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zanoni-第117部分

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last; ere even our ordinary date be finished we yet may prefer to

die?  Wonder rather that there are two who have clung so

faithfully to earth!  Me; I confess; that earth can enamour yet。

Attaining to the last secret while youth was in its bloom; youth

still colours all around me with its own luxuriant beauty; to me;

yet; to breathe is to enjoy。  The freshness has not faded from

the face of Nature; and not an herb in which I cannot discover a

new charm;an undetected wonder。



As with my youth; so with Mejnour's age:  he will tell you that

life to him is but a power to examine; and not till he has

exhausted all the marvels which the Creator has sown on earth;

would he desire new habitations for the renewed Spirit to

explore。  We are the types of the two essences of what is

imperishable;'ART; that enjoys; and SCIENCE; that

contemplates!'  And now; that thou mayest be contented that the

secrets are not vouchsafed to thee; learn that so utterly must

the idea detach itself from what makes up the occupation and

excitement of men; so must it be void of whatever would covet; or

love; or hate;that for the ambitious man; for the lover; the

hater; the power avails not。  And I; at last; bound and blinded

by the most common of household ties; I; darkened and helpless;

adjure thee; the baffled and discontented;I adjure thee to

direct; to guide me; where are they?  Oh; tell me;speak!  My

wife;my child?  Silent!oh; thou knowest now that I am no

sorcerer; no enemy。  I cannot give thee what thy faculties deny;

I cannot achieve what the passionless Mejnour failed to

accomplish; but I can give thee the next…best boon; perhaps the

fairest;I can reconcile thee to the daily world; and place

peace between thy conscience and thyself。〃



〃Wilt thou promise?〃



〃By their sweet lives; I promise!〃



Glyndon looked and believed。  He whispered the address to the

house whither his fatal step already had brought woe and doom。



〃Bless thee for this;〃 exclaimed Zanoni; passionately; 〃and thou

shalt be blessed!  What! couldst thou not perceive that at the

entrance to all the grander worlds dwell the race that intimidate

and awe?  Who in thy daily world ever left the old regions of

Custom and Prescription; and felt not the first seizure of the

shapeless and nameless Fear?  Everywhere around thee where men

aspire and labour; though they see it not;in the closet of the

sage; in the council of the demagogue; in the camp of the

warrior;everywhere cowers and darkens the Unutterable Horror。

But there; where thou hast ventured; alone is the Phantom

VISIBLE; and never will it cease to haunt; till thou canst pass

to the Infinite; as the seraph; or return to the Familiar; as a

child!  But answer me this:  when; seeking to adhere to some calm

resolve of virtue; the Phantom hath stalked suddenly to thy side;

when its voice hath whispered thee despair; when its ghastly eyes

would scare thee back to those scenes of earthly craft or riotous

excitement from which; as it leaves thee to worse foes to the

soul; its presence is ever absent;hast thou never bravely

resisted the spectre and thine own horror; hast thou never said;

'Come what may; to Virtue I will cling?'〃



〃Alas!〃 answered Glyndon; 〃only of late have I dared to do so。〃



〃And thou hast felt then that the Phantom grew more dim and its

power more faint?〃



〃It is true。〃



〃Rejoice; then!thou hast overcome the true terror and mystery

of the ordeal。  Resolve is the first success。  Rejoice; for the

exorcism is sure!  Thou art not of those who; denying a life to

come; are the victims of the Inexorable Horror。  Oh; when shall

men learn; at last; that if the Great Religion inculcates so

rigidly the necessity of FAITH; it is not alone that FAITH leads

to the world to be; but that without faith there is no excellence

in this;faith in something wiser; happier; diviner; than we see

on earth!the artist calls it the Ideal;the priest; Faith。

The Ideal and Faith are one and the same。  Return; O wanderer;

return!  Feel what beauty and holiness dwell in the Customary and

the Old。  Back to thy gateway glide; thou Horror! and calm; on

the childlike heart; smile again; O azure Heaven; with thy night

and thy morning star but as one; though under its double name of

Memory and Hope!〃



As he thus spoke; Zanoni laid his hand gently on the burning

temples of his excited and wondering listener; and presently a

sort of trance came over him:  he imagined that he was returned

to the home of his infancy; that he was in the small chamber

where; over his early slumbers; his mother had watched and

prayed。  There it was;visible; palpable; solitary; unaltered。

In the recess; the homely bed; on the walls; the shelves filled

with holy books; the very easel on which he had first sought to

call the ideal to the canvas; dust…covered; broken; in the

corner。  Below the window lay the old churchyard:  he saw it

green in the distance; the sun glancing through the yew…trees; he

saw the tomb where father and mother lay united; and the spire

pointing up to heaven; the symbol of the hopes of those who

consigned the ashes to the dust; in his ear rang the bells;

pealing; as on a Sabbath day。  Far fled all the visions of

anxiety and awe that had haunted and convulsed; youth; boyhood;

childhood came back to him with innocent desires and hopes; he

thought he fell upon his knees to pray。  He woke;he woke in

delicious tears; he felt that the Phantom was fled forever。  He

looked round;Zanoni was gone。  On the table lay these lines;

the ink yet wet:



〃I will find ways and means for thy escape。  At nightfall; as the

clock strikes nine; a boat shall wait thee on the river before

this house; the boatman will guide thee to a retreat where thou

mayst rest in safety till the Reign of Terror; which nears its

close; be past。  Think no more of the sensual love that lured;

and wellnigh lost thee。  It betrayed; and would have destroyed。

Thou wilt regain thy land in safety;long years yet spared to

thee to muse over the past; and to redeem it。  For thy future; be

thy dream thy guide; and thy tears thy baptism。〃



The Englishman obeyed the injunctions of the letter; and found

their truth。





CHAPTER 7。X。



Quid mirare meas tot in uno corpore formas?

Propert。



(Why wonder that I have so many forms in a single body?)



Zanoni to Mejnour。



。。。



〃She is in one of their prisons;their inexorable prisons。  It

is Robespierre's order;I have tracked the cause to Glyndon。

This; then; made that terrible connection between their fates

which I could not unravel; but which (till severed as it now is)

wrapped Glyndon himself in the same cloud that concealed her。  In

prison;in prison!it is the gate of the grave!  Her trial; and

the inevitable execution that follows such trial; is the third

day from this。  The tyrant has fixed all his schemes of slaughter

for the 10th of Thermidor。  While the deaths of the unoffending
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