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第5章

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said; even laughed; I think。  When he came away; he said to me; 

'Take care of yourself; my dearie;' which had a strange sound of 

childish days; and will not leave my mind。



You must get Litolf's GAVOTTES CELEBRES:  I have made another 

trover there:  a musette of Lully's。  The second part of it I have 

not yet got the hang of; but the first … only a few bars!  The 

gavotte is beautiful and pretty hard; I think; and very much of the 

period; and at the end of it; this musette enters with the most 

really thrilling effect of simple beauty。  O … it's first…rate。  I 

am quite mad over it。  If you find other books containing Lully; 

Rameau; Martini; please let me know; also you might tell me; you 

who know Bach; where the easiest is to be found。  I write all 

morning; come down; and never leave the piano till about five; 

write letters; dine; get down again about eight; and never leave 

the piano till I go to bed。  This is a fine life。 … Yours most 

sincerely;



R。 L。 S。



If you get the musette (Lully's); please tell me if I am right; and 

it was probably written for strings。  Anyway; it is as neat as … as 

neat as Bach … on the piano; or seems so to my ignorance。



I play much of the Rigadoon but it is strange; it don't come off 

QUITE so well with me!



'Musical score which cannot be reproduced'



There is the first part of the musette copied (from memory; so I 

hope there's nothing wrong)。  Is it not angelic?  But it ought; of 

course; to have the gavotte before。  The gavotte is in G; and ends 

on the keynote thus (if I remember):…



'Musical score which cannot be reproduced'



staccato; I think。  Then you sail into the musette。



N。B。 … Where I have put an 'A;' is that a dominant eleventh; or 

what? or just a seventh on the D? and if the latter; is that 

allowed?  It sounds very funny。  Never mind all my questions; if I 

begin about music (which is my leading ignorance and curiosity); I 

have always to babble questions:  all my friends know me now; and 

take no notice whatever。  The whole piece is marked allegro; but 

surely could easily be played too fast?  The dignity must not be 

lost; the periwig feeling。







Letter:  TO THOMAS STEVENSON







'SKERRYVORE; BOURNEMOUTH; March 1886。'



MY DEAR FATHER; … The David problem has to…day been decided。  I am 

to leave the door open for a sequel if the public take to it; and 

this will save me from butchering a lot of good material to no 

purpose。  Your letter from Carlisle was pretty like yourself; sir; 

as I was pleased to see; the hand of Jekyll; not the hand of Hyde。  

I am for action quite unfit; and even a letter is beyond me; so 

pray take these scraps at a vast deal more than their intrinsic 

worth。  I am in great spirits about David; Colvin agreeing with 

Henley; Fanny; and myself in thinking it far the most human of my 

labours hitherto。  As to whether the long…eared British public may 

take to it; all think it more than doubtful; I wish they would; for 

I could do a second volume with ease and pleasure; and Colvin 

thinks it sin and folly to throw away David and Alan Breck upon so 

small a field as this one。 … Ever your affectionate son;



R。 L。 S。







Letter:  TO MRS。 FLEEMING JENKIN







'SKERRYVORE; BOURNEMOUTH'; APRIL 15 OR 16 (THE HOUR NOT BEING 

KNOWN); 1886。



MY DEAR MRS。 JENKIN; … It is I know not what hour of the night; but 

I cannot sleep; have lit the gas; and here goes。



First; all your packet arrived:  I have dipped into the Schumann 

already with great pleasure。  Surely; in what concerns us there is 

a sweet little chirrup; the GOOD WORDS arrived in the morning just 

when I needed it; and the famous notes that I had lost were 

recovered also in the nick of time。



And now I am going to bother you with my affairs:  premising; 

first; that this is PRIVATE; second; that whatever I do the LIFE 

shall be done first; and I am getting on with it well; and third; 

that I do not quite know why I consult you; but something tells me 

you will hear with fairness。



Here is my problem。  The Curtin women are still miserable 

prisoners; no one dare buy their farm of them; all the manhood of 

England and the world stands aghast before a threat of murder。  (1) 

Now; my work can be done anywhere; hence I can take up without loss 

a back…going Irish farm; and live on; though not (as I had 

originally written) in it:  First Reason。  (2) If I should be 

killed; there are a good many who would feel it:  writers are so 

much in the public eye; that a writer being murdered would attract 

attention; throw a bull's…eye light upon this cowardly business:  

Second Reason。  (3) I am not unknown in the States; from which the 

funds come that pay for these brutalities:  to some faint extent; 

my death (if I should be killed) would tell there:  Third Reason。  

(4) NOBODY ELSE IS TAKING UP THIS OBVIOUS AND CRYING DULY:  Fourth 

Reason。  (5) I have a crazy health and may die at any moment; my 

life is of no purchase in an insurance office; it is the less 

account to husband it; and the business of husbanding a life is 

dreary and demoralising:  Fifth Reason。



I state these in no order; but as they occur to me。  And I shall do 

the like with the objections。



First Objection:  It will do no good; you have seen Gordon die and 

nobody minded; nobody will mind if you die。  This is plainly of the 

devil。  Second Objection:  You will not even be murdered; the 

climate will miserably kill you; you will strangle out in a rotten 

damp heat; in congestion; etc。  Well; what then?  It changes 

nothing:  the purpose is to brave crime; let me brave it; for such 

time and to such an extent as God allows。  Third Objection:  The 

Curtin women are probably highly uninteresting females。  I haven't 

a doubt of it。  But the Government cannot; men will not; protect 

them。  If I am the only one to see this public duty; it is to the 

public and the Right I should perform it … not to Mesdames Curtin。  

Fourth Objection:  I am married。  'I have married a wife!'  I seem 

to have heard it before。  It smells ancient! what was the context?  

Fifth Objection:  My wife has had a mean life (1); loves me (2); 

could not bear to lose me (3)。  (1) I admit:  I am sorry。  (2) But 

what does she love me for? and (3) she must lose me soon or late。  

And after all; because we run this risk; it does not follow we 

should fail。  Sixth Objection:  My wife wouldn't like it。  No; she 

wouldn't。  Who would?  But the Curtins don't like it。  And all 

those who are to suffer if this goes on; won't like it。  And if 

there is a great wrong; somebody must suffer。  Seventh Objection:  

I won't like it。  No; I will not; I have thought it through; and I 

will not。  But what of that?  And both she and I may like it more 

than we suppose。  We shall lose friends; all comforts; all society:  

so has everybody who has ever done anything; but we shall have some 

excitement; and that's a fine thing; and we shall be trying to do 

the right; and that's not to be despised。  Eighth Objection:  I am 

an author with my work before me。  See Second Reason。  Ninth 

Objection:  But am I not taken with the hope of excitement?  I was 

at first。  I am not much now。  I see what a dreary; friendless; 

miserable; God…forgotten business it will be。  And anyway; is not 

excitement the proper reward of doing anything both right and a 

little dangerous?  Tenth Objection:  But am I not taken with a 

notion of glory?  I dare say I am。  Yet I see quite clearly how all 

points to nothing coming; to a quite inglorious death by disease 

and from the lack of attendance; or even if I should be knocked on 

the head; as these poor Irish promise; how little any one will 

care。  It will be a smile at a thousand breakfast…tables。  I am 

nearly forty now; I have not many illusions。  And if I had?  I do 

not love this health…tending; housekeeping life 

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