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Father Payne
Chapter 15. Of Writing
Arthur C.Benson
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       _ CHAPTER XV. OF WRITING
       There were certain days when Father Payne would hurry in to meals late and abstracted, with, a cloudy eye, that, as he ate, was fixed on a point about a yard in front of him, or possibly about two miles away. He gave vague or foolish replies to questions, he hastened away again, having heard voices but seen no one. I doubt if he could have certainly named anyone in the room afterwards.
       I had a little question of business to ask him on one such occasion after breakfast. I slipped out but two minutes after him, went to his study, and knocked. An obscure sound came from within. He was seated on his chair, bending over his writing-table.
       "May I ask you something?" I said.
       "Damnation!" said Father Payne.
       I apologised, and tried to withdraw on tiptoe, but he said, turning half round, somewhat impatiently, "Oh, come in, come in--it's all right. What do you want?"
       "I don't want to disturb you," I said.
       "Come in, I tell you!" he said, adding, "you may just as well, because I have nothing to do for a quarter of an hour." He threw a pen on the table. "It's one of my very few penances. If I swear when I am at work, I do no work for a quarter of an hour; so you can keep me company. Sit down there!" He indicated a chair with his large foot, and I sat down.
       My question was soon asked and sooner answered. Father Payne beamed upon me with an indulgent air, and I said: "May I ask what you were doing?"
       "You may," he said. "I rejoice to talk about it. It's my novel."
       "Your novel!" I said. "I didn't know you wrote novels. What sort of a book is it?"
       "It's wretched," he said, "it's horrible, it's grotesque! It's more like all other novels than any book I know. It's written in the most abominable style; there isn't a single good point about it. The incidents are all hackneyed, there isn't a single lifelike character in it, or a single good description, or a single remark worth making. I should think it's the worst book ever written. Will you hear a bit of it? Do, now! only a short bit. I should love to read it to you."
       "Yes, of course," I said, "there is nothing I should like better."
       He read a passage. It was very bad indeed, I couldn't have imagined that an able man could have written such stuff. I had an awful feeling that I had heard every word before.
       "There," he said at last, "that's rather a favourable specimen. What do you think of it? Come, out with it."
       "I'm afraid I'm not very much of a judge," I said.
       His face fell. "That's what everyone says," he said. "I know what you mean. But I'll publish it--I'll be d----d if I won't! Oh, dash it, that's five minutes more. No--I wasn't working, was I? Just conversing."
       "But why do you write it, if you are so dissatisfied with it?" I said feebly.
       "Why?" he said in a loud voice. "Why? Because I love it. I'm besotted by it. It's like strong drink to me. I doubt if there's a man in England who enjoys himself more than I do when I'm writing. The worst of it is, that it won't come out--it's beautiful enough when I think of it, but I can't get it down. It's my second novel, mind you, and I have got plans for three more. Do you suppose I'm going to sit here, with all you fellows enjoying yourselves, and not have my bit of fun? But it's hopeless, and I ought to be ashamed of myself. There simply isn't anything in the world that I should not be better employed in doing than in scribbling this stuff. I know that; but all the authors I know say that writing a book is the part they enjoy--they don't care about correcting proofs, or publishing, or seeing reviews, or being paid for it. Very disinterested and noble, of course! Now I should enjoy it all through, but I simply daren't publish my last one--I should be hooted in the village when the reviews appeared. But I am going to have my fun--the act of creation, you know! But it's too late to begin, and I have had no training. The beastly thing is as sticky as treacle. It's a sort of vomit of all the novels I have ever read, and that's the truth!"
       "I simply don't understand," I said. "I have heard you criticise books, I have heard you criticise some of our work--you have criticised mine. I think you one of the best critics I ever heard. You seem to know exactly how it ought to be done."
       "Yes," he said, frowning, "I believe I do. That's just it! I'm a critic, pure and simple. I can't look at anything, from a pigstye to a cathedral, or listen to anything, from a bird singing to an orchestra, or read anything, from Bradshaw to Shakespeare, without seeing when it is out of shape and how it ought to be done. I'm like the man in Ezekiel, whose appearance was like the appearance of brass, with a line of flax in his hand and a measuring reed. He goes on measuring everything for about five chapters, and nothing comes of it, as far as I can remember! I suppose I ought to be content with that, but I can't bear it. I hate fault-finding. I want to make beautiful things. I spent months over my last novel, and, as Aaron said to Moses, 'There came out this calf!' I'm a very unfortunate man. If I had not had to work so hard for many years for a bare living, I could have done something with writing, I think. But now I'm a sort of plumber, mending holes in other people's work. Never mind. I _will_ waste my time!"
       All this while he was eyeing the little clock on his table. "Now be off!" he said suddenly, "My penance is over, and I won't be disturbed!" He caught up his pen. "You had better tell the others not to come near me, or I'm blessed if I won't read the whole thing aloud after dinner!" And he was immersed in his work again.
       Two or three days later I found Father Payne strolling in the garden, on a bright morning. It was just on the verge of spring. There were catkins in the shrubbery. The lilacs were all knobbed with green. The aconite was in full bloom under the trees, and the soil was all pricked with little green blades. He was drinking it all in with delighted glances. I said something about his book.
       "Oh, the fit's off!" said he; "I'm sober again! I finished the chapter, and, by Jove, I think it's the worst thing I have done yet. It's simply infamous! I read it with strong sensations of nausea! I really don't know how I can get such deplorable rubbish down on paper. No matter, I get all the rapture of creation, and that's the best part of it. I simply couldn't live without it. It clears off some perilous stuff or other, and now I feel like a convalescent. Did you ever see anything so enchanting as that aconite? The colour of it, and the way the little round head is tucked down on the leaves! I could improve on it a trifle, but not much. God must have had a delicious time designing flowers--I wonder why He gave up doing it, and left it to the market-gardeners. I can't make out why new flowers don't keep appearing. I could offer a few suggestions. I dream of flowers sometimes--great banks of bloom rising up out of crystal rivers, in deep gorges, full of sunshine and scent. How nice it is to be idle! I'm sure I've earned it, after that deplorable chapter. It really is a miracle of flatness! You go back to your work, my boy, and thank God you can say what you mean! And then you can bring it to me, and I'll tell you to an inch what it is worth!" _
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本书目录

Preface
Chapter 1. Father Payne
Chapter 2. Aveley
Chapter 3. The Society
Chapter 4. The Summons
Chapter 5. The System
Chapter 6. Father Payne
Chapter 7. The Men
Chapter 8. The Method
Chapter 9. Father Payne
Chapter 10. Characteristics
Chapter 11. Conversation
Chapter 12. Of Going To Church
Chapter 13. Of Newspapers
Chapter 14. Of Hate
Chapter 15. Of Writing
Chapter 16. Of Marriage
Chapter 17. Of Loving God
Chapter 18. Of Friendship
Chapter 19. Of Phyllis
Chapter 20. Of Certainty
Chapter 21. Of Beauty
Chapter 22. Of War
Chapter 23. Of Cads And Pharisees
Chapter 24. Of Continuance
Chapter 25. Of Philanthropy
Chapter 26. Of Fear
Chapter 27. Of Aristocracy
Chapter 28. Of Crystals
Chapter 29. Early Life
Chapter 30. Of Bloodsuckers
Chapter 31. Of Instincts
Chapter 32. Of Humility
Chapter 33. Of Meekness
Chapter 34. Of Criticism
Chapter 35. Of The Sense Of Beauty
Chapter 36. Of Biography
Chapter 37. Of Possessions
Chapter 38. Of Loneliness
Chapter 39. Of The Writer's Life
Chapter 40. Of Waste
Chapter 41. Of Education
Chapter 42. Of Religion
Chapter 43. Of Critics
Chapter 44. Of Worship
Chapter 45. Of A Change Of Religion
Chapter 46. Of Affection
Chapter 47. Of Respect Of Persons
Chapter 48. Of Ambiguity
Chapter 49. Of Belief
Chapter 50. Of Honour
Chapter 51. Of Work
Chapter 52. Of Companionship
Chapter 53. Of Money
Chapter 54. Of Peaceableness
Chapter 55. Of Life-Force
Chapter 56. Of Conscience
Chapter 57. Of Rank
Chapter 58. Of Biography
Chapter 59. Of Exclusiveness
Chapter 60. Of Taking Life
Chapter 61. Of Bookishness
Chapter 62. Of Consistency
Chapter 63. Of Wrens And Lilies
Chapter 64. Of Pose
Chapter 65. Of Revenants
Chapter 66. Of Discipline
Chapter 67. Of Increase
Chapter 68. Of Prayer
Chapter 69. The Shadow
Chapter 70. Of Weakness
Chapter 71. The Bank Of The River
Chapter 72. The Crossing
Chapter 73. After-Thoughts
Chapter 74. Departure