登陆注册
15447900000008

第8章 I. THE OUTSET(8)

I am certain only of the mangy grass-plots, or rather the spaces between the paths, thinly overgrown with some kind of refuse and opprobrious weed, a stunted and pauper vegetation proper solely to the New York Battery. At that hour of the summer morning when our friends, with the aimlessness of strangers who are waiting to do something else, saw the ancient promenade, a few scant and hungry-eyed little boys and girls were wandering over this weedy growth, not playing, but moving listlessly to and fro, fantastic in the wild inaptness of their costumes. One of these little creatures wore, with an odd involuntary jauntiness, the cast-off best drew of some happier child, a gay little garment cut low in the neck and short in the sleeves, which gave her the grotesque effect of having been at a party the night before. Presently came two jaded women, a mother and a grandmother, that appeared, when they had crawled out of their beds, to have put on only so much clothing as the law compelled.

They abandoned themselves upon the green stuff, whatever it was, and, with their lean hands clasped outside their knees, sat and stared, silent and hopeless, at the eastern sky, at the heart of the terrible furnace, into which in those days the world seemed cast to be burnt up, while the child which the younger woman had brought with her feebly wailed unheeded at her side. On one side of these women were the shameless houses out of which they might have crept, and which somehow suggested riotous maritime dissipation; on the other side were those houses in which had once dwelt rich and famous folk, but which were now dropping down the boarding-house scale through various un-homelike occupations to final dishonor and despair. Down nearer the water, and not far from the castle that was once a playhouse and is now the depot of emigration, stood certain express-wagons, and about these lounged a few hard-looking men. Beyond laughed and danced the fresh blue water of the bay, dotted with sails and smokestacks.

"Well," said Basil, "I think if I could choose, I should like to be a friendless German boy, setting foot for the first time on this happy continent. Fancy his rapture on beholding this lovely spot, and these charming American faces! What a smiling aspect life in the New World must wear to his young eyes, and how his heart must leap within him!"

"Yes, Basil; it's all very pleasing, and thank yon for bringing me. But if you don't think of any other New York delights to show me, do let us go and sit in Leonard's office till he comes, and then get out into the country as soon as possible."

Basil defended himself against the imputation that he had been trying to show New York to his wife, or that he had any thought but of whiling away the long morning hours, until it should be time to go to Leonard. He protested that a knowledge of Europe made New York the most uninteresting town in America, and that it was the last place in the world where he should think of amusing himself or any one else; and then they both upbraided the city's bigness and dullness with an enjoyment that none but Bostonians can know. They particularly derided the notion of New York's being loved by any one. It was immense, it was grand in some ways, parts of it were exceedingly handsome; but it was too vast, too coarse, too restless. They could imagine its being liked by a successful young man of business, or by a rich young girl, ignorant of life and with not too nice a taste in her pleasures; but that it should be dear to any poet or scholar, or any woman of wisdom and refinement, that they could not imagine. They could not think of any one's loving New York as Dante loved Florence, or as Madame de Stael loved Paris, or as Johnson loved black, homely, home-like London. And as they twittered their little dispraises, the giant Mother of Commerce was growing more and more conscious of herself, waking from her night's sleep and becoming aware of her fleets and trains, and the myriad hands and wheels that throughout the whole sea and land move for her, and do her will even while she sleeps. All about the wedding-journeyers swelled the deep tide of life back from its night-long ebb. Broadway had filled her length with people; not yet the most characteristic New York crowd, but the not less interesting multitude of strangers arrived by the early boats and trams, and that easily distinguishable class of lately New-Yorkized people from other places, about whom in the metropolis still hung the provincial traditions of early rising; and over all, from moment to moment, the eager, audacious, well-dressed, proper life of the mighty city was beginning to prevail,--though this was not so notable where Basil and Isabel had paused at a certain window. It was the office of one of the English steamers, and he was saying, "It was by this line I sailed, you know,"--and she was interrupting him with, "When who could have dreamed that you would ever be telling me of it here?" So the old marvel was wondered over anew, till it filled the world in which there was room for nothing but the strangeness that they should have loved each other so long and not made it known, that they should ever have uttered it, and that, being uttered, it should be so much more and better than ever could have been dreamed. The broken engagement was a fable of disaster that only made their present fortune more prosperous. The city ceased about them, and they walked on up the street, the first man and first woman in the garden of the new-made earth. As they were both very conscious people, they recognized in themselves some sense of this, and presently drolled it away, in the opulence of a time when every moment brought some beautiful dream, and the soul could be prodigal of its bliss.

"I think if I had the naming of the animals over again, this morning, I shouldn't call snakes 'snakes'; should you, Eve?" laughed Basil in intricate acknowledgment of his happiness.

"O no, Adam; we'd look out all the most graceful euphemisms in the newspapers, and we wouldn't hurt the feelings of a spider."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 坏丫头搞定高冷校草

    坏丫头搞定高冷校草

    “高中的日子真心不好过啊,作业一大堆,天天都要晚自习,最主要的——必须要寄宿。这让人怎么活啊!!!”苑子兮一边吐槽一边劝表妹苑琳不要来自己学校上学。苑琳像是中了邪一样吵着要去苑子兮学校上学,苑子兮也没有办法,只好将计就计给她诉说自己在学校的痛苦咯。“老姐啊,可是你在那里过的不好不代表我过得不好啊。”苑琳翻了个白眼,吃着薯片。“苑琳,你听我说,你好好的在贵族学院上学干嘛又突然转来这个狗不拉屎的学校呢?!”
  • 元素罗盘

    元素罗盘

    自古乱世出英豪,在这个硝烟四起的时代,要想成为至尊强者,就要和天斗,和地斗,和人斗。要踩踏这万千尸骨,搭就的天梯而行。要在惊涛骇浪的血海中蜕变。这是一个神奇的世界,人类文明并不是一枝独秀,其他多个种族并存的世界。重塑帝国辉煌,揭露上古混战谜团。探索一切未知世界。
  • 妖华泣血

    妖华泣血

    赤珠,又名妖华泣血珠。传说,这颗珠子专门嗜执念很深的人的心头血。殉珠之人的执念越深,此珠的颜色就越烈焰。虽然这颗珠子品性极为烈,可这世间想得到它的人,可不少。。。。
  • 遇见他,温澜潮生

    遇见他,温澜潮生

    沈小喵喜欢苏柏?嗯,是的!这已经是所有人都知道的事情了。沈小喵有两种不怕死的精神,一:亲死苏柏;二:上了苏柏自从沈小喵见到苏柏,并一见钟情了,于是她把所有告白方式都拿了出来,什么雨下告白;999朵玫瑰花,送情书;放烟花;每天按时送早饭,等等等……一系列的告白。可是人家苏柏愣是眼神都没给她一个,这让沈小喵很是心酸,内心特想吐槽:大哥,怎么着你也给个眼神表示下。有人问过沈小喵:“苏柏就不喜欢你,你还每天纠缠他干什么呢?”“没关系,他不喜欢我,我喜欢他就行;他不亲我,我狂亲他就行;他不不扑倒我,我反扑倒他就行。”沈小喵霸气的说。吓的问沈小喵问题的那个人心中汗颜:妈的,这人也太不知羞耻了吧!好牛叉啊!
  • 万物的起源

    万物的起源

    在遥远的银河系的彼岸,人类找到了新的家园星纪元0年,第一批旅行者诞生了,他们开始探索这个未知的世界星纪元28年,细胞融合技术推广到民间,联合国成立旅行者总部星纪元112年,弗雷克来到了这个世界星纪元128年,弗雷克开始了自己的探险他喜欢大自然,他征服了最美丽的雪山并跟他成为最好的朋友,他贪吃,曾下潜到三万米的海底,只为了尝一尝深海珍珠贝的鲜美,他热血,因为一株七彩云罗华跟最凶恶的地震阿洛托大打出手,他执着,不达到万物的起源绝不退缩会跳舞的雪山,会害羞的龙卷风,会哭的椰子树,会流巧克力奶的牛,一场生物界的生存游戏正式开始
  • 终极一班之时空合奏曲

    终极一班之时空合奏曲

    这个世界有十二个时空,还有一个魔界,每个时空都有一些特别的人有特别的能力,我们称之为,异能行者。
  • 如果再爱一次

    如果再爱一次

    我只想知道,如果再有一次,你会不会让我离开。我们过了5年平静的生活,在如今的天翻地覆之后,我知道我只是想与你相守。这是个两个男女找到自己,找到他们之间真正爱情的故事。
  • 九灵珠之幻神传奇

    九灵珠之幻神传奇

    她无意中掉进时空黑洞,让她穿越到历史上不存在的朝代!听说浩宇皇朝的九皇叔,位高权重,是浩宇皇朝的不败战神,常年都佩戴着一张青面獠牙面具,有人不小心看到了他的面容,吓得丢了魂得了失心疯,从那以后,就谣传着战神九皇叔相貌丑陋无比,人人见了害怕又敬畏!-----分割线-----漫天飞雪,万里冰川,她倒在地上,脸色苍白,决裂道:若有来世,再不相见!他双手怀抱着冰冷的她,痛苦道:你为何就这般不信任于我!他们可还曾记得那年。忘川河畔旁,一缕碧衣的她俏皮的对着弹琴的他笑道:嗨!你是谁啊?弹得真好听!他看着她的笑容,亿万年未曾动过的心猛的一跳,嘴角微微勾起,十指飞快的滑动!
  • 稀薄的秋凉

    稀薄的秋凉

    作者倾情于人的生存,大地的处境。身边工业化进程日新月异,而旷野却日渐凌乱。那些蔓延的青草与树木,淤泥的田园与农耕都被覆盖,人与事俱不能怀旧。精神或物质处在双重夹缝中,境况窘迫。不可尽言。分为经过北坡、月夜无眠、稀薄的秋凉、折断布谷、李白那只酒瓶、蝉声满树、春雾迷离、水与泥、随手九辑,收录了《谛听早晨》、《春天已经走远》、《阳光灼伤这个盛夏》等60多篇散文。
  • 夺宝天王

    夺宝天王

    少年柳少钦,为救家族换上怪症的族人,踏上了一条充满危险坎坷的道路,他要进入那有龙的世界,夺取那个名为天宇的宝器,铸就自己夺宝天王的无双名号。