cardboard; and pasted flat against the sky; which was of a deeper blue。 “There are one or two people I’m fond of; and there’s a little good music; and a few pictures; now and then— just enough to keep one dangling about here。 Ah; but I couldn’t live with savages! Are you fond of books? Music? Pictures? D’you care at all for first editions? I’ve got a few nice things up here; things I pick up cheap; for I can’t afford to give what they ask。” They had reached a small court of high eighteenth century houses; in one of which Rodney had his rooms。 They climbed a very steep staircase; through whose uncurtained windows the moonlight fell; illuminating the banisters with their twisted pillars; and the piles of plates set on the windowsills; and jars halffull of milk。 Rodney’s rooms were small; but the sittingroom window looked out into a courtyard; with its flagged pavement; and its single tree; and across to the flat redbrick fronts of the opposite houses; which would not have surprised Dr。 Johnson; if he had e out of his grave for a turn in the moonlight。 Rodney lit his lamp; pulled his curtains; offered Denham a chair; and; flinging the manuscript of his paper on the Elizabethan use of Metaphor on to the table; exclaimed: “Oh dear me; what a waste of time! But it’s over now; and so we may think no more about it。” He then busied himself very dexterously in lighting a fire; producing glasses; whisky; a cake; and cups and saucers。 He put on a faded crimson dressinggown; and a pair of red slippers; and advanced to Denham with a tumbler in one hand and a wellburnished book in the other。 “The Baskerville Congreve;” said Rodney; offering it to his guest。 “I couldn’t read him in a cheap edition。” When he was seen thus among his books and his valu 59 Night and Day ables; amiably anxious to make his visitor fortable; and moving about with something of the dexterity and grace of a Persian cat; Denham relaxed his critical attitude; and felt more at home with Rodney than he would have done with many men better known to him。 Rodney’s room was the room of a person who cherishes a great many personal tastes; guarding them from the rough blasts of the public with scrupulous attention。 His papers and his books rose in jagged mounds on table and floor; round which he skirted with nervous care lest his dressinggown might disarrange them ever so slightly。 On a chair stood a stack of photographs of statues and pictures; which it was his habit to exhibit; one by one; for the space of a day or two。 The books on his shelves were as orderly as regiments of soldiers; and the backs of them shone like so many bronze beetlewings; though; if you took one from its place you saw a shabbier volume behind it; since space was limited。 An oval Veian mirror stood above the fireplace; and reflected duskily in its spotted depths the faint yellow and crimson of a jarful of tulips which stood among the letters and pipes and cigarettes upon the mantelpiece。 A small piano occupied a corner of the room; with the score of “Don Giovanni” open upon the bracket。 “Well; Rodney;” said Denham; as he filled his pipe and looked about him; “this is all very nice and fortable。” Rodney turned his head half round and smiled; with the pride of a proprietor; and then prevented himself from smiling。 “Tolerable;” he muttered。 “But I dare say it’s just as well that you have to earn your own living。” “If you mean that I shouldn’t do anything good with leisure if I had it; I dare say you’re right。 But I should be ten times as happy with my whole day to spend as I liked。” “I doubt that;” Denham replied。 They sat silent; and the smoke from their pipes joined amicably in a blue vapor above their heads。 “I could spend three hours every day reading Shakespeare;” Rodney remarked。 “And there’s music and pictures; let alone the society of the people one likes。” 60 Virginia Woolf “You’d be bored to death in a year’s time。” “Oh; I grant you I should be bored if I did nothing。 But I should write plays。” “H’m!” “I should write plays;” he repeated。 “I’ve written three quarters of one already; and I’m only waiting for a holiday to finish it。 And it’s not bad—no; some of it’s really rather nice。” The question arose in Denham’s mind whether he should ask to see this play; as; no doubt; he was expected to do。 He looked rather stealthily at Rodney; who was tapping the coal nervously with a poker; and quivering almost physically; so Denham thought; with desire to talk about this play of his; and vanity unrequited and urgent。 He seemed very much at Denham’s mercy; and Denham could not help liking him; partly on that account。 “Well; … will you let me see the play?” Denham asked; and Rodney looked immediately appeased; but; nevertheless; he sat silent for a moment; holding the poker perfectly upright in the air; regarding it with his rather prominent eyes; and opening his lips and shutting them again。 “Do you really care for this kind of thing?” he asked at length; in a different tone of voice from that in which he had been speaking。 And; without waiting for an answer; he went on; rather querulously: “Very few people care for poetry。 I dare say it bores you。” “Perhaps;” Denham remarked。 “Well; I’ll lend it you;” Rodney announced; putting down the poker。 As he moved to fetch the play; Denham stretched a hand to the bookcase beside him; and took down the first volume which his fingers touched。 It happened to be a small and very lovely edition of Sir Thomas Browne; containing the “Urn Burial;” the “Hydriotaphia;” and the “Garden of Cyrus;” and; opening it at a passage which he knew very nearly by heart; Denham began to read and; for some time; continued to read。 Rodney resumed his seat; with his manuscript on his knee; and from time to time he glanced at Denham; and then joined his fingertips and crossed his thin legs over the fender;