -you do talk lofty!Won't you have something warm to drink?'

'No thank you.Let's get home.'

They went along by the silent colleges,and Jude kept stopping.

'What are you looking at?'

'Stupid fancies.I see,in a way,those spirits of the dead again,on this my last walk,that I saw when I first walked here!'

'What a curious chap you are!'

'I seem to see them,and almost hear them rustling.But I don't revere all of them as I did then.I don't believe in half of them.The theologians,the apologists,and their kin the metaphysicians,the high-handed statesmen,and others,no longer interest me.All that has been spoilt for me by the grind of stern reality!'

The expression of Jude's corpselike face in the watery lamplight was indeed as if he saw people where there was nobody.At moments he stood still by an archway,like one watching a figure walk out;then he would look at a window like one discerning a familiar face behind it.He seemed to hear voices,whose words he repeated as if to gather their meaning.

'They seem laughing at me!'

'Who?'

'Oh -I was talking to myself!The phantoms all about here,in the college archways,and windows.They used to look friendly in the old days,particularly Addison,and Gibbon,and Johnson,and Dr.Browne,and Bishop Ken'

'Come along do!Phantoms!There's neither living nor dead hereabouts except a damn policeman!I never saw the streets emptier.'

'Fancy!The Poet of Liberty used to walk here,and the great Dissector of Melancholy there!'

'I don't want to hear about 'em!They bore me.'

'Walter Raleigh is beckoning to me from that lane -Wycliffe -Harvey -Hooker -Arnold -and a whole crowd of Tractarian Shades'

'I don't want to know their names,I tell you!What do I care about folk dead and gone?Upon my soul you are more sober when you've been drinking than when you have not!'

'I must rest a moment,'he said;and as he paused,holding to the railings,he measured with his eye the height of a college front.'This is old Rubric.And that Sarcophagus;and Up that lane Crozier and Tudor:

and all down there is Cardinal with its long front,and its windows with lifted eyebrows,representing the polite surprise of the university at the efforts of such as I.'

'Come along,and I'll treat you!'

'Very well.It will help me home,for I feel the chilly fog from the meadows of Cardinal as if death-claws were grabbing me through and through.As Antigone said,I am neither a dweller among men nor ghosts.

But,Arabella,when I am dead,you'll see my spirit flitting up and down here among these!'

'Pooh!You mayn't die after all.You are tough enough yet,old man.'

It was night at Marygreen,and the rain of the afternoon showed no sign of abatement.About the time at which Jude and Arabella were walking the streets of Christminster homeward,the Widow Edlin crossed the green,and opened the back door of the schoolmaster's dwelling,which she often did now before bedtime,to assist Sue in putting things away.

同类推荐
  • 文静涵大守自历言

    文静涵大守自历言

    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。
  • 仲秋纪

    仲秋纪

    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。
  • 琉璃王经

    琉璃王经

    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。
  • 能改斋词话

    能改斋词话

    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。
  • 珩璜新论

    珩璜新论

    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
  • 海琼白真人语录

    海琼白真人语录

    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。
  • 阵道天地

    阵道天地

    修士体内:凝阵影,砌阵形,立阵基,结阵图.始出母阵,无所不能!上古已逝,太初湮灭,大道无有情,仙神亦不存!九重天阙十段幽,无极尽头乃千秋!一杯长生酒,谁与我春秋!愚人追逐问不朽,纵为神明魂也休!两杯长生酒,谁舞我春秋!九尺寒潭葬我躯,一缕逆血改天地!三杯长生酒,谁写我春秋!唯我独坐长生殿,一曲悲歌道个别.天尽是极,地终是道,掌天御地,是为极道:天地极道-----阵道.
  • 天才少年K

    天才少年K

    他,放荡不羁,没有什么能够阻挡他的路,搞坏学校实验室,上课翘课,私自把学校的操场让给孤儿院,····他就是天才K闫凯,一个要改变自己的命运的天才少年(本文改编于漫画天才J,剧情有雷同,请见谅)
  • 阳光八万里:古清生散文精选

    阳光八万里:古清生散文精选

    本书为作者精心构筑的美文,多为作者近年已发、未发的散文、随笔。
  • 妃黄腾达:王妃你又耍赖皮

    妃黄腾达:王妃你又耍赖皮

    “王爷大人,你有洁癖,不喜女人,我嫁给你没幸福的。”**“嫁给本王,你会很‘性’福的。”俊美如谪仙的男子微微一笑。钱多多很是怀疑,一个不允许女人靠近他三米的男人,嫁给他不是守活寡,还谈什么幸福。**婚后,她才知道他口中的‘性’福是什么。某日,她忍无可忍指着那一脸贪恋不足的男人怒喊:“假仙,你在敢对我这么残暴,我就告御状和你离婚。”**“傻丫头,夫妻之间这是情**若不受不了,我躺着你来。”话语,男子抱着一个翻滚。钱多多一晃就跨坐他的腰上,感觉到了身下异样,脸色一拧,谁要再说这假仙对女人有洁癖,她非撕烂她的大嘴。(宠妻于无形之中,御情敌于千里之外)
  • 剑动永恒

    剑动永恒

    一场冰与火的战斗史诗,一个人,一把剑,洛天向着未知的黑暗走去……
  • 飘海野人之谜

    飘海野人之谜

    海漂野人之迷(童话小说)作者:木木童梗概:六岁男童来客被风雨推倒在拔根的白果树上,飘到大海驻足到海屿,几十年竟没有人搭救,他以顽强的意志抵抗恶劣的自然环境,觅食自我求生,坚守着生命,直到被(人)渔民发现,视为野人。
  • 蝎魔

    蝎魔

    千年妖魔,为打开飞升魔界之门,用万千生魂构筑邪恶祭台!沦落异界,他能否打破命运枷锁,挥刀屠戮众生只为问一声!何人能,让本尊出刀?
  • 天才纨绔

    天才纨绔

    超级强者一缕元神穿越地球夺舍重生,融入了因为坠马死亡的纨绔子弟身上,在繁华都市中以新的身份开始了不一样的生活。会修真会泡妞,能治病能杀人,神级天赋,术法通神。纨绔会法术,谁也挡不住。且看他如何逆天改命,在红尘美色中,一步步踏上人世巅峰!
  • 你是我最后的曙光

    你是我最后的曙光

    在那年的仲夏夜,晏柒潼拿起郗臻昱送给自己的雕花匕首,杀害了一直以来长期虐待自己的妈妈。一双眼神中没有惊吓也没有恐惧,只是冷冷的看着妈妈睁着眼的尸体,小声的说了一句“对不起”。