登陆注册
4714100000074

第74章

What made me very uncomfortable on these occasions was my consciousness that confinement to bed was hardly an affliction at all. It kept me from the boredom of school, in a fire-lit bedroom at home, with my pretty, smiling stepmother lavishing luxurious attendance upon me, and it gave me long, unbroken days for reading. I was awkwardly aware that I simply had not the effrontery to 'approach the Throne of Grace' with a request to know for what sin I was condemned to such a very pleasant disposition of my hours.

The current of my life ran, during my schooldays, most merrily and fully in the holidays, when I resumed my outdoor exercises with those friends in the village of whom I have spoken earlier.

I think they were more refined and better bred than any of my schoolfellows, at all events it was among these homely companions alone that I continued to form congenial and sympathetic relations. In one of these boys,--one of whom I have heard or seen nothing now for nearly a generation,--I found tastes singularly parallel to my own, and we scoured the horizon in search of books in prose and verse, but particularly in verse.

As I grew stronger in muscle, I was capable of adding considerably to my income by an exercise of my legs. I was allowed money for the railway ticket between the town where the school lay and the station nearest to my home. But, if I chose to walk six or seven miles along the coast, thus more than halving the distance by rail from school house to home, I might spend as pocket money the railway fare I thus saved. Such considerable sums I fostered in order to buy with them editions of the poets.

These were not in those days, as they are now, at the beck and call of every purse, and the attainment of each little masterpiece was a separate triumph. In particular I shall never forget the excitement of reaching at length the exorbitant price the bookseller asked for the only, although imperfect, edition of the poems of S. T. Coleridge. At last I could meet his demand, and my friend and I went down to consummate the solemn purchase.

Coming away with our treasure, we read aloud from the orange coloured volume, in turns, as we strolled along, until at last we sat down on the bulging root of an elm tree in a secluded lane.

Here we stayed, in a sort of poetical nirvana, reading, reading, forgetting the passage of time, until the hour of our neglected mid-day meal was a long while past, and we had to hurry home to bread and cheese and a scolding.

There was occasionally some trouble about my reading, but now not much nor often. I was rather adroit, and careful not to bring prominently into sight anything of a literary kind which could become a stone of stumbling. But, when I was nearly sixteen, Imade a purchase which brought me into sad trouble, and was the cause of a permanent wound to my self-respect. I had long coveted in the bookshop window a volume in which the poetical works of Ben Jonson and Christopher Marlowe were said to be combined. This I bought at length, and I carried it with me to devour as I trod the desolate road that brought me along the edge of the cliff on Saturday afternoons. Of Ben Jonson I could make nothing, but when I turned to 'Hero and Leander', I was lifted to a heaven of passion and music. It was a marvellous revelation of romantic beauty to me, and as I paced along that lonely and exquisite highway, with its immense command of the sea, and its peeps every now and then, through slanting thickets, far down to the snow-white shingle, I lifted up my voice, singing the verses, as Istrolled along:

Buskins of shells, all silver'd, used she, And branch'd with blushing coral to the knee, Where sparrows perched, of hollow pearl and gold, Such as the world would wonder to behold,--so it went on, and I thought I had never read anything so lovely,--Amorous Leander, beautiful and young, Whose tragedy divine Musaeus sung,--it all seemed to my fancy intoxicating beyond anything I had ever even dreamed of, since I had not yet become acquainted with any of the modern romanticists.

When I reached home, tired out with enthusiasm and exercise, Imust needs, so soon as I had eaten, search out my stepmother that she might be a partner in my joys. It is remarkable to me now, and a disconcerting proof of my still almost infantile innocence, that, having induced her to settle to her knitting, I began, without hesitation, to read Marlowe's voluptuous poem aloud to that blameless Christian gentlewoman. We got on very well in the opening, but at the episode of Cupid's pining, my stepmother's needles began nervously to clash, and when we launched on the description of Leander's person, she interrupted me by saying, rather sharply, 'Give me that book, please, I should like to read the rest to myself.' I resigned the reading in amazement, and was stupefied to see her take the volume, shut it with a snap and hide it under her needlework. Nor could I extract from her another word on the subject.

The matter passed from my mind, and I was therefore extremely alarmed when, soon after my going to bed that night, my Father came into my room with a pale face and burning eyes, the prey of violent perturbation. He set down the candle and stood by the bed, and it was some time before he could resolve on a form of speech. Then he denounced me, in unmeasured terms, for bringing into the house, for possessing at all or reading, so abominable a book. He explained that my stepmother had shown it to him, and that he had looked through it, and had burned it.

The sentence in his tirade which principally affected me was this. He said, 'You will soon be leaving us, and going up to lodgings in London, and if your landlady should come into your room, and find such a book lying about, she would immediately set you down as a profligate.' I did not understand this at all, and it seems to me now that the fact that I had so very simply and childishly volunteered to read the verses to my stepmother should have proved to my Father that I connected it with no ideas of an immoral nature.

同类推荐
  • La Mere Bauche

    La Mere Bauche

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 须颂篇

    须颂篇

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 送韦弇

    送韦弇

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN

    A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说灌顶王喻经

    佛说灌顶王喻经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 神医凰后:最强炮灰女配

    神医凰后:最强炮灰女配

    前男友劈腿,十年后,苏般若有车有房有存款,忍不住的在前男友面前得瑟嚣张。结果,却被雷劈死了!再次睁眼,成了宰相府最无用的大小姐。 苏般若:“……” 没关系,本仙女自带仙气,专治各种不服,专业打脸二十年! 只是,当她发现她其实是某本书里注定被女主煎炸蒸炒焖的小炮灰后。 苏般若:“......”mmp! 天道,我跟你讲,你这样是会失去我的!!! 某王爷面无表情:“和本王在一起,本王保你千秋万代寿与天齐!”苏般若:“……”滚!
  • 灵兽归元记

    灵兽归元记

    自盘古开天辟地,世间各种灵兽相继诞生,以维持混沌之气化作的混沌兽,所造成的时间灵力平衡,但随着时间的流逝,世界上相继出现的各方势力,为了达到各自不同的目的,纷纷利用各种手段将那些灵兽控制了起来,在那当中最为厉害的就是一个叫做“夜幕降临”的超级恐怖组织,他们当中的所有人,都是想要征服世界的各种超级厉害人物,世间有邪必有正,身为正义之士的各方势力,在无奈之下最终通过长期战斗。
  • 大人故事集

    大人故事集

    “大人”是一个与“童年”相对的概念,大人的世界通常充满了种种诡诈与算计,深陷大人世界的人们,也总会回想“童年”,回望其中的梦幻、清新。饭饭的《大人故事集》反其意而行之,她笔下的大人们,虽在成人世界,整日应对的也不外乎古老的“食与色”“梦与实”这样的问题,但他们更像生活在童话中。他们小心翼翼生怕碰坏周遭世界,他们大睁双眼,在阳光下梦游。
  • 颜如语梦

    颜如语梦

    若是有一朝,似繁星升起,我再也不想遇见你。
  • 刻骨铭心的瞬间

    刻骨铭心的瞬间

    生命需要希望,每天给自己一个希望,我们就一定能够拥有一个丰富多彩的人生。在人生的花季,每个人都有着花样年华,花样梦想,花样求索。所有的人都不可避免地会走弯路,那是人生的历练。只有在人生的弯路上,我们才有机会放慢速度,慢慢品味生命的奇异和自然的瑰丽。青少年时期是长身体、长见识的黄金时期。无论在学校,还是在社会上,总是要碰到人生中必须懂得的道理。我们要学习的除了知识之外,还应该包括对心灵的构筑;心灵的构筑就得一个点滴、一个细节地用心打造,每个点滴和每个细节,都有人生中不可或缺的领悟。本书中的心灵感悟,正是青少年迫切需要解读的。
  • 我们也是好孩子

    我们也是好孩子

    本科,专科,就像一道不可逾越的鸿沟。而我们,就像是在沟里苦苦挣扎的孩子。满身汗水,泥泞,最后才知道,各有风景,只要努力了就行。各行各业的人才,都是祖国所需,只要努力,就会幸福。
  • 纵横超神踏诸天

    纵横超神踏诸天

    一笑风云变,一怒众神寒,以我手中剑,纵横天地间!一人一剑,傲世诸天!
  • 2012,玛雅预言

    2012,玛雅预言

    预言真的会发生吗?如果发生,人类将要如何应对?现在的科学手段,是否能起到足够应对的措施?在预言应验之前,人们应当选择何种姿态面对?在本书中,这些都将一一为读者解答。
  • 帅气逼人的历史

    帅气逼人的历史

    中国历史上的帅哥,和其他人有着怎样不同的命运?潘安、卫玠、纳兰容若、司马相如、慕容冲、独孤信、兰陵王、韩子高、董贤……每一个帅气的名字后面,都有着一段让后人感叹的历史。本书以嬉笑怒骂的文笔,写了中国历史上著名帅哥的人生经历,嬉笑怒骂,展现了一个不一样的“中国帅哥史”。
  • 逃妃倾城

    逃妃倾城

    目睹丈夫背叛的她彻夜买醉,却不幸遭遇车祸,魂穿异世,成了不受宠的相府哑巴四小姐。一纸圣旨,她嫁了,成了残疾三王爷的王妃,她女扮男装,包袱款款,逃了……本以为孑然一身、绝情断爱的她从此可以逍遥自在,然她的到来并非偶然,一段三世未了情,一句“隐星现,天下变”,一段宫闱之中的爱恨情仇将她越卷越深,从此她步步为营,在这陌生的世界挣扎求存。腹黑如北辰夜,身份尊贵的三王爷,对她恨之入骨,誓洗被弃之耻;聪明如欧阳文轩,温文尔雅的全国首富,对“他”日久生情,呵护备至;暴躁如雷震宇,刚毅强势的第一堡主,因她甘愿化为绕指柔,一世追随;多情如琉璃炘,玉树临风的公子,却惟独对她情有独钟,痴缠不休;……本文正剧,女主渐强型,且看女主如何在这男子为尊的异世斗智斗勇,大放异彩,引得无数美男拜倒在其石榴裙下,俯首称臣。