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st. ives-第66部分

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complete abandonment; till the tears ran down my cheeks; and ever 

and again; as the fit abated; I would get another view of the 

landlord's face; and go off into another paroxysm。



'You droll creature; you will be the death of me yet!' I cried; 

drying my eyes。



My friend was now wholly disconcerted; he knew not where to look; 

nor yet what to say; and began for the first time to conceive it 

possible he was mistaken。



'You seem rather to enjoy a laugh; sir;' said he。



'O; yes!  I am quite an original;' I replied; and laughed again。



Presently; in a changed voice; he offered me twenty pounds for the 

chaise; I ran him up to twenty…five; and closed with the offer: 

indeed; I was glad to get anything; and if I haggled; it was not in 

the desire of gain; but with the view at any price of securing a 

safe retreat。  For although hostilities were suspended; he was yet 

far from satisfied; and I could read his continued suspicions in 

the cloudy eye that still hovered about my face。  At last they took 

shape in words。



'This is all very well;' says he: 'you carry it off well; but for 

all that; I must do my duty。'



I had my strong effect in reserve; it was to burn my ships with a 

vengeance!  I rose。  'Leave the room;' said I。  'This is 

insuperable。  Is the man mad?'  And then; as if already half…

ashamed of my passion: 'I can take a joke as well as any one;' I 

added; 'but this passes measure。  Send my servant and the bill。'



When he had left me alone; I considered my own valour with 

amazement。  I had insulted him; I had sent him away alone; now; if 

ever; he would take what was the only sensible resource; and fetch 

the constable。  But there was something instinctively treacherous 

about the man which shrank from plain courses。  And; with all his 

cleverness; he missed the occasion of fame。  Rowley and I were 

suffered to walk out of his door; with all our baggage; on foot; 

with no destination named; except in the vague statement that we 

were come 'to view the lakes'; and my friend only watched our 

departure with his chin in his hand; still moodily irresolute。



I think this one of my great successes。  I was exposed; unmasked; 

summoned to do a perfectly natural act; which must prove my doom 

and which I had not the slightest pretext for refusing。  I kept my 

head; stuck to my guns; and; against all likelihood; here I was 

once more at liberty and in the king's highway。  This was a strong 

lesson never to despair; and; at the same time; how many hints to 

be cautious! and what a perplexed and dubious business the whole 

question of my escape now appeared!  That I should have risked 

perishing upon a trumpery question of a POURBOIRE; depicted in 

lively colours the perils that perpetually surrounded us。  Though; 

to be sure; the initial mistake had been committed before that; and 

if I had not suffered myself to be drawn a little deep in 

confidences to the innocent Dolly; there need have been no tumble 

at the inn of Kirkby…Lonsdale。  I took the lesson to heart; and 

promised myself in the future to be more reserved。  It was none of 

my business to attend to broken chaises or shipwrecked travellers。  

I had my hands full of my own affairs; and my best defence would be 

a little more natural selfishness and a trifle less imbecile good…

nature。









CHAPTER XXV … I MEET A CHEERFUL EXTRAVAGANT





I PASS over the next fifty or sixty leagues of our journey without 

comment。  The reader must be growing weary of scenes of travel; and 

for my own part I have no cause to recall these particular miles 

with any pleasure。  We were mainly occupied with attempts to 

obliterate our trail; which (as the result showed) were far from 

successful; for; on my cousin following; he was able to run me home 

with the least possible loss of time; following the claret…coloured 

chaise to Kirkby…Lonsdale; where I think the landlord must have 

wept to learn what he had missed; and tracing us thereafter to the 

doors of the coach…office in Edinburgh without a single check。  

Fortune did not favour me; and why should I recapitulate the 

details of futile precautions which deceived nobody; and wearisome 

arts which proved to be artless?



The day was drawing to an end when Mr。 Rowley and I bowled into 

Edinburgh to the stirring sound of the guard's bugle and the 

clattering team。  I was here upon my field of battle; on the scene 

of my former captivity; escape and exploits; and in the same city 

with my love。  My heart expanded; I have rarely felt more of a 

hero。  All down the Bridges I sat by the driver with my arms folded 

and my face set; unflinchingly meeting every eye; and prepared 

every moment for a cry of recognition。  Hundreds of the population 

were in the habit of visiting the Castle; where it was my practice 

(before the days of Flora) to make myself conspicuous among the 

prisoners; and I think it an extraordinary thing that I should have 

encountered so few to recognise me。  But doubtless a clean chin is 

a disguise in itself; and the change is great from a suit of 

sulphur…yellow to fine linen; a well…fitting mouse…coloured great…

coat furred in black; a pair of tight trousers of fashionable cut; 

and a hat of inimitable curl。  After all; it was more likely that I 

should have recognised our visitors; than that they should have 

identified the modish gentleman with the miserable prisoner in the 

Castle。



I was glad to set foot on the flagstones; and to escape from the 

crowd that had assembled to receive the mail。  Here we were; with 

but little daylight before us; and that on Saturday afternoon; the 

eve of the famous Scottish Sabbath; adrift in the New Town of 

Edinburgh; and overladen with baggage。  We carried it ourselves。  I 

would not take a cab; nor so much as hire a porter; who might 

afterwards serve as a link between my lodgings and the mail; and 

connect me again with the claret…coloured chaise and Aylesbury。  

For I was resolved to break the chain of evidence for good; and to 

begin life afresh (so far as regards caution) with a new character。  

The first step was to find lodgings; and to find them quickly。  

This was the more needful as Mr。 Rowley and I; in our smart clothes 

and with our cumbrous burthen; made a noticeable appearance in the 

streets at that time of the day and in that quarter of the town; 

which was largely given up to fine folk; bucks and dandies and 

young ladies; or respectable professional men on their way home to 

dinner。



On the north side of St。 James' Square I was so happy as to spy a 

bill in a third…floor window。  I was equally indifferent to cost 

and convenience in my choice of a lodging … 'any port in a storm' 

was the principle on which I was prepared to act; and Rowley and I 

made at once for the common entrance and sealed the stair。



We were admitted by a very sour…looking female in bombazine。  I 

gathered she had all h
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