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elizabeth and her german garden-第8章

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 are to be found if sought for diligently; and if needs be with tears。   It is after these rare calls that I experience the only moments of depression from which I ever suffer; and then I am angry at myself; a well…nourished person; for allowing even a single precious hour of life to be spoil:  by anything so indifferent。 That is the worst of being fed enough; and clothed enough; and warmed enough; and of having everything you can reasonably desire on the least provocation you are made uncomfortable and unhappy by such abstract discomforts as being shut out from a nearer approach to your neighbour's soul; which is on the face of it foolish; the probability being that he hasn't got one。

The rockets are all out。  The gardener; in a fit of inspiration; put them right along the very front of two borders; and I don't know what his feelings can be now that they are all flowering and the plants behind are completely hidden; but I have learned another lesson; and no future gardener shall be allowed to run riot among my rockets in quite so reckless a fashion。 They are charming things; as delicate in colour as in scent; and a bowl of them on my writing…table fills the room with fragrance。 Single rows; however; are a mistake; I had masses of them planted in the grass; and these show how lovely they can be。 A border full of rockets; mauve and white; and nothing else; must be beautiful; but I don't know how long they last nor what they look like when they have done flowering。 This I shall find out in a week or two; I suppose。  Was ever a would…be gardener left so entirely to his own blundering? No doubt it would be a gain of years to the garden if I were not forced to learn solely by my failures; and if I had some kind creature to tell me when to do things。 At present the only flowers in the garden are the rockets; the pansies in the rose beds; and two groups of azaleas mollis and pontica。  The azaleas have been and still are gorgeous; I only planted them this spring and they almost at once began to flower; and the sheltered corner they are in looks as though it were filled with imprisoned and perpetual sunsets。 Orange; lemon; pink in every delicate shadewhat they will be next year and in succeeding years when the bushes are bigger; I can imagine from the way they have begun life。 On gray; dull days the effect is absolutely startling。 Next autumn I shall make a great bank of them in front of a belt of fir trees in rather a gloomy nook。  My tea…roses are covered with buds which will not open for at least another week; so I conclude this is not the sort of climate where they will flower from the very beginning of June to November; as they are said to do。

July 11th。There has been no rain since the day before Whitsunday; five weeks ago; which partly; but not entirely; accounts for the disappointment my beds have been。  The dejected gardener went mad soon after Whitsuntide; and had to be sent to an asylum。  He took to going about with a spade in one hand and a revolver in the other; explaining that he felt safer that way; and we bore it quite patiently; as becomes civilised beings who respect each other's prejudices; until one day; when I mildly asked him to tie up a fallen creeper and after he bought the revolver my tones in addressing him were of the mildest; and I quite left off reading to him aloud he turned round; looked me straight in the face for the first time since he has been here; and said; 〃Do I look like Graf X… (a great local celebrity); or like a monkey?〃  After which there was nothing for it but to get him into an asylum as expeditiously as possible。 There was no gardener to be had in his place; and I have only just succeeded in getting one; so that what with the drought; and the neglect; and the gardener's madness; and my blunders; the garden is in a sad condition; but even in a sad condition it is the dearest place in the world; and all my mistakes only make me more determined to persevere。

The long borders; where the rockets were; are looking dreadful。 The rockets have done flowering; and; after the manner of rockets: in other walks of life; have degenerated into sticks; and nothing else in those borders intends to bloom this summer。 The giant poppies I had planted out in them in April have either died off or remained quite small; and so have the columbines; here and there a delphinium droops unwillingly; and that is all。 I suppose poppies cannot stand being moved; or perhaps they were not watered enough at the time of transplanting; anyhow; those borders are going to be sown to…morrow with more poppies for next year; for poppies I will have; whether they like it or not; and they shall not be touched; only thinned out。

Well; it is no use being grieved; and after all; directly I come out and sit under the trees; and look at the dappled sky; and see the sunshine on the cornfields away on the plain; all the disappointment smooths itself out; and it seems impossible to be sad and discontented when everything about me is so radiant and kind。

To…day is Sunday; and the garden is so quiet; that; sitting here in this shady corner watching the lazy shadows stretching themselves across the grass; and listening to the rooks quarrelling in the treetops; I almost expect to hear English church bells ringing for the afternoon service。 But the church is three miles off; has no bells; and no afternoon service。 Once a fortnight we go to morning prayer at eleven and sit up in a sort of private box with a room behind; whither we can retire unobserved when the sermon is too long or our flesh too weak; and hear ourselves being prayed for by the blackrobed parson。  In winter the church is bitterly cold; it is not heated; and we sit muffled up in more furs than ever we wear out of doors ; but it would of course be very wicked for the parson to wear furs; however cold he may be; so he puts on a great many extra coats under his gown; and; as the winter progresses; swells to a prodigious size。 We know when spring is coming by the reduction in his figure。 The congregation sit at ease while the parson does the praying for them; and while they are droning the long…drawn…out chorales; he retires into a little wooden box just big enough to hold him。 He does not come out until he thinks we have sung enough; nor do we stop until his appearance gives us the signal。  I have often thought how dreadful it would be if he fell ill in his box and left us to go on singing。 I am sure we should never dare to stop; unauthorised by the Church。 I asked him once what he did in there; he looked very shocked at such a profane question; and made an evasive reply。

If it were not for the garden; a German Sunday would be a terrible day; but in the garden on that day there is a sigh of relief and more profound peace; nobody raking or sweeping or fidgeting; only the little flowers themselves and the whispering trees。

I have been much afflicted again lately by visitors not stray callers to be got rid of after a due administration of tea and things you are sorry afterwards that you said; but people staying in the house and not to be got rid of at all。 All June was lost to me in this way; and it was from first to last a radiant month of heat and beauty; but a garden w
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