登陆注册
19627300000066

第66章 CHAPTER XXVIII TWELVE(1)

This busy globe which spawns us is as incapable of flattery and as intent upon its own affair, whatever that is, as a gyroscope; it keeps steadily whirling along its lawful track, and, thus far seeming to hold a right of way, spins doggedly on, with no perceptible diminution of speed to mark the most gigantic human events--it did not pause to pant and recuperate even when what seemed to Penrod its principal purpose was accomplished, and an enormous shadow, vanishing westward over its surface, marked the dawn of his twelfth birthday.

To be twelve is an attainment worth the struggle. A boy, just twelve, is like a Frenchman just elected to the Academy.

Distinction and honour wait upon him. Younger boys show deference to a person of twelve: his experience is guaranteed, his judgment, therefore, mellow; consequently, his influence is profound. Eleven is not quite satisfactory: it is only an approach. Eleven has the disadvantage of six, of nineteen, of forty-four, and of sixty-nine. But, like twelve, seven is an honourable age, and the ambition to attain it is laudable.

People look forward to being seven. Similarly, twenty is worthy, and so, arbitrarily, is twenty-one; forty-five has great solidity; seventy is most commendable and each year thereafter an increasing honour. Thirteen is embarrassed by the beginnings of a new colthood; the child becomes a youth. But twelve is the very top of boyhood.

Dressing, that morning, Penrod felt that the world was changed from the world of yesterday. For one thing, he seemed to own more of it; this day was HIS day. And it was a day worth owning; the midsummer sunshine, pouring gold through his window, came from a cool sky, and a breeze moved pleasantly in his hair as he leaned from the sill to watch the tribe of clattering blackbirds take wing, following their leader from the trees in the yard to the day's work in the open country. The blackbirds were his, as the sunshine and the breeze were his, for they all belonged to the day which was his birthday and therefore most surely his. Pride suffused him: he was twelve!

His father and his mother and Margaret seemed to understand the difference between to-day and yesterday. They were at the table when he descended, and they gave him a greeting which of itself marked the milestone. Habitually, his entrance into a room where his elders sat brought a cloud of apprehension: they were prone to look up in pathetic expectancy, as if their thought was, "What new awfulness is he going to start NOW?" But this morning they laughed; his mother rose and kissed him twelve times, so did Margaret; and his father shouted, "Well, well!

How's the MAN?"

Then his mother gave him a Bible and "The Vicar of Wakefield"; Margaret gave him a pair of silver-mounted hair brushes; and his father gave him a "Pocket Atlas" and a small compass.

"And now, Penrod," said his mother, after breakfast, "I'm going to take you out in the country to pay your birthday respects to Aunt Sarah Crim."

Aunt Sarah Crim, Penrod's great-aunt, was his oldest living relative. She was ninety, and when Mrs. Schofield and Penrod alighted from a carriage at her gate they found her digging with a spade in the garden.

"I'm glad you brought him," she said, desisting from labour. "Jinny's baking a cake I'm going to send for his birthday party. Bring him in the house. I've got something for him."

She led the way to her "sitting-room," which had a pleasant smell, unlike any other smell, and, opening the drawer of a shining old what-not, took therefrom a boy's "sling-shot," made of a forked stick, two strips of rubber and a bit of leather.

"This isn't for you," she said, placing it in Penrod's eager hand. "No. It would break all to pieces the first time you tried to shoot it, because it is thirty-five years old. I want to send it back to your father. I think it's time. You give it to him from me, and tell him I say I believe I can trust him with it now. I took it away from him thirty-five years ago, one day after he'd killed my best hen with it, accidentally, and broken a glass pitcher on the back porch with it--accidentally. He doesn't look like a person who's ever done things of that sort, and I suppose he's forgotten it so well that he believes he never DID, but if you give it to him from me I think he'll remember. You look like him, Penrod. He was anything but a handsome boy."

同类推荐
  • 太上道君说解冤拔度妙经

    太上道君说解冤拔度妙经

    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。
  • 段正元文集

    段正元文集

    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。
  • 步里客谈

    步里客谈

    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。
  • 淮城纪事

    淮城纪事

    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。
  • 迪化县乡土志

    迪化县乡土志

    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
  • 棺人,别乱来

    棺人,别乱来

    老爸是黄河边上的捞尸人,却没想到给我捞了一个唐朝美男上来。当晚就缠着我……
  • 兰索风云

    兰索风云

    自大陆南方的一个偏远小镇里,走出来一个少年。少年仅修一门功法,练一门斗技,习一门秘术,却要游遍天下山水,看透人间冷暖,悟通人生为何!
  • 蛇美人相府嫡小姐

    蛇美人相府嫡小姐

    爱人背叛竟然穿越了,穿越到一个父亲不爱,受尽欺负的相府嫡女身上,待有朝一日,定加倍还你们。
  • 末世之幸福奋斗

    末世之幸福奋斗

    前世为了渣男,害死了最爱自己的朋友,更害死了那一直默默为自己付出的刘宇,到最后自己还惨死在渣男手下,如果有来世,绝不负家人朋友,更不会让渣男如此屡屡的欺辱自己。
  • 最强狼王

    最强狼王

    王牌杀手罗旭重返校园,守护名门大小姐!扮男友,装司机,勇斗恶棍无赖。感情升温之际,校花却莫名失踪,等他们再见面的时候,居然……
  • 无用是书生

    无用是书生

    《无用是书生》选取历史上的一群特殊知识分子,意在通过对他们人生命运的解剖,探求其悲剧原因中有多少是种必然,多少只是偶然,多少原本可以避免,并以此照见我们今天的立身处世。近20位历史上的文人,大体每人一篇——既非人物小传,也非名人逸事传奇,而是一个齐整的散文系列,作品每每从独特的角度切入,紧扣人物一生中重要的“点”进行叙述、铺陈、议论,读罢可思、可感、可叹。《无用是书生》由诸荣会编著。
  • 崔永元的说话之道

    崔永元的说话之道

    最是那一撇嘴的“坏笑”,引起观众抑制不住的大笑。这位“邻居大妈的儿子”,总是“用老百姓的话说出并不简单的道理”,他甚至把自己的“结巴”和“尴尬”保留在播出带中。这就是著名电视节目主持人崔永元。本书从崔永元在节目中、记者采访中的精彩对话,以及在其他公众场合的警句妙语着眼,全面解析他的说话之道、幽默法宝,让读者从他的高超口才中得到启发,提高自己的说话水平。
  • 富贵长安

    富贵长安

    大杂烩,重生女穿越女都有,人物随故事发展增加,作者描写渣,感情戏渣,情节老套的重生复仇文,除了是宠文以外一无是处,慎入!
  • 全能法神

    全能法神

    无数年来,神魔争斗一直永续着,传说,如果能得到创世神之心,就能拥有创世神一半的力量。雷虎生于武技强横的战虎家族,却因天生体弱,曾被断定活之不过成年,更不能修炼家族中威力无比的虎魂诀。但雷虎不甘命运的束缚,而后自我挖掘,力量觉醒,竟是万年难遇的元灵者。法神、箭神、大力神、神龙骑士通通包...
  • 绝世神医:腹黑大小姐

    绝世神医:腹黑大小姐

    一针在手,天下我有!21世纪女神医穿越成为月国公的嫡孙女,从此渣男退婚,赏你一针。恶女欺辱,让你叫苦。一手出神入化的医术,叫天地风云变色!只是这个邪魅神秘的男人,本小姐不缺跟班也不需要暖床,你可以从本小姐的榻上圆润地滚下来了么?答曰:小颜儿,一起滚。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】