Tono-Bungay H. G. Wells (popular novels .txt) đ
- Author: H. G. Wells
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âMrs. Grundy, I suppose, doesnât know he sins,â I remarked.
âNo? Iâm not so sure.â ââ ⊠But, bless her heart! sheâs a woman.â ââ ⊠Sheâs a woman. Then again you get Grundy with a large greasy smileâ âlike an accident to a butter tubâ âall over his face, being Liberal Mindedâ âGrundy in his Anti-Puritan moments, âtrying not to see Harm in itââ âGrundy the friend of innocent pleasure. He makes you sick with the Harm heâs trying not to see in it.â ââ âŠ
âAnd thatâs why everythingâs wrong, Ponderevo. Grundy, damn him! stands in the light, and we young people canât see. His moods affect us. We catch his gusts of panic, his disease of nosing, his greasiness. We donât know what we may think, what we may say, he does his silly utmost to prevent our reading and seeing the one thing, the one sort of discussion we findâ âquite naturally and properlyâ âsupremely interesting. So we donât adolesce; we blunder up to sex. Dareâ âdare to lookâ âand he may dirt you forever! The girls are terror-stricken to silence by his significant whiskers, by the bleary something in his eyes.â
Suddenly Ewart, with an almost jack-in-the-box effect, sat up.
âHeâs about us everywhere, Ponderevo,â he said, very solemnly. âSometimesâ âsometimes I think he isâ âin our blood. In mine.â
He regarded me for my opinion very earnestly, with his pipe in the corner of his mouth.
âYouâre the remotest cousin he ever had,â I said.â ââ âŠ
I reflected. âLook here, Ewart,â I asked, âhow would you have things different?â
He wrinkled up his queer face, regarded the wait and made his pipe gurgle for a space, thinking deeply.
âThere are complications, I admit. Weâve grown up under the terror of Grundy and that innocent but docile andâ âyesâ âformidable lady, his wife. I donât know how far the complications arenât a disease, a sort of bleaching under the Grundy shadow.â ââ ⊠It is possible there are things I have still to learn about women.â ââ ⊠Man has eaten of the Tree of Knowledge. His innocence is gone. You canât have your cake and eat it. Weâre in for knowledge; letâs have it plain and straight. I should begin, I think, by abolishing the ideas of decency and indecency.â ââ âŠâ
âGrundy would have fits!â I injected.
âGrundy, Ponderevo, would have cold douchesâ âpubliclyâ âif the sight was not too painfulâ âthree times a day.â ââ ⊠But I donât think, mind you, that I should let the sexes run about together. No. The fact behind the sexesâ âis sex. Itâs no good humbugging. It trails aboutâ âeven in the best mixed company. Tugs at your ankle. The men get showing off and quarrellingâ âand the women. Or theyâre bored. I suppose the ancestral males have competed for the ancestral females ever since they were both some sort of grubby little reptile. You arenât going to alter that in a thousand years or so.â ââ ⊠Never should you have a mixed company, neverâ âexcept with only one man or only one woman. How would that be.â ââ âŠ
âOr duets only?â ââ âŠ
âHow to manage it? Some rule of etiquette, perhaps.ââ ââ ⊠He became portentously grave.
Then his long hand went out in weird gestures.
âI seem to seeâ âI seem to seeâ âa sort of City of Women, Ponderevo. Yes.â ââ ⊠A walled enclosureâ âgood stonemasonâs workâ âa city wall, high as the walls of Rome, going about a garden. Dozens of square miles of gardenâ âtreesâ âfountainsâ âarboursâ âlakes. Lawns on which the women play, avenues in which they gossip, boats.â ââ ⊠Women like that sort of thing. Any woman whoâs been to a good eventful girlsâ school lives on the memory of it for the rest of her life. Itâs one of the pathetic things about womenâ âthe superiority of school and collegeâ âto anything they get afterwards. And this city-garden of women will have beautiful places for music, places for beautiful dresses, places for beautiful work. Everything a woman can want. Nurseries. Kindergartens. Schools. And no manâ âexcept to do rough work, perhapsâ âever comes in. The men live in a world where they can hunt and engineer, invent and mine and manufacture, sail ships, drink deep and practice the arts, and fightâ ââ
âYes,â I said, âbutâ ââ
He stilled me with a gesture.
âIâm coming to that. The homes of the women, Ponderevo, will be set in the wall of their city; each woman will have her own particular house and home, furnished after her own heart in her own mannerâ âwith a little balcony on the outside wall. Built into the wallâ âand a little balcony. And there she will go and look out, when the mood takes her, and all round the city there will be a broad road and seats and great shady trees. And men will stroll up and down there when they feel the need of feminine company; when, for instance, they want to talk about their souls or their characters or any of the things that only women will stand.â ââ ⊠The women will lean over and look at the men and smile and talk to them as they fancy. And each woman will have this; she will have a little silken ladder she can let down if she choosesâ âif she wants to talk closer.â ââ âŠâ
âThe men would still be competing.â
âThere perhapsâ âyes. But theyâd have to abide by the womenâs decisions.â
I raised one or two difficulties, and for a while we played with this idea.
âEwart,â I said, âthis is like Dollâs Island.â ââ ⊠Suppose,â I reflected, âan unsuccessful man laid siege to a balcony and wouldnât let his rival come near it?â
âMove him on,â said Ewart, âby a special regulation. As one does organ-grinders. No difficulty about that. And you could forbid itâ âmake it against the etiquette. No life is decent without etiquette.â ââ ⊠And people obey etiquette sooner than laws.â ââ âŠâ
âHâm,â I said, and was struck by an idea that is remote in the world of a young man. âHow about children?â I asked; âin the City? Girls are all very well. But boys, for exampleâ âgrow up.â
âAh!â said Ewart. âYes. I forgot. They mustnât grow up inside.â ââ ⊠Theyâd turn out the boys when they were seven. The father must come with a little pony and
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