Varney the Vampire. James Malcolm Rymer
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Название: Varney the Vampire

Автор: James Malcolm Rymer

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

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isbn: 4064066382056

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СКАЧАТЬ yet not go far. In the neighbouring town, for example, surely we might find some means of living entirely free from remark or observation as to who or what we were."

      "That, sister, I doubt. If you seek for that species of solitude which you contemplate, it is only to be found in a desert."

      "A desert?"

      "Yes; or in a large city."

      "Indeed!"

      "Ay, Flora; you may well believe me, that it is so. In a small community you can have no possible chance of evading an amount of scrutiny which would very soon pierce through any disguise you could by any possibility assume."

      "Then there is no resource. We must go far."

      "Nay, I will consider for you, Flora; and although, as a general principle, what I have said I know to be true, yet some more special circumstance may arise that may point a course that, while it enables us, for Charles Holland's sake, to remain in this immediate neighbourhood, yet will procure to us all the secrecy we may desire."

      "Dear—dear brother," said Flora, as she flung herself upon Henry's neck, "you speak cheeringly to me, and, what is more, you believe in Charles's faithfulness and truth."

      "As Heaven is my judge, I do."

      "A thousand, thousand thanks for such an assurance. I know him too well to doubt, for one moment, his faith. Oh, brother! could he—could Charles Holland, the soul of honour, the abode of every noble impulse that can adorn humanity—could he have written those letters? No, no! perish the thought!"

      "It has perished."

      "Thank God!"

      "I only, upon reflection, wonder how, misled for the moment by the concurrence of a number of circumstances, I could ever have suspected him."

      "It is like your generous nature, brother to say so; but you know as well as I, that there has been one here who has, far from feeling any sort of anxiety to think as well as possible of poor Charles Holland, has done all that in him lay to take the worst view of his mysterious disappearance, and induce us to do the like."

      "You allude to Mr. Marchdale?"

      "I do."

      "Well, Flora, at the same time that I must admit you have cause for speaking of Mr. Marchdale as you do, yet when we come to consider all things, there may be found for him excuses."

      "May there?"

      "Yes, Flora; he is a man, as he himself says, past the meridian of life, and the world is a sad as well as a bad teacher, for it soon—too soon, alas! deprives us of our trusting confidence in human nature."

      "It may be so; but yet, he, knowing as he did so very little of Charles Holland, judged him hastily and harshly."

      "You rather ought to say, Flora, that he did not judge him generously."

      "Well, be it so."

      "And you must recollect, when you say so, that Marchdale did not love Charles Holland."

      "Nay, now," said Flora, while there flashed across her cheek, for a moment, a heightened colour, "you are commencing to jest with me, and, therefore, we will say no more. You know, dear Henry, all my hopes, my wishes, and my feelings, and I shall therefore leave my future destiny in your hands, to dispose of as you please. Look yonder!"

      "Where?"

      "There. Do you not see the admiral and Mr. Chillingworth walking among the trees?"

      "Yes, yes; I do now."

      "How very serious and intent they are upon the subject of their discourse. They seem quite lost to all surrounding objects. I could not have imagined any subject that would so completely have absorbed the attention of Admiral Bell."

      "Mr. Chillingworth had something to relate to him or to propose, of a nature which, perchance, has had the effect of enchaining all his attention—he called him from the room."

      "Yes; I saw that he did. But see, they come towards us, and now we shall, probably, hear what is the subject-matter of their discourse and consultation."

      "We shall."

      Admiral Bell had evidently seen Henry and his sister, for now, suddenly, as if not from having for the first moment observed them, and, in consequence, broken off their private discourse, but as if they arrived at some point in it which enabled them to come to a conclusion to be communicative, the admiral came towards the brother and sister.

      "Well," said the bluff old admiral, when they were sufficiently near to exchange words, "well, Miss Flora, you are looking a thousand times better than you were."

      "I thank you, admiral, I am much better."

      "Oh, to be sure you are; and you will be much better still, and no sort of mistake. Now, here's the doctor and I have both been agreeing upon what is best for you."

      "Indeed!"

      "Yes, to be sure. Have we not, doctor?"

      "We have, admiral."

      "Good; and what, now, Miss Flora, do you suppose it is?"

      "I really cannot say."

      "Why, it's change of air, to be sure. You must get away from here as quickly as you can, or there will be no peace for you."

      "Yes," added Mr. Chillingworth, advancing; "I am quite convinced that change of scene and change of place, and habits, and people, will tend more to your complete recovery than any other circumstances. In the most ordinary cases of indisposition we always find that the invalid recovers much sooner away from the scene of his indisposition, than by remaining in it, even though its general salubrity be much greater than the place to which he may be removed."

      "Good," said the admiral.

      "Then we are to understand," said Henry, with a smile, "that we are no longer to be your guests, Admiral Bell?"

      "Belay there!" cried the admiral; "who told you to understand any such thing, I should like to know?"

      "Well, but we shall look upon this house as yours, now; and, that being the case, if we remove from it, of course we cease to be your guests any longer."

      "That's all you know about it. Now, hark ye. You don't command the fleet, so don't pretend to know what the admiral is going to do. I have made money by knocking about some of the enemies of old England, and that's the most gratifying manner in the world of making money, so far as I am concerned."

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      "It is an honourable mode."

      "Of course it is. Well, I am going to—what the deuce do you call it?"

      "What?"

      "That's just what I want to know. Oh, I have it now. I am going to what the lawyers call invest it."

      "A СКАЧАТЬ