登陆注册
36833900000020

第20章

"I wish it was. Oh, Francis is a friend, I know. He thinks me an odd old thing, but he likes me. Other people don't. And I can't see why they should. I'm sure it's my fault. It's because I'm heavy. You said I was, yourself.""Then I was a great ass," remarked Aunt Barbara. "You wouldn't be heavy with people who understood you. You aren't heavy with me, for instance; but, my dear, lead isn't in it when you are with your father.""But what am I to do, if I'm like that?" asked the boy.

She held up her large, fat hand, and marked the points off on her fingers.

"Three things," she said. "Firstly, get away from people who don't understand you, and whom, incidentally, you don't understand.

Secondly, try to see how ridiculous you and everybody else always are; and, thirdly, which is much the most important, don't think about yourself. If I thought about myself I should consider how old and fat and ugly I am. I'm not ugly, really; you needn't be foolish and tell me so. I should spoil my life by trying to be young, and only eating devilled codfish and drinking hot plum-juice, or whatever is the accepted remedy for what we call obesity.

We're all odd old things, as you say. We can only get away from that depressing fact by doing something, and not thinking about ourselves. We can all try not to be egoists. Egoism is the really heavy quality in the world."She paused a moment in this inspired discourse and whistled to Og, who had stretched his weary limbs across a bed of particularly fine geraniums.

"There!" she said, pointing, "if your dog had done that, you would be submerged in depression at the thought of how vexed your father would be. That would be because you are thinking of the effect on yourself. As it's my dog that has done it--dear me, they do look squashed now he has got up--you don't really mind about your father's vexation, because you won't have to think about yourself.

That is wise of you; if you were a little wiser still, you would picture to yourself how ridiculous I shall look apologising for Og.

Kindly kick him, Michael; he will understand. Naughty! And as for your not having any friends, that would be exceedingly sad, if you had gone the right way to get them and failed. But you haven't.

You haven't even gone among the people who could be your friends.

Your friends, broadly speaking, must like the same sort of things as you. There must be a common basis. You can't even argue with somebody, or disagree with somebody unless you have a common ground to start from. If I say that black is white, and you think it is blue, we can't get on. It leads nowhere. And, finally--"She turned round and faced him directly.

"Finally, don't be so cross, my dear," she said.

"But am I?" asked he.

"Yes. You don't know it, or else probably, since you are a very decent fellow, you wouldn't be. You expect not to be liked, and that is cross of you. A good-humoured person expects to be liked, and almost always is. You expect not to be understood, and that's dreadfully cross. You think your father doesn't understand you; no more he does, but don't go on thinking about it. You think it is a great bore to be your father's only son, and wish Francis was instead. That's cross; you may think it's fine, but it isn't, and it is also ungrateful. You can have great fun if you will only be good-tempered!""How did you know that--about Francis, I mean?" asked Michael.

"Does it happen to be true? Of course it does. Every cross young man wishes he was somebody else.""No, not quite that," began Michael.

"Don't interrupt. It is sufficiently accurate. And you think about your appearance, my dear. It will do quite well. You might have had two noses, or only one eye, whereas you have two rather jolly ones. And do try to see the joke in other people, Michael.

You didn't see the joke in your interview last night with your father. It must have been excruciatingly funny. I don't say it wasn't sad and serious as well. But it was funny too; there were points."Michael shook his head.

"I didn't see them," he said.

"But I should have, and I should have been right. All dignity is funny, simply because it is sham. When dignity is real, you don't know it's dignity. But your father knew he was being dignified, and you knew you were being dignified. My dear, what a pair of you!"Michael frowned.

"But is nothing serious, then?" he asked. "Surely it was serious enough last night. There was I in rank rebellion to my father, and it vexed him horribly; it did more, it grieved him."She laid her hand on Michael's knee.

"As if I didn't know that!" she said. "We're all sorry for that, though I should have been much sorrier if you had given in and ceased to vex him. But there it is! Accept that, and then, my dear, swiftly apply yourself to perceive the humour of it. And now, about your plans!""I shall go to Baireuth on Wednesday, and then on to Munich," began Michael.

"That, of course. Perhaps you may find the humour of a Channel crossing. I look for it in vain. Yet I don't know. . . . The man who puts on a yachting-cap, and asks if there's a bit of a sea on.

It proves to be the case, and he is excessively unwell. I must look out for him next time I cross. And then?""Then I shall settle in town and study. Oh, here's my father coming home."Lord Ashbridge approached down the terrace. He stopped for a moment at the desecrated geranium bed, saw the two sitting together, and turned at right angles and went into the house.

Almost immediately a footman came out with a long dog-lead and advanced hesitatingly to Og. Og was convinced that he had come to play with him, and crouched and growled and retreated and advanced with engaging affability. Out of the windows of the library looked Lord Ashbridge's baleful face. . . . Aunt Barbara swayed out of her chair, and laid a trembling hand on Michael's shoulder.

"I shall go and apologise for Og," she said. "I shall do it quite sincerely, my dear. But there are points."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 焚心天灵域

    焚心天灵域

    我从小就是个孤儿,长大以后我成为了有钱人,可是我却得了疾病,我吧所以的钱都拿去做慈善了,为了让更多孤儿能找到归家的地方。我的病情越来越严重,那天,我眼前一黑,只听见耳边向起一句话,我想挣开眼镜却睁不开,只听见耳边有女人咋谈话........
  • 九劫元凤

    九劫元凤

    倒霉的富二代陈风遭遇天降横祸后来到了星域,在星域他接手了更加倒霉的林风辰的身躯。厄运?流放?去他的倒霉体质,无论什么也挡不住我林风辰登临巅峰的决心,待我九劫度过,我定要拿回属于我的一切!
  • 快穿攻略:炮灰要翻身

    快穿攻略:炮灰要翻身

    系统:“我的目的很简单,就是维护这世界的爱与和平。”林枳:“????”(你怎么不说你是超级英雄会飞呢?)系统:“既然你同意了那么我们就赶紧来签条约吧。”林枳:“......”(刀呢我的刀呢)就这样林枳带着二缺系统开始维护这世界的爱与和平。
  • 群史争霸

    群史争霸

    这片浩瀚大世上将星璀璨、群英荟萃。猛将能以一敌万,千军辟易。统帅可统筹布阵,锻造军魂。谋士有呼风唤雨,借助大势。文臣亦安定一方,风调雨顺。战国群雄、汉初三杰、云台二十八将、五虎上将、四猛八大锤、开隋九老、隋唐十八好汉、凌烟阁二十四功臣、梁山一百零八将、大明开国六公爵......方牧苏醒前世记忆,发现身边有很多耳熟能详的名字。我爷爷是方腊,我爹是方天定,他们已经在培养私兵了。定乾坤,铸圣朝,从篡宋开始。 —— 群号:1072163100
  • 星际垦荒者

    星际垦荒者

    因还不起欠款,罗浩被迫与一个神秘组织签订协议,为他们在某一个星球上劳作十年。在这期间,他与他的搭档创造出了一个神奇的生物。从而开启了他们放牧星空的旅途。
  • 系统之异界最强

    系统之异界最强

    他是一个无业游民,不学无术,天天泡网吧,总是在幻想能变成一个富翁,有许多的美女,然后他就悲剧了。命运的安排,阴差阳错的他,在捡一个打火机时,他竟穿越到了异界。“叮”恭喜你获得异界万能系统,请为系统命名。“去尼玛的什么系统,滚犊子。”恭喜你获得“去尼玛的什么系统。”祝你在异界玩得开心,过得愉快。
  • 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!
  • 苍野录小河淌水

    苍野录小河淌水

    申卯年夏,余寄居哀牢读陶渊明,一朝,方把书阶下院中,乃见天云四塞,青青兮欲雨,余贪屋外之明与所望群山之壮,乃惜时而犹把凳于院读,诵记之中,忽望得南山之巅,烟云踟蹰,往来翻覆,雨电俱下,朦胧飘渺,似有悲怨,排泄不尽,乃指之以问主人此何处也,何以是异哉?时主人自山下河边负柴而归,于足前开柴,主人者,一叟耳,与余同行师事于苍野,乃要余之家,余思家中事少,乃应之以读山中。其乃住斧,顾之曰:“此则天生营也,清末咸丰时,彝家兵马大元帅李大司防起事之地也,山雨欲来,其巅必大作,以其神灵耳,吾民皆敬之,至其生辰死祭,无论彝汉,皆上山而聚也,彼时山头人满,日夜歌舞,盛莫能言也。”
  • 诉人间悲剧

    诉人间悲剧

    失去了一切,心犹在。梦还在。卷土重来,昔日少年已不再。诉说世间悲剧。
  • 飘零的灵魂

    飘零的灵魂

    讲述了主人公自上世纪八十年代致本世纪初的人生经历