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Jane eyre

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  1. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    "Oh, of course! You have seen my daughters?"
    "Yes."
    "Well, you may tell them I wish you to stay till I can talk some
    things over with you I have on my mind: to-night it is too late,
    and I have a difficulty in recalling them. But there was something
    I wished to say--let me see--"
    The wandering look and changed utterance told what wreck had taken
    place in her once vigorous frame. Turning restlessly, she drew the
    bedclothes round her; my elbow, resting on a corner of the quilt,
    fixed it down: she was at once irritated.
    "Sit up!" said she; "don't annoy me with holding the clothes fast.
    Are you Jane Eyre?"
    "I am Jane Eyre."
    "I have had more trouble with that child than any one would believe.
    Such a burden to be left on my hands--and so much annoyance as she
    caused me, daily and hourly, with her incomprehensible disposition,
    and her sudden starts of temper, and her continual, unnatural
    watchings of one's movements! I declare she talked to me once like
    something mad, or like a fiend--no child ever spoke or looked as she
    did; I was glad to get her away from the house. What did they do
    with her at Lowood? The fever broke out there, and many of the
    pupils died. She, however, did not die: but I said she did--I wish
    she had died!"
    "A strange wish, Mrs. Reed; why do you hate her so?"
    "I had a dislike to her mother always; for she was my husband's only
    sister, and a great favourite with him: he opposed the family's
    disowning her when she made her low marriage; and when news came of
    her death, he wept like a simpleton. He would send for the baby;
    though I entreated him rather to put it out to nurse and pay for its
    maintenance. I hated it the first time I set my eyes on it--a
    sickly, whining, pining thing! It would wail in its cradle all
    night long--not screaming heartily like any other child, but
    whimpering and moaning. Reed pitied it; and he used to nurse it and
    notice it as if it had been his own: more, indeed, than he ever
    noticed his own at that age. He would try to make my children
    friendly to the little beggar: the darlings could not bear it, and
    he was angry with them when they showed their dislike. In his last
    illness, he had it brought continually to his bedside; and but an
    hour before he died, he bound me by vow to keep the creature. I
    would as soon have been charged with a pauper brat out of a
    workhouse: but he was weak, naturally weak. John does not at all
    resemble his father, and I am glad of it: John is like me and like
    my brothers--he is quite a Gibson. Oh, I wish he would cease
    tormenting me with letters for money? I have no more money to give
    him: we are getting poor. I must send away half the servants and
    shut up part of the house; or let it off. I can never submit to do
    that--yet how are we to get on? Two-thirds of my income goes in
    paying the interest of mortgages. John gambles dreadfully, and
    always loses--poor boy! He is beset by sharpers: John is sunk and
    degraded--his look is frightful--I feel ashamed for him when I see
    him."
    She was getting much excited. "I think I had better leave her now,"
    said I to Bessie, who stood on the other side of the bed.
    "Perhaps you had, Miss: but she often talks in this way towards
    night--in the morning she is calmer."
    I rose. "Stop!" exclaimed Mrs. Reed, "there is another thing I
    wished to say. He threatens me--he continually threatens me with
    his own death, or mine: and I dream sometimes that I see him laid
    out with a great wound in his throat, or with a swollen and
    blackened face. I am come to a strange pass: I have heavy
    troubles. What is to be done? How is the money to be had?"
    Bessie now endeavoured to persuade her to take a sedative draught:
    she succeeded with difficulty. Soon after, Mrs. Reed grew more
    composed, and sank into a dozing state. I then left her.
    More than ten days elapsed before I had again any conversation with
    her. She continued either delirious or lethargic; and the doctor
    forbade everything which could painfully excite her. Meantime, I
    got on as well as I could with Georgiana and Eliza. They were very
    cold, indeed, at first. Eliza would sit half the day sewing,
    reading, or writing, and scarcely utter a word either to me or her
    sister. Georgiana would chatter nonsense to her canary bird by the
    hour, and take no notice of me. But I was determined not to seem at
    a loss for occupation or amusement: I had brought my drawing
    materials with me, and they served me for both.
    Provided with a case of pencils, and some sheets of paper, I used to
    take a seat apart from them, near the window, and busy myself in
    sketching fancy vignettes, representing any scene that happened
    momentarily to shape itself in the ever-shifting kaleidoscope of
    imagination: a glimpse of sea between two rocks; the rising moon,
    and a ship crossing its disk; a group of reeds and water-flags, and
    a naiad's head, crowned with lotus-flowers, rising out of them; an
    elf sitting in a hedge-sparrow's nest, under a wreath of hawthorn-
    bloom
    One morning I fell to sketching a face: what sort of a face it was
    to be, I did not care or know. I took a soft black pencil, gave it
    a broad point, and worked away. Soon I had traced on the paper a
    broad and prominent forehead and a square lower outline of visage:
    that contour gave me pleasure; my fingers proceeded actively to fill
    it with features. Strongly-marked horizontal eyebrows must be
    traced under that brow; then followed, naturally, a well-defined
    nose, with a straight ridge and full nostrils; then a flexible-
    looking mouth, by no means narrow; then a firm chin, with a decided
    cleft down the middle of it: of course, some black whiskers were
    wanted, and some jetty hair, tufted on the temples, and waved above
    the forehead. Now for the eyes: I had left them to the last,
    because they required the most careful working. I drew them large;
    I shaped them well: the eyelashes I traced long and sombre; the
    irids lustrous and large. "Good! but not quite the thing," I
    thought, as I surveyed the effect: "they want more force and
    spirit;" and I wrought the shades blacker, that the lights might
    flash more brilliantly--a happy touch or two secured success.
    There, I had a friend's face under my gaze; and what did it signify
    that those young ladies turned their backs on me? I looked at it; I
    smiled at the speaking likeness: I was absorbed and content.
    "Is that a portrait of some one you know?" asked Eliza, who had
    approached me unnoticed. I responded that it was merely a fancy
    head, and hurried it beneath the other sheets. Of course, I lied:
    it was, in fact, a very faithful representation of Mr. Rochester.
    But what was that to her, or to any one but myself? Georgiana also
    advanced to look. The other drawings pleased her much, but she
    called that "an ugly man." They both seemed surprised at my skill.
    I offered to sketch their portraits; and each, in turn, sat for a
    pencil outline. Then Georgiana produced her album. I promised to
    contribute a water-colour drawing: this put her at once into good
    humour. She proposed a walk in the grounds. Before we had been out
    two hours, we were deep in a confidential conversation: she had
    favoured me with a description of the brilliant winter she had spent
    in London two seasons ago--of the admiration she had there excited--
    the attention she had received; and I even got hints of the titled
    conquest she had made. In the course of the afternoon and evening
    these hints were enlarged on: various soft conversations were
    reported, and sentimental scenes represented; and, in short, a
    volume of a novel of fashionable life was that day improvised by her
    for my benefit. The communications were renewed from day to day:
    they always ran on the same theme--herself, her loves, and woes. It
    was strange she never once adverted either to her mother's illness,
    or her brother's death, or the present gloomy state of the family
    prospects. Her mind seemed wholly taken up with reminiscences of
    past gaiety, and aspirations after dissipations to come. She passed
    about five minutes each day in her mother's sick-room, and no more.
    Eliza still spoke little: she had evidently no time to talk. I
    never saw a busier person than she seemed to be; yet it was
    difficult to say what she did: or rather, to discover any result of
    her diligence. She had an alarm to call her up early. I know not
    how she occupied herself before breakfast, but after that meal she
    divided her time into regular portions, and each hour had its
    allotted task. Three times a day she studied a little book, which I
    found, on inspection, was a Common Prayer Book. I asked her once
    what was the great attraction of that volume, and she said, "the
    Rubric." Three hours she gave to stitching, with gold thread, the
    border of a square crimson cloth, almost large enough for a carpet.
    In answer to my inquiries after the use of this article, she
    informed me it was a covering for the altar of a new church lately
    erected near Gateshead. Two hours she devoted to her diary; two to
    working by herself in the kitchen-garden; and one to the regulation
    of her accounts. She seemed to want no company; no conversation. I
    believe she was happy in her way: this routine sufficed for her;
    and nothing annoyed her so much as the occurrence of any incident
    which forced her to vary its clockwork regularity.
    She told me one evening, when more disposed to be communicative than
    usual, that John's conduct, and the threatened ruin of the family,
    had been a source of profound affliction to her: but she had now,
    she said, settled her mind, and formed her resolution. Her own
    fortune she had taken care to secure; and when her mother died--and
    it was wholly improbable, she tranquilly remarked, that she should
    either recover or linger long--she would execute a long-cherished
    project: seek a retirement where punctual habits would be
    permanently secured from disturbance, and place safe barriers
    between herself and a frivolous world. I asked if Georgiana would
    accompany her.
    "Of course not. Georgiana and she had nothing in common: they
    never had had. She would not be burdened with her society for any
    consideration. Georgiana should take her own course; and she,
    Eliza, would take hers."
    Georgiana, when not unburdening her heart to me, spent most of her
    time in lying on the sofa, fretting about the dulness of the house,
    and wishing over and over again that her aunt Gibson would send her
    an invitation up to town. "It would be so much better," she said,
    "if she could only get out of the way for a month or two, till all
    was over." I did not ask what she meant by "all being over," but I
    suppose she referred to the expected decease of her mother and the
    gloomy sequel of funeral rites. Eliza generally took no more notice
    of her sister's indolence and complaints than if no such murmuring,
    lounging object had been before her. One day, however, as she put
    away her account-book and unfolded her embroidery, she suddenly took
    her up thus -
    Gió nhớ gì ngẩn ngơ ngoài hiên
    Mưa nhớ gì thì thầm ngoài hiên
  2. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    "Georgiana, a more vain and absurd animal than you was certainly
    never allowed to cumber the earth. You had no right to be born, for
    you make no use of life. Instead of living for, in, and with
    yourself, as a reasonable being ought, you seek only to fasten your
    feebleness on some other person's strength: if no one can be found
    willing to burden her or himself with such a fat, weak, puffy,
    useless thing, you cry out that you are ill-treated, neglected,
    miserable. Then, too, existence for you must be a scene of
    continual change and excitement, or else the world is a dungeon:
    you must be admired, you must be courted, you must be flattered--you
    must have music, dancing, and society--or you languish, you die
    away. Have you no sense to devise a system which will make you
    independent of all efforts, and all wills, but your own? Take one
    day; share it into sections; to each section apportion its task:
    leave no stray unemployed quarters of an hour, ten minutes, five
    minutes--include all; do each piece of business in its turn with
    method, with rigid regularity. The day will close almost before you
    are aware it has begun; and you are indebted to no one for helping
    you to get rid of one vacant moment: you have had to seek no one's
    company, conversation, sympathy, forbearance; you have lived, in
    short, as an independent being ought to do. Take this advice: the
    first and last I shall offer you; then you will not want me or any
    one else, happen what may. Neglect it--go on as heretofore,
    craving, whining, and idling--and suffer the results of your idiocy,
    however bad and insuperable they may be. I tell you this plainly;
    and listen: for though I shall no more repeat what I am now about
    to say, I shall steadily act on it. After my mother's death, I wash
    my hands of you: from the day her coffin is carried to the vault in
    Gateshead Church, you and I will be as separate as if we had never
    known each other. You need not think that because we chanced to be
    born of the same parents, I shall suffer you to fasten me down by
    even the feeblest claim: I can tell you this--if the whole human
    race, ourselves excepted, were swept away, and we two stood alone on
    the earth, I would leave you in the old world, and betake myself to
    the new."
    She closed her lips.
    "You might have spared yourself the trouble of delivering that
    tirade," answered Georgiana. "Everybody knows you are the most
    selfish, heartless creature in existence: and I know your spiteful
    hatred towards me: I have had a specimen of it before in the trick
    you played me about Lord Edwin Vere: you could not bear me to be
    raised above you, to have a title, to be received into circles where
    you dare not show your face, and so you acted the spy and informer,
    and ruined my prospects for ever." Georgiana took out her
    handkerchief and blew her nose for an hour afterwards; Eliza sat
    cold, impassable, and assiduously industrious.
    True, generous feeling is made small account of by some, but here
    were two natures rendered, the one intolerably acrid, the other
    despicably savourless for the want of it. Feeling without judgment
    is a washy draught indeed; but judgment untempered by feeling is too
    bitter and husky a morsel for human deglutition.
    It was a wet and windy afternoon: Georgiana had fallen asleep on
    the sofa over the perusal of a novel; Eliza was gone to attend a
    saint's-day service at the new church--for in matters of religion
    she was a rigid formalist: no weather ever prevented the punctual
    discharge of what she considered her devotional duties; fair or
    foul, she went to church thrice every Sunday, and as often on week-
    days as there were prayers.
    I bethought myself to go upstairs and see how the dying woman sped,
    who lay there almost unheeded: the very servants paid her but a
    remittent attention: the hired nurse, being little looked after,
    would slip out of the room whenever she could. Bessie was faithful;
    but she had her own family to mind, and could only come occasionally
    to the hall. I found the sick-room unwatched, as I had expected:
    no nurse was there; the patient lay still, and seemingly lethargic;
    her livid face sunk in the pillows: the fire was dying in the
    grate. I renewed the fuel, re-arranged the bedclothes, gazed awhile
    on her who could not now gaze on me, and then I moved away to the
    window.
    The rain beat strongly against the panes, the wind blew
    tempestuously: "One lies there," I thought, "who will soon be
    beyond the war of earthly elements. Whither will that spirit--now
    struggling to quit its material tenement--flit when at length
    released?"
    In pondering the great mystery, I thought of Helen Burns, recalled
    her dying words--her faith--her doctrine of the equality of
    disembodied souls. I was still listening in thought to her well-
    remembered tones--still picturing her pale and spiritual aspect, her
    wasted face and sublime gaze, as she lay on her placid deathbed, and
    whispered her longing to be restored to her divine Father's bosom--
    when a feeble voice murmured from the couch behind: "Who is that?"
    I knew Mrs. Reed had not spoken for days: was she reviving? I went
    up to her.
    "It is I, Aunt Reed."
    "Who--I?" was her answer. "Who are you?" looking at me with
    surprise and a sort of alarm, but still not wildly. "You are quite
    a stranger to me--where is Bessie?"
    "She is at the lodge, aunt."
    "Aunt," she repeated. "Who calls me aunt? You are not one of the
    Gibsons; and yet I know you--that face, and the eyes and forehead,
    are quiet familiar to me: you are like--why, you are like Jane
    Eyre!"
    I said nothing: I was afraid of occasioning some shock by declaring
    my identity.
    "Yet," said she, "I am afraid it is a mistake: my thoughts deceive
    me. I wished to see Jane Eyre, and I fancy a likeness where none
    exists: besides, in eight years she must be so changed." I now
    gently assured her that I was the person she supposed and desired me
    to be: and seeing that I was understood, and that her senses were
    quite collected, I explained how Bessie had sent her husband to
    fetch me from Thornfield.
    "I am very ill, I know," she said ere long. "I was trying to turn
    myself a few minutes since, and find I cannot move a limb. It is as
    well I should ease my mind before I die: what we think little of in
    health, burdens us at such an hour as the present is to me. Is the
    nurse here? or is there no one in the room but you?"
    I assured her we were alone.
    "Well, I have twice done you a wrong which I regret now. One was in
    breaking the promise which I gave my husband to bring you up as my
    own child; the other--" she stopped. "After all, it is of no great
    importance, perhaps," she murmured to herself: "and then I may get
    better; and to humble myself so to her is painful."
    She made an effort to alter her position, but failed: her face
    changed; she seemed to experience some inward sensation--the
    precursor, perhaps, of the last pang.
    "Well, I must get it over. Eternity is before me: I had better
    tell her.--Go to my dressing-case, open it, and take out a letter
    you will see there."
    I obeyed her directions. "Read the letter," she said.
    It was short, and thus conceived:-
    "Madam,--Will you have the goodness to send me the address of my
    niece, Jane Eyre, and to tell me how she is? It is my intention to
    write shortly and desire her to come to me at Madeira. Providence
    has blessed my endeavours to secure a competency; and as I am
    unmarried and childless, I wish to adopt her during my life, and
    bequeath her at my death whatever I may have to leave.--I am, Madam,
    &c., &c.,
    "JOHN EYRE, Madeira."
    It was dated three years back.
    "Why did I never hear of this?" I asked.
    "Because I disliked you too fixedly and thoroughly ever to lend a
    hand in lifting you to prosperity. I could not forget your conduct
    to me, Jane--the fury with which you once turned on me; the tone in
    which you declared you abhorred me the worst of anybody in the
    world; the unchildlike look and voice with which you affirmed that
    the very thought of me made you sick, and asserted that I had
    treated you with miserable cruelty. I could not forget my own
    sensations when you thus started up and poured out the venom of your
    mind: I felt fear as if an animal that I had struck or pushed had
    looked up at me with human eyes and cursed me in a man's voice.--
    Bring me some water! Oh, make haste!"
    "Dear Mrs. Reed," said I, as I offered her the draught she required,
    "think no more of all this, let it pass away from your mind.
    Forgive me for my passionate language: I was a child then; eight,
    nine years have passed since that day."
    She heeded nothing of what I said; but when she had tasted the water
    and drawn breath, she went on thus -
    "I tell you I could not forget it; and I took my revenge: for you
    to be adopted by your uncle, and placed in a state of ease and
    comfort, was what I could not endure. I wrote to him; I said I was
    sorry for his disappointment, but Jane Eyre was dead: she had died
    of typhus fever at Lowood. Now act as you please: write and
    contradict my assertion--expose my falsehood as soon as you like.
    You were born, I think, to be my torment: my last hour is racked by
    the recollection of a deed which, but for you, I should never have
    been tempted to commit."
    "If you could but be persuaded to think no more of it, aunt, and to
    regard me with kindness and forgiveness"
    "You have a very bad disposition," said she, "and one to this day I
    feel it impossible to understand: how for nine years you could be
    patient and quiescent under any treatment, and in the tenth break
    out all fire and violence, I can never comprehend."
    "My disposition is not so bad as you think: I am passionate, but
    not vindictive. Many a time, as a little child, I should have been
    glad to love you if you would have let me; and I long earnestly to
    be reconciled to you now: kiss me, aunt."
    I approached my cheek to her lips: she would not touch it. She
    said I oppressed her by leaning over the bed, and again demanded
    water. As I laid her down--for I raised her and supported her on my
    arm while she drank--I covered her ice-cold and clammy hand with
    mine: the feeble fingers shrank from my touch--the glazing eyes
    shunned my gaze.
    "Love me, then, or hate me, as you will," I said at last, "you have
    my full and free forgiveness: ask now for God's, and be at peace."
    Poor, suffering woman! it was too late for her to make now the
    effort to change her habitual frame of mind: living, she had ever
    hated me--dying, she must hate me still.
    The nurse now entered, and Bessie followed. I yet lingered half-an-
    hour longer, hoping to see some sign of amity: but she gave none.
    She was fast relapsing into stupor; nor did her mind again rally:
    at twelve o'clock that night she died. I was not present to close
    her eyes, nor were either of her daughters. They came to tell us
    the next morning that all was over. She was by that time laid out.
    Eliza and I went to look at her: Georgiana, who had burst out into
    loud weeping, said she dared not go. There was stretched Sarah
    Reed's once robust and active frame, rigid and still: her eye of
    flint was covered with its cold lid; her brow and strong traits wore
    yet the impress of her inexorable soul. A strange and solemn object
    was that corpse to me. I gazed on it with gloom and pain: nothing
    soft, nothing sweet, nothing pitying, or hopeful, or subduing did it
    inspire; only a grating anguish for HER woes--not MY loss--and a
    sombre tearless dismay at the fearfulness of death in such a form.
    Eliza surveyed her parent calmly. After a silence of some minutes
    she observed -
    "With her constitution she should have lived to a good old age: her
    life was shortened by trouble." And then a spasm constricted her
    mouth for an instant: as it passed away she turned and left the
    room, and so did I. Neither of us had dropt a tear.
    Gió nhớ gì ngẩn ngơ ngoài hiên
    Mưa nhớ gì thì thầm ngoài hiên
  3. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    CHAPTER XXII
    Mr. Rochester had given me but one week's leave of absence: yet a
    month elapsed before I quitted Gateshead. I wished to leave
    immediately after the funeral, but Georgiana entreated me to stay
    till she could get off to London, whither she was now at last
    invited by her uncle, Mr. Gibson, who had come down to direct his
    sister's interment and settle the family affairs. Georgiana said
    she dreaded being left alone with Eliza; from her she got neither
    sympathy in her dejection, support in her fears, nor aid in her
    preparations; so I bore with her feeble-minded wailings and selfish
    lamentations as well as I could, and did my best in sewing for her
    and packing her dresses. It is true, that while I worked, she would
    idle; and I thought to myself, "If you and I were destined to live
    always together, cousin, we would commence matters on a different
    footing. I should not settle tamely down into being the forbearing
    party; I should assign you your share of labour, and compel you to
    accomplish it, or else it should be left undone: I should insist,
    also, on your keeping some of those drawling, half-insincere
    complaints hushed in your own breast. It is only because our
    connection happens to be very transitory, and comes at a peculiarly
    mournful season, that I consent thus to render it so patient and
    compliant on my part."
    At last I saw Georgiana off; but now it was Eliza's turn to request
    me to stay another week. Her plans required all her time and
    attention, she said; she was about to depart for some unknown
    bourne; and all day long she stayed in her own room, her door bolted
    within, filling trunks, emptying drawers, burning papers, and
    holding no communication with any one. She wished me to look after
    the house, to see callers, and answer notes of condolence.
    One morning she told me I was at liberty. "And," she added, "I am
    obliged to you for your valuable services and discreet conduct!
    There is some difference between living with such an one as you and
    with Georgiana: you perform your own part in life and burden no
    one. To-morrow," she continued, "I set out for the Continent. I
    shall take up my abode in a religious house near Lisle--a nunnery
    you would call it; there I shall be quiet and unmolested. I shall
    devote myself for a time to the examination of the Roman Catholic
    dogmas, and to a careful study of the workings of their system: if
    I find it to be, as I half suspect it is, the one best calculated to
    ensure the doing of all things decently and in order, I shall
    embrace the tenets of Rome and probably take the veil."
    I neither expressed surprise at this resolution nor attempted to
    dissuade her from it. "The vocation will fit you to a hair," I
    thought: "much good may it do you!"
    When we parted, she said: "Good-bye, cousin Jane Eyre; I wish you
    well: you have some sense."
    I then returned: "You are not without sense, cousin Eliza; but what
    you have, I suppose, in another year will be walled up alive in a
    French convent. However, it is not my business, and so it suits
    you, I don't much care."
    "You are in the right," said she; and with these words we each went
    our separate way. As I shall not have occasion to refer either to
    her or her sister again, I may as well mention here, that Georgiana
    made an advantageous match with a wealthy worn-out man of fashion,
    and that Eliza actually took the veil, and is at this day superior
    of the convent where she passed the period of her novitiate, and
    which she endowed with her fortune.
    How people feel when they are returning home from an absence, long
    or short, I did not know: I had never experienced the sensation. I
    had known what it was to come back to Gateshead when a child after a
    long walk, to be scolded for looking cold or gloomy; and later, what
    it was to come back from church to Lowood, to long for a plenteous
    meal and a good fire, and to be unable to get either. Neither of
    these returnings was very pleasant or desirable: no magnet drew me
    to a given point, increasing in its strength of attraction the
    nearer I came. The return to Thornfield was yet to be tried.
    My journey seemed tedious--very tedious: fifty miles one day, a
    night spent at an inn; fifty miles the next day. During the first
    twelve hours I thought of Mrs. Reed in her last moments; I saw her
    disfigured and discoloured face, and heard her strangely altered
    voice. I mused on the funeral day, the coffin, the hearse, the
    black train of tenants and servants--few was the number of
    relatives--the gaping vault, the silent church, the solemn service.
    Then I thought of Eliza and Georgiana; I beheld one the cynosure of
    a ball-room, the other the inmate of a convent cell; and I dwelt on
    and analysed their separate peculiarities of person and character.
    The evening arrival at the great town of--scattered these thoughts;
    night gave them quite another turn: laid down on my traveller's
    bed, I left reminiscence for anticipation.
    I was going back to Thornfield: but how long was I to stay there?
    Not long; of that I was sure. I had heard from Mrs. Fairfax in the
    interim of my absence: the party at the hall was dispersed; Mr.
    Rochester had left for London three weeks ago, but he was then
    expected to return in a fortnight. Mrs. Fairfax surmised that he
    was gone to make arrangements for his wedding, as he had talked of
    purchasing a new carriage: she said the idea of his marrying Miss
    Ingram still seemed strange to her; but from what everybody said,
    and from what she had herself seen, she could no longer doubt that
    the event would shortly take place. "You would be strangely
    incredulous if you did doubt it," was my mental comment. "I don't
    doubt it."
    The question followed, "Where was I to go?" I dreamt of Miss Ingram
    all the night: in a vivid morning dream I saw her closing the gates
    of Thornfield against me and pointing me out another road; and Mr.
    Rochester looked on with his arms folded--smiling sardonically, as
    it seemed, at both her and me.
    I had not notified to Mrs. Fairfax the exact day of my return; for I
    did not wish either car or carriage to meet me at Millcote. I
    proposed to walk the distance quietly by myself; and very quietly,
    after leaving my box in the ostler's care, did I slip away from the
    George Inn, about six o'clock of a June evening, and take the old
    road to Thornfield: a road which lay chiefly through fields, and
    was now little frequented.
    It was not a bright or splendid summer evening, though fair and
    soft: the haymakers were at work all along the road; and the sky,
    though far from cloudless, was such as promised well for the future:
    its blue--where blue was visible--was mild and settled, and its
    cloud strata high and thin. The west, too, was warm: no watery
    gleam chilled it--it seemed as if there was a fire lit, an altar
    burning behind its screen of marbled vapour, and out of apertures
    shone a golden redness.
    I felt glad as the road shortened before me: so glad that I stopped
    once to ask myself what that joy meant: and to remind reason that
    it was not to my home I was going, or to a permanent resting-place,
    or to a place where fond friends looked out for me and waited my
    arrival. "Mrs. Fairfax will smile you a calm welcome, to be sure,"
    said I; "and little Adele will clap her hands and jump to see you:
    but you know very well you are thinking of another than they, and
    that he is not thinking of you."
    But what is so headstrong as youth? What so blind as inexperience?
    These affirmed that it was pleasure enough to have the privilege of
    again looking on Mr. Rochester, whether he looked on me or not; and
    they added--"Hasten! hasten! be with him while you may: but a few
    more days or weeks, at most, and you are parted from him for ever!"
    And then I strangled a new-born agony--a deformed thing which I
    could not persuade myself to own and rear--and ran on.
    They are making hay, too, in Thornfield meadows: or rather, the
    labourers are just quitting their work, and returning home with
    their rakes on their shoulders, now, at the hour I arrive. I have
    but a field or two to traverse, and then I shall cross the road and
    reach the gates. How full the hedges are of roses! But I have no
    time to gather any; I want to be at the house. I passed a tall
    briar, shooting leafy and flowery branches across the path; I see
    the narrow stile with stone steps; and I see--Mr. Rochester sitting
    there, a book and a pencil in his hand; he is writing.
    Well, he is not a ghost; yet every nerve I have is unstrung: for a
    moment I am beyond my own mastery. What does it mean? I did not
    think I should tremble in this way when I saw him, or lose my voice
    or the power of motion in his presence. I will go back as soon as I
    can stir: I need not make an absolute fool of myself. I know
    another way to the house. It does not signify if I knew twenty
    ways; for he has seen me.
    "Hillo!" he cries; and he puts up his book and his pencil. "There
    you are! Come on, if you please."
    I suppose I do come on; though in what fashion I know not; being
    scarcely cognisant of my movements, and solicitous only to appear
    calm; and, above all, to control the working muscles of my face--
    which I feel rebel insolently against my will, and struggle to
    express what I had resolved to conceal. But I have a veil--it is
    down: I may make shift yet to behave with decent composure.
    "And this is Jane Eyre? Are you coming from Millcote, and on foot?
    Yes--just one of your tricks: not to send for a carriage, and come
    clattering over street and road like a common mortal, but to steal
    into the vicinage of your home along with twilight, just as if you
    were a dream or a shade. What the deuce have you done with yourself
    this last month?"
    "I have been with my aunt, sir, who is dead."
    "A true Janian reply! Good angels be my guard! She comes from the
    other world--from the abode of people who are dead; and tells me so
    when she meets me alone here in the gloaming! If I dared, I'd touch
    you, to see if you are substance or shadow, you elf!--but I'd as
    soon offer to take hold of a blue ignis fatuus light in a marsh.
    Truant! truant!" he added, when he had paused an instant. "Absent
    from me a whole month, and forgetting me quite, I'll be sworn!"
    I knew there would be pleasure in meeting my master again, even
    though broken by the fear that he was so soon to cease to be my
    master, and by the knowledge that I was nothing to him: but there
    was ever in Mr. Rochester (so at least I thought) such a wealth of
    the power of communicating happiness, that to taste but of the
    crumbs he scattered to stray and stranger birds like me, was to
    feast genially. His last words were balm: they seemed to imply
    that it imported something to him whether I forgot him or not. And
    he had spoken of Thornfield as my home--would that it were my home!
    He did not leave the stile, and I hardly liked to ask to go by. I
    inquired soon if he had not been to London.
    "Yes; I suppose you found that out by second-sight."
    "Mrs. Fairfax told me in a letter."
    "And did she inform you what I went to do?"
    "Oh, yes, sir! Everybody knew your errand."
    "You must see the carriage, Jane, and tell me if you don't think it
    will suit Mrs. Rochester exactly; and whether she won't look like
    Queen Boadicea, leaning back against those purple cushions. I wish,
    Jane, I were a trifle better adapted to match with her externally.
    Tell me now, fairy as you are--can't you give me a charm, or a
    philter, or something of that sort, to make me a handsome man?"
    "It would be past the power of magic, sir;" and, in thought, I
    added, "A loving eye is all the charm needed: *****ch you are
    handsome enough; or rather your sternness has a power beyond
    beauty."
    Mr. Rochester had sometimes read my unspoken thoughts with an acumen
    to me incomprehensible: in the present instance he took no notice
    of my abrupt vocal response; but he smiled at me with a certain
    smile he had of his own, and which he used but on rare occasions.
    He seemed to think it too good for common purposes: it was the real
    sunshine of feeling--he shed it over me now.
    "Pass, Janet," said he, making room for me to cross the stile: "go
    up home, and stay your weary little wandering feet at a friend's
    threshold."
    All I had now to do was to obey him in silence: no need for me to
    colloquise further. I got over the stile without a word, and meant
    to leave him calmly. An impulse held me fast--a force turned me
    round. I said--or something in me said for me, and in spite of me -
    "Thank you, Mr. Rochester, for your great kindness. I am strangely
    glad to get back again to you: and wherever you are is my home--my
    only home."
    I walked on so fast that even he could hardly have overtaken me had
    he tried. Little Adele was half wild with delight when she saw me.
    Mrs. Fairfax received me with her usual plain friendliness. Leah
    smiled, and even Sophie bid me "bon soir" with glee. This was very
    pleasant; there is no happiness like that of being loved by your
    fellow-creatures, and feeling that your presence is an ad***ion to
    their comfort.
    I that evening shut my eyes resolutely against the future: I
    stopped my cars against the voice that kept warning me of near
    separation and coming grief. When tea was over and Mrs. Fairfax had
    taken her knitting, and I had assumed a low seat near her, and
    Adele, kneeling on the carpet, had nestled close up to me, and a
    sense of mutual affection seemed *****rround us with a ring of
    golden peace, I uttered a silent prayer that we might not be parted
    far or soon; but when, as we thus sat, Mr. Rochester entered,
    unannounced, and looking at us, seemed to take pleasure in the
    spectacle of a group so amicable--when he said he supposed the old
    lady was all right now that she had got her adopted daughter back
    again, and added that he saw Adele was "prete e croquer sa petite
    maman Anglaise"--I half ventured to hope that he would, even after
    his marriage, keep us together somewhere under the shelter of his
    protection, and not quite exiled from the sunshine of his presence.
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  4. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    A fortnight of dubious calm succeeded my return to Thornfield Hall.
    Nothing was said of the master's marriage, and I saw no preparation
    going on for such an event. Almost every day I asked Mrs. Fairfax
    if she had yet heard anything decided: her answer was always in the
    negative. Once she said she had actually put the question to Mr.
    Rochester as to when he was going to bring his bride home; but he
    had answered her only by a joke and one of his queer looks, and she
    could not tell what to make of him.
    One thing specially surprised me, and that was, there were no
    journeyings backward and forward, no visits to Ingram Park: to be
    sure it was twenty miles off, on the borders of another county; but
    what was that distance to an ardent lover? To so practised and
    indefatigable a horseman as Mr. Rochester, it would be but a
    morning's ride. I began to cherish hopes I had no right to
    conceive: that the match was broken off; that rumour had been
    mistaken; that one or both parties had changed their minds. I used
    to look at my master's face to see if it were sad or fierce; but I
    could not remember the time when it had been so uniformly clear of
    clouds or evil feelings. If, in the moments I and my pupil spent
    with him, I lacked spirits and sank into inevitable dejection, he
    became even gay. Never had he called me more frequently to his
    presence; never been kinder to me when there--and, alas! never had I
    loved him so well.
    CHAPTER XXIII
    A splendid Midsummer shone over England: skies so pure, suns so
    radiant as were then seen in long succession, seldom favour even
    singly, our wave-girt land. It was as if a band of Italian days had
    come from the South, like a flock of glorious passenger birds, and
    lighted to rest them on the cliffs of Albion. The hay was all got
    in; the fields round Thornfield were green and shorn; the roads
    white and baked; the trees were in their dark prime; hedge and wood,
    full-leaved and deeply tinted, contrasted well with the sunny hue of
    the cleared meadows between.
    On Midsummer-eve, Adele, weary with gathering wild strawberries in
    Hay Lane half the day, had gone to bed with the sun. I watched her
    drop asleep, and when I left her, I sought the garden.
    It was now the sweetest hour of the twenty-four:- "Day its fervid
    fires had wasted," and dew fell cool on panting plain and scorched
    summit. Where the sun had gone down in simple state--pure of the
    pomp of clouds--spread a solemn purple, burning with the light of
    red jewel and furnace flame at one point, on one hill-peak, and
    extending high and wide, soft and still softer, over half heaven.
    The east had its own charm or fine deep blue, and its own modest
    gem, a casino and solitary star: soon it would boast the moon; but
    she was yet beneath the horizon.
    I walked a while on the pavement; but a subtle, well-known scent--
    that of a cigar--stole from some window; I saw the library casement
    open a handbreadth; I knew I might be watched thence; so I went
    apart into the orchard. No nook in the grounds more sheltered and
    more Eden-like; it was full of trees, it bloomed with flowers: a
    very high wall shut it out from the court, on one side; on the
    other, a beech avenue screened it from the lawn. At the bottom was
    a sunk fence; its sole separation from lonely fields: a winding
    walk, bordered with laurels and terminating in a giant horse-
    chestnut, circled at the base by a seat, led down to the fence.
    Here one could wander unseen. While such honey-dew fell, such
    silence reigned, such gloaming gathered, I felt as if I could haunt
    such shade for ever; but in threading the flower and fruit parterres
    at the upper part of the enclosure, enticed there by the light the
    now rising moon cast on this more open quarter, my step is stayed--
    not by sound, not by sight, but once more by a warning fragrance.
    Sweet-briar and southernwood, jasmine, pink, and rose have long been
    yielding their evening sacrifice of incense: this new scent is
    neither of shrub nor flower; it is--I know it well--it is Mr.
    Rochester's cigar. I look round and I listen. I see trees laden
    with ripening fruit. I hear a nightingale warbling in a wood half a
    mile off; no moving form is visible, no coming step audible; but
    that perfume increases: I must flee. I make for the wicket leading
    to the shrubbery, and I see Mr. Rochester entering. I step aside
    into the ivy recess; he will not stay long: he will soon return
    whence he came, and if I sit still he will never see me.
    But no--eventide is as pleasant to him as to me, and this antique
    garden as attractive; and he strolls on, now lifting the gooseberry-
    tree branches to look at the fruit, large as plums, with which they
    are laden; now taking a ripe cherry from the wall; now stooping
    towards a knot of flowers, either to inhale their fragrance or to
    admire the dew-beads on their petals. A great moth goes humming by
    me; it alights on a plant at Mr. Rochester's foot: he sees it, and
    bends to examine it.
    "Now, he has his back towards me," thought I, "and he is occupied
    too; perhaps, if I walk softly, I can slip away unnoticed."
    I trode on an edging of turf that the crackle of the pebbly gravel
    might not betray me: he was standing among the beds at a yard or
    two distant from where I had to pass; the moth apparently engaged
    him. "I shall get by very well," I me***ated. As I crossed his
    shadow, thrown long over the garden by the moon, not yet risen high,
    he said quietly, without turning -
    "Jane, come and look at this fellow."
    I had made no noise: he had not eyes behind--could his shadow feel?
    I started at first, and then I approached him.
    "Look at his wings," said he, "he reminds me rather of a West Indian
    insect; one does not often see so large and gay a night-rover in
    England; there! he is flown."
    The moth roamed away. I was sheepishly retreating also; but Mr.
    Rochester followed me, and when we reached the wicket, he said -
    "Turn back: on so lovely a night it is a shame to sit in the house;
    and surely no one can wish to go to bed while sunset is thus at
    meeting with moonrise."
    It is one of my faults, that though my tongue is sometimes prompt
    enough at an answer, there are times when it sadly fails me in
    framing an excuse; and always the lapse occurs at some crisis, when
    a facile word or plausible pretext is specially wanted to get me out
    of painful embarrassment. I did not like to walk at this hour alone
    with Mr. Rochester in the shadowy orchard; but I could not find a
    reason to allege for leaving him. I followed with lagging step, and
    thoughts busily bent on discovering a means of extrication; but he
    himself looked so composed and so grave also, I became ashamed of
    feeling any confusion: the evil--if evil existent or prospective
    there was--seemed to lie with me only; his mind was unconscious and
    quiet.
    "Jane," he recommenced, as we entered the laurel walk, and slowly
    strayed down in the direction of the sunk fence and the horse-
    chestnut, "Thornfield is a pleasant place in summer, is it not?"
    "Yes, sir."
    "You must have become in some degree attached to the house,--you,
    who have an eye for natural beauties, and a good deal of the organ
    of Adhesiveness?"
    "I am attached to it, indeed."
    "And though I don't comprehend how it is, I perceive you have
    acquired a degree of regard for that foolish little child Adele,
    too; and even for simple dame Fairfax?"
    "Yes, sir; in different ways, I have an affection for both."
    "And would be sorry to part with them?"
    "Yes."
    "Pity!" he said, and sighed and paused. "It is always the way of
    events in this life," he continued presently: "no sooner have you
    got settled in a pleasant resting-place, than a voice calls out to
    you to rise and move on, for the hour of repose is expired."
    "Must I move on, sir?" I asked. "Must I leave Thornfield?"
    "I believe you must, Jane. I am sorry, Janet, but I believe indeed
    you must."
    This was a blow: but I did not let it prostrate me.
    "Well, sir, I shall be ready when the order to march comes."
    "It is come now--I must give it to-night."
    "Then you ARE going to be married, sir?"
    "Ex-act-ly--pre-cise-ly: with your usual acuteness, you have hit
    the nail straight on the head."
    "Soon, sir?"
    "Very soon, my--that is, Miss Eyre: and you'll remember, Jane, the
    first time I, or Rumour, plainly intimated to you that it was my
    intention to put my old bachelor's neck into the sacred noose, to
    enter into the holy estate of matrimony--to take Miss Ingram to my
    bosom, in short (she's an extensive armful: but that's not to the
    point--one can't have too much of such a very excellent thing as my
    beautiful Blanche): well, as I was saying--listen to me, Jane!
    You're not turning your head to look after more moths, are you?
    That was only a lady-clock, child, 'flying away home.' I wish to
    remind you that it was you who first said to me, with that
    discretion I respect in you--with that foresight, prudence, and
    humility which befit your responsible and dependent position--that
    in case I married Miss Ingram, both you and little Adele had better
    trot forthwith. I pass over the sort of slur conveyed in this
    suggestion on the character of my beloved; indeed, when you are far
    away, Janet, I'll try to forget it: I shall notice only its wisdom;
    which is such that I have made it my law of action. Adele must go
    to school; and you, Miss Eyre, must get a new situation."
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  5. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
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    "Yes, sir, I will advertise immediately: and meantime, I suppose--"
    I was going to say, "I suppose I may stay here, till I find another
    shelter to betake myself to:" but I stopped, feeling it would not do
    to risk a long sentence, for my voice was not quite under command.
    "In about a month I hope to be a bridegroom," continued Mr.
    Rochester; "and in the interim, I shall myself look out for
    employment and an asylum for you."
    "Thank you, sir; I am sorry to give--"
    "Oh, no need to apologise! I consider that when a dependent does
    her duty as well as you have done yours, she has a sort of claim
    upon her employer for any little assistance he can conveniently
    render her; indeed I have already, through my future mother-in-law,
    heard of a place that I think will suit: it is to undertake the
    education of the five daughters of Mrs. Dionysius O'Gall of
    Bitternutt Lodge, Connaught, Ireland. You'll like Ireland, I think:
    they're such warm-hearted people there, they say."
    "It is a long way off, sir."
    "No matter--a girl of your sense will not object to the voyage or
    the distance."
    "Not the voyage, but the distance: and then the sea is a barrier--"
    "From what, Jane?"
    "From England and from Thornfield: and--"
    "Well?"
    "From YOU, sir."
    I said this almost involuntarily, and, with as little sanction of
    free will, my tears gushed out. I did not cry so as to be heard,
    however; I avoided sobbing. The thought of Mrs. O'Gall and
    Bitternutt Lodge struck cold to my heart; and colder the thought of
    all the brine and foam, destined, as it seemed, to rush between me
    and the master at whose side I now walked, and coldest the
    remembrance of the wider ocean--wealth, caste, custom intervened
    between me and what I naturally and inevitably loved.
    "It is a long way," I again said.
    "It is, to be sure; and when you get to Bitternutt Lodge, Connaught,
    Ireland, I shall never see you again, Jane: that's morally certain.
    I never go over to Ireland, not having myself much of a fancy for
    the country. We have been good friends, Jane; have we not?"
    "Yes, sir."
    "And when friends are on the eve of separation, they like to spend
    the little time that remains to them close to each other. Come!
    we'll talk over the voyage and the parting quietly half-an-hour or
    so, while the stars enter into their shining life up in heaven
    yonder: here is the chestnut tree: here is the bench at its old
    roots. Come, we will sit there in peace to-night, though we should
    never more be destined to sit there together." He seated me and
    himself.
    "It is a long way to Ireland, Janet, and I am sorry to send my
    little friend on such weary travels: but if I can't do better, how
    is it to be helped? Are you anything akin to me, do you think,
    Jane?"
    I could risk no sort of answer by this time: my heart was still.
    "Because," he said, "I sometimes have a queer feeling with regard to
    you--especially when you are near me, as now: it is as if I had a
    string somewhere under my left ribs, tightly and inextricably
    knotted to a similar string situated in the corresponding quarter of
    your little frame. And if that boisterous Channel, and two hundred
    miles or so of land come broad between us, I am afraid that cord of
    communion will be snapt; and then I've a nervous notion I should
    take to bleeding inwardly. As for you,--you'd forget me."
    "That I NEVER should, sir: you know--" Impossible to proceed.
    "Jane, do you hear that nightingale singing in the wood? Listen!"
    In listening, I sobbed convulsively; for I could repress what I
    endured no longer; I was obliged to yield, and I was shaken from
    head to foot with acute distress. When I did speak, it was only to
    express an impetuous wish that I had never been born, or never come
    to Thornfield.
    "Because you are sorry to leave it?"
    The vehemence of emotion, stirred by grief and love within me, was
    claiming mastery, and struggling for full sway, and asserting a
    right to predominate, to overcome, to live, rise, and reign at last:
    yes,--and to speak.
    "I grieve to leave Thornfield: I love Thornfield:- I love it,
    because I have lived in it a full and delightful life,--momentarily
    at least. I have not been trampled on. I have not been petrified.
    I have not been buried with inferior minds, and excluded from every
    glimpse of communion with what is bright and energetic and high. I
    have talked, face to face, with what I reverence, with what I
    delight in,--with an original, a vigorous, an expanded mind. I have
    known you, Mr. Rochester; and it strikes me with terror and anguish
    to feel I absolutely must be torn from you for ever. I see the
    necessity of departure; and it is like looking on the necessity of
    death."
    "Where do you see the necessity?" he asked suddenly.
    "Where? You, sir, have placed it before me."
    "In what shape?"
    "In the shape of Miss Ingram; a noble and beautiful woman,--your
    bride."
    "My bride! What bride? I have no bride!"
    "But you will have."
    "Yes;--I will!--I will!" He set his teeth.
    "Then I must go:- you have said it yourself."
    "No: you must stay! I swear it--and the oath shall be kept."
    "I tell you I must go!" I retorted, roused to something like
    passion. "Do you think I can stay to become nothing to you? Do you
    think I am an automaton?--a machine without feelings? and can bear
    to have my morsel of bread snatched from my lips, and my drop of
    living water dashed from my cup? Do you think, because I am poor,
    obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless? You think
    wrong!--I have as much soul as you,--and full as much heart! And if
    God had gifted me with some beauty and much wealth, I should have
    made it as hard for you to leave me, as it is now for me to leave
    you. I am not talking to you now through the medium of custom,
    conventionalities, nor even of mortal flesh;--it is my spirit that
    addresses your spirit; just as if both had passed through the grave,
    and we stood at God's feet, equal,--as we are!"
    "As we are!" repeated Mr. Rochester--"so," he added, enclosing me in
    his arms. Gathering me to his breast, pressing his lips on my lips:
    "so, Jane!"
    "Yes, so, sir," I rejoined: "and yet not so; for you are a married
    man--or as good as a married man, and wed to one inferior to you--to
    one with whom you have no sympathy--whom I do not believe you truly
    love; for I have seen and heard you sneer at her. I would scorn
    such a union: therefore I am better than you--let me go!"
    "Where, Jane? To Ireland?"
    "Yes--to Ireland. I have spoken my mind, and can go anywhere now."
    "Jane, be still; don't struggle so, like a wild frantic bird that is
    rending its own plumage in its desperation."
    "I am no bird; and no net ensnares me; I am a free human being with
    an independent will, which I now exert to leave you."
    Another effort set me at liberty, and I stood erect before him.
    "And your will shall decide your destiny," he said: "I offer you my
    hand, my heart, and a share of all my possessions."
    "You play a farce, which I merely laugh at."
    "I ask you to pass through life at my side--to be my second self,
    and best earthly companion."
    "For that fate you have already made your choice, and must abide by
    it."
    "Jane, be still a few moments: you are over-excited: I will be
    still too."
    A waft of wind came sweeping down the laurel-walk, and trembled
    through the boughs of the chestnut: it wandered away--away--to an
    indefinite distance--it died. The nightingale's song was then the
    only voice of the hour: in listening to it, I again wept. Mr.
    Rochester sat quiet, looking at me gently and seriously. Some time
    passed before he spoke; he at last said -
    "Come to my side, Jane, and let us explain and understand one
    another."
    "I will never again come to your side: I am torn away now, and
    cannot return."
    "But, Jane, I summon you as my wife: it is you only I intend to
    marry."
    I was silent: I thought he mocked me.
    "Come, Jane--come hither."
    "Your bride stands between us."
    He rose, and with a stride reached me.
    "My bride is here," he said, again drawing me to him, "because my
    equal is here, and my likeness. Jane, will you marry me?"
    Still I did not answer, and still I writhed myself from his grasp:
    for I was still incredulous.
    "Do you doubt me, Jane?"
    "Entirely."
    "You have no faith in me?"
    "Not a whit."
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  6. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    "Am I a liar in your eyes?" he asked passionately. "Little sceptic,
    you SHALL be convinced. What love have I for Miss Ingram? None:
    and that you know. What love has she for me? None: as I have
    taken pains to prove: I caused a rumour to reach her that my
    fortune was not a third of what was supposed, and after that I
    presented myself to see the result; it was coldness both from her
    and her mother. I would not--I could not--marry Miss Ingram. You--
    you strange, you almost unearthly thing!--I love as my own flesh.
    You--poor and obscure, and small and plain as you are--I entreat to
    accept me as a husband."
    "What, me!" I ejaculated, beginning in his earnestness--and
    especially in his incivility--to cre*** his sincerity: "me who have
    not a friend in the world but you- if you are my friend: not a
    shilling but what you have given me?"
    "You, Jane, I must have you for my own--entirely my own. Will you
    be mine? Say yes, quickly."
    "Mr. Rochester, let me look at your face: turn to the moonlight."
    "Why?"
    "Because I want to read your countenance--turn!"
    "There! you will find it scarcely more legible than a crumpled,
    scratched page. Read on: only make haste, for I suffer."
    His face was very much agitated and very much flushed, and there
    were strong workings in the features, and strange gleams in the eyes
    "Oh, Jane, you torture me!" he exclaimed. "With that searching and
    yet faithful and generous look, you torture me!"
    "How can I do that? If you are true, and your offer real, my only
    feelings to you must be gratitude and devotion--they cannot
    torture."
    "Gratitude!" he ejaculated; and added wildly--"Jane accept me
    quickly. Say, Edward--give me my name--Edward--I will marry you."
    "Are you in earnest? Do you truly love me? Do you sincerely wish
    me to be your wife?"
    "I do; and if an oath is necessary to satisfy you, I swear it."
    "Then, sir, I will marry you."
    "Edward--my little wife!"
    "Dear Edward!"
    "Come to me--come to me entirely now," said he; and added, in his
    deepest tone, speaking in my ear as his cheek was laid on mine,
    "Make my happiness--I will make yours."
    "God pardon me!" he subjoined ere long; "and man meddle not with me:
    I have her, and will hold her."
    "There is no one to meddle, sir. I have no kindred to interfere."
    "No--that is the best of it," he said. And if I had loved him less
    I should have thought his accent and look of exultation savage; but,
    sitting by him, roused from the nightmare of parting--called to the
    paradise of union--I thought only of the bliss given me to drink in
    so abundant a flow. Again and again he said, "Are you happy, Jane?"
    And again and again I answered, "Yes." After which he murmured, "It
    will atone--it will atone. Have I not found her friendless, and
    cold, and comfortless? Will I not guard, and cherish, and solace
    her? Is there not love in my heart, and constancy in my resolves?
    It will expiate at God's tribunal. I know my Maker sanctions what I
    do. For the world's judgment--I wash my hands thereof. For man's
    opinion--I defy it."
    But what had befallen the night? The moon was not yet set, and we
    were all in shadow: I could scarcely see my master's face, near as
    I was. And what ailed the chestnut tree? it writhed and groaned;
    while wind roared in the laurel walk, and came sweeping over us.
    "We must go in," said Mr. Rochester: "the weather changes. I could
    have sat with thee till morning, Jane."
    "And so," thought I, "could I with you." I should have said so,
    perhaps, but a livid, vivid spark leapt out of a cloud at which I
    was looking, and there was a crack, a crash, and a close rattling
    peal; and I thought only of hiding my dazzled eyes against Mr.
    Rochester's shoulder.
    The rain rushed down. He hurried me up the walk, through the
    grounds, and into the house; but we were quite wet before we could
    pass the threshold. He was taking off my shawl in the hall, and
    shaking the water out of my loosened hair, when Mrs. Fairfax emerged
    from her room. I did not observe her at first, nor did Mr.
    Rochester. The lamp was lit. The clock was on the stroke of
    twelve.
    "Hasten to take off your wet things," said he; "and before you go,
    good-night--good-night, my darling!"
    He kissed me repeatedly. When I looked up, on leaving his arms,
    there stood the widow, pale, grave, and amazed. I only smiled at
    her, and ran upstairs. "Explanation will do for another time,"
    thought I. Still, when I reached my chamber, I felt a pang at the
    idea she should even temporarily misconstrue what she had seen. But
    joy soon effaced every other feeling; and loud as the wind blew,
    near and deep as the thunder crashed, fierce and frequent as the
    lightning gleamed, cataract-like as the rain fell during a storm of
    two hours' duration, I experienced no fear and little awe. Mr.
    Rochester came thrice to my door in the course of it, to ask if I
    was safe and tranquil: and that was comfort, that was strength for
    anything.
    Before I left my bed in the morning, little Adele came running in to
    tell me that the great horse-chestnut at the bottom of the orchard
    had been struck by lightning in the night, and half of it split
    away.
    CHAPTER XXIV
    As I rose and dressed, I thought over what had happened, and
    wondered if it were a dream. I could not be certain of the reality
    till I had seen Mr. Rochester again, and heard him renew his words
    of love and promise.
    While arranging my hair, I looked at my face in the glass, and felt
    it was no longer plain: there was hope in its aspect and life in
    its colour; and my eyes seemed as if they had beheld the fount of
    fruition, and borrowed beams from the lustrous ripple. I had often
    been unwilling to look at my master, because I feared he could not
    be pleased at my look; but I was sure I might lift my face to his
    now, and not cool his affection by its expression. I took a plain
    but clean and light summer dress from my drawer and put it on: it
    seemed no attire had ever so well become me, because none had I ever
    worn in so blissful a mood.
    I was not surprised, when I ran down into the hall, to see that a
    brilliant June morning had succeeded to the tempest of the night;
    and to feel, through the open glass door, the breathing of a fresh
    and fragrant breeze. Nature must be gladsome when I was so happy.
    A beggar-woman and her little boy--pale, ragged objects both--were
    coming up the walk, and I ran down and gave them all the money I
    happened to have in my purse--some three or four shillings: good or
    bad, they must partake of my jubilee. The rooks cawed, and blither
    birds sang; but nothing was so merry or so musical as my own
    rejoicing heart.
    Mrs. Fairfax surprised me by looking out of the window with a sad
    countenance, and saying gravely--"Miss Eyre, will you come to
    breakfast?" During the meal she was quiet and cool: but I could
    not undeceive her then. I must wait for my master to give
    explanations; and so must she. I ate what I could, and then I
    hastened upstairs. I met Adele leaving the schoolroom.
    "Where are you going? It is time for lessons."
    "Mr. Rochester has sent me away to the nursery."
    "Where is he?"
    "In there," pointing to the apartment she had left; and I went in,
    and there he stood.
    "Come and bid me good-morning," said he. I gladly advanced; and it
    was not merely a cold word now, or even a shake of the hand that I
    received, but an embrace and a kiss. It seemed natural: it seemed
    genial to be so well loved, so caressed by him.
    "Jane, you look blooming, and smiling, and pretty," said he: "truly
    pretty this morning. Is this my pale, little elf? Is this my
    mustard-seed? This little sunny-faced girl with the dimpled cheek
    and rosy lips; the satin-smooth hazel hair, and the radiant hazel
    eyes?" (I had green eyes, reader; but you must excuse the mistake:
    for him they were new-dyed, I suppose.)
    "It is Jane Eyre, sir."
    "Soon to be Jane Rochester," he added: "in four weeks, Janet; not a
    day more. Do you hear that?"
    I did, and I could not quite comprehend it: it made me giddy. The
    feeling, the announcement sent through me, was something stronger
    than was consistent with joy--something that smote and stunned. It
    was, I think almost fear.
    "You blushed, and now you are white, Jane: what is that for?"
    "Because you gave me a new name--Jane Rochester; and it seems so
    strange."
    "Yes, Mrs. Rochester," said he; "young Mrs. Rochester--Fairfax
    Rochester's girl-bride."
    "It can never be, sir; it does not sound likely. Human beings never
    enjoy complete happiness in this world. I was not born for a
    different destiny to the rest of my species: to imagine such a lot
    befalling me is a fairy tale--a day-dream."
    "Which I can and will realise. I shall begin to-day. This morning
    I wrote to my banker in London to send me certain jewels he has in
    his keeping,--heirlooms for the ladies of Thornfield. In a day or
    two I hope to pour them into your lap: for every privilege, every
    attention shall be yours that I would accord a peer's daughter, if
    about to marry her."
    "Oh, sir!--never rain jewels! I don't like to hear them spoken of.
    Jewels for Jane Eyre sounds unnatural and strange: I would rather
    not have them."
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  7. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    "I will myself put the diamond chain round your neck, and the
    circlet on your forehead,--which it will become: for nature, at
    least, has stamped her patent of nobility on this brow, Jane; and I
    will clasp the bracelets on these fine wrists, and load these fairy-
    like fingers with rings."
    "No, no, sir! think of other subjects, and speak of other things,
    and in another strain. Don't address me as if I were a beauty; I am
    your plain, Quakerish governess."
    "You are a beauty in my eyes, and a beauty just after the desire of
    my heart,--delicate and aerial."
    "Puny and insignificant, you mean. You are dreaming, sir,--or you
    are sneering. For God's sake don't be ironical!"
    "I will make the world acknowledge you a beauty, too," he went on,
    while I really became uneasy at the strain he had adopted, because I
    felt he was either deluding himself or trying to delude me. "I will
    attire my Jane in satin and lace, and she shall have roses in her
    hair; and I will cover the head I love best with a priceless veil."
    "And then you won't know me, sir; and I shall not be your Jane Eyre
    any longer, but an ape in a harlequin's jacket--a jay in borrowed
    plumes. I would as soon see you, Mr. Rochester, tricked out in
    stage-trappings, as myself clad in a court-lady's robe; and I don't
    call you handsome, sir, though I love you most dearly: far too
    dearly to flatter you. Don't flatter me."
    He pursued his theme, however, without noticing my deprecation.
    "This very day I shall take you in the carriage to Millcote, and you
    must choose some dresses for yourself. I told you we shall be
    married in four weeks. The wedding is to take place quietly, in the
    church down below yonder; and then I shall waft you away at once to
    town. After a brief stay there, I shall bear my treasure to regions
    nearer the sun: to French vineyards and Italian plains; and she
    shall see whatever is famous in old story and in modern record: she
    shall taste, too, of the life of cities; and she shall learn to
    value herself by just comparison with others."
    "Shall I travel?--and with you, sir?"
    "You shall sojourn at Paris, Rome, and Naples: at Florence, Venice,
    and Vienna: all the ground I have wandered over shall be re-trodden
    by you: wherever I stamped my hoof, your sylph's foot shall step
    also. Ten years since, I flew through Europe half mad; with
    disgust, hate, and rage as my companions: now I shall revisit it
    healed and cleansed, with a very angel as my comforter."
    I laughed at him as he said this. "I am not an angel," I asserted;
    "and I will not be one till I die: I will be myself. Mr.
    Rochester, you must neither expect nor exact anything celestial of
    me--for you will not get it, any more than I shall get it of you:
    which I do not at all anticipate."
    "What do you anticipate of me?"
    "For a little while you will perhaps be as you are now,--a very
    little while; and then you will turn cool; and then you will be
    capricious; and then you will be stern, and I shall have much ado to
    please you: but when you get well used to me, you will perhaps like
    me again,--LIKE me, I say, not LOVE me. I suppose your love will
    effervesce in six months, or less. I have observed in books written
    by men, that period assigned as the farthest to which a husband's
    ardour extends. Yet, after all, as a friend and companion, I hope
    never to become quite distasteful to my dear master."
    "Distasteful! and like you again! I think I shall like you again,
    and yet again: and I will make you confess I do not only LIKE, but
    LOVE you--with truth, fervour, constancy."
    "Yet are you not capricious, sir?"
    "To women who please me only by their faces, I am the very devil
    when I find out they have neither souls nor hearts--when they open
    to me a perspective of flatness, triviality, and perhaps imbecility,
    coarseness, and ill-temper: but to the clear eye and eloquent
    tongue, to the soul made of fire, and the character that bends but
    does not break--at once supple and stable, tractable and consistent-
    -I am ever tender and true."
    "Had you ever experience of such a character, sir? Did you ever
    love such an one?"
    "I love it now."
    "But before me: if I, indeed, in any respect come up to your
    difficult standard?"
    "I never met your likeness. Jane, you please me, and you master me-
    -you seem *****bmit, and I like the sense of pliancy you impart; and
    while I am twining the soft, silken skein round my finger, it sends
    a thrill up my arm to my heart. I am influenced--conquered; and the
    influence is sweeter than I can express; and the conquest I undergo
    has a witchery beyond any triumph I can win. Why do you smile,
    Jane? What does that inexplicable, that uncanny turn of countenance
    mean?"
    "I was thinking, sir (you will excuse the idea; it was involuntary),
    I was thinking of Hercules and Samson with their charmers--"
    "You were, you little elfish--"
    "Hush, sir! You don't talk very wisely just now; any more than
    those gentlemen acted very wisely. However, had they been married,
    they would no doubt by their severity as husbands have made up for
    their softness as suitors; and so will you, I fear. I wonder how
    you will answer me a year hence, should I ask a favour it does not
    suit your convenience or pleasure to grant."
    "Ask me something now, Jane,--the least thing: I desire to be
    entreated--"
    "Indeed I will, sir; I have my petition all ready."
    "Speak! But if you look up and smile with that countenance, I shall
    swear concession before I know to what, and that will make a fool of
    me."
    "Not at all, sir; I ask only this: don't send for the jewels, and
    don't crown me with roses: you might as well put a border of gold
    lace round that plain pocket handkerchief you have there."
    "I might as well 'gild refined gold.' I know it: you request is
    granted then--for the time. I will remand the order I despatched to
    my banker. But you have not yet asked for anything; you have prayed
    a gift to be withdrawn: try again."
    "Well then, sir, have the goodness to gratify my curiosity, which is
    much piqued on one point."
    He looked disturbed. "What? what?" he said hastily. "Curiosity is
    a dangerous petition: it is well I have not taken a vow to accord
    every request--"
    "But there can be no danger in complying with this, sir."
    "Utter it, Jane: but I wish that instead of a mere inquiry into,
    perhaps, a secret, it was a wish for half my estate."
    "Now, King Ahasuerus! What do I want with half your estate? Do you
    think I am a Jew-usurer, seeking good investment in land? I would
    much rather have all your confidence. You will not exclude me from
    your confidence if you admit me to your heart?"
    "You are welcome to all my confidence that is worth having, Jane;
    but for God's sake, don't desire a useless burden! Don't long for
    poison--don't turn out a downright Eve on my hands!"
    "Why not, sir? You have just been telling me how much you liked to
    be conquered, and how pleasant over-persuasion is to you. Don't you
    think I had better take advantage of the confession, and begin and
    coax and entreat--even cry and be sulky if necessary--for the sake
    of a mere essay of my power?"
    "I dare you to any such experiment. Encroach, presume, and the game
    is up."
    "Is it, sir? You soon give in. How stern you look now! Your
    eyebrows have become as thick as my finger, and your forehead
    resembles what, in some very astonishing poetry, I once saw styled,
    'a blue-piled thunderloft.' That will be your married look, sir, I
    suppose?"
    "If that will be YOUR married look, I, as a Christian, will soon
    give up the notion of consorting with a mere sprite or salamander.
    But what had you to ask, thing,--out with it?"
    "There, you are less than civil now; and I like rudeness a great
    deal better than flattery. I had rather be a THING than an angel.
    This is what I have to ask,--Why did you take such pains to make me
    believe you wished to marry Miss Ingram?"
    "Is that all? Thank God it is no worse!" And now he unknit his
    black brows; looked down, smiling at me, and stroked my hair, as if
    well pleased at seeing a danger averted. "I think I may confess,"
    he continued, "even although I should make you a little indignant,
    Jane--and I have seen what a fire-spirit you can be when you are
    indignant. You glowed in the cool moonlight last night, when you
    mutinied against fate, and claimed your rank as my equal. Janet,
    by-the-bye, it was you who made me the offer."
    "Of course I did. But to the point if you please, sir--Miss
    Ingram?"
    "Well, I feigned courtship of Miss Ingram, because I wished to
    render you as madly in love with me as I was with you; and I knew
    jealousy would be the best ally I could call in for the furtherance
    of that end."
    "Excellent! Now you are small--not one whit bigger than the end of
    my little finger. It was a burning shame and a scandalous disgrace
    to act in that way. Did you think nothing of Miss Ingram's
    feelings, sir?"
    "Her feelings are concentrated in one--pride; and that needs
    humbling. Were you jealous, Jane?"
    "Never mind, Mr. Rochester: it is in no way interesting to you to
    know that. Answer me truly once more. Do you think Miss Ingram
    will not suffer from your dishonest coquetry? Won't she feel
    forsaken and deserted?"
    "Impossible!--when I told you how she, on the contrary, deserted me:
    the idea of my insolvency cooled, or rather extinguished, her flame
    in a moment."
    "You have a curious, designing mind, Mr. Rochester. I am afraid
    your principles on some points are eccentric."
    "My principles were never trained, Jane: they may have grown a
    little awry for want of attention."
    "Once again, seriously; may I enjoy the great good that has been
    vouchsafed to me, without fearing that any one else is suffering the
    bitter pain I myself felt a while ago?"
    "That you may, my good little girl: there is not another being in
    the world has the same pure love for me as yourself--for I lay that
    pleasant unction to my soul, Jane, a belief in your affection."
    I turned my lips to the hand that lay on my shoulder. I loved him
    very much--more than I could trust myself to say--more than words
    had power to express.
    "Ask something more," he said presently; "it is my delight to be
    entreated, and to yield."
    I was again ready with my request. "Communicate your intentions to
    Mrs. Fairfax, sir: she saw me with you last night in the hall, and
    she was shocked. Give her some explanation before I see her again.
    It pains me to be misjudged by so good a woman."
    "Go to your room, and put on your bonnet," he replied. "I mean you
    to accompany me to Millcote this morning; and while you prepare for
    the drive, I will enlighten the old lady's understanding. Did she
    think, Janet, you had given the world for love, and considered it
    well lost?"
    "I believe she thought I had forgotten my station, and yours, sir."
    "Station! station!--your station is in my heart, and on the necks of
    those who would insult you, now or hereafter.--Go."
    I was soon dressed; and when I heard Mr. Rochester quit Mrs.
    Fairfax's parlour, I hurried down to it. The old lady, had been
    reading her morning portion of Scripture--the Lesson for the day;
    her Bible lay open before her, and her spectacles were upon it. Her
    occupation, suspended by Mr. Rochester's announcement, seemed now
    forgotten: her eyes, fixed on the blank wall opposite, expressed
    the surprise of a quiet mind stirred by unwonted tidings. Seeing
    me, she roused herself: she made a sort of effort to smile, and
    framed a few words of congratulation; but the smile expired, and the
    sentence was abandoned unfinished. She put up her spectacles, shut
    the Bible, and pushed her chair back from the table.
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    Mưa nhớ gì thì thầm ngoài hiên
  8. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    "I feel so astonished," she began, "I hardly know what to say to
    you, Miss Eyre. I have surely not been dreaming, have I? Sometimes
    I half fall asleep when I am sitting alone and fancy things that
    have never happened. It has seemed to me more than once when I have
    been in a doze, that my dear husband, who died fifteen years since,
    has come in and sat down beside me; and that I have even heard him
    call me by my name, Alice, as he used to do. Now, can you tell me
    whether it is actually true that Mr. Rochester has asked you to
    marry him? Don't laugh at me. But I really thought he came in here
    five minutes ago, and said that in a month you would be his wife."
    "He has said the same thing to me," I replied.
    "He has! Do you believe him? Have you accepted him?"
    "Yes."
    She looked at me bewildered. "I could never have thought it. He is
    a proud man: all the Rochesters were proud: and his father, at
    least, liked money. He, too, has always been called careful. He
    means to marry you?"
    "He tells me so."
    She surveyed my whole person: in her eyes I read that they had
    there found no charm powerful enough to solve the enigma.
    "It passes me!" she continued; "but no doubt, it is true since you
    say so. How it will answer, I cannot tell: I really don't know.
    Equality of position and fortune is often advisable in such cases;
    and there are twenty years of difference in your ages. He might
    almost be your father."
    "No, indeed, Mrs. Fairfax!" exclaimed I, nettled; "he is nothing
    like my father! No one, who saw us together, would suppose it for
    an instant. Mr. Rochester looks as young, and is as young, as some
    men at five-and-twenty."
    "Is it really for love he is going to marry you?" she asked.
    I was so hurt by her coldness and scepticism, that the tears rose to
    my eyes.
    "I am sorry to grieve you," pursued the widow; "but you are so
    young, and so little acquainted with men, I wished to put you on
    your guard. It is an old saying that 'all is not gold that
    glitters;' and in this case I do fear there will be something found
    to be different to what either you or I expect."
    "Why?--am I a monster?" I said: "is it impossible that Mr.
    Rochester should have a sincere affection for me?"
    "No: you are very well; and much improved of late; and Mr.
    Rochester, I daresay, is fond of you. I have always noticed that
    you were a sort of pet of his. There are times when, for your sake,
    I have been a little uneasy at his marked preference, and have
    wished to put you on your guard: but I did not like *****ggest even
    the possibility of wrong. I knew such an idea would shock, perhaps
    offend you; and you were so discreet, and so thoroughly modest and
    sensible, I hoped you might be trusted to protect yourself. Last
    night I cannot tell you what I suffered when I sought all over the
    house, and could find you nowhere, nor the master either; and then,
    at twelve o'clock, saw you come in with him."
    "Well, never mind that now," I interrupted impatiently; "it is
    enough that all was right."
    "I hope all will be right in the end," she said: "but believe me,
    you cannot be too careful. Try and keep Mr. Rochester at a
    distance: distrust yourself as well as him. Gentlemen in his
    station are not accustomed to marry their governesses."
    I was growing truly irritated: happily, Adele ran in.
    "Let me go,--let me go to Millcote too!" she cried. "Mr. Rochester
    won't: though there is so much room in the new carriage. Beg him
    to let me go mademoiselle."
    "That I will, Adele;" and I hastened away with her, glad to quit my
    gloomy monitress. The carriage was ready: they were bringing it
    round to the front, and my master was the pavement, Pilot following
    him backwards and forwards.
    "Adele may accompany us, may she not, sir?"
    "I told her no. I'll have no brats!--I'll have only you."
    "Do let her go, Mr. Rochester, if you please: it would be better."
    "Not it: she will be a restraint."
    He was quite peremptory, both in look and voice. The chill of Mrs.
    Fairfax's warnings, and the damp of her doubts were upon me:
    something of unsubstantiality and uncertainty had beset my hopes. I
    half lost the sense of power over him. I was about mechanically to
    obey him, without further remonstrance; but as he helped me into the
    carriage, he looked at my face.
    "What is the matter?" he asked; "all the sunshine is gone. Do you
    really wish the bairn to go? Will it annoy you if she is left
    behind?"
    "I would far rather she went, sir."
    "Then off for your bonnet, and back like a flash of lightning!"
    cried he to Adele.
    She obeyed him with what speed she might.
    "After all, a single morning's interruption will not matter much,"
    said he, "when I mean shortly to claim you--your thoughts,
    conversation, and company--for life."
    Adele, when lifted in, commenced kissing me, by way of expressing
    her gratitude for my intercession: she was instantly stowed away
    into a corner on the other side of him. She then peeped round to
    where I sat; so stern a neighbour was too restrictive to him, in his
    present fractious mood, she dared whisper no observations, nor ask
    of him any information.
    "Let her come to me," I entreated: "she will, perhaps, trouble you,
    sir: there is plenty of room on this side."
    He handed her over as if she had been a lapdog. "I'll send her to
    school yet," he said, but now he was smiling.
    Adele heard him, and asked if she was to go to school "sans
    mademoiselle?"
    "Yes," he replied, "absolutely sans mademoiselle; for I am to take
    mademoiselle to the moon, and there I shall seek a **** in one of
    the white valleys among the volcano-tops, and mademoiselle shall
    live with me there, and only me."
    "She will have nothing to eat: you will starve her," observed
    Adele.
    "I shall gather manna for her morning and night: the plains and
    hillsides in the moon are bleached with manna, Adele."
    "She will want to warm herself: what will she do for a fire?"
    "Fire rises out of the lunar mountains: when she is cold, I'll
    carry her up to a peak, and lay her down on the edge of a crater."
    "Oh, qu' elle y sera mal--peu comfortable! And her clothes, they
    will wear out: how can she get new ones?"
    Mr. Rochester professed to be puzzled. "Hem!" said he. "What would
    you do, Adele? Cudgel your brains for an expedient. How would a
    white or a pink cloud answer for a gown, do you think? And one
    could cut a pretty enough scarf out of a rainbow."
    "She is far better as she is," concluded Adele, after musing some
    time: "besides, she would get tired of living with only you in the
    moon. If I were mademoiselle, I would never consent to go with
    you."
    "She has consented: she has pledged her word."
    "But you can't get her there; there is no road to the moon: it is
    all air; and neither you nor she can fly."
    "Adele, look at that field." We were now outside Thornfield gates,
    and bowling lightly along the smooth road to Millcote, where the
    dust was well laid by the thunderstorm, and, where the low hedges
    and lofty timber trees on each side glistened green and rain-
    refreshed.
    "In that field, Adele, I was walking late one evening about a
    fortnight since--the evening of the day you helped me to make hay in
    the orchard meadows; and, as I was tired with raking swaths, I sat
    down to rest me on a stile; and there I took out a little book and a
    pencil, and began to write about a misfortune that befell me long
    ago, and a wish I had for happy days to come: I was writing away
    very fast, though daylight was fading from the leaf, when something
    came up the path and stopped two yards off me. I looked at it. It
    was a little thing with a veil of gossamer on its head. I beckoned
    it to come near me; it stood soon at my knee. I never spoke to it,
    and it never spoke to me, in words; but I read its eyes, and it read
    mine; and our speechless colloquy was to this effect -
    "It was a fairy, and come from Elf-land, it said; and its errand was
    to make me happy: I must go with it out of the common world to a
    lonely place--such as the moon, for instance--and it nodded its head
    towards her horn, rising over Hay-hill: it told me of the alabaster
    **** and silver vale where we might live. I said I should like to
    go; but reminded it, as you did me, that I had no wings to fly.
    "'Oh,' returned the fairy, 'that does not signify! Here is a
    talisman will remove all difficulties;' and she held out a pretty
    gold ring. 'Put it,' she said, 'on the fourth finger of my left
    hand, and I am yours, and you are mine; and we shall leave earth,
    and make our own heaven yonder.' She nodded again at the moon. The
    ring, Adele, is in my breeches-pocket, under the disguise of a
    sovereign: but I mean soon to change it to a ring again."
    "But what has mademoiselle to do with it? I don't care for the
    fairy: you said it was mademoiselle you would take to the moon?"
    "Mademoiselle is a fairy," he said, whispering mysteriously.
    Whereupon I told her not to mind his badinage; and she, on her part,
    evinced a fund of genuine French scepticism: denominating Mr.
    Rochester "un vrai menteur," and assuring him that she made no
    account whatever of his "contes de fee," and that "du reste, il n'y
    avait pas de fees, et quand meme il y en avait:" she was sure they
    would never appear to him, nor ever give him rings, or offer to live
    with him in the moon.
    The hour spent at Millcote was a somewhat harassing one to me. Mr.
    Rochester obliged me to go to a certain silk warehouse: there I was
    ordered to choose half-a-dozen dresses. I hated the business, I
    begged leave to defer it: no--it should be gone through with now.
    By dint of entreaties expressed in energetic whispers, I reduced the
    half-dozen to two: these however, he vowed he would select himself.
    With anxiety I watched his eye rove over the gay stores: he fixed
    on a rich silk of the most brilliant amethyst dye, and a superb pink
    satin. I told him in a new series of whispers, that he might as
    well buy me a gold gown and a silver bonnet at once: I should
    certainly never venture to wear his choice. With infinite
    difficulty, for he was stubborn as a stone, I persuaded him to make
    an exchange in favour of a sober black satin and pearl-grey silk.
    "It might pass for the present," he said; "but he would yet see me
    glittering like a parterre."
    Glad was I to get him out of the silk warehouse, and then out of a
    jewellers shop: the more he bought me, the more my cheek burned
    with a sense of annoyance and degradation. As we re-entered the
    carriage, and I sat back feverish and fagged, I remembered what, in
    the hurry of events, dark and bright, I had wholly forgotten--the
    letter of my uncle, John Eyre, to Mrs. Reed: his intention to adopt
    me and make me his legatee. "It would, indeed, be a relief," I
    thought, "if I had ever so small an independency; I never can bear
    being dressed like a doll by Mr. Rochester, or sitting like a second
    Danae with the golden shower falling daily round me. I will write
    to Madeira the moment I get home, and tell my uncle John I am going
    to be married, and to whom: if I had but a prospect of one day
    bringing Mr. Rochester an accession of fortune, I could better
    endure to be kept by him now." And somewhat relieved by this idea
    (which I failed not to execute that day), I ventured once more to
    meet my master's and lover's eye, which most pertinaciously sought
    mine, though I averted both face and gaze. He smiled; and I thought
    his smile was such as a sultan might, in a blissful and fond moment,
    bestow on a slave his gold and gems had enriched: I crushed his
    hand, which was ever hunting mine, vigorously, and thrust it back to
    him red with the passionate pressure.
    "You need not look in that way," I said; "if you do, I'll wear
    nothing but my old Lowood frocks to the end of the chapter. I'll be
    married in this lilac gingham: you may make a dressing-gown for
    yourself out of the pearl-grey silk, and an infinite series of
    waistcoats out of the black satin."
    He chuckled; he rubbed his hands. "Oh, it is rich to see and hear
    her?" he exclaimed. "Is she original? Is she piquant? I would not
    exchange this one little English girl for the Grand Turk's whole
    seraglio, gazelle-eyes, houri forms, and all!"
    The Eastern allusion bit me again. "I'll not stand you an inch in
    the stead of a seraglio," I said; "so don't consider me an
    equivalent for one. If you have a fancy for anything in that line,
    away with you, sir, to the bazaars of Stamboul without delay, and
    lay out in extensive slave-purchases some of that spare cash you
    seem at a loss to spend satisfactorily here."
    "And what will you do, Janet, while I am bargaining for so many tons
    of flesh and such an assortment of black eyes?"
    "I'll be preparing myself to go out as a missionary to preach
    liberty to them that are enslaved--your harem inmates amongst the
    rest. I'll get admitted there, and I'll stir up mutiny; and you,
    three-tailed bashaw as you are, sir, shall in a trice find yourself
    fettered amongst our hands: nor will I, for one, consent to cut
    your bonds till you have signed a charter, the most liberal that
    despot ever yet conferred."
    "I would consent to be at your mercy, Jane."
    "I would have no mercy, Mr. Rochester, if you supplicated for it
    with an eye like that. While you looked so, I should be certain
    that whatever charter you might grant under coercion, your first
    act, when released, would be to violate its con***ions."
    "Why, Jane, what would you have? I fear you will compel me to go
    through a private marriage ceremony, besides that performed at the
    altar. You will stipulate, I see, for peculiar terms--what will
    they be?"
    "I only want an easy mind, sir; not crushed by crowded obligations.
    Do you remember what you said of Celine Varens?--of the diamonds,
    the cashmeres you gave her? I will not be your English Celine
    Varens. I shall continue to act as Adele's governess; by that I
    shall earn my board and lodging, and thirty pounds a year besides.
    I'll furnish my own wardrobe out of that money, and you shall give
    me nothing but--"
    "Well, but what?"
    "Your regard; and if I give you mine in return, that debt will be
    quit."
    "Well, for cool native impudence and pure innate pride, you haven't
    your equal," said he. We were now approaching Thornfield. "Will it
    please you to dine with me to-day?" he asked, as we re-entered the
    gates.
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  9. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    "No, thank you, sir."
    "And what for, 'no, thank you?' if one may inquire."
    "I never have dined with you, sir: and I see no reason why I should
    now: till--"
    "Till what? You delight in half-phrases."
    "Till I can't help it."
    "Do you suppose I eat like an ogre or a ghoul, that you dread being
    the companion of my repast?"
    "I have formed no supposition on the subject, sir; but I want to go
    on as usual for another month."
    "You will give up your governessing slavery at once."
    "Indeed, begging your pardon, sir, I shall not. I shall just go on
    with it as usual. I shall keep out of your way all day, as I have
    been accustomed to do: you may send for me in the evening, when you
    feel disposed to see me, and I'll come then; but at no other time."
    "I want a smoke, Jane, or a pinch of snuff, to comfort me under all
    this, 'pour me donner une contenance,' as Adele would say; and
    unfortunately I have neither my cigar-case, nor my snuff-box. But
    listen--whisper. It is your time now, little tyrant, but it will be
    mine presently; and when once I have fairly seized you, to have and
    to hold, I'll just--figuratively speaking--attach you to a chain
    like this" (touching his watch-guard). "Yes, bonny wee thing, I'll
    wear you in my bosom, lest my jewel I should tyne."
    He said this as he helped me to alight from the carriage, and while
    he afterwards lifted out Adele, I entered the house, and made good
    my retreat upstairs.
    He duly summoned me to his presence in the evening. I had prepared
    an occupation for him; for I was determined not to spend the whole
    time in a tete-e-tete conversation. I remembered his fine voice; I
    knew he liked to sing--good singers generally do. I was no vocalist
    myself, and, in his fastidious judgment, no musician, either; but I
    delighted in listening when the performance was good. No sooner had
    twilight, that hour of romance, began to lower her blue and starry
    banner over the lattice, than I rose, opened the piano, and
    entreated him, for the love of heaven, to give me a song. He said I
    was a capricious witch, and that he would rather sing another time;
    but I averred that no time was like the present.
    "Did I like his voice?" he asked.
    "Very much." I was not fond of pampering that susceptible vanity of
    his; but for once, and from motives of expediency, I would e'en
    soothe and stimulate it.
    "Then, Jane, you must play the accompaniment."
    "Very well, sir, I will try."
    I did try, but was presently swept off the stool and denominated "a
    little bungler." Being pushed unceremoniously to one side--which
    was precisely what I wished--he usurped my place, and proceeded to
    accompany himself: for he could play as well as sing. I hied me to
    the window-recess. And while I sat there and looked out on the
    still trees and dim lawn, to a sweet air was sung in mellow tones
    the following strain:-
    "The truest love that ever heart
    Felt at its kindled core,
    Did through each vein, in quickened start,
    The tide of being pour.
    Her coming was my hope each day,
    Her parting was my pain;
    The chance that did her steps delay
    Was ice in every vein.
    I dreamed it would be nameless bliss,
    As I loved, loved to be;
    And to this object did I press
    As blind as eagerly.
    But wide as pathless was the space
    That lay our lives between,
    And dangerous as the foamy race
    Of ocean-surges green.
    And haunted as a robber-path
    Through wilderness or wood;
    For Might and Right, and Woe and Wrath,
    Between our spirits stood.
    I dangers dared; I hindrance scorned;
    I omens did defy:
    Whatever menaced, harassed, warned,
    I passed impetuous by.
    On sped my rainbow, fast as light;
    I flew as in a dream;
    For glorious rose upon my sight
    That child of Shower and Gleam.
    Still bright on clouds of suffering dim
    Shines that soft, solemn joy;
    Nor care I now, how dense and grim
    Disasters gather nigh.
    I care not in this moment sweet,
    Though all I have rushed o'er
    Should come on pinion, strong and fleet,
    Proclaiming vengeance sore:
    Though haughty Hate should strike me down,
    Right, bar approach to me,
    And grinding Might, with furious frown,
    Swear endless enmity.
    My love has placed her little hand
    With noble faith in mine,
    And vowed that wedlock's sacred band
    Our nature shall entwine.
    My love has sworn, with sealing kiss,
    With me to live--to die;
    I have at last my nameless bliss.
    As I love--loved am I!"
    He rose and came towards me, and I saw his face all kindled, and his
    full falcon-eye flashing, and tenderness and passion in every
    lineament. I quailed momentarily--then I rallied. Soft scene,
    daring demonstration, I would not have; and I stood in peril of
    both: a weapon of defence must be prepared--I whetted my tongue:
    as he reached me, I asked with asperity, "whom he was going to marry
    now?"
    "That was a strange question to be put by his darling Jane."
    "Indeed! I considered it a very natural and necessary one: he had
    talked of his future wife dying with him. What did he mean by such
    a pagan idea? I had no intention of dying with him--he might depend
    on that."
    "Oh, all he longed, all he prayed for, was that I might live with
    him! Death was not for such as I."
    "Indeed it was: I had as good a right to die when my time came as
    he had: but I should bide that time, and not be hurried away in a
    suttee."
    "Would I forgive him for the selfish idea, and prove my pardon by a
    reconciling kiss?"
    "No: I would rather be excused."
    Here I heard myself apostrophised as a "hard little thing;" and it
    was added, "any other woman would have been melted to marrow at
    hearing such stanzas crooned in her praise."
    I assured him I was naturally hard--very flinty, and that he would
    often find me so; and that, moreover, I was determined to show him
    divers rugged points in my character before the ensuing four weeks
    elapsed: he should know fully what sort of a bargain he had made,
    while there was yet time to rescind it.
    "Would I be quiet and talk rationally?"
    "I would be quiet if he liked, and as to talking rationally, I
    flattered myself I was doing that now."
    He fretted, pished, and pshawed. "Very good," I thought; "you may
    fume and fidget as you please: but this is the best plan to pursue
    with you, I am certain. I like you more than I can say; but I'll
    not sink into a bathos of sentiment: and with this needle of
    repartee I'll keep you from the edge of the gulf too; and, moreover,
    maintain by its pungent aid that distance between you and myself
    most conducive to our real mutual advantage."
    From less to more, I worked him up to considerable irritation; then,
    after he had retired, in dudgeon, quite to the other end of the
    room, I got up, and saying, "I wish you good-night, sir," in my
    natural and wonted respectful manner, I slipped out by the side-door
    and got away.
    The system thus entered on, I pursued during the whole season of
    probation; and with the best success. He was kept, to be sure,
    rather cross and crusty; but on the whole I could see he was
    excellently entertained, and that a lamb-like submission and turtle-
    dove sensibility, while fostering his despotism more, would have
    pleased his judgment, satisfied his common-sense, and even suited
    his taste less.
    In other people's presence I was, as formerly, deferential and
    quiet; any other line of conduct being uncalled for: it was only in
    the evening conferences I thus thwarted and afflicted him. He
    continued to send for me punctually the moment the clock struck
    seven; though when I appeared before him now, he had no such honeyed
    terms as "love" and "darling" on his lips: the best words at my
    service were "provoking puppet," "malicious elf," "sprite,"
    "changeling," &c. For caresses, too, I now got grimaces; for a
    pressure of the hand, a pinch on the arm; for a kiss on the cheek, a
    severe tweak of the ear. It was all right: at present I decidedly
    preferred these fierce favours to anything more tender. Mrs.
    Fairfax, I saw, approved me: her anxiety on my account vanished;
    therefore I was certain I did well. Meantime, Mr. Rochester
    affirmed I was wearing him to skin and bone, and threatened awful
    vengeance for my present conduct at some period fast coming. I
    laughed in my sleeve at his menaces. "I can keep you in reasonable
    check now," I reflected; "and I don't doubt to be able to do it
    hereafter: if one expedient loses its virtue, another must be
    devised."
    Yet after all my task was not an easy one; often I would rather have
    pleased than teased him. My future husband was becoming to me my
    whole world; and more than the world: almost my hope of heaven. He
    stood between me and every thought of religion, as an eclipse
    intervenes between man and the broad sun. I could not, in those
    days, see God for His creature: of whom I had made an idol.
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  10. enchanteur

    enchanteur Thành viên rất tích cực

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    CHAPTER XXV
    The month of courtship had wasted: its very last hours were being
    numbered. There was no putting off the day that advanced--the
    bridal day; and all preparations for its arrival were complete. I,
    at least, had nothing more to do: there were my trunks, packed,
    locked, corded, ranged in a row along the wall of my little chamber;
    to-morrow, at this time, they would be far on their road to London:
    and so should I (D.V.),--or rather, not I, but one Jane Rochester, a
    person whom as yet I knew not. The cards of address alone remained
    to nail on: they lay, four little squares, in the drawer. Mr.
    Rochester had himself written the direction, "Mrs. Rochester,--
    Hotel, London," on each: I could not persuade myself to affix them,
    or to have them affixed. Mrs. Rochester! She did not exist: she
    would not be born till to-morrow, some time after eight o'clock
    a.m.; and I would wait to be assured she had come into the world
    alive before I assigned to her all that property. It was enough
    that in yonder closet, opposite my dressing-table, garments said to
    be hers had already displaced my black stuff Lowood frock and straw
    bonnet: for not to me appertained that suit of wedding raiment; the
    pearl-coloured robe, the vapoury veil pendent from the usurped
    portmanteau. I shut the closet to conceal the strange, wraith-like
    apparel it contained; which, at this evening hour--nine o'clock--
    gave out certainly a most ghostly shimmer through the shadow of my
    apartment. "I will leave you by yourself, white dream," I said. "I
    am feverish: I hear the wind blowing: I will go out of doors and
    feel it."
    It was not only the hurry of preparation that made me feverish; not
    only the anticipation of the great change--the new life which was to
    commence to-morrow: both these circumstances had their share,
    doubtless, in producing that restless, excited mood which hurried me
    forth at this late hour into the darkening grounds: but a third
    cause influenced my mind more than they.
    I had at heart a strange and anxious thought. Something had
    happened which I could not comprehend; no one knew of or had seen
    the event but myself: it had taken place the preceding night. Mr.
    Rochester that night was absent from home; nor was he yet returned:
    business had called him to a small estate of two or three farms he
    possessed thirty miles off--business it was requisite he should
    settle in person, previous to his me***ated departure from England.
    I waited now his return; eager to disburthen my mind, and to seek of
    him the solution of the enigma that perplexed me. Stay till he
    comes, reader; and, when I disclose my secret to him, you shall
    share the confidence.
    I sought the orchard, driven to its shelter by the wind, which all
    day had blown strong and full from the south, without, however,
    bringing a speck of rain. Instead of subsiding as night drew on, it
    seemed to augment its rush and deepen its roar: the trees blew
    steadfastly one way, never writhing round, and scarcely tossing back
    their boughs once in an hour; so continuous was the strain bending
    their branchy heads northward--the clouds drifted from pole to pole,
    fast following, mass on mass: no glimpse of blue sky had been
    visible that July day.
    It was not without a certain wild pleasure I ran before the wind,
    delivering my trouble of mind to the measureless air-torrent
    thundering through space. Descending the laurel walk, I faced the
    wreck of the chestnut-tree; it stood up black and riven: the trunk,
    split down the centre, gasped ghastly. The cloven halves were not
    broken from each other, for the firm base and strong roots kept them
    unsundered below; though community of vitality was destroyed--the
    sap could flow no more: their great boughs on each side were dead,
    and next winter's tempests would be sure to fell one or both to
    earth: as yet, however, they might be said to form one tree--a
    ruin, but an entire ruin.
    "You did right to hold fast to each other," I said: as if the
    monster-splinters were living things, and could hear me. "I think,
    scathed as you look, and charred and scorched, there must be a
    little sense of life in you yet, rising out of that adhesion at the
    faithful, honest roots: you will never have green leaves more--
    never more see birds making nests and singing idyls in your boughs;
    the time of pleasure and love is over with you: but you are not
    desolate: each of you has a comrade to sympathise with him in his
    decay." As I looked up at them, the moon appeared momentarily in
    that part of the sky which filled their fissure; her disk was blood-
    red and half overcast; she seemed to throw on me one bewildered,
    dreary glance, and buried herself again instantly in the deep drift
    of cloud. The wind fell, for a second, round Thornfield; but far
    away over wood and water, poured a wild, melancholy wail: it was
    sad to listen to, and I ran off again.
    Here and there I strayed through the orchard, gathered up the apples
    with which the grass round the tree roots was thickly strewn; then I
    employed myself in dividing the ripe from the unripe; I carried them
    into the house and put them away in the store-room. Then I repaired
    to the library to ascertain whether the fire was lit, for, though
    summer, I knew on such a gloomy evening Mr. Rochester would like to
    see a cheerful hearth when he came in: yes, the fire had been
    kindled some time, and burnt well. I placed his arm-chair by the
    chimney-corner: I wheeled the table near it: I let down the
    curtain, and had the candles brought in ready for lighting. More
    restless than ever, when I had completed these arrangements I could
    not sit still, nor even remain in the house: a little time-piece in
    the room and the old clock in the hall simultaneously struck ten.
    "How late it grows!" I said. "I will run down to the gates: it is
    moonlight at intervals; I can see a good way on the road. He may be
    coming now, and to meet him will save some minutes of suspense."
    The wind roared high in the great trees which embowered the gates;
    but the road as far as I could see, to the right hand and the left,
    was all still and solitary: save for the shadows of clouds crossing
    it at intervals as the moon looked out, it was but a long pale line,
    unvaried by one moving speck.
    A puerile tear dimmed my eye while I looked--a tear of
    disappointment and impatience; ashamed of it, I wiped it away. I
    lingered; the moon shut herself wholly within her chamber, and drew
    close her curtain of dense cloud: the night grew dark; rain came
    driving fast on the gale.
    "I wish he would come! I wish he would come!" I exclaimed, seized
    with hypochondriac foreboding. I had expected his arrival before
    tea; now it was dark: what could keep him? Had an accident
    happened? The event of last night again recurred to me. I
    interpreted it as a warning of disaster. I feared my hopes were too
    bright to be realised; and I had enjoyed so much bliss lately that I
    imagined my fortune had passed its meridian, and must now decline.
    "Well, I cannot return to the house," I thought; "I cannot sit by
    the fireside, while he is abroad in inclement weather: better tire
    my limbs than strain my heart; I will go forward and meet him."
    I set out; I walked fast, but not far: ere I had measured a quarter
    of a mile, I heard the tramp of hoofs; a horseman came on, full
    gallop; a dog ran by his side. Away with evil presentiment! It was
    he: here he was, mounted on Mesrour, followed by Pilot. He saw me;
    for the moon had opened a blue field in the sky, and rode in it
    watery bright: he took his hat off, and waved it round his head. I
    now ran to meet him.
    "There!" he exclaimed, as he stretched out his hand and bent from
    the saddle: "You can't do without me, that is evident. Step on my
    boot-toe; give me both hands: mount!"
    I obeyed: joy made me agile: I sprang up before him. A hearty
    kissing I got for a welcome, and some boastful triumph, which I
    swallowed as well as I could. He checked himself in his exultation
    to demand, "But is there anything the matter, Janet, that you come
    to meet me at such an hour? Is there anything wrong?"
    "No, but I thought you would never come. I could not bear to wait
    in the house for you, especially with this rain and wind."
    "Rain and wind, indeed! Yes, you are dripping like a mermaid; pull
    my cloak round you: but I think you are feverish, Jane: both your
    cheek and hand are burning hot. I ask again, is there anything the
    matter?
    "Nothing now; I am neither afraid nor unhappy."
    "Then you have been both?"
    "Rather: but I'll tell you all about it by-and-bye, sir; and I
    daresay you will only laugh at me for my pains."
    "I'll laugh at you heartily when to-morrow is past; till then I dare
    not: my prize is not certain. This is you, who have been as
    slippery as an eel this last month, and as thorny as a briar-rose?
    I could not lay a finger anywhere but I was pricked; and now I seem
    to have gathered up a stray lamb in my arms. You wandered out of
    the fold to seek your shepherd, did you, Jane?"
    "I wanted you: but don't boast. Here we are at Thornfield: now
    let me get down."
    He landed me on the pavement. As John took his horse, and he
    followed me into the hall, he told me to make haste and put
    something dry on, and then return to him in the library; and he
    stopped me, as I made for the staircase, to extort a promise that I
    would not be long: nor was I long; in five minutes I rejoined him.
    I found him at supper.
    "Take a seat and bear me company, Jane: please God, it is the last
    meal but one you will eat at Thornfield Hall for a long time."
    I sat down near him, but told him I could not eat. "Is it because
    you have the prospect of a journey before you, Jane? Is it the
    thoughts of going to London that takes away your appetite?"
    "I cannot see my prospects clearly to-night, sir; and I hardly know
    what thoughts I have in my head. Everything in life seems unreal."
    "Except me: I am substantial enough--touch me."
    "You, sir, are the most phantom-like of all: you are a mere dream."
    He held out his hand, laughing. "Is that a dream?" said he, placing
    it close to my eyes. He had a rounded, muscular, and vigorous hand,
    as well as a long, strong arm.
    "Yes; though I touch it, it is a dream," said I, as I put it down
    from before my face. "Sir, have you finished supper?"
    "Yes, Jane."
    I rang the bell and ordered away the tray. When we were again
    alone, I stirred the fire, and then took a low seat at my master's
    knee.
    "It is near midnight," I said.
    "Yes: but remember, Jane, you promised to wake with me the night
    before my wedding."
    "I did; and I will keep my promise, for an hour or two at least: I
    have no wish to go to bed."
    "Are all your arrangements complete?"
    "All, sir."
    "And on my part likewise," he returned, "I have settled everything;
    and we shall leave Thornfield to-morrow, within half-an-hour after
    our return from church."
    "Very well, sir."
    "With what an extraordinary smile you uttered that word--'very
    well,' Jane! What a bright spot of colour you have on each cheek!
    and how strangely your eyes glitter! Are you well?"
    "I believe I am."
    "Believe! What is the matter? Tell me what you feel."
    "I could not, sir: no words could tell you what I feel. I wish
    this present hour would never end: who knows with what fate the
    next may come charged?"
    "This is hypochondria, Jane. You have been over-excited, or over-
    fatigued."
    "Do you, sir, feel calm and happy?"
    "Calm?--no: but happy--to the heart's core."
    I looked up at him to read the signs of bliss in his face: it was
    ardent and flushed.
    "Give me your confidence, Jane," he said: "relieve your mind of any
    weight that oppresses it, by imparting it to me. What do you fear?-
    -that I shall not prove a good husband?"
    "It is the idea farthest from my thoughts."
    "Are you apprehensive of the new sphere you are about to enter?--of
    the new life into which you are passing?"
    "No."
    "You puzzle me, Jane: your look and tone of sorrowful audacity
    perplex and pain me. I want an explanation."
    "Then, sir, listen. You were from home last night?"
    "I was: I know that; and you hinted a while ago at something which
    had happened in my absence:- nothing, probably, of consequence; but,
    in short, it has disturbed you. Let me hear it. Mrs. Fairfax has
    said something, perhaps? or you have overheard the servants talk?--
    your sensitive self-respect has been wounded?"
    "No, sir." It struck twelve--I waited till the time-piece had
    concluded its silver chime, and the clock its hoarse, vibritting
    stroke, and then I proceeded.
    "All day yesterday I was very busy, and very happy in my ceaseless
    bustle; for I am not, as you seem to think, troubled by any haunting
    fears about the new sphere, et cetera: I think it a glorious thing
    to have the hope of living with you, because I love you. No, sir,
    don't caress me now--let me talk undisturbed. Yesterday I trusted
    well in Providence, and believed that events were working together
    for your good and mine: it was a fine day, if you recollect--the
    calmness of the air and sky forbade apprehensions respecting your
    safety or comfort on your journey. I walked a little while on the
    pavement after tea, thinking of you; and I beheld you in imagination
    so near me, I scarcely missed your actual presence. I thought of
    the life that lay before me--YOUR life, sir--an existence more
    expansive and stirring than my own: as much more so as the depths
    of the sea to which the brook runs are than the shallows of its own
    strait channel. I wondered why moralists call this world a dreary
    wilderness: for me it blossomed like a rose. Just at sunset, the
    air turned cold and the sky cloudy: I went in, Sophie called me
    upstairs to look at my wedding-dress, which they had just brought;
    and under it in the box I found your present--the veil which, in
    your princely extravagance, you sent for from London: resolved, I
    suppose, since I would not have jewels, to cheat me into accepting
    something as costly. I smiled as I unfolded it, and devised how I
    would tease you about your aristocratic tastes, and your efforts to
    masque your plebeian bride in the attributes of a peeress. I though
    how I would carry down to you the square of unembroidered blond I
    had myself prepared as a covering for my low-born head, and ask if
    that was not good enough for a woman who could bring her husband
    neither fortune, beauty, nor connections. I saw plainly how you
    would look; and heard your impetuous republican answers, and your
    haughty disavowal of any necessity on your part to augment your
    wealth, or elevate your standing, by marrying either a purse or a
    coronet."
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