Aaron's Rod by D. H. Lawrence (best young adult book series txt) đ
- Author: D. H. Lawrence
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Feeling quite weak and faint, as if he had really been struck by some evil electric fluid, he walked on. And as soon as he began to walk, he began to reason. Perhaps his letter-case was in his other coat. Perhaps he had not had it with him at all. Perhaps he was feeling all this, just for nothing. Perhaps it was all folly.
He hurried forward. He wanted to make sure. He wanted relief. It was as if the power of evil had suddenly seized him and thrown him, and he wanted to say it was not so, that he had imagined it all, conjured it up. He did not want to admit the power of evilâparticularly at that moment. For surely a very ugly evil spirit had struck him, in the midst of that gang of Italian soldiers. He knew itâit had pierced him. It had got him.
But he wanted to say it was not so. Reaching the house, he hastened upwards to his far-off, lonely room, through the dark corridors. Once in his own apartment, he shut the door and switched on the light, a sensation like fear at his heart. Then he searched his other pockets. He looked everywhere. In vain.
In vain, truly enough. For he knew the thing was stolen. He had known it all along. The soldiers had deliberately plotted, had deliberately rushed him and taken his purse. They must have watched him previously. They must have grinned, and jeered at him.
He sat down in a chair, to recover from the shock. The pocket-book contained four hundred francs, three one-pound notes, and various letters and private effects. Well, these were lost. But it was not so much the loss as the assault on his person that caused him to feel so stricken. He felt the jeering, gibing blows they had given as they jostled him.
And now he sat, weak in every limb, and said to himself: âYesâand if I hadnât rushed along so full of feeling: if I hadnât exposed myself: if I hadnât got worked up with the Marchesa, and then rushed all kindled through the streets, without reserve, it would never have happened. I gave myself away: and there was someone ready to snatch what I gave. I gave myself away. It is my own fault. I should have been on my guard. I should be always on my guard: always, always. With God and the devil both, I should be on my guard. Godly or devilish, I should hold fast to my reserve and keep on the watch. And if I donât, I deserve what I get.â
But still he sat in his chair in his bedroom, dazed. One part of his soul was saying emphatically: It serves you right. It is nothing but right. It serves everybody right who rushes enkindled through the street, and trusts implicitly in mankind and in the life-spirit, as if mankind and the life-spirit were a playground for enkindled individuals. It serves you right. You have paid about twelve pounds sterling for your lesson. Fool, you might have known beforehand, and then you neednât have paid at all. You can ill afford twelve pounds sterling, you fool. But since paid you have, then mind, mind the lesson is learned. Never again. Never expose yourself again. Never again absolute trust. It is a blasphemy against life, is absolute trust. Has a wild creature ever absolute trust? It minds itself. Sleeping or waking it is on its guard. And so must you be, or youâll go under. Sleeping or waking, man or woman, God or the devil, keep your guard over yourself. Keep your guard over yourself, lest worse befall you. No man is robbed unless he incites a robber. No man is murdered unless he attracts a murderer. Then be not robbed: it lies within your own power. And be not murdered. Or if you are, you deserve it. Keep your guard over yourself, now, always and forever. Yes, against God quite as hard as against the devil. Heâs fully as dangerous to you. . . .
Thus thinking, not in his mind but in his soul, his active, living soul, he gathered his equanimity once more, and accepted the fact. So he rose and tidied himself for dinner. His face was now set, and still. His heart also was stillâand fearless. Because its sentinel was stationed. Stationed, stationed for ever.
And Aaron never forgot. After this, it became essential to him to feel that the sentinel stood guard in his own heart. He felt a strange unease the moment he was off his guard. Asleep or awake, in the midst of the deepest passion or the suddenest love, or in the throes of greatest excitement or bewilderment, somewhere, some corner of himself was awake to the fact that the sentinel of the soul must not sleep, no, never, not for one instant.
CHAPTER XVII
HIGH UP OVER THE CATHEDRAL SQUARE
Aaron and Lilly sat in Argyleâs little loggia, high up under the eaves of the small hotel, a sort of long attic-terrace just under the roof, where no one would have suspected it. It was level with the grey conical roof of the Baptistery. Here sat Aaron and Lilly in the afternoon, in the last of the lovely autumn sunshine. Below, the square was already cold in shadow, the pink and white and green Baptistery rose lantern-shaped as from some sea-shore, cool, cold and wan now the sun was gone. Black figures, innumerable black figures, curious because they were all on end, up on endâAaron could not say why he expected them to be horizontalâlittle black figures upon end, like fishes that swim on their tails, wiggled endlessly across the piazza, little carriages on natural all-fours rattled tinily across, the yellow little tram-cars, like dogs slipped round the corner. The balcony was so high up, that the sound was ineffectual. The upper space, above the houses, was nearer than the under-currents of the noisy town. Sunlight, lovely full sunlight, lingered warm and still on the balcony. It caught the facade of the cathedral sideways, like the tips of a flower, and sideways lit up the stem of Giottoâs tower, like a lily stem, or a long, lovely pale pink and white and green pistil of the lily of the cathedral. Florence, the flowery town. FirenzeâFiorenzeâthe flowery town: the red lilies. The Fiorentini, the flower-souled. Flowers with good roots in the mud and muck, as should be: and fearless blossoms in air, like the cathedral and the tower and the David.
âI love it,â said Lilly. âI love this place, I love the cathedral and the tower. I love its pinkness and its paleness. The Gothic souls find fault with it, and say it is gimcrack and tawdry and cheap. But I love it, it is delicate and rosy, and the dark stripes are as they should be, like the tiger marks on a pink lily. Itâs a lily, not a rose; a pinky white lily with dark tigery marks. And heavy, too, in its own substance: earth-substance, risen from earth into the air: and never forgetting the dark, black-fierce earthâI reckon here men for a moment were themselves, as a plant in flower is for the moment completely itself. Then it goes off. As Florence has gone off. No flowers now. But it HAS flowered. And I donât see why a race should be like an aloe tree, flower once and die. Why should it? Why not flower again? Why not?â
âIf itâs going to, it will,â said Aaron. âOur deciding about it wonât alter it.â
âThe decision is part of the business.â
Here they were interrupted by Argyle, who put his head through one of the windows. He had flecks of lather on his reddened face.
âDo you think youâre wise now,â he said, âto sit in that sun?â
âIn November?â laughed Lilly.
âAlways fear the sun when thereâs an ârâ in the month,â said Argyle. âAlways fear it ârâ or no âr,â I say. Iâm frightened of it. Iâve been in the South, I know what it is. I tell you Iâm frightened of it. But if you think you can stand itâwellââ
âIt wonât last much longer, anyhow,â said Lilly.
âToo long for me, my boy. Iâm a shady bird, in all senses of the word, in all senses of the word.âNow are you comfortable? What? Have another cushion? A rug for your knees? Youâre quite sure now? Well, wait just one moment till the waiter brings up a syphon, and you shall have a whiskey and soda. Preciousâoh, yes, very precious these daysâlike drinking gold. Thirty-five lire a bottle, my boy!â Argyle pulled a long face, and made a noise with his lips. âBut I had this bottle given me, and luckily youâve come while thereâs a drop left. Very glad you have! Very glad you have.â
Here he poked a little table through the window, and put a bottle and two glasses, one a tooth-glass, upon it. Then he withdrew again to finish shaving. The waiter presently hobbled up with the syphon and third glass. Argyle pushed his head through the window, that was only a little higher than the balcony. He was soon neatly shaved, and was brushing his hair.
âGo ahead, my boys, go ahead with that whiskey!â he said.
âWeâll wait for you,â said Lilly.
âNo, no, donât think of it. However, if you will, I shall be one minute onlyâone minute only. Iâll put on the water for the tea now. Oh, damned bad methylated spirit they sell now! And six francs a litre! Six francs a litre! I donât know what Iâm going to do, the air I breathe costs money nowadaysâJust one moment and Iâll be with you! Just one momentââ
In a very little while he came from the tiny attic bedroom, through the tiniest cupboard of a sitting-room under the eaves, where his books were, and where he had hung his old red India tapestriesâor silk embroideriesâand he emerged there up above the world on the loggia.
âNow thenâ_siamo nel paradiso_, eh? Paradisal enough for you, is it?â
âThe devil looking over Lincoln,â said Lilly laughing, glancing up into Argyleâs face.
âThe devil looking over Florence would feel sad,â said Argyle. âThe place is fast growing respectableâOh, piety makes the devil chuckle. But respectability, my boy, argues a serious diminution of spunk. And when the spunk diminishes we-ellâitâs enough to make the most sturdy devil look sick. What? No doubt about it, no doubt whateverâThere â!â he had just finished settling his tie and buttoning his waistcoat. âHow do I look, eh? Presentable?âIâve just had this suit turned. Clever little tailor across the way there. But he charged me a hundred and twenty francs.â Argyle pulled a face, and made the little trumping noise with his lips. âHoweverânot bad, is it?âHe had to let in a bit at the back of the waistcoat, and a gusset, my boy, a gussetâin the trousers back. Seems Iâve grown in
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