Short Fiction P. G. Wodehouse (good books to read in english .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
Book online «Short Fiction P. G. Wodehouse (good books to read in english .txt) đ». Author P. G. Wodehouse
She began to admire him for it.
To make his position as critic still more impregnable, Sellers was now able to speak as one having authority. After years of floundering, his luck seemed at last to have turned. His pictures, which for months had lain at an agentâs, careened like crippled battleships, had at length begun to find a market. Within the past two weeks three landscapes and an allegorical painting had sold for good prices; and under the influence of success he expanded like an opening floweret. When Epstein, the agent, wrote to say that the allegory had been purchased by a Glasgow plutocrat of the name of Bates for one hundred and sixty guineas, Sellersâ views on Philistines and their crass materialism and lack of taste underwent a marked modification. He spoke with some friendliness of the man Bates.
âTo me,â said Beverley, when informed of the event by Annette, âthe matter has a deeper significance. It proves that Glasgow has at last produced a sober man. No drinker would have dared face that allegory. The whole business is very gratifying.â
Beverley himself was progressing slowly in the field of Art. He had finished the âChild and Cat,â and had taken it to Epstein together with a letter of introduction from Sellers. Sellersâ habitual attitude now was that of the kindly celebrity who has arrived and wishes to give the youngsters a chance.
Since its departure Beverley had not done much in the way of actual execution. Whenever Annette came to his studio he was either sitting in a chair with his feet on the windowsill, smoking, or in the same attitude listening to Sellersâ views on art. Sellers being on the upgrade, a man with many pounds to his credit in the bank, had more leisure now. He had given up his advertisement work, and was planning a great canvasâ âanother allegorical work. This left him free to devote a good deal of time to Beverley, and he did so. Beverley sat and smoked through his harangues. He may have been listening, or he may not. Annette listened once or twice, and the experience had the effect of sending her to Beverley, quivering with indignation.
âWhy do you let him patronize you like that?â she demanded. âIf anybody came and talked to me like that about my music, Iâdâ âIâdâ âI donât know what Iâd do. Yes, even if he were really a great musician.â
âDonât you consider Sellers a great artist, then, even now?â
âHe seems to be able to sell his pictures, so I suppose they must be good; but nothing could give him the right to patronize you as he does.â
âââMy learned friendâs manner would be intolerable in an emperor to a black-beetle,âââ quoted Beverley. âWell, what are we going to do about it?â
âIf only you could sell a picture, too!â
âAh! Well, Iâve done my part of the contract. Iâve delivered the goods. There the thing is at Epsteinâs. The public canât blame me if it doesnât sell. All theyâve got to do is to waltz in in their thousands and fight for it. And, by the way, talking of waltzesâ ââ
âOh, itâs finished,â said Annette, dispiritedly. âPublished too, for that matter.â
âPublished! Whatâs the matter, then? Why this drooping sadness? Why arenât you running around the square, singing like a bird?â
âBecause,â said Annette, âunfortunately, I had to pay the expenses of publication. It was only five pounds, but the sales havenât caught up with that yet. If they ever do, perhaps thereâll be a new edition.â
âAnd will you have to pay for that?â
âNo. The publishers would.â
âWho are they?â
âGrusczinsky and Buchterkirch.â
âHeavens, then what are you worrying about? The thingâs a cert. A man with a name like Grusczinsky could sell a dozen editions by himself. Helped and inspired by Buchterkirch, he will make the waltz the talk of the country. Infants will croon it in their cots.â
âHe didnât seem to think so when I saw him last.â
âOf course not. He doesnât know his own power. Grusczinskyâs shrinking diffidence is a byword in musical circles. He is the genuine Human Violet. You must give him time.â
âIâll give him anything if heâll only sell an edition or two,â said Annette.
The outstanding thing was that he did. There seemed no particular reason why the sale of that waltz should not have been as small and as slow as that of any other waltz by an unknown composer. But almost without warning it expanded from a trickle into a flood. Grusczinsky, beaming paternally whenever Annette entered the shopâ âwhich was oftenâ âannounced two new editions in a week. Beverley, his artistic growth still under a watchful eye of Sellers, said he had never had any doubts as to the success of the thing from the moment when a single phrase in it had so carried him away that he had been compelled to stamp his applause enthusiastically on the floor. Even Sellers forgot his own triumphs long enough to allow him to offer affable congratulations. And money came rolling in, smoothing the path of life.
Those were great days. There was a hatâ ââ âŠ
Life, in short, was very full and splendid. There was, indeed, but one thing which kept it from being perfect. The usual drawback to success is that it annoys oneâs friends so; but in Annetteâs case this drawback was absent. Sellersâ demeanour towards her was that of an old-established inmate welcoming a novice into the Hall of Fame. Her pupilsâ âworthy souls, though boneheadedâ âfawned upon
Comments (0)