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qissyumm

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[交流] TALE OF TWO CITIES

by Charles Dickens 1859
                                 BOOK THE FIRST
                                RECALLED TO LIFE
  I
  THE PERIOD

  IT WAS the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the
age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of
belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light,
it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the
winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing
before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going
direct the other way- in short, the period was so far like the present
period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being
received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of
comparison only.
  There were a king with a large jaw and a queen with a plain face, on
the throne of England; there were a king with a large jaw and a
queen with a fair face, on the throne of France. In both countries
it was clearer than crystal to the lords of the State preserves of
loaves and fishes, that things in general were settled for ever.
  It was the year of Our Lord one thousand seven hundred and
seventy-five. Spiritual revelations were conceded to England at that
favoured period, as at this. Mrs. Southcott had recently attained
her five-and-twentieth blessed birthday, of whom a prophetic private
in the Life Guards had heralded the sublime appearance by announcing
that arrangements were made for the swallowing up of London and
Westminster. Even the Cock-lane ghost had been laid only a round dozen
of years, after rapping out its messages, as the spirits of this
very year last past (supernaturally deficient in originality) rapped
out theirs. Mere messages in the earthly order of events had lately
come to the English Crown and People, from a congress of British
subjects in America: which, strange to relate, have proved more
important to the human race than any communications yet received
through any of the chickens of the Cock-lane brood.
  France, less favoured on the whole as to matters spiritual than
her sister of the shield and trident, rolled with exceeding smoothness
down hill, making paper money and spending it. Under the guidance of
her Christian pastors, she entertained herself, besides, with such
humane achievements as sentencing a youth to have his hands cut off,
his tongue torn out with pincers, and his body burned alive, because
he had not kneeled down in the rain to do honour to a dirty procession
of monks which passed within his view, at a distance of some fifty
or sixty yards. It is likely enough that, rooted in the woods of
France and Norway, there were growing trees, when that sufferer was
put to death, already marked by the Woodman, Fate, to come down and be
sawn into boards, to make a certain movable framework with a sack
and a knife in it, terrible in history. It is likely enough that in
the rough outhouses of some tillers of the heavy lands adjacent to
Paris, there were sheltered from the weather that very day, rude
carts, bespattered with rustic mire, snuffed about by pigs, and
roosted in by poultry, which the Farmer, Death, had already set
apart to be his tumbrils of the Revolution. But that Woodman and
that Farmer, though they work unceasingly, work silently and no one
heard them as they went about with muffled tread: the rather,
forasmuch as to entertain any suspicion that they were awake, was to
be atheistical and traitorous.
  In England, there was scarcely an amount of order and protection
to justify much national boasting. Daring burglaries by armed men, and
highway robberies, took place in the capital itself every night;
families were publicly cautioned not to go out of town without
removing their furniture to upholsterers' warehouses for security; the
highwayman in the dark was a City tradesman in the light, and, being
recognised and challenged by his fellow-tradesman whom he stopped in
his character of "the Captain," gallantly shot him through the head
and rode away; the mail was waylaid by seven robbers, and the guard
shot three dead, and then got shot dead himself by the other four, "in
consequence of the failure of his ammunition:" after which the mail
was robbed in peace; that magnificent potentate, the Lord Mayor of
London, was made to stand and deliver on Turnham Green, by one
highwayman, who despoiled the illustrious creature in sight of all his
retinue; prisoners in London gaols fought battles with their
turkeys, and the majesty of the law fired blunderbusses in among them,
loaded with rounds of shot and ball; thieves snipped off diamond
crosses from the necks of noble lords at Court drawing-rooms;
musketeers went into St. Giles's, to search for contraband goods,
and the mob fired on the musketeers, and the musketeers fir on the
mob, and nobody thought any of these occurrences much out of the
common way. In the midst of them, the hangman, ever busy and ever
worse than useless, was in constant requisition; now, stringing up
long rows of miscellaneous criminals; now, hanging a housebreaker on
Saturday who had been taken on Tuesday; now, burning people in the
hand at Newgate by the dozen, and now burning pamphlets at the door of
Westminster Hall; to-day, taking the life of an atrocious murderer,
and to-morrow of a wretched pilferer who had robbed a farmer's boy
of sixpence.
  All these things, and a thousand like them, came to pass in and
close upon the dear old year one thousand seven hundred and
seventy-five. Environed by them, while the Woodman and the Farmer
worked unheeded, those two of the large jaws, and those other two of
the plain and the fair faces, trod with stir enough, and carried their
divine rights with a high hand. Thus did the year one thousand seven
hundred and seventy-five conduct their Greatnesses, and myriads of
small creatures- the creatures of this chronicle among the rest- along
the roads that lay before them.
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qissyumm

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III
  THE NIGHT SHADOWS

  A WONDERFUL FACT to reflect upon, that every human creature is
constituted to be that profound secret and mystery to every other. A
solemn consideration, when I enter a great city by night, that every
one of those darkly clustered houses encloses its own secret; that
every room in every one of them encloses its own secret; that every
beating heart in the hundreds of thousands of breasts there, is, in
some of its imaginings, a secret to the heart nearest it! Something of
the awfulness, even of Death itself, is referable to this. No more can
I turn the leaves of this dear book that I loved, and vainly hope in
time to read it all. No more can I look into the depths of this
unfathomable water, wherein, as momentary lights glanced into it, I
have had glimpses of buried treasure and other things submerged. It
was appointed that the book should shut with a spring, for ever and
for ever, when I had read but a page. It was appointed that the
water should be locked in an eternal frost, when the light was playing
on its surface, and I stood in ignorance on the shore. My friend is
dead, my neighbour is dead, my love, the darling of my soul, is
dead; it is the inexorable consolidation and perpetuation of the
secret that was always in that individuality, and which I shall
carry in mine to my life's end. In any of the burial-places of this
city through which I pass, is there a sleeper more inscrutable than
its busy inhabitants are, in their innermost personality, to me, or
than I am to them?
  As to this, his natural and not to be alienated inheritance, the
messenger on horseback had exactly the same possessions as the King,
the first Minister of State, or the richest merchant in London. So
with the three passengers shut up in the narrow compass of one
lumbering old mail coach; they were mysteries to one another, as
complete as if each had been in his own coach and six, or his own
coach and sixty, with the breadth of a county between him and the
next.
  The messenger rode back at an easy trot, stopping pretty often at
alehouses by the way to drink, but evincing a tendency to keep his own
counsel, and to keep his hat cocked over his eyes. He had eyes that
assorted very well with that decoration, being of a surface black,
with no depth in the colour or form, and much too near together- as if
they were afraid of being found out in something, singly, if they kept
too far apart. They had a sinister expression, under an old cocked-hat
like a three-cornered spittoon, and over a great muffler for the
chin and throat, which descended nearly to the wearer's knees. When he
stopped for drink, he moved this muffler with his left hand, only
while he poured his liquor in with his right; as soon as that was
done, he muffled again.
  "No, Jerry, no!" said the messenger, harping on one theme as he
rode. "It wouldn't do for you, Jerry. Jerry, you honest tradesman,
it wouldn't suit your line of business! Recalled-! Bust me if I
don't think he'd been a drinking!"
  His message perplexed his mind to that degree that he was fain,
several times, to take off his hat to scratch his head. Except on
the crown, which was raggedly bald, he had stiff, black hair, standing
jaggedly all over it, and growing down hill almost to his broad, blunt
nose. It was so like Smith's work, so much more like the top of a
strongly spiked wall than a head of hair, that the best of players
at leap-frog might have declined him, as the most dangerous man in the
world to go over.
  While he trotted back with the message he was to deliver to the
night watchman in his box at the door of Tellson's Bank, by Temple
Bar, who was to deliver it to greater authorities within, the
shadows of the night took such shapes to him as arose out of the
message, and took such shapes to the mare as arose out of her
private topics of uneasiness. They seemed to be numerous, for she
shied at every shadow on the road.
  What time, the mail-coach lumbered, jolted, rattled, and bumped upon
its tedious way, with its three fellow-inscrutables inside. To whom,
likewise, the shadows of the night revealed themselves, in the forms
their dozing eyes and wandering thoughts suggested.
  Tellson's Bank had a run upon it in the mail. As the bank passenger-
with an arm drawn through the leathern strap, which did what lay in it
to keep him from pounding against the next passenger, and driving
him into his corner, whenever the coach got a special jolt- nodded in
his place, with half-shut eyes, the little coach-windows, and the
coach-lamp dimly gleaming through them, and the bulky bundle of
opposite passenger, became the bank, and did a great stroke of
business. The rattle of the harness was the chink of money, and more
drafts were honoured in five minutes than even Tellson's with all
its foreign and home connection, ever paid in thrice the time. Then
the strong-rooms underground, at Tellson's, with such of their
valuable stores and secrets as were known to the passenger (and it was
not a little that he knew about them), opened before him, and he
went in among them with the great keys and the feebly-burning
candle, and found them safe, and strong, and sound, and still, just as
he had last seen them.
  But, though the bank was almost always with him, and though the
coach (in a confused way, like the presence of pain under an opiate)
was always with him, there was another current of impression that
never ceased to run, all through the night. He was on his way to dig
some one out of a grave.
  Now, which of the multitude of faces that showed themselves before
him was the true face of the buried person, the shadows of the night
did not indicate; but they were all the faces of a man of
five-and-forty by years, and they differed principally in the passions
they expressed, and in the ghastliness of their worn and wasted state.
Pride, contempt, defiance, stubbornness, submission, lamentation,
succeeded one another; so did varieties of sunken cheek, cadaverous
colour, emaciated hands and figures. But the face was in the main
one face, and every head was prematurely white. A hundred times the
dozing passenger inquired of this spectre:
  "Buried how long?"
  The answer was always the same: "Almost eighteen years."
  "You had abandoned all hope of being dug out?"
  "Long ago."
  "You know that you are recalled to life?"
  "They tell me so."
  "I hope you care to live?"
  "I can't say."
  "Shall I show her to you? Will you come and see her?"
  The answers to this question were various and contradictory.
Sometimes the broken reply was, "Wait! It would kill me if I saw her
too soon." Sometimes, it was given in a tender rain of tears, and then
it was, "Take me to her." Sometimes it was staring and bewildered, and
then it was, "I don't know her. I don't understand."
  After such imaginary discourse, the passenger in his fancy would
dig, and dig, dig- now with a spade, now with a great key, now with
his hands- to dig this wretched creature out. Got out at last, with
earth hanging about his face and hair, he would suddenly fall away
to dust. The passenger would then start to himself, and lower the
window, to get the reality of mist and rain on his cheek.
  Yet even when his eyes were opened on the mist and rain, on the
moving patch of light from the lamps, and the hedge at the roadside
retreating by jerks, the night shadows outside the coach would fall
into the train of the night shadows within. The real Banking-house
by Temple Bar, the real business of the past day, the real strong
rooms, the real express sent after him, and the real message returned,
would all be there. Out of the midst of them, the ghostly face would
rise, and he would accost it again.
  "Buried how long?"
  "Almost eighteen years."
  "I hope you care to live?"
  "I can't say."
  Dig- dig- dig- until an impatient movement from one of the two
passengers would admonish him to pull up the window, draw his arm
securely through the leathern strap, and speculate upon the two
slumbering forms, until his mind lost its hold of them, and they again
slid away into the bank and the grave.
  "Buried how long?"
  "Almost eighteen years."
  "You had abandoned all hope of being dug out?"
  "Long ago."
  The words were still in his hearing as just spoken- distinctly in
his hearing as ever spoken words had been in his life- when the
weary passenger started to the consciousness of daylight, and found
that the shadows of the night were gone.
  He lowered the window, and looked out at the rising sun. There was a
ridge of ploughed land, with a plough upon it where it had been left
last night when the horses were unyoked; beyond, a quiet coppice-wood,
in which many leaves of burning red and golden yellow still remained
upon the trees. Though the earth was cold and wet, the sky was
clear, and the sun rose bright, placid, and beautiful.
  "Eighteen years!" said the passenger, looking at the sun.
"Gracious Creator of day! To be buried alive for eighteen years!"
3楼2006-09-29 21:12:03
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qissyumm

铁虫 (初入文坛)

II
  THE MAIL

  IT WAS the Dover road that lay, on a Friday night late in
November, before the first of the persons with whom this history has
business. The Dover road lay, as to him, beyond the Dover mail, as
it lumbered up Shooter's Hill. He walked up hill in the mire by the
side of the mail, as the rest of the passengers did; not because
they had the least relish for walking exercise, under the
circumstances, but because the hill, and the harness, and the mud, and
the mail, were all so heavy, that the horses had three times already
come to a stop, besides once drawing the coach across the road, with
the mutinous intent of taking it back to Blackheath. Reins and whip
and coachman and guard, however, in combination, had read that article
of war which forbade a purpose otherwise strongly in favour of the
argument, that some brute animals are endued with Reason; and the team
had capitulated and returned to their duty.
  With drooping heads and tremulous tails, they mashed their way
through the thick mud, floundering and stumbling between whiles, as if
they were falling to pieces at the larger joints. As often as the
driver rested them and brought them to a stand, with a wary "Wo-ho!
so-ho-then!" the near leader violently shook his head and everything
upon it- like an unusually emphatic horse, denying that the coach
could be got up the hill. Whenever the leader made this rattle, the
passenger started, as a nervous passenger might, and was disturbed
in mind.
  There was a steaming mist in all the hollows, and it had roamed in
its forlornness up the hill, like an evil spirit, seeking rest and
finding none. A clammy and intensely cold mist, it made its slow way
through the air in ripples that visibly followed and overspread one
another, as the waves of an unwholesome sea might do. It was dense
enough to shut out everything from the light of the coach-lamps but
these its own workings, and a few yards of road; and the reek of the
labouring horses steamed into it, as if they had made it all.
  Two other passengers, besides the one, were plodding up the hill
by the side of the mail. All three were wrapped to the cheekbones
and over the cars, and wore jack-boots. Not one of the three could
have said, from anything he saw, what either of the other two was
like; and each was hidden under almost as many wrappers from the
eyes of the mind, as from the eyes of the body, of his two companions.
In those days, travellers were very shy of being confidential on a
short notice, for anybody on the road might be a robber or in league
with robbers. As to the latter, when every posting-house and ale-house
could produce somebody in "the Captain's" pay, ranging from the
landlord to the lowest stable nondescript, it was the likeliest
thing upon the cards. So the guard of the Dover mail thought to
himself, that Friday night in November, one thousand seven hundred and
seventy-five, lumbering up Shooter's Hill, as he stood on his own
particular perch behind the mail, beating his feet, and keeping an eye
and a hand on the arm-chest before him, where a loaded blunderbuss lay
at the top of six or eight loaded horse-pistols, deposited on a
substratum of cutlass.
  The Dover mail was in its usual genial position that the guard
suspected the passengers, the passengers suspected one another and the
guard, they all suspected everybody else, and the coachman was sure of
nothing but the horses; as to which cattle he could with a clear
conscience have taken his oath on the two Testaments that they were
not fit for the journey.
  "Wo-ho!" said the coachman. "So, then! One more pull and you're at
the top and be damned to you, for I have had trouble enough to get you
to it!- Joe!"
  "Halloa!" the guard replied.
  "What o'clock do you make it, Joe?"
  "Ten minutes, good, past eleven."
  "My blood!" ejaculated the vexed coachman, "and not atop of
Shooter's yet! Tst! Yah! Get on with you!"
  The emphatic horse, cut short by the whip in a most decided
negative, made a decided scramble for it, and the three other horses
followed suit. Once more, the Dover mail struggled on, with the
jack-boots of its passengers squashing along by its side. They had
stopped when the coach stopped, and they kept close company with it.
If any one of the three had had the hardihood to propose to another to
walk on a little ahead into the mist and darkness, he would have put
himself in a fair way of getting shot instantly as a highwayman.
  The last burst carried the mail to the summit of the hill. The
horses stopped to breathe again, and the guard got down to skid the
wheel for the descent, and open the coach-door to let the passengers
in.
  "Tst! Joe!" cried the coachman in a warning voice, looking down from
his box.
  "What do you say, Tom?"
  They both listened.
  "I say a horse at a canter coming up, Joe."
  "I say a horse at a gallop, Tom," returned the guard, leaving his
hold of the door, and mounting nimbly to his place. "Gentlemen! In the
king's name, all of you!"
  With this hurried adjuration, he cocked his blunderbuss, and stood
on the offensive.
  The passenger booked by this history, was on the coach-step, getting
in; the two other passengers were close behind him, and about to
follow. He remained on the step, half in the coach and half out of;
they remained in the road below him. They all looked from the coachman
to the guard, and from the guard to the coachman, and listened. The
coachman looked back and the guard looked back, and even the
emphatic leader pricked up his ears and looked back, without
contradicting.
  The stillness consequent on the cessation of the rumbling and
labouring of the coach, added to the stillness of the night, made it
very quiet indeed. The panting of the horses communicated a
tremulous motion to the coach, as if it were in a state of
agitation. The hearts of the passengers beat loud enough perhaps to be
heard; but at any rate, the quiet pause was audibly expressive of
people out of breath, and holding the breath, and having the pulses
quickened by expectation.
  The sound of a horse at a gallop came fast and furiously up the
hill.
  "So-ho!" the guard sang out, as loud as he could roar. "Yo there!
Stand! I shall fire!"
  The pace was suddenly checked, and, with much splashing and
floundering, a man's voice called from the mist, "Is that the Dover
mail?"
  "Never you mind what it is!" the guard retorted. "What are you?"
  "Is that the Dover mail?"
  "Why do you want to know?"
  "I want a passenger, if it is."
  "What passenger?"
  "Mr. Jarvis Lorry."
  Our booked passenger showed in a moment that it was his name. The
guard, the coachman, and the two other passengers eyed him
distrustfully.
  "Keep where you are," the guard called to the voice in the mist,
"because, if I should make a mistake, it could never be set right in
your lifetime. Gentleman of the name of Lorry answer straight."
  "What is the matter?" asked the passenger, then, with mildly
quavering speech. "Who wants me? Is it Jerry?"
  ("I don't like Jerry's voice, if it is Jerry," growled the guard
to himself. "He's hoarser than suits me, is Jerry."
  "Yes, Mr. Lorry."
  "What is the matter?"
  "A despatch sent after you from over yonder. T. and Co."
  "I know this messenger, guard," said Mr. Lorry, getting down into
the road- assisted from behind more swiftly than politely by the other
two passengers, who immediately scrambled into the coach, shut the
door, and pulled up the window. "He may come close; there's nothing
wrong."
  "I hope there ain't, but I can't make so 'Nation sure of that," said
the guard, in gruff soliloquy. "Hallo you!"
  "Well! And hallo you!" said Jerry, more hoarsely than before.
  "Come on at a footpace! d'ye mind me? And if you've got holsters
to that saddle o' yourn, don't let me see your hand go nigh 'em. For
I'm a devil at a quick mistake, and when I make one it takes the
form of Lead. So now let's look at you."
  The figures of a horse and rider came slowly through the eddying
mist, and came to the side of the mail, where the passenger stood. The
rider stooped, and, casting up his eyes at the guard, handed the
passenger a small folded paper. The rider's horse was blown, and
both horse and rider were covered with mud, from the hoofs of the
horse to the hat of the man.
  "Guard!" said the passenger, in a tone of quiet business confidence.
  The watchful guard, with his right hand at the stock of his raised
blunderbuss, his left at the barrel, and his eye on the horseman,
answered curtly, "Sir."
  "There is nothing to apprehend. I belong to Tellson's Bank. You must
know Tellson's Bank in London. I am going to Paris on business. A
crown to drink. I may read this?"
  "If so be as you're quick, sir."
  He opened it in the light of the coach-lamp on that side, and
read- first to himself and then aloud: "'Wait at Dover for Mam'selle.'
It's not long, you see, guard. Jerry, say that my answer was, RECALLED
TO LIFE."
  Jerry started in his saddle. "That's a Blazing strange answer, too,"
said he, at his hoarsest.
  "Take that message back, and they will know that I received this, as
well as if I wrote. Make the best of your way. Good night."
  With those words the passenger opened the coach-door and got in; not
at all assisted by his fellow-passengers, who had expeditiously
secreted their watches and purses in their boots, and were now
making a general pretence of being asleep. With no more definite
purpose than to escape the hazard of originating any other kind of
action.
  The coach lumbered on again, with heavier wreaths of mist closing
round it as it began the descent. The guard soon replaced his
blunderbuss in his arm-chest, and, having looked to the rest of its
contents, and having looked to the supplementary pistols that he
wore in his belt, looked to a smaller chest beneath his seat, in which
there were a few smith's tools, a couple of torches, and a tinder-box.
For he was furnished with that completeness that if the coach-lamps
had been blown and stormed out, which did occasionally happen, he
had only to shut himself up inside, keep the flint and steel sparks
well off the straw, and get a light with tolerable safety and ease (if
he were lucky) in five minutes.
  "Tom!" softly over the coach roof.
  "Hallo, Joe."
  "Did you hear the message?"
  "I did, Joe."
  "What did you make of it, Tom?"
  "Nothing at all, Joe."
  "That's a coincidence, too," the guard mused, "for I made the same
of it myself."
  Jerry, left alone in the mist and darkness, dismounted meanwhile,
not only to ease his spent horse, but to wipe the mud from his face,
and shake the wet out of his hat-brim, which might be capable of
holding about half a gallon. After standing with the bridle over his
heavily-splashed arm, until the wheels of the mail were no longer
within hearing and the night was quite still again, he turned to
walk down the hill.
  "After that there gallop from Temple Bar, old lady, I won't trust
your fore-legs till I get you on the level," said this hoarse
messenger, glancing at his mare. "'Recalled to life.' That's a Blazing
strange message. Much of that wouldn't do for you, Jerry! I say,
Jerry! You'd be in a Blazing bad way, if recalling to life was to come
into fashion, Jerry!"
2楼2006-09-29 21:10:36
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