登陆注册
37370000000033

第33章

"I know what you are going to say,--that the fancy was a weakening of the mind from within.I admit I should have thought of that but he looked so confoundedly sane and able that it seemed ridiculous.He kept asking me my opinion, as a lawyer, on the facts he offered.It was the oddest case ever put before me, but I did my best for him.I dropped all my own views of sense and nonsense.I told him that, taking all that he had told me as fact, the Prescences might be either ordinary minds traversing Space in sleep; or minds such as his which had independently captured the sense of Space's quality; or, finally, the spirits of just men made perfect, behaving as psychical researchers think they do.It was a ridiculous task to set a prosaic man, and Iwasn't quite serious.But Holland was serious enough.

"He admitted that all three explanations were conceivable, but he was very doubtful about the first.The projection of the spirit into Space during sleep, he thought, was a faint and feeble thing, and these were powerful Presences.With the second and the third he was rather impressed.I suppose I should have seen what was happening and tried to stop it; at least, looking back that seems to have been my duty.But it was difficult to think that anything was wrong with Hollond; indeed the odd thing is that all this time the idea of madness never entered my head.Irather backed him up.Somehow the thing took my fancy, though Ithought it moonshine at the bottom of my heart.I enlarged on the pioneering before him.'Think,' I told him, 'what may be waiting for you.You may discover the meaning of Spirit.You may open up a new world, as rich as the old one, but imperishable.You may prove to mankind their immortality and deliver them for ever from the fear of death.Why, man, you are picking at the lock of all the world's mysteries.'

"But Hollond did not cheer up.He seemed strangely languid and dispirited.'That is all true enough,' he said,'if you are right, if your alternatives are exhaustive.But suppose they are something else, something....What that 'something' might be he had apparently no idea, and very soon he went away.

"He said another thing before he left.We asked me if I ever read poetry, and I said, not often.Nor did he: but he had picked up a little book somewhere and found a man who knew about the Presences.I think his name was Traherne, one of the seventeenth-century fellows.He quoted a verse which stuck to my fly-paper memory.It ran something like'Within the region of the air, Compassed about with Heavens fair, Great tracts of lands there may be found, Where many numerous hosts, In those far distant coasts, For other great and glorious ends Inhabit, my yet unknown friends.'

Hollond was positive he did not mean angels or anything of the sort.I told him that Traherne evidently took a cheerful view of them.He admitted that, but added: 'He had religion, you see.

He believed that everything was for the best.I am not a man of faith, and can only take comfort from what I understand.I'm in the dark, I tell you...'

"Next week I was busy with the Chilian Arbitration case, and saw nobody for a couple of months.Then one evening I ran against Hollond on the Embankment, and thought him looking horribly ill.

He walked back with me to my rooms, and hardly uttered one word all the way.I gave him a stiff whisky-and-soda, which he gulped down absent-mindedly.There was that strained, hunted look in his eyes that you see in a frightened animal's.He was always lean, but now he had fallen away to skin and bone.

"'I can't stay long,' he told me, 'for I'm off to the Alps to-morrow and I have a lot to do.' Before then he used to plunge readily into his story, but now he seemed shy about beginning.

Indeed I had to ask him a question.

"'Things are difficult,' he said hesitatingly, and rather distressing.Do you know, Leithen, I think you were wrong about--about what I spoke to you of.You said there must be one of three explanations.I am beginning to think that there is a fourth.

"He stopped for a second or two, then suddenly leaned forward and gripped my knee so fiercely that I cried out.'That world is the Desolation,' he said in a choking voice, 'and perhaps I am getting near the Abomination of the Desolation that the old prophet spoke of.I tell you, man, I am on the edge of a terror, a terror,' he almost screamed, 'that no mortal can think of and live.'

You can imagine that I was considerably startled.It was lightning out of a clear sky.How the devil could one associate horror with mathematics? I don't see it yet...At any rate, I--You may he sure I cursed my folly for ever pretending to take him seriously.The only way would have been to have laughed him out of it at the start.And yet I couldn't, you know--it was too real and reasonable.Anyhow, I tried a firm tone now, and told him the whole thing was arrant raving bosh.I bade him be a man and pull himself together.I made him dine with me, and took him home, and got him into a better state of mind before he went to bed.Next morning I saw him off at Charing Cross, very haggard still, but better.He promised to write to me pretty often...."The pony, with a great eleven-pointer lurching athwart its back, was abreast of us, and from the autumn mist came the sound of soft Highland voices.Leithen and I got up to go, when we heard that the rifle had made direct for the Lodge by a short cut past the Sanctuary.In the wake of the gillies we descended the Correi road into a glen all swimming with dim purple shadows.

The pony minced and boggled; the stag's antlers stood out sharp on the rise against a patch of sky, looking like a skeleton tree.

Then we dropped into a covert of birches and emerged on the white glen highway.

同类推荐
  • 咏慵

    咏慵

    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。
  • 树杞林志

    树杞林志

    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。
  • 道德真经注

    道德真经注

    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。
  • 献帝春秋

    献帝春秋

    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。
  • 南华真经注疏

    南华真经注疏

    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
  • 人间百味楼

    人间百味楼

    人间百味,故事各各一人,一楼,一讲故人。
  • 未曾有因缘经

    未曾有因缘经

    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。
  • 偷来的那些余生

    偷来的那些余生

    任可儿在现实社会中挣扎的小人物,由于灵识得强大开启了隐藏的功能,进入了灵越境界,跟随灵越家族进行了三种人生的体验。在这过程中体验了最真实的人性,最现实的社会,最不可想象的灵越境界。在他的执着和坚持努力下,努力的让这世道变得更好,让这人情变得更真挚,让这世界保留更多的美好和爱。
  • 万界生死劫

    万界生死劫

    祸兮,福之所倚,福兮,祸之所伏!他是唐紫尘的得意门生,是何晨光在特种兵生涯上的引路人,是王重阳的师弟,是斯塔克的死党,是聂小倩梦中的情人,是是勇斗血魔的先锋,是孙悟空的师弟,是紫霞仙子的守护者,是紫霄宫中三千客,是地球重临洪荒的促进者,更是盘古复活的执行者。在无限位面中,或是英雄,或是过客,或是皇帝,或是将军,或是主宰,但又有多少人知道,他开始的目的只是活着,然后让自己爱的人活的更好一点!
  • 亡灵魔导

    亡灵魔导

    相依为命的爷爷死了,决心复仇的格里无意间遇到3个骷髅,3个骷髅带给了他无限机缘,眼看复仇有望,格里却发现这不仅仅是复仇那么简单!神,人,亡灵之间错综复杂的关系。“嗯,既然这么复杂,那么便要让世间无神!”格里如是说。
  • 武林双侠

    武林双侠

    每个人心中都有一个武侠梦,这是我心中的一个武侠世界。一个是身世成谜的侠,一个是官差家长大的侠,这双侠究竟会掀起一场怎样的江湖风云呢,请朋友们关注这部作品。
  • 我若喜欢不必多言

    我若喜欢不必多言

    校园短篇恋爱小说,男主桃泽宇与女主夏榆的精彩相遇
  • 我家摄政王又吃醋了

    我家摄政王又吃醋了

    「架空小甜饼,请勿考究」重活一世,摄政王贺聿收起他的狼爪子,装成一位温润如玉的君子,慢慢接近薛从筠。然后叼回他的狼窝。成亲前:薛从筠:“贺公子,我今日这身衣裳美否?”贺聿细细看过一眼,道:“甚美,令吾不思进取,思你。”薛家小娘子被撩得红了脸。成亲后:薛从筠:“贺聿,我穿的这身衣服好看吗?”贺聿赶紧从公文中抬起头来,说:“娘子穿什么都好看。”说罢,便站起身来,逼着薛从筠道到墙角。“那娘子觉得为夫如何,嗯?”薛从筠缩在角落里瑟瑟发抖。贺聿的手放在她的腰上摩挲着,嘴角勾起似有似无的笑,“阿侬今晚可别再逃了啊。”薛从筠欲哭无泪。以前那个不小心碰一下就会脸红的纯情美少年去哪了?现在谁把这个厚颜无耻的大混蛋带走!
  • 怒荡天下

    怒荡天下

    地球青年周易重生玄黄大世界,体内被人打入神秘封印,修为不得寸进,受人白眼。一朝觉醒,惊现妖圣破损元神,得奇遇,炼神水,怒荡天下。人若不公,灭之!地若不公,平之!天若不公,荡之!
  • 经济新常态和企业新变革(谷臻小简·AI导读版)

    经济新常态和企业新变革(谷臻小简·AI导读版)

    汇集我国经济领域著名专家和资深学者,对中国经济发展出现的新变化、新趋势,特别是新常态给予阐述和分析,以及对企业在新常态下所发生的变革或变革趋势发表见解和观点。