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st. ives-第7部分

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was a man of the middle age; he had a face of a mulberry colour; 

round black eyes; comical tufted eyebrows; and a protuberant 

forehead; and was dressed in clothes of a Quakerish cut。  In spite 

of his plainness; he had that inscrutable air of a man well…to…do 

in his affairs。  I conceived he had been some while observing me 

from a distance; for a sparrow sat betwixt us quite unalarmed on 

the breech of a piece of cannon。  So soon as our eyes met; he drew 

near and addressed me in the French language; which he spoke with a 

good fluency but an abominable accent。



'I have the pleasure of addressing Monsieur le Vicomte Anne de 

Keroual de Saint…Yves?' said he。



'Well;' said I; 'I do not call myself all that; but I have a right 

to; if I chose。  In the meanwhile I call myself plain Champdivers; 

at your disposal。  It was my mother's name; and good to go 

soldiering with。'



'I think not quite;' said he; 'for if I remember rightly; your 

mother also had the particle。  Her name was Florimonde de 

Champdivers。'



'Right again!' said I; 'and I am extremely pleased to meet a 

gentleman so well informed in my quarterings。  Is monsieur Born 

himself?'  This I said with a great air of assumption; partly to 

conceal the degree of curiosity with which my visitor had inspired 

me; and in part because it struck me as highly incongruous and 

comical in my prison garb and on the lips of a private soldier。



He seemed to think so too; for he laughed。



'No; sir;' he returned; speaking this time in English; 'I am not 

〃BORN;〃 as you call it; and must content myself with DYING; of 

which I am equally susceptible with the best of you。  My name is 

Mr。 Romaine … Daniel Romaine … a solicitor of London City; at your 

service; and; what will perhaps interest you more; I am here at the 

request of your great…uncle; the Count。'



'What!' I cried; 'does M。 de Keroual de St。…Yves remember the 

existence of such a person as myself; and will he deign to count 

kinship with a soldier of Napoleon?'



'You speak English well;' observed my visitor。



'It has been a second language to me from a child;' said I。  'I had 

an English nurse; my father spoke English with me; and I was 

finished by a countryman of yours and a dear friend of mine; a Mr。 

Vicary。'



A strong expression of interest came into the lawyer's face。



'What!' he cried; 'you knew poor Vicary?'



'For more than a year;' said I; 'and shared his hiding…place for 

many months。'



'And I was his clerk; and have succeeded him in business;' said he。  

'Excellent man!  It was on the affairs of M。 de Keroual that he 

went to that accursed country; from which he was never destined to 

return。  Do you chance to know his end; sir?'



'I am sorry;' said I; 'I do。  He perished miserably at the hands of 

a gang of banditti; such as we call CHAUFFEURS。  In a word; he was 

tortured; and died of it。  See;' I added; kicking off one shoe; for 

I had no stockings; 'I was no more than a child; and see how they 

had begun to treat myself。'



He looked at the mark of my old burn with a certain shrinking。  

'Beastly people!' I heard him mutter to himself。



'The English may say so with a good grace;' I observed politely。



Such speeches were the coin in which I paid my way among this 

credulous race。  Ninety per cent。 of our visitors would have 

accepted the remark as natural in itself and creditable to my 

powers of judgment; but it appeared my lawyer was more acute。



'You are not entirely a fool; I perceive;' said he。



'No;' said I; 'not wholly。'



'And yet it is well to beware of the ironical mood;' he continued。  

'It is a dangerous instrument。  Your great…uncle has; I believe; 

practised it very much; until it is now become a problem what he 

means。'



'And that brings me back to what you will admit is a most natural 

inquiry;' said I。  'To what do I owe the pleasure of this visit? 

how did you recognise me? and how did you know I was here?'



Carefull separating his coat skirts; the lawyer took a seat beside 

me on the edge of the flags。



'It is rather an odd story;' says he; 'and; with your leave; I'll 

answer the second question first。  It was from a certain 

resemblance you bear to your cousin; M。 le Vicomte。'



'I trust; sir; that I resemble him advantageously?' said I。



'I hasten to reassure you;' was the reply: 'you do。  To my eyes; M。 

Alain de St。…Yves has scarce a pleasing exterior。  And yet; when I 

knew you were here; and was actually looking for you … why; the 

likeness helped。  As for how I came to know your whereabouts; by an 

odd enough chance; it is again M。 Alain we have to thank。  I should 

tell you; he has for some time made it his business to keep M。 de 

Keroual informed of your career; with what purpose I leave you to 

judge。  When he first brought the news of your … that you were 

serving Buonaparte; it seemed it might be the death of the old 

gentleman; so hot was his resentment。  But from one thing to 

another; matters have a little changed。  Or I should rather say; 

not a little。  We learned you were under orders for the Peninsula; 

to fight the English; then that you had been commissioned for a 

piece of bravery; and were again reduced to the ranks。  And from 

one thing to another (as I say); M。 de Keroual became used to the 

idea that you were his kinsman and yet served with Buonaparte; and 

filled instead with wonder that he should have another kinsman who 

was so remarkably well informed of events in France。  And it now 

became a very disagreeable question; whether the young gentleman 

was not a spy?  In short; sir; in seeking to disserve you; he had 

accumulated against himself a load of suspicions。'



My visitor now paused; took snuff; and looked at me with an air of 

benevolence。



'Good God; sir!' says I; 'this is a curious story。'



'You will say so before I have done;' said he。  'For there have two 

events followed。  The first of these was an encounter of M。 de 

Keroual and M。 de Mauseant。'



'I know the man to my cost;' said I: 'it was through him I lost my 

commission。'



'Do you tell me so?' he cried。  'Why; here is news!'



'Oh; I cannot complain!' said I。  'I was in the wrong。  I did it 

with my eyes open。  If a man gets a prisoner to guard and lets him 

go; the least he can expect is to be degraded。'



'You will be paid for it;' said he。  'You did well for yourself and 

better for your king。'



'If I had thought I was injuring my emperor;' said I; 'I would have 

let M。 de Mauseant burn in hell ere I had helped him; and be sure 

of that!  I saw in him only a private person in a difficulty: I let 

him go in private charity; not even to profit myself will I suffer 

it to be misunderstood。'



'Well; well;' said the lawyer; 'no matter now。  This is a foolish 

warmth … a very misplaced enthusiasm; believe me!  The point of the 

story is that M。 de Mauseant spoke of you with gratitude; and drew 

your character in such a manner as greatly to affect your uncle's 

views。  Hard upon the back of which; in came your humble servant; 

and laid before him the direct proof of what we had been so long 

suspecting。  There was no dubiety permitted。  M。 Alain's expensive 

way of life; his clothes and mistresses; his dicing and racehorses; 

were all explained: he was in the pay of Buonaparte; a hired spy; 

and a man that held the strings of what I can only call a 

convolution of extremely fishy enterprises。  To do M。 de Keroual 

justice; he took it in the best way imaginable; destroyed the 

evidences of the one great…nephew's disgrace … and transferred his 

interest wholly to the other。'



'What am I to understand by that?' said I。



'I will tell you;' says he。  'There is a remarkable inconsistency 

in human nature which gentlemen of my cloth have a great deal of 

occasion to observe。  Selfish persons can live without chick or 

child; they can live without all mankind except perhaps the barber 

and the apothecary; but when it comes to dying; they seem 

physically unable to die without an heir。  You can apply this 

principle for yourself。  Viscount Alain; though he scarce guesses 

it; is no longer in the field。  Remains; Viscount Anne。'



'I see;' said I; 'you give a very unfavourable impression of my 

uncle; the Count。'



'I had not meant it;' said he。  'He has led a loose life … sadly 

loose … but he is a man it is impossible to know and not to admire; 

his courtesy is exquisite。'



'And so you think there is actually a chance for me?' I asked。



'Understand;' said he: 'in saying as much as I have done; I travel 

quite beyond my brief。  I have been clothed with no capacity to 

talk of wills; or heritages; or your cousin。  I was sent here to 

make but the one communication: that M。 de Keroual desires to meet 

his great…nephew。'



'Well;' said I; looking about me on the battlements by which we sat 

surrounded; 'this is a case in which Mahomet must certainly come to 

the mountain。'



'Pardon me;' said Mr。 Romaine; 'you know already your uncle is an 

aged man; but I have not yet told you that he is quite broken up; 

and his death shortly looked for。  No; no; there is no doubt about 

it … it is the mountain that must come to Mahomet。'



'From an Englishman; the remark is certainly significant;' said I; 

'but you are of course; and by trade; a keeper of men's secrets; 

and I see you keep that of Cousin Alain; which is not the mark of a 

truculent patriotism; to say the least。'



'I am first of all the lawyer of your family!' says he。



'That being so;' said I; 'I can perhaps stretch a point myself。  

This rock is very high; and it is very steep; a man might come by a 

devil of a fall from almost any part of it; and yet I believe I 

have a pair of wings that might carry me just so far as to the 

bottom。  Once at the bottom I am helpless。'

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