登陆注册
37924800000001

第1章 NIGHT(1)

YOUNG people believe very little that they hear about the compen-sations of growing old, and of living over again in memory the events of the past. Yet there really are these com-pensations and pleasures, and although they are not so vivid and breathless as the pleasures of youth, they have some-thing delicate and fine about them that must be experienced to be appreciated.

Few of us would exchange our mem-ories for those of others. They have become a part of our personality, and we could not part with them without losing something of ourselves. Neither would we part with our own particular childhood, which, however difficult it may have been at times, seems to each of us more significant than the child-hood of any one else. I can run over in my mind certain incidents of my childhood as if they were chapters in a much-loved book, and when I am wake-ful at night, or bored by a long journey, or waiting for some one in the railway-station, I take them out and go over them again.

Nor is my book of memories without its illustrations. I can see little vil-lages, and a great city, and forests and planted fields, and familiar faces; and all have this advantage: they are not fixed and without motion, like the pic-tures in the ordinary book. People are walking up the streets of the vil-lage, the trees are tossing, the tall wheat and corn in the fields salute me.

I can smell the odour of the gathered hay, and the faces in my dream-book smile at me.

Of all of these memories I like best the one in the pine forest.

I was at that age when children think of their parents as being all-powerful.

I could hardly have imagined any cir-cumstances, however adverse, that my father could not have met with his strength and wisdom and skill. All chil-dren have such a period of hero-wor-ship, I suppose, when their father stands out from the rest of the world as the best and most powerful man living. So, feeling as I did, I was made happier than I can say when my father decided, because I was looking pale and had a poor appetite, to take me out of school for a while, and carry me with him on a driving trip. We lived in Michigan, where there were, in the days of which I am writing, not many rail-roads; and when my father, who was attorney for a number of wholesale mer-cantile firms in Detroit, used to go about the country collecting money due, adjusting claims, and so on, he had no choice but to drive.

And over what roads! Now it was a strip of corduroy, now a piece of well-graded elevation with clay subsoil and gravel surface, now a neglected stretch full of dangerous holes; and worst of all, running through the great forests, long pieces of road from which the stumps had been only partly extracted, and where the sunlight barely pene-trated. Here the soaked earth became little less than a quagmire.

But father was too well used to hard journeys to fear them, and I felt that, in going with him, I was safe from all possible harm. The journey had all the allurement of an adventure, for we would not know from day to day where we should eat our meals or sleep at night. So, to provide against trouble, we carried father's old red-and-blue-checked army blankets, a bag of feed for Sheridan, the horse, plenty of bread, bacon, jam, coffee and prepared cream; and we hung pails of pure water and buttermilk from the rear of our buggy.

We had been out two weeks without failing once to eat at a proper table or to sleep in a comfortable bed. Some-times we put up at the stark-looking ho-tels that loomed, raw and uninviting, in the larger towns; sometimes we had the pleasure of being welcomed at a little inn, where the host showed us a personal hospitality; but oftener we were forced to make ourselves "paying guests" at some house. We cared noth-ing whether we slept in the spare rooms of a fine frame "residence" or crept into bed beneath the eaves of the attic in a log cabin. I had begun to feel that our journey would be almost too tame and comfortable, when one night some-thing really happened.

Father lost his bearings. He was hoping to reach the town of Gratiot by nightfall, and he attempted to make a short cut. To do this he turned into a road that wound through a magnifi-cent forest, at first of oak and butter-nut, ironwood and beech, then of densely growing pines. When we en-tered the wood it was twilight, but no sooner were we well within the shadow of these sombre trees than we were plunged in darkness, and within half an hour this darkness deepened, so that we could see nothing -- not even the horse.

"The sun doesn't get in here the year round," said father, trying his best to guide the horse through the mire. So deep was the mud that it seemed as if it literally sucked at the legs of the horse and the wheels of the buggy, and I began to wonder if we should really be swallowed, and to fear that we had met with a difficulty that even my father could not overcome. I can hardly make plain what a tragic thought that was! The horse began to give out sighs and groans, and in the intervals of his struggles to get on, I could feel him trembling. There was a note of anxiety in father's voice as he called out, with all the authority and cheer he could command, to poor Sheri-dan. The wind was rising, and the long sobs of the pines made cold shivers run up my spine. My teeth chattered, partly from cold, but more from fright.

"What are we going to do?" I asked, my voice quivering with tears.

"Well, we aren't going to cry, what-ever else we do!" answered father, rather sharply. He snatched the lighted lantern from its place on the dashboard and leaped out into the road.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 论守护灵的职业素养

    论守护灵的职业素养

    古香古色的茶馆里,琵琶声响,筝鼓和鸣,红衣丽人飘然如谪仙降世。玉扇泣血,檀香萦绕,秦璟望着紧盯着自己的猩红眸子,敲敲自己酸痛的脖子,大义凛然道:“从今天起,我罩你!”机缘巧合之下成为半人半灵的秦璟,为了重生毅然踏上了守护灵的不归路。
  • 穿越到三千年以后

    穿越到三千年以后

    她,只是2011年c市单纯无知的高三女学生,在荒岛露营时和同学发现了个闪着绿光的山洞,却穿越到了三千年后!对此,她也是醉了。他,是腹黑闷骚的超美型上将大人,当她遇上他时,她却是裸着身,红着脸骂他是流氓……当单纯的小白兔遇上腹黑的大灰狼时,会碰撞出怎样的火花呢?
  • 妖灵都市

    妖灵都市

    一众妖怪生活在都市中,他们有着人类的外表,但是却有着与人类迥异的思维,他们冷眼看着人世间的冷暖,另一方面却是面对着一个惊天阴谋。意图灭绝诸天万界的妖怪与生灵的究竟是谁?为什么她死而复生?为什么……这一切的谜团将在这一世终结!
  • 动物王国奇妙事

    动物王国奇妙事

    在这个蔚蓝色的星球上,除了最高级的灵长类——人类以外,还有许许多多动物伙伴,让这个原本安静的星球变得热闹起来。郭漫主编的《动物王国奇妙事》在内容上精选了生物界中形形色色的有趣动物,从色彩缤纷的水中生物到翱翔于天空的鸟类,从形形色色的昆虫到迄今为止生物界最高级的哺乳动物。《动物王国奇妙事》目的是希望读者们通过对一些动物的了解和认识,能够丰富自己的知识,提高自身的环保意识,进而成为环保卫士。
  • 做自己的心理医生大全集

    做自己的心理医生大全集

    本书以生动贴切、具有代表性的心理故事,加以科学条理性的分析,讲述了各种异常心理产生的根源及各种简单易行、具有实效的解决方法,并介绍了与你的日常生活息息相关的各种心理及随之产生的种种行为。让你在轻松阅读中导引自己走向阳光!它具备全面性、可读性、实用性,适合作为个人闲暇或者苦闷时认识自己,永葆身心健康的心灵圣经。
  • 浪迹云霄

    浪迹云霄

    天地选择的拯救者,在一位道士的引导下,开始了血雨腥风的历练历程。是为了自己的仇人还是为了整个宇宙的芸芸众生,他不知道。携着《云霄全书》,申晨会在云霄大陆留下怎样的动人故事,一切尽在本书中。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 镇魄锁

    镇魄锁

    一个被称为不详的农村孩子,一块古朴斑驳的石锁,当气血相冲时,古道的一角,开始慢慢掀开了神秘的面纱……
  • 重生女神男神很强势

    重生女神男神很强势

    她本是身份神秘的掌权者,一朝重生,来到来到最低级的星级大陆,爹不疼,娘不爱,渣姐欺负,还被未婚夫害死。no!no!no!那都不是我,真正的人生刚刚开始,等着吧。陷入一个惊天大局,后面背后者是谁?敬请期待!
  • 我夺舍了武祖

    我夺舍了武祖

    一觉醒来,穿越到了异界,夺舍了大佬。此刻秦城内心是很懵逼的。我是谁。我在哪。我要去哪里。