登陆注册
26237400000031

第31章 CHAPTER XV

It was during the early winter of 1892that I resolved to go to sea.My Hancock Fire Brigade experience was very little responsible for this.I still drank and frequented saloons--practically lived in saloons.Whisky was dangerous,in my opinion,but not wrong.Whisky was dangerous like other dangerous things in the natural world.Men died of whisky;but then,too,fishermen were capsized and drowned,hoboes fell under trains and were cut to pieces.To cope with winds and waves,railroad trains,and bar-rooms,one must use judgment.To get drunk after the manner of men was all right,but one must do it with discretion.No more quarts of whisky for me.

What really decided me to go to sea was that I had caught my first vision of the death-road which John Barleycorn maintains for his devotees.It was not a clear vision,however,and there were two phases of it,somewhat jumbled at the time.It struck me,from watching those with whom I associated,that the life we were living was more destructive than that lived by the average man.

John Barleycorn,by inhibiting morality,incited to crime.

Everywhere I saw men doing,drunk,what they would never dream of doing sober.And this wasn't the worst of it.It was the penalty that must be paid.Crime was destructive.Saloon-mates I drank with,who were good fellows and harmless,sober,did most violent and lunatic things when they were drunk.And then the police gathered them in and they vanished from our ken.Sometimes Ivisited them behind the bars and said good-bye ere they journeyed across the bay to put on the felon's stripes.And time and again I heard the one explanation "IF I HADN'T BEEN DRUNK I WOULDN'T A-DONE IT."And sometimes,under the spell of John Barleycorn,the most frightful things were done--things that shocked even my case-hardened soul.

The other phase of the death-road was that of the habitual drunkards,who had a way of turning up their toes without apparent provocation.When they took sick,even with trifling afflictions that any ordinary man could pull through,they just pegged out.

Sometimes they were found unattended and dead in their beds;on occasion their bodies were dragged out of the water;and sometimes it was just plain accident,as when Bill Kelley,unloading cargo while drunk,had a finger jerked off,which,under the circumstances,might just as easily have been his head.

So I considered my situation and knew that I was getting into a bad way of living.It made toward death too quickly to suit my youth and vitality.And there was only one way out of this hazardous manner of living,and that was to get out.The sealing fleet was wintering in San Francisco Bay,and in the saloons I met skippers,mates,hunters,boat-steerers,and boat-pullers.I met the seal-hunter,Pete Holt,and agreed to be his boat-puller and to sign on any schooner he signed on.And I had to have half a dozen drinks with Pete Holt there and then to seal our agreement.

And at once awoke all my old unrest that John Barleycorn had put to sleep.I found myself actually bored with the saloon life of the Oakland water-front,and wondered what I had ever found fascinating in it.Also,with this death-road concept in my brain,I began to grow afraid that something would happen to me before sailing day,which was set for some time in January.Ilived more circumspectly,drank less deeply,and went home more frequently.When drinking grew too wild,I got out.When Nelson was in his maniacal cups,I managed to get separated from him.

On the 12th of January,1893,I was seventeen,and the 20th of January I signed before the shipping commissioner the articles of the Sophie Sutherland,a three topmast sealing schooner bound on a voyage to the coast of Japan.And of course we had to drink on it.Joe Vigy cashed my advance note,and Pete Holt treated,and Itreated,and Joe Vigy treated,and other hunters treated.Well,it was the way of men,and who was I,just turned seventeen,that I should decline the way of life of these fine,chesty,man-grown men?

同类推荐
  • 云中事记

    云中事记

    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。
  • 权修

    权修

    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。
  • 胎金两界血脉

    胎金两界血脉

    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。
  • 太上妙法本相经

    太上妙法本相经

    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。
  • 医碥

    医碥

    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
  • 重生之末世来临

    重生之末世来临

    当一个在末世的时候悲催的饿死的人又遭遇到了末世,该怎么破?!更无语的是,这个末世怎么跟上个世界的末世不一样啊。为什么会有那么多的植物,还成精了?还有一些奇奇怪怪的品种。。。
  • 一线万金——电话销售的7阶秘诀

    一线万金——电话销售的7阶秘诀

    本丛书由影响力训练集团组织十几位专家、几十位学者、上百位培训界精英历经三年时间精心创作,内容注重实战,以解决企业管理实际问题为导向;论述深入浅出,通俗易懂;工具多、方法多、案例多,且经过多轮培训课程使用并经过多次修订,受到各层次管理者的欢迎和好评。本书紧紧围绕电话销售人员的职位要求,按照电话销售工作的七个流程:前期准备、“说”好开场白、识别客户需求、成功进行产品推介、适时跟进、顺利成交和做好售后服务,详细阐述了在电话销售过程中电话销售人员必须掌握的销售技巧。
  • 未来网游之武极

    未来网游之武极

    未来的全息游戏,真实到难辨真假,杀人夺宝如同真正的江湖!生命只有一条,没有第二次机会!残酷的游戏世界却又美女如云,林野在两难中艰难前进,九大职业各有优势,一同组队却又各自提防,这到底是游戏还是你死我活的杀戮江湖……
  • 简单与爱

    简单与爱

    在女人的成长的过程中会出现两种人,第一种是你爱的人,你二种爱你的人。她,固执的追求着眼前的身影,故意一直忽略背后那一双爱恋的眼。她,懦弱的选择逃避,当失去,才知道什么时后悔。原来,自己想要的最好就在自己身边。她,后来明白,简单的才是最幸福的。绚丽浪漫的爱也抵不过细水长流的情,简单平和的温馨也不逊色于波澜壮阔的美。若要爱的幸福,便简单的活着。
  • 薄荷味的夏季

    薄荷味的夏季

    敏感女孩童汐在老家后所发生的事情,关于青春,关于爱情。作者:赵婧霖霖霖其他书还有《花千骨之永不漫灭的回忆》
  • 唐小虎传奇之天下第一流

    唐小虎传奇之天下第一流

    一个青年的江湖传奇故事,一段刀光剑影的历史,纯粹传统武侠。
  • 如若一切可以预料

    如若一切可以预料

    如果一切都可以预料,胡言的故事也许就是童话
  • 樱花树下有个约会

    樱花树下有个约会

    富三代重生种起了樱花,开起了酒店,顺便当当师爷发展发展农业。为毛引来这么多人的窥视,本师爷只想和县老爷搞搞地下情,当然是在樱花树下
  • 激发青少年的100个崇尚科学故事

    激发青少年的100个崇尚科学故事

    教育就是在孩子心中留下美丽的痕迹。创建励志教育特色就是想把励志这种品质扎根在学生心中,成为他们一辈子都能享用的财富。看成功励志文章,故事,美文,激励成功斗志,学习名人成功方法,励志照亮人生,成功改变命运!
  • 病由心生(珍藏版)

    病由心生(珍藏版)

    本书介绍了《医学心理学》中心身疾病的关系和原理,还向我们介绍了社会心理学中的一些普遍存在的心理问题、社会问题等,同时也介绍了临床心理学的一些常见心理障碍。还交给我们一些驾驭自己心灵,调控心灵的方法。