Mauritius
Chapter 17
go down. ’ and went out into the courtyard. Mother followed with a tray. Her generosity annoyed him, for love made Maurice the Athlete grow. To her, holding a tray with toast, It's nothing to go for a walk while saying nice things, she just wants her son to be as generous as her.
She wondered if she had heard wrong.Did he really refuse to repent?She pondered.If her father knew, what would he say.Then, she happened to learn that the old man's birthday present to Morris had been left in East Anglia. part of Cambridgeshire and Essex, with important fishing ports and summer resorts along the coast.)She took the matter seriously because, to her, losing a motorcycle was more understandable than losing a degree.The two younger sisters were also concerned about the matter.Until noon, they kept moaning about the motorcycle.Though Maurice was always able to silence them, or send them out of hearing, he feared that they would be too obedient and weaken his spirit as they had been during the Easter break, so he said nothing.
By afternoon, Maurice had a nervous breakdown.He remembered that Clive and himself had only been together for one day!And galloping along on a motorcycle like a couple of idiots - without ever cuddling each other!Maurice didn't understand, and that's why their day was perfect.He was too young to appreciate the banality of contact for contact's sake.Although his friends were holding him back, he still gave almost all of his passion.Later, when his love acquires a second power, he realizes that fate has treated him well.An embrace in darkness, a long day in light and wind, two pillars that complement each other.The pain of parting that he is now enduring is not for destruction, but for fulfillment.
He tried to write back to Clive, already terrified of hypocrisy.In the evening he received another letter consisting of the words "Maurice, I love you!"He wrote in his reply: "Clive, I love you." Afterwards, they exchanged letters every day, creating a new image of each other in their hearts without paying attention.Letters are more quickly misinterpreted than silence.Frightened, something was wrong, Clive was terrified.So before the exam, he asked for leave and went straight to London.Maurice had lunch with him, and it was a terrible thing.Both parties were tired, but they chose a restaurant that was so loud that they couldn't hear each other's voices. "I'm not happy at all," said Clive when they parted.Maurice felt relieved, and he felt even more uncomfortable when he pretended to be happy himself.They agreed that they would only write facts in their letters in the future, and they would not write letters unless there was an emergency, and the psychological pressure was reduced.Maurice was hot-headed, almost in a state of high excitement, but he didn't realize it.After that, he slept for several nights without even dreaming, and finally recovered.However, everyday life is still not pleasant.
His position in the family was abnormal, and Mrs. Hall wanted someone to make decisions for him.He looked like a grown-up, having fired the Howells during the last Easter break.On the other hand, he was suspended from Cambridge and was not yet 21.What kind of status should be given to him in her family?At Kitty's urging, she tries to assert her authority over her son.Maurice looked genuinely surprised at first, then turned hostile to her.Mrs. Hall wavered, and though she liked her son, took the unwise step of turning to Dr. Barry for help.One evening, the doctor called Maurice to his house and said he had something to talk to him about.
"Hey, Maurice, how's school going? Not exactly what you expected, huh?"
Maurice was still intimidated by their neighbor.
"Not quite what your mother expected--that would be more accurate."
"Not exactly what anyone expected," Maurice said, looking at his hands.
So Dr. Barry said, "Oh, that's the best thing to do. What do you want a college degree for? It was never meant for middle-class suburbanites. You're not going to be a priest, or a lawyer, or You're not a squire either, sir, you're just wasting your time. Immediately into employment, and you've insulted the superintendent quite well. Your place is in the heart of London. Your mother..." He paused, Lighted a cigar and gave the lad nothing. "Your mother doesn't understand this. She's in a hurry just because you don't want to repent. In my opinion, it's going to happen. You've stepped into a place that wasn't for you, and you've rightly taken the first chance to get out of it." this environment."
"What do you mean, sir?"
"Well, didn't I make it clear enough? I mean, if a squire finds himself behaving like a vulgar man, he'll instinctively apologize. You're brought up in different traditions .”
"I guess I should go home now," said Maurice, maintaining his authority.
"Yes, I think it's time for you to go back. I hope you've realized that I'm not asking you to have a nice evening."
"You talk bluntly—and maybe one day, I'll do the same. I know I like it."
The doctor was on the verge of breaking out, and he cried out: "How dare you insult your mother, Maurice. You should be given a good whipping. You shallow and conceited boy! Instead of begging your mother's forgiveness, you walk around swaggeringly." Go! I know all about it. She came here tearfully, and demanded a few words from me. She and your two sisters are neighbors I respect. When the women speak, I do my bidding. Don't Answer me, sir, don't answer. I don't listen to a word of your excuses, straight or not. You dishonor chivalry. I don't know what the world has become, I don't—I'm disappointed in you, I feel disgust."
Morris went outside at last and wiped his brow.He was a little ashamed that he had treated his mother badly, and the vulgar side of him was stung.Yet somehow, he couldn't get down, couldn't change.Once off the track, it seems like you'll never get back on track. "Damn chivalry." He pondered the doctor's accusation.Would Dr. Barry ask for an apology if the person in the sidecar of the motorcycle was a woman, and if that was why he refused to stop at the Superintendent's order?Probably not.He struggled to follow this line of thought, his mind was still weak, but he had to use it.Because there are so many everyday conversations and ideas that he has to re-interpret to understand.
His mother is waiting for him.She looked embarrassed.her son.She felt that she should come and reprimand him herself.She complained to Kitty that Maurice had grown up, and how sad the children were going away one by one.Kitty insisted that her brother was still a child.However, since Morris went to see Dr. Barry, the women in the family felt that his mouth, eyes and voice had all changed.
Durham's family lived in a remote part of England, between Wiltshire and Somerset. Mercet is a county in southwestern England, bordering Bristol Bay in the north. The coastal scenery is beautiful and it is a protected area.) The junction of the two counties.Although not ancestral, the family has owned the land for four generations and the influence is in their blood.Under George IV (Annotation: George IV (1762-1830). King of England, King of Hanover. Accessed the throne in 1820.) Under the rule, Clive's great-uncle was the chief justice of the United Kingdom.Peng Jie is the nest he built with feathers.Now those feathers are almost scraped to pieces.This family property has been eroded by a hundred years, and he has not married a rich bride to change his family.Mansions and manors, though not really rotten, are stamped with the stamp of stagnation, and that is the harbinger of rottenness.
The mansion is located in the forest.Surrounded by vast gardens, still fenced in by vanishing hedges.The gardens provide sun, air, pasture and herds of Alderney dairy cows.Outside the park was a forest, mostly planted by old Sir Edwin.He combined private gardens with commons.The garden has two gates.There was one doorway up the village, and another on the clay road to the station.Originally, there was no station here. From the station to the garden is an unseemly back alley along the backyard, which symbolizes the afterthoughts of the British.
Maurice arrived in the evening.He had come straight from his grandfather's house in Birmingham.There, he spent his adult birthday in a lifeless manner.Despite the embarrassment, the gift was not cancelled, but both the sender and the recipient were unhappy.He used to look forward to the day he turned 21.Kitty hints that she is unhappy because her brother has fallen.In retaliation Maurice pinched her ear well and kissed her, much to Kitty's annoyance. "You don't understand," she said angrily.He smiled broadly.
There are many cousins in my grandfather's Alfriston garden, and they serve them during tea in the afternoon.
She wondered if she had heard wrong.Did he really refuse to repent?She pondered.If her father knew, what would he say.Then, she happened to learn that the old man's birthday present to Morris had been left in East Anglia. part of Cambridgeshire and Essex, with important fishing ports and summer resorts along the coast.)She took the matter seriously because, to her, losing a motorcycle was more understandable than losing a degree.The two younger sisters were also concerned about the matter.Until noon, they kept moaning about the motorcycle.Though Maurice was always able to silence them, or send them out of hearing, he feared that they would be too obedient and weaken his spirit as they had been during the Easter break, so he said nothing.
By afternoon, Maurice had a nervous breakdown.He remembered that Clive and himself had only been together for one day!And galloping along on a motorcycle like a couple of idiots - without ever cuddling each other!Maurice didn't understand, and that's why their day was perfect.He was too young to appreciate the banality of contact for contact's sake.Although his friends were holding him back, he still gave almost all of his passion.Later, when his love acquires a second power, he realizes that fate has treated him well.An embrace in darkness, a long day in light and wind, two pillars that complement each other.The pain of parting that he is now enduring is not for destruction, but for fulfillment.
He tried to write back to Clive, already terrified of hypocrisy.In the evening he received another letter consisting of the words "Maurice, I love you!"He wrote in his reply: "Clive, I love you." Afterwards, they exchanged letters every day, creating a new image of each other in their hearts without paying attention.Letters are more quickly misinterpreted than silence.Frightened, something was wrong, Clive was terrified.So before the exam, he asked for leave and went straight to London.Maurice had lunch with him, and it was a terrible thing.Both parties were tired, but they chose a restaurant that was so loud that they couldn't hear each other's voices. "I'm not happy at all," said Clive when they parted.Maurice felt relieved, and he felt even more uncomfortable when he pretended to be happy himself.They agreed that they would only write facts in their letters in the future, and they would not write letters unless there was an emergency, and the psychological pressure was reduced.Maurice was hot-headed, almost in a state of high excitement, but he didn't realize it.After that, he slept for several nights without even dreaming, and finally recovered.However, everyday life is still not pleasant.
His position in the family was abnormal, and Mrs. Hall wanted someone to make decisions for him.He looked like a grown-up, having fired the Howells during the last Easter break.On the other hand, he was suspended from Cambridge and was not yet 21.What kind of status should be given to him in her family?At Kitty's urging, she tries to assert her authority over her son.Maurice looked genuinely surprised at first, then turned hostile to her.Mrs. Hall wavered, and though she liked her son, took the unwise step of turning to Dr. Barry for help.One evening, the doctor called Maurice to his house and said he had something to talk to him about.
"Hey, Maurice, how's school going? Not exactly what you expected, huh?"
Maurice was still intimidated by their neighbor.
"Not quite what your mother expected--that would be more accurate."
"Not exactly what anyone expected," Maurice said, looking at his hands.
So Dr. Barry said, "Oh, that's the best thing to do. What do you want a college degree for? It was never meant for middle-class suburbanites. You're not going to be a priest, or a lawyer, or You're not a squire either, sir, you're just wasting your time. Immediately into employment, and you've insulted the superintendent quite well. Your place is in the heart of London. Your mother..." He paused, Lighted a cigar and gave the lad nothing. "Your mother doesn't understand this. She's in a hurry just because you don't want to repent. In my opinion, it's going to happen. You've stepped into a place that wasn't for you, and you've rightly taken the first chance to get out of it." this environment."
"What do you mean, sir?"
"Well, didn't I make it clear enough? I mean, if a squire finds himself behaving like a vulgar man, he'll instinctively apologize. You're brought up in different traditions .”
"I guess I should go home now," said Maurice, maintaining his authority.
"Yes, I think it's time for you to go back. I hope you've realized that I'm not asking you to have a nice evening."
"You talk bluntly—and maybe one day, I'll do the same. I know I like it."
The doctor was on the verge of breaking out, and he cried out: "How dare you insult your mother, Maurice. You should be given a good whipping. You shallow and conceited boy! Instead of begging your mother's forgiveness, you walk around swaggeringly." Go! I know all about it. She came here tearfully, and demanded a few words from me. She and your two sisters are neighbors I respect. When the women speak, I do my bidding. Don't Answer me, sir, don't answer. I don't listen to a word of your excuses, straight or not. You dishonor chivalry. I don't know what the world has become, I don't—I'm disappointed in you, I feel disgust."
Morris went outside at last and wiped his brow.He was a little ashamed that he had treated his mother badly, and the vulgar side of him was stung.Yet somehow, he couldn't get down, couldn't change.Once off the track, it seems like you'll never get back on track. "Damn chivalry." He pondered the doctor's accusation.Would Dr. Barry ask for an apology if the person in the sidecar of the motorcycle was a woman, and if that was why he refused to stop at the Superintendent's order?Probably not.He struggled to follow this line of thought, his mind was still weak, but he had to use it.Because there are so many everyday conversations and ideas that he has to re-interpret to understand.
His mother is waiting for him.She looked embarrassed.her son.She felt that she should come and reprimand him herself.She complained to Kitty that Maurice had grown up, and how sad the children were going away one by one.Kitty insisted that her brother was still a child.However, since Morris went to see Dr. Barry, the women in the family felt that his mouth, eyes and voice had all changed.
Durham's family lived in a remote part of England, between Wiltshire and Somerset. Mercet is a county in southwestern England, bordering Bristol Bay in the north. The coastal scenery is beautiful and it is a protected area.) The junction of the two counties.Although not ancestral, the family has owned the land for four generations and the influence is in their blood.Under George IV (Annotation: George IV (1762-1830). King of England, King of Hanover. Accessed the throne in 1820.) Under the rule, Clive's great-uncle was the chief justice of the United Kingdom.Peng Jie is the nest he built with feathers.Now those feathers are almost scraped to pieces.This family property has been eroded by a hundred years, and he has not married a rich bride to change his family.Mansions and manors, though not really rotten, are stamped with the stamp of stagnation, and that is the harbinger of rottenness.
The mansion is located in the forest.Surrounded by vast gardens, still fenced in by vanishing hedges.The gardens provide sun, air, pasture and herds of Alderney dairy cows.Outside the park was a forest, mostly planted by old Sir Edwin.He combined private gardens with commons.The garden has two gates.There was one doorway up the village, and another on the clay road to the station.Originally, there was no station here. From the station to the garden is an unseemly back alley along the backyard, which symbolizes the afterthoughts of the British.
Maurice arrived in the evening.He had come straight from his grandfather's house in Birmingham.There, he spent his adult birthday in a lifeless manner.Despite the embarrassment, the gift was not cancelled, but both the sender and the recipient were unhappy.He used to look forward to the day he turned 21.Kitty hints that she is unhappy because her brother has fallen.In retaliation Maurice pinched her ear well and kissed her, much to Kitty's annoyance. "You don't understand," she said angrily.He smiled broadly.
There are many cousins in my grandfather's Alfriston garden, and they serve them during tea in the afternoon.
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