登陆注册
4907300000019

第19章

Conrad's Grecian bride subsequently throws herself away on another man, upon which Conrad throws himself on his brother H.'s breast, and they swear eternal friendship. (Make it pathetic. Pretend you have sat amid the ruins in the moonlight, and give the scene--with ghosts.) "Rolandseck," near Bonn. Tell the story of Roland and Hildegunde (see Baedeker, p. 66). Don't make it too long, because it is so much like the other. Describe the funeral? The "Watch Tower on the Rhine" below Audernach. Query, isn't there a song about this? If so, put it in. Coblentz and Ehrenbreitstein. Great fortresses. Call them "the Frowning Sentinels of the State." Make reflections on the German army, also on war generally. Chat about Frederick the Great. (Read Carlyle's history of him, and pick out the interesting bits.) The Drachenfels. Quote Byron. Moralise about ruined castles generally, and describe the middle ages, with your views and opinions on same."

There is much more of it, but that is sufficient to let you see the scheme I had in my head. I have not carried out my scheme, because, when I came to reflect upon the matter, it seemed to me that the idea would develop into something that would be more in the nature of a history of Europe than a chapter in a tourist's diary, and I determined not to waste my time upon it, until there arose a greater public demand for a new History of Europe than there appears to exist at present.

"Besides," I argued to myself, "such a work would be just the very thing with which to beguile the tedium of a long imprisonment. At some future time I may be glad of a labour of this magnitude to occupy a period of involuntary inaction."

"This is the sort of thing," I said to myself, "to save up for Holloway or Pentonville."

It would have been a very enjoyable ride altogether, that evening's spin along the banks of the Rhine, if I had not been haunted at the time by the idea that I should have to write an account of it next day in my diary. As it was, I enjoyed it as a man enjoys a dinner when he has got to make a speech after it, or as a critic enjoys a play.

We passed such odd little villages every here and there. Little places so crowded up between the railway and the river that there was no room in them for any streets. All the houses were jumbled up together just anyhow, and how any man who lived in the middle could get home without climbing over half the other houses in the place I could not make out. They were the sort of villages where a man's mother-in-law, coming to pay him a visit, might wander around all day, hearing him, and even now and then seeing him, yet never being able to get at him in consequence of not knowing the way in.

A drunken man, living in one of these villages, could never hope to get home. He would have to sit down outside, and wait till his head was clear.

We witnessed the opening scenes of a very amusing little comedy at one of the towns where the train drew up. The chief characters were played by an active young goat, a small boy, an elderly man and a woman, parents of the small boy and owners of the goat, and a dog.

First we heard a yell, and then, from out a cottage opposite the station, bounded an innocent and happy goat, and gambolled around.

A long rope, one end of which was fastened to his neck, trailed behind him. After the goat (in the double sense of the phrase) came a child. The child tried to catch the goat by means of the rope, caught itself in the rope instead, and went down with a bump and a screech. Whereupon a stout woman, the boy's mother apparently, ran out from the cottage, and also made for the goat. The goat flew down the road, and the woman flew after it. At the first corner, the woman trod on the rope, and then SHE went down with a bump and a screech. Then the goat turned and ran up the street, and, as it passed the cottage, the father ran out and tried to stop it. He was an old man, but still seemed to have plenty of vigour in him. He evidently guessed how his wife and child had gone down, and he endeavoured to avoid the rope and to skip over it when it came near him. But the goat's movements were too erratic for him. His turn came, and he trod on the rope, and went down in the middle of the road, opposite his own door, with a thud that shook us all up against each other as we stood looking out of the carriage-window, and sat there and cursed the goat. Then out ran a dog, barking furiously, and he went for the goat, and got the end of the rope in his teeth and held on to it like grim death. Away went the goat, at his end of the rope, and, with him, the dog at the other end.

Between them, they kept the rope about six inches above the ground, and with it they remorselessly mowed down every living thing they came across in that once peaceful village. In the course of less than half a minute we counted fourteen persons sitting down in the middle of the road. Eight of them were cursing the goat, four were cursing the dog, and two of them were cursing the old man for keeping the goat, one of these two, and the more violent one, being the man's own wife.

The train left at this juncture. We entreated the railway officials to let us stop and see the show out. The play was becoming quite interesting. It was so full of movement. But they said that we were half-an-hour late as it was, and that they dared not.

We leaned out of the window, and watched for as long as we could; and after the village was lost to view in the distance, we could still, by listening carefully, hear the thuds, as one after another of the inhabitants sat down and began to swear.

At about eleven o'clock we had some beer--you can generally obtain such light refreshment as bottled beer and coffee and rolls from the guard on a through long-distance train in Germany--took off our boots, and saying "Good-night" to each other, made a great show of going to sleep. But we never succeeded in getting there. They wanted to see one's ticket too often for one to get fairly off.

同类推荐
  • 西舫汇征

    西舫汇征

    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。
  • 褒碧斋诗话

    褒碧斋诗话

    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。
  • 一报还一报

    一报还一报

    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。
  • On the First Principles of Government

    On the First Principles of Government

    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。
  • 增广和剂局方药性总论

    增广和剂局方药性总论

    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
  • 做林徽因一样完美的女人

    做林徽因一样完美的女人

    林徽因,这个被奉为传奇的女人,也只是活得更勇敢、更用心的普通人!没有哪一种命运是更好的命运,每个人都有自己要面对的各种问题。本书以林徽因为模本,在详细展开她的生活的同时,告诉被现实包围,却依然有梦的女人,要像林徽因一样,学会主宰自己的生活。不自卑、不哀怨,一日一日来,一步一步走。当你成为自己的英雄,那些遥不可及的幸福和喜悦,得到都是必然!女性读者比男性更关注林徽因,更容易崇拜她。因为,她活出了一个女人所能希求的全部梦想!我们这本书展现了一个绝代完美的女性典范,告诉所有积极追求自我魅力和价值的女性,做女人就要做林徽因这样完美的女人,学做林徽因这样的女人,就能收获爱情与事业双丰收。
  • 欢喜满人间:慈悲

    欢喜满人间:慈悲

    本书分为欢喜满人间、传家之宝、幸福之门等三卷。从个人的身心修养和家庭的和睦相处,到社会的祥和幸福,综述了人生的各个阶段应该注意的快乐生活的法则。星云大师,1927年农历七月二十二出生,原籍江苏江都,为临济正宗第四十八代传人。
  • 鬼帝绝宠:皇叔你行不行

    鬼帝绝宠:皇叔你行不行

    前世她活的憋屈,做了一辈子的小白鼠,重活一世,有仇报仇!有怨报怨!弃之不肖!她是前世至尊,素手墨笔轻轻一挥,翻手为云覆手为雨,天下万物皆在手中画。纳尼?负心汉爱上她,要再求娶?当她什么?昨日弃我,他日在回,我亦不肖!花痴废物?经脉尽断武功全无?却不知她一只画笔便虐你成渣……王府下人表示王妃很闹腾,“王爷王妃进宫偷墨宝,打伤了贵妃娘娘…”“王爷王妃看重了,学仁堂的墨宝当场抢了起来,打伤了太子……”“爱妃若想抢随她去,旁边递刀可别打伤了手……”“……”夫妻搭档,她杀人他挖坑,她抢物他递刀,她打太子他后面撑腰……双重性格男主萌萌哒
  • 明亮童话寓言

    明亮童话寓言

    这本辑录了58篇童话寓言的儿童读物新鲜出炉了。在琳琅满目的少儿精神食品大卖场,它虽然没有“ 洋品牌”那么大的名气,也没有电子书之类的新潮,但却像故乡小镇街头巷尾那甜香扑鼻的“烤红薯”,散发着诱人的泥土气息。特别是在人们对食品安全(包括精神食品)谈虎色变的当下,这样天然无公害的“绿色食品”着实难能可贵。我敢说,他没有一丁点“激素”和“添加剂”。
  • 如何单杀职业选手

    如何单杀职业选手

    “我,夏茗,打游戏,赚钱。”“之前龙中工会叫你带打刷材料,你怎么不去啊?”“他们让我带打,每升一个技能点一万游戏币,我去中立空间随便找个npc讹一顿都比这来钱快。”“小茗你打算选哪个啊,一个青梅一个天降,不管是伪恋路线还是友少路线都能走啊。”“听说过诚哥吗?”“……”
  • 蓝天红云(中篇小说)

    蓝天红云(中篇小说)

    幸运的赵大志摸奖摸到了一辆脚踏车,没多久老婆带着儿子却出了车祸,冥冥之中,到底是谁、又是什么原因主宰着他们一家的命运?赵大志的未来到底是福还是祸?淮河两岸的人家把夭折的孩子称为讨债鬼。赵大志、黄银月两人的儿子赵旺,是六岁这年没了的,说是讨债鬼,也只是一个小讨债鬼。
  • 留不住斜阳

    留不住斜阳

    独自一人坐在编辑部里,默默感受这有雪季节和从不被人看好的落日,任指间的烟雾袅袅升起,在房间的上方扩展成无边的寂寞。?街对面就是邮局,就是那个卖书的地方,就是那卖《围棋天地》的地方,每次都是她甜甜的声音从电话中传来,“您的书到了,过来取吧”,而每次看到她都让人怦然心动,美丽自然天成,清纯不落俗色,而我总是没话找话,问她卖了多少书啦,几点下班啦等日常用语,结果可想而知,每次都是以我仓慌逃走而告终。
  • 潘德世界

    潘德世界

    本作是一部受《西部世界》启发,潘德的预言为蓝本,创作的一部科幻类网游小说。骑马与砍杀,热血与激情,竞技场与角斗士,骑士与佣兵,财富与地位,非凡与平凡等等,都将在书中一一呈现。
  • 末世之种田好难

    末世之种田好难

    这是一个科技拯救世界的故事。这是一个不知道男主是拯救世界的过程中顺便拯救了女主,还是拯救女主的过程中顺便拯救了世界的故事。其实,这是一个女主拯救了世界而她一直不知道的故事。
  • 无限物资的末世生活

    无限物资的末世生活

    那场末日,改变了许多事情,留存下来的人们突然发现,这个世界竟变成了另一副模样。这颗可怜的星球依然留存着许多秘密,超脱于人类理解的文明也已经在这里产生了交汇,而我们普通的不能再普通的主角,刚刚得到了一块能够无限创造物质的神奇芯片。(我的水平确实不足,写的应该是传说中的自嗨文,所以十分感谢大家陪我自嗨了这么久谢谢。感兴趣的可以看看前面,收费章节没什么必要看,现在开了新书,叫最强便利店主,轻小说,挺欢脱的,可能是挖坑生涯的最后一本小说了,自己的事情最近多了起来,要是那本书的成绩还是不行的话,那就暂时不写了,好好的去忙自己的事情了,留下这么些烂摊子真是不好意思了。