登陆注册
19917700000103

第103章

One of the most baneful instruments of ancient criminal procedure was what was known as the monitory; this was a notice from the pulpit, given out by the bishop and repeated by all vicars to their parishioners, ordering them to make inquiries about the crime in question, and to reveal all the facts which might come to their knowledge. This was merely a modified form of the inquisitorial principle which reigned more openly in other countries. In the majority of cases, the monitory, which had, as a fact, been instituted in order to encourage informers in the name of religion, was a marvel of ridiculous atrocity; it frequently set forth the crime and all the imaginary circumstances the plaintiffs were eager to prove; it was, in short, the publication of a ready-made case, which gave the first knave that came a chance of earning some money by making a lying deposition in favour of the highest bidder. The inevitable effect of the monitory, when it was drawn up with a bias, was to arouse public hatred against the accused. The devout especially, receiving their opinions ready-made from the clergy, pursued the victim without mercy.

This is what happened in my own case; but here the clergy of the province were playing a further secret part which almost decided my fate.

The case was taken to the assizes at the court of Bourges, and proceedings began in a very few days.

You can imagine the gloomy despair with which I was filled. Edmee's condition was growing more and more serious; her mind was completely unhinged. I felt no anxiety as to the result of the trial; I never imagined it was possible to convict me of a crime I had not committed;but what were honour and life to me, if Edmee were never to regain the power of recognising my innocence? I looked upon her as already dead, and as having cursed me dying! So I was inflexibly resolved to kill myself immediately after receiving my sentence, whatever it might be.

Until then I felt that it was my duty to live, and to do what might be necessary for the triumph of truth; but I was plunged in such a state of stupor that I did not even think of ascertaining what was to be done. Had it not been for the cleverness and zeal of my counsel, and the sublime devotion of Marcasse, my listlessness would have left me to the most terrible fate.

Marcasse spent all his time in expeditions on my behalf. In the evening he would come and throw himself on a bundle of straw at the foot of my trunkle bed, and, after giving me news of Edmee and the chevalier, whom he went to see every day, he would tell me the results of his proceedings. I used to grasp his hand affectionately; but I was generally so absorbed by the news he had just given me of Edmee, that I never heard anything further.

This prison of La Chatre had formerly been the stronghold of the Elevains of Lombaud, the seigneurs of the province. Nothing was left of it but a formidable square tower at the top of a ravine where the Indre forms a narrow, winding valley, rich with the most beautiful vegetation. The weather was magnificent. My room, situated at the top of the tower, received the rays of the rising sun, which cast the long, thin shadows of a triple row of poplars as far as the eye could see. Never did landscape more smiling, fresh, and pastoral offer itself to the eyes of a prisoner. But how could I find pleasure in it?

Words of death and contumely came to me in every breeze that blew through the wall-flowers growing in the crannies. Every rustic sound, every tune on the pipe that rose to my room, seemed to contain an insult or to proclaim profound contempt for my sorrow. There was nothing, even to the bleating of the flocks, which did not appear to me an expression of neglect or indifference.

For some time Marcasse had had one fixed idea, namely, that Edmee had been shot by John Mauprat. It was possible; but as there was no evidence to support the conjecture, I at once ordered him not to make known his suspicions. It was not for me to clear myself at the expense of others. Although John Mauprat was capable of anything, it was possible that he had never thought of committing this crime; and as Ihad not heard him spoken of for more than six weeks, it seemed to me that it would have been cowardly to accuse him. I clung to the belief that one of the men in the battue had fired at Edmee by mistake, and that a feeling of fear and shame prevented him from confessing his misadventure. Marcasse had the courage to go and see all those who had taken part in the hunt, and, with such eloquence as Heaven had granted him, implored them not to fear the penalty for unintentional murder, and not to allow an innocent man to be accused in their stead. All these efforts were fruitless; from none of the huntsmen did my poor friend obtain a reply which left him any nearer a solution of the mystery that surrounded us.

On being transferred to Bourges, I was thrown into the castle which had belonged to the old dukes of Berry; this was henceforth to be my prison. It was a great grief to me to be separated from my faithful sergeant. He would have been allowed to follow me, but he had a presentiment that he would soon be arrested at the suggestion of my enemies (for he persisted in believing that I was the victim of a plot), and thus be unable to serve me any more. He wished, therefore, to lose no time, and to continue his investigations as long as they "should not have seized his person."Two days after my removal to Bourges, Marcasse produced a document which had been drawn up at his instance by two notaries of La Chatre.

同类推荐
  • 敬斋古今黈

    敬斋古今黈

    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。
  • 劝发菩提心集

    劝发菩提心集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛顶尊胜陀罗尼真言

    佛顶尊胜陀罗尼真言

    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。
  • 医案精华

    医案精华

    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。
  • 佛说法镜经

    佛说法镜经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 重生之百变奇女

    重生之百变奇女

    她是上帝的宠儿,琴棋书画个个精通,可是爱上不应该爱上男人,被闺蜜和她喜欢的男人,杀害....等等..重生之后她成了丞相家的大小姐脸上有脸上有红色的胎记因胎记原因很多人都讨厌他直到偶遇他后他的人生又一次的转变....
  • 蚀种

    蚀种

    【更新会比较慢(不是一般的慢,因为有时候会卡壳),追求更新速度的亲们慎入】你死过吗?如果你死过一次,那么你就会知道生命是多么可贵。没有死过至少也见过世界末日吧?如果我眼前的就是世界末日,那么离死亡也一定不远了吧?北堂莲亲眼目睹了世界末日的爆发,那一天的世界是血红的,横尸遍地,满地都是残骸,充斥着他的瞳孔,重活一世,他对着心脏发誓绝对要将人类的天敌蚀种绝杀殆尽!
  • 二十四节气话养生

    二十四节气话养生

    二十四节气不仅是指导农业生产的“圣经”,也是指导人们养生、保健的秘宝。本书通俗易懂、深入浅出的语言,按照我国丰富的中医药典籍和大量的科研资料,系统介绍了人体脏腑功能活动、气血运行与二十四节气变化息息相关的防治病、运动健身,科学饮食等知识,同是阐述了与二十四节气有关的传说、典故、诗词、趣闻、轶事。内容丰富,科学实用,效果显著,适合广大读者,尤其是中老年朋友阅读参考。
  • 属于我们的十年之约

    属于我们的十年之约

    我们深爱的三只,属于我们的十年之约,四叶草,小螃蟹,汤圆,千纸鹤,我们都是一家人......
  • On Interpretation

    On Interpretation

    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。
  • 此生,爱定你

    此生,爱定你

    青春,是大度的,它装的下快乐,容得住忧伤,盛的了离愁。记得诗人海子曾说过一句话,“我在漫天风雪里披荆斩棘,你在谁的字典里演绎皈依”,青春是对爱的追求,尽管懵懂却萌动。这是一部关于风雪,关于青春,关于爱情的小说,他和她相遇了……
  • 致命的戒指I

    致命的戒指I

    我叫陈焱,是一名侦探,我为无数的人解开了迷惑,破了不少奇案,看到了这肮脏的社会多少人为了金钱为了利益为了权利而走进了没有出口的迷宫,而我的迷宫却从几年前我还是一个老板的私人秘书时开始???我一直无法从我的迷宫绕出去,我一直在迷宫里旋绕着,我不知道出口在哪里,而在出口等我的又是什么???
  • 王爷你的节操呢

    王爷你的节操呢

    不过是翻个围墙而已不至于穿吧!喂,无赖王爷,不要追我啊!
  • 这不是我想要的修仙

    这不是我想要的修仙

    一个青楼的小龟公,机缘巧合被发现是极品体质,又阴差阳错的进入了一个全是女修的没落宗门。豪放的掌门,奇葩的师父,形形色色的师姐,每一个都让他一个脑袋两个大。无论男人、女人,甚至是阴阳人,都对他的体质垂涎若滴,相信很多人其实是都挺羡慕他的吧,嘿嘿……没错,此人就是我——龟公王二!
  • 杂占

    杂占

    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。