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第54章

zanoni-第54章

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fearfully in his head。  I have seen many men die; but never one

who wore such horror on his countenance。  At last all was over!

Zanoni rose from the corpse; and; taking; with great composure;

the sword from my hand; said calmly; 'Ye are witnesses;

gentlemen; that the prince brought his fate upon himself。  The

last of that illustrious house has perished in a brawl。'



〃I saw no more of Zanoni。  I hastened to our envoy to narrate the

event; and abide the issue。  I am grateful to the Neapolitan

government; and to the illustrious heir of the unfortunate

nobleman; for the lenient and generous; yet just; interpretation

put upon a misfortune the memory of which will afflict me to the

last hour of my life。



(Signed) 〃Louis Victor; Duc de R。〃



In the above memorial; the reader will find the most exact and

minute account yet given of an event which created the most

lively sensation at Naples in that day。



Glyndon had taken no part in the affray; neither had he

participated largely in the excesses of the revel。  For his

exemption from both he was perhaps indebted to the whispered

exhortations of Zanoni。  When the last rose from the corpse; and

withdrew from that scene of confusion; Glyndon remarked that in

passing the crowd he touched Mascari on the shoulder; and said

something which the Englishman did not overhear。  Glyndon

followed Zanoni into the banquet…room; which; save where the

moonlight slept on the marble floor; was wrapped in the sad and

gloomy shadows of the advancing night。



〃How could you foretell this fearful event?  He fell not by your

arm!〃 said Glyndon; in a tremulous and hollow tone。



〃The general who calculates on the victory does not fight in

person;〃 answered Zanoni; 〃let the past sleep with the dead。

Meet me at midnight by the sea…shore; half a mile to the left of

your hotel。  You will know the spot by a rude pillarthe only

one nearto which a broken chain is attached。  There and then;

if thou wouldst learn our lore; thou shalt find the master。  Go;

I have business here yet。  Remember; Viola is still in the house

of the dead man!〃



Here Mascari approached; and Zanoni; turning to the Italian; and

waving his hand to Glyndon; drew the former aside。  Glyndon

slowly departed。



〃Mascari;〃 said Zanoni; 〃your patron is no more; your services

will be valueless to his heir;a sober man whom poverty has

preserved from vice。  For yourself; thank me that I do not give

you up to the executioner; recollect the wine of Cyprus。  Well;

never tremble; man; it could not act on me; though it might react

on others; in that it is a common type of crime。  I forgive you;

and if the wine should kill me; I promise you that my ghost shall

not haunt so worshipful a penitent。  Enough of this; conduct me

to the chamber of Viola Pisani。  You have no further need of her。

The death of the jailer opens the cell of the captive。  Be quick;

I would be gone。〃



Mascari muttered some inaudible words; bowed low; and led the way

to the chamber in which Viola was confined。





CHAPTER 3。XVIII。



Merc:  Tell me; therefore; what thou seekest after; and what thou

wilt have。  What dost thou desire to make?



Alch:  The Philosopher's Stone。



Sandivogius。



It wanted several minutes of midnight; and Glyndon repaired to

the appointed spot。  The mysterious empire which Zanoni had

acquired over him; was still more solemnly confirmed by the

events of the last few hours; the sudden fate of the prince; so

deliberately foreshadowed; and yet so seemingly accidental;

brought out by causes the most commonplace; and yet associated

with words the most prophetic; impressed him with the deepest

sentiments of admiration and awe。  It was as if this dark and

wondrous being could convert the most ordinary events and the

meanest instruments into the agencies of his inscrutable will;

yet; if so; why have permitted the capture of Viola?  Why not

have prevented the crime rather than punish the criminal?  And

did Zanoni really feel love for Viola?  Love; and yet offer to

resign her to himself;to a rival whom his arts could not have

failed to baffle。  He no longer reverted to the belief that

Zanoni or Viola had sought to dupe him into marriage。  His fear

and reverence for the former now forbade the notion of so poor an

imposture。  Did he any longer love Viola himself?  No; when that

morning he had heard of her danger; he had; it is true; returned

to the sympathies and the fears of affection; but with the death

of the prince her image faded from his heart; and he felt no

jealous pang at the thought that she had been saved by Zanoni;

that at that moment she was perhaps beneath his roof。  Whoever

has; in the course of his life; indulged the absorbing passion of

the gamester; will remember how all other pursuits and objects

vanished from his mind; how solely he was wrapped in the one wild

delusion; with what a sceptre of magic power the despot…demon

ruled every feeling and every thought。  Far more intense than the

passion of the gamester was the frantic yet sublime desire that

mastered the breast of Glyndon。  He would be the rival of Zanoni;

not in human and perishable affections; but in preternatural and

eternal lore。  He would have laid down life with contentnay;

raptureas the price of learning those solemn secrets which

separated the stranger from mankind。  Enamoured of the goddess of

goddesses; he stretched forth his armsthe wild Ixionand

embraced a cloud!



The night was most lovely and serene; and the waves scarcely

rippled at his feet as the Englishman glided on by the cool and

starry beach。  At length he arrived at the spot; and there;

leaning against the broken pillar; he beheld a man wrapped in a

long mantle; and in an attitude of profound repose。  He

approached; and uttered the name of Zanoni。  The figure turned;

and he saw the face of a stranger:  a face not stamped by the

glorious beauty of Zanoni; but equally majestic in its aspect;

and perhaps still more impressive from the mature age and the

passionless depth of thought that characterised the expanded

forehead; and deep…set but piercing eyes。



〃You seek Zanoni;〃 said the stranger; 〃he will be here anon; but;

perhaps; he whom you see before you is more connected with your

destiny; and more disposed to realise your dreams。〃



〃Hath the earth; then; another Zanoni?〃



〃If not;〃 replied the stranger; 〃why do you cherish the hope and

the wild faith to be yourself a Zanoni?  Think you that none

others have burned with the same godlike dream?  Who; indeed in

his first youth;youth when the soul is nearer to the heaven

from which it sprang; and its divine and primal longings are not

all effaced by the sordid passions and petty cares that are begot

in time;who is there in youth that has not nourished the belief

that the universe has secrets not known to the common herd; and

panted; as the hart for the water…springs; for the fountains that

lie hid and far away amidst the broad wilderness of trackless

science?  The music of the fountain is heard in the soul WITHIN;

till the steps; deceived and erring; rove away from its waters;

and the wanderer dies in the mighty desert。  Think you that none

who have cherished the hope have found the truth; or that the

yearning after the Ineffable Knowledge was given to us utterly in

vain?  No!  Every desire in human hearts is but a glimpse of

things that exist; alike distant and divine。  No! in the world

there have been from age to age some brighter and happier spirits

who have attained to the air in which the beings above mankind

move and breathe。  Zanoni; great though he be; stands not alone。

He has had his predecessors; and long lines of successors may be

yet to come。〃



〃And will you tell me;〃 said Glyndon; 〃that in yourself I behold

one of that mighty few over whom Zanoni has no superiority in

power and wisdom?〃



〃In me;〃 answered the stranger; 〃you see one from w

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