登陆注册
5254800000040

第40章 CHAPTER XII A MAN JUSTLY POPULAR(4)

Not that there was anything in it, to do harm to any one, only that none could explain it, except by attributing it to the devil. The weather was very mild and open, and scarcely any snow fell; at any rate, none lay on the ground, even for an hour, in the highest part of Exmoor; a thing which I knew not before nor since, as long as I can remember. But the nights were wonderfully dark, as though with no stars in the heaven; and all day long the mists were rolling upon the hills and down them, as if the whole land were a wash-house. The moorland was full of snipes and teal, and curlews flying and crying, and lapwings flapping heavily, and ravens hovering round dead sheep; yet no redshanks nor dottrell, and scarce any golden plovers (of which we have great store generally) but vast lonely birds, that cried at night, and moved the whole air with their pinions; yet no man ever saw them. It was dismal as well as dangerous now for any man to go fowling (which of late I loved much in the winter)because the fog would come down so thick that the pan of the gun was reeking, and the fowl out of sight ere the powder kindled, and then the sound of the piece was so dead, that the shooter feared harm, and glanced over his shoulder. But the danger of course was far less in this than in losing of the track, and falling into the mires, or over the brim of a precipice.

Nevertheless, I must needs go out, being young and very stupid, and feared of being afraid; a fear which a wise man has long cast by, having learned of the manifold dangers which ever and ever encompass us. And beside this folly and wildness of youth, perchance there was something, I know not what, of the joy we have in uncertainty. Mother, in fear of my missing home--though for that matter, I could smell supper, when hungry, through a hundred land-yards of fog--my dear mother, who thought of me ten times for one thought about herself, gave orders to ring the great sheep-bell, which hung above the pigeon-cote, every ten minutes of the day, and the sound came through the plaits of fog, and I was vexed about it, like the letters of a copy-book. It reminded me, too, of Blundell's bell, and the grief to go into school again.

But during those two months of fog (for we had it all the winter), the saddest and the heaviest thing was to stand beside the sea. To be upon the beach yourself, and see the long waves coming in; to know that they are long waves, but only see a piece of them; and to hear them lifting roundly, swelling over smooth green rocks, plashing down in the hollow corners, but bearing on all the same as ever, soft and sleek and sorrowful, till their little noise is over.

One old man who lived at Lynmouth, seeking to be buried there, having been more than half over the world, though shy to speak about it, and fain to come home to his birthplace, this old Will Watcombe (who dwelt by the water) said that our strange winter arose from a thing he called the 'Gulf-stream', rushing up Channel suddenly. He said it was hot water, almost fit for a man to shave with, and it threw all our cold water out, and ruined the fish and the spawning-time, and a cold spring would come after it. I was fond of going to Lynmouth on Sunday to hear this old man talk, for sometimes he would discourse with me, when nobody else could move him. He told me that this powerful flood set in upon our west so hard sometimes once in ten years, and sometimes not for fifty, and the Lord only knew the sense of it; but that when it came, therewith came warmth and clouds, and fog, and moisture, and nuts, and fruit, and even shells; and all the tides were thrown abroad. As for nuts he winked awhile, and chewed a piece of tobacco; yet did I not comprehend him. Only afterwards I heard that nuts with liquid kernels came, travelling on the Gulf stream; for never before was known so much foreign cordial landed upon our coast, floating ashore by mistake in the fog, and (what with the tossing and the mist) too much astray to learn its duty.

Folk, who are ever too prone to talk, said that Will Watcombe himself knew better than anybody else about this drift of the Gulf-stream, and the places where it would come ashore, and the caves that took the in-draught. But De Whichehalse, our great magistrate, certified that there was no proof of unlawful importation; neither good cause to suspect it, at a time of Christian charity. And we knew that it was a foul thing for some quarrymen to say that night after night they had been digging a new cellar at Ley Manor to hold the little marks of respect found in the caverns at high-water weed. Let that be, it is none of my business to speak evil of dignities; duly we common people joked of the 'Gulp-stream,' as we called it.

But the thing which astonished and frightened us so, was not, I do assure you, the landing of foreign spirits, nor the loom of a lugger at twilight in the gloom of the winter moonrise. That which made as crouch in by the fire, or draw the bed-clothes over us, and try to think of something else, was a strange mysterious sound.

At grey of night, when the sun was gone, and no red in the west remained, neither were stars forthcoming, suddenly a wailing voice rose along the valleys, and a sound in the air, as of people running. It mattered not whether you stood on the moor, or crouched behind rocks away from it, or down among reedy places; all as one the sound would come, now from the heart of the earth beneath, now overhead bearing down on you. And then there was rushing of something by, and melancholy laughter, and the hair of a man would stand on end before he could reason properly.

God, in His mercy, knows that I am stupid enough for any man, and very slow of impression, nor ever could bring myself to believe that our Father would let the evil one get the upper hand of us. But when I had heard that sound three times, in the lonely gloom of the evening fog, and the cold that followed the lines of air, I was loath to go abroad by night, even so far as the stables, and loved the light of a candle more, and the glow of a fire with company.

There were many stories about it, of course, all over the breadth of the moorland. But those who had heard it most often declared that it must be the wail of a woman's voice, and the rustle of robes fleeing horribly, and fiends in the fog going after her. To that, however, I paid no heed, when anybody was with me; only we drew more close together, and barred the doors at sunset.

同类推荐
  • 提婆菩萨破楞伽经中外道小乘四宗论

    提婆菩萨破楞伽经中外道小乘四宗论

    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。
  • 唐阙史

    唐阙史

    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。
  • 公孙龙子注

    公孙龙子注

    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。
  • 通天乐

    通天乐

    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。
  • 鲲溟诗集

    鲲溟诗集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 胖妞逆袭手册

    胖妞逆袭手册

    京城第一跋扈小侯爷和励志胖妞的故事。李桓煜的世界里除了胖妞,再无其他,什么功名利禄,还比不上小芸的一个微笑。胖妞,我只心悦你。
  • 璇玑梦魇

    璇玑梦魇

    是前世的宿孽,还是今生难以割舍的欲望;一个普通的中文系女生无心闯入一片神秘之域,那里只存在于某人的意念之中。心生种种魔生,心灭种种魔灭。白昼的日光挥不去夜晚孤独的梦魇,不知不觉中,她已经和千古才女苏蕙融为一体,而灾难却无时无刻不在侵蚀着她身边的人们……究竟谁是始作俑者…… 欲望与人性的冲撞,是本文的主题。
  • 寒江·雪

    寒江·雪

    风急,雪飘,大地一片苍茫。寒江冰冻,蜿蜒曲折,盘绕远去,天地似乎凝成冰雪一色,凄清孤寂中透着无边的萧瑟。老树枯枝,斜伸向天,在寒风中摇摆狂舞,仿佛沉沦在炼狱之中不甘的冤魂张开干枯的鬼手,向着苍天发出凄惨尖怖的绝望嘶吼,凭空增添了难言的忧郁和丝丝幽冥的阴寒。一小片稀疏的寒梅三三两两围绕着一排低矮的茅屋,梅花满树芳香,空间暗香浮动,洒脱而淡然。急骤的蹄声远远传来,铁蹄过处,敲碎了一路冰凌,踢起了一路散雪,马上一紫衣人,年轻潇洒,散发披肩,迎风飞舞。
  • 花样美男之我是萝莉

    花样美男之我是萝莉

    我不过是在上课上看小说,就被老师请出了‘我的高中’啊,我这个悲催啊!从天而降的进校申请书,而且还是贵族学校?我也太好运了把,带着我的小说向这个所谓的最有钱最豪华的‘卡布奇诺’去看看。额,超级四美男?还要当他们的唯一女仆?妈咪咪啊,我怎么这么好运?!
  • 重生之逆天改命

    重生之逆天改命

    人生最大的作弊就是重活一次!穆秦一个实力低微的修真者带着无尽的不甘和遗憾重生了,带着前世的记忆穆秦再次站在那个让他一辈子自责悔恨叩仙门的时候他再次犹豫了。前世的爱恨情仇让他无法释怀,今生的光明大道又让他难以抉择。###穆秦说:既然重生了,那么我就要改变自己的命运,改变师门的气运,还有决不能再让那个前世自己牵挂了一辈子的女人受到伤害。可是历史的车轮、命运的轮回真的会让穆秦得偿所愿吗?这一切还是未知!
  • 三点钟

    三点钟

    康奈尔·伍尔里奇(ComellWoolrich):1903年生于纽约市。19世纪20年代,他在哥伦比亚大学时开始创作小说。并于30年代至40年代与雷蒙德·钱德勒以及詹姆士·M·凯恩一起成为“黑色体裁”小说的创始人之一。写出了如《后窗》、《我嫁给了一个死人》之类被称为“黑色系列”的经典悬念小说。他的作品被后人大量改编成电影,其中最有名的是希区柯克的《后窗》和楚孚的《黑衣新娘》。康奈尔·伍尔里奇于1968年酗酒过度而去世。她为自己签署了死亡执行令。他一遍又一遍地对自己说,这事不能怪他,她是咎由自取。他从没见过那个男人。
  • 男人要有胸怀,女人要有情怀

    男人要有胸怀,女人要有情怀

    这个世界从来不缺凡夫俗子,红尘中我们早已在是是非非中学会了争辩和计较,在柴米油盐中学会了小气和狭隘。对于大多数男人来说,心胸修炼最迫在眉睫。如果说上天赐给了男人一样最重要的东西,那么这种东西就是博大的胸怀和宽阔的胸襟。对于男人这种天生好强和自尊的动物,人生也许可以不繁华,但是不能没有尊严和面子。而博大的胸怀和宽阔的胸襟是男人获得成功和他人赞赏的最重要的一点。俯瞰大千世界,具有博大胸怀的男人与具有情怀的女人虽不同,却又相同。他们都是快乐地微笑,独自行走在红尘中,享受着良辰美景,享受着内心的美好与宁静。
  • 逆天成凤

    逆天成凤

    末世佣兵穿越,被人嘲笑为废物,看她如何打脸。丹药,秘籍,萌宠,法宝,她样样具备,什么阴谋阳谋,全部打碎!且看废材如何逆天成凤。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 唐诗鉴赏(传世经典鉴赏丛书)

    唐诗鉴赏(传世经典鉴赏丛书)

    人生不相见,动如参与商。人生代代无穷已,江月年年望相似。天生我材必有用,千金散尽还复来。东边日出西边雨,道是无晴还有晴。同是天涯沦落人,相逢何必曾相识。此情可待成追忆,只是当时已惘然。沉舟侧畔千帆过,病树前头万木春。身无彩风双飞翼,心有灵犀一点通。近乡情更怯,不敢问来人。念天地之悠悠,独怆然而涕。
  • 檐醉杂记

    檐醉杂记

    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。