Lavengro George Borrow (free ebook reader for ipad TXT) đ
- Author: George Borrow
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âWell, sir, where were we? Oh, I remember, we were talking about merit. Sir, I always wish to encourage merit, especially when it comes so highly recommended as in the present instance. Sir, my good friend and correspondent speaks of you in the highest terms. Sir, I honour my good friend, and have the highest respect for his opinion in all matters connected with literatureâ ârather eccentric though. Sir, my good friend has done my periodical more good and more harm than all the rest of my correspondents. Sir, I shall never forget the sensation caused by the appearance of his article about a certain personage whom he provedâ âand I think satisfactorilyâ âto have been a legionary soldierâ ârather startling, was it not? The Sâ âžșâ 129 of the world a common soldier, in a marching regiment!â âoriginal, but startling; sir, I honour my good friend.â
âSo you have renounced publishing, sir,â said I, âwith the exception of the Magazine?â
âWhy, yes; except now and then, under the rose; the old coachman, you know, likes to hear the whip. Indeed, at the present moment, I am thinking of starting a Review on an entirely new and original principle; and it just struck me that you might be of high utility in the undertakingâ âwhat do you think of the matter?â
âI should be happy, sir, to render you any assistance, but I am afraid the employment you propose requires other qualifications than I possess; however, I can make the essay. My chief intention in coming to London was to lay before the world what I had prepared; and I had hoped by your assistanceâ ââ
âAh! I see, ambition! Ambition is a very pretty thing; but, sir, we must walk before we run, according to the old sayingâ âwhat is that you have got under your arm?â
âOne of the works to which I was alluding; the one, indeed, which I am most anxious to lay before the world, as I hope to derive from it both profit and reputation.â
âIndeed! what do you call it?â
âAncient songs of Denmark, heroic and romantic, translated by myself, with notes philological, critical and historical.â
âThen, sir, I assure you that your time and labour have been entirely flung away; nobody would read your ballads, if you were to give them to the world tomorrow.â
âI am sure, sir, that you would say otherwise if you would permit me to read one to you;â and, without waiting for the answer of the big man, nor indeed so much as looking at him, to see whether he was inclined or not to hear me, I undid my manuscript, and with a voice trembling with eagerness, I read to the following effect:â â
Buckshank bold and Elfinstone,
And more than I can mention here,
They caused to be built so stout a ship,
And unto Iceland they would steer.
They launched the ship upon the main,
Which bellowed like a wrathful bear;
Down to the bottom the vessel sank,
A laidly Trold has dragged it there.
Down to the bottom sank young Roland,
And round about he groped awhile;
Until he found the path which led
Unto the bower of Ellenlyle.
âStop!â said the publisher; âvery pretty, indeed, and very original; beats Scott hollow, and Percy too: but, sir, the day for these things is gone by; nobody at present cares for Percy, nor for Scott, either, save as a novelist; sorry to discourage merit, sir, but what can I do? What else have you got?â
âThe songs of Ab Gwilym, the Welsh bard, also translated by myself, with notes critical, philological and historical.â
âPass onâ âwhat else?â
âNothing else,â said I, folding up my manuscript with a sigh, âunless it be a romance in the German style; on which, I confess, I set very little value.â
âWild?â
âYes, sir, very wild.â
âLike the Miller of the Black Valley?â
âYes, sir, very much like the Miller of the Black Valley.â
âWell, thatâs better,â said the publisher; âand yet, I donât know, I question whether anyone at present cares for the miller himself. No, sir, the time for those things is also gone by; German, at present, is a drug; and, between ourselves, nobody has contributed to make it so more than my good friend and correspondent; but, sir, I see you are a young gentleman of infinite merit, and I always wish to encourage merit. Donât you think you could write a series of evangelical tales?â
âEvangelical tales, sir?â
âYes, sir, evangelical novels.â
âSomething in the style of Herder?â
âHerder is a drug, sir; nobody cares for Herderâ âthanks to my good friend. Sir, I have in yon drawer a hundred pages about Herder, which I dare not insert in my periodical; it would sink it, sir. No, sir, something in the style of the Dairymanâs Daughter.â
âI never heard of the work till the present moment.â
âThen, sir, procure it by all means. Sir, I could afford as much as ten pounds for a well-written tale in the style of the Dairymanâs Daughter; that is the kind of literature, sir, that sells at the present day! It is not the Miller of the Black Valleyâ âno, sir, nor Herder either, that will suit the present taste; the evangelical body is becoming very strong, sirâ âthe canting scoundrelsâ ââ
âBut, sir, surely you would not pander to a scoundrelly taste?â
âThen, sir, I must give up business altogether. Sir, I have a great respect for the goddess Reasonâ âan infinite respect, sir; indeed, in my time, I have made a great many sacrifices for her; but, sir, I cannot altogether ruin myself for the goddess Reason. Sir, I am a friend to Liberty, as is well known; but I must also be a friend to my own family. It is with the view of providing for a son of mine that I am about
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