登陆注册
16237100000007

第7章 ACT II(1)

SCENE.--The Library Enter LORD TRESHAM,hastily TRESHAM.This way!In,Gerard,quick!

[As GERARD enters,TRESHAM secures the door.]

Now speak!or,wait--

I'll bid you speak directly.

[Seats himself.]

Now repeat Firmly and circumstantially the tale You just now told me;it eludes me;either I did not listen,or the half is gone Away from me.How long have you lived here?

Here in my house,your father kept our woods Before you?

GERARD.--As his father did,my lord.

I have been eating,sixty years almost,Your bread.

TRESHAM.Yes,yes.You ever were of all The servants in my father's house,I know,The trusted one.You'll speak the truth.

GERARD.I'll speak God's truth.Night after night...

TRESHAM.Since when?

GERARD.At least A month--each midnight has some man access To Lady Mildred's chamber.

TRESHAM.Tush,"access"--

No wide words like "access"to me!

GERARD.He runs Along the woodside,crosses to the South,Takes the left tree that ends the avenue...

TRESHAM.The last great yew-tree?

GERARD.You might stand upon The main boughs like a platform.Then he...

TRESHAM.Quick!

GERARD.Climbs up,and,where they lessen at the top,--I cannot see distinctly,but he throws,I think--for this I do not vouch--a line That reaches to the lady's casement--

TRESHAM.--Which He enters not!Gerard,some wretched fool Dares pry into my sister's privacy!

When such are young,it seems a precious thing To have approached,--to merely have approached,Got sight of the abode of her they set Their frantic thoughts upon.Ha does not enter?

Gerard?

GERARD.There is a lamp that's full i'the midst.

Under a red square in the painted glass Of Lady Mildred's...

TRESHAM.Leave that name out!Well?

That lamp?

GERARD.Is moved at midnight higher up To one pane--a small dark-blue pane;he waits For that among the boughs:at sight of that,I see him,plain as I see you,my lord,Open the lady's casement,enter there...

TRESHAM.--And stay?

GERARD.An hour,two hours.

TRESHAM.And this you saw Once?--twice?--quick!

GERARD.Twenty times.

TRESHAM.And what brings you Under the yew-trees?

GERARD.The first night I left My range so far,to track the stranger stag That broke the pale,I saw the man.

TRESHAM.Yet sent No cross-bow shaft through the marauder?

GERARD.But He came,my lord,the first time he was seen,In a great moonlight,light as any day,FROM Lady Mildred's chamber.

TRESHAM [after a pause].You have no cause --Who could have cause to do my sister wrong?

GERARD.Oh,my lord,only once--let me this once Speak what is on my mind!Since first I noted All this,I've groaned as if a fiery net Plucked me this way and that--fire if I turned To her,fire if I turned to you,and fire If down I flung myself and strove to die.

The lady could not have been seven years old When I was trusted to conduct her safe Through the deer-herd to stroke the snow-white fawn I brought to eat bread from her tiny hand Within a month.She ever had a smile To greet me with--she...if it could undo What's done,to lop each limb from off this trunk...

All that is foolish talk,not fit for you--

I mean,I could not speak and bring her hurt For Heaven's compelling.But when I was fixed To hold my peace,each morsel of your food Eaten beneath your roof,my birth-place too,Choked me.I wish I had grown mad in doubts What it behoved me do.This morn it seemed Either I must confess to you or die:

Now it is done,I seem the vilest worm That crawls,to have betrayed my lady.

TRESHAM.No--

No,Gerard!

GERARD.Let me go!

TRESHAM.A man,you say:

What man?Young?Not a vulgar hind?What dress?

GERARD.A slouched hat and a large dark foreign cloak Wraps his whole form;even his face is hid;

But I should judge him young:no hind,be sure!

TRESHAM.Why?

GERARD.He is ever armed:his sword projects Beneath the cloak.

TRESHAM.Gerard,--I will not say No word,no breath of this!

GERARD.Thank,thanks,my lord!

[Goes.]

TRESHAM [paces the room.After a pause].

Oh,thoughts absurd!--as with some monstrous fact Which,when ill thoughts beset us,seems to give Merciful God that made the sun and stars,The waters and the green delights of earth,The lie!I apprehend the monstrous fact--

Yet know the maker of all worlds is good,And yield my reason up,inadequate To reconcile what yet I do behold--

Blasting my sense!There's cheerful day outside:

This is my library,and this the chair My father used to sit in carelessly After his soldier-fashion,while I stood Between his knees to question him:and here Gerard our grey retainer,--as he says,Fed with our food,from sire to son,an age,--

Has told a story--I am to believe!

That Mildred...oh,no,no!both tales are true,Her pure cheek's story and the forester's!

Would she,or could she,err--much less,confound All guilts of treachery,of craft,of...Heaven Keep me within its hand!--I will sit here Until thought settle and I see my course.

Avert,oh God,only this woe from me!

[As he sinks his head between his arms on the table,GUENDOLEN'S voice is heard at the door.]

Lord Tresham!

[She knocks.]

Is Lord Tresham there?

[TRESHAM,hastily turning,pulls down the first book above him and opens it.]

TRESHAM.Come in!

[She enters.]

Ha,Guendolen!--good morning.

GUENDOLEN.Nothing more?

TRESHAM.What should I say more?

GUENDOLEN.Pleasant question!more?

This more.Did I besiege poor Mildred's brain Last night till close on morning with "the Earl,"

"The Earl"--whose worth did I asseverate Till I am very fain to hope that...Thorold,What is all this?You are not well!

TRESHAM.Who,I?

You laugh at me.

GUENDOLEN.Has what I'm fain to hope,Arrived then?Does that huge tome show some blot In the Earl's 'scutcheon come no longer back Than Arthur's time?

TRESHAM.When left you Mildred's chamber?

GUENDOLEN.Oh,late enough,I told you!The main thing To ask is,how I left her chamber,--sure,Content yourself,she'll grant this paragon Of Earls no such ungracious...

TRESHAM.Send her here!

GUENDOLEN.Thorold?

TRESHAM.I mean--acquaint her,Guendolen,--But mildly!

GUENDOLEN.Mildly?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 昆吾传奇

    昆吾传奇

    一人一剑,横断天涯。一颦一笑,刻骨铭心。为了你,背弃天下又如何!
  • 智慧女人

    智慧女人

    智慧女人之所以智慧,还表现在生活的方方面面。她们清楚地知道自己需要什么和不需要什么,需要的如何得到,不需要的如何拒绝;她们在得失之间善于权衡,进退之机把握得宜。
  • 敬业才能有事业

    敬业才能有事业

    没有不重要的工作,只有不敬业的员工!敬业是企业对员工的最基本要求,也是职场人士的立身之本。本书是阿尔伯特·哈伯德最具影响力的经典著作之一,它揭示了一种由敬业爱岗成就卓越的成功模式。针对当今职场中员工敬业精神不佳的状况,编译者对该书进行重新校订,推出了全新执行版,旨在帮助员工找出敬业精神缺失的根本原因,以及行之有效的解决方案,培养出敬业爱岗的好员工。特别适合作为企业员工的培训教材。
  • 做事先做人(超值精华版)

    做事先做人(超值精华版)

    本书告诉你怎样面对人生的选择,告诉你如何及时放弃阻挡你快乐的因素。让那一个个活生生的小故事,丰富你的心灵,净化你的思维,让你学会做人,学会做事,给自己的生活开一扇窗。
  • 疯狂校园之异能天下

    疯狂校园之异能天下

    身世之谜,音灵之梦,幻境,杀机四伏,这所名叫monster的异能学院,独立于人世间,这些异能者有着与常人不同的能力,是幸,还是不幸
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 本宫来自现代

    本宫来自现代

    新文《婚权独占:席少的名媛新娘》玛雅预言,2012我们大家都会一起死,可是,我竟然等不到2012就死了,死了就死了,竟然还穿越了,穿越应该也会在2012年截止吧?那么反正都要死的,眼前的这个暴君,你就不要用死来吓我了,我不怕的。
  • 异界之妖荒传说

    异界之妖荒传说

    一个从小就是孤儿的青年,在社会上摸爬滚打终于成了一个有钱途小混混。可是,一次意外让本该挂掉的自己居然穿越了,成了一个无用的纨绔。然而上天似乎没有让他做纨绔的意思,迫使其踏上了修行之路,开启了一段拳打南域天才,脚踩中域妖孽的传奇之路,成为痞子界的霸主,一个有理想一个有报复的痞子。开启了一段属于他自己的妖荒传说
  • 我是霸主校草

    我是霸主校草

    叶楚南是一个英俊少年却放浪形骸,在高三(四)班掀起一次次波涛,携校园美女香手,揽妖娆老师芳腰,看他如何一次次在惊险中拥得美人归……
  • 少林寺短打身法统宗拳谱

    少林寺短打身法统宗拳谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。