第 7 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-19 21:36      字数:9322
  〃But I will shred the tapestry;〃 said Matilda; 〃and let myself down。〃
  〃But I will lock you in a turret;〃 said the baron; 〃where you shall only
  see light through a loophole。〃
  〃But through that loophole;〃 said Matilda; 〃will I take my flight; like a
  young eagle from its eerie; and; father; while I go out freely; I will return
  willingly:     but   if   once   I   slip   out   through   a   loop…hole〃   She   paused   a
  moment; and then added; singing;
  The love that follows fain               Will never its faith betray:        But the
  faith that is held in a chain        Will never be found again;                 If a single
  link give way。
  The melody acted irresistibly on the harmonious propensities of the
  friar; who accordingly sang in his turn;
  For hark! hark! hark!         The dog doth bark;                That watches the
  wild deer's lair。     The hunter awakes at the peep of the dawn;               But the lair
  it is empty; the deer it is gone;             And the hunter knows not where。
  Matilda and the friar then sang together;
  Then follow; oh follow! the hounds do cry:                The red sun flames in
  the eastern sky:             The stag bounds over the hollow。             He that lingers
  in   spirit;   or   loiters   in   hall; Shall   see   us   no   more   till   the   evening   fall;
  And no voice but the  echo   shall answer  his   call:                  Then   follow;  oh
  follow; follow:             Follow; oh follow; follow!
  During the process of this harmony; the baron's eyes wandered from
  his daughter to the friar; and from the friar to his daughter again; with an
  alternate expression of anger differently modified: when he looked on the
  friar; it was anger without qualification; when he looked on his daughter it
  was still anger; but tempered by an expression of involuntary admiration
  and   pleasure。   These   rapid   fluctuations   of   the   baron's   physiognomythe
  habitual; reckless; resolute merriment in the jovial face of the friar; and
  the cheerful; elastic spirits that played on the lips and sparkled in the eyes
  of   Matilda;would   have   presented   a   very   amusing   combination   to   Sir
  Ralph; if one of the three images in the group had not absorbed his total
  attention   with   feelings   of   intense   delight   very   nearly   allied   to   pain。  The
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  baron's     wrath   was    somewhat      counteracted      by   the  reflection    that  his
  daughter's   good   spirits   seemed   to   show   that   they   would   naturally   rise
  triumphant over all disappointments; and he had had sufficient experience
  of her humour to know that she might sometimes be led; but never could
  be driven。 Then; too; he was always delighted to hear her sing; though he
  was not at all pleased in this instance with the subject of her song。 Still he
  would have endured the subject for the sake of the melody of the treble;
  but his mind was not sufficiently attuned to unison to relish the harmony
  of the bass。     The friar's accompaniment put him out of all patience; and
  〃So;〃 he exclaimed; 〃this is the way; you teach my daughter to renounce
  the devil; is it? A hunting friar; truly!       Who ever heard before of a hunting
  friar? A profane; roaring; bawling; bumper…bibbing; neck…breaking; catch…
  singing friar?〃
  〃Under favour; bold baron;〃 said the friar; but the friar was warm with
  canary; and in his singing vein; and he could not go on in plain unmusical
  prose。    He therefore sang in a new tune;
  Though   I   be   now   a   grey;   grey   friar;       Yet   I   was   once   a   hale
  young knight:        The   cry  of   my  dogs   was   the   only  choir          In   which
  my     spirit  did  take   delight。   Little    I  recked   of  matin    bell;         But
  drowned its toll with my clanging horn:               And the only beads I loved to
  tell         Were the beads of dew on the spangled thorn。
  The baron was going to storm; but the friar paused; and Matilda sang
  in repetition;
  Little I reck of matin bell;            But drown its toll with my clanging
  horn:     And the only beads I love to tell                 Are the beads of dew on
  the spangled thorn。
  And then she and the friar sang the four lines together; and rang the
  changes upon them alternately。
  Little I reck of matin bell;
  sang the friar。
  〃A precious friar;〃 said the baron。
  But drown its toll with my clanging horn; sang Matilda。
  〃More shame for you;〃 said the baron。
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  And the only beads I love to tell                Are the beads of dew on the
  spangled thorn;
  sang Matilda and the friar together。
  〃Penitent and confessor;〃 said the baron:           〃a hopeful pair truly。〃
  The friar went on;
  An archer keen I was withal;                 As ever did lean on greenwood
  tree;    And     could   make    the  fleetest   roebuck    fall;         A   good    three
  hundred      yards   from    me。   Though       changeful    time;   with   hand    severe;
  Has   made   me   now   these   joys   forego;     Yet   my  heart   bounds   whene'er   I
  hear          Yoicks! hark away! and tally ho!
  Matilda chimed in as before。
  〃Are     you   mad?〃     said   the  baron。     〃Are     you   insane?     Are     you
  possessed? What do you mean?               What in the devil's name do you both
  mean?〃
  Yoicks! hark away! and tally ho!
  roared the friar。
  The baron's pent…up wrath had accumulated like the waters above the
  dam of an overshot mill。          The pond…head of his passion being now filled
  to   the  utmost    limit  of   its  capacity;  and   beginning     to  overflow     in  the
  quivering of his lips and the flashing of his eyes; he pulled up all the flash…
  boards   at   once;   and   gave   loose   to   the   full   torrent   of   his   indignation;   by
  seizing; like furious Ajax; not a messy stone more than two modern men
  could raise; but a vast dish of beef more than fifty ancient yeomen could
  eat; and whirled it like a coit; in terrorem; over the head of the friar; to the
  extremity of the apartment;
  Where it on oaken floor did settle;           With mighty din of ponderous
  metal。
  〃Nay father;〃 said Matilda; taking the baron's hand; 〃do not harm the
  friar: he means not to offend you。          My gaiety never before displeased you。
  Least   of   all   should   it   do   so   now;   when   I   have   need   of   all   my   spirits   to
  outweigh the severity of my fortune。〃
  As she spoke the last   words; tears started into her eyes; which; as   if
  ashamed of the involuntary betraying of her feelings; she turned away to
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  conceal。      The baron was subdued at once。                He kissed his daughter; held
  out   his   hand   to   the   friar;   and   said;   〃Sing   on;   in   God's   name;   and   crack
  away the flasks till your voice swims in canary。〃 Then turning to Sir Ralph;
  he said; 〃You see how it is; sir knight。 Matilda is my daughter; but she has
  me in leading…strings; that is the truth of it。〃
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  CHAPTER V
  'T  is   true;   no   lover   has   that   power To   enforce   a   desperate   amour
  As   he   that   has   two   strings   to   his   bow And   burns   for   love   and   money
  too。BUTLER。
  The friar had often had experience of the baron's testy humour; but it
  had always before confined itself to words; in which the habit of testiness
  often   mingled   more   expression   of   displeasure   than   the   internal   feeling
  prompted。 He knew the baron to be hot and choleric; but at the same time
  hospitable      and    generous;      passionately      fond    of   his   daughter;    often
  thwarting   her   in   seeming;   but   always   yielding   to   her   in   fact。   The   early
  attachment   between   Matilda   and   the   Earl   of   Huntingdon   had   given   the
  baron   no   serious   reason   to   interfere   with   her   habits   and   pursuits;   which
  were so congenial to those of her lover; and not being over…burdened with
  orthodoxy; that is to say; not being seasoned with more of the salt of the
  spirit    than    was    necessary     to   preserve    him     from    excommunication;
  confiscation; and philotheoparoptesism;'1'