登陆注册
15290400000024

第24章

"That's part of the glory of it all," he said; "that art and its emotions become part of you like the food you eat and the wine you drink. Art is always making us; it enters into our character and destiny. As long as you go on growing you assimilate, and thank God one's mind or soul, or whatever you like to call it, goes on growing for a long time. I suppose the moment comes to most people when they cease to grow, when they become fixed and hard; and that is what we mean by being old. But till then you weave your destiny, or, rather, people and beauty weave it for you, as you'll see the Norns weaving, and yet you never know what you are making.

You make what you are, and you never are because you are always becoming. You must excuse me; but Germans are always metaphysicians, and they can't help it.""Go on; be German," said Michael.

"Lieber Gott! As if I could be anything else," said Falbe, laughing. "We are the only nation which makes a science of experimentalism; we try everything, just as a puppy tries everything. It tries mutton bones, and match-boxes, and soap and boots; it tries to find out what its tail is for, and bites it till it hurts, on which it draws the conclusion that it is not meant to eat. Like all metaphysicians, too, and dealers in the abstract, we are intensely practical. Our passion for experimentalism is dictated by the firm object of using the knowledge we acquire. We are tremendously thorough; we waste nothing, not even time, whereas the English have an absolute genius for wasting time. Look at all your games, your sports, your athletics--I am being quite German now, and forgetting my mother, bless her!--they are merely devices for getting rid of the hours, and so not having to think. You hate thought as a nation, and we live for it. Music is thought; all art is thought; commercial prosperity is thought; soldiering is thought.""And we are a nation of idiots?" asked Michael.

"No; I didn't say that. I should say you are a nation of sensualists. You value sensation above everything; you pursue the enjoyable. You are a nation of children who are always having a perpetual holiday. You go straying all over the world for fun, and annex it generally, so that you can have tiger-shooting in India, and lots of gold to pay for your tiger-shooting in Africa, and fur from Canada for your coats. But it's all a game; not one man in a thousand in England has any idea of Empire.""Oh, I think you are wrong there," said Michael. "You believe that only because we don't talk about it. It's--it's like what we agreed about Parsifal. We don't talk about it because it is so much part of us."Falbe sat up.

"I deny it; I deny it flatly," he said. "I know where I get my power of foolish, unthinking enjoyment from, and it's from my English blood. I rejoice in my English blood, because you are the happiest people on the face of the earth. But you are happy because you don't think, whereas the joy of being German is that you do think. England is lying in the shade, like us, with a cigarette and a drink--I wish I had one--and a golf ball or the world with which she has been playing her game. But Germany is sitting up all night thinking, and every morning she gives an order or two."Michael supplied the cigarette.

"Do you mean she is thinking about England's golf ball?" asked Michael.

"Why, of course she is! What else is there to think about?""Oh, it's impossible that there should be a European war," said Michael, "for that is what it will mean!""And why is a European war impossible?" demanded Falbe, lighting his cigarette.

"It's simply unthinkable!"

"Because you don't think," he interrupted. "I can tell you that the thought of war is never absent for a single day from the average German mind. We are all soldiers, you see. We start with that. You start by being golfers and cricketers. But 'der Tag' is never quite absent from the German mind. I don't say that all you golfers and cricketers wouldn't make good soldiers, but you've got to be made. You can't be a golfer one day and a soldier the next."Michael laughed.

"As for that," he said, "I made an uncommonly bad soldier. But Iam an even worse golfer. As for cricket--"Falbe again interrupted.

"Ah, then at last I know two things about you," he said. "You were a soldier and you can't play golf. I have never known so little about anybody after three--four days. However, what is our proverb? 'Live and learn.' But it takes longer to learn than to live. Eh, what nonsense I talk."He spoke with a sudden irritation, and the laugh at the end of his speech was not one of amusement, but rather of mockery. To Michael this mood was quite inexplicable, but, characteristically, he looked about in himself for the possible explanation of it.

"But what's the matter?" he asked. "Have I annoyed you somehow?

I'm awfully sorry."

Falbe did not reply for a moment.

"No, you've not annoyed me," he said. "I've annoyed myself. But that's the worst of living on one's nerves, which is the penalty of Baireuth. There is no charge, so to speak, except for your ticket, but a collection is made, as happens at meetings, and you pay with your nerves. You must cancel my annoyance, please. If I showed it I did not mean to."Michael pondered over this.

"But I can't leave it like that," he said at length. "Was it about the possibility of war, which I said was unthinkable?"Falbe laughed and turned on his elbow towards Michael.

"No, my dear chap," he said. "You may believe it to be unthinkable, and I may believe it to be inevitable; but what does it matter what either of us believes? Che sara sara. It was quite another thing that caused me to annoy myself. It does not matter."Michael lay back on the soft slope.

"Yet I insist on knowing," he said. "That is, I mean, if it is not private."Falbe lay quietly with his long fingers in the sediment of pine-needles.

同类推荐
  • 洪恩灵济真君集福午朝仪

    洪恩灵济真君集福午朝仪

    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。
  • 孝经

    孝经

    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。
  • 醉古堂剑扫卷

    醉古堂剑扫卷

    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。
  • 精忠旗

    精忠旗

    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。
  • 金箓午朝仪

    金箓午朝仪

    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
  • 邪冰校草淑女太难追

    邪冰校草淑女太难追

    三个国民校草,男神,明星抢着做校花的专属贴身保镖。
  • 七灵帝尊

    七灵帝尊

    秦川跟随古书,穿越九天大陆,得七脉灵根,习天命九剑。可契约之后,秦川才发现上了剑魂的当,这竟然是一本追命剑诀,如果不能在规定时间内完成,就要受到当场殒命的处罚!“这不是逼着少爷我成神么……?”剑荡九天,伏尸百万,少爷的修炼速度,又岂是你等庸才,能看的懂的?老书400万完本,不断更,不TJ,放心入坑!
  • 玄天无上

    玄天无上

    天道玄默无容无则谁能阻我天要亡我则灭天地要覆我则踏地看主角如何富贵险中求与这世界一争高下看他坐拥无数江山只为与所爱之人闲时一憩与兄弟豪迈一生即便与天道背道相驰和规则相逆
  • 穿越异界做王储

    穿越异界做王储

    他是修真界的一代奇才,却又是一代废柴,通晓各种杂学,却又无法修炼,在偶得上古传承,穿越异界之后,一切都变得不一样了,这是一片神奇的大陆,没有魔法与斗气,有的只是灵道师与灵武者,剑道、御兽术、丹道、阵法、军团、战阵……将在这里被一一呈现。
  • 神秘总裁不见面

    神秘总裁不见面

    什么?那个屌丝毒舌室友居然就是那个自己费尽心机想要勾引的秦氏总裁,白小萌蒙了,也怒了,原来他一直热心教自己怎么勾引的人,就是他自己,怒归怒,还得陪着笑脸,大人你大人有大量,别跟我小女子一般计较,以前的事情,都是我不对....看着他那么装模做样的脸,她只能在心里歪歪着,真想一拳打过去..毒手总裁和爱捉弄人的萌妹子会发生多少啼笑皆非,又让人感动的事情呢?别走开,听我慢慢道来。
  • 路过你的青春

    路过你的青春

    季瞳,大四女生,纯净清澈,单纯勇敢,凌梓寒,IT界新贵,帅气的大才子,萧昱楠,跟贺军翔很像的花花公子,江筱,热辣,性感。我们曾经深爱着,我们,在彼此的生命里路过。命中注定的一场追逐,绚烂无比。
  • 矜来时

    矜来时

    彼时年少不解尘事,天涯苍茫,他就是她的天。于他身后,那股子傲气四处迸发,那股执念,在她幼小的内心深处萌芽。那四百年,是再平凡不过,却似是人间最难得的往昔。磨平了她的傲气,冲淡了她的执念。阅过红尘繁多,方知大道无情,方知天下之大。所谓全天下,也不过是儿时妄语。只得让过往尘封,将往事埋藏,不论前尘事,念不得后生。将饮一壶酒,与之月下对弈;一瞬忆起前尘,似有故人叹。酒毕,却是做着一场春秋大梦。那人似又在轻唤她名,月下似又是他的身影。云起雨落,梦醒,只余一声空叹。
  • 晚秋雨林

    晚秋雨林

    还记得我上学的时候暗恋过的男生很张扬,很帅,很洒脱。那些发生在我身边的故事,我想记录下来。同时也想记住他。
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 重生之末世修仙

    重生之末世修仙

    身携自创功法,重归三千年前。地球末世,不过是叶辰弥补过去的开始。曾经的仇,赐你血海滔天。曾经的恩,还你繁华无边。但所做的一切,只是为了在一万年后,那道倩影依然伫立心间。