Night and Day Virginia Woolf (the best electronic book reader .txt) đ
- Author: Virginia Woolf
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âWhich is a proof that he wasnât as poor as theyâve sometimes said. I should like to think that he had enough, though I donât in the least want him to be rich.â
Then, perceiving her daughterâs expression of perplexity, Mrs. Hilbery burst out laughing.
âMy dear, Iâm not talking about your William, though thatâs another reason for liking him. Iâm talking, Iâm thinking, Iâm dreaming of my Williamâ âWilliam Shakespeare, of course. Isnât it odd,â she mused, standing at the window and tapping gently upon the pane, âthat for all one can see, that dear old thing in the blue bonnet, crossing the road with her basket on her arm, has never heard that there was such a person? Yet it all goes on: lawyers hurrying to their work, cabmen squabbling for their fares, little boys rolling their hoops, little girls throwing bread to the gulls, as if there werenât a Shakespeare in the world. I should like to stand at that crossing all day long and say: âPeople, read Shakespeare!âââ
Katharine sat down at her table and opened a long dusty envelope. As Shelley was mentioned in the course of the letter as if he were alive, it had, of course, considerable value. Her immediate task was to decide whether the whole letter should be printed, or only the paragraph which mentioned Shelleyâs name, and she reached out for a pen and held it in readiness to do justice upon the sheet. Her pen, however, remained in the air. Almost surreptitiously she slipped a clean sheet in front of her, and her hand, descending, began drawing square boxes halved and quartered by straight lines, and then circles which underwent the same process of dissection.
âKatharine! Iâve hit upon a brilliant idea!â Mrs. Hilbery exclaimedâ ââto lay out, say, a hundred pounds or so on copies of Shakespeare, and give them to working men. Some of your clever friends who get up meetings might help us, Katharine. And that might lead to a playhouse, where we could all take parts. Youâd be Rosalindâ âbut youâve a dash of the old nurse in you. Your fatherâs Hamlet, come to years of discretion; and Iâmâ âwell, Iâm a bit of them all; Iâm quite a large bit of the fool, but the fools in Shakespeare say all the clever things. Now who shall William be? A hero? Hotspur? Henry the Fifth? No, Williamâs got a touch of Hamlet in him, too. I can fancy that William talks to himself when heâs alone. Ah, Katharine, you must say very beautiful things when youâre together!â she added wistfully, with a glance at her daughter, who had told her nothing about the dinner the night before.
âOh, we talk a lot of nonsense,â said Katharine, hiding her slip of paper as her mother stood by her, and spreading the old letter about Shelley in front of her.
âIt wonât seem to you nonsense in ten yearsâ time,â said Mrs. Hilbery. âBelieve me, Katharine, youâll look back on these days afterwards; youâll remember all the silly things youâve said; and youâll find that your life has been built on them. The best of life is built on what we say when weâre in love. It isnât nonsense, Katharine,â she urged, âitâs the truth, itâs the only truth.â
Katharine was on the point of interrupting her mother, and then she was on the point of confiding in her. They came strangely close together sometimes. But, while she hesitated and sought for words not too direct, her mother had recourse to Shakespeare, and turned page after page, set upon finding some quotation which said all this about love far, far better than she could. Accordingly, Katharine did nothing but scrub one of her circles an intense black with her pencil, in the midst of which process the telephone-bell rang, and she left the room to answer it.
When she returned, Mrs. Hilbery had found not the passage she wanted, but another of exquisite beauty as she justly observed, looking up for a second to ask Katharine who that was?
âMary Datchet,â Katharine replied briefly.
âAhâ âI half wish Iâd called you Mary, but it wouldnât have gone with Hilbery, and it wouldnât have gone with Rodney. Now this isnât the passage I wanted. (I never can find what I want.) But itâs spring; itâs the daffodils; itâs the green fields; itâs the birds.â
She was cut short in her quotation by another imperative telephone-bell. Once more Katharine left the room.
âMy dear child, how odious the triumphs of science are!â Mrs. Hilbery exclaimed on her return. âTheyâll be linking us with the moon nextâ âbut who was that?â
âWilliam,â Katharine replied yet more briefly.
âIâll forgive William anything, for Iâm certain that there arenât any Williams in the moon. I hope heâs coming to luncheon?â
âHeâs coming to tea.â
âWell, thatâs better than nothing, and I promise to leave you alone.â
âThereâs no need for you to do that,â said Katharine.
She swept her hand over the faded sheet, and drew herself up squarely to the table as if she refused to waste time any longer. The gesture was not lost upon her mother. It hinted at the existence of something stern and unapproachable in her daughterâs character, which struck chill upon her, as the sight of poverty, or drunkenness, or the logic with which Mr. Hilbery sometimes thought good to demolish her certainty of an approaching millennium struck chill upon her. She went back to her own table, and putting on her spectacles with a curious expression of quiet humility, addressed herself for the first time that morning to the task before her. The shock with an unsympathetic world had a sobering effect on her. For once, her industry surpassed her daughterâs. Katharine could not reduce the world to that particular perspective in which Harriet Martineau, for instance, was a figure of solid importance, and possessed of a genuine relationship to this figure or to that date. Singularly enough, the sharp call of the telephone-bell still echoed in her ear, and her body and mind were in a state of tension, as
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