登陆注册
26328800000016

第16章 CHAPTER IV(1)

Our architect arrived on Friday afternoon, or rather, his assistant.

I felt from the first I was going to like him. He is shy, and that, of course, makes him appear awkward. But, as I explained to Robina, it is the shy young men who, generally speaking, turn out best: few men could have been more painfully shy up to twenty-five than myself.

Robina said that was different: in the case of an author it did not matter. Robina's attitude towards the literary profession would not annoy me so much were it not typical. To be a literary man is, in Robina's opinion, to be a licensed idiot. It was only a week or two ago that I overheard from my study window a conversation between Veronica and Robina upon this very point. Veronica's eye had caught something lying on the grass. I could not myself see what it was, in consequence of an intervening laurel bush. Veronica stooped down and examined it with care. The next instant, uttering a piercing whoop, she leapt into the air; then, clapping her hands, began to dance.

Her face was radiant with a holy joy. Robina, passing near, stopped and demanded explanation.

"Pa's tennis racket!" shouted Veronica--Veronica never sees the use of talking in an ordinary tone of voice when shouting will do just as well. She continued clapping her hands and taking little bounds into the air.

"Well, what are you going on like that for?" asked Robina. "It hasn't bit you, has it?"

"It's been out all night in the wet," shouted Veronica. "He forgot to bring it in."

"You wicked child!" said Robina severely. "It's nothing to be pleased about."

"Yes, it is," explained Veronica. "I thought at first it was mine.

Oh, wouldn't there have been a talk about it, if it had been! Oh my! wouldn't there have been a row!" She settled down to a steady rhythmic dance, suggestive of a Greek chorus expressing satisfaction with the gods.

Robina seized her by the shoulders and shook her back into herself.

"If it had been yours," said Robina, "you would deserve to have been sent to bed."

"Well, then, why don't he go to bed?" argued Veronica.

Robina took her by the arm and walked her up and down just underneath my window. I listened, because the conversation interested me.

"Pa, as I am always explaining to you," said Robina, "is a literary man. He cannot help forgetting things."

"Well, I can't help forgetting things," insisted Veronica.

"You find it hard," explained Robina kindly; "but if you keep on trying you will succeed. You will get more thoughtful. I used to be forgetful and do foolish things once, when I was a little girl."

"Good thing for us if we was all literary," suggested Veronica.

"If we 'were' all literary," Robina corrected her. "But you see we are not. You and I and ****, we are just ordinary mortals. We must try and think, and be sensible. In the same way, when Pa gets excited and raves--I mean, seems to rave--it's the literary temperament. He can't help it."

"Can't you help doing anything when you are literary?" asked Veronica.

"There's a good deal you can't help," answered Robina. "It isn't fair to judge them by the ordinary standard."

They drifted towards the kitchen garden--it was the time of strawberries--and the remainder of the talk I lost. I noticed that for some days afterwards Veronica displayed a tendency to shutting herself up in the schoolroom with a copybook, and that lead pencils had a way of disappearing from my desk. One in particular that had suited me I determined if possible to recover. A subtle instinct guided me to Veronica's sanctum. I found her thoughtfully sucking it. She explained to me that she was writing a little play.

"You get things from your father, don't you?" she enquired of me.

"You do," I admitted; "but you ought not to take them without asking.

I am always telling you of it. That pencil is the only one I can write with."

"I didn't mean the pencil," explained Veronica. "I was wondering if I had got your literary temper."

It is puzzling, when you come to think of it, this estimate accorded by the general public to the litterateur. It stands to reason that the man who writes books, explaining everything and putting everybody right, must be himself an exceptionally clever man; else how could he do it! The thing is pure logic. Yet to listen to Robina and her like you might think we had not sense enough to run ourselves, as the saying is--let alone running the universe. If I would let her, Robina would sit and give me information by the hour.

"The ordinary girl . . . " Robina will begin, with the air of a University Extension Lecturer.

It is so exasperating. As if I did not know all there is to be known about girls! Why, it is my business. I point this out to Robina.

"Yes, I know," Robina will answer sweetly. "But I was meaning the real girl."

It would make not the slightest difference were I even quite a high-class literary man--Robina thinks I am: she is a dear child. Were I Shakespeare himself, and could I in consequence say to her:

"Methinks, child, the creator of Ophelia and Juliet, and Rosamund and Beatrice, must surely know something about girls," Robina would still make answer:

"Of course, Pa dear. Everybody knows how clever you are. But I was thinking for the moment of real girls."

I wonder to myself sometimes, Is literature to the general reader ever anything more than a fairy-tale? We write with our heart's blood, as we put it. We ask our conscience, Is it right thus to lay bare the secrets of our souls? The general reader does not grasp that we are writing with our heart's blood: to him it is just ink.

同类推荐
  • 佛说六道伽陀经

    佛说六道伽陀经

    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。
  • 小苑春望宫池柳色

    小苑春望宫池柳色

    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。
  • 灵芬馆词话

    灵芬馆词话

    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。
  • 称赞大乘功德经

    称赞大乘功德经

    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。
  • 中山经

    中山经

    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
  • 阴阳先生的现代生活

    阴阳先生的现代生活

    我就是我,作为最后一个真正的阴阳先生。我要为自己代言
  • 群魔

    群魔

    日落大陆,一个强者为尊的世界。曾经发生在这里的两次末日浩劫,并未将它彻底毁灭。劫后重生的人类,反而变得愈发强大!然而数百年后,原本风平浪静的大陆再次陷入了危机中。冥神教、修罗殿、异世魔界......这数股涌动的暗流,为了达成各自的夙愿,不惜犯下任何滔天之罪。与此同时,一个体内隐藏着远古恶魔的青年斗者,从异世界坠入了日落大陆......风起云涌,危机四伏的大陆,会因为他的降临而改变吗?
  • 走在青春之路

    走在青春之路

    讲述年轻人大学毕业后所经历的工作和生活,有迷茫,有奋进,还有理想。
  • 哼本王不当花魁了

    哼本王不当花魁了

    一朝穿越,以为可以过上好日子,当躺在这华而不实,全是高仿品的房间时才知道自己被骗了,啊,我幼小的心灵啊!爹不疼,娘不爱就算了,还长得丑,呜,先默哀三秒为了变成有钱银!打工?我自己这小身板乞讨?本宝宝不想蹲在街上晒太阳(哼就是这么任性)咳咳,本美人决定重出江湖去勾引,不!卖笑,呸!是以高尚的品德去征服帅锅,主要是有钱滴,从此走上人生巅峰艾玛,说好的风华绝代的美女姐姐呢,为虾米是男的,而且还是堂堂的摄政王,真的,她发誓,如果她早点知道他的身份,借她一百个胆子,也不敢调戏他,还强上了他,本想打着不主动不拒绝不负责的旗号泡良家妇男,当一双水汪汪的眼睛看着自己,额,好吧,我认错,我负责!
  • 一弯残月

    一弯残月

    一个地球人和一个外星人合伙抓外星逃犯并遭遇更多奇异人物的危机,然后收付异能人士一起打怪的故事面前有一扇门,我手里有许多把钥匙,而我只想找到能开门的那一把
  • 音落渐远

    音落渐远

    乱世离殇,无奈逃亡。不求天荒地老,只求你平好便好。"朕,愿一生一代一双人!""本王,愿执子之手,与子偕老!""本尊愿,愿得一心人,白首不相离。""可我只愿和他,在天愿作比翼鸟,在地愿为连理枝。"在这乱世中,爱、情又算什么?分分合合,已是家常便饭。何时,我们才能长相厮守……本故事纯属虚构,切勿当真(=^▽^=)
  • 天天家常菜

    天天家常菜

    最常吃、最经典的家常美食,最全面、最深入的菜品解析,营养知识,烹饪技法,厨事窍门,集权威专家与身边百姓共同的智慧,倾力打造出让你一学就会的家常菜谱。《天天家常菜》介绍了凉菜、素热菜、荤热菜、锅仔及靓汤这些家常菜谱,学会后在家即可享受舌尖上的幸福。
  • 多面强者

    多面强者

    一世冷漠,二世不甘,三世成神。为亲人和爱人,向敌人下跪,破碎轮回,转世大学生,却被爱人找回,意识觉醒,拜入宗门,杀敌复国,踏入强者之路。
  • 王爷再贱

    王爷再贱

    她本是一个小职员,却穿越到了一个陌生的世界,在这里,她是皇上喜欢的妃子,但她却不爱皇上,她想要自由,便是逃离皇宫,只是小看了皇上对她的爱,宁可舍下天下也要去寻找她,当她爱上他想为他做些什么时,不曾想,本是二十一世纪高材生的凌筱雨,在这个时代却是一只拖油瓶,成了一个包袱……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 亡灵异事录

    亡灵异事录

    一个由一本未知的书引发的关于勇气,友情,爱情和背叛的故事……一本未知的书,对生活带来了翻天覆地球的变化,神秘生物开始出现,一场场阴谋开始浮现,幸还是不幸?以生命为代价的路……