登陆注册
5406200000130

第130章

"The fellow went away, and neither of them would give in.It's queer how real it was when you read it.You were right there looking on, and swallowing hard every few minutes-- though you were as mad as hops.

The girl began to die--slow --and lay there day after day, longing for him to come back, and knowing he wouldn't.At the very end, when there was scarcely a breath left in her, a young fellow who was crazy about her himself, and always had been, put out after the hard-headed fool to bring him to her anyhow.The girl had about given in then.And she lay and waited hour after hour, and the youngster came back by himself.He couldn't bring the man he'd gone after.He found him getting married to a nice girl he didn't really care a darn for.He'd sort of set his teeth and done it--just because he was all in and down and out, and a fool.The girl just dropped her head back on the pillow and lay there, dead! What do you think of that?" quite fiercely."Iguess it was sentimental all right, but it got you by the throat.""'Good-bye, Sweetheart, Good-bye,"' his grace quoted."First-class title.We are all sentimental.And that was the first, was it?""Yes, but it wasn't the last.I began to read the others.I've been reading them ever since.I tell you, for a fellow that knows nothing it's an easy way of finding out a lot of things.You find out what different kinds of people there are, and what different kinds of ways.

If you've lived in one place, and been up against nothing but earning your living, you think that's all there is of it--that it's the whole thing.But it isn't, by gee!" His air became thoughtful."I've begun to kind of get on to what all this means"--glancing about him--"to you people; and how a fellow like T.T.must look to you.I've always sort of guessed, but reading a few dozen novels has helped me to see WHYit's that way.I've yelled right out laughing over it many a time.

That fellow called Thackeray--I can't read his things right straight through-- but he 's an eye-opener.""You have tried nothing BUT novels?" his enthralled hearer inquired.

"Not yet.I shall come to the others in time.I'm sort of hungry for these things about PEOPLE.It's the ways they're different that gets me going.There was one that stirred me all up--but it wasn't like that first one.It was about a man "--he spoke slowly, as if searching for words and parallels --"well, I guess he was one of the early savages here.It read as if they were like the first Indians in America, only stronger and fiercer.When Palford was explaining things to me he'd jerk in every now and then something about 'coming over with the Conqueror' or being here 'before the Conqueror.' I didn't know what it meant.I found out in this book I'm telling about.It gave me the whole thing so that you SAW it.Here was this little country, with no one in it but these first savage fellows it'd always belonged to.They thought it was the world." There was a humorous sense of illumination in his half-laugh."It was their New York, by jings," he put in."Their little old New York that they'd never been outside of! And then first one lot slams in, and then another, and another, and tries to take it from them.Julius Caesar was the first Mr.Buttinski; and they fought like hell.They were fighters from Fightersville, anyhow.They fought each other, took each other's castles and lands and wives and jewelry--just any old thing they wanted.The only jails were private ones meant for their particular friends.And a man was hung only when one of his neighbors got mad enough at him, and then he had to catch him first and run the risk of being strung up himself, or have his head chopped off and stuck up on a spike somewhere for ornament.But fight! Good Lord! They were at it day and night.Did it for fun, just like folks go to the show.They didn't know what fear was.Never heard of it.They'd go about shouting and bragging and swaggering, with their heads hanging half off.And the one in this book was the bulliest fighter of the lot.I guess Idon't know how to pronounce his name.It began with H.""Was it Hereward the Wake, by chance?" exclaimed his auditor.

"Hereward the Last of the English?"

"That's the man," cried Tembarom.

"An engaging ruffian and thief and murderer, and a touching one also,"commented the duke."You liked him?" He really wanted to know.

"I like the way he went after what he wanted to get, and the way he fought for his bit of England.By gee! When he went rushing into a fight, shouting and boasting and swinging his sword, I got hot in the collar.It was his England.What was old Bill doing there anyhow, darn him! Those chaps made him swim in their blood before they let him put the thing over.Good business! I'm glad they gave him all that was coming to him--hot and strong."His sharp face had reddened and his voice rose high and nasal.There was a look of roused blood in him.

"Are you a fighter from Fightersville?" the duke asked, far from unstirred himself.These things had become myths to most people, but here was Broadway in the midst of them unconsciously suggesting that it might not have done ill in the matter of swinging "Brain-Biter"itself.The modern entity slipped back again through the lengthened links of bygone centuries--back until it became T.Tembarom once more-- casual though shrewd; ready and jocular.His eyes resumed their dry New York humor of expression as they fixed themselves on his wholly modern questioner.

"I'll fight," he said, "for what I've got to fight for, but not for a darned thing else.Not a darned thing.""But you would fight," smiled the duke, grimly."Did you happen to remember that blood like that has come down to you? It was some drop of it which made you `hot in the collar' over that engaging savage roaring and slashing about him for his `bit of England."'

Tembarom seemed to think it out interestedly.

同类推荐
  • 佛说阿遬达经

    佛说阿遬达经

    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。
  • 大小便门

    大小便门

    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。
  • 现成话

    现成话

    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。
  • 洞玄灵宝定观经注

    洞玄灵宝定观经注

    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。
  • 真藏经要诀

    真藏经要诀

    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。
热门推荐
  • 八荒界主

    八荒界主

    喝下龙子酒,视为龙家人,从此不低头。身怀龙之血,齐心不背离,傲视于八荒,伤我族人者,虽远必诛之,此誓,天道为证,违者,天地共罚。
  • 忆轩吟

    忆轩吟

    她一个性格古怪,喜欢安静的新时代女性。难得的渡假期却让她来到了异时空。作为富商之女却有一身武艺。美字对她而言以没有意义。树下巧遇心动的姻缘。她为他去书院念书。她为他放弃女儿装只为能……
  • Beyond

    Beyond

    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。
  • 做事先做人的潜规则

    做事先做人的潜规则

    会做人,能左右逢源,不会做人,四处碰壁;会做人,做事有人帮;不会做人,处处碰壁;会做人,办事有捷径,不会做人,命运多舛。如何行动,如何去把握自己做人的原则成就了不同的人生局面。做人有差距,做事当然会有不同的结果。在智力大体相当的情况下,如何行动,如何去把握自己做人的原则就成就了不同的人生局面。有的人不贪图安逸,从来就没想过要有所作为;有的人虽然有远大的抱负,但没有孜孜以求的耐力;有的人刻苦发奋,但始终抓不着努力的方向,有劲用不到对的地方。成功属于会做人的人。本书既是通过:自强不息,做命运的主人;精挑细选,不断扩大朋友圈;勇往直前,追求心中的爱。
  • 星座:预知未来的魔法

    星座:预知未来的魔法

    知命是为了更好的改变自己的命运!这个世界上,万物皆有联系。我们跟天上的星座,也同样有联系。通过占星,我们可以以一个全新的角度去思考自己的人生。观察我们自己、他人的星盘,静下心来,仔细思考这一切的关联和矛盾,进而你甚至能真正体会到命运轨迹的神奇。我们不应当排斥“占星术”这个观察生命的另一种角度。一起跟随本书来体会一下四位作者关于2012-2024年12星座运势的看法吧!
  • 聊斋(当下版)

    聊斋(当下版)

    不是只有古代才有聂小倩和宁采臣的。书生与靓鬼的故事没完没了,不过现代的聂小倩招数更多了,而宁采臣也不是那么懦弱了……
  • 养生先养心

    养生先养心

    自身有病自心知,心病还须心药治。心态宁静身也静,心生疾病身也病。养我心,静我性,养心静性常安定。养心寡欲是良药,静性无虑心康宁。名利权势皆朝露,莫将嗜欲累心病。知朝露,即知命,行止快乐无偏病。吃好喝好,不如养心好名好利好,不如静心好。医好药好,不如开心好富好贵好,不如良心好。
  • 邪王妻

    邪王妻

    她是个不中用的废子,人人唾弃的“哑女”,不懂规矩的贱人巧合之下,认识皇子,“亲人”便试图踩着她往上爬不断的挖坑陷害她,却都偷鸡不成蚀把米殊不知平静无波的桃花眼底隐藏着的厉光,足以射穿人心她看似柔弱,却处事极端,心狠手辣,不择手段等到众人回味,却追悔莫及——当一个邪魅,狂妄的男子出现在她生命中后。。。。。。他的邪魅与张狂,遇到她的狠辣与嚣张,到底是他赢了她的人,还是她偷了他的心?
  • 下一站拉萨

    下一站拉萨

    本书是一个80后背包客探访以拉萨为中心的环游西藏的旅行笔记。从昆仑山口到可可西里,从格尔木到拉萨,从拉萨到日喀则,从日喀则到墨脱……作者以富有诗意的笔触,配以旅行中的感触、心得以及旅行花絮等,从各个角度记录了一行人的见闻游记、幽默轶事,为读者倾情讲述了一个不为人知的西藏风情文化。通过这次的旅行,作者对生命和生活有了更深的体悟,思想得到了洗礼,灵魂得到了升华,找回了真实的自己。读后将带给你身临其境的感受,有了旅行的冲动。现在,就启程,向着梦想之地出发!
  • 媚幽阁文娱

    媚幽阁文娱

    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。