登陆注册
5215600000075

第75章

I didn't learn till later in the afternoon whom it was that Nostromo, with his cargadores and some Italian workmen as well, had managed to save from those drunken rascals. That man has a peculiar talent when anything striking to the imagination has to be done. I made that remark to him afterwards when we met after some sort of order had been restored in the town, and the answer he made rather surprised me. He said quite moodily, `And how much do I get for that, senor ?' Then it dawned upon me that perhaps this man's vanity has been satiated by the adulation of the common people and the confidence of his superiors!

Decoud paused to light a cigarette, then, with his head still over his writing, he blew a cloud of smoke, which seemed to rebound from the paper.

He took up the pencil again.

That was yesterday evening on the Plaza, while he sat on the steps of the cathedral, his hands between his knees, holding the bridle of his famous silver-grey mare. He had led his body of cargadores splendidly all day long. He looked fatigued. I don't know how I looked. Very dirty, Isuppose. But I suppose I also looked pleased. From the time the fugitive President had been got off to the s.s. Minerva , the tide of success had turned against the mob. They had been driven off the harbour, and out of the better streets of the town, into their own maze of ruins and tolderias .

You must understand that this riot, whose primary object was undoubtedly the getting hold of the San Tome silver stored in the lower rooms of the Custom House (besides the general looting of the ricos ), had acquired a political colouring from the fact of two Deputies to the Provincial Assembly, Senores Gamacho and Fuentes, both from Bolson, putting themselves at the head of it -- late in the afternoon, it is true, when the mob, disappointed in their hopes of loot, made a stand in the narrow streets to the cries of ` Viva la libertad ! Down with Feudalism!' (I wonder what they imagine feudalism to be?) `Down with the Goths and Paralytics.' I suppose the Senores Gamacho and Fuentes knew what they were doing. They are prudent gentlemen. In the Assembly they called themselves Moderates, and opposed every energetic measure with philanthropic pensiveness. At the first rumours of Montero's victory, they began to show a subtle change of the pensive temper, and began to defy poor Don Juste Lopez in his Presidential tribune with an effrontery to which the poor man could only respond by a dazed smoothing of his beard and the ringing of the Presidential bell. Then, when the downfall of the Ribierist cause became confirmed beyond the shadow of a doubt, they have blossomed into convinced Liberals, acting together as if they were Siamese twins, and ultimately taking charge, as it were, of the riot in the name of Monterist principles.

Their last move of eight o'clock last night was to organize themselves into a Monterist Committee which sits, as far as I know, in a posada kept by a retired Mexican bull-fighter, a great politician, too, whose name I have forgotten. Thence they have issued a communication to us, the Goths and Paralytics of the Amarilla Club (who have our own committee), inviting us to come to some provisional understanding for a truce, in order, they have the impudence to say, that the noble cause of Liberty `should not be stained by the criminal excesses of Conservative selfishness'! As I came out to sit with Nostromo on the cathedral steps the club was busy considering a proper reply in the principal room, littered with exploded cartridges, with a lot of broken glass, blood smears, candlesticks, and all sorts of wreckage on the floor. But all this is nonsense. Nobody in the town has any real power except the railway engineers, whose men occupy the dismantled houses acquired by the Company for their town station on one side of the Plaza, and Nostromo, whose cargadores were sleeping under the arcades along the front of Anzani's shops. A fire of broken furniture out of the Intendencia saloons, mostly gilt, was burning on the Plaza, in a high flame swaying right upon the statue of Charles IV. The dead body of a man was lying on the steps of the pedestal, his arms thrown wide open, and his sombrero covering his face -- the attention of some friend, perhaps.

The light of the flame touched the foliage of the first trees on the Alameda, and played on the end of a side-street near by, blocked up by a jumble of ox-carts and dead bullocks. Sitting on one of the carcases, a lepero , muffled up, smoked a cigarette. It was a truce, you understand. The only other living being on the Plaza besides ourselves was a cargador walking to and fro, with a long, bare knife in his hand, like a sentry before the Arcades, where his friends were sleeping. And the only other spot of light in the dark town were the lighted windows of the club, at the corner of the Calle.

After having written so far, Don Martin Decoud, the exotic dandy of the Parisian boulevard, got up and walked across the sanded floor of the cafe at one end of the Albergo of United Italy, kept by Giorgio Viola, the old companion of Garibaldi. The highly coloured lithograph of the Faithful Hero seemed to look dimly, in the light of one candle, at the man with no faith in anything except the truth of his own sensations. Looking out of the window, Decoud was met by a darkness so impenetrable that he could see neither the mountains nor the town, nor yet the buildings near the harbour; and there was not a sound, as if the tremendous obscurity of the Placid Gulf, spreading from the waters over the land, had made it dumb as well as blind. Presently Decoud felt a light tremor of the floor and a distant clank of iron. A bright white light appeared, deep in the darkness, growing bigger with a thundering noise. The rolling stock usually kept on the sidings in Rincon was being run back to the yards for safe keeping.

同类推荐
  • A Burlesque Autobiography

    A Burlesque Autobiography

    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。
  • 台阳诗话

    台阳诗话

    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。
  • 西云集

    西云集

    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。
  • 佛说难提释经

    佛说难提释经

    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。
  • 菩萨内习六波罗蜜经

    菩萨内习六波罗蜜经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 纳尼亚传奇(中)

    纳尼亚传奇(中)

    故事的开始讲述一个小男孩和一个女孩偶然进入了一个异世界,被称为“纳尼亚”,并在那里经历过一连串的冒险,及看到那个世界的创造......,
  • 重生异能学霸:霍少,吻安

    重生异能学霸:霍少,吻安

    前世她是娱乐圈动作影后,被姐姐和渣男亲手推下悬崖。重生回到初进高中那一天,得到空间后她学异能、医术,凭借被天使吻过的嗓子一路高歌虐渣渣。只是……这霍氏集团的少东家好像有点奇怪,怎么每天都缠着她要亲亲!“霍少,夫人又把咋们艺人怼了!”某人眸色一冷:“再去签几个送给夫人怼。”……
  • 网游之血海霸主

    网游之血海霸主

    一款名为《神话世界》的游戏 西游故事为游戏的主剧情 洪荒、封神故事为副本 数据化的金箍棒、斩妖剑、三尖两刃刀 数据化的人参果、蟠桃、九转金丹…… (或许有读者会觉得简介熟悉,但并非抄袭,当初《网游之天狗吞日》写完洪荒和封神没有写西游,这本书算是弥补遗憾吧!)
  • 有你在,多久都不算漫长

    有你在,多久都不算漫长

    如果每个人拥有一整个世纪的人生,那么前面九十九年的等待只为最后一年与你共白首。情感作家花拉拉25段花式告白,致所有人的温暖小情书,爱是怦然心动,亦是岁月长情。因为是你我等得起!
  • 大明王朝之朱家天下

    大明王朝之朱家天下

    《大明王朝之朱家天下》将明朝皇帝从头至尾一一道来,叙其登皇位的惊险历程,谈其面对家事国事的决断犹疑,论其治国经邦的成败得失。最终口王现出来的是一部风云起伏的大明王朝朱氏家族史。明朝,是中国历史上最后一个汉人皇朝,也是唯一一个自南向北以南方军队击败北方游牧民族而统一天下的皇朝。在朱家统治的时期,它写就了无数的辉煌,也留下来了无数的骂名。品味朱氏家族近三百年统治史上的光明与黑暗、荣耀与创痛、自由与专制、兴盛与凋敝。纵观明朝的朱家皇帝,皆有近乎病态偏执性格,莫不多疑刻薄,凡事以自我为中心。太祖的多疑刻薄、威祖的狠毒无情、宪宗的滥用私人、武宗的狂妄自大、神宗的偏激逆反、崇祯的目4愎自用等等,不仅皇帝如此,大臣们也是如此,这个偏执者家族写下了明朝近三百年的历史,为后人留下了一个琢磨不透的明朝。《大明王朝之朱家天下》为您讲述了一个统治家族的光明与黑暗、荣耀与创痛、自由与专制、兴隆与凋敝。
  • 青少年应该知道的百部世界名著

    青少年应该知道的百部世界名著

    《青少年应该知道的知识小百科》丛书共12册,它内容健康、有益,形式新颖、独特,把人类几千年来最具代表性的智慧与知识介绍给广大的青年朋友,集经典性、知识性、实用性、趣味性于一体。
  • 重生寒门之商女

    重生寒门之商女

    日子过得要死不活,从没想过,这样的她也有被人谋害的一天。一朝醒来,竟回到95少女时代。父母健在,弟弟活泼,所幸遗憾都还没发生,很多事情尚能挽回。这一世,她绝不再胆小软弱,为保护至爱的家人,定要把命运牢牢抓在自己手里。贫穷和鄙视如何,嘲讽和阻碍怎样,坚信只要有一颗顽强不倒的心,就绝对能笑到最后!从农场发家,步步经营,学医武,闯商界,混校园,秒黑道,且看一代贫女奋斗史!片段一:“那莫江强家,真不要脸,又来借东西!”“嘭!”伴着不屑的哼声,邻居的门在眼前狠狠关上。穆春华眼中盛满愕然和愤怒,却只是转身,默默离去。“妈,别难过,这样的日子终究会过去的!”莫小茜心一紧,垂在身侧的两手紧紧握成拳。这样子的日子一定不会太久的,迟早有一天,我要把所有鄙视我们的人高高的踩在脚下!片段二:风华绝代的男人倚在劳斯莱斯身上,笑得兴味索然:“女人,五十万包养你如何?”“那我用一百万,请你滚出我的视线!”一个过肩摔,直接把人甩飞出去。她用了很久的时间才看得明白,想要对自以为是的人说“不”,就得先有把他们狠狠摔下马的资本!世界的法则,永远都是强者为尊,用实力来说话!PS:抽风型作者,新人一枚,试写喜欢的故事。文明看书,欢迎留评,拒绝人身攻击。
  • 幸存者之无尽丧尸

    幸存者之无尽丧尸

    突然之间,世界一片黑暗,遍地丧尸,为了完成自己的承诺,李杰在末世之中挣扎前行,经历无数战斗之后开始思考这一切到底是为了什么,人类存在的意义究竟是什么,幕后的人究竟有着什么目的。。。。。。
  • 蒲犁厅乡土志

    蒲犁厅乡土志

    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。
  • 丹阳真人直录

    丹阳真人直录

    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。