登陆注册
34925600000043

第43章

Here my father interposed. "I knew the Sunchild; and I more than once heard him speak of God and Mammon. He never varied the form of the words he used, which were to the effect that a man must serve either God or Mammon, but that he could not serve both.""Ah!" said Mr. Turvey, "that no doubt was his exoteric teaching, but Professors Hanky and Panky have assured me most solemnly that his esoteric teaching was as I have given it. By the way, these gentlemen are both, I understand, at Sunch'ston, and I think it quite likely that I shall have a visit from them this afternoon.

If you do not know them I should have great pleasure in introducing you to them; I was at Bridgeford with both of them.""I have had the pleasure of meeting them already," said my father, "and as you are by no means certain that they will come, I will ask you to let me thank you for all that you have been good enough to shew me, and bid you good-afternoon. I have a rather pressing engagement--""My dear sir, you must please give me five minutes more. I shall examine the boys in the Musical Bank Catechi**." He pointed to one of them and said, "Repeat your duty towards your neighbour.""My duty towards my neighbour," said the boy, "is to be quite sure that he is not likely to borrow money of me before I let him speak to me at all, and then to have as little to do with him as--"At this point there was a loud ring at the door bell. "Hanky and Panky come to see me, no doubt," said Mr. Turvey. "I do hope it is so. You must stay and see them.""My dear sir," said my father, putting his handkerchief up to his face, "I am taken suddenly unwell and must positively leave you."He said this in so peremptory a tone that Mr. Turvey had to yield.

My father held his handkerchief to his face as he went through the passage and hall, but when the servant opened the door he took it down, for there was no Hanky or Panky--no one, in fact, but a poor, wizened old man who had come, as he did every other Saturday afternoon, to wind up the Deformatory clocks.

Nevertheless, he had been scared, and was in a very wicked-fleeth-when-no-man-pursueth frame of mind. He went to his inn, and shut himself up in his room for some time, taking notes of all that had happened to him in the last three days. But even at his inn he no longer felt safe. How did he know but that Hanky and Panky might have driven over from Sunch'ston to see Mr. Turvey, and might put up at this very house? or they might even be going to spend the night here. He did not venture out of his room till after seven by which time he had made rough notes of as much of the foregoing chapters as had come to his knowledge so far. Much of what I have told as nearly as I could in the order in which it happened, he did not learn till later. After giving the merest outline of his interview with Mr. Turvey, he wrote a note as follows:- "I suppose I must have held forth about the greatest happiness of the greatest number, but I had quite forgotten it, though I remember repeatedly quoting my favourite proverb, 'Every man for himself, and the devil take the hindmost.' To this they have paid no attention."By seven his panic about Hanky and Panky ended, for if they had not come by this time, they were not likely to do so. Not knowing that they were staying at the Mayor's, he had rather settled it that they would now stroll up to the place where they had left their hoard and bring it down as soon as night had fallen. And it is quite possible that they might have found some excuse for doing this, when dinner was over, if their hostess had not undesignedly hindered them by telling them about the Sunchild. When the conversation recorded in the preceding chapter was over, it was too late for them to make any plausible excuse for leaving the house;we may be sure, therefore, that much more had been said than Yram and George were able to remember and report to my father.

After another stroll about Fairmead, during which he saw nothing but what on a larger scale he had already seen at Sunch'ston, he returned to his inn at about half-past eight, and ordered supper in a public room that corresponded with the coffee-room of an English hotel.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 千少不好惹

    千少不好惹

    春眠不觉晓,我是楠他嫂。此文写的是明星与狗仔之间发生的小故事,不定hebe,内容纯属虚构,不喜勿喷。再声明,这文我在贴吧写过,不是抄袭。有允许贴吧小友转载此文,名字,易烊千玺不好惹。谢谢,看文愉快。
  • 我每周随机一个新系统

    我每周随机一个新系统

    【日常文,轻松搞笑,暴爽不尬!】地摊儿贴膜青年意外开启【无限生成系统】!系统每周随机生成一个新系统!!“叮…恭喜宿主开启【神棍系统】,奖励市区酒吧街一条!”“叮…恭喜宿主开启【神豪系统】,奖励天仙未婚妻!”“叮…,恭喜宿主开启【医神系统】,奖励上市医药集团!”“叮…,恭喜宿主开启【无敌系统】,奖励夏威夷旅游海岛一座!”“叮…,恭喜宿主开启【文圣系统】,奖励全球多所顶级大学名誉校长职位!” “叮…,恭喜宿主开启【签到系统】,奖励…………” 从此徐修焕发第二春,随即系统加持,体验神棍、大亨、医圣、教师、外卖小哥…各种职业,豪横人生就此开始! 书友催更交流(声讨作者)群:1030391983,期待各位大佬、巨佬、超巨佬、超超巨佬…加入。
  • 神的诞生日

    神的诞生日

    泠,他原本是一个“传龙”(游戏)的绝世高手,英雄榜上无人撼动的第一名,可因为一次“意外”的残疾导致不能继续纵横在这个游戏中,当世人在为他的退出而叹息时,世界开始巨变,地球开始变得无比巨大,人类的科技无法起到作用时,这个笼罩万物的游戏开始了,泠可否在这个世界立足呢。
  • 坐看云卷云疏

    坐看云卷云疏

    我愿意为你与世界为敌,只要你还在我身边。
  • 恶魔校草遇之则难脱身

    恶魔校草遇之则难脱身

    高中开学,她去异国学院报道,在路上听着音乐不小心撞到慕少然后奶茶也就。。。。“对不起对不起”说着拿出纸来帮慕少擦,但是呢,结果越擦越脏,“滚开”慕少薄唇一张一合,夏琳歆抬头看见一张犹如鬼斧神工的脸,不由得感叹:“这年头,帅哥都是没礼貌的吗?如果是,那就悲哀了。“保安,把她轰走”慕少说着潇洒走开了,而琳歆才刚刚回过神来却面临着两个魁梧的保安,“不要啊~”
  • 罪仙妖魇

    罪仙妖魇

    羽漓殇,断送了第四个太阳纪的亚特兰提斯,与盖亚决裂,转世于莲澈星。灵邪之战在许久的沉寂之后再一次濒临爆发,而,作为转世背负了暗灵罪羽的月浅辰却还是个孩子……因为罪劫所以必将背负妖刃的梦魇,因为是仙灵所以会被天则守护……但那只是个温柔而安静的少年,秉承了神羽世家一贯守护家族的信念,却仍然抱着希望,想要做到最好,想要什么人都不会被伤害、只是,作为前世的仙,并不只是在意识的深处无知无觉。他怎么可能坐视转世之体那么天真下去?即使你是我的半身,也不允许你奢望。没有人,能够成全所有的幸福……
  • 画眉深浅入时无

    画眉深浅入时无

    世界上的人那么多,遇上一个对的人该有多难?这样的想法使梁梦秋以为自己会打一辈子的光棍,不想一次在大街上闲晃,捡回一个落魄的男人回家……这个男人模样俊,厨艺好,人品佳,实在是父母眼中好夫婿的人选。绕了很多弯,梁梦秋这才发现,她真的是对这个她捡回来的男人动心了……情节虚构,切勿模仿
  • 诱易

    诱易

    他,一个腹黑漫画家。就因为太逗,穿越到自己的漫画中去;而他一个本是配角的逗逼,因为他,逆转剧情......
  • 墨染华发

    墨染华发

    你的青春是否曾经拥有,但已失去。青春是离别,又重逢,是舍弃多年后,再次携手前行。我们是否还有这样对青春的追忆,或是追悔……有这么一个修士的世界,有这么一群异能的青年,在地球村,会演绎出怎样的感动?看着他们,转而回忆怜惜或是憧憬祈愿着Ta的青春,你的青春……(都市-修真-青春-热血)
  • 释摩诃般若波罗蜜经觉意三昧

    释摩诃般若波罗蜜经觉意三昧

    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。