登陆注册
16285200000134

第134章 BOOK Ⅸ(1)

Chapter 1-Delirium

Claude Frollo was no longer in Notre-Dame when his adopted son so abruptly cut the fatal noose in which the unhappy Archdeacon had caught the Egyptian and himself at the same time.On entering the sacristy,he had torn off alb,cope,and stole,had tossed them into the hands of the amazed verger,escaped by the private door of the cloister,ordered a wherryman of the'Terrain'to put him across to the left bank of the Seine,and had plunged into the steep streets of the University,knowing not whither he went,meeting at every step bands of men and women pressing excitedly towards the Pont Saint-Michel in the hope of'still arriving in time'to see the witch hanged—pale,distraught,confused,more blinded and scared than any bird of night set free and flying before a troop of children in broad daylight.He was no longer conscious of where he was going,what were his thoughts,his imaginations.He went blindly on,walking,running,taking the streets at random,without any definite plan,save the one thought of getting away from the Grève,the horrible Grève,which he felt confusedly to be behind him.

In this manner he proceeded the whole length of the Montagne Sainte-Geneviève,and at last left the town by the Porte Saint-Victor.He continued his flight so long as he could see,on turning round,the bastioned walls of the University,and the sparse houses of the faubourg;but when at last a ridge of rising ground completely hid hateful Paris from his view—when he could imagine himself a hundred leagues away from it,in the country,in a desert—he stopped and dared to draw a free breath.

Frightful thoughts now crowded into his mind.He saw clearly into his soul and shuddered.He thought of the unfortunate girl he had ruined and who had ruined him.He let his haggard eye pursue the tortuous paths along which Fate had driven them to their separate destinies up to the point of junction where she had pitilessly shattered them one against the other.He thought of the folly of lifelong vows,of the futility of chastity,science,religion,and virtue,of the impotence of God.He pursued these arguments with wicked gusto,and the deeper he sank in the slough the louder laughed the Satan within him.And discovering,as he burrowed thus into his soul,how large a portion Nature had assigned in it to the passions,he smiled more sardonically than before.He shook up from the hidden depths of his heart all his hatred,all his wickedness;and he discovered with the calm eye of the physician examining a patient that this same hatred and wickedness were but the outcome of perverted love—that love,the source of every human virtue,turned to things unspeakable in the heart of a priest,and that a man constituted as he was,by becoming a priest,made of himself a demon—and he laughed horribly.But suddenly he grew pale again as he contemplated the worst side of his fatal passion—of that corrosive,venomous,malignant,implacable love which had brought the one to the gallows and the other to hell—her to death,him to damnation.

And then his laugh came again when he remembered that P us was living;that,after all,the captain was alive and gay and happy,with a finer uniform than ever,and a new mistress whom he brought to see the old one hanged.And he jeered sardonically at himself to think that of all the human beings whose death he had desired,the Egyptian,the one creature he did not hate,was the only one he had succeeded in destroying.

From the captain,his thoughts wandered to the crowd of that morning,and he was seized with a fresh kind of jealousy.He reflected that the people,the whole population,had beheld the woman he loved—divested of all but a single garment—almost nude.He wrung his hands in agony at the thought that the woman,a mere glimpse of whose form veiled in shadows and seen by his eye alone would have afforded him the supreme measure of bliss,had been given thus,in broad daylight,at high noon,to the gaze of a whole multitude,clad as for a bridal night.He wept with rage over all these mysteries of love profaned,sullied,stripped,withered forever.He wept with rage to think how many impure eyes that ill-fastened garment had satisfied;that this fair creature,this virgin lily,this cup of purity and all delights to which he would only have set his lips in fear and trembling,had been converted into a public trough,as it were,at which the vilest of the populace of Paris,the thieves,the beggars,the lackeys,had come to drink in common of a pleasure—shameless,obscene,depraved.

Again,when he sought to picture to himself the happiness that might have been his had she not been a gipsy and he a priest;had P us not existed,and had she but loved him;when he told himself that a life of serenity and love would have been possible to him too;that at that very moment there were happy couples to be found here and there on earth,whiling away the hours in sweet communings,in orange groves,by the brook-side,under the setting sun or a starry night;and that had God so willed it,he might have made with her one of those thrice-blessed couples,his heart melted in tenderness and despair.

Oh,it was she!still and forever she!—that fixed idea that haunted him incessantly,that tortured him,gnawed his brain,wrung his very vitals!He regretted nothing,he repented of nothing;all that he had done he was ready to do again;better a thousand times see her in the hands of the hangman than the arms of the soldier;but he suffered,he suffered so madly that there were moments when he tore his hair in handfuls from his head to see if it had not turned white.

At one moment it occurred to him that this,perhaps,was the very minute at which the hideous chain he had seen in the morning was tightening its noose of iron round that fragile and slender neck.Great drops of agony burst from every pore at the thought.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 错的时间遇上你

    错的时间遇上你

    我是(对不起我还爱你)的作者,由于各种原因,那个已经不能接着写了,所以把它转移到这来。
  • 大道即武

    大道即武

    六族兴乱,道法三千,武道其上,视为大成。……将军府少年叶澜,遭奸人所害前往小神界宗门百王岭,得母亲二十年前故人收留,自此踏入道法世界。世俗奇才化身修炼废材,他有如何遭遇方能改命崛起?仇恨使之他无有退路,一心得道只为斩杀奸人,复仇之路上连带着拯救六族,公子很忙,带你走进大道即武的世界……
  • 穿越成美男:男色无边

    穿越成美男:男色无边

    一个人的执念,可以跨越时间空间,历史流转,世事变迁,我独独怀念你的一双眼眸。她一觉醒来,身体转换,时空转换,性别转换。一切阴差阳错,一切缘来如此。若有人愿用一世不得好死换你一生和平安乐,你,是选择YES,还是选择NO?如若过往已成定局,他又该怎么做,才能让已失去的恋人,重新归来?看一世情深,换执子之手,共白头。
  • 人生不可不知的历史常识

    人生不可不知的历史常识

    寻根探源,集纳中外灿烂文化;谈古论今,猎获古今丰富知识。人类的文明漫长而悠远,想要了解它的发展历程,就不能不了解历史,就不能不掌握必要的历史常识。只有掌握了历史常识背后所蕴含的深厚底蕴,才能增进对历史乃至现实的解读与把握,才能在新的挑战面前,与时俱进,适应社会的潮流。
  • 盛宠:冷少的百日恋人

    盛宠:冷少的百日恋人

    “一千万,我买你三个月!你放心,没有那个女人能够在我身边超过三个月的!”程易北冷漠的笑着。为了弟弟,仲晴咬牙答应了下来,从此以后成为了程易北的契约情妇,屈辱的在程易北的身下承欢,以为这样弟弟就可以活下来,却不曾想三个月的期限一到,所有的一切就都离她而去。程易北回去了,回到了他的初恋情人的身边;弟弟死了,被程易北的初恋情人刺激的心脏病发,不治身亡。所有的一切都离开了她,她的世界一下子坍塌了。三年后的华丽回归,她从一个名不见转的跑龙套的小明星一跃成为奥斯卡金像奖华裔演员的唯一获得者全胜而归!男人,只是我踩在脚下的玩物,仅此而已!
  • 我的老婆是强盗

    我的老婆是强盗

    在现代我是一个无人问津的小角色,虽然阅书无数,却无半点心得。可是到了异界呢?我有着比他们更优越的头脑,我制定新的法则,平内乱驱外敌,我发明攻城装备,改造帝国兵种。我悯怜百姓,释放奴隶,建造强大的佣兵团,靠着自己的努力,终于一统天下!我是谁?我就是传说中的冥皇萨迦!
  • 弦音星球

    弦音星球

    仿佛听了一场真正的演奏会的故事。音乐+无法实现的爱情+坚定不移的梦想,构建出精彩紧张的剧情,人物间错综复杂的关系,深深的牵绊和感情,这些都是这部小说引人入胜的基石,有血有肉,魅力无穷的人物则是感动读者的核心。
  • 提纲释义

    提纲释义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 幻师颰陀神咒经

    幻师颰陀神咒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?