第 28 节
作者:随便看看      更新:2022-07-12 16:23      字数:9322
  animal the Gong…donkey。
  No   very   great   racing   to…day;   so   no   very   great   amount   of   vehicles:
  though there is a good sprinkling; too:              from farmers' carts and gigs; to
  carriages   with   post…horses   and   to   fours…in…hand;   mostly   coming   by   the
  road   from   York;   and   passing   on   straight   through   the   main   street   to   the
  Course。      A  walk   in   the   wrong   direction   may   be   a   better   thing   for   Mr。
  Goodchild   to…day   than   the   Course;   so   he   walks   in   the   wrong   direction。
  Everybody        gone    to  the   races。    Only     children    in  the   street。   Grand
  Alliance   Circus   deserted;   not   one   Star…Rider   left;   omnibus   which   forms
  the Pay…Place; having on separate panels Pay here for the Boxes; Pay here
  for the Pit; Pay here for the Gallery; hove down in a corner and locked up;
  nobody near the tent but the man on his knees on the grass; who is making
  the paper balloons for the Star young gentlemen to jump through to… night。
  A pleasant road; pleasantly wooded。              No labourers working in the fields;
  all gone 't'races。'     The few late wenders of their way 't'races;' who are yet
  left driving on the road; stare in amazement at the recluse who is not going
  't'races。'   Roadside innkeeper has gone 't'races。'             Turnpike…man has gone
  't'races。' His thrifty wife; washing clothes at the toll…house door; is going
  't'races' to…morrow。       Perhaps there may be no one left to take the toll to…
  morrow; who knows?             Though assuredly that would be neither turnpike…
  like   nor   Yorkshire…like。      The   very   wind   and   dust   seem   to   be   hurrying
  't'races;'   as  they   briskly   pass   the   only   wayfarer     on   the  road。    In   the
  distance;      the   Railway       Engine;     waiting     at   the    town…end;      shrieks
  despairingly。      Nothing but the difficulty of getting off the Line; restrains
  that Engine from going 't'races;' too; it is very clear。
  At night; more Lunatics out than last night … and more Keepers。 The
  latter very active at the Betting Rooms; the street in front of which is now
  impassable。       Mr。   Palmer   as   before。    Mr。  Thurtell   as   before。     Roar   and
  uproar   as   before。    Gradual   subsidence   as   before。   Unmannerly   drinking…
  house expectorates as before。            Drunken negro… melodists; Gong…donkey;
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  and correct cards; in the night。
  On     Wednesday       morning;      the   morning      of  the   great    St。  Leger;    it
  becomes apparent that there has been a great influx since yesterday; both
  of Lunatics and Keepers。           The families of the tradesmen over the way are
  no longer within human ken; their places know them no more; ten; fifteen;
  and   twenty   guinea…lodgers   fill   them。        At   the   pastry…cook's   second…floor
  window; a Keeper is brushing Mr。 Thurtell's hair … thinking it his own。                      In
  the wax… chandler's attic; another Keeper is putting on Mr。 Palmer's braces。
  In   the   gunsmith's   nursery;   a   Lunatic   is   shaving   himself。      In   the   serious
  stationer's     best   sitting…room;     three   Lunatics     are  taking    a  combination…
  breakfast;     praising    the   (cook's)    devil;  and    drinking    neat   brandy   in    an
  atmosphere   of   last   midnight's   cigars。       No   family   sanctuary  is   free   from
  our Angelic   messengers   …   we   put   up   at   the Angel   …   who   in   the   guise   of
  extra waiters for the grand Race…Week; rattle in and out of the most secret
  chambers   of   everybody's   house;   with   dishes   and   tin   covers;   decanters;
  soda…water bottles; and glasses。            An hour later。       Down the street and up
  the street; as far as eyes can see and a good deal farther; there is a dense
  crowd;   outside   the   Betting   Rooms   it   is   like   a   great   struggle   at   a   theatre
  door … in the days of theatres; or at the vestibule of the Spurgeon temple …
  in   the   days   of   Spurgeon。     An   hour   later。    Fusing   into   this   crowd;   and
  somehow getting through it; are all kinds of conveyances; and all kinds of
  foot…passengers; carts; with brick… makers and brick…makeresses jolting up
  and down on planks; drags; with the needful grooms behind; sitting cross…
  armed in the needful manner; and slanting themselves backward from the
  soles of their boots at the needful angle; postboys; in the shining hats and
  smart jackets of the olden time; when stokers were not; beautiful Yorkshire
  horses; gallantly driven by their own breeders and masters。                     Under every
  pole; and every shaft; and every horse; and every wheel as it would seem;
  the   Gong…donkey  …   metallically  braying;  when  not   struggling   for life;   or
  whipped out of the way。
  By one o'clock; all this stir has gone out of the streets; and there is no
  one  left   in   them  but   Francis   Goodchild。       Francis   Goodchild   will   not   be
  left in them long; for; he too is on his way; 't'races。'
  A most beautiful sight; Francis Goodchild finds 't'races' to be; when he
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  has left fair Doncaster behind him; and comes out on the free course; with
  its agreeable prospect; its quaint Red House oddly changing and turning as
  Francis turns; its green grass; and fresh heath。               A free course and an easy
  one;    where     Francis    can   roll  smoothly   where       he   will;   and   can   choose
  between the start; or the coming…in; or the turn behind the brow of the hill;
  or   any   out…of…   the…way   point   where   he   lists   to   see   the   throbbing   horses
  straining   every   nerve;   and   making   the   sympathetic   earth   throb   as   they
  come by。       Francis much delights to be; not in the Grand Stand; but where
  he can see it; rising against the sky with its vast tiers of little white dots of
  faces; and its last high rows and corners of people; looking like pins stuck
  into an enormous pincushion … not quite so symmetrically as his orderly
  eye could wish; when people change or go away。                    When the race is nearly
  run out; it is as good as the race to him to see the flutter among the pins;
  and the change in them from dark to light; as hats are taken off and waved。
  Not   less   full   of   interest;   the   loud   anticipation   of   the   winner's   name;   the
  swelling; and the final; roar; then; the quick dropping of all the pins out of
  their   places;   the   revelation   of   the   shape   of   the   bare   pincushion;   and   the
  closing…in of   the   whole   host   of   Lunatics   and   Keepers;   in   the   rear   of   the
  three horses with bright…coloured riders; who have not yet quite subdued
  their gallop though the contest is over。
  Mr。   Goodchild   would   appear   to   have   been   by   no   means   free   from
  lunacy      himself    at  't'races;'  though     not   of  the   prevalent     kind。    He     is
  suspected by Mr。 Idle to have fallen into a dreadful state concerning a pair
  of little lilac gloves and a little bonnet that he saw there。               Mr。 Idle asserts;
  that   he   did   afterwards   repeat   at   the Angel;   with   an   appearance   of   being
  lunatically seized; some   rhapsody to   the following   effect:                'O little   lilac
  gloves!      And   O   winning   little   bonnet;   making   in   conjunction   with   her
  golden   hair   quite   a   Glory   in   the   sunlight   round   the   pretty   head;   why
  anything in the world but you and me!                 Why may not this day's running…
  of horses; to all the rest:         of precious sands of life to me … be prolonged
  through   an   everlasting   autumn…sunshine;   without   a   sunset!   Slave   of   the
  Lamp; or Ring; strike me yonder gallant equestrian Clerk of the Course; in
  the scarlet coat; motionless on the green grass for ages!                     Friendly Devil
  on    Two    Sticks;    for  ten   times    ten  thousands      years;   keep    Blink…Bonny
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  jibbing at the post; and let us have no start!           Arab drums; powerful of old
  to summon Genii in the desert; sound of yourselves and raise a troop for
  me in the desert of my heart; which shall so enchant this dusty barouche
  (with a conspicuous excise…plate; resembling the Collector's door…plate at a
  turnpike); that I; within it; loving the little lilac gloves; the winning lit