New Grub Street George Gissing (notion reading list TXT) đ
- Author: George Gissing
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Amy had a difficulty in replying. She kept her eyes on the ground.
âYou have had no quarrel with your cousin,â remarked Reardon.
âNone whatever. Itâs only my mother and my uncle.â
âI canât imagine Miss Yule having a quarrel with anyone,â said Jasper. Then he added quickly: âWell, things must shape themselves naturally. We shall see. For the present they will be fully occupied. Of course itâs best that they should be. I shall see them every day, and Miss Yule will come pretty often, I dare say.â
Reardon caught Amyâs eye, but at once looked away again.
âMy word!â exclaimed Milvain, after a momentâs meditation. âItâs well this didnât happen a year ago. The girls have no income; only a little cash to go on with. We shall have our work set. Itâs a precious lucky thing that I have just got a sort of footing.â
Reardon muttered an assent.
âAnd what are you doing now?â Jasper inquired suddenly.
âWriting a one-volume story.â
âIâm glad to hear that. Any special plan for its publication?â
âNo.â
âThen why not offer it to Jedwood? Heâs publishing a series of one-volume novels. You know of Jedwood, donât you? He was Culpepperâs manager; started business about half a year ago, and it looks as if he would do well. He married that womanâ âwhatâs her name?â âWho wrote Mr. Hendersonâs Wives?â
âNever heard of it.â
âNonsense!â âMiss Wilkes, of course. Well, she married this fellow Jedwood, and there was a great row about something or other between him and her publishers. Mrs. Boston Wright told me all about it. An astonishing woman that; a cyclopaedia of the dayâs small talk. Iâm quite a favourite with her; sheâs promised to help the girls all she can. Well, but I was talking about Jedwood. Why not offer him this book of yours? Heâs eager to get hold of the new writers. Advertises hugely; he has the whole back page of The Study about every other week. I suppose Miss Wilkesâs profits are paying for it. He has just given Markland two hundred pounds for a paltry little tale that would scarcely swell out to a volume. Markland told me himself. You know that Iâve scraped an acquaintance with him? Oh! I suppose I havenât seen you since then. Heâs a dwarfish fellow with only one eye. Mrs. Boston Wright cries him up at every opportunity.â
âWho is Mrs. Boston Wright?â asked Reardon, laughing impatiently.
âEdits The English Girl, you know. Sheâs had an extraordinary life. Was born in Mauritiusâ âno, Ceylonâ âI forget; some such place. Married a sailor at fifteen. Was shipwrecked somewhere, and only restored to life after terrific efforts;â âher story leaves it all rather vague. Then she turns up as a newspaper correspondent at the Cape. Gave up that, and took to some kind of farming, I forget where. Married again (first husband lost in aforementioned shipwreck), this time a Baptist minister, and began to devote herself to soup-kitchens in Liverpool. Husband burned to death, somewhere. Sheâs next discovered in the thick of literary society in London. A wonderful woman, I assure you. Must be nearly fifty, but she looks twenty-five.â
He paused, then added impulsively:
âLet me take you to one of her eveningsâ ânine on Thursday. Do persuade him, Mrs. Reardon?â
Reardon shook his head.
âNo, no. I should be horribly out of my element.â
âI canât see why. You would meet all sorts of well-known people; those you ought to have met long ago. Better still, let me ask her to send an invitation for both of you. Iâm sure youâd like her, Mrs. Reardon. Thereâs a good deal of humbug about her, itâs true, but some solid qualities as well. No one has a word to say against her. And itâs a splendid advertisement to have her for a friend. Sheâll talk about your books and articles till all is blue.â
Amy gave a questioning look at her husband. But Reardon moved in an uncomfortable way.
âWeâll see about it,â he said. âSome day, perhaps.â
âLet me know whenever you feel disposed. But about Jedwood: I happen to know a man who reads for him.â
âHeavens!â cried Reardon. âWho donât you know?â
âThe simplest thing in the world. At present itâs a large part of my business to make acquaintances. Why, look you; a man who has to live by miscellaneous writing couldnât get on without a vast variety of acquaintances. Oneâs own brain would soon run dry; a clever fellow knows how to use the brains of other people.â
Amy listened with an unconscious smile which expressed keen interest.
âOh,â pursued Jasper, âwhen did you see Whelpdale last?â
âHavenât seen him for a long time.â
âYou donât know what heâs doing? The fellow has set up as a âliterary adviser.â He has an advertisement in The Study every week. âTo Young Authors and Literary Aspirantsââ âsomething of the kind. âAdvice given on choice of subjects, MSS. read, corrected, and recommended to publishers. Moderate terms.â A fact! And whatâs more, he made six guineas in the first fortnight; so he says, at all events. Now thatâs one of the finest jokes I ever heard. A man who canât get anyone to publish his own books makes a living by telling other people how to write!â
âBut itâs a confounded swindle!â
âOh, I donât know. Heâs capable of correcting the grammar of âliterary aspirants,â and as for recommending to publishersâ âwell, anyone can recommend, I suppose.â
Reardonâs indignation yielded to laughter.
âItâs not impossible that he may thrive by this kind of thing.â
âNot at all,â assented Jasper.
Shortly after this he looked at his watch.
âI must be off, my friends. I have something to write before I can go to my truckle-bed, and itâll take me three hours at least.
âGoodbye, old man. Let me know when your storyâs finished, and weâll talk about it. And think about Mrs. Boston Wright; oh, and about that review in The Current. I wish youâd let me do it. Talk it over with your guide, philosopher, and friend.â
He indicated Amy, who laughed in a forced way.
When he was gone, the two sat
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