登陆注册
15746700000014

第14章

"You are the one man in all the world that I love, and I will not have you persecuted on my account. Since, after you, I neither know nor care for a soul, I am going off to live in the woods, like the men of primitive times. I have inherited a field which brings me in fifty francs a year. It is the only land I have ever stirred with these hands, and half its wretched rent has gone to pay the tithe of labour I owe the seignior. I trust to die without ever doing duty as a beast of burden for others. And yet, should they remove you from your office, or rob you of your income, if you have a field that needs ploughing, only send me word, and you will see that these arms have not grown altogether stiff in their idleness."It was in vain that the pastor opposed this resolve. Patience departed, carrying with him as his only belonging the coat he had on his back, and an abridgment of the teachings of Epictetus. For this book he had a great affection, and, thanks to much study of it, could read as many as three of its pages a day without unduly tiring himself. The rustic anchorite went into the desert to live. At first he built himself a hut of branches in a wood. Then, as wolves attacked him, he took refuge in one of the lower halls of Gazeau Tower, which he furnished luxuriously with a bed of moss, and some stumps of trees;wild roots, wild fruit, and goat's milk constituted a daily fare very little inferior to what he had had in the village. This is no exaggeration. You have to see the peasants in certain parts of Varenne to form an idea of the frugal diet on which a man can live and keep in good health. In the midst of these men of stoical habits all round him, Patience was still exceptional. Never had wine reddened his lips, and bread had seemed to him a superfluity. Besides, the doctrine of Pythagoras was not wholly displeasing to him; and in the rare interviews which he henceforth had with his friend he would declare that, without exactly believing in metempsychosis, and without making it a rule to eat vegetables only, he felt a secret joy at being able to live thus, and at having no further occasion to see death dealt out every day to innocent animals.

Patience had formed this curious resolution at the age of forty. He was sixty when I saw him for the first time, and he was then possessed of extraordinary physical vigour. In truth, he was in the habit of roaming about the country every year. However, in proportion as I tell you about my own life, I shall give you details of the hermit life of Patience.

At the time of which I am about to speak, the forest rangers, more from fear of his casting a spell over them than out of compassion, had finally ceased their persecutions, and given him full permission to live in Gazeau Tower, not, however, without warning him that it would probably fall about his head during the first gale of wind. To this Patience had replied philosophically that if he was destined to be crushed to death, the first tree in the forest would do the work quite as well as the walls of Gazeau Tower.

Before putting my actor Patience on the stage, and with many apologies for inflicting on you such a long preliminary biography, I have still to mention that during the twenty years of which I have spoken the cure's mind had bowed to a new power. He loved philosophy, and in spite of himself, dear man, could not prevent this love from embracing the philosophers too, even the least orthodox. The works of Jean Jacques Rousseau carried him away into new regions, in spite of all his efforts at resistance; and when one morning, when returning from a visit to some sick folk, he came across Patience gathering his dinner of herbs from the rocks of Crevant, he sat down near him on one of the druidical stones and made, without knowing it, the profession of faith of the Savoyard vicar. Patience drank more willingly of this poetic religion than of the ancient orthodoxy. The pleasure with which he listened to a summary of the new doctrines led the cure to arrange secret meetings with him in isolated parts of Varenne, where they agreed to come upon each other as if by chance. At these mysterious interviews the imagination of Patience, fresh and ardent from long solitude, was fired with all the magic of the thoughts and hopes which were then fermenting in France, from the court of Versailles to the most uninhabitable heath. He became enamoured of Jean Jacques, and made the cure read as much of him as he possibly could without neglecting his duties. Then he begged a copy of the /Contrat Social/, and hastened to Gazeau Tower to spell his way through it feverishly.

At first the cure had given him of this manna only with a sparing hand, and while making him admire the lofty thoughts and noble sentiments of the philosopher, had thought to put him on his guard against the poison of anarchy. But all the old learning, all the happy texts of bygone days--in a word, all the theology of the worthy priest --was swept away like a fragile bridge by the torrent of wild eloquence and ungovernable enthusiasm which Patience had accumulated in his desert. The vicar had to give way and fall back terrified upon himself. There he discovered that the shrine of his own science was everywhere cracking and crumbling to ruin. The new sun which was rising on the political horizon and making havoc in so many minds, melted his own like a light snow under the first breath of spring. The sublime enthusiasm of Patience; the strange poetic life of the man which seemed to reveal him as one inspired; the romantic turn which their mysterious relations were taking (the ignoble persecutions of the convent making it noble to revolt)--all this so worked upon the priest that by 1770 he had already travelled far from Jansenism, and was vainly searching all the religious heresies for some spot on which he might rest before falling into the abyss of philosophy so often opened at his feet by Patience, so often hidden in vain by the exorcisms of Roman theology.

IV

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 不二宗师

    不二宗师

    不想做主持人的歌手不是好工匠,郑跃,来自后世的游戏主播,一次意外,滚到了一个似宋非宋似隋非隋的奇怪朝代,一对儿影响世界的小翅膀就这样悄然的扇动起来。
  • 99次控诉:竹马男神请自重

    99次控诉:竹马男神请自重

    胥一小时候最喜欢做的事情就是欺负于果,当时他也不知道自己为什么喜欢欺负于果,把毛毛虫放进于果的文具盒,和掀于果裙子这种都是小事。有一次他让于果在学校喊他‘老公’!于果不从,还躲在一个臭小子身后怯怯的看着他!放学后,胥一恼怒的把于果扔进水沟子里,于果在水沟子里嚎的像杀猪叫,他这才吓坏了,把于果捞起来背着回家。长大后她喜欢上了别人,胥一后悔莫及,早知道追求女孩子需要温柔,何必大动干戈的欺负她呢?不过欺负她,会上瘾的……
  • 傲世墟皇

    傲世墟皇

    相遇的瞬间,仿佛万载,孤魂酒对月。佳人不在,纵吾凌云之上……何用!!
  • 落华无声

    落华无声

    她和他,纠葛了几生几世,最后,是续了前缘,还是从此陌路?新手起步,作品以后会如何发展,我也不知。希望有人喜欢。嗯,不坑的,只是会更新较慢。
  • 麒麟神帝

    麒麟神帝

    身为萧域与姜域的少主,萧洛在整个青绝大域中的靠山,无疑是极度惊人的!如此身份,也令得他身边从不缺少绝品美女。只是他放着冰山美人“姜雅”不要,倾国红颜“苏衣衣”不要,却独宠麒麟武院一个小丫头,宁小溪只是,当他冒着被武院废掉修为的风险,为宁小溪偷来一滴“麒麟涎”后,却遭到了此女背叛,而与此同时,他更是发现了宁小溪的惊天身份……
  • 逆行穿越科幻

    逆行穿越科幻

    这是一个遥远又悲泣的故事。古世界(古代):她与他梅林相遇,青梅竹马。岂料一道圣旨,她为妃,他为臣。“明明不爱我,为何封我为妃!”皇帝爱的是她的庶出妹妹,两人夜夜笙歌。而她,失去了一切…她最爱的人,自愿请缨,留她一人在冰冷的皇都…现世界(现代):她就读“唯画尼学院”,化名美杜莎。美杜莎之眼,预兆不祥,见者石化。学院的学生陆续被石化,众人视她如蛇蝎。他却屡次救她于水火之中,两人暗生情愫。塞迪丽娜世界(异世界):她苦等他三百年,由爱生恨!可命运不会因此让两人错过…她为了复仇,与他签下战书契约。若她胜,他需助她复仇!若他胜,她需放弃复仇,永生永世被禁!而他们的爱…却是一段虐恋情深,凄厉婉转的悲歌…
  • 叫兽的鬼眼新娘

    叫兽的鬼眼新娘

    大学第一天报到,谁曾想宿舍后面是个鬼窟,结果她便与鬼夜夜同床。稀里糊涂的成了鬼新娘,这只艳鬼还化身大学教授,白天晚上的欺负她。驱鬼师师兄,巫师舍友,教授鬼丈夫,她的大学生活还真精彩啊!直到有一天,这只鬼携鬼魅大军而来,她才浑然知道,原来他就是传说中的鬼王大人啊!
  • 许地山作品集(中国现代文学名家作品集)

    许地山作品集(中国现代文学名家作品集)

    生本不乐,能够使人觉得稍微安适的,只有躺在床上那几小时,但要在那短促的时间中希冀极乐,也是不可能的事。
  • 异能搏世录

    异能搏世录

    貌似平静的世界却随着越来越多异能者的出现渐有风起云涌之势,民众视之为异类妖人,恐伤及自身避之若急、当局者视之为不可控力量,忧其乱世决计剪除。面对此等困局是束手待毙或逆流搏世,生存亦毁灭只在一念间,看异能者如何迎风搏浪,逍遥无畏...
  • 这个死神有点浪

    这个死神有点浪

    我叫林扬,屌丝高中生一枚,过着受虐的校园生活,无意间被死神找上,于是,我开始屌丝逆袭,过上了牛b的生活,嗯,牛b的人生不用解释!我是死神,如假包换的一位神,要问我为什么要找上林扬吗,嘿嘿,发展发展下线(才不会告诉你我懒的干活,是来抓苦力的,嘿嘿)。我乃作者,真正的新世纪大逗比,这本书,要给大家展现一场华美的阅读盛宴……咳咳,先不说这些,恩恩,好好学习多看我的文!本书将为您展现一位高中生如何华丽逆袭,迎娶白富美,走向人生巅峰!再来一遍,牛b的人生不用解释!那个,给大家多大的惊喜和感动我先不说,写这本书,只是为了给大家带来更多的欢笑,你快乐,我就快乐,前提是,你得多多支持我哦!