登陆注册
22903500000186

第186章 BOOK ⅩⅠ(15)

Beneath him was the abyss,a fall of full two hundred feet and the pavement.In this dreadful situation the Archdeacon said not a word,breathed not a groan.He writhed upon the gargoyle,****** incredible efforts to climb up it;but his hand slipped on the smooth granite,his feet scraped the blackened wall without gaining a foothold.Those who have ascended the towers of Note-Dame know that the stone-work swells out immediately beneath the balustrade.It was on the retreating curve of this ridge that the wretched priest was exhausting his efforts.It was not even with a perpendicular wall that he was contending,but with one that sloped away under him.

Quasimodo had only to stretch out a hand to draw him out of the gulf,but he never so much as looked at him.He was absorbed in watching the Grève;watching the gibbet;watching the gipsy girl.

The hunchback was leaning,with his elbows on the balustrade,in the very place where the Archdeacon had been a moment before;and there,keeping his eye fixed on the only object that existed for him at that moment,he stood mute and motionless as a statue,save for the long stream of tears that flowed from that eye which,until then,had never shed but one.

Meanwhile the Archdeacon panted and struggled,drops of agony pouring from his bald forehead,his nails torn and bleeding on the stones,his knees grazed against the wall.He heard his soutane,which had caught on a projection of the stone rain-pipe,tear away at each movement he made.To complete his misfortune,the gutter itself ended in a leaden pipe which he could feel slowly bending under the weight of his body,and the wretched man told himself that when his hands should be worn out with fatigue,when his cassock should be rent asunder,when that leaden pipe should be completely bent,he must of necessity fall,and terror gripped his vitals.Once or twice he had wildly looked down upon a sort of narrow ledge formed,some ten feet below him,by the projection of the sculpture,and he implored Heaven,from the bottom of his agonized soul,to be allowed to spend the remainder of his life on that space of two feet square,though it were to last a hundred years.Once he ventured to look down into the Place,but when he lifted his head again his eyes were closed and his hair stood erect.

There was something appalling in the silence of these two men.While the Archdeacon hung in agony but a few feet below him,Quasimodo gazed upon the Place de Grève and wept.

The Archdeacon,finding that his struggles to raise himself only served to bend the one feeble point of support that remained to him,at length resolved to remain still.There he hung,clinging to the rain-pipe,scarcely drawing breath,with no other motion but the mechanical contractions of the body we feel in dreams when we imagine we are falling.His eyes were fixed and wide in a stare of pain and bewilderment.Little by little he felt himself going;his fingers slipped upon the stone;he was conscious more and more of the weakness of his arm and the weight of his body;the piece of lead strained ever farther downward.

Beneath him—frightful vision—he saw the sharp roof of Saint-Jean-le-Rond,like a card bent double.One by one he looked at the impassive sculptured figures round the tower,suspended,like himself,over the abyss,but without terror for themselves or pity for him.All about him was stone—the grinning monsters before his eyes;below,in the Place,the pavement;over his head,Quasimodo.

Down in the Parvis a group of worthy citizens were staring curiously upward,and wondering what madman it could be amusing himself after so strange a fashion.The priest could hear them say,for their voices rose clear and shrill in the quiet air:'He will certainly break his neck!'

Quasimodo was weeping.

At length the priest,foaming with impotent rage and terror,felt that all was unavailing,but gathered what strength still remained to him for one final effort.He drew himself up by the gutter,thrust himself out from the wall by both knees,dug his hands in a cleft of the stone-work,and managed to scramble up about one foot higher;but the force he was obliged to use made the leaden beak that supported him bend suddenly downward,and the strain rent his cassock through.Then,finding everything giving way under him,having only his benumbed and powerless hands by which to cling to anything,the wretched man closed his eyes,loosened his hold,and dropped.

Quasimodo watched him falling.A fall from such a height is rarely straight.The priest launched into space,fell at first head downward and his arms outstretched,then turned over on himself several times.The wind drove him against the roof of a house,where the unhappy man got his first crashing shock.He was not dead,however,and the hunchback saw him grasp at the gable to save himself;but the slope was too sheer,his strength was exhausted:he slid rapidly down the roof,like a loosened tile,and rebounded on to the pavement.There he lay motionless at last.

Quasimodo returned his gaze to the gipsy girl,whose body,dangling in its white robe from the gibbet,he beheld from afar quivering in the last agonies of death;then he let it drop once more on the Archdeacon,lying in a shapeless heap at the foot of the tower,and with a sigh that heaved his deep chest,he murmured:'Oh!all that I have ever loved!'

Chapter 3-The Marriage of Phbus

Towards the evening of that day,when the bishop's officers of justice came to remove the shattered remains of the Archdeacon from the Parvis,Quasimodo had disappeared.

同类推荐
  • 过去世佛分卫经

    过去世佛分卫经

    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。
  • 仁斋直指方论

    仁斋直指方论

    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。
  • 悔逸斋笔乘

    悔逸斋笔乘

    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。
  • 金刚经灵验传

    金刚经灵验传

    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。
  • 智者大师别传注

    智者大师别传注

    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。
热门推荐
  • TFBOYS爱恨纠纷

    TFBOYS爱恨纠纷

    三位小鲜肉与他们的三位女神级搭档,发生的爱恨纠纷他们的会发生什么样的火花和什么样的爱情呢。他们最终能在一起吗?中间会出现什么样的人来打乱他们的爱情呢。(我不太会写明星的故事,别笑我哟。)
  • 呐呐画漫画吧

    呐呐画漫画吧

    虾壳,这漫画有毒!虾壳老贼,你把加代还给悟,我们要脱粉!虾壳老贼,你把日向翔阳还给影山飞雄,我们要脱粉!虾壳老贼,兵长好帅,我要嫁给他,我们还是要脱粉!虾壳老贼,我们不脱粉了,求你把猎人画完啊!你的漫画有毒啊,我们离不开怎么办?
  • 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!
  • 楚江红

    楚江红

    二十年前,惨遭灭门,如今复仇者归来。。。。。。
  • 激情成就卓越

    激情成就卓越

    我们每个人只要迈出一小步,就能让我们平凡无奇的生活变得卓尔不凡。我们也能构建更好的人脉关系,发挥想象力,无需花费一分钱就能为他人创造价值,并塑造新的自我。按照书中的原则行事,并向身边的“弗雷德们”学习,你也能让自己的职业生涯和生活变得多姿多彩。这就是那本告诉你该怎么做的...
  • 邪王的懒妃

    邪王的懒妃

    懒人系列终回本:常言,偷得浮生半日懒。当不能偷得浮生又想懒时怎么办?当然是光明正大地懒啦!从小懒到大的庄书兰就是这样想的!当前世成为记忆时,庄书兰更是决定将这懒人做到底。管他冷嘲热讽也好,闲言碎语也罢,她庄书兰不会因此而改变!且看懒人如何笑傲官场沉浮,冷看朝野纷乱!————情景一:“美男,来,给本姑娘笑一个!”一手托起某男精致的下巴,拇指轻刮着脸颊,“啧啧,这肌肤,比姐姐我的还要好!哎!平日里用的是哪个牌子的保养品啊?”……某男呆状,第一次有种叫耻辱情绪袭上了心头——他居然被一个还未并笄的小女孩子给调戏了!情景二:“跟了本宫,他日你就是一国之母,光宗耀祖!”某男拦下某女,半带着威胁地喝着。“光宗耀祖这件事,不归臣管,你去找别人吧!”轻弹去不知何时落在肩膀上的树叶儿,微微一笑,“时辰不早了,臣得回府休息了!”情景三:“你想从这游戏中退出?”媚眼一抛,却让人不寒而颤。“我还有权力说不吗?”某女惨淡一笑,带着狡黠,“既然是你将我带入这游戏中,你怎么可以置身事外?所以,我们成亲吧!”情景四:“……新娘请下轿!”第一声,无人答应……“请新娘下轿!”第二声,还是无人答应……“请新娘子下轿!”直到第三声时,轿里忽地传来慵懒的声音,“呀!我怎么睡着了?四儿,现在什么时辰?为何迎亲的轿子还不来?”————〖精采多多,敬请期待。〗————懒人系列:总裁的懒妻帝君的懒后懒凰天下风流佳人系列:风流女画师新坑:轻松+现代+都市+网游+青梅+竹马=恋上恶男友情链接:逍遥王爷的穿越妃本色出演绝焰煞神
  • 神宠狂妃

    神宠狂妃

    十岁的木轻烟因不能修炼而到处受到欺凌,直至一次意外香消玉殒,却迎来了另一个世界的灵魂!重生之后,她木轻烟就不再是木轻烟,而是令人闻风丧胆的鬼王妖妃!兄弟姐妹加上嫡母的欺凌,她全部都要还回去!神兽很厉害?我的超神兽一把抓!神品丹药很牛逼?我的兽兽当糖豆吃!神器好吗?我每一次最低只能炼出圣器!啊!个个美男都朝我这边来?!只能是出我的绝技~三十六计之走为上策!前世的情缘,终究要今世来还……
  • 高校相遇的那些事儿

    高校相遇的那些事儿

    成绩优异、在人群中不容易被认出的她——夏心潼,在圣樱高校遇到孤傲自诩、有点混血儿的他——程泽、被誉为“小提琴家”“犹如清晨的第一缕阳光”的他——季晨、幽默细胞过多、爱情高手的他——廖凯,会发生怎样的事情呢?敬请阅读《相遇在高校的那些事儿》
  • 拳扫八荒

    拳扫八荒

    平凡少年楚子枫,为追求长生,从荒野村庄走出,开始了自己的修行之路。“我楚子枫为力量而生,为了追求极致的力量,我愿意放弃所有,包括我的灵魂。”“在这仙术横行的时代,我坚信肉体才是一切的来源,力量才是武道的根本。”
  • 爱已成荒:隔着天堂的相爱

    爱已成荒:隔着天堂的相爱

    同一天,他失去了父亲;她来到了这个世界。时隔多年,他学成归来,带着仇恨和阴谋进入韩氏,不料遇到了让他可以以最快最狠的方式去报复“杀父仇人”的对象。“我从来没有后悔过爱上你。”这是冷泽辰第一次听到韩雪妍说爱他,也是最后一次。