Years of Plenty - BestLightNovel.com
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Martin was eager to be back, despite the prospect of two stiff terms.
And when he was back once more in Oxford, no longer the leaf-clad city of pleasant waters but grey and dripping with the autumn mists, he found that both he himself and his friends had far too much to say.
They were all in new and more desirable rooms and Martin was free from the domination of Galer. He had chosen to dwell high up in the back quad, where the windows were large and the rooms airy, and lately he had revised his pictures. This term he purchased some quaintly luminous and misty landscapes which were the fruit either of startling genius or blank incompetence. As to which was the case there was great argument. Rendell, being senior scholar of his year, had been able to claim the famous rooms of the college, oak-panelled and majestically dark. For Art he relied upon Rembrandt and Durer: but then Rendell never risked anything.
Undoubtedly they had all a great deal to recount, for sixteen weeks of vacation could hardly fail to bring new friends and new experience, new books and new ideas. And the Push knew that there is no satisfaction in mere discovery: it is the telling of a tale that makes for pleasure.
So night after night Martin neglected to settle down after dinner, began to tell tales, and concluded, somewhere about twelve, that it was too late to begin now. Then they would play a rubber of sixpenny auction just to make them sleepy and, playing till three or four, would so succeed in their ambition that they could not breakfast till eleven.
Only Rendell refused to be tempted and went dutifully to his books.
Before long Martin quarrelled with Reggie Petworth, sulked foolishly, despaired of the term, and began to rely on the winter vacation and the subsequent six weeks of term to grapple with the problem of Mods. He spent a miserable Christmas at The Steading and came to the conclusion on New Year's Eve that he had forgotten nearly every word of Greek and Latin that he had ever known. He did not look forward to the term, and on January the fifteenth he went to Oxford as a lamb to the slaughter.
It was a term of infinite depression. The early months of the year, everywhere unkind, are singularly uncharitable to Oxford: the glamour of autumn had departed and winter has no majesty in muddy streets. The days were yellow with a sticky warmth that brought exhaustion and despair. Martin, pa.s.sing from book to book, felt always, at whatever time of day, as though he had eaten too much lunch and would die if he didn't soon have tea: it was that kind of weather. He gave up football because it made him sleep after tea: and then, being without exercise or diversion, yawned all morning and read garbage after lunch. Rendell had his work well in hand and was, men said, sure to get a first.
Lawrence had manfully abandoned hope and sought consolation in beer and bridge. Martin, foolishly but characteristically, took the middle path. He had neither the energy to work nor the courage to be idle, but sat mournfully with his books, gazing blankly at the pages and wondering why it was all so new to him. Then he would consult recent papers, and his heart would sink yet lower as he realised his amazing ignorance.
As the weeks slipped away he took to learning up lists of hard words and legal technicalities. He became a master of the Virgilian vegetable and the Demosthenic demurrer, and though he knew the Latin for burrs and calthrops and succory and bogwort, he would have been quite incapable of distinguis.h.i.+ng those herbs from one another. Thus do we study the poets and orators. But it was distressing work.
And then he became aware of Pink Roses. He noticed her because of her ubiquity and partly, perhaps, because she was always alone: he noticed her in the Broad, in the High, at a football match in the parks, once in the cinema. She was not beautiful, not even pretty: otherwise she need scarcely have remained alone in a community so rapacious. Usually she wore a coat and skirt of dark blue and a little black hat with pink roses. Beneath her hat Martin had observed light fluffy hair done witchingly about her ears and he had been able to notice that she had a pleasing smile and the tiniest of dimples. But her features, too heavy to be piquant, were not strong enough to be striking.
He pointed her out one day to Lawrence and demanded his opinion.
"Oh, that's your Pink Roses," he said critically. "Pretty poor stuff."
"She may be all right," answered Martin meekly.
"She walks all right, but she has got a face like a milk pudding."
Martin did not attempt to argue against this higher criticism.
Lawrence, he thought, was an old dear but he certainly lacked perception. There was something about Pink Roses.
And then one evening, when he was turning into a main street, he walked right into her. He smiled vaguely and apologised, but she had hurried past him and did not hear. He turned and watched her. She stopped outside the cinema and studied the programme: eventually she went in.
Martin had meant to do an hour's work before dinner and began walking back to college. Soon he stopped again and stood vaguely on the pavement, gazing at the pa.s.sing crowd. At last resolvedly he resumed his journey to the college and the poets. Five minutes later he was pa.s.sing a s.h.i.+lling through the grille of the cinema ticket office. It seemed an age before a film ended and the light went up. Then he saw the Pink Roses flowering alone in the sixpenny seats. As soon as the pictures began he would go in her direction. But when the time came he felt self-conscious and afraid. 'Ridiculous a.s.s,' he said to himself.
"You desert Lucretius for Pink Roses and now you don't even gather the rose-buds." And then again: 'Who is the silly girl--after all? Here am I, a scholar of a college, deserting Lucretius for that funny little person! It's too childish.' So he rose to go out and walked instead to the sixpenny seats.
The girl looked round to see who was coming next to her.
"Hullo!" whispered Martin as though surprised. "Didn't I nearly knock you over in the street just now?"
"Someone ran into me," she answered. "I didn't notice who it was."
"I think it was me. I'm so sorry."
"Oh, it didn't matter, thank you."
She said it very nicely and Martin was encouraged to go on. It was rather difficult and he wished he was fortified by a sound dinner.
"You come here a good lot?" he said at last.
"Yes. Nearly every time the pictures change."
"Don't you get bored?"
"It's better than doing nothing."
"But the pictures are so silly as a rule."
"Oh, I like the pictures. 'Sixty Years a Queen'--that was lovely. The girl that did Queen Victoria was just sweet."
To his own surprise Martin did not object to her taste: he would have loathed any other admirer of "Sixty Years a Queen."
"Do you know many people here?" he asked.
"I know some girls I was at school with."
"No men?"
"Not many. I know Mr Carter; Brasenose, isn't he? Do you know him?"
"Only by sight. He's going to be chucked out of the varsity boat."
"Is he? I'm so sorry. He's awfully nice."
"Do you know him well?"
"Only a little. I met him in here. He asked me to have tea in his rooms in Beaumont Street, but of course I couldn't."
So she had ideas about propriety. There was a silence.
"Do you always live in Oxford?" asked Martin.
"We live out at Botley."
"Pretty deadly spot, isn't it?"
"Yes, it's something awful. I want to go to London only my family won't let me go into business. I'm awfully bored."
"So am I."
"Why are you bored?"
"I've got an exam coming on."
"Oh, you poor thing! I could never do exams. I think they're horrid.
I do hope you'll get on all right!"
"Thanks very much!" It pleased Martin to have her sympathy.
They chattered on. Her name was May Williams and she seemed to be very, very tired of Botley and her own company. Before Martin went away to dinner he asked her to meet him at the same time the next evening.
"It's Wednesday," he said. "So you'll get your new pictures. I think it's nicer at this time: there's such a crush in here after dinner."
May agreed with evident pleasure and Martin went back to dinner rejoicing in his courage and his first steps to adventure. He had been right: there was something about Pink Roses, indefinable perhaps, but plainly something. She wasn't just one of the Oxford girls.