登陆注册
19650500000037

第37章 XVIII(2)

What with the ache in his back and his chagrin at losing the pigs, Claude was feeling desperate. "Mother," he shouted, "if you don't take Mahailey into the house, I'll go crazy!"

That evening Mrs. Wheeler asked him how much the twelve hogs would have been worth in money. He looked a little startled.

"Oh, I don't know exactly; three hundred dollars, anyway."

"Would it really be as much as that? I don't see how we could have prevented it, do you?" Her face looked troubled.

Claude went to bed immediately after supper, but he had no sooner stretched his aching body between the sheets than he began to feel wakeful. He was humiliated at losing the pigs, because they had been left in his charge; but for the loss in money, about which even his mother was grieved, he didn't seem to care. He wondered whether all that winter he hadn't been working himself up into a childish contempt for money-values.

When Ralph was home at Christmas time, he wore on his little finger a heavy gold ring, with a diamond as big as a pea, surrounded by showy grooves in the metal. He admitted to Claude that he had won it in a poker game. Ralph's hands were never free from automobile grease--they were the red, stumpy kind that couldn't be kept clean. Claude remembered him milking in the barn by lantern light, his jewel throwing off jabbing sparkles of colour, and his fingers looking very much like the teats of the cow. That picture rose before him now, as a symbol of what successful farming led to.

The farmer raised and took to market things with an intrinsic value; wheat and corn as good as could be grown anywhere in the world, hogs and cattle that were the best of their kind. In return he got manufactured articles of poor quality; showy furniture that went to pieces, carpets and draperies that faded, clothes that made a handsome man look like a clown. Most of his money was paid out for machinery,--and that, too, went to pieces.

A steam thrasher didn't last long; a horse outlived three automobiles.

Claude felt sure that when he was a little boy and all the neighbours were poor, they and their houses and farms had more individuality. The farmers took time then to plant fine cottonwood groves on their places, and to set osage orange hedges along the borders of their fields. Now these trees were all being cut down and grubbed up. Just why, nobody knew; they impoverished the land . . . they made the snow drift . . . nobody had them any more. With prosperity came a kind of callousness; everybody wanted to destroy the old things they used to take pride in. The orchards, which had been nursed and tended so carefully twenty years ago, were now left to die of neglect. It was less trouble to run into town in an automobile and buy fruit than it was to raise it.

The people themselves had changed. He could remember when all the farmers in this community were friendly toward each other; now they were continually having lawsuits. Their sons were either stingy and grasping, or extravagant and lazy, and they were always stirring up trouble. Evidently, it took more intelligence to spend money than to make it.

When he pondered upon this conclusion, Claude thought of the Erlichs. Julius could go abroad and study for his doctor's degree, and live on less than Ralph wasted every year. Ralph would never have a profession or a trade, would never do or make anything the world needed.

Nor did Claude find his own outlook much better. He was twenty-one years old, and he had no skill, no training,--no ability that would ever take him among the kind of people he admired. He was a clumsy, awkward farmer boy, and even Mrs.

Erlich seemed to think the farm the best place for him. Probably it was; but all the same he didn't find this kind of life worth the trouble of getting up every morning. He could not see the use of working for money, when money brought nothing one wanted. Mrs.

Erlich said it brought security. Sometimes he thought this security was what was the matter with everybody; that only perfect safety was required to kill all the best qualities in people and develop the mean ones.

Ernest, too, said "it's the best life in the world, Claude."

But if you went to bed defeated every night, and dreaded to wake in the morning, then clearly it was too good a life for you. To be assured, at his age, of three meals a day and plenty of sleep, was like being assured of a decent burial. Safety, security; if you followed that reasoning out, then the unborn, those who would never be born, were the safest of all; nothing could happen to them.

Claude knew, and everybody else knew, seemingly, that there was something wrong with him. He had been unable to conceal his discontent. Mr. Wheeler was afraid he was one of those visionary fellows who make unnecessary difficulties for themselves and other people. Mrs. Wheeler thought the trouble with her son was that he had not yet found his Saviour. Bayliss was convinced that his brother was a moral rebel, that behind his reticence and his guarded manner he concealed the most dangerous opinions. The neighbours liked Claude, but they laughed at him, and said it was a good thing his father was well fixed. Claude was aware that his energy, instead of accomplishing something, was spent in resisting unalterable conditions, and in unavailing efforts to subdue his own nature. When he thought he had at last got himself in hand, a moment would undo the work of days; in a flash he would be transformed from a wooden post into a living boy. He would spring to his feet, turn over quickly in bed, or stop short in his walk, because the old belief flashed up in him with an intense kind of hope, an intense kind of pain,- the conviction that there was something splendid about life, if he could but find it

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 贴心营养菜

    贴心营养菜

    常言道:“药补不如食补”。如果您通过“食疗”,祛除了身体的不适和潜在的疾患,这不正是您和编者共同的愿望吗?本书根据科学的平衡膳食原则,选用常见的材料,采用了简单易行且最大限度实现营养价值的烹调技法,精心选择了数百款既美味又营养的菜肴,让你成为自己的家庭营养师!还有“厨房小常识”告诉你健康饮食生活的小窍门,贴心又实用!
  • 踏入万界

    踏入万界

    几万年的百族争霸已过,人类在这场争斗之中脱颖而出,此时人类世界空前繁荣。人族鼎盛,百族势微。人类之中大能之士不甘居于一界,开始向外探索,上天入地,显露神通。当诸多手段一一使出之后才发现自己生活的地方如此微不足道,自己的力量如此难登大雅之堂。而这一切,也只是整个世界微微露出的一角。
  • 我师傅是个地球人

    我师傅是个地球人

    空中漂浮着一男一女,男的英气非凡,女的倾国倾城,不过两人的眼中都带着杀意。在动手前,男子忽然说了句:“天王盖地虎”女子一听,眼神一变,说了句:“宝塔镇河妖”男子听到女子的话后,露出了不可思议的眼神,然后又说了一句:“青山不在”女子同样,也是带着不可思议的眼神看着男子,然后回了一句:“绿水长流”男子一听,失神的说了一句:“你是地球来的?”女子一听,激动的点了点头。之后,两人就像遇到亲人一般,一场厮杀消失不见。“唉,我说作者,我才是主角,你写的简介是我师傅和师娘,和我一点关系也没有,简介不谢我这个主角,你什么意思啊?”明天问道。“你是主角不假,但是,你不懂,其实我也是地球来的。”作者回答。
  • 那一年,被爱彻底淹没

    那一年,被爱彻底淹没

    青春如歌,那些为爱的心动,为爱写的诗,为爱唱的歌,为爱流的泪,为爱幸福的笑,为爱的等待,为爱的离别,汇集了一首婉转动听的恋曲,悠扬旋转的流进我们的心里,青春如沫,歌唱完了,一切又准沉寂,泡沫裂了,一切又化为苍白……
  • 倾宠冷萌妃

    倾宠冷萌妃

    凶悍霸道的她,虐尽,一切极品奇葩。万千风华如她,惹了,高冷腹黑的他。他说,“你负责貌美如花,我负责征战天下,爱你宠你一生一世,天下无二绝此一家!”她说,“你负责赚钱养家,我负责勾三搭四,狠虐贱人渣人奇葩,碎了心烂了肝睬他!”(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 教你中国绘画史

    教你中国绘画史

    石器时代是中国绘画的萌芽时期,伴随者石器制作方法的改进,原始的工艺美术有了发展。但在若干年以前,我们所掌握的中国绘画的实例还只是那些描画在陶瓷器皿上的新石器时代的纹饰。但近年来,在中国的许多省份发现了岩画,使得史学家们将中国绘画艺术的起源推前至旧石器时代。
  • 李侍郎使北录

    李侍郎使北录

    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。
  • 校园实用经典赠言寄语(实用一生的语言精华丛书)

    校园实用经典赠言寄语(实用一生的语言精华丛书)

    《实用一生的语言精华丛书:校园实用经典赠言寄语》是一本科普类读物。歇后语、座右铭、格言等无疑都是一种浓缩的语言精华,可能经过千百年来人们的不断提炼和传承,才得以流传至今。《实用一生的语言精华丛书:校园实用经典赠言寄语》主要内容包括赠言寄语类型的语言精华。集趣味性和知识性于一身,可以作为广大青少年朋友修身养性、努力学习的一个指路明灯。
  • 穿越筑巢者之龙

    穿越筑巢者之龙

    穿越成了《筑巢之龙》的主角龙布拉德,为了过上蹂躏男勇者,啪啪女勇者,没事抓个公主吓吓国王的悠闲龙生,布拉德决定走上扩建龙巢,招募强大部下与勇者们斗智斗勇的热血龙生!不过,实际上龙巢的规格与部下早已满级,而敌人则还为了新手村的毕业而努力奋斗。总之这就是一部玩了筑巢之龙,又看了OVERLORD后的脑洞之作。大概还会有些欧陆风云,全面战争,兰斯,魔王远征要塞之类的ACG即视感?另:关于第一人称问题,除了1.2章和幕间外都是第三人称,请放心食用
  • 历届新概念一等奖获得者作文精选(小说卷)

    历届新概念一等奖获得者作文精选(小说卷)

    新思维所有作品都体现出了作者的创造性、发散性思维,作者们打破旧观念、旧规范的束缚,打破僵化保守,处在无拘无束的新思维中创作所得。新表达作品的创作不受题材、体裁限制,作者使用属于自己的充满个性的语言,杜绝套话,杜绝千人一面,杜绝众口一词。真体验真实、真切、真诚、真挚地关注、感受、体察生活,并将这一切,反映在作品中。