登陆注册
26196100000088

第88章 THE FIRST(4)

The real progress, Remington, is a graver thing and a painfuller thing and a slower thing altogether.Look! THAT"--and he pointed to where under a boarding in the light of a gas lamp a dingy prostitute stood lurking--" was in Babylon and Nineveh.Your little lot make believe there won't be anything of the sort after this Parliament! They're going to vanish at a few top notes from Altiora Bailey! Remington!--it's foolery.It's prigs at play.It's make-believe, make-believe! Your people there haven't got hold of things, aren't beginning to get hold of things, don't know anything of life at all, shirk life, avoid life, get in little bright clean rooms and talk big over your bumpers of lemonade while the Night goes by outside--untouched.Those Crampton fools slink by all this,"--he waved at the woman again--"pretend it doesn't exist, or is going to be banished root and branch by an Act to keep children in the wet outside public-houses.Do you think they really care, Remington? I don't.It's make-believe.What they want to do, what Lewis wants to do, what Mrs.Bunting Harblow wants her husband to do, is to sit and feel very grave and necessary and respected on the Government benches.They think of putting their feet out like statesmen, and tilting shiny hats with becoming brims down over their successful noses.Presentation portrait to a club at fifty.

That's their Reality.That's their scope.They don't, it's manifest, WANT to think beyond that.The things there ARE, Remington, they'll never face! the wonder and the depth of life,--lust, and the night-sky,--pain."

"But the good intention," I pleaded, "the Good Will!""Sentimentality," said Britten."No Good Will is anything but dishonesty unless it frets and burns and hurts and destroys a man.

That lot of yours have nothing but a good will to think they have good will.Do you think they lie awake of nights searching their hearts as we do? Lewis? Crampton? Or those neat, admiring, satisfied little wives? See how they shrank from the probe!""We all," I said, "shrink from the probe.""God help us!" said Britten....

"We are but vermin at the best, Remington," he broke out," and the greatest saint only a worm that has lifted its head for a moment from the dust.We are damned, we are meant to be damned, coral animalculae building upward, upward in a sea of damnation.But of all the damned things that ever were damned, your damned shirking, temperate, sham-efficient, self-satisfied, respectable, make-believe, Fabian-spirited Young Liberal is tbe utterly damnedest."He paused for a moment, and resumed in an entirely different note:

"Which is why I was so surprised, Remington, to find YOU in this set!""You're just the old plunger you used to be, Britten," I said."You're going too far with all your might for the sake of the damns.

Like a donkey that drags its cart up a bank to get thistles.

There's depths in Liberalism--"

"We were talking about Liberals."

"Liberty!"

"Liberty! What do YOOR little lot know of liberty?""What does any little lot know of liberty?""It waits outside, too big for our understanding.Like the night and the stars.And lust, Remington! lust and bitterness! Don't Iknow them? with all the sweetness and hope of life bitten and trampled, the dear eyes and the brain that loved and understood--and my poor mumble of a life going on! I'm within sight of being a drunkard, Remington! I'm a failure by most standards! Life has cut me to the bone.But I'm not afraid of it any more.I've paid something of the price, I've seen something of the meaning."He flew off at a tangent."I'd rather die in Delirium Tremens," he cried, "than be a Crampton or a Lewis....""Make-believe.Make-believe." The phrase and Britten's squat gestures haunted me as I walked homeward alone.I went to my room and stood before my desk and surveyed papers and files and Margaret's admirable equipment of me.

I perceived in the lurid light of Britten's suggestions that so it was Mr.George Alexander would have mounted a statesman's private room....

3

I was never at any stage a loyal party man.I doubt if party will ever again be the force it was during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.Men are becoming increasingly constructive and selective, less patient under tradition and the bondage of initial circumstances.As education becomes more universal and liberating, men will sort themselves more and more by their intellectual temperaments and less and less by their accidental associations.

The past will rule them less; the future more.It is not simply party but school and college and county and country that lose their glamour.One does not hear nearly as much as our forefathers did of the "old Harrovian," "old Arvonian," "old Etonian" claim to this or that unfair advantage or unearnt sympathy.Even the Scotch and the Devonians weaken a little in their clannishness.A widening sense of fair play destroys such things.They follow freemasonry down--freemasonry of which one is chiefly reminded nowadays in England by propitiatory symbols outside shady public-houses....

There is, of course, a type of man which clings very obstinately to party ties.These are the men with strong reproductive imaginations and no imaginative initiative, such men as Cladingbowl, for example, or Dayton.They are the scholars-at-large in life.For them the fact that the party system has been essential in the history of England for two hundred years gives it an overwhelming glamour.

They have read histories and memoirs, they see the great grey pile of Westminster not so much for what it is as for what it was, rich with dramatic memories, populous with glorious ghosts, phrasing itself inevitably in anecdotes and quotations.It seems almost scandalous that new things should continue to happen, swamping with strange qualities the savour of these old associations.

同类推荐
  • 指要钞

    指要钞

    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。
  • 礼忏文

    礼忏文

    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。
  • 阿惟越致遮经

    阿惟越致遮经

    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。
  • 游雁宕山日记

    游雁宕山日记

    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。
  • 佛说须达经

    佛说须达经

    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
  • 宿主大人求求您

    宿主大人求求您

    悠然死了,她的灵魂飘了半天也没被鬼差领走,于是她想,自己是要重生呢还是穿越呢?结果以为得了一个系统,要进行的是快穿文,没想到自己才是系统!她只是一堆宝藏的看门人罢了。还得尽快找一个宿主,不然要被抹杀。天下有像她那么悲惨的孩纸吗?某系统:“宿主大人求求您,快做任务吧”某宿主瞥了一眼系统,默然不语。“宿主大人,其实,其实我可以以身相许的。”
  • 你是受吗

    你是受吗

    已弃文,别入坑:)若喜文字,请关注我即将出的新文《庄生梦蝶》:)
  • 《前世之缘:倾世心》

    《前世之缘:倾世心》

    是意外还是命运的安排,让她莫名的穿越到这个历史上没有记载的时代。他,容颜似玉琢。冰冷的大殿上,他抱着她,对她说∶〝我愿空设后宫,今生只宠爱你一人。〞;他,心机似海深。得了天下,终是失去了她;她,在这陌生的时代获得了渴望已久的真爱,但也正是这真爱让她失去了生命中最重要的那个人。幸福从指间滑走,还未来得及握住便已一无所有。【文虐,请自备纸巾】
  • 百变大系统

    百变大系统

    “你想脚踩领导,打脸富二代,手领美女,身后跟着百位小弟吗?那就签约本系统吧”“我要成为一代万人瞩目的神豪”
  • 再说一次我爱你

    再说一次我爱你

    十四岁那年,他许她诺言,因此她从没想过有天会与他天各一边。六年前,他的离开,让她的生命从此落寞,于是他们的电影就只剩她一人唱独角戏。是她想得太远,坚持她一直的执着——她早已在她心底刻下了他的名字,伴随她到天涯海角。六年后,他回到她的身边,让她的心再次沉沦在他的眼里……于是,当他再次对她说“我爱你”的时候,她在劫难逃,只能陪他跌跌撞撞到永远。
  • 无极武境

    无极武境

    铭侠侣诗画,共武墨笙箫,任世间风尘烟雨,不惊波澜,自当纵马逍遥。古老的无极世界,退隐侠客与神秘婴儿,诸看官细细瞧来。看看神秘婴儿的成长之路、行侠之路、复仇之路!没有绚烂的魔法,没有绮异的斗技,有的只是朴素的故事。处女作望大家多多关照!收藏哦~收藏哦~收藏哦~
  • 血海漫步

    血海漫步

    愁啊!别人因为没有秘籍修炼而发愁,其实哥也愁!哥愁的是秘籍太多,不知道用哪本好,会不会过于打击人?忧啊!别人因为无法参透功法而忧虑,其实哥也忧!哥忧的是大圆满境界太容易领悟了,会不会太过于嚣张了?当然,哥也有别人所没有的烦恼,哥的绝世体质太难修炼了,不吃天材地宝完全停步不前。你说,哥惨不惨……(哎,别急啊!哥还没说完呢,记得收藏推荐啊!)
  • 少女决

    少女决

    堂堂席大少爷追妻居然出问题。“美女,我们谈个恋爱吧?”“呵呵!”“美女,我有车,有房,有颜值。是世界上的钻石好好男人。”“庸俗。”“......”某日,席少手捧鲜花、钻戒,单膝跪地“宝贝儿,你是我的唯一,我的心脏,嫁给我吧?”“no——”“why?”某女无奈的回答:“大叔,我还没成年,求你放过我吧?”哦呜~~没成年,没关系,他陪她度过青春年华。
  • 州县提纲

    州县提纲

    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。
  • 孤明

    孤明

    人生辗转,淡薄辛甜。转瞬百年身,不知是何年。