登陆注册
5288700000059

第59章 THE STAR(2)

As he was thus musing he looked up at the sky, and he noticed the presence of a new and unfamiliar star, which he had never seen before.

He was a close observer of the heavens and learned in astronomy, and he felt quite certain that he had never seen this star before. It was a star of peculiar radiance, large and white--almost blue in its whiteness--it shone in the East, and seemed to put all the other stars to shame by its overwhelming radiance and purity. While he was thus gazing at the star it seemed to him as though a great darkness had come upon the world. He heard a low muttering sound as of a distant earthquake, and this was quickly followed by the tramping of innumerable armies. He knew that the end had come. It is the Barbarians, he thought, who have already conquered the world. Rome has fallen never to rise again; Rome has shared the fate of Troy and Carthage, of Babylon, and Memphis; Rome is a name in an old wife's tale; and little savage children shall be given our holy trophies for playthings, and shall use our ruined temples and our overthrown palaces as their playground. And so sharp was the vividness of his vision that he wondered what would happen to his villa, and whether or no the Barbarians would destroy the image of Ceres on the terrace, which he especially cherished, not for its beauty but because it had belonged to his father and to his grandfather before him.

An eternity seemed to pass, and the tramp, tramp, tramp of the armies of those untrained hordes which were coming from the North and overrunning the world seemed to get nearer and nearer. He wondered what they would do with him; he had no place for fear in his heart, but he remembered that on the portico in the morning his freedman's child had been playing with the pieces of a broken jar, a copper coin, and a dog made of terra-cotta. He remembered the child's brown eyes and curly hair, its smile, its laughter, and lisping talk--it was a piece of earth and sun--and he thought of the spears of the Barbarians, and then shifted his thoughts because they sickened him.

Then, just when he thought the heavy footsteps had reached the approach of his villa, the vision changed. The noise of tramping ceased, and through the thick darkness there pierced the radiance of the star: the strange star he had seen that night. The world seemed to awake from a dark slumber. The ruins rose from the dust and took once more a stately shape, even lordlier than before. Rome had risen from the dead, and once more she dominated the world like a starry diadem.

Before him he seemed to see the pillars and the portals of a huge temple, more splendid and gorgeous than the Temples of Caesar. The gates were wide open, and from within came a blare of trumpets. He saw a kneeling multitude; and soldiers with shining breastplates, far taller than the legionaries of Caesar, were keeping a way through the dense crowd, while the figure of an aged man--was it the Pontifex Maximus, he wondered?--was borne aloft in a chair over their heads.

Then once more the vision changed. At least the temple seemed to grow wider, higher, and lighter; the crowd vanished; it seemed to him as though a long corridor of light was opening on some ultimate and mysterious doorway. At last this doorway was opened, and he saw distinctly before him a dark and low manger where oxen and asses were stalled. It was littered with straw. He could hear the peaceful beasts munching their food.

In the corner lay a woman, and in her arms was a child and his face shone like the sun and lit up the whole place, in which there were neither torches nor lamps. The door of the manger was ajar, and through it he saw the sky and the strange star still shining brightly.

He heard a voice, the same voice which he had heard twelve nights before; but the voice was not calling him, it was singing a song, and the song was as it were a part of a larger music, a symphony of clear voices, more joyous and different from anything he had ever heard.

The vision vanished altogether; he was standing once more under the portico amongst the surroundings which were familiar to him. The strange star was still shining in the sky. He went back through the folding-doors of the piazza into the dining-room. His gloom and his perplexity had been lifted from him; he felt quite happy; he could not have explained why. He called his slave and told him to get plenty of provisions on the morrow, for he expected friends to dinner. He added that he wanted nothing further and that the slaves could go to bed.

同类推荐
  • Miss Billy

    Miss Billy

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 俱舍论颂疏论本

    俱舍论颂疏论本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 紫元君授道传心法

    紫元君授道传心法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 本经逢原

    本经逢原

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 五言排律

    五言排律

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 居室装饰指南(家庭实用生活百科丛书)

    居室装饰指南(家庭实用生活百科丛书)

    本书主要介绍了居室要怎样装饰才能完美收场。进一步实现家庭装修的精美、舒适,健康打造出一个美丽如新的“家”。
  • 倒霉的鱼

    倒霉的鱼

    腊月过半,佟兆丰让妻子苏可可请假在家呆几天。苏可可说她突然想起柳老太,这个喜欢吃鱼的老县长夫人现在每天在农贸市场与卖鱼的讨价还价,弄得卖鱼的嫌她麻烦,都怕做她的生意。十年前柳老太家里的浴缸常年是用来养鱼的,老县长喜欢吃的丁鱼和湖里野生的鲫鱼密匝匝地浮在水面上换气。到腊月里,乡下的鱼塘清塘,七乡八镇的鱼都往她家送,搞得满屋都是腥味。苏可可会主动地去帮忙,帮柳老太处理鱼灾。柳老太看着忙活的苏可可会说:“没有你帮忙我不知道该怎么办,我只有把它们都扔掉,统统扔掉。”
  • 佛说长寿灭罪护诸童子陀罗尼经

    佛说长寿灭罪护诸童子陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金刚经·心经·坛经(中华国学经典)

    金刚经·心经·坛经(中华国学经典)

    《金刚经》全称为《能断金刚般若波罗密经》,是初期大乘佛教的代表性经典之一,也是般若类佛经的纲要书。在中国佛教界,《金刚经》流行得极为普遍,如三论、天台、贤首、唯识等宗派,都各有注疏。尤其是自唐宋以来盛极一时的禅宗,更与《金刚经》有深厚的渊源。宋代,出家人的考试,有《金刚经》一科,也让我们从中看出《金刚经》的弘通之盛!
  • 箫声咽

    箫声咽

    深夜,两名道士不请自来,他们自称来自江湖第一善帮的红筹寺,此行无非两个目的,一是送回文总镖头文玮峰的尸首,二是索回红筹寺的圣物。文夫人悲愤交加,百口莫辩,想要寻找帮手,却发现无论是女儿还是其他镖师都在转眼之间没了踪影……文玮峰的女婿,云台山庄的庄主徐士清觉得岳父死得蹊跷,便请来号称“江南府门三绝”之一的仵作白志远协助破案,谁知,白志远刚找到关键线索便死于非命。若干年后,仵作之女白箫被许配给徐家大少爷,不料新婚之夜,新郎却离奇失踪。所有这些都似乎与当年的文镖师命案有关联,而武功高强的蓬莱四子更是个个有嫌疑,究竟谁是凶手?
  • 爱的进程

    爱的进程

    人的一生中能有几回,曾经的伴侣再次相见,尘封的童年记忆忽然惊醒,年迈双亲像婴儿一般被子女照料?《爱的进程》的11个短篇中,门罗将目光投向普通人生活中最为私密的角落,聚焦于恋人、夫妻、手足、亲子之间难解难分的郁结和爱。作家的叙述尖锐而富于同情,记录了生命不同阶段中,人的自我、抉择以及对爱的体验是如何悄悄地转变。《爱的进程》发表于1986年,令门罗第三次斩获加拿大最高文学奖——总督文学奖。
  • 相看两相知

    相看两相知

    一毕业就来到S市躲避情伤的乖女孩陈方好,遇上了正在单枪匹马闯天下的小老板关海波。一个直老板,一个憨员工,竟然也相互扶持着混成了行业中的黑马。彼此井水不犯河水了三年,如今他突然提出要做她的“男朋友”,怎能不让方好惶惑之余心存错愕和质问——凭什么于万千人中,单单挑中了没出息的她!
  • 不可不知的科学常识

    不可不知的科学常识

    在人生的道路上,不知要经历多少的坎坷。每一次的成功,也许都要经历唐僧取经般的九九八十一难。如果我们的生命真有无限长的话,即使把所有的路都走一遍都无所谓,但事实是生命有限,人生苦短,人生真正能够做事的时间不过是短短的几十年。鉴于此,我们编著了这套《不可不知丛书》,作为读者朋友面对现实生活的一面旗帜,来感召和激励人生,共同朝着美好的未来前进。
  • 定力

    定力

    本书将为读者提供训练和提升定力的途径。其内容涉及坚定的信念诞生强大的人生;不浮躁,沉住气才能成大器;雄心若磐,伟大是熬出来的;打拼职场,只有埋头才能出头;人生一定要耐得住寂寞;学会爱,更要学会坚守;拒绝诱惑,别让婚姻败给流年等。
  • 少爷的夺爱陷阱

    少爷的夺爱陷阱

    (虐心,慎入)童年的回忆如同黑色的天空,从她进入这个家开始,她就整日整夜做恶梦,而恶梦的源头,就是她的少爷。六年后,她以为她逃过了恶魔的手掌,可是从天而降的一枚钻戒彻底地打破了她的梦。少爷卷土从来,她避无可避。他说:“你还怎么逃,我的玩具。”她发誓,终有一天,她会将离婚协议甩在他脸上,冷冷道:“少爷,你出局了。”