登陆注册
22898200000121

第121章 BOOK Ⅷ(7)

In the Middle Ages,when an edifice was complete there was almost as much of it under the ground as over it.Except it were built on piles,like Notre-Dame,a palace,a fortress,a church,had always a double foundation.In the cathedrals it formed in some sort a second cathedral—subterranean,low-pitched,dark,mysterious—blind and dumb—under the aisles of the building above,which were flooded with light and resonant day and night with the music of the organ or the bells.Sometimes it was a sepulchre.In the palaces and fortresses it was a prison—or a sepulchre—sometimes both together.These mighty masses of masonry,of which we have explained elsewhere the formation and growth,had not mere foundations,but more properly speaking roots branching out underground into chambers,passages,and stairways,the counterpart of those above.Thus the churches,palaces,and bastilles might be said to be sunk in the ground up to their middle.The vaults of an edifice formed another edifice,in which you descended instead of ascending,the subterranean storeys of which extended downward beneath the pile of exterior storeys,like those inverted forests and mountains mirrored in the waters of a lake beneath the forests and mountains of its shores.

At the Bastille Saint-Antoine,at the Palais de Justice,and at the Louvre,these subterranean edifices were prisons.The storeys of these prisons as they sank into the ground became even narrower and darker—so many zones presenting,as by a graduated scale,deeper and deeper shades of horror.Dante could find nothing better for the construction of his Inferno.These dungeon funnels usually ended in a tub-shaped pit,in which Dante placed his Satan and society the criminal condemned to death.When once a miserable being was there interred,farewell to light,air,life—ogni speranza—he never issued forth again but to the gibbet or the stake unless,indeed,he were left to rot there—which human justice called forgetting.Between mankind and the condemned,weighing upon his head,there was an accumulated mass of stone and jailers;and the whole prison,the massive fortress,was but one enormous complicated lock that barred him from the living world.

It was in one of these deep pits,in the oubliettes excavated by Saint-Louis,in the'in pace'of the Tournelle—doubtless for fear of her escaping—that they had deposited Esmeralda,now condemned to the gibbet,with the colossal Palais de Justice over her head—poor fly,that could not have moved the smallest of its stones!Truly,Providence and social law alike had been too lavish;such a profusion of misery and torture was not necessary to crush so fragile a creature.

She lay there,swallowed up by the darkness,entombed,walled,lost to the world.Any one seeing her in that state,after beholding her laughing and dancing in the sunshine,would have shuddered.Cold as night,cold as death,no breath of air to stir her locks,no human sound to reach her ear,no ray of light within her eye—broken,weighed down by chains,crouching beside a pitcher and a loaf of bread,on a heap of straw,in the pool of water formed by the oozings of the dungeon walls—motionless,almost breathless,she was even past suffering.P us,the sun,noonday,the free air,the streets of Paris,dancing and applause,her tender love passages with the officer—then the priest,the old hag,the dagger,blood,torture,the gibbet—all this passed in turn before her mind,now as a golden vision of delight,now as a hideous nightmare;but her apprehension of it all was now merely that of a vaguely horrible struggle in the darkness,or of distant music still playing above ground but no longer audible at the depth to which the unhappy girl had fallen.

Since she had been here she neither waked nor slept.In that unspeakable misery,in that dungeon,she could no more distinguish waking from sleeping,dreams from reality,than day from night.All was mingled,broken,floating confusedly through her mind.She no longer felt,no longer knew,no longer thought anything definitely—at most she dreamed.Never has human creature been plunged deeper into annihilation.

Thus benumbed,frozen,petrified,scarcely had she remarked at two or three different times the sound of a trap-door opening somewhere above her head,without even admitting a ray of light,and through which a hand had thrown her down a crust of black bread.Yet this was her only surviving communication with mankind—the periodical visit of the jailer.

One thing alone still mechanically occupied her ear:over her head the moisture filtered through the mouldy stones of the vault,and at regular intervals a drop of water fell from it.She listened stupidly to the splash made by this dripping water as it fell into the pool beside her.

This drop of water falling into the pool was the only movement still perceptible around her,the only clock by which to measure time,the only sound that reached her of all the turmoil going on on earth;though,to be quite accurate,she was conscious from time to time in that sink of mire and darkness of something cold passing over her foot or her arm,and that made her shiver.

How long had she been there?She knew not.She remembered a sentence of death being pronounced somewhere against some one,and then that she herself had been carried away,and that she had awakened in silence and darkness,frozen to the bone.She had crawled along on her hands and knees,she had felt iron rings cutting her ankles,and chains had clanked.She had discovered that all around her were walls,that underneath her were wet flag-stones and a handful of straw—but there was neither lamp nor air-hole.Then she had seated herself upon the straw,and sometimes for a change of position on the lowest step of a stone flight she had come upon in the dungeon.

同类推荐
  • 佛顶尊胜陀罗尼

    佛顶尊胜陀罗尼

    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。
  • 蜀中言怀

    蜀中言怀

    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。
  • 孔子家语

    孔子家语

    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。
  • 易林补遗

    易林补遗

    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。
  • 佛说道神足无极变化经

    佛说道神足无极变化经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 幻想之愿望笔记

    幻想之愿望笔记

    如果得到一本能够实现愿望的笔记。你,会做些什么?
  • 新技术·如何办好鹌鹑养殖场(新农村十万个怎么办)

    新技术·如何办好鹌鹑养殖场(新农村十万个怎么办)

    本书阐述了鹌鹑的经济价值,以及养鹌鹑的新技术,告诉大家如何培育出优质的鹌鹑。
  • 因为爱—画地为牢

    因为爱—画地为牢

    人生若只如初见,倾世覆过,我便随你走在天际,看繁花满地。
  • 北河南山

    北河南山

    “划过这条北河,我便能找到你。”“翻过这座南山,你是否还在。”
  • 最强草根

    最强草根

    “兑命系统”在手,天下我有!憋屈草根林松也有时来运转,睥睨群雄的一天!什么,你不喜欢用嘴巴讲道理,你喜欢用拳头讲道理?好!那就看谁的拳头更有理!
  • 上古世纪之最强考验

    上古世纪之最强考验

    上古世纪,生死考验!一不小心,就被选为了考验者,难道是因为我太帅了?嗯,只能这样子解释了。——花无期
  • 来年,我们还会相遇吗

    来年,我们还会相遇吗

    小学最后一个暑假已经来了,或许也是我人生当中最不舍得这个时候的来临,曾经我为时间而感到慢,现在我学会了珍惜,更懂得了爱,爱只不过是一个对我来说遥远的字。
  • 星夜笑忘书

    星夜笑忘书

    星星的家族在一夜之间消失,自己莫名其妙的进了天使训练营,目标是找寻失落的十二把钥匙。打开远古魔法时光之门。星星这个号称要成为史上最强召唤魔法师的一纸契约却直接沦为奴婢。不过等到战斗的时候,她家的洛风实在太给力了。她是否真的能像彼时预言中的那样,收集黄道十二门,的钥匙开启时光之门。
  • 侯府重生

    侯府重生

    她,名虽存,位却无。被人踩在脚下,轻蔑······看她如何消灭自己仇敌,得到自己想要的生活,做自己人生主宰。迷人的容貌,高贵的气质······令人倾心。一个奇迹般地存在,遇到两难的爱情,她会如何选择······
  • 楚氏风流

    楚氏风流

    少男情怀总是诗,作为青江县烈日村黑手党党中央总书记的小混混楚汉,江湖地位自不待言,窃以为人生巅峰不外如此。任他打破头也不会料到,有朝一日,自己竟然会放着大好的日子不过,非要去砍当今皇上的脑袋。“这事不怨我,怨只怨皇上命生得不好。”楚汉冷笑道。“这孩子只怕是真疯了。”楚家现任最高领导人德叔道。