登陆注册
19652500000031

第31章 CHAPTER XI(1)

It is in the nature of men and angels to pursue with death such birds as are uncommon, such animals as are rare; and Society had no use for one like Tod, so uncut to its pattern as to be practically unconscious of its existence. Not that he had deliberately turned his back on anything; he had merely begun as a very young man to keep bees. The better to do that he had gone on to the cultivation of flowers and fruit, together with just enough farming as kept his household in vegetables, milk, butter, and eggs. Living thus amongst insects, birds, cows, and the peace of trees, he had become queer. His was not a very reflective mind, it distilled but slowly certain large conclusions, and followed intently the minute happenings of his little world. To him a bee, a bird, a flower, a tree was well-nigh as interesting as a man; yet men, women, and especially children took to him, as one takes to a Newfoundland dog, because, though capable of anger, he seemed incapable of contempt, and to be endowed with a sort of permanent wonder at things. Then, too, he was good to look at, which counts for more than a little in the scales of our affections; indeed, the slight air of absence in his blue eyes was not chilling, as is that which portends a wandering of its owner on his own business. People recognized that it meant some bee or other in that bonnet, or elsewhere, some sound or scent or sight of life, suddenly perceived--always of life! He had often been observed gazing with peculiar gravity at a dead flower, bee, bird, or beetle, and, if spoken to at such a moment, would say, "Gone!" touching a wing or petal with his finger. To conceive of what happened after death did not apparently come within the few large conclusions of his reflective powers. That quaint grief of his in the presence of the death of things that were not human had, more than anything, fostered a habit among the gentry and clergy of the neighborhood of drawing up the mouth when they spoke of him, and slightly raising the shoulders. For the cottagers, to be sure, his eccentricity consisted rather in his being a 'gentleman,' yet neither eating flesh, drinking wine, nor telling them how they ought to behave themselves, together with the way he would sit down on anything and listen to what they had to tell him, without giving them the impression that he was proud of himself for doing so. In fact, it was the extraordinary impression he made of listening and answering without wanting anything either for himself or for them, that they could not understand. How on earth it came about that he did not give them advice about their politics, religion, morals, or monetary states, was to them a never-ending mystery; and though they were too well bred to shrug their shoulders, there did lurk in their dim minds the suspicion that 'the good gentleman,' as they called him, was 'a tiddy-bit off.' He had, of course, done many practical little things toward helping them and their beasts, but always, as it seemed, by accident, so that they could never make up their minds afterward whether he remembered having done them, which, in fact, he probably did not; and this seemed to them perhaps the most damning fact of all about his being--well, about his being--not quite all there. Another worrying habit he had, too, that of apparently not distinguishing between them and any tramps or strangers who might happen along and come across him.

This was, in their eyes, undoubtedly a fault; for the village was, after all, their village, and he, as it were, their property. To crown all, there was a story, full ten years old now, which had lost nothing in the telling, of his treatment of a cattle-drover.

To the village it had an eerie look, that windmill-like rage let loose upon a man who, after all, had only been twisting a bullock's tail and running a spiked stick into its softer parts, as any drover might. People said--the postman and a wagoner had seen the business, raconteurs born, so that the tale had perhaps lost nothing--that he had positively roared as he came leaping down into the lane upon the man, a stout and thick-set fellow, taken him up like a baby, popped him into a furzebush, and held him there.

People said that his own bare arms had been pricked to the very shoulder from pressing the drover down into that uncompromising shrub, and the man's howls had pierced the very heavens. The postman, to this day, would tell how the mere recollection of seeing it still made him sore all over. Of the words assigned to Tod on this occasion, the mildest and probably most true were: "By the Lord God, if you treat a beast like that again, I'll cut your liver out, you hell-hearted sweep!"

The incident, which had produced a somewhat marked effect in regard to the treatment of animals all round that neighborhood, had never been forgotten, nor in a sense forgiven. In conjunction with the extraordinary peace and mildness of his general behavior, it had endowed Tod with mystery; and people, especially simple folk, cannot bring themselves to feel quite at home with mystery.

Children only--to whom everything is so mysterious that nothing can be--treated him as he treated them, giving him their hands with confidence. But children, even his own, as they grew up, began to have a little of the village feeling toward Tod; his world was not theirs, and what exactly his world was they could not grasp.

Possibly it was the sense that they partook of his interest and affection too much on a level with any other kind of living thing that might happen to be about, which discomfited their understanding. They held him, however, in a certain reverence.

同类推荐
  • 祐山杂说

    祐山杂说

    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。
  • 大乘义章

    大乘义章

    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。
  • 琴斋宜备八则

    琴斋宜备八则

    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。
  • 净土资粮全集

    净土资粮全集

    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。
  • 辽金元宫词

    辽金元宫词

    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
  • 唯美的青春

    唯美的青春

    把我听到的,看到的,想到的送给你们美丽的!
  • 独家占有:老公大人不好惹

    独家占有:老公大人不好惹

    第一次见面就被要求负责,第二次就见家长,第三次…她就成了他的专属保镖。外界传言,他对她是极致的宠溺,深入骨髓。冷太太在A城,少了一丝一毫,都会要对方百倍千倍偿还。如饮鸩止渴的毒,让她最终沦陷。她不惧怕外界所有的流言蜚语,却不过他在她心口刺上的一刀。当那个与她神似的女子陷入危险之际,他匆忙赶到,将那个女子护在怀里,眼神里是她从未见过的惊慌失措。“阿枚没事,我会保护你的。”她的盔甲,也随之崩塌瓦解。数年以后,两人再次相遇,她身边多了个与他神似的小奶包。她挑眉:“先生,我俩不熟。”他扬起邪魅的浅笑:“多负距离接触几次就熟了。”【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 逃之夭夭:娘子不温柔

    逃之夭夭:娘子不温柔

    一场阴谋,阴差阳错,风流才子上官文浩被迫娶了京城悍女燕无双,从此水深火热。“娘子,说好我在上你在下的,怎么又变卦了?”“夫君,娘子我是心疼你,不想你太辛苦。”“可是……”燕无双踩在上官文浩的肩膀上,“没有可是,站稳了,我今天一定要摘到那颗桃子。”驯夫篇:“娘子,我错了。”跪在搓衣板上,双手捏着耳朵。“错在哪?”手拿鸡毛掸子。“错在不应该在大街上看着别的女人。”“错!你错在看了比我丑的女人,居然还对着人家笑。”“娘子,冤枉啊,我那分明是嘲笑。”
  • 穿越女闹皇宫

    穿越女闹皇宫

    从21世纪穿越而来的女孩,成为了公主,每天都有不一样的惊喜,每次都将皇宫弄翻天,精彩无极限,走过路过不要错过,綄纱若兮QQ:201794584QQ群:420090868
  • 曰昆仑

    曰昆仑

    人鬼歧途,终身不处。道家茅山之意!朱祥父亲被害,下葬之日发生诡异。幸亏好友胡文斌相助,父亲才得已安息……
  • 下个夏天来一次不分手的爱

    下个夏天来一次不分手的爱

    她一直以为爱一个人不可能宽容的放手让给别人,因为我爱你,所以你的温暖,你的爱,你的心包括你,整个人都必须是我的专属。最后一次她去他空间留言,遇见你之前,我是世界上最穷的家伙,遇见你之后,我成了最富有的人…谢谢”可是她却默默的换了签名“有了我最想要的东西,为什么并不快乐”…他几年以后看见了那一次的签名,他发了一条说说“遇见你以后,我成了疯子,可是,爱钱钱!你有药吗?””
  • 领兵三百万

    领兵三百万

    公元一三四年,中原最强大的帝国,天朝帝国出兵三百万攻打位于其西部的蛮夷部落,军队在穿过世界第一山,珠穆山上遭遇偷袭,三百万军队被大雪崩活埋于海拔八千米的高山之巅。两千年后,三百万雄狮奇迹般复活,然其最高统治者,天朝帝国三皇子下落不明。王杰,神龙帝国中州市实验高中的一名普通高中生,在某个傍晚被一名散发着强大气势的男子称为三殿下之后,他的人身轨迹发生了彻底的转变。自封‘帝王’!他一手建立了覆盖全球两百多个国家的庞大商业帝国,用强大的武力作为威慑,收复全球最顶级的人才,建立覆盖全球方方面面的‘永昌’组织,最终一统全球,建立该星球上第一个联邦政府。
  • 道行般若波罗蜜经

    道行般若波罗蜜经

    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。
  • 魂铸天穹

    魂铸天穹

    锻胚、铭纹、淬灵、封魂,四步成器!铸器一道,凝魂力为神火以炼天下,冶奇材为精粹以铸苍穹!“我来之前,这一界本没有铸器,我来之后,天下铸器师便都成了我的门生。”九州修仙界第一铸器师,携无上妙法穿越异世,魂铸天穹!
  • 千金归来:腹黑帝少请排队

    千金归来:腹黑帝少请排队

    上一世,你让我不得好死,家破人亡。这一次,我回来了,所以,有很多东西,你必须要承受无法想象的痛苦。不是我恶毒,而是你罪有应得!--情节虚构,请勿模仿