第69部分
丟丟提示您:看後求收藏(第69部分,The Rainbow-虹(英文版),丟丟,630看書),接著再看更方便。
請關閉瀏覽器的閱讀/暢讀/小說模式並且關閉廣告遮蔽過濾功能,避免出現內容無法顯示或者段落錯亂。
put up with you for very long either。 You've too much opinion of
yourself for your good。〃
Between the girl and her mother was a feeling of pure hatred。
There came a stubborn silence。 Ursula knew she must break
it。
〃Well; they've written to me; and I s'll have to go;〃 she
said。
〃Where will you get the money from?〃 asked her father。
〃Uncle Tom will give it me;〃 she said。
Again there was silence。 This time she was triumphant。
Then at length her father lifted his head。 His face was
abstracted; he seemed to be abstracting himself; to make a pure
statement。
〃Well; you're not going all that distance away;〃 he said。
〃I'll ask Mr。 Burt about a place here。 I'm not going to have you
by yourself at the other side of London。〃
〃But I've got to go to Kingston;〃 said Ursula。
〃They've sent for me。〃
〃They'll do without you;〃 he said。
There was a trembling silence when she was on the point of
tears。
〃Well;〃 she said; low and tense; 〃you can put me off this;
but I'm going to have a place。 I'm not going to
stop at home。〃
〃Nobody wants you to stop at home;〃 he suddenly shouted;
going livid with rage。
She said no more。 Her nature had gone hard and smiling in its
own arrogance; in its own antagonistic indifference to the rest
of them。 This was the state in which he wanted to kill her。 She
went singing into the parlour。
C'est la mere Michel qui a perdu son chat;
Qui cri par la fenetre qu'est…ce qui le lue renda〃
During the next days Ursula went about bright and hard;
singing to herself; making love to the children; but her soul
hard and cold with regard to her
本章未完,點選下一頁繼續閱讀。