登陆注册
5216900000009

第9章 CHAPTER V(2)

And then came the city of Oakland,and on the shelves of that free library I discovered all the great world beyond the skyline.Here were thousands of books as good as my four wonder-books,and some were even better.Libraries were not concerned with children in those days,and I had strange adventures.I remember,in the catalogue,being impressed by the title,"The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle."I filled an application blank and the librarian handed me the collected and entirely unexpurgated works of Smollett in one huge volume.I read everything,but principally history and adventure,and all the old travels and voyages.Iread mornings,afternoons,and nights.I read in bed,I read at table,I read as I walked to and from school,and I read at recess while the other boys were playing.I began to get the "jerks."To everybody I replied:"Go away.You make me nervous."And so,at ten,I was out on the streets,a newsboy.I had no time to read.I was busy getting exercise and learning how to fight,busy learning forwardness,and brass and bluff.I had an imagination and a curiosity about all things that made me plastic.

Not least among the things I was curious about was the saloon.

And I was in and out of many a one.I remember,in those days,on the east side of Broadway,between Sixth and Seventh,from corner to corner,there was a solid block of saloons.

In the saloons life was different.Men talked with great voices,laughed great laughs,and there was an atmosphere of greatness.

Here was something more than common every-day where nothing happened.Here life was always very live,and,sometimes,even lurid,when blows were struck,and blood was shed,and big policemen came shouldering in.Great moments,these,for me,my head filled with all the wild and valiant fighting of the gallant adventurers on sea and land.There were no big moments when Itrudged along the street throwing my papers in at doors.But in the saloons,even the sots,stupefied,sprawling across the tables or in the sawdust,were objects of mystery and wonder.

And more,the saloons were right.The city fathers sanctioned them and licensed them.They were not the terrible places I heard boys deem them who lacked my opportunities to know.Terrible they might be,but then that only meant they were terribly wonderful,and it is the terribly wonderful that a boy desires to know.In the same way pirates,and shipwrecks,and battles were terrible;and what healthy boy wouldn't give his immortal soul to participate in such affairs?

Besides,in saloons I saw reporters,editors,lawyers,judges,whose names and faces I knew.They put the seal of social approval on the saloon.They verified my own feeling of fascination in the saloon.They,too,must have found there that something different,that something beyond,which I sensed and groped after.What it was,I did not know;yet there it must be,for there men focused like buzzing flies about a honey pot.I had no sorrows,and the world was very bright,so I could not guess that what these men sought was forgetfulness of jaded toil and stale grief.

Not that I drank at that time.From ten to fifteen I rarely tasted liquor,but I was intimately in contact with drinkers and drinking places.The only reason I did not drink was because Ididn't like the stuff.As the time passed,I worked as boy-helper on an ice-wagon,set up pins in a bowling alley with a saloon attached,and swept out saloons at Sunday picnic grounds.

Big jovial Josie Harper ran a road house at Telegraph Avenue and Thirty-ninth Street.Here for a year I delivered an evening paper,until my route was changed to the water-front and tenderloin of Oakland.The first month,when I collected Josie Harper's bill,she poured me a glass of wine.I was ashamed to refuse,so I drank it.But after that I watched the chance when she wasn't around so as to collect from her barkeeper.

The first day I worked in the bowling alley,the barkeeper,according to custom,called us boys up to have a drink after we had been setting up pins for several hours.The others asked for beer.I said I'd take ginger ale.The boys snickered,and Inoticed the barkeeper favoured me with a strange,searching scrutiny.Nevertheless,he opened a bottle of ginger ale.

Afterward,back in the alleys,in the pauses between games,the boys enlightened me.I had offended the barkeeper.A bottle of ginger ale cost the saloon ever so much more than a glass of steam beer;and it was up to me,if I wanted to hold my job,to drink beer.Besides,beer was food.I could work better on it.There was no food in ginger ale.After that,when I couldn't sneak out of it,I drank beer and wondered what men found in it that was so good.I was always aware that I was missing something.

What I really liked in those days was candy.For five cents Icould buy five "cannon-balls"--big lumps of the most delicious lastingness.I could chew and worry a single one for an hour.

Then there was a Mexican who sold big slabs of brown chewing taffy for five cents each.It required a quarter of a day properly to absorb one of them.And many a day I made my entire lunch off one of those slabs.In truth,I found food there,but not in beer.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • LEGENDS AND LYRICS - SECOND SERIES

    LEGENDS AND LYRICS - SECOND SERIES

    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。
  • 娘子为夫帅不

    娘子为夫帅不

    人说倒霉的时候,连喝水都会噎死,我现在是彻底相信了。莫名穿越到这该死的古代,落后的要命不说,还让我青春靓丽的美少女当起了奶妈!偏偏,这个男人还是个超级自恋狂外加大唐僧。镜头一:“娘子,为夫帅不?”某人手里拿着镜子,笑得一脸花痴。“帅,当然帅了,你人见人爱,花见花开,连啤酒见了都开盖…”“娘子,啤酒是什么酒?我怎么没喝过?好喝吗?娘子…”省略N字“…闭嘴!”镜头二:“娘子,为夫帅不?”某人趴在我床边看着我,笑得一脸灿烂。“帅,美过嫦娥,赛过貂蝉,胜过西施,拜托,行行好吧大少爷,让我睡一觉吧。”“娘子…你不要我了吗?你不喜欢我了吗?你已经讨厌我了吗?娘子…”某人两眼汪汪,可怜兮兮的看着我,好像我就是那始乱终弃的负心汉。“…乖,不哭啊,娘子等会给你买糖吃。”镜头三:“娘子,为夫帅不?”某人声音低哑,两眼喷火的看着我,笑得一脸无害。“帅,非常帅,可是…你还小。”“为夫已经不小了。”“可是,你是人,还是男人。”我不死心的继续劝说。“当然,否则我怎么娶妻?”“既然如此,你就更加不能这样做,这不是大丈夫所为…”信念一点一滴的远去,我的防线正在一点一点的瓦解。“娘子,这不能怪为夫哦…”就这样,那个不小心摸了我小手的男人被他打的鼻青脸肿,三天下不了床。【声明】因故事情节需要,本小说节选了部分历史背景与人物,但纯属戏说娱乐,请广大读者不要对号入座,砖下留情。版权所有,未经作者同意,转载必究!【更新时间:下午2:00——5:00之间,因工作在身,更新可能有时会比较慢,但是清风绝不是喜欢弃坑的人,亲们请放心看文!此文绝对会完美结局!】特别感谢舞轻寒给《娘子》一文做的视频,喜欢的亲们可以去看看,做的很好:推荐清风已经完结的宫廷谋略文《绝色国师》免费滴哦,大家尽管看吧,那是小风第一次尝试写谋略。_________________________________推荐飘雪的好文《驭妖》推荐风之孤鸿的好文《皇妃爬上凤凰台》推荐花花非公子的好文《嚣张丫鬟》
  • 上山

    上山

    “上山?”老板娘忙着登记身份证,头都没抬。“上山?”“哦,不是去阿里?”“哦哦,是去阿里金小提还是眨巴眼皮,不敢相信老板娘说的“上山”是说走新藏线——国道219!用那么俏生生的语气。她回房间说给毕岸临听。毕岸临说:“上山?她就这么说?叶城人也太牛了吧。十六个达坂,四十四道冰沟,平均海拔4500米,跨越昆仑、喀喇昆仑、冈底斯、喜马拉雅四大山系……就说了个——上山,啊?”少顷又说:“那么,咱也上山?”金小提胳膊一挥说:“当然,上山。
  • House Divided (A Luke Stone Thriller—Book 7)

    House Divided (A Luke Stone Thriller—Book 7)

    “One of the best thrillers I have read this year. The plot is intelligent and will keep you hooked from the beginning. The author did a superb job creating a set of characters who are fully developed and very much enjoyable. I can hardly wait for the sequel.”--Books and Movie Reviews (re Any Means Necessary)HOUSE DIVIDED is book #7 in the USA Today bestselling Luke Stone thriller series, which begins with ANY MEANS NECESSARY (Book #1), a free download with over 500 five star reviews!A passenger jet is attacked in northern Africa by terrorists wielding RPGs, resulting in an enormous loss of life. Yet U.S. intelligence reports this is merely a distraction, a prelude to a worse terror incident.
  • 洞真上清青要紫书金根众经

    洞真上清青要紫书金根众经

    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。
  • 倾世女巫

    倾世女巫

    一出生就属人类的她被天猫王多次刺杀,为此,天赏姑娘一直渴望着自己有一张猫脸,有着猫人的特征。当天赏说服了国王去寻找他的王子后,便和她的小伙伴花间错、茄菲、少年乔恩、白思玉等,开始踏上了一条走向强者的成功之路。感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!
  • 渡亡人

    渡亡人

    相传忘川河上有一名摆渡人,可送心怀执念的亡者转世并不忘前尘。而我,则是世间最后一名摆渡人,人称渡亡人。
  • 末日地狱

    末日地狱

    经过可怕的“导弹时期”,大家又迎来了新的挑战——什么挑战?从哪儿来的?嗨!一切都怪——世界上有鬼魂这种东西——!伊莱鸣不死心,召集群鬼占领地球,活着的主角们回到地球,伊莱鸣仇心顿起,将其打入十八层地狱。地狱并不可怕,因为大家有团结的心。但是,可怕的是——每层地狱的守护者,居然是自己战死沙场的朋友!牺牲,歃血,溅泪……再次重现。
  • 内幕真相(第二次世界大战史丛书)

    内幕真相(第二次世界大战史丛书)

    本书综合国内外的最新研究成果和最新解密资料,在有关专家和部门的指导下,以第二次世界大战的历史进程为线索,贯穿了大战的主要历史时期、主要战场战役和主要军政人物,全景式展现了第二次世界大战的恢宏画卷。
  • 宁夏长城

    宁夏长城

    本书属“塞上江南神奇宁夏”丛书之一,以宁夏境内长城为叙述对象,较为全面、详细地描述了宁夏境内长城的历史沿革、建筑形制、结构和材料等。书中附录的长城图片具有一定的价值。