Bliss by Katherine Mansfield (year 2 reading books txt) đ
- Author: Katherine Mansfield
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Yes, that was what he waited for and so did she. Yes, while she shook the teapot hot and dry over the spirit flame she saw those other two, him, leaning back, taking his ease among the cushions, and her, curled up en escargot in the blue shell armchair. The picture was so clear and so minute it might have been painted on the blue teapot lid. And yet she couldnât hurry. She could almost have cried: âGive me time.â She must have time in which to grow calm. She wanted time in which to free herself from all these familiar things with which she lived so vividly. For all these gay things round her were part of herâher offspringâand they knew it and made the largest, most vehement claims. But now they must go. They must be swept away, shooed awayâlike children, sent up the shadowy stairs, packed into bed, and commanded to go to sleepâat onceâwithout a murmur!
For the special thrilling quality of their friendship was in their complete surrender. Like two open cities in the midst of some vast plain their two minds lay open to each other. And it wasnât as if he rode into hers like a conqueror, armed to the eyebrows and seeing nothing but a gay silken flutterânor did she enter his like a queen walking soft on petals. No, they were eager, serious travellers, absorbed in understanding what was to be seen and discovering what was hiddenâmaking the most of this extraordinary absolute chance which made it possible for him to be utterly truthful to her and for her to be utterly sincere with him.
And the best of it was they were both of them old enough to enjoy their adventure to the full without any stupid emotional complication. Passion would have ruined everything; they quite saw that. Besides, all that sort of thing was over and done with for both of themâhe was thirty-one, she was thirtyâthey had had their experiences, and very rich and varied they had been, but now was the time for harvestâharvest. Werenât his novels to be very big novels indeed? And her plays. Who else had her exquisite sense of real English Comedy? âŠ
Carefully she cut the cake into thick little wads and he reached across for a piece.
âDo you realize how good it is,â she implored. âEat it imaginatively. Roll your eyes if you can and taste it on the breath. Itâs not a sandwich from the hatterâs bagâitâs the kind of cake that might have been mentioned in the Book of GenesisâŠ. And God said: âLet there be cake. And there was cake. And God saw that it was good.ââ
âYou neednât entreat me,â said he. âReally you neednât. Itâs a queer thing but I always do notice what I eat here and never anywhere else. I suppose it comes of living alone so long and always reading while I feed ⊠my habit of looking upon food as just food ⊠something thatâs there, at certain times⊠to be devoured ⊠to be⊠not there.â He laughed. âThat shocks you. Doesnât it?â
âTo the bone,â said she.
âButâlook hereââ He pushed away his cup and began to speak very fast. âI simply havenât got any external life at all. I donât know the names of things a bitâtrees and so onâand I never notice places or furniture or what people look like. One room is just like another to meâa place to sit and read or talk inâexcept,â and here he paused, smiled in a strange naive way, and said, âexcept this studio.â He looked round him and then at her; he laughed in his astonishment and pleasure. He was like a man who wakes up in a train to find that he has arrived, already, at the journeyâs end.
âHereâs another queer thing. If I shut my eyes I can see this place down to every detailâevery detailâŠ. Now I come to think of itâIâve never realized this consciously before. Often when I am away from here I revisit it in spiritâ wander about among your red chairs, stare at the bowl of fruit on the black tableâand just touch, very lightly, that marvel of a sleeping boyâs head.â
He looked at it as he spoke. It stood on the corner of the mantelpiece; the head to one side down-drooping, the lips parted, as though in his sleep the little boy listened to some sweet soundâŠ.
âI love that little boy,â he murmured. And then they both were silent.
A new silence came between them. Nothing in the least like the satisfactory pause that had followed their greetingsâ the âWell, here we are together again, and thereâs no reason why we shouldnât go on from just where we left off last time.â That silence could be contained in the circle of warm, delightful fire and lamplight. How many times hadnât they flung something into it just for the fun of watching the ripples break on the easy shores. But into this unfamiliar pool the head of the little boy sleeping his timeless sleep droppedâand the ripples flowed away, awayâboundlessly farâinto deep glittering darkness.
And then both of them broke it. She said: âI must make up the fire,â and he said: âI have been trying a new⊠â Both of them escaped. She made up the fire and put the table back, the blue chair was wheeled forward, she curled up and he lay back among the cushions. Quickly! Quickly! They must stop it from happening again.
âWell, I read the book you left last time.â
âOh, what do you think of it?â
They were off and all was as usual. But was it? Werenât they just a little too quick, too prompt with their replies, too ready to take each other up? Was this really anything more than a wonderfully good imitation of other occasions? His heart beat; her cheek burned and the stupid thing was she could not discover where exactly they were or what exactly was happening. She hadnât time to glance back. And just as she had got so far it happened again. They faltered, wavered, broke down, were silent. Again they were conscious of the boundless, questioning dark. Again, there they wereâtwo hunters, bending over their fire, but hearing suddenly from the jungle beyond a shake of wind and a loud, questioning cry⊠.
She lifted her head. âItâs raining,â she murmured. And her voice was like his when he had said: âI love that little boy.â
Well. Why didnât they just give way to itâyieldâand see what will happen then? But no. Vague and troubled though they were, they knew enough to realize their precious friendship was in danger. She was the one who would be destroyedânot theyâand theyâd be no party to that.
He got up, knocked out his pipe, ran his hand through his hair, and said: âI have been wondering very much lately whether the novel of the future will be a psychological novel or not. How sure are you that psychology qua psychology has got anything to do with literature at all?â
âDo you mean you feel thereâs quite a chance that the mysterious non-existent creaturesâthe young writers of to-dayâare trying simply to jump the psycho-analystâs claim?â
âYes, I do. And I think itâs because this generation is just wise enough to know that it is sick and to realize that its only chance of recovery is by going into its symptomsâmaking an exhaustive study of themâtracking them downâtrying to get at the root of the trouble.â
âBut oh,â she wailed. âWhat a dreadfully dismal outlook.â
âNot at all,â said he. âLook here ⊠â On the talk went. And now it seemed they really had succeeded. She turned in her chair to look at him while she answered. Her smile said: âWe have won.â And he smiled back, confident: âAbsolutely.â
But the smile undid them. It lasted too long; it became a grin. They saw themselves as two little grinning puppets jigging away in nothingness.
âWhat have we been talking about?â thought he. He was so utterly bored he almost groaned.
âWhat a spectacle we have made of ourselves,â thought she. And she saw him laboriouslyâoh, laboriouslyâlaying out the grounds and herself running after, puffing here a tree and there a flowery shrub and here a handful of glittering fish in a pool. They were silent this time from sheer dismay.
The clock struck six merry little pings and the fire made a soft flutter. What fools they wereâheavy, stodgy, elderlyâwith positively upholstered minds.
And now the silence put a spell upon them like solemn music. It was anguishâanguish for her to bear it and he would dieâheâd die if it were brokenâŠ. And yet he longed to break it. Not by speech. At any rate not by their ordinary maddening chatter. There was another way for them to speak to each other, and in the new way he wanted to murmur: âDo you feel this too? Do you understand it at all?â âŠ
Instead, to his horror, he heard himself say: âI must be off; Iâm meeting Brand at six.â
What devil made him say that instead of the other? She jumpedâsimply jumped out of her chair, and he heard her crying: âYou must rush, then. Heâs so punctual. Why didnât you say so before?â
âYouâve hurt me; youâve hurt me! Weâve failed!â said her secret self while she handed him his hat and stick, smiling gaily. She wouldnât give him a moment for another word, but ran along the passage and opened the big outer door.
Could they leave each other like this? How could they? He stood on the step and she just inside holding the door. It was not raining now.
âYouâve hurt meâhurt me,â said her heart. âWhy donât you go? No, donât go. Stay. Noâgo!â And she looked out upon the night.
She saw the beautiful fall of the steps, the dark garden ringed with glittering ivy, on the other side of the road the huge bare willows and above them the sky big and bright with stars. But of course he would see nothing of all this. He was superior to it all. Heâwith his wonderful âspiritualâ vision!
She was right. He did see nothing at all. Misery! Heâd missed it. It was too late to do anything now. Was it too late? Yes, it was. A cold snatch of hateful wind blew into the garden. Curse life! He heard her cry âau revoirâ and the door slammed.
Running back into the studio she behaved so strangely. She ran up and down lifting her arms and crying: âOh! Oh! How stupid! How imbecile! How stupid!â And then she flung herself down on the sommier thinking of nothingâjust lying there in her rage. All was over. What was over? Ohâsomething was. And sheâd never see him againânever. After a long long time (or perhaps ten minutes) had passed in that black gulf her bell rang a sharp quick jingle. It was he, of course. And equally, of course, she oughtnât to have paid the slightest attention to it but just let it go on ringing and ringing. She flew to answer.
On the doorstep there stood an elderly virgin, a pathetic creature who simply idolized her (heaven knows why) and had this habit of turning up and ringing the bell and then saying, when she opened the door: âMy dear, send me away!â She never did. As a rule she asked her in and let her admire everything and accepted the bunch
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