Lucy Montgomery - Anne of Windy Poplars
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- Название:Anne of Windy Poplars
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Anne of Windy Poplars: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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And a May-pole decked with tiny roses and hung with pink and green ribbons. Wouldn't it have been fetching? And then Joan's uncle had to go and die and Joan couldn't have the party after all, so it all went for nothing. But the point is ... I really couldn't have loved him when my thoughts were wandering like that, could I?”
”I don't know ... our thoughts play us curious tricks some times.”
”I really don't think I ever want to get married at all, Miss Shirley. Do you happen to have an orangewood stick handy? Thanks.
My half-moons are getting ragged. I might as well do them while I'm talking. Isn't it just lovely to be exchanging confidences like this? It's so seldom one gets the opportunity ... the world intrudes itself so. Well, what was I talking of ... oh, yes, Terry. What am I to do, Miss Shirley? I want your advice. Oh, I feel like a trapped creature!”
”But, Hazel, it's so very simple ...”
”Oh, it isn't simple at all, Miss Shirley! It's dreadfully complicated. Mamma is so outrageously pleased, but Aunt Jean isn't. SHE doesn't like Terry, and everybody says she has such good judgment. I don't want to marry anybody. I'm ambitious ... I want a career. Sometimes I think I'd like to be a nun. Wouldn't it be wonderful to be the bride of heaven? I think the Catholic church is SO picturesque, don't you? But of course I'm not a Catholic ... and anyway, I suppose you could hardly call it a career. I've always felt I'd love to be a nurse. It's such a romantic profession, don't you think? Smoothing fevered brows and all that ... and some handsome millionaire patient falling in love with you and carrying you off to spend a honeymoon in a villa on the Riviera, facing the morning sun and the blue Mediterranean.
I've SEEN myself in it. Foolish dreams, perhaps, but, oh, so sweet. I CAN'T give them up for the prosaic reality of marrying Terry Garland and settling down in SUMMERSIDE!”
Hazel shivered at the very idea and scrutinized a half-moon critically.
”I suppose ..." began Anne.
”We haven't ANYTHING in common, you know, Miss Shirley. He doesn't care for poetry and romance, and they're my very LIFE. Sometimes I think I must be a reincarnation of Cleopatra ... or would it be Helen of Troy? ... one of those languorous, seductive creatures, anyhow. I have such WONDERFUL thoughts and feelings ... I don't know where I get them if that isn't the explanation. And Terry is so terribly matter-of-fact ... he can't be a reincarnation of anybody. What he said when I told him about Vera Fry's quill pen proves that, doesn't it?”
”But I never heard of Vera Fry's quill pen," said Anne patiently.
”Oh, haven't you? I thought I'd told you. I've told you so much.
Vera's fiance gave her a quill pen he'd made out of a feather he'd picked up that had fallen from a crow's wing. He said to her, 'Let your spirit soar to heaven with it whenever you use it, like the bird who once bore it.' Wasn't that just WONDERFUL? But Terry said the pen would wear out very soon, especially if Vera wrote as much as she talked, and anyway he didn't think crows ever soared to heaven. He just missed the meaning of the whole thing completely ... it's very essence.”
”What WAS its meaning?”
”Oh ... why ... why ... SOARING, you know ... getting away from the clods of earth. Did you notice Vera's ring? A sapphire.
I think sapphires are too dark for engagement rings. I'd rather have your dear, romantic little hoop of pearls. Terry wanted to give me my ring right away ... but I said not yet a while ... it would seem like a fetter ... so IRREVOCABLE, you know. I wouldn't have felt like that if I'd really loved him, would I?”
”No, I'm afraid not ...”
”It's been so WONDERFUL to tell somebody what I really feel like.
Oh, Miss Shirley, if I could only find myself free again ... free to seek the deeper meaning of life! Terry wouldn't understand what I meant if I said THAT to him. And I know he has a temper ... all the Garlands have. Oh, Miss Shirley ... if you would just talk to him ... tell him what I feel like ... he thinks you're wonderful ... he'd be guided by what you say.”
”Hazel, my dear little girl, how could I do that?”
”I don't see why not." Hazel finished the last new moon and laid the orangewood stick down tragically. "If you can't, there isn't any help ANYWHERE. But I can never, Never, NEVER marry Terry Garland.”
”If you don't love Terry, you ought to go to him and tell him so ... no matter how badly it will make him feel. Some day you'll meet some one you can really love, Hazel dear ... you won't have any doubts then ... you'll KNOW.”
”I shall never love ANYBODY again," said Hazel, stonily calm.
"Love brings only sorrow. Young as I am I have learned THAT. This would make a wonderful plot for one of your stories, wouldn't it, Miss Shirley? I must be going ... I'd no idea it was so late. I feel SO much better since I've confided in you ... 'touched your soul in shadowland,' as Shakespeare says.”
”I think it was Pauline Johnson," said Anne gently.
”Well, I knew it was somebody ... somebody who had LIVED. I think I shall sleep tonight, Miss Shirley. I've hardly slept since I found myself engaged to Terry, without the LEAST notion how it had all come about.”
Hazel fluffed out her hair and put on her hat, a hat with a rosy lining to its brim and rosy blossoms around it. She looked so distractingly pretty in it that Anne kissed her impulsively.
"You're the prettiest thing, darling," she said admiringly.
Hazel stood very still.
Then she lifted her eyes and stared clear through the ceiling of the tower room, clear through the attic above it, and sought the stars.
”I shall never, NEVER forget this WONDERFUL moment, Miss Shirley,” she murmured rapturously. "I feel that my beauty ... if I have any ... has been CONSECRATED. Oh, Miss Shirley, you don't know how really terrible it is to have a reputation for beauty and to be always afraid that when people meet you they will not think you as pretty as you were reported to be. It's TORTURE. Sometimes I just DIE of mortification because I fancy I can see they're disappointed.
Perhaps it's only my imagination ... I'm SO imaginative ... too much so for my own good, I fear. I IMAGINED I was in love with Terry, you see. Oh, Miss Shirley, CAN you smell the apple-blossom fragrance?”
Having a nose, Anne could.
”Isn't it just DIVINE? I hope heaven will be ALL flowers. One could be good if one lived in a lily, couldn't one?”
”I'm afraid it might be a little confining," said Anne perversely.
”Oh, Miss Shirley, don't ... DON'T be sarcastic with your little adorer. Sarcasm just SHRIVELS me up like a leaf.”
”I see she hasn't talked you quite to death," said Rebecca Dew, when Anne had come back after seeing Hazel to the end of Spook's Lane. "I don't see how you put up with her.”
”I like her, Rebecca, I really do. I was a dreadful little chatterbox when I was a child. I wonder if I sounded as silly to the people who had to listen to me as Hazel does sometimes.”
”I didn't know you when you was a child but I'm sure you didn't,” said Rebecca. "Because you would MEAN what you said no matter how you expressed it and Hazel Marr doesn't. She's nothing but skim milk pretending to be cream.”
”Oh, of course she dramatizes herself a bit as most girls do, but I think she means some of the things she says," said Anne, thinking of Terry. Perhaps it was because she had a rather poor opinion of the said Terry that she believed Hazel was quite in earnest in all she said about him. Anne thought Hazel was throwing herself away on Terry in spite of the ten thousand he was "coming into." Anne considered Terry a good-looking, rather weak youth who would fall in love with the first pretty girl who made eyes at him and would, with equal facility, fall in love with the next one if Number One turned him down or left him alone too long.
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