登陆注册
19623600000117

第117章 CHAPTER XXII(2)

He did so till he was twenty-five; by which time he had spent his money, laid in a handsome choice of debts, and acquired (like so many other melancholic and uninterested persons) a habit of gambling. An Austrian colonel--the same who afterwards hanged himself at Monte Carlo--gave him a lesson which lasted two-and-twenty hours, and left him wrecked and helpless. Old Singleton once more repurchased the honour of his name, this time at a fancy figure; and Norris was set afloat again on stern conditions. An allowance of three hundred pounds in the year was to be paid to him quarterly by a lawyer in Sydney, New South Wales. He was not to write. Should he fail on any quarter-day to be in Sydney, he was to be held for dead, and the allowance tacitly withdrawn. Should he return to Europe, an advertisement publicly disowning him was to appear in every paper of repute.

It was one of his most annoying features as a son, that he was always polite, always just, and in whatever whirlwind of domestic anger, always calm. He expected trouble; when trouble came, he was unmoved: he might have said with Singleton, "I told you so"; he was content with thinking, "just as I expected." On the fall of these last thunderbolts, he bore himself like a person only distantly interested in the event; pocketed the money and the reproaches, obeyed orders punctually; took ship and came to Sydney. Some men are still lads at twenty-five; and so it was with Norris. Eighteen days after he landed, his quarter's allowance was all gone, and with the light-hearted hopefulness of strangers in what is called a new country, he began to besiege offices and apply for all manner of incongruous situations. Everywhere, and last of all from his lodgings, he was bowed out; and found himself reduced, in a very elegant suit of summer tweeds, to herd and camp with the degraded outcasts of the city.

In this strait, he had recourse to the lawyer who paid him his allowance.

"Try to remember that my time is valuable, Mr. Carthew," said the lawyer. "It is quite unnecessary you should enlarge on the peculiar position in which you stand. Remittance men, as we call them here, are not so rare in my experience; and in such cases I act upon a system. I make you a present of a sovereign; here it is. Every day you choose to call, my clerk will advance you a shilling; on Saturday, since my office is closed on Sunday, he will advance you half a crown. My conditions are these: that you do not come to me, but to my clerk; that you do not come here the worse of liquor; and you go away the moment you are paid and have signed a receipt. I wish you a good-morning."

"I have to thank you, I suppose," said Carthew. "My position is so wretched that I cannot even refuse this starvation allowance."

"Starvation!" said the lawyer, smiling. "No man will starve here on a shilling a day. I had on my hands another young gentleman, who remained continuously intoxicated for six years on the same allowance." And he once more busied himself with his papers.

In the time that followed, the image of the smiling lawyer haunted Carthew's memory. "That three minutes' talk was all the education I ever had worth talking of," says he. "It was all life in a nut-shell. Confound it! I thought, have I got to the point of envying that ancient fossil?"

Every morning for the next two or three weeks, the stroke of ten found Norris, unkempt and haggard, at the lawyer's door. The long day and longer night he spent in the Domain, now on a bench, now on the grass under a Norfolk Island pine, the companion of perhaps the lowest class on earth, the Larrikins of Sydney. Morning after morning, the dawn behind the lighthouse recalled him from slumber; and he would stand and gaze upon the changing east, the fading lenses, the smokeless city, and the many-armed and many-masted harbour growing slowly clear under his eyes. His bed-fellows (so to call them) were less active; they lay sprawled upon the grass and benches, the dingy men, the frowsy women, prolonging their late repose; and Carthew wandered among the sleeping bodies alone, and cursed the incurable stupidity of his behaviour. Day brought a new society of nursery-maids and children, and fresh-dressed and (I am sorry to say) tight-laced maidens, and gay people in rich traps; upon the skirts of which Carthew and "the other blackguards"--his own bitter phrase--skulked, and chewed grass, and looked on. Day passed, the light died, the green and leafy precinct sparkled with lamps or lay in shadow, and the round of the night began again, the loitering women, the lurking men, the sudden outburst of screams, the sound of flying feet. "You mayn't believe it," says Carthew, "but I got to that pitch that I didn't care a hang. I have been wakened out of my sleep to hear a woman screaming, and I have only turned upon my other side. Yes, it's a queer place, where the dowagers and the kids walk all day, and at night you can hear people bawling for help as if it was the Forest of Bondy, with the lights of a great town all round, and parties spinning through in cabs from Government House and dinner with my lord!"

It was Norris's diversion, having none other, to scrape acquaintance, where, how, and with whom he could. Many a long dull talk he held upon the benches or the grass; many a strange waif he came to know; many strange things he heard, and saw some that were abominable. It was to one of these last that he owed his deliverance from the Domain. For some time the rain had been merciless; one night after another he had been obliged to squander fourpence on a bed and reduce his board to the remaining eightpence: and he sat one morning near the Macquarrie Street entrance, hungry, for he had gone without breakfast, and wet, as he had already been for several days, when the cries of an animal in distress attracted his attention.

同类推荐
  • 嵩山野竹禅师录

    嵩山野竹禅师录

    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。
  • 续传灯录

    续传灯录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 芝岩秀禅师语录

    芝岩秀禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 仁王经疏

    仁王经疏

    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。
  • 洞神八帝妙精经

    洞神八帝妙精经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 倾世绝情:孤独三世

    倾世绝情:孤独三世

    一世:她美妙冷酷,“冰,我喜欢你,嫁给我好吗?”“我,对不起。”……车子迎面飞来,将她撞飞,她死了“不,冰,你醒醒,不要死啊。”……
  • 晶武傲天

    晶武傲天

    天武大陆,因寿元所限,武修想要提升修行,仅依靠吸取天地灵气,远远不够。千尝万试之下,终于发现了,蕴含着各种属性灵力的晶石,用来辅助修行。于是,出现了一批天赋卓绝的武修,将这些晶石与不能用来吸取能量的伴生矿石,以特殊的手法,炼制成各式各样的武兵以及功能各异的晶宝。而这些人被尊称为晶炼师,他们用的手法被称为晶炼术。曾经的天才少年秦逸,凝结武核失败。带着在矿洞中意外得来的紫阳环,从此踏上了一段非同寻常的道路。
  • 当代北京阜景文化街史话

    当代北京阜景文化街史话

    京阜景一条街由景山前街、文津街、西安门大街和阜成门内大街四条街銜接而成,全长约3600米。自景山公园南门向西,至阜成门,临街有全国重点文物保护单位12处,在《北京旧城历史文化保护区保护和控制范围规划》中,划定的位于北京明清古城的25片历史保护区中,坐落在阜景街和邻近这条街的多达9片,即文津街、阜成门内大街、景山前街、景山后街、景山西街、陟山门街、北长街、西华门大街、西四北头条至八条四合院平房保护区。这充分说明了阜景街历史文化内涵的丰富和深厚。改革开放以来,尤其是进入21世纪后,市区政府对阜景街不断完善建设规划,加大保护、修缮、开发的力度,使这条历史悠久的街道朝气蓬勃,发生着日新月异的变化。
  • 无限宠妻万万岁

    无限宠妻万万岁

    “如果我以后娶的不是她,你们都别来参加我的婚礼。”一年前,他拥着她,当着所有人的面高调宣布。一年后,他和她最好的朋友订婚,她在他的婚礼上出尽洋相。多年后,她对压在自己身上的他淡漠地说:“抱歉,严先生,我从不回收别的女人用过的破烂货。”这个女人居然胆敢将他看成破烂货?他捏紧了拳头发誓,一定要让她付出代价……
  • 花心校草独爱拽甜心

    花心校草独爱拽甜心

    他们是青梅竹马,他从小宠她上天,对她关怀备至,可是她却不屑他对她的好,直到他心死转身,她才发现自己早已爱上了他,但他已经不再相信爱情。直到某一天,左少晨发现了颜小若对他的感情,迫不及待的将她逼到墙角处,微挑着她的下巴,邪魅一笑:丫头,说你是不是爱上我了?
  • 痴恋男儿

    痴恋男儿

    一个出身贫寒之家的姑娘,高中辍学来到大都市,她决定自己创业。她开始投身淘宝行业,电商和实体一起做,从最初开始的0信誉到最后的五皇冠卖家大老板。在这个过程中,她结识了帅气的快递员,她收货了爱情,一个比自己小2岁的男孩子,竟然来自豪门。等待她的是一个家规森严的上流家庭,她是否可以通过考验,嫁入豪门?她做出了惊人的决定,闪婚,一起携手抵御公婆的欺凌。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 古剑梦谈

    古剑梦谈

    “他是我爱的人,他可以为了我不顾一切。我也可以为了他,放弃一切。”“你疯了。。。。。”“没错,我是疯了。在我看见他的第一眼时,我就知道。我会疯。”“那天庭留你还有何用?”“既然无用,还何苦拴着我?”“我答应过,你的母亲。。。。。。。。。”“可是我爱他,我比谁都爱他。。”在地上跪着的易寒深深地看了一眼月儿,狠心的用灵力将她打伤“可是。。月儿,我,不,爱,你。”
  • 女配归来

    女配归来

    谁说前女友注定只能活在记忆中?谁说青梅竹马比不过小白花的单纯迷糊?谁说原女主比不过重生一世的励志逆袭女配?谁说红衣妖女比不过白衣仙子的冷艳高冷又善良?林清时告诉你什么才是女配应该有的姿态!林清时告诉你什么才是白月光和红玫瑰!林清时专业女配一千年,绝对业务熟悉,智商爆表!
  • 契约甜宠:爵爷霸道来袭

    契约甜宠:爵爷霸道来袭

    一场刻意的接近,各取所需的交易,欢畅淋漓之后,女人妩媚的说着。“爵爷,会知道人家想要什么的。”“哦·······若是我只知道自己想要什么,怎么办?”“你给得起吗?麦冬。”明明是被男人吃干抹净过的女人,睨到男人这幅意犹未尽的神色,身体不由的紧张了下。“爵爷,要的给不起,也得给啊。”“那就签个契约。”······“爵爷,你这明明是不科学的交易啊?”女人皮笑肉不笑道。
  • 修仙在路上

    修仙在路上

    佛言众生本善,却又因浑浊的世事而表现出恶,可我却不曾见到;佛说世间一切,皆如梦幻空花,如露亦如电,应当看破,可我眼前所见,皆是真实;佛道万法皆空,万法常圆,我更是不解,世间一切既是发生,便是真实,何来皆空常圆;佛曰游戏三昧,可我,却就此沉沦……