The Pendragon Legend

Free The Pendragon Legend by Antal Szerb Page A

Book: The Pendragon Legend by Antal Szerb Read Free Book Online
Authors: Antal Szerb
my regret.”
    Slightly reassured, I went down to breakfast. I found Maloney already at the table. He made no comment on our nocturnal encounter.
    Cynthia Pendragon, now dressed rather more casually, seemed to me altogether less formidable than she had the night before. This time I studied her rather more calmly. Even setting aside Pendragon, Llangyvan and several centuries of glorious English history, she was very attractive.
    The loveliest of her features was her forehead. A high, clear brow dominated the face, lending it a certain piquancy. It was a broad, rational, honest face, with large blue eyes. The upper lip, with a touch of aristocratic grace, protruded slightly forward over the lower.
    After the meal, Osborne and Maloney went off to play golf, and I prepared to head up to the library. The stony-faced butler, with his Franz Joseph whiskers, was already waiting for me.
    To my great surprise Cynthia had not gone with the golfers, as I had expected in view of her background. Instead she fell in with me, announcing that she would show me round. I cannot say I was entirely delighted. The Mohammedans excluded women from Paradise, and I would exclude them from libraries, especially the pretty ones. Their mere presence obstructs my reading.
    “Are you fond of books?” I asked, foolishly.
    “Books are my hobby, indeed my obsession. And Welsh folklore. In fact, I’ve always wanted to be schoolteacher in a mountain village and spend my life doing ethnographical research. But my uncle thought it unsuitable. I mean the schoolteaching, not the research.”
    This was not exactly the image I had formed of the Earl’s niece. Somehow I would have preferred her to have confessed to be unable to spell. But it seemed intelligence was yet another sobering Pendragon legacy.
    We had reached the library.
    It was an extremely long and narrow room, with countless books lining the walls, the majority in the uniform binding embossed with the Pendragon-Rosicrucian coat of arms.
    I was filled with the tenderness I always feel—and which nothing can match—when I encounter so many books together. At moments like these I long to wallow, to bathe in them, to savour their wonderful, dusty, old-book odours, to inhale them through my very pores.
    With genuine pride, Cynthia pointed me to the finest treasures of the library, the illuminated Welsh codices. She was proudest above all of those few written not in Latin but in the native language .
    “You can see what a life’s work this could be for me,” she said, “to edit and publish these manuscripts—which exist nowhere else—with commentaries. It would be a major contribution to Welsh literature.”
    “It certainly would. But can you imagine the work it would entail? It’s a job for elderly professors, not for young—and beautiful —patrician ladies.”
    She blushed.
    “You obviously take me for one of those English girls who answer ‘yes’ and ‘no’, and love dancing, and have winsome, empty smiles.”
    “God forbid!” I said. “One has only to look at you to see how intelligent you are.”
    But in truth, I lied. She was far too pretty for me to suppose any such thing. However, since it seemed her foible to be intelligent, I would have to woo her from that angle. For me, as it happened, this promised to be easier than if she had been interested only in sport.
    Next she showed me the Persian codices, collected at the end of the last century by one of the Earls who had been in the tropics. I knew a little about them, having seen them at the great Persian Exhibition at Burlington House. There were some twenty of them and I stumbled from one ecstasy to the next. Little did I imagine what an active part they would play in my own personal history. In my excited bibliomania I forgot the first rule of English good manners, which strictly bars the didactic, and lectured my hostess on everything I knew about Persian books and illustrations—not that it was very much.
    Cynthia listened

Similar Books

After

Marita Golden

The Star King

Susan Grant

ISOF

Pete Townsend

Rockalicious

Alexandra V

Tropic of Capricorn

Henry Miller

The Whiskey Tide

M. Ruth Myers

Things We Never Say

Sheila O'Flanagan

Just One Spark

Jenna Bayley-Burke

The Venice Code

J Robert Kennedy