uring these intervals I put
two and two together, and identified him as the Rector: a bachelor,
eccentric, learned exceedingly, round whom the crust of legend was
already beginning to form; to myself an object of special awe, in that
he was alleged to have written a real book. "Heaps o' books," Martha,
my informant, said; but I knew the exact rate of discount applicable to
Martha's statements.
We passed eventually through a dark hall into a room which struck me
at once as the ideal I had dreamed but failed to find. None of your
feminine fripperies here! None of your chair-backs and tidies! This man,
it was seen, groaned under no aunts. Stout volumes in calf and vellum
lined three sides; books sprawled or hunched themselves on chairs and
tables; books diffused the pleasant odour of printers' ink and bindings;
topping all, a faint aroma of tobacco cheered and heartened exceedingly,
as under foreign skies the flap and rustle over the wayfarer's head
of the Union Jack--the old flag of emancipation! And in one corner,
book-piled like the rest of the furniture, stood a piano.
This I hailed with a squeal of delight. "Want to strum?" inquired my
friend, as if it was the most natural wish in the world--his eyes were
already straying towards another corner, where bits of writing-table
peeped out from under a sort of Alpine system of book and foolscap.
"O, but may I?" I asked in doubt. "At home I'm not allowed to--only
beastly exercises!"
"Well, you can strum here, at all events," he replied; and murmuring
absently, Age, dic Latinum, barbite, carmen, he made his way,
mechanically guided as it seemed, to the irresistible writing-able. In
ten seconds he was out of sight and call. A great book open on his knee,
another propped up in front, a score or so disposed within easy reach,
he read and jotted with an absorption almost passionate. I might have
been in Boeotia, for any consciousness he had of me. So with a light
heart I turned to and strummed.
Those who painfully and with bleeding feet have scaled the crags of
mastery over musical instruments have yet their loss in this,--that the
wild joy of strumming has become a vanished sense. Their happiness comes
from the concord and the relative value of the notes they handle:
the pure, absolute quality and nature of each note in itself are only
appreciated by the strummer. For some notes have all the sea in them,
and some cathedral bells; others a woodland joyance and a smell o
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