登陆注册
20042900000173

第173章 CHAPTER XXVI(9)

"But I think I spoke without confidence, and I know that that evening I prayed without impulse, coldly, mechanically. The long, dim chapel, with its lines of monks facing each other in their stalls, seemed to me a sad place, like a valley of dry bones--for the first time, for the first time.

"I ought to have gone on the morrow to the Reverend Pere. I ought to have asked him, begged him to remove me from the /hotellerie/. I ought to have foreseen what was coming--that this man had a strength to live greater than my strength to pray; that his strength might overcome mine. I began to sin that night. Curiosity was alive in me, curiosity about the life that I had never known, was--so I believed, so I thought I knew--never to know.

"When I came out of the chapel into the /hotellerie/ I met our guest--I do not say his name. What would be the use?--in the corridor. It was almost dark. There were ten minutes before the time for locking up the door and going to bed. Francois, the servant, was asleep under the arcade.

"'Shall we go on to the path and have a last breath of air?' the stranger said.

"We stepped out and walked slowly up and down.

"'Do you not feel the beauty of peace?' I asked.

"I wanted him to say yes. I wanted him to tell me that peace, tranquillity, were beautiful. He did not reply for a moment. I heard him sigh heavily.

"'If there is peace in the world at all,' he said at length, 'it is only to be found with the human being one loves. With the human being one loves one might find peace in hell.'

"We did not speak again before we parted for the night.

"Domini, I did not sleep at all that night. It was the first of many sleepless nights, nights in which my thoughts travelled like winged Furies--horrible, horrible nights. In them I strove to imagine all the stranger knew by experience. It was like a ghastly, physical effort. I strove to conceive of all that he had done--with the view, I told myself at first, of bringing myself to a greater contentment, of realising how worthless was all that I had rejected and that he had grasped at. In the dark I, as it were, spread out his map of life and mine and examined them. When, still in the dark, I rose to go to the chapel I was exhausted. I felt unutterably melancholy. That was at first. Presently I felt an active, gnawing hunger. But--but--I have not come to that yet. This strange, new melancholy was the forerunner.

It was a melancholy that seemed to be caused by a sense of frightful loneliness such as I had never previously experienced. Till now I had almost always felt God with me, and that He was enough. Now, suddenly, I began to feel that I was alone. I kept thinking of the stranger's words: 'If there is peace in the world at all it is only to be found with the human being one loves.'

"'That is false,' I said to myself again and again. 'Peace is only to be found by close union with God. In that I have found peace for many, many years.'

"I knew that I had been at peace. I knew that I had been happy. And yet, when I looked back upon my life as a novice and a monk, I now felt as if I had been happy vaguely, foolishly, bloodlessly, happy only because I had been ignorant of what real happiness was--not really happy. I thought of a bird born in a cage and singing there. I had been as that bird. And then, when I was in the garden, I looked at the swallows winging their way high in the sunshine, between the garden trees and the radiant blue, winging their way towards sea and mountains and plains, and that bitterness, like an acid that burns and eats away fine metal, was once more at my heart.

"But the sensation of loneliness was the most terrible of all. I compared union with God, such as I thought I had known, with that other union spoken of by my guest--union with the human being one loves. I set the two unions as it were in comparison. Night after night I did this. Night after night I told over the joys of union with God--joys which I dared to think I had known--and the joys of union with a loved human being. On the one side I thought of the drawing near to God in prayer, of the sensation of approach that comes with earnest prayer, of the feeling that ears are listening to you, that the great heart is loving you, the great heart that loves all living things, that you are being absolutely understood, that all you cannot say is comprehended, and all you say is received as something precious. I recalled the joy, the exaltation, that I had known when I prayed. That was union with God. In such union I had sometimes felt that the world, with all that it contained of wickedness, suffering and death, was utterly devoid of power to sadden or alarm the humblest human being who was able to draw near to God.

"I had had a conquering feeling--not proud--as of one upborne, protected for ever, lifted to a region in which no enemy could ever be, no sadness, no faint anxiety even.

"Then I strove to imagine--and this, Domini, was surely a deliberate sin--exactly what it must be to be united with a beloved human being.

I strove and I was able. For not only did instinct help me, instinct that had been long asleep, but--I have told you that the stranger was suffering under an obsession, a terrible dominion. This dominion he described to me with an openness that perhaps--that indeed I believe-- he would not have shown had I not been a monk. He looked upon me as a being apart, neither man nor woman, a being without sex. I am sure he did. And yet he was immensely intelligent. But he knew that I had entered the monastery as a novice, that I had been there through all my adult life. And then my manner probably assisted him in his illusion. For I gave--I believe--no sign of the change that was taking place within me under his influence. I seemed to be calm, detached, even in my sympathy for his suffering. For he suffered frightfully.

同类推荐
  • 黔南会灯录

    黔南会灯录

    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。
  • 大乘理趣六波罗蜜多经

    大乘理趣六波罗蜜多经

    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。
  • 艾子杂说

    艾子杂说

    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。
  • Evolution and Ethics and Other Essays

    Evolution and Ethics and Other Essays

    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。
  • 眼科秘诀

    眼科秘诀

    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。
热门推荐
  • 拯救狼族特别行动(乔冬冬奇趣幻想系列)

    拯救狼族特别行动(乔冬冬奇趣幻想系列)

    乔冬冬是个五年级的男生,他调皮好动,对新鲜事物充满好奇,喜欢幻想,乐于助人,总是希望遭遇新奇有趣的事情,于是在他的生活中,便有了很多好玩刺激的故事,以及好多稀奇古怪又真诚善良的朋友,正是这些事情和朋友,帮助了他的成长。本系列丛书正是描写了这样一个城市中的普通男孩在成长过程中的奇幻故事,第一季出版4本,分别是《电脑骑士战记》、《变形校车魔法师》、《72变小女生》、《拯救狼族特别行动》。
  • 圣虹传说:梅赞达的召唤

    圣虹传说:梅赞达的召唤

    不想改变,故不断逃跑。最后却站在所有阴谋与斗争的终点,无路可退。忘记自己曾对谁许下誓言,千呼万唤中,终于睁开双眼。一切幸福已被击碎,然而命运无法逃脱。王座之前,她之身后,你何去何从?
  • 我是坂井悠二

    我是坂井悠二

    境界的地平线什么的,已经让人抛弃了很多东西了。说是史诗作也好,说是设定本也好,总之我已经投入了,那就没什么好说的了。每周一更……大概至于其他,到时候再说吧……好了,希望武藏野的大骗子君能够给我们带来一个还算不错的境界世界。以上
  • 九域曜世录

    九域曜世录

    仙,神,魔,妖四主域与中玄化炎荒五凡域组成了世间九域。一神域大族分支没落家族少年携北曜神帝走出荒域,他历千磨万难,化无数机缘,为心爱女子,为成就至尊!
  • 八号刺青

    八号刺青

    当前世今生,我们牵绊了几生几世依旧是是解不开的结,总没得到一个善果,这一世会不会不一样?身怀特殊印记的艺术生和神秘店铺的青刺师不期而遇,仿佛命中注定,冥冥中他们已经认识很多年。白易想,如果连遇见都是必然,那么不管以什么样的形式、什么样的联系,他们都会相识。身份被一层层解开,前因后果接踵而来,到底是什么让命运这般戏剧化。多年后,李暮雪寄来了一封信,一封很短很短的信。白易,你知道吗,最后我终于让时间把那份爱冲淡了。如今所有的事情都已尘埃落定,我们还能坐在一起吃饭,在这间古老的小铺子里,像初见时一样真好。沈老板,你说我们经历了这么多是是非非,是不是也能写一本自传,名字我都想好了,就叫《八号刺青》。那天阳光明媚,白易坐在椅子上,沈青煜在身边。仿佛他们认识了千年,也相伴了千年,这样的收尾才算没有辜负了几世的轮回。
  • 无双少帅,世子爷的废材妃

    无双少帅,世子爷的废材妃

    他,是出身卑贱的玉王世子,他,是当今圣上的同窗好友,他,也是赫赫有名的墨阁的阁主,她,是将军府的废材三小姐,她,也是邻国无双的不败少帅,她,也是月宸楼的幕后主人,强强联手,会有怎么样的火花..........
  • 送陈判官罢举赴江外

    送陈判官罢举赴江外

    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。
  • 叫我特种兵

    叫我特种兵

    三名特警战士和其他军种的九名战士被秘密派往国外执行任务,由此展开了他们荡气回肠而又惨烈的战场亡命生活。他们身上体现了我国特种兵的精湛技能、铁血精神和博爱胸怀,揭露了现代战争的残酷性。此书详细介绍了在现代战争中,中东的真实面貌,以及人们思想道德、生存现状和雇佣军、赏金猎人的真实面目。虽为小说,实为中国士兵在中东的百科全书,全景式展现了当代中国特种兵在生活、感情、战场上的点点滴滴。
  • 好男人陈二草的妖孽人生

    好男人陈二草的妖孽人生

    本文记叙了某时代好男人陈二草同志那有些灵异的妖孽一生,唉,男人好幸苦。作者吸取教训改邪归正,本文小清新。
  • 中亿万大奖

    中亿万大奖

    一张小小的纸片,足以改变一个人的人生……如果你中了亿万块,你想怎么花!“老板,来十斤天然虫草。”“那么多啊?”“对,我要泡澡。”“虎鞭、驴鞭、蛇鞭、梅花鹿鞭、鳄鱼鞭、鸡鞭等鞭有么。”“……”“人鞭要不要。”“也要”“……”