登陆注册
20042900000110

第110章 CHAPTER XVI(2)

The wind grew louder and sand was blown along the cafe floor and about the coffee-cups.

"The love of women is like the rose of the Caid's garden That is full of silver tears--The love of women is like the first day of the spring When the children play at Cora--The love of women is like the Derbouka that has been warmed at the fire And gives out a sweet sound.

Take it in thy hands, O loving man!

And sing to the Derbouka that is the love of women.

Janat! Janat! Janat!"

In the doorway, where the lamp swung from the beam, a man in European dress stood still to listen. The wind wailed behind him and stirred his clothes. His eyes shone in the faint light with a fierceness of emotion in which there was a joy that was almost terrible, but in which there seemed also to be something that was troubled. When the song died away, and only the voices of the wind and the drum spoke to the darkness, he disappeared into the night. The Arabs did not see him.

"Janat! Janat! Janat!"

The night drew on and the storm increased. All the doors of the houses were closely shut. Upon the roofs the guard dogs crouched, shivering and whining, against the earthen parapets. The camels groaned in the fondouks, and the tufted heads of the palms swayed like the waves of the sea. And the Sahara seemed to be lifting up its voice in a summons that was tremendous as a summons to Judgment.

Domini had always known that the desert would summon her. She heard its summons now in the night without fear. The roaring of the tempest was sweet in her ears as the sound of the Derbouka to the loving man of the sands. It accorded with the fire that lit up the cloud of passion in her heart. Its wildness marched in step with a marching wildness in her veins and pulses. For her gipsy blood was astir to-night, and the recklessness of the boy in her seemed to clamour with the storm. The sound of the wind was as the sound of the clashing cymbals of Liberty, calling her to the adventure that love would glorify, to the far-away life that love would make perfect, to the untrodden paths of the sun of which she had dreamed in the shadows, and on which she would set her feet at last with the comrade of her soul.

To-morrow her life would begin, her real life, the life of which men and women dream as the prisoner dreams of freedom. And she was glad, she thanked God, that her past years had been empty of joy, that in her youth she had been robbed of youth's pleasures. She thanked God that she had come to maturity without knowing love. It seemed to her that to love in early life was almost pitiful, was a catastrophe, an experience for which the soul was not ready, and so could not appreciate at its full and wonderful value. She thought of it as of a child being taken away from the world to Paradise without having known the pain of existence in the world, and at that moment she worshipped suffering. Every tear that she had ever shed she loved, every weary hour, every despondent thought, every cruel disappointment. She called around her the congregation of her past sorrows, and she blessed them and bade them depart from her for ever.

As she heard the roaring of the wind she smiled. The Sahara was fulfilling the words of the Diviner. To-morrow she and Androvsky would go out into the storm and the darkness together. The train of camels would be lost in the desolation of the desert. And the people of Beni-Mora would see it vanish, and, perhaps, would pity those who were hidden by the curtains of the palanquin. They would pity her as Suzanne pitied her, openly, with eyes that were tragic. She laughed aloud.

It was late in the night. Midnight had sounded yet she did not go to bed. She feared to sleep, to lose the consciousness of her joy of the glory which had come into her life. She was a miser of the golden hours of this black and howling night. To sleep would be to be robbed.

A splendid avarice in her rebelled against the thought of sleep.

Was Androvsky sleeping? She wondered and longed to know.

To-night she was fully aware for the first time of the inherent fearlessness of her character, which was made perfect at last by her perfect love. Alone, she had always had courage. Even in her most listless hours she had never been a craven. But now she felt the completeness of a nature clothed in armour that rendered it impregnable. It was a strange thing that man should have the power to put the finishing touch to God's work, that religion should stoop to be a handmaid to faith in a human being, but she did not think it strange. Everything in life seemed to her to be in perfect accord because her heart was in perfect accord with another heart.

And she welcomed the storm. She even welcomed something else that came to her now in the storm: the memory of the sand-diviner's tortured face as he gazed down, reading her fate in the sand. For what was an untroubled fate? Surely a life that crept along the hollows and had no impulse to call it to the heights. Knowing the flawless perfection of her armour she had a wild longing to prove it. She wished that there should be assaults upon her love, because she knew she could resist them one and all, and she wished to have the keen joy of resisting them. There is a health of body so keen and vital that it desires combat. The soul sometimes knows a precisely similar health and is filled with a similar desire.

"Put my love to the proof, O God!" was Domini's last prayer that night when the storm was at its wildest. "Put my love to the uttermost proof that he may know it, as he can never know it otherwise."

And she fell asleep at length, peacefully, in the tumult of the night, feeling that God had heard her prayer.

同类推荐
  • 笔花医镜

    笔花医镜

    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。
  • Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom

    Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom

    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。
  • 尤氏喉科秘书

    尤氏喉科秘书

    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。
  • Guy Mannering

    Guy Mannering

    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。
  • 和白乐天

    和白乐天

    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
  • 我成了山神爷

    我成了山神爷

    一个只想过安宁悠闲逍遥生活的宅男成为十万大山之主的传说。某大门大派:在这方世界应以我门派独尊某宅男:什么?居然这么嚣张,那我自当携十万大山和你来一个山门撞山门!
  • 盗墓笔记之文主花爷

    盗墓笔记之文主花爷

    有点类似于架空,主要围绕小花,基本脱离原剧情,主要将小花为了干好解家当家是如何吃苦的,不喜勿喷,谢谢
  • 末世特警

    末世特警

    末世到来,世界成为变异物种的乐园。幸存的人们为了生存下去,与其展开殊死搏斗。但是,末世没有了法律的约束,人类潜藏的恶性逐渐显露出来,善良的人们更加如生存在地狱中一般。凌东,末世前的特警精英,始神之光寄体的幸存者,他将如何维护这即将倾覆的末世?
  • 玻璃囚室

    玻璃囚室

    主人公米诺在童年时期与巴特、小伙伴罗尼亲密无间,但此后二人都离开了米诺。米诺学生时期被男同学侮辱,后此男同学死于非命。米诺成人后与佟寒相恋,后佟寒亦死于非命。巴特多年后归来,却因为某些原因与米诺疏远。米诺认识了新男友振一,并得知振一多年前死去的胞弟就是当年侮辱米诺的男同学。在米诺与振一准备结婚时,振一在登山中死去。时间永远留在了夏天,偶得的日记牵引出人性的秘密,思维与回忆交错成情感的迷宫,一本关于温暖与冰冷、残缺与完整、自私与宽容的小说。被捆绑的妖娆,《挪威的森林》般纠结的《天浴》式爱恋。病痛,侮辱,强烈快感。根雕,迷宫,迷醇夜晚。神秘的爱与欲望,与残酷结伴,在无尽的旅程中行走。
  • tfboys之初夏美好的时光

    tfboys之初夏美好的时光

    三小只和我们的女主(三人)究竟会发生怎样事情呢?他们会在一起了吗?
  • 枪魂:枪之命

    枪魂:枪之命

    冷酷少年,呆萌小妹,少年为了女孩,不惜一切,金钱,权利,都不及女孩的一句话,看千顺如何踏平天地,成为传奇!
  • 顶级合约

    顶级合约

    陆景行和李可第一次签约,李可提出了三项要求:1.请4点起床晨读。2.不要拍照。3.按时付钱。第三次签约,陆景行提出了三项要求:1.本合约使用期为终身,不许撕毁。2.陆景行拥有最终解释权。3.李可可以有除1以外的否决权。
  • 想问你个问题

    想问你个问题

    这些年有些和尚确实让人倒胃口,比如说他们总是干些赚大钱的事,开着卡迪拉克,拿着苹果手机,搂着漂亮姑娘到处瞎逛。这些事真的让人很不爽。总的来说我还是挺喜欢和尚,不过我要真当了和尚,我妈估计要哭死,她就我这么一个儿子,还指望我传宗接代…说到底,我还是当不了和尚。我想,起码我也可以找几个和尚当朋友,下雨天不开挖掘机的时候就跟他们学学念经打坐,学他们说那些充满智慧的模棱两可的话。要是你问我最羡慕和尚哪一点,我告诉你,那就是小和尚不用整天拍老和尚的马屁。
  • 租借王妃

    租借王妃

    为爱,她失踪三年,只为救他一命。为爱,他寻找三年,如今孑然一身。再次归来,她已非旧时容颜,化身为鸩。再见,他已不认,为有命待她归来,许鸩一年王妃。三年,他已不明了他爱的是否是旧时的容颜。真爱在身侧,他认错了人,与她擦肩而过。
  • 桂花树之恋

    桂花树之恋

    一个菜市场卖鱼的淳朴的女孩英文意外的成为了坏男孩的女仆。在学校里不停的被作弄,所以开始拼命的反抗着命运的不公……