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.

“That’s not doing anything!  You would be doing something if you kidnapped the baby, or if you went straight away.  But that!  To fail honourably!  To come out of the thing as well as you can!  Is that all you are after?”

“Why, yes,” he stammered.  “Since we talk openly, that is all I am after just now.  What else is there?  If I can persuade Signor Carella to give in, so much the better.  If he won’t, I must report the failure to my mother and then go home.  Why, Miss Abbott, you can’t expect me to follow you through all these turns—­”

“I don’t!  But I do expect you to settle what is right and to follow that.  Do you want the child to stop with his father, who loves him and will bring him up badly, or do you want him to come to Sawston, where no one loves him, but where he will be brought up well?  There is the question put dispassionately enough even for you.  Settle it.  Settle which side you’ll fight on.  But don’t go talking about an ‘honourable failure,’ which means simply not thinking and not acting at all.”

“Because I understand the position of Signor Carella and of you, it’s no reason that—­”

“None at all.  Fight as if you think us wrong.  Oh, what’s the use of your fair-mindedness if you never decide for yourself?  Any one gets hold of you and makes you do what they want.  And you see through them and laugh at them—­and do it.  It’s not enough to see clearly; I’m muddle-headed and stupid, and not worth a quarter of you, but I have tried to do what seemed right at the time.  And you—­your brain and your insight are splendid.  But when you see what’s right you’re too idle to do it.  You told me once that we shall be judged by our intentions, not by our accomplishments.  I thought it a grand remark.  But we must intend to accomplish—­not sit intending on a chair.”

“You are wonderful!” he said gravely.

“Oh, you appreciate me!” she burst out again.  “I wish you didn’t.  You appreciate us all—­see good in all of us.  And all the time you are dead—­dead—­dead.  Look, why aren’t you angry?” She came up to him, and then her mood suddenly changed, and she took hold of both his hands.  “You are so splendid, Mr. Herriton, that I can’t bear to see you wasted.  I can’t bear—­she has not been good to you—­your mother.”

“Miss Abbott, don’t worry over me.  Some people are born not to do things.  I’m one of them; I never did anything at school or at the Bar.  I came out to stop Lilia’s marriage, and it was too late.  I came out intending to get the baby, and I shall return an ‘honourable failure.’  I never expect anything to happen now, and so I am never disappointed.  You would be surprised to know what my great events are.  Going to the theatre yesterday, talking to you now—­I don’t suppose I shall ever meet anything greater.  I seem fated to pass through the world without colliding with it or moving it—­and I’m sure I can’t tell you whether the fate’s good or evil.  I don’t die—­I don’t fall in love.  And if other people die or fall in love they always do it when I’m just not there.  You are quite right; life to me is just a spectacle, which—­thank God, and thank Italy, and thank you—­is now more beautiful and heartening than it has ever been before.”

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