姐,我要。。。
轻松的小说阅读环境
巴黎圣母院英文版 - BOOK FIRST CHAPTER 1.THE GRAND HALL. Page 2
繁体
恢复默认
返回目录【键盘操作】左右光标键:上下章节;回车键:目录;双击鼠标:停止/启动自动滚动;滚动时上下光标键调节滚动速度。
  The whole band burst into laughter."Holà hé! who is scolding so?Who is that screech owl of evil fortune?""Hold, I know him" said one of them; "'tis Master Andry Musnier.""Because he is one of the four sworn booksellers of the university!" said the other."Everything goes by fours in that shop," cried a third; "the four nations, the four faculties, the four feasts, the four procurators, the four electors, the four booksellers.""Well," began Jean Frollo once more," we must play the devil with them."**~Faire le diable a quatre~."Musnier, we'll burn your books.""Musnier, we'll beat your lackeys.""Musnier, we'll kiss your wife.""That fine, big Mademoiselle Oudarde.""Who is as fresh and as gay as though she were a widow.""Devil take you!" growled Master Andry Musnier."Master Andry," pursued Jean Jehan, still clinging to his capital, "hold your tongue, or I'll drop on your head!"Master Andry raised his eyes, seemed to measure in an instant the height of the pillar, the weight of the scamp, mentally multiplied that weight by the square of the velocity and remained silent.Jehan, master of the field of battle, pursued triumphantly:"That's what I'll do, even if I am the brother of an archdeacon!""Fine gentry are our people of the university, not to have caused our privileges to be respected on such a day as this! However, there is a maypole and a bonfire in the town; a mystery, pope of the Fools, and Flemish ambassadors in the city; and, at the university, nothing!""Nevertheless, the place Maubert is sufficiently large!" interposed one of the clerks established on the window-sill."Down with the rector, the electors, and the procurators!" cried Joannes."We must have a bonfire this evening in the Champ-Gaillard," went on the other, "made of Master Andry's books.""And the desks of the scribes!" added his neighbor."And the beadles' wands!""And the spittoons of the deans!""And the cupboards of the procurators!""And the hutches of the electors!""And the stools of the rector!""Down with them!" put in little Jehan, as counterpoint; "down with Master Andry, the beadles and the scribes; the theologians, the doctors and the decretists; the procurators, the electors and the rector!""The end of the world has come!,' muttered Master Andry, stopping up his ears."By the way, there's the rector! see, he is passing through the place," cried one of those in the window.Each rivalled his neighbor in his haste to turn towards the place."Is it really our venerable rector, Master Thibaut?" demanded Jehan Frollo du Moulin, who, as he was clinging to one of the inner pillars, could not see what was going on outside."Yes, yes," replied all the others, "it is really he, Master Thibaut, the rector."It was, in fact, the rector and all the dignitaries of the university, who were marching in procession in front of the embassy, and at that moment traversing the place.The students crowded into the window, saluted them as they passed with sarcasms and ironical applause.The rector, who was walking at the head of his company, had to support the first broadside; it was severe."Good day, monsieur le recteur!Holà hé! good day there!""How does he manage to be here, the old gambler?Has he abandoned his dice?""How he trots along on his mule! her ears are not so long as his!""Holà hé! good day, monsieur le recteur Thibaut!~Tybalde aleator~!Old fool! old gambler!""God preserve you!Did you throw double six often last night?""Oh! what a decrepit face, livid and haggard and drawn with the love of gambling and of dice!""Where are you bound for in that fashion, Thibaut, ~Tybalde ad dados~, with your back turned to the university, and trotting towards the town?""He is on his way, no doubt, to seek a lodging in the Rue Thibautodé?"* cried Jehan du M. Moulin.*~Thibaut au des~,--Thibaut of the dice.The entire band repeated this quip in a voice of thunder, clapping their hands furiously."You are going to seek a lodging in the Rue Thibautodé, are you not, monsieur le recteur, gamester on the side of the devil?"Then came the turns of the other dignitaries."Down with the beadles! down with the mace-bearers!""Tell me, Robin pouissepain, who is that yonder?""He is Gilbert de Suilly, ~Gilbertus de Soliaco~, the chancellor of the College of Autun.""Hold on, here's my shoe; you are better placed than I, fling it in his face.""~Saturnalitias mittimus ecce nuces~.""Down with the six theologians, with their white surplices!""Are those the theologians?I thought they were the white geese given by Sainte-Geneviève to the city, for the fief of Roogny.""Down with the doctors!""Down with the cardinal disputations, and quibblers!""My cap to you, Chancellor of Sainte-Geneviève!You have done me a wrong.'Tis true; he gave my place in the nation of Normandy to little Ascanio Falzapada, who comes from the province of Bourges, since he is an Italian.""That is an injustice," said all the scholars."Down with the Chancellor of Sainte-Geneviève!""Ho hé!Master Joachim de Ladehors!Ho hé!Louis Dahuille!Ho he Lambert Hoctement!""May the devil stifle the procurator of the German nation!""And the chaplains of the Sainte-Chapelle, with their gray ~amices; cum tunices grisis~!""~Seu de pellibus grisis fourratis~!""Holà hé!Masters of Arts!All the beautiful black copes! all the fine red copes!""They make a fine tail for the rector.""One would say that he was a Doge of Venice on his way to his bridal with the sea.""Say, Jehan! here are the canons of Sainte-Geneviève!""To the deuce with the whole set of canons!""Abbé Claude Choart!Doctor Claude Choart!Are you in search of Marie la Giffarde?""She is in the Rue de Glatigny.""She is making the bed of the king of the debauchees." She is paying her four deniers* ~quatuor denarios~."*An old French coin, equal to the two hundred and fortieth part of a pound."~Aut unum bombum~.""Would you like to have her pay you in the face?""Comrades!Master Simon Sanguin, the Elector of picardy, with his wife on the crupper!""~post equitem seclet atra eura~--behind the horseman sits black care.""Courage, Master Simon!""Good day, Mister Elector!""Good night, Madame Electress!""How happy they are to see all that!" sighed Joannes de Molendino, still perched in the foliage of his capital.Meanwhile, the sworn bookseller of the university, Master Andry Musnier, was inclining his ear to the furrier of the king's robes, Master Gilles Lecornu."I tell you, sir, that the end of the world has come.No one has ever beheld such outbreaks among the students!It is the accursed inventions of this century that are ruining everything,--artilleries, bombards, and, above all, printing, that other German pest.No more manuscripts, no more books! printing will kill bookselling.It is the end of the world that is drawing nigh.""I see that plainly, from the progress of velvet stuffs," said the fur-merchant.At this moment, midday sounded."Ha!" exclaimed the entire crowd, in one voice.The scholars held their peace.Then a great hurly-burly ensued; a vast movement of feet, hands, and heads; a general outbreak of coughs and handkerchiefs; each one arranged himself, assumed his post, raised himself up, and grouped himself.Then came a great silence; all necks remained outstretched, all mouths remained open, all glances were directed towards the marble table.Nothing made its appearance there.The bailiff's four sergeants were still there, stiff, motionless, as painted statues.All eyes turned to the estrade reserved for the Flemish envoys.The door remained closed, the platform empty.This crowd had been waiting since daybreak for three things: noonday, the embassy from Flanders, the mystery play.Noonday alone had arrived on time.On this occasion, it was too much.They waited one, two, three, five minutes, a quarter of an hour; nothing came.The dais remained empty, the theatre dumb.In the meantime, wrath had succeeded to impatience. Irritated words circulated in a low tone, still, it is true. "The mystery! the mystery!" they murmured, in hollow voices.Heads began to ferment.A tempest, which was only rumbling in the distance as yet, was floating on the surface of this crowd.It was Jehan du Moulin who struck the first spark from it."The mystery, and to the devil with the Flemings!" he exclaimed at the full force of his lungs, twining like a serpent around his pillar.The crowd clapped their hands."The mystery!" it repeated, "and may all the devils take Flanders!""We must have the mystery instantly," resumed the student; "or else, my advice is that we should hang the bailiff of the courts, by way of a morality and a comedy.""Well said," cried the people, "and let us begin the hanging with his sergeants."A grand acclamation followed.The four poor fellows began to turn pale, and to exchange glances.The crowd hurled itself towards them, and they already beheld the frail wooden railing, which separated them from it, giving way and bending before the pressure of the throng.It was a critical moment."To the sack, to the sack!" rose the cry on all sides.At that moment, the tapestry of the dressing-room, which we have described above, was raised, and afforded passage to a personage, the mere sight of whom suddenly stopped the crowd, and changed its wrath into curiosity as by enchantment."Silence! silence!"The personage, but little reassured, and trembling in every limb, advanced to the edge of the marble table with a vast amount of bows, which, in proportion as he drew nearer, more and more resembled genuflections.In the meanwhile, tranquillity had gradually been restored. A1l that remained was that slight murmur which always rises above the silence of a crowd."Messieurs the bourgeois," said he, "and mesdemoiselles the ~bourgeoises~, we shall have the honor of declaiming and representing, before his eminence, monsieur the cardinal, a very beautiful morality which has for its title, 'The Good Judgment of Madame the Virgin Mary.'I am to play Jupiter. His eminence is, at this moment, escorting the very honorable embassy of the Duke of Austria; which is detained, at present, listening to the harangue of monsieur the rector of the university, at the gate Baudets.As soon as his illustrious eminence, the cardinal, arrives, we will begin."It is certain, that nothing less than the intervention of Jupiter was required to save the four unfortunate sergeants of the bailiff of the courts.If we had the happiness of having invented this very veracious tale, and of being, in consequence, responsible for it before our Lady Criticism, it is not against us that the classic precept, ~Nec deus intersit~, could be invoked. Moreover, the costume of Seigneur Jupiter, was very handsome, and contributed not a little towards calming the crowd, by attracting all its attention.Jupiter was clad in a coat of mail, covered with black velvet, with gilt nails; and had it not been for the rouge, and the huge red beard, each of which covered one-half of his face,--had it not been for the roll of gilded cardboard, spangled, and all bristling with strips of tinsel, which he held in his hand, and in which the eyes of the initiated easily recognized thunderbolts,--had not his feet been flesh-colored, and banded with ribbons in Greek fashion, he might have borne comparison, so far as the severity of his mien was concerned, with a Breton archer from the guard of Monsieur de Berry.
或许您还会喜欢:
午夜的五分前
作者:佚名
章节:2 人气:0
摘要:店内的摆设几乎没有变化。除了满眼遍布的令人一看便联想到店名“圣母玛利亚号”的轮船模型、老旧航海图和小小的地球仪勉强算得上个性外,它与学生街上数不清的各色咖啡馆并没有太多分别。虽然没有特别吸引我的地方,不过想要喝杯咖啡的时候,学生时代的我总是来到这家店。在我和小金井小姐面前摆上两杯水,为我们点菜的店老板也没有变化。他穿着白色衬衫和灰色西装裤,显然这样的装扮与咖啡店店主的身份不甚相称。 [点击阅读]
华莱士人鱼
作者:佚名
章节:29 人气:0
摘要:第一部分序章片麟(19世纪香港)英国生物学家达尔文(1809~1882),是伟大的《物种起源》一书的作者,是提出进化论的旷世奇才。乘坐菲茨·路易船长率领的海军勘探船小猎犬号作环球航行时,他才三十一岁。正是这次航行,使达尔文萌发了进化论的构想。然而,《物种起源》并非进化论的开端。 [点击阅读]
南回归线
作者:佚名
章节:28 人气:0
摘要:《南回归线》作为亨利·米勒自传式罗曼史的重要作品,主要叙述和描写了亨利·米勒早年在纽约的生活经历,以及与此有关的种种感想、联想、遐想和幻想。亨利·米勒在书中描写的一次次性*冲动构成了一部性*狂想曲,而他的性*狂想曲又是他批判西方文化、重建自我的非道德化倾向的一部分。 [点击阅读]
卡拉马佐夫兄弟
作者:佚名
章节:94 人气:0
摘要:献给安娜-格里戈里耶芙娜-陀思妥耶夫斯卡娅卡拉马佐夫兄弟我实实在在的告诉你们:一粒麦子不落在地里死了,仍旧是一粒;若是死了,就结出许多子粒来。(《约翰福音》第十二章第二十四节)第一部第一卷一个家庭的历史第一节费多尔-巴夫洛维奇-卡拉马佐夫阿历克赛-费多罗维奇-卡拉马佐夫是我县地主费多尔-巴夫洛维奇-卡拉马佐夫的第三个儿子。 [点击阅读]
印第安酋长
作者:佚名
章节:10 人气:0
摘要:亲爱的读者,你知道,“青角”这个词是什么意思吗?无论用在谁身上,这个词都损人、气人到极点,它指的是触角。“青”就是青,“角”就是触角。因此“青角”是个刚到这个国家(指美国),缺乏经验,尚显稚嫩的人,如果他不想惹人嫌,就得小心翼翼地探出他的触角。我当初也是这么一个“青角”。 [点击阅读]
双城记
作者:佚名
章节:58 人气:0
摘要:内容提要1757年12月的一个月夜,寓居巴黎的年轻医生梅尼特(Dr.Manette)散步时,突然被厄弗里蒙地侯爵(MarquisSt.Evremonde)兄弟强迫出诊。在侯爵府第中,他目睹一个发狂的绝色*农妇和一个身受剑伤的少年饮恨而死的惨状,并获悉侯爵兄弟为了片刻婬*乐杀害他们全家的内情。他拒绝侯爵兄弟的重金贿赂,写信向朝廷告发。 [点击阅读]
古拉格群岛
作者:佚名
章节:64 人气:0
摘要:“在专政时代,在处于敌人四面八方包皮围的情况下,我们有时表现出了不应有的温和、不应有的心软”克雷连科:在审理“工业党”案件时的发言第一章逮捕这个神秘的群岛人们是怎样进去的呢?到那里,时时刻刻有飞机飞去,船舶开去,火车隆隆驶去——可是它们上面却没有标明目的地的字样。售票员也好,苏联旅行社和国际旅行社的经理人员也好,如果你向他们询问到那里去的票子,他们会感到惊异。 [点击阅读]
叶盘集
作者:佚名
章节:18 人气:0
摘要:地球夕阳西坠,黄昏的祭坛下,地球,接受我双手合十最后的顶礼!女中俊杰,你历来受到英雄的尊崇。你温柔而刚烈,秉性中揉合着男性、女性的迥异气质;以不堪忍受的冲突摇撼人们的生活。你右手擎着斟满琼浆的金钟,左手将其击碎。你的游乐场响彻尖刻的讥嘲。你剥夺英雄们享受高尚生活的权力。你赋于“至善”以无上价值,你不怜悯可怜虫。你在繁茂的枝叶间隐藏了无休无止的拼搏,果实里准备胜利花环。 [点击阅读]
吉檀迦利
作者:佚名
章节:11 人气:0
摘要:冰心译1你已经使我永生,这样做是你的欢乐。这脆薄的杯儿,你不断地把它倒空,又不断地以新生命来充满。这小小的苇笛,你携带着它逾山越谷,从笛管里吹出永新的音乐。在你双手的不朽的按抚下,我的小小的心,消融在无边快乐之中,发出不可言说的词调。你的无穷的赐予只倾入我小小的手里。时代过去了,你还在倾注,而我的手里还有余量待充满。 [点击阅读]
名人传
作者:佚名
章节:55 人气:0
摘要:《名人传》包括《贝多芬传》、《米开朗基罗传》和《托尔斯泰传》三部传记。又称三大英雄传。《贝多芬传》:贝多芬出生于贫寒的家庭,父亲是歌剧演员,性格粗鲁,爱酗酒,母亲是个女仆。贝多芬本人相貌丑陋,童年和少年时代生活困苦,还经常受到父亲的打骂。贝多芬十一岁加入戏院乐队,十三岁当大风琴手。十七岁丧母,他独自一人承担着两个兄弟的教育的责任。1792年11月贝多芬离开了故乡波恩,前往音乐之都维也纳。 [点击阅读]
名士风流
作者:佚名
章节:57 人气:0
摘要:柳鸣九文学的作用在于向别人展示作家自己所看待的世界。这部小说的一个人物曾经这样认为:“为什么不动笔创作一部时间与地点明确、而且具有一定意义的小说呢?叙述一个当今的故事,读者可以从中看到自己的忧虑,发现自己的问题,既不去揭示什么,也不去鼓动什么,仅仅作为一个见证。”这个人物这样思忖着。 [点击阅读]
吸血鬼德古拉
作者:佚名
章节:20 人气:0
摘要:东欧,一四六二年自从她的王子骑马出征后,伊丽莎白王妃每晚都被血腥恐怖的恶梦折磨。每一夜,王妃会尽可能保持清醒;然而等她再也撑不住而合眼睡去后,她很快便会发现自己徘徊在死尸遍野、处处断肢残臂的梦魇中。她又尽力不去看那些伤兵的脸——然而,又一次,她被迫看到其中一人。永远是他那张伤痕累累的囚犯的脸,然后伊丽莎白便在尖叫声中醒来。 [点击阅读]