登陆注册
34550300000011

第11章

Palfrey who farmed his own land, that had attracted Mr. Freely's peculiar regard, and conquered his fastidiousness; and no wonder, for the Ideal, as exhibited in the finest waxwork, was perhaps never so closely approached by the Real as in the person of the pretty Penelope. Her yellowish flaxen hair did not curl naturally, Iadmit, but its bright crisp ringlets were such smooth, perfect miniature tubes, that you would have longed to pass your little finger through them, and feel their soft elasticity. She wore them in a crop, for in those days, when society was in a healthier state, young ladies wore crops long after they were twenty, and Penelope was not yet nineteen. Like the waxen ideal, she had round blue eyes, and round nostrils in her little nose, and teeth such as the ideal would be seen to have, if it ever showed them. Altogether, she was a small, round thing, as neat as a pink and white double daisy, and as guileless; for I hope it does not argue guile in a pretty damsel of nineteen, to think that she should like to have a beau and be "engaged," when her elder sister had already been in that position a year and a half. To be sure, there was young Towers always coming to the house; but Penny felt convinced he only came to see her brother, for he never had anything to say to her, and never offered her his arm, and was as awkward and silent as possible.

It is not unlikely that Mr. Freely had early been smitten by Penny's charms, as brought under his observation at church, but he had to make his way in society a little before he could come into nearer contact with them; and even after he was well received in Grimworth families, it was a long while before he could converse with Penny otherwise than in an incidental meeting at Mr. Luff's. It was not so easy to get invited to Long Meadows, the residence of the Palfreys; for though Mr. Palfrey had been losing money of late years, not being able quite to recover his feet after the terrible murrain which forced him to borrow, his family were far from considering themselves on the same level even as the old-established tradespeople with whom they visited. The greatest people, even kings and queens, must visit with somebody, and the equals of the great are scarce. They were especially scarce at Grimworth, which, as I have before observed, was a low parish, mentioned with the most scornful brevity in gazetteers. Even the great people there were far behind those of their own standing in other parts of this realm.

Mr. Palfrey's farmyard doors had the paint all worn off them, and the front garden walks had long been merged in a general weediness.

Still, his father had been called Squire Palfrey, and had been respected by the last Grimworth generation as a man who could afford to drink too much in his own house.

Pretty Penny was not blind to the fact that Mr. Freely admired her, and she felt sure that it was he who had sent her a beautiful valentine; but her sister seemed to think so lightly of him (all young ladies think lightly of the gentlemen to whom they are not engaged), that Penny never dared mention him, and trembled and blushed whenever they met him, thinking of the valentine, which was very strong in its expressions, and which she felt guilty of knowing by heart. A man who had been to the Indies, and knew the sea so well, seemed to her a sort of public character, almost like Robinson Crusoe or Captain Cook; and Penny had always wished her husband to be a remarkable personage, likely to be put in Mangnall's Questions, with which register of the immortals she had become acquainted during her one year at a boarding-school. Only it seemed strange that a remarkable man should be a confectioner and pastry-cook, and this anomaly quite disturbed Penny's dreams. Her brothers, she knew, laughed at men who couldn't sit on horseback well, and called them tailors; but her brothers were very rough, and were quite without that power of anecdote which made Mr. Freely such a delightful companion. He was a very good man, she thought, for she had heard him say at Mr. Luff's, one day, that he always wished to do his duty in whatever state of life he might be placed; and he knew a great deal of poetry, for one day he had repeated a verse of a song. She wondered if he had made the words of the valentine!--it ended in this way:-"Without thee, it is pain to live, But with thee, it were sweet to die."Poor Mr. Freely! her father would very likely object--she felt sure he would, for he always called Mr. Freely "that sugar-plum fellow."Oh, it was very cruel, when true love was crossed in that way, and all because Mr. Freely was a confectioner: well, Penny would be true to him, for all that, and since his being a confectioner gave her an opportunity of showing her faithfulness, she was glad of it.

Edward Freely was a pretty name, much better than John Towers.

Young Towers had offered her a rose out of his button-hole the other day, blushing very much; but she refused it, and thought with delight how much Mr. Freely would be comforted if he knew her firmness of mind.

Poor little Penny! the days were so very long among the daisies on a grazing farm, and thought is so active--how was it possible that the inward drama should not get the start of the outward? I have known young ladies, much better educated, and with an outward world diversified by instructive lectures, to say nothing of literature and highly-developed fancy-work, who have spun a cocoon of visionary joys and sorrows for themselves, just as Penny did. Her elder sister Letitia, who had a prouder style of beauty, and a more worldly ambition, was engaged to a wool-factor, who came all the way from Cattelton to see her; and everybody knows that a wool-factor takes a very high rank, sometimes driving a double-bodied gig.

同类推荐
  • 佛说阿难陀目佉尼呵离陀邻尼经

    佛说阿难陀目佉尼呵离陀邻尼经

    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。
  • 居易续谈

    居易续谈

    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。
  • Alcibiades I

    Alcibiades I

    It seems impossible to separate by any exact line the genuine writings of Plato from the spurious. The only external evidence to them which is of much value is that of Aristotle; for the Alexandrian catalogues of a century later include manifest forgeries.
  • 渠丘耳梦录

    渠丘耳梦录

    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。
  • 帝鉴图说

    帝鉴图说

    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
  • 一个海军军官的网络情缘

    一个海军军官的网络情缘

    一位海军军官的真实的网络恋爱经历。龙哥先后在网上结识了可可、姗姗两个可爱的女孩并与她们温暖愉悦地交往。姗姗因种种原因自动退出,龙哥与可可渐渐相知相爱,美好的恋情从网络走向现实,终成眷属。小说以散文化的风格反映了长沙、西安等地城乡的民情风俗,从一个新的视角呈现出时代的风貌。
  • 枫叶红露凝香

    枫叶红露凝香

    一颗寂寞太久的心,一旦被唤醒,将是万劫不复,什么清心寡欲,什么六根清净,什么断情绝爱,不过是没有遇到那个能让你沉沦的人!
  • 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!
  • 半时晨光一世糖

    半时晨光一世糖

    女主,略有小名的摄影师,喜抓拍,爱逍梦如痴,爱巧克力如醉,爱狗如命,看着冷淡实际上有点小迷糊,有时候喜欢宅有时喜欢旅游,爱玩游戏。男主,墨色工作室的老板,专业很多,化妆,摄影等,腹黑型,从小就喜欢女主了,从古风圈和现实中实行追妻计划,一生追求自己的位置能高于女主心中的男神和巧克力,还有狗的地位,屡战屡败因为初见时那女孩走进他的生活,却不久就一字不堪地离开,让他找了很多年,更让他哭笑不得的她既然喜欢他员工兼好友,他只想眼里和心里都是他。在古风圈中她小有名气,之所以进这圈是因为逍梦也进了这圈,不过在这圈里她喜欢的声音除了逍梦的声音,还有一位神秘人的声音,他很少出现,但他的声音却是让人着迷,无数人捧着,可是有一天她既然能和他同一场出演,这倒是她惊喜不己,更让她惊讶的是他为她开歌会,这个让她惊慌不已。(有些人不是很理解书名,因为本文是青梅竹马类型的,而男主的名字又带晨字就半时晨光,因为女主喜欢巧克力,男主给她一生的宠溺,就是一世糖。)
  • 万瑶之主

    万瑶之主

    瑶是混子。而我宇智波瑶可不是混子!宇智波瑶摸了摸头上的鹿角,叹了口气:“为什么我会有角啊!不是公鹿才有角吗?鼬哥哥又要摸我角了………”这是一个平凡的瑶瑶公主,脱离野王,独自发育的故事,力争成为万瑶之主的她,望着眼前的敌人,可爱一笑。“阿瑶……为你痛哭!”
  • 小花记

    小花记

    无限好书尽在阅文。
  • 八龙岛

    八龙岛

    太古四大龙族同时现世,龙家弃子龙天一意外收获三颗龙宝珠,开启了他的逆天征伐之路。开龙脊,龙气灌顶,幻八龙,飞龙在天。因为个人工作原因,更新不太及时,为了避免出现断更拖更影响阅读体验,决定先存稿一段时间。更新时间定在2021年春节(2021-2-12)希望谅解
  • 陆总我错了

    陆总我错了

    女强vs男强,甜宠,“陆总,不好了!夫人跑去酒吧了。”“没事”“可是,在酒吧有很多男的向夫人搭讪。”“......备车!”“陆夫人,胆子真是越来越大了,嗯?”某个女人看着男人皮笑肉不笑的模样,刚想开溜,就被抓了回去,“陆夫人,看来不生个孩子,你是记不住你已经结婚了。”
  • 天门下

    天门下

    传说中的天门,一千年打开一次,世界上所有强者顿时趋之若骜。能够走上天门的人,就是世间的绝对强者,称霸世界,并且得到永恒,永生,成仙,成神。于是,一场强者间的交锋,争斗,由此开始,世界掀起风云。一向游手好闲的段飞,也走上了去往天门的道路。这个热血澎湃的时代,谁主沉浮!
  • 悠幽星辰不及你

    悠幽星辰不及你

    前一秒,某男:“女朋友是什么,能吃吗?有什么好谈的”后一秒,小鸟依人般蹭了蹭身旁的小女人,:“老婆~你就让我亲一口~就一口~”