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第106章

barnaby rudge(巴纳比·卢杰)-第106章

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fall off; will they?’ 

    ‘No fear of that; my lord;’ said Gashford; with a meaning look; 

which was rather the involuntary expression of his own thoughts 

than   intended   as   any   confirmation   of   his   words;   for   the   other’s 

face was turned away。 ‘Be sure there is no fear of that。’ 

    ‘Nor;’    he  said   with    a  more    restless    motion    than    before;    ‘of 

their—but       they   can    sustain     no   harm     from    leaguing     for   this 

purpose。   Right   is   on   our   side;   though   Might   may   be   against   us。 

You feel as sure of that as I—honestly; you do?’ 

    The secretary was beginning with ‘You do not doubt;’ when the 

other interrupted him; and impatiently rejoined: 

    ‘Doubt。 No。 Who says I doubt? If I doubted; should I cast away 

relatives; friends; everything; for this unhappy country’s sake; this 

unhappy  country;’   he   cried;   springing   up   in   bed;   after   repeating 

the   phrase   ‘unhappy   country’s   sake’   to   himself;   at   least   a   dozen 

times;   ‘forsaken   of   God   and   man;   delivered   over   to   a   dangerous 

confederacy   of   Popish   powers;   the   prey   of        corruption;   idolatry; 

and  despotism! Who  says I   doubt? Am   I called;   and  chosen;   and 

faithful? Tell me。 Am I; or am I not?’ 

    ‘To God; the country; and yourself;’ cried Gashford。 

    ‘I am。 I will be。 I say again; I will be: to the block。 Who says as 

much! Do you? Does any man alive?’ 

    The   secretary  drooped   his   head   with   an   expression   of   perfect 

acquiescence   in   anything   that   had   been   said         or   might   be;   and 

Lord George gradually sinking down upon his pillow; fell asleep。 



Charles Dickens                                                       ElecBook Classics 


… Page 393…

                                Barnaby Rudge                                       394 



    Although there was something very ludicrous in   his   vehement 

manner;       taken     in   conjunction      with    his   meagre      aspect     and 

ungraceful   presence;   it   would   scarcely   have   provoked   a   smile   in 

any   man   of   kindly   feeling;   or   even   if   it   had;   he   would   have   felt 

sorry and almost angry with himself next moment; for yielding to 

the    impulse。     This   lord   was   sincere    in  his   violence    and    in  his 

wavering。   A   nature   prone   to   false   enthusiasm;   and   the   vanity   of 

being      a   leader;    were     the   worst     qualities     apparent      in   his 

composition。 All the rest was weakness—sheer weakness; and it is 

the    unhappy       lot   of   thoroughly      weak     men;     that    their   very 

sympathies;       affections;    confidences—all         the   qualities    which    in 

better constituted minds are virtues—dwindle into foibles; or turn 

into downright vices。 

    Gashford; with many a sly look towards the bed; sat chuckling 

at   his   master’s   folly;   until   his   deep   and   heavy   breathing   warned 

him that he might retire。 Locking his desk; and replacing it within 

the   trunk   (but   not   before   he   had   taken   from   a   secret   lining   two 

printed   handbills);   he   cautiously   withdrew;   looking   back;   as           he 

went; at  the  pale   face   of  the  slumbering  man; above  whose  head 

the dusty plumes that crowned the Maypole couch; waved drearily 

and sadly as though it were a bier。 

    Stopping on the staircase to listen that all was quiet; and to take 

off his shoes lest his footsteps should alarm any light sleeper who 

might   be   near   at   hand;   he   descended   to   the   ground   floor;   and 

thrust  one  of   his   bills   beneath   the   great   door   of   the   house。   That 

done;     he   crept   softly  back    to  his  own     chamber;     and    from    the 

window let another fall—carefully wrapt  round   a  stone  to  save  it 

from the wind—into the yard below。 

    They   were      addressed     on   the   back   ‘To   every   Protestant   into 



Charles Dickens                                                       ElecBook Classics 


… Page 394…

                               Barnaby Rudge                                      395 



whose hands this shall come;’ and bore within what follows: 

    ‘Men and Brethren。 Whoever shall find this letter; will take it as 

a   warning     to   join;  without    delay;   the   friends    of  Lord    George 

Gordon。      There     are   great   events    at  hand;     and   the   times    are 

dangerous   and   troubled。   Read   this   carefully;   keep   it   clean;   and 

drop it somewhere else。 For King and Country。 Union。’ 

    ‘More seed; more seed;’ said Gashford as he closed the window。 

‘When will the harvest come!’ 



Charles Dickens                                                      ElecBook Classics 


… Page 395…

                              Barnaby Rudge                                   396 



                                Chapter 37 



          o   surround    anything;    however     monstrous     or  ridiculous; 

          with an air of mystery; is to invest it with a secret charm; 

T 

          and power of attraction which to the crowd is irresistible。 

False    priests;  false  prophets;    false  doctors;    false  patriots;  false 

prodigies of every kind; veiling their proceedings in mystery; have 

always     addressed    themselves     at  an   immense     advantage     to  the 

popular credulity; and have been; perhaps; more indebted to that 

resource   in   gaining   and   keeping   for   a   time  the  upper   hand     of 

Truth   and   Common   Sense;   than   to   any   half…dozen   items   in   the 

whole catalogue of imposture。 Curiosity is; and has been from the 

creation of the world; a master…passion。 To awaken it; to gratify it 

by slight degrees; and yet leave something always in suspense; is 

to   establish   the   surest   hold   that   can  be   had;   in   wrong;  on  the 

unthinking portion of mankind。 

   If a man had stood on London Bridge; calling till he was hoarse; 

upon   the   passers…by;   to  join   with   Lord   George   Gordon;   although 

for   an   object   which   no   man   understood;   and   which   in   that   very 

incident had a charm of its own;—the probability is; that he might 

have    influenced     a  score   of  people   in  a  month。     If  all  zealous 

Protestants had been publicly urged to join an association for the 

avowed      purpose    of  singing    a  hymn     or  two   occasionally;    and 

hearing      some    indifferent    speeches     made;    and    ultimately     of 

petitioning Parliament not to pass an act for abolishing the penal 

laws    against   Roman     Catholic    priests;  the   penalty   of  perpetual 

imprisonment denounced against those who educated children in 

that   persuasion;   and   the    disqualification    of  all  members    of  the 

Romish church to inherit real property in the United Kingdom by 



Charles Dickens                                                  ElecBook Classics 


… Page 396…

                                Barnaby Rudge                                      397 



right   of   purchase   or   descent;—matters   so   far   removed   from   the 

business      and   bosoms      of  the  mass;    might    perhaps     have    called 

together a hundred people。 But when vague rumours got abroad; 

that  in   this   Protestant   association   a   secret   power   was   mustering 

against the government for undefined and mighty purposes; when 

the air was filled with whispers of a confederacy among the Popish 

powers   to  degrade   and   enslave   England;   establish  an   inquisition 

in London; and turn the pens of Smithfield market into stakes and 

cauldrons;   when   terrors   and   alarms   which   

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