第 2 节
作者:曾氏六合网      更新:2022-08-21 16:40      字数:9322
  sunny silk that might have curtained Venus or have shaken about Aurora
  as she rose in the first morning of the world。 From her he had acquired
  the alphabet and many a ginger…nut and decorative bonbon。 And from her;
  too; he had set forth; with tears; in his new Eton jacket and broad
  white collar; to go to Mr。 Chapman's preparatory school for little boys
  at Slough。 Here he remained for several years; acquiring a respect for
  the poet Gray and a love of Slough peppermint that could only cease
  with life。 Here too he made friends with Robert Green; son of Lord
  Churchmore; who was afterwards to be a certain influence in his life。
  His existence at Slough was happy。 Indeed; so great was his affection
  for the place that his removal to Eton cost him suffering scarcely less
  acute than that which presently attended his departure from Eton to
  Christchurch。 Over his sensations on leaving Oxford we prefer to draw a
  veil; only saying that his last outlookas an undergraduateover her
  immemorial towers was as hazy as the average Cabinet Minister's outlook
  over the events of the day and the desires of the community。
  But if the moisture of the Prophet did him credit at that painful
  period of his life; it must be allowed that his behaviour on being
  formally introduced into London Society showed no puling regret; no
  backward longings after echoing colleges; lost dons and the scouts that
  are no more。 He was quite at his ease; and displayed none of the high…
  pitched contempt of Piccadilly that is often so amusingly
  characteristic of the young gentlemen accustomed to 〃the High。〃
  Mrs。 Merillia; who had been a widow ever since she could remember;
  possessed the lease of the house in Berkeley Square in which the
  Prophet was now sitting。 It was an excellent mansion; with everything
  comfortable about it; a duke on one side; a Chancellor of the Exchequer
  on the other; electric light; several bathrooms and the gramophone。
  There was never any question of the Prophet setting up house by
  himself。 On leaving Oxford he joined his ample fortune to Mrs。
  Merillia's as a matter of course; and they settled down together with
  the greatest alacrity and hopefulness。 Nor were their pleasant
  relations once disturbed during the fifteen years that elapsed before
  the Prophet applied his eye to the telescope in the bow window and gave
  Mr。 Ferdinand the instructions which have just been recorded。
  These fifteen years had not gone by without leaving their mark upon our
  hero。 He had done several things during their passage。 For instance; he
  had written a play; very nearly proposed to the third daughter of a
  London clergyman and twice been to the Derby。 Such events had; not
  unnaturally; had their effect upon the formation of his character and
  even upon the expression of his intelligent face。 The writing of the
  playand; perhaps; its refusal by all the actor…managers of the town
  had traced a tiny line at each corner of his mobile mouth。 The third
  daughter of the London clergymanhis sentiment for herhad taught his
  hand the slightly episcopal gesture which was so admired at the Lambeth
  Palace Garden Party in the summer of 1892。 And the great race meeting
  was responsible for the rather tight trousers and the gentleman…jockey
  smile which he was wont to assume when he set out for a canter in the
  Row。 From all this it will be guessed that our Prophet was exceedingly
  amenable to the influences that throng at the heels of the human
  destiny。 Indeed; he was。 And some few months before this story opens it
  came about that he encountered a gentleman who was; in fact; the
  primary cause of this story being true。 Who was this gentleman? you
  will say。 Sir Tiglath Butt; the great astronomer; Correspondent of the
  Institute of France; Member of the Royal College of Science;
  Demonstrator of Astronomical Physics; author of the pamphlet; 〃Star…
  Gazers;〃 and the brochure; 〃An investigation into the psychical
  condition of those who see stars;〃 C。B。F。R。S。 and popular member of the
  Colley Cibber Club in Long Acre。
  The Prophet was introduced to Sir Tiglath at the Colley Cibber Club;
  and though Sir Tiglath; who was of a freakish disposition and much
  addicted to his joke declined to speak to him; on the ground that he
  (Sir Tiglath) had lost his voice and was unlikely to find it in
  conversation; the Prophet was greatly impressed by the astronomer's
  enormous brick…red face; round body; turned legs; eyes like marbles;
  and capacity for drinking port…wineso much so; in fact that; on
  leaving the club; he hastened to buy a science primer on astronomy; and
  devoted himself for several days to a minute investigation of the Milky
  Way。
  As there is a fascination of the earth; so is there a fascination of
  the heavens。 Along the dim; empurpled highways that lead from star to
  star; from meteorite to comet; the imagination travels wakefully by
  night; and the heart leaps as it draws near to the silver bosses of the
  moon。 Mrs。 Merillia was soon obliged to permit the intrusion of a
  gigantic telescope into her pretty drawing…room; and found herself
  expected to converse at the dinner…table on the eight moons of Saturn;
  the belts of Jupiter; the asteroids of Mars and the phases of Venus。
  These last she at first declined to discuss with a man; even though he
  were her grandson。 But she was won over by the Prophet's innocent
  persuasiveness; and drawn on until she spoke almost as readily of the
  movements of the stars as formerly she had spoken of the movements of
  the Court from Windsor to London; and from London to Balmoral。 In
  truth; she expected that Hennessey's passion for the comets would cease
  as had ceased his passion for the clergyman's daughter; that his ardour
  for astronomy would die as had died his ardour for play…writing; that
  he would give up going to /Corona Borealis/ and to the Southern Fish as
  he had given up going to the Derby。 Time proved her wrong。 As the days
  flew Hennessey became increasingly impassioned。 He was more often at
  the telescope than at the Bachelors'; and seemed on the way to become
  almost as gibbous as the planet Mars。 Even he slightly neglected his
  social duties; and on one terrible occasion forgot that he was engaged
  to dine at Cambridge House because he was assisting at a transit of
  Mercury。
  Now all this began to weigh upon the mind of Mrs。 Merillia; despite the
  amazing cheerfulness of disposition which she had inherited from two
  long lines of confirmed optimistsher ancestors on the paternal and
  maternal sides。 She did not know how to brood; but; if she had; she
  might well have been led to do so。 And even as it was she had been
  reduced to so unusual a condition of dejection that; a week before the
  evening we are describing; she had been obliged to order a box at the
  Gaiety Theatre; she; who; like all optimists; habitually frequented
  those playhouses where she could behold gloomy tragedies; awful
  melodramas; or those ironic pieces called farces; in which the ultimate
  misery of which human nature is capable is drawn to its farthest point。
  In the beginning of this new dejection of hers; Mrs。 Merillia was now
  seated in a stage box at the 〃Gaiety;〃 with an elderly General of Life
  Guards; a Mistress of the Robes; and the grandfather of the Central
  American Ambassador at the Court of St。 James; and all four of them
  were smiling at a neat little low comedian; who was singing; without
  any voice and with the utmost precision; a pathetic romance entitled;
  〃De Coon Wot Got de Chuck。〃
  Meanwhile the Prophet was engaged for the twentieth time in considering
  whether Mrs。 Merillia; on her return from this festival; would have to
  be carried to bed by hired menials。
  Why?
  This brings us to the great turning point in our hero's life; to the
  point when first he began to respect the strange powers stirring within
  him。
  Until he encountered Sir Tiglath Butt in the dining…room of the Colley
  Cibber Club Hennessey had been but a dilettante fellow。 He had written
  a play; but airily; and without the twenty years of arduous and
  persistent study declared by the dramatic critics to be absolutely
  necessary before any intelligent man can learn how to get a bishop on;
  or a chambermaid off; the stage。 He had nearly proposed to a
  clergyman's daughter; but thoughtlessly; and without any previous
  examination into the clericalism of rectory females; any first…hand
  knowledge of mothers' meetings; devoid of which he must be a stout…
  hearted gentleman who would rush in where even curates often fear to
  tread。 He had been to the Derby; but without wearing a bottle…green
  veil or carrying a betting…book。 In fact; he had not taken life very
  seriously; or fully appreciated the solemn duties it brings to all who
  bear its yoke。 Only when the plump red hand of Sir Tiglathholding a
  bumper of thirty…four portpointed the way to the heavens; did
  Hennessey beginthrough his telescopeto see the great possibilities
  that foot it about the