登陆注册
19847300000051

第51章

The Journalistic World has its own diversity of mountain and plain, and its own variety of inhabitants. There are its mountain ranges and upland regions of clear skies and pure airs, where are wide outlooks and horizons whose dim lines fade beyond the reach of clear vision. Amid these mountain ranges and upon these uplands dwell men among the immortals to whom has come the "vision splendid" and whose are the voices that in the crisis of a man or of a nation give forth the call that turns the face upward to life eternal and divine. To these men such words as Duty, Honour, Patriotism, Purity, stand for things of intrinsic value worth a man's while to seek and, having found, to die for.

Level plains there are, too, where harvests are sown and reaped.

But there these same words often become mere implements of cultivation, tools for mechanical industries or currency for the conduct of business. Here dwell the practical men of affairs, as they love to call themselves, for whom has faded the vision in the glare of opportunism.

And far down by the water-fronts are the slum wastes where the sewers of politics and business and social life pour forth their fetid filth. Here the journals of yellow shade grub and fatten.

In this ooze and slime puddle the hordes of sewer rats, scavengers of the world's garbage, from whose collected stores the editor selects his daily mess for the delectation of the great unwashed, whether of the classes or of the masses, and from which he grabs in large handfuls that viscous mud that sticks and stings where it sticks.

The Daily Telegraph was born yellow, a frank yellow of the barbaric type that despises neutral tints. By the Daily Telegraph things were called by their uneuphemistic names. A spade was a spade, and mud was mud, and nothing was sacred from its sewer rats. The highest paid official on its staff was a criminal lawyer celebrated in the libel courts. Everybody cursed it and everybody read it.

After a season, having thus firmly established itself in the enmities of the community, and having become, in consequence, financially secure, it began to aspire toward the uplands, where the harvests were as rich and at the same time less perilous as well as less offensive in the reaping. It began to study euphemism. A spade became an agricultural implement and mud alluvial deposit. Having become by long experience a specialist in the business of moral scavenging, it proceeded to devote itself with most vehement energy to the business of moral reform. All indecencies that could not successfully cover themselves with such gilding as good hard gold can give were ruthlessly held up to public contempt. It continued to be cursed, but gradually came to be respected and feared.

It was to aid in this upward climb that the editor of the Daily Telegraph seized upon Dick. That young man was peculiarly fitted for the part which was to be assigned to him. He was a theological student and, therefore, his ethical standards were unimpeachable.

His university training guaranteed his literary sense, and his connection with the University and College papers had revealed him a master of terse English. He was the very man, indeed, but he must serve his apprenticeship with the sewer rats. For months he toiled amid much slime and filth, breathing in its stinking odours, gaining knowledge, it is true, but paying dear for it in the golden coin of that finer sensibility and that vigorous moral health which had formerly made his life, to himself and to others, a joy and beauty. For the slime would stick, do what he could, and with the smells he must become so familiar that they no longer offended.

That delicate discrimination that immediately detects the presence of decay departed from him, and in its place there developed a coarser sense whose characteristic was its power to distinguish between sewage and sewage. Hence, morality, with him, came to consist in the choosing of sewage of the less offensive forms. On the other hand, consciousness of the brand of heresy drove him from those scenes where the air is pure and from association with those high souls who by mere living exhale spiritual health and fragrance.

"We do not see much of Mr. Boyle these days, Margaret," Mrs.

Macdougall would say to her friend, carefully modulating her tone lest she should betray the anxiety of her gentle, loyal heart.

"But I doubt not he is very busy with his new duties."

"Yes, he is very busy," Margaret would reply, striving to guard her voice with equal care, but with less success. For Margaret was cursed, nay blessed, with that heart of infinite motherhood that yearns over the broken or the weak or the straying of humankind, and makes their pain its own.

"Bring him with you to tea next Sabbath evening, my dear," the little lady would say, with never a quiver or inflection of voice betraying that she had detected the girl's anxiety for her friend.

But more infrequently, as the days went on, could she secure Dick for an hour on Sabbath evening in the quiet, sweet little nook of the professor's dining-room. He was so often held by his work, but more often by his attendance upon Iola, for between Iola and him there had grown up and ripened rapidly an intimacy that Margaret regarded with distrust and fear. How she hated herself for her suspicions! How she fought to forbid them harbour in her heart!

But how persistently they made entrance and to abide.

The World of Fashion is, for the most part, a desert island of gleaming sands, at times fanned by perfume-laden zephyrs and lapped by shining waters. Then those who dwell there disport themselves, careless of all save the lapping, shining waters and the gleaming sands out of which they build their sand castles with such concentrated eagerness and such painful industry. At other times there come tempests, sudden and out of clear skies, which sweep, with ruthless besom, castles and castle-builders alike, and leave desolation and empty spaces for a time.

同类推荐
  • 道门经法相承次序

    道门经法相承次序

    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。
  • 续灯正统

    续灯正统

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典患难部

    明伦汇编人事典患难部

    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。
  • 续三国演义

    续三国演义

    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。
  • 审斋词

    审斋词

    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
  • 25分之1秒的智慧:当心被自己出卖

    25分之1秒的智慧:当心被自己出卖

    《1/25秒的智慧——当心被自己出卖》一书是由哈尔滨出版社出版的“微表情心理学”丛书中的一本。《1/25秒的智慧——当心被自己出卖》是站在保护自己和完善自己的角度,意在帮助读者弄清楚在社交活动中究竟哪些表情和动作会出卖我们的内心想法,并提醒读者注意,在今后的社交中如何少做或不做出类似的表情和动作,从而不把我们的内心想法展露给对方。相反,我们可以通过这本书的介绍学着去洞悉别人的心理活动,从而在社交活动中掌握主动权。
  • 四友斋丛说

    四友斋丛说

    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。
  • 《叆梦异闻》

    《叆梦异闻》

    作品定位:玄幻加治愈;本书为分卷故事,每卷之间联系不大,因此就不剧透了。本叆受key社影响较大,因此想写治愈类的故事,当然没有麻枝准那么深的泪腺功力。希望喜欢的人能够支持。
  • 《奥奇传说》

    《奥奇传说》

    这是一本由游戏奥奇传说改编而成的小说,书中讲述了狼王萨尔斯进攻奥奇城时的情景,以及后来小奥奇与时间之王小诺,是非之王阿修,智慧之王小天,力量之王小炎,生命之王阿瑞一起守卫奥奇城的故事。
  • 梦是谁在编织

    梦是谁在编织

    在神之庭院拥有了神力的吉恩,想统治凡世,他盗取了幻术,控制凡人的思想,没曾想却发现一个巨大的阴谋竟在临近……
  • 网王重生之复仇游戏

    网王重生之复仇游戏

    重生前青学:快看,是手冢灵千那个贱人。听说她还不是手冢家的亲生小姐,是领养的。对了,听说害的花鸟家族大小姐手废了,果然都不知道她父母是什么样子的人。立海大:快看,是柳生千千,那个欺负藤原小姐的人。听说藤原小姐曾经与她哥哥柳生比吕士订过婚。我们还是离她远点吧,连嫂子都会欺负的那个恶毒的女人。冰帝:快看是迹部景樱,那个欺负水源大小姐的,不就是迹部sama的妹妹吗。重生后手冢灵千:你认为死过一次的人还会纯洁吗?迹部景樱:女王的复仇一定要华丽。柳生千千:既然游戏开始啦就一定要见血。作者qq:2912989717qq群:415272372快加群,群内最新更新。
  • 友谊赠言(当代教育丛书·现代名言妙语全集)

    友谊赠言(当代教育丛书·现代名言妙语全集)

    这些名言警句句句经典,字字珠玑,精辟睿智,闪耀着智慧的光芒和精神的力量,具有很强的鼓舞性、哲理性和启迪性。具有成功心理暗示和潜在力量开发的功能,不仅可以成为我们的座右铭,还能增进自律的能力。
  • 沧岚遗事

    沧岚遗事

    这是一个靠实力生存的大陆,沧岚。这是一个拥有神奇天赋被称为“武神诀”的世界。“有的人天生就是领袖,有的人是天生的马前卒,而有的人只是不被后人们铭记的蝼蚁。”——帝铭城
  • 隋唐封神诀

    隋唐封神诀

    大隋年间,封家以《封神诀》成名然而世间并无人真正练成《封神诀》隋末,封家一名私生子横空出世《封神诀》再起争端武林封家力图接纳此子江湖豪强开始争夺此子然而这些人都不知道,其实《封神诀》从来都没有存在过!
  • 傲娇男神:强吻99次

    傲娇男神:强吻99次

    暗恋+明恋14年的竹马傲娇男神,突然入读她的学校,还成了高级班的学长。这不科学!他不是已经毕业,而且,接下他爸的公司了吗?怎么还有时间在这晃悠啊!“叶绯,你再看别的男人,就别怪我不客气咯!”然,对此情况,她也只能无可奈何的喊一句,“什么鬼!”