登陆注册
34904900000056

第56章

Right nigh the crick they was another road come out of the woods to the left-hand side, and switched into the road we was travelling, and used the same bridge to cross the crick by. They was three or four houses here and there, with chimbleys built up on the outside of them, and blue smoke coming out. We stood and looked at the sight before us and forgot all the troubles we had left behind, fur a couple of minutes--it all looked so peaceful and quiet and homeyfied and nice.

"Well," says the doctor, after we had stood there a piece, "I guess we better be moving on again, Danny."But jest as Sam, who was follering along behind with that suit case, picks it up and puts it on his head agin, they come a sound, from away off in the distance somewheres, that made him set it down quick. And we all stops in our tracks and looks at each other.

It was the voice of a hound dog--not so awful loud, but clear and mellow and tuneful, and carried to us on the wind. And then in a minute it come agin, sharper and quicker. They yells like that when they have struck a scent.

As we stood and looked at each other they come a crackle in the underbrush, jest to the left of us.

We turned our heads that-a-way, jest as a nigger man give a leap to the top of a rail fence that separated the road from the woods. He was going so fast that instead of climbing that fence and bal-ancing on the top and jumping off he jest simply seemed to hit the top rail and bounce on over, like he had been throwed out of the heart of the woods, and he fell sprawling over and over in the road, right before our feet.

He was onto his feet in a second, and fur a minute he stood up straight and looked at us--an ashes-coloured nigger, ragged and bleeding from the under-brush, red-eyed, and with slavers trickling from his red lips, and sobbing and gasping and panting fur breath. Under his brown skin, where his shirt was torn open acrost his chest, you could see that nigger's heart a-beating.

But as he looked at us they come a sudden change acrost his face--he must of seen the doctor before, and with a sob he throwed himself on his knees in the road and clasped his hands and held 'em out toward Doctor Kirby.

"ELISHyah! ELISHyah!" he sings out, rocking of his body in a kind of tune, "reveal yo'se'f, reveal yo'se'f an' he'p me NOW! Lawd Gawd ELISHyah, beckon fo' a CHA'iot, yo' cha'iot of FIAH! Lif' me, lif' me--lif' me away f'um hyah in er cha'iot o' FIAH!"The doctor, he turned his head away, and I knowed the thought working in him was the thought of that white woman that would always be an idiot for life, if she lived. But his lips was dumb, and his one hand stretched itself out toward that nigger in the road and made a wiping motion, like he was trying fur to wipe the picture of him, and the thought of him, off'n a slate forevermore.

Jest then, nearer and louder and sharper, and with an eager sound, like they knowed they almost had him now, them hounds' voices come ringing through the woods, and with them come the mixed-up shouts of men.

"RUN!" yells Sam, waving of that suit case round his head, fur one nigger will always try to help another no matter what he's done. "Run fo' de branch--git yo' foots in de worter an' fling 'em off de scent!"He bounded down the hill, that red-eyed nigger, and left us standing there. But before he reached the crick the whole man-hunt come busting through the woods, the dogs a-straining at their straps.

The men was all on foot, with guns and pistols in their hands. They seen the nigger, and they all let out a yell, and was after him. They ketched him at the crick, and took him off along that road that turned off to the left. I hearn later he was a member of Bishop Warren's congregation, so they hung him right in front of Big Bethel church.

We stood there on top of the hill and saw the chase and capture. Doctor Kirby's face was sweating worse than when we first clumb the hill.

He was thinking about that nigger that had pleaded with him. He was thinking also of the woman.

He was glad it hadn't been up to him personal right then and there to butt in and stop a lynching.

He was glad, fur with them two pictures in front of him he didn't know what he would of done.

"Thank heaven!" I hearn him say to himself.

"Thank heaven that it wasn't REALLY in my power to choose!"CHAPTER XVIII

Well, we had pork and greens fur dinner that day, with the best corn-bread I ever eat anywheres, and buttermilk, and sweet potato pie. We got 'em at the house of a feller named Withers--Old Daddy Withers. Which if they was ever a nicer old man than him, or a nicer old woman than his wife, I never run acrost 'em yet.

They lived all alone, them Witherses, with only a couple of niggers to help them run their farm.

After we eats our dinner and Sam gets his'n out to the kitchen, we sets out in front of the house and gets to talking with them, and gets real well acquainted.

Which we soon found out the secret of old Daddy Withers's life--that there innocent-looking old jigger was a poet. He was kind of proud of it and kind of shamed of it both to oncet. The way it come out was when the doctor says one of them quotations he is always getting off, and the old man he looks pleased and says the rest of the piece it dropped out of straight through.

Then they had a great time quoting it at each other, them two, and I seen the doctor is good to loaf around there the rest of the day, like as not.

Purty soon the old lady begins to get mighty proud-looking over something or other, and she leans over and whispers to the old man:

"Shall I bring it out, Lemuel?"

The old man, he shakes his head, no. But she slips into the house anyhow, and fetches out a little book with a pale green cover to it, and hands it to the doctor.

"Bless my soul," says Doctor Kirby, looking at the old man, "you don't mean to say you write verse yourself?"The old man, he gets red all over his face, and up into the roots of his white hair, and down into his white beard, and makes believe he is a little mad at the old lady fur showing him off that-a-way.

同类推荐
  • 自遣

    自遣

    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。
  • 锦里耆旧传

    锦里耆旧传

    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。
  • 搜神秘览

    搜神秘览

    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。
  • 附内义丹旨纲目举要

    附内义丹旨纲目举要

    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。
  • 佛说护国尊者所问大乘经

    佛说护国尊者所问大乘经

    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
  • 三国之风起南海

    三国之风起南海

    大学讲师周晔穿越到了汉末,发现自己附身在了一个十五岁的少年身上,因郡吏辱其母,怒杀郡吏,被郡中捉拿,危急关头,他以自己的才能得到了名将看重,随名将南海剿匪,开启了自己的崛起之路。他倡文教,传技术,办农事,兴工商,引流民,练精兵,平山越,重航海,从南海起步,以交州为基地,逐渐走上了汉末群雄争霸的棋盘,成为了有资格问鼎天下的诸侯之一。他能够平定天下,振兴华夏,一扫两晋之暗弱,改变五胡乱华的悲剧,结束华夏历史治乱循环的怪圈吗?士燮:文盛真吾郡之英杰也!交州大治,当赖明德之能。曹操:夫周晔,人杰也,雄姿杰出,有王霸之略,今不击,必成后患!诸葛亮:太祖龙兴于南海僻地,四海闻风,廓清宇内,英才盖世,仁德爱民,众士慕仰,若水之归海。陈寿:太祖运筹演谋,鞭挞宇内,揽申、商之法,承墨、般之术,该韩、白之策,官方授材,各因其器,矫情任算,不念旧恶,终能总御皇机,克成洪业者,惟其明略最优也。抑可谓非常之人,超世之杰矣。
  • 我其实是来养老的

    我其实是来养老的

    身为穿越者的寒林前半生一直顺风顺水,可忽有一日,得道真仙的他却发现自己的修仙大业似乎已经到头了,事已至此,某真仙非(hao)常(bu)为(you)难(yu)的选择了退休,可当他兴致冲冲来到自己精心选择的养老之地时,却发现这里才是他劳碌的开始……无数年后,一位记者冒险闯过诸多阵法向寒林提问道:“请问寒林天尊,当初是什么原因让您愿意为这个世界而奋斗,是爱吗,是责任吗,是对天下苍生的关怀吗?”“怎么说呢,其实,本尊当初只是来养老的!”或许,这个故事也可以从一颗绣球讲起……
  • 不曾回忆的回忆

    不曾回忆的回忆

    真实的过往生活,是平平淡淡的但又是充满回味的。
  • 腹黑宿主与大魔王

    腹黑宿主与大魔王

    她等了他千万年,他寻了她无数纪元她为了他魂飞魄散,他为了她分魂百万这世间,除了你,又有什么值得我留恋这世间,神魔之间,究竟有何区别?当星光再一次点亮人间我在星空与你相见
  • 守护甜心之冰山复仇

    守护甜心之冰山复仇

    以前那个活泼的日奈森亚梦已经不复存在留下的只是一个傀儡班的雪翼紫陌,她为了最后的复仇,仅仅只剩下了一个个躯壳,他是多么的无助呀!一起来接受她的挑战吧!!
  • 荒岛救赎

    荒岛救赎

    22岁的4男4女,进入了一处疑似梦境的孤岛。他们唯一需要考虑的,就是怎样度过漫长的人生。
  • 修仙需随心

    修仙需随心

    莫名穿越后,本着随遇而安的心态佛系修仙,怎料修了一半才发现自己书穿成反派女配,是随着文文主线成为引路炮灰?还是翻身农奴打倒书中女主?还是……?(女配表示算了不想了费脑子)爱咋咋吧~
  • 你是我的满眼温柔

    你是我的满眼温柔

    所爱隔山海,山海皆可平。海有舟可渡,山有路可行。简单又温馨的感觉,就是喜欢你。把自己所见所想的写成小片段,希望能让你有不一样的感觉
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 次元支配者

    次元支配者

    …唯我独法,人前显圣!…某天,霍光手机上多出一款奇怪游戏,原本还以为是一款类似于中世纪模拟游戏,直到他眼睁睁地看到一位巫师进入地球,并在几天后上了新闻。…幕后黑手流,半主神流。…