登陆注册
18889100000062

第62章

was learning the grammar. The rector having joined us, I left them together, and went to my class. An our later, the rector sent for me.

"Why did you feign such ignorance at the examination?" he asked.

"Why," I answered, "were you unjust enough to compel me to the degradation of an examination?"

He looked annoyed, and escorted me to the dogmatic school, where my comrades of the dormitory received me with great astonishment, and in the afternoon, at play time, they gathered around me and made me very happy with their professions of friendship.

One of them, about fifteen years old, and who at the present time must, if still alive, be a bishop, attracted my notice by his features as much as by his talents. He inspired me with a very warm friendship, and during recess, instead of playing skittles with the others, we always walked together. We conversed upon poetry, and we both delighted in the beautiful odes of Horace. We liked Ariosto better than Tasso, and Petrarch had our whole admiration, while Tassoni and Muratori, who had been his critics, were the special objects of our contempt. We were such fast friends, after four days of acquaintance, that we were actually jealous of each other, and to such an extent that if either of us walked about with any seminarist, the other would be angry and sulk like a disappointed lover.

The dormitory was placed under the supervision of a lay friar, and it was his province to keep us in good order. After supper, accompanied by this lay friar, who had the title of prefect, we all proceeded to the dormitory. There, everyone had to go to his own bed, and to undress quietly after having said his prayers in a low voice. When all the pupils were in bed, the prefect would go to his own. A large lantern lighted up the dormitory, which had the shape of a parallelogram eighty yards by ten. The beds were placed at equal distances, and to each bed there were a fold-stool, a chair, and room for the trunk of the Seminarist. At one end was the washing place, and at the other the bed of the prefect. The bed of my friend was opposite mine, and the lantern was between us.

The principal duty of the prefect was to take care that no pupil should go and sleep with one of his comrades, for such a visit was never supposed an innocent one. It was a cardinal sin, and, bed being accounted the place for sleep and not for conversation, it was admitted that a pupil who slept out of his own bed, did so only for immoral purposes. So long as he stopped in his own bed, he could do what he liked; so much the worse for him if he gave himself up to bad practices. It has been remarked in Germany that it is precisely in those institutions for young men in which the directors have taken most pains to prevent onanism that this vice is most prevalent.

Those who had framed the regulations in our seminary were stupid fools, who had not the slightest knowledge of either morals or human nature. Nature has wants which must be administered to, and Tissot is right only as far as the abuse of nature is concerned, but this abuse would very seldom occur if the directors exercised proper wisdom and prudence, and if they did not make a point of forbidding it in a special and peculiar manner; young people give way to dangerous excesses from a sheer delight in disobedience,--

a disposition very natural to humankind, since it began with Adam and Eve.

I had been in the seminary for nine or ten days, when one night I

felt someone stealing very quietly in my bed; my hand was at once clutched, and my name whispered. I could hardly restrain my laughter. It was my friend, who, having chanced to wake up and finding that the lantern was out, had taken a sudden fancy to pay me a visit. I very soon begged him to go away for fear the prefect should be awake, for in such a case we should have found ourselves in a very unpleasant dilemma, and most likely would have been accused of some abominable offence. As I was giving him that good advice we heard someone moving, and my friend made his escape; but immediately after he had left me I heard the fall of some person, and at the same time the hoarse voice of the prefect exclaiming:

"Ah, villain! wait until to-morrow--until to-morrow!"

After which threat he lighted the lantern and retired to his couch.

The next morning, before the ringing of the bell for rising, the rector, followed by the prefect, entered the dormitory, and said to us:

"Listen to me, all of you. You are aware of what has taken place this last night. Two amongst you must be guilty; but I wish to forgive them, and to save their honour I promise that their names shall not be made public. I expect every one of you to come to me for confession before recess."

He left the dormitory, and we dressed ourselves. In the afternoon, in obedience to his orders, we all went to him and confessed, after which ceremony we repaired to the garden, where my friend told me that, having unfortunately met the prefect after he left me, he had thought that the best way was to knock him down, in order to get time to reach his own bed without being known.

"And now," I said, "you are certain of being forgiven, for, of course, you have wisely confessed your error?"

"You are joking," answered my friend; "why, the good rector would not have known any more than he knows at present, even if my visit to you had been paid with a criminal intent."

"Then you must have made a false confession: you are at all events guilty of disobedience?"

"That may be, but the rector is responsible for the guilt, as he used compulsion."

"My dear friend, you argue in a very forcible way, and the very reverend rector must by this time be satisfied that the inmates of our dormitory are more learned than he is himself."

同类推荐
  • 罗密欧与朱丽叶

    罗密欧与朱丽叶

    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。
  • 见闻琐录

    见闻琐录

    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。
  • 艺增篇

    艺增篇

    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。
  • 海琼传道集

    海琼传道集

    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。
  • 李司马桥了承高使君

    李司马桥了承高使君

    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。
热门推荐
  • 走完一生,就这么点儿感悟

    走完一生,就这么点儿感悟

    本书共分12章,内容包括:幸福的真谛、成功的智慧、感恩的心、智慧箴言、人性的弱点、历史的智慧、名人的感悟、快乐的源泉等。
  • 教主大人的萌萌小医妻

    教主大人的萌萌小医妻

    一个21世纪逗比搞笑军医,一朝穿越,成为死亡谷里面的孤女,为了归家,决心出谷找到神秘器具,于是救下误闯死亡谷的神秘男子。简介就说到这里啦,关键是以正文为主。本文一对一,男女主双处,文风逗比搞笑。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 龙凤舞:凤劫苍穹之解花语

    龙凤舞:凤劫苍穹之解花语

    她是冥界的王,历览千年无数情,她亘古不变地浅笑着。行走世间,转瞬沧桑,过往尘封,前尘湮没,只身徘徊于风尘之间。时光流转,花事纷繁。你,会开成怎样一枝?
  • 最后一个镜头

    最后一个镜头

    当今中国,悬念故事已成为继言情、武侠之后,又一轮通俗文学的热潮阅读文本,更是青少年朋友成长的阅读焦点。眼下的图书市场,也要数这类书刊最走俏了。
  • 诱宠小老婆

    诱宠小老婆

    他毁了她的初恋,夺走了她的第一次,然后对她说:“嫁给我,我宠你。”一纸婚约,她变成了豪门少奶奶,被他宠上云端!可为什么在她遭人陷害险些流产的时候,打给他的电话里传来的却是女人的娇喘声!她看着地上的鲜血,泪如雨下……知道一切真相后,她所有的委屈和愤怒都化作一句话:“陆非凡!我要离婚!”而他就像个魔鬼一样将她抵在门后,捏住她的下巴:“然后去找他么?买一送一?”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 穿越之第一郡主

    穿越之第一郡主

    她睡觉,穿越了,她醒来,受封了,她生辰,失身了……好吧,这些她都认了,可是她是郡主,她是皇上,他们没有血缘关系,但,她恨他!他赐婚她与自己的亲弟弟,却不料她此生三嫁!无一是他!他后悔了。她却离开了。“此生再见,你我陌路。”“若有来世,我定不负你们!”她,苦笑,纵身悬崖。
  • 念念流年

    念念流年

    那个时代的他,将军,身披铠甲冷冷扫过。那个时代的她,丫鬟,粗布衣衫眉眼弯弯。丫鬟配将军,不协调啊,尤其是个爱做春梦,满身冒傻气的丫头,她也没办法,老娘生就这么一个没心没肺的德行,大将军,您呢,爱搭理不搭理,姑娘我是看上你了,大不了我对着你色眯眯一辈子好嘞。泡上冷酷傲慢将军,没点道行还真不行!
  • 成功精神与基本技能训练

    成功精神与基本技能训练

    本书是我国高校第一部研究成功教育的著作。内容涉及成功教育基础理论,致力于自信、快乐、热忱、行动、惜时、执著、韧力、胆识、人际交往、表达和自我美化、创新、创业等成功精神和基本技能的培养,汇集古今中外成功智慧和技巧。
  • 恐龙来袭

    恐龙来袭

    一次次的与恐龙搏斗,与变异人厮杀。不得不在埃及金字塔,英国巨石阵,百慕大三角洲等这些该死的地方穿梭。林晨明白,能活着,就是一件最幸福的事。为了自己的队友,为了身上肩负的终极使命,林晨不得不凭借一己之力,建立恐龙基地,与变形金刚展开死命的搏杀。这是一场科幻的盛宴。一切,都还仅仅是开始……
  • 财阀千金掉入妖孽窝

    财阀千金掉入妖孽窝

    曾经玩游戏一意孤行的她,在真实度达到百分之90的网游内,爱上了不该爱的人。遭遇双重背叛,重生在8年前,到那个家族竞争的时刻,她在大学时期,重新拾起这部网游,低调的利用前世的记忆,一步步走向巅峰,翻手为云,覆手为雨!颠覆命格,扭转乾坤!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。