第 33 节
作者:冬冬      更新:2021-02-20 15:54      字数:9322
  being named David Grayson I tried desperately to set up and support a sort
  of dummy creature which; so clad; so housed; so fed; should appear to be
  what I thought David Grayson ought to appear in the eyes of the world。
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  Oh; I spent quite a lifetime trying to satisfy other people!
  Once I remember staying at home; in bed; reading 〃Huckleberry Finn;〃
  while I sent my trousers out to be mended。
  Well;   that   dummy   Grayson   perished   in   a   cornfield。   His   empty   coat
  served well for a scarecrow。 A wisp of straw stuck out through a hole in
  his finest hat。
  And Ithe man withinI escaped; and have been out freely upon the
  great adventure of life。
  If a shabby coat (and I speak here also symbolically; not forgetful of
  spiritual significances) lets you into the adventurous world of those who
  are   poor   it   does   not   on   the   other   hand   rob   you   of   any   true   friendship
  among   those   who   are   rich   or   mighty。   I   say   true   friendship;   for   unless   a
  man who is rich and mighty is able to see through my shabby coat (as I see
  through his fine one); I shall gain nothing by knowing him。
  I've   permitted   myself   all   this   digressionleft   myself   walking   alone
  there  in   the streets   of   Kilburn   while   I  philosophized   upon   the   ways   and
  means      of   lifenot    without     design;    for   I  could    have    had    no   such
  experiences as I did have in Kilburn if I had worn a better coat or carried
  upon me the evidences of security in life。
  I think I have already remarked upon the extraordinary enlivenment of
  wits which comes to the man who has been without a meal or so and does
  not know when or where he is again to break his fast。 Try it; friend and see!
  It   was   already   getting   along   in   the   evening;   and   I   knew   or   supposed   I
  knew   no   one   in   Kilburn   save   only   Bill   Hahn;   Socialist   who   was   little
  better off than I was。
  In    this  emergency       my    mind    began     to  work     swiftly。   A   score    of
  fascinating   plans   for   getting   my   supper   and   a   bed   to   sleep   in   flashed
  through my mind。
  〃Why;〃 said I; 〃when I come to think of it; I'm comparatively rich。 I'll
  warrant there are plenty of places in Kilburn; and good ones; too; where I
  could barter a chapter of Montaigne and a little good conversation for a
  first…rate supper;   and   I've   no   doubt   that   I  could   whistle  up   a  bed   almost
  anywhere!〃
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  I thought of a little motto I often repeat to myself:
  TO KNOW LIFE; BEGIN ANYWHERE!
  There   were   several   people   on   the   streets   of   Kilburn   that   night   who
  don't know yet how very near they were to being boarded by a somewhat
  shabby looking farmer who would have offered them; let us say; a notable
  musical production called 〃Old Dan Tucker;〃 exquisitely performed on a
  tin whistle; in exchange for a good honest supper。
  There was one   man in   particulara   fine; pompous   citizen   who   came
  down the street swinging his cane and looking as though the universe was
  a sort of Christmas turkey; lying all brown and sizzling before him ready
  to be carveda fine pompous citizen who never realized how nearly Fate
  with a battered volume of Montaigne in one hand and a tin whistle in the
  othercame       to   pouncing     upon    him    that   evening!    And     I  am   firmly
  convinced   that   if   I   had   attacked   him   with   the   Great   Particular   Word   he
  would have carved me off a juicy slice of the white breast meat。
  〃I'm getting hungry;〃 I said; 〃I must find Bill Hahn!〃
  I had turned down a side street; and seeing there in front of a building
  a   number   of   lounging   men   with   two   or   three   cabs   or   carriages   standing
  nearby in the street I walked up to them。 It was a livery barn。
  Now I like all sorts of out…of…door people: I seem to be related to them
  through   horses   and   cattle   and   cold   winds   and   sunshine。   I   like   them   and
  understand   them;   and   they   seem   to   like   me   and   understand   me。   So   I
  walked up to the group of jolly drivers and stablemen intending to ask my
  directions。     The   talking   died   out   and   they   all  turned   to  look   at  me。   I
  suppose I was not altogether a familiar type there in the city streets。 My
  bag; especially; seemed to set me apart as a curious person。
  〃Friends;〃 I said; 〃I am a farmer〃
  They  all   broke   out   laughing;   they  seemed   to   know   it   already!   I   was
  just a little taken aback; but I laughed; too; knowing that there was a way
  of getting at them if only I could find it。
  〃It may surprise you;〃 I said; but this is the first time in some dozen
  years that I've been in a big city like this。〃
  〃You hadn't 'ave told us; partner!〃 said one of them; evidently the wit
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  of the group; in a rich Irish brogue。
  〃Well;〃   I   responded;   laughing   with   the   best   of   them;   〃you've   been
  living right here all the time; and don't realize how amusing and curious
  the city looks to me。 Why; I feel as though I had been away sleeping for
  twenty years; like Rip Van Winkle。 When I left the city there was scarcely
  an    automobile     to  be   seen   anywhereand        now    look   at  them    snorting
  through the streets。 I counted twenty…two passing that corner up there in
  five minutes by the clock。〃
  This was a fortunate remark; for I found instantly that the invasion of
  the   automobile   was   a   matter   of   tremendous   import   to   such   Knights   of
  Bucephalus as these。
  At first the wit interrupted me with amusing remarks; as wits will; but
  I   soon   had   him   as   quiet   as   the   others。   For   I   have   found   the   things   that
  chiefly interest people   are the  things they already  know  aboutprovided
  you    show     them    that  these    common      things    are  still  mysterious;     still
  miraculous; as indeed they are。
  After a time some one pushed me a stable stool and I sat down among
  them;  and   we   had   quite   a   conversation;  which   finally  developed   into   an
  amusing comparison (I wish I had room to repeat it here) between the city
  and    the  country。    I  told   them   something     about    my   farm;   how    much     I
  enjoyed it; and what a wonderful free life one had in the country。 In this I
  was really taking an unfair advantage of them; for I was trading on the fact
  that every man; down deep in his heart; has more or less of an instinct to
  get back to the soilat least all outdoor men have。 And when I described
  the simplest things about my barn; and the cattle and pigs; and the bees
  and   the   good   things   we   have   to   eatI   had   every   one   of   them   leaning
  forward and hanging on my words。
  Harriet sometimes laughs at me for the way I celebrate farm life。 She
  says all my apples are the size of Hubbard squashes; my eggs all double…
  yolked;   and   my   cornfields   tropical   jungles。   Practical   Harriet!   My   apples
  may not ALL be the size of Hubbard squashes; but they are good; sizable
  apples;   and   as   for   flavourall   the   spices   of   Arcady!   And   I   believe;   I
  KNOW; from my own experience that these fields and hills are capable of
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  healing men's souls。 And when I see people wandering around a lonesome
  city like Kilburn; with never a soft bit of soil to put their heels into; nor a
  green thing to cultivate; nor any corn or apples or honey to harvest; I feel
  well; that they are wasting their time。
  (It's a fact; Harriet!)
  Indeed I had the most curious experience with my friend the withis
  name   I   soon   learned   was   Healya   jolly;   round;  red…nosed;  outdoor   chap
  with fists that looked like small…sized hams; and a rich; warm Irish voice。
  At first he was inclined to use me as the ready butt of his lively mind; but
  presently he became so much interested in what I was saying that he sat
  squarely   in   front   of   me   with   both   his   jolly   eyes   and   his   smiling   mouth
  wide open。
  〃If ever you pass my way;〃 I said to him; 〃just drop in and I'll give you
  a dinner of baked beans〃and I smacked〃and home made bread〃 and I
  smacked   again   〃and   p