第 2 节
作者:丁格      更新:2021-02-21 10:34      字数:9322
  ghost with a snuff…box that does not creak。               〃There; Goody; take of my
  rappee。     You will not sneeze; and I shall not say 'God bless you。'                  But
  you will think kindly of old Queen Charlotte; won't you?                   Ah!     I had a
  many troubles; a many troubles。            I was a prisoner almost so much as you
  are。    I had to eat boiled mutton every day:            entre nous; I abominated it。
  But I never complained。          I swallowed it。      I made the best of a hard life。
  We have all our burdens to bear。            But hark!      I hear the cock…crow; and
  snuff   the   morning   air。〃    And   with   this   the   royal   ghost   vanishes   up   the
  chimney      if   there   be   a   chimney   in   that   dismal   harem;   where   poor   old
  Twoshoes and her companions pass their nights  their dreary nights; their
  restless nights; their cold long nights; shared in what glum companionship;
  illumined by what a feeble taper!
  〃Did   I   understand   you;   my   good Twoshoes;   to   say  that   your   mother
  was seven…and…twenty years old when you were born; and that she married
  your esteemed father when she herself was twenty…five? 1745; then; was
  the date of your dear mother's birth。            I daresay her father was absent in
  the   Low   Countries;   with   his   Royal   Highness   the   Duke   of   Cumberland;
  under     whom     he  had   the  honour     of  carrying    a  halberd   at  the  famous
  engagement of Fontenoy  or if not there; he may have been at Preston
  Pans;   under   General   Sir   John   Cope;   when   the   wild   Highlanders   broke
  through all the laws of discipline and the English lines;             and; being on the
  spot; did he see the famous ghost which didn't appear to Colonel Gardner
  of the   Dragoons?       My good   creature; is it possible   you don't   remember
  that Doctor Swift; Sir Robert Walpole (my Lord Orford; as you justly say);
  old Sarah Marlborough; and little Mr Pope; of Twitnam; died in the year of
  your birth?      What a wretched memory you have!                What? haven't they a
  library; and the commonest books of reference at the old convent of Saint
  Lazarus; where you dwell?〃
  〃Convent of Saint Lazarus; Prince William; Dr Swift; Atossa; and Mr
  Pope; of Twitnam!         What is the gentleman talking about?〃 says old goody;
  with a 〃Ho! ho!〃 and a laugh like a old parrot  you know they live to be
  5
  … Page 6…
  Some Roundabout Papers
  as    old   as   Methuselah;       parrots    do;   and    a  parrot    of   a  hundred      is
  comparatively   young   (ho!   ho!   ho!)。        Yes;   and   likewise   carps   live   to   an
  immense old age。         Some which Frederick the Great fed at Sans Souci are
  there now; with great humps of blue mould on their old backs;                      and they
  could tell all sorts of queer stories; if they chose to speak  but they are
  very silent; carps are  of their nature peu communicatives。 Oh! what has
  been thy long life; old goody; but a dole of bread and water and a perch on
  a cage;     a dreary swim round and round a Lethe of a pond?                      What are
  Rossbach       or  Jena    to  those   mouldy      ones;   and   do   they   know     it  is  a
  grandchild of England who brings bread to feed them?
  No!     Those Sans Souci carps may live to be a thousand years old and
  have nothing to tell but that one day is like another;                 and the history of
  friend   Goody   Twoshoes   has   not   much   more   variety   than   theirs。          Hard
  labour; hard fare; hard bed; numbing cold all night; and gnawing hunger
  most   days。     That   is   her   lot。 Is   it   lawful   in   my   prayers   to   say;   〃Thank
  heaven; I am not as one of these〃?              If I were eighty; would I like to feel
  the hunger always gnawing; gnawing? to have to get up and make a bow
  when Mr Bumble the beadle entered the common room? to have to listen
  to   Miss   Prim;   who   came   to   give   me   her   ideas   of   the   next   world? If   I
  were     eighty;   I  own    I  should    not  like   to  have    to  sleep   with   another
  gentleman of my own age; gouty; a bad sleeper; kicking in his old dreams;
  and    snoring;    to  march    down     my   vale   of   years   at  word    of  command;
  accommodating   my   tottering   old   steps   to   those   of   the   other   prisoners   in
  my dingy; hopeless old gang;             to hold out a trembling hand for a sickly
  pittance of gruel; and say; 〃Thank you; ma'am;〃 to Miss Prim; when she
  has   done   reading   her   sermon。   John!   when   Goody Twoshoes   comes   next
  Friday;   I   desire   she   may   not   be   disturbed   by   theological   controversies。
  You have a fair voice; and I heard you and the maids singing a hymn very
  sweetly   the     other   night;   and   was   thankful   that   our   humble     household
  should be in such harmony。             Poor old Twoshoes is so old and toothless
  and quaky; that she can't sing a bit;          but don't be giving yourself airs over
  her;   because   she   can't   sing   and   you   can。  Make   her   comfortable   at   our
  kitchen   hearth。     Set   that   old   kettle   to   sing   by   our   hob。 Warm   her   old
  stomach with nut…brown ale and a toast laid in the fire。                   Be kind to the
  6
  … Page 7…
  Some Roundabout Papers
  poor old school…girl of ninety; who has had leave to come out for a day of
  Christmas      holiday。     Shall    there   be  many     more    Christmases      for  thee?
  Think   of   the   ninety   she   has   seen   already;   the   fourscore   and   ten   cold;
  cheerless; nipping New Years!
  If   you   were   in   her   place;   would   you   like   to   have   a   remembrance   of
  better early days; when you were young and happy; and loving; perhaps;
  or   would   you   prefer   to   have   no   past   on   which   your   mind   could   rest?
  About the year 1788; Goody; were your cheeks rosy; and your eyes bright;
  and did some   young fellow in   powder and   a pigtail look   in them?                   We
  may grow old; but to   us some stories never   are old。                On a sudden  they
  rise   up;   not   dead;   but   living      not   forgotten;   but   freshly   remembered。
  The eyes gleam on us as they used to do。                 The dear voice thrills in our
  hearts。    The rapture of the meeting; the terrible; terrible parting; again and
  again the tragedy is acted over。            Yesterday; in the street; I saw a pair of
  eyes so like two which used to brighten at my coming once; that the whole
  past   came   back   as   I   walked   lonely;   in   the   rush of the   Strand; and   I   was
  young again in the midst of joys and sorrows; alike sweet and sad; alike
  sacred and fondly remembered。
  If I tell a tale out of school; will any harm come to my old school…girl?
  Once; a lady gave her a half…sovereign; which was a source of great pain
  and   anxiety   to   Goody   Twoshoes。         She   sewed   it   away   in   her   old   stays
  somewhere; thinking here at least was a safe investment  (vestis  a vest
  an investment;  pardon me; thou poor old thing; but I cannot help the
  pleasantry)。      And     what    do   you    think?    Another      pensionnaire      of  the
  establishment cut the coin out of Goody's stays  an old woman who went
  upon two   crutches!        Faugh; the old   witch!        What?       Violence   amongst
  these toothless; tottering; trembling; feeble ones?               Robbery amongst the
  penniless?      Dogs coming and snatching Lazarus's crumbs out of his lap?
  Ah;   how   indignant   Goody   was   as   she   told   the   story!     To   that   pond   at
  Potsdam   where   the   carps   live   for   hundreds   of   hundreds   of   years;   with
  hunches      of  blue   mould     on  their   back;   I  daresay    the  little  Prince   and
  Princess of Preussen…Britannien come sometimes with crumbs and cakes
  to feed the mouldy ones。 Those eyes may have goggled from beneath the
  weeds at Napoleon's jack…boots:             they have seen Frederick's lean shanks
  7
  … Page 8…
  Some Roundabout Papers
  reflected in their pool;        and perhaps Monsieur de Voltaire has fed them;
  and now for a crumb of biscuit they will fight; push; hustle; rob; squabble;
  gobble; relapsing into their tranquillity when the ignoble struggle is over。
  Sans souci; indeed!         It is mighty well writing 〃Sans souci〃 over the gate;
  but where is the gate through which Care has not slipped?                     She perches
  on the shoulders of the sentry i