登陆注册
37825300000103

第103章 XXXV(1)

From the window they looked over a sober valley, whose sides were not too sloping to be ploughed, and whose trend was followed by a grass-grown track. It was late on Sunday afternoon, and the valley was deserted except for one labourer, who was coasting slowly downward on a rosy bicycle. The air was very quiet. A jay screamed up in the woods behind, but the ring-doves, who roost early, were already silent. Since the window opened westward, the room was flooded with light, and Stephen, finding it hot, was working in his shirtsleeves.

"You guarantee they'll sell?" he asked, with a pen between his teeth. He was tidying up a pile of manuscripts.

"I guarantee that the world will be the gainer," said Mr. Pembroke, now a clergyman, who sat beside him at the table with an expression of refined disapproval on his face.

"I'd got the idea that the long story had its points, but that these shorter things didn't--what's the word?""'Convince' is probably the word you want. But that type of criticism is quite a thing of the past. Have you seen the illustrated American edition?""I don't remember."

"Might I send you a copy? I think you ought to possess one.""Thank you." His eye wandered. The bicycle had disappeared into some trees, and thither, through a cloudless sky, the sun was also descending.

"Is all quite plain?" said Mr. Pembroke. "Submit these ten stories to the magazines, and make your own terms with the editors. Then--I have your word for it--you will join forces with me; and the four stories in my possession, together with yours, should make up a volume, which we might well call 'Pan Pipes.'""Are you sure `Pan Pipes' haven't been used up already?"Mr. Pembroke clenched his teeth. He had been bearing with this sort of thing for nearly an hour. "If that is the case, we can select another. A title is easy to come by. But that is the idea it must suggest. The stories, as I have twice explained to you, all centre round a Nature theme. Pan, being the god of--""I know that," said Stephen impatiently.

"--Being the god of--"

"All right. Let's get furrard. I've learnt that."It was years since the schoolmaster had been interrupted, and he could not stand it. "Very well," he said. "I bow to your superior knowledge of the classics. Let us proceed.""Oh yes the introduction. There must be one. It was the introduction with all those wrong details that sold the other book.""You overwhelm me. I never penned the memoir with that intention.""If you won't do one, Mrs. Keynes must!"

"My sister leads a busy life. I could not ask her. I will do it myself since you insist.""And the binding?"

"The binding," said Mr. Pembroke coldly, "must really be left to the discretion of the publisher. We cannot be concerned with such details. Our task is purely literary." His attention wandered. He began to fidget, and finally bent down and looked under the table. "What have we here?" he asked.

Stephen looked also, and for a moment they smiled at each other over the prostrate figure of a child, who was cuddling Mr. Pembroke's boots. "She's after the blacking," he explained. "If we left her there, she'd lick them brown.""Indeed. Is that so very safe?"

"It never did me any harm. Come up! Your tongue's dirty.""Can I--" She was understood to ask whether she could clean her tongue on a lollie.

"No, no!" said Mr. Pembroke. "Lollipops don't clean little girls' tongues."

"Yes, they do," he retorted. "But she won't get one." He lifted her on his knee, and rasped her tongue with his handkerchief.

"Dear little thing," said the visitor perfunctorily. The child began to squall, and kicked her father in the stomach.

Stephen regarded her quietly. "You tried to hurt me," he said.

"Hurting doesn't count. Trying to hurt counts. Go and clean your tongue yourself. Get off my knee." Tears of another sort came into her eyes, but she obeyed him. "How's the great Bertie?" he asked.

"Thank you. My nephew is perfectly well. How came you to hear of his existence?""Through the Silts, of course. It isn't five miles to Cadover."Mr. Pembroke raised his eyes mournfully. "I cannot conceive how the poor Silts go on in that great house. Whatever she intended, it could not have been that. The house, the farm, the money,--everything down to the personal articles that belong to Mr. Failing, and should have reverted to his family!""It's legal. Interstate succession."

"I do not dispute it. But it is a lesson to one to make a will.

Mrs. Keynes and myself were electrified."

"They'll do there. They offered me the agency, but--" He looked down the cultivated slopes. His manners were growing rough, for he saw few gentlemen now, and he was either incoherent or else alarmingly direct. "However, if Lawrie Silt's a Cockney like his father, and if my next is a boy and like me--" A shy beautiful look came into his eyes, and passed unnoticed. "They'll do," he repeated. "They turned out Wilbraham and built new cottages, and bridged the railway, and made other necessary alterations." There was a moment's silence.

Mr. Pembroke took out his watch. "I wonder if I might have the trap? I mustn't miss my train, must I? It is good of you to have granted me an interview. It is all quite plain?""Yes."

"A case of half and half-division of profits.""Half and half?" said the young farmer slowly. "What do you take me for? Half and half, when I provide ten of the stories and you only four?""I--I--" stammered Mr. Pembroke.

"I consider you did me over the long story, and I'm damned if you do me over the short ones!""Hush! if you please, hush!--if only for your little girl's sake."He lifted a clerical palm.

"You did me," his voice drove, "and all the thirty-nine Articles won't stop me saying so. That long story was meant to be mine. Igot it written. You've done me out of every penny it fetched.

同类推荐
  • 南亭

    南亭

    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。
  • 佛说陀邻尼钵经

    佛说陀邻尼钵经

    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。
  • 宗门拈古汇集

    宗门拈古汇集

    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。
  • 辨非集

    辨非集

    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。
  • 沙弥律仪毗尼日用合参

    沙弥律仪毗尼日用合参

    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
  • 鼓楼风情

    鼓楼风情

    《鼓楼风情》记叙了远古时期至当今时代的一些历史名人,在南京鼓楼区域内所发生的重大事件及其趣闻轶事。书中或帝王称雄,或谋士献策,或将帅扬戈,或诗人咏叹,或学者报国,或女有豪杰,所述人物在不同的历史时期,或多或少地影响了中国的历史进程。作者从不同的层面、视角,展现了这些人物丰富多彩的精神面貌和内心感受。《鼓楼风情》集史实性、故事性、文学性为一体,其中一些篇目在原有史实基础上,作了一些探索性解读。
  • 面试胜经

    面试胜经

    本书非常有针对性地帮助大学毕业生更好地掌握面试技巧,克服面试时的惶恐和困惑,找到自己理想的职业。
  • 纵横诸天的史莱姆

    纵横诸天的史莱姆

    一只史莱姆的诸天之旅,首先从一只狗开始。还我狗命的那只狗????????????马潇:汪汪汪
  • 追梦情话

    追梦情话

    你就是我的唯一,mygirlmysunshine,at宋BB,要写给你的情书,有很多,这只是其中的一些,写的不好希望你不要建议,真情实感,希望你能够喜欢!——永远爱你的王TT
  • 他与时光比肩

    他与时光比肩

    【红袖首届全球征文大赛最具烧脑奖】第一世,他眼睁睁的看着她死在怀中。第二世,悲剧再现,他无力阻止。这一世,他守着崇初书院和他的博物馆,终于等到那个横冲直撞的小女警推开他的门。“陆馆长,你说我上辈子和上上辈子都死得很惨,对吗?”孟眠歪着头看他,若有所思。“嗯。”“那,我上辈子和上上辈子都很喜欢你,可你不爱我,对吗?”陆寒昭皱眉:“我没说过这样的话。”“那你有多爱我?如果我们再遇见一百次的话……”她剩下的问题被他以吻封缄,在闭上眼的前一刻,她听到那个男人温柔的叹息:“如果再遇见你一百次,我也一定会再沦陷一百次的。”【神仙博物馆馆长VS元气活力小女警】PS:三生三世,前两世虐,最后一世甜就完事了。
  • 三生劫:痴情

    三生劫:痴情

    第一世,他为了她,修为散尽;第二世,她为了他,尽遭反噬;第三世,她成了魔,他跳了诛仙台。她本该笑看天下,却为了他,终消于六界;他本该逍遥一生,却为了她,痴苦一世。三生的情,原不过是她的劫,是他的劫。
  • 噬鬼录

    噬鬼录

    唐明皇时一位宰相名叫张说,写有一诗《谢赐钟馗及历日表》,诗中说到感谢皇上赐给自己的钟馗神像。后大诗人刘禹锡也曾写过类似的诗篇,由这些唐人诗句不难看出,钟馗在唐朝时已是声名赫赫。北宋有一文者名叫郭若虚,曾描述他在宋皇内宫见到了……
  • 绝对溺爱

    绝对溺爱

    他是复制体,她是本体。本是敌人,却因为一次机缘巧合走到了一起。他们会擦出怎样的爱情花火呢?
  • 龙逆穹宇

    龙逆穹宇

    废材如何?难道真的一无是处?一部混沌穹宇诀,一尊至尊玲珑塔看废材逆袭之路!孙宇习上古功法,功法大成!他混沌化虚,吸纳万千!他龙行天道,逆流而上,直上青天,荒宇灭神,灭宇创世!
  • 行走的花朵

    行走的花朵

    这是一部散文集,描写了作者眼中的美景与生活片段,作者文笔朴实自然,不加雕饰,于质朴无华中,娓娓道来自己对大千世界的理解与热爱。作者秉持我书我写的创作理念,写的不仅是自然美景,更要表达自己的心情。希望通过笔下的文字,抚慰灵魂,回归精神的家园。