棉花文学网

手机浏览器扫描二维码访问

第32部分(第1页)

oughts; the effect that her behaviour would have had upon the spirit of the age。 She was extremely anxious to be informed whether the steps she had taken in the matter of getting engaged to Shelmerdine and marrying him met with its approval。 She was certainly feeling more herself。 Her finger had not tingled once; or nothing to count; since that night on the moor。 Yet; she could not deny that she had her doubts。 She was married; true; but if one’s husband was always sailing round Cape Horn; was it marriage? If one liked him; was it marriage? If one liked other people; was it marriage? And finally; if one still wished; more than anything in the whole world; to write poetry; was it marriage? She had her doubts。

But she would put it to the test。 She looked at the ring。 She looked at the ink pot。 Did she dare? No; she did not。 But she must。 No; she could not。 What should she do then? Faint; if possible。 But she had never felt better in her life。

‘Hang it all!’ she cried; with a touch of her old spirit。 ‘Here goes!’

And she plunged her pen neck deep in the ink。 To her enormous surprise; there was no explosion。 She drew the nib out。 It was wet; but not dripping。 She wrote。 The words were a little long in ing; but e they did。 Ah! but did they make sense? she wondered; a panic ing over her lest the pen might have been at some of its involuntary pranks again。 She read;

And then I came to a field where the springing grass

Was dulled by the hanging cups of fritillaries;

Sullen and foreign–looking; the snaky flower;

Scarfed in dull purple; like Egyptian girls:—

As she wrote she felt some power (remember we are dealing with the most obscure manifestations of the human spirit) reading over her shoulder; and when she had written ‘Egyptian girls’; the power told her to stop。 Grass; the power seemed to say; going back with a ruler such as governesses use to the beginning; is all right; the hanging cups of fritillaries—admirable; the snaky flower—a thought; strong from a lady’s pen; perhaps; but Wordsworth no doubt; sanctions it; but—girls? Are girls necessary? You have a husband at the Cape; you say? Ah; well; that’ll do。

And so the spirit passed on。

Orlando now performed in spirit (for all this took place in spirit) a deep obeisance to the spirit of her age; such as—to pare great things with small—a traveller; conscious that he has a bundle of cigars in the corner of his suit case; makes to the customs officer who has obligingly made a scribble of white chalk on the lid。 For she was extremely doubtful whether; if the spirit had examined the contents of her mind carefully; it would not have found something highly contraband for which she would have had to pay the full fine。 She had only escaped by the skin of her teeth。 She had just managed; by some dexterous deference to the spirit of the age; by putting on a ring and finding a man on a moor; by loving nature and being no satirist; cynic; or psychologist—any one of which goods would have been discovered at once—to pass its examination successfully。 And she heaved a deep sigh of relief; as; indeed; well she might; for the transaction between a writer and the spirit of the age is one of infinite delicacy; and upon a nice arrangement between the two the whole fortune of his works depends。 Orlando had so ordered it that she was in an extremely happy position; she need neither fight her age; nor submit to it; she was of it; yet remained herself。 Now; therefore; she could write; and write she did。 She wrote。 She wrote。 She wrote。

It was now November。 After November; es December。 Then January; February; March; and April。 After April es May。 June; July; August follow。 Next is September。 Then October; and so; behold; here we are back at November again; with a whole year acplished。

This method of writing biography; though it has its merits; is a little bare; perhaps; and the reader; if we go on with it; may plain that he could recite the calendar for himself and so save his pocket whatever sum the Hogarth Press may think proper to charge for this book。 But what can the biographer do when his subject has put him in the predicament into which Orlando has now put us? Life; it has been agreed by everyone whose opinion is worth consulting; is the only fit subject for novelist or biographer; life; the same authorities have decided; has nothing whatever to do with sitting still in a chair and thinking。 Thought and life are as the poles asunder。 Therefore—since sitting in a chair and thinking is precisely what Orlando is doing now—there is nothing for it but to recite the calendar; tell one’s beads; blow one’s nose; stir the fire; look out of the window; until she has done。 Orlando sat so still that you could have heard a pin drop。 Would; indeed; that a pin had dropped! That would have been life of a kind。 Or if a butterfly had fluttered through the window and settled on her chair; one could write about that。 Or suppose she had got up and killed a wasp。 Then; at once; we could out with our pens and write。 For there would be blood shed; if only the blood of a wasp。 Where there is blood there is life。 And if killing a wasp is the merest trifle pared with killing a man; still it is a fitter subject for novelist or biographer than this mere wool–gathering; this thinking; this sitting in a chair day in; day out; with a cigarette and a sheet of paper and a pen and an ink pot。 If only subjects; we might plain (for our patience is wearing thin); had more consideration for their biographers! What is more irritating than to see one’s subject; on whom one has lavished so much time and trouble; slipping out of one’s grasp altogether and indulging—witness her sighs and gasps; her flushing; her palings; her eyes now bright as lamps; now haggard as dawns—what is more humiliating than to see all this dumb show of emotion and excitement gone through before our eyes when we know that what causes it—thought and imagination—are of no importance whatsoever?

But Orlando was a woman—Lord Palmerston had just proved it。 And when we are writing the life of a woman; we may; it is agreed; waive our demand for action; and substitute love instead。 Love; the poet has said; is woman’s whole existence。 And if we look for a moment at Orlando writing at her table; we must admit that never was there a woman more fitted for that calling。 Surely; since she is a woman; and a beautiful woman; and a woman in the prime of life; she will soon give over this pretence of writing and thinking and begin at least to think of a gamekeeper (and as long as she thinks of a man; nobody objects to a woman thinking)。 And then she will write him a little note (and as long as she writes little notes nobody objects to a woman writing either) and make an assignation for Sunday dusk and Sunday dusk will e; and the gamekeeper will whistle under the window—all of which is; of course; the very stuff of life and the only possible subject for fiction。 Surely Orlando must have done one of these things? Alas;—a thousand times; alas; Orlando did none of them。 Must it then be admitted that Orlando was one of those monsters of iniquity who do not love? She was kind to dogs; faithful to friends; generosity itself to a dozen starving poets; had a passion for poetry。 But love—as the male novelists define it—and who; after all; speak with greater authority?—has nothing whatever to do with kindness; fidelity; generosity; or poetry。 Love is slipping off one’s petticoat and—But we all know what love is。 Did Orlando do that? Truth pels us to say no; she did not。 If then; the subject of one’s biography will neither love nor kill; but will only think and imagine; we may conclude that he or she is no better than a corpse and so leave her。

The only resource now left us is to look out of the window。 There were sparrows; there were starlings; there were a number of doves; and one or two rooks; all occupied after their fashion。 One finds a worm; another a snail。 One flutters to a branch; another takes a little run on the turf。 Then a servant crosses the courtyard; wearing a green baize apron。 Presumably he is engaged on some intrigue with one of the maids in the pantry; but as no visible proof is offered us; in the courtyard; we can but hope for the best and leave it。 Clouds pass; thin or thick; with some disturbance of the colour of the grass beneath。 The sun–dial registers the hour in its usual cryptic way。 One’s mind begins tossing up a question or two; idly; vainly; about this same life。 Life; it sings; or croons rather; like a kettle on a hob。 Life; life; what art thou? Light or darkness; the baize apron of the under–footman or the shadow of the starling on the grass?

Let us go; then; exploring; this summer morning; when all are adoring the plum blossom and the bee。 And humming and hawing; let us ask of the starling (who is a more sociable bird than the lark) what he may think on the brink of the dustbin; whence he picks among the sticks bings of scullion’s hair。 What’s life; we ask; leaning on the farmyard gate; Life; Life; Life! cries the bird; as if he had heard; and knew precisely; what we meant by this bothering prying habit of ours of asking questions indoors and out and peeping and picking at daisies as the way is of writers when they don’t know what to say next。 Then they e here; says the bird; and ask me what life is; Life; Life; Life!

We trudge on then by the moor path; to the high brow of the wine–blue purple–dark hill; and fling ourselves down there; and dream there and see there a grasshopper; carting back to his home in the hollow; a straw。 And he says (if sawings like his can be given a name so sacred and tender) Life’s labour; or so we interpret the whirr of his dust–choked gullet。 And the ant agrees and the bees; but if we lie here long enough to ask the moths; when they e at evening; stealing among the paler heather bells; they will breathe in our ears such wild nonsense as one hears from telegraph wires in snow storms; tee hee; haw haw。 Laughter; Laughter! the moths say。

Having asked then of man and of bird and the insects; for fish; men tell us; who have lived in green caves; solitary for years to hear them speak; never; never say; and so perhaps know what life is—having asked them all and grown no wiser; but only older and colder (for did we not pray once in a way to wrap up in a book something so hard; so rare; one could swear it was life’s meaning?) back we must go and say straight out to the reader who waits a–tiptoe to hear what life is—alas; we don’t know。

At this moment; but only just in time to save the book from extinction; Orlando pushed away her chair; stretched her arms; dropped her pen; came to the window; and exclaimed; ‘Done!’

She was almost felled to the ground by the extraordinary sight which now met her eyes。 There was the garden and some birds。 The world was going on as usual。 All the time she was writing the world had continued。

‘And if I were dead; it would be just the same!’ she exclaimed。

Such was the intensity of her feelings that she could even imagine that she had suffered dissolution; and perhaps some faintness actually attacked her。 For a moment she stood looking at the fair; indifferent spectacle with staring eyes。 At length she was revived in a si

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

热门小说推荐
我变成了没感情的妖孽

我变成了没感情的妖孽

控心之术,控天下人心,凶兆也。心丢了,如何活?白寒摸着手指上的戒指,压下它散发的红光。她活着,不生不死,气息微弱,可她想长长久久的活下去,把失去的东西,都拿回来,还要拿的更多。白寒的短剑抵在九灵的心口拦我者,死。九灵伸手捂住白寒空空的心口谁输谁赢,犹未可知。控心术出,妖孽出,异人世界战火纷飞。半死不活的白寒翘着二郎腿看着这群沙雕小伙伴,心里非常没底。抽风搞破坏他们在行,这大义之事,他们非常没有经验。有点沙雕,有点热血,有点感人。如果有机会有异能,你最想要哪一种?如果您喜欢我变成了没感情的妖孽,别忘记分享给朋友...

甜妻难追:总裁老公甜蜜爱

甜妻难追:总裁老公甜蜜爱

倾其所有,只为一人,换来的是挚爱血粼粼的背叛和财产篡夺。冰冷的监狱里,他光芒万丈的出现在她眼前,随之而来的,还有一纸契约书。签字,我帮你走出这里,拿回你应得的。为什么宠你,是我的责任。迟少缺女人,也没必要来监狱里找乐子吧?某男唇角微提,我不是缺女人,我是缺你。如果您喜欢甜妻难追总裁老公甜蜜爱,别忘记分享给朋友...

网游之苍茫

网游之苍茫

暧昧季节出品一个极其普通的小人物,经历了不普通的事件。从以游戏为娱乐,变成了以游戏为生存。苍茫到底是一个什么样的游戏,里面又充满了什么样的秘密。无...

凌芷

凌芷

凌云山权势更替,作为凌云山山主之女的凌芷首当其冲成为了牺牲者,因吃下封眠丹,浑浑噩噩千年。不过是得了一个破传承,便被传言她身上有一步登仙的丹药,至此,大陆上人人都像从她手里分一杯羹!凌云山曾经的小魔头凌七七表示,来呀,打不死我,我打死你!(新人新书,喜欢的给个收藏呗ω)如果您喜欢凌芷,别忘记分享给朋友...

你好恩熙

你好恩熙

你好恩熙是纳兰雨墨的经典其他类型类作品,你好恩熙主要讲述了第一次见她,他和他的母亲救了她即将临盆的母亲,她平安出生,他纳兰雨墨最新鼎力大作,年度必看其他类型。新御宅屋(xyuzhaiwu8com)提供...

嫡女惊华

嫡女惊华

关于嫡女惊华她是侯府嫡女,母亲乃是一朝郡主,她更是得到殊荣,赐封沐歌县主。奈何母亲早逝,她听信谗言,一步步走进别人的圈套里面,痴心错付,那人功成之日,就是自己埋骨之时。安上谋逆罪名,最后,弟弟...

每日热搜小说推荐