Mike Fletcher, George Moore [reading books for 4 year olds .TXT] 📗
- Author: George Moore
Book online «Mike Fletcher, George Moore [reading books for 4 year olds .TXT] 📗». Author George Moore
Impenetrable Mystery, And Lo, They That Have Recognized The Radiance Of
The Sinaic Splendor Expired, As They Caught A Lightening Glimpse Of This
Crimson Light Enveloping The Sinai Of Our Revelation. Thus Hath He Who Is
The Beauty Of The All-Merciful Come Down In The Clouds Of His Testimony,
And The Decree Accomplished By Virtue Of The Will Of God, The
All-Glorious, The All-Wise.
Say: Step Out Of Thy Holy Chamber, O Maid Of Heaven, Inmate Of The Exalted
Paradise! Drape Thyself In Whatever Manner Pleaseth Thee In The Silken
Vesture Of Immortality, And Put On, In The Name Of The All-Glorious, The
Broidered Robe Of Light. Hear, Then, The Sweet, The Wondrous Accent Of The
Voice That Cometh From The Throne Of Thy Lord, The Inaccessible, The Most
High. Unveil Thy Face, And Manifest The Beauty Of The Black-Eyed Damsel,
And Suffer Not The Servants Of God To Be Deprived Of The Light Of Thy
Shining Countenance. Grieve Not If Thou Hearest The Sighs Of The Dwellers
Of The Earth, Or The Voice Of The Lamentation Of The Denizens Of Heaven.
Leave Them To Perish On The Dust Of Extinction. Let Them Be Reduced To
Nothingness, Inasmuch As The Flame Of Hatred Hath Been Kindled Within
Their Breasts. Intone, Then, Before The Face Fellow So-And-So Is; You Do Meet A Nice Lot
Of Fellows In The Temple, Don't You?" It Seemed Almost Sufficient
That A Man Should Belong To The Temple For L'estrange To Find Him
Admirable. The Dinners In Hall Were Especially Delightful. Between
The Courses He Looked In Admiration On The Portraits And Old Oak
Carvings, And The Armorial Bearings, And Would Tell How One Bencher
Had Been Debarred From Election As Treasurer Because He Had, On Three
Occasions, Attended Dinner Without Partaking Of Any Food. Such An
Insult To The Kitchen Could Not Be Forgiven. L'estrange Was Full Of
Such Stories, And He Relished Their Historical Flavour As A Gourmet
An Unusually Successful Piece Of Cooking. He Regarded The Temple And
Its Associations With Love.
When He Had Friends To Dinner In His Rooms The Dinner Was Always
Brought From The Hall; He Ordered It Himself In The Large Spacious
Kitchen, Which He Duly Admired, And Prying About Amid The Various
Meats, He Chose With Care, And When Told That What He Desired Could
Not Be Obtained That Day, He Continued His Search Notwithstanding. He
Related That On One Occasion He Discovered A Greengage Pie, After
Many Assurances That There Was No Such Thing In The Kitchen. If He
Was With A Friend He Laid His Hand On His Shoulder, And Pointing Out
An Inscription, He Said, "Now One Thing I Notice About The Temple Is
That Never Is An Occasion Missed Of Putting Up An Inscription; And
Note The Legal Character Of The Inscriptions, How Carefully It Is
Explained, That, For Instance, The Cloisters, Although They Are For
The Use Of The Inner As Well As The Middle Temple, Yet It Was The
Middle Temple That Paid To Have Them Put Up, And Therefore Owns The
Property." L'estrange Always Spoke Of The Gardens As "Our Gardens,"
Of The Church As "Our Church." He Was An Authority On All That
Related To The Temple, And He Delighted In A Friend In Whom He Might
Confide; And To Walk About The Courts With Hall Or Sands, Stopping
Now And Then To Note Some Curious Piece Of Sculpture Or Date, And
Forthwith To Relate An Anecdote That Brought Back Some Of The
Fragrance And Colour Of Old Time, And To Tell How He Intended To Work
Such Curious Facts Into The Book He Was Writing On The Temple, Was
The Essence And The Soul Of This Dreamy Man's Little Life.
Saturday Night Is The Night Of Dalliance In The Temple, And Not
Unfrequently On Sunday Morning, Leaving A Lady Love, L'estrange Would
Go To Church--Top Hat, Umbrella, And Prayer-Book--And Having A Sense
Of Humour, He Was Amused By The Incongruity.
"I Have Left The Accursed Thing Behind Me," He Once Said To Mr.
Collier, And By Such Facetiousness Had Seriously Annoyed The Immense
And Most Staid Mr. Collier.
A Gaunt, Hollow-Eyed Man Was He, Worn To A Thread By Diabetes; And To
Keep The Disease In Check, Strictly Dieted. His Appearance Was So
Suggestive Of Illness, That Whenever He Was Present The Conversation
Always Turned On What He Might Eat And What He Must Refrain From
Touching. A Large, Gray-Skinned Man, Handsome Somewhat Like A Figure
Of Melancholy Carved Out Of Limestone. Since He Had Left Oxford,
Where He Had Taken A Double First, He Had Failed--At The Bar, In
Chapter 7 Pg 83Literature, And In Love. It Was Said That He Had Once Written An
Absurd Letter Asking A Lady, Who Hoped To Marry A Duke, To Go To
South America With Him. This Letter Had Been His Only Adventure.
He Was Like A Bookcase, A Store Of Silent Learning, With This
Difference--From The Bookcase Much May Be Extracted, From Mr. Edmund
Collier Nothing. He Reminded You Of A Dry Well, A London Fog, An
Abandoned Quarry, The Desert Of Sahara, And The North Pole; Of All
Dull And Lugubrious Things He Seemed The Type. Nature Had Not
Afflicted Him With Passions Nor Any Original Thought, He Therefore
Lived An Exemplary Existence, His Mind Fortified With Exemplary
Opinions, Doctrines, And Old Saws.
"I Wonder If He Is Alive," Mike Had Once Said.
"_Hé, Hé, Tout Au Plus_," Harding Had Replied, Sardonically.
Collier Was Now Learning Sanscrit And Writing An Article For The
_Quarterly_. L'estrange Used, As He Said, "To Dig At Him," And After
Many Exhausting Efforts Brought Up Interesting Facts To The Effect
That He Had Just Finished His Treatise On The Greek Participle, And
Was About To Launch A Volume Of Verses Mainly Addressed To Children.
Collier Had Once Possessed Considerable Property, But He Had Invested
Some In A Newspaper Of Which He Was Editor, And He Had Squandered
Much In Vague Speculation. From The Account He Gave Of His Losses It
Was Difficult To Decide Whether He Had Been Moved By Mercenary Or
Charitable Temptations. Now Only The Merest Competence Remained. He
Lived In A Small Garret Where No Solicitor Had Penetrated, Studying
Uninteresting Literatures, Dimly Interested In All That The World Did
Not Care For. He Lived In The Gloom Of Present Failure, Embittered By
The Memory Of Past Successes, Wearied With Long Illness, And
Therefore Constrained To Live Like A Hermit, Never Appearing Anywhere
Except In Hall's Rooms.
Even Mr. Horace Baird, The Recluse Of The Temple, Was Sometimes Met
In Hall's Chambers. When He Lifted His Hat, The White Locks Growing
Amid The Black, Magnificent Masses Of Hair Caught The Eye, And Set
The Mind Thinking On The Brevity Of Youth, Or Wondering What
Ill-Fortune Had Thus Done The Work Of Time. A Passing Glance Told You
That He Was Unsuccessful In His Profession And Unfortunate In His
Life, And If You Spoke To Him, An Affected Gaiety Of Manner Confirmed
The Truth Of The First Impression. Near Him Sat A Patriarchal
Barrister Who Had Travelled In The Colonies, Had Had Political
Appointments, And In Vague Hopes Of Further Political Appointments
Professed Advanced Views, Which He Endeavoured To Redeem With
Flavourless Humour. There Were Also Two Young Men Who Shared Chambers
And Took In Pupils. Fine Tales Their Laundress Told Of The State Of
Their Sitting-Room In The Morning, The Furniture Thrown About, The
Table-Cloth Drenched In Whiskey.
There Was A Young Man Whose Hobby Was Dress And Chorus Girls. There
Was A Young Man Whose Hobby Was Pet Birds; He Talked About The
Beautiful South American Bird He Had Just Bought, And He Asked You To
Come And See It Taking Its Bath In The Morning. Several Persons Were
Writing Law-Books, Which Their Authors Hoped Would Rival _Chitty On
Contracts_.
The Temple, Like A Fatherland, Never Loses Its Influence Over Its
Children. He Who Has Lived In The Temple Will Return To The Temple.
All Things Are Surrendered For The Temple. All Distances Are
Traversed To Reach The Temple. The Temple Is Never Forgotten. The
Briefless Barrister, Who Left In Despair And Became Attorney-General
Of New South Wales, Grows Homesick, Surrenders His Position, And
Returns. The Young Squire Wearies In His Beautiful Country House, And
His Heart Is Fixed In The Dingy Chambers, Which He Cannot Relinquish,
And For Which Wealth Cannot Compensate Him. Even The Poor Clerks Do
Not Forget The Temple, And On Saturday Afternoons They Prowl About
Their Old Offices, And Often Give Up Lucrative Employments. They Are
Drawn By The Temple As By A Magnet, And Must Live Again In The Shadow
Of The Old Inns. The Laundresses' Daughters Pass Into Wealthy
Chapter 7 Pg 84Domesticities, But Sooner Or Later They Return To Drudge Again In The
Temple.
"How Awfully Jolly!--I Do Enjoy An Evening Like This," Said Mike,
When The Guests Had Departed.
At That Moment A Faint Footstep Was Heard On The Landing; Hall Rushed
To See Who Was There, And Returned With Two Women. They Explained
That They Wanted A Drink. Mike Pressed Them To Make Themselves At
Home, And Hall Opened Another Bottle.
"How Comfortable You Bachelors Are Here By Yourselves," Said One.
"I Should Think We Are Just; No Fear Of Either Of Us Being Such Fools
As To Break Up Our Home By Getting Married," Replied Mike.
Sometimes Mike And Hall Returned Early From The Restaurant, And Wrote
From Eight To Eleven; Then Went Out For A Cup Of Coffee And A Prowl,
Beating Up The Strand For Women. They Stayed Out Smoking And Talking
At The Corners Till The Streets Were Empty. Once They Sent A Couple
Of Harlots To Rouse A Learned Old Gentleman Who Lived In Brick Court,
And With Bated Breath Listened From The Floor Beneath To The Dialogue
Above.
But To Continue This Life, Which He Enjoyed So Intensely That He Had
Even Lost His Desire To Gamble, Mike Was Forced To Borrow. Knowing
How Such Things Are Bruited About, Mike Chose To Go To A Woman Rather
Than To Any Of His Men Friends. Mrs. Byril Lent Him Twenty Pounds,
Wherefore He Thought It Necessary To Lecture Hall For One Whole
Evening On The Immorality Of Ever Accepting Money From Women; And He
Remained For Weeks In Idleness, Smoking And Drinking In Restaurants
And Bar Rooms, Deaf To Frank's Many Pleadings For "Copy." At Last He
Roused A Little, And Feeling He Could Do Nothing In London, Proposed
To Come And Stay With Frank In His Cottage At Marlow, And There Write
The Letters.
It Was A Bright October Afternoon, Frank Had Gone To The Station, And
Lizzie, To Appease The Baby, Had Unbuttoned Her Dress. The Little
Servant-Girl Who Assisted With The House-Work Was Busy In The
Kitchen; For The Fatted Calf Had Been Killed--That Is To Say, A Pair
Of Soles, A Steak, And A Partridge Were In Course Of Preparation.
Lizzie Thought Of The Partridge. She Had Omitted Soup From The Dinner
So That She Might Herself See To The Fish; The Steak, Unless
Something Quite Unforeseen Occurred, Annie Would Be Able To Manage,
But The Partridge! Lizzie Determined She Would Find An Excuse For
Leaving The Room; Frank Would Not Like It, But Anything Would Be
Better Than
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