登陆注册
19594600000011

第11章

I can't honestly say that we made much progress at our first meeting. It was Brown's fault. He would begin by telling us a story about a dog. It was the old, old story of the dog who had been in the habit of going every morning to a certain baker's shop with a penny in his mouth, in exchange for which he always received a penny bun. One day, the baker, thinking he would not know the difference, tried to palm off upon the poor animal a ha'penny bun, whereupon the dog walked straight outside and fetched in a policeman. Brown had heard this chestnut for the first time that afternoon, and was full of it. It is always a mystery to me where Brown has been for the last hundred years. He stops you in the street with, "Oh, I must tell you!--such a capital story!" And he thereupon proceeds to relate to you, with much spirit and gusto, one of Noah's best known jokes, or some story that Romulus must have originally told to Remus. One of these days somebody will tell him the history of Adam and Eve, and he will think he has got hold of a new plot, and will work it up into a novel.

He gives forth these hoary antiquities as personal reminiscences of his own, or, at furthest, as episodes in the life of his second cousin. There are certain strange and moving catastrophes that would seem either to have occurred to, or to have been witnessed by, nearly every one you meet. I never came across a man yet who had not seen some other man jerked off the top of an omnibus into a mud-cart. Half London must, at one time or another, have been jerked off omnibuses into mud-carts, and have been fished out at the end of a shovel.

Then there is the tale of the lady whose husband is taken suddenly ill one night at an hotel. She rushes downstairs, and prepares a stiff mustard plaster to put on him, and runs up with it again. In her excitement, however, she charges into the wrong room, and, rolling down the bedclothes, presses it lovingly upon the wrong man.

I have heard that story so often that I am quite nervous about going to bed in an hotel now. Each man who has told it me has invariably slept in the room next door to that of the victim, and has been awakened by the man's yell as the plaster came down upon him. That is how he (the story-teller) came to know all about it.

Brown wanted us to believe that this prehistoric animal he had been telling us about had belonged to his brother-in-law, and was hurt when Jephson murmured, sotto voce, that that made the twenty-eighth man he had met whose brother-in-law had owned that dog--to say nothing of the hundred and seventeen who had owned it themselves.

We tried to get to work afterwards, but Brown had unsettled us for the evening. It is a wicked thing to start dog stories among a party of average sinful men. Let one man tell a dog story, and every other man in the room feels he wants to tell a bigger one.

There is a story going--I cannot vouch for its truth, it was told me by a judge--of a man who lay dying. The pastor of the parish, a good and pious man, came to sit with him, and, thinking to cheer him up, told him an anecdote about a dog. When the pastor had finished, the sick man sat up, and said, "I know a better story than that. Ihad a dog once, a big, brown, lop-sided--"The effort had proved too much for his strength. He fell back upon the pillows, and the doctor, stepping forward, saw that it was a question only of minutes.

The good old pastor rose, and took the poor fellow's hand in his, and pressed it. "We shall meet again," he gently said.

The sick man turned towards him with a consoled and grateful look.

"I'm glad to hear you say that," he feebly murmured. "Remind me about that dog."Then he passed peacefully away, with a sweet smile upon his pale lips.

Brown, who had had his dog story and was satisfied, wanted us to settle our heroine; but the rest of us did not feel equal to settling anybody just then. We were thinking of all the true dog stories we had ever heard, and wondering which was the one least likely to be generally disbelieved.

MacShaughnassy, in particular, was growing every moment more restless and moody. Brown concluded a long discourse--to which nobody had listened--by remarking with some pride, "What more can you want? The plot has never been used before, and the characters are entirely original!"Then MacShaughnassy gave way. "Talking of plots," he said, hitching his chair a little nearer the table, "that puts me in mind. Did Iever tell you about that dog we had when we lived in Norwood?""It's not that one about the bull-dog, is it?" queried Jephson anxiously.

"Well, it was a bull-dog," admitted MacShaughnassy, "but I don't think I've ever told it you before."We knew, by experience, that to argue the matter would only prolong the torture, so we let him go on.

"A great many burglaries had lately taken place in our neighbourhood," he began, "and the pater came to the conclusion that it was time he laid down a dog. He thought a bull-dog would be the best for his purpose, and he purchased the most savage and murderous-looking specimen that he could find.

"My mother was alarmed when she saw the dog. 'Surely you're not going to let that brute loose about the house!' she exclaimed.

'He'll kill somebody. I can see it in his face.'

"'I want him to kill somebody,' replied my father; 'I want him to kill burglars.'

"'I don't like to hear you talk like that, Thomas,' answered the mater; 'it's not like you. We've a right to protect our property, but we've no right to take a fellow human creature's life.'

"'Our fellow human creatures will be all right--so long as they don't come into our kitchen when they've no business there,'

retorted my father, somewhat testily. 'I'm going to fix up this dog in the scullery, and if a burglar comes fooling around--well, that's HIS affair.'

"The old folks quarrelled on and off for about a month over this dog. The dad thought the mater absurdly sentimental, and the mater thought the dad unnecessarily vindictive. Meanwhile the dog grew more ferocious-looking every day.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 九尾玄鸣

    九尾玄鸣

    警察局无所事事的小警官意外结识拥有特殊能力的女孩,可是渐渐发现,这女孩居然不是人……
  • 十里红妆:明妧传

    十里红妆:明妧传

    穿越是门技术活,宅斗凭的是演技。她携绝世医术而来,人不犯我我不犯人。奈何左有狠毒叔母,右有伪善姐妹。算计她,抢了她的未婚夫,还反过来污蔑她装傻逃婚?刁难,毒杀,陷害接踵而至!避之不及,那就干脆斗个天翻地覆!只是不小心救了一个甩都甩不掉的大麻烦。妖孽、狡诈、腹黑、狠辣、睚眦必报,惯会扮猪吃老虎……情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 最强制卡师

    最强制卡师

    一张神秘的黑卡,一个平凡的制卡师,一个无比复杂深邃的宇宙苍穹,一切尽在《最强制卡师》!
  • 九天之宇

    九天之宇

    即使你在九天之上,我也要把你拉下即使你是一位神,我也要打得你变人
  • 龙域神皇

    龙域神皇

    十年的沉默,受尽世间嘲笑,看尽人生百态。百年的逆袭,受尽他人仰望,看尽世间颜良。手持轩辕剑,佩戴东皇钟,身负上古十大神器,背负轩辕圣皇的沉重血脉,以武证道,战尽天下英雄,一人一剑,独椅苍穹,杀尽小人之辈,在这混乱的世界,加冕为皇。
  • 白头上上签

    白头上上签

    不祈求轰轰烈烈的爱情,只求安安稳稳平平凡凡相濡以沫到白头,今世已是这般历尽险阻,只求来世无忧相携到老。我本是宰相府中千金,奈何过惯了这种舒适的日子,想出去找找虐了。看本姑娘是如何在江湖掀起新风大浪吧。“帅师父,你为啥也随我一起出来了捏。”歪着头那样无邪。“笨蛋!我要保护你呀。”
  • 大宋神捕

    大宋神捕

    靖康年间,金人攻陷汴梁,二帝“北狩”,九殿下赵构即位为帝,狼狈南逃,泥马渡江,令大宋正朔得以残存。飞天泥马遽然袭驾,一场兵变骤然而至。明教、袄教和景教动作频繁,北边金兵如狼,大宋江山风雨飘摇。时任杭州推官万俟血,受帝命追查飞马袭驾一案,他步步为营,剥茧抽丝,却被卷入通天阴谋中。金匮天书,惊天谶语,牵扯出一段神鬼莫测的恩怨情仇。群魔乱舞,尔虞我诈,谁将主宰大宋江山命脉?
  • 花边文学(鲁迅作品精选)

    花边文学(鲁迅作品精选)

    本套丛书选文广泛、丰富,且把阅读文学与掌握知识结合起来,既能增进广大读者阅读经典文学的乐趣,又能使我们体悟人生的智慧和生活哲理。
  • 神皇天征

    神皇天征

    剪一川磅礴而立的白雪,绝一世万代的山河;他,一个后天修武者,脚踏实地奋战修炼,一腔热血只为成为一代强者,太多少意想不到的奇遇,看他复兴路如何称霸天下?
  • 修真特种兵

    修真特种兵

    未来与古典的交替,奇幻和仙侠的碰撞!水天岛王牌力量灵蛇小队的队长——炎峰,三百年来最具天资,最具潜力的人。重生后的他才知道,原来灭魔之战并未结束,而他又获得了什么绝技,又凭什么纵横修真界?科技VS修真,基因异变VS修仙法诀,孰强孰弱?那么当科技与修仙结合,又会产生怎样的结果?凄美的传说,神奇的历程,寻妻之路漫长悠远,修仙之途惊险刺激。