登陆注册
20272700000012

第12章 HOLIDAY(4)

'Miss Harrow knows nothing about her, except that she was a quite uneducated girl.'

'But, dash it! by this time she must have got decent manners. Of course there may be other objections. Mrs Reardon knows nothing against her.'

Midway in the following morning, as Jasper sat with a book in the garden, he was surprised to see Alfred Yule enter by the gate.

'I thought,' began the visitor, who seemed in high spirits, 'that you might like to see something I received this morning.'

He unfolded a London evening paper, and indicated a long letter from a casual correspondent. It was written by the authoress of 'On the Boards,' and drew attention, with much expenditure of witticism, to the conflicting notices of that book which had appeared in The Study. Jasper read the thing with laughing appreciation.

'Just what one expected!'

'And I have private letters on the subject,' added Mr Yule.

'There has been something like a personal conflict between Fadge and the man who looks after the minor notices. Fadge,more suo, charged the other man with a design to damage him and the paper.

There's talk of legal proceedings. An immense joke!'

He laughed in his peculiar croaking way.

'Do you feel disposed for a turn along the lanes, Mr Milvain?'

'By all means.--There's my mother at the window; will you come in for a moment?'

With a step of quite unusual sprightliness Mr Yule entered the house. He could talk of but one subject, and Mrs Milvain had to listen to a laboured account of the blunder just committed by The Study. It was Alfred's Yule's characteristic that he could do nothing lighthandedly. He seemed always to converse with effort;he took a seat with stiff ungainliness; he walked with a stumbling or sprawling gait.

When he and Jasper set out for their ramble, his loquacity was in strong contrast with the taciturn mood he had exhibited yesterday and the day before. He fell upon the general aspects of contemporary literature.

'. . . The evil of the time is the multiplication of ephemerides.

Hence a demand for essays, descriptive articles, fragments of criticism, out of all proportion to the supply of even tolerable work. The men who have an aptitude for turning out this kind of thing in vast quantities are enlisted by every new periodical, with the result that their productions are ultimately watered down into worthlessness. . . . Well now, there's Fadge. Years ago some of Fadge's work was not without a certain--a certain conditional promise of--of comparative merit; but now his writing, in my opinion, is altogether beneath consideration; how Rackett could be so benighted as to give him The Study--especially after a man like Henry Hawkridge--passes my comprehension. Did you read a paper of his, a few months back, in The Wayside, a preposterous rehabilitation of Elkanah Settle? Ha!

ha! That's what such men are driven to. Elkanah Settle! And he hadn't even a competent acquaintance with his paltry subject.

Will you credit that he twice or thrice referred to Settle's reply to "Absalom and Achitophel" by the title of "Absalom Transposed," when every schoolgirl knows that the thing was called "Achitophel Transposed"! This was monstrous enough, but there was something still more contemptible. He positively, Iassure you, attributed the play of "Epsom Wells" to Crowne! Ishould have presumed that every student of even the most trivial primer of literature was aware that "Epsom Wells" was written by Shadwell. . . . Now, if one were to take Shadwell for the subject of a paper, one might very well show how unjustly his name has fallen into contempt. It has often occurred to me to do this.

"But Shadwell never deviates into sense." The sneer, in my opinion, is entirely unmerited. For my own part, I put Shadwell very high among the dramatists of his time, and I think I could show that his absolute worth is by no means inconsiderable.

Shadwell has distinct vigour of dramatic conception; his dialogue. . . .'

And as he talked the man kept describing imaginary geometrical figures with the end of his walking-stick; he very seldom raised his eyes from the ground, and the stoop in his shoulders grew more and more pronounced, until at a little distance one might have taken him for a hunchback. At one point Jasper made a pause to speak of the pleasant wooded prospect that lay before them;his companion regarded it absently, and in a moment or two asked:

'Did you ever come across Cottle's poem on the Malvern Hills? No?

It contains a couple of the richest lines ever put into print:

It needs the evidence of close deduction To know that I shall ever reach the top.

Perfectly serious poetry, mind you!'

He barked in laughter. Impossible to interest him in anything apart from literature; yet one saw him to be a man of solid understanding, and not without perception of humour. He had read vastly; his memory was a literary cyclopaedia. His failings, obvious enough, were the results of a strong and somewhat pedantic individuality ceaselessly at conflict with unpropitious circumstances.

Towards the young man his demeanour varied between a shy cordiality and a dignified reserve which was in danger of seeming pretentious. On the homeward part of the walk he made a few discreet inquiries regarding Milvain's literary achievements and prospects, and the frank self-confidence of the replies appeared to interest him. But he expressed no desire to number Jasper among his acquaintances in town, and of his own professional or private concerns he said not a word.

'Whether he could be any use to me or not, I don't exactly know,'

Jasper remarked to his mother and sisters at dinner. 'I suspect it's as much as he can do to keep a footing among the younger tradesmen. But I think he might have said he was willing to help me if he could.'

'Perhaps,' replied Maud, 'your large way of talking made him think any such offer superfluous.'

同类推荐
  • 临症验舌法

    临症验舌法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 汉武帝内传

    汉武帝内传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 元经

    元经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Natural History of Selborne

    The Natural History of Selborne

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宝女所问经

    宝女所问经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • BOSS狂想曲

    BOSS狂想曲

    如果有人问:网游是什么?孩子会说:就是网络游戏。青年会说:偶尔打发时间的消遣。父母会说:就是害我儿子考试不及格的东西。警察会说:真人PK的进化版本。商人会说:那都是钱。子于会说:那是工作。对,只是工作!在这个外挂四溢、RMB战士横飞的时代,网络游戏早就没了乐趣可言。对他们这些长年与网游为伴的职业玩家来说,网游的乐趣到底在哪里呢?情节虚构,切勿模仿。
  • TFBOYS之雨中的承诺

    TFBOYS之雨中的承诺

    我们携手走过了这个纯白的花季,共同聆听花开的声音,却没有留下一丝污点,相信这份别样的感情,会如一杯青梅美酒,越珍藏越香醇。情殇,落寞了谁的年华。那年的你,在我的心中。此时的你,在我的梦里。时光荏苒,一季又一季,淡然度过。当泪水化作雨水,那一刻,谁的誓言还能轮回?望着眼前你含笑的容颜,我的泪还是落满了整个冬天,转身后,再也找不到丢失的诺言。
  • 神武万道

    神武万道

    天地万物皆是道种,有人以火证道,能焚塌诸天万界。有人以水证道,可淹没天上地下。也有人观天地运势,傲立诸天万道之上。苍茫大地,谁主沉浮?
  • 萌萌小夫妻:绝路小冤家

    萌萌小夫妻:绝路小冤家

    “同学你的笔掉了。”“帮我捡一下谢谢。”“同学这支笔好像摔坏了。”“帮我修一下谢谢。”“同学你看我一下好吧?”“帮我……是你啊?”“同学我掉了。”“自己爬起来跟我走吧谢谢。”
  • 太上老君说常清静经注

    太上老君说常清静经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 重生都市之极品高手

    重生都市之极品高手

    系统:昨天晚上,那个校花?林超:我不是那样的人。系统:那前天你老师……林超:请注意你的言行,作为一个系统的本分……系统:卧槽!这么说是那个小护士?林超:尼玛!作为个系统,你怎可以这样满脑子尽想这些东西!?
  • 邪魔剑圣

    邪魔剑圣

    主人公邪辰,原本是第一魔教教主的开山大弟子,一身魔功,除教主与几位太上长老,无人能敌,结果因为偷练上古魔诀,被发现之后,在绝魔顶被处以千雷劫,结果被当时游历大陆的魔主罗侯救下。在魔主罗侯探查邪的身体时,发现邪的法诀竟然是和自己一样的,而且天赋也是万年难遇的天魔之体,就起了收徒之心,在邪恢复伤情时,就将邪辰收做为闭门弟子,不到两百年之内,就达到渡劫期,魔诀已经达到第二重,但是正在马上就要可以化魔时,天魔殿就就遭到老子,元始天尊,通天教主,接引道人,准提道人,女娲娘娘六位圣人群起而攻之,魔主罗侯与邪的几位师兄弟,拼死抵抗,罗侯就一丝魔念与屠仙剑交于邪,将邪辰到三千大世界里去修炼……
  • 培养孩子的情商,从讲故事开始

    培养孩子的情商,从讲故事开始

    《培养孩子的情商,从讲故事开始》一本培养儿童情商的实战手册,孩子的未来20%取决于智商,80%取决于情商,面对孩子的情商问题,不用讨好,不用说教,念念故事书就好。给孩子一堂受益的情商课,就是父母送给他们珍贵的礼物。培养孩子的情商,只需一个滋养心灵的好故事;成就孩子幸福的一生,只需一个会讲故事的好父母。如果你希望孩子具备高情商、拥有大能力、养成好品格,那么,就别错过这段和孩子分享爱与智慧的讲故事时光吧,从现在开始为孩子的健康成长铺就一条宽阔的大道!
  • 开阔眼界的时尚故事

    开阔眼界的时尚故事

    时尚绝不是跟风。时尚是刹那间的心动,不求缱绻情长,只是张扬声与色的酷炫;时尚是精致的生活态度,触摸是洒脱、体面、陶醉和风情万种的思绪。
  • 最强天师在都市

    最强天师在都市

    时逢妖界封印薄弱,妖物降临都市,陈墨拥有特殊体质成为捉妖天师,招杀神白起当跟班,收吕布魂魄充小弟,惹来清纯校花,绝美老师,温柔护士,性感秘书……纷纷爱慕!