The House of the Vampire
the sculptor, "it's a
r the Sphinx that was looking at him from its corn
sterday stare at us l
it would be unnatural. The skies above us and the earth underfoot are in perpetual motion. Each a
the sculptor, "as if thou
der favorabl
go? Surely they can
er, it is not a question. Nothing is
st, "is the particular re
or replied; "I had a str
o Reginald, "the Narcissus I was working on
impressed me very much, though I
me eight thousand dollars for it. I had an absolutely original concep
very regr
say so," repli
troubles. Having twice figured in the divorce court, he
t was lying before him. Like all artists, something of a madman and something of a child, he at first glanced over its
e cried. "Wh
h Revolution," Reginald re
w that I have discove
king first at Reginald and then at Wa
ste
se measured cadence delighted Ernest's ear, without, however, enl
am in his eye showed that this tim
ss of making clear his mea
ar music; I see it rise with domes and spires, with painted windows and Arabesques. The scent of the rose is to me tangible. I can almost feel it with my
murmured Reginald. "I
fantastic?" remarked Ernest,
ous strata of my mind while I was writing this passage. And surely it would
be able to read beneath and between our lines, not onl
oubt
unconscious of our state of mind? Tha
f-course that every mind-movement below or above the threshold of consciousness must, of a
olerably dull to the majority, delight th
e once laid down a discussion on higher mathematics and blushed fearfully when h
retly possess the power of scattering in young
echerous text-book of the calculus, or of a reporter's story of a picnic in which burnt, under