您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Essay(s) by Richard King
Wallpapers
Richard King
下载:Essay(s) by Richard King.txt
本书全文检索:
       Life is full of minor mysteries--conundrums of the everyday which usually centre round the problem: "Why on earth people do certain things and what on earth makes them do them?" And one of these mysteries is that of their choice in wallpapers. Of course some wallpapers are so pretty that it is not at all difficult to realise why people chose them. On the other hand, some are so extraordinarily hideous that one would really like to see, for curiosity's sake, the artist who designed them and the purchaser whose artistic needs they satisfied. Those bunches of impossible flowers linked together by ribbons, the whole painted in horrible combinations of colour--how we all know them, and how we marvel at their creation! One imagines the mental difficulty of the purchaser as to which among the many designs most appealed to her artistic "eye." Then one pictures how her choice wavered among several. One figures to oneself how she sat in consultation with that friend whom most people take with them when they go out to choose wallpapers, asking her opinion concerning the design which showed nightmare birds swarming about among terrible trees, and the one which illustrated brown roses with blue buds growing in regulated bunches on trellis-work of a most bilious green. One can almost hear the arguments for and against, and at last, the definite conclusion that the one with the brown roses and blue buds was the more uncommon--therefore the better of the two. And one day fate leads your steps towards the bedroom wherein that wallpaper hangs. As you throw yourself into the one easy chair you take out your cigarette case to enjoy that "just one more" which is the more enjoyable because it symbolises that feeling of being "enfin seul" which always follows conversations with landladies or several hours making yourselves agreeable to hostesses.
       Then you see it!
       At first you are amusedly contemptuous. "How perfectly hideous," you say to yourself. And then, in your idleness of mind, your eye follows the roses and ribbons in horrible contortions from the skirting board to the ceiling. Realising what you are doing, and knowing that in that direction madness lies, you immediately turn your gaze towards the window. You imagine that you have gained the day. But, alas! _you are wrong_! Comes a moment in the early morning when you wake up two hours before you wanted to, with nothing else to do except to lie awake thinking. And all the while the brown roses with their blue buds have unconsciously stretched their tendrils to seize your wandering regard. Before you realise what they are doing, your eyes are riveted on that horrible bunch half-way up the wall which being cut in half by the sudden termination of the width of one paper roll, does not exactly fit the corresponding half of the other. How it suddenly begins to irritate you--this break in the symmetry of the design! You force your eyes from contemplating its offence, only to discover that the bunches of roses which are exposed between the sides of the picture representing "The Soul's Awakening" and the illuminated text painted by your hostess when she was young, make _an exact square_. Above the pictures you perceive that these same bunches form a "diamond," resting on one of its right angles! That there are only five of these terrible bunches between the side of "The Soul's Awakening" and the corner of the wall, and _six_ between that of "Trust in the Lord" and the door. And all the time you are becoming more and more irritable. You cannot close your eyes because you know that when you open them again the same illustrations from Euclid will await you. The only thing that comforts you is the determination to write immediately to your Member of Parliament insisting that he drafts a Bill creating a censor of wallpapers, with dire penalties for any "circumventors" of the law. That at least would put every seaside landlady in prison.
       [The end]
       Richard King's essay: Wallpapers
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

The "Butters"
"Family Skeletons"
The "Glorious Dead"
Abraham Lincoln
Age That Dyes
Always The Personal Note
Aristocracy And Democracy
Autumn Determination
Autumn Sowing
Away--Far Away!
Awful Warnings
Backward And Forward
Bad-Tempered People
Beginnings
The Blind Man's Problem
Book-Borrowing Nearly Always Means Book-Stealing
Books And The Blind
Children
Christmas
Clergymen
Dreams
Dreams And Reality
The Dreariness Of One Line Of Conduct
Duty
The Enthralling Out-Of-Reach
Faith
Faith Reached Through Bitterness And Loss
Farewells!
February
The Few
The Futile Thought
The Glut Of The Ornamental
The Government Of The Future
The Great And The Really Great
The Happy Discontent
How I Came To Make "History"!
How To Help
Humanity
I Wonder If . . .
If Age Only Practised What It Preached!
The Inane And Unimaginative
It's Oh, To Be Out Of England--Now That Spring Is Here!
Life
Life's Great Adventure
The London Season
Love "Mush"
Love Of God
The Might-Have-Been
Modern Clothes
Mountain Paths
My Escape And Some Others
Mysticism And The Practical Man
The Need To Remember
The Neglected Art Of Eating Gracefully
The New Year
On Getting Away From Yourself
On Going "To The Dogs"
On Reality In People
One Of The Minor Tragedies
Other People's Books
Our "Secret Escapes"
Our Irritating Habits
Over The Fireside
Polite Conversation
Polite Masks
Pompous Pride In Literary "Lions"
The Question
Reconstruction
Relations
Responsibility
The Road To Calvary
A School For Wives
Seaside Piers
A Sense Of Universal Pity
Spiritualism
Sweeping Assertions From Particular Instances
Their Failure
The Things Which Are Not Dreamed Of In Our Philosophy
Travel (life)
Travel (life--change of scene)
Tub-Thumpers
Two Lives
The Two Passions
Types Of Tub-Thumpers
The Unholy Fear
The Unimpassioned English
Unlucky In Little Things
Visitors
Wallpapers
What You Really Reap
When?
The Will To Faith
Wives
Women In Love
Work
Work In The East-End