Giles Goat Boy Read Online Free Page B

Giles Goat Boy
Book: Giles Goat Boy Read Online Free
Author: John Barth
Tags: Fiction, Literary
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convinced that she did by George love me while she loved me, and that what she loved was the very thing that ruined us in the end: I mean my epic unsophistication. And this because, contrary to appearance and common belief, she shares it herself; it is if not the essence of her spirit at least one among its chiefer qualities, and has much to do with that goldenness of hers. How else explain the peculiar radiance she maintains despite her past, a freshness as well of spirit as of complexion, which leads each new suitor to take her for a maiden girl? My ambition to
husband
her, exclusively and forever, as who should aspire to make a
Hausfrau
out of a love-goddess—do you thinkshe indulged it as a joke, or tickled a jaded appetite by playing at homeliness? Very well:
I
choose to think the experiment pleased her as simply and ingenuously as it pleased me; we were equally distressed to see it fail, and whatever the fate of our progeny I believe she will remember as sweetly as I the joy of their getting …
    No matter. I’m celibate now: a priest of Truth that was a monger after Beauty; no longer a Seeker but a humble Finder—all thanks to the extraordinary document here enclosed. I submit it to you neither as its author nor as agent for another in the usual sense, but as a disinterested servant of Our Culture, if you please: that recentest fair fungus in Time’s watchglass. I know in advance what reservations you will have about the length of the thing, the controversial aspects of occasional passages, and even its accuracy here and there; yet whether regarded as “fact” or “fiction” the book’s urgent pertinence should be as apparent as its considerable (if inconsistent and finally irrelevant) literary merit, and I’m confident of your final enthusiasm. “A wart on Miss University,” as the Grand Tutor somewhere declares, “were nonetheless a wart, and if I will not call it a beauty-mark, neither would I turn her out of bed on its account.” There are warts enough on this
Revised New Syllabus
, artistic and it may be historical; but they are so to speak only skin-deep, and I think no publisher will turn it off his list on their account.
    Indulge me now, as a useful introduction to the opus proper, the story of its origin and my coming by it. As you may know, like most of our authors these days I support myself by preaching what I practice. One grows used, in fiction-writing seminaries, to three chief categories of students: elder ladies and climacteric gentlemen who seek in writing an avocation which too might supplement their pensions; well-groomed and intelligent young literature-majors of various sexes who have a flair; and those intensely marginal souls—underdisciplined, oversensitive, disordered in both appearance and reality—whose huge craving for the state of artist-hood may drive them so far in rare instances as actually to work at making pieces of art. It was one of this third sort, I assumed, who came into my office on a gusty fall evening several terms ago with a box of typescript under his arm and a gleam in his face.
    I’d not seen him before—but then, these bohemians appear and vanish like spooks, change their aspect at the merest whim (quite as does the creature called
Harold Bray
hereinafter), and have often the most tenuous connection with their Departments. Imagine a lean young man of twenty, dark-eyed and olive-skinned, almost a mulatto, but with a shag of bronzecurls, unbarbered, on head and chin; even his eyebrows were like turnings of that metal. He wore battered workshoes laced with rawhide, nondescript trousers tucked at the ankles into boot-socks, and an outlandish fleecy jacket that in retrospect I’d guess he fashioned for himself—one may presently suppose of what material. Though he had no apparent limp, he affected a walkingstick as odd as the rest of his get-up: a three-foot post of white ash, somewhat stouter than a pick-shaft, it had what appeared to be folding lenses and

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