North and South eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 692 pages of information about North and South.

North and South eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 692 pages of information about North and South.

It was not merely that Margaret was known to Mr. Thornton to have spoken falsely,—­though she imagined that for this reason only was she so turned in his opinion,—­but that this falsehood of hers bore a distinct reference in his mind to some other lover.  He could not forget the fond and earnest look that had passed between her and some other man—­the attitude of familiar confidence, if not of positive endearment.  The thought of this perpetually stung him; it was a picture before his eyes, wherever he went and whatever he was doing.  In addition to this (and he ground his teeth as he remembered it), was the hour, dusky twilight; the place, so far away from home, and comparatively unfrequented.  His nobler self had said at first, that all this last might be accidental, innocent, justifiable; but once allow her right to love and be beloved (and had he any reason to deny her right?—­had not her words been severely explicit when she cast his love away from her?), she might easily have been beguiled into a longer walk, on to a later hour than she had anticipated.  But that falsehood! which showed a fatal consciousness of something wrong, and to be concealed, which was unlike her.  He did her that justice, though all the time it would have been a relief to believe her utterly unworthy of his esteem.  It was this that made the misery—­that he passionately loved her, and thought her, even with all her faults, more lovely and more excellent than any other woman; yet he deemed her so attached to some other man, so led away by her affection for him as to violate her truthful nature.  The very falsehood that stained her, was a proof how blindly she loved another—­this dark, slight, elegant, handsome man—­while he himself was rough, and stern, and strongly made.  He lashed himself into an agony of fierce jealousy.  He thought of that look, that attitude!—­how he would have laid his life at her feet for such tender glances, such fond detention!  He mocked at himself, for having valued the mechanical way in which she had protected him from the fury of the mob; now he had seen how soft and bewitching she looked when with a man she really loved.  He remembered, point by point, the sharpness of her words—­’There was not a man in all that crowd for whom she would not have done as much, far more readily than for him.’  He shared with the mob, in her desire of averting bloodshed from them; but this man, this hidden lover, shared with nobody; he had looks, words, hand-cleavings, lies, concealment, all to himself.

Mr. Thornton was conscious that he had never been so irritable as he was now, m all his life long; he felt inclined to give a short abrupt answer, more like a bark than a speech, to every one that asked him a question; and this consciousness hurt his pride he had always piqued himself on his self-control, and control himself he would.  So the manner was subdued to a quiet deliberation, but the matter was even harder and sterner than common.  He was more than usually silent at home; employing his evenings in a continual pace backwards and forwards, which would have annoyed his mother exceedingly if it had been practised by any one else; and did not tend to promote any forbearance on her part even to this beloved son.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
North and South from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.