South Wind(Fiscle Part-3) by Norman Douglas (novels for students TXT) π
The Bishop Was Feeling Rather Sea-Sick. Confoundedly Sea-Sick, In Fact.
This Annoyed Him. For He Disapproved Of Sickness In Every Shape Or
Form. His Own State Of Body Was Far From Satisfactory At That Moment;
Africa--He Was Bishop Of Bampopo In The Equatorial Regions--Had Played
The Devil With His Lower Gastric Department And Made Him Almost An
Invalid; A Circumstance Of Which He Was Nowise Proud, Seeing That
Ill-Health Led To Inefficiency In All Walks Of Life. There Was Nothing
He Despised More Than Inefficiency. Well Or Ill, He Always Insisted On
Getting Through His Tasks In A Businesslike Fashion. That Was The Way
To Live, He Used To Say. Get Through With It. Be Perfect Of Your Kind,
Whatever That Kind May Be. Hence His Sneaking Fondness For The
Natives--They Were Such Fine, Healthy Animals.
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- Author: Norman Douglas
Read book online Β«South Wind(Fiscle Part-3) by Norman Douglas (novels for students TXT) πΒ». Author - Norman Douglas
Mind His Own Gleams Of Exotic Scholarship, Those Luminous Asides And
Fruitful Digressions, Those Statesmanlike Comments On Things In General
Which Make His Work Not So Much A Compendium Of Local Lore As A Mirror
Of The Polite Learning Of His Age. It Is No Exaggeration To Say That,
Compared With The Ample Treatment Meted Out To Inconspicuous Rulers
Like Alfonso The Seventeenth Or Florizel The Fat, His Account Of The
Good Duke Alfred Is The Baldest, The Most Perfunctory And Conventional
Of Chronicles. Neither Good Nor Evil Is Related Of Him. There Is
Nothing But A Monotonous Enumeration Of Events.
It Was The Bibliographer Who, Poring Over The Pages Of The Rival Monk
Father Capocchio, That Audacious And Salacious Friar Already
Mentioned--It Was The Bibliographer Who Hit Upon A Passage Which
Suggested A Solution Of The Mystery And Proved That, Though Monsignor
Perrelli Lived During The Reign Of The Good Duke, It Would Be
Stretching Unduly The Sense Of A Plain Word To Say That He "Flourished"
Under His Rule. Other Persons May Have Flourished; Not So The Kindly
Prelate.
"Nothing Whatever," Says This Implacable Enemy Of Nepenthe, "Is To Be
Recorded To The Credit Of The Sanguinary Brigand--So He Terms The Good
Duke--Nothing Whatsoever: Save And Except Only This, That He Cut Off The
Ears Of A Certain Prattler, Intriguer, And Snuff-Taking Sensualist
Called Perrelli Who, Under The Pretence Of Collecting Data For An
Alleged Historical Treatise, Profited By His Priestly Garb To Play Fast
And Loose With What Little Remained Of Decent Family Life On That
God-Abandoned Island. Honour To Whom Honor Is Due! The Ostensible
Reason For This Unique Act Of Justice Was That The Said Perrelli Had
Appeared At Some Palace Function With Paste Buckles On His Shoes,
Instead Of Silver Ones. The Pretext Was Well Chosen, Inasmuch As The
Tyrant Added To His Other Vices And Absurdities The Pose Of Being An
Extravagant Stickler For Etiquette. We Happen To Know, Nevertheless,
That The Name Of A Young Dancer, A Prime Favourite At Court, Cropped Up
Persistently At The Time In Connection With This Malodorous But
Otherwise Insignificant Episode."
It Were Idle, At This Hour Of The Day, To Pursue The Enquiry; The
Mutilation Of Monsignor Perrelli's Person, However, Would Explain
Better Than Anything Else His Equivocal Attitude As Historian. Nor Is
The Incident Altogether Inconsistent With What We Know Of The Duke's
Cheerful Propensities. "Nose After Ears!" Was One Of His Blithest
Watchwords. Faced With So Dispiriting A Prospect And Aware That His
Highness Was As Good As His Princely Word, The Sympathetic Scholar,
While Too Resentful To Praise His Achievements, May Well Have Been Too
Prudent To Disparage Them. Hence His Reticence, His Circumspection.
Hence That Monotonous Enumeration Of Events.
This Microscopic Blot On The Duke's Escutcheon, As Well As Other More
Commendable Details Of His Life, Were Duly Noted Down By The Zealous
Mr. Eames Who, In Addition, Had The Good Fortune To Receive As A Gift
From His Kindly But Unassuming Friend Count Caloveglia A Quaint
Portrait Of The Prince, Hitherto Unknown--An Engraving Which He Purposed
To Reproduce, Together With Other Fresh Iconographical Material, In His
Enlarged And Fully Annotated Edition Of The Antiquities. The Print
Depicts His Highness Full Face, Seated On A Throne In The Accoutrements
Of Mars, With A Gallant Wig Flowing In Mazy Ringlets From Under The
Helmet Upon His Plated Shoulders; Overhead, Upon A Canopy Of Cloud,
Reclines A Breezy Assemblage Of Allegorical Females--Truth, Mercy, Fame
With Her Trumpet, And So Forth. His Nervous Clean-Shaven Features Do
Not Wear The Traditional Smile; They Are Thoughtful, Almost Grim. On
His Left Is Portrayed A Huge Cannon Astride Of Which Can Be Seen A
Chubby Angel; The Duke's Hand Reposes, In A Paternal Caress On The
Cherub's Head--Symbolical Doubtless Of His Love Of Children. His Right
Elbow Rests Upon A Table, And The Slender Bejewelled Fingers Are
Listlessly Pressing Open A Lettered Scroll Of Parchment On Which Can Be
Deciphered The Words "A Chi T'ha Figliato" (To Her Who Bare Thee)--A
Legend Which The Bibliographer, Whose Acquaintance With The Vernacular
Was Not On A Level With His Classical Attainments, Conjectured To Be
Some Fashionable Courtly Toast Of The Period.
The Mention Of Artillery Recalls The Fact That His Highness Was An
Amateur Of Ordnance. He Established A Gun-Foundry On The Island, And
What He Did Not Know About The Art Of Casting Pieces, As Practised In
His Day, Was Plainly Not Worth Knowing. Had It Not Been For His
Passionate Love Of Testing New Processes And New Combinations Of Metal,
He Might Have Attained To A European Reputation In That Department. But
He Was Always Experimenting, And The Consequence Was That His Cannons
Were Always Splitting. One, However, A Monster Of Its Kind, Remained
Intact, To Outward Appearances. It Was Fired On Every Conceivable
Occasion--To Summon The Militia, For Example, From Remote Corners Of The
Island At Any Hour Of The Day Or Night, A Considerable Hardship To
Those Who Lived At A Distance Of Two Or Three Miles, Seeing That
According To The Instructions Set Forth In The Militiaman's Year-Book,
The Sternest Penalties Were Imposed Upon All Who Failed To Appear In
Their Ranks At The Palace Gates Within Five Minutes After The Signal
Had Been Sounded.
It Was A Perilous Gun To Handle. Owing To Some Undiscoverable Flaw Of
Construction Or Imperfection In The Alloy, The Monster Soon Developed A
Disconcerting Knack Of Back-Firing, Hazardous To Life And Limb. It
Stands To Reason That The Good Duke Attached No Undue Importance To Any
Trifling Disaster Accruing Therefrom. On The Contrary, In Order To Be
Sure Of A Thunderous Detonation, He Often Deigned To Superintend In
Person The Loading Of This Particular Piece.
"More Powder," He Would Then Command. "More Powder! Ram It In! Never
Mind Her Little Caprices! A Good Salute Is Worth A Good Soldier! More
Powder! Fill Her Up To The Brim! She's Only Playful, Like Her Master."
Those Who Lost Fingers Or Hands Or Arms Received The Order Of The
Golden Vine. Whenever A Major Portion Of The Anatomy, A Head Or So
Forth, Went Astray, The Victim Was Posthumously Ennobled.
Since His Day, Thanks To The Science Of A Paduan Engineer, This Defect
Has Been Almost Completely Overcome, And The Gun Can Still Be Heard On
Great Occasions, Such As The Duke's Birthday, The Festival Of The
Patron Saint, Or The Visit To The Island Of Some Foreign Sovereign; It
Is Also Discharged, As Of Yore, To Summon The Militia For The Purpose
Of Quelling Any Popular Disturbance. But Even Now It Occasionally
Relapses Into Its Old Humours--With This Difference, That Instead Of
Being Decorated With A Coveted Distinction, The Disabled Man Is Sent To
The Hospital And Told Not To Make A Fool Of Himself Next Time.
This Was The Gun Whose Sound Attracted The Strained Attention Of Mr.
Keith And His Companions, Far Away, On The Sea, Under The Cliffs.
Chapter 20
The Firing Had Ceased; The Boat Began To Glide Forwards Once More. But
Mr. Heard's Eye Remained Fixed Upon The Ill-Omened Black Rock. The
Sun's Rays Had Already Licked Dry The Moisture On Its Surface; It Shone
With A Steady Dull Glow. Some Malefic Force Seemed To Dwell Here. Some
Demon Haunted The Place, Peering Out Of The Crevices Or Rising Up From
The Turquoise-Tinted Water At Its Foot. The Suicides' Rock!
That Vague Sense Of Apprehension, Of Impending Disaster, Once More
Invaded Him. Suddenly It Revealed Itself In Definite Terms. A Ghastly
Notion Flitted Through His Mind.
"You Think It Possible That Denis--?" He Began.
His Friend Seemed To Have Lost All Interest In That Subject. It Was A
Way He Had.
"Denis? I Really Could Not Tell. I'm Not Sufficiently In His
Confidence. . . . Honour Thy Father And Thy Mother," He Proceeded,
Reverting To His Former Theme. "What Think You, Heard, Of This Old
Injunction? Is It Not Altogether Obsolete? Was It Not Written For Quite
Other Conditions? Honour Thy Father And Mother. Why? The State Educates
Children, Feeds Them, Investigates And Cures Their Complaints, Washes
And Weighs Them, Reports On Their Teeth And Stomachs, Prescribes When
They May Begin To Smoke And Enter Public-Houses: Where Does Parental
Authority Come In? The State Provides Old Folks With Refuges And
Pensions: How About The Former Obligations Of Children? Child And
Parent Alike Now Thank The Community For What They Once Received From
Each Other. And The Geographical Elements That Went To The Making Of A
Home Are Also Dispersed. Rich And Poor Roam Like Gipsies From One
Country To Another, From One Flat Into The Next; The Patriarchal Board
Is Replaced By Clubs And Grill-Rooms And Fried-Fish Shops. Many A Man
Who Thinks To Found A Home Discovers That He Has Merely Opened A Tavern
For His Friends. Note, Too, That The Family Has Outgrown Its
Ecclesiastical Sanction; The Oil Of Supernaturalism Which Once Greased
The Wheels Has Run Dry; The Machinery Is Creaking. Industrial
Conditions Have Killed The Old Home. Requiescat! Honour Thy Father And
Mother. Industrialism Has Killed That Commandment. Thou Shalt Not
Steal. Consider This Injunction, Heard, And Ask Yourself Whether
Industrialism Does Not Split Its Sides With Laughing At It. If We Are
To Galvanize That Old Collection Of Laws Into Some Semblance Of Life,
Every One F Them Must Be Re-Written And Brought Up To Date. They Are
Inappropriate For Modern Life; Their Interest Is Purely Historical. We
Want New Values. We Are No Longer Nomads. Industrialism Has Killed The
Pastoral And The Agricultural Points Of View. And How The Modern Jews
Smile At Our Infatuation For Those Queer Doctrines And Legends Which
They Themselves Have Long Ago Outgrown. Apropos, What Has Become Of
Marten?"
"Left The Island, I Hear."
"Quick Work. Now I Wonder Why?"
Everybody Wondered At Marten's Precipitate Departure. Even Angelina
Wondered.
She Just Wondered.
Had He Known That She Wondered, He Might Have Been Tempted To Prolong
His Stay. But Marten Was Too Young To Be A Practical Psychologist. He
Had Lived For Half A Day In Terror Of What He Called "The Inevitable
Reaction," Unaware Of The Fact That Certain People Do Not Suffer From
Reactions And Too Engrossed In Mineralogy To Have Learnt, From A Study
Of Other Sciences, That Angelina Was One Of Them. She Had Passed That
Stage, With Homeric Laughter, Long Before His Appearance On Nepenthe.
She Just Wondered, Nowadays.
Scared, As Though The Avenging Furies Were At His Heels, He Quitted The
Scene Of His Nocturnal Romance, Leaving Half His Geological Projects
Incomplete. Had He Taken The Amiable Don Francesco Into His Confidence
He Might Have Heard Something To His Advantage. But The Scientist Could
Not Endure The Sight Of A Christian Priest. Like Other Intolerant Folk
He Was Now Paying For His Prejudices.
"An Erotic Little Beast," Keith Went On. "And A Typical Hebrew--A
Scoffer. Have You Noticed What A Disruptive And Irreverential Brood
They Are? They Move Up And Down Society Like Some Provocative Fluid,
Insensible To Our Ideals; They Take A Diabolical Pleasure In Shattering
Our Old-Established Conceptions Of Right And Wrong. I Confess I Like
Them For That; They Need Shattering, Some Of Those Conceptions. And
They Have Their Weaknesses Too, Their Achilles Heel--Music, For
Instance, Or Chess. When Next You Are In Town Don't Forget To Go To
That Little Chess Club Of Theirs Over Aldgate East Station. It Is
Better Than A Play To Watch Their Faces. And With All This Materialism
They Have A Mysterious Feminine Leaven Of Enthusiasm And Unworldliness.
What Pecuniary Advantage Could Marten Expect To Gain From His
Minerals?"
"A Professorship."
"Why, Possibly. He Had The Professorial Temperament; There Was Not Much
Poetry In His Composition. If You Were To Ask Him, 'What Are Those
Wonderful Rocks Over There, Shaped Like Some Titanic Organ And Glowing
With A Kind Of Violet Flame?' He Would Say, 'Organ Be Blowed. It's
Columnar Lithoidite.' I Learnt A Little From Him, But Not Enough. I
Wish We Had Him Here. He Could Have Told Us Something."
And Mr. Keith, Ever Avid Of Fresh Things, Regretted His Lost
Opportunities. He Was In One Of This Acquisitive, Corsair Moods. He
Said:
"I Could Take Geology By The Throat Just Now. It's Disgusting, Not To
Know Things!"
His Companion, Meanwhile, Beheld The Panorama In All Its Nightmarish
Splendour, As It Drifted Past Him. He Saw The
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