登陆注册
19484600000034

第34章

THE SECOND OBLONG BOX

When Cleggett returned to the ship he found Captain Abernethy in conversation with a young man of deprecating manner whom the Captain introduced as the Rev.Simeon Calthrop.

"I been tellin' him," said the Cap'n, pitching his voice shrilly above the din the workmen made, and not giving the Rev.Mr.Calthrop an opportunity to speak for himself, "I been tellin' him it may be a long time before the Jasper B.gets to the Holy Land.""Do you want to go to Palestine?" asked Cleggett of Mr.Calthrop, who stood with downcast eyes and fingers that worked nervously at the lapels of his rusty black coat.

"I've knowed him sence he was a boy.He's in disgrace, Simeon Calthrop is," shrieked the Captain, preventing the preacher from answering Cleggett's question, and scorning to answer it directly himself."Been kicked out of his church fur kissin' a married woman, and can't get another one."(The Cap'n meant another church.)The preacher merely raised his eyes, which were large and brown and slightly protuberant, and murmured with a kind of brave humility:

"It is true."

"But why do you want to go to Palestine?" said Cleggett.

"She sung in the choir and she had three children," screamed Cap'n Abernethy, "and she limped some.Folks say she had a cork foot.Hey, Simeon, DID she have a cork foot?"Mr.Calthrop flushed painfully, but he forced himself courageously to answer."Mr.Abernethy, I do not know," he said humbly, and with the look of a stricken animal in his big brown eyes.

He was a handsome young fellow of about thirty--or he would have been handsome, Cleggett thought, had he not been so emaciated.His hair was dark and brown and inclined to curl, his forehead was high and white and broad, and his fingers were long and white and slender; his nose was well modeled, but his lips were a trifle too full.Although he belonged to one of the evangelical denominations, the Rev.Mr.Calthrop affected clothing very like the regulation costume of the Episcopalian clergy; but this clothing was now worn and torn and dusty.Buttons were gone here and there; the knees of the unpressed trousers were baggy and beginning to be ragged, and the sole of one shoe flapped as he walked.He had a three days' growth of beard and no baggage.

When Cap'n Abernethy had delivered himself and walked away, the Rev.Mr.Calthrop confirmed the story of his own disgrace, speaking in a low but clear voice, and with a gentle and wistful smile.

"I am one of the most miserable of sinners, Mr.Cleggett," he said."I have proved myself to be that most despicable thing, an unworthy minister.I was tempted and I fell."The Rev.Mr.Calthrop seemed to find the sort of satisfaction in confessing his sins to the world that the medieval flagellants found in scoring themselves with whips; they struck their bodies; he drew forth his soul and beat it publicly.

Cleggett learned that he had set himself as a punishment and a mortification the task of obtaining his daily bread by the work of his hands.It was his intention to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, refusing all assistance except that which he earned by manual labor.After such a term of years as should satisfy all men (and particularly his own spiritual sense) of the genuineness of his penitence, he would apply to his church for reinstatement, and ask for an appointment to some difficult mission in a wild and savage country.The Rev.Mr.Calthrop intimated that if he chose to accept rehabilitation on less arduous terms, he might obtain it; but the poignancy of his own sense of failure drove him to extremes.

"Are you sure," said Cleggett sternly, "that you are not making aluxury of this very penitence itself?Are you sure that it would not be more acceptable to Heaven if you forgave yourself more easily?""Alas, yes, I am sure!" said Mr.Calthrop, with a sigh and his calm and wistful smile."I know myself too well! I know my own soul.I am cursed with a fatal magnetism which women find it impossible to resist.And I am continually tempted to permit it to exert itself.This is the cross that I bear through life.""You should marry some good woman," said Cleggett.

"I do not feel that I am worthy," said Mr.Calthrop meekly."And think of the pain my wife would experience in seeing me continually tempted by some woman who believed herself to be my psychic affinity!""You are a thought too subtle, Mr.Calthrop," said Cleggett bluntly."But I suppose you cannot help that.To each of us his destiny.I am prepared, until I see some evidence to the contrary, to believe your repentance to be genuine.In the meantime, we need a ship's chaplain.If your conscience permits, you may have the post--combining it, however, with the vocation of a common sailor before the mast.I am inclined to agree with you that manual labor will do you good.Some time or another, in her progress around the world, the Jasper B.will undoubtedly touch at a coast within walking distance of Jerusalem.There we will put you ashore.Before we sail you can put in your time holystoning the deck.

"The deck of the Jasper B., said Cleggett, looking at it, "to all appearances, has not been holystoned for some years.You will find in the forecastle several holystones that have never been used, and may begin at once."Cleggett, if his tastes had not inclined him towards a more active and adventurous life, would have made a good bishop, for he knew how to combine justice and mercy.And yet few bishops have possessed his rapidity of decision, when compelled, upon the spur of the moment, to become the physician of an ailing soul.He had determined in a flash to make the man ship's chaplain, that Calthrop might come into close contactwith other spiritual organisms and not think too exclusively of his own.

The Rev.Mr.Calthrop thanked him with becoming gratitude and departed to get the new holystones.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 翰墨千秋

    翰墨千秋

    “之辞,你是天下的肆瀛,我的之辞。”“鸢歌,你是我的天下,我的璟轩。”“之辞,如果回去后,十年的空白,你会嫌弃我吗?”“鸢歌,哪怕我们面对是最残忍的的物是人非,你有我,不是吗?”“之辞,我们的爱情美吗?”“当然,一对情人一生只有一次的爱情,我们拥有两段。”“鸢歌,我不要天下,我只要你。”“之辞,无论如何,我爱的只有你。”
  • 天才制作人

    天才制作人

    新人新书求收藏求点击!!***李蕴,一个带着众多电视制作策划记忆的宅男重生到没有综艺可言的平行时空,以super女声为起点,开始改造世界人民精神娱乐方式......欢乐大本营,华夏好声音,我是歌者,爸爸我们去哪儿,runningman…..只有人们想不到,没有李蕴做不到的,他总是会给大家带来不一样的全新概念的综艺节目,让你在休闲时有节目可看可欢笑。那他只会综艺嘛?变形记算综艺吗?算?那舌尖上的华夏算不?好吧,爱情公寓、帝都爱情故事总不是综艺了吧?你见过几十集每天播出的综艺?是的,这是一个由综艺起家却不局限于综艺的天才制作人的故事。
  • 青尘流浪

    青尘流浪

    这不是一本书,他只是我渡过的故事。我只是想把他记下来,我不在意是否有人喜欢,他只是我的故事。或许你偶尔看到他,读了之后,会为我们唏嘘。但是这的确是我们的故事,我不知道我究竟会写多久,也许我停笔的那天就是我成熟的那一天。
  • 天下三国

    天下三国

    本书由著名作家李国文话说三国157题,据史实,讲故事,说权谋,道忠奸,探寻世界分合之道,分析博弈消长之谜,梳理人生成败之路,内容丰富,文字精炼。
  • 调教新世界

    调教新世界

    全球人类都穿越了!这里没有汽车、没有电脑、也没有任何工具,这里是一个完全陌生的世界。在这里,拥有先进科技文明的人类,将被彻底打回原形。面对生存的危机,和未知的挑战。人类……是彻底走向末日?还是重新创造出一个新的未来?
  • 高高的白杨

    高高的白杨

    本书是小小说,作者用自己平实的笔触为读者勾描了一幅社会百态图。内容涉及校园、职场、情感等多个领域,共九十余篇,读后启人心智,引人深思,特别是青少年朋友可以开阔视野,认识社会,给自己的写作以及日常生活带来帮助,是本值得一读的课外读物。
  • 魏氏名医

    魏氏名医

    偶然从死去的爷爷那里获得一本医学秘籍,一位翩翩佳公子的亡灵因此现身,女主角在她的帮助下成为名医的故事。
  • 山西四大梆子唱本精粹

    山西四大梆子唱本精粹

    这是一套面向农村,供广大农民朋友阅读的文化丛书。它涉及戏曲、曲艺、民间歌舞、民间工艺、民间故事、民间笑话等多个门类,涵括了编织刺绣、建筑装饰、酿酒制醋、剪纸吹塑、冶铁铸造、陶瓷漆艺等林林总总的艺术形式,是老百姓熟悉的艺术,是我们身边的艺术,和我们的日常生活密切相关。
  • 成为卡萨诺瓦

    成为卡萨诺瓦

    卡萨诺瓦是西方社会公认的情圣,生于十八世纪的他一生和上百位女性有过关系,本书移花接木地再造了一段卡萨诺瓦的新传奇,只为揭示一个卡萨诺瓦不被广为人知的隐私——间谍。“每一天都是一场冒险,每个女人都是一个惊奇的诱惑,每一份爱都是唯一,女人爱他,男人羡慕他,他的魅力无人能挡,蓄势待发的西方情圣——卡萨诺瓦……”偶然的际遇,马烈成为了卡萨诺瓦,却阴差阳错地开始了一段拿破仑时代的浪漫传奇。*****************************一个奇怪的现象:看懂了我的书的——下笔有神,文思泉涌!凡是投了推荐票的——当月他的书就上了封推。点击了收藏的——立即成为了白金作家。砸票的朋友——他的年收入过了百万。
  • 天使路过

    天使路过

    本书是备受国内读者喜爱、以散文随笔著称的新锐女作家乔叶的心灵励志书。乔叶为国内发行量最大杂志《读者》的签约作家,其作品在诸多的报刊杂志中有很高的转载率。本书由70篇左右短小精悍的美文和随笔组成,文字犀利而凄美,直面所有女性读者敏感而纤弱的内心和情感世界。在书中传达了作者对生命、对生活、对爱情的独到见解,让人们在感动之余生出无限的慨叹。