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这一段开心的日子请你勿忘
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Drinking together, with no pain now except the discomfort of lying in the one position, the boys lighting a fire, its shadow jumping on the tents, he could feel the return of acquiescence in this life of pleasant surrender. She was very good to him. He had been cruel and unjust in the afternoon. She was a fine woman, marvellous really. And just then it occurred to him that he was going to die. It came with a rush; not as a rush of water nor of wind; but of a sudden evil-smelling emptiness and the odd thing was that the hyena slipped lightly along the edge of it. 'What is it, Harry?' she asked him. 'Nothing,' he said. 'You had better move over to the other side. To windward.' 'Did Molo change the dressing?' 'Yes. I'm just using the boric now.' 'How do you feel?' 'A little wobbly.' 'I'm going in to bathe,' she said. 'I'll be right out. I'll eat with you and then we'll put the cot in.' So, he said to himself, we did well to stop the quarrelling. He had never quarrelled much with this woman, while with the women that he loved he had quarrelled so much they had finally, always, with the corrosion of the quarrelling, killed what they had together. He had loved too much, demanded too much, and he wore it all out. He thought about alone in Constantinople that time, having quarrelled in Paris before he had gone out. He had whored the whole time and then, when that was over, and he had failed to kill his loneliness, but only made it worse, he had written her, the first one, that one who left him, a letter telling her how he had never been able to kill it . . . How when he thought he saw her outside the Regence one time it made him go all faint and sick inside, and that he would follow a woman who looked like her in some way, along the Boulevard, afraid to see it was not she, afraid to lose the feeling it gave him. How everyone he had slept with had only made him miss her more. How what she had done could never matter since he knew he could not cure himself of loving her. He wrote this letter at the Club, cold sober, and mailed it to New York asking her to write him at the office in Paris. That seemed safe. And that night missing her so much it made him feel hollow sick inside, he wandered up past Taxings, picked a girl up and took her out to supper. He had gone to a place to dance with her afterwards, she danced badly, and left her for a hot Armenian slut, that swung her belly against him so it almost scalded. He took her away from a British gunner subaltern after a row. The gunner asked him outside and they fought in the street on the cobbles in the dark. He'd hit him twice, hard, on the side of the jaw and when he didn't go down he knew he was in for a fight. The gunner hit him in the body, then beside his eye. He swung with his left again and landed and the gunner fell on him and grabbed his coat and tore the sleeve off and he clubbed him twice behind the ear and then smashed him with his right as he pushed him away. When the gunner went down his head hit first and he ran with the girl because they heard the M.P.s coming. They got into a taxi and drove out to Rimmily Hissa along the Bosphorus, and around, and back in the cool night and went to bed and she felt as over-ripe as she looked but smooth, rose-petal, syrupy, smooth-bellied, big-breasted and needed no pillow under her buttocks, and he left her before she was awake looking blousy enough in the fast daylight and turned up at the Pera Palace with a black eye, carrying his coat because one sleeve was missing. That same night he left for Anatolia and he remembered, later on that trip, riding all day through fields of the poppies that they raised for opium and how strange it made you feel, finally, and all the distances seemed wrong, to where they had made the attack with the newly-arrived Constantine officers, that did not know a god-damned thing, and the artillery had fired into the troops and the British observer had cried like a child. That was the day he'd first seen dead men wearing white ballet skirts and upturned shoes with pompoms on them. The Turks had come steadily and lumpily and he had seen the skirted men running and the officers shooting into them and running then themselves and he and the British observer had run too until his lungs ached and his mouth was full of the taste of pennies and they stopped behind some rocks and there were the Turks coming as lumpily as ever. Later he had seen the things that he could never think of and later still he had seen, much worse. So when he got back to Paris that time he could not talk about it or stand to have it mentioned. And there in the cafe as he passed was that American poet with a pile of saucers in front of him and a stupid look on his potato face talking about the Dada movement with a Roumanian who said his name was Tristan Tzarti, who always wore a monocle and had a headache, and, back at the apartment with his wife that now he loved again, the quarrel all over, the madness all over, glad to be home, the office sent his mail up to the flat. So then the letter in answer to the one he'd written came in on a platter one morning and when he saw the hand-writing he went cold all over and tried to slip the letter underneath another. But his wife said, 'Who is that letter from, dear?' and that was the end of the beginning of that. He remembered the good times with them all, and the quarrels. They always picked the finest places to have the quarrels. And why had they always quarrelled when he was feeling best? He had never written any of that because, at first, he never wanted to hurt anyone and then it seemed as though there was enough to write without it. But he had always thought that he would write it finally. There was so much to write. He had seen the world change; not just the events; although he had seen many of them and had watched the people, but he had seen the subtler change and he could remember how the people were at different times. He had been in it and he had watched it and it was his duty to write of it; but now he never would. 'How do you feel?' she said. She had come out from the tent now after her bath. 'All right.' 'Could you eat now?' He saw Molo behind her with the folding table and the other boy with the dishes. 'I want to write,' he said. 'You ought to take some broth to keep your strength up.' 'I'm going to die to-night,' he said. 'I don't need my strength up.' 'Don't be melodramatic, Harry, please,' she said. 'Why don't you use your nose? I'm rotted half-way up my thigh now. What the hell should I fool with broth for? Molo, bring whisky-soda.' 'Please take the broth,' she said gently. 'All right.' The broth was too hot. He had to hold it in the cup until it cooled enough to take it and then he just got it down without gagging. 'You're a fine woman,' he said. 'Don't pay any attention to me.' She looked at him with her well-known, well-loved face from Spur and Town and Country, only a little the worse for drink, only a little the worse for bed, but Town and Country never showed those good breasts and those useful thighs and those lightly small-of-back caressing hands, and as he looked and saw her well-known pleasant smile, he felt death come again. This time there was no rush. It was a puff, as of a wind that makes a candle flicker and the flame go tall. 'They can bring my net out later and hang it from the tree and build the fire up. I'm not going in the tent to-night. It's not worth moving. It's a clear night. There won't be any rain.' So this was how you died, in whispers that you did not hear. Well, there would be no more quarrelling. He could promise that. The one experience that he had never had he was not going to spoil now. He probably would. You spoiled everything. But perhaps he wouldn't. 'You can't take dictation, can you?' 'I never learned,' she told him. 'That's all right.' There wasn't time, of course, although it seemed as though it telescoped so that you might put it all into one paragraph if you could get it right. There was a log house, chinked white with mortar on a hill above the lake. There was a bell on a pole by the door to call the people in to meals. Behind the house were fields and behind the fields was the timber. A line of lombardy poplars ran from the house to the dock. Other poplars ran along the point. A road went up to the hills along the edge of the timber and along that road he picked blackberries. Then that log house was burned down and all the guns that had been on deer foot racks above the open fire place were burned and afterwards their barrels, with the lead melted in the magazines, and the stocks burned away, lay out on the heap of ashes that were used to make lye for the big iron soap kettles, and you asked Grandfather if you could have them to play with, and he said, no. You see they were his guns still and he never bought any others. Nor did he hunt any more. The house was rebuilt in the same place out of lumber now and painted white and from its porch you saw the poplars and the lake beyond; but there were never any more guns. The barrels of the guns that had hung on the deer feet on the wall of the log house lay out there on the heap of ashes and no one ever touched them. In the Black Forest, after the war, we rented a trout stream and there were two ways to walk to it. One was down the valley from Triberg and around the valley road in the shade of the trees that bordered the white road, and then up a side road that went up through the hills, past many small farms, with the big Schwarzwald houses, until that road crossed the stream. That was where our fishing began. The other way was to climb steeply up to the edge of the woods and then go across the top of the hills through the pine woods, and then out to the edge of a meadow and down across this meadow to the bridge. There were birches along the stream and it was not big, but narrow, clear and fast, with pools where it had cut under the roots of the birches. At the Hotel in Triberg the proprietor had a fine season. It was very pleasant and we were all great friends. The next year came the inflation and the money he had made the year before was not enough to buy supplies to open the hotel and he hanged himself. You could dictate that, but you could not dictate the Place Contrescarpe where the flower sellers dyed their flowers in the street and the dye ran over the paving where the autobus started and the old men and the women, always drunk on wine and bad marc; and the children with their noses running in the cold; the smell of dirty sweat and poverty and drunkenness at the Cafe des Amateurs and the whores at the Bal Musette they lived above. The Concierge who entertained the trooper of the Garde Republicaine in her loge, his horse-hair-plumed helmet on a chair. The locataire across the hall whose husband was a bicycle racer and her joy that morning at the Cremerie when she had opened L'Auto and seen where he placed third in Paris-Tours, his first big race. She had blushed and laughed and then gone upstairs crying with the yellow sporting paper in her hand. 他们一起喝着酒,没有痛的感觉,只是因为一直躺着不能翻身而感到不适,两个仆人生起了一堆篝火,光影在帐篷上跳跃,他感到自己对这种愉快的投降生活所怀有的那种默认的心情,现在又油然而生了。她确实对他非常好。今天下午他对她太狠心了,也太不公平了。她是个好女人,确实是个了不起的女人。可是就在这当儿,他忽然想起他快要死了。 这个念头象一种突如其来的冲击;不是流水或者疾风那样的冲击;而是一股无影无踪的臭气的冲击,令人奇怪的是,那只鬣狗却沿着这股无影无踪的臭气的边缘轻轻地溜过来了。 “干什么,哈里?”她问他。 “没有什么,”他说。“你最好挪到那一边去坐。坐到上风那一边去。” “莫洛给你换药了没有?” “换过了。我刚敷上硼酸膏。” “你觉得怎么样?” “有点颤抖。” “我要进去洗澡了,”她说。“我马上就会出来的。我跟你一起吃晚饭,然后把帆布床抬进去。” 这样,他自言自语地说,咱们结束吵嘴,是做对啦。他跟这个女人从来没有大吵大闹过,而他跟他爱上的那些女人却吵得很厉害,最后由于吵嘴的腐蚀作用,总是毁了他们共同怀有的感情:他爱得太深,要求得也太多,这样就把一切全都耗尽了。 他想起那次他孤零零地在君士坦丁堡⑾的情景,从巴黎出走之前,他吵了一场。那一阵他夜夜宿娼,而事后他仍然无法排遣寂寞,相反更加感到难忍的寂寞,于是他给她,他那第一个情妇,那个离开了他的女人写了一封信,告诉她,他是怎样始终割不断对她的思恋…… 怎样有次在摄政院外面他以为看到了她,为了追上她,他跑得头昏眼花,心里直想吐,他会在林荫大道跟踪一个外表有点象她的女人,可就是不敢看清楚不是她,生怕就此失去了她在他心里引起的感情。他跟不少女人睡过,可是她们每个人又是怎样只能使他更加想念她,他又是怎样决不介意她干了些什么,因为他知道他摆脱不掉对她的爱恋。他在夜总会冷静而清醒地写了这封信,寄到纽约去,央求她把回信寄到他在巴黎的事务所去。这样似乎比较稳当。那天晚上他非常想念她,他觉得心里空荡荡的直想吐,他在街头踯躅,一直溜过塔克辛姆,碰到了一个女郎,带她一起去吃晚饭。后来他到了一个地方,同她跳舞,可是她跳得很糟,于是丢下了她,搞上了一个风骚的亚美尼亚女郎,她把肚子贴着他的身子摆动,擦得肚子都几乎要烫坏了。他跟一个少尉衔的英国炮手吵了一架,就把她从炮手手里带走了。那个炮手把他叫到外面去,于是他们在暗地里,在大街的圆石地面上打了起来。他朝他的下巴颏狠狠地揍了两拳,可是他并没有倒下,这一下他知道他免不了要有一场厮打了。那个炮手先打中了他的身子,接着又打中他的眼角。他又一次挥动左手,击中了那个炮手,炮手向他扑过来,抓住了他的上衣,扯下了他的袖子,他往他的耳朵后面狠狠揍了两拳,接着在他把他推开的时候,又用右手把他击倒在地。炮手倒下的时候,头先磕在地上,于是他带着女郎跑掉了,因为他们听见宪兵来了。他们乘上一辆出租汽车,沿着博斯普鲁斯海峡⑿驶向雷米利希萨,兜了一圈,在凛冽的寒夜回到城里睡觉,她给人的感觉就象她的外貌一样,过于成熟了,但是柔滑如脂,象玫瑰花瓣,象糖浆似的,肚子光滑,胸脯高耸,也不需要在她的臀部下垫个枕头,在她醒来以前,他就离开了她,在第一线曙光照射下,她的容貌显得粗俗极了,他带着一只打得发青的眼圈来到彼拉宫,手里提着那件上衣,因为袖子已经没了。 就在那天晚上,他离君士坦丁堡动身到安纳托利亚⒀去,后来他回忆那次旅行,整天穿行在种着罂粟花的田野里,那里的人们种植罂粟花提炼鸦片,这使你感到多么新奇,最后——不管朝哪个方向走仿佛都不对似的——到了他们曾经跟那些刚从君士坦丁堡来的军官一起发动进攻的地方,那些军官啥也不董,大炮都打到部队里去了,那个英国观察员哭得象个小孩子似的。 就在那天,他第一次看到了死人,穿着白色的芭蕾舞裙子和向上想起的有绒球的鞋子。土耳其人象波浪般地不断涌来,他看见那些穿着裙子的男人在奔跑着,军官们朝他们打熗,接着军官们自己也逃跑了,他同那个英国观察员也跑了,跑得他肺都发痛了,嘴里尽是那股铜腥味,他们在岩石后面停下来休息,土耳其人还在波浪般地涌来。后来他看到了他从来没有想象到的事情,后来他还看到比这些更糟的事情。所以,那次他回到巴黎的时候,这些他都不能谈,即使提起这些他都受不了。他经过咖啡馆的时候,里面有那位美国诗人,面前一大堆碟子,土豆般的脸上露出一副蠢相,正在跟一个名叫特里斯坦·采拉⒁的罗马尼亚人讲达达运动。特里斯坦·采拉老是戴着单眼镜,老是闹头痛;接着,当他回到公寓跟他的妻子在一起的时候,他又爱他的妻子了,吵架已经过去了,气恼也过去了,他很高兴自己又回到家里,事务所把他的信件送到了他的公寓。这样,一天早晨,那封答复他写的那封信的回信托在一只盘子里送进来了,当他看到信封上的笔迹时,他浑身发冷,想把那封信塞在另一封信下面。可是他的妻子说:“亲爱的,那封信是谁寄来的?”于是那件刚开场的事就此了结。 他想起他同所有这些女人在一起时的欢乐和争吵。 她们总是挑选最妙的场合跟他吵嘴。为什么她们总是在他心情最愉快的时候跟他吵嘴呢?关于这些,他一点也没有写过,因为起先是他绝不想伤害她们任何一个人的感情,后来看起来好象即使不写这些,要写的东西就已经够多了。但是他始终认为最后他还是会写的。要写的东西太多了。他目睹过世界的变化;不仅是那些事件而已;尽管他也曾目睹过许多事件,观察过人们,但是他目睹过更微妙的变化,而且记得人们在不同的时刻又是怎样表现的。他自己就曾经置身于这种变化之中,他观察过这种变化,写这种变化,正是他的责任,可是现在他再也不会写了。 “你觉得怎样啦?”她说。现在她洗过澡从帐篷里出来了。 “没有什么。” “这会儿就给你吃晚饭好吗?”他看见莫洛在她后面拿着折叠桌,另一个仆人拿着菜盘子。 “我要写东西,”他说。 “你应该喝点肉汤恢复体力。” “我今天晚上就要死了,”他说,“我用不着恢复什么体力啦。” “请你别那么夸张,哈里,”她说。 “你干吗不用你的鼻子闻一闻?我都已经烂了半截啦,现在烂到大腿上了。我干吗还要跟肉汤开玩笑?莫洛,拿威士忌苏打来。” “请你喝肉汤吧,”她温柔地说。 “好吧。” 肉汤太烫了。他只好把肉汤倒在杯子里,等凉得可以喝了,才把肉汤喝下去,一口也没有哽住过。 “你是一个好女人,”他说,“你不用关心我啦。” 她仰起她那张在《激励》和《城市与乡村》上人人皆知,人人都爱的脸庞望着他,那张脸因为酗酒狂饮而稍有逊色,因为贪恋床第之乐而稍有逊色,可是《城市与乡村》从未展示过她那美丽的胸部,她那有用的大腿,她那轻柔地爱抚你的纤小的手,当他望着她,看到她那著名的动人的微笑的时候,他感到死神又来临了。这回没有冲击。它是一股气,象一阵使烛光摇曳,使火焰腾起的微风。 “待会儿他们可以把我的蚊帐拿出来挂在树上,生一堆篝火。今天晚上我不想搬到帐篷里去睡了。不值得搬动了。今天是一个晴朗的夜晚。不会下雨。” 那么,你就这样死了,在你听不见的悄声低语中死去了。 好吧,这样就再也不会吵嘴了。这一点他可以保证。这个他从来没有经历过的经验,他现在不会去破坏它了。但是他也可能会破坏。你已经把什么都毁啦。但是也许他不会。 “你能听写吗?” “我没有学过,”她告诉他。 “好吧。” 没有时间了,当然,尽管好象经过了压缩,只要你能处理得当,你只消用一段文字就可以把那一切都写进去。 在湖畔,一座山上,有一所圆木构筑的房子,缝隙都用灰泥嵌成白色。门边的柱子上挂着一只铃,这是召唤人们进去吃饭用的。房子后面是田野,田野后面是森林。一排伦巴底白杨树从房子一直伸展到码头。另一排白杨树沿着这一带迤逦而去。森林的边缘有一条通向山峦的小路,他曾经在这条小路上采摘过黑莓。后来,那所圆木房子烧坍了,在壁炉上面的鹿脚架上挂着的猎熗都烧掉了,熗筒和熗托跟融化在弹夹里的铅弹也都一起烧坏了,搁在那一堆灰上——那堆灰原是给那只做肥皂的大铁锅熬碱水用的,你问祖父能不能拿去玩,他说,不行。你知道那些猎熗仍旧是他的,他从此也再没有买别的猎熗了。他也再不打猎了。现在在原来的地方用木料重新盖了那所房子,漆成了白色,从门廊上你可以看见白杨树和那边的湖光山色;可是再也没有猎熗了。从前挂在圆木房子墙上的鹿脚上的猎熗筒,搁在那堆灰上,再也没有人去碰过。 战后,我们在黑森林⒂里,租了一条钓鲑鱼的小溪,有两条路可以跑到那儿去。一条是从特里贝格走下山谷,然后烧着那条覆盖在林荫(靠近那条白色的路)下的山路走上一条山坡小道,穿山越岭,经过许多矗立着高大的黑森林式房子的小农场,一直走到小道和小溪交叉的地方。我们就在这个地方开始钓鱼。 另一条路是陡直地爬上树林边沿,然后翻过山巅,穿过松林,接着走出林子来到一片草地边沿,下山越过这片草地到那座桥边。小溪边是一溜桦树,小溪并不宽阔,而是窄小、清澈而湍急,在桦树根边冲出了一个个小潭。 在特里贝格的客店里,店主人这一季生意兴隆。这是使人非常快活的事,我们都是亲密的朋友。第二年通货膨胀,店主人前一年赚的钱,还不够买进经营客店必需的物品,于是他上吊死了。 你能口授这些,但是你无法口授那个城堡护墙广场,那里卖花人在大街上给他们的花卉染色,颜料淌得路面上到处都是,公共汽车都从那儿出发,老头儿和女人们总是喝甜酒和用果渣酿制的低劣的白兰地,喝得醉醺醺的;小孩子们在寒风凛冽中淌着鼻涕;汗臭和贫穷的气味,“业余者咖啡馆”里的醉态,还有“风笛”跳舞厅的妓女们,她们就住在舞厅楼上。那个看门女人在她的小屋里款待那个共和国自卫队员,一张椅上放着共和国自卫队员的那顶插着马鬃的帽子。门厅那边还有家住户,她的丈夫是个自行车赛手,那天早晨她在牛奶房打开《机动车》报看到他在第一次参加盛大的巴黎环城比赛中名列第三时,她是多么高兴。她涨红了脸,大声笑了出来,接着跑到楼上,手里拿着那张淡黄色的体育报哭了起来。 |
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