登陆注册
15706800000126

第126章

It took me three years to win that handshake. For the first six months I remained in Deptford. There was excellent material to be found there for humorous articles, essays, stories; likewise for stories tragic and pathetic. But I owed a hundred and fifty pounds--a little over two hundred it reached to, I found, when I came to add up the actual figures. So I paid strict attention to business, left the tears to be garnered by others--better fitted maybe for the task; kept to my own patch, reaped and took to market only the laughter.

At the beginning I sent each manuscript to Norah; she had it copied out, debited me with the cost received payment, and sent me the balance. At first my earnings were small; but Norah was an excellent agent; rapidly they increased. Dan grew quite cross with her, wrote in pained surprise at her greed. The "matter" was fair, but in no way remarkable. Any friend of hers, of course, he was anxious to assist; but business was business. In justice to his proprietors, he could not and would not pay more than the market value. Miss Deleglise, replying curtly in the third person, found herself in perfect accord with Mr. Brian as to business being business. If Mr. Brian could not afford to pay her price for material so excellent, other editors with whom Miss Deleglise was equally well acquainted could and would.

Answer by return would greatly oblige, pending which the manuscript then in her hands she retained. Mr. Brian, understanding he had found his match, grumbled but paid. Whether he had any suspicion who "Jack Homer" might be, he never confessed; but he would have played the game, pulled his end of the rope, in either case. Nor was he allowed to decide the question for himself. Competition was introduced into the argument. Of purpose a certain proportion of my work my agent sent elsewhere. "Jack Homer" grew to be a commodity in demand. For, seated at my rickety table, I laughed as I wrote, the fourth wall of the dismal room fading before my eyes revealing vistas beyond.

Still, it was slow work. Humour is not an industrious maid; declines to be bustled, will work only when she feels inclined--does not often feel inclined; gives herself a good many unnecessary airs; if worried, packs up and goes off, Heaven knows where! comes back when she thinks she will: a somewhat unreliable young person. To my literary labours I found it necessary to add journalism. I lacked Dan's magnificent assurance. Fate never befriends the nervous. Had I burst into the editorial sanctum, the editor most surely would have been out if in, would have been a man of short ways, would have seen to it that I went out quickly. But the idea was not to be thought of; Robert Macaire himself in my one coat would have been diffident, apologetic. I joined the ranks of the penny-a-liners--to be literally exact, three halfpence a liners. In company with half a dozen other shabby outsiders--some of them young men like myself seeking to climb; others, older men who had sunk--I attended inquests, police courts; flew after fire engines; rejoiced in street accidents; yearned for murders. Somewhat vulture-like we lived precariously upon the misfortunes of others. We made occasional half crowns by providing the public with scandal, occasional crowns by keeping our information to ourselves.

"I think, gentlemen," would explain our spokesman in a hoarse whisper, on returning to the table, "I think the corpse's brother-in-law is anxious that the affair, if possible, should be kept out of the papers."

The closeness and attention with which we would follow that particular case, the fulness and completeness of our notes, would be quite remarkable. Our spokesman would rise, drift carelessly away, to return five minutes later, wiping his mouth.

"Not a very interesting case, gentlemen, I don't think. Shall we say five shillings apiece?" Sometimes a sense of the dignity of our calling would induce us to stand out for ten.

And here also my sense of humour came to my aid; gave me perhaps an undue advantage over my competitors. Twelve good men and true had been asked to say how a Lascar sailor had met his death. It was perfectly clear how he had met his death. A plumber, working on the roof of a small two-storeyed house, had slipped and fallen on him.

The plumber had escaped with a few bruises; the unfortunate sailor had been picked up dead. Some blame attached to the plumber. His mate, an excellent witness, told us the whole story.

"I was fixing a gas-pipe on the first floor," said the man. "The prisoner was on the roof."

"We won't call him 'the prisoner,'" interrupted the coroner, "at least, not yet. Refer to him, if you please, as the 'last witness.'"

"The last witness," corrected himself the man. "He shouts down the chimney to know if I was ready for him."

"'Ready and waiting,' I says.

"'Right,' he says; 'I'm coming in through the window.'

"'Wait a bit,' I says; 'I'll go down and move the ladder for you.

"'It's all right,' he says; 'I can reach it.'

"'No, you can't,' I says. 'It's the other side of the chimney.'

"'I can get round,' he says.

"Well, before I knew what had happened, I hears him go, smack! I rushes to the window and looks out: I see him on the pavement, sitting up like.

"'Hullo, Jim,' I says. 'Have you hurt yourself?'

"'I think I'm all right,' he says, 'as far as I can tell. But I wish you'd come down. This bloke I've fallen on looks a bit sick.'"

The others headed their flimsy "Sad Accident," a title truthful but not alluring. I altered mine to "Plumber in a Hurry--Fatal Result."

Saying as little as possible about the unfortunate sailor, I called the attention of plumbers generally to the coroner's very just remarks upon the folly of undue haste; pointed out to them, as a body, the trouble that would arise if somehow they could not cure themselves of this tendency to rush through their work without a moment's loss of time.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 逆道命途

    逆道命途

    弹指间,斩尽魔神两道,一挥手乱天动地,天道不仁,世情如霜,纵是天之骄子,也难逃命运枷锁,世道不济命运多舛。仙神人兽灵鬼六道,动荡不定,万族并起,强者如云。苍茫大地,万古荒原,纵横捭阖,只为逆天改命。两个不同性格的少年从无尽乱世走出,一切从这里开始!
  • 玉念,无痕

    玉念,无痕

    这是一部围绕着太白剑派的故事,讲述了后青龙会时代的一件大事,围绕着天下八荒之间的恩怨展开。
  • 不是记忆的爱情

    不是记忆的爱情

    我很庆幸在我人生最关键的时候遇到你,你的存在,让我更加坚定人生的方向,你的陪伴,让我生活充满希望,你,成就了我,却为何无情的撇下。我们经历过的,是无论如何也无法抹去的,我认定,我们之间不要记忆……
  • 楚辞(中华国学经典)

    楚辞(中华国学经典)

    《楚辞》是战国时代的伟大诗人屈原创造的一种诗体。作品运用楚地(今两湖一带)的文学样式、方言声韵,叙写楚地的山川人物、历史风情,具有浓厚的地方特色。是继《诗经》以后,对我国文学具有深远影响的一部诗歌总集。并且是中国汉族文学史上第一部浪漫主义诗歌总集。
  • 查理九世之爱的血仇

    查理九世之爱的血仇

    这个嘛我还没想好,等哪天我想起来了再说。
  • 争世雄

    争世雄

    人死后不会去往天堂,而是去往一个叫地域的世界,那里不止有灵魂,还可以有肉身,甚至可以走上无法用科学技术解释的修炼道路。地域就是天堂,强者的天堂。地域就是地狱,弱者的地狱。这里不再有“死”这个名词,这里只有灰飞烟灭。殷明松送原来的世界来到地域如瞬间从天堂坠入地狱一般,从万人追捧到万人唾弃,从衣食无忧到青黄不接.............“我得了一种病叫——野心”“我字典里有‘屈服’这俩个字,但是还有‘不’这个字”“地狱就是天堂,只是因为你的弱而无法感受”..............
  • 邂逅EXO

    邂逅EXO

    邂逅是美好的,朴沫汐邂逅了灿烈,菲菲邂逅了鹿晗......有许多邂逅会发现什么?
  • Exo你给的爱

    Exo你给的爱

    我会努力赚到更多的钱来娶你——张艺兴。你就那么喜欢钱那好钱我有的是我只要你在我身边——吴世勋。你要钱我给你你要权我也有但是我只要你可以吗——鹿晗。我是爱钱,但比起你钱还算什么。——夏幽幽。因为我是第一次写文所以写得不好的地方还请读者们见谅。作者是唯十二哦,还请家人们轻拍。
  • 只属于你们的监督

    只属于你们的监督

    女扮男装的女主踏入这所学院,发生了许多的稀奇的事,让我们来见证这爱情观的奇迹的时刻吧!
  • 穿越之白痴小姐变妖孽王后

    穿越之白痴小姐变妖孽王后

    走在半路上不知不觉晕了莫名其妙穿越了居然还是个白痴后宫家族的斗争让我无可奈何明枪易躲暗箭难防遇上了他冰山腹黑王爷“贱人你这么心狠手辣连本王的小世子都敢害,来人押到柴房关起来”四王爷并没有因为她是他的王妃而心慈手软,要不是因为白若曦的父亲是朝中大臣先皇的得力左右手在朝中实力不一般不然四王爷怎么会取这个白痴