登陆注册
37594800000124

第124章 THE FIRST(3)

Yet it is curious that it never occurred to me for a year or so that this was likely to be a matter of passion between us.I have told how definitely I put my imagination into harness in those matters at my marriage, and I was living now in a world of big interests, where there is neither much time nor inclination for deliberate love-******.I suppose there is a large class of men who never meet a girl or a woman without thinking of ***, who meet a friend's daughter and decide: "Mustn't get friendly with her--wouldn't DO,"and set invisible bars between themselves and all the wives in the world.Perhaps that is the way to live.Perhaps there is no other method than this effectual annihilation of half--and the most sympathetic and attractive half--of the human beings in the world, so far as any frank intercourse is concerned.I am quite convinced anyhow that such a qualified intimacy as ours, such a drifting into the sense of possession, such untrammeled conversation with an invisible, implacable limit set just where the intimacy glows, it is no kind of tolerable compromise.If men and women are to go so far together, they must be free to go as far as they may want to go, without the vindictive destruction that has come upon us.On the basis of the accepted codes the jealous people are right, and the liberal-minded ones are playing with fire.If people are not to love, then they must be kept apart.If they are not to be kept apart, then we must prepare for an unprecedented toleration of lovers.

Isabel was as unforeseeing as I to begin with, but *** marches into the life of an intelligent girl with demands and challenges far more urgent than the mere call of curiosity and satiable desire that comes to a young man.No woman yet has dared to tell the story of that unfolding.She attracted men, and she encouraged them, and watched them, and tested them, and dismissed them, and concealed the substance of her thoughts about them in the way that seems instinctive in a natural-minded girl.There was even an engagement--amidst the protests and disapproval of the college authorities.Inever saw the man, though she gave me a long history of the affair, to which I listened with a forced and insincere sympathy.She struck me oddly as taking the relationship for a thing in itself, and regardless of its consequences.After a time she became silent about him, and then threw him over; and by that time, I think, for all that she was so much my junior, she knew more about herself and me than I was to know for several years to come.

We didn't see each other for some months after my resignation, but we kept up a frequent correspondence.She said twice over that she wanted to talk to me, that letters didn't convey what one wanted to say, and I went up to Oxford pretty definitely to see her--though Icombined it with one or two other engagements--somewhere in February.Insensibly she had become important enough for me to make journeys for her.

But we didn't see very much of one another on that occasion.There was something in the air between us that made a faint embarrassment;the mere fact, perhaps, that she had asked me to come up.

A year before she would have dashed off with me quite unscrupulously to talk alone, carried me off to her room for an hour with a minute of chaperonage to satisfy the rules.Now there was always some one or other near us that it seemed impossible to exorcise.

We went for a walk on the Sunday afternoon with old Fortescue, K.

C., who'd come up to see his two daughters, both great friends of Isabel's, and some mute inglorious don whose name I forget, but who was in a state of marked admiration for her.The six of us played a game of conversational entanglements throughout, and mostly I was impressing the Fortescue girls with the want of mental concentration possible in a rising politician.We went down Carfex, I remember, to Folly Bridge, and inspected the Barges, and then back by way of Merton to the Botanic Gardens and Magdalen Bridge.And in the Botanic Gardens she got almost her only chance with me.

"Last months at Oxford," she said.

"And then?" I asked.

"I'm coming to London," she said.

"To write?"

She was silent for a moment.Then she said abruptly, with that quick flush of hers and a sudden boldness in her eyes: "I'm going to work with you.Why shouldn't I?"3

Here, again, I suppose I had a fair warning of the drift of things.

I seem to remember myself in the train to Paddington, sitting with a handful of papers--galley proofs for the BLUE WEEKLY, I suppose--on my lap, and thinking about her and that last sentence of hers, and all that it might mean to me.

It is very hard to recall even the main outline of anything so elusive as a meditation.I know that the idea of working with her gripped me, fascinated me.That my value in her life seemed growing filled me with pride and a kind of gratitude.I was already in no doubt that her value in my life was tremendous.It made it none the less, that in those days I was obsessed by the idea that she was transitory, and bound to go out of my life again.It is no good trying to set too fine a face upon this complex business, there is gold and clay and sunlight and savagery in every love story, and a multitude of elvish elements peeped out beneath the fine rich curtain of affection that masked our future.I've never properly weighed how immensely my vanity was gratified by her clear preference for me.Nor can I for a moment determine how much deliberate intention I hide from myself in this affair.

Certainly I think some part of me must have been saying in the train: "Leave go of her.Get away from her.End this now." Ican't have been so stupid as not to have had that in my mind....

同类推荐
  • 又示宗武

    又示宗武

    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。
  • 续夷坚志

    续夷坚志

    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。
  • 佛说普达王经

    佛说普达王经

    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。
  • 揽辔录

    揽辔录

    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。
  • 地官司徒

    地官司徒

    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
  • 女配的自传

    女配的自传

    女配的自传,欢迎观看,我的三观挺正的不要怀疑谢谢!如有雷同,纯属巧合?全文架空?
  • 三生三世:美人图

    三生三世:美人图

    罂粟之美让人心动,可罂粟迷人的芬芳背后,却是让人难以拜托的毒性。祸世妖颜,惑了君心,乱了天下。
  • 斗罗为起点万界之旅

    斗罗为起点万界之旅

    “你是谁?”“我?.....”“我是万界的旅者,我穿梭于诸天万界!”“我曾经为人,之后..修成过仙,堕入过魔,普渡过佛,也身为过妖,有的人说我是天使,有的人说我是恶魔,有的人说我善良,有的人说我冷血;我立于万界、遨游诸天,我在三千世界穿梭,我制定万般规则,我维持一切秩序,我乃诸天之大道!我为....湮灭!”斗罗之中,我为神之子,立创世为法,觉逆天武魂,助兽为神,遇倾城佳人诛仙之中,我为旁观者,拳打青云门,脚踢鬼王宗,‘我’便是正!斗破之中,我立于山巅之上,控天下万火,悟毁灭之道火影之中,我为宇智波,佐、鼬为兄?那我便做筑梦之师,给这世界添加不一样的色彩海贼之中,任你千般之技,我当一力破之雄兵连之中,便宜老爹杜卡奥?严厉老姐杜蔷薇?十八岁毕业就去打外星人?这上面的世界是绝对有的世界,其他的还在决定,主要是小说、国漫、日漫、电视剧、电影世界,其他暂定...无限流,原著党勿入(看到此句的原著党请点左上角的‘←’),萌新作者,不是职业写手,目前还是学生,更新不定时...
  • 木叶摆渡人

    木叶摆渡人

    店前万人走过,愿君莫入此门。一间棺材铺,送走多少人。
  • 谁曾路过春暖花开

    谁曾路过春暖花开

    《谁曾路过春暖花开》是90后新锐作家李琬愔的短篇小说集,由10篇小说组成。故事大多以上世纪90年代为背景,以温柔的文字,娓娓道来少男少女的青春情怀。散文式的笔触,细致清新,优美老练,读来有丝丝风雅之意,犹如欣赏一卷旧时光里的风雅画卷,背景隐约回响着淡淡的忧伤的古乐。古镇水乡、破碎的家庭、青梅竹马的玩伴、死去的挚友、年少时不得善果的爱情、支离破碎的理想……那些只细细勾勒的旧时光,看似平淡无奇,却在小处见大,把亲情、友情、爱情,把青春期的困惑和忧愁,把少年时代的欢乐和美好一一描绘下来,披着仿古的外衣,套着温情的秋裤,讲最平实的凡人故事,有关梦想,有关情意,每每让人感动。
  • 代嫁公主要休夫

    代嫁公主要休夫

    “殿主,林姑娘要嫁入太子府了……”“无妨,太子眼瘸。”“殿主,千面剑客拐走了林姑娘……”“无妨,他没时间。”“殿主,林姑娘刚上花轿就被人劫走了……”“传令三万暗卫,掘地三尺也要给本殿主找出来!”现代特工林若曦医毒无双,遭人暗算穿越到天照第一美女白若涵身上,稀里糊涂成为代嫁公主,自从遇到腹黑的林子轩,日子就没一天清净……某天,林若曦抓住一只蠢萌的小狐狸,邪魅一笑,“你说本公主要不要告诉小轩轩,他爹其实……是一只狐妖?”“哦?本座还没当过妖狐奶爸!”“你……本公主要休夫!”
  • 不落繁缕卿勿离

    不落繁缕卿勿离

    秉明烛,入暗夜;暗夜漫漫,行甚远,唯有明烛……他说:你是我的朗月明烛……她说:此生,愿他只她一人,同日月,共星辰……生离死别后究竟是命运的不可逆转,还是心怀不轨之人的操控……
  • 重拾1998

    重拾1998

    种瓜得瓜种豆得豆,重拾往昔,不同的选择,不同的结局。
  • 忆昔卿如风

    忆昔卿如风

    如果,有一天你在时空里迷了路怎么办?她是一个一直在寻找着回家之路的孩子。一个无依无靠无了心也无了情的孩子。不过是挥不去记忆里那抹明媚如阳光般暖暖的笑意,不过是忘不了生她养她的那个温婉的江南,那个慈祥的老人,那盏深夜为她而亮的柔光,于是在这个陌生的世界里,彷徨无措,孤苦无依。“姑娘不觉得这样儿太过自私冷漠了吗?”“你究竟在乎过我们的感受没有?”“伊昔,这里,这里究竟有没有过我的一丁点位置?”面对尘世纷杂,她永远只是转过身,留与他人一抹淡漠的背影。让心去流浪,还是停下脚步,和这个世界妥协?人生只似风前絮,欢也零星,悲也零星,都做连江点点萍。
  • 长山茗

    长山茗

    梁昕是长山茗老板,也是罗刹海市之子,优秀捕灵师。穆雨初是钟表业公司业务经理,玲珑血之人。一场巧合将两个人联系在了一起,她疑惑他的身世,他疑惑她的勇气。最终他们又将走向何方,他是否能留于现世?