登陆注册
19874700000023

第23章

But after lunch we shall go up the hillside to where the theatre stands, at the edge of the pine-woods, and from the porch the trumpets will give out the motif of the Grail, and we shall pass out of the heat into the cool darkness of the theatre. Aren't you thrilled, Comber? Doesn't a holy awe pervade you! Are you worthy, do you think?"All this youthful, unrestrained enthusiasm was a revelation to Michael. Intentionally absurd as Falbe's rhapsody on the Fatherland had been, Michael knew that it sprang from a solid sincerity which was not ashamed of expressing itself. Living, as he had always done, in the rather formal and reticent atmosphere of his class and environment, he would have thought this fervour of patriotism in an English mouth ridiculous, or, if persevered in, merely bad form. Yet when Falbe hailed the Rhine and the spires of Cologne, it was clear that there was no bad form about it at all.

He felt like that; and, indeed, as Michael was beginning to perceive, he felt with a similar intensity on all subjects about which he felt at all. There was something of the same vivid quality about Aunt Barbara, but Aunt Barbara's vividness was chiefly devoted to the hunt of the absurdities of her friends, and it was always the concretely ridiculous that she pursued. But this handsome, vital young man, with his eagerness and his welcome for the world, who had fallen with so delightful a cordiality into Michael's company, had already an attraction for him of a sort he had never felt before.

Dimly, as the days went by, he began to conjecture that he who had never had a friend was being hailed and halloed to, was being ordered, if not by precept, at any rate by example, to come out of the shell of his reserve, and let himself feel and let himself express. He could see how utterly different was Falbe's general conception and practice of life from his own; to Michael it had always been a congregation of strangers--Francis excepted--who moved about, busy with each other and with affairs that had no allure for him, and were, though not uncivil, wholly alien to him.

He was willing to grant that this alienation, this absence of comradeship which he had missed all his life, was of his own making, in so far as his shyness and sensitiveness were the cause of it; but in effect he had never yet had a friend, because he had never yet taken his shutters down, so to speak, or thrown his front door open. He had peeped out through chinks, and felt how lonely he was, but he had not given anyone a chance to get in.

Falbe, on the other hand, lived at his window, ready to hail the passer-by, even as he had hailed Michael, with cheerful words.

There he lounged in his shirt-sleeves, you might say, with elbows on the window-sill; and not from politeness, but from good fellowship, from the fact that he liked people, was at home to everybody. He liked people; there was the key to it. And Michael, however much he might be capable of liking people, had up till now given them no sign of it. It really was not their fault if they had not guessed it.

Two days passed, on the first of which Parsifal was given, and on the second Meistersinger. On the third there was no performance, and the two young men had agreed to meet in the morning and drive out of the town to a neighbouring village among the hills, and spend the day there in the woods. Michael had looked forward to this day with extraordinary pleasure, but there was mingled with it a sort of agony of apprehension that Falbe would find him a very boring companion. But the precepts of Aunt Barbara came to his mind, and he reflected that the certain and sure way of proving a bore was to be taken up with the idea that he might be. And anyhow, Falbe had proposed the plan himself.

They lunched in a little restaurant near a forest-enclosed lake, and since the day was very hot, did no more than stroll up the hill for a hundred yards, where they would get some hint of breeze, and disposed themselves at length on the carpet of pine-needles.

Through the thick boughs overhead the sunlight reached them only in specks and flakes, the wind was but as a distant sea in the branches, and Falbe rolled over on to his face, and sniffed at the aromatic leaves with the gusto with which he enjoyed all that was to him enjoyable.

"Ah; that's good, that's good!" he said. "How I love smells--clean, sharp smells like this. But they've got to be wild; you can't tame a smell and put it on your handkerchief; it takes the life out of it. Do you like smells, Comber?""I--I really never thought about it," said Michael.

"Think now, then, and tell me," said Falbe. "If you consider, you know such a lot about me, and, as a matter of fact, I know nothing whatever about you. I know you like music--I know you like blue trout, because you ate so many of them at lunch to-day. But what else do I know about you ? I don't even know what you thought of Parsifal. No, perhaps I'm wrong there, because the fact that you've never mentioned it probably shows that you couldn't. The symptom of not understanding anything about Parsifal is to talk about it, and say what a tremendous impression it has made on you.""Ah! you've guessed right there," said Michael. "I couldn't talk about it; there's nothing to say about it, except that it is Parsifal.""That's true. It becomes part of you, and you can't talk of it any more than you can talk about your elbows and your knees. It's one of the things that makes you. . . ."He turned over on to his back, and laid his hands palm uppermost over his eyes.

同类推荐
  • 野菜博录

    野菜博录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 备论

    备论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说差摩婆帝授记经

    佛说差摩婆帝授记经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金陵琐事

    金陵琐事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大方广佛华严经普贤菩萨行愿品

    大方广佛华严经普贤菩萨行愿品

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 短信

    短信

    今晚吃什么?”一条看似普通的短信,却把人吓得头皮发麻,浑身僵直。原因只有一个——发短信的那个人,明明已经死了。《短信:我身边的恐怖经历》讲述了主人公因为一个该死的同事,被牵扯进一系列恐怖事件中。死者号码所发来的短信,身份神秘的美女模特,迷雾重重的失踪现场,背后那一双充满恶意的眼睛……这一切的后面,到底隐藏着什么样的阴谋,什么样的真相?“陆小安!你说,死人会不会发短信?”
  • 血竹

    血竹

    人有岁月,天亦有残缺,古称天残。造九州一域之人以大神通将无上功法藏于血竹之中,世人称之为天残卷。并以自身战甲形成十方神器守护整个大陆。从此硝烟起。
  • 豪门掠爱:老公强制宠

    豪门掠爱:老公强制宠

    她暗恋多年的父亲的得意门生,终于成了自己的丈夫,但是新婚之夜,那人却让自己独守空闺,更是明目张胆的带着小三上门示威,昔日眼里的完美情人,却化作了恶魔般的恐怖,就算离婚也摆脱不了……
  • 佛爷驾到

    佛爷驾到

    天荒大陆,道为仙,隐于名山洞府。儒为官,隐于朝野。陈修缘,佛教大学毕业。以优秀的悟性,破格被少林寺录用。谁知道一个前途光明的和尚,竟在一次飞机失事中穿越了。看他怎样在异界建立佛宗,建万家寺庙,布施万民。让万佛朝宗!!!
  • 心病谁没有(升级版)

    心病谁没有(升级版)

    随着工作、生活等各方面压力的增大,患有不同程度心理疾病的人群日益庞大。但由于传统观念,很多人不愿承认自己有病,不肯就医,以致病情加重,久治不愈。其实,心理疾病并不可怕,可怕的是我们的观念。只有大胆说出“我有病”,才能真正打开心结,快乐做人。甘露春医生根据自己十多年临床经验,从众多案例人手,分析常见心理疾病的特征,介绍辨症和治疗方法,把不为人所注意的常见心病向我们娓娓道来,并就如何树立正确的健康心理观念,如何学会正确对待心理疾病等,为我们提供一把打开心锁的金钥匙。
  • 跌落的天使

    跌落的天使

    哪一天我遇到了我生命中的天使,她犹如从天空中坠落!
  • 穿越之最爱不过咫尺天涯

    穿越之最爱不过咫尺天涯

    一个21世纪的女生因为一场车祸而导致她离开了这个世界,她原本以为她已经死了,可醒来的时候却发现自己到了另外一个世界,她以为到了天堂,可...才知道她穿越了,而且已经结婚了...
  • 深蓝星海

    深蓝星海

    2200年七月二十四日,百慕大三角之上凭空出现了一个直径八百七十二米的宇宙黑洞。同年八月十五日二十点五十四分,黑洞迅速扩大并有大量未知气体散发而出,直至十六日十三点二十五分开始有大量人类身体表面出现黑色的图案。2200年七月二十八日罗布泊上空出现大量散发超高温的黑色光团……2200年十月十二日世界各地出现大量未知细小尘埃…………2215年地球之上的所有生物发生变异……
  • 仙皇教

    仙皇教

    自认此书太烂,所以烂尾了,勿读……《重生之仙缘蝶》已发布,求鉴、求喷……
  • 禅林备用清规

    禅林备用清规

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。