第27部分 (第2/7頁)
丟丟提示您:看後求收藏(奇妙書庫www.qmshu.tw),接著再看更方便。
terly careless and happy; and he loved her to
do it。
But he was strange and unused。 So suddenly; everything that
had been before was shed away and gone。 One day; he was a
bachelor; living with the world。 The next day; he was with her;
as remote from the world as if the two of them were buried like
a seed in darkness。 Suddenly; like a chestnut falling out of a
burr; he was shed naked and glistening on to a soft; fecund
earth; leaving behind him the hard rind of worldly knowledge and
experience。 He heard it in the huckster's cries; the noise of
carts; the calling of children。 And it was all like the hard;
shed rind; discarded。 Inside; in the softness and stillness of
the room; was the naked kernel; that palpitated in silent
activity; absorbed in reality。
Inside the room was a great steadiness; a core of living
eternity。 Only far outside; at the rim; went on the noise and
the destruction。 Here at the centre the great wheel was
motionless; centred upon itself。 Here was a poised; unflawed
stillness that was beyond time; because it remained the same;
inexhaustible; unchanging; unexhausted。
As they lay close together; plete and beyond the touch of
time or change; it was as if they were at the very centre of all
the slow wheeling of space and the rapid agitation of life;
deep; deep inside them all; at the centre where there is utter
radiance; and eternal being; and the silence absorbed in praise:
the steady core of all movements; the unawakened sleep of all
wakefulness。 They found themselves there; and they lay still; in
each other's arms; for their moment they were at the heart of
ete