登陆注册
5168400000024

第24章

Meantime Shock's eyes were upon the trail, and his heart was ringing with that last word of his Convener."We expect you to get them.You are our prospector, dig them up." As he thought of the work that lay before him, and of all he was expected to achieve, his heart sank.

These wild, independent men of the West were not at all like the degraded men of the ward, fawning or sullen, who had been his former and only parishioners.A horrible fear had been growing upon him ever since his failure, as he considered it, with the Convener's congregation the night before.It helped him not at all to remember the kindly words of encouragement spoken by the Convener, nor the sympathy that showed in his wife's voice and manner."They felt sorry for me," he groaned aloud.He set his jaws hard, as men had seen him when going into a scrim on the football field."I'll do my best whatever," he said aloud, looking before him at the waving horizon; "a man can only fail.But surely I can help some poor chap out yonder." His eyes followed the waving foot-hill line till they rested on the mighty masses of the Rockies."Ay," he said with a start, dropping into his mother's speech, "there they are, 'the hills from whence cometh my help.' Surely, I do not think He would send me out here to fail."There they lay, that mighty wrinkling of Mother Earth's old face, huge, jagged masses of bare grey rock, patched here and there, and finally capped with white where they pierced the blue.Up to their base ran the lumbering foot-hills, and still further up the grey sides, like attacking columns, the dark daring pines swarmed in massed battalions; then, where ravines gave them footing, in regiments, then in outpost pickets, and last of all in lonely rigid sentinels.But far above the loneliest sentinel pine, cold, white, serene, shone the peaks.The Highland blood in Shock's veins stirred to the call of the hills.Glancing around to make sure he was quite alone--he had almost never been where he could be quite sure that he would not be heard--Shock raised his voice in a shout, again, and, expanding his lungs to the full, once again.How small his voice seemed, how puny his strength, how brief his life, in the presence of those silent, mighty, ancient ranges with their hoary faces and snowy heads.Awed by their solemn silence, and by the thought of their ancient, eternal, unchanging endurance, he repeated to himself in a low tone the words of the ancient Psalm:

"Lord, Thou hast been our dwelling-place, In generations all, Before Thou ever hadst brought forth The mountains, great or small!"How exalting are the mountains and how humbling! How lonely and how comforting! How awesome and how kindly! How relentless and how sympathetic! Reflecting every mood of man, they add somewhat to his nobler stature and diminish somewhat his ignobler self.To all true appeal they give back answer, but to the heart regarding iniquity, like God, they make no response.They never obtrude themselves, but they smile upon his joys, and in his sorrow offer silent sympathy, and ever as God's messengers they bid him remember that with all their mass man is mightier than they, that when the slow march of the pines shall have trod down their might's dust, still with the dew of eternal youth fresh upon his brow will he be with God.

Then and there in Shock's heart there sprang up a kindly feeling for the mountains that through all his varying experiences never left him.They were always there, steadfastly watchful by day like the eye of God, and at night while he slept keeping unslumbering guard like Jehovah himself.All day as he drove up the interminable slopes and down again, the mountains kept company with him, as friends might.So much so that he caught himself, more than once after moments of absorption, glancing up at them with hasty penitence.He had forgotten them, but unoffended they had been watching and waiting for him.

A little after noon Shock found the trail turn in toward a long, log, low-roofed building, which seemed to have been erected in sections, with an irregular group of sod-roofed out-houses clustering about.

An old man lounged against the jamb of the open door.

"Good day," said Shock politely.

The old man looked him over for a moment or two and then answered as if making a concession of some importance, "Good day, good day! From town? Want to eat?"A glance through the door, showing the remains of dinner on a table, determined Shock."No, I guess I'll push on.""All right," said the old man, his tone suggesting that while it was a matter of supreme indifference to him, to Shock it might be a somewhat serious concern to neglect to eat in his house.

"This is Spruce Creek?" enquired Shock.

"Yes, I believe that's what they call it," said the old man with slow deliberation, adding after a few moments silence "because there ain't no spruces here."Shock gave the expected laugh with such heartiness that the old man deigned to take some little interest in him.

"Cattle?" he enquired.

"No."

"Sport?"

"Well, a little, perhaps."

"Oh! Pospectin', eh? Well, land's pretty well taken up in this vicinity, I guess."To this old man there were no other interests in life beyond cattle, sport, and prospcting that could account for the stranger's presence in this region.

"Yes," laughed Shock, "prospecting in a ways too."The old man was obviously puzzled.

"Well," he ventured, "come inside, anyway.Pretty chilly wind that for April.Come right in!"Shock stepped in.The old man drew nearer to him.

"Pain-killer or lime-juice?" he enquired in an insinuating voice.

"What?" said Shock.

"Pain-killer or lime-juice," winking and lowering his voice to a confidential tone.

"Well, as I haven't got any pain I guess I'll take a little lime-juice," replied Shock.

The old man gave him another wink, long and slow, went to the corner of the room, pushed back a table, pulled up a board from the floor, and extracted a bottle.

同类推荐
  • 温病正宗

    温病正宗

    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。
  • 宛如约

    宛如约

    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。
  • 皇清书史

    皇清书史

    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。
  • HISTORY OF THE COMMUNIST LEAGUE

    HISTORY OF THE COMMUNIST LEAGUE

    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。
  • 圣经学规纂论学

    圣经学规纂论学

    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。
热门推荐
  • 伊妮德的故事

    伊妮德的故事

    它当然可以简单地被认作是发生在大约英国乔治三世时期的故事,但同样也可以是任何时间里的故事,或者停留在了任何的空间维度里,也可以仅是作者千万个心思的流露。你可以认为它是悬疑的,更可以当做是书写爱情的,但在作者而言唯一重要的是,她的故事是出于对虚空的时间的信仰。
  • 风暴大唐

    风暴大唐

    唐朝是个不错的穿越对象,很多人来了,都能混得不错,杨一夫带着系统来了,随着一个个系统被点亮,杨一夫的人生开启了迎娶大唐白富美、走上第二个人生巅峰......开局就是玄武门,李世民,住手!
  • 无限之秦龙道

    无限之秦龙道

    仗剑江湖行,纵死侠骨香。问道天地间,漫漫长生路。
  • 云仙笑

    云仙笑

    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。
  • 碧海穹弓缘

    碧海穹弓缘

    公元1141年,宋金签订“议和”之后,江湖上曾一度流传着一把“穹弓剑”,这把宝剑曾多次打退金兵的一次又一次的进攻。但打退金兵的进攻之后,江湖只见......究竟是“鹿”死谁手?而在此时少林武学秘籍唯恐被金人夺取,少林召开武林大会力保武学经典,大宋武林人士义不容辞.......
  • 假婚密爱:装冷老公花样宠

    假婚密爱:装冷老公花样宠

    第一次相遇,他冷冷扔下一张支票。为了钱她沉默接受,本以为他们之间就此两清,却意外再次相遇。“想跑?我说过会给你一个大大的惊喜。”某男阴冷一笑,下一秒拉她到相馆,说是合照,秘书却突然送来一个红本本……
  • 天涯八门

    天涯八门

    我要取天下第一剑客的性命?为什么?一路跟随,却一起陷入重重杀机,我该如何抉择……笑傲一曲终绝响,江湖何处觅知音
  • 第一婚宠:司少,早上好

    第一婚宠:司少,早上好

    一入豪门深似海,豁出一切自尊,委曲求全的活着换来的却是背叛。公婆拿自己当廉价女佣,丈夫逼自己拿掉孩子,朋友逼自己让出爱情,甚至连家人都受到了威胁,最终葬身火海!熊熊燃烧的火焰中,一个善良柔弱的灵魂被仇恨吞噬,脱胎换骨之后再次出现在众人面前。昔日对自己弃如蔽履的男人为自己发狂,昔日将自己踩在脚下肆意羞辱的女人如今跪在自己面前求自己放过她。曾经,冷飞宇彻夜不归让她独守空房,如今,她也让他尝到爱的人在身边却无法触碰滋味;曾经,师采萱趾高气昂的告诉她爱情是有保鲜期的,如今,她跪在她面前求她将老公还给自己;曾经,夫家百般凌辱自己的亲人让他们扮演好穷人该有的卑微角色……
  • 乱古

    乱古

    少年以战重生,吞万灵精血,战无上神魔,一路高歌,杀尽血海,成就无上战帝。
  • 责任:态度与执行力

    责任:态度与执行力

    《责任:态度与执行力》一书,用浅显易懂的语言、富有逻辑的篇章、大量生动的案例向我们阐明了态度的重要性以及执行力的根本,使我们接受了一场现代管理思想的洗礼,从而破解了许多压抑在心头的疑云,看到了自己身上以及周边存在的一些问题,为今后提高工作效率提供了更加科学有效的方式和方法。