boyhood-第18节
按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
〃Well; do you know why I always feel so attracted towards you? 〃 he replied; meeting my confession with a look of kind understanding; 〃and why I like you better than any of my other acquaintances or than any of the people among whom I mostly have to live? It is because I found out at once that you have the rare and astonishing gift of sincerity。〃
〃Yes; I always confess the things of which I am most ashamedbut only to people in whom I trust;〃 I said。
〃Ah; but to trust a man you must be his friend completely; and we are not friends yet; Nicolas。 Remember how; when we were speaking of friendship; we agreed that; to be real friends; we ought to trust one another implicitly。〃
〃I trust you in so far as that I feel convinced that you would never repeat a word of what I might tell you;〃 I said。
〃Yet perhaps the most interesting and important thoughts of all are just those which we never tell one another; while the mean thoughts (the thoughts which; if we only knew that we had to confess them to one another; would probably never have the hardihood to enter our minds) Well; do you know what I am thinking of; Nicolas?〃 he broke off; rising and taking my hand with a smile。 〃I propose (and I feel sure that it would benefit us mutually) that we should pledge our word to one another to tell each other EVERYTHING。 We should then really know each other; and never have anything on our consciences。 And; to guard against outsiders; let us also agree never to speak of one another to a third person。 Suppose we do that?〃
〃I agree;〃 I replied。 And we did it。 What the result was shall be told hereafter。
Kerr has said that every attachment has two sides: one loves; and the other allows himself to be loved; one kisses; and the other surrenders his cheek。 That is perfectly true。 In the case of our own attachment it was I who kissed; and Dimitri who surrendered his cheekthough he; in his turn; was ready to pay me a similar salute。 We loved equally because we knew and appreciated each other thoroughly; but this did not prevent him from exercising an influence over me; nor myself from rendering him adoration。
It will readily be understood that Nechludoff's influence caused me to adopt his bent of mind; the essence of which lay in an enthusiastic reverence for ideal virtue and a firm belief in man's vocation to perpetual perfection。 To raise mankind; to abolish vice and misery; seemed at that time a task offering no difficulties。 To educate oneself to every virtue; and so to achieve happiness; seemed a simple and easy matter。
Only God Himself knows whether those blessed dreams of youth were ridiculous; or whose the fault was that they never became realised。
End