登陆注册
37591800000163

第163章

But though I offend him shame him I never will.' Dear Margaret, with this knave' saying, 'your poor old dad,' it had gone to my heart like a knife.''Tis well,' said my master gloomily; 'I have made a bad bargain.' Presently he halts, and eyes a tree by the wayside.'Go spell me what is writ on yon tree.' So I went, and there was nought but a long square drawn in outline.I told him so.'So much for thy monkish lore,' quoth he.A little farther, and he sent me to read a wall.There was nought but a circle scratched on the stone with a point of nail or knife, and in the circle two dots.I said so Then said he, 'Bon Bec, that square was a warning.Some good Truand left it, that came through this village faring west; that means "dangerous." The circle with the two dots was writ by another of our brotherhood; and it signifies as how the writer, soit Rollin Trapu, soit Triboulet, soit Catin Cul de Bois, or what not, was becked for asking here, and lay two months in Starabin.' Then he broke forth.'Talk: of your little snivelling books that go in pouch.Three hooks have I, France, England, and Germany; and they are writ all over in one tongue, that my brethren of all countries understand; and that is what Icall learning.So sith here they whip sores, and imprison infirmities, I to my tiring room.' And he popped behind the hedge, and came back worshipful.We passed through the village, and I sat me down on the stocks, and even the barber's apprentice whets his razor on a block, so did I flesh my psaltery on this village, fearing great cities.I tuned it, and coursed up and down the wires nimbly with my two wooden strikers; and then chanted loud and clear, as I had heard the minstrels of the country, 'Qui veut ouir qui veut Savoir,'

some trash, I mind not what.And soon the villagers, male and female, thronged about me; thereat I left singing, and recited them to the psaltery a short but right merry tale out of 'the lives of the saints,' which it is my handbook of pleasant figments and this ended, instantly struck up and whistled one of Cul de Jatte's devil's ditties, and played it on the psaltery to boot.

Thou knowest Heaven hath bestowed on me a rare whistle, both for compass and tune.And with me whistling bright and full this sprightly air, and ****** the wires slow when the tune did gallop, and tripping when the tune did amble, or I did stop and shake on one note like a lark i' the air, they were like to eat me; but looking round, lo! my master had given way to his itch, and there was his hat on the ground, and copper pouring in.I deemed it cruel to whistle the bread out of poverty's pouch; so broke off and away; yet could not get clear so swift, but both men and women did slobber me sore, and smelled all of garlic.'There, master,'

said I, 'I call that cleaving the divell in twain and keeping his white half.' Said he, 'Bon Bec, I have made a good bargain.' Then he bade me stay where I was while he went to the Holy Land.Istayed, and he leaped the churchyard dike, and the ***ton was digging a grave, and my master chaffered with him, and came back with a knuckle bone.But why he clept a churchyard Holy Land, that I learned not then, but after dinner.I was colouring the armories of a little inn; and he sat by me most peaceable, a cutting, and filing, and polishing bones, sedately; so I speered was not honest work sweet? 'As rain water,' said he, mocking.'What was he a ******?' 'A pair of bones to play on with thee; and with the refuse a St.Anthony's thumb and a St.Martin's little finger, for the devout.' The vagabone! And now, sweet Margaret, thou seest our manner of life faring Rhineward.I with the two arts I had least prized or counted on for bread was welcome everywhere; too poor now to fear robbers, yet able to keep both master and man on the road.For at night I often made a portraiture of the innkeeper or his dame, and so went richer from an inn; the which it is the lot of few.But my master despised this even way of life.'I love ups and downs,' said he.And certes he lacked them not.One day he would gather more than I in three; another, to hear his tale, it had rained kicks all day in lieu of 'saltees,' and that is pennies.Yet even then at heart he despised me for a poor mechanical soul, and scorned my arts, extolling his own, the art of feigning.

"Natheless, at odd times was he ill at his ease.Going through the town of Aix, we came upon a beggar walking, fast by one hand to a cart-tail, and the hangman a lashing his bare bloody back.He, stout knave, so whipt, did not a jot relent; but I did wince at every stroke; and my master hung his head.

"'Soon or late, Bon Bec,' quoth he.'Soon or late.' I, seeing his haggard face, knew what he meaned.And at a town whose name hath slipped me, but 'twas on a fair river, as we came to the foot of the bridge he halted, and shuddered.'Why what is the coil?' said I.'Oh, blind,' said he, 'they are justifying there.' So nought would serve him but take a boat, and cross the river by water.But 'twas out of the frying-pan, as the word goeth.For the boatman had scarce told us the matter, and that it was a man and a woman for stealing glazed windows out of housen, and that the man was hanged at daybreak, and the quean to be drowned, when lo! they did fling her off the bridge, and fell in the water not far from us.

And oh! Margaret, the deadly splash! It ringeth in mine ears even now.But worse was coming; for, though tied, she came up.and cried 'Help! help!' and I, forgetting all, and hearing a woman's voice cry 'Help!' was for leaping in to save her; and had surely done it, but the boatman and Cul de Jatte clung round me, and in a moment the bourreau's man, that waited in a beat, came and entangled his hooked pole in her long hair, and so thrust her down and ended her.Oh! if the saints answered so our cries for help!

And poor Cul de Jatte groaned; and I sat sobbing, and beat my breast, and cried, 'Of what hath God made men's hearts?'"The reader stopped, and the tears trickled down her cheeks.Gerard crying in Lorraine, made her cry at Rotterdam.The leagues were no more to her heart than the breadth of a room.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 大荒飞仙

    大荒飞仙

    当初升的朝阳再次照亮大荒的黎明,又一个流血的时代来临了。姬云楚,穿越到《山海经》的大荒世界中,踏上了征战八荒,剑指天下的旅途。一路争锋,有上古凶兽,洪荒异兽,又有远古神魔,千年古刹,万年精怪。这是一个古老苍凉的蛮荒世界,这是一个战火连天的乱世岁月。在这个狼烟四起,群雄逐鹿的时代,看姬云楚如何笑傲大荒,纵横天下,抱得美人归。新书期间,跪求收藏,谢谢!(作品相关:萝莉养成、热血、山海志异、搜神、上古神话、)
  • 众神榜贰

    众神榜贰

    北幽魔祖临死前,留有传言,在北俱芦洲传开,得知三界中有无天佛祖留下的无天魔气,得者可以成为新的三界魔祖。而北俱芦洲十万大山里的万妖,为了成为新的魔祖,于是都纷纷出北俱芦洲,欲前往其它部洲。万妖出芦,扰乱三界。而在此之前,东胜神州极北之地的北海上,正有一场仙妖斗法。
  • 魔兽争霸之翟南到此一游

    魔兽争霸之翟南到此一游

    名叫翟南的宅男,从电脑屏幕前,穿越到了真正充斥着战争与魔法的魔兽世界当中。他又是如何争霸魔兽世界,最终戴上皇冠,接受四方朝拜的!让我们拭目以待!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 悲喜都与你有关

    悲喜都与你有关

    王子和公主的故事我在幼儿园时期听过无数遍。王子又勇敢又帅气,公主既善良又美丽,无论恶人如何阻拦,他们最后总是幸福地生活在一起。但是,在现实中,并没有恶人阻挠,他们也需要很努力才能成为对方的恋人。生活不是童话,王子也许很胖,公主说不定是个路痴,还有可能会打呼,可那又怎样呢?他们是彼此的良人,他们愿意为了彼此做更好的自己。作为这个故事的见证人,听到他对她说,我的悲喜,都与你有关时,我觉得,童话实在太单薄了。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 恋爱学院之王子与公主的爱恋

    恋爱学院之王子与公主的爱恋

    她,冰冷无情;她,火爆热情;她,可爱纯真。他,冷漠无情;他,花心脾气差;他,温柔绅士。她们亦或是他们,有着多重的身份。她们,是高贵的公主,还是冷酷的黑道杀手;他们,是典雅的王子,还是暗夜的骑士。当公主遇上王子,又会撞出怎样的火花,发生怎样的故事呢?
  • 重生之团宠小财迷

    重生之团宠小财迷

    小财迷许熙瞳为了救一个落水的孩子把自己的命搭上去了,谁知竟然魂穿了。虽然家里很穷,但家里男的多,所以日子还过得下去,为了摆脱村里的那些极品亲戚,她带着一家人走上了暴富之路
  • 注定和你在一起之梦雪公主

    注定和你在一起之梦雪公主

    她,是一位普普通通的女孩。可是,因为陷害逐出校门,但是因为找到了自己真心喜欢的人,他们青梅竹马,在别人面前花式秀恩爱,之后就请大家慢慢看我的文章了……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!