登陆注册
37806800000015

第15章 CHAPTER VII--THE COMET AND THE FIXED STAR(1)

'I don't feel that I can part with Lisa now, just as she's beginning to be a help to me,' argued Mrs. Grubb, shortly after she had been welcomed and ensconced in a rocking-chair. 'As Madame Goldmarker says, nobody else in the world would have given her a home these four years, and a good many wouldn't have had her round the house.'

'That is true,' replied Mary, 'and your husband must have been a very good man from all you tell me, Mrs. Grubb.'

'Good enough, but totally uninteresting,' said that lady laconically.

'Well, putting aside the question as to whether goodness ought to be totally uninteresting, you say that Lisa's mother left Mr. Grubb three hundred dollars for her food and clothing, and that she has been ever since a willing servant, absolutely devoted to your interests.'

'We never put a cent of the three hundred dollars into our own pockets,' explained Mrs. Grubb. 'Mr. Grubb was dreadfully opposed to my doing it, but every penny of it went to freeing our religious society from debt. It was a case of the greatest good of the greatest number, and I didn't flinch. I thought it was a good deal more important that the Army of Present Perfection should have a roof over its head than that Lisa Bennett should be fed and clothed; that is, if both could not be done.'

'I don't know the creed of the Army, but it seems to me your Presently Perfect soldiers would have been rather uncomfortable under their roof if Lisa Bennett had been naked and starving outside.'

'Oh, it would never have come to that,' responded Mrs. Grubb easily.

'There is plenty of money in the world, and it belongs equally to the whole human race. I don't recognise anybody's right to have a dollar more than I have; but Mr. Grubb could never accept any belief that had been held less than a thousand years, and before he died he gave some money to a friend of his, and told him to pay me ten dollars every month towards Lisa's board. Untold gold could never pay for what my pride has suffered in having her, and if she hadn't been so useful I couldn't have done it,--I don't pretend that I could. She's an offence to the eye.'

'Not any longer,' said Mary proudly.

'Well, she was up to a few months ago; but she would always do anything for the twins, and though they are continually getting into mischief she never lets any harm come to them, not so much as a scratch. If I had taken a brighter child, she would have been for ever playing on her own account and thinking of her own pleasure; but if you once get an idea into Lisa's head of what you expect her to do, she will go on doing it to the end of the world, and wild horses couldn't keep her from it.'

'It's a pity more of us hadn't that virtue of obedience to a higher law.'

'Well, perhaps it is, and perhaps it isn't; it's a sign of a very weak mind.'

'Or a very strong one,' retorted Mary.

'There are natural leaders and natural followers,' remarked Mrs.

Grubb smilingly, as she swayed to and fro in Mary's rocking-chair.

Her smile, like a ballet-dancer's, had no connection with, nor relation to, the matter of her speech or her state of feeling; it was what a watchmaker would call a detached movement. 'I can't see,' said she, 'that it is my duty to send Lisa away to be taught, just when I need her most. My development is a good deal more important than hers.'

'Why?'

'Why? Because I have a vocation and a mission; because, if I should falter or faint by the wayside, hundreds of women who depend on me for inspiration would fall back into error and suffer permanent loss and injury.'

'Do you suppose they really would?' asked Mary rather maliciously, anxious if possible to ruffle the surface of Mrs. Grubb's exasperating placidity. 'Or would they, of course after a long period of grief-stricken apathy, attach themselves to somebody else's classes?'

'They might,' allowed Mrs. Grubb, in a tone of hurt self-respect;

'though you must know, little as you've seen of the world, that no woman has just the same revelation as any other, and that there are some who are born to interpret truth to the multitude. I can say in all humility that it has been so with me from a child. I've always had a burning desire to explore the secret chambers of Thought, always yearned to understand and explain the universe.'

'I have never tried to explain it,' sighed Mary a little wearily;

'one is so busy trying to keep one's little corner clean and sweet and pleasant, a helpful place where sad and tired souls can sit down and rest.'

'Who wants to sit down and rest? Not I!' exclaimed Mrs. Grubb. 'But then, I'm no criterion, I have such an active mind.'

'There are just a few passive virtues,' said Mary teasingly. 'We must remember that activity doesn't always make for good; sometimes it is unrest, disintegration; not growth, Mrs. Grubb, but fermentation.'

Mrs. Grubb took out a small blank-book and made a note, for she had an ear for any sentence that might be used in a speech.

'That is true. "DISTRUST THE ACTIVITY WHICH IS NOT GROWTH, BUT FERMENTATION" that will just hit some ladies in my classes, and it comes right in with something I am going to say this evening. We have a Diet Congress here this week, and there's a good deal of feeling and dispute between the various branches. I have two delegates stopping with me, and they haven't spoken to each other since yesterday morning, nor sat down to eat at the same table. I shall do all I can, as the presiding officer, to keep things pleasant at the meetings, but it will be difficult. You've never been in public life and can't understand it, but you see there are women among the delegates who've suffered the tyranny of man so long that they will cook anything their husbands demand; women who believe in eating any kind of food, and hold that the principal trouble lies in bad cooking; women who will give up meat, but still indulge in all sorts of cakes, pastries, and kickshaws; and women who are strong on temperance in drink, but who see no need of temperance in food. The whole question of diet reform is in an awful state, and a Congress is the only way to settle it.'

同类推荐
  • 明通鉴

    明通鉴

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 周易图

    周易图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 憨休禅师语录

    憨休禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 周慎斋遗书

    周慎斋遗书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 雪堂集

    雪堂集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 封天武主

    封天武主

    南疆,有不死老人枯坐千年,只作一画,一挂天地。远东,死气遍地,有黑暗森林虎视眈眈,群狼环视。西海,有魔教雄居一方,以海为根,为恶四海。北方,凡目之所及,皆为我群峰之巅领域。世界,有人奴御大地魔神,徙步万里。有人不愿飞升,红尘为仙。有人甘愿堕入凡尘,隐匿一方,劈一方禁地栖居。有绝世宗门两界山,镇压凡间百万年。也有远古老人,在虚无中,一人守一城。三百年后,一代剑帝,活出了第二世。
  • 云里雾里花欲落

    云里雾里花欲落

    作为21世纪女特工的云落莫名其妙的狗带了,然后再次苏醒的云落表示:啊哈!穿越了……当云落正准备在这一片玄幻的大陆上闯出一片天地的时候,她发现从现代穿越过来的不止她一个,有的甚至还带着对象!!!注:本文男主未定,全文沙雕好玩,剧情还是要走的,就是会不会走歪就不知道了,简介啥的也不太会写,反正正文写着写着就和简介没关系了,直接看文吧!
  • 泫

    2016年的最强大脑开播了,凡是身怀绝技的非正常的人,都参加了比赛!他,经常被朋友打骂,被室友嘲笑,被养父冷落!他,找工作面试上千次,都是以失败告终!他,叫凌七泫,一个热爱生活,却不甘愿平凡的怪才!他,以神秘登场,参加了比赛,为中国战队,赢取荣耀与光辉!他,曾说过,脑王不是个人的荣誉,而是我们中国与人民的智慧胜利!(此书纯属虚构,切勿跟风借鉴,如有模仿,定是天阉.)
  • 我在东京弹钢琴

    我在东京弹钢琴

    天才钢琴家夏俊希穿越到了平行世界的东京,成为了一名落榜生,虽然恼怒,但这里有钢琴就行。在这里,他遇到了亲密的朋友,可敬的对手,各种各样的姑娘。当然,还有美妙的音乐!--------------------------------------------------------我的计划非常简单,带来片刻的愉悦给一半是是男人的男孩,或一半是男孩的男人。
  • 婚然天成

    婚然天成

    穆天然遭男友劈腿了,赌气之下嫁人了,反正天下乌鸦一般黑,嫁谁不是嫁?司空绝感觉自己年纪到了,是时候成家了反正天下女人都一样,娶谁不是娶?一句话:闪婚捡到极品老公。
  • 透视神眼

    透视神眼

    透视之下,面红心跳,神眼之下,世间百态。逆境孤子,偶遇善缘,终成神医圣手、古武宗匠、一代道子,自此逍遥长乐,享尽天下繁“花”。“姑娘,请自重!”林笑如是说。
  • 沙葬海

    沙葬海

    为了终结领墓人的可悲宿命,李苏严带着兄弟深入险境,喇嘛庙里突然出现的诡异事件,喇嘛失踪,尸魃现世,从天而降虫雨以及镶嵌在石壁里面的尸骨,无一不让事件险象环生。
  • 风尊大陆

    风尊大陆

    一个意外穿越的绝世高手,在另一个世界开启了传奇人生。
  • 文娱教主

    文娱教主

    吴桐,一个土生土长的蓝星人,从小梦想着成为明星,成为文娱界里教主级的人物。当梦想成为现实,面对这表面光鲜亮丽的娱圈,他,该怎么做?
  • 瓷玉梦兰

    瓷玉梦兰

    她是21世纪的顶尖特工,代号“修罗”,再一次执行“sss”任务中因太过疲劳被敌方的炸弹炸死,直接炸得连灰都不剩死就死了,还可以投胎,结果她重生到了另一个世界里的一个废柴,姜黎兰表示,“废柴就废柴,老娘为国家效力了一辈子,最后还死在了战场上,老娘这辈子要当咸鱼”可是事实却不如她所愿……