登陆注册
15694100000003

第3章 THE TALISMAN(3)

The young man went straight up to the table, and, as he stood there, flung down a piece of gold which he held in his hand, without deliberation. It rolled on to the Black; then, as strong natures can, he looked calmly, if anxiously, at the croupier, as if he held useless subterfuges in scorn.

The interest this coup awakened was so great that the old gamesters laid nothing upon it; only the Italian, inspired by a gambler's enthusiasm, smiled suddenly at some thought, and punted his heap of coin against the stranger's stake.

The banker forgot to pronounce the phrases that use and wont have reduced to an inarticulate cry--"Make your game. . . . The game is made. . . . Bets are closed." The croupier spread out the cards, and seemed to wish luck to the newcomer, indifferent as he was to the losses or gains of those who took part in these sombre pleasures.

Every bystander thought he saw a drama, the closing scene of a noble life, in the fortunes of that bit of gold; and eagerly fixed his eyes on the prophetic cards; but however closely they watched the young man, they could discover not the least sign of feeling on his cool but restless face.

"Even! red wins," said the croupier officially. A dumb sort of rattle came from the Italian's throat when he saw the folded notes that the banker showered upon him, one after another. The young man only understood his calamity when the croupiers's rake was extended to sweep away his last napoleon. The ivory touched the coin with a little click, as it swept it with the speed of an arrow into the heap of gold before the bank. The stranger turned pale at the lips, and softly shut his eyes, but he unclosed them again at once, and the red color returned as he affected the airs of an Englishman, to whom life can offer no new sensation, and disappeared without the glance full of entreaty for compassion that a desperate gamester will often give the bystanders. How much can happen in a second's space; how many things depend on a throw of the die!

"That was his last cartridge, of course," said the croupier, smiling after a moment's silence, during which he picked up the coin between his finger and thumb and held it up.

"He is a cracked brain that will go and drown himself," said a frequenter of the place. He looked round about at the other players, who all knew each other.

"Bah!" said a waiter, as he took a pinch of snuff.

"If we had but followed HIS example," said an old gamester to the others, as he pointed out the Italian.

Everybody looked at the lucky player, whose hands shook as he counted his bank-notes.

"A voice seemed to whisper to me," he said. "The luck is sure to go against that young man's despair.""He is a new hand," said the banker, "or he would have divided his money into three parts to give himself more chance."The young man went out without asking for his hat; but the old watch-dog, who had noted its shabby condition, returned it to him without a word. The gambler mechanically gave up the tally, and went downstairs whistling Di tanti Palpiti so feebly, that he himself scarcely heard the delicious notes.

He found himself immediately under the arcades of the Palais-Royal, reached the Rue Saint Honore, took the direction of the Tuileries, and crossed the gardens with an undecided step. He walked as if he were in some desert, elbowed by men whom he did not see, hearing through all the voices of the crowd one voice alone--the voice of Death. He was lost in the thoughts that benumbed him at last, like the criminals who used to be taken in carts from the Palais de Justice to the Place de Greve, where the scaffold awaited them reddened with all the blood spilt here since 1793.

There is something great and terrible about suicide. Most people's downfalls are not dangerous; they are like children who have not far to fall, and cannot injure themselves; but when a great nature is dashed down, he is bound to fall from a height. He must have been raised almost to the skies; he has caught glimpses of some heaven beyond his reach. Vehement must the storms be which compel a soul to seek for peace from the trigger of a pistol.

How much young power starves and pines away in a garret for want of a friend, for lack of a woman's consolation, in the midst of millions of fellow-creatures, in the presence of a listless crowd that is burdened by its wealth! When one remembers all this, suicide looms large.

Between a self-sought death and the abundant hopes whose voices call a young man to Paris, God only knows what may intervene; what contending ideas have striven within the soul; what poems have been set aside;what moans and what despair have been repressed; what abortive masterpieces and vain endeavors! Every suicide is an awful poem of sorrow. Where will you find a work of genius floating above the seas of literature that can compare with this paragraph:

"Yesterday, at four o'clock, a young woman threw herself into the Seine from the Pont des Arts."Dramas and romances pale before this concise Parisian phrase; so must even that old frontispiece, The Lamentations of the glorious king of Kaernavan, put in prison by his children, the sole remaining fragment of a lost work that drew tears from Sterne at the bare perusal--the same Sterne who deserted his own wife and family.

The stranger was beset with such thoughts as these, which passed in fragments through his mind, like tattered flags fluttering above the combat. If he set aside for a moment the burdens of consciousness and of memory, to watch the flower heads gently swayed by the breeze among the green thickets, a revulsion came over him, life struggled against the oppressive thought of suicide, and his eyes rose to the sky: gray clouds, melancholy gusts of the wind, the stormy atmosphere, all decreed that he should die.

同类推荐
  • 北平录

    北平录

    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。
  • 野处类稿

    野处类稿

    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。
  • 太上洞玄灵宝天关经

    太上洞玄灵宝天关经

    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。
  • 器经

    器经

    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。
  • The Bucolics Ecloges

    The Bucolics Ecloges

    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
  • 战争大地

    战争大地

    冰与火的战歌,战气与魔法的碰撞!乱世将至,瓦洛兰大陆烽火连台,狼烟肆起。当德克萨斯将战火引向艾欧尼亚时,这座所有人精神天堂的小岛再也无法置身事外。一位名为易的少年便从这座小岛开始他的传奇之路……新书啊,新书啊,这竟然是新书啊!
  • 凤舞凰天,倾城小姐太妖孽

    凤舞凰天,倾城小姐太妖孽

    靠!靠靠!!靠靠靠!!!她堂堂二十一世纪顶级杀手,居然穿越到了一个古代废材身上?!!!不能修炼??没事没事,本小姐自有办法....遭受虐待??没事没事,欺负本小姐,你有种!!渣男来袭??没事没事,本小姐最会教训渣男了...不断强大,不断强大....终于....引来了一群烂!桃!花!(某王爷:“嘤嘤嘤....你这样说我会伤心的.....!”)(某小姐:.......去死!!)
  • 妖娆夫君:血瞳萌妻

    妖娆夫君:血瞳萌妻

    “该醒了吧!”索菲亚望着冰棺里那沉睡的绝色睡颜,“族长,若公主一直不醒,那我们就这样等下去吗!”索菲亚望了望结界大门,门外满是那些虚伪的天使,“等,我们能做到的只有等,公主是我们最后的希望。”索菲亚平静的说。“这是哪?”艾洛儿看着充满暗色的房间轻轻说道,听到声音的索菲亚大惊,很快她就兴奋起来“公主,是您醒了吗!”艾洛儿看着面前的索菲亚,感觉她上身有种亲和力,不禁问道:“你是谁?谁是公主?你们在拍电影吗?”。。。。。。。。。。。。。。
  • 兽啸星空

    兽啸星空

    公元2045年,随着一颗天外陨石砸落太平洋,几乎一夜间,地球上除却人类外的所有生物发生异变,成为凶兽,人类进入凶兽纪元。同时,那颗陨石也将一种被后世人类称之为“凶兽变”的能力带到地球,精神力强大的人类,可以通过契合凶兽、凶禽,进行凶兽变。契合凶禽,可背生双翼,翱翔天空;契合巨熊,可化身数丈,宛如远古巨人;契合蛮虎、大蟒、鳞鳄乃至深海巨兽……当李峰发现自己可以无限契合凶兽后……
  • 重生之逆天女王

    重生之逆天女王

    她,云妍,人前,是一个貌美天仙,拥有天籁之音的娱乐圈天后。人后,国内最厉害的神秘组织冷宫排名第一的异能杀手。意外获得凤凰项链,从此,拥有一身妙手回春的医术,当然,毒术更加精湛。赌石,古玩,不在话下。他,修仙家族排名第一的墨家大少爷。天赋异禀,玉树临风,人称“鬼面魔王”,冷酷无情,却对她温柔宠溺。他们擦出怎样的火花呢?
  • 小楼一夜

    小楼一夜

    小楼一夜听春雨,深巷明朝卖杏花。他姓白,叫白小楼,表字素衣。他自逍遥来,他自逍遥去。留下的,是一段又一段的传奇。
  • 神奇代码

    神奇代码

    从夜魔侠开始。瞎子春华正茂,小蜘蛛也还是穷刁丝,托尼依旧流连于花丛中,娜塔莎还是苏联特工。。。黄蓉是个小萝莉,法海还没有下山,云中子居然是个人类?小骇客李季某天玩游戏的时候突然收到一段奇怪的代码,于是他无聊地尝试破解,不成想却陷入了诡异当中。。。九是数之极限,所以等级九为创世神,所以宇宙也只有九个。神奇代码带领您领略不一样的神奇之旅。
  • 宠妻总裁你别闹

    宠妻总裁你别闹

    重生归来,她一心复仇,这一世只想让那对狗男女血债血偿!只是……这个便宜未婚夫是怎么回事?帅气多金会撩人?邪魅腹黑酷霸拽?还是豪门贵公子?“嫁给我,我的一切都是你的,包括我……”看着他深情专宠的这一面。她脑袋一拧,白送的我不要!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 甲板上的蝴蝶

    甲板上的蝴蝶

    甲板上的蝴蝶,翩然拍动着绚丽的翼翅,越飞越高,渐渐偏离了船的泊位,远远淡出了我走上南岸的视线。
  • 九德天下

    九德天下

    地狱魔王降临现世,山海魔兽重现人间。神与魔的对抗。凡与仙的抗争。另一个世界揭开帷幕。谁,才是最后的胜者。