Jessie Trim

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Jessie Trim by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Benjamin Leopold Farjeon ISBN: 9781465612489
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
ISBN: 9781465612489
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
As my earliest remembrances are associated with my grandmother's wedding, it takes natural precedence here of all other matter. I was not there, of course, but I seem to see it through a mist, and I have a distinct impression of certain actors in the scene. These are: a smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, my grandmother, my grandfather (whom I never saw in the flesh), and a man with a knob on the top of his head, making a meal off his finger-nails. Naturally, this man's head is bald. Naturally, this man's nails are eaten down to the quick. I am unable to state how I come to the knowledge of these details, but I know them, and am prepared to stand by them. Sitting, as I see myself, in a very low armchair--in which I am such an exact fit that when I rise it rises with me, much to my discomfort--I hear my grandmother say: 'He had a knob on the top of his head, and he was always eating his nails.' Then a solemn pause ensues, broken by my grandmother adding, in a dismal tone: 'And the last time I set eyes on him was on my wedding-day.' The words are addressed not so much to me as to the smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, which had occupied the place of honour on the mantelpiece in my grandmother's house, and which she had brought with her as a precious relic--(Jane Painter, I remember, always called it a relict)--when she came to live with us. The head of this stone figure is loose, and wags upon the slightest provocation. When something falls in the room, when the door is slammed, when a person walks sharply towards it, when it is merely looked at I sometimes fancy. I am not prepossessed in its favour, and I regard it with uneasy feelings, as probably possessing a power for evil, like a malevolently-inclined idol. But my grandmother, for some mysterious reason, values it as a very precious possession, and sits staring dumbly at it for hours. I watch her and it until, in my imagination, its monkey-face begins to twitch and its monkey-lips to move. At a certain point of my watch, I fancy that its eyes roll and glare at me, and I cover mine with my hands to shut out the disturbing sight.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
As my earliest remembrances are associated with my grandmother's wedding, it takes natural precedence here of all other matter. I was not there, of course, but I seem to see it through a mist, and I have a distinct impression of certain actors in the scene. These are: a smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, my grandmother, my grandfather (whom I never saw in the flesh), and a man with a knob on the top of his head, making a meal off his finger-nails. Naturally, this man's head is bald. Naturally, this man's nails are eaten down to the quick. I am unable to state how I come to the knowledge of these details, but I know them, and am prepared to stand by them. Sitting, as I see myself, in a very low armchair--in which I am such an exact fit that when I rise it rises with me, much to my discomfort--I hear my grandmother say: 'He had a knob on the top of his head, and he was always eating his nails.' Then a solemn pause ensues, broken by my grandmother adding, in a dismal tone: 'And the last time I set eyes on him was on my wedding-day.' The words are addressed not so much to me as to the smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, which had occupied the place of honour on the mantelpiece in my grandmother's house, and which she had brought with her as a precious relic--(Jane Painter, I remember, always called it a relict)--when she came to live with us. The head of this stone figure is loose, and wags upon the slightest provocation. When something falls in the room, when the door is slammed, when a person walks sharply towards it, when it is merely looked at I sometimes fancy. I am not prepossessed in its favour, and I regard it with uneasy feelings, as probably possessing a power for evil, like a malevolently-inclined idol. But my grandmother, for some mysterious reason, values it as a very precious possession, and sits staring dumbly at it for hours. I watch her and it until, in my imagination, its monkey-face begins to twitch and its monkey-lips to move. At a certain point of my watch, I fancy that its eyes roll and glare at me, and I cover mine with my hands to shut out the disturbing sight.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Comedias: El remedio en la desdicha; El mejor alcalde, el rey by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Peace and Bread in Time of War by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book De Conjugio by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson, Complete 25 Volumes and enson, the Man and His Work by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Tractate Sanhedrin, Mishnah and Tosefta by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Prose Fancies (Complete) by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book The Short Stories of Edward Bellamy by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book The Standard Electrical Dictionary: A Popular Dictionary of Words and Terms Used in the Practice of Electrical Engineering by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Caesar or Nothing by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Dick Cheveley: His Adventures and Misadventures by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Against Apion by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Shakespeare's Christmas and Other Stories by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book The New Pun Book by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Legends of Loudoun: An Account of the History and Homes of a Border County of Virginia's Northern Neck by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
Cover of the book Miles Tremenhere (Complete) by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy