登陆注册
5404700000013

第13章 KING BEMBA'S POINTA WEST AFRICAN STORY(2)

"My lad, I thank you for your trouble; but I want no doctor. Do you think I'm looking ill?""Indeed you are," I answered, "ill and thin; and, do you know, I hear you talk to yourself in your sleep nearly every night.""What do I say?" he asked eagerly.

"That I cannot tell," I replied. "It is all rambling talk; the same things over and over again, and nearly all about one person--Lucy.""Boy!" he cried out, as if in pain, or as if something had touched him to the quick, "sit you down, and I'll tell you why I think of her--she was my wife."He moved nearer to the edge of the cliff, and we sat down, almost over the restless sea beneath us.

"She lives in my memory," he continued, speaking more to himself than to me, and looking far out to the horizon, beneath which the setting sun had begun to sink, "in spite of all I can do or think of to make her appear base in my eyes. For she left me to go with another man--a scoundrel. This was how it was," he added, quickly: "I married her, and thought her as pure as a flower; but I could not take her to sea with me because I was only the mate of a vessel, so I left her among her own friends, in the village where she was born. In a little cottage by herself I settled her, comfortable and happy as I thought.

God! how she hung round my neck and sobbed when I went away the first time! and yet--yet--within a year she left me." And he stopped for several minutes, resting his head upon his hands. "At first I could get no trace of her," he resumed. "Her friends knew nothing more of her than that she had left the village suddenly. Gradually I found out the name of the scoundrel who had seduced her away. He had bribed her friends so that they were silent; but I overbribed them with the last money I had, and I followed him and my wife on foot. I never found them, nor did I ever know why she had deserted me for him. If I had only known the reason; if I could have been told of my fault; if she had only written to say that she was tired of me; that I was too old, too rough for her soft ways,--I think I could have borne the heavy stroke the villain had dealt me better. The end of my search was that I dropped down in the streets of Liverpool, whither I thought I had tracked them, and was carried to the hospital with brain-fever upon me. Two months afterward I came out cured, and the sense of my loss was deadened within me, so that I could go to sea again, which I did, before the mast, under the name of Jackson, in a bark that traded to this coast here." And the old sailor rose to his feet and turned abruptly away, leaving me sitting alone.

I saw that he did not wish to be followed, so I stayed where I was and watched the gray twilight creep over the face of the sea, and the night quickly succeed to it. Not a cloud had been in the sky all day long, and as the darkness increased the stars came out, until the whole heavens were studded with glittering gems.

Suddenly, low down, close to the sea, a point of light flickered and disappeared, shone again for a moment, wavered and went out, only to reappear and shine steadily. "A steamer's masthead light," I thought, and ran to the house to give the news; but Jackson had already seen the light, and pronounced that she had anchored until the morning. At daybreak there she was, dipping her sides to the swell of the sea as it rolled beneath her. It was my duty to go off to her in one of the surf-boats belonging to the factory; and so I scrambled down the cliff to the little strip of smooth beach that served us for a landing-place.

When I arrived there I found that the white-crested breakers were heavier than I had thought they would be. However, there was the boat lying on the beach with its prow toward the waves, and round it were the boat-boys with their loincloths girded, ready to start; so Iclambered into the stern, or rather--for the boat was shaped alike at stem and stern--the end from which the steersman, or /patrao/, used his long oar. With a shout the boys laid hold of the sides of the boat, and the next moment it was dancing on the spent waves next to the beach. The patrao kept its head steady, and the boys jumped in and seized the oars, and began pulling with a will, standing up to their stroke. Slowly the heavy craft gathered way, and approached a dark and unbroken roller that hastened toward the beach. Then the patrao shouted to the crew, and they lay on their oars, and the wave with a roar burst right in front of the boat, sending the spray of its crest high above our heads.

"/Rema! rema forca!/" ("Row strongly!") now shouted the patrao, speaking Portuguese, as mostly all African coast natives do; and the crew gave way. The next roller we had to meet in its strength; and save for the steady force of the patrao's oar, I believe it would have tossed us aside and we would have been swept under its curving wall of water. As it was, the good boat gave a mighty bound as it felt its force, and its stem pitched high into the air as it slid down its broad back into the deep.

Another and yet another wave were passed, and we could now see them breaking behind us, shutting out the beach from view. Then the last roller was overcome, and there was nothing but the long heave of the deep sea to contend against. Presently we arrived at the steamer, whose side towered above us--an iron wall.

A shout came to me, pitching and lurching with the boat far below, "Come on board at once." But to come on board was only to be done by watching a chance as the boat rose on the top of a roller. Taking such a one, I seized the side-ropes, swung a moment in mid-air, and the next was on the streamer's clean white deck. Before me stood a tall man with black hair and whiskers and dark piercing eyes, who asked me if I was the agent for Flint Brothers. I answered that the agent was on shore, and that I was his assistant. Whereupon he informed me that he had been appointed by the firm to liquidate all their stations and businesses on the coast, and "he would be obliged by my getting his luggage into the boat." This was said in a peremptory sort of way, as if he had spoken to a servant; and very much against the grain Iobeyed his orders.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 红妆令

    红妆令

    十里红妆女儿梦,女儿红妆亦战袍。若是还能生活在熟悉的世界里,温馨平淡也是福,可惜婉柔穿越了。若是有疼爱自己的父母,有家族庇佑,作个不谙世事的闺中淑女,她是情愿的。可惜父母早逝,亲人凉薄,婉柔只能步步算计。一纸赐婚一场阴谋,两个陌生人的命运紧紧相连。如花容颜惹人醉,若是太平盛世,盼纵马逍遥携手终老,怎料山河潇潇。你待我情深义重,我愿与子同袍,誓守山河多娇。
  • 我的奶油小相公

    我的奶油小相公

    她,因前男友要结婚,痛苦自s,就意外穿越了!这年头穿越很平常,没事放宽心。可是,这福利也太厚了吧?穿越成慕夏国公主,慕舒冰!
  • 英雄联盟之超级新星

    英雄联盟之超级新星

    游戏被大多数人认为是不务正业的一件事情,但是又有多少人知道游戏也能够使人走上人生巅峰?我叫赵睿,高一新生,在电竞圈英雄联盟这款竞技游戏当中有着最强路人王和国服第一大腿的称号,有着三个帐号的我,占据着国服排位积分的前三名,受到无数的职业战队邀约,无数次的拒绝之后,我自己也没有料到,竟然会以一种莫名其妙的方式进入我的职业生涯。“你这么厉害,有本事到LPL来单杀我,傻逼。”在一次单排中,我遇到了一个职业战队选手的挑衅。LPL赛场,二十分钟推完高地水晶获得比赛胜利之后,我带着自己的队员去和对方友谊握手。“我来了,也单杀了。”我笑着道。从此,我因‘不务正业’而获得荣耀,财富与地位。
  • 恨水百味

    恨水百味

    《恨水百味》精选了一百例有关张恨水的故事,向读者全方位、多角度地展示一个完整、真实的张恨水形象,举凡张恨水的人生节点、写作历程、家国情怀、闲趣雅趣等,无不娓娓道来,加以作者独特的考证和点评,更显亲切可信。
  • 考古发现之谜总集(求知探索系列丛书)

    考古发现之谜总集(求知探索系列丛书)

    本书共分七章,包括神秘远古起源考古大搜集、考古探险之谜、黄金国都的神秘、古地图及宝藏考古的传奇、探索古遗迹之谜、神秘消失的古遗迹、纳粹把“琥珀屋”藏在哪里。
  • 怒龙噬天

    怒龙噬天

    龙虎山弟子李显,身具龙子血脉,饕餮之体,在意外来到异界,从此开始了他的强者之路以及探索未知的旅途。面对万年一启的众神之门,强大绝伦的时空守护者,李显将何去何从?
  • 你好,我的夫君大人!

    你好,我的夫君大人!

    江小北遭人暗算被公司开除,她不服便上了十八楼准备找到总裁大人问个清楚却不想正巧偶遇正为无法逃避这次相亲而发愁的总裁大人绍北辰,绍北辰见江小北一点也不畏惧于他便以事成之后让江小北复职做他的秘书为条件让江小北来假冒自己的女友来逃避这次相亲,计划成功后两人在回绍北辰家私人别墅的路上偶遇车祸,绍北辰的血无意间滴进来江小北的嘴里,两人就此开启今世前世穿越之旅……
  • 台岛魅影

    台岛魅影

    一辆黄色的士在敦化南路停了下来,职业习惯使高志恒常常不到目的地就下车。他刚过二十七岁,已经是个小头目了。三年前,他大学毕业,因品学兼优被情报治安部门看中。经过一年的强化训练后,他跨入了“台北社会工作会”的大门,从事监控社会各行业的特殊职业。他来到“莺莺料理馆”,一股淡淡的柔情涌上全身。但小情人美娣此时却没有在店里。名叫美娣的女孩是个雏妓,才十五岁,桃园县人,父母双亡后跟着舅父来到台北。因家境困难被迫辍学沦落风尘。在一次警察的“扫黄”行动中,高志恒保护了她。
  • 我的极品美女老板娘

    我的极品美女老板娘

    这是一个超级兵王的故事!这是一个超级兵王的故事!
  • 银河英雄传说

    银河英雄传说

    我们的征途是星辰大海!影响无数作家的亚洲科幻经典,全网独家首发!距今约一千六百年之后,当时宇宙中存在着两大势力,分别是专制的由皇帝与贵族支配,实行专制体制的“银河帝国”和标榜共和主义的民主国家的“自由行星同盟”。与两家进行商业活动的国家“费沙自治领”也扮演着重要角色。这三者相互牵制而又保持微妙的均势,直到常胜的战略天才莱因哈特的出现改变了这一切,率领两万艘舰队踏上征途的他,遇上了毕生的夙敌——同盟军的杨威利,二人展开了首次的智谋激斗。当前翻译版本由田中芳树先生授权《银河英雄传说》日文原版版权,并邀请到国内翻译名家重新翻译。当前版本有别于较早流行的台湾译者的版本,更加贴合当前大陆读者的句法习惯,并在田中芳树先生本人的指导下,纠正了较早翻译版本中字词含义的些许误差。考虑到翻译团队的效率,本书选择以连载方式为读者分阶段呈现。