登陆注册
5630700000019

第19章

"And so you want to hang me, Monseigneur Straw-Stalk? You will have to eat a lot of beef, then, for you are not yet tall enough to reach the branch which is to bear me; and before then . . . perhaps many things will happen that are not dreamt of in your little philosophy.""Nonsense! Why talk nonsense?" said the mole-catcher, with a serious air; "come, make peace. Monseigneur Bernard, I ask pardon for Patience; he is an old man, a fool.""No, no," said Patience; "I want him to hang me; he is right; this is merely my due; and, in fact, it may come more quickly than all the rest. You must not make too much haste to grow, monsieur; for I--well, I am making more haste to grow old than I would wish; and you who are so brave, you would not attack a man no longer able to defend himself.""You didn't hesitate to use your strength against me!" I cried.

"Confess, now; didn't you treat me brutally? Wasn't it a coward's work, that?""Oh, children, children!" he said. "See how the thing reasons! Out of the mouths of children cometh truth."And he moved away dreamily, and muttering to himself as was his wont.

Marcasse took off his hat to me and said in an impassive tone:

"He is wrong . . . live at peace . . . pardon . . . peace . . .

farewell!"

They disappeared; and there ended my relations with Patience. I did not come in contact with him again until long afterward.

VI

I was fifteen when my grandfather died. At Roche-Mauprat his death caused no sorrow, but infinite consternation. He was the soul of every vice that reigned therein, and it is certain that he was more cruel, though less vile, than his sons. On his death the sort of glory which his audacity had won for us grew dim. His sons, hitherto held under firm control, became more and more drunken and debauched. Moreover, each day added some new peril to their expeditions.

Except for the few trusty vassals whom we treated well, and who were all devoted to us, we were becoming more and more isolated and resourceless. People had left the neighbouring country in consequence of our violent depredations. The terror that we inspired pushed back daily the bounds of the desert around us. In making our ventures we had to go farther afield, even to the borders of the plain. There we had not the upper hand; and my Uncle Laurence, the boldest of us all, was dangerously wounded in a skirmish. Other schemes had to be devised. John suggested them. One was that we should slip into the fairs under various disguises, and exercise our skill in thieving.

From brigands we became pick-pockets, and our detested name sank lower and lower in infamy. We formed a fellowship with the most noisome characters our province concealed, and, by an exchange of rascally services, once again managed to avoid destitution.

I say we, for I was beginning to take a place in this band of cutthroats when my grandfather died. He had yielded to my entreaties and allowed me to join in some of the last expeditions he attempted. Ishall make no apologies; but here, gentlemen, you behold a man who has followed the profession of a bandit. I feel no remorse at the recollection, no more than a soldier would feel at having served a campaign under orders from his general. I thought that I was still living in the middle ages. The laws of the land, with all their strength and wisdom, were to me words devoid of meaning. I felt brave and full of vigour; fighting was a joy. Truly, the results of our victories often made me blush; but, as they in no way profited myself, I washed my hands of them. Nay, I remember with pleasure that I helped more than one victim who had been knocked down to get up and escape.

This existence, with its movement, its dangers, and its fatigues, had a numbing effect on me. It took me away from any painful reflections which might have arisen in my mind. Besides, it freed me from the immediate tyranny of John. However, after the death of my grandfather, when our band degraded itself to exploits of a different nature, Ifell back under his odious sway. I was by no means fitted for lying and fraud. I displayed not only aversion but also incapacity for this new industry. Consequently my uncle looked upon me as useless, and began to maltreat me again. They would have driven me away had they not been afraid that I might make my peace with society, and become a dangerous enemy to themselves. While they were in doubt as to whether it was wiser to feed me or to live in fear of me, they often thought (as I have since learned) of picking a quarrel with me, and forcing a fight in which I might be got rid of. This was John's suggestion.

Antony, however, who retained more of Tristan's energy and love of fair play at home than any of his brothers, proved clearly that I did more good than harm. I was, he declared, a brave fighter, and there was no knowing when they might need an extra hand. I might also be shaped into a swindler. I was very young and very ignorant; but John, perhaps, would endeavour to win me over by kindness, and make my lot less wretched. Above all, he might enlighten me as to my true position, by explaining that I was an outcast from society, and could not return to it without being hanged immediately. Then, perhaps, my obstinacy and pride would give way, out of regard to my own well-being on the one hand, and from necessity on the other. At all events, they should try this before getting rid of me.

"For," said Antony to round off his homily, "we were ten Mauprats last year; our father is dead, and, if we kill Bernard, we shall only be eight."This argument gained the day. They brought me forth from the species of dungeon in which I had languished for several months; they gave me new clothes; they exchanged my old gun for a beautiful carbine that Ihad always coveted; they explained to me my position in the world;they honoured me with the best wine at meals. I promised to reflect, and meanwhile, became rather more brutalized by inaction and drunkenness than I had been by brigandage.

同类推荐
  • The Absentee

    The Absentee

    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。
  • 兰闺恨

    兰闺恨

    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。
  • 竹屋痴语

    竹屋痴语

    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。
  • 宝云经

    宝云经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说三摩竭经

    佛说三摩竭经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 感悟故乡:那山那水那人和我

    感悟故乡:那山那水那人和我

    故乡的一轮明月正在异乡的土地上冉冉升起,我像童年时那样想问那月亮:你不是从头到尾都看见了、听见了吗?每当我想起故乡,浮现在我眼前的总是故乡的一轮明月,和月光下我母亲的身影。
  • 七里樱

    七里樱

    年少时,我们,似乎成为了世界的主角,遗憾过,苦恼过,伤心心过,但庆幸的是在那个即将逝去的青春里,你世界的男主随着四季辗转在你身旁,陪你笑,陪你哭……终有一天,你发现他只是喜欢你身边的那个人而已…“你知道的,我喜欢她哎。”“没事…”至少我的青春,你来过就好。
  • 末世幸福攻略

    末世幸福攻略

    遮风挡雨消声音,生火煮饭吹风机。同样是风系火系异能,别人用的时候狂炫酷拽,可战渊用起来却格外居家。关于这一点,方安然曾经嘲笑过战渊。可战渊却盯着她说道:“居家也挺好的,老婆会喜欢,对不对?”红着脸的方安然虽然有些不太好意思,却轻轻地点了点头:“挺对…”
  • 人间词话

    人间词话

    《人间词话》是著名国学大师王国维所著的一部文学批评著作。接受了西洋美学思想之洗礼后,以崭新的眼光对中国旧文学所作的评论。表面上看,《人间词话》与中国相袭已久之诗话、词话一类作品之体例,格式,并无显著的差别,实际上,它已初具理论体系,在旧日诗词论著中,称得上一部屈指可数的作品。甚至在以往词论界里,许多人把它奉为圭臬,把它的论点作为词学,美学的根据,影响很是深远。王国维的《人间词话》是晚清以来最有影响的著作之一。
  • 实用钓鱼技法

    实用钓鱼技法

    《实用钓鱼技法》内容包括“常钓鱼,大有益”、“怎样选择和使用渔具”、“鱼的生理特征和生活习性”、“鱼饵”、“垂钓方法和技巧”等八章。
  • 幻想修正者

    幻想修正者

    何默不是很喜欢自己现在的工作,虽然待遇极好,并且能够去到不同的地方旅游,但是——看着眼前的绿胖子和红裤衩,何默表示自己还是早点辞职安全些。“系统,我想看看外面的世界,放了我成吗?”
  • 宇宙暗物质入侵

    宇宙暗物质入侵

    原本平静的世界被一次意外打破,宇宙深处传来的那一声噪音,被电镀翻译成信息后,身为唯一见证者的杨仁慧,她做出了关于人类命运的抉择。悄然归来的吴帝顺,携带着超科技系统,原本想一步步的摸索地球的未来,可是意外的来临让他不觉间加快了脚步……
  • 夜郎歌

    夜郎歌

    一个浑浑噩噩的中二少年,一块不靠谱的妖精石头,以全城第一学院为目标,发起了最奇葩的冲刺!修武道,通经文,炼药剂,斩强敌……我不是一个强硬的人,但强者,从来都是被逼出来的。
  • 开着房车逛末世

    开着房车逛末世

    作为一名普通的大学生,林岚在一次社团踏青中意外发现了一辆改变了他一生的……房车?不久之后,末日来袭,丧尸肆虐,秩序摧毁,世界仿佛变了模样……当然,这些都跟林岚没有任何关系,他依旧活得逍遥自在,只因为他的房车——坚若磐石,稳如老狗!
  • 人生这道难题:培根随笔

    人生这道难题:培根随笔

    《人生这道难题:培根随笔》收录了培根的随笔散文,内容包括生活的方方面面,如“论真理”、“论死亡”、“论宗教”、“论勇敢”等,这些随笔作品充分展现了作者的价值观念,既真实又诚恳,为读者呈现出了一个立体而完整的培根,使读者可以一览这位科学全才的思想世界。