登陆注册
15416600000022

第22章 An Inland Sea

They had told us overnight that a small steamer plied every other day through Noto's unfamed inland sea, leaving the capital early in the morning, and touching shortly after at Wakura. As good luck would have it, the morrow happened not to be any other day, so we embraced the opportunity to embark in her ourselves. On her, it would be more accurate to say, for she proved such a mite that her cabin was barely possible and anything but desirable. By squatting down and craning my neck I peered in at the entrance, a feat which was difficult enough. She was, in truth, not much bigger than a ship's gig; but she had a soul out of all proportion to her size. The way it throbbed and strained and set her whole little frame quivering with excitement, made me think every moment that she was about to explode.

The fact that she was manned exclusively by Japanese did not entirely reassure me.

There was an apology for a deck forward, to which, when we were well under way, I clambered over the other passengers. I was just sitting down there to enjoy a comfortable pipe when I was startlingly requested by a voice from a caboose behind to move off, as I was obscuring the view of the man at the wheel. After that I perched on the gunwale.

We steamed merrily out into the middle of the bay. The water was slumberously smooth, and under the tawny haze of the morning it shone with the sheen of burnished brass. From the gentle plowing of our bow it rolled lazily to one side, as if in truth it were molten metal.

Land, at varying picturesque distances, lay on all sides of us.

In some directions the shore was not more than a mile and a half off;in others, the eye wandered down a vista of water framed by low headlands for ten miles or more. But the atmosphere gave the dominant thought, a strange slumber-like seclusion. So rich and golden, it shut this little corner of the world in a sort of happy valley of its own, and the smoke from my pipe drifted dreamily astern, a natural incense to the spirits of the spot.

The passengers suggested anything, from a public picnic to an early exploration party. There were men, women and children of all ages and kinds, some stowed away in the cabin behind, some gathered in groups amidships; and those in the cabin thought small fry of those on deck. The cabin was considered the place of honor because the company made one pay a higher price for the privilege of its discomfort. Altogether it was a very pretty epitome of a voyage.

Just as the steamer people were preparing for their first landing, there detached itself from the background of trees along the shore the most singular aquatic structure I think I have ever seen.

It looked like the skeleton of some antediluvian wigwam which a prehistoric roc had subsequently chosen for a nest. Four poles planted in the water inclined to one another at such an angle that they crossed three-quarters of the way up. The projecting quarters held in clutch a large wicker basket like the car of a balloon.

Peering above the car was a man's head. As the occupant below slowly turned the head to keep an eye on us, it suggested, amid its web of poles, some mammoth spider lying in wait for its prey.

It was a matter of some wonder at first how the man got there, until the motion of the steamer turned the side and disclosed a set of cross poles lashed between two of the uprights, forming a rude sort of ladder. Curiosity, satisfied on this primary point, next asked why he got there. As this was a riddle to me, I propounded it to Yejiro, who only shook his head and propounded it to somebody else;a compliment to the inquiry certainly, if not to my choice of informant.

This somebody else told him the man was fishing. Except for the immobility of the figure, I never saw a man look less like it in my life.

Such, however, was the fact. The wigwam was connected by strings to the entrance of a sort of weir, and the man who crouched in the basket was on the lookout for large fish, of a kind called bora. As soon as one of them strayed into the mouth of the net, the man pulled the string which closed the opening. The height of his observatory above the level of the water enabled him to see through it to the necessary depth. I am a trifle hazy over the exact details of the apparatus, as I never saw a fish inquisitive enough to go in; but I submit the existence of the fishermen in proof that it works.

Having deposited such wights as wished to go ashore--for the place was of no pretension--our steam fish once more turned its tail and darted us through some narrows into another bay. It must have been a favorite one with bora, as its shores were dotted with fish-lookouts.

The observatories stood a few stone-throws out in deepish water, at presumably favorable points, and never very near one another, lest they should interfere with a possible catch. Some were inhabited, some not.

This bay was further remarkable for a solar halo which I chanced to see on glancing up at the sun. I suppose it was the singular quality of the light that first caused me to look overhead. For a thin veil of cloud had drawn over the blue and tempered the sunshine peculiarly.

Of course one is familiar with caricatures of the thing in meteorological books; but the phenomenon itself is not so common, and the effect was uncanny. At the first glance it seemed a bit of Noto witchery, that strangely luminous circle around the sun.

To admire the moon thus bonneted, as the Japanese say, is common enough, and befits the hour. But to have the halo of the night hung aloft in broad day is to crown sober noon with enchantment.

The sheet of water was sparsely dotted with sail. One little craft in particular I remember, whose course bore her straight down upon us.

She dilated slowly out of the distance, and then passed so close Imight have tossed a flower aboard of her. So steady her motion she seemed oblivious to our presence, as she glided demurely by at relatively doubled speed.

Only after we had passed did she show signs of noticing us at all.

For, meeting our wake, the coquette, she suddenly began dropping us curtseys in good-by.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 失落灵王

    失落灵王

    一次雷击,改变了一个平凡人的命运是宿命还是偶然进入异界,生存与挑战强大的灵术,热血沸腾狂啸的兽人,冰冷的刺客,冷静的封印师一个普通的少年面对命运,是改变,还是服从,该如何抉择!!!
  • 未焚诗

    未焚诗

    本书收录的诗篇有:路不拾遗、跳舞好吗、俯瞰、对面、外景、无情诗、飞机、田园诗、寓言、笔记簿、练习曲、新旧句、家居诗等。
  • 帝少总裁的心尖妻

    帝少总裁的心尖妻

    结婚三年不会怀,婆婆骂我是不会下蛋的母鸡。终于怀孕却生了个女孩,老公将我扔在医院里不管不问。逆来顺受只是为了稳定的婚姻,但虐待却变本加厉。终于在那一晚,我躺在酒店的大床上装醉,看着一个不是我老公的男人脱我的衣服。还眯眸浅笑,“是不是第一次玩一夜?”我无法回答,有夫之妇玩一夜,那叫出轨,要在以前,这是要浸猪笼的大罪。他爬起来凑近我,“睡都睡了,现在哭有什么用?难道要我给你办个假的烈女证?”在离婚协议上签字后,他抱着我说,“离婚妇女是个宝,身体丰满经验好。”且看离婚女人如何挣脱束缚,逆袭豪门!
  • 平静的水潭下

    平静的水潭下

    茫茫的水潭,看似十分平静,实际上,在这平静的水潭下,却是波涛汹涌,汹涌澎湃!让我们携手走进这平静的水潭,领略其中无限魅力!
  • 另类兽王

    另类兽王

    不一样的人生,另类的小说,没有做不到的,只有想不到的……
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 妖神大道

    妖神大道

    晨,是希望!但是我却是尘,并不出众!世人皆说废人如尘土似草芥!可我并不认同,我一定要向世人证明!我可以将这句话彻底颠覆!
  • 时空超警

    时空超警

    他叫王智超,是超简单的超捷四代拟化生命,身份是隶属于时空管理局的作业人员,负责清理穿越者、导正历史。他是个运气很好的作业人员,接到的都是“超简单任务”。简单的生命与简单的任务,简单的组合正是一切复杂的开始。
  • 幻夜森林之前世尘缘

    幻夜森林之前世尘缘

    “不!我不要你这样,为什么,这个世界上一定会有真爱的啊!”她大喊着。“这个世界太恶心了,我已经厌倦了,我,就这样堕落下去吧。”从不流泪的他,此时眼角也多了泪花。“我爱你,是真的爱你!不要离开我,好吗?”“你爱上了一个不该爱的人,放下吧,我不值得你这样。”他叹了口气,继续说着。“我放不下!你要我怎么放下?!......”“呵....”他低下头“对不起,我伤你伤的太深了。”“不要说对不起......”她伏在他肩头,哭的像个孩子。“爱我,等下辈子吧。”他抬头望着天“也许那时,我就不会像现在这样了。”
  • 盛唐雪

    盛唐雪

    李青风一直以为自己在大唐就这样过去,但是没有想到历史一步步把他推到巅峰,杨贵妃的回眸一笑,李白的謫仙风采。这是一个最好的时代,李青风说:“我来了,盛唐。”