February 16
We took possession of our country cottage today: very charming and overlooking a beautiful Park.
Have just discovered the Journal of the de Goncourts and been reading it greedily. Life has really been a commodity. I am boiling over with vitality, chattering amiably to everyone about nothing—argumentative, sanguine, serious, ridiculous. I called old R⸺ a Rapscallion, a Curmudgeon, and a Scaramouche, and E⸺ a trull, a drab, a trollop, a callet. “You certainly are a unique husband,” said that sweet little lady, and I. …
With me, one of the symptoms of delirium is always a melodramatic truculence! I shake my fist in R⸺’s face and make him explode with laughing. … The sun today, and the great, whopping white clouds all bellied out, made me feel inside quite a bright young dog wriggling its body in ecstatic delight let loose upon the green sward.
“You must come down for a weekend,” I said to R⸺ at lunch. “Come down as soon as you can. You will find every comfort. It is an enormous house—I have not succeeded in finding my way about it and—it’s dangerous to lose yourself—makes you late for dinner. When you arrive our gilded janitor will say: ‘I believe Mr. Barbellion is in the library.’ ”
“Black eunuchs wait on you at dinner, I suppose,” R⸺ rejoined.
“Oh! yes and golden chandeliers and a marble staircase—all in barbaric splendour.”
“Yes, I shall certainly be glad to come down,” said R⸺, phlegmatically.
And so on and so on. Words, idle words all day in a continuous rush. And I am sure that the match which fired the gunpowder was the discovery of the de Goncourts’ Journal! It’s extraordinary how I have been going on from week to week quite calmly for all the world as if I had read all the books and seen all the places and done everything according to the heart’s desire. This book has really jolted me out of my complacency: to think that all this time, I have been dead to so much! Why I might have died unconscious that the de Goncourts had ever lived and written their colossal book and now I am aware of it, I am all in a fever to read it and take it up into my brain: I might die now before I have finished it—a thought that makes me wild with desire just as I once endured most awful pangs when I felt my health going, and believed that I might die before having ever been in love—to die and never to have been in love!—for an instant at a time this possibility used to make me writhe.