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قراءة كتاب The Loom of Youth
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THE LOOM OF YOUTH
"Well, I mean there's Davenham now and—"
"Davenham!" came the scornful retort. "What does it matter what happens to Davenham? He's absolutely useless to the House, rotten at games and spends his whole time reading about fossils. Who cares a curse about Davenham!"
"Oh I suppose you're right, but—"
"My dear ass, of course I am right. Meredith is a simply glorious fellow. Do you remember the way he brought down Freeman in the Two Cock? Why, the House simply couldn't get on without him."
To Gordon all this conveyed very little. He had no idea who Meredith or Davenham were. The only thing he realised was that for those who wore a blue and gold ribbon laws ceased to exist. It was apparently rather advantageous to get into the Fifteen. He had not looked on athletics in that light before. Obviously his preparatory school had failed singularly to keep level with the times. He had always been told by the masters there that games were only important for training the body. But at Fernhurst they seemed the one thing that mattered. To the athlete all things are forgiven. There was clearly a lot to learn.
"To him who desireth much, much is given; and to him who desireth little, little is given; but to neither according to the letter of his desire."
GILBERT CANNAN
The Loom of Youth
ALEC WAUGH
Methuen
First published in Great Britain 1917
Reprinted July 1917, August 1917, September 1917 (twice)
November 1917, January 1918, March 1918, October 1918,
1919, 1921, 1930, 1933, 1945
Cassell's Pocket Library, 1928
Penguin Abridged Edition, 1942
New edition reset and revised 1955
Reprinted 1972
This edition published 1984
by Methuen London Ltd
11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE
Copyright © Alec Waugh 1917
ISBN 0 413 54970 4 (hardback)
ISBN 0 413 54980 1 (paperback)
Printed and bound in Great Britain
by Richard Clay (The Chaucer Press) Ltd
Bungay, Suffolk
This book is available in both a hardcover and paperback edition. The paperback is solid subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the Publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
Transcriber's Note: Minor typos have been corrected in text.
Dedicatory Letter to Arthur Waugh
My Dear Father,
This book, which I am bringing you, is a very small return for all you have given me. In every mood, in every phase of my shifting pilgrimage, I have found you ever the same—loving, sympathetic, wise. You have been with me in my success, and in my happiness, in my failures and in my disappointments, in the hours when I have followed wandering fires. There has never yet come to me a moment when I did not know that I had but to stretch out my hand to find you at my side. In return for so much, this first book of mine is a very small offering.
But yet I bring it to you, simply because it is my first. For whatever altars I may have raised by the wayside, whatever ephemeral loyalties may have swayed me, my one real lodestar has always been your love, and sympathy, and guidance. And as in life it has always been to you first that I have brought my troubles, my aims, my hopes, so in the world of ideas it is to you that I would bring this, the first-born of my dreams.
Accept it. For it carries with it the very real and very deep love of a most grateful son.
A.W.
CONTENTS
Preface | page 9 |
BOOK I: WARP AND WOOF | |
I Groping | 15 |
II Finding his Feet | 21 |
III The New Philosophy | 31 |
IV New Faces | 44 |
V Emerging | 52 |
VI Clarke | 62 |
VII When One is in Rome | 69 |
BOOK II: THE TANGLED SKEIN | |
I Quantum Mutatus | 79 |
II Healthy Philistinism | 102 |
III Tin Gods | 119 |
IV Through a Glass Darkly | 130 |
BOOK III: UNRAVELLING THE THREADS | |
I Common Room Faces | public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@18863@18863-h@18863-h-4.htm.html#Page_134" class="pginternal" |