第 41 节
作者:低诉      更新:2021-02-18 23:48      字数:9321
  〃You seem to take the fate of that Hither girl of yours mightily to heart;
  stranger;〃   quoth   my   hostess;   with   a   touch   of   feminine   jealousy;   as   she
  watched my hesitation。         〃Do you know anything of her?〃
  〃Yes;〃 I answered gloomily。           〃I have seen her once or twice away in
  Seth。〃
  〃Ah; that reminds me!         When they brought her up here from the boats
  to dry her wet clothes; she cried and called in her grief for just such a one
  as you; saying he alone who struck down our men at her feast could rescue
  her〃
  〃What!      Heru here in this room but yesterday!              How did she look?
  Was she hurt? How had they treated her?〃
  My eagerness gave me away。             The woman looked at me through her
  half…shut eyes a space; and then said; 〃Oh! sits the wind in THAT quarter?
  So you can love as well as eat。 I must say you are well…conditioned for a
  spirit。〃
  I  got   up   and   walked    about    the  room    a  space;   then;   feeling   very
  friendless; and knowing no woman was ever born who was not interested
  in   another   woman's   loves;   I   boldly   drew   my   hostess   aside   and   told   her
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  about Heru; and that I was in pursuit of her; dwelling on the girl's gentle
  helplessness;   my   own   hare…brained   adventure;   and   frankly   asking   what
  sort of a sovereign Ar…hap was; what the customs of his court might be;
  and   whether   she   could   suggest   any   means;   tem…   poral   or   spiritual;   by
  which he might be moved to give back Heru to her kindred。
  Nor was   my  confidence   misplaced。            The   woman;   as   I   guessed;   was
  touched somewhere back in her female heart by my melting love…tale; by
  my anxiety and Heru's peril。 Besides; a ghost in search of a fairy ladyand
  such the slender folk of Seth were still considered to be by the race which
  had   supplanted   themthis   was   romance   indeed。   To   be   brief;   that   good
  woman proved invaluable。
  She   told   me;   firstly;   that   Ar…hap   was   believed   to   be   away   at   war;
  〃weekending〃         as  was    his   custom;    amongst      rebellious    tribes;  and    by
  starting at once up the water; I should very probably get to the town before
  he did。     Sec… ondly; she thought if I kept clear of private brawls there was
  little chance of my receiving injury; from the people at all events; as they
  were accustomed to strange visitors; and civil enough until they were fired
  by   war。    〃Sickle   cold;   sword   hot;〃   was   one   of   their   proverbs;   meaning
  thereby   that   in   peaceful   times   they   were   lambs;   however   lionlike   they
  might be in contest。
  This   was   reassuring;   but   as   to   recovering   the   lady;   that   was   another
  matter   over   which   the   good   woman   shook   her   head。   It   was   ill   coming
  between Ar…hap and his tribute; she said; still; if I wanted to see Heru once
  again; this was my op… portunity; and; for the rest; that chance; which often
  favours the enamoured; must be my help。
  Briefly; though I should probably have gone forward in any case out of
  sheer obstinacy; had it been to certain destruction; this better aspect of the
  situation hastened my resolution。            I thanked the woman for help; and then
  the man outside was called in to advise as to the best and speediest way of
  getting     within     earshot    of    his   hairy    sovereignty;     the    monarch      of
  Thitherland。
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  CHAPTER XVI
  The Martian told   me   of   a   merchant boat   with ten   rowers   which   was
  going up to the capital in a couple of hours; and as the skipper was a friend
  of   his   they   would   no   doubt   take   me   as   supercargo;   thereby   saving   the
  necessity of passenger fees; which was obviously a consideration with me。
  It was not altogether a romantic approach to the dungeon of an imprisoned
  beauty; but it was practical; which is often better if not so pleasant。                 So
  the offer was gladly closed with; and curling myself in a rug of foxskins;
  for I was tired with much walking; sailors never being good foot… gangers;
  I slept soundly fill they came to tell me it was time to go on board。
  The vessel was   more like a   canal barge than   anything else; lean and
  long; with the cargo piled in a ridge down the centre as farmers store their
  winter   turnips;   the   rowers   sitting   on   either   side   of   this   plying   oars   like
  dessert…spoons       with   long   handles;    while   they   chanted     a  monotonous
  cadence of monosyllables:
  Oh; ho; oh;
  Oh; ho; oh;
  How high; how high。
  and then again after a pause
  How high; how high
  Oh; ho; oh;
  Oh; ho; oh。
  the   which   was   infinitely   sleep…provoking   if   not   a   refrain   of   a   high
  intellectual order。
  I   shut   my  eyes   as   we   pulled   away  from  the   wharfs   of that nameless
  emporium   and       picked    a  passage   through    a  crowd    of   quaint   shipping;
  wondering where I was; and asking myself whether I was mentally rising
  equal   to   my   extraordinary   surroundings;   whether   I   adequately   appreci…
  ated the immensity of my remove from those other seas on which I had
  last travelled; tiller…ropes in hand; piloting a captain's galley from a wharf。
  Good heavens; what would my comrades on my ship say if they could see
  me   now   steer…   ing   a   load   of   hairy   savages   up   one   of   those   waterways
  which our biggest telescopes magnify but to the thickness of an indication?
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  No; I was not rising equal to the oc… casion; and could not。                     The human
  mind   is   of   but   limited   capacity   after   all;   and   such   freaks   of   fortune   are
  beyond its conception。           I knew I was where I was; but I knew I should
  probably never get the chance of telling of it; and that no one would ever
  believe me if I did; and I re… signed myself to the inevitable with sullen
  acquiescence; smothering the wonder that might have been overwhelming
  in passing interests of the moment。
  There is little to record of that voyage。             We passed through a fleet of
  Ar…hap's   warships;  empty  and   at   anchor   in   double line;  serviceable  half…
  decked cutters; built of solid timber; not pumpkin rind it was pleasant to
  notice;   and   then   the   town   dropped   away   as   we   proceeded   up   a   stream
  about   as   broad   as   the   Hudson   at   its   widest;   and   profusely   studded   with
  islands。     This water was bitterly salt and joined an… other sea on the other
  side of the Martian continent。             Yet it had a pronounced flow against us
  eastward; this tide running for three spring months and being followed; I
  learned; as ocean temperatures varied; by a flow in the opposite direction
  throughout the summer。
  Just    at  present    the  current    was    so  strong    eastwards;     the   moisture
  beaded   upon   my   rowers'   tawny   hides   as   they   strug…   gled   against   it;   and
  their   melancholy   song   dawdled   in   〃linked   sweetness   long   drawn   out;〃
  while the swing of their oars grew longer and longer。                    Truly it was very
  hot; far hotter than was usual for the season; these men declared; and pos…
  sibly  this   robbed   me   of   my   wonted   energy;   and   you;   gentle   reader;   of   a
  description of all the strange things we passed upon that highway。
  Suffice it to say we spent a scorching afternoon; the greater part of a
  stifling night moored under a mud…bank with a grove of trees on top from
  which gigantic fire…flies hung as though the place were illuminated for a
  garden   fete;   and   then;   rowing   on   again   in   the   comparatively   cool   hours
  before dawn; turned into a backwater at cock…crow。
  The   skipper   of   our   cargo   boat   roused   me   just   as   we   turned;   putting
  under my sleepy nostrils a handful of toasted beans on a leaf; and a small
  cup   full   of   something      that   was   not   coffee;   but   smelt   as   good   as   that
  matutinal beverage always does to the tired traveller。
  Over   our   prow   was   an   immense   arch   of   foliage;   and   under…   neath   a
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