The Moonstone Wilkie Collins (ebook reader for manga .txt) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
Book online «The Moonstone Wilkie Collins (ebook reader for manga .txt) đ». Author Wilkie Collins
If the annals of apostasy offer anything comparable to such a declaration as that, I can only say that the case in point is not producible from the stores of my reading. I thought of the Mothersâ Small-Clothes. I thought of the Sunday-Sweetheart-Supervision. I thought of the other Societies, too numerous to mention, all built up on this man as on a tower of strength. I thought of the struggling Female Boards, who, so to speak, drew the breath of their business-life through the nostrils of Mr. Godfreyâ âof that same Mr. Godfrey who had just reviled our good work as a ânuisanceââ âand just declared that he wished he was at the uttermost ends of the earth when he found himself in our company! My young female friends will feel encouraged to persevere, when I mention that it tried even my discipline before I could devour my own righteous indignation in silence. At the same time, it is only justice to myself to add, that I didnât lose a syllable of the conversation. Rachel was the next to speak.
âYou have made your confession,â she said. âI wonder whether it would cure you of your unhappy attachment to me, if I made mine?â
He started. I confess I started too. He thought, and I thought, that she was about to divulge the mystery of the Moonstone.
âWould you think, to look at me,â she went on, âthat I am the wretchedest girl living? Itâs true, Godfrey. What greater wretchedness can there be than to live degraded in your own estimation? That is my life now.â
âMy dear Rachel! itâs impossible you can have any reason to speak of yourself in that way!â
âHow do you know I have no reason?â
âCan you ask me the question! I know it, because I know you. Your silence, dearest, has never lowered you in the estimation of your true friends. The disappearance of your precious birthday gift may seem strange; your unexplained connection with that event may seem stranger still.â
âAre you speaking of the Moonstone, Godfreyâ ââ
âI certainly thought that you referredâ ââ
âI referred to nothing of the sort. I can hear of the loss of the Moonstone, let who will speak of it, without feeling degraded in my own estimation. If the story of the Diamond ever comes to light, it will be known that I accepted a dreadful responsibility; it will be known that I involved myself in the keeping of a miserable secretâ âbut it will be as clear as the sun at noonday that I did nothing mean! You have misunderstood me, Godfrey. Itâs my fault for not speaking more plainly. Cost me what it may, I will be plainer now. Suppose you were not in love with me? Suppose you were in love with some other woman?â
âYes?â
âSuppose you discovered that woman to be utterly unworthy of you? Suppose you were quite convinced that it was a disgrace to you to waste another thought on her? Suppose the bare idea of ever marrying such a person made your face burn, only with thinking of it.â
âYes?â
âAnd, suppose, in spite of all thatâ âyou couldnât tear her from your heart? Suppose the feeling she had roused in you (in the time when you believed in her) was not a feeling to be hidden? Suppose the love this wretch had inspired in youâ â? Oh, how can I find words to say it in! How can I make a man understand that a feeling which horrifies me at myself, can be a feeling that fascinates me at the same time? Itâs the breath of my life, Godfrey, and itâs the poison that kills meâ âboth in one! Go away! I must be out of my mind to talk as I am talking now. No! you mustnât leave meâ âyou mustnât carry away a wrong impression. I must say what is to be said in my own defence. Mind this! He doesnât knowâ âhe never will know, what I have told you. I will never see himâ âI donât care what happensâ âI will never, never, never see him again! Donât ask me his name! Donât ask me any more! Letâs change the subject. Are you doctor enough, Godfrey, to tell me why I feel as if I was stifling for want of breath? Is there a form of hysterics that bursts into words instead of tears? I dare say! What does it matter? You will get over any trouble I have caused you, easily enough now. I have dropped to my right place in your estimation, havenât I? Donât notice me! Donât pity me! For Godâs sake, go away!â
She turned round on a sudden, and beat her hands wildly on the back of the ottoman. Her head dropped on the cushions; and she burst out crying. Before I had time to feel shocked, at this, I was horror-struck by an entirely unexpected proceeding on the part of Mr. Godfrey. Will it be credited that he fell on his knees at her feet?â âon both knees, I solemnly declare! May modesty mention that he put his arms round her next? And may reluctant admiration acknowledge that he electrified her with two words?
âNoble creature!â
No more than that! But he did it with one of the bursts which have made his fame as a public speaker. She sat, either quite thunderstruck, or quite fascinatedâ âI donât know whichâ âwithout even making an effort to put his arms back where his arms ought to have been. As for me, my sense of propriety was completely bewildered. I was so painfully uncertain whether it was my first duty to close my eyes, or to stop my ears, that I did neither. I attribute my being still able to hold the curtain in the right position for looking and listening, entirely to suppressed hysterics. In suppressed hysterics, it is admitted, even by the doctors, that one must hold something.
âYes,â he said, with all the fascination of his evangelical voice and manner, âyou are a noble creature!
Comments (0)