登陆注册
19686100000010

第10章 THE FLUTE OF CHANG LIANG(1)

To P. Kershaw The village was called Moe-tung. It was on the edge of the big main road which leads from Liao-yang to Ta-shi-chiao. It consisted of a few baked mud-houses, a dilapidated temple, a wall, a clump of willows, and a pond. One of the houses I knew well; in its square open yard, in which the rude furniture of toil lay strewn about, I had halted more than once for my midday meal, when riding from Liao-yang to the South.

I had been entertained there by the owner of the house, a brawny husbandman and his fat brown children, and they had given me eggs and Indian corn. Now it was empty; the house was deserted; the owner, his wife and his children, had all gone, to the city probably, to seek shelter. We occupied the house; and the Cossacks at once made a fire with the front door and any fragments of wood they could find. The house was converted into a stable and a kitchen, and the officers' quarters were established in another smaller building across the road, on the edge of a great plain, which was bright green with the standing giant millet.

This smaller cottage had an uncultivated garden in front of it, and a kind of natural summer-house made by the twining of a pumpkin plant which spread its broad leaves over some stakes. We lay down to rest in this garden. About five miles to the north of us was the town of Liao-yang; to the east in the distance was a range of pale blue hills, and immediately in front of us to the south, and scarcely a mile off, was the big hill of Sho-shantze. It was five o'clock in the afternoon, and we had been on the move since two o'clock in the morning. The Cossacks brought us tea and pancakes, and presently news came from the town that the big battle would be fought the next day: the big battle; the real battle, which had been expected for so long and which had been constantly put off. There was a complete stillness everywhere. The officers unpacked their valises and their camp-beds. Every one arranged his bed and his goods in his chosen place, and it seemed as if we had merely begun once more to settle down for a further period of siesta in the long picnic which had been going on for the last two months. Nobody was convinced in spite of the authentic news which we had received, that the Japanese would attack the next day.

The sunset faded into a twilight of delicious summer calm.

From the hills in the east came the noise of a few shots fired by the batteries there, and a captive balloon soared slowly, like a soap-bubble, into the eastern sky. I walked into the village; here and there fires were burning, and I was attracted by the sight of the deserted temple in which the wooden painted gods were grinning, bereft of their priest and of their accustomed dues. I sat down on the mossy steps of the little wooden temple, and somewhere, either from one of the knolls hard by or from one of the houses, came the sound of a flute, or rather of some primitive wooden pipe, which repeated over and over again a monotonous and piercingly sad little tune. I wondered whether it was one of the soldiers playing, but I decided this could not be the case, as the tune was more eastern than any Russian tune.

On the other hand, it seemed strange that any Chinaman should be about. The tune continued to break the perfect stillness with its iterated sadness, and a vague recollection came into my mind of a Chinese legend or poem I had read long ago in London, about a flute-player called Chang Liang. But I could not bring my memory to work; its tired wheels all seemed to be buzzing feebly in different directions, and my thoughts came like thistledown and seemed to elude all efforts of concentration. And so I capitulated utterly to my drowsiness, and fell asleep as I sat on the steps of the temple.

I thought I had been sleeping for a long time and had woken before the dawn: the earth was misty, although the moon was shining; and I was no longer in the temple, but back once more at the edge of the plain.

"They must have fetched me back while I slept," I thought to myself.

同类推荐
  • 儿科萃精

    儿科萃精

    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。
  • 咏物诗

    咏物诗

    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。
  • 佛说四自侵经

    佛说四自侵经

    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。
  • 浪迹续谈

    浪迹续谈

    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。
  • 佛说诸佛经

    佛说诸佛经

    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
  • 互联网内幕曝光史

    互联网内幕曝光史

    你想知道,你玩游戏抽奖时,为何总会抽不到你想要的道具吗?你想知道,一个手机app是怎么做出来的吗?你想知道,互联网行业的人生活工作状态,是怎么样的吗?你想知道,互联网行业的人每天都过着怎样逗比的生活吗?你想知道,互联网创业是多么艰辛的一件事情吗?你想知道,怎么在互联网世界一夜暴富吗?这里还有职场疑惑、时间管理、家庭与工作、生活与工作的平衡之道、亲情友情爱情,最美丽的事情。来看《互联网大神养成记》吧,看一个化工专业出生的人,如何闯入互联网行业,
  • 强势婚宠:宝贝,别乱动

    强势婚宠:宝贝,别乱动

    一场见不得光的阴谋,让她爬上了他的床,一夜春风。她想要逃离这个光怪陆离的世界,却一次次被命运捉弄。无情的父母,恶毒的亲人,怀着孩子的她要何去何从?却没有想到有一天:“我不吃了?”
  • 亲情与金钱

    亲情与金钱

    这就是,我生活中,真是发生的事情,我想用文字的方式,表达出来,大家一看便知,请大家多多支持!谢谢大家!!!
  • 可堪一战

    可堪一战

    万年后,一名叫做龙敖天的青年被万箭穿心而死。因缘际会,重回万年之前,赫赫有名的至善人龙敖天收养了一群倒霉的熊孩子。“鼎天,把我的糖果还给我!”“啊——鼎天,你怎么可以不穿衣服在院子里洗澡!”主角是龙敖天?错错错,主角是被龙敖天穿越之后收养的这一群熊孩子们。友情,爱情,忠诚,热血,始终伴随着一帮熊孩子的成长。你有神器,我有兄弟,你有秘技,我有兄弟。你是天神,我有兄弟,我有兄弟,战天,战地,战尽世间不平事;敢问天上地下,有谁可堪一战!穿越者影响主角的故事,“他穿流”将要主宰网络小说界,哇哈哈哈~~~
  • 第一甜心:总裁的上门娇妻

    第一甜心:总裁的上门娇妻

    和同学打赌,结果她被一个恶俗女人在酒店里狂追。失魂落魄下,她不知道冲进了哪个房间,撞见一场好戏。她躲在房间里不能出去,只能安静地站在那里当观众。可惜,她注定当不成观众,连道歉都被曲解成别有用心!观众成了主角,她成了餐后点心!
  • 心向共产党

    心向共产党

    2012年全市财税工作的指导思想是:全面贯彻党的十七大和十七届五中、六中全会和市第六次党代会精神,以科学发展观为统领,紧紧围绕市委、市政府发展战略,充分发挥财政职能,促进经济发展方式转变和产业结构调整,做大做强财政“蛋糕”,优化支出结构,加大民生投入,加强财政监管,为加快推进“五个鄂州”建设、实现鄂州科学发展跨越发展提供必要的财力支撑。
  • 我嫁入豪门后的真实生活

    我嫁入豪门后的真实生活

    “我希望你和江凡离婚,郑琳已经有了江凡的孩子。”婆婆面无表情地说。怎么可能,江凡怎么可能背叛我?连孩子都有了,他不是说我是他唯一爱的人……
  • 夜店诡谈

    夜店诡谈

    宅男偶像最美嫩模周秀娜、台湾当红歌星范逸臣联手演绎夜店、医院、学校经典鬼故事。万圣节夜,几个年青人各怀心事聚集在一间酒吧。席间,大家提议讲恐怖故事,投票决定谁的故事最不吓人谁就请客。于是其中三位轮流讲述了失踪、单行道、夜勤病栋三个离奇诡异的故事……
  • 谋人谋职谋事业

    谋人谋职谋事业

    一个有着敏锐眼光的人,一个凡事善于琢磨的人,一个行动果断的人,一个善于把握机会的人,定能从平庸中脱颖而出,成大事、创大业。《谋人谋职谋事业》从识人、用人、管人、谋人、谋职五个不同角度告诉读者如何从一个普通平凡的人成为一个成功的人。
  • 最强复制

    最强复制

    复制和粘贴只是电脑程序中一段编码,但是这段编码如果出现在现实世界中,将会带来怎样的改变?食指和拇指来回交搓,楚中天笑眯眯的说:只要有灵石,丹药要多少有多少!只要有灵石,法宝要多少有多少!只要有灵石,一模一样的人都能给变出来!