登陆注册
15448800000028

第28章 CHAPTER VI(3)

The boy does not call his master "froggy," or "sausage," nor prepare for the French or English hour any exhibition of homely wit whatever. He just sits there, and for his own sake tries to learn that foreign tongue with as little trouble to everybody concerned as possible. When he has left school he can talk, not about penknives and gardeners and aunts merely, but about European politics, history, Shakespeare, or the musical glasses, according to the turn the conversation may take.

Viewing the German people from an Anglo-Saxon standpoint, it may be that in this book I shall find occasion to criticise them: but on the other hand there is much that we might learn from them; and in the matter of common sense, as applied to education, they can give us ninety-nine in a hundred and beat us with one hand.

The beautiful wood of the Eilenriede bounds Hanover on the south and west, and here occurred a sad drama in which Harris took a prominent part.

We were riding our machines through this wood on the Monday afternoon in the company of many other cyclists, for it is a favourite resort with the Hanoverians on a sunny afternoon, and its shady pathways are then filled with happy, thoughtless folk. Among them rode a young and beautiful girl on a machine that was new.

She was evidently a novice on the bicycle. One felt instinctively that there would come a moment when she would require help, and Harris, with his accustomed chivalry, suggested we should keep near her. Harris, as he occasionally explains to George and to myself, has daughters of his own, or, to speak more correctly, a daughter, who as the years progress will no doubt cease practising catherine wheels in the front garden, and will grow up into a beautiful and respectable young lady. This naturally gives Harris an interest in all beautiful girls up to the age of thirty-five or thereabouts; they remind him, so he says, of home.

We had ridden for about two miles, when we noticed, a little ahead of us in a space where five ways met, a man with a hose, watering the roads. The pipe, supported at each joint by a pair of tiny wheels, writhed after him as he moved, suggesting a gigantic-worm, from whose open neck, as the man, gripping it firmly in both hands, pointing it now this way, and now that, now elevating it, now depressing it, poured a strong stream of water at the rate of about a gallon a second.

"What a much better method than ours," observed Harris, enthusiastically. Harris is inclined to be chronically severe on all British institutions. "How much simpler, quicker, and more economical! You see, one man by this method can in five minutes water a stretch of road that would take us with our clumsy lumbering cart half an hour to cover."

George, who was riding behind me on the tandem, said, "Yes, and it is also a method by which with a little carelessness a man could cover a good many people in a good deal less time than they could get out of the way."

George, the opposite to Harris, is British to the core. I remember George quite patriotically indignant with Harris once for suggesting the introduction of the guillotine into England.

"It is so much neater," said Harris.

"I don't care if it is," said George; "I'm an Englishman; hanging is good enough for me."

"Our water-cart may have its disadvantages," continued George, "but it can only make you uncomfortable about the legs, and you can avoid it. This is the sort of machine with which a man can follow you round the corner and upstairs."

"It fascinates me to watch them," said Harris. "They are so skilful. I have seen a man from the corner of a crowded square in Strassburg cover every inch of ground, and not so much as wet an apron string. It is marvellous how they judge their distance.

They will send the water up to your toes, and then bring it over your head so that it falls around your heels. They can--"

"Ease up a minute," said George. I said: "Why?"

He said: "I am going to get off and watch the rest of this show from behind a tree. There may be great performers in this line, as Harris says; this particular artist appears to me to lack something. He has just soused a dog, and now he's busy watering a sign-post. I am going to wait till he has finished."

"Nonsense," said Harris; "he won't wet you."

"That is precisely what I am going to make sure of," answered George, saying which he jumped off, and, taking up a position behind a remarkably fine elm, pulled out and commenced filling his pipe.

I did not care to take the tandem on by myself, so I stepped off and joined him, leaving the machine against a tree. Harris shouted something or other about our being a disgrace to the land that gave us birth, and rode on.

The next moment I heard a woman's cry of distress. Glancing round the stem of the tree, I perceived that it proceeded from the young and elegant lady before mentioned, whom, in our interest concerning the road-waterer, we had forgotten. She was riding her machine steadily and straightly through a drenching shower of water from the hose. She appeared to be too paralysed either to get off or turn her wheel aside. Every instant she was becoming wetter, while the man with the hose, who was either drunk or blind, continued to pour water upon her with utter indifference. A dozen voices yelled imprecations upon him, but he took no heed whatever.

Harris, his fatherly nature stirred to its depths, did at this point what, under the circumstances, was quite the right and proper thing to do. Had he acted throughout with the same coolness and judgment he then displayed, he would have emerged from that incident the hero of the hour, instead of, as happened, riding away followed by insult and threat. Without a moment's hesitation he spurted at the man, sprang to the ground, and, seizing the hose by the nozzle, attempted to wrest it away.

同类推荐
  • 非十二子

    非十二子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 台湾文献丛刊南明史料

    台湾文献丛刊南明史料

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 程杏轩医案

    程杏轩医案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 外科理例

    外科理例

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 度世品经

    度世品经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 秦情惊梦

    秦情惊梦

    一个宅女因一场车祸穿越到七国时代成为一国的公主,之后被迫与秦国和亲在后宫找到真爱
  • 追寻的尽头

    追寻的尽头

    未来世界,新世纪初,科技与经济的极速发展,让人类沉浸在和平与幸福的梦乡之中,无法自拔!随着新旧势力的更替,FU与帝国之间的矛盾日益增加,终于,在1060年7月21日,在奥拉多伦卡,一场由矛盾引发的无辜战争爆发了,这个蔚蓝色的星球又一次迎来了生死存亡的危机时刻......
  • 火影之叶舞传奇

    火影之叶舞传奇

    木叶8年,38岁的二代火影千手扉间创立了专门集中教授忍者技能的学校,第一届招收38名学生。他们每个人都是出身寒微的平民,却在忍界的征战长河里创下了不世威名。“有树叶飞舞的地方,火就会燃烧。今赐予汝等‘叶舞’之名!”二代火影的这句话成为了他们行动的源动力。为了守护他们自己心中平民式的和平理想,组成了“叶舞”这个木叶特别行动队的38个平民出身的首届学生,却在忍界的历史长河中铸就了一段伟大的传奇故事。原创同人故事,根植于严谨和绝对官方的资料设定及漫画原著,致力打造木叶黎明时期的战火纷飞的真实忍界和塑造有血有肉的鲜活人物。创作在世界观上依据原著,剧情内容想象原创,而非“世界观自我臆想、剧情照抄原著”。写同人、看同人,要超越同人的境界。君卓第二本同人作品,品质保障。“三无火影同人”第二本作品。
  • 天武奇

    天武奇

    新书《宇宙修行传》已经发布,这次一定会有始有终写一本好看的玄幻作品。《宇宙修行传》,浩瀚无边的宇宙,亿万星球组成一个庞大的修炼界,主角开始了一场宇宙修行的征途。前所未有的浩瀚宇宙视野,一颗颗光怪离陆的星球,星球上强者争鸣,巨兽横行,精彩目不暇接!
  • TFBOYS之浅若安夏

    TFBOYS之浅若安夏

    她从小就喜欢那个梨涡少年,可他却一直把她当妹妹看。一次次的伤心,慢慢地,她在两个男孩的陪伴下放下了他。一个是从小陪她长大的虎牙少年,另一个是陪她打打闹闹的薄荷音少年,她的感情,究竟该何去何从.....如果可以,我想重新认识你,从你叫什么名字开始
  • 玛娜赞歌

    玛娜赞歌

    一颗名为『玛娜』的美丽而平凡的星球上来了一堆魔法元素旅游。从此人类学会了魔法。伊凡却只学会了尿床。某天,伊凡小盆友睁着懵懂双眼问自家的便宜老妈,为什么不教伊凡魔法呢?老妈表示你丫的天生就是个魔法废材,学毛学,把你昨天打碎的那颗夜明珠给老娘粘好,否则不许吃饭。伊凡很好奇夜明珠安好后还能夜明么?
  • 倾仙恋:浪漫江湖游

    倾仙恋:浪漫江湖游

    第一次见面,她就非礼他的胸部,拉着他跳崖!第二次见面,她非礼他的屁股,偷看他洗澡!天啊!她不是杭州城最有气质的第一美女吗?为何越是相处,越是觉得她超级迷糊加腹黑???
  • 伦敦杂记(朱自清作品精选)

    伦敦杂记(朱自清作品精选)

    本套丛书选文广泛、丰富,且把阅读文学与掌握知识结合起来,既能增进广大读者阅读经典文学的乐趣,又能使我们体悟人生的智慧和生活哲理。
  • 最后大主宰

    最后大主宰

    人类在多年的生存繁衍,先是学会走路由猿猴进化成猿人最后成为人类,他们在漫长岁月中学会了用双脚走路、学会使用工具、学会打猎、学会种庄稼……等等在不断发现和创造后,他们以为他们是生物链最顶端的猎食者、他们以为他们会越来越强大、他们以为他们就是这个世界的主宰、他们以为他们会一直这样下去…可是直到有一天,他们的幻想破灭了。
  • 妃常嚣张:拐带冰山邪王

    妃常嚣张:拐带冰山邪王

    一个巨浪打来,她居然穿越了,成为大岭王国第一废材丑女!然而当丑颜褪去,却是一张何等惊世绝艳的容颜!太子殿下?本小姐还看不上眼!天才姐姐?本小姐动动手指头就能把她虐成渣渣!什么?一大波无良亲戚正在赶来?本小姐一并打包送走!神器在我手,神兽当领头,从此天下谁敢拭锋芒!“娘子,为夫敢。”某男子邪魅一笑,将她一拥入怀。