登陆注册
37594800000142

第142章 THE THIRD(1)

THE BREAKING POINT

1

And then we broke down.We broke our faith with both Margaret and Shoesmith, flung career and duty out of our lives, and went away together.

It is only now, almost a year after these events, that I can begin to see what happened to me.At the time it seemed to me I was a rational, responsible creature, but indeed I had not parted from her two days before I became a monomaniac to whom nothing could matter but Isabel.Every truth had to be squared to that obsession, every duty.It astounds me to think how I forgot Margaret, forgot my work, forgot everything but that we two were parted.I still believe that with better chances we might have escaped the consequences of the emotional storm that presently seized us both.

But we had no foresight of that, and no preparation for it, and our circumstances betrayed us.It was partly Shoesmith's unwisdom in delaying his marriage until after the end of the session--partly my own amazing folly in returning within four days to Westminster.But we were all of us intent upon the defeat of scandal and the complete restoration of appearances.It seemed necessary that Shoesmith's marriage should not seem to be hurried, still more necessary that Ishould not vanish inexplicably.I had to be visible with Margaret in London just as much as possible; we went to restaurants, we visited the theatre; we could even contemplate the possibility of my presence at the wedding.For that, however, we had schemed a weekend visit to Wales, and a fictitious sprained ankle at the last moment which would justify my absence....

I cannot convey to you the intolerable wretchedness and rebellion of my separation from Isabel.It seemed that in the past two years all my thoughts had spun commisures to Isabel's brain and I could think of nothing that did not lead me surely to the need of the one intimate I had found in the world.I came back to the House and the office and my home, I filled all my days with appointments and duty, and it did not save me in the least from a lonely emptiness such as I had never felt before in all my life.I had little sleep.In the daytime I did a hundred things, I even spoke in the House on two occasions, and by my own low standards spoke well, and it seemed to me that I was going about in my own brain like a hushed survivor in a house whose owner lies dead upstairs.

I came to a crisis after that wild dinner of Tarvrille's.Something in that stripped my soul bare.

It was an occasion made absurd and strange by the odd accident that the house caught fire upstairs while we were dining below.It was a men's dinner--" A dinner of all sorts," said Tarvrille, when he invited me; "everything from Evesham and Gane to Wilkins the author, and Heaven knows what will happen!" I remember that afterwards Tarvrille was accused of having planned the fire to make his dinner a marvel and a memory.It was indeed a wonderful occasion, and Isuppose if I had not been altogether drenched in misery, I should have found the same wild amusement in it that glowed in all the others.There were one or two university dons, Lord George Fester, the racing man, Panmure, the artist, two or three big City men, Weston Massinghay and another prominent Liberal whose name I can't remember, the three men Tarvrille had promised and Esmeer, Lord Wrassleton, Waulsort, the member for Monckton, Neal and several others.We began a little coldly, with duologues, but the conversation was already becoming general--so far as such a long table permitted--when the fire asserted itself.

It asserted itself first as a penetrating and emphatic smell of burning rubber,--it was caused by the fusing of an electric wire.

The reek forced its way into the discussion of the Pekin massacres that had sprung up between Evesham, Waulsort, and the others at the end of the table."Something burning," said the man next to me.

"Something must be burning," said Panmure.

Tarvrille hated undignified interruptions.He had a particularly imperturbable butler with a cadaverous sad face and an eye of rigid disapproval.He spoke to this individual over his shoulder."Just see, will you," he said, and caught up the pause in the talk to his left.

Wilkins was asking questions, and I, too, was curious.The story of the siege of the Legations in China in the year 1900 and all that followed upon that, is just one of those disturbing interludes in history that refuse to join on to that general scheme of protestation by which civilisation is maintained.It is a break in the general flow of experience as disconcerting to statecraft as the robbery of my knife and the scuffle that followed it had been to me when I was a boy at Penge.It is like a tear in a curtain revealing quite unexpected backgrounds.I had never given the business a thought for years; now this talk brought back a string of pictures to my mind; how the reliefs arrived and the plundering began, how section after section of the International Army was drawn into murder and pillage, how the infection spread upward until the wives of Ministers were busy looting, and the very sentinels stripped and crawled like snakes into the Palace they were set to guard.It did not stop at robbery, men were murdered, women, being plundered, were outraged, children were butchered, strong men had found themselves with arms in a lawless, defenceless city, and this had followed.

Now it was all recalled.

"Respectable ladies addicted to district visiting at home were as bad as any one," said Panmure."Glazebrook told me of one--flushed like a woman at a bargain sale, he said--and when he pointed out to her that the silk she'd got was bloodstained, she just said, 'Oh, bother!' and threw it aside and went back...."We became aware that Tarvrille's butler had returned.We tried not to seem to listen.

"Beg pardon, m'lord," he said."The house IS on fire, m'lord.""Upstairs, m'lord."

"Just overhead, m'lord."

"The maids are throwing water, m'lord, and I've telephoned FIRE.""No, m'lord, no immediate danger."

同类推荐
  • 西游记补

    西游记补

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Author of Beltraffio

    The Author of Beltraffio

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 相宗八要解

    相宗八要解

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 祀义篇

    祀义篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 王学质疑

    王学质疑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 隐士双杰

    隐士双杰

    简介:灾难过后,一所学校将两人连在了一起;生活的点点滴滴将两人粘在了一起,心在一起,身份什么的就不重要了。背景:公元3000年后,天气和环境随着人类活动越来越差,生态环境回报给人类的是无数死亡。懦弱,逃窜,躲避一时间在人类之间流行起来;终于,科技所带来的人造生态环境拯救了剩下不多的人类。可是好景不长,生态环境又赐给了人们一种名叫凝?的病毒,一但感染,三日之内必将爆体而亡。死亡又回到了人类的身边;一年,两年,三年……十年过去,病毒终于被大部分控制了。但是科研人员还是没有停下研究控制凝?病毒药物的步伐,为此又是一大堆的死亡降临……
  • 天行

    天行

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

    快乐星猫之启航

    个人脑补的快乐星猫第九季内容,衔接第八季最后一集。欢迎各位快猫同好们前来相认!
  • 刹那的昙花刹那的你

    刹那的昙花刹那的你

    也许是在错的时间遇到美好的你,你注定是我无法拥有的梦……
  • 无敌霸者

    无敌霸者

    大道三千,吾以吾道逆苍天!作为一个坐着,躺着,站着,甚至是战斗着,只要意识清醒,就可进入修炼状态,功力无限增长的男人,强者之路必然尸骨铺垫,我欲成神,天下共鸣!
  • 风华魔妃逃不了

    风华魔妃逃不了

    上辈子她愚蠢,轻信于人,害得恩师为她而死,为了复活恩师,在抢夺圣魂之中与敌人同归于尽而死。却不想,一朝醒来,居然成为了一个‘男子’?!还是个毫无修炼之资且有另类之好的龙阳男! 洛星辰表示,随便吧,管他那么多,她的目标只有一个,只要能收集圣魂复活恩师就行… 不想,一路苦苦追寻下来,发现的种种意外,背后隐藏着的巨大阴谋,她该作何应付……
  • 天行

    天行

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

    飘逸的刀

    一个人如果厌恶了人心,那么他该去哪里。如果他委屈自己的心,不去伤害别人却被别人肆意攻击,他该如何。如果真的有善良温暖的人,为什么他不能多遇到几个。手里的刀,每夜都在哭诉,问它的主人,为什么要隐忍。后来他说,缘来则聚,发生的一切都是注定的,能做的只有忍受。命运却眷顾着他,让他摆脱了尘俗的喧嚣,去追寻自己想要的生活了
  • 斗罗之灵狐传说

    斗罗之灵狐传说

    叶天灵,地球的一个孤儿,考大学时意外穿越成灵狐族少族长,刚出生时,惨遭灭族,被送到斗罗大陆,成为银龙王弟弟,并且觉醒了万界无敌系统,看他如何报灭族之仇,成为万界之王。
  • 天天营养百味:养胃菜品

    天天营养百味:养胃菜品

    对于现代职场人员来说,日常繁重复杂的工作可能会使部分的人三餐不定,饮食不均,长此以往很容易患上胃病。俗话说胃病“三分治七分养”。那么在日常生活中如何养胃呢?《养胃菜品》中所介绍的菜式可以尝试一下!书中的菜品食材简单,所花材料和时间也少,是日常工作繁忙的人员的上上之选,希望这本书可以帮助到大家,让你在工作的同时拥有一个健康的胃,充满活力的身体!