登陆注册
19863000000005

第5章 PART FIRST(3)

"You think it over now,March.You talk it over with Mrs.March;I know you will,anyway;and I might as well make a virtue of advising you to do it.Tell her I advised you to do it,and you let me know before next Saturday what you've decided."March shut down the rolling top of his desk in the corner of the room,and walked Fulkerson out before him.It was so late that the last of the chore-women who washed down the marble halls and stairs of the great building had wrung out her floor-cloth and departed,leaving spotless stone and a clean,damp smell in the darkening corridors behind her.

"Couldn't offer you such swell quarters in New York,March,"Fulkerson said,as he went tack-tacking down the steps with his small boot-heels.

"But I've got my eye on a little house round in West Eleventh Street that I'm going to fit up for my bachelor's hall in the third story,and adapt for 'The Lone Hand'in the first and second,if this thing goes through;and I guess we'll be pretty comfortable.It's right on the Sand Strip --no malaria of any kind.""I don't know that I'm going to share its salubrity with you yet,"March sighed,in an obvious travail which gave Fulkerson hopes.

"Oh yes,you are,"he coaxed."Now,you talk it over with your wife.

You give her a fair,unprejudiced chance at the thing on its merits,and I'm very much mistaken in Mrs.March if she doesn't tell you to go in and win.We're bound to win!"They stood on the outside steps of the vast edifice beetling like a granite crag above them,with the stone groups of an allegory of life-insurance foreshortened in the bas-relief overhead.March absently lifted his eyes to it.It was suddenly strange after so many years'familiarity,and so was the well-known street in its Saturday-evening solitude.He asked himself,with prophetic homesickness,if it were an omen of what was to be.But he only said,musingly:"A fortnightly.You know that didn't work in England.The fortnightly is published once a month now.""It works in France,"Fulkerson retorted."The 'Revue des Deux Mondes'is still published twice a month.I guess we can make it work in America--with illustrations.""Going to have illustrations?"

"My dear boy!What are you giving me?Do I look like the sort of lunatic who would start a thing in the twilight of the nineteenth century without illustrations?Come off!""Ah,that complicates it!I don't know anything about art."March's look of discouragement confessed the hold the scheme had taken upon him.

"I don't want you to!"Fulkerson retorted."Don't you suppose I shall have an art man?""And will they--the artists--work at a reduced rate,too,like the writers,with the hopes of a share in the success?""Of course they will!And if I want any particular man,for a card,I'll pay him big money besides.But I can get plenty of first-rate sketches on my own terms.You'll see!They'll pour in!""Look here,Fulkerson,"said March,"you'd better call this fortnightly of yours 'The Madness o f the Half-Moon';or 'Bedlam Broke Loose'wouldn't be bad!Why do you throw away all your hard earnings on such a crazy venture?Don't do it!"The kindness which March had always felt,in spite of his wife's first misgivings and reservations,for the merry,hopeful,slangy,energetic little creature trembled in his voice.They had both formed a friendship for Fulkerson during the week they were together in Quebec.When he was not working the newspapers there,he went about with them over the familiar ground they were showing their children,and was simply grateful for the chance,as well as very entertaining about it all.The children liked him,too;when they got the clew to his intention,and found that he was not quite serious in many of the things he said,they thought he was great fun.They were always glad when their father brought him home on the occasion of Fulkerson's visits to Boston;and Mrs.March,though of a charier hospitality,welcomed Fulkerson with a grateful sense of his admiration for her husband.He had a way of treating March with deference,as an older and abler man,and of qualifying the freedom he used toward every one with an implication that March tolerated it voluntarily,which she thought very sweet and even refined.

"Ah,now you're talking like a man and a brother,"said Fulkerson."Why,March,old man,do you suppose I'd come on here and try to talk you into this thing if I wasn't morally,if I wasn't perfectly,sure of success?

There isn't any if or and about it.I know my ground,every inch;and Idon't stand alone on it,"he added,with a significance which did not escape March."When you've made up your mind I can give you the proof;but I'm not at liberty now to say anything more.I tell you it's going to be a triumphal march from the word go,with coffee and lemonade for the procession along the whole line.All you've got to do is to fall in."He stretched out his hand to March."You let me know as soon as you can."March deferred taking his hand till he could ask,"Where are you going?""Parker House.Take the eleven for New York to-night.""I thought I might walk your way."March looked at his watch."But Ishouldn't have time.Goodbye!"

He now let Fulkerson have his hand,and they exchanged a cordial pressure.Fulkerson started away at a quick,light pace.Half a block off he stopped,turned round,and,seeing March still standing where he had left him,he called back,joyously,"I've got the name!""What?"

"Every Other Week."

"It isn't bad."

"Ta-ta!"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 【柯南+死神】无尽旅程的终点

    【柯南+死神】无尽旅程的终点

    我是“死神”,只要死了就能穿越,每一个时空都成为了我人生中的旅游景点。这次,我穿越到了柯南所处的时代,与他相识,顺便培养培养感情,和他成为至交朋友。原以为再离开,也不会对这里留恋,却不料,我的心里已经满满的都是他的影子。肿么办?只好留下来陪他喽!
  • 标杆集(心灵鸡汤系列书)

    标杆集(心灵鸡汤系列书)

    本书饱含温馨的情感,采集了大量充满启迪的心灵故事,情意浓浓,至真至醇,如涓涓细流冲涤你尘封的心,给你心灵的滋养;如母亲温暖的手轻轻抚慰你的胸膛,给你心灵的深深慰藉。它能让心如明镜,照见你曾经的倩影,让你获得片刻休息欣赏自己;它能让你情如种子勃发,慢慢长成片片树阴,遮挡你的风风雨雨。人生如斯,还有谁如此情真意切地牵挂着你?
  • 佣兵大小姐

    佣兵大小姐

    冷亦寒,冷家流落在外的私生女。谁能想到她会与世界顶级佣兵是同一人?本想好好享受一下空闲,却发现自己身边之人个个不简单!从此与黑道之人斗智斗勇,与身边美男暧昧不清。
  • 轮回之劫

    轮回之劫

    这是一本与众不同的小说,不是说它有多么好,只是在这本小说里面,主角不是无敌,也没有那么腹黑阴暗,更不是偶像剧中的一幅扑克脸,主角身边有很多人,很多不一样的角色,都有各的形态,但是随着故事的发展主角身边的人有的会死去,而正是因为主角身边的人的死去才使得主角内心变得更加强大,即使他是一个受过轮回劫的人,但真正的轮回到底又是什么?你想知道吗?那就让主角来告诉你。
  • 半世杀宠
  • 御剑寻仙录

    御剑寻仙录

    上古洪荒,猛兽,仙人,异族,凡人,魔族共存,一场大战决定人类存亡。战端一开,生灵涂炭,人类先祖铸神器保人族不灭,千年之后神器重现天下大乱....
  • EXO时光替我说爱你

    EXO时光替我说爱你

    为什么爱我?为什么离开我?为什么背叛我的爱?为什么在我死心的时候说爱我?为什么我们不会有童话那样的结局?或许,这一切的一切,都是老天在捉弄人吧。你只会把我当成一个玩偶吗?想扔就扔,想捡就捡,你想要我的身体,还是我的心?凭什么对我这么好?你让我用什么补偿你,你想要我的爱吗?对不起……我的心早已被他占据。连死都不怕,怎么会怕爱情,爱情么……好复杂。最后还不是离开了你们……为什么那么爱我,在外人眼里,我算什么?人渣?贱人?小三?上辈子造了多少福,让我认识了两个这么好的朋友,还有两个,那么爱我的人…我爱你,没来得及说出口。我走了,去天堂了,时光老人,替我好好爱着他们吧!
  • 浮生诗草

    浮生诗草

    竹三的诗,写得很有特色,不仅风格清朗明畅,遣句行云流水,更重要的是,这些诗,是诗人半世生涯的写照。一方面,它概括抒写了我们这一辈人的共同心路;一方面,又写出了他自己独特的经历。在这个点上说,《浮生诗草》具有一定程度的典型性意义。
  • 至高之神

    至高之神

    他曾经是最强大的神。他现在是最废柴的神。为了复仇,他不得不去执行一个又一个任务。为了拿回自己的荣耀,他不得不面临一个又一个选择。虽然是神,但是却有着七情六欲,虽然是神,却也有着不得不做出的决断和冒险。强大之路,亦是修罗之路,历经千辛万苦之后,他将重新成为至高存在。
  • 格列佛游记

    格列佛游记

    这是一部充满童话色彩的讽刺小说。但小说的童话色彩只是表面的局部的特征,尖锐深邃的讽刺才是其灵魂。小说的主人公格列佛是一个天生喜欢冒险,不甘寂寞与无聊的人。他记忆力很强,善于学习和观察,善于思考,有独特的思维,性情朴实温和,对人态度友好,举止善良,容易与人交往,知恩图报,有君子之风,愿意帮助朋友,为了朋友他甘愿冒生命危险,也会随时准备抗击一切对朋友不利的人。同时他聪明机智,有胆识,处事圆滑合理,说话巧妙伶俐,做事坚决果断,有着极强的自信心,相信自己能够成功。总的来说他是一个具有质疑精神,酷爱真理,有忍耐力的游者。他在游历之中,洞察到社会现实的日趋堕落,得出英国社会并不文明的结论。