登陆注册
5605100000129

第129章

After this came a pause.Each man sat thinking his own thoughts, which, while marked with difference in form, were doubtless subtly alike in the line they followed.During the silence T.Tembarom looked out at the late afternoon shadows lengthening themselves in darkening velvet across the lawns.

At last he said:

"I never told you that I've been reading some of the 'steen thousand books in the library.I started it about a month ago.And somehow they've got me going."The slightly lifted eyebrows of his host did not express surprise so much as questioning interest.This man, at least, had discovered that one need find no cause for astonishment in any discovery that he had been doing a thing for some time for some reason or through some prompting of his own, and had said nothing whatever about it until he was what he called "good and ready." When he was "good and ready" he usually revealed himself to the duke, but he was not equally expansive with others.

"No, you have not mentioned it," his grace answered, and laughed a little."You frequently fail to mention things.When first we knew each other I used to wonder if you were naturally a secretive fellow;but you are not.You always have a reason for your silences.""It took about ten yearsto kick that into me--ten good years, Ishould say." T.Tembarom looked as if he were looking backward at many episodes as he said it."Naturally, I guess, I must have been an innocent, blab-mouthed kid.I meant no harm, but I just didn't know.

Sometimes it looks as if just not knowing is about the worst disease you can be troubled with.But if you don't get killed first, you find out in time that what you've got to hold on to hard and fast is the trick of 'saying nothing and sawing wood.'"The duke took out his memorandum-book and began to write hastily.T.

Tembarom was quite accustomed to this.He even repeated his axiom for him.

"Say nothing and saw wood," he said."It's worth writing down.It means 'shut your mouth and keep on working.'""Thank you," said the duke."It is worth writing down.Thank you.""I did not talk about the books because I wanted to get used to them before I began to talk," Tembarom explained."I wanted to get somewhere.I'd never read a book through in my life before.Never wanted to.Never had one and never had time.When night came, I was dog-tired and dog-ready to drop down and sleep."Here was a situation of interest.A young man of odd, direct shrewdness, who had never read a book through in his existence, had plunged suddenly into the extraordinarily varied literary resources of the Temple Barholm library.If he had been a fool or a genius one might have guessed at the impression made on him; being T.Tembarom, one speculated with secret elation.The primitiveness he might reveal, the profundities he might touch the surface of, the unexpected ends he might reach, suggested the opening of vistas.

"I have often thought that if books attracted you the library would help you to get through a good many of the hundred and thirty-six hours a day you've spoken of, and get through them pretty decently,"commented the duke.

"That's what's happened," Tembarom answered."There's not so many now.

I can cut 'em off in chunks."

"How did it begin?"

He listened with much pleasure while Tembarom told him how it had begun and how it had gone on.

"I'd been having a pretty bad time one day.Strangeways had been worse--a darned sight worse--just when I thought he was better.I'd been trying to help him to think straight; and suddenly I made a break, somehow, and must have touched exactly the wrong spring.It seemed as if I set him nearly crazy.I had to leave him to Pearson right away.Then it poured rain steady for about eight hours, and Icouldn't get out and `take a walk.' Then I went wandering into the picture-gallery and found Lady Joan there, looking at Miles Hugo.And she ordered me out, or blamed near it.""You are standing a good deal," said the duke.

"Yes, I am--but so is she." He set his hard young jaw and nursed his knee, staring once more at the velvet shadows."The girl in the book Ipicked up--" he began.

"The first book? " his host inquired.

Tembarom nodded.

"The very first.I was smoking my pipe at night, after every one else had gone to bed, and I got up and began to wander about and stare at the names of the things on the shelves.I was thinking over a whole raft of things--a whole raft of them--and I didn't know I was doing it, until something made me stop and read a name again.It was a book called `Good-by, Sweetheart, Good-by,' and it hit me straight.Iwondered what it was about, and I wondered where old Temple Barholm had fished up a thing like that.I never heard he was that kind.""He was a cantankerous old brute," said the Duke of Stone with candor, "but he chanced to be an omnivorous novel-reader.Nothing was too sentimental for him in his later years.""I took the thing out and read it," Tembarom went on, uneasily, the emotion of his first novel-reading stirring him as he talked."It kept me up half the night, and I hadn't finished it then.I wanted to know the end.""Benisons upon the books of which one wants to know the end!" the duke murmured.

Tembarom's interest had plainly not terminated with "the end." Its freshness made it easily revived.There was a hint of emotional indignation in his relation of the plot.

"It was about a couple of fools who were dead stuck on each other--dead.There was no mistake about that.It was all real.But what do they do but work up a fool quarrel about nothing, and break away from each other.There was a lot of stuff about pride.Pride be damned!

How's a man going to be proud and put on airs when he loves a woman?

How's a woman going to be proud and stick out about things when she loves a man? At least, that's the way it hit me.""That's the way it hit me--once," remarked his grace.

"There is only once," said Tembarom, doggedly.

"Occasionally," said his host."Occasionally."Tembarom knew what he meant.

同类推荐
  • 欧阳修词集评

    欧阳修词集评

    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。
  • 佛说五恐怖世经

    佛说五恐怖世经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Sky Pilot

    Sky Pilot

    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。
  • 御制周颠仙人传

    御制周颠仙人传

    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。
  • THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    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
  • 情商也能培养

    情商也能培养

    情商又称情绪智力,是近年来心理学家们提出的与智力和智商相对应的概念。情商主要是指人在情绪、情感、意志、耐受挫折等方面的品质。虽然我们无法预定智商,却可以提高情商,一个杰出的人未必有着高智商,却一定有着高情商。提高情商其实有着简而易行的方法,你需要的就是坚持。
  • 象棋高手

    象棋高手

    “马走日,象走田,车走直路炮翻山,士走斜线护将帅,小卒一去不复还!”王帅从沉睡中苏醒过来,朗声说道。“这小子连他娘都忘记了,偏偏还记得象棋。”旁边有人嘀咕一句。……地球上的象棋高手穿越来到一个叫“楚汉王朝”的世界。看他如何在这个以棋为尊的世界里大展身手,过关斩将!PS:本书没有系统,没有修炼,以象棋为主题。内行看门道,外行看热闹。适合九至九十九岁的书友阅读。
  • 凰医帝临七神

    凰医帝临七神

    (原名《焚尽七神:狂傲女帝》)前世,她贵为巅峰女帝,一夕之间局势逆转,沦为废材之质。魂灵双修,医毒无双,血脉觉醒,一御万兽。天现异象,凰命之女,自此归来,天下乱之。这一次,所有欺她辱她之人必杀之!他自上界而来,怀有目的,却因她动摇内心深处坚定的道义。“你曾说,你向仰我,你想像我一样,步入光明,是我对不起你,又让你重新回到黑暗。”“你都不在了,你让我一个人,怎么像向仰你?!”爱与不爱,从来都是我们自己的事,与他人无关。带走了所有的光明与信仰。
  • 快穿之总有男神想黑化

    快穿之总有男神想黑化

    【1V1独宠甜文】好不容易成了个超级富二代的洛璃烟,遇到个空难,半天福都没享受就嗝屁了,这叫她如何甘心!什么绑定系统做任务就能重生?!好勒!她立刻就来!只不过这男神被精分切片了,她现在该怎么办,退货吗?!不能退货?自己是他的药?想多了,就她这样的毒药还差不多吧!【推荐自己的新书——《我家宿主超级萌》】
  • 飘(上)

    飘(上)

    整部小说洋洋洒洒,气势恢宏,可谓一幅浪漫的历史和社会画卷。小说以美国南北战争前后的南方佐治亚州为背景,以一个种植园主郝嘉乐的女儿郝思嘉为核心人物,通过几个家族的兴衰变化反映了美国南方各州在这一重要历史时期的社会现实。
  • 王爷和离吧

    王爷和离吧

    一朝魂穿,祝冰凌成了废柴,反转她的悲具人生。她惊艳天下,满朝侧目,更引来了某男的觊觎,她不屑一顾,“做我男人,你还不配!”某男星眸荡漾,嘴角挂着万年难见的笑。这个女人——他要定了!她想步步登天,他便推波助澜。她若遭人欺负,他便血洗天下,你想要的,我都能给!
  • 饮膳正要

    饮膳正要

    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。
  • 日暮啼晚归

    日暮啼晚归

    大龄单身冰山队长迟暮×重抑偏执腹黑美少女林晚 文案:“刚才进来了个校外打架的小姑娘,吵着要见你。”迟暮刚回来,脱下外套,听闻小姑娘打架,眉头皱了皱,抬手摸了摸自己几天没刮胡子的下巴,扯扯嘴角,“好,知道了。”既然小姑娘想他了,他哪有不见的理儿。迟暮进了大厅,见林晚坐在墙边长椅上,双手撑在两边,两条小腿在下面一晃一晃的,小脑袋低低的,嘴巴张张合合不知道在嘟囔些什么。迟暮喉头动了动,快步走过去。“臭迟暮,还不回来...”“谁家的小姑娘又打架了?”林晚闻声抬头,看见日思夜想的男人站在自己面前,顿时双眼凝聚着光。顾及着还有其他人在,林晚抑制住自己想扑进男人怀里的冲动,乖乖站好。迟暮看了看周身,转头进了自己的办公室。林晚咬了咬红唇,偷偷笑了笑,乖巧的跟在男人身后。
  • 谨以星光致流年

    谨以星光致流年

    初见时,他是星光璀璨的大明星,她是一个果村里打工的打工妹,两个人的距离如同隔着一条银河系。可是最后他们相爱了,尽管这一段爱情得不到别人的祝福。哪一年冬天,他叫她滚,她就真的滚了。他却跟疯了一样,满世界地找她,可是却得到了她死亡的消息。异国街头,他遇上了一个女流浪画家,一个五岁的流浪音乐家。看着音乐家跟他有七八分相似的脸,他怒道:“纪念,你竟敢带着我的儿子流浪。”可是她的眼眸中尽是陌生道:“这位先生你弄错了,我没有拐跑你的儿子,这是我得儿子。”男人的瞳孔中布满了不相信,“你不认识我了?”她嘲讽道:“先生,今天是我们第一次见面,你觉得我应该认识你吗?”
  • 太微仙君功过格

    太微仙君功过格

    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。