第36部分 (第4/7頁)
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became
stronger; and was restless as a young eel。 Anna was worn out
with the day…long wrestling with its young vigour。
As a little animal; she loved and adored it and was happy。
She loved her husband; she kissed his eyes and nose and mouth;
and made much of him; she said his limbs were beautiful; she was
fascinated by the physical form of him。
And she was indeed Anna Victrix。 He could not bat her any
more。 He was out in the wilderness; alone with her。 Having
occasion to go to London; he marvelled; as he returned; thinking
of naked; lurking savages on an island; how these had built up
and created the great mass of Oxford Street or Piccadilly。 How
had helpless savages; running with their spears on the
riverside; after fish; how had they e to rear up this great
London; the ponderous; massive; ugly superstructure of a world
of man upon a world of nature! It frightened and awed him。 Man
was terrible; awful in his works。 The works of man were more
terrible than man himself; almost monstrous。
And yet; for his own part; for his private being; Brangwen
felt that the whole of the man's world was exterior and
extraneous to his own real life with Anna。 Sweep away the whole
monstrous superstructure of the world of to…day; cities and
industries and civilization; leave only the bare earth with
plants growing and waters running; and he would not mind; so
long as he were whole; had Anna and the child and the new;
strange certainty in his soul。 Then; if he were naked; he would
find clothing somewhere; he would make a shelter and bring food
to his wife。
And what more? What more would be necessar