登陆注册
19591200000013

第13章 THE FOURTH(3)

"Quite.A study of intolerable tensions, the tensions that make young people write unclean words in secret places.""Yes, we certainly ventilate and sanitate in those matters nowadays.Where nothing is concealed, nothing can explode.""On the whole I came up to adolescence pretty straight and clean," said Sir Richmond."What stands out in my memory now is this idea, of a sort of woman goddess who was very lovely and kind and powerful and wonderful.That ruled my secret imaginations as a boy, but it was very much in my mind as Igrew up."

"The mother complex," said Dr.Martineau as a passing botanist might recognize and name a flower.

Sir Richmond stared at him for a moment.

"It had not the slightest connexion with my mother or any mother or any particular woman at all.Far better to call it the goddess complex.""The connexion is not perhaps immediately visible," said the doctor.

"There was no connexion," said Sir Richmond."The women of my adolescent dreams were stripped and strong and lovely.They were great creatures.They came, it was clearly traceable, from pictures sculpture--and from a definite response in myself to their beauty.My mother had nothing whatever to do with that.The women and girls about me were fussy bunches of clothes that I am sure I never even linked with that dream world of love and worship.""Were you co-educated?"

"No.But I had a couple of sisters, one older, one younger than myself, and there were plenty of girls in my circle.Ithought some of them pretty--but that was a different affair.

I know that I didn't connect them with the idea of the loved and worshipped goddesses at all, because I remember when Ifirst saw the goddess in a real human being and how amazed Iwas at the discovery....I was a boy of twelve or thirteen.My people took me one summer to Dymchurch in Romney Marsh; in those days before the automobile had made the Marsh accessible to the Hythe and Folkestone crowds, it was a little old forgotten silent wind-bitten village crouching under the lee of the great sea wall.At low water there were miles of sand as smooth and shining as the skin of a savage brown woman.Shining and with a texture--the very same.And one day as I was mucking about by myself on the beach, boy fashion,--there were some ribs of a wrecked boat buried in the sand near a groin and I was busy with them--a girl ran out from a tent high up on the beach and across the sands to the water.She was dressed in a tight bathing dress and not in the clumsy skirts and frills that it was the custom to inflict on women in those days.Her hair was tied up in a blue handkerchief.She ran swiftly and gracefully, intent upon the white line of foam ahead.I can still remember how the sunlight touched her round neck and cheek as she went past me.She was the loveliest, most shapely thing I have ever seen--to this day.She lifted up her arms and thrust through the dazzling white and green breakers and plunged into the water and swam; she swam straight out for a long way as it seemed to me, and presently came in and passed me again on her way back to her tent, light and swift and sure.The very prints of her feet on the sand were beautiful.Suddenly I realized that there could be living people in the world as lovely as any goddess....She wasn't in the least out of breath.

"That was my first human love.And I love that girl still.Idoubt sometimes whether I have ever loved anyone else.I kept the thing very secret.I wonder now why I have kept the thing so secret.Until now I have never told a soul about it.Iresorted to all sorts of tortuous devices and excuses to get a chance of seeing her again without betraying what it was Iwas after."

Dr.Martineau retained a simple fondness for a story.

"And did you meet her again?"

"Never.Of course I may have seen her as a dressed-up person and not recognized her.A day or so later I was stabbed to the heart by the discovery that the tent she came out of had been taken away.""She had gone?"

"For ever."

Sir Richmond smiled brightly at the doctor's disappointment.

Section 3

"I was never wholehearted and simple about sexual things,"Sir Richmond resumed presently."Never.I do not think any man is.We are too much plastered-up things, too much the creatures of a tortuous and complicated evolution."Dr.Martineau, under his green umbrella, nodded his conceded agreement.

"This--what shall I call it?--this Dream of Women, grew up in my mind as I grew up--as something independent of and much more important than the reality of Women.It came only very slowly into relation with that.That girl on the Dymchurch beach was one of the first links, but she ceased very speedily to be real--she joined the women of dreamland at last altogether.She became a sort of legendary incarnation.

I thought of these dream women not only as something beautiful but as something exceedingly kind and helpful.The girls and women I met belonged to a different creation...."Sir Richmond stopped abruptly and rowed a few long strokes.

Dr.Martineau sought information.

"I suppose," he said, "there was a sensuous element in these dreamings?""Certainly.A very strong one.It didn't dominate but it was a very powerful undertow.""Was there any tendency in all this imaginative stuff to concentrate? To group itself about a single figure, the sort of thing that Victorians would have called an ideal?""Not a bit of it," said Sir Richmond with conviction."There was always a tremendous lot of variety in my mind.In fact the thing I liked least in the real world was the way it was obsessed by the idea of pairing off with one particular set and final person.I liked to dream of a blonde goddess in her own Venusberg one day, and the next I would be off over the mountains with an armed Brunhild.""You had little thought of children?"

"As a young man?"

"Yes."

同类推荐
  • 异出菩萨本起经

    异出菩萨本起经

    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。
  • Aaron Trow

    Aaron Trow

    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。
  • 佛说仁王护国般若波罗蜜经疏神宝记

    佛说仁王护国般若波罗蜜经疏神宝记

    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。
  • 云南机务抄黄

    云南机务抄黄

    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。
  • 昭忠录

    昭忠录

    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
  • 带着缝纫机回古代

    带着缝纫机回古代

    新贵设计师夏颜,奋斗数年终于成立了自己的工作室。原本意气风发的时尚新秀,刚要大展拳脚的时候……却意外穿越了。且慢,人穿过来就算了,怎么连工作室也跟着来了?夏颜望着崭新的工业缝纫机傻眼了……没有电!怎么用?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 穿越之燕去不复还

    穿越之燕去不复还

    “我魔尊燕飞燕今日要用这天下人之血,为我母亲祭奠!”“飞燕,你清醒一点吧,你根本不足什么魔尊,你只是飞燕!”颛孙黎炤吼道。“燕子,你别再错下去了!”苏默尘也焦急地说道。“错?若不是你们错误地把我们一家带到这里,这一切都不会发生,错的根本就是你们!”
  • 中华人民共和国献血法

    中华人民共和国献血法

    为加强法制宣传,迅速普及法律知识,服务于我国民主法制建设,多年来,中国民主法制出版社根据全国人大常委会每年定期审议通过、修订的法律,全品种、大规模的出版了全国人民代表大会常务委员会公报版的系列法律单行本。该套法律单行本经过最高立法机关即全国人民代表大会常务委员会的权威审定,法条内容准确无误,文本格式规范合理,多年来受到了社会各界广泛关注与好评。
  • 丑行天下

    丑行天下

    一个修罗族少年无意中来到现代都市,一改其“前任”因为丑而自卑自闭...是他,告诉我们,丑也可以引领潮流,风靡万千少女。据不完全统计,有37820人因为长的太帅而跳楼。据不完全统计,有7388007人因为长的不够丑而毁容。在这里,丑出自信,丑出时尚!(每天稳定更新,请大家多多支持。您的每一个收藏点击,都是对我最大的动力。)
  • 一个不会离开的男人

    一个不会离开的男人

    男人是和女人完全不同的生物,男人是用来证明爱情的东西。经过千万次的研究和分析,还是不太懂的东西。在这本书里,作者分享了爱人之间和谐相处的心得和秘密。让相爱容易,让相处不难。
  • 山东竹枝词

    山东竹枝词

    《山东竹枝词》借用竹枝词这一古老民歌的形式,创作一部真实记录山东当代风俗史的作品,展现了山东的地域特色、人物风采、风景名胜等,作者在深入各地采风和考察的基础上,紧紧抓住了地域文化这条主线,突出了不同地域文化的特点和引领作用。如济南的泉水文化,济宁的孔孟文化,淄博的齐文化,临沂的红色文化,聊城的水城文化,泰安的泰山文化,莱芜的钢城文化,潍坊的风筝文化,东营的黄河口文化,青岛、日照的港口文化,烟台的海洋文化,威海的渔乡文化,荷泽的牡丹文化其中如泉水诗、渔家诗等还形成了一定规模和影响。即使地域文化特点并不突出的德州、滨州等地,由于选取从枣乡文化和退海之地的沧桑巨变等角度入手,同样写出了特点和情趣。
  • 最后一个汗

    最后一个汗

    海一样的汗王,那是千年前的崛起。腐朽的政权,曾经辉煌的黄金家族已经腐烂。英勇忠诚的骑士已经逝去。苟延残喘的王朝,经历千年的变幻,只有汗的意志在支撑。他是一个胖子,一个普通家庭的胖子,因为祖父的贡献,去中原,那个和草原不一样的地方,会发生什么呢...
  • 转世流年:卿本红妆

    转世流年:卿本红妆

    她不过是工作太累睡了一觉,醒来却穿越到另一个时空,成为南宫府上的小姐,因为一个神棍的一个预言被将军老爹当成男孩养,成了府上的“小少爷”。他是大兴王朝的六皇子,战王殿下,17岁便随军出征,少年才俊,多少名门贵女芳心暗许,他却只是因为那花火中的多看一眼,只对某人一往而情深。缘来缘去,他们的相遇不管是缘是劫,只愿岁月静好,这一世漫漫红尘路,幸有你相伴。
  • 傲天武圣

    傲天武圣

    马萧云魂穿异界,就连前世在古玩市场上淘来的吊坠也一起穿越了过来,而这个吊坠竟然突然间拥有了提纯灵药的能力!别人吞服灵药最多发挥出50%的药效,而经过吊坠提纯的汁液可以发挥出80%,甚至更高!而这,仅仅是吊坠的冰山一角!在这个武者为尊的世界上,且看他如何掌控自己的命运。一步步走上武道巅峰,打破桎梏,化身成圣!【新书起步中,每天固定两更,求推荐...求收藏...】
  • 急救广生集

    急救广生集

    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。