登陆注册
19857000000025

第25章

In the same way the Dean made a mechanical top for little Marjorie Trewlaney, the cripple, to see spun: it would have been unwise to allow the afflicted girl to spin it.There was no end to the things that Mr.Drone could make, and always for the children.Even when he was making the sand-clock for poor little Willie Yodel (who died, you know) the Dean went right on with it and gave it to another child with just the same pleasure.Death, you know, to the clergy is a different thing from what it is to us.The Dean and Mr.Gingham used often to speak of it as they walked through the long grass of the new cemetery, the Necropolis.And when your Sunday walk is to your wife's grave, as the Dean's was, perhaps it seems different to anybody.

The Church of England Church, I said; stood close to the rectory, a tall, sweeping church, and inside a great reach of polished cedar beams that ran to the point of the roof.There used to stand on the same spot the little stone church that all the grown-up people in Mariposa still remember, a quaint little building in red and grey stone.About it was the old cemetery, but that was all smoothed out later into the grass plot round the new church, and the headstones laid out flat, and no new graves have been put there for ever so long.But the Mariposa children still walk round and read the headstones lying flat in the grass and look for the old ones,--because some of them are ever so old--forty or fifty years back.

Nor are you to think from all this that the Dean was not a man with serious perplexities.You could easily convince yourself of the contrary.For if you watched the Rev.Mr.Drone as he sat reading in the Greek, you would notice that no very long period every passed without his taking up a sheet or two of paper that lay between the leaves of the Theocritus and that were covered close with figures.

And these the Dean would lay upon the rustic table, and he would add them up forwards and backwards, going first up the column and then down it to see that nothing had been left out, and then down it again to see what it was that must have been left out.

Mathematics, you will understand, were not the Dean's forte.They never were the forte of the men who had been trained at the little Anglican college with the clipped hedges and the cricket ground, where Rupert Drone had taken the gold medal in Greek fifty-two years ago.You will see the medal at any time lying there in its open box on the rectory table, in case of immediate need.Any of the Drone girls, Lilian, or Jocelyn, or Theodora, would show it to you.But, as I say, mathematics were not the rector's forte, and he blamed for it (in a Christian spirit, you will understand) the memory of his mathematical professor, and often he spoke with great bitterness.Ihave often heard him say that in his opinion the colleges ought to dismiss, of course in a Christian spirit, all the professors who are not, in the most reverential sense of the term, fit for their jobs.

No doubt many of the clergy of the diocese had suffered more or less just as the Dean had from lack of mathematical training.But the Dean always felt that his own case was especially to be lamented.For you see, if a man is trying to make a model aeroplane--for a poor family in the lower part of the town--and he is brought to a stop by the need of reckoning the coefficient of torsion of cast-iron rods, it shows plainly enough that the colleges are not truly filling their divine mission.

But the figures that I speak of were not those of the model aeroplane.These were far more serious.Night and day they had been with the rector now for the best part of ten years, and they grew, if anything, more intricate.

If, for example, you try to reckon the debt of a church--a large church with a great sweep of polished cedar beams inside, for the special glorification of the All Powerful, and with imported tiles on the roof for the greater glory of Heaven and with stained-glass windows for the exaltation of the All Seeing--if, I say, you try to reckon up the debt on such a church and figure out its interest and its present worth, less a fixed annual payment, it makes a pretty complicated sum.Then if you try to add to this the annual cost of insurance, and deduct from it three-quarters of a stipend, year by year, and then suddenly remember that three-quarters is too much, because you have forgotten the boarding-school fees of the littlest of the Drones (including French, as an extra--she must have it, all the older girls did), you have got a sum that pretty well defies ordinary arithmetic.The provoking part of it was that the Dean knew perfectly well that with the help of logarithms he could have done the thing in a moment.But at the Anglican college they had stopped short at that very place in the book.They had simply explained that Logos was a word and Arithmos a number, which at the time, seemed amply sufficient.

So the Dean was perpetually taking out his sheets of figures, and adding them upwards and downwards, and they never came the same.Very often Mr.Gingham, who was a warden, would come and sit beside the rector and ponder over the figures, and Mr.Drone would explain that with a book of logarithms you could work it out in a moment.You would simply open the book and run your finger up the columns (he illustrated exactly the way in which the finger was moved), and there you were.Mr.Gingham said that it was a caution, and that logarithms (I quote his exact phrase) must be a terror.

Very often, too, Nivens, the lawyer, who was a sidesman, and Mullins, the manager of the Exchange Bank, who was the chairman of the vestry, would come and take a look, at the figures.But they never could make much of them, because the stipend part was not a matter that one could discuss.

Mullins would notice the item for a hundred dollars due on fire insurance and would say; as a business man, that surely that couldn't be fire insurance, and the Dean would say surely not, and change it:

同类推荐
  • 佛说辩意长者子所问经

    佛说辩意长者子所问经

    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。
  • 埋忧集

    埋忧集

    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。
  • OLIVER TWIST

    OLIVER TWIST

    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。
  • 蕉轩续录

    蕉轩续录

    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。
  • 台湾府赋役册

    台湾府赋役册

    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
  • 人世感怀(最受学生喜爱的散文精粹)

    人世感怀(最受学生喜爱的散文精粹)

    《最受学生喜爱的散文精粹》从喧嚣中缓缓走来,如一位许久不见的好友,收拾了一路趣闻,满载着一眼美景,静静地与你分享。靠近它,你会忘记白日里琐碎的工作,沉溺于片刻的宁谧。靠近它,你也会忘却烦恼,还心灵一片晴朗。一个人在其一生中,阅读一些立意深远、具有丰富哲学思考的散文,不仅可以开阔视野,重新认识历史、社会、人生和自然,获得思想上的盎然新意,而且还可以学习中外散文名家高超而成熟的创作技巧。
  • 创神宙宇

    创神宙宇

    我们不知道宇宙从何而来,也不知道它究竟往哪里去?我们仅仅只知道一切都是从一个混元无极的点开始的。这个点不知有多小,不知有多重,不知是从什么时候开始就已经存在了,也不知道历经了多久,它开始爆发开来,时间和空间从此开始,物质和生命从此开始,混沌和秩序的法则从此开始。无数个世界随之诞生,无数个世界又同时被毁灭,生命随之诞生也随之死亡,混沌和秩序周而复始,无穷演进。
  • 帝师天下

    帝师天下

    那年,她如意料般的穿越到了架空王朝,她知道所有人的结局,却不知道经过。为了生存,她化身为清冷的太傅。皇帝死后,她又成为了帝师与帝师,权利已大于皇权。幼年的皇帝慢慢长大,终于有一日……╮(╯▽╰)╭有师(女)徒(男)情结,正太情结,养成情结,扑到情结,霸拽情结的读者可以抓来一看。
  • 垂钓日记

    垂钓日记

    本书收录了《“战”安昌》、《云竹风光掠影》、《冰天雪地独斗寒》、《寒风砭骨》、《倾听冰声》、《在大风中搏击》、《暖泉沟空军之行》、《青海湖散记》、《买鱼竿》、《夏钓清潭》等作品。
  • 梦幻居画学简明

    梦幻居画学简明

    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。
  • 赤影札记

    赤影札记

    她是特工,训练20年只为一次任务,成功便可以过上梦寐以求的生活,却偏偏遇到了他。她爱红色的彼岸花,彼岸花俗称曼陀罗花,是死亡之花,爱上他注定是一场不幸……
  • 本妃有点囧

    本妃有点囧

    前世今生多颜乱,迷错迭起梦笙歌!攻心斗角,前世今生,江湖恩怨,六界之外。他和他和他,到底谁对她用情至深?她又该如何作则。一个是前世深爱她而又欺骗她的人,一个又是前世深爱她而又掠夺她的人,还有一个前世今生都在默默注视她的。对于他们,对于她,谁对谁错?不过都是爱情里的可怜人。她没头没脑装傻卖萌,想尽办法不去招惹不去明白他们的心意。可是呢?一个也没逃过,全部伤了个透。她该怎么办?她该怎么做?前世今生,谁是良人,她又注定要负了多少真心知意!
  • In a German Pension

    In a German Pension

    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。
  • tfboys之爱你至永久

    tfboys之爱你至永久

    主要讲述了三个富豪千金与tfboys的爱情故事
  • 和移风易俗者一起上路

    和移风易俗者一起上路

    马克·吐温的著名短篇小说。