登陆注册
15423300000022

第22章

We held our next business meeting on my houseboat. Brown was opposed at first to my going down to this houseboat at all. He thought that none of us should leave town while the novel was still on hand.

MacShaughnassy, on the contrary, was of opinion that we should work better on a houseboat. Speaking for himself, he said he never felt more like writing a really great work than when lying in a hammock among whispering leaves, with the deep blue sky above him, and a tumbler of iced claret cup within easy reach of his hand. Failing a hammock, he found a deck chair a great incentive to mental labour.

In the interests of the novel, he strongly recommended me to take down with me at least one comfortable deck chair, and plenty of lemons.

I could not myself see any reason why we should not be able to think as well on a houseboat as anywhere else, and accordingly it was settled that I should go down and establish myself upon the thing, and that the others should visit me there from time to time, when we would sit round and toil.

This houseboat was Ethelbertha's idea. We had spent a day, the summer before, on one belonging to a friend of mine, and she had been enraptured with the life. Everything was on such a delightfully tiny scale. You lived in a tiny little room; you slept on a tiny little bed, in a tiny, tiny little bedroom; and you cooked your little dinner by a tiny little fire, in the tiniest little kitchen that ever you did see. "Oh, it must be lovely, living on a houseboat," said Ethelbertha, with a gasp of ecstasy; "it must be like living in a doll's house."Ethelbertha was very young--ridiculously young, as I think I have mentioned before--in those days of which I am writing, and the love of dolls, and of the gorgeous dresses that dolls wear, and of the many-windowed but inconveniently arranged houses that dolls inhabit--or are supposed to inhabit, for as a rule they seem to prefer sitting on the roof with their legs dangling down over the front door, which has always appeared to me to be unladylike: but then, of course, I am no authority on doll etiquette--had not yet, Ithink, quite departed from her. Nay, am I not sure that it had not?

Do I not remember, years later, peeping into a certain room, the walls of which are covered with works of art of a character calculated to send any aesthetic person mad, and seeing her, sitting on the floor, before a red brick mansion, containing two rooms and a kitchen; and are not her hands trembling with delight as she arranges the three real tin plates upon the dresser? And does she not knock at the real brass knocker upon the real front door until it comes off, and I have to sit down beside her on the floor and screw it on again?

Perhaps, however, it is unwise for me to recall these things, and bring them forward thus in evidence against her, for cannot she in turn laugh at me? Did not I also assist in the arrangement and appointment of that house beautiful? We differed on the matter of the drawing-room carpet, I recollect. Ethelbertha fancied a dark blue velvet, but I felt sure, taking the wall-paper into consideration, that some shade of terra-cotta would harmonise best.

She agreed with me in the end, and we manufactured one out of an old chest protector. It had a really charming effect, and gave a delightfully warm tone to the room. The blue velvet we put in the kitchen. I deemed this extravagance, but Ethelbertha said that servants thought a lot of a good carpet, and that it paid to humour them in little things, when practicable.

The bedroom had one big bed and a cot in it; but I could not see where the girl was going to sleep. The architect had overlooked her altogether: that is so like an architect. The house also suffered from the inconvenience common to residences of its class, of possessing no stairs, so that to move from one room to another it was necessary to burst your way up through the ceiling, or else to come outside and climb in through a window; either of which methods must be fatiguing when you come to do it often.

Apart from these drawbacks, however, the house was one that any doll agent would have been justified in describing as a "most desirable family residence"; and it had been furnished with a lavishness that bordered on positive ostentation. In the bedroom there was a washing-stand, and on the washing-stand there stood a jug and basin, and in the jug there was real water. But all this was as nothing.

I have known mere ordinary, middle-class dolls' houses in which you might find washing-stands and jugs and basins and real water--ay, and even soap. But in this abode of luxury there was a real towel;so that a body could not only wash himself, but wipe himself afterwards, and that is a sensation that, as all dolls know, can be enjoyed only in the very first-class establishments.

Then, in the drawing-room, there was a clock, which would tick just so long as you continued to shake it (it never seemed to get tired);also a picture and a piano, and a book upon the table, and a vase of flowers that would upset the moment you touched it, just like a real vase of flowers. Oh, there was style about this room, I can tell you.

But the glory of the house was its kitchen. There were all things that heart could desire in this kitchen, saucepans with lids that took on and off, a flat-iron and a rolling-pin. A dinner service for three occupied about half the room, and what space was left was filled up by the stove--a REAL stove! Think of it, oh ye owners of dolls' houses, a stove in which you could burn real bits of coal, and on which you could boil real bits of potato for dinner--except when people said you mustn't, because it was dangerous, and took the grate away from you, and blew out the fire, a thing that hampers a cook.

I never saw a house more complete in all its details. Nothing had been overlooked, not even the family. It lay on its back, just outside the front door, proud but calm, waiting to be put into possession. It was not an extensive family. It consisted of four--papa, and mamma, and baby, and the hired girl; just the family for a beginner.

同类推荐
  • Rhymes a la Mode

    Rhymes a la Mode

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 止观大意

    止观大意

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 尚书正义

    尚书正义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 救诸众生一切苦难经

    救诸众生一切苦难经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 科利奥兰纳斯

    科利奥兰纳斯

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 小花记

    小花记

    无限好书尽在阅文。
  • 负你一生多少泪

    负你一生多少泪

    她本是世家闺秀,却在年少被父母送与他人,十年磨砺,昔日千金成了武功卓绝的江湖侠女。却与侯爵世家的青梅竹马再度重逢,并卷入与王孙的爱恨情仇。她能否重新做回到她的千金小姐,甚至担起母仪天下的责任。当她身负的惊世秘密被揭开,谁能护她周全。她又要守护谁。所谓爱,究竟是妥协,还是成全。
  • 请君入瓮

    请君入瓮

    顾家有女,皎皎如日月,却一片赤诚真心错付。当往事都烟消云散,有人期望她做回顾氏的娇娇女,亦有人期望她永远是游荡在外的孤女。成王败寇,仇人又究竟是谁?
  • 亿万总裁的绝对占有:星光璀璨

    亿万总裁的绝对占有:星光璀璨

    她的梦想是进入今视成为一名新闻人,一不小心睡错了人,运命开始大洗牌。哥哥的惨死,亲友的背叛,她被屈辱地踩在了云泥之下。权欲之下,真相分崩,命运这盘棋,她要自己操盘。他城府冷酷,腹黑霸气,黑白只在他一念之间,掌控着全国最强的经济命脉,他却只要她俯首臣服。当全民偶像遇见国民老公,睡,还是不睡,是早晚的问题。“四爷,她作为一个新人,这么早就炒作,不好吧?”“不好,让她霸版头条。”“四爷,她作为一个女配,跟影后撕逼,不好吧?”“不好,封杀影后。”“四爷,她作为一个老婆,这样夜不归宿,不好吧?”“很好,告诉她,晚上我们聊一聊。”
  • 天使微笑的守护

    天使微笑的守护

    她是一位单纯的少女,她从小没有五岁的记忆,她的养父收养的她养大成人。(想看的人默默地关注吧。)
  • 刀动九州

    刀动九州

    这是一个崇尚实力的世界,强者为尊,弱者则为蝼蚁,没有一个人天生就是强者,每一位站在武道巅峰的强者都是经历了血与火的洗礼,有着一颗坚韧不拔的心,他没有显赫的家世,背负着灭族的仇恨,一个人在众多的蝼蚁中挣扎,他有着坚韧不拔的性格,无所畏惧的勇气,看少年战云鹏怎样在这个残酷的世界演绎出精彩的人生,一切谜底尽在刀动九州……
  • TFBOYs之你若不离我定不弃

    TFBOYs之你若不离我定不弃

    花季雨季,你我是否有未来,你和我最纯真年代,感谢有你。
  • 热血修真高校

    热血修真高校

    可以进入风云高校的分数却迫于无奈来到了凌志,却不想这里是一座修真高校,自己的父亲也是修真者,未来的路会如何,修真高校开启,他的未来会在哪里?
  • 苍劫记

    苍劫记

    为了拯救面临天灾人祸的世间,失传数千年的天剑榜第一位神剑苍劫创世回归。乱世当道,匹夫有责。征战天下,无上巅峰。且看琼宇幻世魔云现,苍劫天念斩前缘。红颜逍客惜樽酒,无奈当道扬奉先!
  • 守望光明

    守望光明

    林铭在太空漂流了两年,但当他回到地球,一切都变了……文明崩塌,命如草芥,这是一个充满了肮脏与血腥的世界。林铭不是好人,但他想为那些好人,重新建立一个光明的世界。”就让我在这黑暗中,守望光明……“