Robertson Davies uses his magical touch to weave together the destinies of this remarkable cast of characters, creating a wise and witty portrait of love, murder, and scholarship at a modern university.Defrocked monks, mad professors, and wealthy eccentrics – a remarkable cast peoples Robertson Davies' brilliant spectacle of theft, perjury, murder, scholarship, and love at a modern university. Only Mr. Davies, author of Fifth Business, The Manticore, and World of Wonders, could have woven together their destinies with such wit, humour – and wisdom.
Классическая проза18+Robertson Davies
The Rebel Angels
The first book in the Cornish series, 1981
Second Paradise I
1
"Parlabane is back."
"What?"
"Hadn't you heard? Parlabane is back."
"Oh my God!"
I hurried on down the long corridor, through chattering students and gossiping faculty members, and again I overheard it, as another pair of professors met.
"You haven't heard about Parlabane, I suppose?"
"No. What should I have heard?"
"He's back."
"Not here?"
"Yes. In the college."
"Not staying, I hope?"
"Who's to say? With Parlabane, anyhow."
This was what I wanted. It was something to say to Hollier when we met after nearly four months apart. At that last meeting he had become my lover, or so I was vain enough to think. Certainly he had become, agonizingly, the man I loved. All through the summer vacation I had fretted and fussed and hoped for a postcard from wherever he might be in Europe, but he was not a man to write postcards. Not a man to say very much, either, in a personal way. But he could be excited; he could give way to feeling. On that day in early May, when he had told me about the latest development in his work, and I – so eager to serve him, to gain his gratitude and perhaps even his love – did an inexcusable thing and betrayed the secret of the
That was when we had parted, he embarrassed and I overcome with astonishment and devotion, and now I was to face him again. I needed an opening remark.
So – up the two winding nights of stairs, which the high ceilings in St. John's made rather more like three flights. Why was I hurrying? Was I so eager to see him? No, I wanted that, of course, but I dreaded it as well. How does one greet one's professor, one's thesis director, whom one loves and who has had one on his old sofa, and whom one hopes may love one in return? It was a sign of my mental state that I was thinking of myself as "one", which meant that my English was becoming stiff and formal. There I was, out of breath, on the landing where there were no rooms but his, and on the study door was his tattered old hand-written sign saying "Professor Hollier is in; knock and enter". So I did, and there he was at his table looking like Dante if Dante had had better upper teeth, or perhaps like Savonarola if Savonarola had been handsomer. Stumbling – a little lightheaded – I rattled out my scrap of news.
"Parlabane is back."
The effect was more than I had reckoned for. He straightened in his chair, and although his mouth did not open, his jaw slackened and his face had that look of intentness that I loved even more than his smile, which was not his best expression.
"Did you say that Parlabane was here?"
"That's what they're all saying in the main hall."
"Great God! How awful!"
"Why awful? Who's Parlabane?"
"I dare say you'll find out soon enough. – Have you had a good summer? Done any work?"
Nothing to recall the adventure on the sofa, which was right beside him and seemed to me to be the most important thing in the room. Just professor-questions about work. He didn't give a damn if I'd had a good summer. He simply wanted to know if I had been getting on with my work – which was a niggling little particle of the substructure of
"I've arranged that you can work in here this year. Of course you've got your own dog-hole somewhere, but here you can spread out books and papers and leave things overnight. I've been clearing this table for you. I shall want you near."
I trembled. Do girls still tremble when their lovers say they want them near? I did. Then –
"Do you know why I want you near?"
I blushed. I wish I didn't blush but at twenty-three I still blush. I could not say a word.
"No, of course you don't. Couldn't possibly. But I'll tell you, and it will make you jump out of your skin. Cornish died this morning."
Oh, abomination of desolation! It wasn't the sofa and what the sofa meant.
"I don't think I know about Cornish."