The Red Room August Strindberg (best english novels to read txt) đ
- Author: August Strindberg
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âOh, itâs you, Mr. Falk,â said the mask. âWelcome, dear friend! Perhaps you would like to see something of my work? Pardon me, I hope you are saved? Yes, this is the office of the printing works. Excuse me a second.â
He stepped up to the organ and pulled out several stops. The answer was a long whistle.
âJust have a look round.â
He put his mouth to one of the trumpets and shouted: âThe seventh trumpet and the eighth woe! Composition Medieval 8, titles Gothic, names spaced out.â
A voice answered through the same trumpet: âNo more manuscript.â The mask sat down at the organ, and took a pen and a sheet of foolscap. The pen raced over the paper while he talked, cigar in mouth.
âThis activityâ âis so extensiveâ âthat it would soonâ âbe beyond my strengthâ âand my healthâ âwould be worseâ âthan it isâ âif I didâ ânot look after itâ âso well.â
He jumped up, pulled out another stop and shouted into another trumpet: âProofs of âHave you paid your Debt?âââ Then he continued writing and talking.
âYou wonderâ âwhyâ âIâ âwear riding-boots. Itâs firstâ âbecauseâ âI take riding exercisesâ âfor the sake ofâ âmy health.â ââ âŠâ
A boy appeared with proofs. The mask handed them to Falk. âPlease read that,â he said, speaking through his nose, because his mouth was busy, while his eyes shouted to the boy: Wait!
â⊠secondlyâ â(a movement of the ears plainly conveyed to Falk that he had not lost the thread), becauseâ âI am of opinionâ âthat a spiritually minded man should notâ âbe conspicuousâ âby his appearanceâ âfor this would beâ âspiritual prideâ âand a challengeâ âto the scoffers.â
A bookkeeper entered. The mask acknowledged his salutation by a wrinkling of his forehead, the only part of his face which was unoccupied.
For want of something else to do, Falk took the proofs and began to read them. The cigar continued talking:
âEverybodyâ âwearsâ âriding-boots. I wonâtâ âbe conspicuousâ âby myâ âappearance. I wearâ âriding-bootsâ âbecauseâ âIâm no humbug.â
He handed the manuscript to the boy and shoutedâ âwith his lips: âFour sticksâ âSeventh trumpet for Nyström!ââ âand then to Falk:
âI shall be disengaged in five minutes. Will you come with me to the warehouse?â
And to the bookkeeper:
âZululu is charging?â
âBrandy,â answered the bookkeeper in a rusty voice.
âEverything all right?â
âEverything all right.â
âIn Godâs name, then! Come along Mr. Falk.â
They entered a room the walls of which were lined with shelves, filled with piles of books. The mask touched them with his horsewhip and said proudly:
âIâve written those! What do you think of that? Isnât it a lot? You, too, writeâ âa little. If you stick to it, you might write as much.â
He bit and tore at his cigar and spat out the tiny flakes which filled the air like flies and settled on the backs of the books. His face wore a look of contempt.
âThe Torch of Reconciliation! Hm! I think itâs a stupid name! Donât you rather agree with me? What made you think of it?â
For the first time Falk had a chance of getting in a word, for like all great men, the mask answered his own questions. His reply was in the negative but he got no further; the mask again usurped the conversation.
âI think itâs a very stupid name. And do you really believe that it will draw?â
âI know nothing whatever about the matter; I donât know what you are talking about.â
âYou donât know?â
He took up a paper and pointed to a paragraph.
Falk, very much taken aback, read the following advertisement:
âNotice to subscribers: The Torch of Reconciliation. Magazine for Christian readers, about to appear under the editorship of Arvid Falk whose work has been awarded a prize by the Academy of Sciences. The first number will contain âGodâs Creation,â by Hokan Spegel, a poem of an admittedly religious and profoundly Christian spirit.â
Falk had forgotten Spegel and his agreement; he stood speechless.
âHow large is the edition going to be? What? Two thousand, I suppose. Too small! No good! My Last Judgment was ten thousand, and yet I didnât make more thanâ âwhat shall I say?â âfifteen net.â
âFifteen?â
âThousand, young man!â
The mask seemed to have forgotten his part and reverted to old habits.
âYou know,â he continued, âthat Iâm a popular preacher; I may say that without boasting, for all the world knows it. You know, that Iâm very popular; I canât help thatâ âit is so! I should be a hypocrite if I pretended not to know what all the world knows! Well, Iâll give you a helping hand to begin with. Look at this bag here! If I say that it contains letters from personsâ âladiesâ âdonât upset yourself, Iâm a married manâ âbegging for my portrait, I have not said too much.â
As a matter of fact it was nothing but an ordinary bag which he touched with his whip.
âTo save them and me a great deal of trouble, and at the same time for the sake of doing a fellow-man a kindness, I have decided to permit you to write my biography; then you can safely issue ten thousand copies of your first number and pocket a clear thousand.â
âBut, my dear pastorââ âhe had it on the tip of his tongue to say captainâ ââI know nothing at all about this matter.â
âNever mind! Never mind! The publisher has himself written to me and asked me for my portrait. And you are to write my biography! To facilitate your work, I asked a friend to write down the principal points. You have only to write an introduction, brief and eloquentâ âa few sticks at the most. Thatâs all.â
So much foresight depressed Falk; he was surprised to find the portrait so unlike the original, and the friendâs handwriting so much like that of the mask.
The latter, who had given him portrait and manuscript, now held out his hand expecting to be thanked.
âMy regards toâ âthe publisher.â
He had so nearly said Smith, that a slight blush appeared between his whiskers.
âBut you donât know my views yet,â protested Falk.
âViews? Have I asked what your views are? I never ask anybody about his views. God forbid! I? Never!â
Once more he touched the
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