第52章 THE EUPHORBIA(14)
- thais
- Anatole France
- 4439字
- 2016-03-03 14:05:49
And yet God has gone from me.Bless me, my father, and I shall be saved; shake the hyssop, and I shall be washed, and I shall shine as the snow."Anthony did not reply.He turned to the monks of Antinoe those eyes whose looks no man could sustain.He gazed for a long time at Paul, called the Fool; then he made a sign to him to approach.And, as all were astonished that the saint should address himself to a man who was not in his senses, Anthony said--"God has granted to him more grace than to any of you.Lift thy eyes, my son Paul, and tell me what thou seest in heaven."Paul the Fool raised his eyes; his face shone, and his tongue was unloosed.
"I see in heaven," he said, "a bed adorned with hangings of purple and gold.Around it three virgins keep constant watch that no soul may approach it, except the chosen one for whom the bed is prepared."Believing that this bed was the symbol of his glorification, Paphnutius had already begun to return thanks to God.But Anthony made a sign to him to be silent, and to listen to the Fool, who murmured in his ecstasy--"The three virgins speak to me; they say unto me: 'A saint is about to quit the earth; Thais of Alexandria is dying.And we have prepared the bed of her glory, for we are her virtues--Faith, Fear, and Love.' "Anthony asked--"Sweet child, what else seest thou?"Paul gazed vacantly from the zenith to the nadir, and from west to east, when suddenly his eyes fell on the Abbot of Antinoe.His face grew pale with a holy terror, and his eyeballs reflected invisible flames.
"I see," he murmured."three demons, who, full of joy, prepare to seize that man.One of them is like unto a tower, one to a woman, and one to a mage.All three bear their name, marked with redhot iron; the first on the forehead, the second on the belly, the third on the breast, and those names are--Pride, Lust, and Doubt.I have finished."Having spoken thus, Paul, with haggard eyes and hanging jaw, returned to his old simple ways.
And, as the monks of Antinoe looked anxiously at Anthony, the saint pronounced these words--"God has made known His just judgment.Let us bow to Him and hold our peace."He passed.He bestowed blessings as he went.The sun, now descended to the horizon, enveloped him in its glory, and his shadow, immeasurably elongated by a miracle from heaven, unrolled itself behind him like an endless carpet, as a sign of the long remembrance this great saint would leave amongst men.
Upright, but thunderstruck, Paphnutius saw and heard nothing more.One word alone rang in his ears, "Thais is dying!" The thought had never occurred to him.Twenty years had he contemplated a mummy's head, and yet the idea that death would close the eyes of Thais astonished him hopelessly.
"Thais is dying!" An incomprehensible saying! "Thais is dying!" In those three words what a new and terrible sense! "Thais is dying!"Then why the sun, the flowers, the brooks, and all creation? "Thais is dying!" What good was all the universe? Suddenly he sprang forward.
"To see her again, to see her once more!" He began to run.He knew not where he was, or whither he went, but instinct conducted him with unerring certainty; he went straight to the Nile.A swarm of sails covered the upper waters of the river.He sprang on board a barque manned by Nubians, and lying in the forepart of the boat, his eyes devouring space, he cried, in grief and rage--"Fool, fool, that I was, not to have possessed Thais whilst there was yet time! Fool to have believed that there was anything else in the world but her! Oh, madness! I dreamed of God, of the salvation of my soul, of life eternal--as if all that counted for anything when I had seen Thais! Why did I not feel that blessed eternity was in a single kiss of that woman, and that without her life was senseless, and no more than an evil dream? Oh, stupid fool! thou hast seen her, and thou hast desired the good things of the other world! Oh, coward! thou hast seen her, and thou hast feared God! God! heaven! what are they? And what have they to offer thee which are worth the least tittle of that which she would have given thee? Oh, miserable, senseless fool, who sought divine goodness elsewhere than on the lips of Thais! What hand was upon thy eyes? Cursed be he who blinded thee then! Thou couldst have bought, at the price of thy damnation, one moment of her love, and thou hast not done it! She opened to thee her arms--flesh mingled with the perfume of flowers--and thou wast not engulfed in the unspeakable enchantments of her unveiled breast.Thou hast listened to the jealous voice which said to thee, 'Refrain!' Dupe, dupe, miserable dupe! Oh, regrets! Oh, remorse! Oh, despair! Not to have the joy to carry to hell the memory of that never-to-be-forgotten hour, and to cry to God, 'Burn my flesh, dry up all the blood in my veins, break all my bones, thou canst not take from me the remembrance which sweetens and refreshes me for ever and ever!'...Thais is dying!
Preposterous God, if thou knewest how I laugh at Thy hell! Thais is dying, and she will never be mine--never! never!"And as the boat came down the river with the current, he remained whole days lying on his face, and repeating--"Never! never! never!"
Then, at the idea that she had given herself to others, and not to him; that she had poured forth an ocean of love, and he had not wetted his lips therein, he stood up, savagely wild, and howled with grief.