登陆注册
26264500000145

第145章 CHAPTER LXXII(4)

True, he had lost all his money, his reputation, and his position as a gentleman; he had, in fact, had to burn his house down in order to get his roast sucking pig; but if asked whether he would rather be as he was now or as he was on the day before his arrest, he would not have had a moment's hesitation in preferring his present to his past. If his present could only have been purchased at the expense of all that he had gone through, it was still worth purchasing at the price, and he would go through it all again if necessary. The loss of the money was the worst, but Ellen said she was sure they would get on, and she knew all about it. As for the loss of reputation--considering that he had Ellen and me left, it did not come to much.

I saw the house on the afternoon of the day on which all was finished, and there remained nothing but to buy some stock and begin selling. When I was gone, after he had had his tea, he stole up to his castle--the first floor front. He lit his pipe and sat down to the piano. He played Handel for an hour or so, and then set himself to the table to read and write. He took all his sermons and all the theological works he had begun to compose during the time he had been a clergyman and put them in the fire; as he saw them consume he felt as though he had got rid of another incubus. Then he took up some of the little pieces he had begun to write during the latter part of his undergraduate life at Cambridge, and began to cut them about and re-write them. As he worked quietly at these till he heard the clock strike ten and it was time to go to bed, he felt that he was now not only happy but supremely happy.

Next day Ellen took him to Debenham's auction rooms, and they surveyed the lots of clothes which were hung up all round the auction room to be viewed. Ellen had had sufficient experience to know about how much each lot ought to fetch; she overhauled lot after lot, and valued it; in a very short time Ernest himself began to have a pretty fair idea what each lot should go for, and before the morning was over valued a dozen lots running at prices about which Ellen said he would not hurt if he could get them for that.

So far from disliking this work or finding it tedious, he liked it very much, indeed he would have liked anything which did not overtax his physical strength, and which held out a prospect of bringing him in money. Ellen would not let him buy anything on the occasion of this sale; she said he had better see one sale first and watch how prices actually went. So at twelve o'clock when the sale began, he saw the lots sold which he and Ellen had marked, and by the time the sale was over he knew enough to be able to bid with safety whenever he should actually want to buy. Knowledge of this sort is very easily acquired by anyone who is in bona fide want of it.

But Ellen did not want him to buy at auctions--not much at least at present. Private dealing, she said, was best. If I, for example, had any cast-off clothes, he was to buy them from my laundress, and get a connection with other laundresses, to whom he might give a trifle more than they got at present for whatever clothes their masters might give them, and yet make a good profit. If gentlemen sold their things, he was to try and get them to sell to him. He flinched at nothing; perhaps he would have flinched if he had had any idea how outre his proceedings were, but the very ignorance of the world which had ruined him up till now, by a happy irony began to work its own cure. If some malignant fairy had meant to curse him in this respect, she had overdone her malice. He did not know he was doing anything strange. He only knew that he had no money, and must provide for himself, a wife, and a possible family. More than this, he wanted to have some leisure in an evening, so that he might read and write and keep up his music. If anyone would show him how he could do better than he was doing, he should be much obliged to them, but to himself it seemed that he was doing sufficiently well; for at the end of the first week the pair found they had made a clear profit of 3 pounds. In a few weeks this had increased to 4 pounds, and by the New Year they had made a profit of 5 pounds in one week.

Ernest had by this time been married some two months, for he had stuck to his original plan of marrying Ellen on the first day he could legally do so. This date was a little delayed by the change of abode from Laystall Street to Blackfriars, but on the first day that it could be done it was done. He had never had more than 250 pounds a year, even in the times of his affluence, so that a profit of 5 pounds a week, if it could be maintained steadily, would place him where he had been as far as income went, and, though he should have to feed two mouths instead of one, yet his expenses in other ways were so much curtailed by his changed social position, that, take it all round, his income was practically what it had been a twelvemonth before. The next thing to do was to increase it, and put by money.

Prosperity depends, as we all know, in great measure upon energy and good sense, but it also depends not a little upon pure luck--that is to say, upon connections which are in such a tangle that it is more easy to say that they do not exist, than to try to trace them. A neighbourhood may have an excellent reputation as being likely to be a rising one, and yet may become suddenly eclipsed by another, which no one would have thought so promising. A fever hospital may divert the stream of business, or a new station attract it; so little, indeed, can be certainly known, that it is better not to try to know more than is in everybody's mouth, and to leave the rest to chance.

Luck, which certainly had not been too kind to my hero hitherto, now seemed to have taken him under her protection. The neighbourhood prospered, and he with it. It seemed as though he no sooner bought a thing and put it into his shop, than it sold with a profit of from thirty to fifty per cent. He learned book-keeping, and watched his accounts carefully, following up any success immediately; he began to buy other things besides clothes--such as books, music, odds and ends of furniture, etc. Whether it was luck or business aptitude, or energy, or the politeness with which he treated all his customers, I cannot say--but to the surprise of no one more than himself, he went ahead faster than he had anticipated, even in his wildest dreams, and by Easter was established in a strong position as the owner of a business which was bringing him in between four and five hundred a year, and which he understood how to extend.

同类推荐
  • 德安守御录上

    德安守御录上

    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。
  • 蕅益大师佛学十种

    蕅益大师佛学十种

    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。
  • 嘉定县乙酉纪事

    嘉定县乙酉纪事

    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。
  • Jean of the Lazy A

    Jean of the Lazy A

    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。
  • 美人谱

    美人谱

    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
  • 寒魇

    寒魇

    孤独是人的宿命,它基于这样一个事实:我们每个人都是这世界上一个旋生旋灭的偶然存在,从无中来,又要回到无中去,没有任何人任何事情能够改变我们的这个命运。是的,甚至连爱也不能。凡是领悟人生这样一种根本性孤独的人,便已经站到了一切人间欢爱的上方,爱得最热烈时也不会做爱的奴隶。
  • 艳鬼夫君

    艳鬼夫君

    穿越,借尸还魂,从乱葬岗中出来。都是因为阎王叫我找犬子。我也没有别的愿望,就是希望在找“犬子”的时候有帅哥陪着,有金子可以抱着,有凯子边钓着。路上艰辛无比险象环生,幸好有N多的美男相陪并顺便俘获美男的心。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 盛宠医妃:九皇叔,别闹

    盛宠医妃:九皇叔,别闹

    “脱!”她粗鲁推倒他,一把将衣襟撕开,露出黑紫色的印记。“你就这么心急?”他欺身上前,大手在她身上游走:“给你就是!”“臭流氓!”她一跃而起,准备逃之夭夭。“你敢逃?”一手握着纤细的腰肢,邪肆道:“那我就让你从此呆在我身下!”她穿越而来,风云起、天地动,万兽臣服!魔兽?封印万年魔尊都任由她挑选!高阶丹药?她随手捏来当糖丸!却没料想招惹了强(chou)大(bu)如(yao)斯(lian)的他,从此节操是路人!
  • 你若盛开,蝴蝶自来

    你若盛开,蝴蝶自来

    修得一段雅量,才能蓄就一生幸福。本书以此为主线,告诉你如何从心性开始完善自己,做到:烦恼的事放开些;伤心的事看淡些;苦痛的事乐观些;自己的事安心些。发觉心灵的澄明与宁静,让人生因清晰而透彻,让生命因不语而若兰清雅。
  • 宁妃传

    宁妃传

    初入深宫,她步步小心,哪知一着不慎,便陷入步步惊心。后宫三千佳丽,风姿各异,心计万千,但唯独一人吸引了各人目光。富贵,地位,权势,子女,亲人......都与他息息相关。看低调宫妃如何翻身来袭,权势在手,成就一代传奇!风云变幻的后宫,一副浩浩荡荡的宫谋权计热烈来袭!新人首创,求支持~。~
  • TF我是你的代理经纪人

    TF我是你的代理经纪人

    任娇娇,TF经纪人。因照顾TF而患上胃病并且没有及时就医,进了医院。莫筱叶,一个普通的不能再普通的女孩。父母早年去世,家里奶奶是她唯一的亲人。时代走势匆匆,慌忙之中,莫筱叶成了TF的代理经纪人,并且走上了短暂的陪读历程。时过境迁,流水年华。TF,曾记心里。
  • 毕加索

    毕加索

    本书主要以毕加索成长历程和人生发展为线索,通过日常生活中富于启发性的小故事来传达他成功的道理,尤其着重表现他所处时代的生活特征,以便对读者产生共鸣和启迪。
  • 亲爱的,闺蜜

    亲爱的,闺蜜

    本故事讲述四个大龄都市女,美丽时尚的她们本有着旁人所羡慕的优秀条件,无奈在感情路上都遭遇错的爱情及错的人,于是,离婚的离婚,未婚先孕的未婚先孕,各自都带着尴尬的脚步跨入30岁大关,成了失婚少妇和未婚妈妈。但,尽管如此,她们依然有着顽强的生命力,在遭受女人的最悲哀以后,她们选择互相依靠,勇敢站起来面对新的未来,开始了她们崭新的人生。就在她们自食其力开始悠然自得的时候,爱情却又再一次向她们走来,只是,她们是否还有勇气再去接受爱情呢?曾经,她们都以为爱,断了线,如今,爱却又重新连上了线,这是命运对她们的再一次考验吗!
  • 空蛹出蝶

    空蛹出蝶

    我要的很简单,一杯温水,一片面包,一句我爱你。如果奢侈一点的话,我希望温水是你倒得,面包是你切的,那句我爱你是你亲口说的。
  • 天灵战魂

    天灵战魂

    冰灵转世的林海没有显赫的身世,没有强大的后台,但有一颗拼搏的心。他懂恩仇,为了救中毒的母亲,拼命走出了北海城,只为求医问药。他知善恶,在陌生的地方他尝尽人情冷暖,看尽世间百态。他重感情,无论是兄弟情意还是爱情,都是他生命中不可割舍的一部分。陷世越深,林海对这个世界也越了解,慢慢的他触摸到了这个世界的屏障,知道了这个世界的秘密。原来这片大陆一直受着邪灵的诅咒,从此林海的使命就是解除诅咒。