Jane Eyre - Page 242/412

"Oh, qu' elle y sera mal--peu comfortable! And her clothes, they

will wear out: how can she get new ones?"

Mr. Rochester professed to be puzzled. "Hem!" said he. "What would

you do, Adele? Cudgel your brains for an expedient. How would a

white or a pink cloud answer for a gown, do you think? And one

could cut a pretty enough scarf out of a rainbow."

"She is far better as she is," concluded Adele, after musing some

time: "besides, she would get tired of living with only you in the

moon. If I were mademoiselle, I would never consent to go with

you."

"She has consented: she has pledged her word."

"But you can't get her there; there is no road to the moon: it is

all air; and neither you nor she can fly."

"Adele, look at that field." We were now outside Thornfield gates,

and bowling lightly along the smooth road to Millcote, where the

dust was well laid by the thunderstorm, and, where the low hedges

and lofty timber trees on each side glistened green and rain-

refreshed.

"In that field, Adele, I was walking late one evening about a

fortnight since--the evening of the day you helped me to make hay in

the orchard meadows; and, as I was tired with raking swaths, I sat

down to rest me on a stile; and there I took out a little book and a

pencil, and began to write about a misfortune that befell me long

ago, and a wish I had for happy days to come: I was writing away

very fast, though daylight was fading from the leaf, when something

came up the path and stopped two yards off me. I looked at it. It

was a little thing with a veil of gossamer on its head. I beckoned

it to come near me; it stood soon at my knee. I never spoke to it,

and it never spoke to me, in words; but I read its eyes, and it read

mine; and our speechless colloquy was to this effect "It was a fairy, and come from Elf-land, it said; and its errand was

to make me happy: I must go with it out of the common world to a

lonely place--such as the moon, for instance--and it nodded its head

towards her horn, rising over Hay-hill: it told me of the alabaster

cave and silver vale where we might live. I said I should like to

go; but reminded it, as you did me, that I had no wings to fly.