登陆注册
5586300000057

第57章 THE SHEEP(2)

Both bridge and shooting were given a rest for the next two or three weeks. Death, who enters into no compacts with party whips, had forced a Parliamentary vacancy on the neighbourhood at the least convenient season, and the local partisans on either side found themselves immersed in the discomforts of a mid-winter election.

Rupert took his politics seriously and keenly. He belonged to that type of strangely but rather happily constituted individuals which these islands seem to produce in a fair plenty; men and women who for no personal profit or gain go forth from their comfortable firesides or club card-rooms to hunt to and fro in the mud and rain and wind for the capture or tracking of a stray vote here and there on their party's behalf--not because they think they ought to, but because they want to. And his energies were welcome enough on this occasion, for the seat was a closely disputed possession, and its loss or retention would count for much in the present position of the Parliamentary game. With Kathleen to help him, he had worked his corner of the constituency with tireless, well-directed zeal, taking his share of the dull routine work as well as of the livelier episodes. The talking part of the campaign wound up on the eve of the poll with a meeting in a centre where more undecided votes were supposed to be concentrated than anywhere else in the division. A good final meeting here would mean everything. And the speakers, local and imported, left nothing undone to improve the occasion.

Rupert was down for the unimportant task of moving the complimentary vote to the chairman which should close the proceedings.

"I'm so hoarse," he protested, when the moment arrived; "I don't believe I can make my voice heard beyond the platform."

"Let me do it," said the Sheep; "I'm rather good at that sort of thing."

The chairman was popular with all parties, and the Sheep's opening words of complimentary recognition received a round of applause.

The orator smiled expansively on his listeners and seized the opportunity to add a few words of political wisdom on his own account. People looked at the clock or began to grope for umbrellas and discarded neckwraps. Then, in the midst of a string of meaningless platitudes, the Sheep delivered himself of one of those blundering remarks which travel from one end of a constituency to the other in half an hour, and are seized on by the other side as being more potent on their behalf than a ton of election literature.

There was a general shuffling and muttering across the length and breadth of the hall, and a few hisses made themselves heard. The Sheep tried to whittle down his remark, and the chairman unhesitatingly threw him over in his speech of thanks, but the damage was done.

"I'm afraid I lost touch with the audience rather over that remark," said the Sheep afterwards, with his apologetic smile abnormally developed.

"You lost us the election," said the chairman, and he proved a true prophet.

A month or so of winter sport seemed a desirable pick-me-up after the strenuous work and crowning discomfiture of the election.

Rupert and Kathleen hied them away to a small Alpine resort that was just coming into prominence, and thither the Sheep followed them in due course, in his role of husband-elect. The wedding had been fixed for the end of March.

It was a winter of early and unseasonable thaws, and the far end of the local lake, at a spot where swift currents flowed into it, was decorated with notices, written in three languages, warning skaters not to venture over certain unsafe patches. The folly of approaching too near these danger spots seemed to have a natural fascination for the Sheep.

"I don't see what possible danger there can be," he protested, with his inevitable smile, when Rupert beckoned him away from the proscribed area; "the milk that I put out on my window-sill last night was frozen an inch deep."

"It hadn't got a strong current flowing through it," said Rupert;

"in any case, there is not much sense in hovering round a doubtful piece of ice when there are acres of good ice to skate over. The secretary of the ice-committee has warned you once already."

A few minutes later Rupert heard a loud squeal of fear, and saw a dark spot blotting the smoothness of the lake's frozen surface. The Sheep was struggling helplessly in an ice-hole of his own making.

Rupert gave one loud curse, and then dashed full tilt for the shore; outside a low stable building on the lake's edge he remembered having seen a ladder. If he could slide it across the ice-hole before the Sheep went under the rescue would be comparatively simple work. Other skaters were dashing up from a distance, and, with the ladder's help, they could get him out of his death-trap without having to trust themselves on the margin of rotten ice. Rupert sprang on to the surface of lumpy, frozen snow, and staggered to where the ladder lay. He had already lifted it when the rattle of a chain and a furious outburst of growls burst on his hearing, and he was dashed to the ground by a mass of white and tawny fur. A sturdy young yard-dog, frantic with the pleasure of performing his first piece of actice guardian service, was ramping and snarling over him, rendering the task of regaining his feet or securing the ladder a matter of considerable difficulty. When he had at last succeeded in both efforts he was just by a hair's-breadth too late to be of any use. The Sheep had definitely disappeared under the ice-rift.

Kathleen Athling and her husband stay the greater part of the year with Rupert, and a small Robbie stands in some danger of being idolised by a devoted uncle. But for twelve months of the year Rupert's most inseparable and valued companion is a sturdy tawny and white yard-dog.

同类推荐
  • 佛果克勤禅师心要

    佛果克勤禅师心要

    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。
  • 仁王护国般若波罗蜜多经疏

    仁王护国般若波罗蜜多经疏

    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。
  • 云仙杂记

    云仙杂记

    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。
  • 三具足经忧波提舍

    三具足经忧波提舍

    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。
  • 训蒙骈句

    训蒙骈句

    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
  • 消失的乡村

    消失的乡村

    在故乡,有人问我,你为何离开这土地,我脱口而出,是血液,那血液要从这泥土上夺路而出,谁也拦不住。他用心灵记录故乡,经历过沧桑,懂得了简单的美与张力,也懂了自己内心的安妥才是正道。
  • 我的海贼有点遭

    我的海贼有点遭

    雷诺穿越到了自己理想中的海贼世界,正当自己要励志拳打白胡子,脚踢黑胡子的时候,一则消息不禁让他泪流满面。雷诺:“啥?你说啥?你说现在统治世界的是d之一族,拉夫德鲁是d之一族的首都?大海上没有海军,就连海贼都少的可怜?”所以说:“我这是穿越到了离剧情开始还有八百多年的海贼世界。”弱弱的问一句:能送我回去吗?(本故事纯属虚构,作者个人脑洞,可能和原著不同,各位勿要当真)
  • 超速绯闻

    超速绯闻

    朱泰英,冷面高富帅,武力值超群,缺点有一个——对女人特别心慈手软,而在尹麟生出现之后,缺点多了一个——黏人。撒手人间的父亲,留给他一笔家产和一个混乱的娱乐公司收购案。在长达五年的时间里,两人误会重重……
  • 《中庸》通解

    《中庸》通解

    本书是我国当代著名儒学家杨朝明教授对中国儒学经典著作《中庸》的通俗性解读作品。全书分为“中庸之为德”“人生难得中庸”“儒家,耕耘在社会中”“哀公问政”“至诚与至圣”等五章,从为人之德、为政之道、治世之法等方面对《中庸》中蕴含的儒学思想进行了详实的解读,能够帮助我们深刻理解儒家文化,为现代人修身正德和现代国家建设提供有益的启示与借鉴。
  • 特种战士

    特种战士

    刘文辉这个人和他的名字极为不相符。文辉的意思是在文这方面超越所有人。但是刘文辉打小就匪,好不容易从父亲的暴打中逃到了部队。还没待一年,就被装进了闷罐车,从繁花似锦的中原,远赴千里来到大西南的原始森林。刘文辉终于明白自己属于那里。
  • 美的本质

    美的本质

    作者在书中探讨了古今中外的哲学家和美学家把意为“美的”中的“美”当成美是什么问题的“美”这一学术问题,根据自己总结的“神经元群理论”解决了在美学中一直争论不休的对动物来说是否有“美”与“美感”问题,并且驳斥了罗素的“自然界是无色无光无声无味的”这一被人们当成真理的理论。作者取得的这些理论成果,对解决美是什么问题或理解美是什么问题的答案来说,十分重要。本书也说明了,作者给出的美是什么问题的答案即“美”的定义,与事实符合。
  • 寺内贯太郎一家

    寺内贯太郎一家

    《寺内贯太郎一家》是日本上世纪七十年代红极一时的电视连续剧,剧作家向田邦子以父亲为原型,生动描绘了日本下町一个三代同堂家庭的日常生活,并将生老病死、爱与孤独等等话题贯穿其中。小说《寺内贯太郎一家》即根剧本改编而来,在絮絮叨叨的生活推进中让读者亲历着家庭的煦暖温情与人生的几多无奈,生活的悲喜愁苦跃然纸上,更让读者在感同身受的同时悄然领悟到逗趣言语下的生活智慧与哲理。
  • 爱情的三部曲

    爱情的三部曲

    爱情三部曲:《雾·雨·电》,作者所写的主要是人,是性格。他主要想用恋爱来表现一些人的性格。就如佩珠,她比前面的两个人进步多了。不过,《电》和《雨》不同,和《雾》更有差别。《电》的头绪很多,适合这个标题,的确像几股电光接连地在空中闪耀。短篇小说《雷》只是一个不小的插曲。故事发生的时间在《雨》和《电》之间。因为《电》里面的几个人物如慧、敏、明、碧、影都曾在《雷》里出现过,我现在就把《雷》放在《电》的前面。
  • 听闻你心有余悸

    听闻你心有余悸

    “她啊……是我的眼角笑意,心底温柔。”他看向她,目光温柔的似乎融化了寒风。“还有,乍见之欢。”四目相对,星星黯淡,月亮融化。“小时候,是她不吝啬,把她的光分给了我。现在,换我做她的神明。”这一爱,是遥遥无期,是覆水难收。“人们都讨厌夜晚,因为它只有一个颜色……我也不喜欢,可是在黑夜里看到的你,闪闪发光。就像只属于我的神明一样。”她握紧他的手。他在星辰坠落后的黯淡中与她相遇他将会是这温柔的夜中唯一的光亮因为贺余悸是秦念昔的神明呀。她像他一样温柔的拂过他的面颊,告诉他“这世界欠你的温柔,我来给。”每一朵满天星都有属于自己的花海。就像点了眼睛的千纸鹤会找到自己的家。
  • 红裙子,白裙子

    红裙子,白裙子

    去年冬天,云南曲靖下了一场大雪,特别冷。柳树的叶子全部掉光,只剩下光秃秃的枝干。在北方,鹅毛大雪几乎是每年冬天都有的。但在四季如春的云南,雪却是特别稀奇、特别珍贵的,有时好多年都不见它的踪影。