The Secret Power by Marie Corelli (the reading strategies book txt) đ
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And he looked at her, smiling. Her passionate eyes, full of glowing ardour, met his,âa flashing fire seemed to leap from them into his own soul, and for the moment he almost lost his self-possession.
âWise Manella!â he repeated, his voice shaking a little, while he fought with the insidious temptation which beset him,âthe temptation to draw her into his arms and take his fill of the love she was so ready to giveââThey always marry? No dear, they do NOT! Many of them avoid marriageââ he paused, then continuedââand do you know why?â
She shook her head.
âBecause it is the end of romance! Because it rings down the curtain on a beautiful Play! The music ceasesâthe lights are put outâthe audience goes home,âand the actors take off their fascinating costumes, wash away their paint and powder and sit down to supperâ possibly fried steak and onions and a pot of beer. The fried steak and onionsâalso the beerâmake a very good ordinary âmarriage.ââ
In this flippant talk he gained the mastery over himself he had feared to loseâand laughed heartily as he saw Manellaâs expression of utter bewilderment.
âI do not understand!â she said, plaintivelyââWhat is steak and onions?âhow do they make a marriage? You say such strange things!â
He laughed again, thoroughly amused.
âYes, donât I!â he rejoinedââBut not half such strange things as I could say if I were so inclined! Iâm a queer fellow!â
He touched her hair gently, putting back a stray curl that had fallen across her forehead.
âNow, dear,â he continued, âItâs time you went. Youâll be wanted at the Plazaâand they mustnât think Iâm keeping you up here, making love to you!â
She tossed her head back, and her eyes flashed almost angrily.
âThereâs no danger of that!â she said, with a little suppressed tremor in her throat like the sob of a nightingale at the close of its song.
âIsnât there?â and putting his arm round her, he drew her close to himself and looked full in her eyesââManellaâthere WAS!âa moment ago!â
She remained still and passive in his armsâhardly daring to breathe, so rapt was she in a sudden ecstasy, but he could feel the wild beating of her heart against his own.
âA moment ago!â he repeated, in a half whisper. âA moment ago I could have made such desperate love to you as would have astonished myself!âand YOU! And I should have regretted it ever afterwardsâ and so would you!â
The struggling emotion in her found utterance.
âNo, noânot I!â she said, in quick little passionate murmursââI could not regret it!âIf you loved me for an hour it would be the joy of my life-time!âYou might leave me,âyou might forget!âbut that would not take away my pride and gladness! You might kill meâI would die gladly if it saved YOUR life!âah, you do not understand loveânot the love of Manella!â
And she lifted her face to hisâa face so lovely, so young, so warm with her soulâs inward rapture that its glowing beauty might have made a lover of an anchorite. But with Roger Seaton the impulses of passion were briefâthe momentary flame had gone out in vapour, and the spirit of the anchorite prevailed. He looked at the dewy red lips, delicately parted like rose petalsâbut he did not kiss them, and the clasp of his arms round her gradually relaxed.
âHush, hush Manella!â he said, with a mild kindness, which in her overwrought state was more distracting than angry words would have beenââHush! You talk foolishnessâbeautiful foolishnessâall women do when they set their fancies on men. It is nature, of course,âYOU think it is love, but, my dear girl, there is no such thing as love! There!ânow you are cross!â for she drew herself quickly away from his hold and stood apart, her eyes sparkling, her breast heaving, with the air of a goddess enraged,ââYou are cross because I tell you the truth---â
âIt is not the truth,â she said, in a low voice quivering with intense feelingââyou tell me lies to disguise yourself. But I can see! You yourself love a womanâbut you have not my courage!âyou are afraid to own it! You would give the world to hold her in your arms as you just now held MEâbut you will not admit itânot even to yourselfâand you pretend to hate when you are mad for love!âjust as you pretend to be ill when you are well! You should be ashamed to say there is no such thing as love! What mean you then by playing so false with yourself?âwith me?âand with HER?â
She looked lovelier than ever in her anger, and he was taken by surprise at the impetuous and instinctive guess she had made at the complexity of his moods, which he himself scarcely understood. For a moment he stood inert, embarrassed by her straight, half-scornful glanceâthen he regained his usual mental poise and smiled with provoking good humour and tolerance.
âTemper, Manella!âtemper again! A pity, a pity! Your Spanish blood is too fiery, Manella!âit is indeed! You have been very rudeâdo you know how rude you have been? But there! I forgive you! You are only a naughty child! As for love---â
He paused, and going to the door of the hut looked out.
âManella, there is a big cloud in the west just over the ocean. It is shaped like a great white eagle and its wings are edged with gold,âit is the beginning of a fine sunset. Come and look at it,â and while we watch it floating along I will talk to you about love!â
She hesitated,âher whole spirit was up in arms against this man whom she loved, and who, so she argued with herself, had allowed her to love HIM, while having no love for HER; and yet,âsince Gwent had told her that his mysterious occupation might result in disaster and danger to his life, her devotion had received a new impetus which was wholly unselfish,âthat of watchful guardianship such as inspires a faithful dog to defend its master. And, moved by this thought, she obeyed his beckoning hand, and stood with him on the sward outside the hut, looking at the cloud he described. It was singularly white,ânew-fallen snow could be no whiter,âand, shaped like a huge bird, its great wings spread out to north and south were edged with a red-gold fire. Seaton pushed an old tree stump into position and sat down upon it, making Manella sit beside him.
âNow for this talk!â he saidââLove is the subject,âLove the theme! We are taught that we must love God and love our neighborâbut we donât, because we canât! In the case of God we cannot love what we donât know and donât see,âand we cannot love our neighbor because he is often a person whom we DO know and CAN see, and who is extremely offensive. Now let us consider what IS love? You, Manella, are angry because I say there is no such thingâand you accuse me of indulging in love for a woman myself. YetâI still declare, in spite of you, there is no such thing as love! I ought to be ashamed of myself for saying thisâso YOU think!âbut Iâm not ashamed. I know Iâm right! Love is a divine idea, never realised. It is like a ninth new note in the musical scaleânot to be attained. It is suggested in the highest forms of poetry and art, but the suggestion can never be carried out. What men and women call âloveâ is the ordinary attraction of sex,âthe same attraction that pulls all male and female living things together and makes them mate. It is very unromantic! And to a man of my mind, very useless.â
She looked at him in a kind of sorrowful perplexity.
âYou have much talkââshe saidââand no doubt you are clever. But I think you are all wrong!â
âYou do? Wise child! Now listen to my much talk a little longer! Have you ever watched silkworms? No? They are typical examples of humanity. A silkworm, while it is a worm, feeds to repletion,âyou can never get it as many mulberry leaves as it would like to eatâ then when it is gorged, it builds itself a beautiful house of silk (which is taken away from it in due course) and comes out at the door in wings!âwings it hardly uses and seems not to understandâ then, if it is a female moth, it looks about for âloveâ from the male. If the male âlovesâ it, the female produces a considerable number of eggs like pin-headsâand then?âwhat then? Why she promptly dies, and thereâs an end of her! Her sole aim and end of being was to produce eggs, which in their turn become worms and repeat the same dull routine of business. Nowâthink me as brutal as you likeâI say a woman is very like a female silkworm,âshe comes out of her beautiful silken cocoon of maidenhood with wings which she doesnât know how to useâshe merely flutters about waiting to be âlovedââand when this dream she calls âloveâ comes to her, she doesnât dream any longerâshe wakesâto find her life finished!â finished, Manella!âdry as a gourd with all the juice run out!â
Manella rose from her seat beside him. The warm light in her eyes had goneâher face was pale, and as she drew herself up to her stately height she made a picture of noble scorn.
âI am sorry for you!â she said. âIf you think these things your thoughts are quite dreadful! You are a cruel man after all! I am sorry I spoke of the beautiful little lady who came here to see you- you do not love her-you cannot!âI felt sure you didâbut I am wrong!âthere is no love in you except for yourself and your own will!â
She spoke, breathing quickly, and trembling with suppressed emotion. He smiled,âand, rising, saluted her with a profound bow.
âThank you, Manella! You give me a true character!âMyself and my own will are certainly the chief factors in my lifeâand they may work wonders yet!âwho knows! And there is no love in meâno!ânot what YOU call love!âbutâas concerns the âbeautiful little lady,â you may know this much of meâTHAT I WANT HER!â
He threw out his hands with a gesture that was almost tragic, and such an expression came into his face of savagery and tenderness commingled that Manella retreated from him in vague terror.
âI want her!â he repeatedââAnd why? Not to âloveâ her,âbut to break her wings,âfor she, unlike a silkworm moth, knows how to use them! I want her, to make her proud mind bend to MY will and way!âI want her to show her how a man can, shall, and MUST be master of a womanâs brain and soul!â
A sudden heat of pent-up feeling broke out in this impulsive rush of words;âhe checked himself,âand seeing Manellaâs pale, scared face he went up to her and took her hand.
âYou see, Manella?â he said, in quiet tonesââThere is no such thing as âlove,â but there is such a thing as âwanting.â Andâfor the most selfish reasons man ever hadâI want HERânot you!â
The colour rushed back to her cheeks in a warm glowâher great dark eyes were ablaze with indignation. She drew her hand quickly from his hold.
âAnd I hope you will never get her!â she said, passionatelyââI will pray the Holy Virgin to save her from you! For you are wicked! She is like an angelâand you are a devil!âyes, surely you must be, or you could not say such horrible things! You do not want me, you say? I know that! I am a fool to have shown you my heartâyou have broken it, but you do not careâyou could have been master of
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