登陆注册
20040200000059

第59章 XVIII. "WOULD YOU BE A PARSON?"(1)

After this I gave up my experiments in conversation. So that by the final afternoon of our journey, with Sunk Creek actually in sight, and the great grasshoppers slatting their dry song over the sage-brush, and the time at hand when the Virginian and Trampas would be "man to man," my thoughts rose to a considerable pitch of speculation.

And now that talking part of the Virginian, which had been nine days asleep, gave its first yawn and stretch of waking. Without preface, he suddenly asked me, "Would you be a parson?"

I was mentally so far away that I couldn't get back in time to comprehend or answer before he had repeated:"What would yu' take to be a parson?"

He drawled it out in his gentle way, precisely as if no nine days stood between it and our last real intercourse.

"Take?" I was still vaguely moving in my distance. "How?"

His next question brought me home.

"I expect the Pope's is the biggest of them parson jobs?"

It was with an "Oh!" that I now entirely took his idea. "Well, yes; decidedly the biggest."

"Beats the English one? Archbishop--ain't it?--of Canterbury? The Pope comes ahead of him?"

"His Holiness would say so if his Grace did not."

The Virginian turned half in his saddle to see my face--I was, at the moment, riding not quite abreast of him--and I saw the gleam of his teeth beneath his mustache. It was seldom I could make him smile, even to this slight extent. But his eyes grew, with his next words, remote again in their speculation.

"His Holiness and his Grace. Now if I was to hear 'em namin' me that-a-way every mawnin', I'd sca'cely get down to business."

"Oh, you'd get used to the pride of it."

"'Tisn't the pride. The laugh is what would ruin me. 'Twould take 'most all my attention keeping a straight face. The Archbishop"--here he took one of his wide mental turns--"is apt to be a big man in them Shakespeare plays. Kings take talk from him they'd not stand from anybody else; and he talks fine, frequently. About the bees, for instance, when Henry is going to fight France. He tells him a beehive is similar to a kingdom. I learned that piece." The Virginian could not have expected to blush at uttering these last words. He knew that his sudden color must tell me in whose book it was he had learned the piece Was not her copy of Kenilworth even now In his cherishing pocket? So he now, to cover his blush, very deliberately recited to me the Archbishop's discourse upon bees and their kingdom:

"'Where some, like magistrates, correct at home...

Others, like soldiers, armed in their stings, Make loot upon the summer's velvet buds;

Which pillage they with merry march bring home To the tent-royal of their emperor:

He, busied in his majesty, surreys The singing masons building roofs of gold.'

"Ain't that a fine description of bees a-workin'? 'The singing masons building roofs of gold!' Puts 'em right before yu', and is poetry without bein' foolish. His Holiness and his Grace. Well, they could not hire me for either o' those positions. How many religions are there?"

"All over the earth?"

"Yu' can begin with ourselves. Right hyeh at home I know there's Romanists, and Episcopals--"

"Two kinds!" I put in. "At least two of Episcopals."

"That's three. Then Methodists and Baptists, and--"

"Three Methodists!"

"Well, you do the countin'."

I accordingly did it, feeling my revolving memory slip cogs all the way round. "Anyhow, there are safely fifteen."

"Fifteen." He held this fact a moment. "And they don't worship a whole heap o' different gods like the ancients did?"

"Oh, no!"

"It's just the same one?"

"The same one."

The Virginian folded his hands over the horn of his saddle, and leaned forward upon them in contemplation of the wide, beautiful landscape.

"One God and fifteen religions," was his reflection. "That's a right smart of religions for just one God."

This way of reducing it was, if obvious to him, so novel to me that my laugh evidently struck him as a louder and livelier comment than was required. He turned on me as if I had somehow perverted the spirit of his words.

"I ain't religious. I know that. But I ain't unreligious. And I know that too."

"So do I know it, my friend."

"Do you think there ought to be fifteen varieties of good people?" His voice, while it now had an edge that could cut anything it came against, was still not raised. "There ain't fifteen. There ain't two. There's one kind. And when I meet it, I respect it. It is not praying nor preaching that has ever caught me and made me ashamed of myself, but one or two people I have knowed that never said a superior word to me They thought more o' me than I deserved, and that made me behave better than I naturally wanted to. Made me quit a girl onced in time for her not to lose her good name. And so that's one thing I have never done. And if ever I was to have a son or somebody I set store by, I would wish their lot to be to know one or two good folks mighty well--men or women--women preferred."

He had looked away again to the hills behind Sunk Creek ranch, to which our walking horses had now almost brought us.

"As for parsons "--the gesture of his arm was a disclaiming one--"I reckon some parsons have a right to tell yu' to be good.

The bishop of this hyeh Territory has a right. But I'll tell yu' this: a middlin' doctor is a pore thing, and a middlin' lawyer is a pore thing; but keep me from a middlin' man of God."

Once again he had reduced it, but I did not laugh this time. I thought there should in truth be heavy damages for malpractice on human souls. But the hot glow of his words, and the vision of his deepest inner man it revealed, faded away abruptly.

"What do yu' make of the proposition yondeh?" As he pointed to the cause of this question he had become again his daily, engaging, saturnine self.

同类推荐
  • 佛说阿罗汉具德经

    佛说阿罗汉具德经

    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。
  • 金华直指女功正法

    金华直指女功正法

    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。
  • 张子正蒙注

    张子正蒙注

    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。
  • 太上灵宝五符序

    太上灵宝五符序

    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。
  • 山海漫谈

    山海漫谈

    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
  • 日本访书志

    日本访书志

    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。
  • 仙情染暮

    仙情染暮

    《仙情染暮》铧沐染卿,精心著作。一个关于争夺乾坤两位神器的战端在慢慢的进行着。殇卿阁对抗的鬼煞殿,又悄然无声的再进行着一个天大的阴谋。沐月之女(女主角)沐染卿,带着爹娘的期待,走向了寻觅行月宫,拜师的道路。沐染卿在去泗月的道路上,结识了(男主角)殇暮,两人携手共进行月宫。然而他们却发现了一个不为人知的秘密。简介:两位神器:乾位神器【水月剑】---坤位神器【紫棠剑】
  • 辛弃疾文集1

    辛弃疾文集1

    辛弃疾以其独特的英雄壮志和豪情,极力使气逞辞,以文为词,大为扩展了词体的题材范围,形成了沉郁豪壮的主体风格,又兼有婉约深曲和清新质朴的格调,可以说熔铸百家,自由挥洒,多姿多彩。
  • 翻滚进行中

    翻滚进行中

    本书围绕故事主人公的成长为线索,讲述一个出生在集高官,企业的家庭为追求自己的爱好,而屡次违背家人的意愿,而看不得生活中的一些暗中的行为而选择与其抗争的故事,虽然本书大部分是写的是主人公的个人情感以及篮球,但是从中败露出了丑陋行径!翻滚正是主人公在不断的挣扎,不断的挣脱出这样的一种生活。在此也想希望大家摸着自己的良心,保持自己的初心,不要被带出一双漆黑的双手!
  • 外国元首们的那些红尘往事

    外国元首们的那些红尘往事

    撒切尔夫人、罗斯福、普京、阿拉法特、阿罗约等伟人拥有高大的身影也有细腻的情感。在那些坚强的外表下,欧洲元首也拥有着各种不同的情感生活。
  • 天素大陆

    天素大陆

    混沌生两仪,两仪生四象,元素之力,统领天下。所谓的仪态,不是装饰自己,而足让对方感到安心。所谓的礼节,不该勉强对方,而该由自己善加引导。所谓的教养,不是爱慕虚荣,而是聆听对方的烦恼。所谓的尊严,不能独善其身,只能在守护对方后获得。有一少年身背黑白双剑,从一小位面杀入大千世界,创造一段绝世神话。
  • 究极控制

    究极控制

    他,平民眼中高高在上的异能者,虽然身赋罕见的异能,却不懂运用。本应平淡终其一生,却意外牵扯进豪门势力的争斗中……
  • 续古今译经图纪

    续古今译经图纪

    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。
  • 农家厨娘,恶搞王爷

    农家厨娘,恶搞王爷

    因为在厨房做食材踩滑穿越了!杨依依对天咆哮了两个小时,不得不“既来之则安之!”什么极品亲戚?什么毒舌王爷?难道我一个穿越过来活了两世,还能怕你们不成吗?看我如何走向属于自己的古代巅峰……
  • 天堂水,龙井茶

    天堂水,龙井茶

    天堂水,故事开始的地方。蓝洁尘趁苏杲不备封住了他的穴道,告诉了他一个天大的秘密:她本是前朝杨氏之后,其姊更是唐玄宗万千宠爱于一身的杨贵妃。其实天下根本没有龙井茶,她自己就是龙井茶。得知真相的苏杲已经阻止不了蓝洁尘以生命换来的天堂水。浩浩愁,茫茫劫,短歌终,明月缺,郁郁佳城,终有碧血,碧亦有时尽,血亦有时灭,一缕香魂无断绝。是耶,非耶,愿化蝴蝶!