登陆注册
37803300000032

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
  • 崔东洲集

    崔东洲集

    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。
  • 楚曲十种临潼斗宝

    楚曲十种临潼斗宝

    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。
  • 医闾先生集

    医闾先生集

    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。
  • 蟋蟀轩草

    蟋蟀轩草

    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。
  • Helen of Troy And Other Poems

    Helen of Troy And Other Poems

    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
  • 君为天下倾

    君为天下倾

    蝶恋花·痕清风偶过芙蓉浦,淡水留痕木容秀。龙鳞耀,浮世里。鸢过青冥紫朝气。莫离,莫离,等风归去。陈年暗换三世意,锦瑟流年为君来。轩边倚,只为伊。萱草留香墨无迹。相依,相依,永不分离。
  • 未闻日记

    未闻日记

    嘘。安静些。我给你讲个故事。一个可能有些恐怖的故事。
  • 入殓师笔录

    入殓师笔录

    一次诡异的入殓,纠缠不休的女鬼,鲜血横流的僵尸,以及背后隐藏着的惊天阴谋...
  • 猪妖也是妖

    猪妖也是妖

    猪怎么了?猪也很可爱!你干啥?放下那碗红烧肉,谁叫你吃的!(左看右看,没人!)-------真香啊!看什么看,没见过猪妖吃猪肉啊?又不是一族的!孤陋寡闻!
  • 时代有容

    时代有容

    这是一个美好的时代,有着海纳百川的雅量。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 星之引

    星之引

    这是一个在极其宏大的世界观下,冰山一角的故事;世界观十分混搭,有中式、西式和纯靠想象式背景;以某一学生视角,从入学到毕业;经历在校的魔法学习,到出校门历练,甚至获得传说中的神器的冒险故事;这里有眼花缭乱的魔法,有形态各异的种族,有历经漫长时间的传说,还有闲得无聊来体验生活的管理者级别加戏角色;故事由学习、感悟,团队协作,友善和积极向上等元素组成;欢迎各位来到魔法星最高学府——伊莱尔魔法学院!
  • 重生三世缘

    重生三世缘

    一朵悬崖雪绒,修炼万年成为上界唯一女上仙,为他守护千年冰灵,却被他剔去仙骨,抽去仙灵,投胎到现代,成为有名特工后,却被亲近之人欺骗成为试验品,毁了实验室,杀了仇人,以为就此终结了,放弃了最爱的特工身份,选择了法医之路,却在接手第一个尸体有穿越到了古代将军世家,再遇那人。原来,是汝。。。
  • 最神奇的博弈论定律

    最神奇的博弈论定律

    博弈论又称对策论,是赌博、对弈或类似情境下为求利益最大化所采取的策略、手段、方法、措施。博弈论源于生活,其理论只不过是人们日常行动的抽象和总结。本书用直观、形象、有趣的语言讲述了生活中的博弈场景,从而让读者既能轻松读懂博弈,又能掌握博弈论智慧的精妙之处。
  • 万界苍血

    万界苍血

    一个少年自莽荒之中携俩兽踏入这个万族争霸的世界,芸芸众生是否有那么一条主宰路?是杀戮,是嗜血……且看少年如何用这亿万生灵的累累白骨铺满这条万族争霸之路……