登陆注册
5383700000177

第177章 A CHECK(9)

A week or two more would see him at the end of his money. He had no lessons now, and could not write; from his novel nothing was to be expected. He might apply again to his brother, but such dependence was unjust and unworthy. And why should he struggle to preserve a life which had no prospect but of misery?

It was in the hours following his encounter with Whelpdale that he first knew the actual desire of death, the simple longing for extinction. One must go far in suffering before the innate will-to-live is thus truly overcome; weariness of bodily anguish may induce this perversion of the instincts; less often, that despair of suppressed emotion which had fallen upon Harold. Through the night he kept his thoughts fixed on death in its aspect of repose, of eternal oblivion. And herein he had found solace.

The next night it was the same. Moving about among common needs and occupations, he knew not a moment's cessation of heart-ache, but when he lay down in the darkness a hopeful summons whispered to him. Night, which had been the worst season of his pain, had now grown friendly; it came as an anticipation of the sleep that is everlasting.

A few more days, and he was possessed by a calm of spirit such as he had never known. His resolve was taken, not in a moment of supreme conflict, but as the result of a subtle process by which his imagination had become in love with death. Turning from contemplation of life's one rapture, he looked with the same intensity of desire to a state that had neither fear nor hope.

One afternoon he went to the Museum Reading-room, and was busy for a few minutes in consultation of a volume which he took from the shelves of medical literature. On his way homeward he entered two or three chemists' shops. Something of which he had need could be procured only in very small quantities; but repetition of his demand in different places supplied him sufficiently. When he reached his room, he emptied the contents of sundry little bottles into one larger, and put this in his pocket. Then he wrote rather a long letter, addressed to his brother at Liverpool.

It had been a beautiful day, and there wanted still a couple of hours before the warm, golden sunlight would disappear. Harold stood and looked round his room. As always, it presented a neat, orderly aspect, but his eye caught sight of a volume which stood upside down, and this fault--particularly hateful to a bookish man--he rectified. He put his blotting-pad square on the table, closed the lid of the inkstand, arranged his pens. Then he took his hat and stick, locked the door behind him, and went downstairs. At the foot he spoke to his landlady, and told her that he should not return that night. As soon as possible after leaving the house he posted his letter.

His direction was westward; walking at a steady, purposeful pace, with cheery countenance and eyes that gave sign of pleasure as often as they turned to the sun-smitten clouds, he struck across Kensington Gardens, and then on towards Fulham, where he crossed the Thames to Putney. The sun was just setting; he paused a few moments on the bridge, watching the river with a quiet smile, and enjoying the splendour of the sky. Up Putney Hill he walked slowly; when he reached the top it was growing dark, but an unwonted effect in the atmosphere caused him to turn and look to the east. An exclamation escaped his lips, for there before him was the new-risen moon, a perfect globe, vast and red. He gazed at it for a long time.

When the daylight had entirely passed, he went forward on to the heath, and rambled, as if idly, to a secluded part, where trees and bushes made a deep shadow under the full moon. It was still quite warm, and scarcely a breath of air moved among the reddening leaves.

Sure at length that he was remote from all observation, he pressed into a little copse, and there reclined on the grass, leaning against the stem of a tree. The moon was now hidden from him, but by looking upward he could see its light upon a long, faint cloud, and the blue of the placid sky. His mood was one of ineffable peace. Only thoughts of beautiful things came into his mind; he had reverted to an earlier period of life, when as yet no mission of literary realism had been imposed upon him, and when his passions were still soothed by natural hope. The memory of his friend Reardon was strongly present with him, but of Amy he thought only as of that star which had just come into his vision above the edge of dark foliage--beautiful, but infinitely remote.

Recalling Reardon's voice, it brought to him those last words whispered by his dying companion. He remembered them now:

We are such stuff As dreams are made on, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep.

同类推荐
  • The Rise of Roscoe Paine

    The Rise of Roscoe Paine

    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。
  • 汉皋诗话

    汉皋诗话

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • RUTH

    RUTH

    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。
  • 達海叢書·附錄

    達海叢書·附錄

    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。
  • Love Songs

    Love Songs

    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
  • 吕氏春秋全鉴

    吕氏春秋全鉴

    本书是先秦的一部重要典籍,杂家的代表作之一。全书分为十二纪、八览、六论三个部分,共计一百六十篇文章,其内容融合了儒、道、墨、法、兵、农、纵横、阴阳等各家思想,是研究先秦文化极其珍贵的资料。本书萃取了整本书最精彩的篇章,在原典下加注释和译文,力求以全新的解读方式和通俗易懂的语言去接近《吕氏春秋》,以便于您更好地品读国学精萃,感知先贤智慧。
  • 距离产生美(短篇小说)

    距离产生美(短篇小说)

    到哪里了?一个声音刺在翟青云的耳膜里。他边接电话边看着天空,不知何故,乌云越来越多。马上就到!马上!翟青云再不耐烦,也不敢得罪她,否则,今天晚上别想睡了。为什么这么慢?声音又尖利又刺耳,像催命符一样可怕。我怎么知道?又不是我开车!头皮“咋咋咋”地发麻,翟青云有种想跳出车窗外的冲动。“嘎吱”一声急刹车,像天上传来的劈雷,迅雷不及掩耳之势劈得翟青云两眼一黑,下意识紧紧抱住前排座位。妈呀,差点把急得像热锅上的蚂蚁的乘客翟青云吓死。
  • 万古第一天骄

    万古第一天骄

    浩渺天地,天骄当世,群雄并起。少年江枫,因一块龙血魂玉,被视作天煞孤星,弃于妖兽山脉。然,天不亡我,一朝崛起,制霸五域。一人一剑,败天骄,压群雄,成就绝世神君之名。
  • 邪皇的弃后

    邪皇的弃后

    注意:我的读者群都散了<p>若是对我的文感兴趣,可以单Q:867865347
  • 杀人的紫丁香

    杀人的紫丁香

    一九八一年的初夏,天气特别地好。亚得里亚海温暖的季风轻掠着壮美的罗马古城。这一天中午,圣彼得教堂的洪钟敲响十二点的时候,一辆崭新的豪华奔驰小轿车驶进了罗马市郊一座叫作“橄榄林”的别墅。通过长长的甬道,小轿车停在别墅主楼跟前。紧跟着从车里下来两个人,先下来的是别墅的男主人奥古斯特,后面的是他的保镖瓦尔蒂尼。奥古斯特·朗达是个将近五十岁的壮年汉子,生得身材高大,虎背熊腰。
  • 都市诡话3

    都市诡话3

    无论伊氏兄妹搬到哪个城市,死亡诅咒总是如影随行,他们能预知哪些人将会在诡异事件中死去,却也将自己拖入了死咒包围的深渊。画中恶鬼索命、随意扭曲的变形人、吃人的五角怪屋、海中爬出的灵瞳恶女、能把活人拉进去杀死的恐怖片、让人一梦不醒的恶灵、迷失的异次元公寓,惊悚恐怖的事情接二连三发生,他们用脆弱的身体拼命抵抗,这些无助的人们惊声尖叫,他们想要活下去! 然而,眼睛会欺骗他们,环境会迷惑他们,头脑会误导他们。人怕鬼,鬼玩人,他们一次次眼睁睁地看着被诅咒的人坠入死亡深渊。到底怎样才能活下去!
  • 银灯笼

    银灯笼

    吴文君,女,浙江海宁人,浙江省作家协会会员,上海首届作家研究生班学员,鲁迅文学院第十七届中青年作家高研班学员,作品发表在《北京文学》、《大家》、《收获》、《上海文学》、《中国作家》、《钟山》、《山花》等多家文学期刊。
  • 人类星外根据地:太空站(神秘的太空世界丛书)

    人类星外根据地:太空站(神秘的太空世界丛书)

    太空是宇宙存在的形式,对人类而言既是探索的对象,也是未来通向其他星球的通道,更是空间诸多能力的集中地。根据百度百科定义:“太空”是由无极元和能量相互作用而构成的、物质的,存在时空概念并存在于宇宙内部的一个有限的,有着开始和结束的整体事件。
  • 凤帝契天下

    凤帝契天下

    年幼帝女流落地球末法时代,被妹妹妒忌而生恨推下海重生于少年时代。帝女帝心天生九窍,觉醒始祖血脉天赋——九巧玲珑心。帝血可契万物,看她如何改变命运,立于万族之上!
  • 公仆的嬗变(马克思主义与当代中国)

    公仆的嬗变(马克思主义与当代中国)

    本书系统梳理了马克思主义的公仆理论,准确地界定了社会公仆范畴的内涵和外延,清晰地勾画了公仆嬗变的历史轨迹,深入地分析了原始社会公仆特点与职能,揭示了阶级社会公仆异化的条件和实质,展示了中国特色社会主义当代公仆的风采,辩证地指出了公仆的嬗变是一个否定之否定合乎逻辑的历史过程,深入剖析了社会主义一定时期仍然存在的社会公仆嬗变社会主人的土壤和条件,并提出了预防为主、标本兼治的应对措施。本书适应我国新时期廉政建设和反腐败斗争的需要,丰富了马克思主义公仆思想的理论宝库,归纳和升华了马克思主义公仆思想最新理论成果,对新时期廉政建设具有一定的实践价值。