登陆注册
37729300000011

第11章

there.My eye," chuckling, "it was queer talk! But I liked it.P'raps it was lies, but it was cheerfle lies that 'elps yer.What I ses is--if THINGS ain't cheerfle, PEOPLE 'S got to be --to fight it out.The women in the 'ouse larft fit to kill theirselves when she fust come 'ome limpin' an'

talked to 'em about what the lidy told 'er.But arter a bit they liked to 'ear 'er--just along o' the cheerfleness.Said it was like a pantermine.Drunken Bet says if she could get 'old 'f it an' believe it sime as Jinny Montaubyn does it'd be as cheerin' as drink an' last longer.""Is it a kind of religion?" Dart asked, having a vague memory of rumors of fantastic new theories and half-born beliefs which had seemed to him weird visions floating through fagged brains wearied by old doubts and arguments and failures.The world was tired--the whole earth was sad--centuries had wrought only to the end of this twentieth century's despair.Was the struggle waking even here--in this back water of the huge city's human tide?

he wondered with dull interest.

"Is it a kind of religion?" he said.

"It 's cheerfler." Glad thrust out her sharp chin uncertainly again.

"There 's no 'ell fire in it.An'

there ain't no blime laid on Godamighty." (The word as she uttered it seemed to have no connection whatever with her usual colloquial invocation of the Deity.) "When a dray run over little Billy an' crushed 'im inter a rag, an' 'is mother was screamin' an' draggin' 'er 'air down, the curick 'e ses, `It 's Gawd's will,'

'e ses--an' 'e ain't no bad sort neither, an' 'is fice was white an' wet with sweat--`Gawd done it,' 'e ses.

An' me, I'd nussed the child an' I clawed me 'air sime as if I was 'is mother an' I screamed out, `Then damn 'im!' An' the curick 'e dropped sittin' down on the curb-stone an' 'id 'is fice in 'is 'ands."

Dart hid his own face after the manner of the wretched curate.

"No wonder," he groaned.His blood turned cold.

"But," said Glad, "Miss Montaubyn's lidy she says Godamighty never done it nor never intended it, an' if we kep' sayin' an' believin' 'e 's close to us an' not millyuns o' miles away, we'd be took care of whilst we was alive an' not 'ave to wait till we was dead."She got up on her feet and threw up her arms with a sudden jerk and involuntary gesture.

"I 'm alive! I 'm alive!" she cried out, "I've got ter be took care of NOW! That 's why I like wot she tells about it.So does the women.

We ain't no more reason ter be sure of wot the curick says than ter be sure o' this.Dunno as I've got ter choose either way, but if I 'ad, I'd choose the cheerflest."Dart had sat staring at her--so had Polly--so had the thief.Dart rubbed his forehead.

"I do not understand," he said.

" 'T ain't understanding! It 's believin'.Bless yer, SHE doesn't understand.I say, let's go an' talk to 'er a bit.She don't mind nothin', an'

she'll let us in.We can leave Polly an' 'im 'ere.They can make some more tea an' drink it."It ended in their going out of the room together again and stumbling once more down the stairway's crookedness.At the bottom of the first short flight they stopped in the darkness and Glad knocked at a door with a summons manifestly expectant of cheerful welcome.She used the formula she had used before.

" 'S on'y me, Miss Montaubyn,"

she cried out." 'S on'y Glad."

The door opened in wide welcome, and confronting them as she held its handle stood a small old woman with an astonishing face.It was astonishing because while it was withered and wrinkled with marks of past years which had once stamped their reckless unsavoriness upon its every line, some strange redeeming thing had happened to it and its expression was that of a creature to whom the opening of a door could only mean the entrance--the tumbling in as it were--of hopes realized.

Its surface was swept clean of even the vaguest anticipation of anything not to be desired.Smiling as it did through the black doorway into the unrelieved shadow of the passage, it struck Antony Dart at once that it actually implied this--and that in this place--and indeed in any place--nothing could have been more astonishing.What could, indeed?

"Well, well," she said, "come in, Glad, bless yer.""I've brought a gent to 'ear yer talk a bit," Glad explained informally.

The small old woman raised her twinkling old face to look at him.

"Ah!" she said, as if summing up what was before her." 'E thinks it 's worse than it is, doesn't 'e, now?

Come in, sir, do."

This time it struck Dart that her look seemed actually to anticipate the evolving of some wonderful and desirable thing from himself.As if even his gloom carried with it treasure as yet undisplayed.As she knew nothing of the ten sovereigns, he wondered what, in God's name, she saw.

The poverty of the little square room had an odd cheer in it.Much scrubbing had removed from it the objections manifest in Glad's room above.There was a small red fire in the grate, a strip of old, but gay carpet before it, two chairs and a table were covered with a harlequin patchwork made of bright odds and ends of all sizes and shapes.The fog in all its murky volume could not quite obscure the brightness of the often rubbed window and its harlequin curtain drawn across upon a string.

"Bless yer," said Miss Montaubyn, "sit down."Dart sat and thanked her.Glad dropped upon the floor and girdled her knees comfortably while Miss Montaubyn took the second chair, which was close to the table, and snuffed the candle which stood near a basket of colored scraps such as, without doubt, had made the harlequin curtain.

"Yer won't mind me goin' on with me bit o' work?" she chirped.

"Tell 'im wot it is," Glad suggested.

"They come from a dressmaker as is in a small way," designating the scraps by a gesture."I clean up for 'er an'

she lets me 'ave 'em.I make 'em up into anythink I can--pin-cushions an'

bags an' curtings an' balls.Nobody'd think wot they run to sometimes.

Now an' then I sell some of 'em.

Wot I can't sell I give away."

"Drunken Bet's biby plays with 'er ball all day," said Glad.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 乾坤一剑溯

    乾坤一剑溯

    任凭你千军万马,任凭你无敌天下,我只有一剑,我也仅仅只需一剑
  • 穿越之五帝传说

    穿越之五帝传说

    简介:一个穷吊丝本来有美好的未来,却偏偏事与愿违因错阳差的被一种神秘力量拐到另一个空间,寄宿在一名本来默默无闻无法修练成强者的潺弱少年身体上,借助灵器的特种功能逐渐成为名强者,从此拉开了一代杀神的篇章。
  • 海归女的前世今生

    海归女的前世今生

    每一次相遇都是久别重逢,这是她和他的真实生活。只有从没过过这种日子的人才会觉得这句话美好,身在其中的只觉得太难了。难也要过下去,谁要这是她自找的?
  • 战玄黄

    战玄黄

    本书成绩太差了,不得不太监了,抱歉!
  • 洛玲珑

    洛玲珑

    前世的轰轰烈烈,却转头成空,所谓的海誓山盟原来都是利用。重生归来,再不想浑浑噩噩度日。侯府千金誓要自己规划人生,交挚友,创玲珑,终有一日,强权也不能随意左右自己的人生。只是,那个冤孽怎么就突然出现,坏自己好事不说,还要打擂?打就打,怕你不成。故事以女主的角度描述了不同的人为了要守护的家族亲人朋友不断奋斗的经历。
  • 哪瓣洋葱不流泪

    哪瓣洋葱不流泪

    我听说,第一个喜欢你的人会活在心里,一辈子……想起他的时候你微笑了吗?流下泪了吗?你,还记得第一个喜欢的人吗?青春像一颗洋葱,笑着的时候拿手抹眼睛,不知不觉就会流下泪来。将这洋葱青春,轻轻剥给你。
  • 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!
  • 海贼之一切为了革新

    海贼之一切为了革新

    战国:“斯帕克圣,他怎么敢?怎么敢?”卡普:“哈,咦....”一旁的赤犬咬牙切齿,虽然这种事情经常发生,不过心中一直在默念,为了正义,为了正义…“啊啦,斯帕克圣大人这次的行为很过分嘛。”黄袁的风凉话,让在场的所有人把目光投向他...黄袁见此,一脸颓废的靠在椅子上,就像刚刚说话的不是他一样。在场的中将,少将们表情不一。空:“大家不必理会斯帕克圣的行为!”最后,元帅钢骨空语气不自然的说完,发现众人面色异样,又道:“我会如实向五老星汇报的...”“散会...”
  • 帮助太太做女人

    帮助太太做女人

    男人心目中的太太是有一定独立性的女人。她们有自己的职业,有自己的理想和追求。他们不苛求女人在在事业上取得多么辉煌的成绩,但是并不喜欢完全失去自己事业的女人,不喜欢完全依赖他们,把所有压力都放在他们肩上的女人。她们应该是走钢丝的平衡高手,能够游刃有余的在事业女性和贤妻良母之间自由游走,一方面不会为了婚姻、为了家庭盲目的牺牲自我,失去自己的个性,另一方面不会将全部时间和经历投入到事业上,于家人不顾。
  • 我只想安静的装个逼

    我只想安静的装个逼

    何以解忧?唯有装逼!––张楚…………ps:简介孤儿,但本书是正儿八经的装逼故事文。