登陆注册
15732800000050

第50章 THE COUNTY FAIR(6)

I didn't quite catch that last remark" expression. I don't know if it affected you in the same way that it did me, but after I had stood there for a time and watched those young men and women thus wasting the precious moments that dropped like priceless pearls into the ocean of Eternity, and were lost irrevocably, young, men and women giving themselves up to present enjoyment without one serious thought in their minds as to who was going to wash the supper dishes, or what would happen if the house took fire while they were away I say I do not know how the sight of such reckless frivolity affected you, but I know that after so long a time my face would get all cramped up from wearing a grin, and I'd have to go out and look at the reapers and binders to rest myself so Icould come back and look some. There are two things that you simply have to do at the County Fair, or you aren't right sure you've been. One is to drink a glass of sweet cider just from the press, (which, I may say in passing, is an over-rated luxury.

Cider has to be just the least bit "frisky" to be good. I don't mean hard, but" frisky." You know). And the other is to buy a whip, if it is only the, little toy, fifteen-cent kind. On the next soap-box to the old fellow that comes every year to sell pictorial Bibles and red, plush-covered albums, the old fellow in the green slippers that talks as if he were just ready to drop off to sleep - on the next soap-box to him is the man that sells the whips. You can buy one for a dollar, two for a dollar, or four for a dollar, but not one for fifty cents, or one for a quarter. Don't ask me why, for I don't know. I am just stating the facts. It can't be done, for I've seen it tried, and if you keep up the attempt too long, the whip-man will lose all patience with your unreasonableness, and tell you to go 'long about your business if you've got any, and not bother the life and soul out of him, because he won't sell anything but a dollar's worth of whips, and that's all there is about it.

He sells other things, handsaws, and pencils, and mouth-harps, and two knives for a quarter, of such pure steel that he whittles shavings off a wire nail with 'em, and is particular to hand you the very identical knife he did it with. He has jewelry, though Idon't suppose you could cut a wire nail with it. You might, at that.

To him approaches a boy.

"Got 'ny collar-buttons?"

"Well, now, I'll just look and see. Here's a beautiful rolled-plate gold watch-chain, with an elegant jewel charm. Lovely blue jewel."He dangles the chain and its rich glass pendant, and it certainly does look fine. "That'd cost you $2.50 at the store. How'd that strike you ?""Hpm. I want a collar-button."

"Well, now, you hold on a minute. Lemme look again. Ah, here's a package 'at orta have some in it. Yes, sir, here's four of 'em, enough to last you a lifetime; front, back, and both sleeves, the kind that flips and don't tear the buttonholes. Well, by ginger! Now, how'd that git in here, I want to know? That gold ring? Well, I don't care. It'll have to go with the collar-buttons.

Tell you what I'll do with you: I'll let you have this elegant solid gold rolled-plate watch-chain and jewel, this elegant, solid gold ring to git married with - Hay? How about it? - and these four collar-buttons for - for - twenty-five cents, or a quarter of a dollar."That boy never took that quarter out of his breeches pocket. It just jumped out of itself. But I see that you are getting the fidgets. You're hoping that I'll come to the horse-racing pretty soon. You want to have it all brought back to you, the big, big race-track which, as you remember it now, must have been about the next size smaller than the earth's orbit around the sun. You want me to tell about the old farmer with the bunch of timothy whiskers under his chin that gets his old jingling wagon on the track just before a heat is to be trotted, and all the people yell at him:

"Take him out!" You want me to tell how the trotters looked walking around in their dusters, with the eye-holes bound with red braid, and how the drivers of the sulkies sat with the tails of their horses tucked under one leg. Well, I'm not going to do anything of the kind, and if you don't like it, you can go to the box-office and demand your money back. I hope you'll get it. First place, I don't know anything about racing, and consequently I don't believe it's a good thing for the country. All I know is, that some horses can go faster than others, but which are the fastest ones I can't tell by the looks, though I have tried several times . . . . I did not walk back. I bought a round-trip ticket. They will tell you that these events at the County Fair tend to improve the breed of horses. So they do - of fast horses. But the fast horses are no good. They can't any of them go as fast as a nickel trolley-car when it gets out where there aren't any houses. And they not only are no good; they're a positive harm. You know and I know that just as soon as a man gets cracked after fast horses, it's good-by John with him.

In the next place, I wouldn't mind it if it was only interesting to me. But it isn't. It bores me to death. You sit there and sit there trying to keep awake while the drivers jockey and jockey, scheming to get the advantage of the other fellow, and the bell rings so many times for them to come back after you think: "They're off this time, sure," that you get sick of hearing it. And when they do get away, why, who can tell which horse is in the lead? On the far side of the track they don't appear to do anything but poke along, and once in a while some fool horse will "break" and that's annoying. And then when they come into the stretch, the other folks that see you with the field-glasses, keep nudging you and asking:

"Who 's ahead, mister? Hay? Who's ahead?" And it's ruinous to the voice to yell: "Go it! Go it! Go IT, ye devil, you!" with your throat all clenched that way and your face as red as a turkey-gobbler's. And that second when they are going under the wire, and the horse you rather like is about a nose behind the other one that you despise - Oh, tedious, very tedious. Ho hum, Harry!

同类推荐
  • Volume Eight

    Volume Eight

    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。
  • 作邑自箴

    作邑自箴

    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。
  • 佛说十力经

    佛说十力经

    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。
  • 古瓶山牧道者究心录

    古瓶山牧道者究心录

    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。
  • 庄公

    庄公

    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。
热门推荐
  • 浪迹在北大

    浪迹在北大

    是一本记录作者十年北大生活的散文集。全书分为三辑:浪迹在北大、一程山水一程歌、内心的旅行。内容包含了作者在北大的校园生活、日本的留学经历、电影随笔、书评以及一些个人的情感小品文。作者语言富有个人特色,流水通透。
  • 灵域战仙传

    灵域战仙传

    巅峰血雨为谁疯,修道超脱万般艰苦,困难重重,且看北域小子刘天,意外获得灵珠,手握青铜剑斩破尘世一切虚幻路,从北域天地一路战至中域,心中的执念是为她,也是道,吃尽天下寒疾苦,历经沧桑,完善心中大道,战至灵域巅峰,成就超脱,成为一代战仙传奇。
  • 庶女古代好生活手札

    庶女古代好生活手札

    穿越一个不吃苦的庶女好像挺不错的,没有小说中恶毒的嫡女和小白花的姐姐,庶女表示她的日子一点也不难过。只是为啥有一天她被一道圣旨纳进了宫,都没有问过她和父母愿意不愿意,这个皇帝太霸道了。于是庶女只好背着包袱依依不舍离开了舒适的家,走进了那个据说会吃人的皇宫。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 这题不会之老师伪装成羊

    这题不会之老师伪装成羊

    她打架,他帮他擦药,他温润如水,她千方百计想看他生气,却发现只是徒劳,诶,不就喝个酒吗,怎么就生气了,为什么目的达成,她却一点也不高兴。。。师生。。。简介无能
  • 重生之星光入我怀

    重生之星光入我怀

    凌纤纤是个在娱乐圈摸爬滚打的小新人,某天醒来发现整个世界都变了,瞬间从十八线小艺人变成了公司一姐,资源滚滚来,而且老板秘书总是用奇怪的眼神看着自己,一切的一切都透着一股诡异。秦景初一觉醒来忽然回到了五年前,什么?老婆从影后变成了十八线小艺人,还被几个叫不上名字的炮灰欺负了,这让他怎么忍?重来一次,他誓必要护她周全,待她荣耀封后之时,再把那星光揽入怀中。
  • 都市纵横之存档系统

    都市纵横之存档系统

    一个碌碌无为的中年,执掌存档系统。读档一零青年正茂,开启一段非凡人生。曾错过的一切,曾造成的遗憾,曾失去的机遇,通通可以弥补。以此为凭,傲视群雄笑看风云起。
  • 仙王志

    仙王志

    我疯过,爱过,恨过,辉煌过,落魄过,悔恨过,闯过,战斗过,拼过,也怕过,但从未后悔过。这就是一代仙王在自己的墓碑上刻下的一段话。
  • 决斗吧:英雄

    决斗吧:英雄

    宇宙基点爆炸,影响了不知道多少世界。仙幻大陆因为这个变故,造成众多不可预料的后果:紫霄所有仙班司职的天仙全部被打落到凡尘;地狱所有邪恶恐怖的魔鬼全部被迫转生凡间;这两个变故导致凡间沉睡的英雄全部苏醒,仙魔凡的战争一触即发。快来决斗吧,英雄!
  • 修仙狂少在都市

    修仙狂少在都市

    修仙界第一天才陆辰遭人暗算陨落,重生回地球17岁。这一世再入修仙,定要让万仙俱灭!【李家村书友群群号:344151132】
  • 特工皇妃:皇上我要废了你

    特工皇妃:皇上我要废了你

    “跟我走,我娶你为妻.”女子缓慢里拉开头发,露出魔鬼似的半脸,淡淡的道:“这样,你还要我跟你走吗?”她是帝国家喻户晓的丑女,废物。却一言惊天下,王子,不嫁。王妃,我不稀罕。金麟岂是池中物,一遇风云变化龙。谁知道如此的废物身后却是那惊才绝艳的所在。谁知道丑颜本是倾国倾城貌。风云悸动,凤飞九天。万里苍穹,唯我独尊。这一生,谁能共我真正生死与共原名《凤霸苍穹:王爷闹洞房》皆因无数读者告诉我不知道这名字什么意思,我抽了,干脆换个朗朗上口的,就这名字了,以后在不换了。