The House of Cobwebs
The House of Cobwebs
and Other Stories
Book Excerpt
ery. Consequently he lives in solitude; he
is tyrannised by moods, dominated by temperament. His intellect is in
abeyance. He shuns the present--the historical past seems alone to concern
him. Yet he abjures his own past. The ghost of his former self affected him
with horror. Identity even he denies. 'How can one be responsible for the
thoughts and acts of the being who bore his name years ago?' He has no
consciousness of his youth--no sympathy with children. In him is to be
discerned 'his father's intellectual and emotional qualities, together with
a certain stiffness of moral attitude derived from his mother.' He reveals
already a wonderful palate for pure literary flavour. His prejudices are
intense, their character being determined by the refinement and idealism of
his nature. All this is profoundly significant, knowing as we do that this
was produced when Gissing's worldly prosperity was at its nadir. He was
living at the time, like his own Harold Biffen, in absolute solitude, a
frequenter of pawnbroker'
Editor's choice
(view all)Popular books in Short Story Collection, Fiction and Literature, Short Story
Readers reviews
5.0
LoginSign up
Sharply observed vignettes of human motivation and behavior.
Like a Spyderco knife fresh out of the box.
OW!
Like a Spyderco knife fresh out of the box.
OW!
- Upvote (0)
- Downvote (0)