登陆注册
26331200000021

第21章 THE BLACK GODMOTHER(1)

Sitting out on the lawn at tea with our friend and his retriever, we had been discussing those massacres of the helpless which had of late occurred, and wondering that they should have been committed by the soldiery of so civilised a State, when, in a momentary pause of our astonishment, our friend, who had been listening in silence, crumpling the drooping soft ear of his dog, looked up and said, "The cause of atrocities is generally the violence of Fear. Panic's at the back of most crimes and follies."Knowing that his philosophical statements were always the result of concrete instance, and that he would not tell us what that instance was if we asked him--such being his nature--we were careful not to agree.

He gave us a look out of those eyes of his, so like the eyes of a mild eagle, and said abruptly: "What do you say to this, then?.....

I was out in the dog-days last year with this fellow of mine, looking for Osmunda, and stayed some days in a village--never mind the name.

Coming back one evening from my tramp, I saw some boys stoning a mealy-coloured dog. I went up and told the young devils to stop it. They only looked at me in the injured way boys do, and one of them called out, 'It's mad, guv'nor!' I told them to clear off, and they took to their heels. The dog followed me. It was a young, leggy, mild looking mongrel, cross--I should say--between a brown retriever and an Irish terrier. There was froth about its lips, and its eyes were watery; it looked indeed as if it might be in distemper. I was afraid of infection for this fellow of mine, and whenever it came too close shooed it away, till at last it slunk off altogether. Well, about nine o'clock, when I was settling down to write by the open window of my sitting-room--still daylight, and very quiet and warm--there began that most maddening sound, the barking of an unhappy dog. I could do nothing with that continual 'Yap yap!' going on, and it was too hot to shut the window; so I went out to see if I could stop it. The men were all at the pub, and the women just finished with their gossip; there was no sound at all but the continual barking of this dog, somewhere away out in the fields. Itravelled by ear across three meadows, till I came on a hay-stack by a pool of water. There was the dog sure enough--the same mealy-coloured mongrel, tied to a stake, yapping, and ****** frantic little runs on a bit of rusty chain; whirling round and round the stake, then standing quite still, and shivering. I went up and spoke to it, but it backed into the hay-stack, and there it stayed shrinking away from me, with its tongue hanging out. It had been heavily struck by something on the head; the cheek was cut, one eye half-closed, and an ear badly swollen. I tried to get hold of it, but the poor thing was beside itself with fear. It snapped and flew round so that I had to give it up, and sit down with this fellow here beside me, to try and quiet it--a strange dog, you know, will generally form his estimate of you from the way it sees you treat another dog. I had to sit there quite half an hour before it would let me go up to it, pull the stake out, and lead it away. The poor beast, though it was so feeble from the blows it had received, was still half-frantic, and I didn't dare to touch it; and all the time I took good care that this fellow here didn't come too near. Then came the question what was to be done. There was no vet, of course, and I'd no place to put it except my sitting-room, which didn't belong to me. But, looking at its battered head, and its half-mad eyes, I thought: 'No trusting you with these bumpkins; you'll have to come in here for the night!'

Well, I got it in, and heaped two or three of those hairy little red rugs landladies are so fond of, up in a corner; and got it on to them, and put down my bread and milk. But it wouldn't eat--its sense of proportion was all gone, fairly destroyed by terror. It lay there moaning, and every now and then it raised its head with a 'yap' of sheer fright, dreadful to hear, and bit the air, as if its enemies were on it again; and this fellow of mine lay in the opposite corner, with his head on his paw, watching it. I sat up for a long time with that poor beast, sick enough, and wondering how it had come to be stoned and kicked and battered into this state; and next day I made it my business to find out.

Our friend paused, scanned us a little angrily, and then went on: "It had made its first appearance, it seems, following a bicyclist.

同类推荐
  • 澎湖台湾纪略

    澎湖台湾纪略

    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。
  • 醉翁谈录

    醉翁谈录

    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。
  • 佛说月光童子经

    佛说月光童子经

    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。
  • 先觉宗乘

    先觉宗乘

    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。
  • 台海使槎录

    台海使槎录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 我愿为你至死不渝

    我愿为你至死不渝

    一次意外,让安慧都不在认识了他们,他们想尽办法办法要让安慧恢复记忆,带她去以前的地方,买她喜欢吃的东西。可,事情往往不会向好事发展,苏安娜从美国回来了,因为刚回归,人生地不熟的,误打误撞的认识了他们,安娜对他们一见钟情,可他们却对安慧好,她不想见到未来属于她的人对其他人那么好,所以她会想办法。安慧会不会回复记忆,还要看老天的造化……
  • 浮生时代

    浮生时代

    扛着机关枪的仙人见过没?踩着祥云上班的上班族见过没?都没见过?那还不赶快在这见识一下!
  • 最强修少

    最强修少

    一株草可顶破苍穹,一滴水可贯穿磐石,林家少年,最强至尊,却因一枚戒指,穿越到现代,修为全失。在现代,开启了一个逆天强者的崛起征程。顺我者昌,逆我者亡,小爷我就是这么狂!
  • 带到再会时

    带到再会时

    她是外表乖巧乐观的元气少女,内心却是满满忧伤大眼睛里总有水雾在流动嘴角的笑总是肆无忌惮。若没遇见你也许我不会太过伤心也不会太过快乐!
  • 每天学点佛学智慧:不生气

    每天学点佛学智慧:不生气

    在这个世界上,能够事事如愿以偿的人本就没有几个。你一心一意做事情,付出很大努力,结果却不是自己想得到的,你会因此感到沮丧。其实,沮丧或生气,对结果来说根本没有任何意义。无论你怎样沮丧,怎样生气,结果已经产生,不能够再回到开始。这时,你所要做的就是回忆过程,寻找下一个出口。不必留恋昨日的失败,也不必介意已经成为事实的结果。无论你是否如愿以偿,都要及时从中跳出来,看清它在整个世界中的真实位置,即它在无限时空中的微不足道。这样,你得到了不会忘乎所以,失去了也不会气愤难当。
  • 别样花色

    别样花色

    花可以代表一些语言,也可以记录着一些故事。每个花有它独特的美,同样也有这许多独特的故事。
  • 一生的成功励志书——挑战挫折

    一生的成功励志书——挑战挫折

    心态决定一切!智慧创造一切!这是一个人人追求成功的时代,心智的力量具有创造成功态势的无穷魔力!即具有成功暗示的随着灵感牵引的成功力。
  • 捉弄过去没现在

    捉弄过去没现在

    映像短篇,梦中记忆,各种回忆深深浅浅的击中着我的心,不管你走过或是停留。我都会在岁月的长河里等待着你的到来。
  • 鲍参军集

    鲍参军集

    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。
  • 引灵者

    引灵者

    人间总有那么些不可说,不可语,不可闻之事。他不是无常,行走在人间,引渡灵魂,破鬼怪怨念来修行,逍遥世间!