第 10 节
作者:负债赌博      更新:2024-05-25 15:05      字数:9322
  stood on the edge of the forest whither he had finally retreated。                   He was
  looking back   at   us;  his   writhing   lips   lifted   clear  of the very  roots   of his
  huge fangs; his hair bristling and his tail lashing。             He gave one last snarl
  and slid from view among the trees。
  And then such a chattering as went up。             We swarmed out of our holes;
  examining   the   marks   his   claws   had   made   on   the   crumbling   rock   of   the
  bluff; all of us talking at once。        One of the two Folk who had been caught
  in the   double   cave   was   part…grown;   half   child   and   half   youth。 They  had
  come      out  proudly     from   their   refuge;   and    we   surrounded      them    in  an
  admiring crowd。         Then the young fellow's mother broke through and fell
  upon   him   in   a   tremendous   rage;   boxing   his   ears;   pulling   his   hair;   and
  shrieking like a demon。 She was a strapping big woman; very hairy; and
  the thrashing she gave him was a delight to the horde。                    We roared with
  laughter; holding on to one another or rolling on the ground in our glee。
  In   spite   of   the   reign   of   fear   under   which   we   lived;   the   Folk   were
  always great laughers。         We had the sense of humor。            Our merriment was
  Gargantuan。        It was never restrained。        There was nothing half way about
  it。   When a thing was funny we were convulsed with appreciation of it;
  and   the   simplest;   crudest   things   were   funny   to   us。   Oh;   we   were   great
  laughers; I can tell you。
  The    way    we   had    treated   Saber…Tooth      was   the   way   we    treated   all
  animals   that   invaded   the   village。     We   kept   our   run…ways   and   drinking…
  places     to  ourselves     by    making     life  miserable      for  the   animals     that
  trespassed      or  strayed    upon    our   immediate     territory。   Even    the   fiercest
  hunting   animals   we   so   bedevilled   that   they   learned   to   leave   our   places
  alone。     We were not fighters like them; we were cunning and cowardly;
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  Before Adam
  and   it   was   because   of   our   cunning   and   cowardice;   and   our   inordinate
  capacity for fear; that we survived in that frightfully hostile environment
  of the Younger World。
  Lop…Ear; I figure; was a year older than I。            What his past history was
  he had no way of telling me; but as I never saw anything of his mother I
  believed   him   to   be   an   orphan。    After   all;   fathers   did   not   count   in   our
  horde。     Marriage   was   as   yet   in   a   rude   state;   and   couples   had   a   way   of
  quarrelling   and separating。  Modern   man;  what   of his divorce   institution;
  does the same thing legally。          But we had no laws。           Custom was all we
  went by; and our custom in this particular matter was rather promiscuous 。
  Nevertheless;      as   this  narrative    will   show    later   on;   we   betrayed
  glimmering adumbrations of the monogamy that was later to give power
  to; and make mighty; such tribes as embraced it。 Furthermore; even at the
  time I was born; there were several faithful couples that lived in the trees
  in the neighborhood of my mother。 Living in the thick of the horde did not
  conduce      to  monogamy。       It   was   for  this  reason;    undoubtedly;     that  the
  faithful couples went away and lived by themselves。 Through many years
  these couples stayed together; though when the man or woman died or was
  eaten the survivor invariably found a new mate。
  There was one thing that greatly puzzled me during the first days of
  my residence in the horde。           There was a nameless and incommunicable
  fear that rested upon all。 At first it appeared to be connected wholly with
  direction。      The     horde    feared    the   northeast。     It   lived   in   perpetual
  apprehension of that quarter of the compass。              And every individual gazed
  more frequently and with greater alarm in that direction than in any other。
  When   Lop…Ear   and   I   went   toward   the   north…east   to   eat   the   stringy…
  rooted carrots that at that season were at their best; he became unusually
  timid。    He was content to eat the leavings; the big tough carrots and the
  little ropy ones; rather than to venture a short distance farther on to where
  the carrots were as yet untouched。             When I so ventured; he scolded me
  and quarrelled with me。          He gave me to understand that in that direction
  was    some    horrible    danger;   but   just  what   the   horrible   danger    was   his
  paucity of language would not permit him to say。
  Many a good meal I got in this fashion; while he scolded and chattered
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  Before Adam
  vainly at me。       I could not understand。         I kept very alert; but I could see
  no    danger。    I   calculated    always    the  distance    between     myself    and   the
  nearest   tree;   and   knew   that   to   that   haven   of   refuge   I   could   out…foot   the
  Tawny One; or old Saber…Tooth; did one or the other suddenly appear。
  One   late   afternoon;   in   the   village;   a   great   uproar   arose。 The   horde
  was animated with a single emotion; that of fear。              The bluff…side swarmed
  with the Folk; all gazing and pointing into the northeast。                I did not know
  what it was; but I scrambled all the way up to the safety of my own high
  little cave before ever I turned around to see。
  And then; across the river; away into the northeast; I saw for the first
  time the mystery of smoke。           It was the biggest animal I had ever seen。             I
  thought it was a monster snake; up…ended; rearing its head high above the
  trees and swaying back and forth。            And yet; somehow; I seemed to gather
  from   the   conduct   of   the   Folk   that   the   smoke   itself   was   not   the   danger。
  They     appeared     to  fear   it  as  the  token    of  something      else。  What    this
  something else was I was unable to guess。 Nor could they tell me。                      Yet I
  was soon to know; and I was to know it as a thing more terrible than the
  Tawny One; than old Saber…Tooth; than the snakes themselves; than which
  it seemed there could be no things more terrible。
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  Before Adam
  CHAPTER VII
  Broken…Tooth   was   another       youngster   who     lived  by   himself。    His
  mother lived in the caves; but two more children had come after him and
  he    had   been   thrust   out  to  shift  for  himself。    We     had   witnessed    the
  performance   during   the   several   preceding   days;   and   it   had   given   us   no
  little glee。    Broken…Tooth did not want to go; and every time his mother
  left the cave he sneaked   back into it。 When   she returned and found  him
  there    her   rages   were   delightful。    Half   the  horde    made    a  practice   of
  watching for these moments。 First; from within the cave; would come her
  scolding and shrieking。         Then we could hear sounds of the thrashing and
  the yelling of Broken…Tooth。           About this time the two younger children
  joined in。    And finally; like the eruption of a miniature volcano; Broken…
  Tooth would come flying out。
  At the end of several days his leaving home was accomplished。                    He
  wailed his grief; unheeded; from the centre of the open space; for at least
  half an hour; and then came to live with Lop…Ear and me。 Our cave was
  small; but with squeezing there was room for three。 I have no recollection
  of   Broken…Tooth   spending   more   than   one   night   with   us;   so   the   accident
  must have happened right away。
  It came in the middle of the day。         In the morning we had eaten our fill
  of the carrots; and then; made heedless by play; we had ventured on to the
  big   trees   just   beyond。   I   cannot   understand   how   Lop…Ear   got   over   his
  habitual caution; but it must have been the play。 We were having a great
  time playing tree tag。      And such tag! We leaped ten or fifteen…foot gaps as
  a matter of course。 And a twenty or twenty…five foot deliberate drop clear
  down to the ground was nothing to us。             In fact; I am almost afraid to say
  the great distances we dropped。          As we grew older and heavier we found
  we had to be more cautious in dropping; but at that age our bodies were all
  strings and springs and we c