登陆注册
19656500000083

第83章 CHAPTER XVII RECOLLECTIONS OF CHILDHOOD(1)

Almost as much as insects and birds--the former so dear to the child, who loves to rear his cockchafers and rose beetles on a bed of hawthorn in a box pierced with holes; the latter an irresistible temptation, with their nests and their eggs and their little ones opening tiny yellow beaks--the mushroom early won my heart with its varied shapes and colors. I can still see myself as an innocent small boy sporting my first braces and beginning to know my way through the cabalistic mazes of my reading book, I see myself in ecstasy before the first bird's nest found and the first mushroom gathered. Let us relate these grave events. Old age loves to meditate the past.

O happy days when curiosity awakens and frees us from the limbo of unconsciousness, your distant memory makes me live my best years over again. Disturbed at its siesta by some wayfarer, the partridge's young brood hastily disperses. Each pretty little ball of down scurries off and disappears in the brushwood; but, when quiet is restored, at the first summoning note they all return under the mother's wing. Even so, recalled by memory, do my recollections of childhood return, those other fledglings which have lost so many of their feathers on the brambles of life. Some, which have hardly come out of the bushes, have aching heads and tottering steps; some are missing, stifled in some dark corner of the thicket; some remain in their full freshness. Now of those which have escaped the clutches of time the liveliest are the first-born. For them the soft wax of childish memory has been converted into enduring bronze.

On that day, wealthy and leisured, with an apple for my lunch and all my time to myself, I decided to visit the brow of the neighboring hill, hitherto looked upon as the boundary of the world. Right at the top is a row of trees which, turning their backs to the wind, bend and toss about as though to uproot themselves and take to flight. How often, from the little window in my home, have I not seen them bowing their heads in stormy weather; how often have I not watched them writhing like madmen amid the snow dust which the north wind's broom raises and smoothes along the hillside! 'What are they doing up there, those desolate trees? I am interested in their supple backs, today still and upright against the blue of the sky, tomorrow shaken when the clouds pass overhead. I am gladdened by their calmness; I am distressed by their terrified gestures. They are my friends. Ihave them before my eyes at every hour of the day. In the morning, the sun rises behind their transparent screen and ascends in its glory. Where does it come from? I am going to climb up there and perhaps I shall find out.

I mount the slope. It is a lean grass sward close-cropped by the sheep. It has no bushes, fertile in rents and tears, for which Ishould have to answer on returning home, nor any rocks, the scaling of which involves like dangers; nothing but large, flat stones, scattered here and there. I. have only to go straight on, over smooth ground. But the sward is as steep as a sloping roof. It is long, ever so long; and my legs are very short. From time to time, I look up. My friends, the trees on the hilltop, seem to be no nearer. Cheerily, sonny! Scramble away!

What is this at my feet? A lovely bird has flown from its hiding place under the eaves of a big stone. Bless us, here's a nest made of hair and fine straw! It's the first I have ever found, the first of the joys which the birds are to bring me. And in this nest are six eggs, laid prettily side by side; and those eggs are a magnificent blue, as though steeped in a dye of celestial azure.

Overpowered with happiness, I lie down on the grass and stare.

Meanwhile, the mother, with a little clap of her gullet--'Tack!

Tack !'--flies anxiously from stone to stone, not far from the intruder. My age knows no pity, is still too barbarous to understand maternal anguish. A plan is running in my head, a plan worthy of a little beast of prey. I will come back in a fortnight and collect the nestlings before they can fly away. In the meantime, I will just take one of those pretty blue eggs, only one, as a trophy. Lest it should be crushed, I place the fragile thing on a little moss in the scoop of my hand. Let him cast a stone at me that has not, in his childhood, known the rapture of finding his first nest.

My delicate burden, which would be ruined by a false step, makes me give up the remainder of the climb. Some other day I shall see the trees on the hilltop over which the sun rises. I go down the slope again. At the bottom, I meet the parish priest's curate reading his breviary as he takes his walk. He sees me coming solemnly along, like a relic bearer; he catches sight of my hand hiding something behind my back: 'What have you there, my boy? ' he asks.

All abashed, I open my hand and show my blue egg on its bed of moss.

'Ah!' says his reverence. 'A Saxicola's egg! Where did you get it?

'

'Up there, father, under a stone.'

Question follows question; and my peccadillo stands confessed. By chance I found a nest which I was not looking for. There were six eggs in it. I took one of them--here it is--and I am waiting for the rest to hatch. I shall go back for the others when the young birds have their quill feathers.

'You mustn't do that, my little friend,' replies the priest. 'You mustn't rob the mother of her brood; you must respect the innocent little ones; you must let God's birds grow up and fly from the nest. They are the joy of the fields and they clear the earth of its vermin. Be a good boy, now, and don't touch the nest.'

I promise and the curate continues his walk. I come home with two good seeds cast on the fallows of my childish brain. An authoritative word has taught me that spoiling birds' nests is a bad action. I did not quite understand how the bird comes to our aid by destroying vermin, the scourge of the crops; but I felt, at the bottom of my heart, that it is wrong to afflict the mothers.

'Saxicola,' the priest had said, on seeing my find.

同类推荐
  • 中宗祀昊天乐章·豫

    中宗祀昊天乐章·豫

    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。
  • Michael Strogoff

    Michael Strogoff

    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。
  • 莲月禅师语录

    莲月禅师语录

    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。
  • 说文解字

    说文解字

    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。
  • 玄坛刊误论

    玄坛刊误论

    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
  • 九指玄人

    九指玄人

    《神途仙路》一次意外,无名山上的孤儿伊飞发现了修真界传说中的秘籍《天门九葬》。八大神器重出江湖,十二圣兽全部降临人间!一时间风起云涌,无数修真者为之疯狂,这场争夺覆盖了天地人三界,传说中的仙神和远古的妖魔纷纷卷入其中……(本书中所有的神、仙、魔都是根据佛经极道义中的介绍而写!)欢迎新来朋友的指点!!!
  • 儒效

    儒效

    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。
  • Windsor Castle

    Windsor Castle

    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。
  • 邪妃万岁:冷酷妖女绝天下

    邪妃万岁:冷酷妖女绝天下

    她是二十一世纪的孤儿,一次意外穿越让她的人生有了天翻地覆的变化!千黛家族中的唯一滴女,举国皆知的废物!当她再次睁开清冷的眸子,回眸一笑,世间乱!冷酷王爷,腹黑帝君,文弱书生无不拜倒在她的石榴裙下!翻手为云,复手为雨!当病秧子小姐展露锋芒,惊才绝艳,天下无数男女为之倾倒...他是绝色的暗夜之王,冷血无情,乱世中和她相逢……
  • 若只年少

    若只年少

    回忆噬人,以至不能自己,也是必然。青春在爱过的人身上显得格外醒目,一刺眼的颜色宣布和取舍。像透过透明的玻璃窗棂见她的远去,历历在目。人生的许多邂逅,都是一道道美丽的风景,人生的许多驿站都是一段段伴随泪水的回忆。
  • 超级圣光

    超级圣光

    天赋异禀的奴隶因为救了一代公爵,被带出地狱般的将军府。踏入魔法世界,修习光明魔法,靠着一身霸绝天下的光系魔法,他成功练出圣光,纵横异世大陆,驰骋天下!
  • 半兽人部落

    半兽人部落

    冰棺一出,亘宇震动。血雨腥风!尸伏千里!谁来拯救?
  • 修眼神功

    修眼神功

    一个凡人踏上修真之路,一步步走到世界的巅峰,登上尊界之主的宝座。因他之故,地球人类也雄霸宇宙,成为外人不得不仰视膜拜的存在。
  • 师兄娶我好吗

    师兄娶我好吗

    一厢情愿喜欢着二师兄,终于盼来他的迎娶。不料成亲当天,二师兄就毒发身亡,而自己,竟成为毒害二师兄的凶手!日日夜夜被同门追捕、受尽江湖各路人士辱骂,自己一夜之间变得人人杀之而后快。逃亡中遇上被逐师门已久的大师兄,此人向来恃强凌弱、臭名远播,更传出采花贼的恶名。或许,杀了他,能换取二师兄的尸骨……
  • 杨帆:对话《时代智商》

    杨帆:对话《时代智商》

    本书记录的二十几个人物,既有中国顶尖的商业领袖,也有大名鼎鼎的社会名流,还有在天津这座北方经济中心城市开拓奋进的领军人物。改革开放三十多年,中国社会发生了波澜壮阔的巨变,很多普通人的命运也赢得了转机。他们以特有的机智与洞察力和顽强的拼搏精神,创造了一个又一个人生传奇。