第 1 节
作者:负债赌博      更新:2021-09-25 11:12      字数:9322
  THE BEDFORD…ROW CONSPIRACY
  THE BEDFORD…ROW
  CONSPIRACY
  Thackeray
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  THE BEDFORD…ROW CONSPIRACY
  CHAPTER I。
  OF THE LOVES OF MR。 PERKINS AND MISS GORGON; AND
  OF THE TWO GREAT FACTIONS IN THE TOWN OF
  OLDBOROUGH。
  〃My dear John;〃 cried Lucy; with a very wise look indeed; 〃it must and
  shall be so。    As for Doughty Street; with our means; a house is out of the
  question。    We must keep three servants; and Aunt Biggs says the taxes are
  one…and…twenty pounds a year。〃
  〃I   have   seen   a   sweet   place   at   Chelsea;〃   remarked   John: 〃Paradise
  Row; No。 17;gardengreenhousefifty pounds a yearomnibus to town
  within a mile。〃
  〃What!   that   I   may   be   left   alone   all   day;   and   you   spend   a   fortune   in
  driving    backward     and   forward   in  those   horrid   breakneck    cabs?    My
  darling; I should die theredie of fright; I know I should。            Did you not
  say   yourself   that  the  road   was   not  as  yet  lighted;  and   that  the  place
  swarmed with public…houses and dreadful tipsy Irish bricklayers?               Would
  you kill me; John?〃
  〃My da…arling;〃 said John; with tremendous fondness; clutching Miss
  Lucy suddenly round the waist; and rapping the hand of that young person
  violently against his waistcoat;〃My da…arling; don't say such things; even
  in a joke。    If I objected to the chambers; it is only because you; my love;
  with your birth and connections; ought to have a house of your own。               The
  chambers are quite large enough and certainly quite good enough for me。〃
  And so; after some more sweet parley on the part of these young people; it
  was agreed that they should take up their abode; when married; in a part of
  the House number One hundred and something; Bedford Row。
  It will be necessary to explain to the reader that John was no other than
  John   Perkins;   Esquire;   of   the   Middle   Temple;   barrister…at…law;   and   that
  Miss   Lucy   was   the   daughter   of   the   late   Captain   Gorgon;   and   Marianne
  Biggs; his wife。     The Captain being of noble connections; younger son of
  a   baronet;   cousin   to  Lord   X;  and   related  to  the  Y  family;   had
  angered   all   his   relatives   by   marrying   a   very   silly   pretty   young   woman;
  who kept a ladies'…school at Canterbury。          She had six hundred pounds to
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  THE BEDFORD…ROW CONSPIRACY
  her    fortune;   which     the  Captain     laid  out   in  the   purchase    of   a  sweet
  travelling…carriage   and   dressing…case   for   himself;   and   going   abroad   with
  his lady; spent several years in the principal prisons of Europe; in one of
  which he died。        His wife and daughter were meantime supported by the
  contributions of Mrs。 Jemima Biggs; who still kept the ladies'…school。
  At last a dear old relativesuch a one as one reads of in romances
  died and left seven thousand pounds apiece to the two sisters; whereupon
  the   elder   gave    up  schooling     and   retired   to  London;     and   the   younger
  managed   to   live   with   some   comfort   and   decency   at   Brussels;   upon   two
  hundred and ten pounds per annum。 Mrs。 Gorgon never touched a shilling
  of her capital; for the very good reason that it was placed entirely out of
  her reach; so that when she died; her daughter found herself in possession
  of a sum of money that is not always to be met with in this world。
  Her aunt the baronet's lady; and her aunt the ex…schoolmistress; both
  wrote very  pressing   invitations to her;  and she  resided   with each   for six
  months   after   her   arrival   in   England。    Now;   for   a   second   time;   she   had
  come to Mrs。 Biggs; Caroline Place; Mecklenburgh Square。                     It was under
  the   roof   of   that   respectable   old   lady   that   John   Perkins;   Esquire;   being
  invited to take tea; wooed and won Miss Gorgon。
  Having thus described the circumstances of Miss Gorgon's life; let us
  pass for a moment from that young lady; and lift up the veil of mystery
  which envelopes the deeds and character of Perkins。
  Perkins; too; was an orphan; and he and his Lucy; of summer evenings;
  when      Sol   descending     lingered    fondly    yet   about   the   minarets     of  the
  Foundling; and gilded the grassplots of Mecklenburgh SquarePerkins; I
  say;    and   Lucy    would    often   sit  together    in  the  summer…house        of  that
  pleasure…ground;   and   muse   upon   the   strange   coincidences   of   their   life。
  Lucy was motherless and fatherless; so too was Perkins。                    If Perkins was
  brotherless and sisterless; was not Lucy likewise an only child?                    Perkins
  was twenty…three:        his age and Lucy's united; amounted to forty…six; and
  it was to be remarked; as a fact still more extraordinary; that while Lucy's
  relatives were AUNTS; John's were UNCLES。                    Mysterious spirit of love!
  let   us   treat   thee   with   respect   and   whisper   not   too   many   of   thy   secrets。
  The  fact   is;  John   and   Lucy  were  a  pair   of  fools   (as   every  young   couple
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  OUGHT to be who have hearts that are worth a farthing); and were ready
  to find coincidences; sympathies; hidden gushes of feeling; mystic unions
  of the soul; and what not; in every single circumstance that occurred from
  the   rising   of   the   sun   to   the   going   down   thereof;   and   in   the   intervals。
  Bedford   Row;   where   Perkins   lived;   is   not   very   far   from   Mecklenburgh
  Square;   and   John   used   to   say   that   he   felt   a   comfort   that   his   house   and
  Lucy's were served by the same muffin…man。
  Further comment is needless。             A more honest; simple; clever; warm…
  hearted; soft; whimsical; romantical; high…spirited young fellow than John
  Perkins   did   not   exist。    When   his   father;   Doctor   Perkins;   died;   this;   his
  only son; was placed under the care of John Perkins; Esquire; of the house
  of Perkins;  Scully; and   Perkins;  those celebrated   attorneys in   the trading
  town     of   Oldborough;       which     the  second     partner;    William     Pitt  Scully;
  Esquire; represented in Parliament and in London。
  All John's fortune was the house in Bedford Row; which; at his father's
  death; was let out into chambers; and brought in a clear hundred a year。
  Under   his   uncle's   roof   at   Oldborough;   where   he   lived   with   thirteen   red…
  haired   male   and   female   cousins;   he   was   only   charged   fifty   pounds   for
  board;   clothes;   and   pocket…money;   and   the   remainder   of   his   rents   was
  carefully   put   by   for   him   until   his   majority。   When   he   approached   that
  periodwhen   he   came   to   belong   to   two   spouting…clubs   at   Oldborough;
  among the young merchants and lawyers'…clerksto blow the flute nicely;
  and play a good game at billiardsto have written one or two smart things
  in the Oldborough Sentinelto be fond of smoking (in which act he was
  discovered by his fainting aunt at three o'clock one morning)in one word;
  when John   Perkins arrived at   manhood; he   discovered that he   was quite
  unfit to be an attorney; that he detested all the ways of his uncle's stern;
  dull; vulgar; regular; red…headed family; and he vowed that he would go to
  London   and   make   his   fortune。        Thither   he   went;   his   aunt   and   cousins;
  who   were   all   〃serious;〃   vowing   that   he   was   a   lost   boy;   and   when   his
  history opens; John had been two years in the metropolis; inhabiting his
  own garrets; and a very nice compact set of apartments; looking into the
  back…garden; at this moment falling vacant; the prudent Lucy Gorgon had
  visited   them;   and   vowed   that   she   and   her   John   should   there   commence
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  housekeeping。
  All these explanations are tedious; but necessary; and furthermore; it
  must   be   said;   that   as   John's   uncle's   partner   was   the   Liberal   member   for
  Oldborough; so Lucy's uncle was its Ministerial representative。
  This gentleman; the brother of the deceased Captain Gorgon; lived at
  the paternal mansion of Gorgon Castle; and rejoiced in the name and title
  of Sir George Grimsby Go