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zanoni-第45部分

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myself ere my researches had made it mine; thou wouldst have

escaped the curse of which thou complainest now;thou wouldst

not have mourned over the brevity of human affection as compared

to the duration of thine own existence; for thou wouldst have

survived the very desire and dream of the love of woman。

Brightest; and; but for that error; perhaps the loftiest; of the

secret and solemn race that fills up the interval in creation

between mankind and the children of the Empyreal; age after age

wilt thou rue the splendid folly which made thee ask to carry the

beauty and the passions of youth into the dreary grandeur of

earthly immortality。〃



〃I do not repent; nor shall I;〃 answered Zanoni。  〃The transport

and the sorrow; so wildly blended; which have at intervals

diversified my doom; are better than the calm and bloodless tenor

of thy solitary waythou; who lovest nothing; hatest nothing;

feelest nothing; and walkest the world with the noiseless and

joyless footsteps of a dream!〃



〃You mistake;〃 replied he who had owned the name of Mejnour;

〃though I care not for love; and am dead to every PASSION that

agitates the sons of clay; I am not dead to their more serene

enjoyments。  I carry down the stream of the countless years; not

the turbulent desires of youth; but the calm and spiritual

delights of age。  Wisely and deliberately I abandoned youth

forever when I separated my lot from men。  Let us not envy or

reproach each other。  I would have saved this Neapolitan; Zanoni

(since so it now pleases thee to be called); partly because his

grandsire was but divided by the last airy barrier from our own

brotherhood; partly because I know that in the man himself lurk

the elements of ancestral courage and power; which in earlier

life would have fitted him for one of us。  Earth holds but few to

whom Nature has given the qualities that can bear the ordeal。

But time and excess; that have quickened his grosser senses; have

blunted his imagination。  I relinquish him to his doom。〃



〃And still; then; Mejnour; you cherish the desire to revive our

order; limited now to ourselves alone; by new converts and

allies。  Surelysurelythy experience might have taught thee;

that scarcely once in a thousand years is born the being who can

pass through the horrible gates that lead into the worlds

without!  Is not thy path already strewed with thy victims?  Do

not their ghastly faces of agony and fearthe blood…stained

suicide; the raving maniacrise before thee; and warn what is

yet left to thee of human sympathy from thy insane ambition?〃



〃Nay;〃 answered Mejnour; 〃have I not had success to

counterbalance failure?  And can I forego this lofty and august

hope; worthy alone of our high condition;the hope to form a

mighty and numerous race with a force and power sufficient to

permit them to acknowledge to mankind their majestic conquests

and dominion; to become the true lords of this planet; invaders;

perchance; of others; masters of the inimical and malignant

tribes by which at this moment we are surrounded:  a race that

may proceed; in their deathless destinies; from stage to stage of

celestial glory; and rank at last amongst the nearest ministrants

and agents gathered round the Throne of Thrones?  What matter a

thousand victims for one convert to our band?  And you; Zanoni;〃

continued Mejnour; after a pause;〃you; even you; should this

affection for a mortal beauty that you have dared; despite

yourself; to cherish; be more than a passing fancy; should it;

once admitted into your inmost nature; partake of its bright and

enduring essence;even you may brave all things to raise the

beloved one into your equal。  Nay; interrupt me not。  Can you see

sickness menace her; danger hover around; years creep on; the

eyes grow dim; the beauty fade; while the heart; youthful still;

clings and fastens round your own;can you see this; and know it

is yours to〃



〃Cease!〃 cried Zanoni; fiercely。  〃What is all other fate as

compared to the death of terror?  What; when the coldest sage;

the most heated enthusiast; the hardiest warrior with his nerves

of iron; have been found dead in their beds; with straining

eyeballs and horrent hair; at the first step of the Dread

Progress;thinkest thou that this weak womanfrom whose cheek a

sound at the window; the screech of the night…owl; the sight of a

drop of blood on a man's sword; would start the colourcould

brave one glance ofAway! the very thought of such sights for

her makes even myself a coward!〃



〃When you told her you loved her;when you clasped her to your

breast; you renounced all power to foresee her future lot; or

protect her from harm。  Henceforth to her you are human; and

human only。  How know you; then; to what you may be tempted; how

know you what her curiosity may learn and her courage brave?  But

enough of this;you are bent on your pursuit?〃



〃The fiat has gone forth。〃



〃And to…morrow?〃



〃To…morrow; at this hour; our bark will be bounding over yonder

ocean; and the weight of ages will have fallen from my heart!  I

compassionate thee; O foolish sage;THOU hast given up THY

youth!〃





CHAPTER 3。XVII。



Alch:  Thou always speakest riddles。  Tell me if thou art that

fountain of which Bernard Lord Trevizan writ?



Merc:  I am not that fountain; but I am the water。  The fountain

compasseth me about。



Sandivogius; 〃New Light of Alchymy。〃



The Prince di  was not a man whom Naples could suppose to be

addicted to superstitious fancies。  Still; in the South of Italy;

there was then; and there still lingers a certain spirit of

credulity; which may; ever and anon; be visible amidst the

boldest dogmas of their philosophers and sceptics。  In his

childhood; the prince had learned strange tales of the ambition;

the genius; and the career of his grandsire;and secretly;

perhaps influenced by ancestral example; in earlier youth he

himself had followed science; not only through her legitimate

course; but her antiquated and erratic windings。  I have; indeed;

been shown in Naples a little volume; blazoned with the arms of

the Visconti; and ascribed to the nobleman I refer to; which

treats of alchemy in a spirit half…mocking and half…reverential。



Pleasure soon distracted him from such speculations; and his

talents; which were unquestionably great; were wholly perverted

to extravagant intrigues; or to the embellishment of a gorgeous

ostentation with something of classic grace。  His immense wealth;

his imperious pride; his unscrupulous and daring character; made

him an object of no inconsiderable fear to a feeble and timid

court; and the ministers of the indolent government willingly

connived at excesses which allured him at least from ambition。

The strange visit and yet more strange departure of Mejnour

filled the breast of the Neapolitan with awe and wonder; against

which all the haughty arrogance and learned scepticism of his

maturer manhood combated in vain。  The apparition of Mejnour

served; indeed; to invest Zanoni with a character in which the

prince had not hitherto regarded him。  He felt a strange alarm at

the rival he had braved;at the foe he had provoked。  When; a

little before his banquet; he had resumed his self…possession; it

was with a fell and gloomy resolution that he brooded over the

perfidious schemes he had previously formed。  He felt as if the

death of the mysterious Zanoni were necessary for the

preservation of his own life; and if at an earlier period of

their rivalry he had determined on the fate of Zanoni; the

warnings of Mejnour only served to confirm his resolve。



〃We will try if his magic can invent an antidote to the bane;〃

said he; half…aloud; and with a stern smile; as he summoned

Mascari to his presence。  The poison which the prince; with his

own hands; mixed into the wine intended for his guest; was

compounded from materials; the secret of which had been one of

the proudest heir…looms of that able and evil race which gave to

Italy her wisest and guiltiest tyrants。  Its operation was quick

yet not sudden:  it produced no pain;it left on the form no

grim convulsion; on the skin no purpling spot; to arouse

suspicion; you might have cut and carved every membrane and fibre

of the corpse; but the sharpest eyes of the leech would not have

detected the presence of the subtle life…queller。  For twelve

hours the victim felt nothing save a joyous and elated

exhilaration of the blood; a delicious languor followed; the sure

forerunner of apoplexy。  No lancet then could save!  Apoplexy had

run much in the families of the enemies of the Visconti!



The hour of the feast arrived;the guests assembled。  There were

the flower of the Neapolitan seignorie; the descendants of the

Norman; the Teuton; the Goth; for Naples had then a nobility; but

derived it from the North; which has indeed been the Nutrix

Leonum;the nurse of the lion…hearted chivalry of the world。



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