登陆注册
4331000000042

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
  • 佛说普门品经

    佛说普门品经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • RODERICK HUDSON

    RODERICK HUDSON

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 香严禅师语录

    香严禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 广动植之三

    广动植之三

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 国朝画徵录

    国朝画徵录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 回忆黄埔军校

    回忆黄埔军校

    本书是全国政协文史和学习委员会拟订的“文史资料百部经典”之一种。该书曾于1984年5月,黄埔军校创建六十周年之际,以《第一次国共合作时期的黄埔军校》之名初版。收集了二十多位曾在军校任职或学习过的同志的讲话或回忆文章,生动真实地记载了黄埔军校官生在第一次国共合作期间共同学习、生活和战斗的情景,读者可以从中了解大革命时期的一个侧面并汲取国共合作失败的历史教训,以促进第三次国共合作和祖国统一的实现。
  • 橘子味的糖

    橘子味的糖

    那样一个雨天,叶念念收到了一整盒的橘子味的糖。“你为什么这么喜欢橘子味的糖,有什么缘故吗?”叶念念微微笑着摇着头。哪里有什么喜欢,这都是那件白衬衫上的淡淡橘子香……
  • 快穿炮灰之男神别乱撩

    快穿炮灰之男神别乱撩

    [1V1甜宠文,前面的故事在另一本。]黑客理工男:“数学中有个温柔而霸道的词,有且仅有。”网瘾少年:“你的祸国妖精只能是我。”傲娇皇帝:“快,为朕讲个故事,不然克扣你的钱。”忠犬骑士:“公主殿下,小三儿不胖,想要亲亲抱抱举高高。”阴冷少年:“我不丧不中二也不病娇,我是个天天向上的乖宝宝。”禁欲和尚:“姑娘,妖精,本就是祸国。在下心怀苍生,只能,让姑娘受苦了。”
  • 英雄联盟:疾风传

    英雄联盟:疾风传

    “吾虽浪迹天涯,却未迷失本心。”主角:亚索。一个浪客,御风剑术的唯一传人,身边跟着一个抱着玩偶熊的可爱小萝莉,剩下的你们自己脑补吧……(PS:本书没有穿越,没有系统,只是讲述了一个发生在英雄联盟符文之地的故事。由于本故事是根据《英雄联盟宇宙》官方背景的改编之作,可能个别内容与最新的官方设定会存在一些出入,还望各位不必太较真!)
  • 第九百九十九次我爱你

    第九百九十九次我爱你

    “你还欠我很多个我爱你”小女人委屈巴巴说道。男人笑笑:“笨女人,地球十多亿人,遇见你,是多么不容易!我怎么可能欠你!”后来在第九百九十九次我爱你的时候,他‘失言’了……那年,她刚入大学不久,酒吧醉酒吻了同校的帅气学长,一米六与一八几的最萌身高差组合,会碰撞出怎样甜中带虐,虐中带甜的故事……
  • 大魏异姓王

    大魏异姓王

    他权倾天下而主不疑,位极人臣而下不嫉。征战半生,讨董卓,征袁绍,败吕布,战马腾,抗刘备,伐孙权。且看他一步一步走向灰黄!!!
  • 噬魂戒指

    噬魂戒指

    苍茫天地中,一个小混混跳崖醒来后发现自己意外穿越到异界大陆,这是个拥有魔法斗气的世界,而他所寄宿的身体却是个无法修炼的废材,看这个被淘汰的少年如何从一个废材变成世人闻之丧胆的噬神……
  • 风中幻世录

    风中幻世录

    “就在那剑割开我脖子左侧的筋络的一刹那,我的右手已经插进了他的胸膛。”八年前下山便是命运的安排,魔幻世界,风起云涌。新的危机降临,顶级强者之间的相互厮杀,我们无数人的命运交织在一起……
  • 矜染言曦

    矜染言曦

    每逢乱世即出,盛世归隐,只因某人放弃了尊严不要,也想守得百姓安宁
  • 还我天下

    还我天下

    作为一个飞机工程师,苏凡感觉自己的压力很大,与前两本的**丝主角不同,这本的苏凡虽然算不上高帅富,但是作为一个西飞的科学家...好吧只能算是边缘的研究员,怎么说也算是一个优秀的人才了。这样的人才当然有一个很不错的工作环境了--绝对干净的环境、无尘的空气以及数十万一套的工作服绝对是壕的级别了,当然如果自由一点就更好了,苏凡是西飞驻部队的一个研究员,工作就是监控飞机的工作状态,说白了就是一个仓库管理员,不过这个仓库里面的东西可不是棍子筷子之类的东西,而是一个庞然大物。