登陆注册
38558400000015

第15章 ACT II(6)

If rumours should get about of anything that offends people's prejudices, you may be quite certain that the whole cause of ******* of thought will suffer for it. Good-bye, Mr. Rosmer.

Rosmer. Good-bye.

Mortensgaard. I shall go straight to the printing-office now and have the great piece of news inserted in the "Searchlight".

Rosmer. Put it all in.

Mortensgaard. I will put in as much as there is any need for the public to know. (Bows, and goes out. ROSMER stands at the door, while MORTENSGAARD goes downstairs. The front door is heard shutting.)Rosmer (still standing in the doorway, calls softly). Rebecca!

Reb--ahem! (Calls loudly.) Mrs. Helseth--is Miss West downstairs?

Mrs. Helseth (from below). No, sir, she is not here.

(The curtain at the end of the room is drawn back, disclosing REBECCA standing in the doorway.)Rebecca. John!

Rosmer (turning round). What! Were you in there, in my bedroom!

My dear, what were you doing there?

Rebecca (going up to him). I have been listening.

Rosmer. Rebecca! Could you do a thing like that?

Rebecca. Indeed I could. It was so horrid the way he said that--about my morning wrapper.

Rosmer. Ah, so you were in there too when Kroll--?

Rebecca. Yes. I wanted to know what was at the bottom of his mind.

Rosmer. You know I would have told you.

Rebecca. I scarcely think you would have told me everything--certainly not in his own words.

Rosmer. Did you hear everything, then?

Rebecca. Most of it, I think. I had to go down for a moment when Mortensgaard came.

Rosmer. And then came up again?

Rebecca. Do not take it ill of me, dear friend.

Rosmer. Do anything that you think right and proper. You have full ******* of action.--But what do you say to it all, Rebecca?

Ah, I do not think I have ever stood so much in need of you as Ido to-day.

Rebecca. Surely both you and I have been prepared for what would happen some day.

Rosmer. No, no--not for this.

Rebecca. Not for this?

Rosmer. It is true that I used to think that sooner or later our beautiful pure friendship would come to be attacked by calumny and suspicion--not on Kroll's part, for I never would have believed such a thing of him--but on the part of the coarse-minded and ignoble-eyed crowd. Yes, indeed; I had good reason enough for so jealously drawing a veil of concealment over our compact. It was a dangerous secret.

Rebecca. Why should we pay any heed to what all these other people think? You and I know that we have nothing to reproach ourselves with.

Rosmer. I? Nothing to reproach myself with? It is true enough that I thought so until to-day. But now, now, Rebecca--Rebecca. Yes? Now?

Rosmer. How am I to account to myself for Beata's horrible accusation?

Rebecca (impetuously). Oh, don't talk about Beata! Don't think about Beata any more! She is dead, and you seemed at last to have been able to get away from the thought of her.

Rosmer. Since I have learnt of this, it seems just as if she had come to life again in some uncanny fashion.

Rebecca. Oh no--you must not say that, John! You must not!

Rosmer. I tell you it is so. We must try and get to the bottom of it. How can she have strayed into such a woeful misunderstanding of me?

Rebecca. Surely you too are not beginning to doubt that she was very nearly insane?

Rosmer. Well, I cannot deny it is just of that fact that I feel Icannot be so altogether certain any longer. And besides if it were so--Rebecca. If it were so? What then?

Rosmer. What I mean is--where are we to look for the actual cause of her sick woman's fancies turning into insanity?

Rebecca. What good can it possibly do for you to indulge in such speculations!

Rosmer. I cannot do otherwise, Rebecca. I cannot let this doubt go on gnawing at my heart, however unwilling I may be to face it.

Rebecca. But it may become a real danger to you to be perpetually dwelling on this one lugubrious topic.

Rosmer (walking about restlessly and absorbed in the idea). Imust have betrayed myself in some way or other. She must have noticed how happy I began to feel from the day you came to us.

Rebecca. Yes; but dear, even if that were so--Rosmer. You may be sure she did not fail to notice that we read the same books; that we sought one another's company, and discussed every new topic together. But I cannot understand it--because I was always so careful to spare her. When I look back, it seems to me that I did everything I could to keep her apart from our lives. Or did I not, Rebecca?

Rebecca. Yes, yes--undoubtedly you did.

Rosmer. And so did you, too. And notwithstanding that--! Oh, it is horrible to think of! To think that here she was--with her affection all distorted by illness --never saying a word--watching us--noticing everything and--and--misconstruing everything.

Rebecca (wringing her hands). Oh, I never ought to have come to Rosmersholm.

Rosmer. Just think what she must have suffered in silence! Think of all the horrible things her poor diseased brain must have led her to believe about us and store up in her mind about us! Did she never speak to you of anything that could give you any kind of clue?

Rebecca (as if startled). To me! Do you suppose I should have remained here a day longer, if she had?

Rosmer. No, no--that is obvious. What a fight she must have fought--and fought alone, Rebecca! In despair, and all alone. And then, in the end, the poignant misery of her victory--which was also her accusation of us--in the mill-race! (Throws himself into a chair, rests his elbows on the table, and hides his face in his hands.)Rebecca (coming quietly up behind him). Listen to me, John. If it were in your power to call Beata back--to you--to Rosmersholm--would you do it?

Rosmer. How can I tell what I would do or what I would not do! Ihave no thoughts for anything but the one thing which is irrevocable.

Rebecca. You ought to be beginning to live now, John. You were beginning. You had freed yourself completely on all sides. You were feeling so happy and so light--hearted Rosmer. I know--that is true enough. And then comes this overwhelming blow.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 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!
  • 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!
  • 薰衣草之我陪你走过十年之约

    薰衣草之我陪你走过十年之约

    “喂,你为什么这么冷漠,我对你的感情你不知道吗?”王俊凯拉着一个女孩的手说道。“你不是和四叶草有一个约定吗?”女孩看着眼前的男孩。一个女孩,表面冷漠,但内心很二的,表面上不喜欢王俊凯,但内心是很爱很爱王俊凯的,怕和王俊凯恋爱会破坏了他和四叶草的约定。
  • 重生之神之遗诏

    重生之神之遗诏

    这是一片元素充斥的大陆,没有元素亲和力的人注定无为,然而,如此可怜的少年还被人穿越占据了身体,一百年后,宿主已经成神,少年的神识得以苏醒,宿主决定补偿他,并送他返回原来的时空废柴依旧是废柴,这一次……
  • 这一世不会后悔
  • 我扒了宿主的马甲

    我扒了宿主的马甲

    系统总觉得自己的宿主不一般,明明上头给的资料就是弱鸡一个,可这点满的技能点是怎么回事?!捉鬼,黑客,打架,好似没有她不会的东西!还有满身的bug!系统森森的觉得自己遭受到了主神的欺骗,而且宿主的操作也太TM骚了吧?!
  • 我曾见过她的崛起

    我曾见过她的崛起

    清风拂过,昔人已去,一位佳人静静地站在墓碑前,花瓣随风飘落,许久,掩盖了坟墓和她.....
  • 倾城王妃不二嫁

    倾城王妃不二嫁

    为了复仇恨,她披上血红嫁衣,以夏府千金夏初雪的身份替代嫁给嗜血安北将军南宫龙傲,承受他蚀骨欢爱。他嗜血残忍,她的冷傲挑战了他的脾性,他先是迷上了她的身体,他喜欢破坏她脸上的清冷,却不想沦陷的是自己。残忍的厮杀,是多年前欠下的孽账。他,最后得到了她。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 地球原来是游戏

    地球原来是游戏

    某天,项小羽的身上突然多了个游戏界面……原来整个地球都是游戏?推倒校花还有奖励?作为一个正直的人,项小羽表示压力很大。
  • 夺宫:谁揽红颜醉倾城

    夺宫:谁揽红颜醉倾城

    皇位交割,权利更迭,煮豆燃萁,兄弟阋墙……他和她生在乱世,身不由己,他和他本是同根,却要相残!这是一个什么样的世道轮回!夜雨洒西窗,长风舞落叶,他修长的手自她清浅的眉眼间划过,他说,“阿漓,我等不及你长大了。做我的妻子好吗?”冰月寒塘水香榭,他的弟弟轩辕予汶指着冰水寒塘对她说:“要么跳下去,要么从我,二选一!”……血雨腥风中,谁在推波?谁在助澜?谁在权衡?谁在露怯?日下长秋,城乌夜起,乱世孤女有情难收,流落漂泊,江山谁寄?