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    One day Father Anselm called Goldmund into his pharmacy, his pretty herb pantry full of wondrous smells. Goldmund knew his way around there. The monk showed him a dried plant, ly preserved between two sheets of paper, and asked him if he ks name and could describe it accurately, the way it looked outside in the fields. Yes, Goldmund could; the plant was Johns-wort. He was asked for a precise description of its characteristics. The old man was satisfied and gave his young friend the mission of gathering a good bundle of these plants during the afternoon, in the plants favorite spots, which he indicated to Goldmund.

    "In exge youll have the afternoon off from your classes, my boy. Youll have no obje to that, and you wont lose anything by it. Because knowledge of nature is a sce, too—not only your silly grammar."

    Goldmund thanked him for the most wele assigo pick flowers for a couple of hours rather than sit in the classroom. To make his joy plete, he asked the stablemaster to let him take the horse Bless, and soon after lunch he led the animal from the stable. It greeted him enthusiastically; he jumped on and galloped, deeply tent, into the warm, glowing day. He rode about for an hour or more, enjoying the air and the smell of the fields, and most of all the riding itself, then he remembered his errand and searched for one of the spots the father had described to him. He found it, tethered the horse in the shade of a maple, talked to it, fed it some bread, and started looking for the plants. There were a few strips of fallow land, rown with all kinds of weeds. Small, wizened poppies with a last few fadials and many ripe seed pods stood among witherid sky-blue chicory and discolored knotweed. The heaps of stones betweewo fields were inhabited by lizards, and there, too, stood the first, yellow-flowered stalks of Johns-woldmund began to pick them. After he had gathered a sizable bunch, he sat down on a stoo rest. It was hot and he looked longingly toward the shadowy edge of the distant forest, but he didnt want to go that far from the plants and from his horse, which he could still see from where he sat. So he stayed where he was, on the warm heap of stones, keeping very still to see the lizards who had fled e out again; he s the Johns-wort, held one of its small leaves to the light to study the huiny pin pricks in it.

    Strange, he thought, each of these thousand little leaves has its own miniature firmament pricked into it, like a delicate embroidery. How strange and inprehensible everything was, the lizards, the plants, eveones, everything. Father Anselm, who was so fond of him, was no longer able to pick his Johns-wort himself; his legs bothered him. Oain days he could not move at all, and his knowledge of medie could not cure him. Perhaps he would soon die, and the herbs in his pantry would tio give out their fragrance, but the old father would no longer be there. But perhaps he would go on living for a long time still, for aen or twenty years perhaps, and still have the same thin white hair and the same funny wrinkle-sheaves around the eyes; but what would have bee of him, Goldmund, iy years?

    Oh, how imprehensible everything was, and actually sad, although it was also beautiful. One knew nothing. One lived and ran about the earth and rode through forests, aain things looked so challenging and promising and nostalgic: a star in the evening, a blue harebell, a reed-green pond, the eye of a person or of a cow. And sometimes it seemed that something never see long desired was about to happen, that a veil would drop from it all; but then it passed, nothing happehe riddle remained unsolved, the secret spell unbroken, and in the end one grew old and looked ing like Father Anselm or wise like Abbot Daniel, and still one knew nothing perhaps, was still waiting and listening.

    He picked up ay snail house, it made a faint tinkling sound among the stones and was warm with sun. Absorbed, he examihe windings of the shell, the notched spiral, the capricious dwindling of its little , the empty gullet with its shimmer of mother-of-pearl. He closed his eyes ahe shape with probing fingers, which was a habit and a game with him. He turhe shell between loose fingers, slidingly retrag its tours, caressingly, without pressure, delighted with the miracle of form, the entment of the tangible. One of the disadvantages of school and learning, he thought dreamily, was that the mind seemed to have the tendency to see and represent all things as though they were flat and had only two dimensions. This, somehow, seemed to render all matters of the intellect shallow and worthless, but he was uo hold on to this thought; the shell slid from his hand; he felt tired and drowsy. His head sank over the herbs, which smelled stronger and stronger as they wilted, he fell asleep in the sun. Lizards ran over his shoes; the plants wilted on his knees; uhe maple, Bless waited and grew impatient.

    From the distant forest someone came walking, a young woman in a faded blue skirt, with a red kerchief tied around black hair, and a tanned summer face. The woman came closer; she was carrying a bundle; a fire-red gillyflower shoween her lips. She noticed the sitting man, watched him from afar for a long while, curious and distrustful, saw that he was asleep, tiptoed closer on naked brow, stood in front of Goldmund and looked at him. Her suspis vahis fine young sleeper did not look dangerous; he pleased her greatly—what had brought him out here to these fallow fields? With a smile she saw that he had been pig flowers; they were already wilted.

    Goldmund opened his eyes, returning from a forest of dreams. His head was bedded softly; it was lying in a womans lap. Strangely close, two warm brown eyes were looking into his, which were sleepy and astonished. He felt no fear; no danger shone in those warm brown stars; they looked friendly. The woman smiled at his astonishment, a very friendly smile, and slowly he, too, began to smile. Her mouth came down on his smiling lips; they greeted each other with a gentle kiss, and Goldmund remembered the evening in the village and the little girl with the braids. But the kiss was not over yet. The womans mouth lingered, began to play, teased aed, and finally seized his lips with greed and violence, set fire to his blo?od, made it throb in his veins; in slow, patient play the brown woman gave herself to the boy, teag him gently, letting him seek and find, setting him afire and stilling the flames. The exalted, brief joy of love vaulted above him, burned with a golden glow, sank down and died. He lay with eyes closed, his face against the womans breast. Not a word had been said. The woman didnt move, softly she stroked his hair, gave him time to e to himself. Finally he opened his eyes.

    "You!" he said. "You! But who are you?"

    "Im Lise," she said.

    "Lise," he repeated after her, tasting her name. "Lise, you are sweet."

    She brought her mouth close to his ear and whispered into it: "Tell me, was this the first time? Did you never love anyone before me?

    He shook his head. Abruptly he sat up and looked across the fields and up into the sky.

    "Oh!" he cried, "the sun is almost down. I must get back."

    "Where to?"

    "To the cloister, to Father Anselm."

    "To Mariabronn? Is that where you belong? Dont you want to stay with me a little longer?"

    "Id like to."

    "Well, stay then!"

    "No, that would not be right. And I must pick more of these herbs."

    "Do you live in the cloister?"

    "Yes, Im a student. But Ill not stay there. May I e to you, Lise? Where do you live, where is your home?"

    "I live nowhere, dear heart. But wont you tell me your name? —Ah, Goldmund is what they call you. Give me another kiss, little Goldmouth, then you may go."

    "You live nowhere? But where do you sleep?"

    "If you like, in the forest with you, or in the hay. Will you e tonight?"

    "Oh, yes. But where? Where will I find you?"

    " you screech like a barn owl?"

    "Ive ried."

    "Try."

    He tried. She laughed, satisfied.

    "All right, e out of the cloister tonight and screech like a barn owl. Ill be close by. Do you like me, little Goldmouth, my darling?"

    "Oh, Lise, I do like you. Ill e. Now go with God, I must hurry."

    It was twilight when Goldmuuro the cloister on his steaming horse, and he was glad to find Father Anselm occupied. A brother had been wading barefoot in the brook and cut himself on a shard of crockery.

    Now it was important to find Narcissus. He asked one of the lay brothers who waited at table in the refectory. No, he was told, Narcissus would not be down for supper; this was his fasting day; hed probably be asleep now since he held vigils during the night. Goldmund hurried off. During the long exercises, his friend slept in one of the pes cells in the inner cloister. Goldmund ran there without thinking. He liste the door; there wasnt a sound. He entered softly. That it was strictly forbidden made no differenow.

    Narcissus was lying on the narrow cot. In the half light he looked like a corpse, rigid on his back, with pale, pointed face, his hands crossed on his chest. His eyes were open; he was not asleep. He looked at Goldmund without speaking, without reproach, but without stirring, so obviously elsewhere, absorbed in a different time and world, that he had difficulty reizing his friend and uanding his words.

    "Narcissus! Five me, dear friend, five me for disturbing you. Im not doing it lightly. I realize that you ought not to speak to me, but do speak to me, I beg you with all my heart."

    Narcissus reflected, his eyes blinked violently for a moment as though he were struggling to e awake.

    "Is it necessary?" he asked in a spent voice.

    "Yes, it is necessary. Ive e to say farewell."

    "Then it is necessary. You shall not have e in vain. Here, sit with me. I have fifteen minutes before the first vigil."

    Haggard, he sat on the bare sleeping plank. Goldmund sat down beside him.

    "Please five me!" he said guiltily. The cell, the bare cot, Narcissuss strained face, drawn with lack of sleep, his half-absent eyes—all this showed plainly how much he disturbed his friend.

    "There is nothing tive. Dont worry about me; theres nothing amiss with me. Youve e to take leave, you say? Yoing away then?"

    "Im going this very day. Oh, I dont know how to tell you! Suddenly everything has been decided."

    "Has your father e, or a message from him?"

    "No, nothing. Life itself has e to me. Im leaving without father, without permission. Im bringing shame upon you, you know; Im running away."

    Narcissus looked down at his long white fingers. Thin and ghostlike, they protruded from the wide sleeves of the habit. There was no smile in his severe, exhausted face, but it could be felt in his voice as he said: "We have very little time, dear friend. Tell me only the essentials, tell me clearly and briefly. Or must I tell you what has happeo you?"

    "You tell me," Goldmund begged.

    "Youve fallen in love, little boy, youve met a woman."

    "How do you always know these things?"

    "Youre making it easy for me. Your dition, amicus meus, shows all the signs of that drunkenness called being in love. But speak now, please."

    Timidly Goldmund touched his friends shoulder.

    "You have just said it. Although this time you didnt say it well, Narcissus, not accurately. It is altogether different. I was out in the fields, and I fell asleep in the heat, and when I woke up, my head was resting on the knees of a beautiful woman and I immediately felt that my mother had e to take me home. I did not think that this woman was my mother. Her eyes were brown and her hair was black; my mother had blond hair like mihis woman didnt look in the least like her. A was my mother, my mothers call, a message from her. It was as though an unknowiful woman had suddenly e out of the dreams of my ow and was holding my head in her lap, smiling at me like a flower and being sweet to me. At her first kiss I felt somethi inside me that hurt in an exquisite way. All my longings, all my dreams and sweet anguish, all the secrets that slept within me, came awake, everything was transformed and ented, everything made sense. She taught me what a woman is and what secrets she has. In half an hour she aged me by many years. I know many things now. I also suddenly khat I could no longer remain in this house, not for another day. Im going as soon as night falls."

    Narcissus listened and nodded.

    "It happened suddenly," he said, "but it is more or less what I expected. I shall think of you often. Ill miss you, amicus. Is there anything I  do for you?"

    "Yes, if you , please say a word to our Abbot, so that he does not n me pletely. He is the only person in this house, besides you, whose thoughts about me are not indifferent to me. His and yours."

    "I know. Is there anything else?"

    "Yes, ohing, please. Later, when you think of me, will you pray for me from time to time? And—thank you."

    "For what, Goldmund?"

    "For your friendship, your patience, for everything. Also for listening to me today, when it was hard for you. And also for n to hold me back."

    "How could I want to hold you back? You know how I feel about it. —But where will you go, Goldmund? Have you a goal? Are you going to that woman?"

    "Yes, Im going with her. I have no goal. She is a stranger—homeless, it seems; perhaps a gypsy."

    "Well, all right. But do you know, my dear Goldmund, that your road with her will be extremely short? I dont think you should t ooo much. Perhaps she has relatives, a husband perhaps; who knows what kind of reception awaits you there."

    Goldmund leaned against his friend.

    "I know," he said, "although I had not thought of it yet. As I told you, I have no goal. This woman who was so very sweet to me is not my goal, Im going to her, but Im not going because of her. Im going because I must, because I have heard the call."

    He sighed and was silent. They sat shoulder to shoulder, sad a happy in the feeling of their iructible friendship. Then Goldmund tinued: &quot;Do not think that Im pletely blind and naive. No. Im happy to go, because I feel that it has to be, and because something so marvelous happeo me today. But Im not imagining that Ill meet wi<bdo>藏书网</bdo>th nothing but joy and mirth. I think the road will be hard. But it will also be beautiful, I hope. It is extremely beautiful to belong to a woman, to give yourself. Dont laugh if I sound foolish. But to love a woman, you see, to abandon yourself to her, to absorb her pletely and feel absorbed by her, that is not what you call being in love, whiock a little. For me it is the road to life, the way toward the meaning of life. Oh, Narcissus, I must leave you! I love you, Narcissus, and thank you for sacrifig a moment of sleep to me today. I find it hard to leave you. You wont fet me?&quot;

    &quot;Dont make us both sad! Ill never fet you. You will e back, I ask it of you, I expect it. If you are in need some day, e to me, or call to me. Farewell, Goldmund, go with God!&quot;

    He had risen. Goldmund embraced him. Knowing his friends aversion of caresses, he did not kiss him; he only stroked his hands.

    Night was falling. Narcissus closed the cell behind him and walked over to the church, his sandals slapping the flagstones. Goldmund followed the bony figure with loving eyes, until it vanished like a shadow at the end of the corridor, swallowed by the darkness of the church door, claimed by exercises, duties, and virtues. How extraordinary, how infinitely puzzling and fusing everything was! This, too—how strange and frightening: to have e to his friend with his heart overflowing, drunk with blossoming love, at the very moment his friend was iation, devoured by fasting and vigils, crucifying his youth, his heart, his senses—all offered up in sacrifice; at the very moment his friend was subjeg himself to the morous obedience, pledging to serve only the mind, to bee nothing but a minister verbi divini! There he had lain, tired unto death, extenuated, with his pale fad bony hands, corpselike, a he had listeo his friend, lucid and sympathetic, had lent his ear to this love-drunken man with the smell of a woman still on him, had sacrificed his few moments of rest between penances. It was strange and divinely beautiful that there was also this kind of love, this selfless, pletely spiritualized kind. How different it was from todays love in the sunny field, the reckless, intoxicated play of the senses. A both were love. Oh, and now Narcissus had gone from him, after showing him once again, clearly, at the last moment, how utterly different and dissimilar they were from one another.

    Now Narcissus was bent down in front of the altar on tired knees, prepared and purified for a night of prayer and plation that permitted him no more than two hours sleep, while he, Goldmund, was running off to find his Lise somewhere uhe trees and play those sweet animal games with her once more. Narcissus would have said remarkable things about that. But he was Goldmund, not Narcissus. It was not for him to go to the bottom of these beautiful, terrifying enigmas and mazes and to say important things about them. For him there was only giving himself and loving, loving his praying friend in the night-dark church as much as the beautiful warm young woman aiting for him.

    As he tiptoed away uhe lime trees in the courtyard and out through the mill, his heart beating with a hundred flig emotions, he had to smile at the memory of that evening with Konrad when he had left the cloister once before by the same secret path, when they were &quot;going to the village.&quot; How excited aly afraid he had beeing out on that little forbidden escapade, and today he was leaving food, taking far more forbidden, dangerous roads and he was not afraid, not thinking about the porter, the Abbot, the teachers.

    This time there were no planks beside the brook; he had to cross without a bridge. He pulled off his clothes and tossed them to the opposite bank, then he waded hrough the deep, swirling stream, up to his chest in the cold water.

    While he dressed again oher side, his thoughts returo Narcissus. With great lucidity that made him feel ashamed, he realized that he was merely exeg now what the other had known all along, toward which he had guided him. Very distinctly he saw Narcissuss intelligent, slightly mog face, listening to him speak so much foolishness, the man who had o a crucial moment, painfully opened his eyes. Again he clearly heard the few words Narcissus had said to him at that time: &quot;You sleep at your mothers breast; I wake in the desert. Your dreams are of girls; mine of boys.&quot;

    For an instant his heart froze. He stood there, utterly alone in the night. Behind him lay the cloister, a home only in appearance, yet a home he had loved and to which he had grown aced.

    But at the same time he had another feeling: that Narcissus had ceased to be his cautioning, superiuide and awakeoday he felt he had entered a try in which he must find his own roads, in whio Narcissus could guide him. He was glad that he realized this. As he looked back, the days of his dependence seemed shameful and oppressive to him. Now he had bee <s></s>aware; he was no longer a child, a student. It was good to know this. A—how hard it was to say farewell! To know that his friend was kneeling in the church back there and not be able to give him anything, to be of no help, to be nothing to him. And now he would be separated from him for a long time, perhaps forever, and know nothing of him, hear his voio longer, look into his noble eyes no longer.

    He tore himself away and followed the stony little road. A few hueps from the cloister walls he stood still, took a deep breath, and uttered the owl call as best he could. A similar call answered in the distance downstream.

    &quot;Like animals we call to each other,&quot; was the thought that came to him as he remembered the hour of love iernoon. Only now it occurred to him that no words had been exged between him and Lise, except at the very end, after the caresses were over, and then only a few and they had been insignifit. What long versations he had had with Narcissus! But now, it seemed, he had entered a wordless world, in whie called to one another like owls, in which words had no meaning. He was ready for it. He had no more need for words today, or for thoughts; only for Lise, only for this wordless, blind, mute groping and searg, this sighing aing.

    Lise was there; she came out of the forest to meet him. He reached out to feel her, framed her head with tender, groping hands, her hair, her ned throat, her slender waist, her firm hips. One arm about her, he walked on with her, without speaking, without asking where to. She walked with sure step in the dark forest. He had trouble keeping up with her. Like a fox or a marten, she seemed to see with night eyes, walked without stumbling, without tripping. He let himself be led into the night, into the forest, into the bli wordless, thoughtless try. He was no lohinking: not of the cloister he had left behind, not of Narcissus.

    Like two mutes they moved through the dark forest, sometimes on soft moss upholstery, sometimes on hard root ribs. Sometimes the sky shone light through sparse high treetops; at other times the darkness was plete. Branches slapped his face; brambles held him back. Everywhere she knew her way and found a passage; she seldom stopped, seldom hesitated. After a long time they arrived in a clearing of solitary pihat stood far apart. The pale night sky opened wide before them. The forest had e to an end; a meadow valley weled them with a sweet smell of hay. They waded through a small, soundless creek. Out here in the open the silence was still greater than in the forest: no rustling bushes, no startled night beast, no crag twigs.

    Lise stopped in front of a big haystack.

    &quot;Well stay here,&quot; she said.

    They sat down in the hay, taking deep breaths at first and enjoying the rest; they were both a little tired. They lay back, listening to the silence, feeling their foreheads dry and their faces gradually cool off. Goldmund crouched, pleasantly tired. Playfully he bent his knees and stretched them straight again, took deep breaths of the night air and the smell of hay, and thought her backward nor forward. Slowly he let himself be drawn aiced by the st and warmth of the woman beside him, replied here and there to her caressing hands a joy when she began to burn and pushed herself closer and closer to him. No, here her words nor thoughts were needed. Clearly he felt all that was important aiful, the youthful strength, the simple, healthy beauty of the female body, felt it grow warm, felt its desire; he also felt clearly that, this time, she wished to be loved differently from the first time, that she did not want to guide and teach him this time, but wao wait for his attack, for his greed. Quietly he let the streams flow through him; happily he felt the boundless fire grow, felt it alive in both of them, turning their little lair into the vital, breathier of all the quiet night.

    He bent over Lises fad began to kiss her lips in the darkness. Suddenly he saw her eyes and forehead shih a gentle light. He looked in surprise, watched the glow grhter, more intehen he knew and turned his head: the moon was rising over the edge of the long black stretch of forest. He watched the white gentle light miraculously inundate her forehead, her cheeks, slide over her round, limpid throat. Softly, delighted, he said: &quot;How beautiful you are!&quot;

    She smiled as though a present had been made her. He sat up; gently he pulled the gown off her shoulders, helped her out of it, peeled her until her shoulders and breasts shone in the cool light of the moon. pletely enraptured, he followed the delicate shadows with eyes and lips, looking and kissing; she held still as though under a spell, with eyes cast down and a solemn expression as though, even to her, her beauty was being discovered and revealed for the first time.

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