Mrs. Paragon2 gravely listened to Peter's story of his indiscipline. She did not, of course, find it in any way ridiculous. She brooded upon it as evidence of Peter's abounding3 life, and she instinctively4 trembled. Peter's energy was beginning to be dangerous.
Peter's uncle flung up his great head and laughed. He made Peter, to Peter's rage, recur5 to the story again and again, asking for unspeakable details. His red face shone and twinkled. He roared with delight.
In the middle of the vacation the author who first had stirred Peter to intellectual enthusiasm came to Hamingburgh, and talked Socialism to a local branch of the Superior Socialists7. Peter was wrought8 to so high an admiration9 of the art with which the great man handled his audience, by the clarity, vigour10, and wit of his speaking, that he dared at the end to ask publicly some very pertinent11 and searching questions. The speaker could[Pg 115] not answer him immediately; but afterwards promised to write to Peter if Peter would remind him.
Peter thus became one of the fortunate correspondents of an author whose private letters were better than his published works. Before he returned to Oxford he already had a small pile, thumbed with continuous reading.
Peter acquitted12 himself reasonably to the satisfaction of his masters when he returned to Gamaliel. He wrote without vigour or interest, but his grim industry saved him from absolute failure. All through the term he stuck hard at the necessary books, and trained hard for the summer eights. His spare energy now went into socialist6 oratory13, blue books, and public speaking. He made sudden appearances at the Oxford union, cutting into the debates with ferocious15 contempt for the politics there discussed. To Peter the world was very wrong, and it seemed easy to put it right. He denounced the imbecility of the party game—played in the midst of so much urgently calling to be done. He drowned his audiences in terrible figures and unanswerable economy. He extirpated16 landlords and destroyed wagery. He abolished the oldest profession in the world as accidental to a society badly run. Peter became famous as an orator14. It was confidently said that next term he would be given a place on the Committee of the union. One evening he was taken by the Proctors, prophesying18 from a cart in the Broad. He was[Pg 116] fined, ostensibly for appearing ungowned in the streets at an unlawful hour.
Peter's access of political fervour was aggravated19 this term by an unfortunate accident. He sprained20 a tendon of his leg, and had to drop out of the boat a few days before the races. The effect of this physical relaxation21 was to increase his energy for discontent. For several blissful days he lay upon his back in a punt upon the Char22, happy to be lazy, to breathe the heavy scent23 of hawthorn24, to be rocked by noises of water and of voices over the water. Then he began to dream; and blue books marched in the avenues of his brain, mocking the elaborate idleness of the afternoon. The week itself of the races forced once again upon his imagination the contrasts he had seen in London. The merry pageant25 of the river, brilliant with summer dresses; the pleasant evening parties at the Old Mitre where his mother and uncle were staying; everywhere an expensive and careless life accepted as normal—these things were bright against a dark background of neglect and oppression. Peter was now a very serious young man.
His brooding at this time was only lightened during the summer week by the presence in Oxford of his mother and uncle. There was much to arrange and to observe. Peter had been afraid of his uncle. How would his uncle behave among the Oxford people? Peter was not really happy until he had dined very near Dundoon and his[Pg 117] party. The father of Dundoon was a nobleman with 10,000 acres of urban land. Yet, Peter cynically26 reflected, you could scarcely distinguish him from Uncle Henry. He, too, had a large red face, ate with more heartiness27 than delicacy28, and talked in an accent entirely29 his own. Peter breathed more freely. Instinctively he began a peroration30 as to aristocracy true and false, with interpolated calculations as to the possible unearned increment31 upon 10,000 acres conveniently near London.
Uncle Henry, of course, had to be shown exactly where the Junior Prior had fallen; and Peter had to stand by, embarrassed and fuming32, while Uncle Henry rehearsed the scene in pantomime.
Peter was proud and glad to see how rapidly his friends came to praise and admire his mother. They instinctively felt her strength and peace. They began at once to confide17 in her, though her answers were rarely of more than one syllable33. Of all Peter's friends Lord Marbury liked her best.
Marbury was at this time Peter's nearest friend at Gamaliel. Peter had met Marbury only this last term. He had one day sat next to a stranger at dinner. Finding the stranger to be a man of excellent intelligence Peter had begun vigorously to denounce the aristocracy of England. The stranger had mildly protested that English lords were rather more various in character than Peter supposed, and that perhaps they had a use in politics and society. Peter contested this, [Pg 118]overwhelming his new friend with facts, figures, arguments, and devices for buying out all the vested interests of the nobility at a reasonable figure. Two days after, at a college ceremony which required the men to answer to their names, Peter heard with distaste that a new title was being called. He looked contemptuously round, and to his dismay saw his new friend rise in answer. Marbury smiled pleasantly at Peter and chaffed him in the best of humour.
The friendship rapidly grew. Marbury was all that a man of lively interest and fancy can be who has mixed from a boy with polite citizens of the world. He knew all that Peter had yet to learn; but Peter's world of ideas attracted him as a country unexplored. Peter less consciously drew towards Marbury as one who seemed, in all but purely34 intellectual things, unaccountably wise. He really felt the curb35 of Marbury's knowledge of things as they are, whereas Marbury delighted in Peter's enthusiasm for things as they should be.
Marbury's charm for Peter rested, too, upon his ability to talk in a perfectly36 natural and unaffected way of intimate and simple things. Marbury at once declared his pleasure in Peter's mother. His own people had not come to Oxford for the races, and he devoted37 himself almost entirely to Mrs. Paragon.
"It's pleasant just to carry her mackintosh," he said to Peter one evening after they had come from the hotel.
[Pg 119]
"I'm glad you like her."
"Like her?" protested Marbury. "Don't be inadequate38. She is simply wonderful."
Peter asked himself how Marbury had discovered this.
"What have you been talking about all the evening?" he inquired.
"I haven't the least idea. Mostly nonsense."
"Then how do you know she is wonderful?"
"Peter," said Marbury, "sometimes you annoy me. It's true that I haven't the least idea what your mother thinks about the English aristocracy or George Meredith. I simply know that your mother is wonderful."
Peter leant eagerly forward:
"I understand how you feel."
"Good," jerked Marbury. "I'm glad you are not quite insensible."
He looked reflectively at Peter, and continued:
"I am almost hopeful about you now that I've met your mother. I cannot help feeling there must be some sanity39 in you somewhere. But where did you get all your nonsense?"
"My father was shot down in the street," said Peter briefly40.
"I'm sorry," said Marbury after a pause. "I did not know."
The summer races were run to an end, and only three weeks of term remained. Peter, physically41 unemployed42, accumulated stores of energy. He became insufferably violent in conversation, and[Pg 120] Marbury, after telling him to put his head in ice, said he would have no more to do with him till he no longer addressed his friends as if they were a public meeting.
That Peter did not that term fly into flat rebellion was due to a lack of opportunity. For a similar reason he continued to get through another year between Oxford and Hamingburgh. His weeks at home with his mother were like deep pools of a stream between troubled reaches. At Oxford Marbury, with his imperturbable43 sanity and good humour, kept him a little in check. They were inseparable. Peter would not again go on the river. He bought a horse and rode with Marbury through the winter and spring in the country about Oxford, or sailed with him in the desolate44 river beyond Port Meadow. Meantime he gored45 at his books like an angry bull, was the favourite hot gospeller of the Oxford Socialists, and was elected Secretary of the union as an independent candidate—a fact recorded with misguided enthusiasm in the Labour press. Peter's first summer term was the model of the two which followed; and his second summer term might harmlessly have passed like the first had not Marbury been called away. Marbury was his uncle's heir, and his uncle was not expected to live through the year. Henceforth Marbury would have to spend most of his time upon his uncle's estate. Thus, in the singing month of May, and in his second year, Peter was left unbridled.
点击收听单词发音
1 Oxford | |
n.牛津(英国城市) | |
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2 paragon | |
n.模范,典型 | |
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3 abounding | |
adj.丰富的,大量的v.大量存在,充满,富于( abound的现在分词 ) | |
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4 instinctively | |
adv.本能地 | |
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5 recur | |
vi.复发,重现,再发生 | |
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6 socialist | |
n.社会主义者;adj.社会主义的 | |
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7 socialists | |
社会主义者( socialist的名词复数 ) | |
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8 wrought | |
v.引起;以…原料制作;运转;adj.制造的 | |
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9 admiration | |
n.钦佩,赞美,羡慕 | |
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10 vigour | |
(=vigor)n.智力,体力,精力 | |
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11 pertinent | |
adj.恰当的;贴切的;中肯的;有关的;相干的 | |
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12 acquitted | |
宣判…无罪( acquit的过去式和过去分词 ); 使(自己)作出某种表现 | |
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13 oratory | |
n.演讲术;词藻华丽的言辞 | |
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14 orator | |
n.演说者,演讲者,雄辩家 | |
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15 ferocious | |
adj.凶猛的,残暴的,极度的,十分强烈的 | |
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16 extirpated | |
v.消灭,灭绝( extirpate的过去式和过去分词 );根除 | |
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17 confide | |
v.向某人吐露秘密 | |
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18 prophesying | |
v.预告,预言( prophesy的现在分词 ) | |
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19 aggravated | |
使恶化( aggravate的过去式和过去分词 ); 使更严重; 激怒; 使恼火 | |
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20 sprained | |
v.&n. 扭伤 | |
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21 relaxation | |
n.松弛,放松;休息;消遣;娱乐 | |
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22 char | |
v.烧焦;使...燃烧成焦炭 | |
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23 scent | |
n.气味,香味,香水,线索,嗅觉;v.嗅,发觉 | |
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24 hawthorn | |
山楂 | |
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25 pageant | |
n.壮观的游行;露天历史剧 | |
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26 cynically | |
adv.爱嘲笑地,冷笑地 | |
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27 heartiness | |
诚实,热心 | |
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28 delicacy | |
n.精致,细微,微妙,精良;美味,佳肴 | |
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29 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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30 peroration | |
n.(演说等之)结论 | |
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31 increment | |
n.增值,增价;提薪,增加工资 | |
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32 fuming | |
愤怒( fume的现在分词 ); 大怒; 发怒; 冒烟 | |
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33 syllable | |
n.音节;vt.分音节 | |
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34 purely | |
adv.纯粹地,完全地 | |
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35 curb | |
n.场外证券市场,场外交易;vt.制止,抑制 | |
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36 perfectly | |
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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37 devoted | |
adj.忠诚的,忠实的,热心的,献身于...的 | |
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38 inadequate | |
adj.(for,to)不充足的,不适当的 | |
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39 sanity | |
n.心智健全,神智正常,判断正确 | |
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40 briefly | |
adv.简单地,简短地 | |
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41 physically | |
adj.物质上,体格上,身体上,按自然规律 | |
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42 unemployed | |
adj.失业的,没有工作的;未动用的,闲置的 | |
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43 imperturbable | |
adj.镇静的 | |
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44 desolate | |
adj.荒凉的,荒芜的;孤独的,凄凉的;v.使荒芜,使孤寂 | |
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45 gored | |
v.(动物)用角撞伤,用牙刺破( gore的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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