登陆注册
14198700000042

第42章 THE LESSON.(3)

"A curious thing happened to me," he said, "when I was a child. I could hardly have been six years old. I had gone to Ghent with my parents. I think it was to visit some relative. One day we went into the castle. It was in ruins then, but has since been restored.

We were in what was once the council chamber. I stole away by myself to the other end of the great room and, not knowing why I did so, I touched a spring concealed in the masonry, and a door swung open with a harsh, grinding noise. I remember peering round the opening. The others had their backs towards me, and I slipped through and closed the door behind me. I seemed instinctively to know my way. I ran down a flight of steps and along dark corridors through which I had to feel my way with my hands, till I came to a small door in an angle of the wall. I knew the room that lay the other side. A photograph was taken of it and published years afterwards, when the place was discovered, and it was exactly as I knew it with its way out underneath the city wall through one of the small houses in the Aussermarkt.

"I could not open the door. Some stones had fallen against it, and fearing to get punished, I made my way back into the council room.

It was empty when I reached it. They were searching for me in the other rooms, and I never told them of my adventure."

At any other time I might have laughed. Later, recalling his talk that evening, I dismissed the whole story as mere suggestion, based upon the imagination of a child; but at the time those strangely brilliant eyes had taken possession of me. They remained still fixed upon me as I sat on the low rail of the veranda watching his white face, into which the hues of death seemed already to be creeping.

I had a feeling that, through them, he was trying to force remembrance of himself upon me. The man himself--the very soul of him--seemed to be concentrated in them. Something formless and yet distinct was visualising itself before me. It came to me as a physical relief when a spasm of pain caused him to turn his eyes away from me.

"You will find a letter when I am gone," he went on, after a moment's silence. "I thought that you might come too late, or that I might not have strength enough to tell you. I felt that out of the few people I have met outside business, you would be the most likely not to dismiss the matter as mere nonsense. What I am glad of myself, and what I wish you to remember, is that I am dying with all my faculties about me. The one thing I have always feared through life was old age, with its gradual mental decay. It has always seemed to me that I have died more or less suddenly while still in possession of my will. I have always thanked God for that."

He closed his eyes, but I do not think he was sleeping; and a little later the nurse returned, and we carried him indoors. I had no further conversation with him, though at his wish during the following two days I continued to read to him, and on the third day he died.

I found the letter he had spoken of. He had told me where it would be. It contained a bundle of banknotes which he was giving me--so he wrote--with the advice to get rid of them as quickly as possible.

"If I had not loved you," the letter continued, "I would have left you an income, and you would have blessed me, instead of cursing me, as you should have done, for spoiling your life."

This world was a school, so he viewed it, for the making of men; and the one thing essential to a man was strength. One gathered the impression of a deeply religious man. In these days he would, no doubt, have been claimed as a theosophist; but his beliefs he had made for, and adapted to, himself--to his vehement, conquering temperament. God needed men to serve Him--to help Him. So, through many changes, through many ages, God gave men life: that by contest and by struggle they might ever increase in strength; to those who proved themselves most fit the sterner task, the humbler beginnings, the greater obstacles. And the crown of well-doing was ever victory. He appeared to have convinced himself that he was one of the chosen, that he was destined for great ends. He had been a slave in the time of the Pharaohs; a priest in Babylon; had clung to the swaying ladders in the sack of Rome; had won his way into the councils when Europe was a battlefield of contending tribes; had climbed to power in the days of the Borgias.

To most of us, I suppose, there come at odd moments haunting thoughts of strangely familiar, far-off things; and one wonders whether they are memories or dreams. We dismiss them as we grow older and the present with its crowding interests shuts them out; but in youth they were more persistent. With him they appeared to have remained, growing in reality. His recent existence, closed under the white sheet in the hut behind me as I read, was only one chapter of the story; he was looking forward to the next.

He wondered, so the letter ran, whether he would have any voice in choosing it. In either event he was curious of the result. What he anticipated confidently were new opportunities, wider experience.

In what shape would these come to him?

The letter ended with a strange request. It was that, on returning to England, I should continue to think of him: not of the dead man I had known, the Jewish banker, the voice familiar to me, the trick of speech, of manner--all such being but the changing clothes--but of the man himself, the soul of him, that would seek and perhaps succeed in revealing itself to me.

A postscript concluded the letter, to which at the time I attached no importance. He had made a purchase of the hut in which he had died. After his removal it was to remain empty.

I folded the letter and placed it among other papers, and passing into the hut took a farewell glance at the massive, rugged face.

The mask might have served a sculptor for the embodiment of strength. He gave one the feeling that having conquered death he was sleeping.

I did what he had requested of me. Indeed, I could not help it. I thought of him constantly. That may have been the explanation of it.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 山村田园生活录

    山村田园生活录

    没事种种花,闲来溜溜狗,晚上老婆孩子热炕头......公司裁员,很不幸主角成了其中的一员......回到老家,决定留在老家,不经意间得到一宝贝,从此生活发生了很大的变化......
  • 宙劫之挣扎

    宙劫之挣扎

    天灾来了!坐看强大的黑客,彪悍的发明家,睿智的谋士,世家的公子,野外生存的专家以及神秘的晶依如何闯荡这宙劫末世!本书描绘了四位学生以及一名女孩成功的从新一洲跨越四个城市洲到达雨林洲,又穿过三个雨林洲最后成功抵达人类聚居地-赤道城的故事(到达了之后三年赤道城就倒了,故事还将继续)。不过,故事的结尾,并不意味着结束,它或许意味着一种新的开始。读者群(互动):欢迎加入宙劫书友互动群,群号码:203428517
  • 幻影终虚1

    幻影终虚1

    灵族天劫将至,异族少年葛少飞临危受命前往中原寻找神灵石。此时阴阳教,生死门、连云盟三方大战早已尘埃落定,武林之中看似风平浪静,实则暗流汹涌。君纵临神秘消失,楚天萧离奇判教,生死门门主隐藏幕后,不知其是何人?左缺心怀不轨,又在图谋什么.....?一切谜团尚未解开,武林中人又因异宝之争,杀戮不断。更有无字天书,引出千年之秘。葛少飞卷入其中,历尽生死最终参悟“天残决”是否又能找到神灵石?江湖从此风波再起.....
  • 超级乐园

    超级乐园

    我曾在神雕侠侣中拜祭过独孤求败,也曾在邪神传说中教冷漠武功。我曾远走西藏求艺波纹气功,也曾在龙珠超里拜师孙悟空。我曾在圣杯战争中收远坂樱为徒,也曾在诛仙里拜读过五卷天书。我曾在洪荒中听叶青讲道,也曾在遮天里血战星空。我是叶恒,我想变得更强,也想长生,或许这还有一丝回家的希望......
  • 狼牙月

    狼牙月

    大明胡惟庸之子化名杜康,笑傲江湖,导演靖难之役。
  • 敬事如仪,过清贫有尊严的生活

    敬事如仪,过清贫有尊严的生活

    猴年春节,在网上被炒得沸沸扬扬的“上海女逃离江西农村”一事,其影响之巨,反响之热烈,可称之为一次网络事件。人民日报微信号也发表署名评论,参与讨论。从众多网民的网帖到电视报刊的评论,舆论普遍将矛盾集中在贫富的差别上。个人认为这是对焦不准,没有找准问题的症结,如此将矛头对准这位上海女孩,难免有失偏颇。女孩的问题是,当她怀着单纯的爱情梦想和一时冲动(后面的事实可以说明这一点),面对令她错愕的现实情形时,阅历和见识让她认识不清自己所面对的现象实质,而在语言上表露出的对农村(其实只是她的这位男朋友的家)贫穷与落后的拒绝与轻侮(也许是无意间的流露)。
  • tfboys愿时光温柔相待

    tfboys愿时光温柔相待

    今生所做的一切我从未后悔过,若能从来一次,我愿不惜生命去交换,只要能在你身边,不要离开你……----三女主
  • 名人演讲词大全集(优秀青少年必读)

    名人演讲词大全集(优秀青少年必读)

    演讲是时代的音符,是历史的记录,是才情的展示,是艺术的杰作。出色的演讲犹如滔滔江河,震撼人心,也如涓涓细流,滋润心田;能让现场欢声雷动,也让现场鸦雀无声;能让人笑声不断,也让人泪流满面。古往今来,各个时代、各个领域的名人们,以他们杰出的演讲口才,点燃了人们的激情,鼓舞了人们的斗志,征服了历史的狂澜,推动了文明的前进,留下了一代人的传奇,书写了一代人的辉煌。本书精选世界政坛领袖、思想先哲、科学巨匠、文艺泰斗、商界精英、社会名流等各类名人的演讲佳作。这些经典之作,有的高屋建瓴、气势逼人;有的引经据典、高谈阔论;有的慷慨激昂、奔放热烈;有的低回舒缓、委婉哀怨;有的汪洋恣肆、游刃有余,各领风骚。
  • 英雄联盟之死亡峡谷

    英雄联盟之死亡峡谷

    当英雄联盟成为抵挡异魔入侵的主流,当召唤师峡谷变为真实的绞肉战斗之地,一个挣扎在死亡峡谷的倒霉资深者,意外的重生到刚进入峡谷的一刻。有了高超的战斗技巧和多个未知峡谷地图的经历,陈飞相信自己会一步一步走出召唤师的死亡峡谷!
  • 十年了,依旧忘不了忘不了

    十年了,依旧忘不了忘不了

    2004年的一天,一辆吉普车正行驶在北方的秋天里,吉普车车身很脏,看得出来,这辆车已经跑了很远的路。是的,几天来王楠一路驾车从南方开到了北方,从南方出发的时候还是瓢泼大雨,现在北方的天空已是艳阳高照的秋天了,当车跨过长江大桥时,王楠在心里默念,回来了,还是回来了。