第 13 节
作者:莫莫言      更新:2021-02-18 23:42      字数:9305
  pew with a face as complacent as that of the cat that has eaten the canary。
  Presently   the   deacons   appeal   to   her   for   information   touching   the   good
  doctor。 Mistress Shurtleff sweetly tells them that the good doctor was in
  his study when she left home。 There he is found; indeed; and released from
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  durance; begging the deacons to keep his mortification secret; to 〃give it
  an understanding; but no tongue。〃 Such was the discipline undergone by
  the worthy Dr。 Shurtleff on his earthly pilgrimage。 A portrait of this patient
  mannow   a   saint   somewherehangs   in   the   rooms   of   the   New   England
  Historical   and   Genealogical   Society   in   Boston。 There   he   can   be   seen   in
  surplice and bands; with his lamblike; apostolic face looking down upon
  the heavy antiquarian labors of his busy descendants。
  Whether   or   not   a   man   is   to   be   classed   as   eccentric   who   vanishes
  without     rhyme    or  reason    on   his  wedding…night      is  a  query   left  to  the
  reader's decision。 We   seem  to   have struck   a   matrimonial vein;  and   must
  work   it   out。   In   1768;   Mr。   James   McDonough   was   one   of   the   wealthiest
  men in Portsmouth; and the fortunate suitor for the hand of a daughter of
  Jacob   Sheafe;   a   town   magnate。   The   home   of   the   bride   was   decked   and
  lighted for the nuptials; the banquet…table was spread; and the guests were
  gathered。 The minister in his robe stood by the carven mantelpiece; book
  in hand; and waited。 Then followed an awkward intervalthere was a hitch
  somewhere。 A strange silence fell upon the laughing groups; the air grew
  tense    with   expectation;    in  the   pantry;   Amos    Boggs;     the  butler;  in  his
  agitation    split  a  bottle   of  port   over   his  new   cinnamon…colored        small…
  clothes。 Then a whispera whisper suppressed these twenty minutesran
  through the apartments;〃The bridegroom has not come!〃。 He never came。
  The mystery of that night remains a mystery after the lapse of a century
  and a quarter。
  What   had   become   of   James   McDonough?   The   assassination   of   so
  notable a person in a community where every strange face was challenged;
  where      every    man's    antecedents     were    known;     could    not   have    been
  accomplished   without   leaving   some   slight   traces。   Not   a   shadow   of   foul
  play    was    discovered。     That    McDonough        had   been    murdered      or  had
  committed suicide were theories accepted at first by a few; and then by no
  one。 On the   other hand; he   was in love   with his fiancee;   he had   wealth;
  power; positionwhy had he fled? He was seen a moment on the public
  street; and then never seen again。 It was as if he turned into air。 Meanwhile
  the   bewilderment   of   the   bride   was   dramatically   painful。   If   McDonough
  had been waylaid and killed; she could mourn for him。 If he had deserted
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  her; she could wrap herself in her pride。 But neither course lay open to her;
  then or afterward。 In one of the Twice Told Tales Hawthorne deals with a
  man   named   Wakefield;   who   disappears   with   like   suddenness;   and   lives
  unrecognized   for   twenty   years   in   a   street   not   far   from   his   abandoned
  hearthside。 Such expunging of one's self was not possible in Portsmouth;
  but   I  never  think   of   McDonough   without   recalling Wakefield。  I  have   an
  inexplicable conviction that for many a year James McDonough; in some
  snug     ambush;      studied     and   analyzed      the   effect   of   his   own    startling
  disappearance。
  Some       time   in   the   year   1758;     there   dawned      upon    Portsmouth       a
  personage   bearing   the   ponderous   title   of   King's   Attorney;   and   carrying
  much   gold   lace   about   him。       This   gilded   gentleman   was   Mr。        Wyseman
  Clagett; of Bristol; England; where his father dwelt on the manor of Broad
  Oaks; in a mansion with twelve chimneys; and kept a coach and eight or
  ten    servants。    Up    to   the  moment       of  his   advent    in   the   colonies;    Mr。
  Wyseman         Clagett    had   evidently     not   been    able   to  keep    anything     but
  himself。 His wealth consisted of his personal decorations; the golden frogs
  on his lapels; and the tinsel at his throat; other charms he had none。 Yet
  with these he contrived to dazzle the eyes of Lettice Mitchel; one of the
  young   beauties   of   the   province;   and   to   cause   her   to   forget   that   she   had
  plighted troth   with a   Mr。 Warner;  then   in Europe;  and destined to   return
  home with a disturbed heart。 Mr。 Clagett was a man of violent temper and
  ingenious   vindictiveness;   and   proved   more   than   a   sufficient   punishment
  for   Lettice's   infidelity。   The   trifling   fact   that   Warner   was   deadhe   died
  shortly after his returndid not interfere with the course of Mr。 Clagett's
  jealousy; he was haunted by the suspicion that Lettice regretted her first
  love;   having      left   nothing   undone   to    make   her   do   so。   〃This   is   to  pay
  Warner's debts;〃 remarked Mr。 Clagett; as he twitched off the table…cloth
  and wrecked the tea…things。
  In    his  official   capacity     he  was    a  relentless    prosecutor。     The    noun
  Clagett      speedily     turned    itself   into   a   verb;    〃to   Clagett〃     meant     〃to
  prosecute;〃 they were convertible terms。 In spite of his industrious severity;
  and   his   royal   emoluments;   if   such   existed;   the   exchequer   of   the   King's
  Attorney showed a perpetual deficit。 The stratagems to which he resorted
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  from   time   to   time   in   order   to   raise   unimportant   sums   reminded   one   of
  certain scenes in Moliere's comedies。
  Mr。   Clagett   had   for   his   ame   damnee   a   constable   of   the   town。   They
  were made for each other; they were two flowers with but a single stem;
  and this was their method of procedure: Mr。 Clagett dispatched one of his
  servants   to   pick   a   quarrel   with   some   countryman   on   the  street;   or   some
  sailor     drinking     at  an   inn:    the   constable     arrested     the   sailor   or   the
  countryman;        as  the   case   might    be;   and   hauled     the  culprit   before    Mr。
  Clagett;   Mr。   Clagett   read   the   culprit   a   moral   lesson;   and   fined   him   five
  dollars and costs。 The plunder was then divided between the conspirators
  two   hearts   that   beat   as   oneClagett;   of   course;   getting   the   lion's   share。
  Justice was never administered in a simpler manner in any country。 This
  eminent legal light was extinguished in 1784; and the wick laid away in
  the   little   churchyard   in   Litchfield;   New   Hampshire。   It   is   a   satisfaction;
  even after such a lapse of time; to know that Lettice survived the King's
  Attorney sufficiently long to be very happy with somebody else。  Lettice
  Mitchel was scarcely eighteen when she married Wyseman Clagett。
  About eighty years ago; a witless fellow named Tilton seems to have
  been a familiar figure on the streets of the old town。 Mr。 Brewster speaks
  of him as 〃the well…known idiot; Johnny Tilton;〃 as if one should say; 〃the
  well…known statesman; Daniel Webster。〃 It is curious to observe how any
  sort   of   individuality   gets   magnified   in   this   parochial   atmosphere;   where
  everything lacks perspective; and nothing is trivial。 Johnny Tilton does not
  appear to have had much individuality to start with; it was only after his
  head     was     cracked     that   he   showed      any    shrewdness       whatever。      That
  happened   early   in   his   unobtrusive   boyhood。   He   had   frequently   watched
  the hens flying out of the loft window in his father's stable; which stood in
  the rear of the Old Bell Tavern。 It occurred to Johnny; one day; that though
  he   might   not   be   as   bright   as   other   lads;   he   certainly   was   in   no   respect
  inferior to a hen。 So he placed himself on the sill of the window in the loft;
  flapped his arms; and took flight。 The New England Icarus alighted head
  downward; lay insensible for a while; and was henceforth looked upon as
  a   mortal   who   had   lost   his   wits。 Yet   at   odd   moments   his   cloudiness   was
  illumined by a gleam of intelligence such as had not been detected in him