Kipps by H. G. Wells (bts books to read TXT) đ
The solid work varied, according to the prevailing mood of Mr. Woodrow. Sometimes that was a despondent lethargy, copy-books were distributed or sums were 'set,' or the great mystery of book-keeping was declared in being, and beneath these superficial activities lengthy conversations and interminable guessing games with marbles went on, while Mr. Woodrow sat inanimate at his desk, heedless of school affairs, staring in front of him at unseen things. At times his face was utterly inane; at times it had an expression of stagnant amazement, as if he saw before his eyes with pitiless c
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Ann opened her lips and did not speak.
âWhat?â asked Kipps.
âNothing,â said Ann, âonly I did want it to be a little âouse, Artie. I wanted it to be a âandy little âouse, jest for us.â
Kippsâ face was suddenly flushed and obstinate. He took up the curiously smelling tracings again. âIâm not agoing to be looked down upon,â he said. âItâs not only Uncle Iâm thinking of!â
Ann stared at him.
Kipps went on. âI wonât âave that young Walshingham fâr instance, sneering and sniffing at me. Making out at if we was all wrong. I see âim yesterday⊠Nor Coote neether. Iâm as goodâweâre as goodâwhateverâs âappened.â
Silence, and the rustle of plans.
He looked up and saw Annâs eyes bright with tears. For a moment the two stared at one another.
âWeâll âave the big âouse,â said Ann, with a gulp. âI didnât think of that, Artie.â
Her aspect was fierce and resolute, and she struggled with emotion. âWeâll âave the big âouse,â she repeated. âThey shanât say I dragged you down wiv meânone of them shanât say that. Iâve thoughtâ Iâve always been afraid of that.â
Kipps looked again at the plan, and suddenly the grand house had become very grand indeed. He blew.
âNo, Artie. None of them shanât say that,â and, with something blind in her motions, Ann tried to turn the plan round to herâŠ
After all, Kipps thought, there might be something to say for the milder project⊠But he had gone so far that now he did not know how to say it.
And so the plans went out to the builders, and in a little while Kipps was committed to two thousand five hundred poundsâ worth of building. But then, you know, he had an income of twelve hundred a year.
8
It is extraordinary what minor difficulties cluster about housebuilding.
âI say, Ann,â remarked Kipps one day. âWe shall âave to call this little âouse by a name. I was thinking of âOme Cottage.â But I dunno whether âOme Cottage is quite the thing like. All these little fishermanâs places are called Cottages.â
âI like âCottage,â said Ann.
âItâs got eleven bedrooms, yâseeâ, said Kipps. âI donât see âow you call it a cottage with more bedrooms than four. Propâly speaking, itâs a Large Villa. Propâly itâs almost a Big âOuse. Leastways a âOuse.â
âWell,â said Ann, âif you must call it VillaâHome Villa⊠I wish it wasnât.â
Kipps meditated.
âOw about Eureka Villa?â he said, raising his voice.
âWhatâs Eureka?â
âItâs a name,â he said. âThere used to be Eureka Dress Fasteners. Thereâs lots of names, come to think of it, to be got out of a shop. Thereâs Pyjama Villa. I remember that in the hosiery. No, come to think, that wouldnât do. But Maraposaâsort of oatmeal cloth, that was⊠No! Eurekaâs better.â
Ann meditated. âIt seems silly like to âave a name that donât mean much.â
âPerhaps it does,â said Kipps. âThough itâs what people âave to do.â
He became meditative. âI got it!â he cried.
âNot Oreeka!â said Ann.
âNo! There used to be a âouse at Hastings opposite our schoolâquite a big âouse it wasâSt. Annâs. Now thatââ
âNo,â said Mrs. Kipps, with decision. âThanking you kindly, but I donât have no butcher boys making game of meâŠâ
They consulted Carshot, who suggested, after some days of reflection, Waddycombe, as a graceful reminder of Kippsâ grandfather; old Kipps, who was for âUpton Manor House,â where he had once been second footman; Buggins, who favoured either a stern, simple number, âNumber Oneââif there were no other houses there, or something patriotic, as âEmpire Villaâ; and Pearce, who inclined to âSandringhamâ; but in spite of all this help they were still undecided, when amidst violent perturbations of the soul and after the most complex and difficult haggling, wranglings, fears, muddles, and goings to and fro, Kipps became the joyless owner of a freehold plot of three-eighths of an acre, and saw the turf being wheeled away from the site that should one day be his home.
1
THE Kippses sat at their midday dinner-table amidst the vestiges of rhubarb pie, and discussed two post cards the one oâclock post had brought. It was a rare, bright moment of sunshine in a wet and windy day in the March that followed their marriage. Kipps was attired in a suit of brown, with a tie of fashionable green, while Ann wore one of those picturesque loose robes that are usually associated with sandals and advanced ideas. But there werenât any sandals on Ann or any advanced ideas, and the robe had come quite recently through the counsels of Mrs. Sid. Pornick. âItâs Art-like,â said Kipps, but giving way. âItâs more comfortable,â said Ann. The room looked out by French windows upon a little patch of green and the Hythe parade. The parade was all shiny wet with rain, and the green-gray sea tumbled and tumbled between parade and sky.
The Kipps furniture, except for certain chromolithographs of Kippsâ incidental choice, that struck a quiet note amidst the wall-paper, had been tactfully forced by an expert salesman, and it was in a style of mediocre elegance. There was a sideboard of carved oak that had only one faultâit reminded Kipps at times of woodcarving, and its panel of bevelled glass now reflected the back of his head. On its shelf were two books from Parsonsâ Library, each with a âplaceâ marked by a slip of paper; neither of the Kippses could have told you the title of either book they read, much less the authorâs name. There was an ebonised overmantel set with phials and pots of brilliant colour, each duplicated by looking-glass, and bearing also a pair of Japanese jars made in Birmingham, a wedding-present from Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Pornick, and several sumptuous Chinese fans. And there was a Turkey carpet of great richness. In addition to these modern exploits of Messrs. Bunt and Bubble, there were two inactive tall clocks, whose extreme dilapidation appeal to the connoisseur; a terrestrial and a celestial globe, the latter deeply indented; a number of good old iron-moulded and dusty books; and a stuffed owl, wanting one (easily replaceable) glass eye, obtained by the exertions of Uncle Kipps. The table equipage was as much as possible like Mrs. Bindon Bottingâs, only more costly, and in addition there were green and crimson wine-glassesâ though the Kippses never drank wineâŠ
Kipps turned to the more legible of his two post cards again.
âUnavoidably prevented from seeinâ me to-day,â âe says. I like âis cheek. After I give âim âis start and everything.â
He blew.
âE certainly treats you a bit orf and,â said Ann.
Kipps gave vent to his dislike of young Walshingham.
âHeâs getting too big for âis britches,â he said. âIâm beginning to wish she âad brought an action for breach. Ever since âe said the wouldnât, âeâs seemed to think Iâve got no right to spend my own money.â
âEâs never liked your building the âouse,â said Ann.
Kipps displayed wrath. âWhat the goodness âas it got to do wiv âim?â
âOvermantel, indeed!â he added; âOvermantel!⊠âE tries that on with meâIâll tell âim something âe wonât like.â
He took up the second card. âDashed if I can read a word of it. I can just make out Chitâlow at the end, and thatâs all.â
He scrutinised it. âItâs like some one in a fit writing. This here might be W-H-A-Tâwhat. P-R-I-C-EâI got it! What price Harry now? It was a sort of saying of âis. I expect âeâs either done something or not done something towards starting that play, Ann.â
âI expect thatâs about it,â said Ann.
Kipps grunted with effort. âI canât read the rest,â he said at last, ânohow.â
A thoroughly annoying post. He pitched the card on the table, stood up and went to the window, where Ann, after a momentary reconnaissance at Chitterlowâs hieroglyphics, came to join him.
âWonder what I shall do this afternoon,â said Kipps, with his hands deep in his pockets.
He produced and lit a cigarette.
âGo for a walk, I sâpose,â said Ann.
âI been for a walk this morning.â
âSâpose I must go for another,â he added, after an interval.
They regarded the windy waste of sea for a space.
âWonder why it is âe wonât see me,â said Kipps, returning to the problem of young Walshingham. âItâs all lies about âis being too busy.â
Ann offered no solution.
âRain again!â said Kippsâas the lash of the little drops stung the window.
âOo, bother!â said Kipps, âyou got to do something. Look âere, Ann! Iâll go orf for a regâlar tramp through the rain, up by Saltwood, round by Newington, over the camp, and so round and back, and see âow theyâre getting on about the âouse. See? And look âere!âyou get Gwendolen to go out a bit before I come back. If itâs still rainy, she can easy go round and see âer sister. Then weâll âave a bit of tea, with teacakeâall butteryâsee? Toce it ourselves, pârâaps. Eh?â
âI dessay I can find something to do in the âouse,â said Ann, considering. âYouâll take your mackintosh and leggings, I sâpose? Youâll get wet without your mackintosh over those roads.â
âRight-o,â said Kipps; and went to ask Gwendolen for his brown leggings and his other pair of boots.
2
Things conspired to demoralise Kipps that afternoon.
When he got outside the house everything looked so wet under the drive of the south-wester that he abandoned the prospect of the clay lanes towards Newington altogether, and turned east to Folkestone along the Seabrook digue. His mackintosh flapped about him, the rain stung his cheek; for a time he felt a hardy man. And then as abruptly the rain ceased and the wind fell, and before he was through Sandgate High Street it was a bright spring day. And there was Kipps in his mackintosh and squeaky leggings, looking like a fool!
Inertia carried him another mile to the Leas, and there the whole world was pretending there had never been such a thing as rainâever. There wasnât a cloud in the sky; except for an occasional puddle, the asphalte paths looked as dry as a bone. A smartly dressed man, in one of those overcoats that look like ordinary cloth, and are really most deceitfully and unfairly waterproof, passed him and glanced at the stiff folds of his mackintosh. âDemn!â said Kipps. His mackintosh swished against his leggings, his leggings piped and whistled over his boot-tops.
âWhy do I never get anything right?â Kipps asked of a bright, implacable universe.
Nice old ladies passed him, refined people with tidy umbrellas, bright, beautiful, supercilious-looking children. Of course, the right thing for such a day as this was a light overcoat and an umbrella. A child might have known that. He had them at home, but how could one explain that? He decided to turn down by the Harvey monument and escape through Clifton Gardens towards the hills. And thereby he came upon Coote.
He already felt the most abject and propitiatory of social outcasts when he came upon Coote, and Coote finished him. He passed within a yard of Coote. Coote was coming along towards the Leas, and when Kipps saw him his legs hesitated about their office, and he seemed to himself to stagger about all over the footpath. At the sight of him Coote started visibly. Then a sort of rigor vitae passed through his frame, his jaw protruded and errant bubbles of air seemed to escape and run about beneath his loose skin. (Seemed, I sayâI am perfectly well aware that there is really connective tissue in Coote, as in all of us, to prevent anything
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