登陆注册
15365100000060

第60章 I Return to My Muttons(4)

We gathered from him that this calm craft would go,as advertised,'if she got her trip;'if she didn't get it,she would wait for it.

'Has she got any of her trip?'

'Bless you,no,boss.She ain't unloadened,yit.She only come in dis mawnin'.'

He was uncertain as to when she might get her trip,but thought it might be to-morrow or maybe next day.This would not answer at all;so we had to give up the novelty of sailing down the river on a farm.

We had one more arrow in our quiver:a Vicksburg packet,the 'Gold Dust,'was to leave at 5P.M.We took passage in her for Memphis,and gave up the idea of stopping off here and there,as being impracticable.

She was neat,clean,and comfortable.We camped on the boiler deck,and bought some cheap literature to kill time with.The vender was a venerable Irishman with a benevolent face and a tongue that worked easily in the socket,and from him we learned that he had lived in St.Louis thirty-four years and had never been across the river during that period.

Then he wandered into a very flowing lecture,filled with classic names and allusions,which was quite wonderful for fluency until the fact became rather apparent that this was not the first time,nor perhaps the fiftieth,that the speech had been delivered.He was a good deal of a character,and much better company than the sappy literature he was selling.

A random remark,connecting Irishmen and beer,brought this nugget of information out of him--They don't drink it,sir.They can't drink it,sir.

Give an Irishman lager for a month,and he's a dead man.

An Irishman is lined with copper,and the beer corrodes it.

But whiskey polishes the copper and is the saving of him,sir.'

At eight o'clock,promptly,we backed out and crossed the river.

As we crept toward the shore,in the thick darkness,a blinding glory of white electric light burst suddenly from our forecastle,and lit up the water and the warehouses as with a noon-day glare.

Another big change,this--no more flickering,smoky,pitch-dripping,ineffectual torch-baskets,now:their day is past.Next,instead of calling out a score of hands to man the stage,a couple of men and a hatful of steam lowered it from the derrick where it was suspended,launched it,deposited it in just the right spot,and the whole thing was over and done with before a mate in the olden time could have got his profanity-mill adjusted to begin the preparatory services.

Why this new and simple method of handling the stages was not thought of when the first steamboat was built,is a mystery which helps one to realize what a dull-witted slug the average human being is.

We finally got away at two in the morning,and when I turned out at six,we were rounding to at a rocky point where there was an old stone warehouse--at any rate,the ruins of it;two or three decayed dwelling-houses were near by,in the shelter of the leafy hills;but there were no evidences of human or other animal life to be seen.

I wondered if I had forgotten the river;for I had no recollection whatever of this place;the shape of the river,too,was unfamiliar;there was nothing in sight,anywhere,that I could remember ever having seen before.

I was surprised,disappointed,and annoyed.

We put ashore a well-dressed lady and gentleman,and two well-dressed,lady-like young girls,together with sundry Russia-leather bags.

A strange place for such folk!No carriage was waiting.

The party moved off as if they had not expected any,and struck down a winding country road afoot.

But the mystery was explained when we got under way again;for these people were evidently bound for a large town which lay shut in behind a tow-head (i.e.,new island)a couple of miles below this landing.I couldn't remember that town;I couldn't place it,couldn't call its name.So I lost part of my temper.

I suspected that it might be St.Genevieve--and so it proved to be.Observe what this eccentric river had been about:

it had built up this huge useless tow-head directly in front of this town,cut off its river communications,fenced it away completely,and made a 'country'town of it.

It is a fine old place,too,and deserved a better fate.

It was settled by the French,and is a relic of a time when one could travel from the mouths of the Mississippi to Quebec and be on French territory and under French rule all the way.

Presently I ascended to the hurricane deck and cast a longing glance toward the pilot-house.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 走向历史诗学

    走向历史诗学

    本书为国内第一部较系统、全面、深入研究美国后现代历史学家海登·怀特文艺学思想内涵的专著。作者共分八章一绪论对其展开论述。从其历史诗学的提出背景开始梳理,到诗学与历史诗学的界定、事件与故事的分野,再到故事解释的三种模式分析、历史诗学视野里的海登·怀特的描述,最后提出期待与展望。
  • 又何处

    又何处

    总之就是一个老妖怪如何诱哄小狐狸投入怀抱的故事
  • 冷日子 暖日子

    冷日子 暖日子

    《冷日子暖日子》是裘山山的散文作品集。作品曾获得鲁迅文学奖,中国人民解放军文艺奖,冰心散文奖,四川省文学奖,巴蜀文艺奖、《小说月报》百花奖,以及夏衍电影文学剧本奖等若干奖励,现为成都军区《西南军事文学》主编。《冷日子暖日子》收录了《数字化决定》、《滞后的人生》、《我的教师生涯》、《有儿自远方归来》、《大声咳嗽》等作品。
  • 机器人男友,别乱来

    机器人男友,别乱来

    “啊,流星!”躺在山坡的草地上欣赏夜空的某女,激动地跳了起来,张臂大呼:“天啊——请赐给我一个美男吧!”“嘭——”星光投射而下,原本兴奋的某女华丽丽的晕了过去,请注意,不是兴奋晕的,而是被砸晕的……从那之后,某女的生活中多了个不同于人类的物种,机器人,而且是面容俊美到极致的某只!怎么说呢,此种机器人身体里有高级芯片,几乎与人类无异!学习能力超强!比如说,某女正忙着往洗衣机里扔衣服,某男勾起粉色内衣,不耻下问,“这是什么?”某女咬牙,“……衣服!”某男不解:“穿给我看看!”
  • 笑猫日记之云朵上的学校

    笑猫日记之云朵上的学校

    马小跳的表妹杜真子有一只猫,他会笑。还记得吗?看QQ阅读没有才发的,别质疑我是盗版的,杨红樱阿姨的正版好么?
  • 婚后相爱:首席的神秘娇妻

    婚后相爱:首席的神秘娇妻

    一次乌龙相亲,让不该相遇的人相遇了。对他来说,她不过是一个让他感兴趣的女人。但是却慢慢的霸占他的心。他把她禁锢在自己的身边,用最霸道的爱去对待她,但是她依然冷漠对待,最后还是两败俱伤。她坐上回京都的飞机,透过窗看外面的云层,喃喃的说:顾淮远,你从来不知道,我其实在赌一场奋不顾身的爱情。说完就下意识摸了自己的肚子。
  • 有个傻瓜爱过你

    有个傻瓜爱过你

    契约婚姻不奇怪,可是三份契约下的婚姻,你见过吗? 洛乔芮从来没有想过如此倒霉的事情会落在她的身上,刚刚感情触礁,还来不及伤心,更大的麻烦就接踵而至,家族生意岌岌可危,父亲受不了打击已经入院.好在天生好运,Qyoyo集团的董事长向她抛来了橄榄枝,但条件却是让她嫁给自己的儿子,一个在外貌、学识,品味、才能……上都无可挑剔的——哑巴! 三个人抱着各自的目的签下了三份不同的契约,限期五年……
  • 我的青春是把刀

    我的青春是把刀

    但愿有来生,我也生在帝王家,高头大马,号令天下,许你一身嫁衣红霞。“于以凡,你是欺我梁家没有一个伊祁青丝吗?那我梁婉蝶这一命,是否可换你对梁家一次的枉开一面?”梁婉蝶嘴角带着一丝鲜血,眼眸深处带着说不清道不明的情绪。谁指间的漏掉的细沙,经风吹起,勾勒出整个天涯。我将所有的苦涩放在这幅画中,等你来,等故事花开。我要你在岁月中守着一纸承诺,我不来,你岂敢老?
  • 宋二姑娘择婿记

    宋二姑娘择婿记

    苏府二房四个正当龄的娇女儿自穷乡僻野上京城寻佳婿。侯府的少爷,国公府的世子,还有金榜提名的进士纷纷登场。何处有佳婿,又何人是良配。多少人爱你年轻欢畅的时辰,和你的美丽,假意或真心。而又是谁,会爱上你。
  • 都市双龙

    都市双龙

    宅男黑客遇到了超能大叔,解锁生命最终程序,美丽校花,逗比女刺客纷纷落网......青春校园,热血都市,异能争锋!