第 37 节
作者:吹嘻      更新:2021-11-05 20:37      字数:9322
  has remained so deep in oblivion; appears immediately on a glance
  at the original。  The author; Charles Robert Maturin; a needy;
  eccentric Irish clergyman of 1780…1824; could cause intense
  suspense and horrorcould read keenly into human motivescould
  teach an awful moral lesson in the guise of fascinating fiction;
  but he could not stick to a long story with simplicity。  His dozens
  of shifting scenes; his fantastic coils of 〃tales within tales〃
  sadly perplex the reader of 〃Melmoth〃 in the first version。  It is
  hoped; however; that the present selection; by its directness and
  the clearness of the story thread; may please the modern reader
  better than the involved original; and bring before a wider public
  some of the most gripping descriptions ever penned in English。
  In Volume IV of these stories comes a tale; 〃Melmoth Reconciled;〃
  which Balzac himself wrote; while under the spell of Maturin's
  〃great allegorical figure。〃  Here the unhappy being succeeds in his
  purpose。  The story takes place in mocking; careless Paris; 〃that
  branch establishment of hell〃; a cashier; on the eve of
  embezzlement and detection; cynically accedes to Melmoth's terms;
  and accepts his helpwith what unlooked…for results; the reader
  may see。
  Charles Robert Maturin
  Melmoth the Wanderer
  John Melmoth; student at Trinity College; Dublin; having journeyed
  to County Wicklow for attendance at the deathbed of his miserly
  uncle; finds the old man; even in his last moments; tortured by
  avarice; and by suspicion of all around him。  He whispers to John:
  〃I want a glass of wine; it would keep me alive for some hours; but
  there is not one I can trust to get it for me;they'd steal a
  bottle; and ruin me。〃  John was greatly shocked。  〃Sir; for God's
  sake; let ME get a glass of wine for you。〃  〃Do you know where?〃
  said the old man; with an expression in his face John could not
  understand。  〃No; Sir; you know I have been rather a stranger here;
  Sir。〃  〃Take this key;〃 said old Melmoth; after a violent spasm;
  〃take this key; there is wine in that closet;Madeira。  I always
  told them there was nothing there; but they did not believe me; or
  I should not have been robbed as I have been。  At one time I said
  it was whisky; and then I fared worse than ever; for they drank
  twice as much of it。〃
  John took the key from his uncle's hand; the dying man pressed it
  as he did so; and John; interpreting this as a mark of kindness;
  returned the pressure。  He was undeceived by the whisper that
  followed;〃John; my lad; don't drink any of that wine while you
  are there。〃  〃Good God!〃 said John; indignantly throwing the key on
  the bed; then; recollecting that the miserable being before him was
  no object of resentment; he gave the promise required; and entered
  the closet; which no foot but that of old Melmoth had entered for
  nearly sixty years。  He had some difficulty in finding out the
  wine; and indeed stayed long enough to justify his uncle's
  suspicions;but his mind was agitated; and his hand unsteady。  He
  could not but remark his uncle's extraordinary look; that had the
  ghastliness of fear superadded to that of death; as he gave him
  permission to enter his closet。  He could not but see the looks of
  horror which the women exchanged as he approached it。  And;
  finally; when he was in it; his memory was malicious enough to
  suggest some faint traces of a story; too horrible for imagination;
  connected with it。  He remembered in one moment most distinctly;
  that no one but his uncle had ever been known to enter it for many
  years。
  Before he quitted it; he held up the dim light; and looked around
  him with a mixture of terror and curiosity。  There was a great deal
  of decayed and useless lumber; such as might be supposed to be
  heaped up to rot in a miser's closet; but John's eyes were in a
  moment; and as if by magic; riveted on a portrait that hung on the
  wall; and appeared; even to his untaught eye; far superior to the
  tribe of family pictures that are left to molder on the walls of a
  family mansion。  It represented a man of middle age。  There was
  nothing remarkable in the costume; or in the countenance; but THE
  EYES; John felt; were such as one feels they wish they had never
  seen; and feels they can never forget。  Had he been acquainted with
  the poetry of Southey; he might have often exclaimed in his after…
  life;
  〃Only the eyes had life;
  They gleamed with demon light。〃THALABA。
  From an impulse equally resistless and painful; he approached the
  portrait; held the candle toward it; and could distinguish the
  words on the border of the painting;Jno。 Melmoth; anno 1646。
  John was neither timid by nature; nor nervous by constitution; nor
  superstitious from habit; yet he continued to gaze in stupid horror
  on this singular picture; till; aroused by his uncle's cough; he
  hurried into his room。  The old man swallowed the wine。  He
  appeared a little revived; it was long since he had tasted such a
  cordial;his heart appeared to expand to a momentary confidence。
  〃John; what did you see in that room?〃  〃Nothing; Sir。〃  〃That's a
  lie; everyone wants to cheat or to rob me。〃  〃Sir; I don't want to
  do either。〃  〃Well; what did you see that youyou took notice of?〃
  〃Only a picture; Sir。〃  〃A picture; Sir!the original is still
  alive。〃  John; though under the impression of his recent feelings;
  could not but look incredulous。  〃John;〃 whispered his uncle;
  〃John; they say I am dying of this and that; and one says it is for
  want of nourishment; and one says it is for want of medicine;but;
  John;〃 and his face looked hideously ghastly; 〃I am dying of a
  fright。  That man;〃 and he extended his meager arm toward the
  closet; as if he was pointing to a living being; 〃that man; I have
  good reason to know; is alive still。〃  〃How is that possible; Sir?〃
  said John involuntarily; 〃the date on the picture is 1646。〃  〃You
  have seen it;you have noticed it;〃 said his uncle。  〃Well;〃he
  rocked and nodded on his bolster for a moment; then; grasping
  John's hand with an unutterable look; he exclaimed; 〃You will see
  him again; he is alive。〃  Then; sinking back on his bolster; he
  fell into a kind of sleep or stupor; his eyes still open; and fixed
  on John。
  The house was now perfectly silent; and John had time and space for
  reflection。  More thoughts came crowding on him than he wished to
  welcome; but they would not be repulsed。  He thought of his uncle's
  habits and character; turned the matter over and over again in his
  mind; and he said to himself; 〃The last man on earth to be
  superstitious。  He never thought of anything but the price of
  stocks; and the rate of exchange; and my college expenses; that
  hung heavier at his heart than all; and such a man to die of a
  fright;a ridiculous fright; that a man living 150 years ago is
  alive still; and yethe is dying。〃  John paused; for facts will
  confute the most stubborn logician。  〃With all his hardness of
  mind; and of heart; he is dying of a fright。  I heard it in the
  kitchen; I have heard it from himself;he could not be deceived。
  If I had ever heard he was nervous; or fanciful; or superstitious;
  but a character so contrary to all these impressions;a man that;
  as poor Butler says; in his 'Remains of the Antiquarian;' would
  have 'sold Christ over again for the numerical piece of silver
  which Judas got for him;'such a man to die of fear!  Yet he IS
  dying;〃 said John; glancing his fearful eye on the contracted
  nostril; the glazed eye; the drooping jaw; the whole horrible
  apparatus of the facies Hippocraticae displayed; and soon to cease
  its display。
  Old Melmoth at this moment seemed to be in a deep stupor; his eyes
  lost that little expression they had before; and his hands; that
  had convulsively been catching at the blankets; let go their short
  and quivering grasp; and lay extended on the bed like the claws of
  some bird that had died of hunger;so meager; so yellow; so
  spread。  John; unaccustomed to the sight of death; believed this to
  be only a sign that he was going to sleep; and; urged by an impulse
  for which he did not attempt to account to himself; caught up the
  miserable light; and once more ventured into the forbidden room;
  the BLUE CHAMBER of the dwelling。  The motion roused the dying
  man;he sat bolt upright in his bed。  This John could not see; for
  he was now in the closet; but he heard the groan; or rather the
  choked and gurgling rattle of the throat; that announces the
  horrible conflict between muscular and mental convulsion。  He
  started; turned away; but; as he turned away; he thought he saw the
  eyes of the portrait; on which his own was fixed; MOVE; and hurried
  back to his uncle's bedside。
  Old Melmoth died in the course of that night; and died as he had
  lived; in a kind of avaricious delirium。  John could not have
  imagined a scene so horrible as his last hours presented。  He
  cursed and blasphemed about three ha