登陆注册
5152800000066

第66章

I have said already that but for the hazard of a journey to Tahiti I should doubtless never have written this book.It is thither that after many wanderings Charles Strickland came, and it is there that he painted the pictures on which his fame most securely rests.I suppose no artist achieves completely the realisation of the dream that obsesses him, and Strickland, harassed incessantly by his struggle with technique, managed, perhaps, less than others to express the vision that he saw with his mind's eye; but in Tahiti the circumstances were favourable to him; he found in his surroundings the accidents necessary for his inspiration to become effective, and his later pictures give at least a suggestion of what he sought.They offer the imagination something new and strange.It is as though in this far country his spirit, that had wandered disembodied, seeking a tenement, at last was able to clothe itself in flesh.To use the hackneyed phrase, here he found himself.

It would seem that my visit to this remote island should immediately revive my interest in Strickland, but the work I was engaged in occupied my attention to the exclusion of something that was irrelevant, and it was not till I had been there some days that I even remembered his connection with it.After all, I had not seen him for fifteen years, and it was nine since he died.But I think my arrival at Tahiti would have driven out of my head matters of much more immediate importance to me, and even after a week I found it not easy to order myself soberly.I remember that on my first morning I awoke early, and when I came on to the terrace of the hotel no one was stirring.I wandered round to the kitchen, but it was locked, and on a bench outside it a native boy was sleeping.There seemed no chance of breakfast for some time, so I sauntered down to the water-front.The Chinamen were already busy in their shops.The sky had still the pallor of dawn, and there was a ghostly silence on the lagoon.Ten miles away the island of Murea, like some high fastness of the Holy Grail, guarded its mystery.

I did not altogether believe my eyes.The days that had passed since I left Wellington seemed extraordinary and unusual.Wellington is trimand neat and English; it reminds you of a seaport town on the South Coast.And for three days afterwards the sea was stormy.Gray clouds chased one another across the sky.Then the wind dropped, and the sea was calm and blue.The Pacific is more desolate than other seas; its spaces seem more vast, and the most ordinary journey upon it has somehow the feeling of an adventure.The air you breathe is an elixir which prepares you for the unexpected.Nor is it vouchsafed to man in the flesh to know aught that more nearly suggests the approach to the golden realms of fancy than the approach to Tahiti.Murea, the sister isle, comes into view in rocky splendour, rising from the desert sea mysteriously, like the unsubstantial fabric of a magic wand.With its jagged outline it is like a Monseratt of the Pacific, and you may imagine that there Polynesian knights guard with strange rites mysteries unholy for men to know.The beauty of the island is unveiled as diminishing distance shows you in distincter shape its lovely peaks, but it keeps its secret as you sail by, and, darkly inviolable, seems to fold itself together in a stony, inaccessible grimness.It would not surprise you if, as you came near seeking for an opening in the reef, it vanished suddenly from your view, and nothing met your gaze but the blue loneliness of the Pacific.

Tahiti is a lofty green island, with deep folds of a darker green, in which you divine silent valleys; there is mystery in their sombre depths, down which murmur and plash cool streams, and you feel that in those umbrageous places life from immemorial times has been led according to immemorial ways.Even here is something sad and terrible.But the impression is fleeting, and serves only to give a greater acuteness to the enjoyment of the moment.It is like the sadness which you may see in the jester's eyes when a merry company is laughing at his sallies; his lips smile and his jokes are gayer because in the communion of laughter he finds himself more intolerably alone.For Tahiti is smiling and friendly; it is like a lovely woman graciously prodigal of her charm and beauty; and nothing can be more conciliatory than the entrance into the harbour at Papeete.The schooners moored to the quay are trim and neat, the little town along the bay is white and urbane, and the flamboyants, scarlet against the blue sky, flaunt their colour like a cry of passion.They aresensual with an unashamed violence that leaves you breathless.And the crowd that throngs the wharf as the steamer draws alongside is gay and debonair; it is a noisy, cheerful, gesticulating crowd.It is a sea of brown faces.You have an impression of coloured movement against the flaming blue of the sky.Everything is done with a great deal of bustle, the unloading of the baggage, the examination of the customs; and everyone seems to smile at you. It is very hot. The colour dazzles you.

同类推荐
  • 洞真太上八素真经修习功业妙诀

    洞真太上八素真经修习功业妙诀

    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。
  • 利州北佛龛前重于去

    利州北佛龛前重于去

    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。
  • Alfred Tennyson

    Alfred Tennyson

    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。
  • 袁中郎全集

    袁中郎全集

    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。
  • 憨休禅师敲空遗响

    憨休禅师敲空遗响

    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
  • 洞真金房度命绿字回年三华宝曤内真上经

    洞真金房度命绿字回年三华宝曤内真上经

    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。
  • 大王莫怕

    大王莫怕

    土里土气的山村野丫头木小多无意中结识了要去中南山修炼的高傲贵公子夜泽天,一路发生了很多搞笑无厘头的事情,到了中南山之后又经过多层选拔终于留下成为南派入室弟子……与尘冠希,许仙,沉鱼落雁等人成为师兄妹,其中爆笑不断,欢喜多多……(有心脏病的亲们慎入哦!笑残概不负责。)另外随着时间的累积,小丫头有和小王爷产生了怎样的情愫呢,大家拭目以待吧
  • 曾小芹的耳朵

    曾小芹的耳朵

    周大辛多迟回来,都带着老婆曾小芹,项母眼里,曾小芹是周大辛忠实影子。周大辛曾小芹是一对夫妻,是项母家房客。项母住处是碧水城最后一片老街区,老街区老住户,死的死,搬的搬了,剩下像项母项老伯这样恋旧老人守望老街区老宅最后岁月。老街区腾下的老宅和空房租给来谋生的乡下人与外乡人。项母女儿项叶嫁人,儿子独立门户,空出楼上俩房间,一间堆杂物,一间租给周大辛曾小芹夫妻俩。他们早出晚归,无论多晚,项母都留门。门是老式双合大门,上下安装石臼,推拉门扇,咿呀作响,古老而悠远。两口子有时三更归来五更出门,甚至加班通宵不归,真真是铁打的身板累不垮。
  • 九十九号交易所

    九十九号交易所

    【你想要财富吗?想要地位吗?想要权势吗?那么进来交易吧。爱太痛,恨太苦,痴太悲,缠太伤。交易吧,用你最纯粹最炽烈的情来交易。】——九十九号交易所这世间最浓烈的爱,最苦涩的恨,最执着的痴,最无望的缠……到后来,都是一缕云烟,一抔黄土,一片孤魂。再醒来,她变回了她,又不是她了。守着九十九号交易所,看尽人间百态,交易一切的爱恨痴缠。无论是爱情,亲情,友情——这世间一切纯真炽热的情感,她都愿意交易,她也只交易这一项。金钱、地位、权势,你想要的,拿你最纯粹的情来交易,你准备好了吗? PS: 1.非正常快穿,故事长短不定 2.各故事基本无关联 3.佛系更新,谨慎入坑
  • 法界观披云集

    法界观披云集

    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。
  • 倒插门

    倒插门

    他相亲的第一眼就看差了。第一眼见她,就像他家里那只洋瓷盆上的洋美人,在水中晃悠,晃起他眼光深处的几分暧昧。他有些晕。资产阶级小姐原来真是这样的,这一趟来对了,我!他脸上的疙瘩红辣辣的。那个洋瓷盆儿是祁红家的,拿到学校当资产阶级批判。盆底画着的女人,素花绸旗袍,粉红脸儿,粉红胳膊腿,他看得心惊肉跳,跳到最后,竟然做了一件天大的事。资产阶级小姐敢情都会在水里飘悠。老姨介绍这个对象时说:成分高点,听村里人叫她家资本家。
  • 续墨客挥犀

    续墨客挥犀

    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。
  • 出轨王妃

    出轨王妃

    王妃,我并不稀罕,不当也罢。如果坐上这个位置,要牺牲自我,尊严,个性,对不起,办不到。不就是一个男人嘛!要我低三下四去求他,讨好他,迎合他,抱歉,我也很高傲。一曲艳舞,我只想吸引我的相公而已,却不想惹来后宫砖头无数,下一秒,什么《女德》,〈女诫>,反正是一大堆古代女子丛书都搬到我房里来了.拜托,那个皇帝比我父亲还老,我会和他有什么什么?就算有,我也会和那些即帅气又年轻的皇子来一段好不好。勾引的计划是完成了,可请问相公,你也用不着这么性急嘛!我现在心里想的,嘴里念的,眼睛看的,甚至是手中摸的,只有相公你呢!哼,如果不是为了让你尽快休了本姑娘,本姑娘才不会牺牲色相,以身相诱呢!痕儿的新文,希望亲们喜欢,如果喜欢,就别忘了给痕儿投张票哦!痕儿做了一个女主出轨的调查,请亲们踊跃发表自已的看法...下面是痕儿已完结文,呵亲们有兴趣可以欣赏一下!〈出轨王妃〉:〈冷宫晚妃〉:〈丫环皇后〉:〈罂粟皇后〉:〈总裁的玩物〉:〈将军的替身小妾〉:〈皇妃---别走〉:痕儿的新文出炉了,呵,欢迎亲们去欣赏,现代文:《总裁的深度诱惑》穿越文:〈失身变弃妇〉痕儿新坑,有空的亲们去踩踩,《王妃欠调教》有兴趣的亲们可以去踩踩哦!亲们,痕儿新文,欢迎来踩,都市言情:《恶劣富少极品男》顺便推荐后妃大大超好看的精彩文文,《狂野未婚夫》呵,还有自已的新文《总裁惹不得》痕儿最新现代文,《总裁的惩罚游戏》喜欢现代都市文的亲们,记得过来踩踩哦!推荐好友一本书,《夫君十个不算多》轻松又搞笑的哦!痕儿的新文,望亲们多来踩踩,《总裁的豪夺妻》
  • 画与日记

    画与日记

    一个因患上未知死亡病,而被隔离的小镇。这里的居民,有高达百分之十的恐怖几率在成年阶段,都会莫名其妙的昏迷,直至死亡。而十六岁的穹在某天,却意外喜欢上了小镇上的同龄少女—琴,但不久后,他并未逃过十分之一的厄运,从而被带离到外界接受治疗…命运轮转下,两人之间只剩下了昔日的画与日记…
  • 黑暗之魂记事

    黑暗之魂记事

    古之有神,在黑暗中以火焰辟世,连绵缠绕万千岁月。今时,火之将熄,不死人群聚,以蝼蚁之力噬尽残存神威。继承者,愿为薪柴续火?还是化作阴魂蔽日?读者群:685799435