[The Cathedral by Joris-Karl Huysmans]@TWC D-Link bookThe Cathedral CHAPTER XIV 26/27
"Madness!" "Why, what is the matter ?" cried the two priests. "I beg your pardon.
Nothing." "Are you in pain ?" "No, it is nothing." There was an awkward pause which he was determined to break. "Did you ever take laughing gas ?" said he; "the gas which sends you to sleep and is used in surgery for short operations? No? Well, you feel a buzzing in your brain, and just as you hear a great noise of falling waters you lose consciousness.
That is what I am feeling; only the experience is not in my brain, but in my soul, which is giddy and helpless, on the point of fainting away." "I should like to think," said the Abbe Plomb, "that it is not the thought of a visit to Solesmes that has thus upset you." Durtal had not courage enough to own the truth; he was afraid of seeming ridiculous if he confessed to such a panic; so to avoid a direct answer he vaguely shook his head. "And I cannot help wondering why you should hesitate, for you will be welcomed with open arms.
The Father Abbot is a man of the highest merit, and, moreover, no enemy to art.
Besides--and this I hope will suffice to reassure you--he is a most simple and kind-hearted monk." "But I have to finish my article." The two priests laughed. "You have a week before you to write your article in." "And then, to get any benefit from a monastery, I ought not be in the state of dryness and diffusion in which I find myself vegetating," Durtal went on with difficulty. "The saints themselves are not free from distractions," replied the Abbe Gevresin.
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