第 22 节
作者:双曲线      更新:2021-04-30 17:21      字数:9322
  somewhere to the east。          How he had done it I can never guess。                That is
  his secret。
  The tenderfoot is always in hard luck。             Apparently; too; by all tests of
  analysis it is nothing but luck; pure chance; misfortune。                And yet the very
  persistence of it in his case; where another escapes; perhaps indicates that
  much   of   what   we   call   good   luck    is   in   reality   unconscious   skill   in   the
  arrangement         of   those    elements     which     go   to  make     up   events。     A
  persistently   unlucky   man   is   perhaps   sometimes   to   be        pitied;   but   more
  often to be booted。        That philosophy         will be cryingly unjust about once
  in ten。
  But    lucky    or  unlucky;     the   tenderfoot    is  human。      Ordinarily      that
  doesn't occur to you。         He is a malevolent engine of destructionquite as
  impersonal as heat or cold or lack of water。               He is an unfortunate article
  of   personal   belonging   requiring   much   looking          after   to   keep   in   order。
  He is a credulous and          convenient response to practical jokes; huge tales;
  misinformation。          He     is   a   laudable     object    of    attrition     for    the
  development of your character。             But somehow;         in the woods; he is not
  as other men; and so you do             not come to feel yourself in close human
  relations to him。
  But Algernon   is   real;  nevertheless。        He  has   feelings;  even if   you   do
  not   respect   them。     He   has   his   little   enjoyments;   even   though   he   does
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  rarely contemplate anything but the horn of his saddle。
  〃Algernon;〃 you cry; 〃for heaven's sake stick that saddle of yours in a
  glass   case   and glut   yourself   with the sight of   its   ravishing beauties   next
  WINTER。         For the present do gaze on the mountains。               That's what you
  came for。〃
  No use。
  He has; doubtless; a full range of all the appreciative emotions; though
  from     his  actions    you'd    never   suspect     it。   Most      human     of  all;  he
  possesses his little vanities。
  Algernon      always    overdoes     the  equipment      question。    If   it  is  bird…
  shooting;   he   accumulates   leggings   and   canvas   caps   and   belts   and   dog…
  whistles and things until he looks like a picture from a department…store
  catalogue。      In   the   cow   country  he   wears   Stetson   hats;   snake   bands;   red
  handkerchiefs; six…shooters; chaps; and huge spurs that do not match his
  face。    If it is yachting; he has a chronometer with a gong in the cabin of a
  five…ton sailboat; possesses a nickle…plated machine to register the heel of
  his craft; sports a brass…bound yachting…cap and all the regalia。                  This is
  merely  amusing。        But   I   never   could   understand his   insane   desire   to   get
  sunburned。       A man will get sunburned fast enough; he could not help it if
  he would。      Algernon usually starts out from town without                a hat。    Then
  he dares not take off his sweater for a week lest it carry away his entire
  face。    I   have   seen   men   with   deep   sores   on   their   shoulders   caused   by
  nothing but excessive burning in the sun。              This; too; is merely amusing。
  It   means   quite   simply   that   Algernon   realizes   his   inner   deficiencies   and
  wants to make up for them by the outward seeming。                   Be kind to him; for
  he has been raised a pet。
  The tenderfoot is lovablemysterious in how he does itand awfully
  unexpected。
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  XII
  THE CANON
  One day we tied our horses to three bushes; and walked               on foot two
  hundred yards。      Then we looked down。
  It was nearly four thousand feet down。          Do you realize how far that is?
  There   was   a   river   meandering   through   olive…colored   forests。   It   was   so
  distant that it was light green and as narrow as a piece of tape。            Here and
  there were rapids; but so remote that we could not distinguish the motion
  of them; only the color。        The white resembled tiny dabs of cotton wool
  stuck on the tape。      It turned and twisted; following the turns and twists of
  the canon。     Somehow the level at the bottom resembled less forests and
  meadows than a heavy and sluggish fluid like molasses flowing between
  the canon walls。      It emerged from the bend of a sheer cliff ten miles to
  eastward: it disappeared placidly around the bend of another sheer cliff an
  equal distance to the westward。
  The   time   was   afternoon。    As   we   watched;   the   shadow  of   the   canon
  wall darkened the valley。       Whereupon we looked up。
  Now the upper   air;  of   which   we were dwellers   for the   moment;  was
  peopled by giants and clear         atmosphere and glittering sunlight; flashing
  like   silver   and   steel   and   precious   stones   from  the   granite   domes;   peaks;
  minarets; and palisades of the High Sierras。          Solid as they were in reality;
  in   the  crispness   of  this  mountain    air;  under   the  tangible   blue  of  this
  mountain sky; they seemed to poise light as so many balloons。                Some of
  them   rose   sheer;   with   hardly   a   fissure; some    had   flung   across   their
  shoulders     long   trailing  pine    draperies;    fine  as   fur;  others  matched
  mantles     of  the    whitest    white   against    the  bluest   blue   of  the   sky。
  Towards the lower country were more pines rising in              ridges; like the fur
  of an animal that has been alarmed。
  We dangled our feet over the edge and talked about it。               Wes pointed
  to the upper end where the sluggish lava…like           flow of the canon…bed first
  came into view。
  〃That's where we'll camp;〃 said he。
  〃When?〃 we asked。
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  〃When we get there;〃 he answered。
  For this canon lies in the heart of the mountains。              Those who would
  visit it have first to get into the countrya matter of over a week。                 Then
  they have their choice of three probabilities of destruction。
  The first route comprehends two final days of travel at an altitude of
  about ten thousand feet; where the snow lies in midsummer; where there is
  no   feed;   no   comfort;   and   the   way   is   strewn   with   the   bones   of   horses。
  This is known as the 〃Basin Trail。〃           After taking it; you prefer the others…
  …until you try them。
  The    finish   of  the   second    route   is  directly   over   the  summit     of   a
  mountain。       You climb two thousand feet and then drop down five。                   The
  ascent is heart… breaking but safe。         The descent is hair…raising and unsafe:
  no profanity can do justice to it。         Out of a pack…train of thirty mules; nine
  were lost in the course of that five thousand feet。            Legend has it that once
  many years ago certain prospectors took in a Chinese cook。                    At first the
  Mongolian   bewailed   his   fate   loudly   and   fluently;   but   later   settled   to   a
  single   terrified   moan   that   sounded   like   〃tu…ne…mah!   tu…ne…   mah!〃       The
  trail was therefore named the 〃Tu…ne… mah Trail。〃                 It is said that 〃tu…ne…
  mah〃 is the very worst single vituperation of which the Chinese language
  is capable。
  The third route is called 〃Hell's Half Mile。〃           It is not misnamed。
  Thus     like  paradise    the   canon    is  guarded;    but   like  paradise    it  is
  wondrous in delight。         For when you descend you find that the tape…wide
  trickle    of  water   seen   from    above    has   become     a  river  with    profound
  darkling pools and placid stretches and swift dashing rapids; that the dark
  green sluggish flow in the canon…bed has disintegrated into a noble forest
  with great pine…trees; and shaded aisles; and deep dank thickets; and brush
  openings where the sun is warm and the birds are cheerful; and groves of
  cottonwoods where all day long softly; like snow; the flakes of cotton float
  down   through   the   air。     Moreover   there   are   meadows;   spacious   lawns;
  opening out; closing in; winding here and there through the groves in the
  manner of spilled naphtha; actually waist high with green feed; sow