登陆注册
5459700000114

第114章 IV(2)

Tomorrow, when it came, proved to be black and cold, a day of pouring rain. As they filed through the narrow, crowded streets, that harsh Norman city presented no very cheering aspect. They were glad, at last, to find the waterside, to go out on the bridge and breathe the air in the great open space over the river, away from the clatter of cart-wheels and the hard voices and crafty faces of these townspeople, who seemed rough and unfriendly. From the bridge they looked up at the white chalk hills, the tops a blur of intense green under the low, lead-coloured sky. They watched the fleets of broad, deep-set river barges, coming and going under their feet, with tilted smokestacks. Only a little way up that river was Paris, the place where every doughboy meant to go; and as they leaned on the rail and looked down at the slow-flowing water, each one had in his mind a confused picture of what it would be like. The Seine, they felt sure, must be very much wider there, and it was spanned by many bridges, all longer than the bridge over the Missouri at Omaha. There would be spires and golden domes past counting, all the buildings higher than anything in Chicago, and brilliant--dazzlingly brilliant, nothing grey and shabby about it like this old Rouen. They attributed to the city of their desire incalculable immensity, bewildering vastness, Babylonian hugeness and heaviness--the only attributes they had been taught to admire.

Late in the morning Claude found himself alone before the Church of St. Ouen. He was hunting for the Cathedral, and this looked as if it might be the right place. He shook the water from his raincoat and entered, removing his hat at the door. The day, so dark without, was darker still within; . . . far away, a few scattered candles, still little points of light . . . just before him, in the grey twilight, slender white columns in long rows, like the stems of silver poplars.

The entrance to the nave was closed by a cord, so he walked up the aisle on the right, treading softly, passing chapels where solitary women knelt in the light of a few tapers. Except for them, the church was empty . . . empty. His own breathing was audible in this silence. He moved with caution lest he should wake an echo.

When he reached the choir he turned, and saw, far behind him, the rose window, with its purple heart. As he stood staring, hat in hand, as still as the stone figures in the chapels, a great bell, up aloft, began to strike the hour in its deep, melodious throat; eleven beats, measured and far apart, as rich as the colours in the window, then silence . . . only in his memory the throbbing of an undreamed-of quality of sound. The revelations of the glass and the bell had come almost simultaneously, as if one produced the other; and both were superlatives toward which his mind had always been groping,--or so it seemed to him then.

In front of the choir the nave was open, with no rope to shut it off. Several .straw chairs were huddled on a flag of the stone floor. After some hesitation he took one, turned it round, and sat down facing the window. If some one should come up to him and say anything, anything at all, he would rise and say, "Pardon, Monsieur; je ne sais pas c'est defendu." He repeated this to himself to be quite sure he had it ready.

On the train, coming down, he had talked to the boys about the bad reputation Americans had acquired for slouching all over the place and butting in on things, and had urged them to tread lightly, "But Lieutenant," the kid from Pleasantville had piped up, "isn't this whole Expedition a butt-in? After all, it ain't our war." Claude laughed, but he told him he meant to make an example of the fellow who went to rough-housing.

He was well satisfied that he hadn't his restless companions on his mind now. He could sit here quietly until noon, and hear the bell strike again. In the meantime, he must try to think: This was, of course, Gothic architecture; he had read more or less about that, and ought to be able to remember something. Gothic . . . that was a mere word; to him it suggested something very peaked and pointed,--sharp arches, steep roofs. It had nothing to do with these slim white columns that rose so straight and far,--or with the window, burning up there in its vault of gloom . . . .

While he was vainly trying to think about architecture, some recollection of old astronomy lessons brushed across his brain,--something about stars whose light travels through space for hundreds of years before it reaches the earth and the human eye. The purple and crimson and peacock-green of this window had been shining quite as long as that before it got to him . . . .

He felt distinctly that it went through him and farther still . . . as if his mother were looking over his shoulder. He sat solemnly through the hour until twelve, his elbows on his knees, his conical hat swinging between them in his hand, looking up through the twilight with candid, thoughtful eyes.

When Claude joined his company at the station, they had the laugh on him. They had found the Cathedral,--and a statue of Richard the Lion-hearted, over the spot where the lion-heart itself was buried; "the identical organ," fat Sergeant Hicks assured him.

But they were all glad to leave Rouen.

同类推荐
  • 伽耶山顶经

    伽耶山顶经

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典斋戒部

    明伦汇编人事典斋戒部

    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。
  • 佛说阿弥陀经

    佛说阿弥陀经

    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。
  • 经验奇方

    经验奇方

    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。
  • Julius Caesar

    Julius Caesar

    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
  • 政德:刘余莉精解《群书治要》

    政德:刘余莉精解《群书治要》

    国无德不兴,人无德不立。2018年3月,习近平总书记再次强调:领导干部要讲政德。政德建设无疑是全面从严治党的内在要求,也是整个社会道德建设的风向标,与中国传统“为政以德”思想一脉相承。本书从治国宝典《群书治要》中选取历代圣贤的政德实践智慧,由中央党校教授按“严私德、守公德、明大德”三个体系,结合党政工作之需,进行精要解析。以古论今、古为今用,旨在帮助领导干部深入认识政德修养的重要性,提升综合素质,成就新作为。
  • 瀚北之风雪

    瀚北之风雪

    北国遗留在外唯一的继承人云隐,他的故国在他眼里灭亡……他跟随姑姑来到南国,却没想在这期间结缘数个生死好友……
  • 大杂院纪事

    大杂院纪事

    二凤,那年二十二三岁吧,生得好看。个头儿不高不矮,胖瘦匀称,皮肤又白又细,眉清目秀;尤其是那两只大眼睛,像含着一汪水,滴溜溜的,看你两眼,你魂儿就没了。有那么邪乎吗?有人说她眼睛会说话。这是真的。京剧《鸿鸾喜》里金玉奴有台词云:“青春正二八,生长在贫家,绿窗春寂静,空负貌如花。”用这戏词形容贾二凤,也最恰当不过,而且,她还不止年方二八呢!也就是那年月,男女之间不那么解放,长得美怎么着,也就是多看两眼。但穷,和她爸抽白面儿,可就把她耽误了——空负貌如花啊!前院是个四合院,住着七家,可说是个大杂院了。
  • 孩子感兴趣的科技故事

    孩子感兴趣的科技故事

    本书分科技发明故事、科学发现故事、科技创新故事、科技挑战故事、科学痴迷故事等部分,以激发青少年对科学的兴趣和热爱为目的,选取那些有代表性的真实故事,精心编撰而成,意在为小读者们提供可以学习借鉴的参照;同时每一则故事后面也有精彩点评,以便于加深孩子的理解。希望大家通过这些故事,用科学的态度和不断探索的精神去热爱生活,不断学习,为未来的成功打下良好基础。
  • 魔傀

    魔傀

    魔莲犯界,灭世浮屠,四方战火,神州动荡,圣人舍命求偈,方知唯绝命之士可止。沉睡的魂,转世的念,破界的意,降临的魔......集中一起会怎样?糟糕,这不剧透了吗。
  • 茶花女

    茶花女

    《茶花女》为我们塑造了一些生动、鲜明的艺术形象,而其中最突出、最令人难忘的自然是女主人公茶花女玛格丽特。读者们切莫把玛格丽特和阿尔丰西娜·普莱西小姐混为一谈,阿尔丰西娜的身世固然值得同情,但她的的确确是个堕落的女人,用小仲马的话来说,她“既是一个纯洁无瑕的贞女,又是一个彻头彻尾的娼妇”。
  • 快穿成凰

    快穿成凰

    (本文脑洞较大,如有雷同,纯属巧合。) 一朝穿越,曾经的特工一姐沦落成了凤族前朝公主。人家是穿越过来享福的,我是来替原主复仇的。可以哭么?且看她心脏被挖,修为尽失如何一点点惩治凤族的叛徒! “系统,我任务失败了。” “给我复活,重新来。”
  • 时光韧带(天籁文集·诗歌)

    时光韧带(天籁文集·诗歌)

    不敢说是诗,只因为生命的音符,在时空里跳荡,偶尔捉几只,铺排在平面上,就成了这,似连似断的长短句,空灵的真实,意象延绵嘈嘈急雨,韵律源于天地,智慧敲击宇宙的秘密,情,融化在阳光里,携心灵共振,是恒久的魅力。
  • 欢歌犹在意微醺Ⅱ

    欢歌犹在意微醺Ⅱ

    时隔数年,双目失明的郁欢重归故地。如春风般的少年阮知秋突兀地闯进了她死寂的生活,带着她重回到阳光下,给了她新生活力,见到五彩斑斓的世界,再次感受生命的鲜活。凌锦呈也如一道阴影悄然靠近,让她无法回避,可孟清的死却是他们之间不可磨灭的隔阂。但她也在凌锦呈一次次的悉心照顾中,徘徊、辗转,开始有点儿迷失。忽然出现的亲生妹妹张笑笑,虽带着乖戾,生命却活得肆意畅然,对郁欢更是亦爱亦恨,犹如镜子的两面,互相映照着。而两姐妹的矛盾,更是随着孤儿孟心的到来愈演愈烈。另外,“小公主”祁清清与阮知秋的萌动爱意,在张笑笑的刻意挑拨下,从亲密、误会、疏离,到各自认清自己,找到彼此的重新定位,也经历了一番挫折。在人人都以为生活开始往好的方向前行时,孟清死亡的真相反转,苏卿远的遗物录像再现,凌锦呈的事业、家庭都陷入危机,而郁欢的眼睛也再次面临失明。这一切猝不及防地到来,郁欢又将面临怎样的人生抉择?她的感情、亲情还能突破黑暗,再见光明吗?
  • 时空枢纽在漫威

    时空枢纽在漫威

    时空枢纽,这个汇聚了无数英雄的地方,当它遇到了钢铁侠甚至是传说中的神呢?我们都是英雄,我们应该齐心协力对抗来自未知的侵略,我也需要你们的帮助……