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The Vicissitudes of Bessie Fairfax

The Vicissitudes of Bessie Fairfax

Author: Holme Lee
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Chapter 1 AS GOOD AS OURS

Word Count: 1217    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

to meet the objection that, while a machine may have great ideas in it, "it does not look it." The average machine not only fails to express the idea that it stands for, but it genera

n one looks for poetry in it, d

hing in it is absurd. Judged merely by its outer signs, the universe over our heads-with its cunning little stars in it-is the height of absurdity, as a self-expression. The sky laughs at us. We know it when we look in a telescope. Time and space are God's jokes. Lo

tal soul than a week-old baby wailing at time and space. The idea of a baby may be all right, but in its outer form, at first, at least, a baby is a failure, and always has been. The same is true of our other musical instruments. A horn caricatures music. A flute is a man rubbing a black stick with his lips. A trombone player is a monster. We listen solemnly to the violin-the voice of an archangel with a board tucked under his chin-and to Girardi's 'cello-a whole human race laughing and crying and singing to us between a boy's legs. The eye-language of the violin has to be interpreted, and only people who are cultivated enough to suppress whole parts of themselves (rather useful and important parts elsewhere) can enjoy a great opera-a huge conspiracy of symbolism, every visible thing in it standing for something that can not be seen, beckoning at something that cannot be heard. Nothing could possibly be more grotesque, looked at from the ou

put with it. Man himself is futile and comic-looking (to the other animals), rushing empty about space. New York is a spectacle for a

y well does not trouble me much. I do not forget the look of the first ocean-engine I ever saw-four or five stories of it; nor do I forget the look of

to me again when he brought me up from his whirl of wheels in the hold to the deck of star

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1 Chapter 1 AS GOOD AS OURS2 Chapter 2 ON BEING BUSY AND STILL3 Chapter 3 ON NOT SHOWING OFF4 Chapter 4 ON MAKING PEOPLE PROUD OF THE WORLD5 Chapter 5 PLATO AND THE GENERAL ELECTRIC WORKS6 Chapter 6 HEWING AWAY ON THE HEAVENS AND THE EARTH7 Chapter 7 THE GRUDGE AGAINST THE INFINITE8 Chapter 8 SYMBOLISM IN MODERN ART9 Chapter 9 THE MACHINES AS ARTISTS10 Chapter 10 THE IDEA OF INCARNATION11 Chapter 11 THE IDEA OF SIZE12 Chapter 12 THE IDEA OF LIBERTY13 Chapter 13 THE IDEA OF IMMORTALITY14 Chapter 14 No.1415 Chapter 15 THE IDEA OF GOD16 Chapter 16 THE IDEA OF THE UNSEEN AND INTANGIBLE17 Chapter 17 THE IDEA OF GREAT MEN18 Chapter 18 THE NEXT MORNING.19 Chapter 19 NEIGHBORS TO ABBOTSMEAD.20 Chapter 20 PAST AND PRESENT.21 Chapter 21 A DISCOVERY.22 Chapter 22 PRELIMINARIES.23 Chapter 23 BESSIE SHOWS CHARACTER.24 Chapter 24 A QUIET POLICY.25 Chapter 25 A DINNER AT BRENTWOOD.26 Chapter 26 A MORNING AT BRENTWOOD.27 Chapter 27 SOME DOUBTS AND FEARS.28 Chapter 28 IN MINSTER COURT.29 Chapter 29 LADY LATIMER IN WOLDSHIRE.30 Chapter 30 MY LADY REVISITS OLD SCENES.31 Chapter 31 A SUCCESS AND A REPULSE.32 Chapter 32 A HARD STRUGGLE.33 Chapter 33 A VISIT TO CASTLEMOUNT.34 Chapter 34 BESSIE'S PEACEMAKING.35 Chapter 35 ABBOTSMEAD IN SHADOW.36 Chapter 36 DIPLOMATIC.37 Chapter 37 SUNDAY MORNING AT BEECHHURST.38 Chapter 38 SUNDAY EVENING AT BROOK.39 Chapter 39 AT FAIRFIELD.40 Chapter 40 ANOTHER RIDE WITH THE DOCTOR.41 Chapter 41 FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES.42 Chapter 42 HOW FRIENDS MAY FALL OUT..43 Chapter 43 BETWEEN THEMSELVES.44 Chapter 44 A LONG, DULL DAY.45 Chapter 45 THE SQUIRE'S WILL.46 Chapter 46 TENDER AND TRUE.47 Chapter 47 GOODNESS PREVAILS.48 Chapter 48 CERTAIN OPINIONS.49 Chapter 49 BESSIE'S LAST RIDE WITH THE DOCTOR.50 Chapter 50 FOR BETTER, FOR WORSE.