登陆注册
5202300000031

第31章

On the northerly shore of San Francisco Bay a line of bluffs terminates in a promontory, at whose base, formed by the crumbling debris of the cliff above, there is a narrow stretch of beach, salt meadow, and scrub oak.The abrupt wall of rock behind it seems to isolate it as completely from the mainland as the sea before it separates it from the opposite shore.In spite of its contiguity to San Francisco,--opposite also, but hidden by the sharp re-entering curve of coast,--the locality was wild, uncultivated, and unfrequented.A solitary fisherman's cabin half hidden in the rocks was the only trace of habitation.White drifts of sea-gulls and pelican across the face of the cliff, gray clouds of sandpipers rising from the beach, the dripping flight of ducks over the salt meadows, and the occasional splash of a seal from the rocks, were the only signs of life that could be seen from the decks of passing ships.And yet the fisherman's cabin was occupied by Zephas Bunker and his young wife, and he had succeeded in wresting from the hard soil pasturage for a cow and goats, while his lateen-sailed fishing-boat occasionally rode quietly in the sheltered cove below.

Three years ago Zephas Bunker, an ex-whaler, had found himself stranded on a San Francisco wharf and had "hired out" to a small Petaluma farmer.At the end of a year he had acquired little taste for the farmer's business, but considerable for the farmer's youthful daughter, who, equally weary of small agriculture, had consented to elope with him in order to escape it.They were married at Oakland; he put his scant earnings into a fishing-boat, discovered the site for his cabin, and brought his bride thither.

The novelty of the change pleased her, although perhaps it was but little advance on her previous humble position.Yet she preferred her present freedom to the bare restricted home life of her past;the perpetual presence of the restless sea was a relief to the old monotony of the wheat field and its isolated drudgery.For Mary's youthful fancy, thinly sustained in childhood by the lightest literary food, had neither been stimulated nor disillusioned by her marriage.That practical experience which is usually the end of girlish romance had left her still a child in sentiment.The long absences of her husband in his fishing-boat kept her from wearying of or even knowing his older and unequal companionship; it gave her a freedom her girlhood had never known, yet added a protection that suited her still childish dependency, while it tickled her pride with its equality.When not engaged in her easy household duties in her three-roomed cottage, or the care of her rocky garden patch, she found time enough to indulge her fancy over the mysterious haze that wrapped the invisible city so near and yet unknown to her; in the sails that slipped in and out of the Golden Gate, but of whose destination she knew nothing; and in the long smoke trail of the mail steamer which had yet brought her no message.Like all dwellers by the sea, her face and her thoughts were more frequently turned towards it; and as with them, it also seemed to her that whatever change was coming into her life would come across that vast unknown expanse.But it was here that Mrs.Bunker was mistaken.

It had been a sparkling summer morning.The waves were running before the dry northwest trade winds with crystalline but colorless brilliancy.Sheltered by the high, northerly bluff, the house and its garden were exposed to the untempered heat of the cloudless sun refracted from the rocky wall behind it.Some tarpaulin and ropes lying among the rocks were sticky and odorous; the scrub oaks and manzanita bushes gave out the aroma of baking wood; occasionally a faint pot-pourri fragrance from the hot wild roses and beach grass was blown along the shore; even the lingering odors of Bunker's vocation, and of Mrs.Bunker's cooking, were idealized and refined by the saline breath of the sea at the doors and windows.Mrs.

Bunker, in the dazzling sun, bending over her peas and lettuces with a small hoe, felt the comfort of her brown holland sunbonnet.

Secure in her isolation, she unbuttoned the neck of her gown for air, and did not put up the strand of black hair that had escaped over her shoulder.It was very hot in the lee of the bluff, and very quiet in that still air.So quiet that she heard two distinct reports, following each other quickly, but very faint and far.

She glanced mechanically towards the sea.Two merchant-men in midstream were shaking out their wings for a long flight, a pilot boat and coasting schooner were rounding the point, but there was no smoke from their decks.She bent over her work again, and in another moment had forgotten it.But the heat, with the dazzling reflection from the cliff, forced her to suspend her gardening, and stroll along the beach to the extreme limit of her domain.Here she looked after the cow that had also strayed away through the tangled bush for coolness.The goats, impervious to temperature, were basking in inaccessible fastnesses on the cliff itself that made her eyes ache to climb.Over an hour passed, she was returning, and had neared her house, when she was suddenly startled to see the figure of a man between her and the cliff.He was engaged in brushing his dusty clothes with a handkerchief, and although he saw her coming, and even moved slowly towards her, continued his occupation with a half-impatient, half-abstracted air.Her feminine perception was struck with the circumstance that he was in deep black, with scarcely a gleam of white showing even at his throat, and that he wore a tall black hat.Without knowing anything of social customs, it seemed to her that his dress was inconsistent with his appearance there.

"Good-morning," he said, lifting his hat with a preoccupied air.

"Do you live here?"

"Yes," she said wonderingly.

"Anybody else?"

"My husband."

"I mean any other people? Are there any other houses?" he said with a slight impatience.

"No."

同类推荐
  • 佛说大迦叶问大宝积正法经卷第一

    佛说大迦叶问大宝积正法经卷第一

    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。
  • The Price She Paid

    The Price She Paid

    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。
  • 六十种曲赠书记

    六十种曲赠书记

    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。
  • 老子指略

    老子指略

    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。
  • Bygone Beliefs

    Bygone Beliefs

    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
  • 此岸彼岸

    此岸彼岸

    本书汇集作者近年创作的散文、诗作32篇,分为此岸、彼岸两大部分。作者以独有的“工程纪实”手法,讴歌了改革开放30年来生活在中国和美国两岸的精彩,自然流畅地展现了中国的富强、朋友的风采、我们的生活、儿孙的成长、美国见闻以及往事回忆等等。此书系作者71岁时为纪念敦堉(老伴)辞世十周年而撰写,魅力独具。重庆南开中学校友级刊《53南开人》曾刊载过本书的部分文章。
  • 快穿之逆天炮灰

    快穿之逆天炮灰

    乔秋:我的性别究竟是什么?季如枫:我也想知道我的性别究竟是什么?乔秋:兄弟,要怀疑人生么?季如枫:已经在怀疑了……
  • 我执

    我执

    本书为梁文道先生所撰写的散文随笔集,是以香港《成报》文采版专栏“秘学笔记”的文字为主,谈及爱情婚姻、日常生活、疾病经历、信仰感悟、城市文化、文学艺术、历史记忆等个人生活体验和人生感受诸多方面。读来清新自然,体贴入微,在淡雅简约的叙述中往往给人意外的启迪。
  • Russia in 1919

    Russia in 1919

    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。
  • 铁眉三巴掌禅师语录

    铁眉三巴掌禅师语录

    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。
  • 尼采的人生哲学(中国艺术研究院学术文库)

    尼采的人生哲学(中国艺术研究院学术文库)

    本书是对尼采及其哲学的全新解读。全书围绕尼采哲学的核心思想展开,即反对神权及一切“旧社会的权力产物”,伸张自主权力,激励人们摆脱奴性,超越自我,奋发图强,焕发生命的璀璨光华。全书从总体上把握尼采的思想体系,多方面系统介绍尼采的学说,客观点评其观点论断。它名为哲学,实则旁及方方面面,涉及不少学科和知识领域。它还将尼采的思想观点加以演绎,并且穿插了许多有趣的故事、掌故和逸闻,既反观历史,也针砭时弊。因此,它不仅具有学术性,而且具有相当的知识性、趣味性和现实性。
  • 才子佳人一杯酒

    才子佳人一杯酒

    以两个人对话、问答的方式来表达。以迷茫青年的眼光,对历史和现实进行另类而深刻的思考。风格独特,幽默智慧,中间有嬉笑怒骂,也有完全颠覆的理解。朋友们从梦蝶的文字里面,会看到古代文人墨客的内心、看到他们的不一样的喜怒哀愁。
  • 仙侠奇缘之东海明珠

    仙侠奇缘之东海明珠

    东海定远侯一家被倭龙一族灭门,小女儿韵韵侥幸逃脱。体质特殊一直不敢示人,看着平凡无奇的她,却有特殊的灵根天赋,却是多灾多难。性格坚韧的她,发誓为家人报仇。被南楚太子楚云端所救。辗转之下跟随出云端进入天极山修仙,本来难以入门的她,机缘之下拜两位上仙为师。开始正式步入仙道。她的一生两次情劫,温柔善良的楚云端。灵根优异却是体质纯阳,修炼每次遇到瓶颈都会走火入魔。韵韵深深的爱着他,费劲心力帮助他。热情似火的倭龙王子无极,本要抓她做炉鼎,却也深深爱上她。得不到,也要霸到的苦恋孽恋。圣皇剑仙白羽,临危受命,负责封印控制天外魔仙,守护大陆。灵根体质特殊的默含韵与他结下不解之缘,心中深深爱着楚云端的她,将何去何从。一个多灾多难善良的女孩,修仙路上,情感路上,复仇路上,故事很精彩。
  • 穿越之女配的悠然生活

    穿越之女配的悠然生活

    江夏一觉醒来发现自己成了小说里的女配,还是个深爱男配的十八线女配,在剧情里压根就没露过脸的那种,但是随着她的加入,剧情似乎开始有了变化,她本想置身事外,但最后却发现无法与主线完全割裂开,她突然发现很多事情都与她息息相关。
  • 锁魂之思洛阁

    锁魂之思洛阁

    辰羽是上仙的时候,颜洛为他而死,为了复活颜洛不择手段,他现在成了堕仙,没有了天规的束缚这一次,他只为守护转世的颜洛,也是现在的欧阳洛可是…………欧阳洛“你说,你是不是喜欢颜洛,你就是喜欢她,不喜欢我”辰羽“这个,洛儿,你们是同一个人”欧阳洛“不听不听,”辰羽看着眼前的小女人“他为她入魔,为了她坏事做尽,现在这个什么情况?”辰羽“好了好了,我错了,以后喜欢你,什么颜洛的我不认识,乖……”