登陆注册
34913100000128

第128章

The next day, when he saw lady Arctura, Donal was glad to learn that, for all the excitement of the day before, she had passed a good night, and never dreamed at all.

"I've been thinking it all over, my lady," he said, "and it seems to me that, if your uncle heard the noise of our plummet so near, the chimney can hardly rise from the floor you searched; for that room, you know, is half-way between the ground-floor and first floor.

Still, sound does travel so! We must betake ourselves to measurement, I fear.--But another thing came into my head last night which may serve to give us a sort of parallax. You said you heard the music in your own room: would you let me look about in it a little? something might suggest itself!--Is it the room I saw you in once?"

"Not that," answered Arctura, "but the bedroom beyond it. I hear it sometimes in either room, but louder in the bedroom. You can examine it when you please.--If only you could find my bad dream, and drive it out!--Will you come now?"

"It is near the earl's room: is there no danger of his hearing anything?"

"Not the least. The room is not far from his, it is true, but it is not in the same block; there are thick walls between. Besides he is too ill to be up."

She led the way, and Donal followed her up the main staircase to the second floor, and into the small, curious, ancient room, evidently one of the oldest in the castle, which she had chosen for her sitting-room. Perhaps if she had lived less in the shadow, she might have chosen a less gloomy one: the sky was visible only through a little lane of walls and gables and battlements. But it was very charming, with its odd nooks and corners, recesses and projections.

It looked an afterthought, the utilization of a space accidentally defined by rejection, as if every one of its sides were the wall of a distinct building.

"I do wish, my lady," said Donal, "you would not sit so much where is so little sunlight! Outer and inner things are in their origin one; the light of the sun is the natural world-clothing of the truth, and whoever sits much in the physical dark misses a great help to understanding the things of the light. If I were your director," he went on, "I would counsel you to change this room for one with a broad, fair outlook; so that, when gloomy thoughts hid God from you, they might have his eternal contradiction in the face of his heaven and earth."

"It is but fair to tell you," replied Arctura, "that Sophia would have had me do so; but while I felt about God as she taught me, what could the fairest sunlight be to me?"

"Yes, what indeed!" returned Donal. "Do you know," he added presently, his eyes straying about the room, "I feel almost as if I were trying to understand a human creature. A house is so like a human mind, which gradually disentangles and explains itself as you go on to know it! It is no accidental resemblance, for, as an unavoidable necessity, every house must be like those that built it."

"But in a very old house," said Arctura, "so many hands of so many generations have been employed in the building, and so many fancied as well as real necessities have been at work, that it must be a conflict of many natures."

"But where the house continues in the same family, the builders have more or less transmitted their nature, as well as their house, to those who come after them."

"Do you think then," said Arctura, almost with a shudder, "that I inherit a nature like the house left me--that the house is an outside to me--fits my very self as the shell fits the snail?"

"The relation of outer and inner is there, but there is given with it an infinite power to modify. Everyone is born nearer to God than to any ancestor, and it rests with him to cultivate either the godness or the selfness in him, his original or his mere ancestral nature. The fight between the natural and the spiritual man is the history of the world. The man who sets his faults inherited, makes atonement for the sins of those who went before him; he is baptized for the dead, not with water but with fire."

"That seems to me strange doctrine," said Arctura, with tremulous objection.

"If you do not like it, do not believe it. We inherit from our ancestors vices no more than virtues, but tendencies to both. Vice in my great-great-grandfather may in me be an impulse."

"How horrible!" cried Arctura.

"To say that we inherit sin from Adam, horrifies nobody: the source is so far back from us, that we let the stream fill our cisterns unheeded; but to say we inherit it from this or that nearer ancestor, causes the fact to assume its definite and individual reality, and make a correspondent impression."

"Then you allow that it is horrible to think oneself under the influence of the vices of certain wicked people, through whom we come where we are?"

"I would allow it, were it not that God is nearer to us than any vices, even were they our own; he is between us and those vices. But in us they are not vices--only possibilities, which become vices when they are yielded to. Then there are at the same time all sorts of counteracting and redeeming influences. It may be that wherein a certain ancestor was most wicked, his wife was especially lovely. He may have been cruel, and she tender as the hen that gathers her chickens under her wing. The main danger is perhaps, of being caught in some sudden gust of unsuspected impulse, and carried away of the one tendency before the other has time to assert and the will to rouse itself. But those who doubt themselves and try to do right may hope for warning. Such will not, I think, be allowed to go far out of the way for want of that. Self-confidence is the worst traitor."

"You comfort me a little."

"And then you must remember," continued Donal, "that nothing in its immediate root is evil; that from best human roots worst things spring. No one, for instance, will be so full of indignation, of fierceness, of revenge, as the selfish man born with a strong sense of justice.--But you say this is not the room in which you hear the music best?"

"No, it is here."

同类推荐
  • 产鉴

    产鉴

    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。
  • 桐山老农集

    桐山老农集

    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。
  • 庄子注

    庄子注

    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。
  • 明语林

    明语林

    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。
  • 大威怒乌刍涩摩仪轨

    大威怒乌刍涩摩仪轨

    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。
热门推荐
  • 求求你们别演了

    求求你们别演了

    简介:我在江边一泡尿,蛟龙浮尸起。我向天空两口痰,凤凰坠九天。我对神灵三扣首,神像碎个稀巴烂!很多人都以为我是天下无敌的绝世强者,对我卑躬屈膝,顶礼膜拜。然而现实是,我这位“绝世强者”,正偷偷修炼着最垃圾的功法,卡在最垃圾的境界……群号:905401970(戏精神殿)
  • 二十六记

    二十六记

    一本大纲,寻仙世界的开始,千年史册记录的源头。
  • 命起乾坤

    命起乾坤

    白天是大学生的陆瑜,到了晚上则是一名暗夜杀手。因为世界末日导致自己重生另一个陌生的世界。在那个世界遇到了自己曾经的爱人,上一世没能保护好你。这一世我愿以天下人为敌,许你一生称心如意
  • 剑来去

    剑来去

    剑走世间,行来去,心染尘埃,意潇洒。借酒问天,留情否,踏歌悠悠,不回头。斜阳残日空留影,万古长青无神佛。
  • 总裁真正坏

    总裁真正坏

    这个男人到底是怎么回事儿?她明白拒绝了他五根手指头那么多了,他竟然还假借职位便利,对她实施各种腹黑无耻的骚扰。还故意掉进粪坑,让她美女求救英雄,好趁机色诱。可就是这样一个男人,让她丢盔弃甲,最后眼里只容的下他一人。
  • 你会成为一个很好的人

    你会成为一个很好的人

    我不知道以后我会怎样,但至少现在,我想,不负青春……就这么简单而已。
  • 情域传奇

    情域传奇

    情之极,域门开,历千年,战帝现。一个平凡的人,却因为一段感情纠葛走向不平凡的人生,看一个平凡的小子怎样走上三界战帝之位。
  • 八零厨娘发家史

    八零厨娘发家史

    特级厨师摔了一跤,重生到八十年代的贫困乡村,爹娘不给力,亲戚太奇葩,帅哥太难搞,还被人当做扫把星,狐狸精,赔钱货,白眼狼……一手烂牌不要紧,凭借高超厨艺,江芝莲赤手空拳也能打天下!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 无影剑道

    无影剑道

    我玩了一辈子的剑,却连剑的影子都没见过…………
  • 都市鸟神

    都市鸟神

    被一只受天外射线感染过的金雕啄伤后,晁凤梧获得了金雕的特殊能力,原本单调无味的学吊生活也开始变得高端大气上档次了!轻拢慢捻抹复挑,女汉功夫非常好。乘风破浪会有时,学氓冲进化粪池。