三界文学阁

手机浏览器扫描二维码访问

第34部分(第1页)

rt of her dress burst open; and out upon the table fell ‘The Oak Tree’; a poem。

‘A manuscript!’ said Sir Nicholas; putting on his gold pince–nez。 ‘How interesting; how excessively interesting! Permit me to look at it。’ And once more; after an interval of some three hundred years; Nicholas Greene took Orlando’s poem and; laying it down among the coffee cups and the liqueur glasses; began to read it。 But now his verdict was very different from what it had been then。 It reminded him; he said as he turned over the pages; of Addison’s “Cato”。 It pared favourably with Thomson’s “Seasons”。 There was no trace in it; he was thankful to say; of the modern spirit。 It was posed with a regard to truth; to nature; to the dictates of the human heart; which was rare indeed; in these days of unscrupulous eccentricity。 It must; of course; be published instantly。

Really Orlando did not know what he meant。 She had always carried her manuscripts about with her in the bosom of her dress。 The idea tickled Sir Nicholas considerably。

‘But what about royalties?’ he asked。

Orlando’s mind flew to Buckingham Palace and some dusky potentates who happened to be staying there。

Sir Nicholas was highly diverted。 He explained that he was alluding to the fact that Messrs — (here he mentioned a well–known firm of publishers) would be delighted; if he wrote them a line; to put the book on their list。 He could probably arrange for a royalty of ten per cent on all copies up to two thousand; after that it would be fifteen。 As for the reviewers; he would himself write a line to Mr —; who was the most influential; then a pliment—say a little puff of her own poems—addressed to the wife of the editor of the — never did any harm。 He would call —。 So he ran on。 Orlando understood nothing of all this; and from old experience did not altogether trust his good nature; but there was nothing for it but to submit to what was evidently his wish and the fervent desire of the poem itself。 So Sir Nicholas made the blood–stained packet into a neat parcel; flattened it into his breast pocket; lest it should disturb the set of his coat; and with many pliments on both sides; they parted。

Orlando walked up the street。 Now that the poem was gone;—and she felt a bare place in her breast where she had been used to carry it—she had nothing to do but reflect upon whatever she liked—the extraordinary chances it might be of the human lot。 Here she was in St James’s Street; a married woman; with a ring on her finger; where there had been a coffee house once there was now a restaurant; it was about half past three in the afternoon; the sun was shining; there were three pigeons; a mongrel terrier dog; two hansom cabs and a barouche landau。 What then; was Life? The thought popped into her head violently; irrelevantly (unless old Greene were somehow the cause of it)。 And it may be taken as a ment; adverse or favourable; as the reader chooses to consider it upon her relations with her husband (who was at the Horn); that whenever anything popped violently into her head; she went straight to the nearest telegraph office and wired to him。 There was one; as it happened; close at hand。 ‘My God Shel’; she wired; ‘life literature Greene toady—’ here she dropped into a cypher language which they had invented between them so that a whole spiritual state of the utmost plexity might be conveyed in a word or two without the telegraph clerk being any wiser; and added the words ‘Rattigan Glumphoboo’; which summed it up precisely。 For not only had the events of the morning made a deep impression on her; but it cannot have escaped the reader’s attention that Orlando was growing up—which is not necessarily growing better—and ‘Rattigan Glumphoboo’ described a very plicated spiritual state—which if the reader puts all his intelligence at our service he may discover for himself。

There could be no answer to her telegram for some hours; indeed; it was probable; she thought; glancing at the sky; where the upper clouds raced swiftly past; that there was a gale at Cape Horn; so that her husband would be at the mast–head; as likely as not; or cutting away some tattered spar; or even alone in a boat with a biscuit。 And so; leaving the post office; she turned to beguile herself into the next shop; which was a shop so mon in our day that it needs no description; yet; to her eyes; strange in the extreme; a shop where they sold books。 All her life long Orlando had known manuscripts; she had held in her hands the rough brown sheets on which Spenser had written in his little crabbed hand; she had seen Shakespeare’s script and Milton’s。 She owned; indeed; a fair number of quartos and folios; often with a son in her praise in them and sometimes a lock of hair。 But these innumerable little volumes; bright; identical; ephemeral; for they seemed bound in cardboard and printed on tissue paper; surprised her infinitely。 The whole works of Shakespeare cost half a crown; and could be put in your pocket。 One could hardly read them; indeed; the print was so small; but it was a marvel; none the less。 ‘Works’—the works of every writer she had known or heard of and many more stretched from end to end of the long shelves。 On tables and chairs; more ‘works’ were piled and tumbled; and these she saw; turning a page or two; were often works about other works by Sir Nicholas and a score of others whom; in her ignorance; she supposed; since they were bound and printed; to be very great writers too。 So she gave an astounding order to the bookseller to send her everything of any importance in the shop and left。

She turned into Hyde Park; which she had known of old (beneath that cleft tree; she remembered; the Duke of Hamilton fell run through the body by Lord Mohun); and her lips; which are often to blame in the matter; began framing the words of her telegram into a senseless singsong; life literature Greene toady Rattigan Glumphoboo; so that several park keepers looked at her with suspicion and were only brought to a favourable opinion of her sanity by noticing the pearl necklace which she wore。 She had carried off a sheaf of papers and critical journals from the book shop; and at length; flinging herself on her elbow beneath a tree; she spread these pages round her and did her best to fathom the noble art of prose position as these masters practised it。 For still the old credulity was alive in her; even the blurred type of a weekly newspaper had some sanctity in her eyes。 So she read; lying on her elbow; an article by Sir Nicholas on the collected works of a man she had once known—John Donne。 But she had pitched herself; without knowing it; not far from the Serpentine。 The barking of a thousand dogs sounded in her ears。 Carriage wheels rushed ceaselessly in a circle。 Leaves sighed overhead。 Now and again a braided skirt and a pair of tight scarlet trousers crossed the grass within a few steps of her。 Once a gigantic rubber ball bounced on the newspaper。 Violets; oranges; reds; and blues broke through the interstices of the leaves and sparkled in the emerald on her finger。 She read a sentence and looked up at the sky; she looked up at the sky and looked down at the newspaper。 Life? Literature? One to be made into the other? But how monstrously difficult! For—here came by a pair of tight scarlet trousers—how would Addison have put that? Here came two dogs dancing on their hind legs。 How would Lamb have described that? For reading Sir Nicholas and his friends (as she did in the intervals of looking about her); she somehow got the impression—here she rose and walked—they made one feel—it was an extremely unfortable feeling—one must never; never say what one thought。 (She stood on the banks of the Serpentine。 It was a bronze colour; spider–thin boats were skimming from side to side。) They made one feel; she continued; that one must always; always write like somebody else。 (The tears formed themselves in her eyes。) For really; she thought; pushing a little boat off with her toe; I don’t think I could (here the whole of Sir Nicholas’ article came before her as articles do; ten minutes after they are read; with the look of his room; his head; his cat; his writing–table; and the time of the day thrown in); I don’t think I could; she continued; considering the article from this point of view; sit in a study; no; it’s not a study; it’s a mouldy kind of drawing–room; all day long; and talk to pretty young men; and tell them little anecdotes; which they mustn’t repeat; about what Tupper said about Smiles; and then; she continued; weeping bitterly; they’re all so manly; and then; I do detest Duchesses; and I don’t like cake; and though I’m spiteful enough; I could never learn to be as spiteful as all that; so how can I be a critic and write the best English prose of my time? Damn it all! she exclaimed; launching a penny steamer so vigorously that the poor little boat almost sank in the bronze–coloured waves。

Now; the truth is that when one has been in a state of mind (as nurses call it)—and the tears still stood in Orlando’s eyes—the thing one is looking at bees; not itself; but another thing; which is bigger and much more important and yet remains the same thing。 If one looks at the Serpentine in this state of mind; the waves soon bee just as big as the waves on the Atlantic; the toy boats bee indistinguishable from ocean liners。 So Orlando mistook the toy boat for her husband’s brig; and the wave she had made with her toe for a mountain of water off Cape Horn; and as she watched the toy boat climb the ripple; she thought she saw Bonthrop’s ship climb up and up a glassy wall; up and up it went; and a white crest with a thousand deaths in it arched over it; and through the thousand deaths it went and disappeared—’It’s sunk!’ she cried out in an agony—and then; behold; there it was again sailing along safe and sound among the ducks on the other side of the Atlantic。

‘Ecstasy!’ she cried。 ‘Ecstasy! Where’s the post office?’ she wondered。 ‘For I must wire at once to Shel and tell him。。。’ And repeating ‘A toy boat on the Serpentine’; and ‘Ecstasy’; alternately; for the thoughts were interchangeable and meant exactly the same thing; she hurried towards Park Lane。

‘A toy boat; a toy boat; a toy boat;’ she repeated; thus enforcing upon herself the fact that it is not articles by Nick Greene on John Donne nor eight–hour bills nor covenants nor factory acts that matter; it’s something useless; sudden; violent; something that costs a life; red; blue; purple; a spirit; a splash; like those hyacinths (she was passing a fine bed of them); free from taint; dependence; soilure of humanity or care for one’s kind; something rash; ridiculous; like my hyacinth; husband I mean; Bonthrop: that’s what it is—a toy boat on the Serpentine; ecstasy—it’s ecstasy that matters。 Thus she spoke aloud; waiting for the carriages to pass at Stanhope Gate; for the consequence of not living with one’s husband; except when the wind is sunk; is that one talks nonsense aloud in Park Lane。 It would no doubt have been different had she lived all the year round with him as Queen Victoria remended。 As it was the thought of him would e upon her in a flash。 She found it absolutely necessary to spea

从八百只麻雀开始肝成神明  蹉跎岁月女人花  冷血悍将  在中国做事(全文阅读) - 黄夏君  现在,发现你的优势  演讲论辩技巧  要塞-中世纪领主  唯爱成神  冥仙未世  红色之翼  重生后,真少爷回村带妻女发家致富  梨园往事  战锤:这不是草原争霸吗?  上门姐夫楚天舒乔诗媛最新更新章节免费阅读  拍遍全网糊咖醉姐终于火了陈醉周望全集免费阅读  销售人员职业教程  女性经理人打造术:跟王熙凤学管理  血色使命  双子变变变  五胡烽火录  

热门小说推荐
重回九四好种田

重回九四好种田

红袖读书首届全球征文大赛参赛作品如果您喜欢重回九四好种田,别忘记分享给朋友...

带着老公儿子穿年代

带着老公儿子穿年代

一场地震,让江山山原本衣食无忧的一家三口穿到了缺衣少食的年代。左边是怀中嗷嗷待哺的儿子,右边是他们一家三口即将面临着黑户这个问题。小两口同时望天,想破口大骂。好在穿越大神没有太亏待他们。送了一栋商场给他们。靠着商场这个金手指,一家三口很快在这个贫穷的年代里站稳了脚跟。结果一不小心落了户。一不小心又成为了那个年代里的万元户。今天的牛家村异常热闹,那就是牛大胆当初卖掉的儿子找回来,不仅自己回来了,还带回来了妻儿。这件事情在牛家村一下子成了今天的大热话题。然而村里人都知道,牛大胆家里可是村子里出了名的穷家庭。现在多了一个儿子,牛家这边要热闹了。然而大家等呀等。等到的是牛家天天有肉吃了。等到的是牛家人过年有新衣服穿了。等到的是牛家人要搬到镇上去住了。如果您喜欢带着老公儿子穿年代,别忘记分享给朋友...

穿书成为假千金的亲妹妹后

穿书成为假千金的亲妹妹后

简介社畜云章穿越修真界后又穿进一本真假千金文,成了假千金的亲妹妹。真假千金有一个共同的白月光卫王。卫王是皇太后嫡出,清隽绝俗,如天上月,在云隐寺出家。当云章穿书而来,拉着一家子跑路,路遇一少年,甚合胃口。卫王如月光清冷你意欲何为?云章别误会,就是看上你封地穿书成为假千金的亲妹妹后推荐地址...

女皇逆袭攻略

女皇逆袭攻略

9年前,西域汨桑国三公主一战成名,灭昆拔,诛昆王,名震诸国9年后,一辆马车缓缓驶离随国锦官城,世上再无秦氏未晞,惟有汨桑三公主乌云然如果您喜欢女皇逆袭攻略,别忘记分享给朋友...

医妻三嫁

医妻三嫁

苏凉穿越后,嫁给同一个男人,三次。第一次,只是交易。第二次,还是交易。第三次,又是事不过三,我们假戏真做吧。顾泠说。女主视角军医穿越,成了被豺狼亲戚害死的苦命村姑。报仇雪恨之后,无处可去,便跟美男相公搭伙过日子。相公是个神棍,字面意思。日子过得那叫一个风生水起,跌宕起伏,伏伏伏伏要不,散伙吧?苏凉认真提议。美男说,下辈子再说。男主视角天生特殊能力,让他选择离群索居。从来都是让身边的人离开,第一次开口挽留的人,就是她。顾泠觉得他和苏凉天生一对,注定要在一起。有人反对?他一直在救人,偶尔杀几个也无妨。霸气睿智成长型穿越女主vs仙气地气并存异能男主如果您喜欢医妻三嫁,别忘记分享给朋友...

这个仙人有点猛

这个仙人有点猛

穿越之后,黄枫发现这个世界有点乱,朝堂不靠谱,仙门不着调,妖四处作妖,鬼到处惹事,如此严重的安全隐患一下就激发了他的火力不足恐惧症他是一个不喜欢凑热闹也不爱管闲事的人,只想舒舒服服过生活,可许久之后他发现,热闹他好像都凑了,闲事他似乎都管了,而且大家都很听他的话黄枫你们有意见就提,我又不是不讲道理的人!妖鬼仙凡不不不,你说得都对!功法覆盖范围之内,皆是真理!如果您喜欢这个仙人有点猛,别忘记分享给朋友...

每日热搜小说推荐