登陆注册
19555700000104

第104章 CHAPTER THE SIXTH(12)

It was the Labour trouble in the Transvaal which had brought the two schoolfellows together again.White had been on his way to Zimbabwe.An emotional disturbance of unusual intensity had driven him to seek consolations in strange scenery and mysterious desolations.It was as if Zimbabwe called to him.Benham had come to South Africa to see into the question of Indian immigration, and he was now on his way to meet Amanda in London.Neither man had given much heed to the gathering social conflict on the Rand until the storm burst about them.There had been a few paragraphs in the papers about a dispute upon a point of labour etiquette, a question of the recognition of Trade Union officials, a thing that impressed them both as technical, and then suddenly a long incubated quarrel flared out in rioting and violence, the burning of houses and furniture, attacks on mines, attempts to dynamite trains.White stayed in Johannesburg because he did not want to be stranded up country by the railway strike that was among the possibilities of the situation.Benham stayed because he was going to London very reluctantly, and he was glad of this justification for a few days'

delay.The two men found themselves occupying adjacent tables in the Sherborough Hotel, and White was the first to recognize the other.They came together with a warmth and readiness of intimacy that neither would have displayed in London.

White had not seen Benham since the social days of Amanda at Lancaster Gate, and he was astonished at the change a few years had made in him.The peculiar contrast of his pallor and his dark hair had become more marked, his skin was deader, his features seemed more prominent and his expression intenser.His eyes were very bright and more sunken under his brows.He had suffered from yellow fever in the West Indies, and these it seemed were the marks left by that illness.And he was much more detached from the people about him; less attentive to the small incidents of life, more occupied with inner things.He greeted White with a confidence that White was one day to remember as pathetic.

"It is good to meet an old friend," Benham said."I have lost friends.And I do not make fresh ones.I go about too much by myself, and I do not follow the same tracks that other people are following...."What track was he following? It was now that White first heard of the Research Magnificent.He wanted to know what Benham was doing, and Benham after some partial and unsatisfactory explanation of his interest in insurgent Hindoos, embarked upon larger expositions.

"It is, of course, a part of something else," he amplified.He was writing a book, "an enormous sort of book." He laughed with a touch of shyness.It was about "everything," about how to live and how not to live.And "aristocracy, and all sorts of things." White was always curious about other people's books.Benham became earnest and more explicit under encouragement, and to talk about his book was soon to talk about himself.In various ways, intentionally and inadvertently, he told White much.These chance encounters, these intimacies of the train and hotel, will lead men at times to a stark frankness of statement they would never permit themselves with habitual friends.

About the Johannesburg labour trouble they talked very little, considering how insistent it was becoming.But the wide propositions of the Research Magnificent, with its large indifference to immediate occurrences, its vast patience, its tremendous expectations, contrasted very sharply in White's memory with the bitterness, narrowness and resentment of the events about them.For him the thought of that first discussion of this vast inchoate book into which Benham's life was flowering, and which he was ultimately to summarize, trailed with it a fringe of vivid little pictures; pictures of crowds of men hurrying on bicycles and afoot under a lowering twilight sky towards murmuring centres of disorder, of startling flares seen suddenly afar off, of the muffled galloping of troops through the broad dusty street in the night, of groups of men standing and watching down straight broad roads, roads that ended in groups of chimneys and squat buildings of corrugated iron.And once there was a marching body of white men in the foreground and a complicated wire fence, and a clustering mass of Kaffirs watching them over this fence and talking eagerly amongst themselves.

"All this affair here is little more than a hitch in the machinery,"said Benham, and went back to his large preoccupation....

But White, who had not seen so much human disorder as Benham, felt that it was more than that.Always he kept the tail of his eye upon that eventful background while Benham talked to him.

When the firearms went off he may for the moment have even given the background the greater share of his attention....

11

It was only as White burrowed through his legacy of documents that the full values came to very many things that Benham said during these last conversations.The papers fitted in with his memories of their long talks like text with commentary; so much of Benham's talk had repeated the private writings in which he had first digested his ideas that it was presently almost impossible to disentangle what had been said and understood at Johannesburg from the fuller statement of those patched and corrected manuscripts.The two things merged in White's mind as he read.The written text took upon itself a resonance of Benham's voice; it eked out the hints and broken sentences of his remembered conversation.

同类推荐
  • 幼科概论

    幼科概论

    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。
  • 文殊师利菩萨无相十礼

    文殊师利菩萨无相十礼

    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。
  • 馗书

    馗书

    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。
  • 京师坊巷志稿

    京师坊巷志稿

    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。
  • 洛阳记

    洛阳记

    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
  • 非虚构的我

    非虚构的我

    《非虚构的我》是麦家对自己的人生的一次回顾和总结。他将自己的身世,经历,亲人,挚友,好恶,困惑,恐惧,念想……一一如实道来,毫不躲闪。
  • 千里追魂

    千里追魂

    人性本恶,贪婪、卑鄙、喜怒无常、逞凶斗恶、好口舌之欲!自怀胎之时起,夺其母之精气,补足自身之需;出生之时,伤母之身;婴儿之时,喜依赖,不喜则哭泣;幼年之时,不知人性,苦其父母;待成年之日,才知善恶之好。人性本恶也。人为满足口舌之欲,做尽伤天害理之事,得老天惩罚,却怨老天不公!却不知大道至公!滚油浇猴脑,活食出世老鼠,活剌驴肉,上山灭走兽,下水屠鳞甲,做笼杀飞禽。即有因,就有果!
  • 绝世财女之一品渣妃

    绝世财女之一品渣妃

    人生最大的乐趣是什么?第一是省钱,第二是收钱,第三是赚钱!某女是白家的嫡女,一路喜好坑蒙拐骗,本想安安静静的做一个小财女、数银子,可谁知道家里人接二连三的出事故?而且,她还莫名其妙地缠上了一只狐狸?(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 女配想静静

    女配想静静

    车祸穿越,既来之则安之,但尼玛竟然穿到书里,还是个连女二女三都算不上的小配角。她自认为没有通天本领在古代活得多姿多彩,欲仙欲死。所以咱远离男主女主,安安稳稳过咱小日子行不。不过boss,咱俩不合适呀,我有喜欢的人了!哦,原来那人是你呀,这可咋整?这是个从弱小小丫鬟逐渐成长,变得强大最终收获爱情!本文女主无金手指。开始弱小,没有远大志向,后期慢慢成长起来,1V1,HE。
  • 神之狩猎

    神之狩猎

    当一名地球上的冷兵器杀手,进入另一个未知的狩猎时空,将会遇到怎样难以让人想像的狩猎模式呢?
  • 庶女走着瞧:嫡女要翻身

    庶女走着瞧:嫡女要翻身

    现代杀手温妮,在一次执行任务中不幸牺牲,灵魂穿越到南越朝顾将军家的嫡女兰若溪身上。这兰若溪因为痴傻非常,不被家人所待见,庶母庶妹任意欺凌。因为被未婚夫退婚,不堪羞辱自尽。再次睁眼,取而代之的是那一抹未及眼底的冷笑。身为嫡女还会被你们这些庶女欺负,实在是太没有天理了!她代替痴傻兰若溪在将军府混的风生水起,用计让爹爹休了庶母,设计了庶妹的婚事,将那个抛弃了真正兰若溪的负心男整家破人亡。她女扮男装混商界,组建神秘杀手组织,闯龙潭虎穴,又夺得第一才女的称号。皇帝指给她一门‘绝好婚事’,皇帝的三儿子,南宁王。兰若溪暗骂皇帝老奸巨猾,那南宁王双腿残疾,是南越王朝有名的废物王爷。传说他不能行男女之事,成日汤药泡身,随时都有可能一命呜呼。身为君王制度的牺牲品,她认了,反正都要嫁人,嫁谁都无所谓。在所有人的‘祝福’中,嫁进了南宁王府,将原本清冷萧条的王府闹的鸡飞狗跳......
  • 梨花雪

    梨花雪

    分为在风中、梨花雪、真实人生三辑,主要收录了秋苇、在风中、鞭子、花开花落、秋日黄昏、活着、生命的缝隙、进入、伤害等作品。淮河与长江、淮北平原和江淮丘陵中的生活,化成了一篇篇散文。这些散文是独语式的,沉郁而灵动,具有着诗的质地和韵味。无论叙述还是回忆,都不是平板的陈述和再现,而是一种透过生命直觉抵达语言深处的文学性呈现。她的叙述气质和方式,是慢板式的柔静、飘逸与钝音式的坚硬相互渗透。
  • 我的DOG是GOD

    我的DOG是GOD

    有GOD做宠物,失恋也可以生活的很精彩。
  • 穿越之妖孽靠边站

    穿越之妖孽靠边站

    吴欣雨本来好好的大学生活,就因为她放了楚大班主任的鸽子,而翘了辫子。吴欣雨表示这报应也来的太快点了,谁承想后又穿越,穿就穿了吧,正好她还没活够,看她在异世如何混的风声云起。妖孽甲,一身紫色衣衫风情万种的眼神瞟过来:“雨儿啊.....”吴欣雨抬头望天:“今儿个万里无云,没雨”拂袖而去。妖孽乙,则幸灾乐祸道“活该”转身离去。徒留某甲憋屈的在地上画圈圈。作者:第一次写文文,不好的地方各位亲们请多多包涵。害羞捂脸飘走.......
  • 江湖救急速去速回

    江湖救急速去速回

    一个优雅的高冷范国民女神—天山天女夏符曦,一个古灵精怪见吃就来神的—幽灵都灵女江南儿,一个满怀一腔热血励志报江湖的—狐灵山狐灵小仙,看三个女汉子如何零个帮!