The Wonderful Visit H. G. Wells (best novels to read .txt) đ
- Author: H. G. Wells
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The Angel retreated a step or so as the Vicar came nearer and nearer in his attempt to be diplomatic and confidential. The beautiful face grew perplexed. âI donât quite understand. Why do you keep making these noises in your throat? Is it Die or Eat, or any of those.â ââ âŠâ
âAs your host,â interrupted the Vicar, and stopped.
âAs my host,â said the Angel.
âWould you object, pending more permanent arrangements, to invest yourself, ahem, in a suit, an entirely new suit I may say, like this I have on?â
âOh!â said the Angel. He retreated so as to take in the Vicar from top to toe. âWear clothes like yours!â he said. He was puzzled but amused. His eyes grew round and bright, his mouth puckered at the corners.
âDelightful!â he said, clapping his hands together. âWhat a mad, quaint dream this is! Where are they?â He caught at the neck of the saffron robe.
âIndoors!â said the Vicar. âThis way. We will changeâ âindoors!â
XII At the Vicarage (Continued)So the Angel was invested in a pair of nether garments of the Vicarâs, a shirt, ripped down the back (to accommodate the wings), socks, shoesâ âthe Vicarâs dress shoesâ âcollar, tie, and light overcoat. But putting on the latter was painful, and reminded the Vicar that the bandaging was temporary. âI will ring for tea at once, and send Grummet down for Crump,â said the Vicar. âAnd dinner shall be earlier.â While the Vicar shouted his orders on the landing rails, the Angel surveyed himself in the cheval glass with immense delight. If he was a stranger to pain, he was evidently no strangerâ âthanks perhaps to dreamingâ âto the pleasure of incongruity.
They had tea in the drawing-room. The Angel sat on the music stool (music stool because of his wings). At first he wanted to lie on the hearthrug. He looked much less radiant in the Vicarâs clothes, than he had done upon the moor when dressed in saffron. His face shone still, the colour of his hair and cheeks was strangely bright, and there was a superhuman light in his eyes, but his wings under the overcoat gave him the appearance of a hunchback. The garments, indeed, made quite a terrestrial thing of him, the trousers were puckered transversely, and the shoes a size or so too large.
He was charmingly affable and quite ignorant of the most elementary facts of civilization. Eating came without much difficulty, and the Vicar had an entertaining time teaching him how to take tea. âWhat a mess it is! What a dear grotesque ugly world you live in!â said the Angel. âFancy stuffing things into your mouth! We use our mouths just to talk and sing with. Our world, you know, is almost incurably beautiful. We get so very little ugliness, that I find all thisâ ââ ⊠delightful.â
Mrs. Hinijer, the Vicarâs housekeeper, looked at the Angel suspiciously when she brought in the tea. She thought him rather a âqueer customer.â What she would have thought had she seen him in saffron no one can tell.
The Angel shuffled about the room with his cup of tea in one hand, and the bread and butter in the other, and examined the Vicarâs furniture. Outside the French windows, the lawn with its array of dahlias and sunflowers glowed in the warm sunlight, and Mrs. Jehoramâs sunshade stood thereon like a triangle of fire. He thought the Vicarâs portrait over the mantel very curious indeed, could not understand what it was there for. âYou have yourself round,â he said, apropos of the portrait, âWhy want yourself flat?â and he was vastly amused at the glass fire screen. He found the oak chairs oddâ ââYouâre not square, are you?â he said, when the Vicar explained their use. âWe never double ourselves up. We lie about on the asphodel when we want to rest.â
âThe chair,â said the Vicar, âto tell you the truth, has always puzzled me. It dates, I think, from the days when the floors were cold and very dirty. I suppose we have kept up the habit. Itâs become a kind of instinct with us to sit on chairs. Anyhow, if I went to see one of my parishioners, and suddenly spread myself out on the floorâ âthe natural way of itâ âI donât know what she would do. It would be all over the parish in no time. Yet it seems the natural method of reposing, to recline. The Greeks and Romansâ ââ
âWhat is this?â said the Angel abruptly.
âThatâs a stuffed kingfisher. I killed it.â
âKilled it!â
âShot it,â said the Vicar, âwith a gun.â
âShot! As you did me?â
âI didnât kill you, you see. Fortunately.â
âIs killing making like that?â
âIn a way.â
âDear me! And you wanted to make me like thatâ âwanted to put glass eyes in me and string me up in a glass case full of ugly green and brown stuff?â
âYou see,â began the Vicar, âI scarcely understoodâ ââ
âIs that âdieâ?â asked the Angel suddenly.
âThat is dead; it died.â
âPoor little thing. I must eat a lot. But you say you killed it. Why?â
âYou see,â said the Vicar, âI take an interest in birds, and I (ahem) collect them. I wanted the specimenâ ââ
The Angel stared at him for a moment with puzzled eyes. âA beautiful bird like that!â he said with a shiver. âBecause the fancy took you. You wanted the specimen!â
He thought for a minute. âDo you often kill?â he asked the Vicar.
XIII The Man of ScienceThen Doctor Crump arrived. Grummet had met him not a hundred yards from the vicarage gate. He was a large, rather heavy-looking man,
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