登陆注册
37736800000045

第45章

I shall never forget an anecdote my uncle used to relate, dealing with the period when he was chaplain of the Lincolnshire county jail. One morning there was to be a hanging; and the usual little crowd of witnesses, consisting of the sheriff, the governor, three or four reporters, a magistrate, and a couple of warders, was assembled in the prison. The condemned man, a brutal ruffian who had been found guilty of murdering a young girl under exceptionally revolting circumstances, was being pinioned by the hangman and his assistant; and my uncle was employing the last few moments at his disposal in trying to break down the sullen indifference the fellow had throughout manifested towards both his crime and his fate.

My uncle failing to make any impression upon him, the governor ventured to add a few words of exhortation, upon which the man turned fiercely on the whole of them.

"'Go to hell,' he cried, 'with your snivelling jaw. Who are you, to preach at me? YOU'RE glad enough I'm here--all of you. Why, I'm the only one of you as ain't going to make a bit over this job.

Where would you all be, I should like to know, you canting swine, if it wasn't for me and my sort? Why, it's the likes of me as KEEPSthe likes of you,' with which he walked straight to the gallows and told the hangman to 'hurry up' and not keep the gentlemen waiting.""There was some 'grit' in that man," said MacShaughnassy.

"Yes," added Jephson, "and wholesome wit also."MacShaughnassy puffed a mouthful of smoke over a spider which was just about to kill a fly. This caused the spider to fall into the river, from where a supper-hunting swallow quickly rescued him.

"You remind me," he said, "of a scene I once witnessed in the office of The Daily--well, in the office of a certain daily newspaper. It was the dead season, and things were somewhat slow. An endeavour had been made to launch a discussion on the question 'Are Babies a Blessing?' The youngest reporter on the staff, writing over the ****** but touching signature of 'Mother of Six,' had led off with a scathing, though somewhat irrelevant, attack upon husbands, as a class; the Sporting Editor, signing himself 'Working Man,' and garnishing his contribution with painfully elaborated orthographical lapses, arranged to give an air of verisimilitude to the correspondence, while, at the same time, not to offend the susceptibilities of the democracy (from whom the paper derived its chief support), had replied, vindicating the British father, and giving what purported to be stirring midnight experiences of his own. The Gallery Man, calling himself, with a burst of imagination, 'Gentleman and Christian,' wrote indignantly that he considered the agitation of the subject to be both impious and indelicate, and added he was surprised that a paper holding the exalted, and deservedly popular, position of The--should have opened its columns to the brainless vapourings of 'Mother of Six' and 'Working Man.'

"The topic had, however, fallen flat. With the exception of one man who had invented a new feeding-bottle, and thought he was going to advertise it for nothing, the outside public did not respond, and over the editorial department gloom had settled down.

"One evening, as two or three of us were mooning about the stairs, praying secretly for a war or a famine, Todhunter, the town reporter, rushed past us with a cheer, and burst into the Sub-editor's room. We followed. He was waving his notebook above his head, and clamouring, after the manner of people in French exercises, for pens, ink, and paper.

"'What's up?' cried the Sub-editor, catching his enthusiasm;'influenza again?'

"'Better than that!' shouted Todhunter. 'Excursion steamer run down, a hundred and twenty-five lives lost--four good columns of heartrending scenes.'

"'By Jove!' said the Sub, 'couldn't have happened at a better time either'--and then he sat down and dashed off a leaderette, in which he dwelt upon the pain and regret the paper felt at having to announce the disaster, and drew attention to the exceptionally harrowing account provided by the energy and talent of 'our special reporter.'""It is the law of nature," said Jephson: "we are not the first party of young philosophers who have been struck with the fact that one man's misfortune is another man's opportunity.""Occasionally, another woman's," I observed.

I was thinking of an incident told me by a nurse. If a nurse in fair practice does not know more about human nature--does not see clearer into the souls of men and women than all the novelists in little Bookland put together--it must be because she is physically blind and deaf. All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players; so long as we are in good health, we play our parts out bravely to the end, acting them, on the whole, artistically and with strenuousness, even to the extent of sometimes fancying ourselves the people we are pretending to be. But with sickness comes forgetfulness of our part, and carelessness of the impression we are ****** upon the audience. We are too weak to put the paint and powder on our faces, the stage finery lies unheeded by our side.

The heroic gestures, the virtuous sentiments are a weariness to us.

In the quiet, darkened room, where the foot-lights of the great stage no longer glare upon us, where our ears are no longer strained to catch the clapping or the hissing of the town, we are, for a brief space, ourselves.

This nurse was a quiet, demure little woman, with a pair of dreamy, soft gray eyes that had a curious power of absorbing everything that passed before them without seeming to look at anything. Gazing upon much life, laid bare, had given to them a slightly cynical expression, but there was a background of kindliness behind.

During the evenings of my convalescence she would talk to me of her nursing experiences. I have sometimes thought I would put down in writing the stories that she told me, but they would be sad reading.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 邪王的懒妃

    邪王的懒妃

    懒人系列终回本:常言,偷得浮生半日懒。当不能偷得浮生又想懒时怎么办?当然是光明正大地懒啦!从小懒到大的庄书兰就是这样想的!当前世成为记忆时,庄书兰更是决定将这懒人做到底。管他冷嘲热讽也好,闲言碎语也罢,她庄书兰不会因此而改变!且看懒人如何笑傲官场沉浮,冷看朝野纷乱!————情景一:“美男,来,给本姑娘笑一个!”一手托起某男精致的下巴,拇指轻刮着脸颊,“啧啧,这肌肤,比姐姐我的还要好!哎!平日里用的是哪个牌子的保养品啊?”……某男呆状,第一次有种叫耻辱情绪袭上了心头——他居然被一个还未并笄的小女孩子给调戏了!情景二:“跟了本宫,他日你就是一国之母,光宗耀祖!”某男拦下某女,半带着威胁地喝着。“光宗耀祖这件事,不归臣管,你去找别人吧!”轻弹去不知何时落在肩膀上的树叶儿,微微一笑,“时辰不早了,臣得回府休息了!”情景三:“你想从这游戏中退出?”媚眼一抛,却让人不寒而颤。“我还有权力说不吗?”某女惨淡一笑,带着狡黠,“既然是你将我带入这游戏中,你怎么可以置身事外?所以,我们成亲吧!”情景四:“……新娘请下轿!”第一声,无人答应……“请新娘下轿!”第二声,还是无人答应……“请新娘子下轿!”直到第三声时,轿里忽地传来慵懒的声音,“呀!我怎么睡着了?四儿,现在什么时辰?为何迎亲的轿子还不来?”————〖精采多多,敬请期待。〗————懒人系列:总裁的懒妻帝君的懒后懒凰天下风流佳人系列:风流女画师新坑:轻松+现代+都市+网游+青梅+竹马=恋上恶男友情链接:逍遥王爷的穿越妃本色出演绝焰煞神
  • 神沧圣王

    神沧圣王

    柯泽崛起于神弃之地,坠落于神陨之域;无法逃脱的是那命运的捉弄,还是神意的掌控?生死之间的放逐,失无可失!王者归来的愤起,破天逐神!神沧之上,欲为圣王!
  • 聊记

    聊记

    她因娃娃亲嫁给了他,他因体弱多病的表妹疏忽她,她因一纸秘方被他冷漠以对,他因这纸秘方为表妹寻得美满婚姻!
  • 斗龙

    斗龙

    炎黄龙城,统领中州,传承久远的没落豪门。直到一条霸道之龙破空而来,斗万龙于天际,灭天下之苍生。当代龙头血祭苍天,降龙封印于其子体内。十八年后,蛇年新年大典,注定要与斗龙同生共死的少年,发出了一声绝望非人的龙吼,九州大地开始颤抖……
  • 全能魔王的英雄梦想

    全能魔王的英雄梦想

    叶铭只是一个高二学生,毫无特点的他却拥有着一个成为英雄的梦想,随着时光的流逝,他的梦想也渐渐褪色。然而,叶铭在一次回顾自己五年前玩过的游戏时发生了意外。睁开眼,自己身边居然躺着一个名为艾米莉娅的少女(划掉)勇者,从此,叶铭的高中生活产生了巨大的变化,而他的英雄梦想,才刚刚燃起。
  • 变种人战争

    变种人战争

    当我们回顾人类文明的前夜,从南方古猿到到晚期智人。突变人种的到来将导致进化缓慢的同类立刻灭绝,无一例外。此时此刻,我们正站在这样的十字路口上,变种人的民粹主义幽灵在每一个大洲徘徊。面对支离破碎的人类社会。青年罗靳为了一个朴素的政治理想,毅然拿起棒球棍走上街头,为了寻求人类和变种人的和平共存而苦苦挣扎。虽千万人,其往矣。
  • 完美逆袭吖

    完美逆袭吖

    穿越?还是,四次元空间?好像是,又好像都不是。。。
  • 血国风云

    血国风云

    妖魔入侵已三百年,帝国首都也已陷落两百年——最后的叛城被屠灭后的第十六年,天下已看不见任何人类政权。血族、狼人、人马......各种妖魔瓜分了这片土地,奴役着所有人类。尽管人类早已习惯以奴隶、罪人乃至食物的身份活着,但怨念的火苗却仍然在阴影中暗暗升起。叛旗起,刀甲鸣,在血族王朝的土地上,不杀尽最后一个敌族不罢休的战争才刚刚开始!
  • 七源天宙

    七源天宙

    一个破碎的宇宙,一个没落的星球,在强敌的侵略下渐渐崩溃。一个少年,自祥和时代崛起,发动大乱,是否能够拯救即将崩溃的宇宙?
  • 武神传说

    武神传说

    春秋战国是一个英雄辈出的年代。在这些故事中,一个名叫战鹰的少年走进了我们的视线......无数次历险,无数次靡炼,一个鲜活的武神形象在我们眼前冉冉升起。爱情与战争,正义与邪恶,孰是孰非,恩怨情仇,一切尽在宕荡起伏的作品之中。