登陆注册
18888900000012

第12章 A PURPLE RHODODENDRON(1)

The purple rhododendron is rare.

Up in the Gap here, Bee Rock, hung out over Roaring Rock, blossoms with it--as a gray cloud purples with the sunrise. This rock was tossed lightly on edge when the earth was young, and stands vertical. To get the flowers you climb the mountain to one side, and, balancing on the rock's thin edge, slip down by roots and past rattlesnake dens till you hang out over the water and reach for them. To avoid snakes it is best to go when it is cool, at daybreak.

I know but one other place in this southwest corner of Virginia where there is another bush of purple rhododendron, and one bush only is there.

This hangs at the throat of a peak not far away, whose ageless gray head is bent over a ravine that sinks like a spear thrust into the side of the mountain. Swept only by high wind and eagle wings as this is, I yet knew one man foolhardy enough to climb to it for a flower. He brought one blossom down: and to this day I do not know that it was not the act of a coward;yes, though Grayson did it, actually smiling all the way from peak to ravine, and though he was my best friend --best loved then and since. I believe he was the strangest man I have ever known, and I say this with thought;for his eccentricities were sincere. In all he did I cannot remember having even suspected anything theatrical but once.

We were all Virginians or Kentuckians at the Gap, and Grayson was a Virginian. You might have guessed that he was a Southerner from his voice and from the way he spoke of women --but no more. Otherwise, he might have been a Moor, except for his color, which was about the only racial characteristic he had. He had been educated abroad and, after the English habit, had travelled everywhere. And yet I can imagine no more lonely way between the eternities than the path Grayson trod alone.

He came to the Gap in the early days, and just why he came I never knew. He had studied the iron question a long time, he told me, and what I thought reckless speculation was, it seems, deliberate judgment to him. His money ``in the dirt,'' as the phrase was, Grayson got him a horse and rode the hills and waited. He was intimate with nobody. Occasionally he would play poker with us and sometimes he drank a good deal, but liquor never loosed his tongue. At poker his face told as little as the back of his cards, and he won more than admiration--even from the Kentuckians, who are artists at the game;but the money went from a free hand, and, after a diversion like this, he was apt to be moody and to keep more to himself than ever. Every fortnight or two he would disappear, always over Sunday. In three or four days he would turn up again, black with brooding, and then he was the last man to leave the card-table or he kept away from it altogether. Where he went nobody knew; and he was not the man anybody would question.

One night two of us Kentuckians were sitting in the club, and from a home paper I read aloud the rumored engagement of a girl we both knew--who was famous for beauty in the Bluegrass, as was her mother before her and the mother before her--to an unnamed Virginian. Grayson sat near, smoking a pipe; and when I read the girl's name I saw him take the meerschaum from his lips, and I felt his eyes on me. It was a mystery how, but I knew at once that Grayson was the man. He sought me out after that and seemed to want to make friends. I was willing, or, rather he made me more than willing; for he was irresistible to me, as I imagine he would have been to anybody. We got to walking together and riding together at night, and we were soon rather intimate; but for a long time he never so much as spoke the girl's name. Indeed, he kept away from the Bluegrass for nearly two months; but when he did go he stayed a fortnight.

This time he came for me as soon as he got back to the Gap. It was just before midnight, and we went as usual back of Imboden Hill, through moon-dappled beeches, and Grayson turned off into the woods where there was no path, both of us silent. We rode through tremulous, shining leaves--Grayson's horse choosing a way for himself--and, threshing through a patch of high, strong weeds, we circled past an amphitheatre of deadened trees whose crooked arms were tossed out into the moonlight, and halted on the spur. The moon was poised over Morris's farm;South Fork was shining under us like a loop of gold, the mountains lay about in tranquil heaps, and the moon-mist rose luminous between them. There Grayson turned to me with an eager light in his eyes that I had never seen before.

``This has a new beauty to-night!''

he said; and then ``I told her about you, and she said that she used to know you--well.'' I was glad my face was in shadow--I could hardly keep back a brutal laugh--and Grayson, unseeing, went on to speak of her as I had never heard any man speak of any woman. In the end, he said that she had just promised to be his wife. I answered nothing.

Other men, I knew, had said that with the same right, perhaps, and had gone from her to go back no more.

And I was one of them. Grayson had met her at White Sulphur five years before, and had loved her ever since.

She had known it from the first, he said, and I guessed then what was going to happen to him. I marvelled, listening to the man, for it was the star of constancy in her white soul that was most lustrous to him--and while Iwondered the marvel became a commonplace.

Did not every lover think his loved one exempt from the frailty that names other women? There is no ideal of faith or of purity that does not live in countless women to-day. I believe that; but could I not recall one friend who walked with Divinity through pine woods for one immortal spring, and who, being sick to death, was quite finished --learning her at last? Did I not know lovers who believed sacred to themselves, in the name of love, lips that had been given to many another without it? And now did I not know--but I knew too much, and to Grayson I said nothing.

同类推荐
  • 山家绪余集

    山家绪余集

    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。
  • 五君咏五首

    五君咏五首

    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。
  • 浩然斋词话

    浩然斋词话

    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。
  • Some Short Stories

    Some Short Stories

    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。
  • 香宋杂记

    香宋杂记

    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
  • La Grande Breteche

    La Grande Breteche

    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。
  • 时代夹缝中的末代魔法师

    时代夹缝中的末代魔法师

    魔法是远古的传说,信仰是当道的炸鸡,科学是未来的潮流。神殿当道……,科学抬头……,王权并立,魔法被当成了神话,魔法师消声匿迹,一个小小魔法师,正在夹缝里求生存,他将掩没在时代的洪流?亦或带动起魔法科学?重新创立魔法时代?来到卡诺萨,末代魔法师的故事即将展开……
  • 大叔,不可以

    大叔,不可以

    季云姿这辈子最悲剧的事情就是,被自己的亲姐姐抢走了相恋三年的未婚夫萧睿。被狗男女逼得走头无路,季云姿咬牙,做了一个大胆的决定,她要嫁给萧睿的小叔!她要赶在两狗男女跟前结婚,让他们每天叫自己小婶婶!膈应死他们!可萧睿的小叔萧宸是什么人呢?高大英俊,身材性感,目光里总是充满着无人能及的自信。二十八岁就上了福布斯排行榜的人,怎么会看上她这么一个没胸没屁股的小女人?
  • 独宠:孤的紫宸后

    独宠:孤的紫宸后

    她一直以为她在这个世界会就这么憋屈的活着,然后老去,死去,但是某天,发现竟然有人代替她真正的身份活着,占着她的夫君和孩儿,活在世人景仰的荣贵的花簇锦团里,而她却像污泥一般,遭受着世人的嫌弃与践踏……某日,回归之后受尽万千宠爱的她问道:“陛下……你怎么能允许她在你身边?”他回:“不过是背影有些似你,你离开孤的时候,孤,连背影都没来得及看到。”————【爽版简介】他酸了:孤的空间与皇后的空间为邻,皇后怎么不过来看孤?她傲娇:有什么好看的,我现在要什么有什么,各种高级丹药、高级灵兽、高级法宝……他怒:儿子在我这里!她笑:随意啊,你带大了再还给我小太子探头:你带大了要还给母后……
  • 复仇三公主的异能死亡爱恋

    复仇三公主的异能死亡爱恋

    她们原本那么美好,却被那突如其来的变故打到遍体鳞伤,十年了,她们哭过,笑过,冷漠过。只为十年后的今天,她们全新的蜕变,却遇上了他们。一切都在转动,谁会最终取得胜利?
  • 漫步仙侠世界

    漫步仙侠世界

    叶辰是个幸运的家伙,作为二十一世纪的新青年,许多别人想都不敢想的事,他都做过。锁妖塔前,他曾提剑斩邪剑仙;蜀山之巅,他曾一剑西来灭血魔;西湖岸边,他曾剑劈雷峰塔;他去过《诛仙》、踏破《风云》也留恋过《秦时明月》...........当他回首之时,他已经忘记自己见证了多少世界的沧海桑田,却发现这只是一个局,而他只是局中人?!
  • 无境修仙

    无境修仙

    修仙是无数人梦寐都求不来的,有人为了长生不死,有人为了高高在上,有人为了纵欲四海。而北凌却是为了看清那高高在上之后是什么?穿越少年偶与身死的富家少爷融合重生,凭借逆天的青铜古钟,走向一条巅峰的修仙之路!这是一个起始于红尘中,向往自由自在,不死不灭,追寻那山的外面是什么的故事……
  • 逃往初夏的爱

    逃往初夏的爱

    他们的爱情,开始于初夏……或许是上天注定的遇见,在浪漫的西餐厅里,他们以别开生面的方式相遇了。她是新来打工的小员工,他是谎称为新员工的西餐厅老板,这样的相遇充满了戏剧化的色彩。在日渐的相处中,感情的种子慢慢发芽,不知何时就长成了参天的模样。
  • 鬼族史诗

    鬼族史诗

    他是十方三界之王,还是十方三界的棋子?身边的鱼人爱他,以死相鉴,他待之以师姐;鱼人女王以鱼人之海相托终生,他一笑摇头;他毕生追求的,为何总是那个异族的女子?预言师说:这是宿命。宿命?为何宿命?他不信。于是,他挥师、他征战、他征服、他称王……多少灵魂的爱恨情仇在他的铁骑下粉墨登场又烟消云散,他从未停下。虽为亡灵,他却征服人族世界、踏平鱼人之海、在暗黑大陆开疆拓土、在天空之城大败鸟人一族、辗转古生一界,最后问鼎神域。但他问鼎的,并非是神域之王的宝座和美名。当他最终得偿所愿的时候,他才明白,原来,不信宿命,其实也是宿命的一种。站在高高的往生殿,他终日仰首望着虚空。虚空上,有个女子,在神域之巅,终日俯首下望,望着暗黑大陆,望着那个亡灵,在往生之巅。
  • 唐风今何在

    唐风今何在

    “九天阊闾开宫殿,万国衣冠拜冕旒”前世他是长安城里的纨绔子弟,睡枕美人臂,醉尝美人唇,顺便带几个狗腿子欺负下良家妇女,但一心杀敌报国,战死在铁血沙场上。当他重生在一千二百年之后,面对温柔善良的美丽小姐姐,冷艳如花的女律师,对他暗暗爱慕的高中校花……以及形形色色的暧昧诱惑,唐风淡淡的道:“美女,我来了!”【更新】每日2-3章,从不断更。