都来读小说网

手机浏览器扫描二维码访问

第39部分(第1页)

p coughing in the park; a swift screaming past the window。 Her own body quivered and tingled as if suddenly stood naked in a hard frost。 Yet; she kept; as she had not done when the clock struck ten in London; plete posure (for she was now one and entire; and presented; it may be; a larger surface to the shock of time)。 She rose; but without precipitation; called her dogs; and went firmly but with great alertness of movement down the staircase and out into the garden。 Here the shadows of the plants were miraculously distinct。 She noticed the separate grains of earth in the flower beds as if she had a microscope stuck to her eye。 She saw the intricacy of the twigs of every tree。 Each blade of grass was distinct and the marking of veins and petals。 She saw Stubbs; the gardener; ing along the path; and every button on his gaiters was visible; she saw Betty and Prince; the cart horses; and never had she marked so clearly the white star on Betty’s forehead; and the three long hairs that fell down below the rest on Prince’s tail。 Out in the quadrangle the old grey walls of the house looked like a scraped new photograph; she heard the loud speaker condensing on the terrace a dance tune that people were listening to in the red velvet opera house at Vienna。 Braced and strung up by the present moment she was also strangely afraid; as if whenever the gulf of time gaped and let a second through some unknown danger might e with it。 The tension was too relentless and too rigorous to be endured long without disfort。 She walked more briskly than she liked; as if her legs were moved for her; through the garden and out into the park。 Here she forced herself; by a great effort; to stop by the carpenter’s shop; and to stand stock–still watching Joe Stubbs fashion a cart wheel。 She was standing with her eye fixed on his hand when the quarter struck。 It hurtled through her like a meteor; so hot that no fingers can hold it。 She saw with disgusting vividness that the thumb on Joe’s right hand was without a finger nail and there was a raised saucer of pink flesh where the nail should have been。 The sight was so repulsive that she felt faint for a moment; but in that moment’s darkness; when her eyelids flickered; she was relieved of the pressure of the present。 There was something strange in the shadow that the flicker of her eyes cast; something which (as anyone can test for himself by looking now at the sky) is always absent from the present—whence its terror; its nondescript character—something one trembles to pin through the body with a name and call beauty; for it has no body; is as a shadow without substance or quality of its own; yet has the power to change whatever it adds itself to。 This shadow now; while she flickered her eye in her faintness in the carpenter’s shop; stole out; and attaching itself to the innumerable sights she had been receiving; posed them into something tolerable; prehensible。 Her mind began to toss like the sea。 Yes; she thought; heaving a deep sigh of relief; as she turned from the carpenter’s shop to climb the hill; I can begin to live again。 I am by the Serpentine; she thought; the little boat is climbing through the white arch of a thousand deaths。 I am about to understand。。。

Those were her words; spoken quite distinctly; but we cannot conceal the fact that she was now a very indifferent witness to the truth of what was before her and might easily have mistaken a sheep for a cow; or an old man called Smith for one who was called Jones and was no relation of his whatever。 For the shadow of faintness which the thumb without a nail had cast had deepened now; at the back of her brain (which is the part furthest from sight); into a pool where things dwell in darkness so deep that what they are we scarcely know。 She now looked down into this pool or sea in which everything is reflected—and; indeed; some say that all our most violent passions; and art and religion; are the reflections which we see in the dark hollow at the back of the head when the visible world is obscured for the time。 She looked there now; long; deeply; profoundly; and immediately the ferny path up the hill along which she was walking became not entirely a path; but partly the Serpentine; the hawthorn bushes were partly ladies and gentlemen sitting with card–cases and gold–mounted canes; the sheep were partly tall Mayfair houses; everything was partly something else; as if her mind had bee a forest with glades branching here and there; things came nearer; and further; and mingled and separated and made the strangest alliances and binations in an incessant chequer of light and shade。 Except when Canute; the elk–hound; chased a rabbit and so reminded her that it must be about half past four—it was indeed twenty–three minutes to six—she forgot the time。

The ferny path led; with many turns and windings; higher and higher to the oak tree; which stood on the top。 The tree had grown bigger; sturdier; and more knotted since she had known it; somewhere about the year 1588; but it was still in the prime of life。 The little sharply frilled leaves were still fluttering thickly on its branches。 Flinging herself on the ground; she felt the bones of the tree running out like ribs from a spine this way and that beneath her。 She liked to think that she was riding the back of the world。 She liked to attach herself to something hard。 As she flung herself down a little square book bound in red cloth fell from the breast of her leather jacket—her poem ‘The Oak Tree’。 ‘I should have brought a trowel;’ she reflected。 The earth was so shallow over the roots that it seemed doubtful if she could do as she meant and bury the book here。 Besides; the dogs would dig it up。 No luck ever attends these symbolical celebrations; she thought。 Perhaps it would be as well then to do without them。 She had a little speech on the tip of her tongue which she meant to speak over the book as she buried it。 (It was a copy of the first edition; signed by author and artist。) ‘I bury this as a tribute;’ she was going to have said; ‘a return to the land of what the land has given me;’ but Lord! once one began mouthing words aloud; how silly they sounded! She was reminded of old Greene getting upon a platform the other day paring her with Milton (save for his blindness) and handing her a cheque for two hundred guineas。 She had thought then; of the oak tree here on its hill; and what has that got to do with this; she had wondered? What has praise and fame to do with poetry? What has seven editions (the book had already gone into no less) got to do with the value of it? Was not writing poetry a secret transaction; a voice answering a voice? So that all this chatter and praise and blame and meeting people who admired one and meeting people who did not admire one was as ill suited as could be to the thing itself—a voice answering a voice。 What could have been more secret; she thought; more slow; and like the intercourse of lovers; than the stammering answer she had made all these years to the old crooning song of the woods; and the farms and the brown horses standing at the gate; neck to neck; and the smithy and the kitchen and the fields; so laboriously bearing wheat; turnips; grass; and the garden blowing irises and fritillaries?

So she let her book lie unburied and dishevelled on the ground; and watched the vast view; varied like an ocean floor this evening with the sun lightening it and the shadows darkening it。 There was a village with a church tower among elm trees; a grey domed manor house in a park; a spark of light burning on some glass–house; a farmyard with yellow corn stacks。 The fields were marked with black tree clumps; and beyond the fields stretched long woodlands; and there was the gleam of a river; and then hills again。 In the far distance Snowdon’s crags broke white among the clouds; she saw the far Scottish hills and the wild tides that swirl about the Hebrides。 She listened for the sound of gun–firing out at sea。 No—only the wind blew。 There was no war to–day。 Drake had gone; Nelson had gone。 ‘And there’; she thought; letting her eyes; which had been looking at these far distances; drop once more to the land beneath her; ‘was my land once: that Castle between the downs was mine; and all that moor running almost to the sea was mine。’ Here the landscape (it must have been some trick of the fading light) shook itself; heaped itself; let all this encumbrance of houses; castles; and woods slide off its tent–shaped sides。 The bare mountains of Turkey were before her。 It was blazing noon。 She looked straight at the baked hill–side。 Goats cropped the sandy tufts at her feet。 An eagle soared above。 The raucous voice of old Rustum; the gipsy; croaked in her ears; ‘What is your antiquity and your race; and your possessions pared with this? What do you need with four hundred bedrooms and silver lids on all your dishes; and housemaids dusting?’

At this moment some church clock chimed in the valley。 The tent–like landscape collapsed and fell。 The present showered down upon her head once more; but now that the light was fading; gentlier than before; calling into view nothing detailed; nothing small; but only misty fields; cottages with lamps in them; the slumbering bulk of a wood; and a fan–shaped light pushing the darkness before it along some lane。 Whether it had struck nine; ten; or eleven; she could not say。 Night had e—night that she loved of all times; night in which the reflections in the dark pool of the mind shine more clearly than by day。 It was not necessary to faint now in order to look deep into the darkness where things shape themselves and to see in the pool of the mind now Shakespeare; now a girl in Russian trousers; now a toy boat on the Serpentine; and then the Atlantic itself; where it storms in great waves past Cape Horn。 She looked into the darkness。 There was her husband’s brig; rising to the top of the wave! Up; it went; and up and up。 The white arch of a thousand deaths rose before it。 Oh rash; oh ridiculous man; always sailing; so uselessly; round Cape Horn in the teeth of a gale! But the brig was through the arch and out on the other side; it was safe at last!

‘Ecstasy!’ she cried; ‘ecstasy!’ And then the wind sank; the waters grew calm; and she saw the waves rippling peacefully in the moonlight。

‘Marmaduke Bonthrop Shelmerdine!’ she cried; standing by the oak tree。

The beautiful; glittering name fell out of the sky like a steel–blue feather。 She watched it fall; turning and twisting like a slow–falling arrow that cleaves the deep air beautifully。 He was ing; as he always came; in moments of dead calm; when the wave rippled and the spotted leaves fell slowly over her foot in the autumn woods; when the leopard was still; the moon was on the waters; and nothing moved in between sky and sea。 Then he came。

All was still now。 It was near midnight。 The moon rose slowly over the weald。 Its light raised a phantom castle upon earth。 There stood the great house with all its windows robed in silver。 Of wall or substance there was none。 All was phantom。 All was still。 All was lit as for the ing of a dead Queen。 Gazing below her; Orlando saw dark plumes tossing in the courtyard; and torches flickering and shadows kneeling。 A Queen once

上门姐夫楚天舒乔诗媛最新更新章节免费阅读  五胡烽火录  女性经理人打造术:跟王熙凤学管理  重生后,真少爷回村带妻女发家致富  双子变变变  血色使命  拍遍全网糊咖醉姐终于火了陈醉周望全集免费阅读  要塞-中世纪领主  冥仙未世  在中国做事(全文阅读) - 黄夏君  唯爱成神  冷血悍将  销售人员职业教程  红色之翼  战锤:这不是草原争霸吗?  演讲论辩技巧  梨园往事  蹉跎岁月女人花  从八百只麻雀开始肝成神明  现在,发现你的优势  

热门小说推荐
末日游戏之全民种田

末日游戏之全民种田

有男主,偏种田文游戏系统突然来临,全球人民在线苟活意外死亡的莫可可,重生回到游戏之初这一世,莫可可发誓,自己一定要发愤图强,努力游戏,走上人生巅峰,做上农场主,包养小白脸。嘿嘿,不好意思,有点飘了。不过,那个大神,你真的要和在下一起玩吗?你真的叫程世嘉嘛?要知道,在莫可可的记忆里,谁要是能和大神程世嘉有那么一点半点的交情,那可都是说一不二,富得流油!看来重生一次,老天爷还真是对我莫可可不薄啊!!如果您喜欢末日游戏之全民种田,别忘记分享给朋友...

卿如春风来

卿如春风来

她是朝中重将的幺女,集万千宠爱于一身他是有异国血统的皇子,永无继位之可能。她原本性子娇纵跋扈,却因失足落水而记忆全无他看似洒脱身份尊贵,却因母族之恨活与夹缝之中。本该小心筹谋的一生,只因有你,芬芳四溢。卿如春风来,温香入满怀。本文无穿越无重生如果您喜欢卿如春风来,别忘记分享给朋友...

团宠妈咪又掉马了

团宠妈咪又掉马了

关于团宠妈咪又掉马了再婚当天,陆斯年收到前妻的贺礼萌娃一枚,外加头顶一片青青草原。四年后,陆斯年发誓要好好教训那个女人,然而,他前妻身边的另一个萌娃是怎么回事?棉棉妈咪,哥哥开演奏会啦!苏染快!打榜应援上热搜,我儿子是最棒的!演奏会现场。棉棉哥哥,人家是你的超级铁粉哦,么么哒。糖糖别爱我,没结果!你身边肤白貌美大长腿的姐姐还不错。陆斯年停止你的非分之想,她是我的!...

我的成神日志

我的成神日志

一场意外让苏浩获得无限转生的能力。但是谁能告诉他,为什么每次转生都活不过五岁?世界很危险,对儿童很不友好。苏浩定下了第一个小目标成年。我怎么可能连成年都做不到!苏浩在百万年的时光中,一次又一次的轮回,获取足够多的知识后,他找到了成神的方法。这是一个凡人的成神之路。或许你也可以!如果您喜欢我的成神日志,别忘记分享给朋友...

电竞大神太高冷,想撩!

电竞大神太高冷,想撩!

人美花心女作家VSLOL职业选手温欣,网络人气女作家,肤白貌美,又浪又撩。她向来是万花丛中过片叶不沾身,直到某天乖乖跳进某人的枷锁,浪女回头,千金难买。周衍,LPL高岭之花,冷情又禁欲,却没想到栽在一只狡猾的小白兔手里。LPL豪门战队来了一个运营助理,助理小姐姐人美心善,天真单纯,仿佛仙女一般的存在。然而队员们都不知道,助理小姐姐每天琢磨的都是怎么拐走他们的队长大人。温欣的日常OS今天要不要撩队长呢?不可一世的你,恰好是我的最爱。最高明的猎手,往往是以猎物的姿态出现。如果您喜欢电竞大神太高冷,想撩!,别忘记分享给朋友...

我要当世界第一

我要当世界第一

2011年的夏天,最后一个留洋球员离开德甲,此后五大联赛再无中国球员,如果按照现实的轨迹,要到整整7年半后才会有另一个全村的希望踏上西班牙的赛场。而在这个世界中,2011年的12月份,一个16岁的少年踏上了不列颠的土地,从此,一个传奇的故事正式拉开了帷幕。这是一个要成为世界第一的故事。如果您喜欢我要当世界第一,别忘记分享给朋友...

每日热搜小说推荐