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louis lambert-第3部分

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chemistry。 Each of these divisions had its own building; classrooms;
and play…ground; in the large common precincts on to which the
classrooms opened; and beyond which was the refectory。

This dining…hall; worthy of an ancient religious Order; accommodated
all the school。 Contrary to the usual practice in educational
institutions; we were allowed to talk at our meals; a tolerant
Oratorian rule which enabled us to exchange plates according to our
taste。 This gastronomical barter was always one of the chief pleasures
of our college life。 If one of the 〃middle〃 boys at the head of his
table wished for a helping of lentils instead of dessertfor we had
dessertthe offer was passed down from one to another: 〃Dessert for
lentils!〃 till some other epicure had accepted; then the plate of
lentils was passed up to the bidder from hand to hand; and the plate
of dessert returned by the same road。 Mistakes were never made。 If
several identical offers were made; they were taken in order; and the
formula would be; 〃Lentils number one for dessert number one。〃 The
tables were very long; our incessant barter kept everything moving; we
transacted it with amazing eagerness; and the chatter of three hundred
lads; the bustling to and fro of the servants employed in changing the
plates; setting down the dishes; handing the bread; with the tours of
inspection of the masters; made this refectory at Vendome a scene
unique in its way; and the amazement of visitors。

To make our life more tolerable; deprived as we were of all
communication with the outer world and of family affection; we were
allowed to keep pigeons and to have gardens。 Our two or three hundred
pigeon…houses; with a thousand birds nesting all round the outer wall;
and above thirty garden plots; were a sight even stranger than our
meals。 But a full account of the peculiarities which made the college
at Vendome a place unique in itself and fertile in reminiscences to
those who spent their boyhood there; would be weariness to the reader。
Which of us all but remembers with delight; notwithstanding the
bitterness of learning; the eccentric pleasures of that cloistered
life? The sweetmeats purchased by stealth in the course of our walks;
permission obtained to play cards and devise theatrical performances
during the holidays; such tricks and freedom as were necessitated by
our seclusion; then; again; our military band; a relic of the cadets;
our academy; our chaplain; our Father professors; and all our games
permitted or prohibited; as the case might be; the cavalry charges on
stilts; the long slides made in winter; the clatter of our clogs; and;
above all; the trading transactions with 〃the shop〃 set up in the
courtyard itself。

This shop was kept by a sort of cheap…jack; of whom big and little
boys could procureaccording to his prospectusboxes; stilts; tools;
Jacobin pigeons; and Nuns; Mass…booksan article in small demand
penknives; paper; pens; pencils; ink of all colors; balls and marbles;
in short; the whole catalogue of the most treasured possessions of
boys; including everything from sauce for the pigeons we were obliged
to kill off; to the earthenware pots in which we set aside the rice
from supper to be eaten at next morning's breakfast。 Which of us was
so unhappy as to have forgotten how his heart beat at the sight of
this booth; open periodically during play…hours on Sundays; to which
we went; each in his turn; to spend his little pocket…money; while the
smallness of the sum allowed by our parents for these minor pleasures
required us to make a choice among all the objects that appealed so
strongly to our desires? Did ever a young wife; to whom her husband;
during the first days of happiness; hands; twelve times a year; a
purse of gold; the budget of her personal fancies; dream of so many
different purchases; each of which would absorb the whole sum; as we
imagined possible on the eve of the first Sunday in each month? For
six francs during one night we owned every delight of that
inexhaustible shop! and during Mass every response we chanted was
mixed up in our minds with our secret calculations。 Which of us all
can recollect ever having had a sou left to spend on the Sunday
following? And which of us but obeyed the instinctive law of social
existence by pitying; helping; and despising those pariahs who; by the
avarice or poverty of their parents; found themselves penniless?

Any one who forms a clear idea of this huge college; with its monastic
buildings in the heart of a little town; and the four plots in which
we were distributed as by a monastic rule; will easily conceive of the
excitement that we felt at the arrival of a new boy; a passenger
suddenly embarked on the ship。 No young duchess; on her first
appearance at Court; was ever more spitefully criticised than the new
boy by the youths in his division。 Usually during the evening play…
hour before prayers; those sycophants who were accustomed to
ingratiate themselves with the Fathers who took it in turns two and
two for a week to keep an eye on us; would be the first to hear on
trustworthy authority: 〃There will be a new boy to…morrow!〃 and then
suddenly the shout; 〃A New Boy!A New Boy!〃 rang through the courts。
We hurried up to crowd round the superintendent and pester him with
questions:

〃Where was he coming from? What was his name? Which class would he be
in?〃 and so forth。

Louis Lambert's advent was the subject of a romance worthy of the
/Arabian Nights/。 I was in the fourth class at the timeamong the
little boys。 Our housemasters were two men whom we called Fathers from
habit and tradition; though they were not priests。 In my time there
were indeed but three genuine Oratorians to whom this title
legitimately belonged; in 1814 they all left the college; which had
gradually become secularized; to find occupation about the altar in
various country parishes; like the cure of Mer。

Father Haugoult; the master for the week; was not a bad man; but of
very moderate attainments; and he lacked the tact which is
indispensable for discerning the different characters of children; and
graduating their punishment to their powers of resistance。 Father
Haugoult; then; began very obligingly to communicate to his pupils the
wonderful events which were to end on the morrow in the advent of the
most singular of 〃new boys。〃 Games were at an end。 All the children
came round in silence to hear the story of Louis Lambert; discovered;
like an aerolite; by Madame de Stael; in a corner of the wood。
Monsieur Haugoult had to tell us all about Madame de Stael; that
evening she seemed to me ten feet high; I saw at a later time the
picture of Corinne; in which Gerard represents her as so tall and
handsome; and; alas! the woman painted by my imagination so far
transcended this; that the real Madame de Stael fell at once in my
estimation; even after I read her book of really masculine power; /De
l'Allemagne/。

But Lambert at that time was an even greater wonder。 Monsieur
Mareschal; the headmaster; after examining him; had thought of placing
him among the senior boys。 It was Louis' ignorance of Latin that
placed him so low as the fourth class; but he would certainly leap up
a class every year; and; as a remarkable exception; he was to be one
of the 〃Academy。〃 /Proh pudor/! we were to have the honor of counting
among the 〃little boys〃 one whose coat was adorned with the red ribbon
displayed by the 〃Academicians〃 of Vendome。 These Academicians enjoyed
distinguished privileges; they often dined at the director's table;
and held two literary meetings annually; at which we were all present
to hear their elucubrations。 An Academician was a great man in embryo。
And if every Vendome scholar would speak the truth; he would confess
that; in later life; an Academician of the great French Academy seemed
to him far less remarkable than the stupendous boy who wore the cross
and the imposing red ribbon which were the insignia of our 〃Academy。〃

It was very unusual to be one of that illustrious body before
attaining to the second class; for the Academicians were expected to
hold public meetings every Thursday during the holidays; and to read
tales in verse or prose; epistles; essays; tragedies; dramas
compositions far above the intelligence of the lower classes。 I long
treasured the memory of a story called the 〃Green Ass;〃 which was; I
think; the masterpiece of this unknown Society。 In the fourth; and an
Academician! This boy of fourteen; a poet already; the protege of
Madame de Stael; a coming genius; said Father Haugoult; was to be one
of us! a wizard; a youth capable of writing a composition or a
translation while we were being called into lessons; and of learning
his lessons by reading them through but once。 Louis Lambert bewildered
all our ideas。 And Father Haugoult's curiosity and impatience to see
this new boy added fuel to our excited fancy。

〃If he has pigeons; he can have no pigeon…house; there is not room for
another。 Well; it cannot be helped;〃 said one boy; since famous as an
agriculturist。

〃Who will sit next to him?〃 said another。

〃Oh; I wish I might be his chum!〃 cried an enthusiast。

In school language; the word here rendered chum/faisant/; or in some
schools; /copin/expressed a fraternal sharing of the joys and evils
of your childish existence; a community of interests that was fruitful
of squabbling and making friends again; a treaty of alliance offensive
and defensive。 It is strange; but never in my time did I know brothers
who were chums。 If man lives by his feelings; he thinks perhaps that
he will make his life the poorer if he merges an affection of his own
choosing in a natural tie。

The impression made upon me by Father Haugoult's harangue that evening
is one of the most vivid reminiscences of my childhood; I can compare
it with nothing but my first reading of /Robinson Crusoe/。 Indeed; I
owe to my recollection of these prodigious impressions an observation
that may perhaps be new as to the different sense attached to words by
each hearer。 The word in itself has no final meaning; we affect a word
more than it affects us; its value is in relation to the images we
have assimilated and grouped roun
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