MS. Pages: | cover - 19r | 19v - 24r | 24v - backcover |
![]() [A transcription of this page can be found in the Molloy module.] |
|
[0412] I have tried to reflect on the beginning of my story. [0413] There are things I do not understand. [0414] But nothing to signify. [0415] I have only to go on.
[0416]
[0418] Sapo was on good terms with his little friends, though they did not exactly love him.
[0419] The dunce is seldom solitary.
[0420] He boxed and wrestled well, was |
[0423] cried, Haven't I told you I don't know!
[0424] He spent
[0435] I have not been able to find out why he was not expelled.
[0436] I shall have to leave this question unanswered.
[0437] I try not to [0444] At the age of 14 he was a plump, rosy complexioned boy. [0445] His wrists and ankles were thick, which made his mother say that one day he would be even bigger than his father. |
[0446] Strange deduction.
[0447] But the most striking thing about him was
[0456] Sapo loved nature,
[0457] This is
[0458] Sapo loved nature, |
|
[0490] Sapo’s calm, his silent ways, were not calculated to please.
[0491] In the midst of tumult, at school and at home, he remained motionless
[0503] |
[0511] Then he was sorry that he had not let himself be taught the art of thinking, beginning by folding back his third and second fingers the better to put the index on the subject and the ear-finger on the verb, the way his Latin teacher had shown him, and that he could make no sense, or next to none, of the babel of doubts, desires, imaginings and fears that raged within his head.
[0512] And less well endowed with courage and with strength he too would have abandoned, and despaired of ever knowing what manner of being he was, and how he was going to live, and lived vanquished, blindly, in
[0513] From these reveries he emerged tired and pale, which confirmed his father's impression that he was the prey of lascivious speculations.
[0514] He ought to play more games, he would say.
[0515] We're getting on, we're getting on.
[0516] They told me he would be a good athlete, said M. Saposcat, and now |
______ [0539] The summer holidays. [0540] In the morning he received private tuition. [0541] You'll have us in the poorhouse, said Mrs. S. [0542] It's a good investment, replied her husband. [0543] In the afternoon he left the |
[0548] I fell asleep.
[0549] [0559] Live and invent. [0560] I have tried. [0561] I must have tried. [0562] Invent. [0563] It is not the right word. [0564] Neither is live. [0565] No matter. [0566] I have tried. [0567] While within me the wild beast of earnestness paced its cage, ravening, roaring, lacerating. [0568] I have done that. |
MS. Pages: | cover - 19r | 19v - 24r | 24v - backcover |