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zanoni-第13部分

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feebly;〃water:I parch;I burn!〃  The intruder approached the

bed; bent over him; and took his hand。  〃Oh; bless thee; Jean;

bless thee!〃 said the sufferer; 〃hast thou brought back the

physician already?  Sir; I am poor; but I can pay you well。  I

would not die yet; for that young man's sake。〃  And he sat

upright in his bed; and fixed his dim eyes anxiously on his

visitor。



〃What are your symptoms; your disease?〃



〃Fire; fire; fire in the heart; the entrails:  I burn!〃



〃How long is it since you have taken food?〃



〃Food! only this broth。  There is the basin; all I have taken

these six hours。  I had scarce drunk it ere these pains began。〃



The stranger looked at the basin; some portion of the contents

was yet left there。



〃Who administered this to you?〃



〃Who?  Jean!  Who else should?  I have no servant;none!  I am

poor; very poor; sir。  But no! you physicians do not care for the

poor。  I AM RICH! can you cure me?〃



〃Yes; if Heaven permit。  Wait but a few moments。〃



The old man was fast sinking under the rapid effects of poison。

The stranger repaired to his own apartments; and returned in a

few moments with some preparation that had the instant result of

an antidote。  The pain ceased; the blue and livid colour receded

from the lips; the old man fell into a profound sleep。  The

stranger drew the curtains round the bed; took up the light; and

inspected the apartment。  The walls of both rooms were hung with

drawings of masterly excellence。  A portfolio was filled with

sketches of equal skill;but these last were mostly subjects

that appalled the eye and revolted the taste:  they displayed the

human figure in every variety of suffering;the rack; the wheel;

the gibbet; all that cruelty has invented to sharpen the pangs of

death seemed yet more dreadful from the passionate gusto and

earnest force of the designer。  And some of the countenances of

those thus delineated were sufficiently removed from the ideal to

show that they were portraits; in a large; bold; irregular hand

was written beneath these drawings; 〃The Future of the

Aristocrats。〃  In a corner of the room; and close by an old

bureau; was a small bundle; over which; as if to hide it; a cloak

was thrown carelessly。  Several shelves were filled with books;

these were almost entirely the works of the philosophers of the

time;the philosophers of the material school; especially the

Encyclopedistes; whom Robespierre afterwards so singularly

attacked when the coward deemed it unsafe to leave his reign

without a God。



(〃Cette secte (les Encyclopedistes) propagea avec beaucoup de

zele l'opinion du materialisme; qui prevalut parmi les grands et

parmi les beaux esprits; on lui doit en partie cette espece de

philosophie pratique qui; reduisant l'Egoisme en systeme regarde

la societe humaine comme une guerre de ruse; le succes comme la

regle du juste et de l'injuste; la probite comme une affaire de

gout; ou de bienseance; le monde comme le patrimoine des fripons

adroits。〃〃Discours de Robespierre;〃 Mai 7; 1794。  (This sect

(the Encyclopaedists) propagate with much zeal the doctrine of

materialism; which prevails among the great and the wits; we owe

to it partly that kind of practical philosophy which; reducing

Egotism to a system; looks upon society as a war of cunning;

success the rule of right and wrong; honesty as an affair of

taste or decency:  and the world as the patrimony of clever

scoundrels。))



A volume lay on a table;it was one of Voltaire; and the page

was opened at his argumentative assertion of the existence of the

Supreme Being。  (〃Histoire de Jenni。〃)  The margin was covered

with pencilled notes; in the stiff but tremulous hand of old age;

all in attempt to refute or to ridicule the logic of the sage of

Ferney:  Voltaire did not go far enough for the annotator!  The

clock struck two; when the sound of steps was heard without。  The

stranger silently seated himself on the farther side of the bed;

and its drapery screened him; as he sat; from the eyes of a man

who now entered on tiptoe; it was the same person who had passed

him on the stairs。  The new…comer took up the candle and

approached the bed。  The old man's face was turned to the pillow;

but he lay so still; and his breathing was so inaudible; that his

sleep might well; by that hasty; shrinking; guilty glance; be

mistaken for the repose of death。  The new…comer drew back; and a

grim smile passed over his face:  he replaced the candle on the

table; opened the bureau with a key which he took from his

pocket; and loaded himself with several rouleaus of gold that he

found in the drawers。  At this time the old man began to wake。

He stirred; he looked up; he turned his eyes towards the light

now waning in its socket; he saw the robber at his work; he sat

erect for an instant; as if transfixed; more even by astonishment

than terror。  At last he sprang from his bed。



〃Just Heaven! do I dream!  Thouthouthou; for whom I toiled

and starved!THOU!〃



The robber started; the gold fell from his hand; and rolled on

the floor。



〃What!〃 he said; 〃art thou not dead yet?  Has the poison failed?〃



〃Poison; boy!  Ah!〃 shrieked the old man; and covered his face

with his hands; then; with sudden energy; he exclaimed; 〃Jean!

Jean! recall that word。  Rob; plunder me if thou wilt; but do not

say thou couldst murder one who only lived for thee!  There;

there; take the gold; I hoarded it but for thee。  Go! go!〃 and

the old man; who in his passion had quitted his bed; fell at the

feet of the foiled assassin; and writhed on the ground;the

mental agony more intolerable than that of the body; which he had

so lately undergone。  The robber looked at him with a hard

disdain。

〃What have I ever done to thee; wretch?〃 cried the old man;

〃what but loved and cherished thee?  Thou wert an orphan;an

outcast。  I nurtured; nursed; adopted thee as my son。  If men

call me a miser; it was but that none might despise thee; my

heir; because Nature has stunted and deformed thee; when I was no

more。  Thou wouldst have had all when I was dead。  Couldst thou

not spare me a few months or days;nothing to thy youth; all

that is left to my age?  What have I done to thee?〃



〃Thou hast continued to live; and thou wouldst make no will。〃



〃Mon Dieu!  Mon Dieu!〃



〃TON DIEU!  Thy God!  Fool!  Hast thou not told me; from my

childhood; that there is NO God?  Hast thou not fed me on

philosophy?  Hast thou not said; 'Be virtuous; be good; be just;

for the sake of mankind:  but there is no life after this life'?

 Mankind! why should I love mankind?  Hideous and misshapen;

mankind jeer at me as I pass the streets。  What hast thou done to

me?  Thou hast taken away from me; who am the scoff of this

world; the hopes of another!  Is there no other life?  Well;

then; I want thy gold; that at least I may hasten to make the

best of this!〃



〃Monster!  Curses light on thy ingratitude; thy〃



〃And who hears thy curses?  Thou knowest there is no God!  Mark

me; I have prepared all to fly。  See;I have my passport; my

horses wait without; relays are ordered。  I have thy gold。〃  (And

the wretch; as he spoke; continued coldly to load his person with

the rouleaus)。  〃And now; if I spare thy life; how shall I be

sure that thou wilt not inform against mine?〃  He advanced with a

gloomy scowl and a menacing gesture as he spoke。



The old man's anger changed to fear。  He cowered before the

savage。  〃Let me live! let me live!thatthat〃



〃Thatwhat?〃



〃I may pardon thee!  Yes; thou hast nothing to fear from me。  I

swear it!〃



〃Swear!  But by whom and what; old man?  I cannot believe thee;

if thou believest not in any God!  Ha; ha! behold the result of

thy lessons。〃



Another moment and those murderous fingers would have strangled

their prey。  But between the assassin and his victim rose a form

that seemed almost to both a visitor from the world that both

denied;stately with majestic strength; glorious with awful

beauty。



The ruffian recoiled; looked; trembled; and then turned and fled

from the chamber。  The old man fell again to the ground

insensible。





CHAPTER 1。VIII。



To know how a bad man will act when in power; reverse all the

doctrines he preaches when obscure。S。 Montague。



Antipathies also form a part of magic (falsely) so…called。  Man

naturally has the same instinct as the animals; which warns them

involuntarily against the creatures that are hostile or fatal to

their existence。  But HE so often neglects it; that it becomes

dormant。  Not so the true cultivator of the Great Science; etc。

Trismegistus the Fourth (a Rosicrucian)。



When he again saw the old man the next day; the stranger found

him calm; and surprisingly recovered from the scene and

sufferings of the night。  He expressed his gratitude to his

preserver with tearful fervour; and stated that he had already

sent for a rel
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