The World's Greatest Books — Volume 05 — Fiction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about The World's Greatest Books — Volume 05 — Fiction.

The World's Greatest Books — Volume 05 — Fiction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about The World's Greatest Books — Volume 05 — Fiction.

    Die, die, die,
    Away you fly,
    Your soul is in the sky!

as the hinspired Shakespeare wittily remarks.”

And the ribald lay down on his back, stretched himself out, and pretended to die in a fit of coughing, which last was, alas! no counterfeit, while poor I, shocked and bewildered, let my tears fall fast upon my knees.

I never told my mother into what pandemonium I had fallen, but from that time my great desire was to get knowledge.  I fancied that getting knowledge I should surely get wisdom, and books, I thought, would tell me all I needed.

That was how it was I came to know Sandy Mackaye, whose old book-shop I used to pass on my walk homeward.  One evening, as I was reading one of the books on his stall, the old man called me in and asked me abruptly my name, and trade, and family.

I told him all, and confessed my love of books.  And Mackaye encouraged me, and taught me Latin, and soon had me to lodge in his old shop, for my mother in her stern religion would not have me at home because I could not believe in the Christianity which I heard preached in the Baptist chapel.

II.—­I Move Among the Gentlefolks

The death of our employer threw many of us out of work, for the son who succeeded to the business determined to go ahead with the times, and to that end decided to go in for the “show-trade”; which meant an alteration in the premises, the demolition of the work-rooms, and the giving out of the work to be made up at the men’s own homes.

Mackaye would have me stay with him.

“Ye’ll just mind the shop, and dust the books whiles,” he said.

But this I would not do, for I thought the old man could not afford to keep me in addition to himself.  Then he suggested that I should go to Cambridge and see my cousin, with a view to getting the poems published which I had been writing ever since I started tailoring.

“He’s bound to it by blude,” said Sandy; “and I’m thinking ye’d better try to get a list o’ subscribers.”

So to Cambridge I went.

It was some time since I had seen my cousin George, and at our last meeting he had taken me to the Dulwich Gallery.  It was there that two young ladies, one so beautiful that I was dazzled, and an elderly clergyman, whom my cousin told me was a dean, had spoken to me about the pictures, and that interview marked a turning point in my life.  When I got to Cambridge, and had found my cousin’s rooms, I was received kindly enough.

“You couldn’t have got on at tailoring—­much too sharp a fellow for that,” he said, on hearing my story.  “You ought to be at college, if one could only get you there.  Those poems of yours—­you must let me have them and look over them, and I dare say I shall be able to persuade the governor to do something with them.”

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Project Gutenberg
The World's Greatest Books — Volume 05 — Fiction from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.