登陆注册
20057400000180

第180章 CHAPTER LIII JEREMY FINDS OUT SOMETHING(1)

'You know, my son,' said Jeremy Stickles, with a good pull at his pipe, because he was going to talk so much, and putting his legs well along the settle; 'it has been my duty, for a wearier time than I care to think of (and which would have been unbearable, except for your great kindness), to search this neighbourhood narrowly, and learn everything about everybody. Now the neighbourhood itself is queer; and people have different ways of thinking from what we are used to in London. For instance now, among your folk, when any piece of news is told, or any man's conduct spoken of, the very first question that arises in your mind is this--"Was this action kind and good?" Long after that, you say to yourselves, "does the law enjoin or forbid this thing?" Now here is your fundamental error: for among all truly civilised people the foremost of all questions is, "how stands the law herein?" And if the law approve, no need for any further questioning. That this is so, you may take my word: for I know the law pretty thoroughly.

'Very well; I need not say any more about that, for Ihave shown that you are all quite wrong. I only speak of this savage tendency, because it explains so many things which have puzzled me among you, and most of all your kindness to men whom you never saw before; which is an utterly illegal thing. It also explains your toleration of these outlaw Doones so long. If your views of law had been correct, and law an element of your lives, these robbers could never have been indulged for so many years amongst you: but you must have abated the nuisance.'

'Now, Stickles,' I cried, 'this is too bad!' he was delivering himself so grandly. 'Why you yourself have been amongst us, as the balance, and sceptre, and sword of law, for nigh upon a twelvemonth; and have you abated the nuisance, or even cared to do it, until they began to shoot at you?'

'My son,' he replied, 'your argument is quite beside the purpose, and only tends to prove more clearly that which I have said of you. However, if you wish to hear my story, no more interruptions. I may not have a chance to tell you, perhaps for weeks, or I know not when, if once those yellows and reds arrive, and be blessed to them, the lubbers! Well, it may be six months ago, or it may be seven, at any rate a good while before that cursed frost began, the mere name of which sends a shiver down every bone of my body, when Iwas riding one afternoon from Dulverton to Watchett'--'Dulverton to Watchett!' I cried. 'Now what does that remind me of? I am sure, I remember something--'

'Remember this, John, if anything--that another word from thee, and thou hast no more of mine. Well, I was a little weary perhaps, having been plagued at Dulverton with the grossness of the people. For they would tell me nothing at all about their fellow-townsmen, your worthy Uncle Huckaback, except that he was a God-fearing man, and they only wished Iwas like him. I blessed myself for a stupid fool, in thinking to have pumped them; for by this time I might have known that, through your Western homeliness, every man in his own country is something more than a prophet. And I felt, of course, that I had done more harm than good by questioning; inasmuch as every soul in the place would run straightway and inform him that the King's man from the other side of the forest had been sifting out his ways and works.'

'Ah,' I cried, for I could not help it; 'you begin to understand at last, that we are not quite such a set of oafs, as you at first believed us.'

'I was riding on from Dulverton,' he resumed, with great severity, yet threatening me no more, which checked me more than fifty threats: 'and it was late in the afternoon, and I was growing weary. The road (if road it could be called) 'turned suddenly down from the higher land to the very brink of the sea; and rounding a little jut of cliff, I met the roar of the breakers.

My horse was scared, and leaped aside; for a northerly wind was piping, and driving hunks of foam across, as children scatter snow-balls. But he only sank to his fetlocks in the dry sand, piled with pop-weed: and Itried to make him face the waves; and then I looked about me.

'Watchett town was not to be seen, on account of a little foreland, a mile or more upon my course, and standing to the right of me. There was room enough below the cliffs (which are nothing there to yours, John), for horse and man to get along, although the tide was running high with a northerly gale to back it.

But close at hand and in the corner, drawn above the yellow sands and long eye-brows of rackweed, as snug a little house blinked on me as ever I saw, or wished to see.

'You know that I am not luxurious, neither in any way given to the common lusts of the flesh, John. My father never allowed his hair to grow a fourth part of an inch in length, and he was a thoroughly godly man;and I try to follow in his footsteps, whenever I think about it. Nevertheless, I do assure you that my view of that little house and the way the lights were twinkling, so different from the cold and darkness of the rolling sea, moved the ancient Adam in me, if he could he found to move. I love not a house with too many windows: being out of house and doors some three-quarters of my time, when I get inside a house Ilike to feel the difference. Air and light are good for people who have any lack of them; and if a man once talks about them, 'tis enough to prove his need of them. But, as you well know, John Ridd, the horse who has been at work all day, with the sunshine in his eyes, sleeps better in dark stables, and needs no moon to help him.

同类推荐
  • Timon of Athens

    Timon of Athens

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 文殊师利发愿经

    文殊师利发愿经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Scarlet Pimpernel

    The Scarlet Pimpernel

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 伊川易传

    伊川易传

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 天潢玉牒

    天潢玉牒

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 梦回女儿国之妖鬼重生

    梦回女儿国之妖鬼重生

    铸剑男躲避追杀误入女儿国,险被妖兽所食,女国宫太师出手相救却阴差阳错与宫主相爱……多年后太师暗中勾结妖兽谋反逼宫主退位,宫主为保护女儿与丈夫与妖兽同归于尽并将女儿国举国上下所有人的生灵寄存于女儿与丈夫体内,最后一役,男主受到重创沉睡千年,醒来后却发现整个世界都变了……
  • 锁红颜:卿本佳人

    锁红颜:卿本佳人

    南郡有一女,明媚如春光,擅刺绣。一朝被退婚,被家中险恶之人算计。且看她如何崛起!
  • 凤血江山

    凤血江山

    她是前朝亡国的公主。一朝宫变,十年蛰伏。可一场错嫁,令她陷入无法摆脱的境地。成亲夜遭受的羞辱,他的冷漠,姬妾间的争斗……令她无法置身事外。她从容淡然,助建王,谋江山,在男人的野心中步步维艰,只盼能早日了结恩怨情仇。他是南楚最不受宠的大皇子慕容修。新婚初夜,他给她侧妃之位,任她自生自灭,却不想她丝丝缕缕缠住他的心,从此挥之不去。他是当朝权势熏天的龙影司统领殷凌澜,为她的秘密苦守十年。他的杀,为了她的不杀。他是北汉百战百胜的萧王萧世行,他为了她兴兵千里,只为得她倾心一顾。江山社稷,美人英雄,一曲乱世离殇,如泣如诉。笙歌尽,江山定,她放弃所有,只愿与心爱之人江湖逍遥,从此不离不弃。
  • 罗兰记事

    罗兰记事

    乔·艾弗里,一个剑神爷爷,有一个风轻云淡却嗜血的父亲,有一堆牛X的叔叔伯伯,有神秘的贴身管家,有温柔的贴身侍女,有狂野的公主,有各种类型的奇葩朋友,有异世版的锦衣卫骑士团!他的生活目标很简单,游遍大陆---罗兰!请看异界风云录,一样的称雄成神,不一样的经历!
  • 无敌白虎

    无敌白虎

    李毅是个17岁的高中生。因为被被车撞,而重生为上古四大神兽,白虎。
  • 嗜血总裁的狂野妻

    嗜血总裁的狂野妻

    为了报复飞氏集团,他不惜折磨她、设计她,逼迫她爱上他。新婚当晚,他和别的女人厮混在一起,第二天,在她愤怒的眼神下,他当着大家的面前凌辱她!而他没想到的是,被他当作玩具的女人,他居然会有一天爱她痴狂,爱她如魔!
  • 殿下太惹火:掳获腹黑美男

    殿下太惹火:掳获腹黑美男

    长着一张SD娃娃脸是她的错吗?为什么整天被人拿来说事?莫名其妙的成了乔莱特学院最拉风会长的女朋友而遭遇各种麻烦,是不幸还是幸运?那个家伙有事没事就摆着一副臭脸,性格脾气完全琢磨不透,你见过上一秒说过话下一秒就不认账的人吗?腹黑校草遇拽萝莉,挑衅与被挑衅,到底是谁先喜欢上谁?
  • 总裁霸爱成瘾

    总裁霸爱成瘾

    如果能重新选择,我宁愿被野兽强*暴,也不愿和你纠缠——柯柔只有我有权力离开你,你没有权力离开我——黑泽烈***他,是只手遮天的大亨,心中只有无限的仇恨;她,是败落的豪门孤女,温顺柔弱;***“想死?我准你死了吗?”阴冷的影子欺近,鹰眸蒙着层戾气,咬着牙,灼热的气息直接喷洒在血色尽失的精致脸蛋上。“没有我的命令,阎罗王也不会收你。嗯?那么想死?”,一把扯掉碍眼的针口,又拉下她鼻端的氧气管,他扬起嘴角,露出丝笑意,冷冷的,直达眼底。
  • 赢得友谊、影响他人的智慧

    赢得友谊、影响他人的智慧

    本书是卡内基成功学经典之作,介绍了处理人际关系时的技巧和艺术。
  • 魔王娇妻:娘亲快跑

    魔王娇妻:娘亲快跑

    谁说穿越后一定靠男人?她白苏苏自立自强!她乃21世纪的新兴女性,现代打劫犯法,她就在古代开个山寨,劫贪官,救百姓,顺便过过贼瘾……可是为啥一劫劫出个魔王?千年前的恩怨摆不脱宿世的纠葛,这场戏中到底谁在掌控,谁又深陷其中,无法自拔?