登陆注册
5361100000013

第13章

"My dear lady," reassured her the Minor Poet, "do not be afraid.No one regards that poem with more reverence than do I.You can have but small conception what a help it is to me also.I, too, so often read it to myself; and when-- We understand.As one who turns his back on scenes of riot to drink the moonlight in quiet ways, I go to it for sweetness and for peace.So much do I admire the poem, Inaturally feel desire and curiosity to meet its author, to know him.

I should delight, drawing him aside from the crowded room, to grasp him by the hand, to say to him: 'My dear--my very dear Mr.Minor Poet, I am so glad to meet you! I would I could tell you how much your beautiful work has helped me.This, my dear sir--this is indeed privilege!' But I can picture so vividly the bored look with which he would receive my gush.I can imagine the contempt with which he, the pure liver, would regard me did he know me--me, the liver of the fool's hot days.""A short French story I once read somewhere," I said, "rather impressed me.A poet or dramatist--I am not sure which--had married the daughter of a provincial notary.There was nothing particularly attractive about her except her dot.He had run through his own small fortune and was in some need.She worshipped him and was, as he used to boast to his friends, the ideal wife for a poet.She cooked admirably--a useful accomplishment during the first half-dozen years of their married life; and afterwards, when fortune came to him, managed his affairs to perfection, by her care and economy keeping all worldly troubles away from his study door.An ideal Hausfrau, undoubtedly, but of course no companion for our poet.So they went their ways; till, choosing as in all things the right moment, when she could best be spared, the good lady died and was buried.

"And here begins the interest of the story, somewhat late.One article of furniture, curiously out of place among the rich appointments of their fine hotel, the woman had insisted on retaining, a heavy, clumsily carved oak desk her father had once used in his office, and which he had given to her for her own as a birthday present back in the days of her teens.

"You must read the story for yourselves if you would enjoy the subtle sadness that surrounds it, the delicate aroma of regret through which it moves.The husband finding after some little difficulty the right key, fits it into the lock of the bureau.As a piece of furniture, plain, solid, squat, it has always jarred upon his artistic sense.She too, his good, affectionate Sara, had been plain, solid, a trifle squat.Perhaps that was why the poor woman had clung so obstinately to the one thing in the otherwise perfect house that was quite out of place there.Ah, well! she is gone now, the good creature.And the bureau--no, the bureau shall remain.

Nobody will need to come into this room, no one ever did come there but the woman herself.Perhaps she had not been altogether so happy as she might have been.A husband less intellectual--one from whom she would not have lived so far apart--one who could have entered into her simple, commonplace life! it might have been better for both of them.He draws down the lid, pulls out the largest drawer.

It is full of manuscripts, folded and tied neatly with ribbons once gay, now faded.He thinks at first they are his own writings--things begun and discarded, reserved by her with fondness.She thought so much of him, the good soul! Really, she could not have been so dull as he had deemed her.The power to appreciate rightly--this, at least, she must have possessed.He unties the ribbon.

No, the writing is her own, corrected, altered, underlined.He opens a second, a third.Then with a smile he sits down to read.

What can they be like, these poems, these stories? He laughs, smoothing the crumpled paper, foreseeing the trite commonness, the shallow sentiment.The poor child! So she likewise would have been a litterateure.Even she had her ambition, her dream.

"The sunshine climbs the wall behind him, creeps stealthily across the ceiling of the room, slips out softly by the window, leaving him alone.All these years he had been living with a fellow poet.They should have been comrades, and they had never spoken.Why had she hidden herself? Why had she left him, never revealing herself?

Years ago, when they were first married--he remembers now--she had slipped little blue-bound copy-books into his pocket, laughing, blushing, asking him to read them.How could he have guessed? Of course, he had forgotten them.Later, they had disappeared again;it had never occurred to him to think.Often in the earlier days she had tried to talk to him about his work.Had he but looked into her eyes, he might have understood.But she had always been so homely-seeming, so good.Who would have suspected? Then suddenly the blood rushes into his face.What must have been her opinion of his work? All these years he had imagined her the amazed devotee, uncomprehending but admiring.He had read to her at times, comparing himself the while with Moliere reading to his cook.What right had she to play this trick upon him? The folly of it! The pity of it! He would have been so glad of her.""What becomes, I wonder," mused the Philosopher, "of the thoughts that are never spoken? We know that in Nature nothing is wasted;the very cabbage is immortal, living again in altered form.Athought published or spoken we can trace, but such must only be a small percentage.It often occurs to me walking down the street.

同类推荐
  • 英云梦传

    英云梦传

    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。
  • 佛说月光菩萨经

    佛说月光菩萨经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说帝释所问经

    佛说帝释所问经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 来鹤亭诗

    来鹤亭诗

    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。
  • 灵瑞禅师岩华集

    灵瑞禅师岩华集

    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
  • 丹东看守所的故事

    丹东看守所的故事

    本书是荣获国家“三个一百”原创图书出版工程奖、公安部金盾文学奖的图书。
  • 答王无功九日

    答王无功九日

    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。
  • 快穿之最佳灰姑娘

    快穿之最佳灰姑娘

    我肤白貌美,还有大长腿。我身娇体软,且身轻如燕。我声若黄莺,也姿态翩然。但是我,没有钱……我不是那一朵遗世好独立的盛世白莲花,而是总会遇上帅气多金男主的——灰姑娘!当气运被夺走,夫君被抢去,还有什么可以阻挡的了坚强正义而善良的灰姑娘倾尽一切的逆袭呢?阿芙:我尽量……不黑化!系统:信你才有鬼!
  • 300英雄次元战争

    300英雄次元战争

    使用随机英雄卡,召唤英雄或成为英雄吧!1~6卷是连续章节剧情,从第7卷开始的每一卷都是不同主角的独立章节,不需要了解前章节也能看懂后续章节,不会影响阅读体验。看不懂第1卷的读者们,可以尝试从第7卷开始观看哦(~ ̄▽ ̄)~另外,感谢各位的点击和阅读~\(≧▽≦)/~
  • 换个角度看世界,人生可以不忧虑

    换个角度看世界,人生可以不忧虑

    我们在游戏里无所不能,是拯救世界的勇士,在现实生活中,却无法一呼百应;我们可以考出数一数二的成绩,却不敢在众人面前大胆演讲;我们对各种电子产品无师自通,有时候却做不好洗衣服、铺床这样基本的家务……我们的青春受尽呵护,当困难和挫折来临时,我们能否顺利应对、完美渡过?未来的成就不单单取决于现在的学习成绩。哈佛大学心理学博士丹尼尔指出,一个人成功的关键影响,百分之八十来自情商,高情商由自信、沟通能力、人际关系、领导力和热情的态度等构成。面对开放的竞争环境,专业知识技术显然不够。
  • 到南方去

    到南方去

    老雕和男孩第二天一清早就出发了。高尔果想,这一天他一定能够飞到维斯特尔堡登。在飞行过程中,他忽然听见男孩自言自语地说道,“现在他们穿越的这个地方是无人生活的地方。”他们的脚下是南麦德尔帕德。那里除了一片荒芜的森林,简直什么东西也没有。但是,当雕听见男孩这样说的时候,却立刻喊了起来:“在瑞典北部这个地方,森林就是人们的土地。”
  • 魅王爆宠:逆天小医妃

    魅王爆宠:逆天小医妃

    她是阮家臭名昭著的废物,人人厌恶,唯独权倾朝野的逸王殿下对她誓死纠缠,倾心相待。殊不知世人眼拙,废物实为逆天神医!他是她的夫,欺他就是辱她,害他就是伤她,人若辱她、伤她,她必除之后快!龙有逆鳞,狼有暗刺,她就是他的命,谁要是动了他的命,他定灭其满门,诛其九族!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 四十四家租客

    四十四家租客

    你知道四十四家租客吗?那是一栋神奇的饭店。我们从古老的阁楼中找到了一本日记,上面记载着日记的主人光怪陆离的饭店生活。这里是,四十四家租客
  • 中国大军事家的故事

    中国大军事家的故事

    中华民族是一个有悠久历史的文明古国,在这个漫漫的历史长河中,为了中华民族的发展和兴旺,一批批优秀人物前赴后继,不懈努力,才换来了我们今天的幸福生活。
  • 宠物喂养小窍门

    宠物喂养小窍门

    宠物从幼年期到配种期喂养的注意事项,如何调配最适合宠物的食物。