第 1 节
作者:冬冬      更新:2021-02-20 15:53      字数:9322
  THE FRIENDLY ROAD
  THE FRIENDLY ROAD
  by DOUBLEDAY; PAGE & COMPANY
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  THE FRIENDLY ROAD
  A WORD TO HIM WHO OPENS
  THIS BOOK
  I did not plan when I began writing these chapters to make an entire
  book;   but   only   to   put   down   the   more   or   less   unusual   impressions;   the
  events and adventures; of certain quiet pilgrimages in country roads。 But
  when   I   had   written   down   all   of   these   things;   I   found   I   had   material   in
  plenty。
  〃What shall I call it now that I have written it?〃 I asked myself。
  At first I thought I should call it 〃Adventures on the Road;〃 or 〃The
  Country Road;〃 or something equally simple; for I would not have the title
  arouse any appetite which the book itself could not satisfy。 One pleasant
  evening   I   was   sitting   on   my   porch   with   my   dog   sleeping   near   me;   and
  Harriet not far away rocking and sewing; and as I looked out across the
  quiet   fields   I  could   see in   the  distance  a curving   bit of the town   road。   I
  could see the valley below it and the green hill beyond; and my mind went
  out   swiftly   along   the   country   road   which   I   had   so   recently   travelled   on
  foot; and I thought with deep satisfaction of all the people I had met on my
  pilgrimagesthe        Country     Minister     with   his   problems;      the   buoyant
  Stanleys;  Bill   Hahn the  Socialist; the Vedders   in   their  garden;  the  Brush
  Peddler。 I thought of the Wonderful City; and of how for a time I had been
  caught   up   into   its   life。   I   thought   of   the   men   I   met   at   the   livery   stable;
  especially Healy; the wit; and of that strange Girl of the Street。 And it was
  good     to  think   of  them    all  living   around    me;   not   so   very   far  away;
  connected   with   me   through   darkness   and   space   by   a   certain   mysterious
  human cord。 Most of all I love that which I cannot see beyond the hill。
  〃Harriet;〃 I said aloud; 〃it grows more wonderful every year how full
  the world is of friendly people!〃
  So I got up quickly and came in here to my room; and taking a fresh
  sheet of paper I wrote down the title of my new book:
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  THE FRIENDLY ROAD
  〃The Friendly Road。〃
  I invite you to travel with me upon this friendly road。 You may find; as
  I did; something which will cause you for a time; to forget yourself into
  contentment。 But if you chance to be a truly serious person; put down my
  book。 Let nothing stay your hurried steps; nor keep you from your way。
  As   for   those   of   us   who   remain;   we   will   loiter   as   much   as   ever   we
  please。 We'll   take   toll   of   these   spring   days;   we'll   stop   wherever   evening
  overtakes us; we'll eat the food of hospitalityand make friends for life!
  DAVID GRAYSON。
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  THE FRIENDLY ROAD
  CHAPTER I。 I LEAVE MY FARM
  〃Is it so small a thing To have enjoyed the sun; To have lived light in
  spring?〃
  It is eight o'clock of a sunny spring morning。 I have been on the road
  for   almost   three   hours。 At   five   I   left   the   town   of   Holt;   before   six   I   had
  crossed the railroad at a place called Martin's Landing; and an hour ago; at
  seven;  I   could   see   in   the   distance   the   spires   of   Nortontown。 And   all   the
  morning as I came tramping along the fine country roads with my pack…
  strap    resting    warmly     on   my    shoulder;    and    a  song    in  my    throatjust
  nameless words to a nameless tuneand all the birds singing; and all the
  brooks bright under their little bridges; I knew that I must soon step aside
  and put down; if I could; some faint impression of the feeling of this time
  and   place。   I   cannot   hope   to   convey   any   adequate   sense   of   it   allof   the
  feeling   of   lightness;   strength;   clearness;   I   have   as   I   sit   here   under   this
  maple treebut I am going to write as long as ever I am happy at it; and
  when   I   am   no   longer   happy   at   it;   why;   here   at   my   very   hand   lies   the
  pleasant     country     road;   stretching    away     toward    newer     hills  and   richer
  scenes。
  Until to…day I have not really been quite clear in my own mind as to
  the step I have taken。 My sober friend; have you ever tried to do anything
  that the world at large considers not quite sensible; not quite sane? Try it!
  It   is   easier   to   commit   a   thundering   crime。 A  friend   of   mine   delights   in
  walking   to   town   bareheaded;   and   I   fully   believe   the   neighbourhood   is
  more disquieted thereby than it would be if my friend came home drunken
  or failed to pay his debts。
  Here   I   am   then;   a   farmer;   forty   miles   from   home   in   planting   time;
  taking his ease under a maple tree and writing in a little book held on his
  knee!   Is   not   that   the   height   of   absurdity?   Of   all   my   friends   the   Scotch
  Preacher   was the   only  one   who seemed   to understand   why  it   was   that   I
  must go away for a time。 Oh; I am a sinful and revolutionary person!
  When I left home last week; if you could have had a truthful picture of
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  mefor   is   there   not   a   photography  so   delicate   that   it   will   catch   the   dim
  thought…shapes which attend upon our lives?if you could have had such a
  truthful   picture   of   me;   you   would   have   seen;   besides   a   farmer   named
  Grayson   with   a gray  bag   hanging   from  his   shoulder;  a  strange   company
  following   close   upon   his   steps。 Among   this   crew   you   would   have   made
  out easily:
  Two fine cows。 Four Berkshire pigs。 One team of gray horses; the old
  mare a little lame in her right foreleg。 About fifty hens; four cockerels; and
  a number of ducks and geese。
  More   than   thisI   shall   offer   no   explanation   in   these   writings   of   any
  miracles that may appearyou would have seen an entirely respectable old
  farmhouse bumping and hobbling along as best it might in the rear。 And in
  the   doorway;   Harriet   Grayson;   in   her   immaculate   white   apron;   with   the
  veritable   look   in   her   eyes   which   she   wears   when   I   am   not   comporting
  myself with quite the proper decorum。
  Oh; they would not let me go! How they all followed clamoring after
  me。 My thoughts coursed backward faster than ever I could run away。 If
  you could have heard that motley crew of the barnyard as I did the hens
  all   cackling;   the   ducks   quacking;   the   pigs   grunting;   and   the   old   mare
  neighing and stamping; you would have thought it a miracle that I escaped
  at all。
  So often we think in a superior and lordly manner of our possessions;
  when; as a matter of fact; we do not really possess them; they possess us。
  For    ten   years    I  have    been    the   humble      servant;    attending     upon    the
  commonest daily needs of sundry hens; ducks; geese; pigs; bees; and of a
  fussy and exacting old gray mare。 And the habit of servitude; I find; has
  worn deep scars upon me。 I am almost like the life prisoner who finds the
  door   of   his   cell   suddenly   open;   and   fears   to   escape。   Why;   I   had   almost
  become ALL farmer。
  On   the   first   morning   after   I   left   home   I   awoke   as   usual   about   five
  o'clock   with   the   irresistible   feeling   that   I   must   do   the   milking。   So   well
  disciplined had I become in my servitude that I instinctively thrust my leg
  out of bedbut pulled it quickly back in again; turned over; drew a long;
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  THE FRIENDLY ROAD
  luxurious breath; and said to myself:
  〃Avaunt cows! Get thee behind me; swine! Shoo; hens!〃
  Instantly the clatter of mastery to which I had responded so quickly for
  so     many     years    grew     perceptibly      fainter;   the    hens    cackled     less
  domineeringly;  the  pigs squealed   less   insistently;  and   as   for the strutting
  cockerel;   that   lordly   and   despotic   bird   stopped   fairly   in   the   middle   of   a
  crow; and his voice gurgled away in a spasm of astonishment。 As for the
  old farmhouse; it grew so dim I could scarcely see it at all