登陆注册
5437300000090

第90章 CHAPTER XXXIV(2)

"Very good. The rest will be easy enough. I will place you under the care of a countryman of yours, who has been employed in our office for many years. The easiest way for you, as a stranger, will be to go by sea; and the Englishman will show you where to hire a boat." In a few minutes more the clerk and I were on our way to the harbor. Difficulties which I had not anticipated occurred in finding the boat and in engaging a crew. This done, it was next necessary to purchase provisions for the voyage. Thanks to the experience of my companion, and to the hearty good-will with which he exerted it, my preparations were completed before night-fall. I was able to set sail for my destination on the next day. The boat had the double advantage, in navigating the Zuyder Zee, of being large, and of drawing very little water; the captain's cabin was at the stern; and the two or three men who formed his crew were berthed forward, in the bows. The whole middle of the boat, partitioned off on the one side and on the other from the captain and the crew, was assigned to me for my cabin. Under these circumstances, I had no reason to complain of want of space; the vessel measuring between fifty and sixty tons. I had a comfortable bed, a table, and chairs. The kitchen was well away from me, in the forward part of the boat. At my own request, I set forth on the voyage without servant or interpreter. I preferred being alone. The Dutch captain had been employed, at a former period of his life, in the mercantile navy of France; and we could communicate, whenever it was necessary or desirable, in the French language. We left the spires of Amsterdam behind us, and sailed over the smooth waters of the lake on our way to the Zuyder Zee. The history of this remarkable sea is a romance in itself. In the days when Rome was mistress of the world, it had no existence. Where the waves now roll, vast tracts of forest surrounded a great inland lake, with but one river to serve it as an outlet to the sea. Swelled by a succession of tempests, the lake overflowed its boundaries: its furious waters, destroying every obstacle in their course, rested only when they reached the furthest limits of the land. The Northern Ocean beyond burst its way in through the gaps of ruin; and from that time the Zuyder Zee existed as we know it now. The years advanced, the generations of man succeeded each other; and on the shores of the new ocean there rose great and populous cities, rich in commerce, renowned in history. For centuries their prosperity lasted, before the next in this mighty series of changes ripened and revealed itself. Isolated from the rest of the world, vain of themselves and their good fortune, careless of the march of progress in the natio ns round them, the inhabitants of the Zuyder Zee cities sunk into the fatal torpor of a secluded people. The few members of the population who still preserved the relics of their old energy emigrated, while the mass left behind resignedly witnessed the diminution of their commerce and the decay of their institutions. As the years advanced to the nineteenth century, the population was reckoned by hundreds where it had once been numbered by thousands. Trade disappeared; whole streets were left desolate. Harbors, once filled with shipping, were destroyed by the unresisted accumulation of sand. In our own times the decay of these once flourishing cities is so completely beyond remedy, that the next great change in contemplation is the draining of the now dangerous and useless tract of water, and the profitable cultivation of the reclaimed land by generations that are still to come. Such, briefly told, is the strange story of the Zuyder Zee. As we advanced on our voyage, and left the river, I noticed the tawny hue of the sea, caused by sand-banks which color the shallow water, and which make the navigation dangerous to inexperienced seamen. We found our moorings for the night at the fishing island of Marken--a low, lost, desolate-looking place, as I saw it under the last gleams of the twilight. Here and there, the gabled cottages, perched on hillocks, rose black against the dim gray sky. Here and there, a human figure appeared at the waterside, standing, fixed in contemplation of the strange boat. And that was all I saw of the island of Marken. Lying awake in the still night, alone on a strange sea, there were moments when I found myself beginning to doubt the reality of my own position. Was it all a dream? My thoughts of suicide; my vision of the mother and daughter; my journey back to the metropolis, led by the apparition of the child; my voyage to Holland; my night anchorage in the unknown sea--were these, so to speak, all pieces of the same morbid mental puzzle, all delusions from which I might wake at any moment, and find myself restored to my senses again in the hotel at London? Bewildered by doubts which led me further and further from any definite conclusion, I left my bed and went on deck to change the scene. It was a still and cloudy night. In the black void around me, the island was a blacker shadow yet, and nothing more. The one sound that reached my ears was the heavy breathing of the captain and his crew sleeping on either side of me. I waited, looking round and round the circle of darkness in which I stood. No new vision showed itself. When I returned again to the cabin, and slumbered at last, no dreams came to me. All that was mysterious, all that was marvelous, in the later events of my life seemed to have been left behind me in England. Once in Holland, my course had been influenced by circumstances which were perfectly natural, by commonplace discoveries which might have revealed themselves to any man in my position. What did this mean? Had my gifts as a seer of visions departed from me in the new land and among the strange people? Or had my destiny led me to the place at which the troubles of my mortal pilgrimage were to find their end? Who could say? Early the next morning we set sail once more. Our course was nearly northward. On one side of me was the tawny sea, changing under certain conditions of the weather to a dull pearl-gray. On the other side was the flat, winding coast, composed alternately of yellow sand and bright-green meadow-lands; diversified at intervals by towns and villages, whose red-tiled roofs and quaint church-steeples rose gayly against the clear blue sky. The captain suggested to me to visit the famous towns of Edam and. Hoorn; but I declined to go on shore. My one desire was to reach the ancient city in which Mrs. Van Brandt had been left deserted. As we altered our course, to make for the promontory on which Enkhuizen is situated, the wind fell, then shifted to another quarter, and blew with a force which greatly increased the difficulties of navigation. I still insisted, as long as it was possible to do so, on holding on our course. After sunset, the strength of the wind abated. The night came without a cloud, and the starry firmament gave us its pale and glittering light. In an hour more the capricious wind shifted back again in our favor. Toward ten o'clock we sailed into the desolate harbor of Enkhuizen. The captain and crew, fatigued by their exertions, ate their frugal suppers and went to their beds. In a few minutes more, I was the only person left awake in the boat. I ascended to the deck, and looked about me. Our boat was moored to a deserted quay. Excepting a few fishing vessels visible near us, the harbor of this once prosperous place was a vast solitude of water, varied here and there by dreary banks of sand. Looking inland, I saw the lonely buildings of the Dead City--black, grim, and dreadful under the mysterious starlight. Not a human creature, not even a stray animal, was to be seen anywhere. The place might have been desolated by a pestilence, so empty and so lifeless did it now appear. Little more than a hundred years ago, the record of its population reached sixty thousand. The inhabitants had dwindled to a tenth of that number when I looked at Enkhuizen now! I considered with myself what my next course of proceeding was to be. The chances were certainly against my discovering Mrs. Van Brandt if I ventured alone and unguided into the city at night. On the other hand, now that I had reached the place in which she and her child were living, friendless and deserted, could I patiently wait through the weary interval that must elapse before the morning came and the town was astir? I knew my own self-tormenting disposition too well to accept this latter alternative. Whatever came of it, I determined to walk through Enkhuizen on the bare chance of meeting some one who might inform me of Mrs. Van Brandt's address. First taking the precaution of locking my cabin door, I stepped from the bulwark of the vessel to the lonely quay, and set forth upon my night wanderings through the Dead City.

同类推荐
  • 诸法无诤三昧法门

    诸法无诤三昧法门

    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。
  • 明仁宗宝训

    明仁宗宝训

    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。
  • 圣多罗菩萨一百八名陀罗尼经

    圣多罗菩萨一百八名陀罗尼经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Heimskringla

    Heimskringla

    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。
  • 河朔访古记

    河朔访古记

    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。
热门推荐
  • 许你一世盛宠

    许你一世盛宠

    男人扔给她一张支票,“拿了钱,儿子从此跟你再无关系!”她拿着支票,眼睁睁看着他抱着孩子离开!多年以后,再次遇见与她眉眼相似的孩子!她下定决心这次要留在儿子身边,弥补他。
  • 我真的不想拯救世界啊

    我真的不想拯救世界啊

    这是一个没有死亡的世界。不生不死的幽灵在属于人的世间游荡,从末世艰难重建的瑞萨斯提呦,终将有一天被曾经的同类拖入毁灭的深渊。然而,这一切的悲剧都将终止于他的到来。——PS:本书无女主无暧昧,主角无敌,咸鱼救世。【已停止更新】
  • 这个师尊不靠谱

    这个师尊不靠谱

    受屈惨死重生,一番挣扎打滚,终于靠着修仙挽救自己尴尬的命运!多年之后,已为半个仙身的女子看着自己多年前捡上山的小乞丐,皱着眉头叨咕:“我怎么捡了这么个麻烦!”“师尊可是嫌弃弟子?”“没有没有~怎么会啦~师尊是爱你的~真的!”麻烦是麻烦,但自己找的徒弟还是要宠着不是?
  • 无限副本时代

    无限副本时代

    一觉醒来,世界变了个模样。苏长风:重回十六岁确实是件好事,毕竟之后这些年的大变化都记住了,就算是买房也能大赚一笔;重生到古代也行,火药、造纸术、活字印刷、烧玻璃这些能发家的技术我也都会。但是这两件明明都是好事,为什么凑到一起我却只想哭呢?而且谁能告诉我这个副本是怎么回事?
  • 黄河边墙(之一)

    黄河边墙(之一)

    《黄河边墙》是山西文学院第四届签约作家岳占东的签约作品。从2005年开始,作者就先后深入明长城所在的北京、内蒙、河北、陕西、山西等地的十几个县(旗),考察走访了多处明长城遗址,了解和掌握了明长城野外第一手原始资料。又对大量有关的图书进行了深入细致的研究。在此基础上,重点以山西偏关县老牛湾到河曲县石梯子全长140里的黄河边墙为线索,对明朝276年修筑长城的历史和形成的边塞文化做了考察和细化,构建了由“营堡”写长城,由历史人物和历史事件凸显历史背景,由作者感受抒写边塞文化的创作框架。经过两年多的创作,《黄河边墙》得以完成,本刊从这期开始选载,以飨读者。
  • 坑爹儿子鬼医娘亲

    坑爹儿子鬼医娘亲

    听说玉家大小姐玉清落刚嫁入于家,新婚之夜丈夫丢下她带着心爱的女人离家出走了。听说玉清落在嫁入于家半年后,莫名其妙的怀孕了。听说……玉清落死了,和肚子里的孩子都被烧死在了一间四面漏风的破庙里,死无葬身之地。只是——六年后,玉清落摸了摸身边站着的小不点,轻哼一声,问,“听说你死了,有没有报仇的冲动?”“你怎么不去报仇?她们还说你死了,还说你死状凄惨,还说你偷人,还说你应该浸猪笼,还说你样貌奇丑,还说你……啊,娘亲,你再抽我脑袋我就离家出走了。”“现在有没有报仇的冲动了?”玉清落挑着眉,轻哼一声。“……有了。”【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • BOSS今天也在卖萌

    BOSS今天也在卖萌

    遇见温时域之前的宋一曦,没人疼没人爱孤单寂寞冷。遇见温时域之后的宋一曦,只有一个感受那就是,吵死了吵死了吵死了!“女人,我给你打电话你不接!”“女人,我给你买的项链你敢不戴!”他予她最好的,替她抵挡一切伤害他是她的救赎,即使所有人都背弃他,她也甘愿陪着他
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 误入豪门:总裁很霸道

    误入豪门:总裁很霸道

    一个霸道的男人和一个聪明的女人,霸道的男人隐藏在暗处的温柔,是他最厉害的杀手锏,聪明的女人时刻都明白自己的身份,知道什么时候该说什么该做什么,当这样两个人相遇之后,又会擦出什么样的火花?
  • 混在三国争天下

    混在三国争天下

    汉末刘姓最好混,改姓吧。吾乃汉景帝第十七代玄孙,比十八代的刘备刚好大一辈。刘备吾侄还不快快过来参拜你叔父。新书(洪荒之时间逆天)