For You to Read
属于您的小说阅读网站
欧亨利短篇小说集 - 刎颈之交英文原文
繁体
恢复默认
返回目录【键盘操作】左右光标键:上下章节;回车键:目录;双击鼠标:停止/启动自动滚动;滚动时上下光标键调节滚动速度。
  刎颈之交英文原文
  Telemachus, Friend (O·Henry)
  Returning from a hunting trip, I waited at the little town of Los Pinos, in New Mexico, for the south-bound train, which was one hour late. I sat on the porch of the Summit House and discussed the functions of life with Telemachus Hicks, the hotel proprietor.
  Perceiving that personalities were not out of order, I asked him what species of beast had long ago twisted and mutilated his left ear. Being a hunter, I was concerned in the evils that may befall one in the pursuit of game.
  "That ear," says Hicks, "is the relic of true friendship."
  "An accident?" I persisted.
  "No friendship is an accident," said Telemachus; and I was silent.
  "The only perfect case of true friendship I ever knew," went on my host, "was a cordial intent between a Connecticut man and a monkey. The monkey climbed palms in Barranquilla and threw down cocoanuts to the man. The man sawed them in two and made dippers, which he sold for two reales each and bought rum. The monkey drank the milk of the nuts. Through each being satisfied with his own share of the graft, they lived like brothers.
  "But in the case of human beings, friendship is a transitory art, subject to discontinuance without further notice.
  "I had a friend once, of the entitlement of Paisley Fish, that I imagined was sealed to me for an endless space of time. Side by side for seven years we had mined, ranched, sold patent churns, herded sheep, took photographs and other things, built wire fences, and picked prunes. Thinks I, neither homocide nor flattery nor riches nor sophistry nor drink can make trouble between me and Paisley Fish. We was friends an amount you could hardly guess at. We was friends in business, and we let our amicable qualities lap over and season our hours of recreation and folly. We certainly had days of Damon and nights of Pythias.
  "One summer me and Paisley gallops down into these San Andres mountains for the purpose of a month's surcease and levity, dressed in the natural store habiliments of man. We hit this town of Los Pinos, which certainly was a roof-garden spot of the world, and flowing with condensed milk and honey. It had a street or two, and air, and hens, and a eating-house; and that was enough for us.
  "We strikes the town after supper-time, and we concludes to sample whatever efficacy there is in this eating-house down by the railroad tracks. By the time we had set down and pried up our plates with a knife from the red oil-cloth, along intrudes Widow Jessup with the hot biscuit and the fried liver.
  "Now, there was a woman that would have tempted an anchovy to forget his vows. She was not so small as she was large; and a kind of welcome air seemed to mitigate her vicinity. The pink of her face was the in hoc signo of a culinary temper and a warm disposition, and her smile would have brought out the dogwood blossoms in December.
  "Widow Jessup talks to us a lot of garrulousness about the climate and history and Tennyson and prunes and the scarcity of mutton, and finally wants to know where we came from.
  "'Spring Valley,' says I.
  "'Big Spring Valley,' chips in Paisley, out of a lot of potatoes and knuckle-bone of ham in his mouth.
  "That was the first sign I noticed that the old fidus Diogenes business between me and Paisley Fish was ended forever. He knew how I hated a talkative person, and yet he stampedes into the conversation with his amendments and addendums of syntax. On the map it was Big Spring Valley; but I had heard Paisley himself call it Spring Valley a thousand times.
  "Without saying any more, we went out after supper and set on the railroad track. We had been pardners too long not to know what was going on in each other's mind.
  "'I reckon you understand,' says Paisley, 'that I've made up my mind to accrue that widow woman as part and parcel in and to my hereditaments forever, both domestic, sociable, legal, and otherwise, until death us do part.'

  "'Why, yes,' says I, 'I read it between the lines, though you only spoke one. And I suppose you are aware,' says I, 'that I have a movement on foot that leads up to the widow's changing her name to Hicks, and leaves you writing to the society column to inquire whether the best man wears a japonica or seamless socks at the wedding!'
  "'There'll be some hiatuses in your program,' says Paisley, chewing up a piece of a railroad tie. 'I'd give in to you,' says he, 'in 'most any respect if it was secular affairs, but this is not so. The smiles of woman,' goes on Paisley, 'is the whirlpool of Squills and Chalybeates, into which vortex the good ship Friendship is often drawn and dismembered. I'd assault a bear that was annoying you,' says Paisley, 'or I'd endorse your note, or rub the place between your shoulder-blades with opodeldoc the same as ever; but there my sense of etiquette ceases. In this fracas with Mrs. Jessup we play it alone. I've notified you fair.'
  "And then I collaborates with myself, and offers the following resolutions and by-laws:
  "'Friendship between man and man,' says I, 'is an ancient historical virtue enacted in the days when men had to protect each other against lizards with eighty-foot tails and flying turtles. And they've kept up the habit to this day, and stand by each other till the bellboy comes up and tells them the animals are not really there. I've often heard,' I says, 'about ladies stepping in and breaking up a friendship between men. Why should that be? I'll tell you, Paisley, the first sight and hot biscuit of Mrs. Jessup appears to have inserted a oscillation into each of our bosoms. Let the best man of us have her. I'll play you a square game, and won't do any underhanded work. I'll do all of my courting of her in your presence, so you will have an equal opportunity. With that arrangement I don't see why our steamboat of friendship should fall overboard in the medicinal whirlpools you speak of, whichever of us wins out.'
  "'Good old hoss!' says Paisley, shaking my hand. 'And I'll do the same,' says he. 'We'll court the lady synonymously, and without any of the prudery and bloodshed usual to such occasions. And we'll be friends still, win or lose.'
  "At one side of Mrs. Jessup's eating-house was a bench under some trees where she used to sit in the breeze after the south-bound had been fed and gone. And there me and Paisley used to congregate after supper and make partial payments on our respects to the lady of our choice. And we was so honorable and circuitous in our calls that if one of us got there first we waited for the other before beginning any gallivantery.
  "The first evening that Mrs. Jessup knew about our arrangement I got to the bench before Paisley did. Supper was just over, and Mrs. Jessup was out there with a fresh pink dress on, and almost cool enough to handle.
  "I sat down by her and made a few specifications about the moral surface of nature as set forth by the landscape and the contiguous perspective. That evening was surely a case in point. The moon was attending to business in the section of sky where it belonged, and the trees was making shadows on the ground according to science and nature, and there was a kind of conspicuous hullabaloo going on in the bushes between the bullbats and the orioles and the jack-rabbits and other feathered insects of the forest. And the wind out of the mountains was singing like a Jew's-harp in the pile of old tomato-cans by the railroad track.
  "I felt a kind of sensation in my left side--something like dough rising in a crock by the fire. Mrs. Jessup had moved up closer.
  "'Oh, Mr. Hicks,' says she, 'when one is alone in the world, don't they feel it more aggravated on a beautiful night like this?'
  "I rose up off the bench at once.
  "'Excuse me, ma'am,' says I, 'but I'll have to wait till Paisley comes before I can give a audible hearing to leading questions like that.'

  "And then I explained to her how we was friends cinctured by years of embarrassment and travel and complicity, and how we had agreed to take no advantage of each other in any of the more mushy walks of life, such as might be fomented by sentiment and proximity. Mrs. Jessup appears to think serious about the matter for a minute, and then she breaks into a species of laughter that makes the wildwood resound.
  "In a few minutes Paisley drops around, with oil of bergamot on his hair, and sits on the other side of Mrs. Jessup, and inaugurates a sad tale of adventure in which him and Pieface Lumley has a skinning-match of dead cows in '95 for a silver-mounted saddle in the Santa Rita valley during the nine months' drought.
  "Now, from the start of that courtship I had Paisley Fish hobbled and tied to a post. Each one of us had a different system of reaching out for the easy places in the female heart. Paisley's scheme was to petrify 'em with wonderful relations of events that he had either come across personally or in large print. I think he must have got his idea of subjugation from one of Shakespeare's shows I see once called 'Othello.' There is a coloured man in it who acquires a duke's daughter by disbursing to her a mixture of the talk turned out by Rider Haggard, Lew Dockstader, and Dr. Parkhurst. But that style of courting don't work well off the stage.
  "Now, I give you my own recipe for inveigling a woman into that state of affairs when she can be referred to as 'nee Jones.' Learn how to pick up her hand and hold it, and she's yours. It ain't so easy. Some men grab at it so much like they was going to set a dislocation of the shoulder that you can smell the arnica and hear 'em tearing off bandages. Some take it up like a hot horseshoe, and hold it off at arm's length like a druggist pouring tincture of asafoetida in a bottle. And most of 'em catch hold of it and drag it right out before the lady's eyes like a boy finding a baseball in the grass, without giving her a chance to forget that the hand is growing on the end of her arm. Them ways are all wrong.
  "I'll tell you the right way. Did you ever see a man sneak out in the back yard and pick up a rock to throw at a tomcat that was sitting on a fence looking at him? He pretends he hasn't got a thing in his hand, and that the cat don't see him, and that he don't see the cat. That's the idea. Never drag her hand out where she'll have to take notice of it. Don't let her know that you think she knows you have the least idea she is aware you are holding her hand. That was my rule of tactics; and as far as Paisley's serenade about hostilities and misadventure went, he might as well have been reading to her a time- table of the Sunday trains that stop at Ocean Grove, New Jersey.
  "One night when I beat Paisley to the bench by one pipeful, my friendship gets subsidised for a minute, and I asks Mrs. Jessup if she didn't think a 'H' was easier to write than a 'J.' In a second her head was mashing the oleander flower in my button-hole, and I leaned over and--but I didn't.
  "'If you don't mind,' says I, standing up, 'we'll wait for Paisley to come before finishing this. I've never done anything dishonourable yet to our friendship, and this won't be quite fair.'
  "'Mr. Hicks,' says Mrs. Jessup, looking at me peculiar in the dark, 'if it wasn't for but one thing, I'd ask you to hike yourself down the gulch and never disresume your visits to my house.'
  "'And what is that, ma'am?' I asks.
  "'You are too good a friend not to make a good husband,' says she.
  "In five minutes Paisley was on his side of Mrs. Jessup.
  "'In Silver City, in the summer of '98,' he begins, 'I see Jim Batholomew chew off a Chinaman's ear in the Blue Light Saloon on account of a crossbarred muslin shirt that--what was that noise?'
  "I had resumed matters again with Mrs. Jessup right where we had left off.

  "'Mrs. Jessup,' says I, 'has promised to make it Hicks. And this is another of the same sort.'
  "Paisley winds his feet round a leg of the bench and kind of groans.
  "'Lem,' says he, 'we been friends for seven years. Would you mind not kissing Mrs. Jessup quite so loud? I'd do the same for you.'
  "'All right,' says I. 'The other kind will do as well.'
  "'This Chinaman,' goes on Paisley, 'was the one that shot a man named Mullins in the spring of '97, and that was--'
  "Paisley interrupted himself again.
  "'Lem,' says he, 'if you was a true friend you wouldn't hug Mrs. Jessup quite so hard. I felt the bench shake all over just then. You know you told me you would give me an even chance as long as there was any.'
  "'Mr. Man,' says Mrs. Jessup, turning around to Paisley, 'if you was to drop in to the celebration of mine and Mr. Hicks's silver wedding, twenty-five years from now, do you think you could get it into that Hubbard squash you call your head that you are nix cum rous in this business? I've put up with you a long time because you was Mr. Hicks's friend; but it seems to me it's time for you to wear the willow and trot off down the hill.'
  "'Mrs. Jessup,' says I, without losing my grasp on the situation as fiance, 'Mr. Paisley is my friend, and I offered him a square deal and a equal opportunity as long as there was a chance.'
  "'A chance!' says she. 'Well, he may think he has a chance; but I hope he won't think he's got a cinch, after what he's been next to all the evening.'
  "Well, a month afterwards me and Mrs. Jessup was married in the Los Pinos Methodist Church; and the whole town closed up to see the performance.
  "When we lined up in front and the preacher was beginning to sing out his rituals and observances, I looks around and misses Paisley. I calls time on the preacher. 'Paisley ain't here,' says I. 'We've got to wait for Paisley. A friend once, a friend always--that's Telemachus Hicks,' says I. Mrs. Jessup's eyes snapped some; but the preacher holds up the incantations according to instructions.
  "In a few minutes Paisley gallops up the aisle, putting on a cuff as he comes. He explains that the only dry-goods store in town was closed for the wedding, and he couldn't get the kind of a boiled shirt that his taste called for until he had broke open the back window of the store and helped himself. Then he ranges up on the other side of the bride, and the wedding goes on. I always imagined that Paisley calculated as a last chance that the preacher might marry him to the widow by mistake.
  "After the proceedings was over we had tea and jerked antelope and canned apricots, and then the populace hiked itself away. Last of all Paisley shook me by the hand and told me I'd acted square and on the level with him and he was proud to call me a friend.
  "The preacher had a small house on the side of the street that he'd fixed up to rent; and he allowed me and Mrs. Hicks to occupy it till the ten-forty train the next morning, when we was going on a bridal tour to El Paso. His wife had decorated it all up with hollyhocks and poison ivy, and it looked real festal and bowery.
  "About ten o'clock that night I sets down in the front door and pulls off my boots a while in the cool breeze, while Mrs. Hicks was fixing around in the room. Right soon the light went out inside; and I sat there a while reverberating over old times and scenes. And then I heard Mrs. Hicks call out, 'Ain't you coming in soon, Lem?'
  "'Well, well!' says I, kind of rousing up. 'Durn me if I wasn't waiting for old Paisley to--'
  "But when I got that far," concluded Telemachus Hicks, "I thought somebody had shot this left ear of mine off with a forty-five. But it turned out to be only a lick from a broomhandle in the hands of Mrs. Hicks."
或许您还会喜欢:
时间简史
作者:佚名
章节:31 人气:0
摘要:宇宙论是一门既古老又年轻的学科。作为宇宙里高等生物的人类不会满足于自身的生存和种族的绵延,还一代代不懈地探索着存在和生命的意义。但是,人类理念的进化是极其缓慢和艰苦的。从亚里士多德-托勒密的地心说到哥白尼-伽利略的日心说的演化就花了2000年的时间。令人吃惊的是,尽管人们知道世间的一切都在运动,只是到了本世纪20年代因哈勃发现了红移定律后,宇宙演化的观念才进入人类的意识。 [点击阅读]
昂梯菲尔奇遇记
作者:佚名
章节:32 人气:0
摘要:一位无名船长为搜寻一座无名小岛,正驾着无标名的航船,行驶在不知晓的海洋上。1831年9月9日,清晨6时许,船长离舱登上了尾船楼板。东方欲晓,准确地说,圆盘般的太阳正缓缓地探头欲出,但尚未冲出地平线。长长地发散铺开的光束爱抚地拍打着海面,在晨风的吹拂下,大海上荡起了轮轮涟漪。经过一个宁静的夜,迎来的白天将会是一个大好的艳阳天,这是末伏后的九月难得的天气。 [点击阅读]
星球大战4:新希望
作者:佚名
章节:15 人气:0
摘要:另外一个星系,另外一个时间。“古老的共和国”是传奇的共和国,它的广袤无垠和悠久永恒远非时间和距离所能衡量。不必追溯它的起源,也不必寻求它的方位……它就是宇宙这一方的独一无二的共和国。在参议院的英明治理和杰迪骑土们的保卫下,共和国一度十分兴旺发达。然而,事物的发展往往就是这样:当财富和权力从受人倾慕而膨胀到令人畏惧时,奸邪之徒就会应运而生。他们贪得无厌,渐荫觊觎之心。 [点击阅读]
星球大战5:帝国反击战
作者:佚名
章节:14 人气:0
摘要:反军军官举起他的电子双筒望远镜,把焦距调准对着那些在雪中坚定地前进着的东西,看上去象一些来自过去的生物……但它们是战争机器,每一个都大踏步地走着,象四条腿的巨大的有蹄动物——帝国全地形装甲运输器!军官急忙抓起他的互通讯器。“流氓领机——回话!点零三!”“回波站五——七,我们正在路上。”就在卢克天行者回答时,一个爆炸把雪和冰溅散在军官和他惊恐的手下周围。 [点击阅读]
星球大战6:绝地归来
作者:佚名
章节:10 人气:0
摘要:对反军联盟来说,这是一段黑暗的时期……冻结在硝酸甘油中的汉-索洛,被送到了可恶的歹徒加巴手中。决心救他出来,卢克天行者、莱亚公主以及兰度-卡内森向加巴在塔托勒的堡垒发起了一次冒险的进攻。现在,在这部《星球大战》中最令人激动的一章里,反军指挥官把所有反军战斗舰召集起来,组成了一支庞大的舰队。而达斯-维达。 [点击阅读]
星球大战前传1:魅影危机
作者:佚名
章节:24 人气:0
摘要:塔土尼星球。蔚蓝无云的天空中,恒星闪烁,炫目的白色光芒照耀着这颗行星上广袤的荒原。因此生成的热气从平坦的“沙质地表蒸腾上升,在巨大的断崖和高耸苍凉的山巅之间形成了一片晶莹的氤氲。这是这颗行星上惟一典型的地貌特征。大块大块风化的巨岩如哨兵般屹立,在潮湿的雾霭中俯视着一切。当飞车赛手呼啸而过,引擎发出狂野的嘶吼,炽热的光和空气似乎都在颤动,群山也为之颤栗不止。 [点击阅读]
星球大战前传3:西斯的复仇
作者:佚名
章节:22 人气:0
摘要:很久以前,在一个遥远的星系这个故事发生在很久以前的一个遥远星系。故事已经结束了,任何事都不能改变它。这是一个关于爱情与失去、友情与背叛、勇气与牺牲以及梦想破灭的故事,这是一个关于至善与至恶之间模糊界限的故事。这是一个关于一个时代终结的故事。关于这个故事,有一件很奇怪的事——它既发生在语言难以描述其长久与遥远的时间之前与距离之外,又发生在此刻,发生在这里。它就发生在你阅读这些文字的时候。 [点击阅读]
星际战争
作者:佚名
章节:28 人气:0
摘要:1938年10月30日晚,一个声音在美国大地回荡:“火星人来了!”顿时,成千上万的美国人真的以为火星人入侵地球了,纷纷弃家而逃,社会陷入一片混乱。原来是广播电台在朗读英国科幻小说大师H.G.威尔斯的作品《世界大战》。一本小书竟引起社会骚乱,这在世界小说史上是绝无仅有的。小说故事发生在大英帝国称霸世界、睥睨天下的19世纪末叶。火星人从天而降,在伦敦附近着陆,从而拉开了征服地球战争的序幕。 [点击阅读]
春潮
作者:佚名
章节:45 人气:0
摘要:欢快的岁月,幸福的时日——恰似春水悠悠,已经一去不留!——引自古老的抒情歌曲夜半一点多钟他回到自己的书房。打发走点燃灯烛的仆人,他便猛然坐到壁炉边的安乐椅里,用双手捂住了脸。他还从未感觉到这样疲乏——肉体的与精神的。 [点击阅读]
暗室
作者:佚名
章节:4 人气:0
摘要:三个漂流者蓝天上万里无云。在一望无际波浪不惊的大海上,只有小小的浪花在无休止地抖动着。头顶上初秋的太阳把光线撒向大海,使海面泛着银光。往周围望去,看不到陆地的一点踪影,四周只有宽阔无边的圆圆的水平线。天空是圆的,海也是圆的,仿佛整个世界除此之外什么都没有了似的。在这无边的大海中央,孤零零地漂着一个小得像罂粟籽般的东西。那是一只小船。船舵坏了,又没有一根船桨,盲无目的地任凭波浪将它摇来荡去。 [点击阅读]