登陆注册
15320500000014

第14章

Each man and woman that I pass by, each silently spinning his silken thought, short or long, fine or coarse.What becomes of it?""I heard you say once," remarked the Old Maid to the Minor Poet, "that 'thoughts are in the air,' that the poet but gathers them as a child plucks wayside blossoms to shape them into nosegays.""It was in confidence," replied the Minor Poet."Please do not let it get about, or my publisher will use it as an argument for cutting down my royalties.""I have always remembered it," answered the Old Maid."It seemed so true.A thought suddenly comes to you.I think of them sometimes, as of little motherless babes creeping into our brains for shelter.""It is a pretty idea," mused the Minor Poet."I shall see them in the twilight: pathetic little round-eyed things of goblin shape, dimly luminous against the darkening air.Whence come you, little tender Thought, tapping at my brain? From the lonely forest, where the peasant mother croons above the cradle while she knits? Thought of Love and Longing: lies your gallant father with his boyish eyes unblinking underneath some tropic sun? Thought of Life and Thought of Death: are you of patrician birth, cradled by some high-born maiden, pacing slowly some sweet garden? Or did you spring to life amid the din of loom or factory? Poor little nameless foundlings!

I shall feel myself in future quite a philanthropist, taking them in, adopting them.""You have not yet decided," reminded him the Woman of the World, "which you really are: the gentleman we get for three and sixpence net, or the one we are familiar with, the one we get for nothing.""Please don't think I am suggesting any comparison," continued the Woman of the World, "but I have been interested in the question since George joined a Bohemian club and has taken to bringing down minor celebrities from Saturday to Monday.I hope I am not narrow-minded, but there is one gentleman I have been compelled to put my foot down on.""I really do not think he will complain," I interrupted.The Woman of the World possesses, I should explain, the daintiest of feet.

"It is heavier than you think," replied the Woman of the World.

"George persists I ought to put up with him because he is a true poet.I cannot admit the argument.The poet I honestly admire.Ilike to have him about the place.He lies on my drawing-room table in white vellum, and helps to give tone to the room.For the poet Iam quite prepared to pay the four-and-six demanded; the man I don't want.To be candid, he is not worth his own discount.""It is hardly fair," urged the Minor Poet, "to confine the discussion to poets.A friend of mine some years ago married one of the most charming women in New York, and that is saying a good deal.

Everybody congratulated him, and at the outset he was pleased enough with himself.I met him two years later in Geneva, and we travelled together as far as Rome.He and his wife scarcely spoke to one another the whole journey, and before I left him he was good enough to give me advice which to another man might be useful.'Never marry a charming woman,' he counselled me.'Anything more unutterably dull than "the charming woman" outside business hours you cannot conceive.'""I think we must agree to regard the preacher," concluded the Philosopher, "merely as a brother artist.The singer may be a heavy, fleshy man with a taste for beer, but his voice stirs our souls.The preacher holds aloft his banner of purity.He waves it over his own head as much as over the heads of those around him.He does not cry with the Master, 'Come to Me,' but 'Come with me, and be saved.' The prayer 'Forgive them' was the prayer not of the Priest, but of the God.The prayer dictated to the Disciples was 'Forgive us,' 'Deliver us.' Not that he should be braver, not that he should be stronger than they that press behind him, is needed of the leader, but that he should know the way.He, too, may faint, he, too, may fall; only he alone must never turn his back.""It is quite comprehensible, looked at from one point of view,"remarked the Minor Poet, "that he who gives most to others should himself be weak.The professional athlete pays, I believe, the price of central weakness.It is a theory of mine that the charming, delightful people one meets with in society are people who have dishonestly kept to themselves gifts entrusted to them by Nature for the benefit of the whole community.Your conscientious, hard-working humorist is in private life a dull dog.The dishonest trustee of laughter, on the other hand, robbing the world of wit bestowed upon him for public purposes, becomes a brilliant conversationalist.""But," added the Minor Poet, turning to me, "you were speaking of a man named Longrush, a great talker.""A long talker," I corrected."My cousin mentioned him third in her list of invitations.'Longrush,' she said with conviction, 'we must have Longrush.' 'Isn't he rather tiresome?' I suggested.'He is tiresome,' she agreed, 'but then he's so useful.He never lets the conversation drop.'""Why is it?" asked the Minor Poet."Why, when we meet together, must we chatter like a mob of sparrows? Why must every assembly to be successful sound like the parrot-house of a zoological garden?""I remember a parrot story," I said, "but I forget who told it to me.""Maybe one of us will remember as you go on," suggested the Philosopher.

"A man," I said--"an old farmer, if I remember rightly--had read a lot of parrot stories, or had heard them at the club.As a result he thought he would like himself to be the owner of a parrot, so journeyed to a dealer and, according to his own account, paid rather a long price for a choice specimen.A week later he re-entered the shop, the parrot borne behind him by a boy.'This bird,' said the farmer, 'this bird you sold me last week ain't worth a sovereign!'

'What's the matter with it?' demanded the dealer.'How do I know what's the matter with the bird?' answered the farmer.'What I tell you is that it ain't worth a sovereign--'tain' t worth a half a sovereign!' 'Why not?' persisted the dealer; 'it talks all right, don't it?' 'Talks!' retorted the indignant farmer, 'the damn thing talks all day, but it never says anything funny!'""A friend of mine," said the Philosopher, "once had a parrot--""Won't you come into the garden?" said the Woman of the World, rising and leading the way.

同类推荐
  • 东槎纪略

    东槎纪略

    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。
  • 吴子兵法

    吴子兵法

    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。
  • 六韬

    六韬

    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。
  • 商子

    商子

    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。
  • 璇矶图

    璇矶图

    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
  • 相亲相爱

    相亲相爱

    在经历第31次相亲之后,顾无言以为自己真的遇到王子的时候,却发现这是一个生活在黑暗中的王子,曾经的王子和现在的王子,你,会选择哪一个?
  • 乱码时空X盗非道

    乱码时空X盗非道

    无声的谋杀,黑暗的世界。现实何只残酷,简直冷酷无情!命运的羁绊,终究敌不过上天的旨意。异界的魂魄,妄想借尸还魂,可,她已不是她。七魂六魄,试练之路何其漫长,漫漫修真何其险峻,前世的辉煌,今世能否再续?不,是现在,能否圆了这弥天大谎!一世不存同人,他们之中必定死去一个,而活下的那个,就真的是活着吗?五年前,强者陨落,五年后,满血归来,可是,无尽的杀戮,是“她”想要的么?是!复活的唯一机会,成败就此一举!
  • 兵之圣皇

    兵之圣皇

    薛佳本是现实世界里的一名普通的军人,却在执行一次任务中丧生。然而人意想不到的是,他居然在另外一个神奇的世界苏生。这个世界拥有大量修炼者,他们以武道为尊,拥强者为荣。弱者,在这个世界根本没有立足之地。然而,薛佳这具身体的原主,却是一个不折不扣的废物。他要改变这种现状,他要成为绝世强者!他要赢得万人的朝拜,毁灭天地、碎裂虚空、扭转生死至道,称霸一片混沌星空。最重要的是,他想回到原来的世界......
  • 夕阳下的她和他

    夕阳下的她和他

    她和他相恋三年、她以为他是她的全世界,没想到医务室所见的一幕却让她万念俱灭,没想到短短一天她失去了自认为这个世界上除家人以外最在乎的两个人。饱尝背叛的滋味的她决定去酒吧麻醉自己,没想到在酒吧发生了一系列惊心动魄的事,那个阳光帅气的男孩却在以后的校园生活中占据了她的一切,然而他们相处之道却不是那么的愉快......
  • 倚剑叱天

    倚剑叱天

    悠长一梦,恍惚如烟。白秋不知是身在梦中,或是梦在心中。独孤求败的一生风光,只是白秋偶然间的一梦悟道,何为虚幻何又为真?谁又能说清。修者的世界里,如何谓魔?如何谓圣?一梦醒来,物是人非。万物皆有道,世事尽菩提。天地间修途漫漫,所谓神魔也不过如此!他无视命运百转千回,纵横五界倚剑叱天,他的传奇故事便是由这大梦初醒开始。
  • 某幻想的无限之旅

    某幻想的无限之旅

    作为一个烂大街的穿越者,某人光荣的分尸过黑恶势力丘比,揍过魔王拯救世界,但某人志不在此,他渴求无限的精彩,只追逐平凡的故乡,但无限的归途之中,伴随着他越发强大,能够轻易的处理各种麻烦,他骤然发现,事情开始变得不太对劲...
  • 红尘岁月

    红尘岁月

    凡人见证滚滚红尘,在矛盾交错中展示现实百态,在与各色人等的碰撞中透视官场风云爱恨情仇。
  • 冰心残蝶

    冰心残蝶

    她是冷血的杀手,绝美的容颜,百发百中的枪法,她可以随意操纵别人的生命,却难以把握自己的人生。他出自军阀之家,拥有无上的权利,睿智神勇无可匹敌,呼风唤雨无所不能,却抓不住她的心。
  • 秦帝御天

    秦帝御天

    千古一帝,文治武功。奋六世之余烈,振长策而御宇内。吞二周而亡诸侯,履至尊二至六合。执敲扑而鞭笞天下,威震四海,天下归心。化身嬴政,大秦始皇。赵正修炼武功,运用未来智慧,开创属于自己的国度,换得后世千秋之业矣。
  • 萌小姐坏先生

    萌小姐坏先生

    你呀你整天就知道看耽美你还会看什么?我还会看你呀!我的坏先生~