第 90 节
作者:南方网      更新:2021-02-19 19:56      字数:9247
  thinking  that  mere   friendship;   as   the   world   now  goes;   would   not
  justify    so  warm      a  sympathy—or         rather;    not   thinking     at  all;  I
  suppose—giving way to irresistible feelings; made me acquainted
  with his earnest; tender; constant; affection for Marianne。 He has
  loved her; my Elinor; ever since the first moment of seeing her。”
  Here;     however;     Elinor   perceived;—not   the         language;   not   the
  professions of Colonel Brandon; but the natural embellishments of
  her mother’s active fancy; which fashioned every thing  delightful
  to her; as it chose。
  “His     regard      for   her;   infinitely     surpassing      anything       that
  Willoughby   ever   felt   or   feigned;   as   much   more         warm;     as  more
  sincere   or   constant—which   ever   we   are   to   call   it—has   subsisted
  through        all   the    knowledge        of   dear     Marianne’s        unhappy
  prepossession         for   that    worthless      young      man!—and         without
  selfishness—without encouraging a hope!—could he have seen her
  happy   with   another—Such   a   noble   mind!—such   openness;   such
  sincerity!—no one can be deceived in him。”
  “Colonel      Brandon’s      character;”     said   Elinor;    “as  an   excellent
  man; is well established。”
  “I   know   it   is”—replied   her   mother   seriously;   “or   after   such   a
  warning; I should be the last to encourage such affection; or even
  to   be   pleased   by   it。   But   his   coming   for   me   as   he   did;   with   such
  active;   such  ready  friendship;   is   enough   to   prove   him   one   of   the
  worthiest of men。”
  “His   character;   however;”   answered   Elinor;   “does   not   rest   on
  one   act   of  kindness;   to   which   his     affection    for   Marianne;     were
  humanity   out   of   the   case;      would    have   prompted       him。    To   Mrs。
  Jennings;       to  the  Middletons;       he  has   been    long    and   intimately
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  known;      they   equally     love  and    respect    him;    and   even    my   own
  knowledge   of   him;   though   lately   acquired;   is   very   considerable;
  and so highly do I value and esteem him; that if Marianne can be
  happy      with   him;    I  shall  be   as  ready    as   yourself    to  think   our
  connection the greatest blessing to us in the world。 What answer
  did you give him?—Did you allow him to hope?”
  “Oh! my love; I could not then talk of hope to him or to myself。
  Marianne might at that moment be dying。 But he did not ask for
  hope   or   encouragement。   His   was   an   involuntary   confidence;   an
  irrepressible effusion to a soothing friend—not an application to a
  parent。     Yet    after   a  time    I did    say;   for  at   first  I  was    quite
  overcome—that   if   she   lived;   as   I   trusted   she   might;   my   greatest
  happiness   would   lie   in   promoting   their   marriage;   and   since   our
  arrival;   since   our   delightful   security;   I    have    repeated    it   to   him
  more   fully;   have   given   him   every   encouragement   in   my   power。
  Time; a very little time; I tell him; will do everything;—Marianne’s
  heart is not to be wasted for ever on such a man as Willoughby。—
  His own merits must soon secure it。”
  “To judge from the Colonel’s spirits; however; you have not yet
  made him equally sanguine。”
  “No。—He thinks Marianne’s affection too deeply rooted for any
  change in it under a great length of time; and even supposing her
  heart   again   free;   is   too   diffident   of   himself   to   believe;   that   with
  such a difference of age and disposition he could ever attach her。
  There;   however;   he   is   quite   mistaken。   His   age   is   only   so   much
  beyond hers as to be an advantage; as to make his character and
  principles      fixed;—and      his   disposition;    I  am    well   convinced;      is
  exactly  the  very  one   to   make   your   sister   happy。   And   his   person;
  his manners too; are all in his favour。 My partiality does not blind
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  me;   he   certainly   is   not   so   handsome   as   Willoughby—but   at   the
  same      time;   there    is  something       much     more     pleasing     in  his
  countenance。—There              was      always       a    something;—if         you
  remember;—in Willoughby’s eyes at times; which I did not like。”
  Elinor could not remember it;—but her mother; without waiting
  for her assent; continued;
  “And   his   manners;   the   Colonel’s   manners   are   not   only   more
  pleasing to me than Willoughby’s ever were; but they are of a kind
  I   well   know    to  be   more    solidly   attaching     to  Marianne。      Their
  gentleness;      their   genuine     attention    to  other   people;    and    their
  manly unstudied simplicity is much more accordant with her real
  disposition; than the liveliness—often artificial; and often ill…timed
  of   the   other。   I   am   very   sure   myself;   that   had   Willoughby   turned
  out    as  really   amiable;    as  he   has   proved     himself    the  contrary;
  Marianne   would   yet   never   have   been   so   happy   with  him;   as   she
  will be with Colonel Brandon。”
  She paused。—Her daughter could not quite agree with her; but
  her dissent was not heard; and therefore gave no offence。
  “At Delaford; she will be within an easy distance of me;” added
  Mrs。     Dashwood;        “even    if  I   remain     at   Barton;     and    in   all
  probability;—for I hear it is a large village;—indeed there certainly
  must be some small house or cottage close by; that would   suit  us
  quite as well as our present situation。”
  Poor     Elinor!—here       was    a  new    scheme      for  getting    her   to
  Delaford!—but her spirit was stubborn。
  “His   fortune  too!—for  at  my  time   of   life   you   know;   everybody
  cares about that;—and though I neither know nor desire to know;
  what it really is; I am sure it must be a good one。”
  Here they were interrupted by the entrance   of  a   third   person;
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  and Elinor withdrew to think it all over in private; to wish success
  to her friend; and yet in wishing it; to feel a pang for Willoughby。
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  CHAPTER X
  arianne’s illness; though weakening in its kind; had not
  been long enough to make her recovery slow; and with
  M
  youth; natural strength; and her mother’s presence in
  aid; it  proceeded   so  smoothly  as   to  enable   her  to  remove;   within
  four    days   after   the  arrival   of  the   latter;  into   Mrs。   Palmer’s
  dressing…room。 When there; at her own particular request; for she
  was   impatient   to   pour   forth   her   thanks   to   him   for   fetching   her
  mother; Colonel Brandon was invited to visit her。
  His emotion on entering the room; in seeing her altered looks;
  and in receiving the pale hand which she immediately held out to
  him;     was   such;   as;   in  Elinor’s    conjecture;    must    arise   from
  something       more     than    his   affection    for   Marianne;      or   the
  consciousness       of   its  being   known      to  others;   and    she   soon
  discovered   in   his   melancholy   eye   and   varying   complexion   as   he
  looked at her sister; the probable recurrence of many past scenes
  of misery to his mind; brought back by that resemblance between
  Marianne and Eliza already acknowledged; and now strengthened
  by    the  hollow    eye;   the   sickly  skin;   the   posture    of  reclining
  weakness; and the warm acknowledgment of peculiar obligation。
  Mrs。    Dashwood;      not   less  watchful    of  what   passed    than   her
  daughter;      but   with   a   mind    very   differently    influenced;    and
  therefore     watching   to   very   different   effect;  saw  nothing    in  the
  Colonel’s behaviour but what arose from the most simple and self…
  evident sensations