第 2 节
作者:翱翔1981      更新:2024-04-07 21:07      字数:9322
  Through   that   soul   I   seemed   to   touch   and   take   hold   upon   the   East。
  And first there was the wisdom of the East。 I have never known any one
  who seemed   to   exist   on   such   〃large draughts  of intellectual   day〃   as this
  child of seventeen; to whom one could tell all one's personal troubles and
  agitations;  as   to   a   wise   old   woman。    In   the   East;   maturity  comes   early;
  and this child had already lived through all a woman's life。                 But there was
  something else; something hardly personal; something which belonged to
  a   consciousness   older   than   the   Christian;   which   I   realised;   wondered   at;
  and     admired;     in   her   passionate     tranquillity    of   mind;    before    which
  everything mean and trivial and temporary caught fire and burnt away in
  smoke。      Her     body    was   never    without    suffering;    or  her  heart   without
  conflict;   but   neither   the   body's   weakness   nor   the   heart's   violence   could
  disturb that fixed contemplation; as of Buddha on his lotus…throne。
  And along with this wisdom; as of age or of the age of a race; there
  was   what   I   can   hardly   call   less   than   an   agony   of   sensation。   Pain   or
  pleasure transported her; and the whole of pain or pleasure might be held
  in a flower's cup or the imagined frown of a friend。               It was never found in
  those things which to others seemed things of importance。                    At the age of
  twelve she passed the Matriculation of the Madras University; and awoke
  to find herself famous throughout India。               〃Honestly;〃 she said to me;  〃I
  was not pleased; such things did not appeal to me。〃                  But here; in a letter
  from Hyderabad; bidding one 〃share a March morning〃 with her; there is;
  at   the   mere   contact    of  the   sun;   this  outburst:    〃Come       and   share   my
  exquisite     March     morning     with   me:   this   sumptuous      blaze   of  gold   and
  sapphire   sky;   these  scarlet   lilies   that   adorn   the   sunshine;   the   voluptuous
  scents   of   neem   and   champak   and   serisha   that   beat   upon   the   languid   air
  with   their   implacable   sweetness;   the   thousand   little   gold   and   blue   and
  silver breasted birds bursting with the shrill ecstasy of life in nesting time。
  All is hot and fierce and passionate; ardent and unashamed in its exulting
  and importunate desire for life and love。 And; do you know that the scarlet
  lilies are woven petal by petal from my heart's blood; these little quivering
  birds   are   my   soul   made   incarnate   music;   these   heavy   perfumes   are   my
  emotions dissolved into aerial essence; this flaming blue and gold sky is
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  the 'very me;' that part of me that incessantly and in… solently; yes; and a
  little   deliberately;   triumphs   over   that   other   parta   thing   of   nerves   and
  tissues that suffers and cries out; and that must die to…morrow perhaps; or
  twenty years hence。〃
  Then   there   was   her   humour;   which   was   part   of   her   strange   wisdom;
  and   was   always   awake   and   on   the   watch。       In   all   her   letters;   written   in
  exquisite     English     prose;   but   with   an   ardent    imagery     and   a   vehement
  sincerity   of   emotion   which   make   them;   like   the   poems;   indeed   almost
  more     directly;   un…English;      Oriental;    there  was    always     this  intellectual;
  critical   sense   of   humour;   which   could   laugh   at   one's   own   enthusiasm  as
  frankly as that enthusiasm had been set down。                    And partly the humour;
  like the delicate reserve of her manner; was a mask or a shelter。                     〃I have
  taught myself;〃 she writes to me from India; 〃to be commonplace and like
  everybody else superficially。           Every one thinks I am so nice and cheerful;
  so 'brave;' all the banal things that are so comfortable to be。                  My mother
  knows me only as 'such a tranquil child; but so strong…willed。'                    A tranquil
  child!〃 And she writes again; with deeper significance: 〃I too have learnt
  the   subtle   philosophy   of   living   from   moment   to   moment。           Yes;   it   is   a
  subtle philosophy; though it appears merely an epicurean doctrine:                        'Eat;
  drink; and be merry; for to…morrow we die。'                I have gone through so many
  yesterdays   when   I   strove   with   Death   that   I   have   realised   to   its   full   the
  wisdom of that sentence; and it is to me not merely a figure of speech; but
  a   literal   fact。  Any   to…morrow   I   might   die。       It   is   scarcely   two   months
  since I came back from the grave:                is it worth while to be anything but
  radiantly   glad?      Of   all   things   that   life   or   perhaps   my   temperament   has
  given me I prize the gift of laughter as beyond price。〃
  Her desire; always; was to be 〃a wild free thing of the air like the birds;
  with a song in my heart。〃           A spirit of too much fire in too frail a body; it
  was rarely that her desire was fully granted。               But in Italy she found what
  she   could   not   find   in   England;   and   from   Italy   her   letters   are    radiant。
  〃This Italy is made of gold;〃 she writes from Florence; 〃the gold of dawn
  and daylight; the gold of the stars; and; now dancing in weird enchanting
  rhythms   through   this   magic   month   of   May;   the   gold   of   fireflies   in   the
  perfumed darkness'aerial gold。'            I long to catch the subtle music of their
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  fairy dances and make a poem with a rhythm like the quick irregular wild
  flash   of   their   sudden    movements。        Would   it   not   be    wonderful?      One
  black night I stood in a garden with fireflies in my hair like darting restless
  stars caught in a mesh of darkness。             It gave me a strange sensation; as if I
  were not human at all; but an elfin spirit。            I wonder why these little things
  move me so deeply?            It is because I have a most 'unbalanced intellect;' I
  suppose。〃       Then; looking out on Florence; she cries; 〃God! how beautiful
  it is; and how glad I am that I am alive to…day!〃               And she tells me that she
  is drinking in the beauty like wine; 〃wine; golden and scented; and shining;
  fit for the gods; and the gods have drunk it; the dead gods of Etruria; two
  thousand years ago。         Did I say dead?         No; for the gods are immortal; and
  one    might     still  find  them    loitering   in  some     solitary   dell   on  the   grey
  hillsides   of   Fiesole。    Have   I   seen   them?      Yes;   looking   with   dreaming
  eyes;   I   have   found   them   sitting   under   the   olives;   in   their   grave;   strong;
  antique beautyEtruscan gods!〃
  In Italy she watches the faces of the monks; and at one moment longs
  to attain to their peace by renunciation; longs for Nirvana; 〃then; when one
  comes out again into the hot sunshine that warms one's blood; and sees the
  eager hurrying faces of men and women in the street; dramatic faces over
  which the disturbing experiences of life have passed and left their symbols;
  one's heart thrills up into one's throat。            No; no; no; a thousand times no!
  how can one deliberately renounce this coloured; unquiet; fiery human life
  of   the   earth?〃    And;   all   the   time;   her   subtle   criticism   is   alert;   and   this
  woman   of   the   East   marvels   at   the   women   of   the   West;   〃the   beautiful
  worldly   women   of   the   West;〃   whom   she   sees   walking   in   the   Cascine;
  〃taking   the   air   so   consciously  attractive   in   their  brilliant   toilettes;   in   the
  brilliant     coquetry      of   their    manner!〃        She      finds    them     〃a    little
  incomprehensible;〃          〃profound      artists   in   all  the   subtle    intricacies    of
  fascination;〃   and   asks   if   these   〃incalculable   frivolities   and   vanities   and
  coquetries and caprices〃 are; to us; an essential part of their charm?                    And
  she watches them with amusement as they flutter about her; petting her as
  if she were a nice child; a child or a toy; not dreaming that she is saying to
  herself     sorrowfully:      〃How      utterly    empty    their   lives   must    be   of  all
  spiritual beauty IF they are nothing more than they appear to be。〃
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  THE GOLD