51(y)(7)
用你喜欢的方式阅读你喜欢的小说
巴黎圣母院英文版 - BOOK NINTH CHAPTER II.HUNCHBACKED, ONE EYED, LAME.
繁体
恢复默认
返回目录【键盘操作】左右光标键:上下章节;回车键:目录;双击鼠标:停止/启动自动滚动;滚动时上下光标键调节滚动速度。
  Every city during the Middle Ages, and every city in France down to the time of Louis XII. had its places of asylum. These sanctuaries, in the midst of the deluge of penal and barbarous jurisdictions which inundated the city, were a species of islands which rose above the level of human justice. Every criminal who landed there was safe.There were in every suburb almost as many places of asylum as gallows. It was the abuse of impunity by the side of the abuse of punishment; two bad things which strove to correct each other.The palaces of the king, the hotels of the princes, and especially churches, possessed the right of asylum.Sometimes a whole city which stood in need of being repeopled was temporarily created a place of refuge.Louis XI. made all paris a refuge in 1467.His foot once within the asylum, the criminal was sacred; but he must beware of leaving it; one step outside the sanctuary, and he fell back into the flood.The wheel, the gibbet, the strappado, kept good guard around the place of refuge, and lay in watch incessantly for their prey, like sharks around a vessel.Hence, condemned men were to be seen whose hair had grown white in a cloister, on the steps of a palace, in the enclosure of an abbey, beneath the porch of a church; in this manner the asylum was a prison as much as any other.It sometimes happened that a solemn decree of parliament violated the asylum and restored the condemned man to the executioner; but this was of rare occurrence.parliaments were afraid of the bishops, and when there was friction between these two robes, the gown had but a poor chance against the cassock.Sometimes, however, as in the affair of the assassins of petit-Jean, the headsman of paris, and in that of Emery Rousseau, the murderer of Jean Valleret, justice overleaped the church and passed on to the execution of its sentences; but unless by virtue of a decree of parliament, woe to him who violated a place of asylum with armed force! The reader knows the manner of death of Robert de Clermont, Marshal of France, and of Jean de Chalons, Marshal of Champagne; and yet the question was only of a certain perrin Marc, the clerk of a money-changer, a miserable assassin; but the two marshals had broken the doors of St. Méry. Therein lay the enormity.Such respect was cherished for places of refuge that, according to tradition, animals even felt it at times.Aymoire relates that a stag, being chased by Dagobert, having taken refuge near the tomb of Saint-Denis, the pack of hounds stopped short and barked.Churches generally had a small apartment prepared for the reception of supplicants.In 1407, Nicolas Flamel caused to be built on the vaults of Saint-Jacques de la Boucherie, a chamber which cost him four livres six sous, sixteen farthings, parisis.At Notre-Dame it was a tiny cell situated on the roof of the side aisle, beneath the flying buttresses, precisely at the spot where the wife of the present janitor of the towers has made for herself a garden, which is to the hanging gardens of Babylon what a lettuce is to a palm-tree, what a porter's wife is to a Semiramis.It was here that Quasimodo had deposited la Esmeralda, after his wild and triumphant course.As long as that course lasted, the young girl had been unable to recover her senses, half unconscious, half awake, no longer feeling anything, except that she was mounting through the air, floating in it, flying in it, that something was raising her above the earth. From time to time she heard the loud laughter, the noisy voice of Quasimodo in her ear; she half opened her eyes; then below her she confusedly beheld paris checkered with its thousand roofs of slate and tiles, like a red and blue mosaic, above her head the frightful and joyous face of Quasimodo. Then her eyelids drooped again; she thought that all was over, that they had executed her during her swoon, and that the misshapen spirit which had presided over her destiny, had laid hold of her and was bearing her away.She dared not look at him, and she surrendered herself to her fate. But when the bellringer, dishevelled and panting, had deposited her in the cell of refuge, when she felt his huge hands gently detaching the cord which bruised her arms, she felt that sort of shock which awakens with a start the passengers of a vessel which runs aground in the middle of a dark night.Her thoughts awoke also, and returned to her one by one.She saw that she was in Notre-Dame; she remembered having been torn from the hands of the executioner; that phoebus was alive, that phoebus loved her no longer; and as these two ideas, one of which shed so much bitterness over the other, presented themselves simultaneously to the poor condemned girl; she turned to Quasimodo, who was standing in front of her, and who terrified her; she said to him,--"Why have you saved me?"He gazed at her with anxiety, as though seeking to divine what she was saying to him.She repeated her question. Then he gave her a profoundly sorrowful glance and fled. She was astonished.A few moments later he returned, bearing a package which he cast at her feet.It was clothing which some charitable women had left on the threshold of the church for her.Then she dropped her eyes upon herself and saw that she was almost naked, and blushed.Life had returned.Quasimodo appeared to experience something of this modesty. He covered his eyes with his large hand and retired once more, but slowly.She made haste to dress herself.The robe was a white one with a white veil,--the garb of a novice of the H?tel-Dien.She had barely finished when she beheld Quasimodo returning. He carried a basket under one arm and a mattress under the other.In the basket there was a bottle, bread, and some provisions.He set the basket on the floor and said, "Eat!" He spread the mattress on the flagging and said, "Sleep."It was his own repast, it was his own bed, which the bellringer had gone in search of.The gypsy raised her eyes to thank him, but she could not articulate a word.She dropped her head with a quiver of terror.Then he said to her. -"I frighten you.I am very ugly, am I not?Do not look at me; only listen to me.During the day you will remain here; at night you can walk all over the church.But do not leave the church either by day or by night.You would be lost.They would kill you, and I should die."She was touched and raised her head to answer him.He had disappeared.She found herself alone once more, meditating upon the singular words of this almost monstrous being, and struck by the sound of his voice, which was so hoarse yet so gentle.Then she examined her cell.It was a chamber about six feet square, with a small window and a door on the slightly sloping plane of the roof formed of flat stones.Many gutters with the figures of animals seemed to be bending down around her, and stretching their necks in order to stare at her through the window.Over the edge of her roof she perceived the tops of thousands of chimneys which caused the smoke of all the fires in paris to rise beneath her eyes.A sad sight for the poor gypsy, a foundling, condemned to death, an unhappy creature, without country, without family, without a hearthstone.At the moment when the thought of her isolation thus appeared to her more poignant than ever, she felt a bearded and hairy head glide between her hands, upon her knees.She started (everything alarmed her now) and looked.It was the poor goat, the agile Djali, which had made its escape after her, at the moment when Quasimodo had put to flight Charmolue's brigade, and which had been lavishing caresses on her feet for nearly an hour past, without being able to win a glance.The gypsy covered him with kisses."Oh!Djali!" she said, "how I have forgotten thee!And so thou still thinkest of me!Oh! thou art not an ingrate!"At the same time, as though an invisible hand had lifted the weight which had repressed her tears in her heart for so long, she began to weep, and, in proportion as her tears flowed, she felt all that was most acrid and bitter in her grief depart with them.Evening came, she thought the night so beautiful that she made the circuit of the elevated gallery which surrounds the church.It afforded her some relief, so calm did the earth appear when viewed from that height.
或许您还会喜欢:
不能承受的生命之轻
作者:佚名
章节:13 人气:2
摘要:米兰·昆德拉(MilanKundera,1929-),捷克小说家,生于捷克布尔诺市。父亲为钢琴家、音乐艺术学院的教授。生长于一个小国在他看来实在是一种优势,因为身处小国,“要么做一个可怜的、眼光狭窄的人”,要么成为一个广闻博识的“世界性*的人”。童年时代,他便学过作曲,受过良好的音乐熏陶和教育。少年时代,开始广泛阅读世界文艺名著。 [点击阅读]
古兰经
作者:佚名
章节:116 人气:2
摘要:《古兰经》概述《古兰经》是伊斯兰教经典,伊斯兰教徒认为它是安拉对先知穆罕默德所启示的真实语言,在穆罕默德死后汇集为书。《古兰经》的阿拉伯文在纯洁和优美上都无与伦比,在风格上是达到纯全的地步。为了在斋月诵读,《古兰经》分为30卷,一月中每天读1卷。但是《古兰经》主要划分单位却是长短不等的114章。《法蒂哈》即开端一章是简短的祈祷词,其他各章大致按长短次序排列;第二章最长;最后两三章最短。 [点击阅读]
小银和我
作者:佚名
章节:142 人气:2
摘要:——和希梅内斯的《小银和我》严文井许多年以前,在西班牙某一个小乡村里,有一头小毛驴,名叫小银。它像个小男孩,天真、好奇而又调皮。它喜欢美,甚至还会唱几支简短的咏叹调。它有自己的语言,足以充分表达它的喜悦、欢乐、沮丧或者失望。有一天,它悄悄咽了气。世界上从此缺少了它的声音,好像它从来就没有出生过一样。这件事说起来真有些叫人忧伤,因此西班牙诗人希梅内斯为它写了一百多首诗。每首都在哭泣,每首又都在微笑。 [点击阅读]
希腊的神话和传说
作者:佚名
章节:112 人气:2
摘要:古希腊(公元前12世纪到公元前9~8世纪)是世界四大文明古国之一,它为人类留下了一笔辉煌灿烂的文化财富。古希腊的神话和传说就是其中最为瑰丽的珍宝。世界有许多民族,每个民族都创作出了它自己的神话和传说,这些神话都有自己民族的特点,但也都有共同的性质。 [点击阅读]
悲剧的诞生
作者:佚名
章节:66 人气:2
摘要:2004年3月尼采美学文选//尼采美学文选初版译序:尼采美学概要初版译序:尼采美学概要尼采(1844-1900)是德国著名哲学家、诗人。他在美学上的成就主要不在学理的探讨,而在以美学解决人生的根本问题,提倡一种审美的人生态度。他的美学是一种广义美学,实际上是一种人生哲学。他自己曾谈到,传统的美学只是接受者的美学,而他要建立给予者即艺术家的美学。 [点击阅读]
梦的解析
作者:佚名
章节:72 人气:2
摘要:我尝试在本书中描述“梦的解析”;相信在这么做的时候,我并没有超越神经病理学的范围。因为心理学上的探讨显示梦是许多病态心理现象的第一种;它如歇斯底里性恐惧、强迫性思想、妄想亦是属于此现象,并且因为实际的理由,很为医生们所看重。由后遗症看来,梦并没有实际上的重要性;不过由它成为一种范例的理论价值来看,其重要性却相对地增加不少。 [点击阅读]
百年孤独
作者:佚名
章节:26 人气:2
摘要:全书近30万字,内容庞杂,人物众多,情节曲折离奇,再加上神话故事、宗教典故、民间传说以及作家独创的从未来的角度来回忆过去的新颖倒叙手法等等,令人眼花缭乱。但阅毕全书,读者可以领悟,作家是要通过布恩地亚家族7代人充满神秘色*彩的坎坷经历来反映哥伦比亚乃至拉丁美洲的历史演变和社会现实,要求读者思考造成马贡多百年孤独的原因,从而去寻找摆脱命运捉弄的正确途径。 [点击阅读]
科学怪人
作者:佚名
章节:29 人气:2
摘要:你那时还觉得我的探险之旅会凶多吉少,但是现在看来开端良好、一帆风顺,你对此一定会深感宽慰吧。我是昨天抵达这里的,所做的第一件事就是要写信给你,让我亲爱的姐姐放心,而且请你对我的探险事业增加成功的信心。我现在位于距离伦敦千里之遥的北方,当我漫步在圣彼得堡的街头,微风带着一丝寒气迎面而来,不觉令我精神一振,一种快意不禁涌上心头。 [点击阅读]
绿里奇迹
作者:佚名
章节:59 人气:2
摘要:这件事发生在1932年,当时的州立监狱还在冷山。当然了,还有电椅。狱中囚犯常拿电椅开玩笑,对令人恐惧却又摆脱不掉的东西,大家总喜欢如此地取笑一番。他们管它叫“电伙计”,或者叫“大榨汁机”。大伙谈论电费单,谈论那年秋天监狱长穆尔斯不得不自己做感恩节晚餐,因为他妻子梅琳达病得没法做饭了。不过,对于那些真得要坐到电椅上的人,这些玩笑很快就不合时宜了。 [点击阅读]
一朵桔梗花
作者:佚名
章节:37 人气:2
摘要:1.一串白藤花序幕花街上,点着常夜灯。如今,连一点痕迹都没有了,可是大正(注:日本年号,1911-1926)末年,在那个伸入濑户内海的小小港埠里,有一所即今是当时也使人觉得凄寂的风化区,名字就叫“常夜坡”。活了这么一把年纪,到如今还常常会想起那整晚点着的白花花、冷清清的灯光;奇异的是每次想起,它总是那么凄冷,了无生气。 [点击阅读]