登陆注册
37888000000012

第12章 CHAPTER IV(4)

Nor was this all. Its summit was flat, and in the midst of it stood a huge tree. Even had it not been for the fruit which hung from its branches, the aspect of that tree must have struck the beholder as uncanny, even as horrible. The bark on its great bole was leprous white; and from its gaunt and spreading rungs rose branches that subdivided themselves again and again, till at last they terminated in round green fingers, springing from grey, flat slabs of bark, in shape not unlike that of a human palm. Indeed, from a little distance this tree, especially if viewed by moonlight, had the appearance of bearing on it hundreds or thousands of the arms and hands of men, all of them stretched imploringly to Heaven.

Well might they seem to do so, seeing that to its naked limbs hung the bodies of at least twenty human beings who had suffered death by order of the king or his captains, or by the decree of the company of wizards, whereof Hokosa was the chief. There on the Hill of Death stood the Tree of Death; and that in its dank shade, or piled upon the ground beneath it, hung and lay the pitiful remnants of the multitudes who for generations had been led thither to their doom.

Now, in Owen's vision a man was seen approaching by the little pathway that ran up the side of the mount--the Road of Lost Footsteps it was called. It was Hokosa the wizard. Outside the circle of the tree he halted, and drawing a tanned skin from a bundle of medicines which he carried, he tied it about his mouth; for the very smell of that tree is poisonous and must not be suffered to reach the lungs.

Presently he was under the branches, where once again he halted; this time it was to gaze at the body of an old man which swung to and fro in the night breeze.

"Ah! friend," he muttered, "we strove for many years, but it seems that I have conquered at the last. Well, it is just; for if you could have had your way, your end would have been my end."

Then very leisurely, as one who is sure that he will not be interrupted, Hokosa began to climb the tree, till at length some of the green fingers were within his reach. Resting his back against a bough, one by one he broke off several of them, and averting his face so that the fumes of it might not reach him, he caused the thick milk- white juice that they contained to trickle into the mouth of a little gourd which was hung about his neck by a string. When he had collected enough of the poison and carefully corked the gourd with a plug of wood, he descended the tree again. At the great fork where the main branches sprang from the trunk, he stood a while contemplating a creeping plant which ran up them. It was a plant of naked stem, like the tree it grew upon; and, also like the tree, its leaves consisted of bunches of green spikes having a milky juice.

"Strange," he said aloud, "that Nature should set the bane and the antidote side by side, the one twined about the other. Well, so it is in everything; yes, even in the heart of man. Shall I gather some of this juice also? No; for then I might repent and save him, remembering that he has loved me, and thus lose her I seek, her whom I must win back or be withered. Let the messenger of the King of Heaven save him, if he can. This tree lies on his path; perchance he may prevail upon its dead to tell him of the bane and of the antidote." And once more the wizard laughed mockingly.

*****

The vision passed. At this moment Thomas Owen, recovering from his swoon, lifted his head from the window-place. The night before him was as black as it had been, and behind him the little American clock was still striking the hour of midnight. Therefore he could not have remained insensible for longer than a few seconds.

A few seconds, yet how much he had seen in them. Truly his want of faith had been reproved--truly he also had been "warned of God in a dream,"--truly "his ears had been opened and his instruction sealed."

His soul had been "kept back from the pit," and his life from "perishing by the sword"; and the way of the wicked had been made clear to him "in a dream, in a vision of the night when deep sleep falleth upon men."

Not for nothing had he endured that agony, and not for nothing had he struggled in the grip of doubt.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 菊戏

    菊戏

    穷书生在落魄潦倒之际意外得到老板的垂青,得到一份陪伴富家千金的特殊工作,只因他有一张与小姐死去的男友格外相似的脸。然而每当小姐唱起昆曲,穷书生似乎就会发现一丝鬼影,他的梦里也总是出现唐僧取到的佛经,这一切到底在暗示什么?菊花盛开的私家花园到底与小姐男友之死有什么联系?
  • 玄门魔修

    玄门魔修

    一个泣血的神话!一曲征战命运的悲歌!那曾经的过去到底发生了什么?血玉魔灵到底是什么?冥冥中谁在主宰一切?
  • 别等黑暗降临

    别等黑暗降临

    “为什么要杀人?”“因为他已经变成了恶魔,人在他眼里早就不是人。”“那你不怕吗?”“恩。”轻抿一下嘴,“可是我知道他更怕。”
  • 一生的成功励志书——展现人格

    一生的成功励志书——展现人格

    心态决定一切!智慧创造一切!这是一个人人追求成功的时代,心智的力量具有创造成功态势的无穷魔力!即具有成功暗示的随着灵感牵引的成功力。
  • 逆浊

    逆浊

    高中的时候学化学,老师告诉我们,能量虽然是守恒的,但其方向却不可逆。清水可以变脏,污水却不再会变纯洁。当水渐渐被染色,有一天它发现它只能永远保持已有的颜色,只能被特定的人选择,而不能为了想要进入的嘴唇变身。它跳了下去。杯子碎了,水洒了一地。人们把地上的碎片收拾掉,水被吸进了肮脏的拖把。大概,我也会这样吧。躺在地上时她这样想道。我明明很努力,很现实,却不如那些天真可爱、自责一下就让人饶了她不争气事实的小姑娘。别人看不到我的温柔,只看得到我有担当时的强大,看不到我的脆弱,只看到我不愿别人担心时的坚强。你问我,下辈子是要被人呵护,还是仍然坚持这样?她迟疑了一秒,然后笑了。我希望,不要有下辈子。
  • 禁忌之纸牌游戏

    禁忌之纸牌游戏

    明川大学,延氏家族,商泉意外被卷入一场离奇的自杀事件,有人用纸牌一步步指引她,前方是真相还是危险的陷阱?……又是谁可以守护她到达光明的彼岸?……
  • 走进神秘百岁不老人

    走进神秘百岁不老人

    本书向你介绍一位神秘的老人,他105岁,眼不花,耳不聋,思维活跃,行动敏捷,他身怀绝技,能完成连年轻人都无法完成的高难动作,如劈叉、红旗飘扬、童子拜佛等;他104岁时遭遇车祸,断了5根肋骨,伤势严重,可他一个月就奇迹般地痊愈了。他105岁,仍有一颗积极进取的心,他有很多很多愿望和理想要去一个个地实现,他参与了申奥宣传片的拍摄,积极组织“百岁健身泰斗迎奥运设擂台挑战全球”活动,积极参加全国十运会活动,他还要参加2008年奥运会开幕式,……他的座右铭就是:生命不息,奋斗不止,人活一天,就要为社会做有益的事。本书作者通过对老人成名前后和一生经历的描写,深刻揭示老人不老之谜。本书适合各类人员阅读。
  • 夫君的马甲藏不住了

    夫君的马甲藏不住了

    柳延雪一朝穿越,成为大雍王朝丞相家的四小姐。四小姐不受父亲宠爱,不得家人关怀,更是被心心念念的未婚夫一脚踹死。……既然所有人都负我,那我也将负天下人!柳延雪掌掴嫡姐,舌战主母,脚踢渣男,翻手为云,覆手为雨!当她站在最高点,回首凝望来时路时,有人拉住了她的手。二人的影子交错在一处。“你心,既是我之所向。”
  • 虚空之境

    虚空之境

    他从小被父母遗弃,17岁那一年,他发誓要让所有抛弃他的人后悔,可似乎是命运的捉弄,一场交通意外使他失去了生命。而他的灵魂却来到了另一个时空,遇到了蓝蝶漪澜,白鹤白小单和兔子风越。在这个时空中,没有什么是不可能的。
  • 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!