第 6 节
作者:辛苦      更新:2021-02-20 16:24      字数:9322
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  owt sen。〃
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  The Diary of a Goose Girl
  CHAPTER VI
  One   learns   to   be   modest   by   living   on   a   poultry   farm;   for   there   are
  constant expositions of the most deplorable vanity among the cocks。 We
  have a couple of pea…fowl who certainly are an addition to the landscape;
  as they step mincingly along the square of turf we dignify by the name of
  lawn。     The head of the house has a most languid and self…conscious strut;
  and his microscopic mind is fixed entirely on his splendid trailing tail。                  If
  I   could   only   master   his   language   sufficiently   to   tell   him   how   hideously
  ugly   the   back   view   of   this   gorgeous   fan   is;   when   he   spreads   it   for   the
  edification of the observer in front of him; he would of course retort that
  there is a 〃congregation side〃 to everything; but I should at least force him
  into a defence of his tail and a confession of its limitations。 This would be
  new and unpleasant; I fancy; and if it produced no perceptible effect upon
  his super…arrogant demeanour; I might remind him that he is likely to be
  used;   eventually;   for   a   feather   duster;   unless;   indeed;   the   Heavens   are
  superstitious and prefer  to   throw  his tail   away;  rather  than   bring ill  luck
  and the evil eye into the house。
  The longer I study the cock; whether Black Spanish; White Leghorn;
  Dorking;      or   the  common       barnyard     fowl;    the  more     intimately    I  am
  acquainted with him; the less I am impressed with his character。 He has
  more pride of bearing; and less to be proud of; than any bird I know。                    He
  is indolent; though he struts pompously over the grass as if the day were
  all too short for his onerous duties。           He calls the hens about him when I
  throw   corn   from   the   basket;   but   many   a   time   I   have   seen   him   swallow
  hurriedly;   and   in   private;   some   dainty   titbit   he   has   found   unexpectedly。
  He has no particular chivalry。          He gives no special encouragement to his
  hen   when   he   becomes   a   prospective   father;   and   renders   little   assistance
  when the responsibilities become actualities。              His only personal message
  or   contribution   to   the   world   is   his   raucous   cock…a…doodle…doo;        which;
  being uttered most frequently at dawn; is the most ill…timed and offensive
  of all musical notes。        It is so unnecessary too; as if the day didn't come
  soon enough without his warning; but I suppose he is anxious to waken his
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  hens     and   get   them    at  their   daily    task;  and    so   he  disturbs     the  entire
  community。         In short; I dislike him; his swagger; his autocratic strut; his
  greed; his irritating self…consciousness; his endless parading of himself up
  and down in a procession of one。
  Of    course     his   character     is  largely    the   result   of   polygamy。       His
  weaknesses are only what might be expected; and as for the hens; I have
  considerable respect for the patience; sobriety; and dignity with which they
  endure   an   institution   particularly   offensive   to   all   women。         In   their   case
  they   do   not   even   have   the   sustaining   thought   of   its   being   an   article   of
  religion; so they are to be complimented the more。
  There is nothing on earth so feminine as a hennot womanly; simply
  feminine。       Those   men   of   insight   who   write   the   Woman's   Page   in   the
  Sunday newspapers study hens more than women; I sometimes think; at
  any rate; their favourite types are all present on this poultry farm。
  Some   families   of   White   Leghorns   spend   most   of   their   time   in   the
  rickyard; where they look extremely pretty; their slender white shapes and
  red combs and wattles well set off by the background of golden hayricks。
  There is a great oak…tree in one corner; with a tall ladder leaning against its
  trunk; and a capital roosting…place on a long branch running at right angles
  with   the   ladder。     I   try   to   spend   a   quarter   of   an   hour   there   every   night
  before supper; just for the pleasure of seeing the feathered 〃women…folks〃
  mount that ladder。
  A  dozen   of   them   surround   the   foot;   waiting   restlessly   for   their   turn。
  One   little   white   lady   flutters   up   on   the   lowest   round   and   perches   there
  until   she   reviews   the   past;   faces   the   present;   and   forecasts   the   future;
  during     which     time    she   is  gathering     courage     for  the   next   jump。     She
  cackles; takes up one foot and then the other; tilts back and forth; holds up
  her skirts and drops them again; cocks her head nervously to see whether
  they  are   all   staring   at   her   below;   gives   half   a   dozen   preliminary  springs
  which mean nothing; declares she can't and won't go up any faster; unties
  her bonnet strings and pushes back her hair; pulls down her dress to cover
  her toes; and finally alights on the next round; swaying to and fro until she
  gains   her   equilibrium;   when   she   proceeds   to   enact   the   same   scene   over
  again。
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  All   this   time   the   hens   at   the   foot   of   the   ladder   are   criticising   her
  methods   and   exclaiming   at   the length   of time   she   requires   in   mounting;
  while   the     cocks    stroll   about   the   yard   keeping     one   eye   on   the   ladder;
  picking up a seed here and there; and giving a masculine sneer now and
  then at the too…familiar scene。            They approach the party at intervals; but
  only to remark that it always makes a man laugh to see a woman go up a
  ladder。     The     next    hen;   stirred   to  the   depths    by   this   speech;    flies   up
  entirely   too   fast;   loses   her   head;   tumbles   off   the   top   round;   and   has   to
  make the ascent over again。             Thus it goes on and on; this petite comedie
  humaine; and I could enjoy it with my whole heart if Mr。 Heaven did not
  insist on sharing the spectacle with me。                 He is so inexpressibly dull; so
  destitute   of   humour;   that   I   did   not   think   it   likely   he   would   see   in   the
  performance anything more than a flock of hens going up a ladder to roost。
  But he did; for there is no man so blind that he cannot see the follies of
  women; and; when he forgot himself so far as to utter a few genial; silly;
  well…worn   reflections   upon   femininity   at   large;   I   turned   upon   him   and
  revealed to him some of the characteristics of his own sex; gained from an
  exhaustive study of the barnyard fowl of the masculine gender。                         He went
  into the house discomfited; though chuckling a little at my vehemence; but
  at   least   I   have   made   it   for   ever   impossible   for   him   to   watch   his   hens
  without an occasional glance at the cocks。
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  CHAPTER VII
  July 12th。
  O   the   pathos   of  a  poultry   farm!    Catherine      of  Aragon;    the  black
  Spanish hen that stole her nest; brought out nine chicks this morning; and
  the   business…like   and   marble…hearted   Phoebe   has   taken   them   away   and
  given them to another hen who has only seven。                 Two mothers cannot be
  wasted on these small familiesit would not be profitable; and the older
  mother; having been tried and found faithful over seven; has been given
  the   other   nine   and   accepted    them。    What     of  the  bereft   one?    She    is
  miserable and stands about moping and forlorn; but it is no use fighting
  against the inevitable; hens' hearts must obey the same laws that govern
  the rotation of crops。       Catherine of Aragon feels her lot a bitter one just
  now; but in time she will succumb; and lay; which is more to the point。
  We   have   had   a   very   busy   evening;   beginning   with   the   rats'   supper
  delicate sandwiches of bread…and…butter spread with Paris green。
  We    have    a  new    brood    of   seventeen    ducklings     just  h