登陆注册
6069300000045

第45章 INVITA MINERVA(2)

For months he had been living in this way; endless circling, perpetual beginning, followed by frustration. A sign of exhaustion, it of course made exhaustion more complete. At times he was on the border-land of imbecility; his mind looked into a cloudy chaos, a shapeless whirl of nothings. He talked aloud to himself, not knowing that he did so. Little phrases which indicated dolorously the subject of his preoccupation often escaped him in the street: 'What could I make of that, now?'

'Well, suppose I made him--?' 'But no, that wouldn't do,' and so on. It had happened that he caught the eye of some one passing fixed in surprise upon him; so young a man to be talking to himself in evident distress!

The expected crisis came, even now that he was savagely determined to go on at any cost, to write, let the result be what it would. His will prevailed. A day or two of anguish such as there is no describing to the inexperienced, and again he was dismissing slip after slip, a sigh of thankfulness at the completion of each one. It was a fraction of the whole, a fraction, a fraction.

The ordering of his day was thus. At nine, after breakfast, he sat down to his desk, and worked till one. Then came dinner, followed by a walk. As a rule he could not allow Amy to walk with him, for he had to think over the remainder of the day's toil, and companionship would have been fatal. At about half-past three he again seated himself; and wrote until half-past six, when he had a meal. Then once more to work from half-past seven to ten.

Numberless were the experiments he had tried for the day's division. The slightest interruption of the order for the time being put him out of gear; Amy durst not open his door to ask however necessary a question.

Sometimes the three hours' labour of a morning resulted in half-a-dozen lines, corrected into illegibility. His brain would not work; he could not recall the ******st synonyms; intolerable faults of composition drove him mad. He would write a sentence beginning thus: 'She took a book with a look of--;' or thus: 'Arevision of this decision would have made him an object of derision.' Or, if the period were otherwise inoffensive, it ran in a rhythmic gallop which was torment to the ear. All this, in spite of the fact that his former books had been noticeably good in style. He had an appreciation of shapely prose which made him scorn himself for the kind of stuff he was now turning out. 'Ican't help it; it must go; the time is passing.'

Things were better, as a rule, in the evening. Occasionally he wrote a page with fluency which recalled his fortunate years; and then his heart gladdened, his hand trembled with joy.

Description of locality, deliberate analysis of character or motive, demanded far too great an effort for his present condition. He kept as much as possible to dialogue; the space is filled so much more quickly, and at a pinch one can make people talk about the paltriest incidents of life.

There came an evening when he opened the door and called to Amy.

'What is it?' she answered from the bedroom. 'I'm busy with Willie.'

'Come as soon as you are free.'

In ten minutes she appeared. There was apprehension on her face;she feared he was going to lament his inability to work. Instead of that, he told her joyfully that the first volume was finished.

'Thank goodness!' she exclaimed. 'Are you going to do any more to-night?'

'I think not--if you will come and sit with me.'

'Willie doesn't seem very well. He can't get to sleep.'

'You would like to stay with him?'

'A little while. I'll come presently.'

She closed the door. Reardon brought a high-backed chair to the fireside, and allowed himself to forget the two volumes that had still to be struggled through, in a grateful sense of the portion that was achieved. In a few minutes it occurred to him that it would be delightful to read a scrap of the 'Odyssey'; he went to the shelves on which were his classical books, took the desired volume, and opened it where Odysseus speaks to Nausicaa:

'For never yet did I behold one of mortals like to thee, neither man nor woman; I am awed as I look upon thee. In Delos once, hard by the altar of Apollo, I saw a young palm-tree shooting up with even such a grace.'

Yes, yes; THAT was not written at so many pages a day, with a workhouse clock clanging its admonition at the poet's ear. How it freshened the soul! How the eyes grew dim with a rare joy in the sounding of those nobly sweet hexameters!

Amy came into the room again.

'Listen,' said Reardon, looking up at her with a bright smile.

'Do you remember the first time that I read you this?'

And he turned the speech into free prose. Amy laughed.

'I remember it well enough. We were alone in the drawing-room; Ihad told the others that they must make shift with the dining-room for that evening. And you pulled the book out of your pocket unexpectedly. I laughed at your habit of always carrying little books about.'

The cheerful news had brightened her. If she had been summoned to hear lamentations her voice would not have rippled thus soothingly. Reardon thought of this, and it made him silent for a minute.

'The habit was ominous,' he said, looking at her with an uncertain smile. 'A practical literary man doesn't do such things.'

'Milvain, for instance. No.'

With curious frequency she mentioned the name of Milvain. Her unconsciousness in doing so prevented Reardon from thinking about the fact; still, he had noted it.

'Did you understand the phrase slightingly?' he asked.

'Slightingly? Yes, a little, of course. It always has that sense on your lips, I think.'

In the light of this answer he mused upon her readily-offered instance. True, he had occasionally spoken of Jasper with something less than respect, but Amy was not in the habit of doing so.

'I hadn't any such meaning just then,' he said. 'I meant quite simply that my bookish habits didn't promise much for my success as a novelist.'

'I see. But you didn't think of it in that way at the time.'

He sighed.

'No. At least--no.'

'At least what?'

'Well, no; on the whole I had good hope.'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 都市之游戏世界

    都市之游戏世界

    对于明志这个网瘾少年来说,想在现代社会生活下去。只能请求上天怜悯,奇迹发生。也不知道是奇迹发生,还是上天给明志的惩罚,天降奇物,明志人生好像脱离了他的轨道......
  • 火种回溯者

    火种回溯者

    希望,乐观,无私,勇敢我深信,无论是故事内还是故事外的人,心中都有属于自己的火种。这是来自内心的力量,强大与否不重要,重要的是它在燃烧。(封面正在制作中)
  • 老鼠女孩

    老鼠女孩

    车祸那年我28岁,很庆幸的是在前一年我生下了属于我们两个人的孩子,以至于立方春公司有人继承,后来我脑神经压迫,后半辈子都没有好转但我的丈夫还是对我很好……
  • 驾校教练在线暴躁

    驾校教练在线暴躁

    小练笔~可能会很平淡。但结局是好的。驾校教练和女大学生,清汤寡水的小甜文,暴躁小哥Vs软萌学生
  • 诸圣天下

    诸圣天下

    真人何须服天,空幻轮回皆在指掌中,丈一身肝胆,敢让天地称臣。梦醒时分,惊雷乱宇,四极皆颤,纵观整部古史,我为传说,行太古,战上古……
  • 亿万狂婿

    亿万狂婿

    三年前,因为一个投资项目,风清扬被视为家族之耻,逐出家族,所幸的是,他遇到值得真爱一生的女子,甘愿入赘为婿。三年后,当年投资让风清扬成为千亿富豪,家族跪求他回去,但,他甘愿守护在她身边。我穷,我愿在家为你洗衣做饭,我富,我愿在外为你遮风挡雨……
  • 仙侠奇缘之仙烛

    仙侠奇缘之仙烛

    【抒情版文案】人生何其黑暗困苦,然而长夜漫漫,终将会有一道光照进你的生命。你终将会走出荒芜凶恶的极北,你终将会见识到这天地间的五彩斑斓,你也终将会意识到善恶并生世界不是非黑即白。可你无需在意那些风刀霜剑命运森凉,你只需坚持着你最初的愿望,那是你最大的力量。【精彩提前看】“没什么好怨恨好后悔的,一生中能遇到这么一个人,已经是了不得的运气了。”“我不希望我成为你的唯一,你的世界里应该有更多明亮的色彩。”“纵使日后痛到要流血,也胜过背叛信仰的刺在骨肉里化脓。”“姐姐,我是小白。”“你必须要快,快到超越生死,你才能掌控自己的命运!”【作者的话】是一个成长型的吃货女主和内敛醋王的小傲娇男主的故事!预警!本文拥有多条线许多人物!HE!一定信我!
  • 鬼王独宠冷妃

    鬼王独宠冷妃

    她,现代一个万人之上的血皇意外穿越同名同姓的废物大小姐身上?爹爹不疼姥姥不爱?没关系,反正又不是亲生的!庶妹欺负?没关系,她记着呢!太子退婚?没关系,她也没见过太子啊!栽赃陷害?没…这可有关系了!且看她如何玩转他们于手掌之间。而他!一代鬼王,却唯独对她死皮赖脸,且看他们上演一出怎样的追逐战!
  • 我写小故事

    我写小故事

    小故事大社会人生百态,人生就是个故事身边的事就是小故事。
  • 阿茨卡圣战之火地主宰

    阿茨卡圣战之火地主宰

    阿茨卡法术集!利用黑洞而产生的各种法术!全部记载到了这本书里!学会它的人!可以瞬间成为王者!一统世界!可是,这个东西却让坏人,给得到了。。。。。。