登陆注册
15443300000032

第32章 #Chapter I The Eye of Death; or, the Murder Charge

"Smith looked up with relief from the glittering pools below to the glittering skies and the great black bulk of the college.

The only light other than stars glowed through one peacock-green curtain in the upper part of the building, marking where Dr. Emerson Eames always worked till morning and received his friends and favourite pupils at any hour of the night.

Indeed, it was to his rooms that the melancholy Smith was bound.

Smith had been at Dr. Eames's lecture for the first half of the morning, and at pistol practice and fencing in a saloon for the second half.

He had been sculling madly for the first half of the afternoon and thinking idly (and still more madly) for the second half.

He had gone to a supper where he was uproarious, and on to a debating club where he was perfectly insufferable, and the melancholy Smith was melancholy still. Then, as he was going home to his diggings he remembered the eccentricity of his friend and master, the Warden of Brakespeare, and resolved desperately to turn in to that gentleman's private house.

"Emerson Eames was an eccentric in many ways, but his throne in philosophy and metaphysics was of international eminence; the university could hardly have afforded to lose him, and, moreover, a don has only to continue any of his bad habits long enough to make them a part of the British Constitution. The bad habits of Emerson Eames were to sit up all night and to be a student of Schopenhauer. Personally, he was a lean, lounging sort of man, with a blond pointed beard, not so very much older than his pupil Smith in the matter of mere years, but older by centuries in the two essential respects of having a European reputation and a bald head.

"`I came, against the rules, at this unearthly hour,' said Smith, who was nothing to the eye except a very big man trying to make himself small, `because I am coming to the conclusion that existence is really too rotten.

I know all the arguments of the thinkers that think otherwise--bishops, and agnostics, and those sort of people. And knowing you were the greatest living authority on the pessimist thinkers--'

"`All thinkers,' said Eames, `are pessimist thinkers.'

"After a patch of pause, not the first--for this depressing conversation had gone on for some hours with alternations of cynicism and silence-- the Warden continued with his air of weary brilliancy: `It's all a question of wrong calculation. The most flies into the candle because he doesn't happen to know that the game is not worth the candle. The wasp gets into the jam in hearty and hopeful efforts to get the jam into him.

IN the same way the vulgar people want to enjoy life just as they want to enjoy gin--because they are too stupid to see that they are paying too big a price for it. That they never find happiness--that they don't even know how to look for it--is proved by the paralyzing clumsiness and ugliness of everything they do. Their discordant colours are cries of pain.

Look at the brick villas beyond the college on this side of the river.

There's one with spotted blinds; look at it! just go and look at it!'

"`Of course,' he went on dreamily, `one or two men see the sober fact a long way off--they go mad. Do you notice that maniacs mostly try either to destroy other things, or (if they are thoughtful) to destroy themselves? The madman is the man behind the scenes, like the man that wanders about the coulisse of a theater.

He has only opened the wrong door and come into the right place.

He sees things at the right angle. But the common world--'

"`Oh, hang the common world!' said the sullen Smith, letting his fist fall on the table in an idle despair.

"`Let's give it a bad name first,' said the Professor calmly, `and then hang it. A puppy with hydrophobia would probably struggle for life while we killed it; but if we were kind we should kill it.

So an omniscient god would put us out of our pain.

He would strike us dead.'

"`Why doesn't he strike us dead?' asked the undergraduate abstractedly, plunging his hands into his pockets.

"`He is dead himself,' said the philosopher; `that is where he is really enviable.'

"`To any one who thinks,' proceeded Eames, `the pleasures of life, trivial and soon tasteless, and bribes to bring us into a torture chamber.

We all see that for any thinking man mere extinction is the... What are you doing?... Are you mad?... Put that thing down.'

"Dr. Eames had turned his tired but still talkative head over his shoulder, and had found himself looking into a small round black hole, rimmed by a six-sided circlet of steel, with a sort of spike standing up on the top.

It fixed him like an iron eye. Through those eternal instants during which the reason is stunned he did not even know what it was.

Then he saw behind it the chambered barrel and cocked hammer of a revolver, and behind that the flushed and rather heavy face of Smith, apparently quite unchanged, or even more mild than before.

"`I'll help you out of your hole, old man,' said Smith, with rough tenderness. `I'll put the puppy out of his pain.'

"Emerson Eames retreated towards the window. `Do you mean to kill me?' he cried.

"`It's not a thing I'd do for every one,' said Smith with emotion;

`but you and I seem to have got so intimate to-night, somehow.

I know all your troubles now, and the only cure, old chap.'

"`Put that thing down,' shouted the Warden.

"`It'll soon be over, you know,' said Smith with the air of a sympathetic dentist. And as the Warden made a run for the window and balcony, his benefactor followed him with a firm step and a compassionate expression.

"Both men were perhaps surprised to see that the gray and white of early daybreak had already come. One of them, however, had emotions calculated to swallow up surprise. Brakespeare College was one of the few that retained real traces of Gothic ornament, and just beneath Dr. Eames's balcony there ran out what had perhaps been a flying buttress, still shapelessly shaped into gray beasts and devils, but blinded with mosses and washed out with rains.

同类推荐
  • 载酒园诗话

    载酒园诗话

    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。
  • 古宿尊禅师语录

    古宿尊禅师语录

    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。
  • 性情集

    性情集

    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。
  • 地藏菩萨经

    地藏菩萨经

    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。
  • 胜鬘经挟注

    胜鬘经挟注

    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。
热门推荐
  • 大风香云

    大风香云

    《大风香云》是菜园公子的“风花雪月”武侠系列小说第一部。少年英雄,绝世佳人。前程路上多妖邪,奋发神威狂践踏。创千秋伟业,活一生潇洒。
  • 贤者之冠

    贤者之冠

    “”烈日起,古王升,飞龙无影,恶魔遁形;钟声起,王已死,北方袭来,重重黑影。”迷雾之地,冰霜城堡,北方废土,西方绿洲,追寻贤者,正邪对决,捧起象征力量与统治的贤者之冠,书写一片大陆的爱恨情仇!
  • 校园胖妞逆袭记

    校园胖妞逆袭记

    喂,胖妞,你再吃下去,我可真的不要你了?”莫颜瞅着左手鸡腿右手鸡翅的向葵,哭笑不得。狠狠的咬了一口鸡腿,向葵随意一擦嘴角的油瞪着他:“我才不信!”莫颜轻笑,拿出口袋为她每日准备的纸巾,细心的擦着她嘴角的油渍。“我等你,我不管你要不要我!”冲着大雨之中渐行渐远的车大声嘶吼,向葵一屁股坐在地方,泪水模糊视线。莫颜沉默的合上眼,握紧的手泄露心底的不舍。他会回来,不管多年以后她是否嫁人,她只能是他的!
  • 三国之霸王铁蹄

    三国之霸王铁蹄

    当霸王铁蹄遇到虎豹军团,会碰撞出怎样的火花!当韩信对决诸葛亮,会是怎样的大战!霸王、吕布谁强谁弱?铁与血的较量,智与慧的碰撞!两个时代的霸主,跨时空的较量!且看网游之铸就辉煌!
  • 浮生琐

    浮生琐

    自娱自乐,笔风飘忽不定,感谢各位看官(如果有的话...)
  • 易界纵横

    易界纵横

    一个不断创造奇迹的少年,一场神秘的时间旅行。一只不起眼的饰物小鼎,一枚刻画着神秘花纹的蛋。一段来自不同时空的旷世奇缘;两个对峙了万年的神魔;三大纠缠不断的上古王朝。所有的一切,都将在此呈现。易界之旅,打开一个浩大的仙侠世界,纵横于万人仰望的云端。
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 叼蛮小姐俏美男

    叼蛮小姐俏美男

    一个俊俏的又野蛮的小姐,在她开的学校里,欺辱着每一个少年美男子,可是,她可以永远欺辱下去吗,
  • 我们的故事那么长

    我们的故事那么长

    作为一名勤勤恳恳的千唯,林凡本想平淡的过完她的高中生活,不料顾念的出现将这一切打乱。关于爱情的所有,她想到的只有他;关于未来的解集,他勾画的全是她。爱过恨过,总该领悟。用成长祭奠青春,用失去告别未知。如果你的青春也曾受伤【温瞳&;#8226;寂年文学社】
  • 那年青春我们刚刚好

    那年青春我们刚刚好

    学霸。学渣,不良少年,校花,透明人,各型各色的老师,构成了我一整个青春,莫黎,那年在人群中看到你,就注定为你沉迷。张婧涵,今生终究是我欠你的。遇到你,我从未后悔,哪怕你眼里从未有我的影子。