‘Richard says he’ll have me back, and I’m bound to go. If he had
refused, it might not have been so much my duty to––give up Jude.
But––’ She remained with her face in the bedclothes, and Mrs. Edlin
left the room.
Phillotson in the interval had gone back to his friend Gillingham,
who still sat over the supper-table. They soon rose, and walked out
on the green to smoke awhile. A light was burning in Sue’s room, a
shadow moving now and then across the blind.
Gillingham had evidently been impressed with the inde
finable
charm of Sue, and after a silence he said, ‘Well: you’ve all but got her
again at last. She can’t very well go a second time. The pear has
dropped into your hand.’
‘Yes. . . . I suppose I am right in taking her at her word. I confess
there seems a touch of sel
fishness in it. Apart from her being, what
she is, of course, a luxury for a fogey like me, it will set me right in
the eyes of the clergy and orthodox laity, who have never forgiven me
for letting her go. So I may get back in some degree into my old
track.’
‘Well––if you’ve got any sound reason for marrying her again, do
it now in God’s name! I was always against your opening the cage-
door and letting the bird go in such an obviously suicidal way. You
might have been a school inspector by this time, or a reverend, if you
hadn’t been so weak about her.’
‘I did myself irreparable damage––I know it.’
‘Once you’ve got her housed again, stick to her.’
Phillotson was more evasive to-night. He did not care to admit
clearly that his taking Sue to him again had at bottom nothing to do
with repentance of letting her go, but was, primarily, a human
instinct
flying in the face of custom and profession.* He said, ‘Yes. I
shall do that. I know woman better now. Whatever justice there was
in releasing her, there was little logic, for one holding my views on
other subjects.’
Gillingham looked at him, and wondered whether it would ever
happen that the reactionary spirit induced by the world’s sneers and
his own physical wishes would make Phillotson more orthodoxly
cruel to her than he had erstwhile been informally and perversely
kind.
‘I perceive it won’t do to give way to impulse,’ Phillotson
resumed, feeling more and more every minute the necessity of acting
Dostları ilə paylaş: