登陆注册
19558800000009

第9章

Therese did not reply.Her head and her vast cap remained buried in the fireplace; and nothing in her person, which I closely watched, betrayed the least emotion.She poked some paper under the wood, and blew up the fire.That was all!

Finally I saw her face again;--it was calm--so calm that it made me vexed."Surely," I thought to myself, "this old maid has no heart.

She lets me go away without saying so much as AH! Can the absence of her old master really affect her so little?""Well, then go, Monsieur," she answered at last, "only be back here by six o'clock! There is a dish for dinner to-day which will not wait for anybody."Naples, November 10, 1859.

"Co tra calle vive, magna, e lave a faccia."I understand, my friend--for three centimes I can eat, drink, and wash my face, all by means of one of those slices of watermelon you display there on a little table.But Occidental prejudices would prevent me from enjoying that simple pleasure freely and frankly.And how could I suck a watermelon? I have enough to do mereley to keep on my feet in this crowd.What a luminous, noisy night in the Strada di Porto! Mountains of fruit tower up in the shops, illuminated by multicoloured lanterns.Upon charcoal furnaces lighted in the open air water boils and steams, and ragouts are singing in frying-pans.The smell of fried fish and hot meats tickles my nose and makes me sneeze.At this moment I find that my handkerchief has left the pocket of my frock-coat.I am pushed, lifted up, and turned about in every direction by the gayest, the most talkative, the most animated and the most adroit populace possible to imagine; and suddenly a young woman of the people, while I am admiring her magnificent hair, with a single shock of her powerful elastic shoulder, pushes me staggering three paces back at least, without injury, into the arms of a maccaroni-eater, who receives me with a smile.

I am in Naples.How I ever managed to arrive here, with a few mutilated and shapeless remains of baggage, I cannot tell, because I am no longer myself.I have been travelling in a condition of perpetual fright; and I think that I must have looked awhile ago in this bright city like an owl bewildered by sunshine.To-night it is much worse! Wishing to obtain a glimpse of popular manners, I went to the Strada di Porto, where I now am.All about me animated throngs of people crowd and press before the eating-places; and Ifloat like a waif among these living surges, which, even while they submerge you, still caress.For this Neopolitan people has, in its very vivacity, something indescribably gentle and polite.I am not roughly jostled, I am merely swayed about; and I think that by dint of thus rocking me to and fro, these good folks want to lull me asleep on my feet.I admire, as I tread the lava pavements of the strada, those porters and fishermen who move by me chatting, singing, smoking, gesticulating, quarrelling, and embracing each other the next moment with astonishing versatility of mood.They live through all their sense at the same time; and, being philosophers without knowing it, keep the measure of their desires in accordance with the brevity of life.I approach a much-patronised tavern, and see inscribed above the entrance this quatrain in Neopolitan patois:

"Amice, alliegre magnammo e bevimmo N fin che n'ce stace noglio a la lucerna:

Chi sa s'a l'autro munno n'ce verdimmo?

Chi sa s'a l'autro munno n'ce taverna?"

["Friends, let us merrily eat and drink as long as oil remains in the lamp:

Who knows if we shall meet again in another world?

Who knows if in the other world there will be a tavern?"]

Even such counsels was Horace wont to give to his friends.You received them, Posthumus; you heard them also, Leuconoe, perverse beauty who wished to know the secrets of the future.That future is now the past, and we know it well.Of a truth you were foolish to worry yourselves about so small a matter; and your friend showed his good sense when he told you to take life wisely and to filter your Greek wines--"Sapias, vina liques." Even thus the sight of a fair land under a spotless sky urges to the pursuit of quiet pleasures.but there are souls for ever harassed by some sublime discontent; those are the noblest.You were of such, Leuconoe; and I, visiting for the first time, in my declining years, that city where your beauty was famed of old, I salute with deep respect your melancholy memory.Those souls of kin to your own who appeared in the age of Chrisitianity were souls of saints; and the "Golden Legend" is full of the miracles they wrought.Your friend Horace left a less noble posterity, and I see one of his descendants in the person of that tavern poet, who at this moment is serving out wine in cups under the epicurean motto of his sign.

And yet life decides in favour of friend Flaccus, and his philosophy is the only one which adapts itself to the course of events.There is a fellow leaning against that trellis-work covered with vine-leaves, and eating an ice, while watching the stars.He would not stoop even to pick up the old manuscript I am going to seek with so much trouble and fatigue.And in truth man is made rather to eat ices than to pore over old texts.

I continued to wander about among the drinkers and the singers.

There were lovers biting into beautiful fruit, each with an arm about the other's waist.Man must be naturally bad; for all this strange joy only evoked in me a feeling of uttermost despondency.

That thronging populace displayed such artless delight in the simple act of living, that all the shynesses begotten by my old habits as an author awoke and intensified into something like fright.

Furthermore, I found myself much discouraged by my inability to understand a word of all the storm of chatter about me.It was a humiliating experience for a philologist.Thus I had begun to feel quite sulky, when I was startled to hear someone behind me observe:

"Dimitri, that old man is certainly a Frenchman.He looks so bewildered that I really fell sorry for him.Shall I speak to him?

同类推荐
  • The Country of the Pointed Firs

    The Country of the Pointed Firs

    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。
  • 登祝融峰

    登祝融峰

    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。
  • 儒效

    儒效

    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。
  • 佛说四天王经

    佛说四天王经

    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。
  • 外科瘿瘤疣痣门

    外科瘿瘤疣痣门

    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
  • 全家都能用的老偏方:一个老中医的坐诊实录

    全家都能用的老偏方:一个老中医的坐诊实录

    本书是一位知名老中医的坐诊实录,收集了老中医40余年来的诊断中医偏方,这些偏方经过无数患者验证,行之有效,可以说面面俱到,非常适合家用。也许伴随你多年的皮肤问题,经过几样简单的食材,即可轻松化解;也许伴随你父母多年的老顽疾经过几副中药的调理,即可治愈;也许,你的孩子感冒、发烧,书中几个简单的小偏方,你随意选一个即可巧妙地化解……一本超实用,最简单,行之有效的偏方书籍。一本书,一个中医院到自家门口。
  • 神级道人

    神级道人

    跨越时空而来的神级道士,带着逆天的技能和装备,玩转现代大都市,建立庞大的妖兽军团,纵横七海,攻城掠地,掀起了人类文明的灭世危机……
  • 冰焕雪心

    冰焕雪心

    凌雪,一个现代的女杀手,为不让她所守护的一个秘密被他人手中,一朝穿越,竟解开了前世所守护的秘密之谜。解开谜团后,发现自己掉进了某男的怀里,“我能说不吗?”“很显然,你不能,乖乖地嫁给我吧!”“我……不……嫁。”果断逃走,躲起来,为什么他还能找得到我?“媳妇,你也该玩够了,应该回家了,是时候举行婚礼了。”
  • 桃花灼灼

    桃花灼灼

    在日本人侵华战争中发生惨案的一个小村庄,发现了铁矿,日本人来投资,村民们开始抵制,后来为了生活去矿上做工,于是噩梦开始了……
  • 天降之徒

    天降之徒

    穿越不可怕,可怕的是如何回去!神说:若想回去,成我之徒。看主角流云峰如何在大陆寻找一同穿越而来的同学,共同走上回家的路!
  • 异世寻乡人

    异世寻乡人

    为了救活自己的恋人,林轩通过地球最先进的科技打穿时空,在脑海中移植了一块能确定时间和空间坐标的智能芯片。打算回到过去,改变未婚妻的命运,却不慎被卷入时空风暴,流落异界。且看林轩如何在异世找到归家的路,又将在异世演绎出怎样的精彩。——————————一切尽在《异世寻乡人》。
  • 王俊凯之今夕又遇梨花雪

    王俊凯之今夕又遇梨花雪

    年少轻狂时,绯闻嘲讽,父亲形象的巨变,姐妹反目……她如同踩进了沼泽深渊。然而在光阴深处,总有那么一个人,用他特有的桃花眼和虎牙,温暖了她的世界。梨:周婉梨花:方堇薇雪:南宫彧染tfboys——是她们的信仰。三个少年灿烂了她们的青春,能否灿烂整个人生?
  • 恋上复仇三公主

    恋上复仇三公主

    她,冰冷。她,任性。她,可爱。活泼的她们是高傲的公主,她们是高贵的女王……她们拥有着令人羡慕的容貌。为了报复隐瞒了身份进入了贵族学院,她们的眼中充满了嗜血与愤恨!当然,她们的复仇之路不会充满血腥的,还有酸酸甜甜的爱情。他,冷漠,霸道。他,高贵。他,花心。帅气的他们是天子骄子,他们是高高在上的王子……遇上了我们三位公主之后会怎么样呢?
  • 健康全方位

    健康全方位

    随着人们生活水平的提高,对生活质量的要求也越来越高。以前家被人们认为是最安全、最舒适的生存空间的观念已被打破,人们越来越意识到了这“安乐窝”、“避风港”背后暗藏着的“危机”,居家健康越来越得到了人们的重视。
  • 代言人

    代言人

    天黑了,大雨还在下着。从教室出来的时候,走廊里已经没有一个人了!Dingo那个混小子不是说要给我送雨伞的嘛,怎么还不来?我掏出手机,惨啊,没电了!算了,多等一会吧。我可不是什么统招生呦,成绩不好没考上大学,只能参加自考,混个文凭呗。唉,中国的教育体制害人非浅呀,教育部的那些蛀虫,每年钱贪得倒不少,投资却比不上邻国蒙古,真他妈的,实在不是小弟愚鲁,只怪这种教育方式提不起我对学习的一点兴趣。烟都抽三根了,这雨怎么还不见停,送伞的人也不见来。我又点上一根烟,深深的吸了一口。雨丝在灯光照射下一闪一闪的。老妈也是在这么一个下着雨的晚上因为我没考……