登陆注册
26236100000116

第116章

Charles Gould turned towards the town. Before him jagged peaks of the Sierra came out all black in the clear dawn. Here and there a muffled lepero whisked round the corner of a grass-grown street before the ringing hoofs of his horse. Dogs barked behind the walls of the gardens; and with the colourless light the chill of the snows seemed to fall from the mountains upon the disjointed pavements and the shuttered houses with broken cornices and the plaster peeling in patches between the flat pilasters of the fronts.

The daybreak struggled with the gloom under the arcades on the Plaza, with no signs of country people disposing their goods for the day's market, piles of fruit, bundles of vegetables ornamented with flowers, on low benches under enormous mat umbrellas; with no cheery early-morning bustle of villagers, women, children, and loaded donkeys. Only a few scattered knots of revolutionists stood in the vast space, looking all one way from under their slouched hats for some sign of news from Rincon. The largest of those groups turned about like one man as Charles Gould passed, and shouted, ` Viva la libertad !'

after him in a menacing tone.

Charles Gould rode on, and turned into the archway of his house. In the patio littered with straw, a practicante , one of Dr Monygham's native assistants, sat on the ground with his back against the rim of the fountain, fingering a guitar discreetly, while two girls of the lower class, standing up before him, shuffled their feet a little and waved their arms, humming a popular dance tune. Most of the wounded during the two days of rioting had been taken away already by their friends and relations, but several figures could be seen sitting up balancing their bandaged heads in time to the music. Charles Gould dismounted. A sleepy mozo coming out of the bakery door took hold of the horse's bridle; the practicante endeavoured to conceal his guitar hastily; the girls, unabashed, stepped back smiling; and Charles Gould, on his way to the staircase, glanced into a dark corner of the patio at another group, a mortally wounded cargador with a woman kneeling by his side; she mumbled prayers rapidly, trying at the same time to force a piece of orange between the stiffening lips of the dying man.

The cruel futility of things stood unveiled in the levity and sufferings of that incorrigible people; the cruel futility of lives and of deaths thrown away in the vain endeavour to attain an enduring solution of the problem. Unlike Decoud, Charles Gould could not play lightly a part in a tragic farce. It was tragic enough for him in all conscience, but he could see no farcical element. He suffered too much under a conviction of irremediable folly. He was too severely practical and too idealistic to look upon its terrible humours with amusement, as Martin Decoud, the imaginative materialist, was able to do in the dry light of his scepticism.

To him, as to all of us, the compromises with his conscience appeared uglier than ever in the light of failure. His taciturnity, assumed with a purpose, had prevented him from tampering openly with his thoughts; but the Gould Concession had insidiously corrupted his judgement. He might have known, he said to himself, leaning over the balustrade of the corridor, that Ribierism could never come to anything. The mine had corrupted his judgement by ****** him sick of bribing and intriguing merely to have his work left alone from day to day. Like his father, he did not like to be robbed. It exasperated him. He had persuaded himself that, apart from higher considerations, the backing up of Don Jose's hopes of reform was good business. He had gone forth into the senseless fray as his poor uncle, whose sword hung on the wall of his study, had gone forth -- in the defence of the commonest decencies of organized society. Only his weapon was the wealth of the mine, more far-reaching and subtle than an honest blade of steel fitted into a ****** brass guard.

More dangerous to the wielder, too, this weapon of wealth, doubled-edged with the cupidity and misery of mankind, steeped in all the voices of self-indulgence as in a concoction of poisonous roots, tainting the very cause for which it is drawn, always ready to turn awkwardly in the hand. There was nothing for it now but to go on using it. But he promised himself to see it shattered into small bits before he let it be wrenched from his grasp.

After all, with his English parentage and English upbringing, he perceived that he was an adventurer in Costaguana, the descendant of adventurers enlisted in a foreign legion, of men who had sought fortune in a revolutionary war, who had planned revolutions, who had believed in revolutions. For all the uprightness of his character, he had something of an adventurer's easy morality which takes count of personal risk in the ethical appraising of his action. He was prepared, if need be, to blow up the whole San Tome mountain sky high out of the territory of the Republic. This resolution expressed the tenacity of his character, the remorse of that subtle conjugal infidelity through which his wife was no longer the sole mistress of his thoughts, something of his father's imaginative weakness, and something, too, of the spirit of a buccaneer throwing a lighted match into the magazine rather than surrender his ship.

Down below in the patio the wounded cargador had breathed his last. The woman cried out once, and her cry, unexpected and shrill, made all the wounded sit up. The practicante scrambled up to his feet, and, guitar in hand, gazed steadily in her direction with elevated eyebrows.

The two girls -- sitting now one on each side of their wounded relative, with their knees drawn up and long cigars between their lips -- nodded at each other significantly.

同类推荐
  • 众仙赞颂灵章

    众仙赞颂灵章

    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。
  • 家范

    家范

    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。
  • 原机启微

    原机启微

    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。
  • 第一义法胜经

    第一义法胜经

    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。
  • 情志门

    情志门

    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
  • 刀剑之界

    刀剑之界

    这是一个未来的世界,这里每一个人都不是废人,每一个人都可能成为你心目中的主角,然后随着你的主角走下去吧
  • 鬼眼天骄:重生女神计划

    鬼眼天骄:重生女神计划

    季薇重生回到了三十年前自己的童年时代。当人生重来,季薇决心不让自己留下任何遗憾。鬼眼觉醒,一眼观未来,一眼知阴阳。从此女神崛起,天骄袭来!
  • 半步豪门

    半步豪门

    【第1部《豪门蜕变》】她是校花一枚,本想在大学里好好学习、天天向上,但是无端的绑架、陷害、欺诈、车祸,让她受尽折磨和欺辱。巧遇痴情富豪不计血本讨好于她,怎奈各种货色的争风吃醋和好友的背叛出卖,再加上腹黑富豪的变态纠缠,让她忍无可忍,那又何必再忍,尔等三围发达头脑简单的货色岂是她的对手,苦尽甘来之时,她却发现自己竟然一直生活在巨大的阴谋和谎言之中。
  • 现代蛮荒

    现代蛮荒

    在面对一个联通异界蛮荒世界的世界通道出现在地球上时,人们将会何去何从。移民还是定居在地球上将异界蛮荒世界当成纯粹的殖民之地,为自己掠夺大量的资源财富。在蛮荒世界的影响下,人类的发展路线又将会怎样。三百年后的张云重生回到三百年前的地球,将会书写怎样的绚丽人生!本书将为你一一道来,敬请观看《现代蛮荒》!
  • 封魁人

    封魁人

    青梅竹马的死让我跟着一个奇葩师傅走上了封鬼的道路魁字拆开乃斗鬼,我的职业就是封魁人!
  • 凤起沧溟

    凤起沧溟

    北月王朝,昭和六十九年三月,天现异象。凤凰涅槃,浴火重生。凤星降临,凤女诞生。世间传言,得凤女者得天下!特工火云,代号“火凤凰”,意外流落异世,成为云启国凤家三女。凤家三女,天生聋哑,性格懦弱,并且惨遭当朝太子悔婚。火云取代凤家三小姐,强势如昨,决定叛逃命运,决不做任人宰割的绵羊,于是离开凤家。提起凤家三小姐,众人闻之色变,男人捂住下体,女人捂住脸蛋……这是为何?这事还得从一个月前说起。世人皆知,凤家三女,自小愚钝,天生聋哑,更在一个月前,惨遭太子悔婚。谁料,她却因此性情大变……乱世万里苍穹,天下唯我独尊!
  • 醉笑红尘:王爷手下留情

    醉笑红尘:王爷手下留情

    她是爹不疼娘不爱姐姐谋害的野种,她是宜春院最下等的侍女,她是太子曾经的情人,也是齐王放在心尖上不肯忘记的女人。在七日蛊下苟延残喘的弱小生命,在太子王爷斗争中的牺牲品。她曾经想过离开,上天却一次次逼的她重新回来。迷离的心渐渐破碎,化为乌有,她是一颗棋子,一颗不在有心的棋子。【这是一篇虐文,虐心虐情虐身,无宅斗什么鬼的,分类出错!】
  • 凯少宠妻:萌妻太粘人

    凯少宠妻:萌妻太粘人

    因为公司的事情,她不得不嫁人,可是她内心是完全抗拒的啊!而又在神奇的某一天,身为总裁的他居然把苏家小姐拐回家过上了没羞没臊的生活。【婚后的某一天,她生气的说“我告诉你!你不可以这样的啊!过分了昂!”“我怎么就过分了?”“那些男明星明明好帅的!可你偏说他们丑!”“你信不信我让他们离开这个圈子!”……】【绝对宠啊】
  • 做小人物成大事业

    做小人物成大事业

    本书共分做人要“小”和成事有门道两篇,介绍了做小人物成大事业的技巧。
  • 穿越二重奏之唯爱魔妃

    穿越二重奏之唯爱魔妃

    这一切的一切是命中注定,我的回归,我们的相遇,都是你为她埋下的伏笔,爱深至骨,断心决情,我对你执念于此,为何还要伤我,雾碧池边,千颜树下。你我许下的诺言已堕入无尽黑暗,永寻不踪,即是这样我心已死,永不复动,