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zanoni-第66部分

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sensual; and a brief experiment of thy patience and thy faith。

Go back to thine own world; thou hast no nature to aspire to

ours!



〃It was I who prepared Paolo to receive thee at the revel。  It

was I who instigated the old beggar to ask thee for alms。  It was

I who left open the book that thou couldst not read without

violating my command。  Well; thou hast seen what awaits thee at

the threshold of knowledge。  Thou hast confronted the first foe

that menaces him whom the senses yet grasp and inthrall。  Dost

thou wonder that I close upon thee the gates forever?  Dost thou

not comprehend; at last; that it needs a soul tempered and

purified and raised; not by external spells; but by its own

sublimity and valour; to pass the threshold and disdain the foe?

Wretch! all my silence avails nothing for the rash; for the

sensual;for him who desires our secrets but to pollute them to

gross enjoyments and selfish vice。  How have the imposters and

sorcerers of the earlier times perished by their very attempt to

penetrate the mysteries that should purify; and not deprave!

They have boasted of the Philosopher's Stone; and died in rags;

of the immortal elixir; and sunk to their grave; grey before

their time。  Legends tell you that the fiend rent them into

fragments。  Yes; the fiend of their own unholy desires and

criminal designs!  What they coveted; thou covetest; and if thou

hadst the wings of a seraph thou couldst soar not from the slough

of thy mortality。  Thy desire for knowledge; but petulant

presumption; thy thirst for happiness; but the diseased longing

for the unclean and muddied waters of corporeal pleasure; thy

very love; which usually elevates even the mean; a passion that

calculates treason amidst the first glow of lust。  THOU one of

us; thou a brother of the August Order; thou an Aspirant to the

Stars that shine in the Shemaia of the Chaldean lore!  The eagle

can raise but the eaglet to the sun。  I abandon thee to thy

twilight!



〃But; alas for thee; disobedient and profane! thou hast inhaled

the elixir; thou hast attracted to thy presence a ghastly and

remorseless foe。  Thou thyself must exorcise the phantom thou

hast raised。  Thou must return to the world; but not without

punishment and strong effort canst thou regain the calm and the

joy of the life thou hast left behind。  This; for thy comfort;

will I tell thee:  he who has drawn into his frame even so little

of the volatile and vital energy of the aerial juices as thyself;

has awakened faculties that cannot sleep;faculties that may

yet; with patient humility; with sound faith; and the courage

that is not of the body like thine; but of the resolute and

virtuous mind; attain; if not to the knowledge that reigns above;

to high achievement in the career of men。  Thou wilt find the

restless influence in all that thou wouldst undertake。  Thy

heart; amidst vulgar joys will aspire to something holier; thy

ambition; amidst coarse excitement; to something beyond thy

reach。  But deem not that this of itself will suffice for glory。

Equally may the craving lead thee to shame and guilt。  It is but

an imperfect and new…born energy which will not suffer thee to

repose。  As thou directest it; must thou believe it to be the

emanation of thine evil genius or thy good。



〃But woe to thee! insect meshed in the web in which thou hast

entangled limbs and wings!  Thou hast not only inhaled the

elixir; thou hast conjured the spectre; of all the tribes of the

space; no foe is so malignant to man;and thou hast lifted the

veil from thy gaze。  I cannot restore to thee the happy dimness

of thy vision。  Know; at least; that all of usthe highest and

the wisestwho have; in sober truth; passed beyond the

threshold; have had; as our first fearful task; to master and

subdue its grisly and appalling guardian。  Know that thou CANST

deliver thyself from those livid eyes;know that; while they

haunt; they cannot harm; if thou resistest the thoughts to which

they tempt; and the horror they engender。  DREAD THEM MOST WHEN

THOU BEHOLDEST THEM NOT。  And thus; son of the worm; we part!

All that I can tell thee to encourage; yet to warn and to guide;

I have told thee in these lines。  Not from me; from thyself has

come the gloomy trial from which I yet trust thou wilt emerge

into peace。  Type of the knowledge that I serve; I withhold no

lesson from the pure aspirant; I am a dark enigma to the general

seeker。  As man's only indestructible possession is his memory;

so it is not in mine art to crumble into matter the immaterial

thoughts that have sprung up within thy breast。  The tyro might

shatter this castle to the dust; and topple down the mountain to

the plain。  The master has no power to say; 'Exist no more;' to

one THOUGHT that his knowledge has inspired。  Thou mayst change

the thoughts into new forms; thou mayst rarefy and sublimate it

into a finer spirit;but thou canst not annihilate that which

has no home but in the memory; no substance but the idea。  EVERY

THOUGHT IS A SOUL!  Vainly; therefore; would I or thou undo the

past; or restore to thee the gay blindness of thy youth。  Thou

must endure the influence of the elixir thou hast inhaled; thou

must wrestle with the spectre thou hast invoked!〃



The letter fell from Glyndon's hand。  A sort of stupor succeeded

to the various emotions which had chased each other in the

perusal;a stupor resembling that which follows the sudden

destruction of any ardent and long…nursed hope in the human

heart; whether it be of love; of avarice; of ambition。  The

loftier world for which he had so thirsted; sacrificed; and

toiled; was closed upon him 〃forever;〃 and by his own faults of

rashness and presumption。  But Glyndon's was not of that nature

which submits long to condemn itself。  His indignation began to

kindle against Mejnour; who owned he had tempted; and who now

abandoned him;abandoned him to the presence of a spectre。  The

mystic's reproaches stung rather than humbled him。  What crime

had he committed to deserve language so harsh and disdainful?

Was it so deep a debasement to feel pleasure in the smile and the

eyes of Fillide?  Had not Zanoni himself confessed love for

Viola; had he not fled with her as his companion?  Glyndon never

paused to consider if there are no distinctions between one kind

of love and another。  Where; too; was the great offence of

yielding to a temptation which only existed for the brave?  Had

not the mystic volume which Mejnour had purposely left open; bid

him but 〃Beware of fear〃?  Was not; then; every wilful

provocative held out to the strongest influences of the human

mind; in the prohibition to enter the chamber; in the possession

of the key which excited his curiosity; in the volume which

seemed to dictate the mode by which the curiosity was to be

gratified?  As rapidly these thoughts passed over him; he began

to consider the whole conduct of Mejnour either as a perfidious

design to entrap him to his own misery; or as the trick of an

imposter; who knew that he could not realise the great

professions he had made。  On glancing again over the more

mysterious threats and warnings in Mejnour's letter; they seemed

to assume the language of mere parable and allegory;the jargon

of the Platonists and Pythagoreans。  By little and little; he

began to consider that the very spectra he had seeneven that

one phantom so horrid in its aspectwere but the delusions which

Mejnour's science had enable him to raise。  The healthful

sunlight; filling up every cranny in his chamber; seemed to laugh

away the terrors of the past night。  His pride and his resentment

nerved his habitual courage; and when; having hastily dressed

himself; he rejoined Paolo; it was with a flushed cheek and a

haughty step。



〃So; Paolo;〃 said he; 〃the Padrone; as you call him; told you to

expect and welcome me at your village feast?〃



〃He did so by a message from a wretched old cripple。  This

surprised me at the time; for I thought he was far distant; but

these great philosophers make a joke of two or three hundred

leagues。〃



〃Why did you not tell me you had heard from Mejnour?〃



〃Because the old cripple forbade me。〃



〃Did you not see the man afterwards during the dance?〃



〃No; Excellency。〃



〃Humph!〃



〃Allow me to serve you;〃 said Paolo; piling Glyndon's plate; and

then filling his glass。  〃I wish; signor; now the Padrone is

gone;not;〃 added Paolo; as he cast rather a frightened and

suspicious glance round the room; 〃that I mean to say anything

disrespectful of him;I wish; I say; now that he is gone; that

you would take pity on yourself; and ask your own heart what your

youth was meant for?  Not to bury yourself alive in these old

ruins; and endanger body and soul by studies which I am sure no

saint could approve of。〃



〃Are the saints so partial; then; to your own occupations; Master

Paolo?〃



〃Why;〃 answered the bandit; a little confus
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