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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âDelayed!â he said scornfully. âNot produced in the smalls. Or is it smells âe says? âOw can one understand that? Anyâow, âeâs âumbugging again. Somefing about the Strand. No!⊠Well, âeâs âad all the money âeâll ever get out of me!⊠Iâm done.â
He seemed to find a momentary relief in the dramatic effect of his announcement. He came near to a swagger of despair upon the hearthrug, and then suddenly came and sat down next to Ann, and rested his chin on the knuckles of his two clenched hands.
âI been a fool, Ann,â he said in a gloomy monotone. âI been a brasted fool. But itâs âard on us, all the same. Itâs âard.â
âOw was you to know?â said Ann.
â I ought to âave known. I did in a sort of way know. And âere we are! I wouldnât care so much if it was myself, but itâs you, Ann! âEre we are! Regular smashed up! And youââ
He checked at an unspeakable aggravation of their disaster. âI knew âe wasnât to be depended upon, and there I left it! And you got pay⊠Whatâs to âappen to us all, I donât know.â
He thrust out his chin and glared at fate.
âOw do you know âeâs specklated everything?â said Ann, after a silent survey of him.
âE âas,â said Kipps, irritably, holding firm to disaster.
âShe say so?â
âShe donât know, of course; but you depend upon it, thatâs it. She told me she knew something was on, and when she found âim gone and a note lef for her, she knew it was up with âim. âE went by the night boat. She wrote that telegrarf off to me straight away.â
Ann surveyed his features with tender, perplexed eyes; she had never seen him so white and drawn before, and her hand rested an inch or so away from his arm. The actual loss was still, as it were, afar from her. The immediate thing was his enormous distress.
âOw do you knowâ?â she said, and stopped. It would irritate him too much.
Kippsâ imagination was going headlong.
âSold up!â he emitted presently, and Ann flinched.
âGoing back to work, day after day. I canât stand it, Ann, I canât. And youââ
âIt donât do to think of it,â said Ann.
Presently he came upon a resolve. âI keep on thinking of it, and thinking of it, and whatâs to be done, and whatâs to be done. I shanât be any good âomeâsâarfernoon. It keeps on going round and round in my âead, and round and round. I better go for a walk or something. Iâd be no comfort to you, Ann. I should want to âowl and âammer things if I âung about âome. My fingers âr all atwitch. I shall keep on thinking âow I might âave stopped it, and callinâ myself a foolâŠâ
He looked at her between pleading and shame. It seemed like deserting her.
Ann regarded him with tear-dimmed eyes.
âYouâd better do whatâs good for you, Artie,â she said⊠âIâll be best cleaning. Itâs no use sending off Gwendolen before her month, and the top room wants turning out.â She added with a sort of grim humour, âMay as well turn it out now while I got it.â
âI better go for a walk,â said KippsâŠ
And presently our poor, exploded Kipps was marching out to bear his sudden misery. Habit turned him up the road towards his growing house, and then suddenly he perceived his directionââOh, Lor!ââand turned aside and went up the steep way to the hill-crest and the Sandling Road, and over the line by that tree-embowered Junction, and athwart the wide fields towards Postlingâa little, black, marching figureâand so up the Downs and over the hills, whither he had never gone beforeâŠ
2
He came back long after dark, and Ann met him in the passage.
âWhere you been, Artie?â she asked, with a strained note in her voice.
âI been walking and walkingâtrying to tire myself out. All the time I been thinking, what shall I do? Trying to fix something up, all out of nothing.â
âI didnât know you meant to be out all this time.â
Kipps was gripped by compunctionâŠ
âI canât think what we ought to do,â he said presently.
âYou canât do anything much, Artie, not till you hear from Mr. Bean.â
âNo. I canât do anything much. Thatâs jest it. And all this time I keep feelinâ if I donât do something the top of my âeadâll bust⊠Been trying to make up advertisements âarf the time I been outââbout finding a place; good salesman and stockkeeper, good Manchester dresses, window-dressingâLor! Fancy that all beginning again!⊠If you went to stay with Sid a bitâIf I sent every penny I got to youâI dunno! I dunno!â
When they had gone to bed there was an elaborate attempt to get to sleep⊠In one of their great waking pauses Kipps remarked in a muffled tone, âI didnât mean to frighten you, Ann, being out so late. I kepâ on walking and walking, and some âow it seemed to do me good. I went out to the âill-top ever so far beyond Stanford, and sat there ever so long, and it seemed to make me better. Jest looking over the marsh like, and seeing the sunsetâŠâ
âVery likely,â said Ann, after a long interval, âit isnât so bad as you think it is, Artie.â
âItâs bad,â said Kipps.
âVery likely, after all, it isnât quite so bad. If thereâs only a littleââ
There came another long silence.
âAnn,â said Kipps, in the quiet darkness.
âYes,â said Ann.
âAnn,â said Kipps, and stopped as though he had hastily shut a door upon speech.
âI kepâ thinking,â he said, trying againââkepâ thinking, after all, I been cross to you and a fool about thingsâ about them cards, Annâbutââhis voice shook to piecesâ âwe âave been âappy, Ann⊠someâow⊠togever.â
And with that he and then she fell into a passion of weeping.
They clung very tightly togetherâcloser than they had been since ever the first brightness of their married days turned to the gray of common life againâŠ
All the disaster in the world could not prevent their going to sleep at last with their poor little troubled heads close together on one pillow. There was nothing more to be done; there was nothing more to be thought. Time might go on with his mischiefs, but for a little while at least they still had one another.
3
Kipps returned from his second interview with Mr. Bean in a state of strange excitement. He let himself in with his latchkey and slammed the door. âAnn!â he shouted, in an unusual note; âAnn!â
Ann replied distantly.
âSomething to tell you,â said Kipps; âsomething noo!â
Ann appeared apprehensive from the kitchen.
âAnn,â he said, going before her into the little dining-room, for his news was too dignified for the passage, âvery likely, Ann, oâ Bean says, we shall âaveââ He decided to prolong the suspense. âGuess!â
âI canât, Artie.â
âThink of a lot of money!â
âA âundred pounds pârâaps?â
He spoke with immense deliberation. âOver a fousand pounds!â
Ann stared and said nothing, only went a shade whiter.
âOver,â he said. âAâmost certainly over.â
He shut the dining-room door and came forward hastily, for Ann, it was clear, meant to take this mitigation of their disaster with a complete abandonment of her self-control. She came near flopping; she fell into his arms.
âArtie,â she got to at last, and began to weep, clinging tightly to him.
âPretty near certain,â said Kipps, holding her. âA fousand pounds!â
âI said, Artie,â she wailed on his shoulder with the note of accumulated wrongs, âvery likely it wasnât so badââ
âThereâs things,â he said, when presently he came to particulars, âe couldnât touch. The noo place! Itâs freehold and paid for, and with the bit of building on it, thereâs five or six âundred pounds pârâapsâsay worf free âundred for safety.
We canât be sold up to finish it, like we thought. Oâ Bean says we can very likely sell it and get money. âE says you often get a chance to sell a âouse lessen âarf done, specially free-old. Very likely, âe says. Then thereâs Hughenden. Hughenden âasnât been mortgaged not for more than âarf its value. Thereâs a âundred or so to be got on that, and the furniture, and the rent for the summer still coming in. âE says thereâs very likely other things. A fousand pounds; thatâs what âe said. âE said it might even be moreâŠâ
They were sitting now at the table.
âIt alters everything,â said Ann.
âI been thinking that, Ann, all the way âome. I came in the motor-car. First ride Iâve had since the Smash. We neednât send off Gwendolen; leastways, not till after. You know. We neednât turn out of âereânot for a long time. What we been doing for the oâ people we can go on doing aâmost as much. And your mother!⊠I wanted to âoller, coming along. I pretty near run coming down the road by the Hotel.â
âOh, I am glad we can stop âere and be comfortable a bit,â said Ann. âI am glad for that.â
âI pretty near told the driver on the motorâonly âe was the sort wonât talkâYou see, Ann, weâll be able to start a shop, weâll be able to get into something like. All about our âaving to go back to places and thatâall that doesnât matter any more.â
For a while they abandoned themselves to ejaculating transports. Then they fell talking to shape an idea to themselves of the new prospect that opened before them.
âWe must start a sort of shop,â said Kipps, whose imagination had been working. âItâll âave to be a shop.â
âDrapery?â said Ann.
âYou want such a lot of capital for the drapery; morân a thousand pounds you want by a long wayâto start it anything like proper.â
âWell, outfitting. Like Buggins was going to do.â
Kipps glanced at that for a moment, because the idea had not occurred to him. Then he came back to his prepossession.
âWell, I thought of something else, Ann,â he said. âYou see, Iâve always thought a little bookshopâIt isnât like draperyââaving to be learnt. I thought even before this Smash Up, âow Iâd like to âave something to do, instead of always âaving âolidays always like we âave been âaving.â
She reflected.
âYou donât know much about books, do you, Artie?â
âYou donât want to.â He illustrated. âI noticed when we used to go to that Libâry at Folkestone, ladies werenât anything like what they was in a draperâsâif you âavenât got just what they want, itâs âOh, no!â and out they go. But in a bookshop itâs different. One bookâs very like anotherâafter all, what is it? Something to read and done with. Itâs not a thing that matters like print dresses or serviettesâwhere you either like âem or donât, and people judge you by. They take what you give âem in books and libâries, and glad to be told what to. See âow we wasâup at that libâryâŠâ
He paused. âYou see, Annââ
âWell, I read ân âdvertisement the other dayâ I been asking Mr. Bean. It saidâfive âundred pounds.â
âWhat did?â
âBranches,â said Kipps.
Ann failed to understand. âItâs a sort of thing that gets up bookshops all over the country,â said Kipps. âI didnât tell you, but I arst about it a bit. Onây I dropped it again. Before this Smash, I mean. Iâd thought Iâd like to keep a shop for a lark, onây then I thought it silly. Besides, it âud âave been beneath me.â
He blushed vividly. âIt was a sort
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