第 7 节
作者:插翅难飞      更新:2021-04-30 17:18      字数:9322
  and the splintering of planks。         There were the rattle of arms and the cries
  of   French   soldiers   in   the   hall。 Next   instant   feet   came   flying   down   the
  stair and a man burst frantically into my cell。
  〃Lucia!〃   he   cried;   〃Lucia!〃    He   stood   in   the   dim   light;   panting   and
  unable to find his words。         Then he broke out again。          〃Have I not shown
  you how I love you; Lucia?           What more could I do to prove it?             I have
  betrayed my country; I have broken my vow; I have ruined my friends; and
  I have given my life in order to save you。〃
  It   was   young   Lorenzo   Loredan;   the   lover   whom   I   had   superseded。
  My heart was heavy for him at the time; but after all it is every man for
  himself in love; and if one fails in the game it is some consolation to lose
  to one who can be a graceful and considerate winner。
  I was about to point this out to him; but at the first word I uttered he
  gave a shout of astonishment; and; rushing out; he seized the lamp which
  hung in the corridor and flashed it in my face。
  〃It is you; you villain!〃 he cried。        〃You French coxcomb。           You shall
  pay me for the wrong which you have done me。〃
  But the next instant he saw the pallor of my face and the blood which
  was still pouring from my head。
  〃What is this?〃 he asked。        〃How come you to have lost your ear?〃
  I shook off my weakness; and pressing my handkerchief to my wound
  I rose from my couch; the debonair colonel of Hussars。
  〃My injury; sir; is nothing。        With your permission we will not allude
  to a matter so trifling and so personal。〃
  But   Lucia   had   burst   through   from   her   cell   and   was   pouring   out   the
  whole story while she clasped Lorenzo's arm。
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  〃This   noble   gentlemanhe   has   taken   my   place;   Lorenzo!         He   has
  borne it for me。      He has suffered that I might be saved。〃
  I could sympathise with the struggle which I could see in the Italian's
  face。    At last he held out his hand to me。
  〃Colonel Gerard;〃 he said; 〃you are worthy of a great love。                I forgive
  you; for if you have wronged me you have made a noble atonement。                      But
  I wonder to see you alive。         I left the tribunal before you were judged; but
  I understood that no mercy would be shown to any Frenchman since the
  destruction of the ornaments of Venice。〃
  〃He did not destroy them;〃 cried Lucia。             〃He has helped to preserve
  those in our palace。〃
  〃One of them; at any rate;〃 said I; as I stooped and kissed her hand。
  This was the way; my friends; in which I lost my ear。                 Lorenzo was
  found stabbed to the heart in the Piazza of St。 Mark within two days of the
  night of my adventure。         Of the tribunal and its ruffians; Matteo and three
  others were shot; the rest banished from the town。
  Lucia;   my   lovely   Lucia;   retired   into   a   convent   at   Murano   after   the
  French   had   left   the   city;   and   there   she   still   may   be;   some   gentle   lady
  abbess who has perhaps long forgotten the days when our hearts throbbed
  together; and when the whole great world seemed so small a thing beside
  the   love   which    burned    in  our   veins。   Or    perhaps    it  may   not  be   so。
  Perhaps she has not forgotten。
  There may still be times when the peace of the cloister is broken by
  the memory of the old soldier who loved her in those distant days。                 Youth
  is past and passion is gone; but the soul of the gentleman can never change;
  and still Etienne Gerard would bow his grey head before her and would
  very gladly lose his other ear if he might do her a service。
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  II。 How the Brigadier Captured
  Saragossa
  Have   I   ever   told   you;   my   friends;   the   circumstances   connected   with
  my joining the Hussars of Conflans at the time of the siege of Saragossa
  and the very remarkable exploit which I performed in connection with the
  taking of that city?      No?     Then you have indeed something still to learn。
  I will tell it to you exactly as it occurred。        Save for two or three men and
  a score or two of women; you are the first who have ever heard the story。
  You   must   know;   then;   that   it   was   in   the   Second   Hussarscalled   the
  Hussars of   Chamberanthat I  had served   as   a lieutenant   and as   a  junior
  captain。     At the time I speak of I was only twenty…five years of age; as
  reckless and desperate a man as any in that great army。
  It chanced that the war had come to a halt in Germany; while it was
  still   raging   in   Spain;   so   the   Emperor;   wishing   to   reinforce   the   Spanish
  army; transferred me as senior captain to the Hussars of Conflans; which
  were at that time in the Fifth Army Corps under Marshal Lannes。
  It was a long journey from Berlin to the Pyrenees。
  My   new     regiment    formed    part  of   the  force  which;    under   Marshal
  Lannes; was then besieging the Spanish town of Saragossa。                   I turned my
  horse's head in that direction; therefore; and behold me a week or so later
  at   the   French   headquarters;   whence   I   was   directed   to   the   camp   of   the
  Hussars of Conflans。
  You have read; no doubt; of this famous siege of Saragossa; and I will
  only say that no general could have had a harder task than that with which
  Marshal Lannes was confronted。             The immense city was crowded with a
  horde   of   Spaniardssoldiers;   peasants;   priests   all   filled   with   the   most
  furious hatred of the French; and the most savage determination to perish
  before   they   would   surrender。      There   were   eighty   thousand   men   in   the
  town and only thirty thousand to besiege them。                Yet we had a powerful
  artillery;   and   our   engineers   were   of   the   best。 There   was   never   such   a
  siege; for it is usual that when the fortifications are taken the city falls; but
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  here   it   was   not   until   the   fortifications   were   taken   that   the   real   fighting
  began。      Every   house   was   a   fort   and   every   street   a   battle…field;   so   that
  slowly;   day   by   day;   we   had   to   work   our   way   inwards;   blowing   up   the
  houses with their garrisons until more than half the city had disappeared。
  Yet the other half was as determined as ever and in a better position for
  defence;   since   it   consisted   of   enormous   convents   and   monasteries   with
  walls   like   the   Bastille;   which   could   not   be   so   easily   brushed   out   of   our
  way。     This was the state of things at the time that I joined the army。
  I   will   confess   to   you   that   cavalry   are   not   of   much   use   in   a   siege;
  although   there   was   a   time   when   I   would   not   have   permitted   anyone   to
  have      made     such    an    observation。       The      Hussars     of   Conflans      were
  encamped   to   the   south   of   the   town;   and   it   was   their   duty   to   throw   out
  patrols and to make sure that no Spanish force was advancing from that
  quarter。      The   colonel   of   the   regiment   was   not   a   good   soldier;   and   the
  regiment was at that time very far from being in the high condition which
  it   afterwards   attained。      Even   in   that   one   evening   I   saw   several   things
  which shocked me; for I had a high standard; and it went to my heart to
  see   an   ill…   arranged   camp;   an   ill…groomed   horse;   or   a   slovenly   trooper。
  That night I supped with twenty…six of my new brother…officers; and I fear
  that in my  zeal I   showed them  only too plainly  that I   found things   very
  different to what I was accustomed in the army of Germany。
  There was silence in the mess after my remarks; and I felt that I had
  been indiscreet when I saw the glances that were cast at me。                      The colonel
  especially was furious; and a great major named Olivier; who was the fire…
  eater     of   the   regiment;     sat   opposite      to  me     curling    his   huge     black
  moustaches; and staring at me as if he would eat me。                     However; I did not
  resent his attitude; for I felt that I had indeed been indiscreet; and that it
  would   give   a   bad   impression   if   upo