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第43章

the magic skin-第43章

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and longed to live for ever。 As his eyes fell upon Pauline; her own

opened at once as if a ray of sunlight had lighted on them。



〃Good…morning;〃 she said; smiling。 〃How handsome you are; bad man!〃



The grace of love and youth; of silence and dawn; shone in their

faces; making a divine picture; with the fleeting spell over it all

that belongs only to the earliest days of passion; just as simplicity

and artlessness are the peculiar possession of childhood。 Alas! love's

springtide joys; like our own youthful laughter; must even take

flight; and live for us no longer save in memory; either for our

despair; or to shed some soothing fragrance over us; according to the

bent of our inmost thoughts。



〃What made me wake you?〃 said Raphael。 〃It was so great a pleasure to

watch you sleeping that it brought tears to my eyes。〃



〃And to mine; too;〃 she answered。 〃I cried in the night while I

watched you sleeping; but not with happiness。 Raphael; dear; pray

listen to me。 Your breathing is labored while you sleep; and something

rattles in your chest that frightens me。 You have a little dry cough

when you are asleep; exactly like my father's; who is dying of

phthisis。 In those sounds from your lungs I recognized some of the

peculiar symptoms of that complaint。 Then you are feverish; I know you

are; your hand was moist and burningDarling; you are young;〃 she

added with a shudder; 〃and you could still get over it if

unfortunatelyBut; no;〃 she cried cheerfully; 〃there is no

'unfortunately;' the disease is contagious; so the doctors say。〃



She flung both arms about Raphael; drawing in his breath through one

of those kisses in which the soul reaches its end。



〃I do not wish to live to old age;〃 she said。 〃Let us both die young;

and go to heaven while flowers fill our hands。〃



〃We always make such designs as those when we are well and strong;〃

Raphael replied; burying his hands in Pauline's hair。 But even then a

horrible fit of coughing came on; one of those deep ominous coughs

that seem to come from the depths of the tomb; a cough that leaves the

sufferer ghastly pale; trembling; and perspiring; with aching sides

and quivering nerves; with a feeling of weariness pervading the very

marrow of the spine; and unspeakable languor in every vein。 Raphael

slowly laid himself down; pale; exhausted; and overcome; like a man

who has spent all the strength in him over one final effort。 Pauline's

eyes; grown large with terror; were fixed upon him; she lay quite

motionless; pale; and silent。



〃Let us commit no more follies; my angel;〃 she said; trying not to let

Raphael see the dreadful forebodings that disturbed her。 She covered

her face with her hands; for she saw Death before herthe hideous

skeleton。 Raphael's face had grown as pale and livid as any skull

unearthed from a churchyard to assist the studies of some scientific

man。 Pauline remembered the exclamation that had escaped from Valentin

the previous evening; and to herself she said:



〃Yes; there are gulfs that love can never cross; and therein love must

bury itself。〃



On a March morning; some days after this wretched scene; Raphael found

himself seated in an armchair; placed in the window in the full light

of day。 Four doctors stood round him; each in turn trying his pulse;

feeling him over; and questioning him with apparent interest。 The

invalid sought to guess their thoughts; putting a construction on

every movement they made; and on the slightest contractions of their

brows。 His last hope lay in this consultation。 This court of appeal

was about to pronounce its decisionlife or death。



Valentin had summoned the oracles of modern medicine; so that he might

have the last word of science。 Thanks to his wealth and title; there

stood before him three embodied theories; human knowledge fluctuated

round the three points。 Three of the doctors brought among them the

complete circle of medical philosophy; they represented the points of

conflict round which the battle raged; between Spiritualism; Analysis;

and goodness knows what in the way of mocking eclecticism。



The fourth doctor was Horace Bianchon; a man of science with a future

before him; the most distinguished man of the new school in medicine;

a discreet and unassuming representative of a studious generation that

is preparing to receive the inheritance of fifty years of experience

treasured up by the Ecole de Paris; a generation that perhaps will

erect the monument for the building of which the centuries behind us

have collected the different materials。 As a personal friend of the

Marquis and of Rastignac; he had been in attendance on the former for

some days past; and was helping him to answer the inquiries of the

three professors; occasionally insisting somewhat upon those symptoms

which; in his opinion; pointed to pulmonary disease。



〃You have been living at a great pace; leading a dissipated life; no

doubt; and you have devoted yourself largely to intellectual work?〃

queried one of the three celebrated authorities; addressing Raphael。

He was a square…headed man; with a large frame and energetic

organization; which seemed to mark him out as superior to his two

rivals。



〃I made up my mind to kill myself with debauchery; after spending

three years over an extensive work; with which perhaps you may some

day occupy yourselves;〃 Raphael replied。



The great doctor shook his head; and so displayed his satisfaction。 〃I

was sure of it;〃 he seemed to say to himself。 He was the illustrious

Brisset; the successor of Cabanis and Bichat; head of the Organic

School; a doctor popular with believers in material and positive

science; who see in man a complete individual; subject solely to the

laws of his own particular organization; and who consider that his

normal condition and abnormal states of disease can both be traced to

obvious causes。



After this reply; Brisset looked; without speaking; at a middle…sized

person; whose darkly flushed countenance and glowing eyes seemed to

belong to some antique satyr; and who; leaning his back against the

corner of the embrasure; was studying Raphael; without saying a word。

Doctor Cameristus; a man of creeds and enthusiasms; the head of the

〃Vitalists;〃 a romantic champion of the esoteric doctrines of Van

Helmont; discerned a lofty informing principle in human life; a

mysterious and inexplicable phenomenon which mocks at the scalpel;

deceives the surgeon; eludes the drugs of the pharmacopoeia; the

formulae of algebra; the demonstrations of anatomy; and derides all

our efforts; a sort of invisible; intangible flame; which; obeying

some divinely appointed law; will often linger on in a body in our

opinion devoted to death; while it takes flight from an organization

well fitted for prolonged existence。



A bitter smile hovered upon the lips of the third doctor; Maugredie; a

man of acknowledged ability; but a Pyrrhonist and a scoffer; with the

scalpel for his one article of faith。 He would consider; as a

concession to Brisset; that a man who; as a matter of fact; was

perfectly well was dead; and recognize with Cameristus that a man

might be living on after his apparent demise。 He found something

sensible in every theory; and embraced none of them; claiming that the

best of all systems of medicine was to have none at all; and to stick

to facts。 This Panurge of the Clinical Schools; the king of observers;

the great investigator; a great sceptic; the man of desperate

expedients; was scrutinizing the Magic Skin。



〃I should very much like to be a witness of the coincidence of its

retrenchment with your wish;〃 he said to the Marquis。



〃Where is the use?〃 cried Brisset。



〃Where is the use?〃 echoed Cameristus。



〃Ah; you are both of the same mind;〃 replied Maugredie。



〃The contraction is perfectly simple;〃 Brisset went on。



〃It is supernatural;〃 remarked Cameristus。



〃In short;〃 Maugredie made answer; with affected solemnity; and

handing the piece of skin to Raphael as he spoke; 〃the shriveling

faculty of the skin is a fact inexplicable; and yet quite natural;

which; ever since the world began; has been the despair of medicine

and of pretty women。〃



All Valentin's observation could discover no trace of a feeling for

his troubles in any of the three doctors。 The three received every

answer in silence; scanned him unconcernedly; and interrogated him

unsympathetically。 Politeness did not conceal their indifference;

whether deliberation or certainty was the cause; their words at any

rate came so seldom and so languidly; that at times Raphael thought

that their attention was wandering。 From time to time Brisset; the

sole speaker; remarked; 〃Good! just so!〃 as Bianchon pointed out the

existence of each desperate symptom。 Cameristus seemed to be deep in

meditation; Maugredie looked like a comic author; studying two queer

characters with a view to reproducing them faithfully upon the stage。

There was deep; unconcealed distress; and grave compassion in Horace

Bianchon's face。 He had been a doctor for too short a time to be

untouched by suffering and unmoved by a deathbed; he had not learned

to keep back the sympathetic tears that obscure a man's clear vision

and prevent him from seizing like the general of an army; upon the

auspicious moment for victory; in utter disregard of the groans of

dying men。



After spending about half an hour over taking in some sort the measure

of the patient and the complaint; much as a tailor measures a young

man for a coat when he orders his wedding outfit; the authorities

uttered several commonplaces; and even talked of politics。 Then they

decided to go into Raphael's study to exchange their ideas and frame

their verdict。



〃May I not be present during the discussion; gentlemen?〃 Valentin had

asked them; but Brisset and Maugredie protested against this; and; in

spite of their patient's entreaties; declined altogether to deliberate

in his presence。



Raphael gave way before their custom; thinking that he could slip into

a passage adjoining; whence he could easily overhear the medical

conference in which the three professors were about to engage。



〃Permit me; gentlemen;〃 said Brisset; as they entered; 〃to give you my

own opinion at once。 I neither wish to force it upon you nor to have

it discussed。 In the first place; it is unbiased; concise; and based

on an exact similarity that exists between one of my own patients and

the subject that we have been called in to examine; and; moreover; I

am expected at my hospital。 The importance of the case that demands my

presence there will excuse me for speaking the first word。 The subject

with which we are concerned has been exhausted in an equal degree by

intellectual laborswhat did he set about; Horace?〃 he asked of the

young doctor。



〃A 'Theory of the Will;' 〃



〃The devil! but that's a big subject。 He is exha

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