登陆注册
19984400000085

第85章 THE SILENCE(2)

'Suppose he were to snap!' he thought.Impelled to justify this fancy, he blurted out: "You're a nervous chap.The way you look at those poor devils!"Pippin hustled him along the deck."Come, come, you took me off my guard," he murmured, with a sly, gentle smile, "that's not fair."He found it a continual source of wonder that Pippin, at his age, should cut himself adrift from the associations and security of London life to begin a new career in a new country with dubious prospect of success.'I always heard he was doing well all round,'

he thought; 'thinks he'll better himself, perhaps.He's a true Cornishman.'

The morning of arrival at the mines was grey and cheerless; a cloud of smoke, beaten down by drizzle, clung above the forest; the wooden houses straggled dismally in the unkempt semblance of a street, against a background of endless, silent woods.An air of blank discouragement brooded over everything; cranes jutted idly over empty trucks; the long jetty oozed black slime; miners with listless faces stood in the rain; dogs fought under their very legs.On the way to the hotel they met no one busy or serene except a Chinee who was polishing a dish-cover.

The late superintendent, a cowed man, regaled them at lunch with his forebodings; his attitude toward the situation was like the food, which was greasy and uninspiring.Alone together once more, the two newcomers eyed each other sadly.

"Oh dear!" sighed Pippin."We must change all this, Scorrier; it will never do to go back beaten.I shall not go back beaten; you will have to carry me on my shield;" and slyly: "Too heavy, eh? Poor fellow!" Then for a long time he was silent, moving his lips as if adding up the cost.Suddenly he sighed, and grasping Scorrier's arm, said: "Dull, aren't I? What will you do? Put me in your report, 'New Superintendent--sad, dull dog--not a word to throw at a cat!'"And as if the new task were too much for him, he sank back in thought.The last words he said to Scorrier that night were: "Very silent here.It's hard to believe one's here for life.But I feel Iam.Mustn't be a coward, though!" and brushing his forehead, as though to clear from it a cobweb of faint thoughts, he hurried off.

Scorrier stayed on the veranda smoking.The rain had ceased, a few stars were burning dimly; even above the squalor of the township the scent of the forests, the interminable forests, brooded.There sprang into his mind the memory of a picture from one of his children's fairy books--the picture of a little bearded man on tiptoe, with poised head and a great sword, slashing at the castle of a giant.It reminded him of Pippin.And suddenly, even to Scorrier--whose existence was one long encounter with strange places--the unseen presence of those woods, their heavy, healthy scent, the little sounds, like squeaks from tiny toys, issuing out of the gloomy silence, seemed intolerable, to be shunned, from the mere instinct of self-preservation.He thought of the evening he had spent in the bosom of "Down-by-the-starn" Hemmings' family, receiving his last instructions--the security of that suburban villa, its discouraging gentility; the superior acidity of the Miss Hemmings; the noble names of large contractors, of company promoters, of a peer, dragged with the lightness of gun-carriages across the conversation; the autocracy of Hemmings, rasped up here and there, by some domestic contradiction.It was all so nice and safe--as if the whole thing had been fastened to an anchor sunk beneath the pink cabbages of the drawing-room carpet! Hemmings, seeing him off the premises, had said with secrecy: "Little Pippin will have a good thing.We shall make his salary L----.He'll be a great man-quite a king.Ha-ha!"Scorrier shook the ashes from his pipe.'Salary!' he thought, straining his ears; 'I wouldn't take the place for five thousand pounds a year.And yet it's a fine country,' and with ironic violence he repeated, 'a dashed fine country!'

Ten days later, having finished his report on the new mine, he stood on the jetty waiting to go abroad the steamer for home.

"God bless you!" said Pippin."Tell them they needn't be afraid; and sometimes when you're at home think of me, eh?"Scorrier, scrambling on board, had a confused memory of tears in his eyes, and a convulsive handshake.

II

It was eight years before the wheels of life carried Scorrier back to that disenchanted spot, and this time not on the business of the New Colliery Company.He went for another company with a mine some thirty miles away.Before starting, however, he visited Hemmings.

The secretary was surrounded by pigeon-holes and finer than ever;Scorrier blinked in the full radiance of his courtesy.A little man with eyebrows full of questions, and a grizzled beard, was seated in an arm-chair by the fire.

"You know Mr.Booker," said Hemmings--"one of my directors.This is Mr.Scorrier, sir--who went out for us."These sentences were murmured in a way suggestive of their uncommon value.The director uncrossed his legs, and bowed.Scorrier also bowed, and Hemmings, leaning back, slowly developed the full resources of his waistcoat.

"So you are going out again, Scorrier, for the other side? I tell Mr.Scorrier, sir, that he is going out for the enemy.Don't find them a mine as good as you found us, there's a good man."The little director asked explosively: "See our last dividend?

Twenty per cent; eh, what?"

同类推荐
  • 皆大欢喜

    皆大欢喜

    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。
  • 太上玄灵北斗本命延生真经注

    太上玄灵北斗本命延生真经注

    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。
  • Lavengro

    Lavengro

    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。
  • 采菲录

    采菲录

    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。
  • Villainage in England

    Villainage in England

    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
  • 糖尿病食疗谱

    糖尿病食疗谱

    本书主要从以下介绍糖尿病的食疗食谱:素菜、荤菜、粥菜、汤菜、主食、药茶和药酒。
  • 青春浅扬

    青春浅扬

    青春,美丽,张扬,冲动,还有懵懂。我的青春谢谢你的参与,更谢谢你配我走完全程。
  • 进击的巨人绯色之恋

    进击的巨人绯色之恋

    西奈与利威尔有着最普通的相遇,最普通的相识,这个世界上没有那么多我爱着你,你爱着她,她爱着他,他爱着我,他们从来不需要多余的话,只是放心的将自己交给对方……故事便是从这开始当天空蒙上阴色,不再蔚蓝清明;当河水逆流染上血腥,当红色沾染面颊湿了衣襟……曾经奢求的那点点幸福,化为云烟消失不见。失去了那么多还能失去什么,若不曾与你相遇,生命的意义早已化变为零,只因有你,世界,全部。
  • 逆天水灵师

    逆天水灵师

    聿小九,痴傻五年,无灵根的废物,聿家的耻辱!痴傻?废物?她倒是让让这些人知道,他们连废物都不如。无灵根也能将他们打趴下哭爹喊娘。欺辱她?没关系,她会让他们后悔曾经活在这个世上。当痴傻的聿小九突然不傻了,曾经的废物变成了天才,神狐在手,搅他个天翻地覆,让人知道什么叫真正的强者。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 花季过后是什么季节

    花季过后是什么季节

    这里是草原上的一个美丽而繁华的城市,到处充满着物欲,这里的校园也是金钱的。但是当经济泡沫破裂的时候,那个关于精心塑造的完美的理想、爱情之梦也随之破灭了。有人说校园是一个象牙塔,但是当你从那个象牙塔中走出的时候,才会发现周围的一切其实是那样的冰冷,怀着这样冰冷的心走向冬季的那个女孩,她自己是那样了不起,成绩优秀、家庭富裕,其实她也只是一个可悲的金钱交易的产物,一个有钱人花钱买人生的女儿。随着爱情的失去,她变得一无所有,远走他乡,她是那样的孤独,她只有告诉自己:“不要紧的,我很坚强。”
  • 六道散仙:跨越千年的羁绊

    六道散仙:跨越千年的羁绊

    他,今生命运注定空白被夺取生命。她,追随他来到这个世上只为夺取他的尸体。一切随着命运的发展进行,殊不知却因为佛道从中作梗使得命运的年轮再次发生不同的趋势。一场邪恶与争夺力量的较量在跨越千年后寻找他下落时,爆发了。走过千年时光却不曾知晓何为爱,何为情,何为羁绊。回到千年之前寻找自己失去的力量,一生中从未感受过的羁绊不断变得强烈,渴望爱与情,羁绊的她用心守护身边的每个人,为伙伴燃起了当年不灭的姿态。
  • 守护甜心之樱雪公主

    守护甜心之樱雪公主

    失去爱的她,如同一个善良的天使变成一个恶魔,仇恨蒙蔽了她的双眼,她是否可以冲破蚕茧化身为蝶!
  • 恋上雨怀念忆

    恋上雨怀念忆

    当雨再落下时,时间已经跨过几年的时光,现在的我和你已经形同陌路了,看窗外不停的雨,想起当初的我和曾经的你那么熟悉而又陌生,当初我对你说:“等待雨是伞一生的宿命,而等待你是我一生的追求”可是现在的我知道有时候相信的它未必会开花结果。『那么问题来了,最后雨滴是否还会悲伤了』
  • 缘起百年

    缘起百年

    百年前你杀了我,绝对得不到你想要的,大秦也会迟早完蛋我相里一脉今日之苦,皆出自于你。我相里与秦,从此世世代代不共戴天!百年后家仇与爱情交织,你要我还是你的家族,和我在一起你注定要失去你现在拥有的一切。看他们如何抉择
  • 欧阳南野先生文集摘

    欧阳南野先生文集摘

    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。