The Egoist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 707 pages of information about The Egoist.

The Egoist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 707 pages of information about The Egoist.

“That is really Pagan fatalism!”

“Our modern word for it is Nature.  Science condescends to speak of natural selection.  Look at these!  They are both graceful and winning and witty, bright to mind and eye, made for one another, as country people say.  I can’t blame him.  Besides, we don’t know that he’s guilty.  We’re quite in the dark, except that we’re certain how it must end.  If the chance should occur to you of giving Willoughby a word of counsel—­it may—­you might, without irritating him as my knowledge of his plight does, hint at your eyes being open.  His insane dread of a detective world makes him artificially blind.  As soon as he fancies himself seen, he sets to work spinning a web, and he discerns nothing else.  It’s generally a clever kind of web; but if it’s a tangle to others it’s the same to him, and a veil as well.  He is preparing the catastrophe, he forces the issue.  Tell him of her extreme desire to depart.  Treat her as mad, to soothe him.  Otherwise one morning he will wake a second time . . . !  It is perfectly certain.  And the second time it will be entirely his own fault.  Inspire him with some philosophy.”

“I have none.”

“I if I thought so, I would say you have better.  There are two kinds of philosophy, mine and yours.  Mine comes of coldness, yours of devotion.”

“He is unlikely to choose me for his confidante.”

Vernon meditated.  “One can never quite guess what he will do, from never knowing the heat of the centre in him which precipitates his actions:  he has a great art of concealment.  As to me, as you perceive, my views are too philosophical to let me be of use to any of them.  I blame only the one who holds to the bond.  The sooner I am gone!—­in fact, I cannot stay on.  So Dr. Middleton and the Professor did not strike fire together?”

“Doctor Middleton was ready, and pursued him, but Professor Crooklyn insisted on shivering.  His line of blank verse, ’A Railway platform and a Railway inn!’ became pathetic in repetition.  He must have suffered.”

“Somebody has to!”

“Why the innocent?”

“He arrives a propos.  But remember that Fridolin sometimes contrives to escape and have the guilty scorched.  The Professor would not have suffered if he had missed his train, as he appears to be in the habit of doing.  Thus his unaccustomed good-fortune was the cause of his bad.”

“You saw him on the platform?”

“I am unacquainted with the professor.  I had to get Mrs Mountstuart out of the way.”

“She says she described him to you.  ’Complexion of a sweetbread, consistency of a quenelle, grey, and like a Saint without his dish behind the head.’”

“Her descriptions are strikingly accurate, but she forgot to sketch his back, and all that I saw was a narrow sloping back and a broad hat resting the brim on it.  My report to her spoke of an old gentleman of dark complexion, as the only traveller on the platform.  She has faith in the efficiency of her descriptive powers, and so she was willing to drive off immediately.  The intention was a start to London.  Colonel De Craye came up and effected in five minutes what I could not compass in thirty.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Egoist from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.