Manalive eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 201 pages of information about Manalive.
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Manalive eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 201 pages of information about Manalive.
to both of them—­that he had come out into the light of that lucid and radiant ignorance in which all beliefs had begun.  The sky above them was full of mythology.  Heaven seemed deep enough to hold all the gods.  The round of the ether turned from green to yellow gradually like a great unripe fruit.  All around the sunken sun it was like a lemon; round all the east it was a sort of golden green, more suggestive of a greengage; but the whole had still the emptiness of daylight and none of the secrecy of dusk.  Tumbled here and there across this gold and pale green were shards and shattered masses of inky purple cloud, which seemed falling towards the earth in every kind of colossal perspective.  One of them really had the character of some many-mitred, many-bearded, many-winged Assyrian image, huge head downwards, hurled out of heaven—­a sort of false Jehovah, who was perhaps Satan.  All the other clouds had preposterous pinnacled shapes, as if the god’s palaces had been flung after him.

And yet, while the empty heaven was full of silent catastrophe, the height of human buildings above which they sat held here and there a tiny trivial noise that was the exact antithesis; and they heard some six streets below a newsboy calling, and a bell bidding to chapel.  They could also hear talk out of the garden below; and realized that the irrepressible Smith must have followed Gould downstairs, for his eager and pleading accents could be heard, followed by the half-humourous protests of Miss Duke and the full and very youthful laughter of Rosamund Hunt.  The air had that cold kindness that comes after a storm.  Michael Moon drank it in with as serious a relish as he had drunk the little bottle of cheap claret, which he had emptied almost at a draught.  Inglewood went on eating ginger very slowly and with a solemnity unfathomable as the sky above him.  There was still enough stir in the freshness of the atmosphere to make them almost fancy they could smell the garden soil and the last roses of autumn.  Suddenly there came from the darkening room a silvery ping and pong which told them that Rosamund had brought out the long-neglected mandoline.  After the first few notes there was more of the distant bell-like laughter.

“Inglewood,” said Michael Moon, “have you ever heard that I am a blackguard?”

“I haven’t heard it, and I don’t believe it,” answered Inglewood, after an odd pause.  “But I have heard you were—­what they call rather wild.”

“If you have heard that I am wild, you can contradict the rumour,” said Moon, with an extraordinary calm; “I am tame.  I am quite tame; I am about the tamest beast that crawls.  I drink too much of the same kind of whisky at the same time every night.  I even drink about the same amount too much.  I go to the same number of public-houses.  I meet the same damned women with mauve faces.  I hear the same number of dirty stories—­ generally the same dirty stories.  You may assure my friends, Inglewood, that you see before you a person whom civilization has thoroughly tamed.”

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Manalive from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.