第 6 节
作者:痛罚      更新:2022-07-12 16:20      字数:9321
  says the sea…captain。        〃It is lovely; surely;〃 says he; filling his pipe; 〃but
  finer poets nor you; my lad;〃 says he; lighting it; 〃have tried to describe
  the   grace   and   beauty   of   Tao…Tuen;   and;〃   says   he   taking   a   draw;   〃have
  failed。〃
  〃Tao…Tuen is a beautiful name。           It is like two notes plucked on a harp。
  And it must be a wonderful place; surely; if great poets cannot describe it。〃
  〃It is not a place;〃 said the captain; 〃it's a girl。〃
  〃As for women; Venice 〃
  〃Venice be damned!〃 said the sea…captain。               〃Not in Venice; not in all
  the world; is there the like for grace or beauty of Tao…Tuen。 They call her
  Golden Bells;〃 he says。
  〃Is she a dancing…girl?〃 Marco asked。
  〃She is not a dancing…girl;〃 says the sea…captain; 〃she is the daughter
  of Kubla; the great Khan。〃
  〃A cold and beautiful princess;〃 says Marco Polo。
  〃She is not a cold and beautiful princess;〃 says the sea…captain。 〃She is
  warm as the sun in early June; and she may be beautiful and a princess;
  but   we   all   think   of   her   as   Golden   Bells;   the   little   girl   in   the   Chinese
  garden。〃
  〃Did you ever see her?〃 says Marco; eagerly。               〃Tell me。〃
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  〃I saw her before I left;〃 says the sea…captain。            〃I was at the Khan's
  palace of   Chagannor;〃   says   he;   〃seeing   of   the   chief of the stewards   was
  there anything I could get for him; and I in foreign parts。               And as I was
  being rowed back along the river by my ten brawny sailormen; what did I
  pass but the garden of Golden Bells。
  〃And   there   she   was   by   the   river…side;   a   little   brown   slip   of   a   girl   in
  green coat and trousers; with a flower in her dark hair。
  〃And I lower my head in reverence as we pass by。               But I hear her low;
  merry voice; by reason of which they call her Golden Bells。
  〃'Ho; master of the vessel。' she calls。        'Where do you go?'
  〃And the sailors back water with a swish; and I stand up respectfully;
  for all she is only a slip of a girl。
  〃'I go to foreign parts; Golden Bells;' I tell her; 'to far and dangerous
  places; into the Indian Ocean。          To the Island of Unicorns and to the land
  where men eat men。'
  〃'I hope you come back safe; master of the vessel;' she says。                'I hope
  you have a good voyage and come back safe。                It must be a dreadful strain
  on your people to think of you so far away。'
  〃'In all this wide land;' I tell her; 'there is none to worry about me。              I
  have neither chick nor child。'
  〃'Golden Bells   will worry  about you;  then;'  she said;  'and you   in   the
  hazards of the sea。       And take this flower for luck。'        And she gave me the
  flower from her hair。        'And let it bring you luck against the anger of the
  ocean   and   the   enemies   all   men   have。   And   let   me   know   when   you   are
  back; because I'll be worried about a man of China and him in danger on
  the open sea。'
  〃And wasn't that a wonderful thing from a daughter of Kubla to me; a
  poor sailor…man?
  〃The son of the King of Siam came to woo her with a hundred princes
  on a hundred elephants; but she wouldn't have him。                'I don't wish to be a
  queen;' she told her father。       'How could I be a queen?          I am only Golden
  Bells。'    Nor would she have anything to say to the Prince of the Land of
  Darkness; who came to her with sea ivory and pale Arctic gold。                  'The sun
  of China is in my heart; and you wouldn't have me go up into the great
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  coldness to shiver and die?'
  〃So she remains in her garden by the lake of Cranes with Li Po; the
  great poet; him they call the Drinker of Wine; to make songs for her; and
  the SANANG Tung Chih; the great magician; to perform wonders for her
  when she is wearied; and Bulagan; her nurse; to take her to her heart when
  she is sad。
  〃And sad she is a lot of the time; they tell me。        She sits in her garden
  in the dusk; playing her lute; and singing the song of the Willow branches;
  which is the saddest love…song in the world。 。 。
  〃And why she should be singing a sad love…song; is a mystery; for her
  soft; brown beauty is the flower of the world。         For there would be no lack
  of suitors for her; nor is she the one to refuse love。 The only thing I make
  of it is that the right hour hasn't come。
  〃The beauty of Venice jumps to your eyes; but the beauty of this pulls
  at your heart。    Little brown Golden Bells; in her Chinese garden; singing
  the song of the Willow Branches at the close of day 。 。 。Is that not better
  nor Venice?〃
  But he got no word out of Marco Polo; sitting with his chin cupped in
  his hands。    And that was the finest answer at all; at all。 。 。
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  CHAPTER V
  The   times   went   by;   and   Marco   Polo   busied   himself   with   his   daily
  affairs;   keeping   track   of   the   galleasses   with   merchandise   to   strange   far…
  away ports; buying presents for refractory governors who didn't care for
  foreign   trade   in   their   domains;   getting   wisdom   from   the   old   clerks;   and
  knowledge   from   the   mariners;   in   the   main;   acting   as   the   son   of   a   great
  house while the heads of it were away。
  You would think that he would have forgotten what the sea…captain of
  China told him about Golden Bells; what with work and sport and other
  women near him。          You would think that would drop out of his memory
  like an old rime。      But it stuck there; as an old rime sometimes sticks; and
  by dint of thinking he had her fast now in his mind  so fast; so clear; so
  full of life; that she might be some one he had seen an hour ago or was
  going to see an hour from now。            He would think of the now merry; now
  sad eyes of her; and the soft; sweet voice of her by reason of which they
  called her Golden Bells; and the dusky little face; and the hair like black
  silk; and the splotch of the red flower in it。          She was as distinct to him as
  the five fingers on his hand。          It wasn't only she was clear in his mind's
  eye; but she was inside of him; closer than his heart。             She was there when
  the sun rose; so he would be saying; 〃It's a grand day is in it surely; Golden
  Bells。〃    She was there in the dim counting house and he going over in the
  great intricate ledgers the clerks do be posting carefully with quills of the
  gray goose; so that he would be saying: 〃I wonder where this is and that is。
  Sure I had my finger on it only a moment ago; Golden Bells。〃                  And when
  the dusk was falling; and the bats came out; and the quiet of Christ was
  over everything; and the swallows flew low on the great canals; she would
  be beside him; and never a word would he say to her; so near to him would
  she be。
  And she wrought strangeness between him and the women he knew;
  the great grave lady with the large; pale mouth; her that was of his mind;
  and the  little  black   cloak…maker  with   the  eager;  red   mouth; her  that   was
  closer than   mind or   heart to   him。      So that   the  first   found   fault   with  his
  poetry。
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  〃I don't know what's come over you; Marco Polo;〃  and there was a
  touch of temper in her voice;  〃but these poems of yours show me you
  haven't your mind on your subject。               Would you mind telling me when I
  had   bound   black   hair?〃   she says。       〃And   you   say   my  bosom  is   like   two
  little   russet   apples。   Now;  a   regular   poet once   compared   it   to   two   great
  silver cups; and that was a good comparison; though in truth;〃 she says;
  〃he knew as little about it as you。           And my hands are not like soft Eastern
  flowers。      They're like lilies。      I don't know where you do be getting these
  Eastern comparisons;〃 she says。 〃But I don't like them。                     Tell me; pretty
  boy;〃      she   looks   suspicious;        〃you   haven't   been   taking   any   of   the
  strange Egyptian drugs the dark people do be selling in the dim shops on
  the quiet canals?        Look out; pretty boy!         Look out!〃
  And   the   little   cloak…maker   grumbled   when   he   was   gone。