It pleased only a fe times it seemed to displease even two friends.
At first it ime of it. All o o give in to an attra t it first. of time s destiny, its depts significe. For a long time o er o lead oion. ito ted te.
Foldmund it first, a valesce. time imidated, by tty girl. Deep io noion, te t by t o lead ted t youtoic t furtive enter, at lifes first appeal to t being of femininity t te e oed to love, to abandon sinning, to give to an admired older friend, more intelligent to spiritualize to transform to nobler fires of sacrifice.
But during t spring of t unfamiliar obstacles, ued, inpreening demands. It never occurred to o see radi, t opposite of t only love, only sincere devotion o fuse to oo differences and bridge trasts. But ive t abando, grateful ogeto seem to uand, to tolerate dreamy strolls on pat led in no particular dire. ters of sc passages in books, opened neo approve of e often o be smiling, seemed not to take t t mere pedantry, not just telligent, but t t, sometant. But en made .
Actually Narcissus reized ies only too o ty, tal force of nature i on feeding Greek to a fervent young soul, on repaying an i love rary, altogetoo muco a natural dition but a miracle. to fall in love permitted be tent emplation of t. Not even for a sed could t ined for monkisicism and a lifelong striving for saintliness, Narcissus ruly destined for t life. to ted only in its form. Narcissus did not believe in Goldmunds calling to be an ascetic. o read people more clearly t, and y. ure and uood it deeply, in spite of trasts, because it ture s of upbringing and paternal of t do: reveal t to its bearer, free rue nature. It per would make him lose his friend.
ite caution o by before a serious approace of t, tring aut betion only to breaktried to discover o. It turned out to be less difficult ted. Goldmund to fess t nig tside t, ed enoug a moment ly ed at t, Goldmund immediately said, "If only you and able to fess me; I matter in fession and I I couldnt tell my fessor."
Carefully, s;You remember to be ill," ured. "You t ten, si en. Per notice, but I m."
"You ; cried ;But I o utter a moment; I t I could never face you again. You ;
Narcissus groped ahead.
"I uand," ;It must for you. Suco tears in front of a stranger, and a teac t, it e out of cer. ell, t m I merely t you otle may berangely. But you ill. You is o somet overpo;
Goldmund ated a sed, t;Yes, somets pretend youre my fessor; sooner or later t be told."
itold ory of t night.
Smilingly, Narcissus replied: "ell yes, going to t one do all kinds of forbidden t is t; t you it ttle foolisudents? is so terrible about t?"
Angrily, out: "You do talk like a scer! You kno is all about! Of course I dont see a great sin in breaking to play a student prank, alts ly part of tory training for cloister life."
"Just a moment, my friend," Narcissus called s;Dont you kno many pious fat t kind of preparatory training? Dont you kno a rels life may be one of test roads to saint;
"O lecture!" protested Goldmund. "It a trifling disobedie girl. I t describe tion to you. It if I gave in to tit, if I merely reac to touco turn back, t sin give me up ever. t it iful dream, of all virtue, of all love of God and good."
Narcissus nodded, deep in t.
"Love of God," ;is not al simple. e kno is ten in ts. But God is not tained only in ts, you knoesimal part of s and be far from God."
"But dont you uand?" Goldmund plained.
"Certainly I uand. You feel t t crus you could fess t;
"Yes, t is exactly ;
"You see, I do uand. Youre not so terribly er all; tory of Eve and t is certainly no idle tale. A you are n t if you Daniel, or your baptismal saint, tom, or a bis, even a simple monk. But you arent. You are a student, and alto remain in ter for life, or your fat for you, still you taken any voed. If some pretty girl o tempt you one of to give in to temptation, you ;
"No ten vo; Goldmund cried edly. "But an unte sacred, somet you see t to many ot not to me? You been secrated eitaken any vo, but you yourself to tou? Isnt t you t you you long ago, in your , make t yet been made you feel bound by it forever? Arent you exactly like me?"
"No, Goldmund, I am not like you, not in too, am keeping an unspoken vo respect you are rig I am in no I am going to say to you noerly unlike me you are."
Goldmund unned; Narcissuss expression and toted no tradi. . ake all seriously? Did a ge friendship were beginning all ain.
Narcissus no longer about ture of Goldmunds secret. It possible t t ter antagonism in suciful, ? t be a secret enemy t urn ural urges. to be discovered, o be jured up and made visible; only t be defeated.
Mean ed by rayed. nature. Even tain t no vice could be suspected ed to see toget seemed t tting t from tly, as tocrats for in keeping er spirit, not .
Many t tions, slander—reaiel. y years of cloister life; to cloister life and tradition, sometimes amusing, sometimes a danger. ed, tervene. Suc, exclusive friends undangerous, but since for an instant doubt its purity, o let it take its course. If it been for Narcissuss exceptional position among students and teac ated to place a feing rules bet good foldmund to es and to be in close association only eac permissible to disturb traordinary, ed Narcissus, ea? proved eaco partiality and fulness, t to be knes, of rating, perly presumptuous, insigo people. overestimate ts, o s; but doubt t Narcissus iced sometudent Goldmund, t ter ter. , noticed anyt Goldmund, apart from ure, and perain eagerness, a some made ill a student and a boarder, as to ter and o fear t Narcissus ure tou. i ain spiritual pride and erudite arrogance; but ticular pupil; it and see. o rule over average ratrong or exceptional cers, o sig going to let ed by suspis; eful for tional rusted to his care.
Narcissus pondered a great deal about of spotting aionally reizing ture ainy of otold Goldmund. All t in too clearly: rong ually, perist, but at any rate a person potential for love, o give ive senses so set on leading tic life of t at great lengt it. Goldmunds fatermination. Could t? spell over o make tiny, y? sort of a person en iionally touc of tly spoken of imagine see not strange and suspicious? old a story about a trout as a boy, ated ted a vivid picture. ant, po figure in Goldmunds life, o describe ly, to jure up vivid images of t like imes w gave o his soul?
Goldmund also brooded a great deal. eion of not being taken seriously, of being treated a little like a c did it mean like him?
Yet t fill all of Goldmunds days. able to too long at a time. to be done io see ter, terms. unity to ride tenants, especially en stalk otters es flour, by t. Alt time ill remained a number of s and pleasures. And usually to o sing in tudent co say a rosary in front of a favorite altar, to listen to tiful Latin of to see tacles and ors glitter t venerable saints figures standing on ns, ts s, St. Jacob and pilgrims satchel.
draoone figures; o t tood i relationso al, omnist godfatected and guided t bond and love for tals of tar ors, for tifully profiled staves and s of sprouting leaves t burst from tone of tly and intensely. It seemed a valuable, intimate secret to , outside of nature s plants and creatures, ted a sed, silent, man-made nature: ts, and plants of stone and imes ried to draw real flowers, horses, human faces.
And antly recurring r meaning adly, or t oo, y. urgy.
And every so often, for brief moments, ra i annoyed and bored o find ion and ess. Every so often art a taciturn bed ing; it for an iating ention, an invitation to "go to t; tened and quickly drao tet t o think of her any more.
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