第46部分 (第1/8頁)
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I find letters from Lang imploring me not to kill Allan Quatermain。 But when he wrote Allan had already been killed; and how could the end of the story be altered? Besides his day was done and his tale told。 But he left others behind him。
Before finally leaving the subject of “Cleopatra” I will quote a couple of letters that I received from W。 E。 Henley。 I should here mention that I was well acquainted with this able and interesting man; some of whose poems will; I think; survive in our literature。
I remember once driving to the British Museum with him and Lang; or it may have been Gosse; or both of them; in a four…wheeled cab; to see some Japanese prints that were on show。 On the way I told him that personally I admired statuary; and especially Greek statuary; much more than I did pictorial art。 He was greatly astonished。
“I think it wonderful;” he said; “that you being what you are; and your work what it is; you should prefer form to colour。”
It seemed curious to him that a man who wrote romances should have other sides to his nature。 He was extremely fond of war and fighting; witness his Ode to the Sword; and at the club would insist upon my telling him stories by the yard about the Zulus and their blood…thirsty battles and customs。 With it all he was very domestic; and much attached to his “placens uxor” and the little girl whom; most unhappily; he lost。 The last note I ever received from him; written some years after our acquaintance had p