登陆注册
4907300000027

第27章

Towards three o'clock we worked our way round to the station, and began looking for our train. We hunted all over the place, but could not find it anywhere. The central station at Munich is an enormous building, and a perfect maze of passages and halls and corridors. It is much easier to lose oneself in it, than to find anything in it one may happen to want. Together and separately B. and I lost ourselves and each other some twenty-four times. For about half an hour we seemed to be doing nothing else but rushing up and down the station looking for each other, suddenly finding each other, and saying, "Why, where the dickens have you been? I have been hunting for you everywhere. Don't go away like that," and then immediately losing each other again.

And what was so extraordinary about the matter was that every time, after losing each other, we invariably met again--when we did meet--outside the door of the third-class refreshment room.

We came at length to regard the door of the third-class refreshment room as "home," and to feel a thrill of joy when, in the course of our weary wanderings through far-off waiting-rooms and lost-luggage bureaus and lamp depots, we saw its old familiar handle shining in the distance, and knew that there, beside it, we should find our loved and lost one.

When any very long time elapsed without our coming across it, we would go up to one of the officials, and ask to be directed to it.

"Please can you tell me," we would say, "the nearest way to the door of the third-class refreshment room?"

When three o'clock came, and still we had not found the 3.10 train, we became quite anxious about the poor thing, and made inquiries concerning it.

"The 3.10 train to Ober-Ammergau," they said. "Oh, we've not thought about that yet."

"Haven't thought about it!" we exclaimed indignantly. "Well, do for heaven's sake wake up a bit. It is 3.5 now!"

"Yes," they answered, "3.5 in the afternoon; the 3.10 is a night train. Don't you see it's printed in thick type? All the trains between six in the evening and six in the morning are printed in fat figures, and the day trains in thin. You have got plenty of time.

Look around after supper."

I do believe I am the most unfortunate man at a time-table that ever was born. I do not think it can be stupidity; for if it were mere stupidity, I should occasionally, now and then when I was feeling well, not make a mistake. It must be fate.

If there is one train out of forty that goes on "Saturdays only" to some place I want to get to, that is the train I select to travel by on a Friday. On Saturday morning I get up at six, swallow a hasty breakfast, and rush off to catch a return train that goes on every day in the week "except Saturdays."

I go to London, Brighton and South Coast Railway-stations and clamour for South-Eastern trains. On Bank Holidays I forget it is Bank Holiday, and go and sit on draughty platforms for hours, waiting for trains that do not run on Bank Holidays.

To add to my misfortunes, I am the miserable possessor of a demon time-table that I cannot get rid of, a Bradshaw for August, 1887.

Regularly, on the first of each month, I buy and bring home with me a new Bradshaw and a new A.B.C. What becomes of them after the second of the month, I do not know. After the second of the month, I never see either of them again. What their fate is, I can only guess. In their place is left, to mislead me, this wretched old 1887 corpse.

For three years I have been trying to escape from it, but it will not leave me.

I have thrown it out of the window, and it has fallen on people's heads, and those people have picked it up and smoothed it out, and brought it back to the house, and members of my family--"friends" they call themselves--people of my own flesh and blood--have thanked them and taken it in again!

I have kicked it into a dozen pieces, and kicked the pieces all the way downstairs and out into the garden, and persons--persons, mind you, who will not sew a button on the back of my shirt to save me from madness--have collected the pieces and stitched them carefully together, and made the book look as good as new, and put it back in my study!

It has acquired the secret of perpetual youth, has this time-table.

Other time-tables that I buy become dissipated-looking wrecks in about a week. This book looks as fresh and new and clean as it did on the day when it first lured me into purchasing it. There is nothing about its appearance to suggest to the casual observer that it is not this month's Bradshaw. Its evident aim and object in life is to deceive people into the idea that it is this month's Bradshaw.

It is undermining my moral character, this book is. It is responsible for at least ten per cent. of the bad language that I use every year. It leads me into drink and gambling. I am continually finding myself with some three or four hours to wait at dismal provincial railway stations. I read all the advertisements on both platforms, and then I get wild and reckless, and plunge into the railway hotel and play billiards with the landlord for threes of Scotch.

I intend to have that Bradshaw put into my coffin with me when I am buried, so that I can show it to the recording angel and explain matters. I expect to obtain a discount of at least five-and-twenty per cent. off my bill of crimes for that Bradshaw.

The 3.10 train in the morning was, of course, too late for us. It would not get us to Ober-Ammergau until about 9 a.m. There was a train leaving at 7.30 (I let B. find out this) by which we might reach the village some time during the night, if only we could get a conveyance from Oberau, the nearest railway-station. Accordingly, we telegraphed to Cook's agent, who was at Ober-Ammergau (we all of us sneer at Mr. Cook and Mr. Gaze, and such-like gentlemen, who kindly conduct travellers that cannot conduct themselves properly, when we are at home; but I notice most of us appeal, on the quiet, to one or the other of them the moment we want to move abroad), to try and send a carriage to meet us by that train; and then went to an hotel, and turned into bed until it was time to start.

同类推荐
  • 洞玄灵宝自然九天生神章经解义

    洞玄灵宝自然九天生神章经解义

    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。
  • 清苑斋诗集

    清苑斋诗集

    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。
  • 金液大丹口诀

    金液大丹口诀

    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。
  • 注华严法界观科文

    注华严法界观科文

    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。
  • 旧杂譬喻经

    旧杂譬喻经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 从漫威开始的无限宇宙

    从漫威开始的无限宇宙

    本书即将进入完结倒计时,新书首发。与新书展开了多方面联动,存稿丰厚,请尽情观看。而这本书的内容嘛?大概就是花式穿越的旅行吧。太空大战即将爆发,当动漫中的角色来到了现实时,又会迸发出怎样的战斗力?
  • 堂吉诃德

    堂吉诃德

    本书讲述曼查一个地方的贵族阿隆索·基哈诺,因为沉迷于骑士小说,时常幻想自己是个中世纪骑士,进而改名为“曼查的堂吉坷德”,把自己喜欢的农村姑娘阿尔东萨·洛伦索改名为接近公主或贵夫人的“托博索的阿尔西内亚”,跟拉着缺少头脑邻居桑乔·潘萨做自己的仆人,骑着瘦马“罗西南多”,游走天下,行侠仗义、作出了种种荒诞不经、令人匪夷所思的行径,结果四处碰壁。他最终从梦幻中苏醒过来,回到家乡后死去。文学评论家都称《堂吉诃德》是西方文学史上的第一部现代小说。
  • 天醒之路平桑恋

    天醒之路平桑恋

    【热播电视剧《天醒之路》】最后平凡还是奢望,最后美好还是短暂,我来了你走了,两仪花终究散了这对鸳鸯。那些曾经的誓言,带走了稚气,天醒者,是真醒了;英之魄,是心爱人耗尽生命;她带他体验了红尘美好,他因她有活下去的勇气………秦桑残魂无意遇到了高人指点,再次回到这个敢爱敢恨的世界…(ps:来自于《天醒之路》热播电视剧续,努力做好,望小可爱们支持,有小改动,但问题不大,加油,加油,加油!)
  • 美漫之火箭浣熊

    美漫之火箭浣熊

    霍建穿越到漫威世界,成了火箭浣熊,而且还带来了游戏里的“机械师”职业模板。离开半世界,营救格鲁特,组建银河护卫队,吃饭睡觉打灭霸……是的。我才是银河护卫队的老大!其他作品《搬个魔兽到异界》,《魔兽入侵漫威》,《魔兽世界里的中华武者》,有兴趣的朋友可以看看。书友群:264727664(咕咕大萌德)。
  • 成功社交72法则

    成功社交72法则

    生命中有些东西是不依赖于外力的,要想倍受瞩目,要想创建一个良好的人际氛围,必须得注重内在人格的修炼。正所谓:肚中有货,不骄不躁,不怕没有伯乐寻不着千里马,气宇轩昂,平易谦逊,不愁身边不环绕仰慕的群众。
  • 管理寓言枕边书

    管理寓言枕边书

    这些经典寓言小故事读起来简单、轻松,富有情趣,相信广大读者朋友能于轻松愉悦中读完本书,并能从中悟出管理的真谛。
  • 纵横星空之任我行

    纵横星空之任我行

    太阳系中,一架外星战舰的意外闯入,掀起了全球修炼狂潮,是新纪元的到来,还是暗藏危机,且看方辰如何拯救地球,纵横星空……喜欢本书的友友,欢迎加入萧遥竹竿小说群,群聊号码:300764604
  • 小学生基础语感在阅读教学中的分学段培养与评价

    小学生基础语感在阅读教学中的分学段培养与评价

    语感是在理解和表达过程中,对言语对象进行直觉建构的一种言语能力,其心理表征是一个开放的图式与产生式的复合体。基础语感本质上也是一种语感,不同在于它是基于小学生心理发展水平、文化积累和生活体验的,侧重于理解与表达字、词、句、段、篇等基本言语对象的基础言语能力。小学语文教学应注重分学段来培养学生的基础语感。在小学阅读教学中分学段培养与评价基础语感,应始于培养目标的制定,然后根据目标的教学心理学分类来导学、导教、导测量。在测量与评价基础语感时,还应着眼于学生发展,结合具体语境从外显表现与内隐理解两方面进行整体的、多样化的评价。
  • 混沌灭世决

    混沌灭世决

    落魄书生,惨遭穿越,初来乍到,得人传承。灭世绝学,共进五层,层层致命,层层盖世。混沌大陆,一切未知,修仙之路,困难重重。塑造仙源,蓄气练气,我欲修仙,法力无边。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。