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 FOURTH CHAPTER III.~IMMANIS PECORIS CUSTOS, IMMANIOR IP
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。
  Now, in 1482, Quasimodo had grown up.He had become a few years previously the bellringer of Notre-Dame, thanks to his father by adoption, Claude Frollo,--who had become archdeacon of Josas, thanks to his suzerain, Messire Louis de Beaumont,--who had become Bishop of paris, at the death of Guillaume Chartier in 1472, thanks to his patron, Olivier Le Daim, barber to Louis XI., king by the grace of God.So Quasimodo was the ringer of the chimes of Notre-Dame.In the course of time there had been formed a certain peculiarly intimate bond which united the ringer to the church. Separated forever from the world, by the double fatality of his unknown birth and his natural deformity, imprisoned from his infancy in that impassable double circle, the poor wretch had grown used to seeing nothing in this world beyond the religious walls which had received him under their shadow. Notre-Dame had been to him successively, as he grew up and developed, the egg, the nest, the house, the country, the universe.There was certainly a sort of mysterious and pre-existing harmony between this creature and this church.When, still a little fellow, he had dragged himself tortuously and by jerks beneath the shadows of its vaults, he seemed, with his human face and his bestial limbs, the natural reptile of that humid and sombre pavement, upon which the shadow of the Romanesque capitals cast so many strange forms.Later on, the first time that he caught hold, mechanically, of the ropes to the towers, and hung suspended from them, and set the bell to clanging, it produced upon his adopted father, Claude, the effect of a child whose tongue is unloosed and who begins to speak.It is thus that, little by little, developing always in sympathy with the cathedral, living there, sleeping there, hardly ever leaving it, subject every hour to the mysterious impress, he came to resemble it, he incrusted himself in it, so to speak, and became an integral part of it.His salient angles fitted into the retreating angles of the cathedral (if we may be allowed this figure of speech), and he seemed not only its inhabitant but more than that, its natural tenant.One might almost say that he had assumed its form, as the snail takes on the form of its shell.It was his dwelling, his hole, his envelope. There existed between him and the old church so profound an instinctive sympathy, so many magnetic affinities, so many material affinities, that he adhered to it somewhat as a tortoise adheres to its shell.The rough and wrinkled cathedral was his shell.It is useless to warn the reader not to take literally all the similes which we are obliged to employ here to express the singular, symmetrical, direct, almost consubstantial union of a man and an edifice.It is equally unnecessary to state to what a degree that whole cathedral was familiar to him, after so long and so intimate a cohabitation.That dwelling was peculiar to him.It had no depths to which Quasimodo had not penetrated, no height which he had not scaled.He often climbed many stones up the front, aided solely by the uneven points of the carving.The towers, on whose exterior surface he was frequently seen clambering, like a lizard gliding along a perpendicular wall, those two gigantic twins, so lofty, so menacing, so formidable, possessed for him neither vertigo, nor terror, nor shocks of amazement.To see them so gentle under his hand, so easy to scale, one would have said that he had tamed them.By dint of leaping, climbing, gambolling amid the abysses of the gigantic cathedral he had become, in some sort, a monkey and a goat, like the Calabrian child who swims before he walks, and plays with the sea while still a babe.Moreover, it was not his body alone which seemed fashioned after the Cathedral, but his mind also.In what condition was that mind?What bent had it contracted, what form had it assumed beneath that knotted envelope, in that savage life?This it would be hard to determine.Quasimodo had been born one-eyed, hunchbacked, lame.It was with great difficulty, and by dint of great patience that Claude Frollo had succeeded in teaching him to talk.But a fatality was attached to the poor foundling.Bellringer of Notre-Dame at the age of fourteen, a new infirmity had come to complete his misfortunes: the bells had broken the drums of his ears; he had become deaf.The only gate which nature had left wide open for him had been abruptly closed, and forever.In closing, it had cut off the only ray of joy and of light which still made its way into the soul of Quasimodo.His soul fell into profound night.The wretched being's misery became as incurable and as complete as his deformity.Let us add that his deafness rendered him to some extent dumb. For, in order not to make others laugh, the very moment that he found himself to be deaf, he resolved upon a silence which he only broke when he was alone.He voluntarily tied that tongue which Claude Frollo had taken so much pains to unloose. Hence, it came about, that when necessity constrained him to speak, his tongue was torpid, awkward, and like a door whose hinges have grown rusty.If now we were to try to penetrate to the soul of Quasimodo through that thick, hard rind; if we could sound the depths of that badly constructed organism; if it were granted to us to look with a torch behind those non-transparent organs to explore the shadowy interior of that opaque creature, to elucidate his obscure corners, his absurd no-thoroughfares, and suddenly to cast a vivid light upon the soul enchained at the extremity of that cave, we should, no doubt, find the unhappy psyche in some poor, cramped, and ricketty attitude, like those prisoners beneath the Leads of Venice, who grew old bent double in a stone box which was both too low and too short for them.It is certain that the mind becomes atrophied in a defective body.Quasimodo was barely conscious of a soul cast in his own image, moving blindly within him.The impressions of objects underwent a considerable refraction before reaching his mind.His brain was a peculiar medium; the ideas which passed through it issued forth completely distorted.The reflection which resulted from this refraction was, necessarily, divergent and perverted.Hence a thousand optical illusions, a thousand aberrations of judgment, a thousand deviations, in which his thought strayed, now mad, now idiotic.The first effect of this fatal organization was to trouble the glance which he cast upon things.He received hardly any immediate perception of them.The external world seemed much farther away to him than it does to us.The second effect of his misfortune was to render him malicious.He was malicious, in fact, because he was savage; he was savage because he was ugly.There was logic in his nature, as there is in ours.His strength, so extraordinarily developed, was a cause of still greater malevolence: "~Malus puer robustus~," says Hobbes.This justice must, however be rendered to him.Malevolence was not, perhaps, innate in him.From his very first steps among men, he had felt himself, later on he had seen himself, spewed out, blasted, rejected.Human words were, for him, always a raillery or a malediction.As he grew up, he had found nothing but hatred around him.He had caught the general malevolence.He had picked up the weapon with which he had been wounded.After all, he turned his face towards men only with reluctance; his cathedral was sufficient for him.It was peopled with marble figures,--kings, saints, bishops,--who at least did not burst out laughing in his face, and who gazed upon him only with tranquillity and kindliness.The other statues, those of the monsters and demons, cherished no hatred for him, Quasimodo.He resembled them too much for that. They seemed rather, to be scoffing at other men.The saints were his friends, and blessed him; the monsters were his friends and guarded him.So he held long communion with them.He sometimes passed whole hours crouching before one of these statues, in solitary conversation with it.If any one came, he fled like a lover surprised in his serenade.And the cathedral was not only society for him, but the universe, and all nature beside.He dreamed of no other hedgerows than the painted windows, always in flower; no other shade than that of the foliage of stone which spread out, loaded with birds, in the tufts of the Saxon capitals; of no other mountains than the colossal towers of the church; of no other ocean than paris, roaring at their bases.What he loved above all else in the maternal edifice, that which aroused his soul, and made it open its poor wings, which it kept so miserably folded in its cavern, that which sometimes rendered him even happy, was the bells.He loved them, fondled them, talked to them, understood them. From the chime in the spire, over the intersection of the aisles and nave, to the great bell of the front, he cherished a tenderness for them all.The central spire and the two towers were to him as three great cages, whose birds, reared by himself, sang for him alone.Yet it was these very bells which had made him deaf; but mothers often love best that child which has caused them the most suffering.It is true that their voice was the only one which he could still hear.On this score, the big bell was his beloved.It was she whom he preferred out of all that family of noisy girls which bustled above him, on festival days.This bell was named Marie.She was alone in the southern tower, with her sister Jacqueline, a bell of lesser size, shut up in a smaller cage beside hers.This Jacqueline was so called from the name of the wife of Jean Montagu, who had given it to the church, which had not prevented his going and figuring without his head at Montfau?on.In the second tower there were six other bells, and, finally, six smaller ones inhabited the belfry over the crossing, with the wooden bell, which rang only between after dinner on Good Friday and the morning of the day before Easter.So Quasimodo had fifteen bells in his seraglio; but big Marie was his favorite.No idea can be formed of his delight on days when the grand peal was sounded.At the moment when the archdeacon dismissed him, and said, "Go!" he mounted the spiral staircase of the clock tower faster than any one else could have descended it.He entered perfectly breathless into the aerial chamber of the great bell; he gazed at her a moment, devoutly and lovingly; then he gently addressed her and patted her with his hand, like a good horse, which is about to set out on a long journey.He pitied her for the trouble that she was about to suffer.After these first caresses, he shouted to his assistants, placed in the lower story of the tower, to begin.They grasped the ropes, the wheel creaked, the enormous capsule of metal started slowly into motion. Quasimodo followed it with his glance and trembled.The first shock of the clapper and the brazen wall made the framework upon which it was mounted quiver.Quasimodo vibrated with the bell."Vah!" he cried, with a senseless burst of laughter.However, the movement of the bass was accelerated, and, in proportion as it described a wider angle, Quasimodo's eye opened also more and more widely, phosphoric and flaming.At length the grand peal began; the whole tower trembled; woodwork, leads, cut stones, all groaned at once, from the piles of the foundation to the trefoils of its summit.Then Quasimodo boiled and frothed; he went and came; he trembled from head to foot with the tower.The bell, furious, running riot, presented to the two walls of the tower alternately its brazen throat, whence escaped that tempestuous breath, which is audible leagues away.Quasimodo stationed himself in front of this open throat; he crouched and rose with the oscillations of the bell, breathed in this overwhelming breath, gazed by turns at the deep place, which swarmed with people, two hundred feet below him, and at that enormous, brazen tongue which came, second after second, to howl in his ear.It was the only speech which he understood, the only sound which broke for him the universal silence.He swelled out in it as a bird does in the sun.All of a sudden, the frenzy of the bell seized upon him; his look became extraordinary; he lay in wait for the great bell as it passed, as a spider lies in wait for a fly, and flung himself abruptly upon it, with might and main.Then, suspended above the abyss, borne to and fro by the formidable swinging of the bell, he seized the brazen monster by the ear-laps, pressed it between both knees, spurred it on with his heels, and redoubled the fury of the peal with the whole shock and weight of his body.Meanwhile, the tower trembled; he shrieked and gnashed his teeth, his red hair rose erect, his breast heaving like a bellows, his eye flashed flames, the monstrous bell neighed, panting, beneath him; and then it was no longer the great bell of Notre- Dame nor Quasimodo: it was a dream, a whirlwind, a tempest, dizziness mounted astride of noise; a spirit clinging to a flying crupper, a strange centaur, half man, half bell; a sort of horrible Astolphus, borne away upon a prodigious hippogriff of living bronze.The presence of this extraordinary being caused, as it were, a breath of life to circulate throughout the entire cathedral. It seemed as though there escaped from him, at least according to the growing superstitions of the crowd, a mysterious emanation which animated all the stones of Notre-Dame, and made the deep bowels of the ancient church to palpitate.It sufficed for people to know that he was there, to make them believe that they beheld the thousand statues of the galleries and the fronts in motion.And the cathedral did indeed seem a docile and obedient creature beneath his hand; it waited on his will to raise its great voice; it was possessed and filled with Quasimodo, as with a familiar spirit.One would have said that he made the immense edifice breathe.He was everywhere about it; in fact, he multiplied himself on all points of the structure.Now one perceived with affright at the very top of one of the towers, a fantastic dwarf climbing, writhing, crawling on all fours, descending outside above the abyss, leaping from projection to projection, and going to ransack the belly of some sculptured gorgon; it was Quasimodo dislodging the crows.Again, in some obscure corner of the church one came in contact with a sort of living chimera, crouching and scowling; it was Quasimodo engaged in thought. Sometimes one caught sight, upon a bell tower, of an enormous head and a bundle of disordered limbs swinging furiously at the end of a rope; it was Quasimodo ringing vespers or the Angelus.Often at night a hideous form was seen wandering along the frail balustrade of carved lacework, which crowns the towers and borders the circumference of the apse; again it was the hunchback of Notre-Dame.Then, said the women of the neighborhood, the whole church took on something fantastic, supernatural, horrible; eyes and mouths were opened, here and there; one heard the dogs, the monsters, and the gargoyles of stone, which keep watch night and day, with outstretched neck and open jaws, around the monstrous cathedral, barking.And, if it was a Christmas Eve, while the great bell, which seemed to emit the death rattle, summoned the faithful to the midnight mass, such an air was spread over the sombre fa?ade that one would have declared that the grand portal was devouring the throng, and that the rose window was watching it.And all this came from Quasimodo.Egypt would have taken him for the god of this temple; the Middle Ages believed him to be its demon: he was in fact its soul.To such an extent was this disease that for those who know that Quasimodo has existed, Notre-Dame is to-day deserted, inanimate, dead.One feels that something has disappeared from it.That immense body is empty; it is a skeleton; the spirit has quitted it, one sees its place and that is all.It is like a skull which still has holes for the eyes, but no longer sight.
或许您还会喜欢:
相约星期二
作者:佚名
章节:28 人气:2
摘要:最后的课程——《相约星期二》中文版序余秋雨一我们人类的很多行为方式是不可思议的,有时偶然想起,总会暗暗吃惊。譬如,其中一件怪事,就是人人都在苦恼人生,但谁也不愿意多谈人生。稍稍多谈几句的,一是高中毕业生,动笔会写“生活的风帆啊”之类的句子;二是街头老大娘,开口会发“人这一辈子啊”之类的感叹。 [点击阅读]
紧急传染
作者:佚名
章节:38 人气:2
摘要:1991年6月12日,这是暮春的一个近似完美的日子。天已破晓,阳光触摸着北美大陆的东海岸。美国大部、加拿大和墨西哥都在期待着阳光明媚的蓝天、只是气象雷达显示雷暴云团即将来临,估计会从平原伸向田纳西河谷。已经有预报,从白令海峡移动过来的阵雨云可能覆盖阿拉斯加的西沃德半岛。这个6月12日几乎在各个方面都与以往的6月12日没什么两样,只有一个奇怪的迹象除外。 [点击阅读]
静静的顿河
作者:佚名
章节:66 人气:2
摘要:评论重读《静静的顿河》,那些久违了的又陌生又熟悉的人物,以及他们痛苦的思想和命运,又一次激起了我内心的热情。顿河这条伟大的河流所哺育的哥萨克民族通过战争,在痛苦和流血之后最终走向了社会主义。肖洛霍夫把拥护苏维埃、迈向社会主义称为伟大的人类真理,并把它作为作品的主题之一。肖洛霍夫对顿河无比热爱,书中经常出现作者对顿河发自内心的充满激*情的赞颂。顿河草原上散发出的青草和泥土的浓烈味道,让读者过目不忘。 [点击阅读]
魔山
作者:佚名
章节:26 人气:2
摘要:一《魔山》是德国大文豪托马斯·曼震撼世界文坛的力作,是德国现代小说的里程碑。美国著名作家辛克莱·刘易斯对《魔山》的评价很高,他于一九三○年看了这部书后曾说:“我觉得《魔山》是整个欧洲生活的精髓。”确实,它不愧为反映第一次世界大战前夕欧洲社会生活的百科全书。一九二九年托马斯·曼获诺贝尔文学奖,《魔山》起了决定性作用,这是评论界公认的事实。二关于托马斯·曼,我国读者并不陌生。 [点击阅读]
三个火枪手
作者:佚名
章节:77 人气:2
摘要:内容简介小说主要描述了法国红衣大主教黎塞留,从1624年出任首相到1628年攻打并占领胡格诺言教派的主要根据地拉罗谢尔城期间所发生的事。黎塞留为了要帮助国王路易十三,千方百计要抓住王后与英国首相白金汉公爵暧昧关系的把柄。而作品主人公达达尼昂出于正义,与他的好友三个火枪手为解救王后冲破大主教所设下的重重罗网,最终保全了王后的名誉。 [点击阅读]
冰与火之歌3
作者:佚名
章节:81 人气:2
摘要:天灰灰的,冷得怕人,狗闻不到气味。黑色的大母狗嗅嗅熊的踪迹,缩了回去,夹着尾巴躲进狗群里。这群狗凄惨地蜷缩在河岸边,任凭寒风抽打。风钻过层层羊毛和皮衣,齐特也觉得冷,该死的寒气对人对狗都一样,可他却不得不待在原地。想到这里,他的嘴扭成一团,满脸疖子因恼怒而发红。我本该安安全全留在长城,照料那群臭乌鸦,为伊蒙老师傅生火才对。 [点击阅读]
古拉格群岛
作者:佚名
章节:64 人气:2
摘要:“在专政时代,在处于敌人四面八方包皮围的情况下,我们有时表现出了不应有的温和、不应有的心软”克雷连科:在审理“工业党”案件时的发言第一章逮捕这个神秘的群岛人们是怎样进去的呢?到那里,时时刻刻有飞机飞去,船舶开去,火车隆隆驶去——可是它们上面却没有标明目的地的字样。售票员也好,苏联旅行社和国际旅行社的经理人员也好,如果你向他们询问到那里去的票子,他们会感到惊异。 [点击阅读]
地狱
作者:佚名
章节:110 人气:2
摘要:致中国的合作者、读者和书迷们:对于今年不能亲至中国一事,我深感遗憾,因此想借这封短信向你们所有人表达我的感激之情,有了你们,才有我所谓的成功。谢谢你们为我的作品中文版所付出的时间与努力,你们的厚爱尤其让我感动。我希望能在不久的将来拜访你们美丽的国家,亲口表达我的谢意。谨致最诚挚的祝愿。 [点击阅读]
大卫·科波菲尔
作者:佚名
章节:75 人气:2
摘要:大卫·科波菲尔尚未来到人间,父亲就已去世,他在母亲及女仆辟果提的照管下长大。不久,母亲改嫁,后父摩德斯通凶狠贪婪,他把大卫看作累赘,婚前就把大卫送到辟果提的哥哥家里。辟果提是个正直善良的渔民,住在雅茅斯海边一座用破船改成的小屋里,与收养的一对孤儿(他妹妹的女儿爱弥丽和他弟弟的儿子海穆)相依为命,大卫和他们一起过着清苦和睦的生活。 [点击阅读]
海伯利安
作者:佚名
章节:76 人气:2
摘要:序章乌黑发亮的太空飞船的了望台上,霸主领事端坐在施坦威钢琴前,弹奏着拉赫马尼诺夫的《升C小调前奏曲》,虽然钢琴已是一件古董,却保存得完好如初。此时,舱下沼泽中,巨大的绿色蜥蜴状生物蠕动着,咆哮着。北方正酝酿着一场雷暴。长满巨大裸子植物的森林在乌青的黑云下现出黑色影像,而层积云就像万米高塔直插入狂暴天穹。闪电在地平线上肆虐。 [点击阅读]