Kipps H. G. Wells (best thriller novels to read .txt) đ
- Author: H. G. Wells
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âItâs plain, of course,â said Kipps, standing beside his uncle and looking down at this plan, which certainly did seem a little less magnificent now than it had at the first encounter.
âYou mustnât âave it too plain,â said old Kipps.
âIf itâs comfortableâ â,â Ann hazarded.
Old Kipps glanced at her over his spectacles. âYou ainât comfortable, my gal, in this world, not if you donât live up to your position,â so putting compactly into contemporary English that fine old phrase, noblesse oblige. âA âouse of this sort is what a retired tradesman might âave, or some little whippersnapper of a sâliciter. But youâ ââ
âCourse that isnât the oâny plan,â said Kipps, and tried the middle one.
But it was the third one which won over old Kipps. âNow thatâs a âouse, my boy,â he said at the sight of it.
Ann came and stood just behind her husbandâs shoulder while old Kipps expanded upon the desirability of the larger scheme. âYou ought to âave a billiard-room,â he said; âI donât see that, but all the restâs all right. A lot of these âere officers âere âud be glad of a game of billiards.ââ ââ âŠ
âWhatâs all these dots?â said old Kipps.
âSârubbery,â said Kipps. âFlowâing sârubs.â
âThereâs eleven bedrooms in that âouse,â said Ann. âItâs a bit of a lot, ainât it, uncle?â
âYouâll want âem, my girl. As you get on, youâll be âaving visitors. Friends of your âusband, pâraps, from the School of Musketry, what you want âim to get on with. You canât never tell.â
âIf we âave a great sârubbery,â Ann ventured, âwe shall âave to keep a gardener.â
âIf you donât âave a sârubbery,â said old Kipps, with a note of patient reasoning, âââow are you to prevent every jackanapes that goes by, starinâ into your drorinâ-room winderâ âpâraps when you get someone a bit special to entertain?â
âWe ainât used to a sârubbery,â said Ann, mulishly; âwe get on very well âere.â
âIt isnât what youâre used to,â said old Kipps, âitâs what you ought to âave now.â And with that Ann dropped out of the discussion.
âStudy and libâry,â old Kipps read. âThatâs right. I see a Tantalus the other day over Brookland, the very thing for a gentlemanâs study. Iâll try and get over and bid for it.ââ ââ âŠ
By bus time old Kipps was quite enthusiastic about the house building, and it seemed to be definitely settled that the largest plan was the one decided upon. But Ann had said nothing further in the matter.
When Kipps returned from seeing his uncle into the busâ âthere always seemed a certain doubt whether that portly figure would go into the little red âTip-Topâ boxâ âhe found Ann still standing by the table, looking with an expression of comprehensive disapproval at the three plans.
âThere donât seem much the matter with uncle,â said Kipps, assuming the hearthrug, âspite of âis âeartburn. âE âopped up them steps like a bird.â
Ann remained staring at the plans.
âYou donât like them plans?â hazarded Kipps.
âNo, I donât, Artie.â
âWe got to build somethinâ now.â
âButâ âitâs a gentlemanâs âouse, Artie!â
âItâsâ âitâs a decent size, oâ course.â
Kipps took a flirting look at the drawing and went to the window.
âLook at the cleaninâ. Free servantsâll be lost in that âouse, Artie.â
âWe must âave servants,â said Kipps.
Ann looked despondently at her future residence.
âWe got to keep up our position, anyâow,â said Kipps, turning towards her. âIt stands to reason, Ann, we got a position. Very well! I canât âave you scrubbinâ floors. You got to âave a servant and you got to manage a âouse. You wouldnât âave me ashamedâ ââ
Ann opened her lips and did not speak.
âWhat?â asked Kipps.
âNothing,â said Ann, âonly I did want it to be a little âouse, Artie. I wanted it to be a âandy little âouse, jest for us.â
Kippsâ face was suddenly flushed and mulish. He took up the curiously smelling tracings again. âIâm not a-going to be looked down upon,â he said. âItâs not only Uncle Iâm thinking of!â
Ann stared at him.
Kipps went on. âI wonât âave that young Walshingham fâr instance, sneering and sniffling at me. Making out as if we was all wrong. I see âim yesterday.â ââ ⊠Nor Coote neether. Iâm as goodâ âweâre as good. Whateverâs âappened.â
Silence and the rustle of plans.
He looked up and saw Annâs eyes bright with tears. For a moment the two stared at one another.
âWeâll âave the big âouse,â said Ann, with a gulp. âI didnât think of that, Artie.â
Her aspect was fierce and resolute, and she struggled with emotion. âWeâll âave the big âouse,â she repeated. âThey shanât say I dragged you down wivâ meâ ânone of them shanât say that. Iâve thoughtâ âIâve always been afraid of that.â
Kipps looked again at the plan, and suddenly the grand house had become very grand indeed. He blew.
âNo, Artie, none of them shanât say that,â and with something blind in her motions Ann tried to turn the plan round to her.â ââ âŠ
After all, Kipps thought there might be something to say for the milder project.â ââ ⊠But he had gone so far that now he did not know how to say it.
And so the plans went out to the builders, and in a little while Kipps was committed to two thousand five hundred pounds worth of building. But then, you know, he had an income of twelve hundred a year.
It is extraordinary what minor difficulties cluster about house building.
âI say, Ann,â remarked Kipps one day, âwe shall âave to call this little âouse by a name. I was thinking of âOme Cottage. But I dunno whether âOme Cottage is quite the thing like. All these little fishermenâs places are called Cottages.â
âI like cottage,â said Ann.
âItâs got eleven bedrooms, dâsee,â said Kipps. âI donât see âow you can call it a cottage with more bedrooms than four. Propâly speaking, itâs a Large Villa. Propâly, itâs almost a Big âOuse. Leastways a âOuse.â
âWell,â said Ann, âif you must call it Villaâ âHome Villa.â ââ ⊠I wish it wasnât.â
Kipps meditated.
âââOw about Eureka Villa?â he said, raising his voice.
âWhatâs Eureka?â
âItâs a name,â
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