The Old Wives' Tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 811 pages of information about The Old Wives' Tale.

The Old Wives' Tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 811 pages of information about The Old Wives' Tale.
Scales deeply and wickedly in love; she saw them with their arms round each other’s necks. ...  And then she called herself a middle-aged fool, to base such a structure of suspicion on a brief encounter in the street and on an idea, a fancy, a curious and irrational notion!  Sophia had a certain streak of pure nobility in that exceedingly heterogeneous thing, her character.  Moreover, Mrs. Baines watched the posts, and she also watched Sophia—­she was not the woman to trust to a streak of pure nobility—­and she came to be sure that Sophia’s sinfulness, if any, was not such as could be weighed in a balance, or collected together by stealth and then suddenly placed before the girl on a charger.

Still, she would have given much to see inside Sophia’s lovely head.  Ah!  Could she have done so, what sleep-destroying wonders she would have witnessed!  By what bright lamps burning in what mysterious grottoes and caverns of the brain would her mature eyes have been dazzled!  Sophia was living for months on the exhaustless ardent vitality absorbed during a magical two minutes in Wedgwood Street.  She was living chiefly on the flaming fire struck in her soul by the shock of seeing Gerald Scales in the porch of the Wedgwood Institution as she came out of the Free Library with Experience Of Life tucked into her large astrakhan muff.  He had stayed to meet her, then:  she knew it!  “After all,” her heart said, “I must be very beautiful, for I have attracted the pearl of men!” And she remembered her face in the glass.  The value and the power of beauty were tremendously proved to her.  He, the great man of the world, the handsome and elegant man with a thousand strange friends and a thousand interests far remote from her, had remained in Bursley on the mere chance of meeting her!  She was proud, but her pride was drowned in bliss.  “I was just looking at this inscription about Mr. Gladstone.”  “So you decided to come out as usual!” “And may I ask what book you have chosen?” These were the phrases she heard, and to which she responded with similar phrases.  And meanwhile a miracle of ecstasy had opened—­opened like a flower.  She was walking along Wedgwood Street by his side, slowly, on the scraped pavements, where marble bulbs of snow had defied the spade and remained.  She and he were exactly of the same height, and she kept looking into his face and he into hers.  This was all the miracle.  Except that she was not walking on the pavement—­she was walking on the intangible sward of paradise!  Except that the houses had receded and faded, and the passers-by were subtilized into unnoticeable ghosts!  Except that her mother and Constance had become phantasmal beings existing at an immense distance!

What had happened?  Nothing!  The most commonplace occurrence!  The eternal cause had picked up a commercial traveller (it might have been a clerk or curate, but it in fact was a commercial traveller), and endowed him with all the glorious, unique, incredible attributes of a god, and planted him down before Sophia in order to produce the eternal effect.  A miracle performed specially for Sophia’s benefit!  No one else in Wedgwood Street saw the god walking along by her side.  No one else saw anything but a simple commercial traveller.  Yes, the most commonplace occurrence!

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The Old Wives' Tale from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.