贝壳电子书 > 英文原著电子书 > a simpleton >

第66章

a simpleton-第66章

小说: a simpleton 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



when he has got money to spend。〃

In short; Reginald had played so upon her heart; that she now urged
the joint expedition; only she asked a delay of a day or two to
equip them; and steel herself to the separation。

Staines did not share those vague fears that overpowered the wife;
whose bitter experiences were unknown to him; but he felt
uncomfortable at her conditionfor now she was often in tearsand
he said all he could to comfort her; and he also advised her how to
profit by these terrible diamonds; in her way。  He pointed out to
her that her farm lay right in the road to the diamonds; yet the
traffic all shunned her; passing twenty miles to the westward。
Said he; 〃You should profit by all your resources。  You have wood;
a great rarity in Africa; order a portable forge; run up a building
where miners can sleep; another where they can feed; the grain you
have so wisely refused to sell; grind it into flour。〃

〃Dear heart! why; there's neither wind nor water to turn a mill。〃

〃But there are oxen。  I'll show you how to make an ox…mill。  Send
your Cape cart into Cape Town for iron lathes; for coffee and tea;
and groceries by the hundredweight。  The moment you are readyfor
success depends on the order in which we actthen prepare great
boards; and plant them twenty miles south。  Write or paint on them;
very large; 'The nearest way to the Diamond Mines; through Dale's
Kloof; where is excellent accommodation for man and beast。  Tea;
coffee; home…made bread; fresh butter; etc。; etc。'  Do this; and
you will soon leave off decrying diamonds。  This is the sure way to
coin them。  I myself take the doubtful way; but I can't help it。  I
am a dead man; and swift good fortune will give me life。  You can
afford to go the slower road and the surer。〃

Then he drew her a model of an ox…mill; and of a miner's dormitory;
the partitions six feet six apart; so that these very partitions
formed the bedstead; the bed…sacking being hooked to the uprights。
He drew his model for twenty bedrooms。

The portable forge and the ox…mill pleased Dick Dale most; but the
partitioned bedsteads charmed Phoebe。  She said;〃 Oh; doctor; how
can one man's head hold so many things?  If there's a man on earth
I can trust my husband with; 'tis you。  But if things go cross up
there; promise me you will come back at once and cast in your lot
with us。  We have got money and stock; and you have got headpiece;
we might do very well together。  Indeed; indeed we might。  Promise
me。  Oh; do; please; promise me!〃

〃I promise you。〃

And on this understanding; Staines and Falcon were equipped with
rifles; pickaxe; shovels; waterproofs; and full saddle…bags; and
started; with many shakings of the hand; and many tears from
Phoebe; for the diamond washings。


CHAPTER XXI。


Phoebe's tears at parting made Staines feel uncomfortable; and he
said so。

〃Pooh; pooh!〃 said Falcon; 〃crying for nothing does a woman good。〃

Christopher stared at him。

Falcon's spirits rose as they proceeded。  He was like a boy let
loose from school。  His fluency and charm of manner served;
however; to cheer a singularly dreary journey。

The travellers soon entered on a vast and forbidding region; that
wearied the eye; at their feet a dull; rusty carpet of dried grass
and wild camomile; with pale…red sand peeping through the burnt and
scanty herbage。  On the low mounds; that looked like heaps of
sifted ashes; struggled now and then into sickliness a ragged;
twisted shrub。  There were flowers too; but so sparse; that they
sparkled vainly in the colorless waste; which stretched to the
horizon。  The farmhouses were twenty miles apart; and nine out of
ten of them were new ones built by the Boers since they degenerated
into white savages: mere huts; with domed kitchens behind them。  In
the dwelling…house the whole family pigged together; with raw flesh
drying on the rafters; stinking skins in a corner; parasitical
vermin of all sorts blackening the floor; and particularly a small;
biting; and odoriferous tortoise; compared with which the insect a
London washerwoman brings into your house in her basket; is a
stroke with a featherand all this without the excuse of penury;
for many of these were shepherd kings; sheared four thousand
fleeces a year; and owned a hundred horses and horned cattle。

These Boers are compelled; by unwritten law; to receive travellers
and water their cattle; but our travellers; after one or two
experiences; ceased to trouble them; for; added to the dirt; the
men were sullen; the women moody; silent; brainless; the whole
reception churlish。  Staines detected in them an uneasy
consciousness that they had descended; in more ways than one; from
a civilized race; and the superior bearing of a European seemed to
remind them what they had been; and might have been; and were not;
so; after an attempt or two; our adventurers avoided the Boers; and
tried the Kafirs。  They found the savages socially superior; though
their moral character does not rank high。

The Kafir cabins they entered were caves; lighted only by the door;
but deliciously cool; and quite clean; the floors of puddled clay
or ants' nests; and very clean。  On entering these cool retreats;
the flies that had tormented them shirked the cool grot; and buzzed
off to the nearest farm to batten on congenial foulness。  On the
fat; round; glossy babies; not a speck of dirt; whereas the little
Boers were cakes thereof。  The Kafir would meet them at the door;
his clean black face all smiles and welcome。  The women and grown
girls would fling a spotless handkerchief over their shoulders in a
moment; and display their snowy teeth; in unaffected joy at sight
of an Englishman。

At one of these huts; one evening; they met with something St。 Paul
ranks above cleanliness even; viz。; Christianity。  A neighboring
lion had just eaten a Hottentot faute de mieux; and these good
Kafirs wanted the Europeans not to go on at night and be eaten for
dessert。  But they could not speak a word of English; and
pantomimic expression exists in theory alone。  In vain the women
held our travellers by the coat…tails; and pointed to a distant
wood。  In vain Kafir pere went on all…fours and growled sore。  But
at last a savage youth ran to the kitchenfor they never cook in
the houseand came back with a brand; and sketched; on the wall of
the hut; a lion with a mane down to the ground; and a saucer eye;
not loving。  The creature's paw rested on a hat and coat and
another fragment or two of a European。  The rest was fore…
shortened; or else eaten。

The picture completed; the females looked; approved; and raised a
dismal howl。

〃A lion on the road;〃 said Christopher gravely。

Then the undaunted Falcon seized the charcoal; and drew an
Englishman in a theatrical attitude; left foot well forward; firing
a gun; and a lion rolling head over heels like a buck rabbit; and
blood squirting out of a hole in his perforated carcass。

The savages saw; and exulted。  They were so off their guard as to
confound representation with fact; they danced round the white
warrior; and launched him to victory。

〃Aha!〃 said Falcon; 〃I took the shine out of their lion; didn't I?〃

〃You did: and once there was a sculptor who showed a lion his
marble group; a man trampling a lion; extracting his tongue; and so
on; but report says it DID NOT CONVINCE THE LION。〃

〃Why; no; a lion is not an ass。  But; for your comfort; there ARE
no lions in this part of the world。  They are myths。  There were
lions in Africa。  But now they are all at the Zoo。  And I wish I
was there too。〃

〃In what characterof a discontented animalwith every blessing?
They would not take you in; too common in England。  Hallo! this is
something new。  What lots of bushes!  We should not have much
chance with a lion here。〃

〃There ARE no lions: it is not the Zoo;〃 said Falcon; but he
spurred on faster。

The country; however; did not change its feature; bushes and little
acacias prevailed; and presently dark forms began to glide across
at intervals。

The travellers held their breath; and pushed on; but at last their
horses flagged; so they thought it best to stop and light a fire
and stand upon 

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的