登陆注册
5585400000084

第84章 THE AGONY(22)

He discerned himself in this fleeting picture; he followed out his own life in it, thought by thought, day after day. He saw himself, not without astonishment, an absent gloomy figure in the midst of these lively folk, always musing over his own fate, always absorbed by his own sufferings, seemingly impatient of the most harmless chat. He saw how he had shunned the ephemeral intimacies that travelers are so ready to establish--no doubt because they feel sure of never meeting each other again--and how he had taken little heed of those about him.

He saw himself like the rocks without, unmoved by the caresses or the stormy surgings of the waves.

Then, by a gift of insight seldom accorded, he read the thoughts of all those about him. The light of a candle revealed the sardonic profile and yellow cranium of an old man; he remembered now that he had won from him, and had never proposed that the other should have his revenge; a little further on he saw a pretty woman, whose lively advances he had met with frigid coolness; there was not a face there that did not reproach him with some wrong done, inexplicably to all appearance, but the real offence in every case lay in some mortification, some invisible hurt dealt to self-love. He had unintentionally jarred on all the small susceptibilities of the circle round about him.

His guests on various occasions, and those to whom he had lent his horses, had taken offence at his luxurious ways; their ungraciousness had been a surprise to him; he had spared them further humiliations of that kind, and they had considered that he looked down upon them, and had accused him of haughtiness ever since. He could read their inmost thoughts as he fathomed their natures in this way. Society with its polish and varnish grew loathsome to him. He was envied and hated for his wealth and superior ability; his reserve baffled the inquisitive;his humility seemed like haughtiness to these petty superficial natures. He guessed the secret unpardonable crime which he had committed against them; he had overstepped the limits of the jurisdiction of their mediocrity. He had resisted their inquisitorial tyranny; he could dispense with their society; and all of them, therefore, had instinctively combined to make him feel their power, and to take revenge upon this incipient royalty by submitting him to a kind of ostracism, and so teaching him that they in their turn could do without him.

Pity came over him, first of all, at this aspect of mankind, but very soon he shuddered at the thought of the power that came thus, at will, and flung aside for him the veil of flesh under which the moral nature is hidden away. He closed his eyes, so as to see no more. A black curtain was drawn all at once over this unlucky phantom show of truth;but still he found himself in the terrible loneliness that surrounds every power and dominion. Just then a violent fit of coughing seized him. Far from receiving one single word--indifferent, and meaningless, it is true, but still containing, among well-bred people brought together by chance, at least some pretence of civil commiseration--he now heard hostile ejaculations and muttered complaints. Society there assembled disdained any pantomime on his account, perhaps because he had gauged its real nature too well.

"His complaint is contagious."

"The president of the Club ought to forbid him to enter the salon.""It is contrary to all rules and regulations to cough in that way!""When a man is as ill as that, he ought not to come to take the waters----""He will drive me away from the place."

Raphael rose and walked about the rooms to screen himself from their unanimous execrations. He thought to find a shelter, and went up to a young pretty lady who sat doing nothing, minded to address some pretty speeches to her; but as he came towards her, she turned her back upon him, and pretended to be watching the dancers. Raphael feared lest he might have made use of the talisman already that evening; and feeling that he had neither the wish nor the courage to break into the conversation, he left the salon and took refuge in the billiard-room.

No one there greeted him, nobody spoke to him, no one sent so much as a friendly glance in his direction. His turn of mind, naturally meditative, had discovered instinctively the general grounds and reasons for the aversion he inspired. This little world was obeying, unconsciously perhaps, the sovereign law which rules over polite society; its inexorable nature was becoming apparent in its entirety to Raphael's eyes. A glance into the past showed it to him, as a type completely realized in Foedora.

He would no more meet with sympathy here for his bodily ills than he had received it at her hands for the distress in his heart. The fashionable world expels every suffering creature from its midst, just as the body of a man in robust health rejects any germ of disease. The world holds suffering and misfortune in abhorrence; it dreads them like the plague; it never hesitates between vice and trouble, for vice is a luxury. Ill-fortune may possess a majesty of its own, but society can belittle it and make it ridiculous by an epigram. Society draws caricatures, and in this way flings in the teeth of fallen kings the affronts which it fancies it has received from them; society, like the Roman youth at the circus, never shows mercy to the fallen gladiator;mockery and money are its vital necessities. "Death to the weak!" That is the oath taken by this kind of Equestrian order, instituted in their midst by all the nations of the world; everywhere it makes for the elevation of the rich, and its motto is deeply graven in hearts that wealth has turned to stone, or that have been reared in aristocratic prejudices.

同类推荐
  • 知医必辨

    知医必辨

    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。
  • 韵史补

    韵史补

    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。
  • 夹科肇论序注

    夹科肇论序注

    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。
  • 续红楼梦

    续红楼梦

    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。
  • Tanglewood Tales

    Tanglewood Tales

    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
  • 狐狸老公很高冷

    狐狸老公很高冷

    少女纪安有高冷又傲娇的狐狸师父,有强势又脱线的美女老妈,有可爱又仗义的好闺蜜,她本以为,自己的未来必定与众不同又光芒万丈。然而,在即将成年的纪安面前,一件件怪事接踵而来,十七年前的那个疫病之夜,母亲宁姗到底忘记了什么?而狐狸师父接近纪安的目的,又真的如他所说的那般单纯吗?十八岁那命定的大劫即将来临,唯有必然定数阿南刻,在静默地凝视这一切。
  • 故事会(2018年6月下)

    故事会(2018年6月下)

    《故事会》是中国最通俗的民间文学小本杂志,是中国的老牌刊物之一。先后获得两届中国期刊的最高奖——国家期刊奖。1998年,它在世界综合类期刊中发行量排名第5。从1984年开始,《故事会》由双月刊改为月刊,2003年11月份开始试行半月刊,2004年正式改为半月刊。现分为红、绿两版,其中红版为上半月刊,绿版为下半月刊。
  • 萧十一郎

    萧十一郎

    萧十一郎是各来去无踪、潇洒浪荡的“大盗”,为人侠义、忠诚。风四娘告诉他,武林中人人窥伺的神秘宝物割鹿刀进入中原,一时江湖上烽烟四起,萧十一郎屡屡被人嫁祸,深深卷入这场风波,但也由此结识了武林第一美女、世家公子连城璧的妻子沈璧君,从此萧,沈,连三人开始了恩怨纠缠的一生……
  • 无敌从成为NPC开始

    无敌从成为NPC开始

    陈清莫名其妙穿越进入游戏,游戏就游戏吧,看起来还挺有意思的,问题是……为什么是头五级的野牛?
  • 龙界历险记3:三角龙的奇迹

    龙界历险记3:三角龙的奇迹

    本书是“龙界历险记”系列之第三册,故事延续前一册,讲述洛克和星星博士追捕恶灵时,穿越变成三角龙,后一边追查真相一边寻找返回真实世界的方法,故事情节跌宕起伏,充满知识性和科学性。
  • 五家正宗赞

    五家正宗赞

    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。
  • 中国现当代伦理思潮

    中国现当代伦理思潮

    本书从宏观与微观相结合的角度,对自由主义西化派、现代新儒家、中国马克思主义三大伦理思潮的发展特征和主要人物的伦理思想进行系统的研究和反思,并对新世纪以来中国马克思主义伦理思想的新发展做出了比较全面的介绍与阐释,涉及科学发展观伦理思想和中华民族伟大复兴中国梦伦理思想以及当代马克思主义伦理思想的创新性研究,认为要建设中华伦理文化必须以马克思主义为指导,全面清理和发掘以儒家为主干的传统伦理文化,借鉴和吸纳近现代西方伦理文化。全书史论结合,具有较高的理论和学术价值。
  • 偷心盗妃

    偷心盗妃

    【女强,爽文,1对1】她,掌生死,震天下!一朝穿越,却成为一名要人保护的村家女。世人欺她废物一枚,亲人讥她无能一生;她低下头,再次扬起,丑小鸭不再,天鹅的光辉谁能阻挡?三界五国奈她何?前有玄武重生力,后有灵泉享不尽;扯起神龙做大旗,还有苍天做娘亲;任你功夫再高,长袖在手,天下我有。他是一国之王,一袭白袍冷傲冠绝天下,掌心温柔只为她……长袖版:六十岁的心灵,十六岁的身体,让她怎么接受一个二十岁的小年轻?所以她跑吧,还有逆天的大事在等着她呢!洛川版:柔弱的你;狂傲的你;温柔的你;绝情的你;心里眼里全是你。无论你怎么变,宠你,我不改变!
  • 小河流过

    小河流过

    故事像是真的,女人是真的,感情也是真的。那人,那事,像一条缓缓的小河,静静的流过
  • 东宫掌心宝

    东宫掌心宝

    大风大浪大红大紫都经历过了,重生之后阿稚只想守护亲人,悠闲度日。婚姻对她来说不是大事,以她的家世才貌,就算闭着眼睛随便挑一个,那也是青年才俊人中龙凤啊。盘算的蛮好,偏偏有人硬要跟她作对,一个不小心,她又和前世一样红颜祸水倾国倾城了,又和前世一样成为他的掌心宝……情节虚构,请勿模仿