Where Angels Fear to Tread eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about Where Angels Fear to Tread.

Where Angels Fear to Tread eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about Where Angels Fear to Tread.

“Oh, never mind.”

“I hated Sawston, you see.”

He was delighted.  “So did and do I. That’s splendid.  Go on.”

“I hated the idleness, the stupidity, the respectability, the petty unselfishness.”

“Petty selfishness,” he corrected.  Sawston psychology had long been his specialty.

“Petty unselfishness,” she repeated.  “I had got an idea that every one here spent their lives in making little sacrifices for objects they didn’t care for, to please people they didn’t love; that they never learnt to be sincere—­and, what’s as bad, never learnt how to enjoy themselves.  That’s what I thought—­what I thought at Monteriano.”

“Why, Miss Abbott,” he cried, “you should have told me this before!  Think it still!  I agree with lots of it.  Magnificent!”

“Now Lilia,” she went on, “though there were things about her I didn’t like, had somehow kept the power of enjoying herself with sincerity.  And Gino, I thought, was splendid, and young, and strong not only in body, and sincere as the day.  If they wanted to marry, why shouldn’t they do so?  Why shouldn’t she break with the deadening life where she had got into a groove, and would go on in it, getting more and more—­worse than unhappy—­apathetic till she died?  Of course I was wrong.  She only changed one groove for another—­a worse groove.  And as for him—­well, you know more about him than I do.  I can never trust myself to judge characters again.  But I still feel he cannot have been quite bad when we first met him.  Lilia—­that I should dare to say it! —­must have been cowardly.  He was only a boy—­just going to turn into something fine, I thought—­and she must have mismanaged him.  So that is the one time I have gone against what is proper, and there are the results.  You have an explanation now.”

“And much of it has been most interesting, though I don’t understand everything.  Did you never think of the disparity of their social position?”

“We were mad—­drunk with rebellion.  We had no common-sense.  As soon as you came, you saw and foresaw everything.”

“Oh, I don’t think that.”  He was vaguely displeased at being credited with common-sense.  For a moment Miss Abbott had seemed to him more unconventional than himself.

“I hope you see,” she concluded, “why I have troubled you with this long story.  Women—­I heard you say the other day—­are never at ease till they tell their faults out loud.  Lilia is dead and her husband gone to the bad—­all through me.  You see, Mr. Herriton, it makes me specially unhappy; it’s the only time I’ve ever gone into what my father calls ’real life’—­and look what I’ve made of it!  All that winter I seemed to be waking up to beauty and splendour and I don’t know what; and when the spring came, I wanted to fight against the things I hated—­mediocrity and dulness and spitefulness and society.  I actually hated society for a day or two at Monteriano.  I didn’t see that all these things are invincible, and that if we go against them they will break us to pieces.  Thank you for listening to so much nonsense.”

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Where Angels Fear to Tread from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.