登陆注册
12108900000011

第11章 BOOK Ⅰ(8)

After receiving ample meed of applause in return for their bows,the four characters proceeded,amid profound silence,to deliver a prologue which we willingly spare the reader.Besides,just as in our own day,the public was far more interested in the costumes the actors wore than the parts they enacted—and therein they chose the better part.

All four were attired in party-coloured robes,half yellow,half white,differing from one another only in material;the first being of gold and silver brocade,the second of silk,the third of woollen stuff,the fourth of linen.The first of these figures carried a sword in his right hand,the second two golden keys,the third a pair of scales,the fourth a spade;and for the benefit of such sluggish capacities as might have failed to penetrate the transparency of these attributes,on the hem of the brocade robe was embroidered in enormous black letters,'I am Nobility,'on the silk one'I am Clergy,'on the woollen one'I am Commerce,'on the linen one'I am Labour.'The sex of the two male allegories was plainly indicated by the comparative shortness of their tunics and their Phrygian caps,whereas the female characters wore robes of ample length and hoods on their heads.

It would also have required real perverseness not to have understood from the poetic imagery of the prologue that Labour was espoused to Commerce,and Clergy to Nobility,and that the two happy couples possessed between them a magnificent golden dolphin(dauphin)which they proposed to adjudge only to the most beautiful damsel.Accordingly,they were roaming the world in search of this Fair One,and,after rejecting successively the Queen of Golconda,the Princess of Trebizonde,the daughter of the Grand Khan of Tartary,etc,etc.,Labour and Commerce,Clergy and Nobility,had come to rest themselves awhile on the marble table of the Palais de Justice,and to deliver themselves before an honoured audience of a multitude of sententious phrases,moral maxims,sophisms,flowers of speech,as were freely dispensed in those days by the Faculty of Arts or at the examinations at which the Masters took their degree.

All this was,in effect,very fine.

Meanwhile,in all that crowd over which the four allegorical figures were pouring out floods of metaphor,no ear was more attentive,no heart more palpitating,no eye more eager,no neck more outstretched than the eye,the ear,the heart,the neck of the poet-author,our good Pierre Gringoire,who but a little while before had been unable to resist the joy of revealing his name to a couple of pretty girls.He had retired again behind his pillar,a few paces from them,where he stood gazing,listening,relishing.The favourable applause which had greeted the opening of his prologue was still thrilling through his vitals;and he was completely carried away by that kind of contemplative ecstasy with which the dramatic author follows his ideas as they drop one by one from the lips of the actor amid the silence of a vast audience.Happy Pierre Gringoire!

Sad to say,however,this first ecstasy was but of short duration.Scarcely had Gringoire raised this intoxicating cup of triumph and delight to his lips than a drop of bitterness came to mingle with it.

A beggar,a shocking tatterdemalion,too tightly squeezed in among the crowd to be able to collect his usual harvest,or,in all probability,had not found sufficient to indemnify himself in the pockets of his immediate neighbours,had conceived the bright idea of perching himself in some conspicuous spot from whence he might attract the gaze and the alms of the benevolent.To this end,during the opening lines of the prologue,he had managed to hoist himself up by the pillars of the reserved platform on to the cornice which projected around the foot of its balustrade,where he seated himself,soliciting the attention and the pity of the throng by his rags and a hideous sore covering his right arm.He did not,however,utter a word.

The silence he preserved allowed of the prologue proceeding without let or hindrance,nor would any noticeable disturbance have occurred if,as luck would have it,the scholar Jehan had not,from his own high perch,espied the beggar and his antics.A wild fit of laughter seized the graceless young rascal,and,unconcerned at interrupting the performance and distracting the attention of the audience,he cried delightedly:

'Oh,look at that old fraud over there begging!'

Any one who has ever thrown a stone into a frog-pond,or fired into a covey of birds,will have some idea of the effect of these incongruous words breaking in upon the all-pervading quiet.Gringoire started as if he had received an electric shock.The prologue broke off short,and all heads turned suddenly towards the beggar,who,far from being disconcerted,only saw in this incident an excellent opportunity for gathering a harvest,and at once began whining in a piteous voice with half-closed eyes:'Charity,I pray you!'

'Why,upon my soul!'cried Jehan,'if it isn't Clopin Trouillefou!Holá!friend,so thy sore was troublesome on thy leg that thou hast removed it to thine arm?'and so saying,with the dexterity of a monkey he tossed a small silver piece into the greasy old beaver which the beggar held out with his diseased arm.The man received both alms and sarcasm without wincing,and resumed his doleful petition:'Charity,I pray you!'

This episode had distracted the audience not a little,and a good many of the spectators,Robin Poussepain and the rest of the students at the head,delightedly applauded this absurd duet improvised in the middle of the prologue between the scholar with his shrill,piping voice,and the beggar with his imperturbable whine.

Gringoire was seriously put out.Recovering from his first stupefaction,he pulled himself together hurriedly and shouted to the four actors on the stage:'Go on!que diable!go on!'without deigning even a glance of reprobation at the two brawlers.

同类推荐
  • 东溪玩月

    东溪玩月

    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。
  • 方言巧对

    方言巧对

    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。
  • 八卦拳学

    八卦拳学

    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。
  • 通关文

    通关文

    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。
  • 妇人临产门

    妇人临产门

    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
  • 美男风暴:万般宠爱于一身

    美男风暴:万般宠爱于一身

    一所贵族学院,汇聚了性格各异的俊男美女,这里的学生要么拥有这尊贵的身份要么就拥有着神一般的智商,最为恐怖的莫为两者兼得。本已不平静的学院再次涌入了新的血液,为情为爱,早已波涛汹涌,暗藏杀机。【汐汐读者群:517709158,求推荐票求收藏求评论,么么哒】
  • 仙铺

    仙铺

    “长生天”乃远古大能开辟的一个大天地,“长生天”内灵气粘稠如蜜吸一口提神醒脑,住一月百病全消,奇珍异宝,灵兽仙草更是多不胜举,称他为“仙境”也不足为过,想去长生天吗?书内有坐标!
  • 仙道隐

    仙道隐

    一个人,一壶酒,斩断相思万古愁。再回首,人消瘦,万古千秋红尘游。
  • 四个人的天空

    四个人的天空

    青春励志小说!毋莦雉,独生子女,千金大小姐,任性,霸道,野蛮,专横,弱点,刀子嘴,豆腐心,本性不坏,大大咧咧,典型的路痴。顽固不灵,缺少父爱,其母一人把她带大到成年,母女两感情纠结,相互不理解。但是...遇上他们...于是一些年轻的爱情悄然而至!(PS:小婴新上作品,求收藏,求点击!)
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 让心跳动:那些恐怖之事

    让心跳动:那些恐怖之事

    《让心跳动:那些恐怖之事》是知名作家殷谦继恐怖悬疑小说《关中灵异鬼尸》之后的又一部长篇小说。《让心跳动:那些恐怖之事》——将带你走进人类思想的苦旅,但又是在寻求着刺激与恐惧,愉快和幸福。真正能穿越历史空间的是故事,真正能占据历史遂道的,也是故事。
  • 农女狂妃

    农女狂妃

    人生最悲催的事情是什么?好不容易以为找到了一生中最爱,结果在为他生下孩子的时候,被一刀捅死了。人生更悲催的事情是什么?死没死成,又活过来了。结果却变成了一个未婚生子的相府小姐,而且居然连孩子他爹是哪只都完全不知道?大婚前夕,她意外产子,惊吓了相府上下所有人。相爷大怒,要杀此孽子,连那两个刚刚出生的孩儿也不放过。叔可忍,婶婶也不能忍!据理力争,连哄带吓,终于骗的相爷松口,愿意放她母子离开。离了相府,归了田园,一间茅房,两亩薄田,三面环山,水土肥美。带着丫鬟,养着娃儿,上山挖药,下地种田,丰胸瘦身,美容健身。金子银子,滚滚而来,乡绅土豪,上门求亲,渣爹后娘。本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 改变人一生的智慧书

    改变人一生的智慧书

    本书共分为四册,内容包括:人一生要养成的习惯;人一生要注意的细节;人一生要把握的机遇等。
  • 万圣征途

    万圣征途

    这是一片异能者的大陆,这是一片神灵陨落的大陆,争斗不断,英雄辈出。没有最弱的能力,只有不会使用能力的人!不平凡的傀儡能力注定让吉莱恩·哥特站在时代的巅峰,与这个世界同一年代的天才一起,去追逐那来自远方的光芒,有兄弟,有亲人,吉莱恩在年幼时就已经发誓:我要,变得更强!(新书新人,有不好的地方还请多多见谅。)
  • 错过后的重逢

    错过后的重逢

    初中青涩的初恋,他与她,本是班上的学霸,她比他成绩略好,两人之间磨出爱的火花。她却因种种原因放弃了,选择了离开。十年之中,她的真实身世浮出水面,他也变成了称霸商界的总裁。十年之后,两人再次相遇,又将如何……