登陆注册
15448800000016

第16章 CHAPTER IV(2)

All you can see from the bed is a confused tangle of waving arms and legs, suggestive of an intoxicated octopus trying to find bottom. Not a word is spoken; that seems to be the etiquette of the thing. If you are sleeping in your pyjamas, you spring from the bed, and only add to the confusion; if you are wearing a less showy garment, you stop where you are and shout commands, which are utterly unheeded. The simplest plan is to leave it to the eldest boy. He does get them out after a while, and closes the door upon them. It re-opens immediately, and one, generally Muriel, is shot back into the room. She enters as from a catapult. She is handicapped by having long hair, which can be used as a convenient handle. Evidently aware of this natural disadvantage, she clutches it herself tightly in one hand, and punches with the other. He opens the door again, and cleverly uses her as a battering-ram against the wall of those without. You can hear the dull crash as her head enters among them, and scatters them. When the victory is complete, he comes back and resumes his seat on the bed. There is no bitterness about him; he has forgotten the whole incident.

"I like the morning," he says, "don't you?"

"Some mornings," you agree, "are all right; others are not so peaceful."

He takes no notice of your exception; a far-away look steals over his somewhat ethereal face.

"I should like to die in the morning," he says; "everything is so beautiful then."

"Well," you answer, "perhaps you will, if your father ever invites an irritable man to come and sleep here, and doesn't warn him beforehand."

He descends from his contemplative mood, and becomes himself again.

"It's jolly in the garden," he suggests; "you wouldn't like to get up and have a game of cricket, would you?"

It was not the idea with which you went to bed, but now, as things have turned out, it seems as good a plan as lying there hopelessly awake; and you agree.

You learn, later in the day, that the explanation of the proceeding is that you, unable to sleep, woke up early in the morning, and thought you would like a game of cricket. The children, taught to be ever courteous to guests, felt it their duty to humour you.

Mrs. Harris remarks at breakfast that at least you might have seen to it that the children were properly dressed before you took them out; while Harris points out to you, pathetically, how, by your one morning's example and encouragement, you have undone his labour of months.

On this Wednesday morning, George, it seems, clamoured to get up at a quarter-past five, and persuaded them to let him teach them cycling tricks round the cucumber frames on Harris's new wheel.

Even Mrs. Harris, however, did not blame George on this occasion; she felt intuitively the idea could not have been entirely his.

It is not that the Harris children have the faintest notion of avoiding blame at the expense of a friend and comrade. One and all they are honesty itself in accepting responsibility for their own misdeeds. It simply is, that is how the thing presents itself to their understanding. When you explain to them that you had no original intention of getting up at five o'clock in the morning to play cricket on the croquet lawn, or to mimic the history of the early Church by shooting with a cross-bow at dolls tied to a tree; that as a matter of fact, left to your own initiative, you would have slept peacefully till roused in Christian fashion with a cup of tea at eight, they are firstly astonished, secondly apologetic, and thirdly sincerely contrite. In the present instance, waiving the purely academic question whether the awakening of George at a little before five was due to natural instinct on his part, or to the accidental passing of a home-made boomerang through his bedroom window, the dear children frankly admitted that the blame for his uprising was their own. As the eldest boy said:

"We ought to have remembered that Uncle George had a long day, before him, and we ought to have dissuaded him from getting up. I blame myself entirely."

But an occasional change of habit does nobody any harm; and besides, as Harris and I agreed, it was good training for George.

In the Black Forest we should be up at five every morning; that we had determined on. Indeed, George himself had suggested half-past four, but Harris and I had argued that five would be early enough as an average; that would enable us to be on our machines by six, and to break the back of our journey before the heat of the day set in. Occasionally we might start a little earlier, but not as a habit.

I myself was up that morning at five. This was earlier than I had intended. I had said to myself on going to sleep, "Six o'clock, sharp!"

There are men I know who can wake themselves at any time to the minute. They say to themselves literally, as they lay their heads upon the pillow, "Four-thirty," "Four-forty-five," or "Five-fifteen," as the case may be; and as the clock strikes they open their eyes. It is very wonderful this; the more one dwells upon it, the greater the mystery grows. Some Ego within us, acting quite independently of our conscious self, must be capable of counting the hours while we sleep. Unaided by clock or sun, or any other medium known to our five senses, it keeps watch through the darkness. At the exact moment it whispers "Time!" and we awake.

The work of an old riverside fellow I once talked with called him to be out of bed each morning half an hour before high tide. He told me that never once had he overslept himself by a minute.

Latterly, he never even troubled to work out the tide for himself.

He would lie down tired, and sleep a dreamless sleep, and each morning at a different hour this ghostly watchman, true as the tide itself, would silently call him. Did the man's spirit haunt through the darkness the muddy river stairs; or had it knowledge of the ways of Nature? Whatever the process, the man himself was unconscious of it.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 冰融化了

    冰融化了

    她堂堂慕容集团的掌上明珠,为了体验校园生活扮丑进入铭尚高中遇见了他,一个冷若冰霜,不相信有纯真的爱情。。。。。。他们之间会发生什么事情。。。。。。敬请期待PS:这是我写的第一本小说,请大家多多关注,多多支持!!!
  • 极品腐女,邪魅王爷绝色妻

    极品腐女,邪魅王爷绝色妻

    21世纪腐女一枚,因为一本书而穿越,不料却是从天上掉了下来,还掉在了妖孽邪王身上,遇到了自己喜欢的男神。是要男神还是要王爷还是一起收了比较好!某沫“小诺,你说那俩妖孽,谁攻谁受?”某诺“小沫,俗话说'两攻必有一受,两受必有一攻'。”旁边的两位妖孽般的男子看着她俩,眼底尽显宠溺。但是接下来的话其中一位就有些不淡定了。某诺小声嘟囔“其实我觉得你那位挺攻的。“某妖孽“诺儿,难道你夫君我一点也不攻?嗯?”某诺“怎...么会!你最攻!”某妖孽一把扛起某诺,留给另外两人一道潇洒的背影“不攻没关系,你夫君是专门攻你的!”某邪王效仿前面那位,一把公主抱抱起某沫“小沫儿,觉得我攻否?”某沫“绝对是,攻...”
  • 神眼剑狂风

    神眼剑狂风

    这是争霸热血的世界,这是天骄挥舞群雄纷争的乱世,这是血与火交织的残酷大道,这是至强者才能够卓立的绝巅,这是问鼎仙道的盛世!来自最末的家族少年,觉醒了隐藏体内的血脉,开启神眼,从此,世界因此震荡!一艘幽灵船,满载罪恶,怀着无以尽述的复杂心情,他,要通过最大的考验重临故地!
  • 有剑鸣山

    有剑鸣山

    梦回往事伫残阳,当时只道是寻常。而今沉浮几何载,笑叹风云已沧桑。曾有一人西去,俯首埋头;后见一剑东来,乘风破浪,响八荒。故去矣,万事休,江湖不过一隅尔!有剑鸣山,开天门,斩天仙!PS:什么时候居然让自己做封面了,也是够了,不好看多担待!
  • 盛装下的苍凉:宋帝国

    盛装下的苍凉:宋帝国

    本书包括半部《论语》治天下——赵普的宦海沉浮、君臣雪夜谋天下——先南后北战略的形成与实施、良驹亦有失蹄时——名相寇准的败笔等内容。
  • 妖孽妹妹:我的全系魔法师哥哥

    妖孽妹妹:我的全系魔法师哥哥

    她:杀人不眨眼的女魔头——北婼玥,被人人惧怕,却不知八年前她为了她的哥哥甘愿与黑暗为伍,与光明对抗,他:绿眸金发全系魔法少年——北墨寒,八年前宠他的妹妹宠的入骨,却不知他对她早已情根深种,更因为他宠的入骨的妹妹失踪,他因此一蹶不振;再次相见,他是整个魔夏帝都的王者,她——是被人人惧怕甚至听到名字都要跑回家把门窗关的紧紧的女魔头,他们的相恋究竟是一副感动上苍的美好画卷,还是……一首哀歌戚戚的虐恋情殇
  • 尘世笔录

    尘世笔录

    这是由多个小说组成的一本书,你可以认真看。
  • 拾道者

    拾道者

    这是一个武者的世界,一个丧失记忆的少年,不断的在寻找记忆的过程,却触发了自己截然不同的命运。一个个惊天谜团,逐渐展开……他是棋子,还是下棋的人?
  • 附身鬼全录

    附身鬼全录

    鬼皇苏醒,十八层地狱之门随之大开,各路恶鬼蜂拥人界,其中拥有附身之法的恶鬼尤为强大。为保人界太平,鬼神与恶鬼之间的斗争展开了,而杜羽,一个平凡的学生,却无意间卷入了这场战争,成为了一个特立独行的鬼神……
  • 不作不死不青春

    不作不死不青春

    哥哥因车祸去世,我和我嫂子住在了一起,每个夜晚里,她都会教我怎么才能做一个“真正的男人”……