登陆注册
38612500000070

第70章 MAURICE KIRKWOOD'S STORY OF HIS LIFE(6)

After all,what had I to live for if the great primal instinct which strives to make whole the half life of lonely manhood is defeated,suppressed,crushed out of existence?Why not as well die in the attempt to break up a wretched servitude to a perverted nervous movement as in any other way?I am alone in the world,--alone save for my faithful servant,through whom I seem to hold to the human race as it were by a single filament.My father,who was my instructor,my companion,my dearest and best friend through all my later youth and my earlier manhood,died three years ago and left me my own master,with the means of living as might best please my fancy.This season shall decide my fate.One more experiment,and Ishall find myself restored to my place among my fellow-beings,or,as I devoutly hope,in a sphere where all our mortal infirmities are past and forgotten.

I have told the story of a blighted life without reserve,so that there shall not remain any mystery or any dark suspicion connected with my memory if I should be taken away unexpectedly.It has cost me an effort to do it,but now that my life is on record I feel more reconciled to my lot,with all its possibilities,and among these possibilities is a gleam of a better future.I have been told by my advisers,some of them wise,deeply instructed,and kind-hearted men,that such a life-destiny should be related by the subject of it for the instruction of others,and especially for the light it throws on certain peculiarities of human character often wrongly interpreted as due to moral perversion,when they are in reality the results of misdirected or reversed actions in some of the closely connected nervous centres.

For myself I can truly say that I have very little morbid sensibility left with reference to the destiny which has been allotted to me.Ihave passed through different stages of feeling with reference to it,as I have developed from infancy to manhood.At first it was mere blind instinct about which I had no thought,living like other infants the life of impressions without language to connect them in series.In my boyhood I began to be deeply conscious of the infirmity which separated me from those around me.In youth began that conflict of emotions and impulses with the antagonistic influence of which I have already spoken,a conflict which has never ceased,but to which I have necessarily become to a certain degree accustomed;and against the dangers of which I have learned to guard myself habitually.That is the meaning of my isolation.You,young man,--if at any time your eyes shall look upon my melancholy record,--you at least will understand me.Does not your heart throb,in the presence of budding or blooming womanhood,sometimes as if it "were ready to crack"with its own excess of strain?What if instead of throbbing it should falter,flutter,and stop as if never to beat again?You,young woman,who with ready belief and tender sympathy will look upon these pages,if they are ever spread before you,know what it is when your breast heaves with uncontrollable emotion and the grip of the bodice seems unendurable as the embrace of the iron virgin of the Inquisition.Think what it would be if the grasp were tightened so that no breath of air could enter your panting chest!

Does your heart beat in the same way,young man,when your honored friend,a venerable matron of seventy years,greets you with her kindly smile as it does in the presence of youthful loveliness?When a pretty child brings you her doll and looks into your eyes with artless grace and trustful simplicity,does your pulse quicken,do you tremble,does life palpitate through your whole being,as when the maiden of seventeen meets your enamored sight in the glow of her rosebud beauty?Wonder not,then,if the period of mystic attraction for you should be that of agitation,terror,danger,to one in whom the natural current of the instincts has had its course changed as that of a stream is changed by a convulsion of nature,so that the impression which is new life to you is death to him.

I am now twenty-five years old.I have reached the time of life which I have dreamed,nay even ventured to hope,might be the limit of the sentence which was pronounced upon me in my infancy.I can assign no good reason for this anticipation.But in writing this paper I feel as if I were preparing to begin a renewed existence.

There is nothing for me to be ashamed of in the story I have told.

There is no man living who would not have yielded to the sense of instantly impending death which seized upon me under the conditions Ihave mentioned.Martyrs have gone singing to their flaming shrouds,but never a man could hold his breath long enough to kill himself;he must have rope or water,or some mechanical help,or nature will make him draw in a breath of air,and would make him do so though he knew the salvation of the human race would be forfeited by that one gasp.

This paper may never reach the eye of any one afflicted in the same way that I have been.It probably never will;but for all that,there are many shy natures which will recognize tendencies in themselves in the direction of my unhappy susceptibility.Others,to whom such weakness seems inconceivable,will find their scepticism shaken,if not removed,by the calm,judicial statement of the Report drawn up for the Royal Academy.It will make little difference to me whether my story is accepted unhesitatingly or looked upon as largely a product of the imagination.I am but a bird of passage that lights on the boughs of different nationalities.I belong to no flock;my home may be among the palms of Syria,the olives of Italy,the oaks of England,the elms that shadow the Hudson or the Connecticut;Ibuild no nest;to-day I am here,to-morrow on the wing.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 对付主角的一百零八种方法

    对付主角的一百零八种方法

    【非言情,沙雕正经文】第一阶段作者:我是作者,可是为什么总被虐待。别人家的小说是虐主角,我这本为什么是虐作者啊!第二阶段作者:背叛孤者,格杀勿论!孤容不得背叛孤之人,你说呢?孤的分身。孤尚且连自己都不相信,焉能相信你?另:千古一见沙雕文,剧情不够分身凑。
  • 拿破仑成功之道全书

    拿破仑成功之道全书

    希尔从事美国成功人士的研究工作,并利用私谊写信给美国政界、工商界、科学界、金融界等取得卓越成绩的高层人士,积极与他们结识。在以后的20年间,已经获得博士学位。拿破仑·希尔访问了包括福特、罗福斯、洛克菲勒、爱迪生、贝尔在内的500多名成功人士,并进行深入的研究。本书是对拿破仑希尔成功学的详细阐释。
  • 第一卷树独

    第一卷树独

    远古时期,三界初建,还未成型。一棵活了亿万年的古树,化为人形,只差一道天劫即刻飞身成神,怎料天劫中一道结痂成为事故……
  • 堕仙路

    堕仙路

    戮凡百万,坠落凡尘。仙途渺茫,弃道开天。你是谁?我是洛凡尘,我已落凡尘!
  • 佛家人生智慧

    佛家人生智慧

    本书不仅介绍了佛教的源起与发展,揭示正信的佛教与迷信之间的本质不同,更重点运用佛教经典中的教诲,结合图解的形式,对佛法进行生活化解读,剖析每个人都会遇到的生与死、苦与乐、智与愚、有与无、祸与福,告诉我们离苦得乐,获得自在、安详与成功的生活智慧。
  • 登天志

    登天志

    石头,一个没姓没父母,无法修炼的小子,被同门师兄弟门鄙视,意外获得逆天传承,强势崛起,但他却不知道,自己从此卷入了一场巨大的风暴之中。天若欺我,天亦可欺。世若遗我,世当屠灭!
  • 无上大乘要诀妙经

    无上大乘要诀妙经

    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。
  • 三界第一刺客

    三界第一刺客

    风剑为了泡妞,花了五年时间,学遍了所有恋爱心里学终于写出了“定姻缘”这本泡妞圣典,发下大宏愿后,却因心里耗尽而死。成功穿越到了一充满武道,斗气,和魔法,世界。长生诀一,丹田鼓胀气血旺。二,气行周天强五脏。三,气通百脉筋骨响。四,皮肉如绵刀不伤。五,体力绵长骨如钢。六,血如长河力抛象。七,光照紫府元神壮。八,生发换牙佛陀像。九,涅槃灵胎逆时光。十,还愿众生身如苍。
  • 浪魔夺海传

    浪魔夺海传

    那个时代,大海之上风起云涌,海寇肆行。但大海是容得下任何人的。为自由之生存,为生存之自由。一群恶魔,同样也是侠客。将在这片海上掀起万丈恶浪,夺取一个海上最美的梦,一个无与伦比的自由。
  • 哈妹的奋战

    哈妹的奋战

    我叫哈妹,是被嫌弃的“初一娘娘”。家人怕被我克死,所以我成了詹岭乡第一个留守儿童。我从三岁就有记忆,却敏感自闭。在一次高烧晕过去后,有人叫我聋子。渐渐地,我的身体长成大块头,脑子却长成一根筋。从此,一路奋战。年少懵懂,曾自以为是同性恋,为能求得美人归,与男人一比高低。困扰了10年后,才发现自己爱江山也爱美男,征途一波三折……