登陆注册
34909400000002

第2章

Then, generally pacing to and fro in the apple walk, or sitting astride the bridge itself, Derrick would tell me of the adventures of my ancestor, Paul Wharncliffe, who performed incredible feats of valour, and who was to both of us a most real person. On wet days he wrote his story in a copy-book, and would have worked at it for hours had my mother allowed him, though of the manual part of the work he had, and has always retained, the greatest dislike. I remember well the comical ending of this first story of his. He skipped over an interval of ten years, represented on the page by ten laboriously made stars, and did for his hero in the following lines:

"And now, reader, let us come into Mondisfield churchyard. There are three tombstones. On one is written, 'Mr. Paul Wharncliffe.'"

The story was no better than the productions of most eight-year-old children, the written story at least. But, curiously enough, it proved to be the germ of the celebrated romance, 'At Strife,' which Derrick wrote in after years; and he himself maintains that his picture of life during the Civil War would have been much less graphic had he not lived so much in the past during his various visits to Mondisfield.

It was at his second visit, when we were nine, that I remember his announcing his intention of being an author when he was grown up.

My mother still delights in telling the story. She was sitting at work in the south parlour one day, when I dashed into the room calling out:

"Derrick's head is stuck between the banisters in the gallery; come quick, mother, come quick!"

She ran up the little winding staircase, and there, sure enough, in the musician's gallery, was poor Derrick, his manuscript and pen on the floor and his head in durance vile.

"You silly boy!" said my mother, a little frightened when she found that to get the head back was no easy matter, "What made you put it through?"

"You look like King Charles at Carisbrooke," I cried, forgetting how much Derrick would resent the speech.

And being released at that moment he took me by the shoulders and gave me an angry shake or two, as he said vehemently, "I'm not like King Charles! King Charles was a liar."

I saw my mother smile a little as she separated us.

"Come, boys, don't quarrel," she said. "And Derrick will tell me the truth, for indeed I am curious to know why he thrust his head in such a place."

"I wanted to make sure," said Derrick, "whether Paul Wharncliffe could see Lady Lettice, when she took the falcon on her wrist below in the passage. I mustn't say he saw her if it's impossible, you know. Authors have to be quite true in little things, and I mean to be an author."

"But," said my mother, laughing at the great earnestness of the hazel eyes, "could not your hero look over the top of the rail?"

"Well, yes," said Derrick. "He would have done that, but you see it's so dreadfully high and I couldn't get up. But I tell you what, Mrs. Wharncliffe, if it wouldn't be giving you a great deal of trouble--I'm sorry you were troubled to get my head back again--but if you would just look over, since you are so tall, and I'll run down and act Lady Lettice."

"Why couldn't Paul go downstairs and look at the lady in comfort?" asked my mother.

Derrick mused a little.

"He might look at her through a crack in the door at the foot of the stairs, perhaps, but that would seem mean, somehow. It would be a pity, too, not to use the gallery; galleries are uncommon, you see, and you can get cracked doors anywhere. And, you know, he was obliged to look at her when she couldn't see him, because their fathers were on different sides in the war, and dreadful enemies."

When school-days came, matters went on much in the same way; there was always an abominably scribbled tale stowed away in Derrick's desk, and he worked infinitely harder than I did, because there was always before him this determination to be an author and to prepare himself for the life. But he wrote merely from love of it, and with no idea of publication until the beginning of our last year at Oxford, when, having reached the ripe age of one-and-twenty, he determined to delay no longer, but to plunge boldly into his first novel.

He was seldom able to get more than six or eight hours a week for it, because he was reading rather hard, so that the novel progressed but slowly. Finally, to my astonishment, it came to a dead stand-still.

I have never made out exactly what was wrong with Derrick then, though I know that he passed through a terrible time of doubt and despair. I spent part of the Long with him down at Ventnor, where his mother had been ordered for her health. She was devoted to Derrick, and as far as I can understand, he was her chief comfort in life. Major Vaughan, the husband, had been out in India for years; the only daughter was married to a rich manufacturer at Birmingham, who had a constitutional dislike to mothers-in-law, and as far as possible eschewed their company; while Lawrence, Derrick's twin brother, was for ever getting into scrapes, and was into the bargain the most unblushingly selfish fellow I ever had the pleasure of meeting.

"Sydney," said Mrs. Vaughan to me one afternoon when we were in the garden, "Derrick seems to me unlike himself, there is a division between us which I never felt before. Can you tell me what is troubling him?"

She was not at all a good-looking woman, but she had a very sweet, wistful face, and I never looked at her sad eyes without feeling ready to go through fire and water for her. I tried now to make light of Derrick's depression.

"He is only going through what we all of us go through," I said, assuming a cheerful tone. "He has suddenly discovered that life is a great riddle, and that the things he has accepted in blind faith are, after all, not so sure."

She sighed.

"Do all go through it?" she said thoughtfully. "And how many, I wonder, get beyond?"

同类推荐
  • 已畦琐语

    已畦琐语

    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。
  • 玄沙师备禅师语录

    玄沙师备禅师语录

    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。
  • 寿世保元

    寿世保元

    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。
  • 农战

    农战

    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。
  • 决罪福经

    决罪福经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 季末之末

    季末之末

    无论你怎么挣扎,你都在命运的漩涡中,无法自拔……
  • 超痛症

    超痛症

    一个叫做张铭的大学生想好好活下去的故事。他有足足两个朋友、加起来勉强能够凑够一个活人的家长和无穷无尽的麻烦。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 从未被定义

    从未被定义

    很多事从来都没有被定义很多事都是相对的你只需要做你热爱的你想做的并且是正义的事
  • 用着日漫外挂当救世主

    用着日漫外挂当救世主

    求婚被拒,工作被炒,还出了车祸,敢问谁还能比我更惨!刚刚咽完气发现自己意外进入了一个无敌系统,进入了一个前所未有的世界,三大日漫技能都会用,卡卡罗特的能力、鸣人的能力、路飞的能力等等随我挑选。诶?我终于要迈向人生巅峰了吗?
  • 漆黑的目录

    漆黑的目录

    这本书我准备重写,可能要很久之后了,起码得等到我另一本书完本。
  • 武炼星帝

    武炼星帝

    小世家放牛郎陆极意外收获一枚武道神品石,各路巅峰宗师指点、各种顶级秘籍任他挑选!从此武炼天下,一路高歌。天下英才,尽是手下败将!
  • 唯棠

    唯棠

    一个轮回百世的老妖怪被炸死了,再次轮回到一个内向小不点的身上。却发现深陷谜团层层深入,身世成迷,她能否解开轮回之谜,重新做人?叶轻筠佛系做人,无奈天道不仁,三番二次坑害于她:老虎不发威,你真当我是个小奶猫啊!一朝风起,镜州大陆暗流汹涌,鲛人矛盾一触即发,战友死,亲人灭。叶轻筠:“一起上吧,躲一下算我输!”轮回百世,没想到便宜徒弟找上门来。某便宜徒弟:“棠棠,你可不可以,不要丢下我一个人?”叶轻筠:“糖什么糖,我一点都不甜好不好!”
  • 青春恋曲之深情浅缘

    青春恋曲之深情浅缘

    青春里的那一段深深的爱,你付出了所有的心思和牵挂,奉上你可以能为爱情付出的所有,只可惜,情,那么深,缘,却那样浅,你们流泪的放开了彼此的手,可是爱情在时光的隧道中,被诠释的更加璀璨动人,青春的恋曲早已成为你心上跳动的一根最美的旋律……
  • 间国

    间国

    来到不是已知历史的朝代,他想平凡的活着,他知道怎么避免都避免不了在封建朝代下的阶级压制,所以在他平凡的十四年里,他成了临安的解元。