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zanoni-第34部分

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and day; because love never sleeps when danger menaces the

beloved one!〃



〃And you it was that informed the Cardinal ?〃



〃Yes; and what has been my task might as easily have been thine。

 Speak;thine answer!〃



〃You shall have it on the third day from this。〃



〃Be it so。  Put off; poor waverer; thy happiness to the last

hour。  On the third day from this; I will ask thee thy resolve。〃



〃And where shall we meet?〃



〃Before midnight; where you may least expect me。  You cannot shun

me; though you may seek to do so!〃



〃Stay one moment!  You condemn me as doubtful; irresolute;

suspicious。  Have I no cause?  Can I yield without a struggle to

the strange fascination you exert upon my mind?  What interest

can you have in me; a stranger; that you should thus dictate to

me the gravest action in the life of man?  Do you suppose that

any one in his senses would not pause; and deliberate; and ask

himself; 'Why should this stranger care thus for me?'〃



〃And yet;〃 said Zanoni; 〃if I told thee that I could initiate

thee into the secrets of that magic which the philosophy of the

whole existing world treats as a chimera; or imposture; if I

promised to show thee how to command the beings of air and ocean;

how to accumulate wealth more easily than a child can gather

pebbles on the shore; to place in thy hands the essence of the

herbs which prolong life from age to age; the mystery of that

attraction by which to awe all danger and disarm all violence and

subdue man as the serpent charms the bird;if I told thee that

all these it was mine to possess and to communicate; thou wouldst

listen to me then; and obey me without a doubt!〃



〃It is true; and I can account for this only by the imperfect

associations of my childhood;by traditions in our house of〃



〃Your forefather; who; in the revival of science; sought the

secrets of Apollonius and Paracelsus。〃



〃What!〃 said Glyndon; amazed; 〃are you so well acquainted with

the annals of an obscure lineage?〃



〃To the man who aspires to know; no man who has been the meanest

student of knowledge should be unknown。  You ask me why I have

shown this interest in your fate?  There is one reason which I

have not yet told you。  There is a fraternity as to whose laws

and whose mysteries the most inquisitive schoolmen are in the

dark。  By those laws all are pledged to warn; to aid; and to

guide even the remotest descendants of men who have toiled;

though vainly; like your ancestor; in the mysteries of the Order。

We are bound to advise them to their welfare; nay; more;if they

command us to it; we must accept them as our pupils。  I am a

survivor of that most ancient and immemorial union。  This it was

that bound me to thee at the first; this; perhaps; attracted

thyself unconsciously; Son of our Brotherhood; to me。〃



〃If this be so; I command thee; in the name of the laws thou

obeyest; to receive me as thy pupil!〃



〃What do you ask?〃 said Zanoni; passionately。  〃Learn; first; the

conditions。  No neophyte must have; at his initiation; one

affection or desire that chains him to the world。  He must be

pure from the love of woman; free from avarice and ambition; free

from the dreams even of art; or the hope of earthly fame。  The

first sacrifice thou must make isViola herself。  And for what?

For an ordeal that the most daring courage only can encounter;

the most ethereal natures alone survive!  Thou art unfit for the

science that has made me and others what we are or have been; for

thy whole nature is one fear!〃



〃Fear!〃 cried Glyndon; colouring with resentment; and rising to

the full height of his stature。



〃Fear! and the worst fear;fear of the world's opinion; fear of

the Nicots and the Mervales; fear of thine own impulses when most

generous; fear of thine own powers when thy genius is most bold;

fear that virtue is not eternal; fear that God does not live in

heaven to keep watch on earth; fear; the fear of little men; and

that fear is never known to the great。〃



With these words Zanoni abruptly left the artist; humbled;

bewildered; and not convinced。  He remained alone with his

thoughts till he was aroused by the striking of the clock; he

then suddenly remembered Zanoni's prediction of the Cardinal's

death; and; seized with an intense desire to learn its truth; he

hurried into the streets;he gained the Cardinal's palace。  Five

minutes before noon his Eminence had expired; after an illness of

less than an hour。  Zanoni's visit had occupied more time than

the illness of the Cardinal。  Awed and perplexed; he turned from

the palace; and as he walked through the Chiaja; he saw Jean

Nicot emerge from the portals of the Prince di 。





CHAPTER 3。V。



Two loves I have of comfort and despair;

Which like two spirits do suggest me still。

Shakespeare。



Venerable Brotherhood; so sacred and so little known; from whose

secret and precious archives the materials for this history have

been drawn; ye who have retained; from century to century; all

that time has spared of the august and venerable science;thanks

to you; if now; for the first time; some record of the thoughts

and actions of no false and self…styled luminary of your Order be

given; however imperfectly; to the world。  Many have called

themselves of your band; many spurious pretenders have been

so…called by the learned ignorance which still; baffled and

perplexed; is driven to confess that it knows nothing of your

origin; your ceremonies or doctrines; nor even if you still have

local habitation on the earth。  Thanks to you if I; the only one

of my country; in this age; admitted; with a profane footstep;

into your mysterious Academe (The reader will have the goodness

to remember that this is said by the author of the original MS。;

not by the editor。); have been by you empowered and instructed to

adapt to the comprehension of the uninitiated; some few of the

starry truths which shone on the great Shemaia of the Chaldean

Lore; and gleamed dimly through the darkened knowledge of latter

disciples; labouring; like Psellus and Iamblichus; to revive the

embers of the fire which burned in the Hamarin of the East。

Though not to us of an aged and hoary world is vouchsafed the

NAME which; so say the earliest oracles of the earth; 〃rushes

into the infinite worlds;〃 yet is it ours to trace the reviving

truths; through each new discovery of the philosopher and

chemist。  The laws of attraction; of electricity; and of the yet

more mysterious agency of that great principal of life; which; if

drawn from the universe; would leave the universe a grave; were

but the code in which the Theurgy of old sought the guides that

led it to a legislation and science of its own。  To rebuild on

words the fragments of this history; it seems to me as if; in a

solemn trance; I was led through the ruins of a city whose only

remains were tombs。  From the sarcophagus and the urn I awake the

genius (The Greek Genius of Death。) of the extinguished Torch;

and so closely does its shape resemble Eros; that at moments I

scarcely know which of ye dictates to me;O Love!  O Death!



And it stirred in the virgin's heart;this new; unfathomable;

and divine emotion!  Was it only the ordinary affection of the

pulse and the fancy; of the eye to the Beautiful; of the ear to

the Eloquent; or did it not justify the notion she herself

conceived of it;that it was born not of the senses; that it was

less of earthly and human love than the effect of some wondrous

but not unholy charm?  I said that; from that day in which; no

longer with awe and trembling; she surrendered herself to the

influence of Zanoni; she had sought to put her thoughts into

words。  Let the thoughts attest their own nature。



THE SELF CONFESSIONAL。



〃Is it the daylight that shines on me; or the memory of thy

presence?  Wherever I look; the world seems full of thee; in

every ray that trembles on the water; that smiles upon the

leaves; I behold but a likeness to thine eyes。  What is this

change; that alters not only myself; but the face of the whole

universe?



。。。



How instantaneously leaped into life the power with which thou

swayest my heart in its ebb and flow。  Thousands were around me;

and I saw but thee。  That was the night in which I first entered

upon the world which crowds life into a drama; and has no

language but music。  How strangely and how suddenly with thee

became that world evermore connected!  What the delusion of the

stage was to others; thy presence was to me。  My life; too;

seemed to centre into those short hours; and from thy lips I

heard a music; mute to all ears but mine。  I sit in the room

where my father dwelt。  Here; on that happy night; forgetting why

THEY were so happy; I shrunk into the shadow; and sought to guess

what thou wert to me; and my mother's low voice woke me; and I

crept to my father's side; closeclose; from fear of my own

thoughts。


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