第 22 节
作者:想聊      更新:2021-02-19 01:11      字数:9322
  gray salon。 I rushed into the fields and vineyards to make her two
  bouquets; but as I gathered the flowers; one by one; cutting their
  long stalks and admiring their beauty; the thought occurred to me that
  the colors and foliage had a poetry; a harmony; which meant something
  to the understanding while they charmed the eye; just as musical
  melodies awaken memories in hearts that are loving and beloved。 If
  color is light organized; must it not have a meaning of its own; as
  the combinations of the air have theirs? I called in the assistance of
  Jacques and Madeleine; and all three of us conspired to surprise our
  dear one。 I arranged; on the lower steps of the portico; where we
  established our floral headquarters; two bouquets by which I tried to
  convey a sentiment。 Picture to yourself a fountain of flowers gushing
  from the vases and falling back in curving waves; my message springing
  from its bosom in white roses and lilies with their silver cups。 All
  the blue flowers; harebells; forget…me…nots; and ox…tongues; whose
  tines; caught from the skies; blended so well with the whiteness of
  the lilies; sparkled on this dewy texture; were they not the type of
  two purities; the one that knows nothing; the other that knows all; an
  image of the child; an image of the martyr? Love has its blazon; and
  the countess discerned it inwardly。 She gave me a poignant glance
  which was like the cry of a soldier when his wound is touched; she was
  humbled but enraptured too。 My reward was in that glance; to refresh
  her heart; to have given her comfort; what encouragement for me! Then
  it was that I pressed the theories of Pere Castel into the service of
  love; and recovered a science lost to Europe; where written pages have
  supplanted the flowery missives of the Orient with their balmy tints。
  What charm in expressing our sensations through these daughters of the
  sun; sisters to the flowers that bloom beneath the rays of love!
  Before long I communed with the flora of the fields; as a man whom I
  met in after days at Grandlieu communed with his bees。
  Twice a week during the remainder of my stay at Frapesle I continued
  the slow labor of this poetic enterprise; for the ultimate
  accomplishment of which I needed all varieties of herbaceous plants;
  into these I made a deep research; less as a botanist than as a poet;
  studying their spirit rather than their form。 To find a flower in its
  native haunts I walked enormous distances; beside the brooklets;
  through the valleys; to the summit of the cliffs; across the moorland;
  garnering thoughts even from the heather。 During these rambles I
  initiated myself into pleasures unthought of by the man of science who
  lives in meditation; unknown to the horticulturist busy with
  specialities; to the artisan fettered to a city; to the merchant
  fastened to his desk; but known to a few foresters; to a few woodsmen;
  and to some dreamers。 Nature can show effects the significations of
  which are limitless; they rise to the grandeur of the highest moral
  conceptionsbe it the heather in bloom; covered with the diamonds of
  the dew on which the sunlight dances; infinitude decked for the single
  glance that may chance to fall upon it:be it a corner of the forest
  hemmed in with time…worn rocks crumbling to gravel and clothed with
  mosses overgrown with juniper; which grasps our minds as something
  savage; aggressive; terrifying as the cry of the kestrel issuing from
  it:be it a hot and barren moor without vegetation; stony; rigid; its
  horizon like those of the desert; where once I gathered a sublime and
  solitary flower; the anemone pulsatilla; with its violet petals
  opening for the golden stamens; affecting image of my pure idol alone
  in her valley:be it great sheets of water; where nature casts those
  spots of greenery; a species of transition between the plant and
  animal; where life makes haste to come in flowers and insects;
  floating there like worlds in ether:be it a cottage with its garden
  of cabbages; its vineyards; its hedges overhanging a bog; surrounded
  by a few sparse fields of rye; true image of many humble existences:
  be it a forest path like some cathedral nave; where the trees are
  columns and their branches arch the roof; at the far end of which a
  light breaks through; mingled with shadows or tinted with sunset reds
  athwart the leaves which gleam like the colored windows of a chancel:
  then; leaving these woods so cool and branchy; behold a chalk…land
  lying fallow; where among the warm and cavernous mosses adders glide
  to their lairs; or lift their proud slim heads。 Cast upon all these
  pictures torrents of sunlight like beneficent waters; or the shadow of
  gray clouds drawn in lines like the wrinkles of an old man's brow; or
  the cool tones of a sky faintly orange and streaked with lines of a
  paler tint; then listenyou will hear indefinable harmonies amid a
  silence which blends them all。
  During the months of September and October I did not make a single
  bouquet which cost me less than three hours search; so much did I
  admire; with the real sympathy of a poet; these fugitive allegories of
  human life; that vast theatre I was about to enter; the scenes of
  which my memory must presently recall。 Often do I now compare those
  splendid scenes with memories of my soul thus expending itself on
  nature; again I walk that valley with my sovereign; whose white robe
  brushed the coppice and floated on the green sward; whose spirit rose;
  like a promised fruit; from each calyx filled with amorous stamens。
  No declaration of love; no vows of uncontrollable passion ever
  conveyed more than these symphonies of flowers; my baffled desires
  impelled me to efforts of expression through them like those of
  Beethoven through his notes; to the same bitter reactions; to the same
  mighty bounds towards heaven。 In their presence Madame de Mortsauf was
  my Henriette。 She looked at them constantly; they fed her spirit; she
  gathered all the thoughts I had given them; saying; as she raised her
  head from the embroidery frame to receive my gift; 〃Ah; how
  beautiful!〃
  Natalie; you will understand this delightful intercourse through the
  details of a bouquet; just as you would comprehend Saadi from a
  fragment of his verse。 Have you ever smelt in the fields in the month
  of May the perfume that communicates to all created beings the
  intoxicating sense of a new creation; the sense that makes you trail
  your hand in the water from a boat; and loosen your hair to the breeze
  while your mind revives with the springtide greenery of the trees? A
  little plant; a species of vernal grass; is a powerful element in this
  veiled harmony; it cannot be worn with impunity; take into your hand
  its shining blade; striped green and white like a silken robe; and
  mysterious emotions will stir the rosebuds your modesty keeps hidden
  in the depths of your heart。 Round the neck of a porcelain vase
  imagine a broad margin of the gray…white tufts peculiar to the sedum
  of the vineyards of Touraine; vague image of submissive forms; from
  this foundation come tendrils of the bind…weed with its silver bells;
  sprays of pink rest…barrow mingled with a few young shoots of oak…
  leaves; lustrous and magnificently colored; these creep forth
  prostrate; humble as the weeping…willow; timid and supplicating as
  prayer。 Above; see those delicate threads of the purple amoret; with
  its flood of anthers that are nearly yellow; the snowy pyramids of the
  meadow…sweet; the green tresses of the wild oats; the slender plumes
  of the agrostis; which we call wind…ear; roseate hopes; decking love's
  earliest dream and standing forth against the gray surroundings。 But
  higher still; remark the Bengal roses; sparsely scattered among the
  laces of the daucus; the plumes of the linaria; the marabouts of the
  meadow…queen; see the umbels of the myrrh; the spun glass of the
  clematis in seed; the dainty petals of the cross…wort; white as milk;
  the corymbs of the yarrow; the spreading stems of the fumitory with
  their black and rosy blossoms; the tendrils of the grape; the twisted
  shoots of the honeysuckle; in short; all the innocent creatures have
  that is most tangled; wayward; wild;flames and triple darts; leaves
  lanceolated or jagged; stalks convoluted like passionate desires
  writhing in the soul。 From the bosom of this torrent of love rises the
  scarlet poppy; its tassels about to open; spreading its flaming flakes
  above the starry jessamine; dominating the rain of pollenthat soft
  mist fluttering in the air and reflecting the light in its myriad
  particles。 What woman intoxicated with the odor of the vernal grasses
  would fail to understand this wealth of offered thoughts; these ardent
  desires of a love demanding the happiness refused in a hundred
  struggles which passion still renews; continuous; unwearying; eternal!
  Put this speech of the flowers in the light of a window to show its
  crisp details; its delicate contrasts; its arabesques of color; and
  allow th