登陆注册
14821400000020

第20章

Every few minutes, so it seemed to me, though in reality the intervals may perhaps have been longer, a ghostly face would appear at the carriage-window, and ask to see our tickets.

Whenever a German railway-guard feels lonesome, and does not know what else to do with himself, he takes a walk round the train, and gets the passengers to show him their tickets, after which he returns to his box cheered and refreshed. Some people rave about sunsets and mountains and old masters; but to the German railway-guard the world can show nothing more satisfying, more inspiring, than the sight of a railway-ticket.

Nearly all the German railway officials have this same craving for tickets. If only they get somebody to show them a railway-ticket, they are happy. It seemed a harmless weakness of theirs, and B. and I decided that it would be only kind to humour them in it during our stay.

Accordingly, whenever we saw a German railway official standing about, looking sad and weary, we went up to him and showed him our tickets. The sight was like a ray of sunshine to him; and all his care was immediately forgotten. If we had not a ticket with us at the time, we went and bought one. A mere single third to the next station would gladden him sufficiently in most cases; but if the poor fellow appeared very woe-begone, and as if he wanted more than ordinary cheering up, we got him a second-class return.

For the purpose of our journey to Ober-Ammergau and back, we each carried with us a folio containing some ten or twelve first-class tickets between different towns, covering in all a distance of some thousand miles; and one afternoon, at Munich, seeing a railway official, a cloak-room keeper, who they told us had lately lost his aunt, and who looked exceptionally dejected, I proposed to B. that we should take this man into a quiet corner, and both of us show him all our tickets at once--the whole twenty or twenty-four of them--and let him take them in his hand and look at them for as long as he liked. I wanted to comfort him.

B., however, advised against the suggestion. He said that even if it did not turn the man's head (and it was more than probable that it would), so much jealousy would be created against him among the other railway people throughout Germany, that his life would be made a misery to him.

So we bought and showed him a first-class return to the next station but one; and it was quite pathetic to watch the poor fellow's face brighten up at the sight, and to see the faint smile creep back to the lips from which it had so long been absent.

But at times, one wishes that the German railway official would control his passion for tickets--or, at least, keep it within due bounds.

Even the most kindly-hearted man grows tired of showing his ticket all day and night long, and the middle of a wearisome journey is not the proper time for a man to come to the carriage-window and clamour to see your "billet."

You are weary and sleepy. You do not know where your ticket is.

You are not quite sure that you have got a ticket; or if you ever had one, somebody has taken it away from you. You have put it by very carefully, thinking that it would not be wanted for hours, and have forgotten where.

There are eleven pockets in the suit you have on, and five more in the overcoat on the rack. Maybe, it is in one of those pockets. If not, it is possibly in one of the bags--somewhere, or in your pocket-book, if you only knew where that was, or your purse.

You begin a search. You stand up and shake yourself. Then you have another feel all over. You look round in the course of the proceedings; and the sight of the crowd of curious faces watching you, and of the man in uniform waiting with his eye fixed severely upon you, convey to you, in your then state of confusion, the momentary idea that this is a police-court scene, and that if the ticket is found upon you, you will probably get five years.

Upon this you vehemently protest your innocence.

"I tell you I haven't got it!" you exclaim;--"never seen the gentleman's ticket. You let me go! I--"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 缘自前世生

    缘自前世生

    她微闭双眼,脑海中细细勾画那副俊逸的眉眼,那样熟悉独不是爱她的他。青丝白发,弹指间,一眼万年,他曾兀自笑言:“凛凛一笑好吓人,小神保命要紧。”恺夜,再说一次好不好?
  • 嗜血妖后琉璃心

    嗜血妖后琉璃心

    她只不过是一个不受宠的公主,却迎来了这么多绝色美男的真心。命运的轮回,一环扣一环,她终究逃不过情。王爷的霸道,易箫的包容,莫以熏的温暖。这都是每一个女人的向往,但是她却挚爱皇上,此生若随君而去,无怨无悔。曾经的我被你禁锢,当我用尽生命挣脱你的的束缚时,却发现我早已将心遗失于你。相公还记得我们的诺言吗?君当作磐石,妾当作蒲苇,蒲苇韧如丝,磐石无转移。来世再爱
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 镇南王的小王妃

    镇南王的小王妃

    自古一入侯门深似海,对自小生长在官宦世家,却遭遇白眼冷落的静萍来说这辈子只想与母亲能平平静静的度过这一生,正如同她的名字一样。可是她却成了家族利益下的牺牲品,天性柔弱的她是否能找到属于她的幸福呢?她一个天真活泼可爱有如太阳般笑容的十七岁高中毕业生,却因为一次危险的游戏,与千年幽灵做了一个交换,竟然来到了唐朝,当上了小王妃。
  • 穿越成了仙官

    穿越成了仙官

    我有一个掌人间善恶之权,司阴府是非之目,案判七十二曹,刑分三十六岳,惩奸罚恶,灵死注生的大靠山!当然,仗着大靠山的圣眷,同时我也是人界无数山神、土地神、城隍神,冥界各司、案、曹、鬼王、将军、阴帅的大靠山!
  • 点石成金的手指:重新发现世界的50个科学故事

    点石成金的手指:重新发现世界的50个科学故事

    为了让更多的青少年明友走进科学,了解我们究竟生话在一个怎样的世界,张佳音等用心编辑了《点石成金的手指(重新发现世界的50个科学故事)》这本书,精心挑选了50个科普小故事汇集成册,内容涵盖太空、地球、气象、动物、植物、科技、历史、人体奥秘等多个方面,既涉及青少年明友应该了解的最新科学领域和科技动态,又包含了一些在我们的日常生话中经常会遇到的问题,其中有法布尔的《昆虫记》这样广为流传的名篇佳作,也有一些鲜为人知的精彩篇目。每个故事之后,我们还附有一个问题,希望通过阅读和知识点链接的启发之后,每个读者都能给出一个更具有“科学性”的答案。
  • 天变腾蛇

    天变腾蛇

    如果这力量能保护我所爱之人,那么不论它将会让我变成恶魔还是什么我都无所谓。血浓于水无法改变,家人都亏欠你太多太多……如果那一天只能有一个人能活下来,那么我向你保证,那个人绝对是你,而不是我,弟弟!
  • 血武天域

    血武天域

    这是一个血脉与武者的世界,这里有强大的武者可以与天争锋,这里有强者的血脉者令天地变色扰乱天地,血与武的颠覆都能够与天争锋,上古的消失,天域显现,于是无数的血脉者,武者开始追逐那个上古消失后留下来的梦想中的世界,天地乱,风云起,自太古以后天地真正大乱,迎来了天地之间第一场乱世,百族争锋,血脉突变风云不断,看一个深林之中走出的少年如何安定天下,走上巅峰。。。。。。。。。。。。。
  • 构建美的课堂

    构建美的课堂

    《构建美的课堂》,正是上述思考与实践的成果。该书从“学科本质美”、“教学过程美”、“课堂氛围美”三个部分,通过列举教学案例,提供教学策略,引导教师和学生一起去发现、感悟、欣赏其中的“美”,从而实现提高儿童审美情趣和审美能力的教育目标。这本书将“美育”与学科、教学、课堂进行了有机的结合,涵盖了教育教学的基本环节,给儿童提供了浸润式的“美育”氛围。我们有理由相信,在这种氛围下,定二小的孩子们一定会成长为“言行皆雅、气韵俱佳”的少年儿童。
  • 那年一起走过的路

    那年一起走过的路

    六年青春,六年陪伴,六年情谊,青春不散!不完美我们,不完美的生活,不完美的一切,可是,那又如何?不完美的世界!小学最后一年,永远不散!那些年我们一起走过的路,一起经历过的风雨...