Shirley Charlotte BrontĂ« (free ebook reader for pc .txt) đ
- Author: Charlotte Brontë
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âLiked it? I admire your taste! Michael is not sane. Where did you meet him?â
âIn the deepest, shadiest spot in the glen, where the water runs low, under brushwood. We sat down near that plank bridge. It was moonlight, but clouded, and very windy. We had a talk.â
âOn politics?â
âAnd religion. I think the moon was at the full, and Michael was as near crazed as possible. He uttered strange blasphemy in his Antinomian fashion.â
âExcuse me, but I think you must have been nearly as mad as he, to sit listening to him.â
âThere is a wild interest in his ravings. The man would be half a poet, if he were not wholly a maniac; and perhaps a prophet, if he were not a profligate. He solemnly informed me that hell was foreordained my inevitable portion; that he read the mark of the beast on my brow; that I had been an outcast from the beginning. Godâs vengeance, he said, was preparing for me, and affirmed that in a vision of the night he had beheld the manner and the instrument of my doom. I wanted to know further, but he left me with these words, âThe end is not yet.âââ
âHave you ever seen him since?â
âAbout a month afterwards, in returning from market, I encountered him and Moses Barraclough, both in an advanced stage of inebriation. They were praying in frantic sort at the roadside. They accosted me as Satan, bid me avaunt, and clamoured to be delivered from temptation. Again, but a few days ago, Michael took the trouble of appearing at the countinghouse door, hatless, in his shirtsleevesâ âhis coat and castor having been detained at the public-house in pledge. He delivered himself of the comfortable message that he could wish Mr. Moore to set his house in order, as his soul was likely shortly to be required of him.â
âDo you make light of these things?â
âThe poor man had been drinking for weeks, and was in a state bordering on delirium tremens.â
âWhat then? He is the more likely to attempt the fulfilment of his own prophecies.â
âIt would not do to permit incidents of this sort to affect oneâs nerves.â
âMr. Moore, go home!â
âSo soon?â
âPass straight down the fields, not round by the lade and plantations.â
âIt is early yet.â
âIt is late. For my part, I am going in. Will you promise me not to wander in the Hollow tonight?â
âIf you wish it.â
âI do wish it. May I ask whether you consider life valueless?â
âBy no means. On the contrary, of late I regard my life as invaluable.â
âOf late?â
âExistence is neither aimless nor hopeless to me now, and it was both three months ago. I was then drowning, and rather wished the operation over. All at once a hand was stretched to meâ âsuch a delicate hand I scarcely dared trust it; its strength, however, has rescued me from ruin.â
âAre you really rescued?â
âFor the time. Your assistance has given me another chance.â
âLive to make the best of it. Donât offer yourself as a target to Michael Hartley; and good night!â
Miss Helstone was under a promise to spend the evening of the next day at Fieldhead. She kept her promise. Some gloomy hours had she spent in the interval. Most of the time had been passed shut up in her own apartment, only issuing from it, indeed, to join her uncle at meals, and anticipating inquiries from Fanny by telling her that she was busy altering a dress, and preferred sewing upstairs, to avoid interruption.
She did sew. She plied her needle continuously, ceaselessly, but her brain worked faster than her fingers. Again, and more intensely than ever, she desired a fixed occupation, no matter how onerous, how irksome. Her uncle must be once more entreated, but first she would consult Mrs. Pryor. Her head laboured to frame projects as diligently as her hands to plait and stitch the thin texture of the muslin summer dress spread on the little white couch at the foot of which she sat. Now and then, while thus doubly occupied, a tear would fill her eyes and fall on her busy hands; but this sign of emotion was rare and quickly effaced. The sharp pang passed; the dimness cleared from her vision. She would re-thread her needle, rearrange tuck and trimming, and work on.
Late in the afternoon she dressed herself. She reached Fieldhead, and appeared in the oak parlour just as tea was brought in. Shirley asked her why she came so late.
âBecause I have been making my dress,â said she. âThese fine sunny days began to make me ashamed of my winter merino, so I have furbished up a lighter garment.â
âIn which you look as I like to see you,â said Shirley. âYou are a ladylike little person, Caroline.â âIs she not, Mrs. Pryor?â
Mrs. Pryor never paid compliments, and seldom indulged in remarks, favourable or otherwise, on personal appearance. On the present occasion she only swept Carolineâs curls from her cheek as she took a seat near her, caressed the oval outline, and observed, âYou get somewhat thin, my love, and somewhat pale. Do you sleep well? your eyes have a languid look.â And she gazed at her anxiously.
âI sometimes dream melancholy dreams,â answered Caroline; âand if I lie awake for an hour or two in the night, I am continually thinking of the rectory as a dreary old place. You know it is very near the churchyard. The back part of the house is extremely ancient, and it is said that the out-kitchens there were once enclosed in the churchyard, and that there are graves under them. I rather long to leave the rectory.â
âMy dear, you are surely not superstitious?â
âNo, Mrs. Pryor; but I think I grow what is called nervous. I see things under a darker aspect than I used to do. I have fears I never used to haveâ ânot of ghosts, but of omens and disastrous events; and I have an inexpressible weight on my mind which I would give the world to shake off, and I
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