登陆注册
5630400000008

第8章

BENTLEY. Not if I know it. Youd throw me over the moment you set eyes on him.

MRS TARLETON. Oh, Bunny! For shame!

BENTLEY. Well, who'd marry me, dyou suppose, if they could get my brains with a full-sized body? No, thank you. I shall take jolly good care to keep Joey out of this until Hypatia is past praying for.

Johnny and Lord Summerhays return through the pavilion from their stroll.

TARLETON. Welcome! welcome! Why have you stayed away so long?

LORD SUMMERHAYS. [shaking hands] Yes: I should have come sooner.

But I'm still rather lost in England. [Johnny takes his hat and hangs it up beside his own]. Thank you. [Johnny returns to his swing and his novel. Lord Summerhays comes to the writing table].

The fact is that as Ive nothing to do, I never have time to go anywhere. [He sits down next Mrs Tarleton].

TARLETON. [following him and sitting down on his left] Paradox, paradox. Good. Paradoxes are the only truths. Read Chesterton. But theres lots for you to do here. You have a genius for government.

You learnt your job out there in Jinghiskahn. Well, we want to be governed here in England. Govern us.

LORD SUMMERHAYS. Ah yes, my friend; but in Jinghiskahn you have to govern the right way. If you dont, you go under and come home. Here everything has to be done the wrong way, to suit governors who understand nothing but partridge shooting (our English native princes, in fact) and voters who dont know what theyre voting about. I dont understand these democratic games; and I'm afraid I'm too old to learn. What can I do but sit in the window of my club, which consists mostly of retired Indian Civil servants? We look on at the muddle and the folly and amateurishness; and we ask each other where a single fortnight of it would have landed us.

TARLETON. Very true. Still, Democracy's all right, you know. Read Mill. Read Jefferson.

LORD SUMMERHAYS. Yes. Democracy reads well; but it doesnt act well, like some people's plays. No, no, my friend Tarleton: to make Democracy work, you need an aristocratic democracy. To make Aristocracy work, you need a democratic aristocracy. Youve got neither; and theres an end of it.

TARLETON. Still, you know, the superman may come. The superman's an idea. I believe in ideas. Read Whatshisname.

LORD SUMMERHAYS. Reading is a dangerous amusement, Tarleton. I wish I could persuade your free library people of that.

TARLETON. Why, man, it's the beginning of education.

LORD SUMMERHAYS. On the contrary, it's the end of it. How can you dare teach a man to read until youve taught him everything else first?

JOHNNY. [intercepting his father's reply by coming out of the swing and taking the floor] Leave it at that. Thats good sense. Anybody on for a game of tennis?

BENTLEY. Oh, lets have some more improving conversation. Wouldnt you rather, Johnny?

JOHNNY. If you ask me, no.

TARLETON. Johnny: you dont cultivate your mind. You dont read.

JOHNNY. [coming between his mother and Lord Summerhays, book in hand] Yes I do. I bet you what you like that, page for page, I read more than you, though I dont talk about it so much. Only, I dont read the same books. I like a book with a plot in it. You like a book with nothing in it but some idea that the chap that writes it keeps worrying, like a cat chasing its own tail. I can stand a little of it, just as I can stand watching the cat for two minutes, say, when Ive nothing better to do. But a man soon gets fed up with that sort of thing. The fact is, you look on an author as a sort of god. Ilook on him as a man that I pay to do a certain thing for me. I pay him to amuse me and to take me out of myself and make me forget.

TARLETON. No. Wrong principle. You want to remember. Read Kipling.

"Lest we forget."

JOHNNY. If Kipling wants to remember, let him remember. If he had to run Tarleton's Underwear, he'd be jolly glad to forget. As he has a much softer job, and wants to keep himself before the public, his cry is, "Dont you forget the sort of things I'm rather clever at writing about." Well, I dont blame him: it's his business: I should do the same in his place. But what he wants and what I want are two different things. I want to forget; and I pay another man to make me forget. If I buy a book or go to the theatre, I want to forget the shop and forget myself from the moment I go in to the moment I come out. Thats what I pay my money for. And if I find that the author's simply getting at me the whole time, I consider that hes obtained my money under false pretences. I'm not a morbid crank: I'm a natural man; and, as such, I dont like being got at. If a man in my employment did it, I should sack him. If a member of my club did it, I should cut him. If he went too far with it, I should bring his conduct before the committee. I might even punch his head, if it came to that. Well, who and what is an author that he should be privileged to take liberties that are not allowed to other men?

MRS TARLETON. You see, John! What have I always told you? Johnny has as much to say for himself as anybody when he likes.

JOHNNY. I'm no fool, mother, whatever some people may fancy. I dont set up to have as many ideas as the Governor; but what ideas I have are consecutive, at all events. I can think as well as talk.

BENTLEY. [to Tarleton, chuckling] Had you there, old man, hadnt he? You are rather all over the shop with your ideas, aint you?

JOHNNY. [handsomely] I'm not saying anything against you, Governor. But I do say that the time has come for sane, healthy, unpretending men like me to make a stand against this conspiracy of the writing and talking and artistic lot to put us in the back row.

It isnt a fact that we're inferior to them: it's a put-up job; and it's they that have put the job up. It's we that run the country for them; and all the thanks we get is to be told we're Philistines and vulgar tradesmen and sordid city men and so forth, and that theyre all angels of light and leading. The time has come to assert ourselves and put a stop to their stuck-up nonsense. Perhaps if we had nothing better to do than talking or writing, we could do it better than they.

同类推荐
  • Hunted Down

    Hunted Down

    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。
  • 眼科心法要诀

    眼科心法要诀

    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。
  • 金云翘传

    金云翘传

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 缘情手鉴诗格

    缘情手鉴诗格

    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。
  • 十诵律比丘尼戒本

    十诵律比丘尼戒本

    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
  • 裸婚之恋:偏爱木头老公

    裸婚之恋:偏爱木头老公

    一个对爱情有着执念的女孩,遇上一个遇到爱不懂怎么表达的男孩。误会,偏见,离别,争吵汹涌而至。两人过着聚少离多的生活,现实的考验接踵而来。
  • 旺夫小厨娘

    旺夫小厨娘

    姚沐婉怎么也想不到自己也赶上一波穿越大军。身在小山沟,她也没得闲,左手撕极品,右手做美食,日子红红火火过起来。美味饭香引垂涎,她知道掌握一把好厨艺,绝对能抓住男人的味觉。他遇上她,种出来了可爱的小萌宝,更种出一片锦绣田园。
  • 异世之魍魉

    异世之魍魉

    爽文,没有隔夜仇,没有过夜架,有苦当面诉,有仇当场报……
  • 优秀是教出来的

    优秀是教出来的

    孩子就像一块璞玉,能不能成才,关键在于父母如何去雕琢。智慧的父母可以把禀赋一般的孩子培育成天才;而教育不得法的父母却只会在无意识中扼杀孩子的天才。为了能让所有的父母都能教育出天才的孩子,我们精选了10位世界顶尖级教育大师的教育方法,编写了这本《优秀是教出来的》。这些风靡世界并对人类教育和发展产生过空前影响的教育方法分别是:卡尔·威特的全能教育法、塞德兹的自由教育法、铃木镇一的才能教育法、多湖辉的实践教育法、井深大的早期教育法、斯特娜的自然教育法、蒙台梭利的特殊教育法、斯宾塞的快乐教育法、夏洛特·梅森的环境教育法和苏霍姆林斯基的全面教育法。
  • 家庭圈套

    家庭圈套

    平凡的生活里,涌动着欲望和不安;为了给长孙买房,重男轻女的奶奶陈景春,不惜发动三个儿子们的家庭力量,集体筹款买房,却没想到引发了三家人的悲欢离合.......
  • 仙草供应商

    仙草供应商

    白云黄鹤道人家,一琴一剑一杯茶。羽衣常带烟霞色,不染人间桃李花。常世人间笑哈哈,周游四海你为啥。苦终受尽修正道,不染人间桃李花。山不在高,有仙则名,水不在深,有龙则灵。灵田在手,仙草我有!!修修仙种种田,其乐无穷!!-------------------------------ps:本文正统仙侠种田文,无系统,有节操!欢迎品阅!!
  • 闽海纪略

    闽海纪略

    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。
  • 漫威世界的奥特曼

    漫威世界的奥特曼

    出生在漫威电影世界的莫夜,偶然间获得了至宝圣闪火花,圣闪火花内收纳着数十尊巨人的石像,被吸入复仇者联盟并与复仇者们并肩战斗中,一一激活奥特战士,同时竟牵出背后隐藏的巨大秘密。谁是猎人?谁是猎物?圣闪火花是什么?萦绕在莫夜脑海中的谜题挥之不去,前两任火花持有者是如何消失的?圣闪火花传到莫夜手里,又将经历怎样的故事?……时光流逝,太阳如流星般划过,复仇者们簇拥莫夜站在雨中凝视长空。“索尔,你该减肥了。”莫夜惆怅的道。
  • 我能契约万物

    我能契约万物

    嗜血妖刀为何沦为厨房菜刀?山中女妖为何沦为等身抱枕?能操控生机的秘宝为何变成了一盆只知道晒太阳的盆栽?这一切的背后是谁的黑手在若隐若现?江就枕在绝色美人的膝枕上,懒洋洋地把玩着手中的妖刀,看着庭院里晒太阳的盆栽,撇嘴道:“我怎么知道,我只是个能契约万物的一般市民啊。”
  • 余生,执迷不悟

    余生,执迷不悟

    很多年后,她都还记得那些疯狂的夜晚。他像恶魔一样,残忍地践踏她的自尊,撕毁她的廉耻……如果她的死亡能成为他的枷锁,她甘愿——永堕地狱。