The Magician by W. Somerset Maugham (ebook reader macos TXT) ๐
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In Paris, surgeon Arthur Burdon and his fiancรฉ are introduced to Oliver Haddo, a wealthy Englishman from an old family who claims to be a magician trained in the occult. At first they are unconvinced and irritated by Haddoโs boasts; however he soon demonstrates his powers in more and more fateful ways.
The character of Oliver Haddo is an unflattering caricature of the English occultist Alistair Crowley, whom Maugham had met while living in Paris. Crowley himself wrote a review in Vanity Fair in which he accused Maugham of plagiarizing various other novels, signing off as โOliver Haddo.โ Most critics dismissed these allegations.
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- Author: W. Somerset Maugham
Read book online ยซThe Magician by W. Somerset Maugham (ebook reader macos TXT) ๐ยป. Author - W. Somerset Maugham
โWeโre going to fix the date of our marriage now,โ he said. โIโm buying furniture already.โ
โI think only English people could have behaved so oddly as you, in postponing your marriage without reason for two mortal years.โ
โYou see, Margaret was ten when I first saw her, and only seventeen when I asked her to marry me. She thought she had reason to be grateful to me and would have married me there and then. But I knew she hankered after these two years in Paris, and I didnโt feel it was fair to bind her to me till she had seen at least something of the world. And she seemed hardly ready for marriage, she was growing still.โ
โDid I not say that you were a matter-of-fact young man?โ smiled Dr. Porhoรซt.
โAnd itโs not as if there had been any doubt about our knowing our minds. We both cared, and we had a long time before us. We could afford to wait.โ
At that moment a man strolled past them, a big stout fellow, showily dressed in a check suit; and he gravely took off his hat to Dr. Porhoรซt. The doctor smiled and returned the salute.
โWho is your fat friend?โ asked Arthur.
โThat is a compatriot of yours. His name is Oliver Haddo.โ
โArt-student?โ inquired Arthur, with the scornful tone he used when referring to those whose walk in life was not so practical as his own.
โNot exactly. I met him a little while ago by chance. When I was getting together the material for my little book on the old alchemists I read a great deal at the library of the Arsenal, which, you may have heard, is singularly rich in all works dealing with the occult sciences.โ
Burdenโs face assumed an expression of amused disdain. He could not understand why Dr. Porhoรซt occupied his leisure with studies so profitless. He had read his book, recently published, on the more famous of the alchemists; and, though forced to admire the profound knowledge upon which it was based, he could not forgive the waste of time which his friend might have expended more usefully on topics of pressing moment.
โNot many people study in that library,โ pursued the doctor, โand I soon knew by sight those who were frequently there. I saw this gentleman every day. He was immersed in strange old books when I arrived early in the morning, and he was reading them still when I left, exhausted. Sometimes it happened that he had the volumes I asked for, and I discovered that he was studying the same subjects as myself. His appearance was extraordinary, but scarcely sympathetic; so, though I fancied that he gave me opportunities to address him, I did not avail myself of them. One day, however, curiously enough, I was looking up some point upon which it seemed impossible to find authorities. The librarian could not help me, and I had given up the search, when this person brought me the very book I needed. I surmised that the librarian had told him of my difficulty. I was very grateful to the stranger. We left together that afternoon, and our kindred studies gave us a common topic of conversation. I found that his reading was extraordinarily wide, and he was able to give me information about works which I had never even heard of. He had the advantage over me that he could apparently read, Hebrew as well as Arabic, and he had studied the Kabbalah in the original.โ
โAnd much good it did him, I have no doubt,โ said Arthur. โAnd what is he by profession?โ
Dr. Porhoรซt gave a deprecating smile.
โMy dear fellow, I hardly like to tell you. I tremble in every limb at the thought of your unmitigated scorn.โ
โWell?โ
โYou know, Paris is full of queer people. It is the chosen home of every kind of eccentricity. It sounds incredible in this year of grace, but my friend Oliver Haddo claims to be a magician. I think he is quite serious.โ
โSilly ass!โ answered Arthur with emphasis.
IIMargaret Dauncey shared a flat near the Boulevard du Montparnasse with Susie Boyd; and it was to meet her that Arthur had arranged to come to tea that afternoon. The young women waited for him in the studio. The kettle was boiling on the stove; cups and petits fours stood in readiness on a model stand. Susie looked forward to the meeting with interest. She had heard a good deal of the young man, and knew that the connection between him and Margaret was not lacking in romance. For years Susie had led the monotonous life of a mistress in a school for young ladies, and had resigned herself to its dreariness for the rest of her life, when a legacy from a distant relation gave her sufficient income to live modestly upon her means. When Margaret, who had been her pupil, came, soon after this, to announce her intention of spending a couple of years in Paris to study art, Susie willingly agreed to accompany her. Since then she had worked industriously at Colarossiโs Academy, by no means under the delusion that she had talent, but merely to amuse herself. She refused to surrender the pleasing notion that her environment was slightly wicked. After the toil of many years it relieved her to be earnest in nothing; and she found infinite satisfaction in watching the lives of those around her.
She had a great affection for Margaret, and though her own stock of enthusiasms was run low, she could enjoy thoroughly Margaretโs young enchantment in all that was exquisite. She was a plain woman; but there was no envy in her, and she took the keenest pleasure in Margaretโs comeliness. It was almost with maternal pride that she watched each year add a new grace to that exceeding beauty. But her common sense was sound, and she took care
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