登陆注册
5216000000014

第14章

He came, an inch at a time, growling viciously, and holding Hollis's half-sovereign tight between his teeth. We tried sweet reasonableness at first. We offered him a sixpence in exchange; he looked insulted, and evidently considered the proposal as tantamount to our calling him a fool. We made it a shilling, then half-a-crown--he seemed only bored by our persistence.

"I don't think you'll ever see this half-sovereign again, Hollis,"said Gadbut, laughing. We all, with the exception of young Hollis, thought the affair a very good joke. He, on the contrary, seemed annoyed, and, taking the dog from Gadbut, made an attempt to pull the coin out of its mouth.

Tiny, true to his life-long principle of never parting if he could possibly help it, held on like grim death, until, feeling that his little earnings were slowly but surely going from him, he made one final desperate snatch, and swallowed the money. It stuck in his throat, and he began to choke.

Then we became seriously alarmed for the dog. He was an amusing chap, and we did not want any accident to happen to him. Hollis rushed into his room and procured a long pair of pincers, and the rest of us held the little miser while Hollis tried to relieve him of the cause of his suffering.

But poor Tiny did not understand our intentions. He still thought we were seeking to rob him of his night's takings, and resisted vehemently. His struggles fixed the coin firmer, and, in spite of our efforts, he died--one more victim, among many, to the fierce fever for gold.

I dreamt a very curious dream about riches once, that made a great impression upon me. I thought that I and a friend--a very dear friend--were living together in a strange old house. I don't think anybody else dwelt in the house but just we two. One day, wandering about this strange old rambling place, I discovered the hidden door of a secret room, and in this room were many iron-bound chests, and when I raised the heavy lids I saw that each chest was full of gold.

And, when I saw this, I stole out softly and closed the hidden door, and drew the worn tapestries in front of it again, and crept back along the dim corridor, looking behind me, fearfully.

And the friend that I had loved came towards me, and we walked together with our hands clasped. But I hated him.

And all day long I kept beside him, or followed him unseen, lest by chance he should learn the secret of that hidden door; and at night I lay awake watching him.

But one night I sleep, and, when I open my eyes, he is no longer near me. I run swiftly up the narrow stairs and along the silent corridor. The tapestry is drawn aside, and the hidden door stands open, and in the room beyond the friend that I loved is kneeling before an open chest, and the glint of the gold is in my eyes.

His back is towards me, and I crawl forward inch by inch. I have a knife in my hand, with a strong, curved blade; and when I am near enough I kill him as he kneels there.

His body falls against the door, and it shuts to with a clang, and Itry to open it, and cannot. I beat my hands against its iron nails, and scream, and the dead man grins at me. The light streams in through the chink beneath the massive door, and fades, and comes again, and fades again, and I gnaw at the oaken lids of the iron-bound chests, for the madness of hunger is climbing into my brain.

Then I awake, and find that I really am hungry, and remember that in consequence of a headache I did not eat any dinner. So I slip on a few clothes, and go down to the kitchen on a foraging expedition.

It is said that dreams are momentary conglomerations of thought, centring round the incident that awakens us, and, as with most scientific facts, this is occasionally true. There is one dream that, with slight variations, is continually recurring to me. Over and over again I dream that I am suddenly called upon to act an important part in some piece at the Lyceum. That poor Mr. Irving should invariably be the victim seems unfair, but really it is entirely his own fault. It is he who persuades and urges me. Imyself would much prefer to remain quietly in bed, and I tell him so. But he insists on my getting up at once and coming down to the theatre. I explain to him that I can't act a bit. He seems to consider this unimportant, and says, "Oh, that will be all right."We argue for a while, but he makes the matter quite a personal one, and to oblige him and get him out of the bedroom I consent, though much against my own judgment. I generally dress the character in my nightshirt, though on one occasion, for Banquo, I wore pyjamas, and I never remember a single word of what I ought to say. How I get through I do not know. Irving comes up afterwards and congratulates me, but whether upon the brilliancy of my performance, or upon my luck in getting off the stage before a brickbat is thrown at me, Icannot say.

Whenever I dream this incident I invariably wake up to find that the bedclothes are on the floor, and that I am shivering with cold; and it is this shivering, I suppose, that causes me to dream I am wandering about the Lyceum stage in nothing but my nightshirt. But still I do not understand why it should always be the Lyceum.

Another dream which I fancy I have dreamt more than once--or, if not, I have dreamt that I dreamt it before, a thing one sometimes does--is one in which I am walking down a very wide and very long road in the East End of London. It is a curious road to find there.

Omnibuses and trams pass up and down, and it is crowded with stalls and barrows, beside which men in greasy caps stand shouting; yet on each side it is bordered by a strip of tropical forest. The road, in fact, combines the advantages of Kew and Whitechapel.

Some one is with me, but I cannot see him, and we walk through the forest, pushing our way among the tangled vines that cling about our feet, and every now and then, between the giant tree-trunks, we catch glimpses of the noisy street.

同类推荐
  • 闻明上人逝寄友人

    闻明上人逝寄友人

    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。
  • 于少保萃忠全传

    于少保萃忠全传

    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。
  • 念佛镜

    念佛镜

    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。
  • 晚春登大云寺南楼

    晚春登大云寺南楼

    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。
  • 太上消灾祈福醮仪

    太上消灾祈福醮仪

    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
  • 天霄决

    天霄决

    上古时期,九族的九位大能齐力破天,却被天地之力所绞杀,而那一股股逆天之力却不为天地之力吸收形成了一座与世俗隔离的独特空间……
  • Concerning Letters

    Concerning Letters

    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。
  • 凤皇归来

    凤皇归来

    尹颜是尹家百年一遇的废柴,天生无法修炼玄力,在姨娘和庶女的阴谋之下被送入宫中,成为太监的玩物。历劫重生,她仍旧是尹家的大小姐,却已不是废柴。本该翱翔于天际的凤凰为何陨落至此,便是她一直找寻的真相……
  • 王妃太凉薄

    王妃太凉薄

    作为即将嫁入皇室的姑娘,背后没点实力怎么行。于是白浅兮就这样被“卖”了。对于这个消息,白浅兮表示:没问题,嫁就嫁呗,她还怕了不成,大不了逃婚啊。话虽然是这么说的,但,君翎安表示,逃婚是不可能的,这辈子都不可能的。
  • 三国志

    三国志

    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。
  • 瞳力之都

    瞳力之都

    一个惊天阴谋笼罩着全人类,全新的自我认识,促使人类在不断强化自己。游戏?异种入侵?人类对力量的渴望更加强烈,瞳力成为人类的希望,拥有瞳力也便拥有了掌控生死。我是张小可,黑瞳世界的到来,让我的一生也就此改变。
  • 谋断九州

    谋断九州

    相士曾发出预言:此子闭嘴则为治世之良贤,张嘴必为乱世之枭雄。十八岁的公子张开嘴,果然看到天下大乱,看到群雄逐鹿,看到民不聊生。他以为,谋能生乱,亦能止乱,他要找出一位真龙天子,结束这乱世。
  • 掌娇

    掌娇

    顾则淮逼过宫、造过反,才得来如今的权势无双。众人都说他坏事做尽,才落得如今孑然一生的下场,就算如此,这京城之中谁家有了姑娘都想要往镇南侯府里塞,偏偏顾则淮极为挑剔,显家世显赫的倨傲,长相绝美的扎眼,性子温婉的刻板……谁都瞧不上。可谁知道顾则淮在一个小姑娘身上越看越有亡妻的影子。得知要嫁给自己三表叔的傅明月恨的牙痒痒,得,怎么又活了一世,这人还是阴魂不散?还有没有王法了?
  • 原来是猫小姐

    原来是猫小姐

    突然而来的疼痛让薛灵雪成功变身,什么?自己竟然是只猫?还是猫界的大小姐?
  • 无上地狱

    无上地狱

    无上种子根植灵魂本源。浩瀚泰坦世界任我遨游。虚空本源随我征战四方。……然而最后,当我打遍天下无敌手,才发现一切都是阴谋。所有人都死在他的谋划之下,我也不过是苟延残喘。