The Magician by W. Somerset Maugham (ebook reader macos TXT) ๐
Description
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
โGod has forsaken me,โ she repeated. โGod has foresaken me.โ
Next day, her eyes red with weeping, she dragged herself to Haddoโs door. When he opened it, she went in without a word. She sat down, and he watched her in silence.
โI am willing to marry you whenever you choose,โ she said at last.
โI have made all the necessary arrangements.โ
โYou have spoken to me of your mother. Will you take me to her at once.โ
The shadow of a smile crossed his lips.
โIf you wish it.โ
Haddo told her that they could be married before the Consul early enough on the Thursday morning to catch a train for England. She left everything in his hands.
โIโm desperately unhappy,โ she said dully.
Oliver laid his hands upon her shoulders and looked into her eyes.
โGo home, and you will forget your tears. I command you to be happy.โ
Then it seemed that the bitter struggle between the good and the evil in her was done, and the evil had conquered. She felt on a sudden curiously elated. It seemed no longer to matter that she deceived her faithful friends. She gave a bitter laugh, as she thought how easy it was to hoodwink them.
Wednesday happened to be Arthurโs birthday, and he asked her to dine with him alone.
โWeโll do ourselves proud, and hang the expense,โ he said.
They had arranged to eat at a fashionable restaurant on the other side of the river, and soon after seven he fetched her. Margaret was dressed with exceeding care. She stood in the middle of the room, waiting for Arthurโs arrival, and surveyed herself in the glass. Susie thought she had never been more beautiful.
โI think youโve grown more pleasing to look upon than you ever were,โ she said. โI donโt know what it is that has come over you of late, but thereโs a depth in your eyes that is quite new. It gives you an odd mysteriousness which is very attractive.โ
Knowing Susieโs love for Arthur, she wondered whether her friend was not heartbroken as she compared her own plainness with the radiant beauty that was before her. Arthur came in, and Margaret did not move. He stopped at the door to look at her. Their eyes met. His heart beat quickly, and yet he was seized with awe. His good fortune was too great to bear, when he thought that this priceless treasure was his. He could have knelt down and worshipped as though a goddess of old Greece stood before him. And to him also her eyes had changed. They had acquired a burning passion which disturbed and yet enchanted him. It seemed that the lovely girl was changed already into a lovely woman. An enigmatic smile came to her lips.
โAre you pleased?โ she asked.
Arthur came forward and Margaret put her hands on his shoulders.
โYou have scent on,โ he said.
He was surprised, for she had never used it before. It was a faint, almost acrid perfume that he did not know. It reminded him vaguely of those odours which he remembered in his childhood in the East. It was remote and strange. It gave Margaret a new and troubling charm. There had ever been something cold in her statuesque beauty, but this touch somehow curiously emphasized her sex. Arthurโs lips twitched, and his gaunt face grew pale with passion. His emotion was so great that it was nearly pain. He was puzzled, for her eyes expressed things that he had never seen in them before.
โWhy donโt you kiss me?โ she said.
She did not see Susie, but knew that a quick look of anguish crossed her face. Margaret drew Arthur towards her. His hands began to tremble. He had never ventured to express the passion that consumed him, and when he kissed her it was with a restraint that was almost brotherly. Now their lips met. Forgetting that anyone else was in the room, he flung his arms around Margaret. She had never kissed him in that way before, and the rapture was intolerable. Her lips were like living fire. He could not take his own away. He forgot everything. All his strength, all his self-control, deserted him. It crossed his mind that at this moment he would willingly die. But the delight of it was so great that he could scarcely withhold a cry of agony. At length Susieโs voice reminded him of the world.
โYouโd far better go out to dinner instead of behaving like a pair of complete idiots.โ
She tried to make her tone as flippant as the words, but her voice was cut by a pang of agony. With a little laugh, Margaret withdrew from Arthurโs embrace and lightly looked at her friend. Susieโs brave smile died away as she caught this glance, for there was in it a malicious hatred that startled her. It was so unexpected that she was terrified. What had she done? She was afraid, dreadfully afraid, that Margaret had guessed her secret. Arthur stood as if his senses had left him, quivering still with the extremity of passion.
โSusie says we must go,โ smiled Margaret.
He could not speak. He could not regain the conventional manner of polite society. Very pale, like a man suddenly awaked
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