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john ingerfield and other stories-第11部分

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support; he proceeded to adopt sterner measures。  He addressed

himself personally to the ringleader of the rioters; the man who had

first championed the cause of the absent Joss。  This person was a

brawny individual; who; judging from appearances; followed in his

business hours the calling of a coalheaver。  〃Yes; sir;〃 said the

chairman; pointing a finger towards him; where he sat in the front

row of the gallery; 〃you; sir; in the flannel shirt。  I can see you。

Will you allow this lady to give her entertainment?〃



〃No;〃 answered he of the coalheaving profession; in stentorian tones。



〃Then; sir;〃 said the little chairman; working himself up into a

state suggestive of Jove about to launch a thunderbolt〃then; sir;

all I can say is that you are no gentleman。〃



This was a little too much; or rather a good deal too little; for the

Signora Ballatino。  She had hitherto been standing in a meek attitude

of pathetic appeal; wearing a fixed smile of ineffable sweetness but

she evidently felt that she could go a bit farther than that herself;

even if she was a lady。  Calling the chairman 〃an old messer;〃 and

telling him for Gawd's sake to shut up if that was all he could do

for his living; she came down to the front; and took the case into

her own hands。



She did not waste time on the rest of the audience。  She went direct

for that coalheaver; and thereupon ensued a slanging match the memory

of which sends a trill of admiration through me even to this day。  It

was a battle worthy of the gods。  He was a heaver of coals; quick and

ready beyond his kind。  During many years sojourn East and South; in

the course of many wanderings from Billingsgate to Limehouse Hole;

from Petticoat Lane to White…chapel Road; out of eel…pie shop and

penny gaff; out of tavern and street; and court and doss…house; he

had gathered together slang words and terms and phrases; and they

came back to him now; and he stood up against her manfully。



But as well might the lamb stand up against the eagle; when the

shadow of its wings falls across the green pastures; and the wind

flies before its dark oncoming。  At the end of two minutes he lay

gasping; dazed; and speechless。



Then she began。



She announced her intention of 〃wiping down the bloomin' 'all〃 with

him; and making it respectable; and; metaphorically speaking; that is

what she did。  Her tongue hit him between the eyes; and knocked him

down and trampled on him。  It curled round and round him like a whip;

and then it uncurled and wound the other way。  It seized him by the

scruff of his neck; and tossed him up into the air; and caught him as

he descended; and flung him to the ground; and rolled him on it。  It

played around him like forked lightning; and blinded him。  It danced

and shrieked about him like a host of whirling fiends; and he tried

to remember a prayer; and could not。  It touched him lightly on the

sole of his foot and the crown of his head; and his hair stood up

straight; and his limbs grew stiff。  The people sitting near him drew

away; not feeling it safe to be near; and left him alone; surrounded

by space; and language。



It was the most artistic piece of work of its kind that I have ever

heard。  Every phrase she flung at him seemed to have been woven on

purpose to entangle him and to embrace in its choking folds his

people and his gods; to strangle with its threads his every hope;

ambition; and belief。  Each term she put upon him clung to him like a

garment; and fitted him without a crease。  The last name that she

called him one felt to be; until one heard the next; the one name

that he ought to have been christened by。



For five and three…quarter minutes by the clock she spoke; and never

for one instant did she pause or falter; and in the whole of that

onslaught there was only one weak spot。



That was when she offered to make a better man than he was out of a

Guy Fawkes and a lump of coal。  You felt that one lump of coal would

not have been sufficient。



At the end; she gathered herself together for one supreme effort; and

hurled at him an insult so bitter with scorn so sharp with insight

into his career and character; so heavy with prophetic curse; that

strong men drew and held their breath while it passed over them; and

women hid their faces and shivered。



Then she folded her arms; and stood silent; and the house; from floor

to ceiling; rose and cheered her until there was no more breath left

in its lungs。



In that one night she stepped from oblivion into success。  She is now

a famous 〃artiste。〃



But she does not call herself Signora Ballatino; and she does not

play upon the zithern。  Her name has a homelier sound; and her

speciality is the delineation of coster character。







SILHOUETTES。







I fear I must be of a somewhat gruesome turn of mind。  My sympathies

are always with the melancholy side of life and nature。  I love the

chill October days; when the brown leaves lie thick and sodden

underneath your feet; and a low sound as of stifled sobbing is heard

in the damp woodsthe evenings in late autumn time; when the white

mist creeps across the fields; making it seem as though old Earth;

feeling the night air cold to its poor bones; were drawing ghostly

bedclothes round its withered limbs。  I like the twilight of the long

grey street; sad with the wailing cry of the distant muffin man。  One

thinks of him; as; strangely mitred; he glides by through the gloom;

jangling his harsh bell; as the High Priest of the pale spirit of

Indigestion; summoning the devout to come forth and worship。  I find

a sweetness in the aching dreariness of Sabbath afternoons in genteel

suburbsin the evil…laden desolateness of waste places by the river;

when the yellow fog is stealing inland across the ooze and mud; and

the black tide gurgles softly round worm…eaten piles。



I love the bleak moor; when the thin long line of the winding road

lies white on the darkening heath; while overhead some belated bird;

vexed with itself for being out so late; scurries across the dusky

sky; screaming angrily。  I love the lonely; sullen lake; hidden away

in mountain solitudes。  I suppose it was my childhood's surroundings

that instilled in me this affection for sombre hues。  One of my

earliest recollections is of a dreary marshland by the sea。  By day;

the water stood there in wide; shallow pools。  But when one looked in

the evening they were pools of blood that lay there。



It was a wild; dismal stretch of coast。  One day; I found myself

there all aloneI forget how it came aboutand; oh; how small I

felt amid the sky and the sea and the sandhills!  I ran; and ran; and

ran; but I never seemed to move; and then I cried; and screamed;

louder and louder; and the circling seagulls screamed back mockingly

at me。  It was an 〃unken〃 spot; as they say up North。



In the far back days of the building of the world; a long; high ridge

of stones had been reared up by the sea; dividing the swampy

grassland from the sand。  Some of these stones〃pebbles;〃 so they

called them round aboutwere as big as a man; and many as big as a

fair…sized house; and when the sea was angryand very prone he was

to anger by that lonely shore; and very quick to wrath; often have I

known him sink to sleep with a peaceful smile on his rippling waves;

to wake in fierce fury before the night was spenthe would snatch up

giant handfuls of these pebbles and fling and toss them here and

there; till the noise of their rolling and crashing could be heard by

the watchers in the village afar off。



〃Old Nick's playing at marbles to…night;〃 they would say to one

another; pausing to listen。  And then the women would close tight

their doors; and try not to hear the sound。



Far out to sea; by where the muddy mouth of the river yawned wide;

there rose ever a thin white line of surf; and underneath those

crested waves there dwelt a very fearsome thing; called the Bar。  I

grew to hate and be afraid of this mysterious Bar; for I heard it

spoken of always with bated breath; and I knew that it was very cruel

to fisher folk; and hurt them so sometimes that they would cry whole

days and nights together with the pain; or would sit with white

scared faces; rocking themselves to and fro。



Once when I was playing among the sandhills; there came by a tall;

grey woman; bending beneath a load of driftwood。  She paused when

nearly opposite to me; and; facing seaward; fixed her eyes upon the

breaking surf above the Bar。  〃Ah; how I hate the sight of your white

teeth!〃 she muttered; then turned and passed on。



Another morning; walking through the village; I heard a low wailing

come from one of the cottages; while a little farther on a group of

women were gathered in the roadway; talking。  〃Ay;〃 said one of them;

〃I thought the Bar was looking hungry last night。〃



So; putting one and the other together; I concluded that the 〃Bar〃

must be an ogre; such as a body reads of in books; who lived in a

coral castle deep below the river's mouth; and fed upon the fishermen

as he caught them going down to the sea or coming home。



From my bedroom window; on moonlight nights; I could watch the

silvery foam; marking the spot beneath where he lay hid; and I would

stand on tip…toe; peering out; until at length I would come to fancy

I could see his hideous form floating below the waters。  Then; as the

little white…sailed boats stole by him; tremblingly; I used to

tremble too; lest he should suddenly open his grim jaws and gulp them

down; and when they had all safely reached the dark; soft sea beyond;

I would steal back to the bedside; and pray to God to make the Bar

good; so that he would give up eating the poor fishermen。



Another incident connected with that coast lives in my mind。  It was

the morning after a great stormgreat even for that stormy coast

and the passion…worn waters were still heaving with 
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