The Woodlanders Thomas Hardy (the reader ebook TXT) đ
- Author: Thomas Hardy
Book online «The Woodlanders Thomas Hardy (the reader ebook TXT) đ». Author Thomas Hardy
âI am so glad to hear you say that. And those other booksâ âthose piles of old playsâ âwhat good are they to a medical man?â
âNone whatever!â he replied, cheerfully. âSell them at Sherton for what they will fetch.â
âAnd those dreadful old French romances, with their horrid spellings of âfilzâ and âungâ and âilzâ and âmaryâ and âma foy?âââ
âYou havenât been reading them, Grace?â
âOh noâ âI just looked into them, that was all.â
âMake a bonfire of âem directly you get home. I meant to do it myself. I canât think what possessed me ever to collect them. I have only a few professional handbooks now, and am quite a practical man. I am in hopes of having some good news to tell you soon, and then do you think you couldâ âcome to me again?â
âI would rather you did not press me on that just now,â she replied, with some feeling. âYou have said you mean to lead a new, useful, effectual life; but I should like to see you put it in practice for a little while before you address that query to me. Besidesâ âI could not live with you.â
âWhy not?â
Grace was silent a few instants. âI go with Marty to Gilesâs grave. We swore we would show him that devotion. And I mean to keep it up.â
âWell, I wouldnât mind that at all. I have no right to expect anything else, and I will not wish you to keep away. I liked the man as well as any I ever knew. In short, I would accompany you a part of the way to the place, and smoke a cigar on the stile while I waited till you came back.â
âThen you havenât given up smoking?â
âWellâ âahemâ âno. I have thought of doing so, butâ ââ
His extreme complacence had rather disconcerted Grace, and the question about smoking had been to effect a diversion. Presently she said, firmly, and with a moisture in her eye that he could not see, as her mind returned to poor Gilesâs âfrustrate ghost,â âI donât like youâ âto speak lightly on that subject, if you did speak lightly. To be frank with youâ âquite frankâ âI think of him as my betrothed lover still. I cannot help it. So that it would be wrong for me to join you.â
Fitzpiers was now uneasy. âYou say your betrothed lover still,â he rejoined. âWhen, then, were you betrothed to him, or engaged, as we common people say?â
âWhen you were away.â
âHow could that be?â
Grace would have avoided this; but her natural candor led her on. âIt was when I was under the impression that my marriage with you was about to be annulled, and that he could then marry me. So I encouraged him to love me.â
Fitzpiers winced visibly; and yet, upon the whole, she was right in telling it. Indeed, his perception that she was right in her absolute sincerity kept up his affectionate admiration for her under the pain of the rebuff. Time had been when the avowal that Grace had deliberately taken steps to replace him would have brought him no sorrow. But she so far dominated him now that he could not bear to hear her words, although the object of her high regard was no more.
âIt is rough upon meâ âthat!â he said, bitterly. âOh, Graceâ âI did not know youâ âtried to get rid of me! I suppose it is of no use, but I ask, cannot you hope toâ âfind a little love in your heart for me again?â
âIf I could I would oblige you; but I fear I cannot!â she replied, with illogical ruefulness. âAnd I donât see why you should mind my having had one lover besides yourself in my life, when you have had so many.â
âBut I can tell you honestly that I love you better than all of them put together, and thatâs what you will not tell me!â
âI am sorry; but I fear I cannot,â she said, sighing again.
âI wonder if you ever will?â He looked musingly into her indistinct face, as if he would read the future there. âNow have pity, and tell me: will you try?â
âTo love you again?â
âYes; if you can.â
âI donât know how to reply,â she answered, her embarrassment proving her truth. âWill you promise to leave me quite free as to seeing you or not seeing you?â
âCertainly. Have I given any ground for you to doubt my first promise in that respect?â
She was obliged to admit that he had not.
âThen I think that you might get your heart out of that grave,â said he, with playful sadness. âIt has been there a long time.â
She faintly shook her head, but said, âIâll try to think of you moreâ âif I can.â
With this Fitzpiers was compelled to be satisfied, and he asked her when she would meet him again.
âAs we arrangedâ âin a fortnight.â
âIf it must be a fortnight it must!â
âThis time at least. Iâll consider by the day I see you again if I can shorten the interval.â
âWell, be that as it may, I shall come at least twice a week to look at your window.â
âYou must do as you like about that. Good night.â
âSay âhusband.âââ
She seemed almost inclined to give him the word; but exclaiming, âNo, no; I cannot,â slipped through the garden-hedge and disappeared.
Fitzpiers did not exaggerate when he told her that he should haunt the precincts of the dwelling. But his persistence in this course did not result in his seeing her much oftener than at the fortnightly interval which she had herself marked out as proper. At these times, however, she punctually appeared, and as the spring wore on the meetings were kept up, though their character changed but little with the increase in their number.
The small garden of the cottage occupied by the Tangs familyâ âfather, son, and now sonâs wifeâ âaligned with the larger one of the
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