登陆注册
19661000000010

第10章 CHAPTER THE THIRD THE WIMBLEHURST APPRENTICESHIP(1

"Just as though an old Porpoise like him would ever make money," she said, turning her eyes upon his profile with a sudden lapse to affection. "He'll just porpoise about."

"I'll do something," said my uncle, "you bet! Zzzz!" and rapped with a shilling on the marble table.

"When you do you'll have to buy me a new pair of gloves," she said, "anyhow. That finger's past mending. Look! you Cabbage--you." And she held the split under his nose, and pulled a face of comical fierceness.

My uncle smiled at these sallies at the time, but afterwards, when I went back with him to the Pharmacy--the low-class business grew brisker in the evening and they kept open late--he reverted to it in a low expository tone. "Your aunt's a bit impatient, George. She gets at me. It's only natural.... A woman doesn't understand how long it takes to build up a position. No.... In certain directions now--I am--quietly--building up a position.

Now here.... I get this room. I have my three assistants. Zzzz.

It's a position that, judged by the criterion of imeedjit income, isn't perhaps so good as I deserve, but strategically--yes. It's what I want. I make my plans. I rally my attack."

"What plans," I said, "are you making?"

"Well, George, there's one thing you can rely upon, I'm doing nothing in a hurry. I turn over this one and that, and I don't talk--indiscreetly. There's-- No! I don't think I can tell you that. And yet, why NOT?"

He got up and closed the door into the shop. "I've told no one," he remarked, as he sat down again. "I owe you something."

His face flushed slightly, he leant forward over the little table towards me.

"Listen!" he said.

I listened.

"Tono-Bungay," said my uncle very slowly and distinctly.

I thought he was asking me to hear some remote, strange noise.

"I don't hear anything," I said reluctantly to his expectant face. He smiled undefeated. "Try again," he said, and repeated, "Tono-Bungay."

"Oh, THAT!" I said.

"Eh?" said he.

"But what is it?"

"Ah!" said my uncle, rejoicing and expanding. "What IS it?

That's what you got to ask? What won't it be?" He dug me violently in what he supposed to be my ribs. "George," he cried--"George, watch this place! There's more to follow."

And that was all I could get from him.

That, I believe, was the very first time that the words Tono-Bungay ever heard on earth--unless my uncle indulged in monologues in his chamber--a highly probable thing. Its utterance certainly did not seem to me at the time to mark any sort of epoch, and had I been told this word was the Open Sesame to whatever pride and pleasure the grimy front of London hid from us that evening, I should have laughed aloud.

"Coming now to business," I said after a pause, and with a chill sense of effort; and I opened the question of his trust.

My uncle sighed, and leant back in his chair. "I wish I could make all this business as clear to you as it is to me," he said.

"However--Go on! Say what you have to say."

VII

After I left my uncle that evening I gave way to a feeling of profound depression. My uncle and aunt seemed to me to be leading--I have already used the word too often, but I must use it again--DINGY lives. They seemed to be adrift in a limitless crowd of dingy people, wearing shabby clothes, living uncomfortably in shabby second-hand houses, going to and fro on pavements that had always a thin veneer of greasy, slippery mud, under grey skies that showed no gleam of hope of anything for them but dinginess until they died. It seemed absolutely clear to me that my mother's little savings had been swallowed up and that my own prospect was all too certainly to drop into and be swallowed up myself sooner or later by this dingy London ocean.

The London that was to be an adventurous escape from the slumber of Wimblehurst, had vanished from my dreams. I saw my uncle pointing to the houses in Park Lane and showing a frayed shirt-cuff as he did so. I heard my aunt: "I'm to ride in my carriage then. So he old says."

My feelings towards my uncle were extraordinarily mixed. I was intensely sorry not only for my aunt Susan but for him--for it seemed indisputable that as they were living then so they must go on--and at the same time I was angry with the garrulous vanity and illness that had elipped all my chance of independent study, and imprisoned her in those grey apartments. When I got back to Wimblehurst I allowed myself to write him a boyishly sarcastic and sincerely bitter letter. He never replied. Then, believing it to be the only way of escape for me, I set myself far more grimly and resolutely to my studies than I had ever done before.

After a time I wrote to him in more moderate terms, and he answered me evasively. And then I tried to dismiss him from my mind and went on working.

Yes, that first raid upon London under the moist and chilly depression of January had an immense effect upon me. It was for me an epoch-making disappointment. I had thought of London as a large, free, welcoming, adventurous place, and I saw it slovenly and harsh and irresponsive.

I did not realise at all what human things might be found behind those grey frontages, what weakness that whole forbidding facade might presently confess. It is the constant error of youth to over-estimate the Will in things. I did not see that the dirt, the discouragement, the discomfort of London could be due simply to the fact that London was a witless old giantess of a town, too slack and stupid to keep herself clean and maintain a brave face to the word. No! I suffered from the sort of illusion that burnt witches in the seventeenth century. I endued her grubby disorder with a sinister and magnificent quality of intention.

And my uncle's gestures and promises filled me with doubt and a sort of fear for him. He seemed to me a lost little creature, too silly to be silent, in a vast implacable condemnation. I was full of pity and a sort of tenderness for my aunt Susan, who was doomed to follow his erratic fortunes mocked by his grandiloquent promises.

I was to learn better. But I worked with the terror of the grim underside of London in my soul during all my last year at Wimblehurst.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 上将皇后

    上将皇后

    上将战死,重生废柴,自强不息,成为机甲大师,并把自家汉子扶上星际大帝的王座。本文又名《我的二手脑残智脑好有上进心,它打算和皇帝陛下的4S机甲结婚,于是我成了陪嫁》,《迷途的上将哟,皇帝陛下在宫里跪着机甲引擎期待您的临幸您知道么?》,《手把手教你把家务机器人改造成4S机甲》。
  • 重生之豪门女管家

    重生之豪门女管家

    上一世赵安唯被一绿茶女联合所害,走不出大山,上不了大学,嫁不了好男人,最后惨遭折磨致死。重生后她励志走出大山,上名牌大学,不当男人的附属品,成为优雅的白富美,闯出自己的一片天,走向人生制高点。
  • 克服胆怯

    克服胆怯

    胆怯者没有资格担任任何重要职位。因为他缺乏肩负责任的勇气,只有当主动带头的必要性跟他无关的时候,他才感到庆幸。胆怯者总是拖延,他总是把今天能做的事情推到明天,宁愿推托掉哪怕米粒般大小的责任。胆怯的人永远都优柔寡断,做不成任何事,几乎还没等到危险决定发起攻击,他就已经败下阵来。所以,在胆怯者面前,机会的大门总是紧闭的。任何时代,永远都是无畏者的天下。胜者无畏,这是颠扑不破的成功箴言。
  • 超级神兽养殖大师

    超级神兽养殖大师

    当别人还为得到一头异兽而沾沾自喜的时候,姜晨已经在培养在第一千头灵兽了。当别人还在为得到一头灵兽绞尽脑汁,拼死拼活的时候,姜晨已经打算把一万头战兽全都培养成仙兽了。当别人被一头仙兽杀得凄惨无比的时候,姜晨已经率领他的仙兽大军,踏平了一个个的仙兽族群。当别人还在向一头神兽顶礼膜拜的时候,姜晨已经把无数的神兽圈养起来,为他繁殖所需要的神兽。驯兽之道,玩的不仅是质量,还有数量。且看姜晨得到神兽养殖系统后,怎么打造出一支,称霸天地,唯我独尊的神兽大军。
  • 做自己想做的人

    做自己想做的人

    当今世界,人们也许会在繁华中盲从,在喧嚣中浮躁,在灯红酒绿中迷失,在人生的路口徘徊,但永远也不会忘记自己的幸福和前途。看一下本书,或许能带你远离城市的喧嚣和繁华,在迷失中找回自己!要想达到成功目标的人,不仅能时刻预见危机,坦然面对已有的挫折,还要把这种危机与挫折当做自己新的机遇,适时调整自己,向人生发起新的冲击。
  • 张明礼的意外之旅

    张明礼的意外之旅

    一个打错的电话,改变了两个人的人生走向,之后的连锁反应,又让好几个人的生活起了波澜。当今社会的人们,在享受高科技带来的便利的同时,也会遭遇各种诱惑,潜藏的危险。有时候,善与恶、是与非、生与死、天堂与地狱,就存在于你一念之间。
  • 民国毒商:女人我最大

    民国毒商:女人我最大

    一个普通身世的来上海打工的女孩,因为做微商送面膜不小心穿越到民国,她到底经历了什么,让她不仅仅成为了亚洲护肤品女王,还成为了民族女英雄?她又有什么样的魅力和胆识,不仅仅让同龄的男人喜欢她,还让比她爹都大的民国上海富豪想娶她做大太太?最终,她嫁给了谁?最终,她是因为笼罩的光环和荣誉而留在了民国,还是放弃了一切财富穿越回上海从头开始……
  • 名门宠婚

    名门宠婚

    7次相亲被甩,居然冒出第8个相亲男,强行将她霸道扛到结婚登记处盖戳,她还未来得及回味,居然已经成为陆氏总裁的老婆!虾米!这就是传说中的一夜凤凰?NO!当初恋男友回来,霸道老公背后秘密,朋友背叛,智斗恶婆婆……一切真相被揭秘,这究竟是步步设下的陷阱?还是一场精心策划……
  • 犯罪心理档案

    犯罪心理档案

    这是一部囊括了几乎所有犯罪元素的惊心之书:碎尸悬案、虐童恶魔、地狱来电、废墓遗尸、杀人魔咒……每一起凶案都让人头皮发麻,真凶一直藏在我们身边,与我们同眠共餐。善与恶的殊死角逐背后,充满着绝望、怨恨、嫉妒、贪婪、傲慢、色欲、禁恋。公安厅最隐秘最不可告人的犯罪档案完全揭露,你将深入一线的犯罪现场,深入剖析诡谲罪案,展现不寒而栗的凶案全记录令人心惊。直面最令人恐惧、最沉重难解的人性之恶!
  • 绝世战帝

    绝世战帝

    年少贫贱被人欺,心若顽石不屈膝,偶得诸天玄妙法,势要九天踏云梯!世家落魄子弟,遭人百般折辱,隐忍苦练,偶得诸天妙法,从此青云直上,入武道,杀仇敌,修战灵,炼神通。从凡尘一隅,直到诸天万界。登天路,踏歌行,逍遥自在,帝霸诸天。阻我者,尽皆轰杀!