登陆注册
14847200000011

第11章

He awoke next morning from rosy scenes of dream to a steamy atmosphere that smelled of soapsuds and dirty clothes,and that was vibrant with the jar and jangle of tormented life.As he came out of his room he heard the slosh of water,a sharp exclamation,and a resounding smack as his sister visited her irritation upon one of her numerous progeny.The squall of the child went through him like a knife.He was aware that the whole thing,the very air he breathed,was repulsive and mean.How different,he thought,from the atmosphere of beauty and repose of the house wherein Ruth dwelt.There it was all spiritual.Here it was all material,and meanly material.

"Come here,Alfred,"he called to the crying child,at the same time thrusting his hand into his trousers pocket,where he carried his money loose in the same large way that he lived life in general.He put a quarter in the youngster's hand and held him in his arms a moment,soothing his sobs."Now run along and get some candy,and don't forget to give some to your brothers and sisters.Be sure and get the kind that lasts longest."

His sister lifted a flushed face from the wash-tub and looked at him.

"A nickel'd ha'ben enough,"she said."It's just like you,no idea of the value of money.The child'll eat himself sick."

"That's all right,sis,"he answered jovially."My money'll take care of itself.If you weren't so busy,I'd kiss you good morning."

He wanted to be affectionate to this sister,who was good,and who,in her way,he knew,loved him.But,somehow,she grew less herself as the years went by,and more and more baffling.It was the hard work,the many children,and the nagging of her husband,he decided,that had changed her.It came to him,in a flash of fancy,that her nature seemed taking on the attributes of stale vegetables,smelly soapsuds,and of the greasy dimes,nickels,and quarters she took in over the counter of the store.

"Go along an'get your breakfast,"she said roughly,though secretly pleased.Of all her wandering brood of brothers he had always been her favorite."I declare I willkiss you,"she said,with a sudden stir at her heart.

With thumb and forefinger she swept the dripping suds first from one arm and then from the other.He put his arms round her massive waist and kissed her wet steamy lips.The tears welled into her eyes—not so much from strength of feeling as from the weakness of chronic overwork.She shoved him away from her,but not before he caught a glimpse of her moist eyes.

"You'll find breakfast in the oven,"she said hurriedly."Jim ought to be up now.I had to get up early for the washing.Now get along with you and get out of the house early.It won't be nice to-day,what of Tom quittin'an'nobody but Bernard to drive the wagon."

Martin went into the kitchen with a sinking heart,the image of her red face and slatternly form eating its way like acid into his brain.She might love him if she only had some time,he concluded.But she was worked to death.Bernard Higginbotham was a brute to work her so hard.But he could not help but feel,on the other hand,that there had not beenanything beautiful in that kiss.It was true,it was an unusual kiss.For years she had kissed him only when he returned from voyages or departed on voyages.But this kiss had tasted soapsuds,and the lips,he had noticed,were flabby.There had been no quick,vigorous lip-pressure such as should accompany any kiss.Hers was the kiss of a tired woman who had been tired so long that she had forgotten how to kiss.He remembered her as a girl,before her marriage,when she would dance with the best,all night,after a hard day's work at the laundry,and think nothing of leaving the dance to go to another day's hard work.And then he thought of Ruth and the cool sweetness that must reside in her lips as it resided in all about her.Her kiss would be like her hand-shake or the way she looked at one,firm and frank.In imagination he dared to think of her lips on his,and so vividly did he imagine that he went dizzy at the thought and seemed to rift through clouds of rose-petals,filling his brain with their perfume.

In the kitchen he found Jim,the other boarder,eating mush very languidly,with a sick,far-away look in his eyes.Jim was a plumber's apprentice whose weak chin and hedonistic temperament,coupled with a certain nervous stupidity,promised to take him nowhere in the race for bread and butter.

"Why don't you eat?"he demanded,as Martin dipped dolefully into the cold,half-cooked oatmeal mush."Was you drunk again last night?"

Martin shook his head.He was oppressed by the utter squalidness of it all.Ruth Morse seemed farther removed than ever.

"I was,"Jim went on with a boastful,nervous giggle."I was loaded right to the neck.Oh,she was a daisy.Billy brought me home."

Martin nodded that he heard,—it was a habit of nature with him to pay heed to whoever talked to him,—and poured a cup of lukewarm coffee.

"Goin'to the Lotus Club dance to-night?"Jim demanded."They're goin'to have beer,an'if that Temescal bunch comes,there'll be a rough-house.I don't care,though.I'm takin'my lady friend just the same.Cripes,but I've got a taste in my mouth!"

He made a wry face and attempted to wash the taste away with coffee.

"D'ye know Julia?"

Martin shook his head.

"She's my lady friend,"Jim explained,"and she's a peach.I'd introduce you to her,only you'd win her.I don't see what the girls see in you,honest I don't;but the way you win them away from the fellers is sickenin'."

"I never got any away from you,"Martin answered uninterestedly.The breakfast had to be got through somehow.

"Yes,you did,too,"the other asserted warmly."There was Maggie."

"Never had anything to do with her.Never danced with her except that one night."

"Yes,an'that's just what did it,"Jim cried out."You just danced with her an'looked at her,an'it was all off.Of course you didn't mean nothin'by it,but it settled me for keeps.Wouldn't look at me again.Always askin'about you.She'd have made fast dates enough with you if you'd wanted to."

"But I didn't want to."

"Wasn't necessary.I was left at the pole."Jim looked at him admiringly."How d'ye do it,anyway,Mart?"

"By not carin'about'em,"was the answer.

"You mean makin'b'lieve you don't care about them?"Jim queried eagerly.

Martin considered for a moment,then answered,"Perhaps that will do,but with me I guess it's different.I never have cared—much.If you can put it on,it's all right,most likely."

"You should'a'ben up at Riley's barn last night,"Jim announced inconsequently."A lot of the fellers put on the gloves.There was a peach from West Oakland.They called'm'The Rat.'Slick as silk.No one could touch'm.We was all wishin'you was there.Where was you anyway?"

"Down in Oakland,"Martin replied.

"To the show?"

Martin shoved his plate away and got up.

"Comin'to the dance to-night?"the other called after him.

"No,I think not,"he answered.

He went downstairs and out into the street,breathing great breaths of air.He had been suffocating in that atmosphere,while the apprentice's chatter had driven him frantic.There had been times when it was all he could do to refrain from reaching over and mopping Jim's face in the mush-plate.The more he had chattered,the more remote had Ruth seemed to him.How could he,herding with such cattle,ever become worthy of her?He was appalled at the problem confronting him,weighted down by the incubus of his working-class station.Everything reached out to hold him down—his sister,his sister's house and family,Jim the apprentice,everybody he knew,every tie of life.Existence did not taste good in his mouth.Up to then he had accepted existence,as he had lived it with all about him,as a good thing.He had never questioned it,except when he read books;but then,they were only books,fairy stories of a fairer and impossible world.But now he had seen that world,possible and real,with a flower of a woman called Ruth in the midmost centre of it;and thenceforth he must know bitter tastes,and longings sharp as pain,and hopelessness that tantalized because it fed on hope.

He had debated between the Berkeley Free Library and the Oakland Free Library,and decided upon the latter because Ruth lived in Oakland.Who could tell?—a library was a most likely place for her,andhe might see her there.He did not know the way of libraries,and he wandered through endless rows of fiction,till the delicate-featured French-looking girl who seemed in charge,told him that the reference department was upstairs.He did not know enough to ask the man at the desk,and began his adventures in the philosophy alcove.He had heard of book philosophy,but had not imagined there had been so much written about it.The high,bulging shelves of heavy tomes humbled him and at the same time stimulated him.Here was work for the vigor of his brain.He found books on trigonometry in the mathematics section,and ran the pages,and stared at the meaningless formulas and figures.He could read English,but he saw there an alien speech.Norman and Arthur knew that speech.He had heard them talking it.And they were her brothers.He left the alcove in despair.From every side the books seemed to press upon him and crush him.

He had never dreamed that the fund of human knowledge bulked so big.He was frightened.How could his brain ever master it all?Later,he remembered that there were other men,many men,who had mastered it;and he breathed a great oath,passionately,under his breath,swearing that his brain could do what theirs had done.

And so he wandered on,alternating between depression and elation as he stared at the shelves packed with wisdom.In one miscellaneous section he came upon a"Norrie's Epitome."He turned the pages reverently.In a way,it spoke a kindred speech.Both he and it were of the sea.Then he found a"Bowditch"and books by Lecky and Marshall.There it was;he would teach himself navigation.He would quit drinking,work up,and become a captain.Ruth seemed very near to him in that moment.As a captain,he could marry her(if she would have him).And if she wouldn't,well—he would live a good life amongmen,because of Her,and he would quit drinking anyway.Then he remembered the underwriters and the owners,the two masters a captain must serve,either of which could and would break him and whose interests were diametrically opposed.He cast his eyes about the room and closed the lids down on a vision of ten thousand books.No;no more of the sea for him.There was power in all that wealth of books,and if he would do great things,he must do them on the land.Besides,captains were not allowed to take their wives to sea with them.

Noon came,and afternoon.He forgot to eat,and sought on for the books on etiquette;for,in addition to career,his mind was vexed by a simple and very concrete problem:When you meet a young lady and she asks you to call,how soon can you call?was the way he worded it to himself.But when he found the right shelf,he sought vainly for the answer.He was appalled at the vast edifice of etiquette,and lost himself in the mazes of visiting-card conduct between persons in polite society.He abandoned his search.He had not found what he wanted,though he had found that it would take all of a man's time to be polite,and that he would have to live a preliminary life in which to learn how to be polite.

"Did you find what you wanted?"the man at the desk asked him as he was leaving.

"Yes,sir,"he answered."You have a fine library here."

The man nodded."We should be glad to see you here often.Are you a sailor?"

"Yes,sir,"he answered."And I'll come again."

Now,how did he know that?he asked himself as he went down the stairs.

And for the first block along the street he walked very stiff and straight and awkwardly,until he forgot himself in his thoughts,whereupon his rolling gait gracefully returned to him.

同类推荐
  • 案号

    案号

    “你确定这回不是骗我去相亲?”坐在副驾驶席上,时骏不厌其烦地问着正在开车的霍刚。霍刚一脚刹车狠狠踩下去,愠怒地盯着时骏。饶是他这般的好脾气也被问得心烦,他指着时骏挺翘的鼻尖:“时骏,你已经白痴到记不住我的话了?这件事你问了我十一遍!十一遍!你再敢多问一句马上给我滚蛋!”“那麻烦你停车,我要下去谢谢。”霍刚咬牙切齿,却拿时骏毫无办法。今晚局长点名要时骏赴宴,这人混不吝的劲儿一上来,好像谁都在骗他!他霍刚是骗人的那种人吗?肯定不是啊。但要真把时骏放走了也不行,局长那边没法交差。
  • 并蒂花

    并蒂花

    我们城南这一块,老房子密密麻麻,好似城郊田野上稻草烧后剩下的一坨坨草灰堆。但我们家例外,宛如稻草灰上长出的一棵蘑菇来。花绿相间的野蘑菇,还散发出潮湿的土腥气,院子里的四季上演缤纷花事。夏天,两大缸荷花静女一般,端坐在厨房的外墙根下。妈妈夏天五点就起床,在院子里洗衣服,红色塑料大澡盆里架一个枣红色搓板,一堆浸着汗的衣服,又过了夜,完成发酵,馊味呛人。“扑啦——扑啦”,她穿着褪色的睡衣弓着腰坐在矮凳上搓衣服,手上套着肉色薄橡皮手套,像个操弄手术刀的医生。荷花在她身旁一瓣一瓣展开,直到顶出杏黄的嫩蕊,她也不看,仿佛拗着气。
  • 纸镇

    纸镇

    我暗恋十年的女孩在破天荒地邀我彻夜恶搞后,却在第二天离奇失踪,只留下一堆隐晦杂乱的线索,但指向的却是一座并不存在的虚构小镇。毕业在即,心爱的姑娘却下落不明。直到失去她,我才终于明白,她对我究竟有多重要。一张惠特曼的诗歌残片,一幅有着破洞的旅游地图,三个性格迥异却又亲密无间的伙伴,在绝望中开始不懈的破译和搜寻。真相即将浮出水面,但我的惊讶与不安正与日俱增。离她越近,我却越觉得陌生……
  • 命运(全集)

    命运(全集)

    这是一部全景展现改革开放的长篇小说。以深圳的崛起为线索,集中描写了在改革开放这一伟大变革中,上下各阶层,包括中央领导、商人、底层民众等不同人物、不同观念的激烈冲突。决策者如何决策,商人又该如何把握商机,如何斡旋各方关系……那些时代的弄潮儿和他们的事迹将载入史册。
  • 下矮桩

    下矮桩

    面对柳正发,县政协主席白光斌即使多年后仍会想起自己当初穿街过巷胆战心惊去找遛着肇的那个遥远夜晚。那时,那个人要白主席给他下矮桩是为了一句话;那个人曾向他卑躬屈膝下矮桩也是为了一句话。一句狠话。嘿嘿——白主席笑了两声,山不转水转。他自己都听得出来喉咙里的干笑。这种干笑的滋味只有他自己才能领略。干笑了两声后,他又一脸苦相,自顾自地摆了摆头,从不下矮桩的他现在不得不去向那个人下矮桩了。谁会相信当初气头上的一句话会让人怀恨在心,并在多年后兑现。
热门推荐
  • 教育,为了遇见更好的世界

    教育,为了遇见更好的世界

    王蕾著的《教育为了遇见更好的世界》主要收录了一个个鲜活的故事,一份份浓浓的爱意,一盏盏点亮未来的灯,一束束温暖的光,都源于平日的记录。生动的故事,记录的是和孩子们朝夕相处的那些时光,折射的是教师的责任与理想,蕴藏着教师的智慧与情怀。
  • 名人传记丛书:华兹华斯

    名人传记丛书:华兹华斯

    名人传记丛书——华兹华斯——一切知识的开始和终结,同人心一样不朽:“立足课本,超越课堂”,以提高中小学生的综合素质为目的,让中小学生从课内受益到课外,是一生的良师益友。
  • 随身空间之农女忒霸道

    随身空间之农女忒霸道

    现代剩女携带着神秘空间穿越到异世变成小萝莉,当她刚穿越到异世却悲催的发现自己正身处乱世,异族恶魔正在侵犯我族、血洗蹂躏我族。小小萝莉与村民们在被追赶屠杀中逐渐变强大,依靠威力强大的空间将异族恶匪驱逐、消灭。又带领民众重建家园,开辟岀一派盛世繁华、民众幸福的新天地。
  • 陌上花开,谁念缓归眷春深

    陌上花开,谁念缓归眷春深

    女子永远是一个时代最浪漫的印记,是战火纷飞、时代变迁中最绚丽、最妩媚的那一抹记忆。民国女子,才情兼备,风流潇洒。婀娜多姿的旗袍,掩盖不了他们新民意识的觉醒。她们是站在旧时代里,最早倚门外望的那一群风流人物,敏感、细腻、多情。约会民国温婉才女,触摸一百年前,清新和风情兼备的那个年代。
  • 清初历史演义小说·三国演义毛评本1

    清初历史演义小说·三国演义毛评本1

    罗贯中的《三国志通俗演义》成书于明初,清初毛纶、毛宗岗父子对三国演义的批注,包括伏笔,情节,使之成为迄今最流行的定本《三国演义》。《三国演义》的内涵是十分丰富的,囊括了中国古代政治、外交、兵法、权谋、道德观念、哲学、思想等方方面面的内容。尤其是书中描写的四十多次战争,场面波澜壮阔,鲜活生动,为后人提供了各种军事知识和战争经验。全书可大致分为黄巾起义、董卓之乱、群雄逐鹿、三国鼎立、三国归晋五大部分,犹如在历史广阔的历史上,上演了一幕幕气势磅礴的战争场面。作者罗贯中将兵法三十六计融于字里行间,既有情节,也有兵法韬略。
  • 都市之剑影

    都市之剑影

    一个西南的小山村里,李星良回到家的时候,他发现一个漂亮的女神级别的妹子昏迷在自己的床上,并且得知这是拐卖来的给自己的媳妇。于是他有些不淡定了……在西南原始森林里搏杀异兽,在杀手组织里挥出无情一剑,在财团的地下竞技场里战外星科技,在黑暗议会里卷入远古文明复苏的起点,在海域孤岛里斩邪恶诸神,见证远古陨落,在无尽星空里看万族文明,在虚实之星寻找梦宇宙的真相,在混沌破灭之地,与无数宇宙之主沉沦在拯救与杀戮之中……
  • 携妃行天下

    携妃行天下

    【古典架空,宫廷计谋,青梅竹马】别人的青梅竹马都是供人远古流传的佳话,可偏偏她的这个青梅竹马对她不是打就是骂?这不对,这不对。妖孽夫君时常将她气的头脑发胀,妖孽夫君又娶了位美娇妾?三年的时间太长了,划不来,风小昭还是决定先休了他,重新再寻个美驸马。
  • 诡道人生之绝世无双

    诡道人生之绝世无双

    天下七绝,刀郎,胡帝,神火大木,不戒圣僧,陈华顺,韩慕侠,王山河的传奇故事
  • 2034中国世界杯

    2034中国世界杯

    2034年,中国成功获得世界杯主办权,大中华举国上下一片欢腾。为了备战2034中国世界杯,作为东道主,我们提前十几年就进行了归化之路。然而自从国足在2023年中国亚洲杯失利之后。中国足协一怒之下秘密推出了(八仙计划)。故事讲述张先生因为在起点写了一本有关《足球宝典》的体育文,竟然躺枪成为(八仙计划)之中的一名草根教练,他开创了极具东方智慧、独树一帜的战术流派足球。一次偶然的机会!张教练得到了两届世界冠军,国际巨星璒贝莱的指点,从此中国队摇扶直上,世青赛、亚洲杯、奥运会、世界杯都给我们留下了美好的回忆。
  • 修魔之圣天魔帝

    修魔之圣天魔帝

    加了一个魔修群,又不小心吞了一个快要成为魔祖的魔尊,从此走上逆天之路,各种装逼。。。