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Romola
Part 1   Part 1 - Chapter 11. Tito's Dilemma
George Eliot
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       _ Part One: Chapter Eleven. Tito's Dilemma
       When Fra Luca had ceased to speak, Tito still stood by him in irresolution, and it was not till, the pressure of the passengers being removed, the friar rose and walked slowly into the church of Santa Felicita, that Tito also went on his way along the Via de' Bardi.
       "If this monk is a Florentine," he said to himself; "if he is going to remain at Florence, everything must be disclosed." He felt that a new crisis had come, but he was not, for all that, too evidently agitated to pay his visit to Bardo, and apologise for his previous non-appearance. Tito's talent for concealment was being fast developed into something less neutral. It was still possible--perhaps it might be inevitable-- for him to accept frankly the altered conditions, and avow Baldassarre's existence; but hardly without casting an unpleasant light backward on his original reticence as studied equivocation in order to avoid the fulfilment of a secretly recognised claim, to say nothing of his quiet settlement of himself and investment of his florins, when, it would be clear, his benefactor's fate had not been certified. It was at least provisionally wise to act as if nothing had happened, and for the present he would suspend decisive thought; there was all the night for meditation, and no one would know the precise moment at which he had received the letter.
       So he entered the room on the second storey--where Romola and her father sat among the parchment and the marble, aloof from the life of the streets on holidays as well as on common days--with a face only a little less bright than usual, from regret at appearing so late: a regret which wanted no testimony, since he had given up the sight of the Corso in order to express it; and then set himself to throw extra animation into the evening, though all the while his consciousness was at work like a machine with complex action, leaving deposits quite distinct from the line of talk; and by the time he descended the stone stairs and issued from the grim door in the starlight, his mind had really reached a new stage in its formation of a purpose.
       And when, the next day, after he was free from his professorial work, he turned up the Via del Cocomero towards the convent of San Marco, his purpose was fully shaped. He was going to ascertain from Fra Luca precisely how much he conjectured of the truth, and on what grounds he conjectured it; and, further, how long he was to remain at San Marco. And on that fuller knowledge he hoped to mould a statement which would in any case save him from the necessity of quitting Florence. Tito had never had occasion to fabricate an ingenious lie before: the occasion was come now--the occasion which circumstance never fails to beget on tacit falsity; and his ingenuity was ready. For he had convinced himself that he was not bound to go in search of Baldassarre. He had once said that on a fair assurance of his father's existence and whereabout, he would unhesitatingly go after him. But, after all, why was he bound to go? What, looked at closely, was the end of all life, but to extract the utmost sum of pleasure? And was not his own blooming life a promise of incomparably more pleasure, not for himself only, but for others, than the withered wintry life of a man who was past the time of keen enjoyment, and whose ideas had stiffened into barren rigidity? Those ideas had all been sown in the fresh soil of Tito's mind, and were lively germs there: that was the proper order of things--the order of nature, which treats all maturity as a mere nidus for youth. Baldassarre had done his work, had had his draught of life: Tito said it was his turn now.
       And the prospect was so vague:--"I think they are going to take me to Antioch:" here was a vista! After a long voyage, to spend months, perhaps years, in a search for which even now there was no guarantee that it would not prove vain: and to leave behind at starting a life of distinction and love: and to find, if he found anything, the old exacting companionship which was known by rote beforehand. Certainly the gems and therefore the florins were, in a sense, Baldassarre's: in the narrow sense by which the right of possession is determined in ordinary affairs; but in that large and more radically natural view by which the world belongs to youth and strength, they were rather his who could extract the most pleasure out of them. That, he was conscious, was not the sentiment which the complicated play of human feelings had engendered in society. The men around him would expect that he should immediately apply those florins to his benefactor's rescue. But what was the sentiment of society?--a mere tangle of anomalous traditions and opinions, which no wise man would take as a guide, except so far as his own comfort was concerned. Not that he cared for the florins save perhaps for Romola's sake: he would give up the florins readily enough. It was the joy that was due to him and was close to his lips, which he felt he was not bound to thrust away from him and so travel on, thirsting. Any maxims that required a man to fling away the good that was needed to make existence sweet, were only the lining of human selfishness turned outward: they were made by men who wanted others to sacrifice themselves for their sake. He would rather that Baldassarre should not suffer: he liked no one to suffer; but could any philosophy prove to him that he was bound to care for another's suffering more than for his own? To do so he must have loved Baldassarre devotedly, and he did not love him: was that his own fault? Gratitude! seen closely, it made no valid claim: his father's life would have been dreary without him: are we convicted of a debt to men for the pleasures they give themselves?
       Having once begun to explain away Baldassarre's claim, Tito's thought showed itself as active as a virulent acid, eating its rapid way through all the tissues of sentiment. His mind was destitute of that dread which has been erroneously decried as if it were nothing higher than a man's animal care for his own skin: that awe of the Divine Nemesis which was felt by religious pagans, and, though it took a more positive form under Christianity, is still felt by the mass of mankind simply as a vague fear at anything which is called wrong-doing. Such terror of the unseen is so far above mere sensual cowardice that it will annihilate that cowardice: it is the initial recognition of a moral law restraining desire, and checks the hard bold scrutiny of imperfect thought into obligations which can never be proved to have any sanctity in the absence of feeling. "It is good," sing the old Eumenides, in Aeschylus, "that fear should sit as the guardian of the soul, forcing it into wisdom--good that men should carry a threatening shadow in their hearts under the full sunshine; else, how should they learn to revere the right?" That guardianship may become needless; but only when all outward law has become needless--only when duty and love have united in one stream and made a common force.
       As Tito entered the outer cloister of San Marco, and inquired for Fra Luca, there was no shadowy presentiment in his mind: he felt himself too cultured and sceptical for that: he had been nurtured in contempt for the tales of priests whose impudent lives were a proverb, and in erudite familiarity with disputes concerning the Chief Good, which had after all, he considered, left it a matter of taste. Yet fear was a strong element in Tito's nature--the fear of what he believed or saw was likely to rob him of pleasure: and he had a definite fear that Fra Luca might be the means of driving him from Florence.
       "Fra Luca? ah, he is gone to Fiesole--to the Dominican monastery there. He was taken on a litter in the cool of the morning. The poor Brother is very ill. Could you leave a message for him?"
       This answer was given by a fra converso, or lay brother, whose accent told plainly that he was a raw contadino, and whose dull glance implied no curiosity.
       "Thanks; my business can wait."
       Tito turned away with a sense of relief. "This friar is not likely to live," he said to himself. "I saw he was worn to a shadow. And at Fiesole there will be nothing to recall me to his mind. Besides, if he should come back, my explanation will serve as well then as now. But I wish I knew what it was that his face recalled to me." _
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本书目录

Part 1
   Part 1 - Proem
   Part 1 - Chapter 1. The Shipwrecked Stranger
   Part 1 - Chapter 2. Breakfast For Love
   Part 1 - Chapter 3. The Barber's Shop
   Part 1 - Chapter 4. First Impressions
   Part 1 - Chapter 5. The Blind Scholar And His Daughter
   Part 1 - Chapter 6. Dawning Hopes
   Part 1 - Chapter 7. A Learned Squabble
   Part 1 - Chapter 8. A Face In The Crowd
   Part 1 - Chapter 9. A Man's Ransom
   Part 1 - Chapter 10. Under The Plane-Tree
   Part 1 - Chapter 11. Tito's Dilemma
   Part 1 - Chapter 12. The Prize Is Nearly Grasped
   Part 1 - Chapter 13. The Shadow Of Nemesis
   Part 1 - Chapter 14. The Peasants' Fair
   Part 1 - Chapter 15. The Dying Message
   Part 1 - Chapter 16. A Florentine Joke
   Part 1 - Chapter 17. Under The Loggia
   Part 1 - Chapter 18. The Portrait
   Part 1 - Chapter 19. The Old Man's Hope
   Part 1 - Chapter 20. The Day Of The Betrothal
Part 2
   Part 2 - Chapter 21. Florence Expects A Guest
   Part 2 - Chapter 22. The Prisoners
   Part 2 - Chapter 23. After-Thoughts
   Part 2 - Chapter 24. Inside The Duo
   Part 2 - Chapter 25. Outside The Duomo
   Part 2 - Chapter 26. The Garment Of Fear
   Part 2 - Chapter 27. The Young Wife
   Part 2 - Chapter 28. The Painted Record
   Part 2 - Chapter 29. A Moment Of Triumph
   Part 2 - Chapter 30. The Avenger's Secret
   Part 2 - Chapter 31. Fruit Is Seed
   Part 2 - Chapter 32. A Revelation
   Part 2 - Chapter 33. Baldassarre Makes An Acquaintance
   Part 2 - Chapter 34. No Place For Repentance
   Part 2 - Chapter 35. What Florence Was Thinking Of
   Part 2 - Chapter 36. Ariadne Discrowns Herself
   Part 2 - Chapter 37. The Tabernacle Unlocked
   Part 2 - Chapter 38. The Black Marks Become Magical
   Part 2 - Chapter 39. A Supper In The Rucellai Gardens
   Part 2 - Chapter 40. An Arresting Voice
   Part 2 - Chapter 41. Coming Back
Part 3
   Part 3 - Chapter 42. Romola In Her Place
   Part 3 - Chapter 43. The Unseen Madonna
   Part 3 - Chapter 44. The Visible Madonna
   Part 3 - Chapter 45. At The Barber's Shop
   Part 3 - Chapter 46. By A Street Lamp
   Part 3 - Chapter 47. Check
   Part 3 - Chapter 48. Counter-Check
   Part 3 - Chapter 49. The Pyramid Of Vanities
   Part 3 - Chapter 50. Tessa Abroad And At Home
   Part 3 - Chapter 51. Monna Brigida's Conversion
   Part 3 - Chapter 52. A Prophetess
   Part 3 - Chapter 53. On San Miniato
   Part 3 - Chapter 54. The Evening And The Morning
   Part 3 - Chapter 55. Waiting
   Part 3 - Chapter 56. The Other Wife
   Part 3 - Chapter 57. Why Tito Was Safe
   Part 3 - Chapter 58. A Final Understanding
   Part 3 - Chapter 59. Pleading
   Part 3 - Chapter 60. The Scaffold
   Part 3 - Chapter 61. Drifting Away
   Part 3 - Chapter 62. The Benediction
   Part 3 - Chapter 63. Ripening Schemes
   Part 3 - Chapter 64. The Prophet In His Cell
   Part 3 - Chapter 65. The Trial By Fire
   Part 3 - Chapter 66. A Masque Of The Furies
   Part 3 - Chapter 67. Waiting By The River
   Part 3 - Chapter 68. Romola's Waking
   Part 3 - Chapter 69. Homeward
   Part 3 - Chapter 70. Meeting Again
   Part 3 - Chapter 71. The Confession
   Part 3 - Chapter 72. The Last Silence