登陆注册
19855800000116

第116章

The Princess CasamassimaRowland had a very friendly memory of a little mountain inn, accessible with moderate trouble from Lucerne, where he had once spent a blissful ten days.He had at that time been trudging, knapsack on back, over half Switzerland, and not being, on his legs, a particularly light weight, it was no shame to him to confess that he was mortally tired.The inn of which I speak presented striking analogies with a cow-stable; but in spite of this circumstance, it was crowded with hungry tourists.

It stood in a high, shallow valley, with flower-strewn Alpine meadows sloping down to it from the base of certain rugged rocks whose outlines were grotesque against the evening sky.

Rowland had seen grander places in Switzerland that pleased him less, and whenever afterwards he wished to think of Alpine opportunities at their best, he recalled this grassy concave among the mountain-tops, and the August days he spent there, resting deliciously, at his length, in the lee of a sun-warmed boulder, with the light cool air stirring about his temples, the wafted odors of the pines in his nostrils, the tinkle of the cattle-bells in his ears, the vast progression of the mountain shadows before his eyes, and a volume of Wordsworth in his pocket.

His face, on the Swiss hill-sides, had been scorched to within a shade of the color nowadays called magenta, and his bed was a pallet in a loft, which he shared with a German botanist of colossal stature--every inch of him quaking at an open window.

These had been drawbacks to felicity, but Rowland hardly cared where or how he was lodged, for he spent the livelong day under the sky, on the crest of a slope that looked at the Jungfrau.

He remembered all this on leaving Florence with his friends, and he reflected that, as the midseason was over, accommodations would be more ample, and charges more modest.

He communicated with his old friend the landlord, and, while September was yet young, his companions established themselves under his guidance in the grassy valley.

He had crossed the Saint Gothard Pass with them, in the same carriage.

During the journey from Florence, and especially during this portion of it, the cloud that hung over the little party had been almost dissipated, and they had looked at each other, in the close contiguity of the train and the posting-carriage, without either accusing or consoling glances.

It was impossible not to enjoy the magnificent scenery of the Apennines and the Italian Alps, and there was a tacit agreement among the travelers to abstain from sombre allusions.The effect of this delicate compact seemed excellent; it ensured them a week's intellectual sunshine.

Roderick sat and gazed out of the window with a fascinated stare, and with a perfect docility of attitude.He concerned himself not a particle about the itinerary, or about any of the wayside arrangements;he took no trouble, and he gave none.He assented to everything that was proposed, talked very little, and led for a week a perfectly contemplative life.His mother rarely removed her eyes from him;and if, a while before, this would have extremely irritated him, he now seemed perfectly unconscious of her observation and profoundly indifferent to anything that might befall him.They spent a couple of days on the Lake of Como, at a hotel with white porticoes smothered in oleander and myrtle, and the terrace-steps leading down to little boats with striped awnings.They agreed it was the earthly paradise, and they passed the mornings strolling through the perfumed alleys of classic villas, and the evenings floating in the moonlight in a circle of outlined mountains, to the music of silver-trickling oars.

One day, in the afternoon, the two young men took a long stroll together.

They followed the winding footway that led toward Como, close to the lake-side, past the gates of villas and the walls of vineyards, through little hamlets propped on a dozen arches, and bathing their feet and their pendant tatters in the gray-green ripple;past frescoed walls and crumbling campaniles and grassy village piazzas, and the mouth of soft ravines that wound upward, through belts of swinging vine and vaporous olive and splendid chestnut, to high ledges where white chapels gleamed amid the paler boskage, and bare cliff-surfaces, with their sun-cracked lips, drank in the azure light.

It all was confoundingly picturesque; it was the Italy that we know from the steel engravings in old keepsakes and annuals, from the vignettes on music-sheets and the drop-curtains at theatres;an Italy that we can never confess to ourselves--in spite of our own changes and of Italy's--that we have ceased to believe in.

Rowland and Roderick turned aside from the little paved footway that clambered and dipped and wound and doubled beside the lake, and stretched themselves idly beneath a fig-tree, on a grassy promontory.

Rowland had never known anything so divinely soothing as the dreamy softness of that early autumn afternoon.The iridescent mountains shut him in; the little waves, beneath him, fretted the white pebbles at the laziest intervals; the festooned vines above him swayed just visibly in the all but motionless air.

Roderick lay observing it all with his arms thrown back and his hands under his head."This suits me," he said; "I could be happy here and forget everything.Why not stay here forever?"He kept his position for a long time and seemed lost in his thoughts.

Rowland spoke to him, but he made vague answers; at last he closed his eyes.It seemed to Rowland, also, a place to stay in forever; a place for perfect oblivion of the disagreeable.

Suddenly Roderick turned over on his face, and buried it in his arms.

There had been something passionate in his movement; but Rowland was nevertheless surprised, when he at last jerked himself back into a sitting posture, to perceive the trace of tears in his eyes.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 妻命难为:神品农女驯贤夫

    妻命难为:神品农女驯贤夫

    卧病再床的娘亲!瘦骨如柴的小弟!极品家人!这都是不事儿。无缘无故多了一个是高是矮、是圆是扁、是丑是美都不知道的夫君。这事儿就大了。不嫁吧!就只有等死。嫁吧!心里又有些不爽,她一个堂堂现代人一朝穿越了居然被人安排婚姻,这事怎么想心里都不爽。不过,换个思维想想自己其实也算是赚到了。不仅一朝成了高手中的高手,还有良田空间,嚣张灵宠作伴。咳咳!最最最最重要的还是自己未来夫君居然正好是自己喜欢的类型____
  • 怒踏天穹

    怒踏天穹

    张横,神荒大陆雄狮部落血狮族的一名少年!他犯下了偷窥圣姑的渎神大罪,被掌刑堂判斩立决!那么,他该如何洗脱罪名,逃过这一劫?他体内被下了囚天禁地的上古血禁,再也无法跨入修行者的行列!那么,是什么让他走上了一条吞天地气运,夺万物造化的孽者之路?……“小爷张横,嚣张的张,蛮横的横!”张横如是说。怒踏天穹:主宰天地意志,践踏群魔诸神!
  • 吾名刺客

    吾名刺客

    他到底是紫禁城里混不吝的小混混,还是各大烟花之地竞相邀约的风流才子;他既是急公好义的江湖豪客,又是冷血无情的冷血杀手。他有着各种各样的身份,而这些不过是他隐秘自己的伪装。如果问他到底是谁,他会笑而不语,心道:难道我作为穿越大军一员的秘密能告诉你们么。
  • 幻野仙踪

    幻野仙踪

    一次惊世巨变,引发玄门纷乱。一场旷世激战,挑起异族恩怨。一位少年突现,揭开千年谜团。迷离身世,无上绝学,波折爱恋。是真实,还是虚幻……
  • 仙之恶少

    仙之恶少

    他出生便有异象,幼负盛名,却不敌命运流转在仙之一途上,再度上路,寻找那只属于他的僻径,重新定义那一个‘仙’字感谢创世书评团提供论坛书评支持
  • 倾世毒妃:风流古代

    倾世毒妃:风流古代

    她,是21世纪的最强测灵师,通知天文地理:是21世纪的最强佣兵,无所不能:狡猾如她,天真如她,妩媚如她。却一朝穿越,穿越到一个身份不低的人身上,且看她如何风流成性,且看她如何笑看江湖,且看她如何咸鱼大翻身!
  • 九天玄域歌

    九天玄域歌

    她曾是魔君的女儿,却因为父君的暴政而遭到整个魔界的厌恶。她曾有亲密的爱人,却因为身份的悬殊而被无情抛弃。她曾天真地选择为爱放手,却被人狠狠推下了象征着地狱的玄域境中……那么,当她从地狱中爬出的时候,是否能寻回曾经失去的一切?
  • 清代嫁妆研究

    清代嫁妆研究

    中国传统社会,嫁妆于婚姻意义重大。首先,它在女子出嫁时必不可少,无论家庭贫富,人们都会尽力为女儿筹办嫁妆;其次,嫁妆的多少直接影响到婚姻的缔结,丰厚的嫁妆往往使女性在婚姻市场上得到更高身价;再次,嫁妆给家庭及社会带来一系列影响,如助长了整个社会的奢靡之风、导致婚后的奁产纠纷等。
  • 强势王妃:王爷不放手

    强势王妃:王爷不放手

    什么?穿越了?不仅穿越了,还穿越到一个七岁小屁孩的身体里,样貌变了,身体变了,唯独吃货的本性没变。算了,既来之,则安之。前一世放弃的爱情,这一世我不会放过,前一世没能保护好的亲情,这一世,我会保护好。可是我的这个身体里有怎样的秘密?我要寻找出答案。凤凰浴火重生不是为了重复过去,而是为了更好的蜕变,活出更大的精彩。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 夫君追上门:甜宠小萌妃

    夫君追上门:甜宠小萌妃

    一朝穿越成为相府的白痴三小姐,软弱无能好欺负?呆萌痴傻易推倒?赐婚傻王?愚蠢的人类啊,这些都是浮云~“小姐小姐,外面的人都说白痴配傻子,天造地设。”某女拿起茶杯淡定的说:“哦,是吗?”“小姐甘愿嫁给傻……三王爷吗?”“当然了,你没发现我是三小姐他是三王爷,我们正好对对碰!bingo!”“哈?小姐你在说什么?”“没啥没啥,来喝茶。”