登陆注册
6139000000026

第26章 CHAPTER X(1)

BEFORE dropping the curtain on my college days I must relate a little adventure which is amusing as an illustration of my reverend friend Napier's enthusiastic spontaneity. My own share in the farce is a subordinate matter.

During the Christmas party at Holkham I had 'fallen in love,' as the phrase goes, with a young lady whose uncle (she had neither father nor mother) had rented a place in the neighbourhood. At the end of his visit he invited me to shoot there the following week. For what else had I paid him assiduous attention, and listened like an angel to the interminable history of his gout? I went; and before I left, proposed to, and was accepted by, the young lady. I was still at Cambridge, not of age, and had but moderate means.

As for the maiden, 'my face is my fortune' she might have said. The aunt, therefore, very properly pooh-poohed the whole affair, and declined to entertain the possibility of an engagement; the elderly gentleman got a bad attack of gout; and every wire of communication being cut, not an obstacle was wanting to render persistence the sweetest of miseries.

Napier was my confessor, and became as keen to circumvent the 'old she-dragon,' so he called her, as I was. Frequent and long were our consultations, but they generally ended in suggestions and schemes so preposterous, that the only result was an immoderate fit of laughter on both sides. At length it came to this (the proposition was not mine): we were to hire a post chaise and drive to the inn at G-. I was to write a note to the young lady requesting her to meet me at some trysting place. The note was to state that a clergyman would accompany me, who was ready and willing to unite us there and then in holy matrimony; that I would bring the licence in my pocket; that after the marriage we could confer as to ways and means; and that - she could leave the REST to me.

No enterprise was ever more merrily conceived, or more seriously undertaken. (Please to remember that my friend was not so very much older than I; and, in other respects, was quite as juvenile.)

Whatever was to come of it, the drive was worth the venture.

The number of possible and impossible contingencies provided for kept us occupied by the hour. Furnished with a well-filled luncheon basket, we regaled ourselves and fortified our courage; while our hilarity increased as we neared, or imagined that we neared, the climax. Unanimously we repeated Dr. Johnson's exclamation in a post chaise: 'Life has not many things better than this.'

But where were we? Our watches told us that we had been two hours covering a distance of eleven miles.

'Hi! Hullo! Stop!' shouted Napier. In those days post horses were ridden, not driven; and about all we could see of the post boy was what Mistress Tabitha Bramble saw of Humphrey Clinker. 'Where the dickens have we got to now?'

'Don't know, I'm sure, sir,' says the boy; 'never was in these 'ere parts afore.'

'Why,' shouts the vicar, after a survey of the landscape, 'if I can see a church by daylight, that's Blakeney steeple; and we are only three miles from where we started.'

Sure enough it was so. There was nothing for it but to stop at the nearest house, give the horses a rest and a feed, and make a fresh start, - better informed as to our topography.

It was past four on that summer afternoon when we reached our destination. The plan of campaign was cut and dried. I called for writing materials, and indicted my epistle as agreed upon.

'To whom are you telling her to address the answer?' asked my accomplice. 'We're INCOG. you know. It won't do for either of us to be known.'

'Certainly not,' said I. 'What shall it be? White? Black?

Brown? or Green?'

'Try Browne with an E,' said he. 'The E gives an aristocratic flavour. We can't afford to risk our respectability.'

The note sealed, I rang the bell for the landlord, desired him to send it up to the hall and tell the messenger to wait for an answer.

As our host was leaving the room he turned round, with his hand on the door, and said:

'Beggin' your pardon, Mr. Cook, would you and Mr. Napeer please to take dinner here? I've soom beatiful lamb chops, and you could have a ducklin' and some nice young peas to your second course. The post-boy says the 'osses is pretty nigh done up; but by the time - '

'How did you know our names?' asked my companion.

'Law sir! The post-boy, he told me. But, beggin' your pardon, Mr. Napeer, my daughter, she lives in Holkham willage; and I've heard you preach afore now.'

'Let's have the dinner by all means,' said I.

'If the Bishop sequesters my living,' cried Napier, with solemnity, 'I'll summon the landlord for defamation of character. But time's up. You must make for the boat-house, which is on the other side of the park. I'll go with you to the head of the lake.'

We had not gone far, when we heard the sound of an approaching vehicle. What did we see but an open carriage, with two ladies in it, not a hundred yards behind us.

'The aunt! by all that's - !'

What - I never heard; for, before the sentence was completed, the speaker's long legs were scampering out of sight in the direction of a clump of trees, I following as hard as I could go.

As the carriage drove past, my Friar Lawrence was lying in a ditch, while I was behind an oak. We were near enough to discern the niece, and consequently we feared to be recognised. The situation was neither dignified nor romantic. My friend was sanguine, though big ardour was slightly damped by the ditch water. I doubted the expediency of trying the boat-house, but he urged the risk of her disappointment, which made the attempt imperative.

The padre returned to the inn to dry himself, and, in due course, I rejoined him. He met me with the answer to my note. 'The boat-house,' it declared, 'was out of the question. But so, of course, was the POSSIBILITY of CHANGE.

We must put our trust in PROVIDENCE. Time could make NO difference in OUR case, whatever it might do with OTHERS.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 血浴苍穹

    血浴苍穹

    一口井,可穿越无尽苍穹;一滴血,可逆行万古。众生觉醒,万族争锋,群圣制霸,乱动寰宇。白痴纪凌,一朝觉醒,从此踩天骄,踏万兽,登临绝巅,浴血苍穹!感谢腾讯文学书评团提供书评支持!
  • 召王令

    召王令

    “召王令出,国玺立现!”大夏皇帝自杀前留下这么一句话。自此,天下纷争不断,只为手握传国玉玺,登上九五之尊。手握召王令的夏晚华表示,这是她的保命符,要藏好!可是有一天,某人发现这召王令不是那么回事!原来这皇帝也会开玩笑啊!还是不小的玩笑。【文慢热,可以先收藏攒着】
  • 典当风云

    典当风云

    长官生死簿的美女判官为何沦为当铺老板。当铺背后又是怎样的风云涌起,算计,背叛,深爱我的你是否永远在我身边。在外霸气在内娇憨美艳判官~醋王霸道口是心非傲娇男主臭脸阎王阎王大人我被罚这些天想我了吗。没有。阎王大人今天想我了吗。没有。阎王大人。。。。没有。哦我只是告诉你洛云说他要娶我了。本王想你了,到了本王的心里,你就逃不掉了。
  • 太极重生

    太极重生

    顺应天命者,悲。抗逆天命者,死。命运真的不可抗拒吗?不!在西天大陆上,只要你有足够的实力,命运算什么?金钱算什么?精灵算什么?帝国算什么?只要你有足够的实力,一切都会拜倒在你的脚下……
  • 总裁宠妻

    总裁宠妻

    他婚期将至,她心如刀割。“幕,你爱我吗?”“你也配谈爱?做好你该做的就好,其他的与你无关”他搂着怀里的未婚妻轻声安慰,给了她一个响亮的巴掌。”颜素,你真幼稚,破坏了雪儿的礼服你以为你会得到什么?只会让我更加厌恶你。”看着他们相拥离去,她的委屈只能吞进肚子里。她性命垂危,他举行盛世订婚典礼。静谧的夜空传来了爆炸声,他的心被狠狠撕裂。直到几年后一个与她长得一摸一样的女人与她擦肩而过,他的目光定格在她手里牵着的一只导盲犬.......【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 我的老婆大人是特工

    我的老婆大人是特工

    听说老婆大人升职加薪当领导!作为丈夫自然不能落后……背着我执行任务偷偷结交新朋友,让我在家当奶爸简直就是有违人性……〔节操还是那个节操故事还是那个故事〕
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 太子妃是憨憨

    太子妃是憨憨

    六岁的阿瑶从没想过会在无望崖边救了两个中原人,更没有想到南初,蛊越,漠炽的平静会渐行渐远。她是南初国的九公主,姨母是蛊越的女王,她也从未想过会与中原的某位皇子扯上关系……她喜欢红色的衣裳,心中只有草原骏马,阿爹姨母,还想着和小时候的青梅竹马沈蔚然度过余生……时光流转,当年的落难少年,那两个打昏她的颍朝皇子却又在九年之后喧宾夺主般闯进了她的世界,若不是顾颍川教她,她都不曾知道金银花在中原叫做忍冬,正红色的衣裳是中原的正妻才能穿,不晓得什么女则女训。她只知道她好像喜欢上中原的顾颍川了,这个笑容灿烂,满眼星光的少年。可一切终究如昙花一现,沉迷,阴谋,国破,迫嫁……这所有的伤痛也都来自同一个国家,颍朝。
  • 农门香妻

    农门香妻

    云小酒被自家猫主子坑到了异世。猫主子:完不成任务你就别想回去了!虾米?原主又黑又壮,婆家不待见,夫君冷无情,居然都是她要攻略的对象?!直至某天,腹黑冷漠无情的某男一把抱住她:夫人快来,为夫替你暖炕头!云小酒黑线,夫君,你人设崩了!
  • 惧离殇

    惧离殇

    孤风仙侠道,缘花漫街飘。前路似荟翳,投情亦倾心。山巅持剑立,雪歌身边伴。惧离终多离,真情铸雪殇。