Ordeal of Richard Feverel — Volume 3 by George Meredith
page 8 of 97 (08%)
page 8 of 97 (08%)
|
wood, and the vision of his beloved. He could barely hold himself down
and listen. "I believe," the baronet spoke with little of the cheerfulness of belief, "good women exist." Oh, if he knew Lucy! "But," and he gazed on Richard intently, "it is given to very few to meet them on the threshold--I may say, to none. We find them after hard buffeting, and usually, when we find the one fitted for us, our madness has misshaped our destiny, our lot is cast. For women are not the end, but the means, of life. In youth we think them the former, and thousands, who have not even the excuse of youth, select a mate--or worse--with that sole view. I believe women punish us for so perverting their uses. They punish Society." The baronet put his hand to his brow as his mind travelled into consequences. 'Our most diligent pupil learns not so much as an earnest teacher,' says The Pilgrim's Scrip; and Sir Austin, in schooling himself to speak with moderation of women, was beginning to get a glimpse of their side of the case. Cold Blood now touched on love to Hot Blood. Cold Blood said, "It is a passion coming in the order of nature, the ripe fruit of our animal being." |
|