登陆注册
38624700000001

第1章

PREFACE

Sometimes short stories are brought together like parcels in a basket. Sometimes they grow together like blossoms on a bush. Then, of course, they really belong to one another, because they have the same life in them.

The stories in this book have been growing together for a long time. It is at least ten years since the first of them, the story of The Other Wise Man, came to me; and all the others I knew quite well by heart a good while before I could find the time, in a hard-worked life, to write them down and try to make them clear and true to others. It has been a slow task, because the right word has not always been easy to find, and I wanted to keep free from conventionality in the thought and close to nature in the picture. It is enough to cause a man no little shame to see how small is the fruit of so long labour.

And yet, after all, when one wishes to write about life, especially about that part of it which is inward, the inwrought experience of living may be of value. And that is a thing which one cannot get in haste, neither can it be made to order. Patient waiting belongs to it; and rainy days belong to it; and the best of it sometimes comes in the doing of tasks that seem not to amount to much. So in the long run, I suppose, while delay and failure and interruption may keep a piece of work very small, yet in the end they enter into the quality of it and bring it a little nearer to the real thing, which is always more or less of a secret.

But the strangest part of it all is the way in which a single thought, an idea, will live with a man while he works, and take new forms from year to year, and light up the things that he sees and hears, and lead his imagination by the hand into many wonderful and diverse regions. It seems to me that there am two ways in which you may give unity to a book of stories. You may stay in one place and write about different themes, preserving always the colour of the same locality. Or you may go into different places and use as many of the colours and shapes of life as you can really see in the light of the same thought.

There is such a thought in this book. It is the idea of the search for inward happiness, which all men who are really alive are following, along what various paths, and with what different fortunes! Glimpses of this idea, traces of this search, I thought that I could see in certain tales that were in my mind,--tales of times old and new, of lands near and far away. So I tried to tell them, as best as I could, hoping that other men, being also seekers, might find some meaning in them.

There are only little, broken chapters from the long story of life. None of them is taken from other books. Only one of them--the story of Winifried and the Thunder-Oak--has the slightest wisp of a foundation in fact or legend. Yet I think they are all true.

But how to find a name for such a book,--a name that will tell enough to show the thought and yet not too much to leave it free?

I have borrowed a symbol from the old German poet and philosopher, Novalis, to stand instead of a name. The Blue Flower which he used in his romance of Heinrich von Ofterdingen to symbolise Poetry, the object of his young hero's quest, I have used here to signify happiness, the satisfaction of the heart.

Reader, will you take the book and see if it belongs to you? Whether it does or not, my wish is that the Blue Flower may grow in the garden where you work.

AVALON, December 1, 1902.

CONTENTS

I. The Blue Flower II.The Source III. The Mill IV.Spy Rock V. Wood-Magic VI.The Other Wise Man VII. I Handful of Clay VIII. The Lost Word IX.The First Christmas-Tree THE BLUE FLOWERThe parents were abed and sleeping. The clock on the wall ticked loudly and lazily, as if it had time to spare. Outside the rattling windows there was a restless, whispering wind.

The room grew light, and dark, and wondrous light again, as the moon played hide-and-seek through the clouds. The boy, wide-awake and quiet in his bed, was thinking of the Stranger and his stories.

"It was not what he told me about the treasures," he said to himself, "that was not the thing which filled me with so strange a longing. I am not greedy for riches. But the Blue Flower is what I long for. I can think of nothing else.

Never have I felt so before. It seems as if I had been dreaming until now--or as if I had just slept over into a new world.

"Who cared for flowers in the old world where I used to live? I never heard of anyone whose whole heart was set upon finding a flower. But now I cannot even tell all that Ifeel--sometimes as happy as if I were enchanted. But when the flower fades from me, when I cannot see it in my mind, then it is like being very thirsty and all alone. That is what the other people could not understand.

"Once upon a time, they say, the animals and the trees and the flowers used to talk to people. It seems to me, every minute, as if they were just going to begin again. When Ilook at them I can see what they want to say. There must be a great many words that I do not know; if I knew more of them perhaps I could understand things better. I used to love to dance, but now I like better to think after the music."Gradually the boy lost himself in sweet fancies, and suddenly he found himself again, in the charmed land of sleep.

He wandered in far countries, rich and strange; he traversed wild waters with incredible swiftness; marvellous creatures appeared and vanished; he lived with all sorts of men, in battles, in whirling crowds, in lonely huts. He was cast into prison. He fell into dire distress and want. All experiences seemed to be sharpened to an edge. He felt them keenly, yet they did not harm him. He died and came alive again; he loved to the height of passion, and then was parted forever from his beloved. At last, toward morning, as the dawn was stealing near, his soul grew calm, and the pictures showed more clear and firm.

It seemed as if he were walking alone through the deep woods. Seldom the daylight shimmered through the green veil.

同类推荐
  • Romantic Ballads

    Romantic Ballads

    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。
  • 佛说园生树经

    佛说园生树经

    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。
  • 少仪外传

    少仪外传

    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。
  • 塘医话 馤塘医话

    塘医话 馤塘医话

    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。
  • 憨休禅师敲空遗响

    憨休禅师敲空遗响

    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。
热门推荐
  • 王俊凯之夏天的风

    王俊凯之夏天的风

    本小说主要写王俊凯和一个叫夏晨的女孩在夏天里相遇然后在俩人身上发生了很多故事。
  • 临界意志

    临界意志

    万千宇宙中的一颗小星球上,有着独属于它的故事。
  • 贵族王庭

    贵族王庭

    一个贵族少年,没有称霸天下的野心,也没有羽化成仙的志向,甚至没有对权力的向往。只想在父母庇佑下,平淡安稳的生活,游戏人间,做自己想做的事,追求自己喜欢的人,当命运的齿轮转动,时光无情的流逝,能否保持本心。
  • 幽都伞魔宁不欢

    幽都伞魔宁不欢

    匹夫无罪,怀璧其罪。一场大火,焚烧的不仅仅是善与恶的界线。一场雪崩,埋葬的不仅仅是正与邪的道心。一场海啸,搅乱的亦不仅是非曲直的公论。宁乐,匪首之子,人精,胸无大志,听曲度日。十二岁那年天降异象,四方神器之朱雀现世,无家可归的少年被迫踏上修仙复仇之途,故取字“不欢”。-故事讲述的是四名宿主原本天各四方,不同的身世与经历,不同的性格与信仰,因四方神器之灾结缘,历经磨难与沧桑,终将在世人面前揭开上古三界的黑暗面纱……【本文无系统,非诸天,单女主(也可能没女主),不种马(尽量,被真·叶雨眠赶上高速下不来了真的),不虐主(一般不虐),伪无敌(其实跟真无敌差不多)。完美诠释了什么叫做“简介立的flag就是用来打作者脸的”。】
  • 总裁大人送上门:错爱99天

    总裁大人送上门:错爱99天

    他帅的惊天动地,那一晚她将醉酒的他从花痴女手中解救,怎知他却缠上了她的身,压倒了她的人,还吐了她一声,浴室中,她开始犹豫不决……美男在前,是扑上去呢还是要坐怀不乱,这是个很严肃的问题!
  • 论颜控的自我修养

    论颜控的自我修养

    [见到反派前]言慕辞:你说什么?绑定?完成任务?麻溜走开好吧。言成星:我觉得那些小世界人都挺帅的。言慕斯:太阳西边出来了。不自恋了。言慕辞:再帅都木得用。[见反派后]言慕辞:这神仙颜值,我又可了。我觉得这次任务安排的很人性化。程笙:……
  • 时间线旅程

    时间线旅程

    一场游戏开始了一道庞大的循环开始了他踏上了一场时间的旅行其中又蕴含着多少因果又有多少秘密旅行才刚刚开始……
  • 神之罅隙

    神之罅隙

    这里是神之罅隙,由诸天神国间的缝隙所组成的世界,一个留存着各种信仰的世界。万法凋零,诸神不显。修真之路断绝,却鲜有人知。人心不足蛇吞象。身为人类的他们要吞仙噬神。到处密布着他们的棋子。他们是隐藏于诡计之后的诡计!他们是真相之后的真相!这一次他们的目标是神们!这一切的一切究竟是为了重构成神之路?还是成为神们自己?来神之罅隙,找寻那个你所信仰的神灵。
  • 亿万杀手:权少请绕路

    亿万杀手:权少请绕路

    杀手顾天晴人生最大的错误就是遇到他,他是父亲旧友之子。当初甩掉他易如反掌,为什么现在甩也甩不掉呢。“要你何用?”“暖床用。”“姐不缺你这一个,滚。”“这个滚的意思,我是这么理解的。”叹当时意气风发,经年过,旧人已成天涯客。但他墨雨宸是随便放弃的人么?“孩子你可以带走,不过有个条件。”“什么?”“孩子他妈留下。”遇到你,是我这辈子最大的幸运还是最大的不幸......
  • 想从修真界回家的陶雪章

    想从修真界回家的陶雪章

    陶雪章,一个“净人”,也就是一个自身不带任何属性的人。为了能够有那么一日吗,离开修真界,回到净土,他放弃了成为单灵体也就是所谓的修真界天才的机会,选择了成为一名修真界最废的“金木水火土”五灵体。