登陆注册
16285200000088

第88章 BOOK Ⅵ(15)

Then she fell on her face on the ground,her forehead striking the floor with the sound of stone upon stone.The three women thought her dead;but a moment afterward she stirred,and they saw her drag herself on her hands and knees to the corner where the little shoe lay.At this they dared look no longer;they saw her not,but they heard the sound of a tempest of sighs and kisses,mingled with heart-rending cries and dull blows as of a head being struck against a wall;then,after one of these blows,so violent that they all three recoiled in horror,deep silence.

'Can she have killed herself?'asked Gervaise,venturing her head through the bars.'Sister!Sister Gudule!'

'Sister Gudule!'echoed Oudarde.

'Alas,she does not move!'cried Gervaise;'can she be dead?Gudule!Gudule!'

Mahiette,whom deep emotion had rendered speechless,now made an effort.'Wait a moment,'said she;then going close to the window—'Paquette!'she cried—'Paquette la Chantefleurie!'

A child blowing unsuspiciously on the half-lighted match of a petard,causing it suddenly to explode in his face,would not be more appalled than Mahiette at the effect of this name,thus unexpectedly launched into Sister Gudule's cell.

The recluse shook in every limb,then,rising to her feet,she sprang at the loophole with eyes so blazing that the three women and the child all fell back to the very edge of the quay.

Meanwhile the terrible face of the recluse remained close to the grating.'Oh!oh!'she cried,with a horrible laugh,'it is the Egyptian woman calling me!'

At that moment a scene which was taking place on the pillory caught her haggard eye.Her brow contracted with horror,she stretched her two skeleton arms through the cross-bars,and cried in a voice like the rattle in a dying throat,''Tis thou again,daughter of Egypt!'Tis thou calling me,stealer of children!Accursed be thou forever—accursed!accursed!accursed!'

Chapter 4-A Tear for a Drop of Water

The concluding words of the foregoing chapter may be described as the point of junction of two scenes which,till that moment,had been running parallel,each on its own particular stage;the one—which we have just been following—at the Rat-Hole;the other—now to be described—on the pillory.The former had been witnessed only by the three women with whom the reader has just been made acquainted;the latter had for audience the whole crowd which we saw gathering in the Place de Grève round the pillory and the gibbet.

This crowd,in whom the sight of the four sergeants stationed since nine in the morning at the four corners of the pillory had roused the pleasing expectation of a penal exhibition of some sort—not,perhaps,a hanging,but a flogging,a cutting off of ears or the like—this crowd had increased so rapidly that the four mounted men,finding themselves too closely pressed,had more than once been under the necessity of'tightening'it,as they called it then,by great lashes of their whips and their horses'heels.

The populace,well accustomed to waiting for public executions,manifested but little impatience.They amused themselves by looking at the pillory,a very simple structure,consisting of a hollow cube of masonry some ten feet in height.A steep flight of steps of unhewn stone—called par excellence the ladder—led to the top platform,on which lay horizontally a wheel of stout oak.To this wheel the victim was bound kneeling and with his hands pinioned behind him;a shaft of timber,set in motion by a windlass concealed in the interior of the structure,caused the wheel to rotate horizontally,thus presenting the face of the culprit to every point of the Place in succession.This was called'turning'the criminal.

It will be seen from the deion that the pillory of the Grève was far from possessing the many attractions of that at the Halles.Here was nothing architectural,nothing monumental—no roof embellished with an iron cross,no octagon lantern tower,no slender pilasters blossoming out against the edge of the roof into acanthus-leafed and flowery capitals,no fantastic,dragon-headed gargoyles,no carved wood-work,no delicate sculpture cut deeply into the stone.

One had to be content with the four rough-hewn sides of stone and an ugly stone gibbet,mean and bare,at the side of it.The show would have been a poor one to the amateur of Gothic architecture,but truly nobody could be more indifferent in the matter of architecture than the good burghers of the Middle Ages;they cared not a jot for the beauty of a pillory.

At last the culprit arrived,tied to a cart's tail,and as soon as he was hoisted on to the platform and,bound with cords and straps to the wheel,was plainly visible from every point of the Place,a prodigious hooting mingled with laughter and acclamations burst from the assembled crowd.They had recognised Quasimodo.

It was indeed he.Strange turn of fortune's wheel!—to be pilloried on the same spot on which,but the day before,he had been saluted,acclaimed Pope and Prince of Fools,and counted in his train the Duke of Egypt,the King of Tunis,and the Emperor of Galilee.One thing,however,is certain,there was no mind in that crowd,not even his own,though in turn the victor and the vanquished,that thought of drawing this parallel.Gringoire and his philosophy were lacking at this spectacle.

Presently Michel Noiret,appointed trumpeter to our lord the King,after imposing silence on the people,made proclamation of the sentence,pursuant to the ordinance and command of the Lord Provost.He then fell back behind the cart with his men.

同类推荐
  • On Horsemanship

    On Horsemanship

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Herland

    Herland

    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。
  • 明伦汇编皇极典用人部

    明伦汇编皇极典用人部

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 法华经安乐行义

    法华经安乐行义

    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。
  • 佛说乐想经

    佛说乐想经

    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
  • 钢铁是怎样炼成的

    钢铁是怎样炼成的

    本书讲述了主人公保尔柯察金从一个在社会底层挣扎的贫穷少年, 逐渐成长为一个为祖国为人民毕生奋斗的无产阶级革命战士的故事。
  • 雪花吹剑录

    雪花吹剑录

    玉生烟莞尔一笑,道:“我到过许多地方,喝过许多不同的酒,见过许多不同的人,却都比不上我第一次见你时的情形,青衣白衫,手举长剑,迎风而立,神采飞扬的少年。”萧风道:“因为当时你目光流转,顾盼神飞,气势如虹,只可惜自己不是盖世大英雄。”峨眉山,舍身崖,莫愁湖畔,独孤子之徒玉生烟,她跨过山河岁月,看过泰山的云,喝过苗疆的烈酒,游遍塞北江南,看尽大漠孤烟,长河落日,历世渡劫,最后方有所悟,真正的“侠”,不是武功高强,天下无敌,“侠之大者,为国为民”。是非成败转头空,人死留名,豹死留皮,名利功过,古往今来少有人勘破,还须退步抽身早。莫不如“一壶浊酒喜相逢”,青梅煮酒,围炉把盏,古今多少事,尽付笑谈中。
  • 血咒

    血咒

    万年诅咒,承载着暴风血雨,一场毁灭性灾难即将来临。血颜,从出生就注定会有不寻常命运,万年血咒的寄托,血族的重任母亲的仇恨,从弱小到强大,一步步成为世界强者,看似坚强的背后又有多少不为人知的心酸,无奈。“我本无心争夺,奈何命运与自己开了个玩笑。”“若我不去战斗,被敌人杀了,还有指着我的头颅说:看,这就是奴隶!”“我绝不能让世界落入我所厌恶的人手中!”
  • 魔神教父

    魔神教父

    前世黑道太子,今生破法邪神。一场意外穿越到异世界的林凡,却获得了一双妖孽般的破法血瞳。坠入血魔古窟中洗髓伐筋后更是打造一尊无敌金刚身。魔功成,血瞳开,魔眼破尽万法大道。盯法宝,法宝破;盯阵法,阵法开;盯上那边那位美女,喂,你……你别过来!
  • 神魔印决

    神魔印决

    一念成魔,一念成神,一念成人,人,神,魔,仅在一念之间!莫邪自恶魔岛神墓而生,扭转乾坤,定夺天下,弱肉强食的天地,一步步崛起,朋友,家人,及时化身成魔我也要守护这一份份真挚的情感..........及时,为魔!!
  • 败家千金冷酷爷

    败家千金冷酷爷

    俗话说在家从父,出嫁从夫。可是本小姐的宗旨是,在家败父,出嫁败夫。本小姐乃是堂堂清朝第一富豪——大贪官和珅家的三千金,纽怙碌月柔。万千宠爱集于一身,恃宠而不骄,败金却是唯一的爱好。
  • 逆天至尊巅峰对决:邪龙曲

    逆天至尊巅峰对决:邪龙曲

    新书以上传《带着天使去泡妞》性感天使降临,纯情哥偶获异术,风流清纯校园,丝袜学姐,长腿学妹,大胸脯性感校花。校园疯狂,校外张狂,狂野警花,纯情少女,性感学姐,霸道总裁。不服不行,不美不行,玩的就是多情,搞的就是气质。。
  • 娱乐皇朝

    娱乐皇朝

    李峰一名普通的酒吧驻唱歌手,却在一次醒来后发现自己竟然穿越了,在个世界里,他有感受到了很多以往没有感受到的东西,更让他开心的是,在这里他可以实现自己的梦想,成为世界上最着名的明星。(故事纯属虚构。)
  • 世说旧注

    世说旧注

    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。
  • 玫瑰花的倾诉

    玫瑰花的倾诉

    本小说是魔界的恋情,魔界的人去人间帮人们化解恩怨,不巧人间的人喜欢上了魔界的人,而另外一个魔界的人跟那人成了好朋友,他们因爱而恨。请尽情期待