Produced by John Bickers
KAI LUNG'S GOLDEN HOURS
By Ernest Bramah
First Published 1922.
KAI LUNG'S GOLDEN HOURS
BY
ERNEST BRAMAH
With a Preface by Hilaire Belloc
PREFACE
_Homo faber_. Man is born to make. His business is to construct: to plan: to carry out the plan: to fit together, and to produce a finished thing.
That human art in which it is most difficult to achieve this end (and in which it is far easier to neglect it than in any other) is the art of writing. Yet this much is certain, that unconstructed writing is at once worthless and ephemeral: and nearly the whole of our modern English writing is unconstructed.
The matter of survival is perhaps not the most important, though it is a test of a kind, and it is a test which every serious writer feels most intimately. The essential is the matter of excellence: that a piece of work should achieve its end. But in either character, the character of survival or the character of intrinsic excellence, construction deliberate and successful is the fundamental condition.
It may be objected that the mass of writing must in any age neglect construction. We write to establish a record for a few days: or to send a thousand unimportant messages: or to express for others or for ourselves something very vague and perhaps very weak in the way of emotion, which does not demand construction and at any rate cannot command it. No writer can be judged by the entirety of his writings, for these would include every note he ever sent round the corner; every memorandum he ever made upon his shirt cuff. But when a man sets out to write as a serious business, proclaiming that by the nature of his publication and presentment that he is doing something he thinks worthy of the time and place in which he lives and of the people to whom he belongs, then if he does not construct he is negligible.
Yet, I say, the great mass of men to-day do not attempt it in the English tongue, and the proof is that you can discover in their slipshod pages nothing of a seal or stamp. You do not, opening a book at random, say at once: "This is the voice of such and such a one." It is no one's manner or voice. It is part of a common babel.
Therefore in such a time as that of our decline, to come across work which is planned, executed and achieved has something of the effect produced by the finding of a wrought human thing in the wild. It is like finding, as I once found, deep hidden in the tangled rank grass of autumn in Burgundy, on the edge of a wood not far from Dijon, a neglected statue of the eighteenth century. It is like coming round the corner of some wholly desolate upper valley in the mountains and seeing before one a well-cultivated close and a strong house in the midst.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Kai Lung's Golden Hours by Ernest Bramah
- 2: The Wallet of Kai Lung satisfied all these conditions
- 3: Kai Lung rose guardedly to his feet
- 4: To which has been added that of Lung
- 5: One advances along the westward road
- 6: As one who has set his face towards Yu ping
- 7: Li loe drew nearer to Kai Lung and
- 8: Lying between the prison house and the yamen garden
- 9: Existence can never again be ordinary
- 10: It was indeed as Li loe had foretold
- 11: Protested Ming shu from a bitter throat
- 12: When Wong Ts'in had discovered
- 13: Fa Fai went without any added inducement
- 14: Replied Wong Ts'in courteously
- 15: About Wong Ts'in's earth yards
- 16: That of Wei Chang is invariably at the foot
- 17: ' An even more ignominious end may await Fang
- 18: Yet where is the Willow plate itself
- 19: And she regarded Wei Chang with a set deliberation
- 20: This interruption did not please Wong Ts'in
- 21: The controlling deities approved
- 22: And to him presently came the maiden Hwa mei
- 23: Addressing himself to the Mandarin
- 24: By to morrow night not only Sun Wei
- 25: The degraded Wun Sei is ground Sun Wei
- 26: Said the voice of Leou inwardly
- 27: Leou twice struck the walls enclosing him
- 28: When the night was advanced and Hia and Ning
- 29: His incomparable nails were also gone
- 30: Then Leou stood audaciously forth
- 31: The youth Tian searched the ground
- 32: The opening of this enterprise forecasts a questionable omen
- 33: Sun Wei swings from the roof tree of his own ruined yamen
- 34: Tian himself might never get inside Ti foo
- 35: He declared his errand to Ko'en Cheng
- 36: Tian alone displayed himself without reserve
- 37: Tian brought his horse to rest upon the tower
- 38: The only daughter of Ko'en Cheng
- 39: Reported the slave submissively
- 40: Demanded Wong Pao contentiously
- 41: On a protected eminence stood N'ang Wei
- 42: Confessed Wong Pao tremblingly
- 43: Wong Pao and the Emperor and his band
- 44: Continued the insufferable Ming shu
- 45: Owing to the symmetrical breathing of Lao Ting
- 46: Lao Ting sought other means to continue his study
- 47: And there being a similar balance between crowbar and books
- 48: Lao Ting retraced his steps in an exalted frame of mind
- 49: When Lao Ting awoke it was still night
- 50: Lao Ting forgot his usual caution
- 51: When Lao Ting gained his own room
- 52: Announced Sheng yin definitely
- 53: Remembering Sheng yin's parting
- 54: But Hoa mi deemed this inexpedient
- 55: These things aiding Ming shu's plan
- 56: Weng Cho was the only one concerned
- 57: At the other end stood his son Weng
- 58: For whom can Weng Cho of the House of Wu mourn
- 59: Cast back Weng over his shoulder
- 60: So that Weng alone remained standing
- 61: Here Weng suffered himself to be blindfolded
- 62: Noble mandarin coming from the north
- 63: Weng prostrated himself and withdrew
- 64: Submitting oneself to purifying scars
- 65: The very speculative Shan Tien
- 66: This concerns the story of Wang Ho
- 67: Thus positioned Wang Ho prospered
- 68: If really sincere in his determination
- 69: Again has the clay souled Wang Ho
- 70: But the sordid minded Shen Heng
- 71: Convinced him of Cheng Lin's discrimination
- 72: The degraded Shen Heng maintains an unworthy silence
- 73: To what age did your venerated father attain
- 74: As Shen Heng never ceased to declare
- 75: Lin declared his intention of purchasing
- 76: Interposed Hwa mei dexterously
- 77: Darken the face of Shan Tien's present regard
- 78: The maiden turned and hastened on her way
- 79: Exclaimed Chang Tao in astonishment
- 80: Wealthy Shen Yi's incredibly attractive daughter
- 81: Said the stranger respectfully
- 82: Or Gravity removing devoid of Inelegance
- 83: Two of these were Shen Yi and a trusted slave
- 84: Admitted Chang Tao with conscious humiliation
- 85: Admitted Chang Tao reluctantly
- 86: She being of the house of Shen
- 87: Said Pe lung in a voice not devoid of reproach
- 88: In the past Shen Yi provoked the Deities
- 89: Chang Tao followed Fuh sang on her backward path
- 90: And Fuh sang is no less innate of your exalted tribe
- 91: This limit being reached in the essential story of Chang Tao
- 92: The reproach is easily removed
- 93: To incriminate Ming shu together with yourself
- 94: And conscientiously regarding The Virtues throughout
- 95: But to Yuen Yan it was overwhelming
- 96: Addressing himself to Yan's mother
- 97: Yan was not unnaturally engaged for a considerable time
- 98: A barber and an embellisher of pig tails
- 99: And if you neglect your business to avoid Heng cho
- 100: For Yuen Yan will prove industrious
- 101: Thus Chou hu prospered greatly
- 102: O distressingly superficial Chou hu
- 103: At once perceiving the wisdom of the change
- 104: Exclaimed Tsae che remorsefully
- 105: While Tsae che also added her sign and attestation
- 106: It was fully light when Tsae che returned
- 107: The lines converge and the issues of Shan Tien
- 108: On the right hand of the Mandarin reclined the base Ming shu
- 109: This involves the story of Hien and the Chief Examiner
- 110: Replied the benevolent Thang li
- 111: The other of the two persons was Hien
- 112: ' The omen is a most encouraging one
- 113: Who appeared to be too ingenuous to suspect Thang li's craft
- 114: O two complexioned Chief Examiner
- 115: Contemptuously replied Tsin Lung
- 116: Then replied Tsin Lung Truly
- 117: And especially Hien and Tsin Lung
- 118: Said the impartial Monarch encouragingly
- 119: With the possible exception of Meng hu's masterpiece
- 120: Still more conveniently arranged
- 121: This naturally suggests the intolerable Tsin Lung
- 122: That person decided upon an immediate flight
- 123: But it remained for Shan Tien to voice their doubt
- 124: Suggested Ming shu resourcefully
- 125: Inevitably the Censor K'o yih
- 126: While the obliging Ming shu plies an unfaltering brush
- 127: This concerns the story of Ten teh
- 128: Ten teh turned his eyes and lo
- 129: With these words Ten teh dismissed him
- 130: And from that time Ten teh prospered
- 131: But it was without aim and carried no restraint
- 132: Ten teh prostrated himself fittingly
- 133: Inspired by no friendship towards Fuh chi
- 134: Replied the headman sympathetically
- 135: Since the days of the commendable Kwong
- 136: In tones of undisguised contempt towards Tan yung
- 137: And in this matter ye are less than earthworms
- 138: And Kha hia and his horde of Kins
- 139: Replied Nau Kaou dispassionately
- 140: Came back the voice of Ten teh
- 141: Has this person delivered his message competently
- 142: Ten teh was no longer able to express himself in words
