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第39章

the heir of redclyffe-第39章

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cautioned me; and nearly made me mad!  I never was nearer coming to a 

regular outbreak。  Always the same!  Fool that I am。'



'Now; Guy; that is always your way; when other people are provoking; 

you abuse yourself。  I am sure Philip was so; with his calm assertion 

of being right。'



'The more provoking; the more trial for me。'



'But you endured it。  You say it was only _nearly_ an outbreak。  You 

parted friends?  I am sure of that。'



'Yes; it would have been rather too bad not to do that。'



'Then why do you scold yourself; when you really had the victory?'



'The victory will be if the inward feeling as well as the outward token 

is ever subdued。'



'0; that must be in time; of course。  Only let me hear how you got on 

with Colonel Deane。'



'He was very good…natured; and would have laughed it off; but Philip 

went with me; and looked grand; and begged in a solemn way that no more 

might be said。  I could have got on better alone; but Philip was very 

kind; or; as you say; gracious。'



'And provoking;' added Amy; 'only I believe you do not like me to say 

so。'



'It is more agreeable to hear you call him so at this moment than is 

good for me。  I have no right to complain; since I gave the offence。'



'The offence?'



'The absenting myself。'



'Oh! that you did because you thought it right。'



'I want to be clear that it was right。'



'What do you mean?' cried she; astonished。  'It was a great piece of 

self…denial; and I only felt it wrong not to be doing the same。'



'Nay; how should such creatures as you need the same discipline as I?'



She exclaimed to herself how far from his equal she washow weak; 

idle; and self…pleasing she felt herself to be; but she could not say 

sothe words would not come; and she only drooped her little head; 

humbled by his treating her as better than himself。



He proceeded:



'Something wrong I have done; and I want the clue。  Was it self…will in 

choosing discipline contrary to your mother's judgment?  Yet she could 

not know all。  I thought it her kindness in not liking me to lose the 

pleasure。  Besides; one must act for oneself; and this was only my own 

personal amusement。'



'Yes;' said Amy; timidly hesitating。



'Well?' said he; with the gentle; deferential tone that contrasted with 

his hasty; vehement self…accusations。  'Well?' and he waited; though 

not so as to hurry or frighten her; but to encourage; by showing her 

words had weight。



'I was thinking of one thing;' said Amy; 'is it not sometimes right to 

consider whether we ought to disappoint people who want us to be 

pleased?'

  

'There it is; I believe;' said Guy; stopping and considering; then 

going on with a better satisfied air; 'that is a real rule。  Not to be 

so bent on myself as to sacrifice other people's feelings to what seems 

best for me。  But I don't see whose pleasure I interfered with。'



Amy could have answered; 'Mine;' but the maidenly feeling checked her 

again; and she said; 'We all thought you would like it。'



'And I had no right to sacrifice your pleasure!  I see; I see。  The 

pleasure of giving pleasure to others is so much the best there is on 

earth; that one ought to be passive rather than interfere with it。'



'Yes;' said Amy; 'just as I have seen Mary Ross let herself be swung 

till she was giddy; rather than disappoint Charlotte and Helen; who 

thought she liked it。'



'If one could get to look at everything with as much indifference as 

the swinging!  But it is all selfishness。  It is as easy to be selfish 

for one's own good as for one's own pleasure; and I dare say; the first 

is as bad as the other。'



'I was thinking of something else;' said Amy。  'I should think it more 

like the holly tree in Southey。  Don't you know it?  The young leaves 

are sharp and prickly; because they have so much to defend themselves 

from; but as the tree grows older; it leaves off the spears; after it 

has won the victory。'



'Very kind of you; and very pretty; Amy;' said he; smiling; 'but; in 

the meantime; it is surely wrong to be more prickly than is 

unavoidable; and there is the perplexity。  Selfish! selfish! selfish!  

Oneself the first object。  That is the root。'



'Guy; if it is not impertinent to ask; I do wish you would tell me one 

thing。  Why did you think it wrong to go to that ball?' said Amy; 

timidly。



'I don't know that I thought it wrong to go to that individual ball;' 

said Guy; 'but my notion was; that altogether I was getting into a 

rattling idle way; never doing my proper quantity of work; or doing it 

properly; and talking a lot of nonsense sometimes。  I thought; last 

Sunday; it was time to make a short turn somewhere and bring myself up。  

I could not; or did not get out of the pleasant talks as Laura does; so 

I thought giving up this ball would punish me at once; and set me on a 

new tack of behaving like a reasonable creature。'



'Don't call yourself too many names; or you won't be civil to us。  We 

all; except Laura; have been quite as bad。'



'Yes; but you had not so much to do。'



'We ought;' said Amy; 'but I meant to be reasonable when Eveleen is 

gone。'



Perhaps I ought to have waited till then; but I don't know。  Lady 

Eveleen is so amusing that it leads to farther dawdling; and it would 

not do to wait to resist the temptation till it is out of the way。'



As he spoke; they saw Mrs。 Edmonstone coming out; and went to meet her。  

Guy told her his trouble; detailing it more calmly than before he had 

found out his mistake。  She agreed with him that this had been in 

forgetting that his attending the ball did not concern only himself; 

but he then returned to say that he could not see what difference it 

made; except to their own immediate circle。



'If it was not you; Guy; who made that speech; I should call it fishing 

for a compliment。  You forget that rank and station make people sought 

after。'



'I suppose there is something in that;' said Guy; thoughtfully; 'at any 

rate; it is no bad thing to think so; it is so humiliating。'



'That is not the way most people would take it。'



'No?  Does not it prevent one from taking any attention as paid to 

one's real self?  The real flattering thing would be to be made as much 

of as Philip is; for one's own merits; and not for the handle to one's 

name。'



'Yes; I think so;' said Amy。



'Well; then;' as if he wished to gather the whole conversation into one 

resolve; the point is to consider whether abstaining from innocent 

things that may be dangerous to oneself mortifies other people。  If so; 

the vexing them is a certain wrong; whereas the mischief of taking the 

pleasure is only a possible contingency。  But then one must take it out 

of oneself some other way; or it becomes an excuse for self…

indulgence。'



'Hardly with you;' said Mrs。 Edmonstone; smiling。



'Because I had rather go at it at once; and forget all about other 

people。  You must teach me consideration; Mrs。 Edmonstone; and in the 

meantime will you tell me what you think I had better do about this 

scrape?'



'Let it alone;' said Mrs。 Edmonstone。  'You have begged every one's 

pardon; and it had better be forgotten as fast as possible。   They have 

made more fuss already than it is worth。  Don't torment yourself about 

it any more; for; if you have made a mistake; it is on the right side; 

and on the first opportunity; I'll go and call on Mrs。 Deane; and see 

if she is very implacable。'



The dressing…bell rang; and Amy ran up…stairs; stopping at Laura's 

door; to ask how she prospered in the drive she had been taking with 

Charles and Eveleen。



Amy told her of Guy's trouble; and oh! awkward question; inquired if 

she could guess what it could be that Philip imagined that Guy had been 

offended at。



'Can't he guess?' said poor Laura; to gain time; and brushing her hair 

over h

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