登陆注册
15452000000200

第200章 CHAPTER XLVI.(1)

Round a great fire in the Town Hall were huddled a number of half-naked creatures, who had been driven out of their dilapidated homes; some of them had seen children or relatives perish in the flood they had themselves so narrowly escaped, and were bemoaning them with chattering teeth.

Little spoke them a word of comfort, promised them all clothes as soon as the shops should open, and hurried off to the lower part of the town in search of Ransome.

He soon found the line the flood had taken. Between Poma Bridge and Hillsborough it had wasted itself considerably in a broad valley, but still it had gone clean through Hillsborough twelve feet high, demolishing and drowning. Its terrible progress was marked by a layer of mud a foot thick, dotted with rocks, trees, wrecks of houses, machinery, furniture, barrels, mattresses, carcasses of animals, and dead bodies, most of them stark naked, the raging flood having torn their clothes off their backs.

Four corpses and two dead horses were lying in a lake of mud about the very door of the railway station; three of them were females in absolute nudity. The fourth was a male, with one stocking on. This proved to be Hillsbro' Harry, warned in vain up at Damflask. When he actually heard the flood come hissing, he had decided, on the whole, to dress, and had got the length of that one stocking, when the flying lake cut short his vegetation.

Not far from this, Little found Ransome, working like a horse, with the tear in his eyes.

He uttered a shout of delight and surprise, and, taking Little by both shoulders, gazed earnestly at him, and said, "Can this be a living man I see?"

"Yes, I am alive," said Little, "but I had to work for it: feel my clothes."

"Why, the are dryer than mine."

"Ay; yet have been in water to the throat; the heat of my body and my great exertions dried them. I'll tell you all another day: now show me how to do a bit of good; for it is not one nor two thousand pounds I'll stick at, this night."

"Come on."

Strange sights they saw that night.

They found a dead body curled round the top frame of a lamppost, and, in the suburbs, another jammed between a beam and the wall of a house.

They found some houses with the front wall carried clean away, and, on the second floor, such of the inmates as had survived huddled together in their night-clothes, unable to get down. These, Ransome and his men speedily relieved from their situation.

And now came in word that the whole village of Poma Bridge had been destroyed.

Little, with Ransome and his men, hurried on at these sad tidings as fast as the mud and ruins would allow, and, on the way, one of the policemen trod on something soft. It was the body of a woman imbedded in the mud.

A little further they saw, at some distance, two cottages in a row, both gutted and emptied. An old man was alone in one, seated on the ground-floor in the deep mud.

They went to him, and asked what they could do for him.

"Do? Why let me die," be said.

They tried to encourage him; but he answered them in words that showed how deeply old Shylock's speech is founded in nature:

"Let the water take me--it has taken all I had."

When they asked after his neighbors, he said he believed they were all drowned. Unluckily for HIM, he had been out when the flood came.

Little clambered into the other cottage, and found a little boy and girl placidly asleep in a cupboard upstairs.

Little yelled with delight, and kissed them, and cuddled them, as if they had been his own, so sweet was it to see their pretty innocent faces, spared by death. The boy kissed him in return, and told him the room had been full of water, and dada and mamma had gone out at the window, and they themselves had floated in the bed so high he had put his little sister on the top shelf, and got on it himself, and then they had both felt very sleepy.

"You are a dear good boy, and I take you into custody," said Ransome, in a broken voice.

Judge if this pair were petted, up at the Town Hall.

At Poma Bridge the devastation was horrible. The flood had bombarded a row of fifty houses, and demolished them so utterly that only one arch of one cellar remained; the very foundations were torn up, and huge holes of incredible breadth and depth bored by the furious eddies.

Where were the inhabitants?

Ransome stood and looked and shook like a man in an ague.

"Little," said he, "this is awful. Nobody in Hillsborough dreams the extent of this calamity. I DREAD THE DAWN OF DAY. There must be scores of dead bodies hidden in this thick mud, or perhaps swept through Hillsborough into the very sea."

A little further, and they came to the "Reindeer," where he had heard the boon-companions singing--over their graves; for that night, long before the "cock did craw, or the day daw," their mouths were full of water and mud, and not the "barley bree."

To know their fate needed but a glance at the miserable, shattered, gutted fragment of the inn that stood. There was a chimney, a triangular piece of roof, a quarter of the inside of one second-floor room, with all the boards gone and half the joists gone, and the others either hanging down perpendicular or sticking up at an angle of forty-five. Even on the side furthest from the flood the water had hacked and plowed away the wall so deeply, that the miserable wreck had a jagged waist, no bigger in proportion than a wasp's.

Not far from this amazing ruin was a little two-storied house, whose four rooms looked exactly, as four rooms are represented in section on the stage, the front wall having been blown clean away, and the furniture and inmates swept out; the very fender and fire-irons had been carried away: a bird-cage, a clock, and a grate were left hanging to the three walls.

As a part of this village stood on high ground, the survivors were within reach of relief; and Little gave a policeman orders to buy clothes at the shop, and have them charged to him.

同类推荐
  • 议兵

    议兵

    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。
  • 火吽轨别录

    火吽轨别录

    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。
  • 大乘宝要义论卷

    大乘宝要义论卷

    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。
  • 六十种曲绣襦记

    六十种曲绣襦记

    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。
  • 佛说胜军王所问经

    佛说胜军王所问经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 旋舞的紫蝶

    旋舞的紫蝶

    生死格斗游戏的同人作品,文笔很幼稚,还希望大家多多提意见。
  • 武灵天下

    武灵天下

    他原本是武林高手,竟重生在一位已被人唾弃而自寻短见的废材身上;没有根骨,没有先天灵气他一样可以成为强者,谁让他原本就是武林高手。《武灵天下》讲述一位武林高手带着飞刀绝技重生到灵界,通过不懈努力最终成为万众瞩目灵尊级暗器师的故事。
  • 姥姥讲的诡故事

    姥姥讲的诡故事

    "来!孩子,到姥姥这来!来听姥姥讲故事吧!在这里,有为情所困的羊脸女、被活活烧死的烧窖娃娃,有活吃人尸的猫脸哑女、有轮回百世的阴命童子、还有摇铃赶尸的茅山老道、沐浴人血成邪的滴血薄荷、守护山民的护山神犬……来吧!让我们一起走入这个可怖的世界!"
  • 只因夜色太疯狂

    只因夜色太疯狂

    我和陈昊天的故事,始于一次肮脏的交易。再见面,他是男友的小舅,又用权势买断我的爱情,威胁我任他予取予求。为了报复他,我使尽浑身解数,要他栽在我手里,却把自己给赔进去了。我不择手段帮他排除异己,承担恶名,又给他洗衣做饭,生儿育女。可这些终究都抵不过他心里的那枚朱砂。他任旧爱对我百般羞辱,让孩子叫别人为妈,冷看我声名狼藉,锒铛入狱....
  • 霸道女王遇总裁你离我远点

    霸道女王遇总裁你离我远点

    “你,你……你离我远点!”“为什么?你可是要嫁给我的?”他一脸邪魅的看着她。“谁要嫁给你!你滚开啊!”她用手推着他。他一手环住她的腰,低头在她的唇上轻轻烙下一吻:“你不可能逃走……”
  • 穿越门之三千世界

    穿越门之三千世界

    黎流月得到一个闪闪发亮的金手指,可以穿越任何界面。怎么形容心情呢?(*?︶?*)一个字,爽~!意外去某个修仙的地方?然后遇到了药罐子大少爷,斗长老,被求拜师?还修仙?去某个王朝,遇上了十个小猴子们(小屁孩~),麻烦事儿升级!去高科技星球……嗯哼?怎么当上超级世家的大小姐了?哦?还有个有丧尸的世界?全是水形成的星球?还有个远古部落?对了,部长的儿子好可爱!去…等等,,,黑洞告诉我,我要在每个世界去寻找穿越女?带回原来的世界???要不然……去你个要不然!我能啊,但重点是有三千世界!挂机都要好多时间惹!不爽了!————————————森sion的功底不是特好,文文也有不好的地方!所以,请多多指教啊!
  • 夏日浅笑

    夏日浅笑

    因为喜欢青梅竹马的祁郁,光玳总是默默为他付出着。直到因为祁郁的关系而结识了总是会在她困难时帮助她的佑一,在相处中,光玳开始渐渐觉得佑一越来越重要,也因为佑一的出现,让正迷恋付桑桑的祁郁所带来的伤痛似乎好了许多。可是事实的真相是,付桑桑喜欢的人是佑一,所做的一切都是为了和佑一在一起而已。当最后祁郁经历过挫折和失败总算发现自己喜欢的人是光玳时,光玳已经知道,自己喜欢的,只有佑一而已了。面对一系列复杂的事情,光玳开始不知道应该要如何选择……
  • 一剑凌仙

    一剑凌仙

    人生如梦亦如烟两袖清风几欲仙剑意无痕何须酒独孤御道醉神游
  • 灵极杀

    灵极杀

    人有隐脉,藏于眉心,是为天生灵脉。若一日觉醒,可牵一发而动全身,从此共振天地灵力,踏入修炼一途,成为令人羡慕的修灵者。贫民区少年经历重重坎坷,终得一个机会,觉醒天地生之神脉,成生之轮脉纹,一路而上,为了找回失散的妹妹,为了寻知自己身世.........PS:劳烦点开这本书的朋友,觉得还可以的话点一下收藏,笔墨感激不尽O(∩_∩)O谢谢!!
  • 烟雨洪江

    烟雨洪江

    本书主要讲述洪江古商城中两个家族随着历史的变迁而命运多变的传奇故事。文中主人公“我的奶奶”出生医道世家廖家大院,三岁随父在医所为病人看病,五岁为病人抓药,十余岁时因为用自家的祖传秘方“七毒散”偶救一中蛊的杨姓商人而结下姻缘。从此,两个家族,三代人,分隔大陆台湾,演绎了无尽的颠沛流离和悲欢离合……