Daniel Deronda George Eliot (best book clubs TXT) đ
- Author: George Eliot
Book online «Daniel Deronda George Eliot (best book clubs TXT) đ». Author George Eliot
âWhen you resolved on that, you meant that I should never know my origin?â said Deronda, impulsively. âYou have at least changed in your feeling on that point.â
âYes, that was what I meant. That is what I persevered in. And it is not true to say that I have changed. Things have changed in spite of me. I am still the same Leonoraââ âshe pointed with her forefinger to her breastâ ââhere within me is the same desire, the same will, the same choice, butââ âshe spread out her hands, palm upward, on each side of her, as she paused with a bitter compression of her lip, then let her voice fall into muffled, rapid utteranceâ ââevents come upon us like evil enchantments: and thoughts, feelings, apparitions in the darkness are eventsâ âare they not? I donât consent. We only consent to what we love. I obey something tyrannicââ âshe spread out her hands againâ ââI am forced to be withered, to feel pain, to be dying slowly. Do I love that? Well, I have been forced to obey my dead father. I have been forced to tell you that you are a Jew, and deliver to you what he commanded me to deliver.â
âI beseech you to tell me what moved youâ âwhen you were young, I meanâ âto take the course you did,â said Deronda, trying by this reference to the past to escape from what to him was the heartrending piteousness of this mingled suffering and defiance. âI gather that my grandfather opposed your bent to be an artist. Though my own experience has been quite different, I enter into the painfulness of your struggle. I can imagine the hardship of an enforced renunciation.â
âNo,â said the Princess, shaking her head and folding her arms with an air of decision. âYou are not a woman. You may tryâ âbut you can never imagine what it is to have a manâs force of genius in you, and yet to suffer the slavery of being a girl. To have a pattern cut outâ ââthis is the Jewish woman; this is what you must be; this is what you are wanted for; a womanâs heart must be of such a size and no larger, else it must be pressed small, like Chinese feet; her happiness is to be made as cakes are, by a fixed receipt.â That was what my father wanted. He wished I had been a son; he cared for me as a makeshift link. His heart was set on his Judaism. He hated that Jewish women should be thought of by the Christian world as a sort of ware to make public singers and actresses of. As if we were not the more enviable for that! That is a chance of escaping from bondage.â
âWas my grandfather a learned man?â said Deronda, eager to know particulars that he feared his mother might not think of.
She answered impatiently, putting up her hand, âOh, yesâ âand a clever physicianâ âand good: I donât deny that he was good. A man to be admired in a playâ âgrand, with an iron will. Like the old Foscari before he pardons. But such men turn their wives and daughters into slaves. They would rule the world if they could; but not ruling the world, they throw all the weight of their will on the necks and souls of women. But nature sometimes thwarts them. My father had no other child than his daughter, and she was like himself.â
She had folded her arms again, and looked as if she were ready to face some impending attempt at mastery.
âYour father was different. Unlike meâ âall lovingness and affection. I knew I could rule him; and I made him secretly promise me, before I married him, that he would put no hindrance in the way of my being an artist. My father was on his deathbed when we were married: from the first he had fixed his mind on my marrying my cousin Ephraim. And when a womanâs will is as strong as the manâs who wants to govern her, half her strength must be concealment. I meant to have my will in the end, but I could only have it by seeming to obey. I had an awe of my fatherâ âalways I had had an
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