登陆注册
2009400000004

第4章 在行路中遇见自己 (3)

On this waning autumn afternoon the northern Maine landscape is tart, compelling, shadowed here and there by puffs of fair-weather cumulus, remnants of summer. Here, a dozen miles west of Waldoboro, I once spent my summers from the age of 12 to 14 at one of those Indian-named boys’ camps—more years ago than I like to think about.

I stand on the rise near what was once the baseball diamond. To my right is the black oak, several hundred years old, beside which we used to hold our Saturday night campfires. How many times on heat-heavy August days have I stood on this rise looking out over the wooded landscape toward the Camden hills? For me it was always a magical prospect, the austere countryside stretching away with the sharp definition of an 18th-century aquatint across hill and woodland to Mt. Battie outlined against the horizon. At our campfire evenings, when we gathered around the great oak just after sunset, Mount Battie without losing its definition would take on a blue luminosity.

Over the years a ragged second-growth of aspen and birch and speckled alder, at the far edge of the baseball diamond, has blotted out that view. Now there is nothing to see beneath the crystalline sky but the uneven tops of second-growth trees. Already the sky has begun to taken on the steelier tints of winter. Even Mt. Battie has disappeared.

On sultry afternoons, when the air quivered in the cool and fading light of early evening, I used to stand here by the old oak and look out across an interlude of scrub and swamp from which several miles away, a hill emerged. As a hill it was insignificant enough. Below its bare summit an abandoned pasture lay dotted with ground juniper and outcroppings of granite. Yet something about that hill drew me, beckoned to me, across the miles. I could not bear to take my eyes from it, I knew only that before summer ended I must go to it, make my way over the pasture, up and up past shrub and granite until I stood on the very summit. It was something I had to do. I could not explain why. I did not even ask myself.

Not that it was easy to get away from camp. Morning and afternoon, our activities were recorded in a counselor’ s notebook. We had to be swimming or rowing or playing tennis or baseball or practicing a track event or going off on nature walks or making some gadget in the carpentry shop—just so long as we did something. But to do nothing, to climb a hill for no reason, that was outside the rules, against the “camp spirit”.

Saturday afternoons, with their influx of parents and visitors, brought a certain relaxation, less accountability. On one such blue and vivid afternoon I slipped away to get to my hill. From the great oak, I could see its summit ahead of me, unknown, inviting. Inconspicuously, I edged along the baseball field, then slipped into the underbrush.

It was hard going, hard to keep a sense of direction in such a tangle of vine and thicket. I stumbled over rotten logs, stepped into anthills. Marsh hillocks gave way under my feet, dead branches snagged me, prickly seeds worked into my wet sneakers. The air was stagnant. With mosquitoes droning and hover-flies circling and darting, I plodded on, losing myself and losing track of time.

I must have been struggling on for at least an hour. Suddenly I came to a clearing, an open grove of ash and maple, and as the sunlight filtered through the leaves. I saw in front of me a cluster of ornate diminutive houses. Brightly painted in a variety of colors, trimmed with scrollwork and cusps and scalloped shingles, with narrow, high-pitched roofs, each was no more than an arm’ s length from the next, and all were empty. There was no sign of any living being.

To me, emerging from the wood, the sunlit grove was like something out of Grimm, as if this odd little village had been put under a spell and had been asleep for 100 years. A yellow house in front of me with a blue-latticed front porch could have been waiting for Hansel and Gretel. So quiet the grove was, so still the air, that even the aspen leaves hung limp. Blue and green dragonflies, poised in the air, added to the enchantment. Far off, I could hear the wich-wich-wich of a yellow warbler and a locust’ s somnolent buzz. Otherwise silence.

I went up on the porch of a pinktrimmed house and peered through the single window. What I saw was prosaic enough—a room with a couple of chairs, a table, a couch, a kerosene lamp. A ladder led upstairs to a sleeping loft. The grove was a mystery. Why were those little houses there? Why were they empty and yet at the same time cared for? Who owned them? It was eerie to see these miniatures huddled together against all that space. I half expected some guardian to come rushing out and ask me what I was doing there.

I suppose my enchanted village was some sort of camp meeting ground, used a few weeks each summer. I never did find out. On that afternoon I did not linger. The sun’ s rays were already slanting, the shadows longer, and my hill still lay ahead of me. Again I plunged into the underbrush, breaking through at last to a rutted road scored with puddles. But at the first turning I reached the foot of the hill, my hill, open and placed in the lengthened sunshine. Its thin meadow grass had turned brown, a stone wall that once enclosed the pasture had fallen apart, and velvety mullein leaves were thrusting up between the boulders. Up I went, over a granite ledge and across the meadow, trampling down hardhack and meadowsweet in my hurry to get to the top.

同类推荐
  • 生活英语会话王

    生活英语会话王

    本书共分为四类话题,内容涵盖了日常生活交际场合的50多个场景。全书共分49个单元,每单元下分:巧问巧答、会话工具、会话模板、鲜活词语和趣味阅读五大部分。收录了日常生活中最常用到的食、住、穿、行四个方面的内容,共十四节49个单元,非常实用、易练,循序渐进就可以学会。
  • 雅思英语词汇词根词缀高效记忆:轻松背单词

    雅思英语词汇词根词缀高效记忆:轻松背单词

    书中所收录的单词都是从历届雅思考试题中提炼出来的。编者利用先进的电脑统计分析技术,对历年考试题中出现的单词进行系统的电脑分频,将历年考题中出现频率较高的单词甄选出来,标注为常考单词。考题中出现频率较低的,但是考试范围内的单词,标注为普通单词。极大地方便了考生有的放矢地去背单词。
  • 用英语介绍中国这里是广州

    用英语介绍中国这里是广州

    外国人面前,你能否用一口流利的英文介绍自己所在的城市呢?走出国门,你是否能够让更多的外国人了解广州灿烂悠久的文化?本书为读者奉上原汁原味的人文阅读精华,详细介绍了人们最感兴趣的广州历史文化、城市风景、广州生活、名人逸事等,带您全方位地了解广州。读者在学习英语的同时,又能品味这座南方文化名城的独特魅力。
  • 奥赛罗·李尔王

    奥赛罗·李尔王

    本书是莎士比亚著名的四大悲剧之一,是英国的一个古老传说,故事本身大约发生在8世纪左右。后在英国编成了许多戏剧,现存的戏剧除莎士比亚外,还有一个更早的无名氏作品,一般认为莎士比亚的李尔王是改编此剧而创作的。故事讲述了年事已高的国王李尔王退位后,被大女儿和二女儿赶到荒郊野外,成为法兰西皇后的三女儿率军救父,却被杀死,李尔王伤心地死在她身旁。
热门推荐
  • 杀戮天下白发盲妃

    杀戮天下白发盲妃

    她是人们敬畏的无回谷谷主,也是人们称赞的雪家小姐,亦是人们羡慕的沐府宠妃。身份尊贵的她,通晓事理的她,受人宠爱的她,名为无忧的她,却满头白发,黑绸遮眼,尝不出世间百味,感觉不到人世冷暖,麻木于疼痛。两度重生两度白发,我名无忧,可何为无忧?受人所托,她来到了当朝长公主之子,沐煌沐王爷的身边。本想着帮助他,再报了自己的大仇后,便隐居避世,却不料被卷入了一个又一个阴谋当中,更是遇见了传说中的人鱼族,不死族,但最让她无法接受的确是……原来她才是他的劫!(绝对宠文,女主白发与男主无关,女强男更强!)
  • 全世界最贵的总裁情商课

    全世界最贵的总裁情商课

    全世界上最高端的总裁情商课,10节课价值100万美金,课程起源于哈佛,延展于世界,只针对上市公司总裁培训服务,硅谷首富拉里.埃里森、谷歌联合创始人拉里.佩奇以及比尔.盖茨、巴菲特、奥巴马、克林顿、奥普拉等政治精英与商业精英都曾接触、推荐或接受过的全球最高端的总裁课程——他们占领了世96%的财富与无上的话语权,他们都有一个共同的特点,情商高于智商。如何才能拥有上市公司总裁的超级情商?如何运用情商提高自我领导力,提升影响力与交际圈?如何运用高情商进行高效沟通、团队管控、团队激励,以及运用高情商处理生活中、公司日常管理中容易遇到的各种问题。
  • An Essay on Profits

    An Essay on Profits

    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。
  • 若为池中物

    若为池中物

    林瀚君一直认为自己很拉菜,结果出了秘境以后,妖王做了她的宠物,鬼王见了她转头就跑,哇咔咔,这是要吊炸天的节奏,魔王竟然还要追求她,但是……林瀚君:抱歉,我有我家小美人了。魔王:……某个美人:……
  • 梦幻大陆传

    梦幻大陆传

    他为爱而自杀,但却重生到了另一下个世界。在这展开了了一段异世传奇之旅……他是苍神,一代传奇他已一己之力改写了梦幻大陆大历史,无数年他的传人又将书写新的传奇……
  • 妖魔名单

    妖魔名单

    妖,魔,在人类发展的历史中。逐渐消失在了普通人的视线之内,却真实存在于社会的生活中!一个被寺院捡到的孤儿,在一次意外的求学之旅中发现了奇异的事件,一次次揭秘的背后,他遇到了她!她,一个普通的学生,却又是没落家族的继承者。一次意外中被他所救,将他带入了一个与众不同的世界。一切的一切究竟是天意,还是人为?
  • 回弓

    回弓

    回家,回家身在异乡为异客,每逢佳节倍思亲可若我能再选择一次还是再来这里,找到你们,长歌一曲
  • 1岁育儿方案

    1岁育儿方案

    本丛书主要介绍了胎教、产期生活常识以及产后变化、产后保健、新生儿的生理特征、新生儿的营养和照料、1至3岁婴幼儿的卫生保健、智能训练、疾病防治等知识。该丛书具有很强的科学性和使用性,非常易学、易懂和易用,是广大孕妇用以指导饮食营养、日常生活、保健预防和用药医疗的良好读物。
  • 废柴茅山弟子

    废柴茅山弟子

    这世间,有好多科学不能解释的怪事,我们称之为“超自然现象”,茅山,是一个专门对付这种超自然灵异现象的隐秘的门派!对于茅山,人们只知茅山之名,却不知茅山一派在何处!三色猫求封日期:2012年10月13日
  • 世界谜语抢猜百科

    世界谜语抢猜百科

    世界谜语抢猜百科提供大量谜语题目,阅读本书既好玩有趣,又能增长知识,开发智力。