登陆注册
20034000000014

第14章 III(4)

The bully and his victim never quite forget their first relations. They meet in clubs and country houses, and clap one another on the back; but in both the memory is green of a more strenuous day, when they were boys together.

He tried to say, "He was the right kind of boy, and I was the wrong kind." But Cambridge would not let him smooth the situation over by self-belittlement. If he had been the wrong kind of boy, Gerald had been a worse kind. He murmured, "We are different, very," and Miss Pembroke, perhaps suspecting something, asked no more. But she kept to the subject of Mr. Dawes, humorously depreciating her lover and discussing him without reverence.

Rickie laughed, but felt uncomfortable. When people were engaged, he felt that they should be outside criticism. Yet here he was criticizing. He could not help it. He was dragged in.

"I hope his ankle is better."

"Never was bad. He's always fussing over something.""He plays next week in a match, I think Herbert says.""I dare say he does."

"Shall we be going?"

"Pray go if you like. I shall stop at home. I've had enough of cold feet."It was all very colourless and odd.

Gerald returned, saying, "I can't stand your cook. What's she want to ask me questions for? I can't stand talking to servants.

I say, 'If I speak to you, well and good'--and it's another thing besides if she were pretty.""Well, I hope our ugly cook will have lunch ready in a minute,"said Agnes. "We're frightfully unpunctual this morning, and Idaren't say anything, because it was the same yesterday, and if Icomplain again they might leave. Poor Rickie must be starved.""Why, the Silts gave me all these sandwiches and I've never eaten them. They always stuff one.""And you thought you'd better, eh?" said Mr. Dawes, "in case you weren't stuffed here."Miss Pembroke, who house-kept somewhat economically, looked annoyed.

The voice of Mr. Pembroke was now heard calling from the house, "Frederick! Frederick! My dear boy, pardon me. It was an important letter about the Church Defence, otherwise--. Come in and see your room."He was glad to quit the little lawn. He had learnt too much there. It was dreadful: they did not love each other.

More dreadful even than the case of his father and mother, for they, until they married, had got on pretty well. But this man was already rude and brutal and cold: he was still the school bully who twisted up the arms of little boys, and ran pins into them at chapel, and struck them in the stomach when they were swinging on the horizontal bar. Poor Agnes; why ever had she done it? Ought not somebody to interfere?

He had forgotten his sandwiches, and went back to get them.

Gerald and Agnes were locked in each other's arms.

He only looked for a moment, but the sight burnt into his brain.

The man's grip was the stronger. He had drawn the woman on to his knee, was pressing her, with all his strength, against him.

Already her hands slipped off him, and she whispered, "Don't you hurt--" Her face had no expression. It stared at the intruder and never saw him. Then her lover kissed it, and immediately it shone with mysterious beauty, like some star.

Rickie limped away without the sandwiches, crimson and afraid. He thought, "Do such things actually happen?" and he seemed to be looking down coloured valleys. Brighter they glowed, till gods of pure flame were born in them, and then he was looking at pinnacles of virgin snow. While Mr. Pembroke talked, the riot of fair images increased.

They invaded his being and lit lamps at unsuspected shrines.

Their orchestra commenced in that suburban house, where he had to stand aside for the maid to carry in the luncheon. Music flowed past him like a river. He stood at the springs of creation and heard the primeval monotony. Then an obscure instrument gave out a little phrase.

The river continued unheeding. The phrase was repeated and a listener might know it was a fragment of the Tune of tunes.

Nobler instruments accepted it, the clarionet protected, the brass encouraged, and it rose to the surface to the whisper of violins. In full unison was Love born, flame of the flame, flushing the dark river beneath him and the virgin snows above.

His wings were infinite, his youth eternal; the sun was a jewel on his finger as he passed it in benediction over the world.

Creation, no longer monotonous, acclaimed him, in widening melody, in brighter radiances. Was Love a column of fire? Was he a torrent of song? Was he greater than either--the touch of a man on a woman?

It was the merest accident that Rickie had not been disgusted.

But this he could not know.

Mr. Pembroke, when he called the two dawdlers into lunch, was aware of a hand on his arm and a voice that murmured, "Don't--they may be happy."

He stared, and struck the gong. To its music they approached, priest and high priestess.

"Rickie, can I give these sandwiches to the boot boy?" said the one. "He would love them.""The gong! Be quick! The gong!"

"Are you smoking before lunch?" said the other.

But they had got into heaven, and nothing could get them out of it. Others might think them surly or prosaic. He knew. He could remember every word they spoke. He would treasure every motion, every glance of either, and so in time to come, when the gates of heaven had shut, some faint radiance, some echo of wisdom might remain with him outside.

As a matter of fact, he saw them very little during his visit. He checked himself because he was unworthy. What right had he to pry, even in the spirit, upon their bliss? It was no crime to have seen them on the lawn. It would be a crime to go to it again. He tried to keep himself and his thoughts away, not because he was ascetic, but because they would not like it if they knew. This behaviour of his suited them admirably. And when any gracious little thing occurred to them--any little thing that his sympathy had contrived and allowed--they put it down to chance or to each other.

So the lovers fall into the background. They are part of the distant sunrise, and only the mountains speak to them. Rickie talks to Mr. Pembroke, amidst the unlit valleys of our over-habitable world.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 道禁乾坤

    道禁乾坤

    仗三尺青锋,舒书生意气。意气风发可摘九天星辰,怒火中烧剑挑无底深渊。清歌啸凤,狂吼龙从。曾经平凡的少年,在虚幻的游戏世界里历尽艰辛,终成霸主,逍遥无拘。有萌宠,有贱友,有梦想,也有爱情……一声剑去三千里,道法自然禁乾坤。且随陆羽笑平生
  • 百位世界杰出的企业家(上)(世界名人成功启示录)

    百位世界杰出的企业家(上)(世界名人成功启示录)

    每当历史的巨人跨越一步时,人类就总会在向前暸望的同时,情不自禁地回首流逝的年代,缅怀远去的先人,感悟曾经的岁月。当我们带着崇敬与激情去追思那一位位闪烁着智慧光芒、给人类带来希望和光明的世界杰出人物时,胸中便会油然升腾出一股发自心底的感动,一股追求奋起的冲动。
  • 慎世苍歌

    慎世苍歌

    宿世命,轮回劫。太古恨,千年别。幽冥祸,本无邪。众生叛,半道决!
  • 绝代风华公主的美男穿越记

    绝代风华公主的美男穿越记

    从小有着仇恨的她多年后与失散的妹妹团聚当终于答应他们的告白时。却可笑的发现他们是仇家的人,被欺骗了?正当她以为生命到此结束时。却穿越了??“这是什么世纪?”“小姐,你真是装糊涂了,这是24世纪呀。”从此,她的性格大大改化,成为了一个性格倔强、可爱的人。这也让我们几位男主深深爱上她。正当她准备开始新的生活,她的妹妹突然出现了。可她不知道的是,她的妹妹可不再是以前那个妹妹了。重重危险将她靠近……正当她以为可以开始新生活时,哎,可怜悲催,情敌出现,我悲痛欲绝。我竟然又穿越了!性格再次转变。和9位美男一起玩…各位亲们第一章写坏了,你们要原谅我!ps:正文比简介写的要好看,有些不一样。
  • 惑媚人心

    惑媚人心

    (作者的第一部书,多多支持哦)她是天上的芳香四溢的百花仙子,他是人间万人敬奉的龙。她因在人间贪玩,不仅莫名其妙地成为他的恋人,还因他的失误,不得不沦落到现代转世。而命格老人家恰巧写错了命格,只好把她穿越回到那里,一个史书上从未记载过的世界,然后又碰见了他,这一切只是巧合吗?她该如何继续面对他?当她想起一切时,又该何去何从?敬请期待。欢迎加入魂牵梦潆,群号码:429081504谢谢。
  • 冰凰岁月:女王陛下的贴身邪帝

    冰凰岁月:女王陛下的贴身邪帝

    她,为21世纪特工杀手,却因离奇死亡,穿越至奇异世界,不想却为一府上侍女,遭人鞭打,原来的灵魂死去,王者归来!命运交错,与他相遇。他,隐藏身份,妖孽的一代帝王,却愿低下头来博她一笑。这一世的她,拥有强大的身世,收服神兽,天生灵力,强大天赋,傲视苍穹。谁说废材就不能称霸世界?他紧紧却追随她的脚步。她淡笑:”那么,你想怎样。“他邪笑:‘曾经没追到,现在一定要。”前世的因缘,今世的相遇,如果可以,我等你。
  • 妻凭夫贵

    妻凭夫贵

    听说未婚夫是个活死人,怎么办,要不要逃婚啊?还没将逃婚付之于行动,麻烦倒霉之事接连而来,那个谁,我们已经恩怨互销了,怎么还总是出现在我面前。某狼邪笑:叼你回家暖被生娃去。某女撇嘴:“可奴家是商贾出身,配不是你高贵的身份啊。”某狼霸气道:“爷看中的是你的人,不是身份。再说身份这事好办交给我处理就好,你只要养养花,逗逗小狗,随便给爷养一群小狼就是了。”某女黑线,她是人不是狼好吗?还一群小狼,想得美。
  • 笑傲争锋路

    笑傲争锋路

    天玄大世界,祖域为峰,四大至尊域横贯其中。芸芸众生,命运谁敢掌控,倘若天道不公,岂能怪我武道争锋。“天上地下,强者为霸”,少年陈宇因一玉、一塔、一眼、一人踏上一条武道巅峰之路。九段破空,破空而立,脱生死,转轮回,穿梭时空,逆乱阴阳,最终重塑乾坤。激情一切,尽在《笑傲争锋路》
  • 一宠成婚,情迷小娇妻

    一宠成婚,情迷小娇妻

    为了一千万,她将自己的初夜卖给他。不料才一个晚上,所有的一切都天翻地覆。渣男贱女当道,他却屡次救了她。在他强势的温柔下,她渐渐沉沦……。没想到这一场交易,不仅失了身,还失了心……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 三分钟

    三分钟

    如果你能看到你的未来,3分钟,你能干嘛