手机浏览器扫描二维码访问
the accent never falls where it does with a man)。 Fame! she repeated。 A poet—a charlatan; both every morning as regularly as the post es in。 To dine; to meet; to meet; to dine; fame—fame! (She had here to slow down to pass through the crowd of market people。 But no one noticed her。 A porpoise in a fishmonger’s shop attracted far more attention than a lady who had won a prize and might; had she chosen; have worn three coros one on top of another on her brow。) Driving very slowly she now hummed as if it were part of an old song; ‘With my guineas I’ll buy flowering trees; flowering trees; flowering trees and walk among my flowering trees and tell my sons what fame is’。 So she hummed; and now all her words began to sag here and there like a barbaric necklace of heavy beads。 ‘And walk among my flowering trees;’ she sang; accenting the words strongly; ‘and see the moon rise slow; the waggons go。。。’ Here she stopped short and looked ahead of her intently at the bon of the car in profound meditation。
‘He sat at Twitchett’s table;’ she mused; ‘with a dirty ruff on。。。Was it old Mr Baker e to measure the timber? Or was it Sh–p—re? (for when we speak names we deeply reverence to ourselves we never speak them whole。) She gazed for ten minutes ahead of her; letting the car e almost to a standstill。
‘Haunted!’ she cried; suddenly pressing the accelerator。 ‘Haunted! ever since I was a child。 There flies the wild goose。 It flies past the window out to sea。 Up I jumped (she gripped the steering–wheel tighter) and stretched after it。 But the goose flies too fast。 I’ve seen it; here—there—there—England; Persia; Italy。 Always it flies fast out to sea and always I fling after it words like s (here she flung her hand out) which shrivel as I’ve seen s shrivel drawn on deck with only sea–weed in them; and sometimes there’s an inch of silver—six words—in the bottom of the 。 But never the great fish who lives in the coral groves。’ Here she bent her head; pondering deeply。
And it was at this moment; when she had ceased to call ‘Orlando’ and was deep in thoughts of something else; that the Orlando whom she had called came of its own accord; as was proved by the change that now came over her (she had passed through the lodge gates and was entering the park)。
The whole of her darkened and settled; as when some foil whose addition makes the round and solidity of a surface is added to it; and the shallow bees deep and the near distant; and all is contained as water is contained by the sides of a well。 So she was now darkened; stilled; and bee; with the addition of this Orlando; what is called; rightly or wrongly; a single self; a real self。 And she fell silent。 For it is probable that when people talk aloud; the selves (of which there may be more than two thousand) are conscious of disseverment; and are trying to municate; but when munication is established they fall silent。
Masterfully; swiftly; she drove up the curving drive between the elms and oaks through the falling turf of the park whose fall was so gentle that had it been water it would have spread the beach with a smooth green tide。 Planted here and in solemn groups were beech trees and oak trees。 The deer stepped among them; one white as snow; another with its head on one side; for some wire ting had caught in its horns。 All this; the trees; deer; and turf; she observed with the greatest satisfaction as if her mind had bee a fluid that flowed round things and enclosed them pletely。 Next minute she drew up in the courtyard where; for so many hundred years she had e; on horseback or in coach and six; with men riding before or ing after; where plumes had tossed; torches flashed; and the same flowering trees that let their leaves drop now had shaken their blossoms。 Now she was alone。 The autumn leaves were falling。 The porter opened the great gates。 ‘Morning; James;’ she said; ‘there’re some things in the car。 Will you bring ‘em in?’ words of no beauty; interest; or significance themselves; it will be conceded; but now so plumped out with meaning that they fell like ripe nuts from a tree; and proved that when the shrivelled skin of the ordinary is stuffed out with meaning it satisfies the senses amazingly。 This was true indeed of every movement and action now; usual though they were; so that to see Orlando change her skirt for a pair of whipcord breeches and leather jacket; which she did in less than three minutes; was to be ravished with the beauty of movement as if Madame Lopokova were using her highest art。 Then she strode into the dining–room where her old friends Dryden; Pope; Swift; Addison regarded her demurely at first as who should say Here’s the prize winner! but when they reflected that two hundred guineas was in question; they nodded their heads approvingly。 Two hundred guineas; they seemed to say; two hundred guineas are not to be sniffed at。 She cut herself a slice of bread and ham; clapped the two together and began to eat; striding up and down the room; thus shedding her pany habits in a second; without thinking。 After five or six such turns; she tossed off a glass of red Spanish wine; and; filling another which she carried in her hand; strode down the long corridor and through a dozen drawing–rooms and so began a perambulation of the house; attended by such elk–hounds and spaniels as chose to follow her。
This; too; was all in the day’s routine。 As soon would she e home and leave her own grandmother without a kiss as e back and leave the house unvisited。 She fancied that the rooms brightened as she came in; stirred; opened their eyes as if they had been dozing in her absence。 She fancied; too; that; hundreds and thousands of times as she had seen them; they never looked the same twice; as if so long a life as theirs had stored in them a myriad moods which changed with winter and summer; bright weather and dark; and her own fortunes and the people’s characters who visited them。 Polite; they always were to strangers; but a little weary: with her; they were entirely open and at their ease。 Why not indeed? They had known each other for close on four centuries now。 They had nothing to conceal。 She knew their sorrows and joys。 She knew what age each part of them was and its little secrets—a hidden drawer; a concealed cupboard; or some deficiency perhaps; such as a part made up; or added later。 They; too; knew her in all her moods and changes。 She had hidden nothing from them; had e to them as boy and woman; crying and dancing; brooding and gay。 In this window–seat; she had written her first verses; in that chapel; she had been married。 And she would be buried here; she reflected; kneeling on the window–sill in the long gallery and sipping her Spanish wine。 Though she could hardly fancy it; the body of the heraldic leopard would be making yellow pools on the floor the day they lowered her to lie among her ancestors。 She; who believed in no immortality; could not help feeling that her soul would e and go forever with the reds on the panels and the greens on the sofa。 For the room—she had strolled into the Ambassador’s bedroom—shone like a shell that has lain at the bottom of the sea for centuries and has been crusted over and painted a million tints by the water; it was rose and yellow; green and sand–coloured。 It was frail as a shell; as iridescent and as empty。 No Ambassador would ever sleep there again。 Ah; but she knew where the heart of the house still beat。 Gently opening a door; she stood on the threshold so that (as she fancied) the room could not see her and watched the tapestry rising and falling on the eternal faint breeze which never failed to move it。 Still the hunter rode; still Daphne flew。 The heart still beat; she thought; however faintly; however far withdrawn; the frail indomitable heart of the immense building。
Now; calling her troop of dogs to her she passed down the gallery whose floor was laid with whole oak trees sawn across。 Rows of chairs with all their velvets faded stood ranged against the wall holding their arms out for Elizabeth; for James; for Shakespeare it might be; for Cecil; who never came。 The sight made her gloomy。 She unhooked the rope that fenced them off。 She sat on the Queen’s chair; she opened a manuscript book lying on Lady Betty’s table; she stirred her fingers in the aged rose leaves; she brushed her short hair with King James’ silver brushes: she bounced up and down upon his bed (but no King would ever sleep there again; for all Louise’s new sheets) and pressed her cheek against the worn silver counterpane that lay upon it。 But everywhere were little lavender bags to keep the moth out and printed notices; ‘Please do not touch’; which; though she had put them there herself; seemed to rebuke her。 The house was no longer hers entirely; she sighed。 It belonged to time now; to history; was past the touch and control of the living。 Never would beer be spilt here any more; she thought (she was in the bedroom that had been old Nick Greene’s); or holes burnt in the carpet。 Never two hundred servants e running and brawling down the corridors with warming pans and great branches for the great fireplaces。 Never would ale be brewed and candles made and saddles fashioned and stone shaped in the workshops outside the house。 Hammers and mallets were silent now。 Chairs and beds were empty; tankards of silver and gold were locked in glass cases。 The great wings of silence beat up and down the empty house。
So she sat at the end of the gallery with her dogs couched round her; in Queen Elizabeth’s hard armchair。 The gallery stretched far away to a point where the light almost failed。 It was as a tunnel bored deep into the past。 As her eyes peered down it; she could see people laughing and talking; the great men she had known; Dryden; Swift; and Pope; and statesmen in colloquy; and lovers dallying in the window–seats; and people eating and drinking at the long tables; and the wood smoke curling round their heads and making them sneeze and cough。 Still further down; she saw sets of splendid dancers formed for the quadrille。 A fluty; frail; but nevertheless stately music began to play。 An organ boomed。 A coffin was borne into the chapel。 A marriage procession came out of it。 Armed men with helmets left for the wars。 They brought banners back from Flodden and Poitiers and stuck them on the wall。 The long gallery filled itself thus; and still peering further; she thought she could make out at the very end; beyond the Elizabethans and the Tudors; some one older; further; darker; a cowled figure; monastic; severe; a monk; who went with his hands clasped; and a book in them; murmuring—
Like thunder; the stable clock struck four。 Never did any earthquake so demolish a whole town。 The gallery and all its occupants fell to powder。 Her own face; that had been dark and sombre as she gazed; was lit as by an explosion of gunpowder。 In this same light everything near her showed with extreme distinctness。 She saw two flies circling round and noticed the blue sheen on their bodies; she saw a knot in the wood where her foot was; and her dog’s ear twitching。 At the same time; she heard a bough creaking in the garden; a sheep coughing in the park; a swift screaming past the window。 Her own body quivered and tingled as if s
五胡烽火录 在中国做事(全文阅读) - 黄夏君 红色之翼 要塞-中世纪领主 唯爱成神 重生后,真少爷回村带妻女发家致富 梨园往事 上门姐夫楚天舒乔诗媛最新更新章节免费阅读 双子变变变 战锤:这不是草原争霸吗? 女性经理人打造术:跟王熙凤学管理 拍遍全网糊咖醉姐终于火了陈醉周望全集免费阅读 冷血悍将 从八百只麻雀开始肝成神明 现在,发现你的优势 冥仙未世 演讲论辩技巧 蹉跎岁月女人花 血色使命 销售人员职业教程
关于我在摄政王怀里撒个娇她曾是秦府高高在上,受尽宠爱的嫡女,却因信错了人,爱错了人,惨遭家破人亡,横死街头。重活一世,她盯上了与她毫无血缘关系的二哥。她知道,那个冷傲的少年,将来会成为权倾朝野...
排雷!绝壁甜文初见时,那抹笑容,印入脑海,久久不能遗忘多年后,记者采访沐九深第一次见迟浅的时候是在哪里?说的第一句话是什么?沐九深当着广大人民群众面前沉思了片刻缓缓开口。男厕所同学,买纸不,十块钱一包!(‘呆萌’小学霸&奶系伪学渣)如果您喜欢最美不过说爱你,别忘记分享给朋友...
女主苏炸燃,男主黑心莲,高甜双洁1v1萧拂衣,上古玄医世家传人,医毒双绝。不想一朝穿成乞女,先是被活死人吸血,又被算计代嫁病秧子活阎王?洞房花烛夜,盖头落地,萧拂衣错愕。好,好巧?这不是铁锁棺里的活死人吗?活阎王勾唇带下去,养起来!放血!萧拂衣敲你妈,我要和离!老虎不发威当我是病猫?欺负过我的排好队...
整个凤国的京城百姓皆知,俊美无双的新皇陛下与顾家小女乃是金童玉女,天造地设的一对。然而自打沈家长女进宫以来,后宫就乱了新后痴傻疯癫,四妃接连暴毙,弄得人心惶惶,后宫动荡不安,再也没有大臣敢把自己的女儿送进宫来找死。不仅如此,深受新帝宠爱的沈皇贵妃,把后宫搞的乌烟瘴气,乱作一团之后还和别的男人一起跑了ps(绝宠一对一身心干净女强男强无小三宠文)如果您喜欢爆萌宠妃摄政王,惹上身,别忘记分享给朋友...
把头抬起来。冰冷的男音自面前传来,似是带着些慵懒的嗓音,又带着些不屑。跪在地上的穆尧打了个冷颤,挤着一脸的谄媚笑,抬起头道太子英明神武,草民屈于神威。如果您喜欢太子,下官不承恩,别忘记分享给朋友...
英雄联盟同人穿越者杰诺的出现改变了奥莉安娜变成发条魔灵的命运,但在世界线的收束之下,他的心脏因为中毒而衰竭,最后不得已换上了一个海克斯水晶制成的心脏。从此画风突变!奥莉安娜杰诺,你怎么又把心脏丢出来砸人了?杰诺我知道乱丢垃圾不好,我也不想这样的,可它自己就从我胸口弹出来了!当事人小杰(眼部打码)现在就是后悔!非常后悔!我发誓我真的没看过什么弹珠警察。如果您喜欢我的海克斯心脏,别忘记分享给朋友...