登陆注册
14821100000023

第23章

I packed my bag, and then went to help him. He was cramming all his possessions into portmanteaux and boxes; the Hoffman was already packed, and the wall looked curiously bare without it. Clearly this was no visit to London--he was leaving Bath for good, and who could wonder at it?

"I have arranged for the attendant from the hospital to come in at night as well as in the morning," he said, as he locked a portmanteau that was stuffed almost to bursting. "What's the time?

We must make haste or we shall lose the train. Do, like a good fellow, cram that heap of things into the carpet-bag while I speak to the landlady."

At last we were off, rattling through the quiet streets of Bath, and reaching the station barely in time to rush up the long flight of stairs and spring into an empty carriage. Never shall I forget that journey. The train stopped at every single station, and sometimes in between; we were five mortal hours on the road, and more than once I thought Derrick would have fainted. However, he was not of the fainting order, he only grew more and more ghastly in colour and rigid in expression.

I felt very anxious about him, for the shock and the sudden anger following on the trouble about Freda seemed to me enough to unhinge even a less sensitive nature. 'At Strife' was the novel which had, I firmly believe, kept him alive through that awful time at Ben Rhydding, and I began to fear that the Major's fit of drunken malice might prove the destruction of the author as well as of the book.

Everything had, as it were, come at once on poor Derrick; yet I don't know that he fared worse than other people in this respect.

Life, unfortunately, is for most of us no well-arranged story with a happy termination; it is a chequered affair of shade and sun, and for one beam of light there come very often wide patches of shadow.

Men seem to have known this so far back as Shakespeare's time, and to have observed that one woe trod on another's heels, to have battled not with a single wave, but with a 'sea of troubles,' and to have remarked that 'sorrows come not singly, but in battalions.'

However, owing I believe chiefly to his own self-command, and to his untiring faculty for taking infinite pains over his work, Derrick did not break down, but pleasantly cheated my expectations. I was not called on to nurse him through a fever, and consumption did not mark him for her own. In fact, in the matter of illness, he was always a most prosaic, unromantic fellow, and never indulged in any of the euphonious and interesting ailments. In all his life, I believe, he never went in for anything but the mumps--of all complaints the least interesting--and, may be, an occasional headache.

However, all this is a digression. We at length reached London, and Derrick took a room above mine, now and then disturbing me with nocturnal pacings over the creaking boards, but, on the whole, proving himself the best of companions.

If I wrote till Doomsday, I could never make you understand how the burning of his novel affected him--to this day it is a subject I instinctively avoid with him--though the re-written 'At Strife' has been such a grand success. For he did re-write the story, and that at once. He said little; but the very next morning, in one of the windows of our quiet sitting-room, often enough looking despairingly at the grey monotony of Montague Street, he began at 'Page I, Chapter I,' and so worked patiently on for many months to re-make as far as he could what his drunken father had maliciously destroyed.

Beyond the unburnt paragraph about the attack on Mondisfield, he had nothing except a few hastily scribbled ideas in his note-book, and of course the very elaborate and careful historical notes which he had made on the Civil War during many years of reading and research--for this period had always been a favourite study with him.

But, as any author will understand, the effort of re-writing was immense, and this, combined with all the other troubles, tried Derrick to the utmost. However, he toiled on, and I have always thought that his resolute, unyielding conduct with regard to that book proved what a man he was.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天衍四九

    天衍四九

    大道五十,天衍四九,遁去其一。变数,变数。谁又是那远遁而去的一,或你,或他。两个诞生于天地间最初的种族。他和她就生降于这两个种族。而他却惨遭灭族,而她为了等待他曾经的誓言,守候了百万个破晓和月牙交替.....今生因你痴狂,此爱天下无双!“哥哥,你为何不开心,为何总是愁眉”“哥哥,你的修为没有我强,你不能够担任族长”看着那把剑刺透了自己的胸膛,他感觉到撕心裂肺的痛,这痛不是来自剑伤,而是来自于心碎,因为用这剑的人就是自己的弟弟。
  • 科技唐朝

    科技唐朝

    科学与历史的交锋,究竟会激荡出怎样的火花!上万种科技发明,照亮整个大唐时空,千年历史从此发生天翻地覆的转折。李继说,我不是在重复历史,而是在创造一个崭新的世界。一个穿越者回到唐朝,他的亲身经历,将会书写一个怎样的精彩传奇!高度架空,十分精彩,轻松搞笑,真情感人。胡说八道,天方奇谭,大胆构思,大幅跨越!本书遵循的原则只有一个:凡不符合科学的,统统抛弃!让我们一起来经历一场前所未有的唐朝科技风暴吧!Ps:新书求推荐票、收藏、打赏、评论,等等等等,大家看得爽可不要吝啬哦!
  • 我的笨蛋妻

    我的笨蛋妻

    我的名字叫叶紫嫣,和全班同学去春游,谁知,我们一起穿越了!穿越到了原古战争时期。还不是我们所学的历史简直就是一个架空时期。在那里有魂兽,有人兽合体。自己还不知道怎么的就把自己给卖了。命苦啊!
  • 三公主的水晶恋

    三公主的水晶恋

    她,皇室公主,高贵冷艳,冷漠,对伤害亲人的人,绝不手软,一座万年冰山;他,孤傲冷漠,对兄弟视如亲人,伤者,一个字,死
  • 雪逝依月

    雪逝依月

    年少时总有那么些自以为是,也总会干些愚蠢残忍过分的事,时间的冲刷,挽回理智的心,所有的事与人,改变了原本的样子,好与坏并不是绝对的,失去的东西,也不可能有回转之地,错误面前,没有人会听那些借口,一切的改变······
  • 巨星:谁与争锋

    巨星:谁与争锋

    他是宠儿也是弃儿,他被追逐也被放逐他在失重后赢回尊重,他在尊重中赢来更多的尊重他在离开时已经没有离开曾经的倔强变成今天的执着,只留下,一声叹息!
  • 魂武八荒传

    魂武八荒传

    参透轮回决的王辰南死后意外回到十六岁初入星辰学院的第一天,即将破灭的八荒大陆如今完好如初,这一次历史的车轮能否被改写?那些失去的是否能够挽回?这一切只能靠王辰南一人去改变……
  • 重生之只好赖着你

    重生之只好赖着你

    生无可恋的林默醒来后,发现重生回到两年前她妈妈刚被人撞成植物人的时候,那时她没有向那个人索要高昂的医药费,借款、欠债、被男友嫌弃的她,最终走投无路。重生后,她找到了那个人向他索要赔款,谁知竟被对方利用成了一粒棋子,还欣然做起了他雇来的妻子……重生前她错过了他,重生后她赖上他的钱、赖上他的床、赖上他的爱。
  • 无名指的孤单

    无名指的孤单

    很久以前,曾经有人说过。无名指是靠近心脏的地方,它可以为你守住你的爱人,同时也锁住了你的心。直到那年,他如神砥闯入铃儿的世界,使她的整个世界充满了阳光,仿佛呼吸都充满了他的气息。本以为这是最初的悸动,却不想这只是一场报复的开始,而当她满心欢喜的等着做他的新娘时,却发现了他的秘密。他为何对他忽冷忽热的秘密,当她在结婚前夜绝然离去,几年后,真相大白时,他们是否还能在一起
  • 便衣警察

    便衣警察

    这是一个年轻警察成长的故事,也是一曲美好爱情的颂歌。故事发生在粉碎“四人帮”之前的一九七六年。经群众举报,南州市公安局逮捕了一个名叫徐邦呈的台湾特务。当时没有弄清楚特务潜入南州市来的目的,在军代表甘副局长的诱供下,徐邦呈谎称他要在边境接应一支敌人的小分队入境,目的是破坏大陆的批林批孔运动……