登陆注册
5386500000010

第10章 THE TALISMAN(10)

"You have been hissed perhaps at the Funambules? Or you have had to compose couplets to pay for your mistress' funeral? Do you want to be cured of the gold fever? Or to be quit of the spleen? For what blunder is your life forfeit?""You must not look among the common motives that impel suicides for the reason of my death. To spare myself the task of disclosing my unheard-of sufferings, for which language has no name, I will tell you this--that I am in the deepest, most humiliating, and most cruel trouble, and," he went on in proud tones that harmonized ill with the words just uttered, "I have no wish to beg for either help or sympathy.""Eh! eh!"

The two syllables which the old man pronounced resembled the sound of a rattle. Then he went on thus:

"Without compelling you to entreat me, without making you blush for it, and without giving you so much as a French centime, a para from the Levant, a German heller, a Russian kopeck, a Scottish farthing, a single obolus or sestertius from the ancient world, or one piastre from the new, without offering you anything whatever in gold, silver, or copper, notes or drafts, I will make you richer, more powerful, and of more consequence than a constitutional king."The young man thought that the older was in his dotage, and waited in bewilderment without venturing to reply.

"Turn round," said the merchant, suddenly catching up the lamp in order to light up the opposite wall; "look at that leathern skin," he went on.

The young man rose abruptly, and showed some surprise at the sight of a piece of shagreen which hung on the wall behind his chair. It was only about the size of a fox's skin, but it seemed to fill the deep shadows of the place with such brilliant rays that it looked like a small comet, an appearance at first sight inexplicable. The young sceptic went up to this so-called talisman, which was to rescue him from all points of view, and he soon found out the cause of its singular brilliancy. The dark grain of the leather had been so carefully burnished and polished, the striped markings of the graining were so sharp and clear, that every particle of the surface of the bit of Oriental leather was in itself a focus which concentrated the light, and reflected it vividly.

He accounted for this phenomenon categorically to the old man, who only smiled meaningly by way of answer. His superior smile led the young scientific man to fancy that he himself had been deceived by some imposture. He had no wish to carry one more puzzle to his grave, and hastily turned the skin over, like some child eager to find out the mysteries of a new toy.

"Ah," he cried, "here is the mark of the seal which they call in the East the Signet of Solomon.""So you know that, then?" asked the merchant. His peculiar method of laughter, two or three quick breathings through the nostrils, said more than any words however eloquent.

"Is there anybody in the world simple enough to believe in that idle fancy?" said the young man, nettled by the spitefulness of the silent chuckle. "Don't you know," he continued, "that the superstitions of the East have perpetuated the mystical form and the counterfeit characters of the symbol, which represents a mythical dominion? I have no more laid myself open to a charge of credulity in this case, than if I had mentioned sphinxes or griffins, whose existence mythology in a manner admits.""As you are an Orientalist," replied the other, "perhaps you can read that sentence."He held the lamp close to the talisman, which the young man held towards him, and pointed out some characters inlaid in the surface of the wonderful skin, as if they had grown on the animal to which it once belonged.

"I must admit," said the stranger, "that I have no idea how the letters could be engraved so deeply on the skin of a wild ass." And he turned quickly to the tables strewn with curiosities and seemed to look for something.

"What is it that you want?" asked the old man.

"Something that will cut the leather, so that I can see whether the letters are printed or inlaid."The old man held out his stiletto. The stranger took it and tried to cut the skin above the lettering; but when he had removed a thin shaving of leather from them, the characters still appeared below, so clear and so exactly like the surface impression, that for a moment he was not sure that he had cut anything away after all.

"The craftsmen of the Levant have secrets known only to themselves,"he said, half in vexation, as he eyed the characters of this Oriental sentence.

"Yes," said the old man, "it is better to attribute it to man's agency than to God's."The mysterious words were thus arranged:

[Drawing of apparently Sanskrit characters omitted]

Or, as it runs in English:

POSSESSING ME THOU SHALT POSSESS ALL THINGS.

BUT THY LIFE IS MINE, FOR GOD HAS SO WILLED IT.

WISH, AND THY WISHES SHALL BE FULFILLED;

BUT MEASURE THY DESIRES, ACCORDING TO THE LIFE THAT IS IN THEE.

THIS IS THY LIFE, WITH EACH WISH I MUST SHRINKEVEN AS THY OWN DAYS.

WILT THOU HAVE ME? TAKE ME.

GOD WILL HEARKEN UNTO THEE.

SO BE IT!

"So you read Sanskrit fluently," said the old man. "You have been in Persia perhaps, or in Bengal?""No, sir," said the stranger, as he felt the emblematical skin curiously. It was almost as rigid as a sheet of metal.

The old merchant set the lamp back again upon the column, giving the other a look as he did so. "He has given up the notion of dying already," the glance said with phlegmatic irony.

"Is it a jest, or is it an enigma?" asked the younger man.

The other shook his head and said soberly:

"I don't know how to answer you. I have offered this talisman with its terrible powers to men with more energy in them than you seem to me to have; but though they laughed at the questionable power it might exert over their futures, not one of them was ready to venture to conclude the fateful contract proposed by an unknown force. I am of their opinion, I have doubted and refrained, and----""Have you never even tried its power?" interrupted the young stranger.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 光与影的恋歌

    光与影的恋歌

    光与影的交汇,生与死的别离,我与你不离不弃!
  • 大秦盛衰四十年:破译大秦帝国密码

    大秦盛衰四十年:破译大秦帝国密码

    大秦帝国,一个神秘的王朝:它是中国有史以来第一个真正统一的建封王朝;它有着亘古未有的辽阔疆士;它奠定了延续十五个封建王朝或时代的统治基础;然而就在短短四十年间,大秦帝国经历了从崛起到灭亡的历史变迁,是什么原因促成了这一辉煌而又短命的王朝?它的主人、一代大帝秦始皇又为何给后世留下了种种难解的谜团……
  • 过去

    过去

    于晓愉看了看窗外,觉得现在走,天黑前就能赶回家。但她在思想上还是举棋不定,等张小卫一起走?还是自己先走?大概有三分钟的时间,她在这两个选择之间进行自我说服,最后还是决定自己先走。她下决心似的从衣帽架上拿下她的羽绒服,然后在镜子前看了看,她的头发有点乱,于是她去窗台上找来梳子,她要把自己收拾得整齐一些,总不能一出门,就让别人看到她乱糟糟的头发。临出门前,于晓愉关掉了电脑电源,看了看,她刚泡起的玫瑰花茶味道正好,她端起杯子又喝了一口。一下午的时间,她已经喝了两杯玫瑰花茶了,后来觉得味道有点淡,就倒掉了。
  • 年下疯

    年下疯

    从小离家学习舞蹈的叶如尘从练习生的时候就羡慕陈曦有个姐姐。姐姐给他给他钱、姐姐给他买衣服、姐姐给他选造型……终于见到了传说中的姐姐,想占为己有,却不想:“我不想跟比我小的人谈恋爱。”“乖,叫哥哥。”没有年上宠,何来年下疯。
  • 热泪

    热泪

    卓星月喜欢热带,仿佛每一口滚烫的呼吸都可以把心烧焦,再也感觉不到关于杨决的痛。当她和富家公子杨决私奔被杨父抓回,面对不屑的目光,她知道逃避是弱者的选择,为了获得杨父的承认,她必须让自己强大到无懈可击。于是,她选择到千里之外的热带旅游小岛,为痛失爱子的姑妈打理猫星酒店,希望获得继承权。大学毕业生从打扫猫舍做起,一步步开始继承之路。然而,行为偏激的姑妈屡屡令卓星月的希望变成绝望,幸亏一位谜团重重的黑先生多次出手帮忙,支撑她永不放弃。隔着一千八百公里的距离,这头有对酒店虎视眈眈的对手机关算尽,那头有为杨决无怨无悔的电视台女主播唐兰曦步步紧逼。时光拍岸,异地恋真的能长久吗?也许,只有海知道答案。
  • 绝命哀歌

    绝命哀歌

    如果,明明知道和你爱的人没有结果,你还会像飞蛾扑向火焰般追寻吗?虞姬想她会的,哪怕和他在一起的时间万分之一秒,她也会义不容辞
  • 爱上木匠

    爱上木匠

    杏子是一个年轻貌美的农村女孩。高中毕业后在家务农,后跟随打工大潮南下,与同村同学美子在一个工厂打工,因各方面表现突出,在工厂里受到领导的关注与器重。一次跟美子去了她老公的建筑工地上,认识了美子老公的同事,一个木匠秦爱绍。很快他就走进了杏子的内心,木匠的音容笑貌开始影响她,打动她,折磨她,从木匠身上发出的任何一个信息都堪比电流,这暗流涌动的精神物质,用空气、温度与想象在向她传递着,她该怎么办?找一个内心喜欢的家境贫寒的木匠,过着平凡的底层生活,还是应允穷追不舍的厂长侄子,与富二代过上令人羡慕的生活,以此来满足她在老乡以及家乡人谈论中的虚荣?
  • 西游之傲世妖孽

    西游之傲世妖孽

    平凡少年,魂穿异界,竟然成为孙悟空与紫霞仙子的儿子孙宝天。可二人的结合并不被某些大能人物与超级势力所允许。为了家人,孙悟空与紫霞仙子都陷入危险中。得知此事,唐僧毅然舍弃一身功业,以给徒弟祈福,再次投胎转世;猪八戒与沙和尚也立刻去寻助师兄。而此时,更大的危机与剧变正悄然降临。看新一代妖孽孙宝天,如何战胜重重危机,大败各路强敌,成为九天十地新的永恒传奇!
  • 锐读(第15期·悬疑新主张)

    锐读(第15期·悬疑新主张)

    悬疑作品是一个社会的窗子,我们站在窗外,窥视里面的喜怒哀乐。 用有意思的悬疑作品打动人。
  • 太阳从西方升起

    太阳从西方升起

    八月天,河南省作家协会会员。发表小说《遥远的麦子》《黑神的别样人生》《低腰裤》《父亲的王国》等。现任某报社记者。