Lotta Schmidt, and Other Stories. Anthony Trollope

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Lotta Schmidt, and Other Stories - Anthony Trollope страница 9

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
Lotta Schmidt, and Other Stories - Anthony Trollope

Скачать книгу

press easier got.”

      For months Fred Pickering hung about the office of the Morning Comet. November went, and December, and January, and he was still hanging about the office of the Morning Comet. He did make his way to some acquaintance with certain persons on the staff of the Comet, who earned their bread, if not absolutely by literature, at least by some work cognate to literature. And when he was asked to sup with one Tom Wood on a night in January, he thought that he had really got his foot upon the threshold. When he returned home that night, or I should more properly say on the following morning, his wife hoped that many more such preliminary suppers might not be necessary for his success.

      At last he did get employment at the office of the Morning Comet. He attended there six nights a week, from ten at night till three in the morning, and for this he received twenty shillings a week. His work was almost altogether mechanical, and after three nights disgusted him greatly. But he stuck to it, telling himself that as the day was still left to him for work he might put up with drudgery during the night. That idea, however, of working day and night soon found itself to be a false one. Twelve o’clock usually found him still in bed. After his late breakfast he walked out with his wife, and then;—well, then he would either write a few verses or read a volume of an old novel.

      “I must learn shorthand-writing,” he said to his wife, one morning when he came home.

      “Well, dear, I have no doubt you would learn it very quickly.”

      “I don’t know that; I should have begun younger. It’s a thousand pities that we are not taught anything useful when we are at school. Of what use is Latin and Greek to me?”

      “I heard you say once that it would be of great use to you some day.”

      “Ah, that was when I was dreaming of what will never come to pass; when I was thinking of literature as a high vocation.” It had already come to him to make such acknowledgments as this. “I must think about mere bread now. If I could report I might, at any rate, gain a living. And there have been reporters who have risen high in the profession. Dickens was a reporter. I must learn, though I suppose it will cost me twenty pounds.”

      He paid his twenty pounds and did learn shorthand-writing. And while he was so doing he found he might have learned just as well by teaching himself out of a book. During the period of his tuition in this art he quarrelled with his employers at the Morning Comet, who, as he declared, treated him with an indignity which he could not bear. “They want me to fetch and carry, and be a menial,” he said to his wife. He thereupon threw up his employment at the Comet office. “But now you will get an engagement as a reporter,” his wife said. He hoped that he might get an engagement as a reporter; but, as he himself acknowledged, the world was all to begin again. He was at last employed, and made his first appearance at a meeting of discontented tidewaiters, who were anxious to petition parliament for some improvement in their position. He worked very hard in his efforts to take down the words of the eloquent leading tidewaiter; whereas he could see that two other reporters near him did not work at all. And yet he failed. He struggled at this work for a month, and failed at last. “My hand is not made for it,” he said to his wife, almost in an agony of despair. “It seems to me as though nothing would come within my reach.” “My dear,” she said, “a man who can write the Braes of Birken”—the Braes of Birken was the name of his poem on the joys of honeymooning—“must not be ashamed of himself because he cannot acquire a small mechanical skill.” “I am ashamed of myself all the same,” said Fred.

      Конец ознакомительного фрагмента.

      Текст предоставлен ООО «ЛитРес».

      Прочитайте эту книгу целиком, купив полную легальную версию на ЛитРес.

      Безопасно оплатить книгу можно банковской картой Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, со счета мобильного телефона, с платежного терминала, в салоне МТС или Связной, через PayPal, WebMoney, Яндекс.Деньги, QIWI Кошелек, бонусными картами или другим удобным Вам способом.

/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQAAAQABAAD/2wBDAAMCAgMCAgMDAwMEAwMEBQgFBQQEBQoHBwYIDAoMDAsK CwsNDhIQDQ4RDgsLEBYQERMUFRUVDA8XGBYUGBIUFRT/2wBDAQMEBAUEBQkFBQkUDQsNFBQUFBQU FBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBT/wAARCAWgA4QDASIA AhEBAxEB/8QAHgAAAQQCAwEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAECAwQFBgcICQr/xABgEAABAwMDAwIEAgYFBgcN ABMBAgMEAAURBhIhBzFBE1EIFCJhcYEJFSMykaEWQlKx0RgzVmKTwRckgpKi4fAlNDY3Q1Nyc3R1 srPxNUaDlMLTJlRVY9IZlaO0J0TDRf/EABoBAQEBAQEBAQAAAAAAAAAAAAABAgMEBQb/xAA7EQAC AQIEBAMIAQQCAgMBAAMAARECIRIxQVEDEyLwMmGhIzNCcYGRseFSBEPB0RRiU/EFY3IkNIKS/9oA DAMBAAIRAxEAPwDH0UUUAUUUUAUUUUAUUUUAUUUUAUUUUAUUUUA4ClpBRQC0UUUAUUUUAUUUUAUU lFAITzRk0EUlALk0mc0UYzQBTsCkwadQCAYopaSgFpCKKDnFANooxRQBRRRQBRRRQBRRRQBRRRQB RRRQBRRRQBRRRQBRRRQBRRRQBRRRQBRRRQBRRRQBRS4NGDQCZooooAooooAzilyaSigFyaTNFFAO HalpBS0AUlFFAGaKMUtAJjFLSUtAFFJS0AUUUUAlLSZoyKACM0tJkUZFALRSZFFALSUUUAtFFJQB S0lLQBSUUUAtIaWkNANzmnDtSYNLnAoBaTNITxSUA4UGkB7UpoBaKKKAKKKKAKKKSgFooooAoooo BlFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFKO9JThQBS0lLQBRRQDigCilNK20t0kIQpZHcJSTQDaKl +Ukf/m73+zP+FRqSpCilSSlQ7gjBoBp7U3NOPam0AZooooApU96UDiigCloooBKKD2puaAdS0g7U tAIe1Npx7U3FAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFFAFFFKAVEAAkngA eaASipflJH/5u9/sz/hTXGXGsb21oz23JIzQBSHilbSpxW1KStR7BIyal+Tkf/m73+zP+FAV6Kct tbRwtCkHvhQIptAA70qqSigCilGKDjFAJQO9FFAPopmaM0AoPvTqZSg0A6ikzS0Ag80tFJQC0lGa MigAnFJk0E5FJQBRRRQBRRRQBTh2pAOKWgFpKKWgENLSUtAFJS0UAUlLRQBRSUUAtNV3p1NV3oBK KKKAUd6WkHenUAUUUUAUUUUAUlGM0h70A6iimqoB1FMzRQBRRRQBRRRQBW39JtAr6m6/teng6uO1 JUpTz7YBU22lJUpQz

Скачать книгу