登陆注册
15454400000066

第66章 MY UNWILLING NEIGHBOR(1)

I was about twenty-five years old when I began life as the owner of a vineyard in western Virginia. I bought a large tract of land, the greater part of which lay upon the sloping side of one of the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge, the exposure being that most favorable to the growth of the vine. I am an enthusiastic lover of the country and of country life, and believed that I should derive more pleasure as well as profit from the culture of my far-stretching vineyard than I would from ordinary farm operations.

I built myself a good house of moderate size upon a little plateau on the higher part of my estate. Sitting in my porch, smoking my pipe after the labors of the day, I could look down over my vineyard into a beautiful valley, with here and there a little curling smoke arising from some of the few dwellings which were scattered about among the groves and spreading fields, and above this beauty I could imagine all my hillside clothed in green and purple.

My family consisted of myself alone. It is true that Iexpected some day that there would be others in my house besides myself, but I was not ready for this yet.

During the summer I found it very pleasant to live by myself. It was a novelty, and I could arrange and manage everything in my own fashion, which was a pleasure I had not enjoyed when I lived in my father's house. But when winter came I found it very lonely. Even my servants lived in a cabin at some little distance, and there were many dark and stormy evenings when the company even of a bore would have been welcome to me. Sometimes I walked over to the town and visited my friends there, but this was not feasible on stormy nights, and the winter seemed to me a very long one.

But spring came, outdoor operations began, and for a few weeks I felt again that I was all-sufficient for my own pleasure and comfort. Then came a change. One of those seasons of bad and stormy weather which so frequently follow an early spring settled down upon my spirits and my hillside. It rained, it was cold, fierce winds blew, and I became more anxious for somebody to talk to than I had been at any time during the winter.

One night, when a very bad storm was raging, I went to bed early, and as I lay awake I revolved in my mind a scheme of which I had frequently thought before. I would build a neat little house on my grounds, not very far away from my house, but not too near, and I would ask Jack Brandiger to come there and live.

Jack was a friend of mine who was reading law in the town, and it seemed to me that it would be much more pleasant, and even more profitable, to read law on a pretty hillside overlooking a charming valley, with woods and mountains behind and above him, where he could ramble to his heart's content.

I had thought of asking Jack to come and live with me, but this idea I soon dismissed. I am a very particular person, and Jack was not. He left his pipes about in all sorts of places--sometimes when they were still lighted. When he came to see me he was quite as likely to put his hat over the inkstand as to put it anywhere else. But if Jack lived at a little distance, and we could go backward and forward to see each other whenever we pleased, that would be quite another thing. He could do as he pleased in his own house, and I could do as I pleased in mine, and we might have many pleasant evenings together. This was a cheering idea, and I was planning how we might arrange with the negro woman who managed my household affairs to attend also to those of Jack when I fell asleep.

I did not sleep long before I was awakened by the increased violence of the storm. My house shook with the fury of the wind.

The rain seemed to be pouring on its roof and northern side as if there were a waterfall above us, and every now and then I could hear a shower of hailstones rattling against the shutters. My bedroom was one of the rooms on the lower floor, and even there Icould hear the pounding of the deluge and the hailstones upon the roof.

All this was very doleful, and had a tendency to depress the spirits of a man awake and alone in a good-sized house. But Ishook off this depression. It was, not agreeable to be up here by myself in such a terrible storm, but there was nothing to be afraid of, as my house was new and very strongly built, being constructed of logs, weather-boarded outside and ceiled within.

It would require a hurricane to blow off the roof, and I believed my shutters to be hail-proof. So, as there was no reason to stay awake, I turned over and went to sleep.

I do not know how long it was before I was awakened again, this time not by the noise of the storm, but by a curious movement of my bedstead. I had once felt the slight shock of an earthquake, and it seemed to me that this must be something of the kind. Certainly my bed moved under me. I sat up. The room was pitchy dark. In a moment I felt another movement, but this time it did not seem to me to resemble an earthquake shock. Such motion, I think, is generally in horizontal directions, while that which I felt was more like the movement of a ship upon the water. The storm was at its height; the wind raged and roared, and the rain seemed to be pouring down as heavily as ever.

I was about to get up and light the lamp, for even the faintest candle-flame would be some sort of company at such a grewsome moment, when my bedstead gave another movement, more shiplike than before. It actually lurched forward as if it were descending into the trough of the sea, but, unlike a ship, it did not rise again, but remained in such a slanting position that Ibegan to slide down toward the foot. I believe that if it had not been a bedstead provided with a footboard, I should have slipped out upon the floor.

同类推荐
  • 湛然居士文集

    湛然居士文集

    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。
  • 华严经要解

    华严经要解

    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。
  • 清实录雍正朝实录

    清实录雍正朝实录

    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。
  • 禅苑清规

    禅苑清规

    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。
  • 太上飞步南斗太微玉经

    太上飞步南斗太微玉经

    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
  • 日暮下的海兰

    日暮下的海兰

    一个对生活已失去一切欲望,貌似已到崩溃边缘的大学毕业生-杜驰拓,选择了一个美丽的小镇海兰作为自己结束一切的地方。但当跳入蓝海时却被一个莫名其妙但自称自己是海兰神的女孩所救,女孩利用法力将他复活,但当女孩向他索要钱财来恢复自己法力的时候却发现他只是个没有固定收入的大学毕业生。由于杜驰拓是被海兰所复活,所以在海兰恢复法力之前他无法离开这个小镇。无奈之下,只得滞留在这里,想方设法凑集所有的报酬。但是渐渐地他适应了这里的生活,同时遇到了很多有意思的11女女,他们与杜驰拓,海兰之间也是发生了许多有趣的故事。。。
  • 穿越之全球大演武

    穿越之全球大演武

    吴亮,一个孤儿在人生最落魄的时候,因一场交通事故穿越到15年后的大演武时代。此时寰宇公司推出的一款名叫全球演武的全息模拟虚拟游戏应运而生。在种种际遇下,看主人公是如何习得神功,傲视群雄。如何玩转游戏,称霸全网。如何快意恩仇,笑傲江湖....
  • 冷少的首席宠妻:99次说爱我

    冷少的首席宠妻:99次说爱我

    千金小姐墨璟初一夜之间却沦为丧家奴,还被高冷男买回家好生伺候?!一夜好眠,他借她的身体散发着雄性荷尔蒙,“看不出来,你年纪不大,心机不小。”冷少尘挑着她的下巴,愣是给了她一记白眼,什么!我心机大呢!明明我吃亏;“这种寄人篱下的滋味好受吗?”他再次挑唆,“不要靠近我”他对她一次又一次的爆发着欲望,“怀了孩子又怎样?我是不会娶你的。”她逃,他追,“孩子是我的!你岂能说走就走!”甜蜜新文,虐心上线,快来入坑!
  • 皇城禁卫军

    皇城禁卫军

    2010年接触了一款腾讯手机家园游戏“二战风云”,谨以此文纪念那些年一起陪伴成长的兄弟姐妹们。
  • 仙剑奇侠之轩云传

    仙剑奇侠之轩云传

    “天芒星”是颗福星,在夕阳的照耀下万丈光芒,夜空之上它璀璨耀眼,使华夏熠熠生辉。“孤煞星”是颗灾星,在乌云之上它如同干涸的骷髅,令人畏惧,使人间充满坎坷。“天芒星”、“孤煞星”如同日月,一方升起,一方消迹。今日,芒、煞二星同时升起,乃是千古奇观,就如同日月共辉,天地共浊......魁星探月,想必有大劫难逃。芒煞之星指向一个地方,仙界
  • 凤回三生

    凤回三生

    龙吟凤唳……苍穹之上,九重宫阙。她倒在血泊中,紫眸中神光逐渐涣散,“为什么……”她低语,似在质问,似在自语。“因为神魔自古不两立。”他冷漠的金眸有如蚀骨寒冰,深深刺痛了她的心。最后一缕生机也终于涣散……夜,未央……(其实这是一篇宠文(*/?\*))
  • 霸道王妃:本王错了

    霸道王妃:本王错了

    一个神秘组织老大,一朝穿越,成为一个身负灭族之仇的小小少女。本是世家千金的她却是暗杀不断,她忍;世人欺她,她忍;忍无可忍,她一挑眉,红唇一动:“不怕死的尽管来”。众人止步,她得意洋洋,眼前一闪,一抹紫色忽降,‘’本王来会会你‘',谁能告诉她,他是从哪里冒出来的。
  • 恶霸总裁:娇妻床上宠

    恶霸总裁:娇妻床上宠

    -——他,是商界的龙头老大,;他,暴戾残忍,是嗜血如水的恶魔。-----她,呆萌天真,单纯如水,拥有绝色容貌。母亲离世惨遭继母欺压。终于有一天,她脱离了继母的苦海。却又被推进了他这个火坑......
  • 再爱难回头

    再爱难回头

    我们什么时候竟变成了这般模样?很多东西不是你想要就能够拥有的其实我也没有算和你在一起只是想能够喜欢你就好了但是上天给我了这个机会我一定会珍惜的可是阿苏昀哲你自己不珍惜我又有什么办法呢一生酷爱苏昀哲再爱难回头。致我的学校生活。
  • 启迪孩子智慧的动物故事

    启迪孩子智慧的动物故事

    《启迪孩子智慧的动物故事》系列从成长中可能遇到的问题出发,内容涵盖了勤奋、坚强、自信、乐观等诸多与孩子健康成长密切相关的方面,入选的故事通俗易懂,道理清晰明了,版式活泼多样,容易激发孩子强烈的阅读兴趣,能够起到极好的教育和熏陶作用,对于提高孩子的文化素养、拓展孩子的知识面大有帮助。