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diff --git a/58436-8.txt b/58436-0.txt index e3c12d7..4db111b 100644 --- a/58436-8.txt +++ b/58436-0.txt @@ -1,28 +1,7 @@ -The Project Gutenberg EBook of Multitude and Solitude, by John Masefield +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 58436 *** -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. -Title: Multitude and Solitude -Author: John Masefield - -Release Date: December 9, 2018 [EBook #58436] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MULTITUDE AND SOLITUDE *** - - - - -Produced by Al Haines @@ -274,7 +253,7 @@ as too "opinionated," too "crude." "Yes?" he answered. "By the way--my daughter is here; she wants so much to talk to you about the play. Will you come?" -Roger had met this daughter once before. He saw her now, an anæmic +Roger had met this daughter once before. He saw her now, an anæmic girl, in a Liberty dress, standing with her nose in the air, amid a mob of first-nighters. She, too, wished to patronise him and to criticise the oracle. The superiority of a girl of nineteen was more than he @@ -1014,7 +993,7 @@ noise like serpent's hissing as she glided. "Nothing is really interesting except vice," was the only phrase which he could remember of Mrs. Melyard's conversation. She was a feverish character, explained by inherited phthisical taint. Melyard collected tsuba, and -fenced archæologically at the Foil Club. He was the best rapier and +fenced archæologically at the Foil Club. He was the best rapier and dagger man in England. "You are Mrs. Templeton?" he asked. "I remember a lady at Mrs. @@ -1159,7 +1138,7 @@ discovered a very curious fact--two facts." "First, that the Celt's love of the beautiful is all bunkum. Second, that the people of these islands are mongrels, bred from the scum of Europe. You can call yourself an Anglo-Saxon, or a Celt, or an Aryan, -or a Norman, or a Long-Barrow Palæolith; but if you came from these +or a Norman, or a Long-Barrow Palæolith; but if you came from these islands, you are a mongrel, a mongrel of a most chequered kind." At this instant the door opened suddenly, and the electric light was @@ -1379,7 +1358,7 @@ for them." One of the poems began A second letter from the same lady enclosed a "Poem on My Cat Peter," which had been accidentally omitted from the other envelope. His agent -sent him a very welcome cheque for £108, for his newly completed novel. +sent him a very welcome cheque for £108, for his newly completed novel. Next came a letter from a stranger, asking for permission to set some verses to music. A charitable countess asked for verses for her new Bazaar Book. An American News Cutting Bureau sent a little bundle of @@ -1528,7 +1507,7 @@ Not me. Come on in, quick." "But I thought you were having apoplexy." -"That heavy frame full of Dürers came down. The corner caught me over +"That heavy frame full of Dürers came down. The corner caught me over the eye while I was standing by the mantelpiece. It knocked me out. Come on in. I believe Kitty's in a bad way." @@ -2003,17 +1982,17 @@ were no friends of his there, except a red-haired, fierce little poet, who sat close by, reading and eating cake. The yellow back of _Les Fleurs du Mal_ was propped against his teapot. He bit so fiercely that his beard wagged at each bite. Something of the fierceness and passion -of the _Femmes Damnées_, or of _le vin de l'Assassin_, was wreaked upon +of the _Femmes Damnées_, or of _le vin de l'Assassin_, was wreaked upon the cake. There came a muttering among the bites. The man was almost reading aloud. A memory of Baudelaire came to Roger, a few grand melancholy lines:-- - "La servante au grand coeur dont vous étiez jalouse, + "La servante au grand coeur dont vous étiez jalouse, Et qui dort sans sommeil sous une humble pelouse, Nous devrions pourtant lui porter quelques fleurs. Les morts, les pauvres morts, ont de grandes douleurs, - Et quand Octobre souffle, émondeur des vieux arbres, - Son vent mélancolique à l'entour de leurs marbres, + Et quand Octobre souffle, émondeur des vieux arbres, + Son vent mélancolique à l'entour de leurs marbres, Certe, ils doivent trouver les vivants bien ingrats." @@ -2037,7 +2016,7 @@ twilight, ghosts of old men brooding on her beauty, like the old men in Troy when Helen passed. No. He could not bear Ireland with her away. He thought of the boat train with regret for the old jolly jaunts. The guard with a Scotch accent, the carriage in front which went on to -Dundee, the sound of the beautiful Irish voice ("voce assai più che la +Dundee, the sound of the beautiful Irish voice ("voce assai più che la nostra viva"), and then the hiring of rug and pillow, knowing that one would wake in Scotland, among hills, running water, a "stately speech," and pure air. It would not be wise to go to Ireland. If he went now, @@ -3535,7 +3514,7 @@ medical research could hope to do. He read the Reports of the Commission, various papers in _The Lancet_, the works of Professor Ronald Ross and Sir Patrick Manson, the summary of Low in Allbutt, the deeply interesting articles in the _Journal of Tropical Medicine_, and -whatever articles he could find in reviews and encyclopædias. +whatever articles he could find in reviews and encyclopædias. He called one day at the theatre office in answer to a telegram from Falempin. Falempin had something to say to him. He had flung down the @@ -3888,7 +3867,7 @@ will be swept away by the first 'still, strong man' who comes along with 'a mailed fist.' Very well. I have no doubt that brute force can and will sweep away most things not brutal like itself. It may sweep me away. But I will not disgrace my century by preaching the methods -of Palæolithic man. If you want war, go out and fight waste. I +of Palæolithic man. If you want war, go out and fight waste. I suppose that two hundred and fifty million pounds are flung away each year on drink and armaments in this country alone. I suppose that in the same time about five hundred pounds are spent on researches into @@ -4025,7 +4004,7 @@ paper and fumigated it." "It's all due to a kind of mosquito," said Lionel. "The white-ribbed mosquito. He carries the organism. You put paraffin on all standing -puddles and pools to prevent the mosquito's larvæ from hatching out. +puddles and pools to prevent the mosquito's larvæ from hatching out. My old chief did a lot of work in Havana, and the West Indies, stampin' out yellow fever. It has made the Panama Canal possible." @@ -4355,7 +4334,7 @@ earth. The writer, doubting one and despising the other, laid up treasures in limbo. He began to understand O'Neill's remark that it was "the most difficult thing in the world for an artist both to do good work and to save his own soul." Little, long-contemned scraps of -mediæval theology, acquired in the emotional mood during which he had +mediæval theology, acquired in the emotional mood during which he had been pre-Raphaelite, appealed to him again, suddenly, as not merely attractive but wise. Often, at times of deep emotion, in the fear of death, the mind finds more significance in things learned in childhood @@ -4416,8 +4395,8 @@ discoveries are made by discoverers, not always by seekers. What was mysterious about the sleeping sickness? A little thought reduced his limited knowledge to order. The disease -is spreading eastwards from the West Coast of Africa between 16° north -and 16° south latitude, keeping pretty sharply within the thirty-two +is spreading eastwards from the West Coast of Africa between 16° north +and 16° south latitude, keeping pretty sharply within the thirty-two degrees, north and south. It is caused by an organism called a trypanosome, which enters the blood through the probosces of biting flies. It kills, when the organism enters the cerebro-spinal fluid. @@ -4546,8 +4525,8 @@ natives got it together merely from taking their siesta there." "Oh, yes. It clears the flies out of that particular spot. But it scatters them abroad. It doesn't destroy them. It doesn't destroy the -pupæ, which are buried under the roots in the ground. Burning is -better, perhaps. Burning may do for the pupæ, but then it doesn't +pupæ, which are buried under the roots in the ground. Burning is +better, perhaps. Burning may do for the pupæ, but then it doesn't affect the grown flies." "Tell me," said Roger, "is blood necessary to the tsetse?" @@ -4872,7 +4851,7 @@ Boehme was right," he went on. "We are watery people. Without action we are stagnant. If you sit down to write, day after day, for months on end, you can feel the scum growing on your mind." He sat down again, staring at the Correggio. "There," he said, "that is all it is. -I sometimes feel that all the thoroughly good artists, like Dürer, +I sometimes feel that all the thoroughly good artists, like Dürer, Shakespeare, Michael Angelo, Dante, all of them, sit in judgment on the lesser artists when they die. I think they forgive bad art, because they know how jolly difficult art of any kind is. I don't believe that @@ -5613,7 +5592,7 @@ treatment." "It would be rather a feather in our caps if we found a tsetse-cide. A bird would be better than nothing. Or an ichneumon-fly to pierce the -pupæ." +pupæ." "I was young myself once," said Lionel. "I know exactly how it feels." There was a pause after this. Lionel seemed to chuckle. @@ -6853,7 +6832,7 @@ not see how things were going to get done. He told himself that things would have to get done, and that he would have to do them. The resolution cheered him, but the prospect was not made brighter by his discovery soon afterwards that Lionel's -temperature had shot up with a sudden leaping bound to 103°. That +temperature had shot up with a sudden leaping bound to 103°. That frightened him. Lionel was not going to be ill, he was ill, and very dangerously ill already. His temperature had risen four or five degrees in about half an hour. The discovery gave Roger a momentary @@ -6937,7 +6916,7 @@ was lying there uneasily, muttering and restless, with a much-flushed face. His hands were plucking and scratching at his chest. There was that about him which suggested high fever. Roger hurriedly brought a thermometer and took the sick man's temperature. It had sunk to less -than 100°. He thrust aside the pyjama coat, and felt the heart with +than 100°. He thrust aside the pyjama coat, and felt the heart with his finger. The pulse was beating with something of the batting motion of a guttering electric light. The chest was inflamed, with a slight reddish rash. @@ -6992,7 +6971,7 @@ repeating that he must eat to keep strong, lest he should fail Lionel in any way. Food, and the hot diffusive stimulant, made him more cheerful. He told himself that Lionel was only in a fit of the frequently recurring trypanosome fever. After a day or two of fever he -would come to again, weak, anæmic, and complaining of headache. A dose +would come to again, weak, anæmic, and complaining of headache. A dose of atoxyl would destroy all the symptoms in a few hours. Even if he did not take the atoxyl, there was no certainty that the fever would turn to sleeping sickness. There was a chance of it; but no certainty. @@ -7705,7 +7684,7 @@ His efforts to make a culture succeeded. With very great difficulty he obtained a vigorous culture of trypanosomes, of the small kind usually obtained by culture. He strove to make the culture virulent, by growing it at the artificial equable temperature most favourable to the -growth of the germ (25° C.), and by adding to the bouillon on which the +growth of the germ (25° C.), and by adding to the bouillon on which the germs fed minute quantities of those chemical qualities likely to strengthen them in one way or another. @@ -8285,11 +8264,11 @@ Lionel told him that they had discovered a serum for the cure of trypanosomiasis. The German smiled. "Ah," he said. "There is already sera. The Japanese bacteriologist, what was his name? Shima? Oshima? Shiga? No, Hiroshiga. He have found a good serum, which makes der -peoples die sometimes. Then there is Mühlbauer who have improved the +peoples die sometimes. Then there is Mühlbauer who have improved the serum of Hiroshiga. He have added a little trypanroth or a little mercury or somedings. Now he have cured everymans. I wonder you have not seen of Hiroshiga in der newspapers. He have make his experiments -in der spring; and Mühlbauer he is now at Nairobi curing everymans. He +in der spring; and Mühlbauer he is now at Nairobi curing everymans. He have vaccination camps." "Well," said Lionel. "We've been beaten on the post. You hear, Roger? @@ -8576,363 +8555,4 @@ QUILLER-COUCH, _Cambridge University_. 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