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the new machiavelli-第49章

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women have the courage to face the facts of life。



I was no systematic libertine; you must understand; things happened 

to me and desire drove me。  Any young man would have served for that 

Locarno adventure; and after that what had been a mystic and 

wonderful thing passed rapidly into a gross; manifestly misdirected 

and complicating one。  I can count a meagre tale of five illicit 

loves in the days of my youth; to include that first experience; and 

of them all only two were sustained relationships。  Besides these 

five 〃affairs;〃 on one or two occasions I dipped so low as the inky 

dismal sensuality of the streets; and made one of those pairs of 

correlated figures; the woman in her squalid finery sailing 

homeward; the man modestly aloof and behind; that every night in the 

London year flit by the score of thousands across the sight of the 

observant。 。 。 。



How ugly it is to recall; ugly and shameful now without 

qualification!  Yet at the time there was surely something not 

altogether ugly in itsomething that has vanished; some fine thing 

mortally ailing。



One such occasion I recall as if it were a vision deep down in a 

pit; as if it had happened in another state of existence to someone 

else。  And yet it is the sort of thing that has happened; once or 

twice at least; to half the men in London who have been in a 

position to make it possible。  Let me try and give you its peculiar 

effect。  Man or woman; you ought to know of it。



Figure to yourself a dingy room; somewhere in that network of 

streets that lies about Tottenham Court Road; a dingy bedroom lit by 

a solitary candle and carpeted with scraps and patches; with 

curtains of cretonne closing the window; and a tawdry ornament of 

paper in the grate。  I sit on a bed beside a weary…eyed; fair…

haired; sturdy young woman; half undressed; who is telling me in 

broken German something that my knowledge of German is at first 

inadequate to understand。 。 。 。



I thought she was boasting about her family; and then slowly the 

meaning came to me。  She was a Lett from near Libau in Courland; and 

she was telling mejust as one tells something too strange for 

comment or emotionhow her father had been shot and her sister 

outraged and murdered before her eyes。



It was as if one had dipped into something primordial and stupendous 

beneath the smooth and trivial surfaces of life。  There was I; you 

know; the promising young don from Cambridge; who wrote quite 

brilliantly about politics and might presently get into Parliament; 

with my collar and tie in my hand; and a certain sense of shameful 

adventure fading out of my mind。



〃Ach Gott!〃 she sighed by way of comment; and mused deeply for a 

moment before she turned her face to me; as to something forgotten 

and remembered; and assumed the half…hearted meretricious smile。



〃Bin ich eine hubsche?〃 she asked like one who repeats a lesson。



I was moved to crave her pardon and come away。



〃Bin ich eine hubsche?〃 she asked a little anxiously; laying a 

detaining hand upon me; and evidently not understanding a word of 

what I was striving to say。







8





I find it extraordinarily difficult to recall the phases by which I 

passed from my first admiration of Margaret's earnestness and 

unconscious daintiness to an intimate acquaintance。  The earlier 

encounters stand out clear and hard; but then the impressions become 

crowded and mingle not only with each other but with all the 

subsequent developments of relationship; the enormous evolutions of 

interpretation and comprehension between husband and wife。  Dipping 

into my memories is like dipping into a ragbag; one brings out this 

memory or that; with no intimation of how they came in time or what 

led to them and joined them together。  And they are all mixed up 

with subsequent associations; with sympathies and discords; habits 

of intercourse; surprises and disappointments and discovered 

misunderstandings。  I know only that always my feelings for Margaret 

were complicatel feelings; woven of many and various strands。



It is one of the curious neglected aspects of life how at the same 

time and in relation to the same reality we can have in our minds 

streams of thought at quite different levels。  We can be at the same 

time idealising a person and seeing and criticising that person 

quite coldly and clearly; and we slip unconsciously from level to 

level and produce all sorts of inconsistent acts。  In a sense I had 

no illusions about Margaret; in a sense my conception of Margaret 

was entirely poetic illusion。  I don't think I was ever blind to 

certain defects of hers; and quite as certainly they didn't seem to 

matter in the slightest degree。  Her mind had a curious want of 

vigour; 〃flatness〃 is the only word; she never seemed to escape from 

her phrase; her way of thinking; her way of doing was indecisive; 

she remained in her attitude; it did not flow out to easy; 

confirmatory action。



I saw this quite clearly; and when we walked and talked together I 

seemed always trying for animation in her and never finding it。  I 

would state my ideas。  〃I know;〃 she would say; 〃I know。〃



I talked about myself and she listened wonderfully; but she made no 

answering revelations。  I talked politics; and she remarked with her 

blue eyes wide and earnest: 〃Every WORD you say seems so just。〃



I admired her appearance tremendously butI can only express it by 

saying I didn't want to touch her。  Her fair hair was always 

delectably done。  It flowed beautifully over her pretty small ears; 

and she would tie its fair coilings with fillets of black or blue 

velvet that carried pretty buckles of silver and paste。  The light; 

the faint down on her brow and cheek was delightful。  And it was 

clear to me that I made her happy。



My sense of her deficiencies didn't stand in the way of my falling 

at last very deeply in love with her。  Her very shortcomings seemed 

to offer me something。 。 。 。



She stood in my mind for goodnessand for things from which it 

seemed to me my hold was slipping。



She seemed to promise a way of escape from the deepening opposition 

in me between physical passions and the constructive career; the 

career of wide aims and human service; upon which I had embarked。  

All the time that I was seeing her as a beautiful; fragile; rather 

ineffective girl; I was also seeing her just as consciously as a 

shining slender figure; a radiant reconciliation; coming into my 

darkling disorders of lust and impulse。  I could understand clearly 

that she was incapable of the most necessary subtleties of political 

thought; and yet I could contemplate praying to her and putting all 

the intricate troubles of my life at her feet。



Before the reappearance of Margaret in my world at all an unwonted 

disgust with the consequences and quality of my passions had arisen 

in my mind。  Among other things that moment with the Lettish girl 

haunted me persistently。  I would see myself again and again sitting 

amidst those sluttish surroundings; collar and tie in hand; while 

her heavy German words grouped themselves to a slowly apprehended 

meaning。  I would feel again with a fresh stab of remorse; that this 

was not a flash of adventure; this was not seeing life in any 

permissible sense; but a dip into tragedy; dishonour; hideous 

degradation; and the pitiless cruelty of a world as yet uncontrolled 

by any ordered will。



〃Good God!〃 I put it to myself; 〃that I should finish the work those 

Cossacks had begun!  I who want order and justice before everything!  

There's no way out of it; no decent excuse!  If I didn't think; I 

ought to have thought!〃 。 。 。



How did I get to it?〃 。 。 。  I would ransack the phases of my 

development from the first shy unveiling of a hidden wonder to the 

last extremity as a man will go through muddled account books to 

find some d
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