登陆注册
5289300000011

第11章 CHAPTER III(1)

It was the cow that woke me the first morning. I did not know it was our cow--not at the time. I didn't know we had a cow. I looked at my watch; it was half-past two. I thought maybe she would go to sleep again, but her idea was that the day had begun. I went to the window, the moon was at the full. She was standing by the gate, her head inside the garden; I took it her anxiety was lest we might miss any of it. Her neck was stretched out straight, her eyes towards the sky; which gave to her the appearance of a long-eared alligator. I have never had much to do with cows. I don't know how you talk to them. I told her to "be quiet," and to "lie down"; and made pretence to throw a boot at her. It seemed to cheer her, having an audience; she added half a dozen extra notes. I never knew before a cow had so much in her. There is a thing one sometimes meets with in the suburbs--or one used to; I do not know whether it is still extant, but when I was a boy it was quite common. It has a hurdy-gurdy fixed to its waist and a drum strapped on behind, a row of pipes hanging from its face, and bells and clappers from most of its other joints.

It plays them all at once, and smiles. This cow reminded me of it--with organ effects added. She didn't smile; there was that to be said in her favour.

I hoped that if I made believe to be asleep she would get discouraged. So I closed the window ostentatiously, and went back to bed. But it only had the effect of putting her on her mettle. "He did not care for that last," I imagined her saying to herself, "I wasn't at my best. There wasn't feeling enough in it." She kept it up for about half an hour, and then the gate against which, I suppose, she had been leaning, gave way with a crash. That frightened her, and I heard her gallop off across the field. I was on the point of dozing off again when a pair of pigeons settled on the window-sill and began to coo. It is a pretty sound when you are in the mood for it. I wrote a poem once--a simple thing, but instinct with longing--while sitting under a tree and listening to the cooing of a pigeon. But that was in the afternoon. My only longing now was for a gun. Three times I got out of bed and "shoo'd" them away. The third time I remained by the window till I had got it firmly into their heads that I really did not want them. My behaviour on the former two occasions they had evidently judged to be mere playfulness. I had just got back to bed again when an owl began to screech. That is another sound I used to think attractive--so weird, so mysterious. It is Swinburne, I think, who says that you never get the desired one and the time and the place all right together. If the beloved one is with you, it is the wrong place or at the wrong time; and if the time and the place happen to be right, then it is the party that is wrong. The owl was all right: I like owls. The place was all right. He had struck the wrong time, that was all. Eleven o'clock at night, when you can't see him, and naturally feel that you want to, is the proper time for an owl.

Perched on the roof of a cow-shed in the early dawn he looks silly.

He clung there, flapping his wings and screeching at the top of his voice. What it was he wanted I am sure I don't know; and anyhow it didn't seem the way to get it. He came to this conclusion himself at the end of twenty minutes, and shut himself up and went home. I thought I was going to have at last some peace, when a corncrake--a creature upon whom Nature has bestowed a song like to the tearing of calico-sheets mingled with the sharpening of saws--settled somewhere in the garden and set to work to praise its Maker according to its lights. I have a friend, a poet, who lives just off the Strand, and spends his evenings at the Garrick Club. He writes occasional verse for the evening papers, and talks about the "silent country, drowsy with the weight of languors." One of these times I'll lure him down for a Saturday to Monday and let him find out what the country really is--let him hear it. He is becoming too much of a dreamer: it will do him good, wake him up a bit. The corncrake after awhile stopped quite suddenly with a jerk, and for quite five minutes there was silence.

"If this continues for another five," I said to myself, "I'll be asleep." I felt it coming over me. I had hardly murmured the words when the cow turned up again. I should say she had been somewhere and had had a drink. She was in better voice than ever.

It occurred to me that this would be an opportunity to make a few notes on the sunrise. The literary man is looked to for occasional description of the sunrise. The earnest reader who has heard about this sunrise thirsts for full particulars. Myself, for purposes of observation, I have generally chosen December or the early part of January. But one never knows. Maybe one of these days I'll want a summer sunrise, with birds and dew-besprinkled flowers: it goes well with the rustic heroine, the miller's daughter, or the girl who brings up chickens and has dreams. I met a brother author once at seven o'clock in the morning in Kensington Gardens. He looked half asleep and so disagreeable that I hesitated for awhile to speak to him: he is a man that as a rule breakfasts at eleven. But I summoned my courage and accosted him.

"This is early for you," I said.

"It's early for anyone but a born fool," he answered.

"What's the matter?" I asked. "Can't you sleep?"

"Can't I sleep?" he retorted indignantly. "Why, I daren't sit down upon a seat, I daren't lean up against a tree. If I did I'd be asleep in half a second."

"What's the idea?" I persisted. "Been reading Smiles's 'Self Help and the Secret of Success'? Don't be absurd," I advised him.

"You'll be going to Sunday school next and keeping a diary. You have left it too late: we don't reform at forty. Go home and go to bed."

I could see he was doing himself no good.

"I'm going to bed," he answered, "I'm going to bed for a month when I've finished this confounded novel that I'm on. Take my advice," he said--he laid his hand upon my shoulder--"Never choose a colonial girl for your heroine. At our age it is simple madness."

同类推荐
  • The Human Drift

    The Human Drift

    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。
  • 警富新书

    警富新书

    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。
  • 求野录

    求野录

    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。
  • The Formation of Vegetable Mould

    The Formation of Vegetable Mould

    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。
  • 佛古闻禅师语录

    佛古闻禅师语录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 谜中之谜

    谜中之谜

    今日晨六点城市边缘的一座山顶上,有一颗“红宝石”在闪闪发光,晦暗明灭。火!”看见的人都醒悟着喊到,仓惶着拿起电话报警。小屋立于光秃秃的崖顶。风猛烈。所幸火势被控制住,没有向山下的城市蔓延。寂静来得比噪音更可怕。所有的人都在等待房梁坍塌的一刻,那是火焰最后的张狂。劲风把云层堆积成涌动的漩涡,压盖过来。天上开始落下淅淅沥沥的小雨。“轰!”在巨雷鸣响的一刻,房梁倒塌,火势减弱,数缕蛇升黑烟如房屋的魂魄,遁入天空。几处微弱的小火凌乱铺散,但已不足为势。灭火队员们刚松一口气,便大雨倾盆。
  • 大剧院正在上演

    大剧院正在上演

    五月,天山蛮九沟,一辆白色夜班车在崎岖的盘山路上缓慢地爬行着。车内,何心竹头枕着一本书躺在那里,玻璃上浮现出她陷入遐想的恬美微笑。车行六七里,又熄火了,司机在旅客的抱怨声中跳了下来,开始检查车子。心竹也随着骂骂咧咧的旅客下了车。路边,马兰花、野生虞美人、喀拉科雏菊、莱恩小百合、蒲公英开得正欢,心竹忙跑过去,欣喜地采摘起来。她准备编个花环,因为不久,她就将成为轩歌的新娘子,她想把这个花环送给她心爱的人。当心竹抱着一大束野花回到车内时,睡在心竹上铺的一个高个子年轻人说话了,小姐,当心野花有毒!
  • 重阳真人金关玉锁诀

    重阳真人金关玉锁诀

    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。
  • 那是一只什么鸟

    那是一只什么鸟

    温亚军,现为北京武警总部某文学杂志主编。著有长篇小说伪生活等六部,小说集硬雪、驮水的日子等七部。获第三届鲁迅文学奖,第十一届庄重文文学奖,《小说选刊》《中国作家》和《上海文学》等刊物奖,入选中国小说学会排行榜。中国作家协会会员。
  • 生生世世爱:玥色倾心

    生生世世爱:玥色倾心

    “你当真这般恨我?”皇甫歆,他带着无尽的忧伤问道。尉迟玥,她没有回答,却握紧了手中的刀子狠狠的刺去……血,一滴滴的散开,空气中的血腥味让她几近疯狂,飞奔而出,大喊着:“我不是你的王妃!”他愣住,未加阻拦,胸口的痛根本无法抵过内心阵阵的抽搐,仿佛那刀不是刺在胸口而是在心上生生剜了血肉一般……而她的心也再次被扯碎,刀刺中的不是他的胸口,而是自己的心。爱情,在种种误会还没有解除时已经去了地狱……
  • 无我剑

    无我剑

    本是救死扶伤的医生穿越到异世界为何成了剑客杀手?是不是要佛拿起屠刀的时候,才会有人开始忏悔自己的罪行?当发现杀人才是救人的时候,医生握起了剑;当罪孽无法饶恕的时候,善良的人也会成为死神。“呐,为什么要给它取名无我剑啊?又不霸气,又不好听的。”“因为没有我,它就只是一把剑而已啊。””
  • 何取应笑

    何取应笑

    情不知所起,一往而深,生者可以死,死者可以生。但她翻然醒悟,情是什么?呵,不过是一场游戏一场梦!为什么弱小就要被人把玩于股掌之间?那她便成为最强者!
  • 三木小说

    三木小说

    他心里也不要盛世萧条。我们走在秋天无比美好的色彩里,落叶的声音传到了很多年前,在没有名字的吊桥上,自行车碾过落叶。我想我为什么总是用想象的美好包裹我的生活?这竟然是生命给我的最好的感情。我想写下来,给那些也用虚幻的人。虚幻也并不可怕,如果不是虚荣。生活是没有幂的矩阵,是无解。然而我想给我的孩子看我曾经在感受力最蓬勃的年月里留存的记忆。因为于我而言,这些感受力是我体内基因带给我的最好的礼物。
  • 红锈

    红锈

    人生就这样平凡了吗?不不不,平凡之下还有深渊。方生平从小到大一路中规中矩,一脚迈进中年,突然掉进霉运的深渊,崩坏的生话如何修补?是抛妻另娶还是追妻前行?红锈:颜色美好,内腐外脆。难溶于水,惰性强。
  • Camp Pleasant

    Camp Pleasant

    This short novel that is told with almost fable-like simplicity: Matt Harper is a first-time counselor at a boy's summer camp when he witnesses a casual brutality that leads to murder. The bullying, gluttonous headman Ed Nolan (who has "reduced Camp Pleasant to a microcosm of the Third Reich") is portrayed as one stereotype that the reader is not sorry to see killed off. Instead, all of our sympathy is reserved for the possible suspects: Merv Loomis, the homosexual counselor Nolan humiliates into quitting; the troubled ten-year-old Tony Rocca; Nolan's meek wife, Ellen; and several others. The setting and tone have the distinct feel of the early 1950s, but a casual reference to actress Catherine Deneuve places the action in the mid-60s or later.