登陆注册
19620400000049

第49章 ON A RIVER STEAMER(5)

From the whole, soft, liquescent fluid scene, the impression which I derived was melancholy.

It evoked in my spirit a sense of instability, a lack of restfulness.

"Why are you travelling?"

"Because I wish to have a word with him."

"With your uncle?"

"Yes."

"About the property?"

"What else?"

"Then look here, my young fellow. Drop it all--both your uncle and the property, and betake yourself to a monastery, and there live and pray. For if you have shed blood, and especially if you have shed the blood of a kinsman, you will stand for ever estranged from all, while, moreover, bloodshed is a dangerous thing--it may at any time come back upon you."

"But the property?" the young fellow asked with a lift of his head.

"Let it go," the peasant vouchsafed as he closed his eyes.

On the younger man's face the down twitched as though a wind had stirred it. He yawned, and looked about him for a moment. Then, descrying myself, he cried in a tone of resentment:

"What are you looking at? And why do you keep following me about?"

Here the big peasant opened his eyes, and, with a glance first at the man, and then at myself, growled:

"Less noise there, you mitten-face!"

**************************

As I retired to my nook and lay down, I reflected that what the big peasant had said was apposite enough-that the young fellow's face did in very truth resemble an old and shabby woollen mitten.

Presently I dreamt that I was painting a belfry, and that, as I did so, huge, goggle-eyed jackdaws kept flying around the belfry's gables, and flapping at me with their wings and hindering my work: until, as I sought to beat them off, I missed my footing, fell to earth, and awoke to find my breath choking amid a dull, sick, painful feeling of lassitude and weakness, and a kaleidoscopic mist quavering before my eyes till it rendered me dizzy. From my head, behind the car, a thin stream of blood was trickling.

Rising with some difficulty to my feet, I stepped aft to a pump, washed my head under a jet of cold water, bound it with my handkerchief, and, returning, inspected my resting-place in a state of bewilderment as to what could have caused the accident to happen.

On the deck near the spot where I had been asleep, there was standing stacked a pile of small logs prepared for the cook's galley; while, in the precise spot where my head had rested there was reposing a birch faggot of which the withy-tie had come unfastened. As I raised the fallen faggot I perceived it to be clean and composed of silky loppings of birch-bark which rustled as I fingered them; and, consequently, I reflected that the ceaseless vibration of the steamer must have caused the faggot to become jerked on to my head.

Reassured by this plausible explanation of the unfortunate, but absurd, occurrence of which I have spoken, I next returned to the stern, where there were no oppressive odours to be encountered, and whence a good view was obtainable.

The hour was the turn of the night, the hour of maximum tension before dawn, the hour when all the world seems plunged in a profundity of slumber whence there can be no awakening, and when the completeness of the silence attunes the soul to special sensibility, and when the stars seem to be hanging strangely close to earth, and the morning star, in particular, to be shining as brightly as a miniature sun. Yet already had the heavens begun to grow coldly grey, to lose their nocturnal softness and warmth, while the rays of the stars were drooping like petals, and the moon, hitherto golden, had turned pale and become dusted over with silver, and moved further from the earth as intangibly the water of the river sloughed its thick, viscous gleam, and swiftly emitted and withdrew, stray, pearly reflections of the changes occurring in the heavenly tints.

In the east there was rising, and hanging suspended over the black spears of the pine forest, a thin pink mist the sensuous hue of which was glowing ever brighter, and assuming a density ever greater, and standing forth more boldly and clearly, even as a whisper of timid prayer merges into a song of exultant thankfulness. Another moment, and the spiked tops of the pines blazed into points of red fire resembling festival candles in a sanctuary.

Next, an unseen hand threw over the water, drew along its surface, a transparent and many-coloured net of silk. This was the morning breeze, herald of dawn, as with a coating of tissue-like, silvery scales it rippled the river until the eye grew weary of trying to follow the play of gold and mother-of-pearl and purple and bluish-green reflected from the sun-renovated heavens.

Next, like a fan there unfolded themselves the first sword-shaped beams of day, with their tips blindingly white; while simultaneously one seemed to hear descending from an iilimitable height a dense sound-wave of silver bells, a sound-wave advancing triumphantly to greet the sun as his roseate rim became visible over the forest like the rim of a cup that, filled with the essence of life, was about to empty its contents upon the earth, and to pour a bounteous flood of creative puissance upon the marshes whence a reddish vapour as of incense was arising. Meanwhile on the more precipitous of the two banks some of the trees near the river's margin were throwing soft green shadows over the water, while gilt-like dew was sparkling. on the herbage, and birds were awakening, and as a white gull skimmed the water's surface on level wings, the pale shadow of those wings followed the bird over the tinted expanse, while the sun, suspended in flame behind the forest, like the Imperial bird of the fairy-tale, rose higher and higher into the greenish-blue zenith, until silvery Venus, expiring, herself looked like a bird.

同类推荐
  • 吴佩衡医案

    吴佩衡医案

    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。
  • 修炼大丹要旨

    修炼大丹要旨

    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。
  • 慧觉衣禅师语录

    慧觉衣禅师语录

    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。
  • 明皇杂录

    明皇杂录

    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。
  • 增订十药神书

    增订十药神书

    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。
热门推荐
  • 嗜血末日:丧尸之王拿血来

    嗜血末日:丧尸之王拿血来

    末世,你想到了什么?令人生畏的丧尸与灭绝人性的人类?NO!由于一位超神、逗比(划掉!)特工的到来,彻底扭转了这种局面。她表示,虽然自己穿越到了一只被三族及各大势力追杀的圣母吸血鬼身上,唯一的金手指是啥卵用都没有的异能,她也会!呃,活着的。。吧?可是,也许她并不知道,表面上血腥华丽的末世之争,不过是个惊天骗局。而她从醒来的那一刻开始,早已被硬扯进局内,无法脱身!但是,当王者双双归来,脚踏生灵,又是谁能与之争锋?!(1v1女强男更强文女主前期十分神经慢热后期转变不满走开不送拜拜)
  • 至尊世子妃

    至尊世子妃

    魔女历劫归来成至尊王妃,一心与夫携手,安享富贵,奈何在那之前只能拼命的游弋在各种的阴谋阳某,为那一方乐土,拼尽一切!景之言儿甜蜜篇“言儿,过来到我这边!”慕雅言回头一看来人,立刻扔了手里正在拉的绳子,转身就跑,留下叶欣儿一个人因为突然少了慕雅言里的力,而重心不稳的晃了晃身子:“慕雅言,你这个重色轻友的东西,你要摔死我啊!”慕雅言闻言停下身子,仔细看了看叶欣儿和地面的距离:“你放心吧,我看过了,你不会被摔死,顶多残疾!”“景之,我很听话吧!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 致我们不愿辜负的未来

    致我们不愿辜负的未来

    15个最暖心的励志故事,有关青春、有关责任、有关未来、有关梦想。千万网友力荐,在迷茫时必读的温暖文字!人生充满未知,每一个努力的人,都会得到未来对他最美的回赠!包括人气网络名篇《青春不怕岁月长》《未来太远,现下就是永远》《一起欣赏这世界全部的漂亮》。关于“暖读”:希望它是可以让你按自己的心情随拾随读的书;希望它是在你等车、排队、疲惫时陪伴你的朋友;希望它是在你开心或悲伤时想起的文字。“暖读”——献给所有时光中的私语者,献给有故事的人。
  • 重生之极道

    重生之极道

    一本小说,一部人生。叶枫重生于天地,是机遇?还是预谋?揭晓事实的真相,看叶枫如何走上武道巅峰,极品?无赖?卑鄙?这也是实力的一部分,颠覆传统英雄的形象,创建极品流,跳出天辰,走向星空,创造一个又一个的奇迹……
  • 魔君驸马:公主跟我回家

    魔君驸马:公主跟我回家

    一袭白衣的冷漠少年,身负着血与灵的封印,锁下的血魔是暴戾无情的存在。然,谁又知,血魔承载的并非毁灭,化身为人类模样的血魔的灵魂原是世人无可避免的劫。冰冷的俊容上永远是漠然。救赎?没有人会救他,被世界、世人放弃的恶魔,滚回地狱去吧!
  • 弈剑歌

    弈剑歌

    红尘乱世弈剑留,韶华白首须臾纵。问君可知长生乐,却言不老万古空。———————本文慢热,请收藏待肥
  • 思路决定出路的24堂课

    思路决定出路的24堂课

    有什么样的思路,就会有什么样的出路,即思路决定出路。对于普通人,思路决定自己一个人和一家人的出路。对于领导人,思路则决定一个组织、一个地方,乃至一个国家的出路。任何的成功都是起因于一个思路,任何的失败也都是起因于一个思路。好思路成就你一生,坏思路毁掉你的一生。所以说思路就是决定一个人是否成功的关键因素。人与人之间根本没有多大区别,只是因为思路不同,看问题的角度不同,解决问题的方法不同,所以导致了人生的出路不同。成功人士与普通人的区别在于:思考模式的不同。任何一件事情的背后都有一个正确的过程和方法,更有一个正确的思路。思路决定出路,结果改变人生。思想有多远你就能够走多远!
  • 义战

    义战

    文斌和阿罪听到唤声,激动起来,跑到床边“我就知道你这混蛋会没事的”三人眼眶红润,要不是强忍着,眼泪就流出来了。“你们还想咒我死啊”明星看到二人没事,也是眼眶红润!“没事就好”阿罪忍不住,哭泣着。三人无言,抱在一起。眼泪滑在彼此的脸上……千言万语想跟对方诉说,可是又不想让对方看到自己虚弱一面,为自己担心。希望彼此都没事,这就是兄弟。
  • 宋词是一朵情花2

    宋词是一朵情花2

    最经典的宋词读本,最唯美的诗词解读。 国学大师汤一介、北大教授李中华、王守常倾情推荐。更严谨,唯美,更动人。以诗词会古人,以古人读心灵,以心灵悟人生。今人爱宋词,爱情花,是因为她包罗万象,又于万象中生出种种聚散无常。宋词就是开在绝情谷的绚烂情花,我们都中了它的毒。
  • 题河州赤岸桥

    题河州赤岸桥

    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。