No Name by Wilkie Collins (good books for 7th graders TXT) ๐
Description
No Name is set in England during the 1840s. It follows the fortunes of two sisters, Magdalen Vanstone and her older sister Norah. Their comfortable upper-middle-class lives are shockingly disrupted when, after the sudden deaths of their parents, they discover that they are disinherited and left without either name or fortune. The headstrong Magdalen vows to recover their inheritance, by fair means or foul. Her increasing desperation makes her vulnerable to a wily confidence trickster, Captain Wragge, who promises to assist her in return for a cut of the profits.
No Name was published in serial form like many of Wilkie Collinsโ other works. They were tremendously popular in their time, with long queues forming awaiting the publication of each episode. Though not as well known as his The Woman in White and The Moonstone, No Name is their equal in boasting a gripping plot and strong women characters (a rarity in the Victorian era). Collinsโ mentor Charles Dickens is on record as considering it to be far the superior of The Woman in White.
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- Author: Wilkie Collins
Read book online ยซNo Name by Wilkie Collins (good books for 7th graders TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Wilkie Collins
The door closed and Magdalen was alone again. She felt no sense of solitude; Captain Wragge had left her with something new to think of. Hour after hour her mind dwelt wonderingly on Mr. Kirke, until the evening came, and she heard his voice again through the half-opened door.
โI am very grateful,โ she said to him, before the nurse could answer his inquiriesโ โโvery, very grateful for all your goodness to me.โ
โTry to get well,โ he replied, kindly. โYou will more than reward me, if you try to get well.โ
The next morning Mr. Merrick found her impatient to leave her bed, and be moved to the sofa in the front room. The doctor said he supposed she wanted a change. โYes,โ she replied; โI want to see Mr. Kirke.โ The doctor consented to move her on the next day, but he positively forbade the additional excitement of seeing anybody until the day after. She attempted a remonstranceโ โMr. Merrick was impenetrable. She tried, when he was gone, to win the nurse by persuasionโ โthe nurse was impenetrable, too.
On the next day they wrapped her in shawls, and carried her in to the sofa, and made her a little bed on it. On the table near at hand were some flowers and a number of an illustrated paper. She immediately asked who had put them there. The nurse (failing to notice a warning look from the doctor) said Mr. Kirke had thought that she might like the flowers, and that the pictures in the paper might amuse her. After that reply, her anxiety to see Mr. Kirke became too ungovernable to be trifled with. The doctor left the room at once to fetch him.
She looked eagerly at the opening door. Her first glance at him as he came in raised a doubt in her mind whether she now saw that tall figure and that open sunburned face for the first time. But she was too weak and too agitated to follow her recollections as far back as Aldborough. She resigned the attempt, and only looked at him. He stopped at the foot of the sofa and said a few cheering words. She beckoned to him to come nearer, and offered him her wasted hand. He tenderly took it in his, and sat down by her. They were both silent. His face told her of the sorrow and the sympathy which his silence would fain have concealed. She still held his handโ โconsciously nowโ โas persistently as she had held it on the day when he found her. Her eyes closed, after a vain effort to speak to him, and the tears rolled slowly over her wan white cheeks.
The doctor signed to Kirke to wait and give her time. She recovered a little and looked at him. โHow kind you have been to me!โ she murmured. โAnd how little I have deserved it!โ
โHush! hush!โ he said. โYou donโt know what a happiness it was to me to help you.โ
The sound of his voice seemed to strengthen her, and to give her courage. She lay looking at him with an eager interest, with a gratitude which artlessly ignored all the conventional restraints that interpose between a woman and a man. โWhere did you see me,โ she said, suddenly, โbefore you found me here?โ
Kirke hesitated. Mr. Merrick came to his assistance.
โI forbid you to say a word about the past to Mr. Kirke,โ interposed the doctor; โand I forbid Mr. Kirke to say a word about it to you. You are beginning a new life today, and the only recollections I sanction are recollections five minutes old.โ
She looked at the doctor and smiled. โI must ask him one question,โ she said, and turned back again to Kirke. โIs it true that you had only seen me once before you came to this house?โ
โQuite true!โ He made the reply with a sudden change of color which she instantly detected. Her brightening eyes looked at him more earnestly than ever, as she put her next question.
โHow came you to remember me after only seeing me once?โ
His hand unconsciously closed on hers, and pressed it for the first time. He attempted to answer, and hesitated at the first word. โI have a good memory,โ he said at last; and suddenly looked away from her with a confusion so strangely unlike his customary self-possession of manner that the doctor and the nurse both noticed it.
Every nerve in her body felt that momentary pressure of his hand, with the exquisite susceptibility which accompanies the first faltering advance on the way to health. She looked at his changing color, she listened to his hesitating words, with every sensitive perception of her sex and age quickened to seize intuitively on the truth. In the moment when he looked away from her, she gently took her hand from him, and turned her head aside on the pillow. โCan it be?โ she thought, with a flutter of delicious fear at her heart, with a glow of delicious confusion burning on her cheeks. โCan it be?โ
The doctor made another sign to Kirke. He understood it, and rose immediately. The momentary discomposure in his face and manner had both disappeared. He was satisfied in his own mind that he had successfully kept his secret, and in the relief of feeling that conviction he had become himself again.
โGoodbye till tomorrow,โ he said, as he left the room.
โGoodbye,โ she answered, softly, without looking at him.
Mr. Merrick took the chair which Kirke had resigned, and laid his hand on her pulse. โJust what I feared,โ remarked the doctor; โtoo quick by half.โ
She petulantly snatched away her wrist. โDonโt!โ she said, shrinking from him. โPray donโt touch me!โ
Mr. Merrick good-humoredly gave up his place to the nurse. โIโll return in half an hour,โ he whispered, โand carry her back to bed. Donโt let her talk. Show her the pictures in the newspaper, and keep her quiet in that way.โ
When the doctor returned, the nurse reported that the newspaper had not been wanted. The patientโs conduct had been exemplary. She had not been at all
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