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第3章

ursula-第3章

小说: ursula 字数: 每页4000字

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there was never any talk of religion between the doctor and the abbe。

Besides; the abbe is one of the most honest men on the face of the

globe; he'd give the shirt off his back to a poor man; he is incapable

of a base action; and to cheat a family out of their inheritance is〃



〃Theft;〃 said Madame Massin。



〃Worse!〃 cried Minoret…Levrault; exasperated by the tongue of his

gossiping neighbour。



〃Of course I know;〃 said Madame Massin; 〃that the Abbe Chaperon is an

honest man; but he is capable of anything for the sake of his poor。 He

must have mined and undermined uncle; and the old man has just tumbled

into piety。 We did nothing; and here he is perverted! A man who never

believed in anything; and had principles of his own! Well! we're done

for。 My husband is absolutely beside himself。〃



Madame Massin; whose sentences were so many arrows stinging her fat

cousin; made him walk as fast as herself; in spite of his obesity and

to the great astonishment of the church…goers; who were on their way

to mass。 She was determined to overtake this uncle and show him to the

post master。



Nemours is commanded on the Gatinais side by a hill; at the foot of

which runs the road to Montargis and the Loing。 The church; on the

stones of which time has cast a rich discolored mantle (it was rebuilt

in the fourteenth century by the Guises; for whom Nemours was raised

to a peerage…duchy); stands at the end of the little town close to a

great arch which frames it。 For buildings; as for men; position does

everything。 Shaded by a few trees; and thrown into relief by a neatly

kept square; this solitary church produces a really grandiose effect。

As the post master of Nemours entered the open space; he beheld his

uncle with the young girl called Ursula on his arm; both carrying

prayer…books and just entering the church。 The old man took off his

hat in the porch; and his head; which was white as a hill…top covered

with snow; shone among the shadows of the portal。



〃Well; Minoret; what do you say to the conversion of your uncle?〃

cried the tax…collector of Nemours; named Cremiere。



〃What do you expect me to say?〃 replied the post master; offering him

a pinch of snuff。



〃Well answered; Pere Levrault。 You can't say what you think; if it is

true; as an illustrious author says it is; that a man must think his

words before he speaks his thoughts;〃 cried a young man; standing

near; who played the part of Mephistopheles in the little town。



This ill…conditioned youth; named Goupil; was head clerk to Monsieur

Cremiere…Dionis; the Nemours notary。 Notwithstanding a past conduct

that was almost debauched; Dionis had taken Goupil into his office

when a career in Pariswhere the clerk had wasted all the money he

inherited from his father; a well…to…do farmer; who educated him for a

notarywas brought to a close by his absolute pauperism。 The mere

sight of Goupil told an observer that he had made haste to enjoy life;

and had paid dear for his enjoyments。 Though very short; his chest and

shoulders were developed at twenty…seven years of age like those of a

man of forty。 Legs small and weak; and a broad face; with a cloudy

complexion like the sky before a storm; surmounted by a bald forehead;

brought out still further the oddity of his conformation。 His face

seemed as though it belonged to a hunchback whose hunch was inside of

him。 One singularity of that pale and sour visage confirmed the

impression of an invisible gobbosity; the nose; crooked and out of

shape like those of many deformed persons; turned from right to left

of the face instead of dividing it down the middle。 The mouth;

contracted at the corners; like that of a Sardinian; was always on the

qui vive of irony。 His hair; thin and reddish; fell straight; and

showed the skull in many places。 His hands; coarse and ill…joined at

the wrists to arms that were far too long; were quick…fingered and

seldom clean。 Goupil wore boots only fit for the dust…heap; and raw

silk stockings now of a russet black; his coat and trousers; all

black; and threadbare and greasy with dirt; his pitiful waistcoat with

half the button…moulds gone; an old silk handkerchief which served as

a cravatin short; all his clothing revealed the cynical poverty to

which his passions had reduced him。 This combination of disreputable

signs was guarded by a pair of eyes with yellow circles round the

pupils; like those of a goat; both lascivious and cowardly。 No one in

Nemours was more feared nor; in a way; more deferred to than Goupil。

Strong in the claims made for him by his very ugliness; he had the

odious style of wit peculiar to men who allow themselves all license;

and he used it to gratify the bitterness of his life…long envy。 He

wrote the satirical couplets sung during the carnival; organized

charivaris; and was himself a 〃little journal〃 of the gossip of the

town。 Dionis; who was clever and insincere; and for that reason timid;

kept Goupil as much through fear as for his keen mind and thorough

knowledge of all the interests of the town。 But the master so

distrusted his clerk that he himself kept the accounts; refused to let

him live in his house; held him at arm's length; and never confided

any secret or delicate affair to his keeping。 In return the clerk

fawned upon the notary; hiding his resentment at this conduct; and

watching Madame Dionis in the hope that he might get his revenge

there。 Gifted with a ready mind and quick comprehension he found work

easy。



〃You!〃 exclaimed the post master to the clerk; who stood rubbing his

hands; 〃making game of our misfortunes already?〃



As Goupil was known to have pandered to Dionis' passions for the last

five years; the post master treated him cavalierly; without suspecting

the hoard of ill…feeling he was piling up in Goupil's heart with every

fresh insult。 The clerk; convinced that money was more necessary to

him than it was to others; and knowing himself superior in mind to the

whole bourgeoisie of Nemours; was now counting on his intimacy with

Minoret's son Desire to obtain the means of buying one or the other of

three town offices;that of clerk of the court; or the legal practice

of one of the sheriffs; or that of Dionis himself。 For this reason he

put up with the affronts of the post master and the contempt of Madame

Minoret…Levrault; and played a contemptible part towards Desire;

consoling the fair victims whom that youth left behind him after each

vacation;devouring the crumbs of the loaves he had kneaded。



〃If I were the nephew of a rich old fellow; he never would have given

God to ME for a co…heir;〃 retorted Goupil; with a hideous grin which

exhibited his teethfew; black; and menacing。



Just then Massin…Levrault; junior; the clerk of the court; joined his

wife; bringing with him Madame Cremiere; the wife of the tax…collector

of Nemours。 This man; one of the hardest natures of the little town;

had the physical characteristics of a Tartar: eyes small and round as

sloes beneath a retreating brow; crimped hair; an oily skin; huge ears

without any rim; a mouth almost without lips; and a scanty beard。 He

spoke like a man who was losing his voice。 To exhibit him thoroughly

it is enough to say that he employed his wife and eldest daughter to

serve his legal notices。



Madame Cremiere was a stout woman; with a fair complexion injured by

red blotches; always too tightly laced; intimate with Madame Dionis;

and supposed to be educated because she read novels。 Full of

pretensions to wit and elegance; she was awaiting her uncle's money to

〃take a certain stand;〃 decorate her salon; and receive the

bourgeoisie。 At present her husband denied her Carcel lamps;

lithographs; and all the other trifles the notary's wife possessed。

She was excessively afraid of Goupil; who caught up and retailed her

〃slapsus…linquies〃 as she called them。 One day Madame Dionis chanced

to ask what 〃Eau〃 she thought best for the teeth。



〃Try opium;〃 

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