登陆注册
19875300000015

第15章 THE NOONING TREE.(5)

I pulled Dixie off, but I was too late. He give a groan I shall remember to my dyin' day, 'n' then he plunged out o' the crowd 'n' through the gate like a streak o' lightnin'. We follered, but land! we couldn't find him, an' true as I set here, I never expected to see him alive agin. But I did;

I forgot all about one thing, you see, 'n' that was the baby.

If it wa'n't no attraction to its mother, I guess he cal'lated it needed a father all the more. Anyhow, he turned up in the field yesterday mornin', ready for work, but lookin' as if he 'd hed his heart cut out 'n' a piece o' lead put in the place of it."

"I don't seem as if she 'd 'a' ben brazen enough to come back so near him," said Steve.

"Wall, I don't s'pose she hed any idea o' Dixie's bein' at a circus over Wareham jest then; an' ten to one she didn't care if the whole town seen her. She wanted to get rid of him, 'n' she didn't mind how she did it.

Dixie ain't one of the shootin' kinds, an' anyhow, Fiddy Maddox wa'n't one to look ahead; whatever she wanted to do, that she done, from the time she was knee high to a grasshopper.

I've seen her set down by a peck basket of apples, 'n' take a couple o' bites out o' one, 'n' then heave it fur 's she could heave it 'n' start in on another, 'n' then another;

'n' 't wa'n't a good apple year, neither. She'd everlastin'ly spile 'bout a dozen of 'em 'n' smaller 'bout two mouthfuls.

Doxy Morton, now, would eat an apple clean down to the core, 'n' then count the seeds 'n' put 'em on the window-sill to dry, 'n' get up 'n' put the core in the stove, 'n' wipe her hands on the roller towel, 'n' take up her sewin' agin; 'n' if you 've got to be cuttin' 'nitials in tree bark an' writin' of 'em in the grass with a stick like you 've ben doin' for the last half-hour, you 're blamed lucky to be doin'_D_'s not _F_'s, like Dixie there!"

It was three o'clock in the afternoon. The men had dropped work and gone to the circus. The hay was pronounced to be in a condition where it could be left without much danger; but, for that matter, no man would have stayed in the field to attend to another man's hay when there was a circus in the neighborhood.

Dixie was mowing on alone, listening as in a dream to that subtle something in the swish of the scythe that makes one seek to know the song it is singing to the grasses.

"Hush, ah, hush, the scythes are saying, Hush, and heed not, and fall asleep;

Hush, they say to the grasses swaying, Hush, they sing to the clover deep;

Hush,--'t is the lullaby Time is singing,--Hush, and heed not, for all things pass.

Hush, ah, hush! and the scythes are swinging Over the clover, over the grass."

And now, spent with fatigue and watching and care and grief,-- heart sick, mind sick, body sick, sick with past suspense and present certainty and future dread,--he sat under the cool shade of the nooning tree, and buried his face in his hands.

He was glad to be left alone with his miseries,-- glad that the other men, friendly as he felt them to be, had gone to the circus, where he would not see or hear them for hours to come.

How clearly he could conjure up the scene that they were enjoying with such keen relish!

Only two days before, he had walked among the same tents, staring at horses and gay trappings and painted Amazons as one who noted nothing; yet the agony of the thing he now saw at last lit up all the rest as with a lightning flash, and burned the scene forever on his brain and heart.

It was at Wareham, too,--Wareham, where she had promised to be his wife, where she had married him only a year before.

How well he remembered the night! They left the parsonage; they had ten miles to drive in the moonlight before reaching their stopping-place,--ten miles of such joy as only a man could know, he thought, who had had the warm fruit of life hanging within full vision, but just out of reach,--just above his longing lips; and then, in an unlooked-for, gracious moment, his!

He could swear she had loved him that night, if never again.

But this picture passed away, and he saw that maddening circle with the caracoling steeds. He head the discordant music, the monotonous creak of the machinery, the strident laughter of the excited riders.

As first the thing was a blur, a kaleidoscope of whirling colors, into which there presently crept form and order.

. . . A boy who had cried to get on, and was now crying to get off.

. . . Old Rube Hobson and his young wife; Rube looking white and scared, partly by the whizzing motion, and partly by the prospect of paying out ten cents for the doubtful pleasure.

. . . Pretty Hetty Dunnell with that young fellow from Portland; she too timid to mount one of the mettle-some chargers, and snuggling close to him in one of the circling seats. The, good Got!--Dell! sitting on a prancing white horse, with the man he knew, the man he feared, riding beside her; a man who kept holding on her hat with fingers that trembled,--the very hat she "'peared bride in" a man who brushed a grasshopper from her shoulder with an air of ownership, and, when she slapped his hand coquettishly, even dared to pinch her pink cheek,--his wife's cheek,-- before that crowd of on-lookers! Merry-go-round, indeed!

The horrible thing was well named; and life was just like it,-- a whirl of happiness and misery, in which the music cannot play loud enough to drown the creak of the machinery, in which one soul cries out in pain, another in terror, and the rest laugh; but the prancing steeds gallop on, gallop on, and once mounted, there is no getting off, unless . . .

There were some things it was not possible for a mean to bear!

The river! The river! He could hear it rippling over the sunny sands, swirling among the logs, dashing and roaring under the bridge, rushing to the sea's embrace. Could it tell whither it was hurrying? NO; but it was escaping from its present bonds; it would never have to pass over these same jagged rocks again.

同类推荐
  • 五灯严统

    五灯严统

    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。
  • 华严经海印道场忏仪

    华严经海印道场忏仪

    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。
  • 沙弥尼律仪要略

    沙弥尼律仪要略

    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。
  • 十住毗婆沙论卷第

    十住毗婆沙论卷第

    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。
  • Greenmantlel

    Greenmantlel

    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
  • 大自然的奥秘

    大自然的奥秘

    本书符合广大青少年朋友的求知欲望及猎奇心理的特点,非常适合青少年朋友阅读。向青少年朋友普及环境科学知识,鼓励他们开展各种丰富多彩的环保活动,才有利于帮助他们建立环保意识,让他们将环保意识转化为日常生活中的行动指南。只有提高青少年的环保意识,才能为实现能源的可持续发展战略提供坚强有力的人才保障;也只有通过他们的行动,人类赖以生存的环境才有希望得到改善!
  • 此情可待成追忆i

    此情可待成追忆i

    那年的我们,都懵懵懂懂,不知道什么是爱,什么叫誓言,,还有,什么叫现实...只知道被最信任的人背叛,心会很痛很痛;只知道,既然许下了誓言,就一定要完成;只知道,坐在天台,憧憬我们的未来。从无话不说变成无话可说,究竟是什么在悄然的改变这一切?是青春的怦然心动,是友谊产生了裂缝,还是,我们都还太年轻?
  • 散财挽尊财神系统

    散财挽尊财神系统

    一个死宅少年,一个天地制霸九天散财挽尊之宇宙最强最吊最牛B财神系统。敢不敢跟我比烧钱?——林非口头禅钱不是问题,反正没有!——林非口头禅天下最强散财挽尊少年诞生。企业主竞相跪拜,绝世佳人青睐有加。求收藏,求推荐~~~~~~~~~~
  • 世界废墟

    世界废墟

    处在沙漠中的一个基地,收到太空中的一条讯息。不过,这条讯息却是告诉人类,地球上存在着另类文明。沿着这条讯息,国家组织了一支怪异的先遣队,展开调查。异族王陵、深海遗都、太空城堡······他们可能都存在过地球上,只是,什么原因让这些璀璨的文明都消失了,人类又为什么要急于寻找这些文明的下落。请跟着我的脚步,带你走进一个诡秘的世界。
  • 神尊仙宗

    神尊仙宗

    上辈子不被天道眷顾,厄运缠身,出了车祸原本以为将死,结果穿越了,成了一派掌门,系统开启,谁与争锋,灵石?从不缺灵器?全是高等货......叶违天真的要逆天了
  • 圣运图录

    圣运图录

    被隐秘培养多年,成为了当朝的太子,之后要怎么办呢?成皇之后,却是妻子的提线木偶又该如何反抗呢?反抗换来了更大的压迫,还反抗吗?皇帝被人诟病大门不出二门不迈,又要该如何平复民心?面对这一切,周文冷笑道:“魂修气运,身修灵!我不是宅男,我是帝王!”
  • 佛说妙色王因缘经

    佛说妙色王因缘经

    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。
  • 哭京兆庞尹

    哭京兆庞尹

    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。
  • 战栗的影子

    战栗的影子

    一支小小的竹简,几个诡异离奇的事件,命运是一条穿越时空的锁链,将不同国家、不同职业、毫不相干的人连在一起。他们偶然窥探到永生的密码,从此踏上诡谲荒诞的探索之路,开始了寻找人类嗜血亲戚的恐怖之旅。
  • 裸婚之后

    裸婚之后

    走入婚姻殿堂的那一刹那,就如登上了一辆辆不知道终点的列车。运行过程中,各种各样因素的影响下,随时都有可能迷失甚至出轨,提前下车。