手机浏览器扫描二维码访问
is done; she leant out of the window; gave one low whistle; and descended the shattered and bloodstained staircase; now strewn with the litter of waste–paper baskets; treaties; despatches; seals; sealing wax; etc。; and so entered the courtyard。 There; in the shadow of a giant fig tree; waited an old gipsy on a donkey。 He led another by the bridle。 Orlando swung her leg over it; and thus; attended by a lean dog; riding a donkey; in pany of a gipsy; the Ambassador of Great Britain at the Court of the Sultan left Constantinople。
They rode for several days and nights and met with a variety of adventures; some at the hands of men; some at the hands of nature; in all of which Orlando acquitted herself with courage。 Within a week they reached the high ground outside Broussa; which was then the chief camping ground of the gipsy tribe to which Orlando had allied herself。 Often she had looked at those mountains from her balcony at the Embassy; often had longed to be there; and to find oneself where one has longed to be always; to a reflective mind; gives food for thought。 For some time; however; she was too well pleased with the change to spoil it by thinking。 The pleasure of having no documents to seal or sign; no flourishes to make; no calls to pay; was enough。 The gipsies followed the grass; when it was grazed down; on they moved again。 She washed in streams if she washed at all; no boxes; red; blue; or green; were presented to her; there was not a key; let alone a golden key; in the whole camp; as for ‘visiting’; the word was unknown。 She milked the goats; she collected brushwood; she stole a hen’s egg now and then; but always put a coin or a pearl in place of it; she herded cattle; she stripped vines; she trod the grape; she filled the goat–skin and drank from it; and when she remembered how; at about this time of day; she should have been making the motions of drinking and smoking over an empty coffee–cup and a pipe which lacked tobacco; she laughed aloud; cut herself another hunch of bread; and begged for a puff from old Rustum’s pipe; filled though it was with cow dung。
The gipsies; with whom it is obvious that she must have been in secret munication before the revolution; seem to have looked upon her as one of themselves (which is always the highest pliment a people can pay); and her dark hair and dark plexion bore out the belief that she was; by birth; one of them and had been snatched by an English Duke from a nut tree when she was a baby and taken to that barbarous land where people live in houses because they are too feeble and diseased to stand the open air。 Thus; though in many ways inferior to them; they were willing to help her to bee more like them; taught her their arts of cheese–making and basket–weaving; their science of stealing and bird–snaring; and were even prepared to consider letting her marry among them。
But Orlando had contracted in England some of the customs or diseases (whatever you choose to consider them) which cannot; it seems; be expelled。 One evening; when they were all sitting round the camp fire and the sunset was blazing over the Thessalian hills; Orlando exclaimed:
‘How good to eat!’
(The gipsies have no word for ‘beautiful’。 This is the nearest。)
All the young men and women burst out laughing uproariously。 The sky good to eat; indeed! The elders; however; who had seen more of foreigners than they had; became suspicious。 They noticed that Orlando often sat for whole hours doing nothing whatever; except look here and then there; they would e upon her on some hill–top staring straight in front of her; no matter whether the goats were grazing or straying。 They began to suspect that she had other beliefs than their own; and the older men and women thought it probable that she had fallen into the clutches of the vilest and cruellest among all the Gods; which is Nature。 Nor were they far wrong。 The English disease; a love of Nature; was inborn in her; and here; where Nature was so much larger and more powerful than in England; she fell into its hands as she had never done before。 The malady is too well known; and has been; alas; too often described to need describing afresh; save very briefly。 There were mountains; there were valleys; there were streams。 She climbed the mountains; roamed the valleys; sat on the banks of the streams。 She likened the hills to ramparts; to the breasts of doves; and the flanks of kine。 She pared the flowers to enamel and the turf to Turkey rugs worn thin。 Trees were withered hags; and sheep were grey boulders。 Everything; in fact; was something else。 She found the tarn on the mountain–top and almost threw herself in to seek the wisdom she thought lay hid there; and when; from the mountain–top; she beheld far off; across the Sea of Marmara; the plains of Greece; and made out (her eyes were admirable) the Acropolis with a white streak or two; which must; she thought; be the Parthenon; her soul expanded with her eyeballs; and she prayed that she might share the majesty of the hills; know the serenity of the plains; etc。 etc。; as all such believers do。 Then; looking down; the red hyacinth; the purple iris wrought her to cry out in ecstasy at the goodness; the beauty of nature; raising her eyes again; she beheld the eagle soaring; and imagined its raptures and made them her own。 Returning home; she saluted each star; each peak; and each watch–fire as if they signalled to her alone; and at last; when she flung herself upon her mat in the gipsies’ tent; she could not help bursting out again; How good to eat! How good to eat! (For it is a curious fact that though human beings have such imperfect means of munication; that they can only say ‘good to eat’ when they mean ‘beautiful’ and the other way about; they will yet endure ridicule and misunderstanding rather than keep any experience to themselves。) All the young gipsies laughed。 But Rustum el Sadi; the old man who had brought Orlando out of Constantinople on his donkey; sat silent。 He had a nose like a scimitar; his cheeks were furrowed as if from the age–long descent of iron hail; he was brown and keen–eyed; and as he sat tugging at his hookah he observed Orlando narrowly。 He had the deepest suspicion that her God was Nature。 One day he found her in tears。 Interpreting this to mean that her God had punished her; he told her that he was not surprised。 He showed her the fingers of his left hand; withered by the frost; he showed her his right foot; crushed where a rock had fallen。 This; he said; was what her God did to men。 When she said; ‘But so beautiful’; using the English word; he shook his head; and when she repeated it he was angry。 He saw that she did not believe what he believed; and that was enough; wise and ancient as he was; to enrage him。
This difference of opinion disturbed Orlando; who had been perfectly happy until now。 She began to think; was Nature beautiful or cruel; and then she asked herself what this beauty was; whether it was in things themselves; or only in herself; so she went on to the nature of reality; which led her to truth; which in its turn led to Love; Friendship; Poetry (as in the days on the high mound at home); which meditations; since she could impart no word of them; made her long; as she had never longed before; for pen and ink。
‘Oh! if only I could write!’ she cried (for she had the odd conceit of those who write that words written are shared)。 She had no ink; and but little paper。 But she made ink from berries and wine; and finding a few margins and blank spaces in the manuscript of ‘The Oak Tree’; managed by writing a kind of shorthand; to describe the scenery in a long; blank version poem; and to carry on a dialogue with herself about this Beauty and Truth concisely enough。 This kept her extremely happy for hours on end。 But the gipsies became suspicious。 First; they noticed that she was less adept than before at milking and cheese–making; next; she often hesitated before replying; and once a gipsy boy who had been asleep; woke in a terror feeling her eyes upon him。 Sometimes this constraint would be felt by the whole tribe; numbering some dozens of grown men and women。 It sprang from the sense they had (and their senses are very sharp and much in advance of their vocabulary) that whatever they were doing crumbled like ashes in their hands。 An old woman making a basket; a boy skinning a sheep; would be singing or crooning contentedly at their work; when Orlando would e into the camp; fling herself down by the fire and gaze into the flames。 She need not even look at them; and yet they felt; here is someone who doubts; (we make a rough–and–ready translation from the gipsy language) here is someone who does not do the thing for the sake of doing; nor looks for looking’s sake; here is someone who believes neither in sheep–skin nor basket; but sees (here they looked apprehensively about the tent) something else。 Then a vague but most unpleasant feeling would begin to work in the boy and in the old woman。 They broke their withys; they cut their fingers。 A great rage filled them。 They wished Orlando would leave the tent and never e near them again。 Yet she was of a cheerful and willing disposition; they owned; and one of her pearls was enough to buy the finest herd of goats in Broussa。
Slowly; she began to feel that there was some difference between her and the gipsies which made her hesitate sometimes to marry and settle down among them for ever。 At first she tried to account for it by saying that she came of an ancient and civilized race; whereas these gipsies were an ignorant people; not much better than savages。 One night when they were questioning her about England she could not help with some pride describing the house where she was born; how it had 365 bedrooms and had been in the possession of her family for four or five hundred years。 Her ancestors were earls; or even dukes; she added。 At this she noticed again that the gipsies were uneasy; but not angry as before when she had praised the beauty of nature。 Now they were courteous; but concerned as people of fine breeding are when a stranger has been made to reveal his low birth or poverty。 Rustum followed her out of the tent alone and said that she need not mind if her father were a Duke; and possessed all the bedrooms and furniture that she described。 They would none of them think the worse of her for that。 Then she was seized with a shame that she had never felt before。 It was clear that Rustum and the other gipsies thought a descent of four or five hundred years only the meanest possible。 Their own families went back at least two or three thousand years。 To the gipsy whose ancestors had built the Pyramids centuries before Christ was born; the genealogy of Howards and Plantages was no better and no worse than that of the Smiths and the Joneses: both were negligible。 Moreover; where the shepherd boy had a lineage of such antiquity; there was nothing specially memorable or desirable in ancient birth; vagabonds and beggars all shared it。 And then; though he was too courteous to speak openly; it was clear that the gipsy thought that there was no more vulgar ambition than to possess bedrooms by the hundred (they were on top of a hill as they spoke; it was night; the mountains rose around them) when
蹉跎岁月女人花 冷血悍将 从八百只麻雀开始肝成神明 血色使命 战锤:这不是草原争霸吗? 五胡烽火录 女性经理人打造术:跟王熙凤学管理 演讲论辩技巧 要塞-中世纪领主 双子变变变 冥仙未世 在中国做事(全文阅读) - 黄夏君 上门姐夫楚天舒乔诗媛最新更新章节免费阅读 现在,发现你的优势 拍遍全网糊咖醉姐终于火了陈醉周望全集免费阅读 销售人员职业教程 红色之翼 梨园往事 重生后,真少爷回村带妻女发家致富 唯爱成神
盛唐三绝李白的诗张旭的草书裴旻的剑。一个中文系的学生穿越成了史上唯一一个经由国家承认的剑圣裴旻,青锋三尺,天下无敌,上揽九霄寰宇,重铸盛唐诗篇。...
一场变故,两个相爱之人因此分离。为了争夺孩子抚养权,四年之后她重回故土。当年的真相却是一点点的正在解开。所幸多年,那个爱她的人一直从未改变!如果您喜欢江少追妻上上签,别忘记分享给朋友...
关于神话之开局无敌天道网游玄域降临,在玄域中获得的一切力量,神器,功法等都能够带入现实。唐浩重生归来,凭借着对后世的全知全能,在亲眼目睹了飞蓬和重楼的神魔大战,获得了圣级功法易经,推演世界万物,复制一切顶级功法!在别人杀猪宰羊,打怪升级之时,他已然踏上人生巅峰,铸造自己的无上神话!...
婚后相爱宠文小粉丝撩了歌坛巨星,从此过上了没羞没臊的日子。林夏躺在床上看着帅气逼人的偶像老公,甜甜的开口老公,我要你的签名。老公,我要你的贴面照。老公,我要听你的新专辑。男人嘴角勾起,一下子抱起了女人,轻声问道我的人,你要不要?漫漫已有签约作品萌妻水嫩嫩,boss套路深闪婚娇嫩妻小叔蜜蜜爱隐婚闪爱娇妻满分宠和护妻军少,花样宠,群1满了,群2692134120,群3479994577。VIP群(需2000粉丝值)618895719如果您喜欢天价闪婚巨星老公,高调爱,别忘记分享给朋友...
一场见不得光的契约,让她成为神秘男人的小娇妻,成了人人羡慕的顾太太。面对季心玥的的追问,顾云深只丢给她一纸婚约嫁给我,你就不用被父母抵债了!婚后,他宠她于一身,却也是伤她最深的人。季心玥想逃离顾云深的怀抱。这个霸道的男人却一步步逼上前,给自己的小娇妻来了一个结结实实臂咚。女人,你是跑不掉的了…如果您喜欢一吻定情帝少的千亿宠儿,别忘记分享给朋友...
现代警校霸王花许娇穿越成好吃懒做,人人讨厌的农家女。有宠女成魔的亲娘,一大堆的穷困潦倒又难缠的家族成员,还有一个超级腹黑且不待见她的未婚夫!这日子咋过?不能过,也要过。看许娇改变自己,变成真善美代表,全村的村花,带领大家走上种田致富的道路!撕X斗极品,能打能杠,能撩夫如果您喜欢重生农家小娘子,别忘记分享给朋友...