登陆注册
20272700000071

第71章 THE LAST RESOURCE(4)

'Darling, they do struggle. But it's as if an ever-increasing weight were round their necks; it drags them lower and lower. The world has no pity on a man who can't do or produce something it thinks worth money. You may be a divine poet, and if some good fellow doesn't take pity on you you will starve by the roadside.

Society is as blind and brutal as fate. I have no right to complain of my own ill-fortune; it's my own fault (in a sense)that I can't continue as well as I began; if I could write books as good as the early ones I should earn money. For all that, it's hard that I must be kicked aside as worthless just because Idon't know a trade.'

'It shan't be! I have only to look into your face to know that you will succeed after all. Yours is the kind of face that people come to know in portraits.'

He kissed her hair, and her eyes, and her mouth.

'How well I remember your saying that before! Why have you grown so good to me all at once, my Amy? Hearing you speak like that Ifeel there's nothing beyond my reach. But I dread to go away from you. If I find that it is hopeless; if I am alone somewhere, and know that the effort is all in vain--'

'Then?'

'Well, I can leave you free. If I can't support you, it will be only just that I should give you back your freedom.'

'I don't understand--'

She raised herself and looked into his eyes.

'We won't talk of that. If you bid me go on with the struggle, Ishall do so.'

Amy had hidden her face, and lay silently in his arms for a minute or two. Then she murmured:

'It is so cold here, and so late. Come!'

'So early. There goes three o'clock.'

The next day they talked much of this new project. As there was sunshine Amy accompanied her husband for his walk in the afternoon; it was long since they had been out together. An open carriage that passed, followed by two young girls on horseback, gave a familiar direction to Reardon's thoughts.

'If one were as rich as those people! They pass so close to us;they see us, and we see them; but the distance between is infinity. They don't belong to the same world as we poor wretches. They see everything in a different light; they have powers which would seem supernatural if we were suddenly endowed with them.'

'Of course,' assented his companion with a sigh.

'Just fancy, if one got up in the morning with the thought that no reasonable desire that occurred to one throughout the day need remain ungratified! And that it would be the same, any day and every day, to the end of one's life! Look at those houses; every detail, within and without, luxurious. To have such a home as that!'

'And they are empty creatures who live there.'

'They do live, Amy, at all events. Whatever may be their faculties, they all have free scope. I have often stood staring at houses like these until I couldn't believe that the people owning them were mere human beings like myself. The power of money is so hard to realise; one who has never had it marvels at the completeness with which it transforms every detail of life.

Compare what we call our home with that of rich people; it moves one to scornful laughter. I have no sympathy with the stoical point of view; between wealth and poverty is just the difference between the whole man and the maimed. If my lower limbs are paralysed I may still be able to think, but then there is such a thing in life as walking. As a poor devil I may live nobly; but one happens to be made with faculties of enjoyment, and those have to fall into atrophy. To be sure, most rich people don't understand their happiness; if they did, they would move and talk like gods--which indeed they are.'

Amy's brow was shadowed. A wise man, in Reardon's position, would not have chosen this subject to dilate upon.

'The difference,' he went on, 'between the man with money and the man without is simply this: the one thinks, "How shall I use my life?" and the other, "How shall I keep myself alive?" Aphysiologist ought to be able to discover some curious distinction between the brain of a person who has never given a thought to the means of subsistence, and that of one who has never known a day free from such cares. There must be some special cerebral development representing the mental anguish kept up by poverty.'

'I should say,' put in Amy, 'that it affects every function of the brain. It isn't a special point of suffering, but a misery that colours every thought.'

'True. Can I think of a single subject in all the sphere of my experience without the consciousness that I see it through the medium of poverty? I have no enjoyment which isn't tainted by that thought,. and I can suffer no pain which it doesn't increase. The curse of poverty is to the modern world just what that of slavery was to the ancient. Rich and destitute stand to each other as free man and bond. You remember the line of Homer Ihave often quoted about the demoralising effect of enslavement;poverty degrades in the same way.'

'It has had its effect upon me--I know that too well,' said Amy, with bitter frankness.

Reardon glanced at her, and wished to make some reply, but he could not say what was in his thoughts.

He worked on at his story. Before he had reached the end of it, 'Margaret Home' was published, and one day arrived a parcel containing the six copies to which an author is traditionally entitled. Reardon was not so old in authorship that he could open the packet without a slight flutter of his pulse. The book was tastefully got up; Amy exclaimed with pleasure as she caught sight of the cover and lettering:

'It may succeed, Edwin. It doesn't look like a book that fails, does it?'

She laughed at her own childishness. But Reardon had opened one of the volumes, and was glancing over the beginning of a chapter.

'Good God!' he cried. 'What hellish torment it was to write that page! I did it one morning when the fog was so thick that I had to light the lamp. It brings cold sweat to my forehead to read the words. And to think that people will skim over it without a suspicion of what it cost the writer!--What execrable style! Apotboy could write better narrative.'

'Who are to have copies?'

同类推荐
  • The Grand Canyon of Arizona

    The Grand Canyon of Arizona

    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。
  • 醉春风

    醉春风

    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。
  • 佛说身毛喜竖经

    佛说身毛喜竖经

    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。
  • 明伦汇编家范典姑侄部

    明伦汇编家范典姑侄部

    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。
  • 弇州山人文抄

    弇州山人文抄

    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。
热门推荐
  • 左手苍梧右手木樨

    左手苍梧右手木樨

    2035年,地球偏离太阳系轨道,进入未知的伽马星系,却不幸遭遇外星生物侵略,为抵御外星人的侵略,人类组织武装力量进行反抗,雷小波作为一名人类反抗武装力量的士兵,在一场战役中身受重伤,跌落到失落的纳努文明遗迹之中,进而蜕变成为超级战士...
  • 元素空间重生:废物少女的逆转

    元素空间重生:废物少女的逆转

    尛筱雪是学校中最普通的一位,却因此被人误以为废物一枚。她对这世界失望了,在A栋上吹风时竟被不明物体砸到头了?醒来后发现自己变了。她在元素空间内还学会了医术,还拥有了异能,她治疗了很多大人物,令别人人对她刮目相看。她要像全世界证明,谁说丑小鸭不会变成白天鹅?
  • 传奇爱丽丝

    传奇爱丽丝

    看爱丽丝之王的传奇经历与逆天的实力。。。。
  • 容喜儿:嬷嬷驾到皇上请接招

    容喜儿:嬷嬷驾到皇上请接招

    美女作家因缘际会穿越千年!“什么?她竟然还带着现代价值连城的珠宝!”“哎吆我去,竟然刚穿越就遭受身负重伤的身体,好吧,她忍了。”莫名其妙的多了一位绝世美男做师父,鬼使神差的做起了小偷。“一次暗杀中竟然不小心被雍正擒拿住,糊里糊涂的做起了宫女。”“好吧,她忍了。”但是这个雍正每次都找她麻烦,从此以后她的生活一下子变得不平静了。”
  • 乱世双神妖才冥千曦

    乱世双神妖才冥千曦

    一朝魂穿,黑道党无人不惧之杀神一夕间尽变世家之弃女,人唾之妖女,树可忍果不可忍。看她如何逆转乾坤,颠倒世家。姐乃从天而降之神女,岂忍汝等妖邪鬼怪在此作乱。但太出名好像也不是什么好事,弃女变才女,世家人捧之,姐冷眼一撇不屑之,给姐从哪来爬哪去。妖女变神女,天下人供之,姐拿刀一阵乱挥,姐乃杀人不眨眼之妖女,各位请避之。
  • 月郧纪实

    月郧纪实

    月国贵族举办联姻舞会,男方家的幼子在城堡探险时发现一条密道直通地牢,地牢中关押着一个拥有诅咒胎记的女孩。两个孩子随后被雇佣兵集团月郧掳走,成为了月郧旗下的一支——新月的后备组员。主角究竟为何会被掳走?月郧与王族有何渊源?面对亲情与仇恨他们将如何抉择?谜底将在这首青春之歌中慢慢被揭开。
  • 林小凡之浴火重生

    林小凡之浴火重生

    不甘于平凡,可又不知道自己该做什么,每天浑浑噩噩的,想要重新振作的林小凡,却少了几分勇气,那么,接下来的他会怎么做?继续平凡下去或是奋起一搏?
  • 丑女倾城:王妃狠毒

    丑女倾城:王妃狠毒

    洛雪瑶,她是从小便经历过生与死的绝顶杀手,即使各国领导高层都要追杀她,她旗下的公司一样能够进入前十强,成为全球是大富翁的其中一员。可是,由于一时疏忽,自己的爱人却背叛了他,和她的亲妹妹洛子怡在一起了。可是,洛子怡岂是这样容易知足的人?于是,便联合付风用洛雪瑶亲手研制的毒药害死了洛雪瑶,洛雪瑶最后含恨而终。。。可是一朝穿越,虽然可以重活一世,却是九州大陆最丑的女子,但是,就算如此,她,洛雪瑶也一定会是那个最耀眼的人!!!
  • 血色黎明路

    血色黎明路

    血色黎明路三部曲!新版丧尸小说,没有豪华的虚构,没有华丽的幻想题材,给你真实的感觉!讲述了末日下人们为了生存,为了明天的太阳,努力的逃亡……
  • 魑魅之刑

    魑魅之刑

    世间百态,在世间的洪流里只是一页页篇章。而我的篇章续写的是一段不一样的体验和传奇。————浑浑噩噩中醒来,雷鸣发现自己处在一个完全陌生的世界,身体被赋予了能力的同时,一场血雨腥风的战争即将到来。爱情丶友情丶背叛充斥其中,一切只是为了存活下去,许下最后的愿望。