登陆注册
4716900000062

第62章

Individual furtively works off the best one, and picks it up,--while his eyes are bent on his work,--as if she had only dropped it, and hands it to him. He takes it, turns it over, pulls it, knocks it, with an evident intention of understanding the subject thoroughly.

"Rather a haggard-looking boot," he remarks, after his close survey.

"Yes, but--"

"Other a'n't so bad, I suppose?"

"Well--I--don't know--that is--"

"Both bad enough."

"Yes, indeed," with an uneasy laugh.

"Let's see the other one." The other one is produced, and examined in silence.

"Are YOU going to wear them boots up the mountain?" with a tone that said very plainly, "Of course you're not.""Why, yes, I WAS going to wear them. Don't you think they will do?""I wouldn't trust MY feet in 'em."

"O--h! ARE there snakes? Do you think snakes could bite through them?"A shake of the head, and a little, low, plaintive whistle, is the only reply, but they speak in thunder of boa-constrictors, anacondas, and cobra de capellos.

"They were very good and stout when I had them. I called them very stout shoes.""O yes, they're made of good material, but you see they 're worn out. I don't believe I could mend them worth while. The stitches would tear out.""But couldn't you, somehow, glue on a pair of soles? any way to make them stick. I'll pay you anything, if you'll only make them last till I go home, or even till I get down the mountain.

Now, I am sure you can do it, if you will only think so. Don't you know Kossuth says, 'Nothing is difficult to him who wills'?"He was evidently moved by the earnestness of the appeal. "Isuppose they'd be worth more to you now than half a dozen pair when you get home.""Worth! why, they would be of inestimable value. Think of the snakes! I don't care how you do them, nor how you make them look. If you will only glue on, or sew on, or nail on, or rivet on, something that is thick and will stick, I will pay you, and be grateful to you through the remainder of my natural life.""Well,--you leave 'em, and come over again this afternoon, and if I can do anything, I'll do it by that time.""Oh! I am so much obliged to you"; and I went away in high spirits, just putting my head back through the door to say, "Now you persevere, and I am sure you will succeed."I was as happy as a queen. To be sure, I had to walk home without any shoes; but the grass was as soft as velvet, and the dust as clean as sand, and it did not hurt me in the least.

To be sure, he had not promised to mend them; but I had faith in him, and how did it turn out? Verily, I should not have known the boots, if I seen only the soles. They were clipped, and shaved, and underpinned, and smoothed, and looked as if they had taken out "a new lease of life.""I don't suppose they will last you as long as I have been doing them," he remarked, with unprofessional frankness. I did not believe him, and indeed his prophecy was not true, for they are in existence yet, and I never disposed of "a quarter" in my life with more satisfaction than I dropped it that day into his benevolent hand.

A thousand years hence, when New Hampshire shall have become as populous as Babylon, this sketch may become the foundation of some "Tale of Beowulf" or other. At any rate here it is ready.

Of all the White Mountains, the one of which you hear least said is Agamenticus, and perhaps justly, for it is not one of the White Mountains, but an isolated peak by itself. My information concerning it is founded partly on observation, partly on testimony, and partly on memory, supported where she is weak by conjecture. These sources, however, mingle their waters together somewhat too intricately for accurate analysis, and I shall, therefore, waive distinctions, and plant myself on the broad basis of assertion, warning the future historian and antiquary not take this paper as conclusive without extraneous props.

Agamenticus is a huge rock rising abruptly from a level country along New Hampshire's half-yard of sea-shore. As it is the only large rock on the eastern coast of the United States, it is in invaluable beacon to mariners. The first city ever built on American continent was laid out at its base, the remains are now visible from its summit; but, as funds failed, and the founders were killed by the Indians, it was never completed, in fact was never begun, only laid out. To the east I was certain I saw Boar's Head and a steamer steaming towards it, till I was assured that in such case the steamer must have been steaming over the corn-fields, because, unlike Aenon near to Salim, there was no water there. So I suppose it must have been "A painted ship upon a painted ocean."The ascent to Agamenticus is sidling and uncertain so long as you hug your carriage; but, leaving that, and confiding yourself to Mother Earth, you gather both strength and equipoise from the touch, and, with a little boy to guide you through the woods and over the rocks, you will find the ascent quite pleasant and safe, if you are careful not to slip down, which you will be sure to do on your descent, whether you are careful or not. At the summit of the mountain is a fine and flourishing growth of muskmelon, sugar, and currant-wine. At least we found them there in profusion.

Agamenticus has its legend. Many years ago, the Indians, to avert the plague, drove twenty thousand cattle to the top of the mountain, and there sacrificed them to the Great Spirit.

We could still discern traces of the sacrifice,--burnt stones, bits of green-black glass, and charred pine branches. Then we came home.

Perthes says, "That part of a journey which remains after the travelling is the journey." What remains of my journey, for me, for you? Will any live over again a pleasant past and look more cheerily into a lowering future for these wayward words of mine? Are there clouded lives that will find a little sunshine; pent-up souls that will catch a breath of blooms in my rambling record? Are there lips that will relax their tightness; eyes that will lose for a moment the shadow of remembered pain? Then, indeed, the best part of my journey is yet to come.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 迭代:让情商和见识成为你最大的底气

    迭代:让情商和见识成为你最大的底气

    迭代就是,当我们去做一件事的时候,通过反复做,不断总结和思考,从而找到更好的方法,实现一次比一次更优化。人的一生,拥有归零心态,不断自我迭代和进阶,才能一直走在成长的道路上,才有机会发现人生的无限潜能。一个人要想不断地成长和迭代,就需要在情商和见识方面不断自我完善。本书从职业发展、个人成长、情商修炼、自我管理等四个角度展开,为年轻人提供了全新的洞察职场和审视自我的视角,给内心孤独、迷茫、焦躁者以清晰的进阶思路,助力他们突破自我瓶颈,实现自我逆袭。
  • 新闻学十年(1998-2008):多元与分化

    新闻学十年(1998-2008):多元与分化

    在新中国成立60周年、中国传媒大学校庆55周年之际,《现代传播——中国传媒大学学报》也迎来了30周年刊庆。《现代传播——中国传媒大学学报》创刊于1979年,迄今走过了整整30年的历程。作为国内创刊最早的广播电视学术期刊之一,30年来我们向广大读者奉献了160多期刊物,5000余篇论文,发行总量50万余册,为中国广播电视学术与事业的发展做出了自己的贡献。
  • 大乘离文字普光明藏经

    大乘离文字普光明藏经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 妖孽个个很腹黑:绝版刁妃

    妖孽个个很腹黑:绝版刁妃

    穿到古代做丫环谁有她大牌,茶水少爷端着糕点小姐喂着,原以为可以如此混吃混喝,却料不到这具身体有着显赫家世。他是惯她无法无天的少爷,却因爱生恨。他是温润如玉的谪仙公子,妖孽腹黑手段阴狠无情,却独对她无上宠溺。他是刚愎狂傲的将军,却在两个女人中难以取舍。他是一个帝王,不论如何温和,动用的永远都是冰冷的王权。
  • 时空体

    时空体

    刚才看了一点人是物质的,也是有灵魂的,我的回答是人是又物质法界组成的,并且不断成长的,成长可以认它以非物质的灵魂状态存在于时空中,因此仙就是这样的,时空体也是这样的,西方很好笑非要逻辑分析灵魂就是个物质法界,人死了,灵魂和肉体跟着就灭了,但是整体上他是存在的变化体,描述成一段变化存在于时空体变化体中不同的生物局部上有不同的进化界限,整
  • 正邪天下(5)

    正邪天下(5)

    一段师门恩怨引出一场天下动乱。武林之争始于绝世奇人空灵子所创“天平六术”。空灵子六位逆徒横行江湖,扰起一场血腥风雨。两位神秘少年便在这风雨江湖中同时崛起,各凭绝世智谋在武林中卷起一股狂潮,心怀圣意者,却魔缘不断,而心怀邪念者,却机缘连连,更统一邪道与正道相持不下,然而,自古正邪不两立,他们终因不同的信念而决战武林。
  • 少年奇侠

    少年奇侠

    屋里只剩下楚英一个人,一盏灯。面对这陌生的一间屋子,这屋里的一切,楚英突然感到自己是多么孤独。他那遥远又模糊的记忆中,似乎有过一种生活,那生活中,也曾有过亲情的抚爱和纯真的欢笑。可这一切,突然在那么一天都消失了。留在他心灵中的,只有一丝永也忘不掉的温馨和那一股永远也燃不尽的仇恨。
  • 巅峰造诣的科学家(1)(世界名人成长历程)

    巅峰造诣的科学家(1)(世界名人成长历程)

    《世界名人成长历程——巅峰造诣的科学家(1)》本书分为毕达格拉斯、希波克拉特斯、希帕克斯等部分。
  • 寒灰集:郁达夫作品精选

    寒灰集:郁达夫作品精选

    文学作品是以语言为手段塑造形象来反映社会生活、表达作者思想感情的一种艺术,是我们的一面镜子,对于我们的人生具有潜移默化的巨大启迪作用,能够开阔我们的视野,增长我们的知识,陶冶我们的情操。文学大师是一个时代的开拓者和各种文学形式的集大成者,他们的作品来源于他们生活的时代,记载了那个时代社会生活的缩影,包含了作家本人对社会、生活的体验与思考,影响着社会的发展进程,具有永恒的魅力。他们是我们心灵的工程师,能够指导我们的人生发展,给予我们心灵鸡汤般的精神滋养。这正如泰戈尔在谈到文学与我们人类未来的关系时所说:“用文学去点燃未来的万家灯火。”
  • 兽神罗曼史

    兽神罗曼史

    因为不听妈妈的话而嫁人的钱美满绝对想不到自己竟然嫁给了另一个世界的怪物——兽神。嫁给一个怪物到底是上天的惩罚还是一个新版童话故事?虽然她说过自己更喜欢包办婚姻,但是这事儿好像已经超出了她的承受范围了。