登陆注册
4907000000011

第11章

"Oh, hang the Major! I don't care about him, I want to know about you," I cried.

"About me?" said Derrick doubtfully. "Oh, I'm right enough."

"What do you do with yourself? How on earth do you kill time?" I asked. "Come, give me a full, true, and particular account of it all."

"We have tried three other servants," said Derrick; "but the plan doesn't answer. They either won't stand it, or else they are bribed into smuggling brandy into the house. I find I can do most things for my father, and in the morning he has an attendant from the hospital who is trustworthy, and who does what is necessary for him.

At ten we breakfast together, then there are the morning papers, which he likes to have read to him. After that I go round to the Pump Room with him--odd contrast now to what it must have been when Bath was the rage. Then we have lunch. In the afternoon, if he is well enough, we drive; if not he sleeps, and I get a walk. Later on an old Indian friend of his will sometimes drop in; if not he likes to be read to until dinner. After dinner we play chess--he is a first-rate player. At ten I help him to bed; from eleven to twelve I smoke and study Socialism and all the rest of it that Lynwood is at present floundering in."

"Why don't you write, then?"

"I tried it, but it didn't answer. I couldn't sleep after it, and was, in fact, too tired; seems absurd to be tired after such a day as that, but somehow it takes it out of one more than the hardest reading; I don't know why."

"Why," I said angrily, "it's because it is work to which you are quite unsuited--work for a thick-skinned, hard-hearted, uncultivated and well-paid attendant, not for the novelist who is to be the chief light of our generation."

He laughed at this estimate of his powers.

"Novelists, like other cattle, have to obey their owner," he said lightly.

I thought for a moment that he meant the Major, and was breaking into an angry remonstrance, when I saw that he meant something quite different. It was always his strongest point, this extraordinary consciousness of right, this unwavering belief that he had to do and therefore could do certain things. Without this, I know that he never wrote a line, and in my heart I believe this was the cause of his success.

"Then you are not writing at all?" I asked.

"Yes, I write generally for a couple of hours before breakfast," he said.

And that evening we sat by his gas stove and he read me the next four chapters of 'Lynwood.' He had rather a dismal lodging-house bedroom, with faded wall-paper and a prosaic snuff-coloured carpet.

On a rickety table in the window was his desk, and a portfolio full of blue foolscap, but he had done what he could to make the place habitable; his Oxford pictures were on the walls--Hoffman's 'Christ speaking to the Woman taken in Adultery,' hanging over the mantelpiece--it had always been a favourite of his. I remember that, as he read the description of Lynwood and his wife, I kept looking from him to the Christ in the picture till I could almost have fancied that each face bore the same expression. Had this strange monotonous life with that old brute of a Major brought him some new perception of those words, "Neither do I condemn thee"?

But when he stopped reading, I, true to my character, forgot his affairs in my own, as we sat talking far into the night--talking of that luckless month at Mondisfield, of all the problems it had opened up, and of my wretchedness.

"You were in town all September?" he asked; "you gave up Blachington?"

"Yes," I replied. "What did I care for country houses in such a mood as that."

He acquiesced, and I went on talking of my grievances, and it was not till I was in the train on my way back to London that I remembered how a look of disappointment had passed over his face just at the moment. Evidently he had counted on learning something about Freda from me, and I--well, I had clean forgotten both her existence and his passionate love.

Something, probably self-interest, the desire for my friend's company, and so forth, took me down to Bath pretty frequently in those days; luckily the Major had a sort of liking for me, and was always polite enough; and dear old Derrick--well, I believe my visits really helped to brighten him up. At any rate he said he couldn't have borne his life without them, and for a sceptical, dismal, cynical fellow like me to hear that was somehow flattering.

The mere force of contrast did me good. I used to come back on the Monday wondering that Derrick didn't cut his throat, and realising that, after all, it was something to be a free agent, and to have comfortable rooms in Montague Street, with no old bear of a drunkard to disturb my peace. And then a sort of admiration sprang up in my heart, and the cynicism bred of melancholy broodings over solitary pipes was less rampant than usual.

It was, I think, early in the new year that I met Lawrence Vaughan in Bath. He was not staying at Gay Street, so I could still have the vacant room next to Derrick's. Lawrence put up at the York House Hotel.

"For you know," he informed me, "I really can't stand the governor for more than an hour or two at a time."

"Derrick manages to do it," I said.

"Oh, Derrick, yes," he replied, "it's his metier, and he is well accustomed to the life. Besides, you know, he is such a dreamy, quiet sort of fellow; he lives all the time in a world of his own creation, and bears the discomforts of this world with great philosophy. Actually he has turned teetotaller! It would kill me in a week."

I make a point of never arguing with a fellow like that, but I think I had a vindictive longing, as I looked at him, to shut him up with the Major for a month, and see what would happen.

同类推荐
  • 普陀洛迦新志

    普陀洛迦新志

    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。
  • 贤弈编

    贤弈编

    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。
  • 毗尼母经

    毗尼母经

    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。
  • 樗庵类稿

    樗庵类稿

    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 VALLEY OF FEAR

    THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    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
  • 神奇宝贝之小夜

    神奇宝贝之小夜

    作为世上少有的女杀手的她,来到神奇宝贝世界后又会掀起怎样的风浪呢?小夜:(摊手)只想安安静静地做个训练家,可惜有些人不想呀~那怎么办?去吧,我的伙伴们!
  • 经济法学(法学教材)

    经济法学(法学教材)

    本书阐述了经济法的基本理论和市场主体规制法、市场行为规制法、宏观经济调控法的一般原理与基本制度。重点分析了经济法的基本属性、权义责任、运行规律和反不正当竞争、反垄断、产品质量、消费者保护、投资、财税、金融、外贸等法律制度。
  • 星探记

    星探记

    十年前,赵子月在电视剧里认识了王晔柏,成了她千万粉丝中的一员。两年后,王晔柏因丑闻退出娱乐圈…八年后,赵子月一跃成为青年网络作家却得知王晔柏复出消息……
  • 为时代放声歌唱:贺敬之传

    为时代放声歌唱:贺敬之传

    贺敬之是我国著名诗人,生于1924年,山东峄县(今山东枣庄)人。曾任文化部副部长、中宣部副部长、文化部代部长等职。丁七玲编著的这本《贺敬之传(为时代放声歌唱)》依照时间顺序,系统梳理了贺敬之90年来的经历与成就。全书分为苦难童年、少年漂泊求学路、延安岁月、建国前后、为伟大时代歌唱、艰难时期、诗人当部长、新古体诗开新诗境、暮年的坚持等9章。
  • 蒙哥马利传

    蒙哥马利传

    伯纳德·劳·蒙哥马利,被誉为英国最优秀的军事家之一,1887年11月17日出生于伦敦肯宁顿区的一个牧师家庭。其祖父罗伯特·蒙哥马利是军校出身,19岁时被派往当时被英国殖民化统治的印度任职,他不但骁勇善战,而且冷静机智,当印度发生起义时,罗伯特凭借沉着的心理素质和巧妙的智慧很快就平息了事端,这让英国国会对他大为赞赏,将他提升为旁遮普省的副省长,直至罗伯特·蒙哥马利以爵士爵位返回英国为止。
  • 拈花菩提

    拈花菩提

    “菩提十书”之《拈花菩提》:生命之河漂浮着许多花瓣,有的美如桃花,有的凄艳如樱,有的轻淡若菊,还有的如历经冰寒的梅花,也有开在山溪间无名的小野花,无论是什么花,都展现了菩提心海妙有世界。本书是菩提系列第五部,林清玄以微观与巨视探触现实人生“一色一香,无非中道”的真谛,让我们能以菩提心来看待因缘,包容人间,注视世界。
  • 诅咒与灰烬

    诅咒与灰烬

    《珊瑚与骨》魔法世界的续集。一个疯狂的双胞胎姐姐,一个觊觎她神秘力量的恶魔,一段遍布疑问却鲜有答案的旅程——海伦比任何时候都需要她的守护者达克斯。但是她害怕如果将一切告知达克斯,他将永远不会原谅她,毕竟他牺牲了那么多只为帮她消灭阿塞尔。海伦在一次龙卷风来袭时淹死了阿塞尔——她认为自己已将阿塞尔杀死。但为什么阿塞尔嘲弄的声音还总是出现在她的耳边,诱骗她放弃自己的力量?也许她之前是把事情搞砸了——砸的漂亮——但是她绝不会让阿塞尔控制自己的力量。当天之国的烈火威胁到地球时,针对阿塞尔之死的质疑越来越多,处处压抑着骚动不安的气氛。海伦必须和争分夺秒,在大火烧毁地球之前净化恶魔的灵魂。
  • 精灵掌门人

    精灵掌门人

    新书《不科学御兽》已上传!……为什么考试会有精灵对战,为什么出门会被精灵袭击,谁告诉我地球发生了什么……不要碰我!我不要吃药,我没疯!接受了设定后……方缘立志成为一名优秀的训练家。“真香。”
  • 机武女皇

    机武女皇

    星际时代,机甲为王,真气为尊。十四岁天才少女,散功重来,能否再现辉煌?热血荣耀,璀璨星际,不变的是女皇!
  • 未来的你,一定会感谢现在执着的自己

    未来的你,一定会感谢现在执着的自己

    假如未来你有一天回想起过去的日子,你会对那逝去的时光怀着怎样的情感呢?是悔恨还是感恩?时光一去不回头,未来的你,也许功成名就,也许还在为事业打拼,但不管怎样,都是执着努力的结果。执着,会让你更坚定前进的方向,会让你在遭遇挫折时勇往直前。执着是一种心态,也是一种力量。这种力量能够督促你前行,给你上进的勇气,让未来的你,在回首凝望时,可以从内心感谢现在执着的自己。本书以生动的例子叙述了执着不气馁的道理,通过十个章节,从不同的角度进行了叙述,旨在给读者以启迪。