登陆注册
38606100000054

第54章

I have mentioned that my obliging friend the amoureuxfou handed me over to the doorkeeper of the citadel.I should add that I was at first committed to the wife of this functionary,a stout peasantwoman,who took a key down from a nail,conducted me to a postern door,and ushered me into the presence of her husband.Having just begun his rounds with a party of four persons,he was not many steps in advance.Iadded myself perforce to this party,which was not brilliantly composed,except that two of its members were gendarmes in full toggery,who announced in the course of our tour that they had been stationed for a year at Carcassonne,and had never before had the curiosity to come up to the Cite.There was something brilliant,certainly,in that.The gardien was an extraordinarily typical little Frenchman,who struck me even more forcibly than the wonders of the inner enceinte;and as I am bound to assume,at whatever cost to my literary vanity,that there is not the slightest danger of his reading these remarks,I may treat him as public property.With his diminutive stature and his perpendicular spirit,his flushed face,expressive protuberant eyes,high peremptory voice,extreme volubility,lucidity,and neatness of utterance,he reminded me of the gentry who figure in the revolutions of his native land.If he was not a fierce little Jacobin,he ought to have been,for I am sure there were many men of his pattern on the Committee of Public Safety.He knew absolutely what he was about,understood the place thoroughly,and constantly reminded his audience of what he himself had done in the way of excavations and reparations.He described himself as the brother of the architect of the work actually going forward (that which has been done since the death of M.ViolletleDuc,I suppose he meant),and this fact was more illustrative than all the others.It reminded me,as one is reminded at every turn,of the democratic conditions of French life:a man of the people,with a wife en bonnet,extremely intelligent,full of special knowledge,and yet remaining essentially of the people,and showing his intelligence with a kind of ferocity,of defiance.Such a personage helps one to understand the red radicalism of France,the revolutions,the barricades,the sinister passion for theories.(I do not,of course,take upon myself to say that the individual I describe who can know nothing of the liberties I am taking with him is actually devoted to these ideals;I only mean that many such devotees must have his qualities.)In just the nuance that Ihave tried to indicate here,it is a terrible pattern of man.Permeated in a high degree by civilization,it is yet untouched by the desire which one finds in the Englishman,in proportion as he rises in the world,to approximate to the figure of the gentleman.On the other hand,a nettete,a faculty of exposition,such as the English gentleman is rarely either blessed or cursed with.

This brilliant,this suggestive warden of Carcassonne marched us about for an hour,haranguing,explaining,illustrating,as he went;it was a complete little lecture,such as might have been delivered at the Lowell Institute,on the manger in which a firstrate place forte used to be attacked and defended Our peregrinations made it very clear that Carcassone was impregnable;it is impossible to imagine,without having seen them,such refinements of immurement,such ingenuities of resistance.We passed along the battlements and chemins de ronde,ascended and descended towers,crawled under arches,peered out of loopholes,lowered ourselves into dungeons,halted in all sorts of tight places,while the purpose of something or other was described to us.It was very curious,very interesting;above all,it was very pictorial,and involved perpetual peeps into the little crooked,crumbling,sunny,grassy,empty Cite.In places,as you stand upon it,the great towered and embattled enceinte produces an illusion;it looks as if it were still equipped and defended.One vivid challenge,at any rate,it flings down before you;it calls upon you to make up your mind on the matter of restoration.For myself,I have no hesitation;Iprefer in every case the ruined,however ruined,to the reconstructed,however splendid.What is left is more precious than what is added:the one is history,the other is fiction;and I like the former the better of the two,it is so much more romantic.One is positive,so far as it goes;the other fills up the void with things more dead than the void itself,inasmuch as they have never had life.After that I am free to say that the restoration of Carcassonne is a splendid achievement.The little custodian dismissed us at last,after having,as usual,inducted us into the inevitable repository of photographs.These photographs are a great nuisance,all over the Midi.They are exceedingly bad,for the most part;and the worst those in the form of the hideous little albumpanorama are thrust upon you at every turn.They are a kind of tax that you must pay;the best way is to pay to be let off.It was not to be denied that there was a relief in separating from our accomplished guide,whose manner of imparting information reminded me of the energetic process by which I have seen mineral waters bottled.All this while the afternoon had grown more lovely;the sunset had deepened,the horizon of hills grown purple;the mass of the Canigou became more delicate,yet more distinct.The day had so far faded that the interior of the little cathedral was wrapped in twilight,into which the glowing windows projected something of their color.

This church has high beauty and value,but I will spare the reader a presentation of details which I myself had no opportunity to master.It consists of a romanesque nave,of the end of the eleventh century,and a Gothic choir and transepts of the beginning of the fourteenth;and,shut up in its citadel like a precious casket in a cabinet,it seems or seemed at that hour to have a sort of double sanctity.After leaving it and passing out of the two circles of walls,I treated myself,in the most infatuated manner,to another walk round the Cite.It is certainly this general impression that is most striking,the impression from outside,where the whole place detaches itself at once from the landscape.In the warm southern dusk it looked more than ever like a city in a fairytale.To make the thing perfect,a white young moon,in its first quarter,came out and hung just over the dark silhouette.It was hard to come away,to incommode one's self for anything so vulgar as a railwaytrain;Iwould gladly have spent the evening in revolving round the walls of Carcassonne.But I had in a measure engaged to proceed to Narborme,and there was a certain magic that name which gave me strength,Narbonne,the richest city in Roman Gaul.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 渡己录

    渡己录

    我的师傅只是一个能力平平的老太太我在一次次的惊险中寻找自己要做的事情我没能力拯救世界也没能力拯救自己灭鬼杀兽也算拯救别人了吧
  • 梦幻西游之异世侠缘

    梦幻西游之异世侠缘

    系统全新格式化,所罗等人意识被尽数封印与寄体之中。全新的异世大陆,来自梦幻西游全方位地理的修真世界。性格丕变,冷酷无情的所罗,要如何与多愁善感的热血少年剑侠客周旋?让剑侠客帮他找回失散的伙计?要如何让他相信养育自己的楚恋依乃是一名无耻之徒?梦幻西游之跨服战场系列第三部《梦幻西游之异世侠缘》,同学们走进来,与我、与剑侠客一同踏上浩浩修仙路!
  • 高达之可能的未来

    高达之可能的未来

    意外增加的人、被收养的孤儿,他的出现让历史的齿轮开始出现了一点点的偏差,未来将何去何从?又会出现怎样的未来可能的未来正在出现………………PS:此为UC系的作品,不喜欢的请离开。(老赵出品、规矩还是一样,更新……但是会想尽办法完本。)
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 机器人简史

    机器人简史

    深蓝的星空,是否有外星文明的存在?答案是一定会有。他们为什么和我们没有交集?或许在我们凝望星空的时候,他们也在凝望着我们,我们都在孤独的宇宙中守望着。
  • 穿越之换种人生

    穿越之换种人生

    ********这辈子不想那么委屈。********但是不是只有能承受失去才能享受得到?********“不管别人怎么说,我认为我们之间是爱。”********陪伴不是最长情的告白么?********每个人,遇见,是最大的幸运。
  • 万古丹神

    万古丹神

    叶辰曾是一名天才,却因一些原因,修为五年都未有丝毫进展。因此,天才瞬间成为废物,在无尽的嘲讽谩骂羞辱中,少年的心从未动摇过。无意间得到丹神传承,困扰自身修炼无法寸进的原因,也随之解决,少年重夺天才光环,展现自身妖孽天赋。
  • 皓月至尊

    皓月至尊

    皓月照云间、仗剑执天涯。醉馀清夜梦、卧时留余香。正当少年时、立志万丈峰。花露月明残、飞剑斩恩仇。
  • 光明死了都要爱

    光明死了都要爱

    “柳知业我爱光明很爱很爱。”“傻丫头,你爱光明光明也爱你啊,你爱什么什么都会眷顾你。”