第36部分(第1/8 頁)
o do so。
Your story disposes me to think you have that ambition。 It also causes me to hope that I may make the author’s acquaintance。 If you call on me when you are in town I shall be delighted to ask your pardon for writing to you with such unmannerly frankness and self…sufficiency。
Believe me to be; my dear sir;
Yours very sincerely;
John Cordy Jeaffreson。
What an extraordinarily kind heart must have been that of Mr。 Jeaffreson! He was a very busy man; producing as he did works of fiction and of biography; in addition to his antiquarian labours that involved the deciphering of thousands of old documents; by means of all which toil he earned a moderate ine。 Yet he found time on behalf of an individual totally unknown to him; or to anybody else in this country; to labour through several hundred not too legible sheets of manuscript; and to write a masterly criticism of their contents。 Moreover; for all this trouble he refused to accept any reward。 Certainly it has been my fortune to make acquaintance with much malice in the world; but on the other hand I have met with signal kindness at the hands of those engaged in literary pursuits; and of such kindnesses I can recall no more striking example than this act of Mr。 Jeaffreson; of whom I shall always entertain the most affectionate memory。
Well; I took his advice。 From a tiny note on the first page of the manuscript it would seem that I began to rewrite “Dawn” or “Angela;” as it was