登陆注册
19917700000072

第72章

M. de la Marche happened to be setting out for America at the very time when Marcasse came to his castle in Berry for a week, to make his annual round among the beams and joists in the barns. The inmates of the chateau, in their excitement at the count's departure, indulged in wonderful commentaries on that far country, so full of dangers and marvels, from which, according to the village wiseacres, no man ever returned without a vast fortune, and so many gold and silver ingots that he needed ten ships to carry them all. Now, under his icy exterior, Don Marcasse, like some hyperborean volcano, concealed a glowing imagination, a passionate love of the marvellous. Accustomed to live in a state of equilibrium on narrow beams in evidently loftier regions than other men, and not insensible to the glory of astounding the bystanders every day by the calm daring of his acrobatic movements, he let himself be fired by these pictures of Eldorado; and his dreams were the more extravagant because, as usual, he unbosomed himself to no one. M. de la Marche, therefore, was very much surprised when, on the eve of his departure, Marcasse presented himself, and proposed to accompany him to America as his valet. In vain did M. de la Marche remind him that he was very old to abandon his calling and run the risks of a new kind of life. Marcasse displayed so much firmness that in the end he gained his point. Various reasons led M.

de la Marche to consent to the strange request. He had resolved to take with him a servant older still than the weasel-hunter, a man who was accompanying him only with great reluctance. But this man enjoyed his entire confidence, a favour which M. de la Marche was very slow to grant, since he was only able to keep up the outward show of a man of quality, and wished to be served faithfully, and with economy and prudence. He knew, however, that Marcasse was scrupulously honest, and even singularly unselfish; for there was something of Don Quixote in the man's soul as well as in his appearance. He had found in some ruins a sort of treasure-trove, that is to say, an earthenware jar containing a sum of about ten thousand francs in old gold and silver coins; and not only had he handed it over to the owner of the ruins, whom he might easily have deceived, but further he had refused to accept any reward, declaring emphatically in his abbreviated jargon, "honesty would die selling itself."Marcasse's economy, his discretion, his punctuality, seemed likely to make him a valuable man, if he could be trained to put these qualities at the service of others. The one thing to be feared was that he might not be able to accustom himself to his loss of independence. However, M. de la Marche thought that, before M. de Ternay's squadron sailed, he would have time to test his new squire sufficiently.

On his side, Marcasse felt many regrets at taking leave of his friends and home; for if he had "friends everywhere and everywhere a native place," as he said, in allusion to his wandering life, he still had a very marked preference for Varenne; and of all his castles (for he was accustomed to call every place he stopped at "his"), the chateau of Sainte-Severe was the only one which he arrived at with pleasure and left with regret. One day, when he had missed his footing on the roof and had rather a serious fall, Edmee, then still a child, had won his heart by the tears she had shed over this accident, and the artless attentions she had shown him. And ever since Patience had come to dwell on the edge of the park, Marcasse had felt still more attracted toward Sainte-Severe; for in Patience Marcasse had found his Orestes.

Marcasse did not always understand Patience; but Patience was the only man who thoroughly understood Marcasse, and who knew how much chivalrous honesty and noble courage lay hidden beneath that odd exterior. Humbly bowing to the hermit's intellectual superiority, the weasel-hunter would stop respectfully whenever the poetic frenzy took possession of Patience and made his words unintelligible. At such a time Marcasse would refrain from questions and ill-timed remarks with touching gentleness; would lower his eyes, and nodding his head from time to time as if he understood and approved, would, at least, afford his friend the innocent pleasure of being listened to without contradiction.

Marcasse, however, had understood enough to make him embrace republican ideas and share in those romantic hopes of universal levelling and a return to the golden age, which had been so ardently fostered by old Patience. Having frequently heard his friend say that these doctrines were to be cultivated with prudence (a precept, however, to which Patience gave but little heed himself), the hidalgo, inclined to reticence both by habit and inclination, never spoke of his philosophy; but he proved himself a more efficacious propagandist by carrying about from castle to cottage, and from house to farm, those little cheap editions of /La Science du Bonhomme Richard/, and other small treatises on popular patriotism, which, according to the Jesuits, a secret society of Voltairian philosophers, devoted to the diabolical practice of freemasonry, circulated gratis among the lower classes.

Thus in Marcasse's sudden resolution there was as much revolutionary enthusiasm as love of adventure. For a long time the dormouse and polecat had seemed to him overfeeble enemies for his restless valour, even as the granary floor seemed to afford too narrow a field. Every day he read the papers of the previous day in the servants' hall of the houses he visited; and it appeared to him that this war in America, which was hailed as the awakening of the spirit of justice and liberty in the New World, ought to produce a revolution in France.

It is true he had a very literal notion of the way in which ideas were to cross the seas and take possession of the minds of our continent.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 半夏之恋:小子,赖上你

    半夏之恋:小子,赖上你

    半夏在反应到自己的钱包被偷的下一秒,便发现身后有人加快了脚下的步伐从自己身旁追了上去。钱包递到了自己眼前时,视线之内,是张早已被多数女生在心中反复描摹千百万遍的脸,穿着蓝白相间运动服的纪渊言,苍白的没有任何表情的脸,好像是被匆匆经过的冬日阳光冻结了一样。
  • 惊天行者

    惊天行者

    他天资卓绝,却是一幅奇怪病体。他修炼无人愿修的危险玄通,为的只是守住自己的人格与尊严。他走上世人唾弃的天行者之路,图的却是拯救天下于危难。他看似平平无奇,但他却是天下皆惧的惊天行者。他正气凛然,但世人却视其为天下首恶。但是:规则是用来打破的,科学是拿来搞破坏的,钢铁侠是来拯救人类的,他是来颠覆世界的!
  • 酒品:饮出的格调与生活情趣

    酒品:饮出的格调与生活情趣

    本书介绍了酒文化,酒的起源,特性,功能以及饮酒的趣味和饮酒的知识,以助饮酒者的雅趣,让更多的人熟悉美酒香醇的人生价值与独特魅力。
  • 大登殿

    大登殿

    你说我厚颜无耻?哼!那只是我为人处事的手段。你说我心狠手辣?唉~~我也是不得已而为之啊!路见不平?给我好处就相助。看到宝贝?打不死我就抽刀!我!苏大老爷,就是要祸乱这偌大的修仙界!
  • 三百千千:千字文

    三百千千:千字文

    我国传统文化启蒙教育读物,最普及的当属《三字经》、《百家姓》、《千字文》、《千家诗》。这四部书在民间简称“三百千千”,是旧时儿童上学必读之书。
  • 万兽朝圣

    万兽朝圣

    唐林作为帮派内一位顶级杀手,目前已经达到大成境界,不出一年半载,唐林的境界便能提升至武者巅峰,成为灵修者。灵修者,人类武者与灵兽融为一体,随后一化为二,一为人身,二为兽体,两者心意相通,都拥有自己的意识。唐林只需要寻找到一只强力的灵兽来炼化便可,可就在这时,帮派又指派唐林去执行一项九死一生的任务!这次任务是死,抑或是一个命运的转折点?
  • 绝世狂傲:天才灵幻师

    绝世狂傲:天才灵幻师

    风起云涌之中,云洲大陆竟出现了传说中的久灵族,千年一遇的天才横空出世。令人想不到的是,绝世天才竟是曾经的废材?一朝身世之谜终被揭晓,他褪去层层伪装,世人惊知,他原来是她?------沈慕白一袭素雅的白色长袍,风姿卓越,清冷高雅,犹如误落凡尘的嫡仙……莫景岚嘴角抽了抽:打住!各位,千万不要被作者骗了!什么高冷,什么嫡仙,全是假象!!他根本就是只腹黑的禽兽啊!!沈慕白嘴角微勾一脸兴味地看着咆哮的莫景岚,缓缓开口:"莫莫,怎么能这么说你夫君呢""不要叫我莫莫,我感觉你在叫我嬷嬷!""那,摸摸?""……"
  • 红颜情梦

    红颜情梦

    一个从农村走出来的穷小子,心比天高,在起落浮沉中,体味人生百态,彰显不凡人生......一位曾视爱情如生命的青年才俊,在多个爱与被爱之间,究竟何去何从......这是一个穷小子与命运抗争的奋斗史,这是一段反映人性真实美好的生命礼赞,这是一本生命情感的动人写真集,这是一种敬畏生命奋斗不息的正能量人生价值观!
  • 陈世美是我老爸

    陈世美是我老爸

    男主家喻户晓,名字叫陈世美,一介秀才出身,有一个贤惠的妻子秦氏,家有一双聪明儿女,陈中状元之前,一家人过着其乐融融的田园生活----
  • 人鱼岛

    人鱼岛

    年轻的国际刑警钱龙辉来到“人鱼岛”度假——他想在体验加勒比风情的同时,能够有幸目睹人鱼的身影。然而,在他到达岛上的当日,却发生了一起恐怖的袭击事件。在受岛主的委托开始调查之后,钱龙辉发现这座岛上隐藏了太多的秘密。而随着调查的深入,人鱼的来历、始作俑者的身份、一个关键人物的身世之谜,以及一件尘封已久的往事,都开始随之慢慢浮出水面……