第 83 节
作者:打死也不说      更新:2021-12-13 08:42      字数:9322
  learn that a judicial inquiry has been opened to…day into the affairs of the Corsican Bank; and that a serious examination of its books will very probably reveal one of those financial scandalstoo frequent; alas! in our daysand in which; for the honour of the Chamber; we would wish that none of our members were concerned。〃
  With this sudden revelation; the speaker stopped a moment; like an actor making his point; and in the heavy silence weighing on the assembly; the noise of a closing door was heard。 It was the Governor Paganetti leaving the tribune; his face white; the eyes wide open; his mouth half opened; like some Pierrot scenting in the air a formidable blow。 Monpavon; motionless; expanded his shirtfront。 The big man puffed violently into the flowers of his wife's little white hat。
  Jansoulet's mother looked at her son。
  〃I have spoken of the honour of the Chamber; gentlemen。 On that point I have more to say。〃 Now Le Merquier was reading no longer。 After the chairman of the committees; the orator came on the scene; or rather the judge。 His face was expressionless; his eyes hidden; nothing lived; nothing moved in all his body save the right armthe long angular arm with short sleeveswhich rose and fell automatically; like a sword of justice; making at the end of each sentence the cruel and inexorable gesture of beheading。 And truly it was an execution at which they were present。 The orator would leave on one side scandalous legends; the mystery which brooded over this colossal fortune acquired in distant lands; far from all control。 But there were in the life of the candidate certain points difficult to clear up; certain details。 He hesitated; seemed to select his words; then; before the impossibility of formulating a direct accusation: 〃Do not let us lower the debate; gentlemen。 You have understood me。 You know to what infamous stories I alludeto what calumnies; I wish I could say; but truth forces me to state that when M。 Jansoulet called before your committee; was asked to deny the accusations made against him; his explanations were so vague that; though convinced of his innocence; a scrupulous regard for your honour forced us to reject a candidature so besmirched。 No; this man must not sit among you。 Besides; what would he do there? Living so long in the East; he has unlearned the laws; the manners; and the usages of his country。 He believes in rough and ready justice; in fights in the open street; he relies on the abuses of power; and worse still; on the venality and crouching baseness of all men。 He is the merchant who thinks that everything can be bought at a priceeven the votes of the electors; even the conscience of his colleagues。〃
  One should have seen with what naive admiration these fat deputies; enervated with good fortune; listened to this ascetic; this man of another age; like some Saint…Jerome who had left his Thebaid to overwhelm with his vigorous eloquence; in a full assembly of the Roman Empire; the shameless luxury of the prevaricators and of the /concussionaires/。 How well they understood now this grand surname of 〃My conscience〃 which the courts had given him。 In the galleries the enthusiasm rose higher still。 Lovely heads leaned to see him; to drink in his words。 Applause went round; bending the bouquets here and there; like the wind in a wheat…field。 A woman's voice cried with a little foreign accent; 〃Bravo! Bravo!〃
  And the mother?
  Standing upright; immovable; concentrated in her desire to understand something of this legal phraseology; of these mysterious allusions; she was there like deaf…mutes who only understand what is said before them by the movement of the lips and the expression of the faces。 But it was enough for her to watch her son and Le Merquier to understand what harm one was doing to the other; what perfidious and poisoned meaning fell from this long discourse on the unfortunate man whom one might have believed asleep; except for the trembling of his strong shoulders and the clinching of his hands in his hair; while hiding his face。 Oh; if she could have said to him: 〃Don't be afraid; my son。 If they all misconstrue you; your mother loves you。 Let us come away together。 What need have we of them?〃 And for one moment she could believe that what she was saying to him thus in her heart he had understood by some mysterious intuition。 He had just raised and shaken his grizzled head; where the childish curve of his lips quivered under a possibility of tears。 But instead of leaving his seat; he spoke from it; his great hands pounded the wood of the desk。 The other had finished; now it was his time to answer:
  〃Gentlemen;〃 said he。
  He stopped at once; frightened by the sound of his voice; hoarse; frightfully low and vulgar; which he heard for the first time in public。 He must find the words for his defence; tormented as he was by the twitchings of his face; the intonations which he could not express。 And if the anguish of the poor man was touching; the old mother up there; leaning; gasping; moving her lips nervously as if to help him find words; reflected the picture of his torture。 Though he could not see her; intentionally turned away from her gallery; as he evidently was; this maternal inspiration; the ardent magnetism of those black eyes; ended by giving him life; and suddenly his words and gestures flowed freely:
  〃First of all; gentlemen; I must say that I do not defend the methods of my election。 If you believe that electoral morals have not been always the same in Corsica; that all the irregularities committed are due to the corrupting influence of my gold and not to the uncultivated and passionate temperament of its people; reject meit will be justice and I will not murmur。 But in this debate other matters have been dealt with; accusations have been made which involve my personal honour; and those; and those alone; I wish to answer。〃 His voice was growing firmer; always broken; veiled; but with some soft cadences。 He spoke rapidly of his life; his first steps; his departure for the East。 It sounded like an eighteenth century tale of the Barbary corsairs sailing the Latin seas; of Beys and of bold Provencals; as sunburned as crickets; who used to end by marrying some sultana and 〃taking the turban;〃 in the old expression of the Marseillais。 〃As for me;〃 said the Nabob; with his good…humoured smile。 〃I had no need of taking the turban to grow rich。 I had only to take into this land of idleness the activity and flexibility of a southern Frenchman; and in a few years I made one of those fortunes which can only be made in those hot countries; where everything is gigantic; prodigious; disproportionate; where flowers grow in a night; and one tree produces a forest。 The excuse of such fortunes is the manner in which they are used; and I make bold to say that never has any favourite of fortune tried harder to justify his wealth。 I have not been successful。〃 No! he had not succeeded。 From all the gold he had scattered he had only gathered contempt and hatred。 Hatred! Who could boast more of it than he? like a great ship in the dock when its keel touches the bottom。 He was too rich; and that stood for every vice; and every crime pointed him out for anonymous vengeances; cruel and incessant enmities。
  〃Ah; gentlemen;〃 cried the poor Nabob; lifting his clinched hands; 〃I have known poverty; I have struggled face to face with it; and it is a dreadful struggle; I swear。 But to struggle against wealth; to defend one's happiness; honourrestto have no shelter but piles of gold which fall and crush you; is something more hideous; more heart… breaking still。 Never; in the darkest days of my distress; have I had the pains; the anguish; the sleepless nights with which fortune has loaded methis horrible fortune which I hate and which stifles me。 They call me the Nabob; in Paris。 It is not the Nabob they should say; but the Pariaha social pariah holding out wide arms to a society which will have none of him。〃
  Written down; the words may appear cold; but there; before the assembly; the defence of this man was stamped with an eloquent and grandiose sincerity; which at first; coming from this rustic; this upstart; without culture or education; with the voice of a boatman; first astonished and then singularly moved his hearers just on account of its wild; uncultivated style; foreign to every notion of parliamentary etiquette。 Already marks of favour had agitated members; used to the flood of gray and monotonous administrative speech。 But at this cry of rage and despair against wealth; uttered by the wretch whom it was enfolding; rolling; drowning in its floods of gold; while he was struggling and calling for help from the depths of his Pactolus; the whole Chamber rose with loud applause; and outstretched hands; as if to give the unfortunate Nabob more testimonies of esteem; of which he was so desirous; and at the same time to save him from shipwreck。 Jansoulet felt it; and warmed by this sympathy; he went on; with head erect and confident look:
  〃You have just been told; gentlemen; that I was unworthy of sitting among you。 And he who said it was the last from whom I should have expected it; for he alone knew the sad secret of my life; he alone could speak for me; justify me; and convince you。