The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth by H. G. Wells (essential reading .txt) đ
- Author: H. G. Wells
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âNo fear,â said Redwood. âThere isnât a recipe. Itâs no good, Winkles, if youâll pardon my frankness. Iâll make you the powders myself.â
âJust as well, perhaps,â said Winkles, after a momentary hard stare at Redwoodââjust as well.â And then: âI can assure you I really donât mind in the least.â
IV.When Winkles had gone Bensington came and stood on the hearth-rug and looked down at Redwood.
âHer Serene Highness!â he remarked.
âHer Serene Highness!â said Redwood.
âItâs the Princess of Weser Dreiburg!â
âNo further than a third cousin.â
âRedwood,â said Bensington; âitâs a curious thing to say, I know, butâdo you think Winkles understands?â
âWhat?â
âJust what it is we have made.
âDoes he really understand,â said Bensington, dropping his voice and keeping his eye doorward, âthat in the Familyâthe Family of his new patientââ
âGo on,â said Redwood.
âWho have always been if anything a little underâunderââ
âThe Average?â
âYes. And so very tactfully undistinguished in any way, he is going to produce a royal personageâan outsize royal personageâof that size. You know, Redwood, Iâm not sure whether there is not something almostâtreasonable ...â
He transferred his eyes from the door to Redwood.
Redwood flung a momentary gestureâindex finger erectâat the fire. âBy Jove!â he said, âhe doesnât know!â
âThat man,â said Redwood, âdoesnât know anything. That was his most exasperating quality as a student. Nothing. He passed all his examinations, he had all his factsâand he had just as much knowledgeâas a rotating bookshelf containing the Times Encyclopedia. And he doesnât know anything now. Heâs Winkles, and incapable of really assimilating anything not immediately and directly related to his superficial self. He is utterly void of imagination and, as a consequence, incapable of knowledge. No one could possibly pass so many examinations and be so well dressed, so well done, and so successful as a doctor without that precise incapacity. Thatâs it. And in spite of all heâs seen and heard and been told, there he isâhe has no idea whatever of what he has set going. He has got a Boom on, heâs working it well on Boomfood, and some one has let him in to this new Royal Babyâand thatâs Boomier than ever! And the fact that Weser Dreiburg will presently have to face the gigantic problem of a thirty-odd-foot Princess not only hasnât entered his head, but couldnâtâit couldnât!â
âThereâll be a fearful row,â said Bensington.
âIn a year or so.â
âSo soon as they really see she is going on growing.â
âUnless after their fashionâthey hush it up.â
âItâs a lot to hush up.â
âRather!â
âI wonder what theyâll do?â
âThey never do anythingâRoyal tact.â
âTheyâre bound to do something.â
âPerhaps she will.â
âO Lord! Yes.â
âTheyâll suppress her. Such things have been known.â
Redwood burst into desperate laughter. âThe redundant royaltyâthe bouncing babe in the Iron Mask!â he said. âTheyâll have to put her in the tallest tower of the old Weser Dreiburg castle and make holes in the ceilings as she grows from floor to floor! Well, Iâm in the very same pickle. And Cossar and his three boys. AndâWell, well.â
âThereâll be a fearful row,â Bensington repeated, not joining in the laughter. âA fearful row.â
âI suppose,â he argued, âyouâve really thought it out thoroughly, Redwood. Youâre quite sure it wouldnât be wiser to warn Winkles, wean your little boy gradually, andâand rely upon the Theoretical Triumph?â
âI wish to goodness youâd spend half an hour in my nursery when the Foodâs a little late,â said Redwood, with a note of exasperation in his voice; âthen you wouldnât talk like that, Bensington. BesidesâFancy warning Winkles... No! The tide of this thing has caught us unawares, and whether weâre frightened or whether weâre notâweâve got to swim!â
âI suppose we have,â said Bensington, staring at his toes. âYes. Weâve got to swim. And your boy will have to swim, and Cossarâs boysâheâs given it to all three of them. Nothing partial about Cossarâall or nothing! And Her Serene Highness. And everything. We are going on making the Food. Cossar also. Weâre only just in the dawn of the beginning, Redwood. Itâs evident all sorts of things are to follow. Monstrous great things. But I canât imagine them, Redwood. Exceptââ
He scanned his finger nails. He looked up at Redwood with eyes bland through his glasses.
âIâve half a mind,â he adventured, âthat Caterham is right. At times. Itâs going to destroy the Proportions of Things. Itâs going to dislocateâWhat isnât it going to dislocate?â
âWhatever it dislocates,â said Redwood, âmy little boy must have the Food.â
They heard some one falling rapidly upstairs. Then Cossar put his head into the flat. âHullo!â he said at their expressions, and entering, âWell?â
They told him about the Princess.
âDifficult question!â he remarked. âNot a bit of it. Sheâll grow. Your boyâll grow. All the others you give it to âll grow. Everything. Like anything. Whatâs difficult about that? Thatâs all right. A child could tell you that. Whereâs the bother?â
They tried to make it clear to him.
âNot go on with it!â he shrieked. âButâ! You canât help yourselves now. Itâs what youâre for. Itâs what Winkles is for. Itâs all right. Often wondered what Winkles was for. Now itâs obvious. Whatâs the trouble?
âDisturbance? Obviously. Upset things? Upset everything. Finallyâupset every human concern. Plain as a pikestaff. Theyâre going to try and stop it, but theyâre too late. Itâs their way to be too late. You go on and start as much of it as you can. Thank God He has a use for you!â
âBut the conflict!â said Bensington, âthe stress! I donât know if you have imaginedââ
âYou ought to have been some sort of little vegetable, Bensington,â said Cossarââthatâs what you ought to have been. Something growing over a rockery. Here you are, fearfully and wonderfully made, and all you think youâre made for is just to sit about and take your vittles. Dâyou think this world was made for old women to mop about in? Well, anyhow, you canât help yourselves nowâyouâve
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