登陆注册
20055300000095

第95章

"O, yes, to be sure, the _question is_,--and a deuce of a question it is! How came _you_ in this state of sin and misery?

Well, I shall answer in the good old words you used to teach me, Sundays. I came so by ordinary generation. My servants were my father's, and, what is more, my mother's; and now they are mine, they and their increase, which bids fair to be a pretty considerable item. My father, you know, came first from New England; and he was just such another man as your father,--a regular old Roman,--upright, energetic, noble-minded, with an iron will. Your father settled down in New England, to rule over rocks and stones, and to force an existence out of Nature; and mine settled in Louisiana, to rule over men and women, and force existence out of them. My mother," said St. Clare, getting up and walking to a picture at the end of the room, and gazing upward with a face fervent with veneration, "_she was divine!_ Don't look at me so!--you know what I mean!

She probably was of mortal birth; but, as far as ever I could observe, there was no trace of any human weakness or error about her; and everybody that lives to remember her, whether bond or free, servant, acquaintance, relation, all say the same. Why, cousin, that mother has been all that has stood between me and utter unbelief for years. She was a direct embodiment and personification of the New Testament,--a living fact, to be accounted for, and to be accounted for in no other way than by its truth. O, mother! mother!" said St. Clare, clasping his hands, in a sort of transport; and then suddenly checking himself, he came back, and seating himself on an ottoman, he went on:

"My brother and I were twins; and they say, you know, that twins ought to resemble each other; but we were in all points a contrast.

He had black, fiery eyes, coal-black hair, a strong, fine Roman profile, and a rich brown complexion. I had blue eyes, golden hair, a Greek outline, and fair complexion. He was active and observing, I dreamy and inactive. He was generous to his friends and equals, but proud, dominant, overbearing, to inferiors, and utterly unmerciful to whatever set itself up against him.

Truthful we both were; he from pride and courage, I from a sort of abstract ideality. We loved each other about as boys generally do,--off and on, and in general;--he was my father's pet, and I my mother's.

"There was a morbid sensitiveness and acuteness of feeling in me on all possible subjects, of which he and my father had no kind of understanding, and with which they could have no possible sympathy. But mother did; and so, when I had quarreled with Alfred, and father looked sternly on me, I used to go off to mother's room, and sit by her. I remember just how she used to look, with her pale cheeks, her deep, soft, serious eyes, her white dress,--she always wore white; and I used to think of her whenever I read in Revelations about the saints that were arrayed in fine linen, clean and white. She had a great deal of genius of one sort and another, particularly in music; and she used to sit at her organ, playing fine old majestic music of the Catholic church, and singing with a voice more like an angel than a mortal woman; and I would lay my head down on her lap, and cry, and dream, and feel,--oh, immeasurably!--things that I had no language to say!

"In those days, this matter of slavery had never been canvassed as it has now; nobody dreamed of any harm in it.

"My father was a born aristocrat. I think, in some preexistent state, he must have been in the higher circles of spirits, and brought all his old court pride along with him; for it was ingrain, bred in the bone, though he was originally of poor and not in any way of noble family. My brother was begotten in his image.

"Now, an aristocrat, you know, the world over, has no human sympathies, beyond a certain line in society. In England the line is in one place, in Burmah in another, and in America in another; but the aristocrat of all these countries never goes over it. What would be hardship and distress and injustice in his own class, is a cool matter of course in another one. My father's dividing line was that of color. _Among his equals_, never was a man more just and generous; but he considered the negro, through all possible gradations of color, as an intermediate link between man and animals, and graded all his ideas of justice or generosity on this hypothesis.

I suppose, to be sure, if anybody had asked him, plump and fair, whether they had human immortal souls, he might have hemmed and hawed, and said yes. But my father was not a man much troubled with spiritualism; religious sentiment he had none, beyond a veneration for God, as decidedly the head of the upper classes.

"Well, my father worked some five hundred negroes; he was an inflexible, driving, punctilious business man; everything was to move by system,--to be sustained with unfailing accuracy and precision. Now, if you take into account that all this was to be worked out by a set of lazy, twaddling, shiftless laborers, who had grown up, all their lives, in the absence of every possible motive to learn how to do anything but `shirk,' as you Vermonters say, and you'll see that there might naturally be, on his plantation, a great many things that looked horrible and distressing to a sensitive child, like me.

"Besides all, he had an overseer,--great, tall, slab-sided, two-fisted renegade son of Vermont--(begging your pardon),--who had gone through a regular apprenticeship in hardness and brutality and taken his degree to be admitted to practice. My mother never could endure him, nor I; but he obtained an entire ascendency over my father; and this man was the absolute despot of the estate.

同类推荐
  • 持世陀罗尼经

    持世陀罗尼经

    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。
  • The Provost

    The Provost

    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。
  • 太微灵书紫文仙忌真记上经

    太微灵书紫文仙忌真记上经

    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。
  • Lysistrata

    Lysistrata

    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。
  • 梵天火罗九曜

    梵天火罗九曜

    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。
热门推荐
  • 让你的谈吐打动人心

    让你的谈吐打动人心

    本书从心理学和逻辑学的角度出发,用大量生动的例子讲述说话的艺术与技巧。
  • 太上老君说常清静经注

    太上老君说常清静经注

    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。
  • 异界流氓大仙

    异界流氓大仙

    人生很无奈,看个女宿舍居然遇到玉帝老人家。人生很神奇,拍个脸部特写就被抓到了仙界。人生很刺激,就这么被小娘皮给送到异界了。赵无极本打算在异界安心地呆个百年挥一挥衣袖不带走一片云彩的离开,但结果却是这百年时间他影响了整个异界……
  • 血色的轮回

    血色的轮回

    失败,失败,失败……我要复仇,我要让你生不如死,我会比蛇蝎还毒,比后宫每一个女人都狠,你欠我的,我要你一样一样的还回来,我要你还回来……
  • 第二次世界大战实录:战史篇(三)

    第二次世界大战实录:战史篇(三)

    本书内容包括:第二次世界大战的起源背景、序幕爆发、全面展开、相持转折、最后结局等。
  • 神仙与爱情

    神仙与爱情

    一个人渴望神仙的自在,一个神仙渴望人类的爱情,当他们互换身份,结局会如何?
  • 夜半诡事

    夜半诡事

    石磊一个大学毕业的学生,用他的话说这年头毕业等于失业,无奈之下他在网上找到了一份充满诡异气息的工作——猎鬼。
  • 冷艳贫女惹人爱

    冷艳贫女惹人爱

    她是夏日里可远观不可亵玩的白莲,也是冬日里透着刺骨凉意的寒冰。江湖险恶,血海仇深,谜团重重,到底谁能陪她经历一切,靠近她,温暖她……
  • 仙道无迹

    仙道无迹

    世家门阀弃子,没有自暴自弃,他拥有一颗自强不息的心,在这个乱世、人命如狗的年代里,所有的人都只想着如何去苟活于世,他凭借自己的双手,如何在这个武侠世界里成就绝世强者,又怎样一步步的走向修仙之路不一样的时代、不一样的武侠世界、不一样的寻仙之路,不一样的经历、不一样的看点,只希望用心写出来的东西,不会让各位看官失望,相信某枫,一定会给一个惊喜给各位。
  • 雪月玉龙

    雪月玉龙

    《雪月玉龙》讲述的是一名少年公子行走江湖的经历,在出山之前,本以为凭借自己的小聪明可以轻松的应对世俗的环境,哪想步入江湖后处处危机,让自己防不胜防,不仅让自己受伤,而且还因为打赌赔上了自己绝世武功,还好自己的法宝在关键时刻救下自己的性命,当武功废掉后,出山后从一名小贩手里买了本《雪月诀》却使得自己重新获得了力量,当中曲折更是惊心动魄,主人翁是否能征服世界?能否找到自己最终的归宿?让我们对此拭目以待!这部书也是本人第一部小说,欢迎大家对本书进行评价,好的建议我会结合实际融入书中,对于后期创作还需要大家的支持与鼓励!