第11章

类别:其他 作者:H。 G。 Wells字数:3109更新时间:18/12/22 09:14:23
Hedidmostofthetalking。Mymotherrepeatedwhatshehadalreadysaidintheshop,“IhavebroughtGeorgeovertoyou。” andthendesistedforatimefromtherealbusinessinhand。 “Youfindthisacomfortablehouse?”sheasked;andthisbeingaffirmed:“Itlooks——veryconvenient。Nottoobigtobeatrouble——no。YoulikeWimblehurst,Isuppose?” MyuncleretortedwithsomeinquiriesaboutthegreatpeopleofBladesover,andmymotheransweredinthecharacterofapersonalfriendofLadyDrew’s。Thetalkhungforatime,andthenmyuncleembarkeduponadissertationuponWimblehurst。 “Thisplace。”hebegan,“isn’tofcoursequitetheplaceIoughttobein。” Mymothernoddedasthoughshehadexpectedthat。 “ItgivesmenoScope。”hewenton。“It’sdead-and-alive。 Nothinghappens。” “He’salwayswantingsomethingtohappen。”saidmyauntSusan。 “Somedayhe’llgetashowerofthingsandthey’llbetoomuchforhim。” “Notthey。”saidmyuncle,buoyantly。 “Doyoufindbusiness——slack?”askedmymother。 “Oh!onerubsalong。Butthere’snoDevelopment——nogrowth。 Theyjustcomealonghereandbuypillswhentheywant’em——andahorseballorsuch。They’vegottobeillbeforethere’saprescription。Thatsorttheyare。Youcan’tget’emtolaunchout,youcan’tget’emtotakeupanythingnew。Forinstance,I’vebeentryinglately——inducethemtobuytheirmedicinesinadvance,andinlargerquantities。Buttheywon’tlookforit! ThenItriedtofloatalittlenotionofmine,sortofaninsuranceschemeforcolds;youpaysomuchaweek,andwhenyou’vegotacoldyougetabottleofCoughLinctussolongasyoucanproduceasubstantialsniff。See?ButLord!they’venocapacityforideas,theydon’tcatchon;noJumpabouttheplace,noLife。Live!——theytrickle,andwhatonehastodohereistotrickletoo——Zzzz。” “Ah!”saidmymother。 “Itdoesn’tsuitme。”saidmyuncle。“I’mthecascadingsort。” “Georgewasthat。”saidmymotherafteraponderingmoment。 MyauntSusantookuptheparablewithanaffectionateglanceatherhusband。 “He’salwaystryingtomakehisoldbusinessjump。”shesaid。 “Alwaysputtingfreshcardsinthewindow,orgettinguptosomething。You’dhardlybelieve。ItmakesMEjumpsometimes。” “Butitdoesnogood。”saidmyuncle。 “Itdoesnogood。”saidhiswife。“It’snothismiloo。” Presentlytheycameuponawidepause。 Fromthebeginningoftheirconversationtherehadbeenthepromiseofthispause,andIprickedmyears。Iknewperfectlywhatwasboundtocome;theyweregoingtotalkofmyfather。I wasenormouslystrengthenedinmypersuasionwhenIfoundmymother’seyesrestingthoughtfullyuponmeinthesilence,andthanmyunclelookedatmeandthenmyaunt。Istruggledunavailinglytoproduceanexpressionofmeekstupidity。 “Ithink。”saidmyuncle,“thatGeorgewillfinditmoreamusingtohaveaturninthemarket-placethantositheretalkingwithus。There’sapairofstocksthere,George——veryinteresting。 Old-fashionedstocks。” “Idon’tmindsittinghere。”Isaid。 Myuncleroseandinthemostfriendlywayledmethroughtheshop。Hestoodonhisdoorstepandjerkedamiabledirectionstome。 “Ain’titsleepy,George,eh?There’sthebutcher’sdogoverthere,asleepintheroad-halfanhourfrommidday!IfthelastTrumpsoundedIdon’tbelieveitwouldwake。Nobodywouldwake! Thechapsupthereinthechurchyard——they’djustturnoverandsay:’Naar——youdon’tcatchus,youdon’t!See?’。Well,you’llfindthestocksjustroundthatcorner。” Hewatchedmeoutofsight。 SoIneverheardwhattheysaidaboutmyfatherafterall。 VI WhenIreturned,myunclehadinsomeremarkablewaybecomelargerandcentral。“Tha’chu,George?”hecried,whentheshop-doorbellsounded。“Comerightthrough“;andIfoundhim,asitwere,inthechairman’splacebeforethedrapedgrate。 Thethreeofthemregardedme。 “Wehavebeentalkingofmakingyouachemist,George。”saidmyuncle。 Mymotherlookedatme。“Ihadhoped。”shesaid,“thatLadyDrewwouldhavedonesomethingforhim——“Shestopped。 “Inwhatway?”saidmyuncle。 “Shemighthavespokentosomeone,gothimintosomethingperhaps。”Shehadtheservant’sinvinciblepersuasionthatallgoodthingsaredonebypatronage。 “Heisnotthesortofboyforwhomthingsaredone。”sheadded,dismissingthesedreams。“Hedoesn’taccommodatehimself。WhenhethinksLadyDrewwishesathing,heseemsnottowishit。 TowardsMr。Redgrave,too,hehasbeen——disrespectful——heislikehisfather。” “Who’sMr。Redgrave?” “TheVicar。” “Abitindependent?”saidmyuncle,briskly。 “Disobedient。”saidmymother。“Hehasnoideaofhisplace。Heseemstothinkhecangetonbyslightingpeopleandfloutingthem。He’lllearnperhapsbeforeitistoolate。” Myunclestrokedhiscutchinandme。“HaveyoulearntanyLatin?”heaskedabruptly。 IsaidIhadnot。 “He’llhavetolearnalittleLatin。”heexplainedtomymother,“toqualify。H’m。Hecouldgodowntothechapatthegrammarschoolhere——it’sjustbeenroutedintoexistenceagainbytheCharityCommissionersandhavelessons。” “What,melearnLatin!”Icried,withemotion。 “Alittle。”hesaid。 “I’vealwayswanted“Isaidand;“LATIN!” IhadlongbeenobsessedbytheideathathavingnoLatinwasadisadvantageintheworld,andArchieGarvellhaddriventhepointofthisprettyearnestlyhome。TheliteratureIhadreadatBladesoverhadalltendedthatway。LatinhadhadaqualityofemancipationformethatIfinditdifficulttoconvey。Andsuddenly,whenIhadsupposedalllearningwasatanendforme,Iheardthis! “It’snogoodtoyou,ofcourse。”saidmyuncle,“excepttopassexamswith,butthereyouare!” “You’llhavetolearnLatinbecauseyouhavetolearnLatin。” saidmymother,“notbecauseyouwantto。Andafterwardsyouwillhavetolearnallsortsofotherthings。” TheideathatIwastogoonlearning,thattoreadandmasterthecontentsofbookswasstilltobejustifiableasaduty,overwhelmedallotherfacts。Ihadhaditratherclearinmymindforsomeweeksthatallthatkindofopportunitymightclosetomeforever。Ibegantotakealivelyinterestinthisnewproject。 “ThenshallIlivehere?”Iasked,“withyou,andstudy。aswellasworkintheshop?” “That’sthewayofit。”saidmyuncle。 Ipartedfrommymotherthatdayinadream,sosuddenandimportantwasthisnewaspectofthingstome。IwastolearnLatin!NowthatthehumiliationofmyfailureatBladesoverwaspastforher,nowthatshehadalittlegotoverherfirstintenserepugnanceatthisresorttomyuncleandcontrivedsomethingthatseemedlikeapossibleprovisionformyfuture,thetendernessnaturaltoapartingfarmoresignificantthananyofourpreviouspartingscreptintohermanner。 Shesatinthetraintoreturn,Iremember,andIstoodattheopendoorofhercompartment,andneitherofusknewhowsoonweshouldceaseforevertobeatroubletooneanother。 “Youmustbeagoodboy,George。”shesaid。“Youmustlearn。 Andyoumustn’tsetyourselfupagainstthosewhoareaboveyouandbetterthanyou。Orenvythem。”