Crome Yellow Aldous Huxley (detective books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Aldous Huxley
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Henry Wimbush walked home thinking of the books he would present to the War Memorial Library, if ever it came into existence. He took the path through the fields; it was pleasanter than the road. At the first stile a group of village boys, loutish young fellows all dressed in the hideous ill-fitting black which makes a funeral of every English Sunday and holiday, were assembled, drearily guffawing as they smoked their cigarettes. They made way for Henry Wimbush, touching their caps as he passed. He returned their salute; his bowler and face were one in their unruffled gravity.
In Sir Ferdinandoâs time, he reflected, in the time of his son, Sir Julius, these young men would have had their Sunday diversions even at Crome, remote and rustic Crome. There would have been archery, skittles, dancingâ âsocial amusements in which they would have partaken as members of a conscious community. Now they had nothing, nothing except Mr. Bodihamâs forbidding Boysâ Club and the rare dances and concerts organised by himself. Boredom or the urban pleasures of the county metropolis were the alternatives that presented themselves to these poor youths. Country pleasures were no more; they had been stamped out by the Puritans.
In Manninghamâs Diary for 1600 there was a queer passage, he remembered, a very queer passage. Certain magistrates in Berkshire, Puritan magistrates, had had wind of a scandal. One moonlit summer night they had ridden out with their posse and there, among the hills, they had come upon a company of men and women, dancing, stark naked, among the sheepcotes. The magistrates and their men had ridden their horses into the crowd. How self-conscious the poor people must suddenly have felt, how helpless without their clothes against armed and booted horsemen! The dancers were arrested, whipped, gaoled, set in the stocks; the moonlight dance is never danced again. What old, earthy, Panic rite came to extinction here? he wondered. Who knows?â âperhaps their ancestors had danced like this in the moonlight ages before Adam and Eve were so much as thought of. He liked to think so. And now it was no more. These weary young men, if they wanted to dance, would have to bicycle six miles to the town. The country was desolate, without life of its own, without indigenous pleasures. The pious magistrates had snuffed out forever a little happy flame that had burned from the beginning of time.
âAnd as on Tulliaâs tomb one lamp burned clear,
Unchanged for fifteen hundred yearâ ââ âŠâ
He repeated the lines to himself, and was desolated to think of all the murdered past.
XIXHenry Wimbushâs long cigar burned aromatically. The History of Crome lay on his knee; slowly he turned over the pages.
âI canât decide what episode to read you tonight,â he said thoughtfully. âSir Ferdinandoâs voyages are not without interest. Then, of course, thereâs his son, Sir Julius. It was he who suffered from the delusion that his perspiration engendered flies; it drove him finally to suicide. Or thereâs Sir Cyprian.â He turned the pages more rapidly. âOr Sir Henry. Or Sir Georgeâ ââ ⊠No, Iâm inclined to think I wonât read about any of these.â
âBut you must read something,â insisted Mr. Scogan, taking his pipe out of his mouth.
âI think I shall read about my grandfather,â said Henry Wimbush, âand the events that led up to his marriage with the eldest daughter of the last Sir Ferdinando.â
âGood,â said Mr. Scogan. âWe are listening.â
âBefore I begin reading,â said Henry Wimbush, looking up from the book and taking off the pince-nez which he had just fitted to his noseâ ââbefore I begin, I must say a few preliminary words about Sir Ferdinando, the last of the Lapiths. At the death of the virtuous and unfortunate Sir Hercules, Ferdinando found himself in possession of the family fortune, not a little increased by his fatherâs temperance and
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