登陆注册
19566300000119

第119章

Ericson returned no answer.He only said--'Death will be better than life.One thing I don't like about it though,' he added, 'is the coming on of unconsciousness.I cannot bear to lose my consciousness even in sleep.It is such a terrible thing!'

'I suppose that's ane o' the reasons that we canna be content withoot a God,' responded Robert.'It's dreidfu' to think even o'

fa'in' asleep withoot some ane greater an' nearer than the me watchin' ower 't.But I'm jist sayin' ower again what I hae read in ane o' your papers, Mr.Ericson.Jist lat me luik.'

Venturing more than he had ever yet ventured, Robert rose and went to the cupboard where Ericson's papers lay.His friend did not check him.On the contrary, he took the papers from his hand, and searched for the poem indicated.

'I'm not in the way of doing this sort of thing, Robert,' he said.

'I know that,' answered Robert.

And Ericson read.

SLEEP.

Oh, is it Death that comes To have a foretaste of the whole?

To-night the planets and the stars Will glimmer through my window-bars, But will not shine upon my soul.

For I shall lie as dead, Though yet I am above the ground;All passionless, with scarce a breath, With hands of rest and eyes of death, I shall be carried swiftly round.

Or if my life should break The idle night with doubtful gleams Through mossy arches will I go, Through arches ruinous and low, And chase the true and false in dreams.

Why should I fall asleep?

When I am still upon my bed, The moon will shine, the winds will rise, And all around and through the skies The light clouds travel o'er my head.

O, busy, busy things!

Ye mock me with your ceaseless life;

For all the hidden springs will flow, And all the blades of grass will grow, When I have neither peace nor strife.

And all the long night through, The restless streams will hurry by;And round the lands, with endless roar, The white waves fall upon the shore, And bit by bit devour the dry.

Even thus, but silently, Eternity, thy tide shall flow--And side by side with every star Thy long-drawn swell shall bear me far, An idle boat with none to row.

My senses fail with sleep;

My heart beats thick; the night is noon;

And faintly through its misty folds I hear a drowsy clock that holds Its converse with the waning moon.

Oh, solemn mystery!

That I should be so closely bound With neither terror nor constraint Without a murmur of complaint, And lose myself upon such ground!

'Rubbish!' said Ericson, as he threw down the sheets, disgusted with his own work, which so often disappoints the writer, especially if he is by any chance betrayed into reading it aloud.

'Dinna say that, Mr.Ericson,' returned Robert.'Ye maunna say that.

Ye hae nae richt to lauch at honest wark, whether it be yer ain or ony ither body's.The poem noo--'

'Don't call it a poem,' interrupted Ericson.'It's not worthy of the name.'

'I will ca' 't a poem,' persisted Robert; 'for it's a poem to me, whatever it may be to you.An' hoo I ken 'at it's a poem is jist this: it opens my een like music to something I never saw afore.'

'What is that?' asked Ericson, not sorry to be persuaded that there might after all be some merit in the productions painfully despised of himself.

'Jist this: it's only whan ye dinna want to fa' asleep 'at it luiks fearsome to ye.An' maybe the fear o' death comes i' the same way:

we're feared at it 'cause we're no a'thegither ready for 't; but whan the richt time comes, it'll be as nat'ral as fa'in' asleep whan we're doonricht sleepy.Gin there be a God to ca' oor Father in heaven, I'm no thinkin' that he wad to sae mony bonny tunes pit a scraich for the hinder end.I'm thinkin', gin there be onything in 't ava--ye ken I'm no sayin', for I dinna ken--we maun jist lippen till him to dee dacent an' bonny, an' nae sic strange awfu' fash aboot it as some fowk wad mak a religion o' expeckin'.'

Ericson looked at Robert with admiration mingled with something akin to merriment.

'One would think it was your grandfather holding forth, Robert,' he said.'How came you to think of such things at your age?'

'I'm thinkin',' answered Robert, 'ye warna muckle aulder nor mysel'

whan ye took to sic things, Mr.Ericson.But, 'deed, maybe my luckie-daddie (grandfather) pat them i' my heid, for I had a heap ado wi' his fiddle for a while.She's deid noo.'

Not understanding him, Ericson began to question, and out came the story of the violins.They talked on till the last of their coals was burnt out, and then they went to bed.

Shargar had undertaken to rouse them early, that they might set out on their long walk with a long day before them.But Robert was awake before Shargar.The all but soulless light of the dreary season awoke him, and he rose and looked out.Aurora, as aged now as her loved Tithonus, peered, gray-haired and desolate, over the edge of the tossing sea, with hardly enough of light in her dim eyes to show the broken crests of the waves that rushed shorewards before the wind of her rising.Such an east wind was the right breath to issue from such a pale mouth of hopeless revelation as that which opened with dead lips across the troubled sea on the far horizon.

While he gazed, the east darkened; a cloud of hail rushed against the window; and Robert retreated to his bed.But ere he had fallen asleep, Ericson was beside him; and before he was dressed, Ericson appeared again, with his stick in his hand.They left Shargar still asleep, and descended the stairs, thinking to leave the house undisturbed.But Mrs.Fyvie was watching for them, and insisted on their taking the breakfast she had prepared.They then set out on their journey of forty miles, with half a loaf in their pockets, and money enough to get bread and cheese, and a bottle of the poorest ale, at the far-parted roadside inns.

When Shargar awoke, he wept in desolation, then crept into Robert's bed, and fell fast asleep again.

同类推荐
  • 梅花拳秘谱

    梅花拳秘谱

    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。
  • 王心斋语

    王心斋语

    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。
  • 正一修真略仪

    正一修真略仪

    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。
  • In the Shadow of the Glen

    In the Shadow of the Glen

    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。
  • My Discovery of England

    My Discovery of England

    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
  • 一生要快读的中外地理

    一生要快读的中外地理

    本书对中国和世界各国的地质、地貌、水文、气候、植被、重要名胜、主要城市、风土人情、民族文化等进行了全面的介绍。
  • 木兰溪 木兰江 木兰河

    木兰溪 木兰江 木兰河

    本书内容包括:入海口、镇海堤、三江口、宁海桥、涵坝闸、熙宁桥、木兰陂、南北洋、石马街、坝下城、虎啸潭、东西乡等。
  • 凤凰涅槃:绝世狂妃

    凤凰涅槃:绝世狂妃

    九千年的等待……稚嫩的童颜……少女的泪水。她是月紫翎,23世纪‘红羽’。也是让慕幽世界震撼的战神,亦是他等了九千年的妻子。他说:“等到了你,就不会在放手!”她冷笑:“九千年的情缘,早已消失!”
  • 祈剑默示录

    祈剑默示录

    公元2012年,玛雅末日预言开始在世界各国流传,12月21日后,预言中的末日却并未到来。然而,一次国际组织的秘密考古活动意外发现了千年前古人留下的真相。十六位超人类个体即将诞生,金刚石块中的远古意志被再次唤醒,这一切的暗示,是为救赎还是毁灭?
  • 破天之皇

    破天之皇

    宇文辰是一个修行者,在游荡中寻求机遇,寻求一点点突破的豁口。在机缘巧合下遇到了一个祭坛,这个祭坛很明显有着五个很强势的鬼魄。只要能够炼化这个祭坛,就能够控制这几个魂魄。这样的话他在修行的道路上就能迈出去很好的一步。但努力很久都无法炼化,最后准备放弃离去时,一个叫董倩倩的女子出来了,助他一臂之力,终于将其收服。从此他平凡的生活将不再平凡。
  • 倾世红颜:帝后太嚣张

    倾世红颜:帝后太嚣张

    明眸皓齿,国色天香,传说中丑如夜叉的女子竟是这般貌美!阅尽无数美女的冷峻帝王,难以自持,蠢蠢欲动。她威胁道“上官谦,你敢碰我,我让你赔上性命和江山!”他却勾唇而笑:“朕相信你有这本事,不过——朕还是要碰你。”衣衫尽落,她羞愤而落泪,心中发誓要将这个男人千刀万剐!
  • “不太好”及其他

    “不太好”及其他

    本书是一本冲击力十足的短篇小说集,故事虽然短小,但却非常深刻,堪比鸿篇巨著。这些故事并非花团锦簇、幸福永远、美人救英雄的老一套。安妮塔?瑞博肯会带你走进书中人扭曲阴暗的内心世界……如果你不轻举妄动,有可能她还会把你带回来。但是这些故事必将久久萦绕在你的脑海里。本书是作者送给小说迷最好的礼物,将为读者打开一扇崭新的大门。
  • 王妃不乖:调教小王妃

    王妃不乖:调教小王妃

    曾记,当年,秋来秋去,依旧那样唯美,秋心秋情,依旧蔓延着念想。每当回忆,那秋久殇永不忘。遇见如同一场宿命,结局早已写好。是的,她来了,他也来了,他们相遇,相爱。她离开了,心痛了,因为他说他爱她,她问他“如果我难过了,你会安慰我吗;如果我受伤了,你会陪伴我吗;如果我哭了,你会安慰我吗;如果我没安全感,你会抱着我吗;如果我失踪了,你会不顾一切地寻找我吗;如果我讨厌你了,你还会对我好吗;如果我离开了,你会为我哭得撕心裂肺吗。”他沉默了,后悔了…….其实他一直在等,只差她一个回头。他想:如果我伤你至深,只愿你莫要回头。最终,她回头了,原谅了。他们终老了。
  • 不断红尘

    不断红尘

    如果成仙需要斩断情根,那么我不成仙又如何,我王云一生为爱修仙,到了最后却要斩断情根,既然如此,我就走出一条我自己的路,踏破这天地规则,做红尘之仙。不断世间烦琐事,红尘之路悟人生……
  • 爱情雪

    爱情雪

    陆风,一个内向害羞的双子座男生,在他的高二,遇到了一个开朗的女孩——叶敏!爱情的第一眼,便是千载难逢的千里眼,他对她是一见钟情的···可是,为了高考那份梦想,他和她之间的爱情经历了太多故事!爱情如雪,凉到手心,却暖到了心田,每个人都有自己的“爱情雪”,他的爱情就是这样,经历了太多温度,直到最后,雪融化了,他才知道她是有多么重要···5年的时间赛跑,他一直在她身边,从未走远;而她大步向前,时常回头,不敢走远;一个怕跟丢,一个怕失去,这就是他和她的故事···爱情雪,错的时间遇到对的人,是一种无奈···甜到忧伤的雪,融化了一个男孩的心,温情改变了他,让他变得更加优秀···