Chapter 38—CONCLUSION

类别:文学名著 作者:夏洛蒂·勃朗特 本章:Chapter 38—CONCLUSION

    Reader, I married  o tche knives, and I said—

    “Mary, I o Mr. Rocer t decent pic order of people, to ime safely communicate a remarkable piece of ne incurring tion, and subsequently stunned by a torrent of . Mary did look up, and sare at me: ting a pair of cing at tes ime Jo from t Mary, bending again over t, said only—

    “have you, Miss? ell, for sure!”

    A s time after s er, but I didn’t knoo co be o o ear.

    “I telled Mary  en gave ian name)—“I kneain   long neit, for augely pulled his forelock.

    “ter told me to give you and Mary t into e. it ing to  tc sanctum some time after, I caughe words—

    “Ster for ’ grand ladies.” And again, “If s one o’ t, sured; and i’ iful, onybody may see t.”

    I e to Moor o Cambridge immediately, to say ep unreservedly. Diana announced t s give me time to get over then she would come and see me.

    “Ster not  till ter, o oo late, for our s beams will only fade over your grave or mine.”

    . Jo knoer in : yet six monter e to me, , ioning Mr. Rocer’s name or alluding to my marriage. ter ained a regular, t frequent, correspondence ever since: rusts I am not of t God in things.

    You  quite forgotten little Adèle, ; I soon asked and obtained leave of Mr. Rocer, to go and see  tic joy at be ablis oo strict, its course of study too severe for a cook  to become  I soon found ticable; my time and cares  out a sced on a more indulgent system, and near enougo permit of my visiting en, and bringing imes. I took care s for anyt could contribute to : stled in udies. As sion corrected in a great measure s; and tention to me and mine, stle kindness I ever  in my poo offer her.

    My tale drao its close: one ing my experience of married life, and one brief glance at tunes of t frequently recurred in tive, and I have done.

    I en years. I kno is to live entirely for and  I love best on eart—blest beyond ely bone of y: ion of t t beats in our separate bosoms; consequently, ogeto be togeto be at once as free as in solitude, as gay as in company. e talk, I believe, all day long: to talk to eac a more animated and an audible too me; ed in cer—perfect concord is t.

    Mr. Rocer continued blind t t circumstance t dre knit us so very close: for I ill  erally, I ure—ting into  of field, tree, to ligamp on o ing o go: of doing for  o be done. And t full, most exquisite, even t painful sion. ruly, t ance in profiting by my attendance:  I loved  to yield t attendance o indulge my sest wishes.

    One morning at ting a letter to ation,  over me, and said—“Jane, tering ornament round your neck?”

    I ch-chain: I answered “Yes.”

    “And have you a pale blue dress on?”

    I  for some time y clouding one eye  now .

    up to London.  oculist; and ually recovered t of t one eye.  noinctly:  read or e muc  being led by to - born  into  ted , and black. On t occasion, , ackno God empered judgment h mercy.

    My Ed love are ernately, once every year, to see us, and o see tain in t officer and a good man. Mary’s is a clergyman, a college friend of tainments and principles, ion. Botain Fitzjames and Mr. on love them.

    As to St. Jo England:  to India. ered on t still. A more resolute, indefatigable pioneer never ed, full of energy, and zeal, and truto improvement;  te t encumber it. ern; ing; ious yet; but ernness of t, le,  ake up ion of ter-spirit,  rank of tand  fault before t migories of thful.

    St. Joo sufficed to toil, and toil dras close: ens to its setting. t letter I received from ears, and yet filled my  icipated ible cro a stranger’s e to me next, to say t t  lengto t. Jo  ed, eadfast. his—

    “My Master,” inctly,—‘Surely I come quickly!’ and hourly I more eagerly respond,—‘Amen; even so come, Lord Jesus!’”


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