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classic mystery and detective stories-第41章

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appeared to me in the light of Margaret's grandfatherand; had I

been left to myself; he would have been saved。  As it was; never

was horror equal to mine when I met her flying to his succor。  I

had relied upon her absence; and the misery of that moment; when

her eye fell upon me in the very act of seizing her grandfather;

far transcended all else that I have suffered in these terrific

scenes。  She fainted in my arms; and I and another carried her

upstairs and procured water。  Meantime her grandfather had been

murdered; even while Margaret fainted。  I had; however; under the

fear of discovery; though never anticipating a reencounter with

herself; forestalled the explanation requisite in such a case to

make my conduct intelligible。  I had told her; under feigned names;

the story of my mother and my sisters。  She knew their wrongs: she

had heard me contend for the right of vengeance。  Consequently; in

our parting interview; one word only was required to place myself

in a new position to her thoughts。  I needed only to say I was that

son; that unhappy mother; so miserably degraded and outraged; was

mine。



〃As to the jailer; he was met by a party of us。  Not suspecting

that any of us could be connected with the family; he was led to

talk of the most hideous details with regard to my poor Berenice。

The child had not; as had been insinuated; aided her own

degradation; but had nobly sustained the dignity of her sex and her

family。  Such advantages as the monster pretended to have gained

over hersick; desolate; and latterly deliriouswere; by his own

confession; not obtained without violence。  This was too much。

Forty thousand lives; had he possessed them; could not have

gratified my thirst for revenge。  Yet; had he but showed courage;

he should have died the death of a soldier。  But the wretch showed

cowardice the most abject; and;but you know his fate。



〃Now; then; all is finished; and human nature is avenged。  Yet; if

you complain of the bloodshed and the terror; think of the wrongs

which created my rights; think of the sacrifice by which I gave a

tenfold strength to those rights; think of the necessity for a

dreadful concussion and shock to society; in order to carry my

lesson into the councils of princes。



〃This will now have been effected。  And ye; victims of dishonor;

will be glorified in your deaths; ye will not have suffered in

vain; nor died without a monument。  Sleep; therefore; sister

Berenicesleep; gentle Mariamne; in peace。  And thou; noble

mother; let the outrages sown in thy dishonor; rise again and

blossom in wide harvests of honor for the women of thy afflicted

race。  Sleep; daughters of Jerusalem; in the sanctity of your

sufferings。  And thou; if it be possible; even more beloved

daughter of a Christian fold; whose company was too soon denied to

him in life; open thy grave to receive HIM; who; in the hour of

death; wishes to remember no title which he wore on earth but that

of thy chosen and adoring lover;



〃MAXIMILIAN。〃







Introduction to Melmoth the Wanderer





Balzac likens the hero of one of his short stories to 〃Moliere's

Don Juan; Goethe's Faust; Byron's Manfred; Maturin's Melmothgreat

allegorical figures drawn by the greatest men of genius in Europe。〃



〃But what is 'Melmoth'?  Why is HE classed as 'a great allegorical

figure'?〃 exclaimed many a surprised reader。  Few had perusedfew

know at this daythe terrible story of Melmoth the Wanderer; half

man; half devil; who has bartered away his soul for the glory of

power and knowledge; and; repenting of his bargain; tries again and

again to persuade some desperate human to change places with him

penetrates to the refuge of misery; the death chamber; even the

madhouse; seeking one in such utter agony as to accept his help;

and take his cursebut ever fails。



Why this extraordinary tale; told with wild and compelling sweep;

has remained so deep in oblivion; appears immediately on a glance

at the original。  The author; Charles Robert Maturin; a needy;

eccentric Irish clergyman of 1780…1824; could cause intense

suspense and horrorcould read keenly into human motivescould

teach an awful moral lesson in the guise of fascinating fiction;

but he could not stick to a long story with simplicity。  His dozens

of shifting scenes; his fantastic coils of 〃tales within tales〃

sadly perplex the reader of 〃Melmoth〃 in the first version。  It is

hoped; however; that the present selection; by its directness and

the clearness of the story thread; may please the modern reader

better than the involved original; and bring before a wider public

some of the most gripping descriptions ever penned in English。



In Volume IV of these stories comes a tale; 〃Melmoth Reconciled;〃

which Balzac himself wrote; while under the spell of Maturin's

〃great allegorical figure。〃  Here the unhappy being succeeds in his

purpose。  The story takes place in mocking; careless Paris; 〃that

branch establishment of hell〃; a cashier; on the eve of

embezzlement and detection; cynically accedes to Melmoth's terms;

and accepts his helpwith what unlooked…for results; the reader

may see。







Charles Robert Maturin





Melmoth the Wanderer





John Melmoth; student at Trinity College; Dublin; having journeyed

to County Wicklow for attendance at the deathbed of his miserly

uncle; finds the old man; even in his last moments; tortured by

avarice; and by suspicion of all around him。  He whispers to John:





〃I want a glass of wine; it would keep me alive for some hours; but

there is not one I can trust to get it for me;they'd steal a

bottle; and ruin me。〃  John was greatly shocked。  〃Sir; for God's

sake; let ME get a glass of wine for you。〃  〃Do you know where?〃

said the old man; with an expression in his face John could not

understand。  〃No; Sir; you know I have been rather a stranger here;

Sir。〃  〃Take this key;〃 said old Melmoth; after a violent spasm;

〃take this key; there is wine in that closet;Madeira。  I always

told them there was nothing there; but they did not believe me; or

I should not have been robbed as I have been。  At one time I said

it was whisky; and then I fared worse than ever; for they drank

twice as much of it。〃



John took the key from his uncle's hand; the dying man pressed it

as he did so; and John; interpreting this as a mark of kindness;

returned the pressure。  He was undeceived by the whisper that

followed;〃John; my lad; don't drink any of that wine while you

are there。〃  〃Good God!〃 said John; indignantly throwing the key on

the bed; then; recollecting that the miserable being before him was

no object of resentment; he gave the promise required; and entered

the closet; which no foot but that of old Melmoth had entered for

nearly sixty years。  He had some difficulty in finding out the

wine; and indeed stayed long enough to justify his uncle's

suspicions;but his mind was agitated; and his hand unsteady。  He

could not but remark his uncle's extraordinary look; that had the

ghastliness of fear superadded to that of death; as he gave him

permission to enter his closet。  He could not but see the looks of

horror which the women exchanged as he approached it。  And;

finally; when he was in it; his memory was malicious enough to

suggest some faint traces of a story; too horrible for imagination;

connected with it。  He remembered in one moment most distinctly;

that no one but his uncle had ever been known to enter it for many

years。



Before he quitted it; he held up the dim light; and looked around

him with a mixture of terror and curiosity。  There was a great deal

of decayed and useless lumber; such as might be supposed to be

heaped up to rot in a miser's closet; but John's eyes were in a

moment; and as if by magic; riveted on a portrait that hung on the

wall; and appeared; even to his untaught eye; far superior to the

tribe of family pictures that are left to molder on the walls of a

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