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第110章

zanoni-第110章

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you are one of those fools of feeling;those professors of anti…

revolutionary virtue; of whom I have seen not a few before my

Bar。  Faugh! it sickens me to see those who make a merit of

incivism; and perish to save some bad patriot; because it is a

son; or a father; or a wife; or a daughter; who is saved。〃



〃I AM one of those fools of feeling;〃 said the stranger; rising。

〃You have divined aright。〃



〃And wilt thou not; in return for my mercy; utter to…night the

revelations thou wouldst proclaim to…morrow?  Come; and perhaps

thou toonay; the woman alsomay receive; not reprieve; but

pardon。〃



〃Before your tribunal; and there alone!  Nor will I deceive you;

president。  My information may avail you not; and even while I

show the cloud; the bolt may fall。〃



〃Tush! prophet; look to thyself!  Go; madman; go。  I know too

well the contumacious obstinacy of the class to which I suspect

thou belongest; to waste further words。  Diable! but ye grow so

accustomed to look on death; that ye forget the respect ye owe to

it。  Since thou offerest me thy head; I accept it。  To…morrow

thou mayst repent; it will be too late。〃



〃Ay; too late; president!〃 echoed the calm visitor。



〃But; remember; it is not pardon; it is but a day's reprieve; I

have promised to this woman。  According as thou dost satisfy me

to…morrow; she lives or dies。  I am frank; citizen; thy ghost

shall not haunt me for want of faith。〃



〃It is but a day that I have asked; the rest I leave to justice

and to Heaven。  Your huissiers wait below。〃





CHAPTER 7。XVI。



Und den Mordstahl seh' ich blinken;

Und das Morderauge gluhn!

〃Kassandra。〃



(And I see the steel of Murder glitter;

And the eye of Murder glow。)



Viola was in the prison that opened not but for those already

condemned before adjudged。  Since her exile from Zanoni; her very

intellect had seemed paralysed。  All that beautiful exuberance of

fancy which; if not the fruit of genius; seemed its blossoms; all

that gush of exquisite thought which Zanoni had justly told her

flowed with mysteries and subtleties ever new to him; the wise

one;all were gone; annihilated; the blossom withered; the fount

dried up。  From something almost above womanhood; she seemed

listlessly to sink into something below childhood。  With the

inspirer the inspirations had ceased; and; in deserting love;

genius also was left behind。



She scarcely comprehended why she had been thus torn from her

home and the mechanism of her dull tasks。  She scarcely knew what

meant those kindly groups; that; struck with her exceeding

loveliness; had gathered round her in the prison; with mournful

looks; but with words of comfort。  She; who had hitherto been

taught to abhor those whom Law condemns for crime; was amazed to

hear that beings thus compassionate and tender; with cloudless

and lofty brows; with gallant and gentle mien; were criminals for

whom Law had no punishment short of death。  But they; the

savages; gaunt and menacing; who had dragged her from her home;

who had attempted to snatch from her the infant while she clasped

it in her arms; and laughed fierce scorn at her mute; quivering

lips;THEY were the chosen citizens; the men of virtue; the

favourites of Power; the ministers of Law!  Such thy black

caprices; O thou; the ever…shifting and calumnious;Human

Judgment!



A squalid; and yet a gay world; did the prison…houses of that day

present。  There; as in the sepulchre to which they led; all ranks

were cast with an even…handed scorn。  And yet there; the

reverence that comes from great emotions restored Nature's first

and imperishable; and most lovely; and most noble Law;THE

INEQUALITY BETWEEN MAN AND MAN!  There; place was given by the

prisoners; whether royalists or sans…culottes; to Age; to

Learning; to Renown; to Beauty; and Strength; with its own inborn

chivalry; raised into rank the helpless and the weak。  The iron

sinews and the Herculean shoulders made way for the woman and the

child; and the graces of Humanity; lost elsewhere; sought their

refuge in the abode of Terror。



〃And wherefore; my child; do they bring thee hither?〃 asked an

old; grey…haired priest。



〃I cannot guess。〃



〃Ah; if you know not your offence; fear the worst!〃



〃And my child?〃for the infant was still suffered to rest upon

her bosom。



〃Alas; young mother; they will suffer thy child to live。'



〃And for this;an orphan in the dungeon!〃 murmured the accusing

heart of Viola;〃have I reserved his offspring!  Zanoni; even in

thought; ask notask not what I have done with the child I bore

thee!〃



Night came; the crowd rushed to the grate to hear the muster…

roll。  (Called; in the mocking jargon of the day; 〃The Evening

Gazette。〃)  Her name was with the doomed。  And the old priest;

better prepared to die; but reserved from the death…list; laid

his hands on her head; and blessed her while he wept。  She heard;

and wondered; but she did not weep。  With downcast eyes; with

arms folded on her bosom; she bent submissively to the call。  But

now another name was uttered; and a man; who had pushed rudely

past her to gaze or to listen; shrieked out a howl of despair and

rage。  She turned; and their eyes met。  Through the distance of

time she recognised that hideous aspect。  Nicot's face settled

back into its devilish sneer。  〃At least; gentle Neapolitan; the

guillotine will unite us。  Oh; we shall sleep well our wedding…

night!〃  And; with a laugh; he strode away through the crowd; and

vanished into his lair。



。。。



She was placed in her gloomy cell; to await the morrow。  But the

child was still spared her; and she thought it seemed as if

conscious of the awful present。  In their way to the prison it

had not moaned or wept。  It had looked with its clear eyes;

unshrinking; on the gleaming pikes and savage brows of the

huissiers。  And now; alone in the dungeon; it put its arms round

her neck; and murmured its indistinct sounds; low and sweet as

some unknown language of consolation and of heaven。  And of

heaven it was!for; at the murmur; the terror melted from her

soul; upward; from the dungeon and the death;upward; where the

happy cherubim chant the mercy of the All…loving; whispered that

cherub's voice。  She fell upon her knees and prayed。  The

despoilers of all that beautifies and hallows life had desecrated

the altar; and denied the God!they had removed from the last

hour of their victims the Priest; the Scripture; and the Cross!

But Faith builds in the dungeon and the lazar…house its sublimest

shrines; and up; through roofs of stone; that shut out the eye of

Heaven; ascends the ladder where the angels glide to and fro;

PRAYER。



And there; in the very cell beside her own; the atheist Nicot

sits stolid amidst the darkness; and hugs the thought of Danton;

that death is nothingness。  (〃Ma demeure sera bientot LE NEANT〃

(My abode will soon be nothingness); said Danton before his

judges。))  His; no spectacle of an appalled and perturbed

conscience!  Remorse is the echo of a lost virtue; and virtue he

never knew。  Had he to live again; he would live the same。  But

more terrible than the death…bed of a believing and despairing

sinner that blank gloom of apathy;that contemplation of the

worm and the rat of the charnel…house; that grim and loathsome

NOTHINGNESS which; for his eye; falls like a pall over the

universe of life。  Still; staring into space; gnawing his livid

lip; he looks upon the darkness; convinced that darkness is

forever and forever!



。。。



Place; there! place!  Room yet in your crowded cells。  Another

has come to the slaughter…house。



As the jailer; lamp in hand; ushered in the stranger; the latter

touched him and whispered。  The stranger drew a jewel from his

finger。  Diantre; how the diamond flashed in the ray of the lamp!

Value each head of your eighty at a thousand francs; and the

jewel is more worth than all!  The jaile

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