登陆注册
14724300000124

第124章 TWO DREAMS(6)

"For my part, I despise him."

"Perhaps we are unjust," I remarked.

"Ha! to-morrow he may be as famous as Volange the actor."Monsieur de Calonne here motioned us to look at the surgeon, with a gesture that seemed to say: "I think he'll be very amusing.""Did you dream of a queen?" asked Beaumarchais.

"No, I dreamed of a People," replied the surgeon, with an emphasis which made us laugh. "I was then in charge of a patient whose leg Iwas to amputate the next day--"

"Did you find the People in the leg of your patient?" asked Monsieur de Calonne.

"Precisely," replied the surgeon.

"How amusing!" cried Madame de Genlis.

"I was somewhat surprised," went on the speaker, without noticing the interruption, and sticking his hands into the gussets of his breeches, "to hear something talking to me within that leg. I then found I had the singular faculty of entering the being of my patient. Once within his skin I saw a marvellous number of little creatures which moved, and thought, and reasoned. Some of them lived in the body of the man, others lived in his mind. His ideas were things which were born, and grew, and died; they were sick and well, and gay, and sad; they all had special countenances; they fought with each other, or they embraced each other. Some ideas sprang forth and went to live in the world of intellect. I began to see that there were two worlds, two universes,--the visible universe, and the invisible universe; that the earth had, like man, a body and a soul. Nature illumined herself for me; I felt her immensity when I saw the oceans of beings who, in masses and in species, spread everywhere, making one sole and uniform animated Matter, from the stone of the earth to God. Magnificent vision! In short, I found a universe within my patient. When Iinserted my knife into his gangrened leg I cut into a million of those little beings. Oh! you laugh, madame; let me tell you that you are eaten up by such creatures--""No personalities!" interposed Monsieur de Calonne. "Speak for yourself and for your patient.""My patient, frightened by the cries of his animalcules, wanted to stop the operation; but I went on regardless of his remonstrances;telling him that those evil animals were already gnawing at his bones.

He made a sudden movement of resistance, not understanding that what Idid was for his good, and my knife slipped aside, entered my own body, and--""He is stupid," said Lavoisier.

"No, he is drunk," replied Beaumarchais.

"But, gentlemen, my dream has a meaning," cried the surgeon.

"Oh! oh!" exclaimed Bodard, waking up; "my leg is asleep!""Your animalcules must be dead," said his wife.

"That man has a vocation," announced my little neighbor, who had stared imperturbably at the surgeon while he was speaking.

"It is to yours," said the ugly man, "what the action is to the word, the body to the soul."But his tongue grew thick, his words were indistinct, and he said no more. Fortunately for us the conversation took another turn. At the end of half an hour we had forgotten the surgeon of the king's pages, who was fast asleep. Rain was falling in torrents as we left the supper-table.

"The lawyer is no fool," I said to Beaumarchais.

"True, but he is cold and dull. You see, however, that the provinces are still sending us worthy men who take a serious view of political theories and the history of France. It is a leaven which will rise.""Is your carriage here?" asked Madame de Saint-James, addressing me.

"No," I replied, "I did not think that I should need it to-night."Madame de Saint-James then rang the bell, ordered her own carriage to be brought round, and said to the little lawyer in a low voice:--"Monsieur de Robespierre, will you do me the kindness to drop Monsieur Marat at his own door?--for he is not in a state to go alone.""With pleasure, madame," replied Monsieur de Robespierre, with his finical gallantry. "I only wish you had requested me to do something more difficult."End

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 走过彼此的倾城时光

    走过彼此的倾城时光

    她一直在他的身后追逐,从未想过他会用这么残忍的方式来拒绝她,当她转身离去,又为什么不放手
  • 桃花开时,半路诀别

    桃花开时,半路诀别

    几年前的事故到底是意外还是人为,苦苦追寻的真相是否像当初想的那样简单,痴情换来的结果是白头到老还是半路诀别,为了她纵使粉身碎骨又如何,只望能给她一世安稳。片段“只要你一碗血,我就能告诉你,你想知道的”.....“马上就要到桃花开放的季节了,今年我又要一个人看花了吗”......“晴儿,我只求你在陪我一会儿,一会儿就好,过了这一会儿,你若要走,我定不留”......
  • 校园狂少

    校园狂少

    一身邪气,却要伸张正义;世间万术,不敌我一世修罗!千年阴谋我来破,命犯桃花莫嫌多。一切的一切,缘因我得到了一双修罗目!
  • 奇风之子

    奇风之子

    故事起源于一个很古老的大陆,主角诞生于一个边陲小镇,面对兽人入侵,父亲早早离开自己。灾难有天降临这个边陲小村,村子毁于一旦,背负着全村人的仇恨,背负着众人的不解,主角踏上自己的征程,周游列国,遇侏儒,助矮人,守精灵,战巨人,闯龙谷,爱恨情仇纠缠一身,风天心能否从这跌拓起伏的命运中摆脱出来?群院大赛,能否夺魁;战士工会大赛,魔法工会大赛,是否技压群雄;佣兵王之争,究竟花落谁家;战诸国群雄,能否找出幕后真凶;与黑暗势力的较量,究竟孰强孰弱;最后凶手面貌揭露,自己究竟能否下手呢?
  • TFboys之爱不悔

    TFboys之爱不悔

    “你说过永远,却不想是你先放弃。”她在大雨茫茫中,提出离开他。他想要认真把她的眼泪与雨水分清楚,可却怎样也看不清,是雨替你的掩饰还是你对我真的只有利用?他想要握紧,最终只能看着她的背影……他笑着走,转身那一刻才感觉到自己落泪了,因为,雨是冷的,泪是,暖的……的确,她是靠这场雨来给自己勇气……
  • 也许,我只是天上的点繁星

    也许,我只是天上的点繁星

    我有故事你有酒吗?用一个个故事,来让你看看这个世界。
  • 上下五千年3(经典故事丛书)

    上下五千年3(经典故事丛书)

    本套丛书包括十四册:《佛教·佛经故事》、《希腊神话》、《中国神话》、《一千零一夜》、《圣经故事》、《中国经典历史故事(上中下册)》、《伊索寓言》、《成语故事》《世界经典历史故事(上中下册)》、《安徒生童话》。
  • 霁月风华

    霁月风华

    他是战神将军,她是亡国公主,他冷漠无情,她呆萌调皮。他那似千年寒冰的心终被她在不知不觉中捂热。缘起缘落,相爱的两个人能突破重艰难困苦相守白头吗?
  • 狱中人

    狱中人

    他和她都将对方恨到了极点,却不知道恨到了极点,也可以变成爱。他们成了彼此的救赎,握紧了双手不想失去。他也曾以为生命中最美好的时光终于到来。没有仇恨,没有伤害,没有杀戮。这样的时光,存在,却太短暂了。有无数的人无数的理由想让他下地狱。但他是她的耶稣,她的信仰,她的救赎。那颗陨星跨越了几万光年来到地球,在巨蚌中沉睡了不知几百年,又在人间经历了几百年的流浪,才开始守护着那被称为“银色天使”的病毒。而他和她之间,仅仅是隔了一块墓碑的距离而已。
  • 有道无名

    有道无名

    大约几十万年以前,曾经有一块广阔的大陆,大陆中心有一座连接天地的大山,突然一天电闪雷鸣,整块大陆沉入地心之中,留下无尽的传说,成就了一片大海。直到一天……