第 20 节
作者:负债赌博      更新:2024-05-25 15:05      字数:9322
  are shaped by the merest chance。            We did not know it was our riverthere
  was   no   way   of   telling;   and   if   we   had   never   crossed   it   we   would   most
  probably have never returned to the horde; and I; the modern; the thousand
  centuries yet to be born; would never have been born 。
  And yet Lop…Ear and I wanted greatly to return。               We had experienced
  homesickness on our journey; the yearning for our own kind and land; and
  often   had   I   had   recollections   of   the   Swift   One;   the   young   female   who
  made soft sounds; whom it was good to be with; and who lived by herself
  nobody      knew    where。     My     recollections    of  her   were   accompanied       by
  sensations of hunger; and these I felt when I was not hungry and when I
  had just eaten。
  But to come back to the river。          Food was plentiful; principally berries
  and succulent roots; and on the river bank we played and lingered for days。
  And then the idea came to Lop…Ear。              It was a visible process; the coming
  of the idea。      I saw it。    The expression in his eyes became plaintive and
  querulous; and he was greatly perturbed。              Then his eyes went muddy; as
  if he had lost his grip on the inchoate thought。             This was followed by the
  plaintive;   querulous   expression   as   the   idea   persisted   and   he   clutched   it
  anew。     He looked at me; and at the river and the far shore。                He tried to
  speak; but had no sounds with which to express the idea。                  The result was
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  a   gibberish   that   made   me   laugh。   This   angered   him;   and   he   grabbed   me
  suddenly and threw me on my back。 Of course we fought; and in the end I
  chased him up a tree; where he secured a long branch and poked me every
  time I tried to get at him。
  And   the   idea   had   gone   glimmering。       I   did  not   know;   and   he   had
  forgotten。     But the next morning it awoke in him again。                Perhaps it was
  the homing instinct in him asserting itself that made the idea persist。                  At
  any rate it was there; and clearer than before。 He led me down to the water;
  where a log had grounded in an eddy。 I thought he was minded to play; as
  we had played in the mouth of the slough。              Nor did I change my mind as
  I watched him tow up a second log from farther down the shore。
  It was not until   we were  on the  logs; side by side   and holding   them
  together; and had paddled out into the current; that I learned his intention。
  He paused to point at the far shore; and resumed his paddling; at the same
  time uttering loud and encouraging cries。              I understood; and we paddled
  energetically。 The swift current caught us; flung us toward the south shore;
  but before we could make a landing flung us back toward the north shore。
  Here   arose   dissension。     Seeing   the   north   shore   so   near;   I   began   to
  paddle   for   it。  Lop…Ear   tried   to   paddle   for   the   south   shore。   The   logs
  swung around in circles; and we got nowhere; and all the time the forest
  was   flashing   past   as   we   drifted   down   the   stream。   We   could   not   fight。
  We knew better than to let go the grips of hands and feet that held the logs
  together。     But we chattered and abused each other with our tongues until
  the   current   flung   us   toward   the   south   bank   again。   That   was   now   the
  nearest goal; and together and amicably we paddled for it。                 We landed in
  an eddy; and climbed directly into the trees to reconnoitre。
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  CHAPTER XIII
  It   was   not   until   the   night   of   our   first   day  on   the  south   bank   of   the
  river that we discovered the Fire People。            What must have been a band of
  wandering hunters went into camp not far from the tree in which Lop…Ear
  and I had elected to roost for the night。           The voices of the Fire People at
  first alarmed us; but later; when darkness had come; we were attracted by
  the fire。    We crept cautiously and silently from tree to tree till we got a
  good view of the scene。
  In   an   open   space   among   the   trees;   near   to   the   river;   the   fire   was
  burning。      About   it   were   half   a   dozen   Fire…Men。   Lop…Ear   clutched   me
  suddenly; and I could feel him tremble。              I looked more closely; and saw
  the wizened little old hunter   who   had shot   Broken…Tooth out of   the   tree
  years before。      When he   got up and walked   about; throwing fresh   wood
  upon the fire; I saw that he limped with his crippled leg。             Whatever it was;
  it was a permanent injury。          He seemed more dried up and wizened than
  ever; and the hair on his face was quite gray。
  The other hunters were young men。              I noted; lying near them on the
  ground;   their   bows   and   arrows;   and   I   knew   the   weapons   for   what   they
  were。     The   Fire…Men   wore   animal   skins   around   their   waists   and   across
  their shoulders。      Their arms and legs; however; were bare; and they wore
  no footgear。      As I have said before; they were not quite so hairy as we of
  the Folk。     They did not have large heads; and between them and the Folk
  there was very little difference in the degree of the slant of the head back
  from the eyes。
  They   were   less   stooped   than   we;   less   springy   in   their   movements。
  Their backbones and hips and knee…joints seemed more rigid。                   Their arms
  were not so long as ours either; and I did not notice that they ever balanced
  themselves when they walked; by touching the ground on either side with
  their   hands。    Also;   their   muscles   were   more   rounded   and   symmetrical
  than ours; and their faces were more pleasing。             Their nose orifices opened
  downward; likewise the bridges of their noses were more developed; did
  not   look   so   squat   nor   crushed   as   ours。   Their   lips   were   less   flabby   and
  pendent; and their eye…teeth did not look so much like fangs。                   However;
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  they were quite as thin…hipped as we; and did not weigh much more。 Take
  it all in all; they were less different from us than were we from the Tree
  People。     Certainly;     all  three  kinds   were    related;  and   not   so  remotely
  related at that。
  The   fire   around   which   they   sat   was   especially   attractive。   Lop…Ear
  and    I  sat  for  hours;    watching    the   flames    and   smoke。     It   was   most
  fascinating   when   fresh   fuel   was   thrown   on   and   showers   of   sparks   went
  flying   upward。     I   wanted   to   come   closer   and   look   at   the   fire;   but   there
  was no way。       We were crouching in the forks of a tree on the edge of the
  open space; and we did not dare run the risk of being discovered。
  The    Fire…Men     squatted    around    the  fire  and   slept  with   their  heads
  bowed forward on their knees。            They did not sleep soundly。          Their ears
  twitched in their sleep; and they were restless。            Every little while one or
  another got up and threw more wood upon the fire。                  About the circle of
  light in the forest; in the darkness beyond; roamed hunting animals。                 Lop…
  Ear and I could tell them by their sounds。              There were wild dogs and a
  hyena; and for a time there was a great yelping and snarling that awakened
  on the instant the whole circle of sleeping Fire…Men。
  Once a lion and a lioness stood beneath our tree and gazed out with
  bristling    hair  and   blinking    eyes。   The    lion  licked   his   chops   and   was
  nervous with eagerness; as if he wanted to go forward and make a meal。
  But the lioness was more cautious。           It was she that discovered us; and the
  pair stood and looked up at us; silently; with twitching; scenting nostrils。
  Then they growled; looked once again at the fire; and turned away into the
  forest。
  For a much longer time Lop…Ear and I remained and watched。                      Now
  and again we could hear the crashing of heavy bodies in the thickets and
  underbrush; and from the darkness of the other side; across the circle; we
  could see eyes gleaming in the firelight。 In the distance we heard a lion
  roar; and from far off came the scream of some stricken animal; splashing
  and floundering