登陆注册
25631700000027

第27章

Towards three o'clock we worked our way round to the station, and began looking for our train. We hunted all over the place, but could not find it anywhere. The central station at Munich is an enormous building, and a perfect maze of passages and halls and corridors. It is much easier to lose oneself in it, than to find anything in it one may happen to want. Together and separately B. and I lost ourselves and each other some twenty-four times. For about half an hour we seemed to be doing nothing else but rushing up and down the station looking for each other, suddenly finding each other, and saying, "Why, where the dickens have you been? I have been hunting for you everywhere. Don't go away like that," and then immediately losing each other again.

And what was so extraordinary about the matter was that every time, after losing each other, we invariably met again--when we did meet--outside the door of the third-class refreshment room.

We came at length to regard the door of the third-class refreshment room as "home," and to feel a thrill of joy when, in the course of our weary wanderings through far-off waiting-rooms and lost-luggage bureaus and lamp depots, we saw its old familiar handle shining in the distance, and knew that there, beside it, we should find our loved and lost one.

When any very long time elapsed without our coming across it, we would go up to one of the officials, and ask to be directed to it.

"Please can you tell me," we would say, "the nearest way to the door of the third-class refreshment room?"

When three o'clock came, and still we had not found the 3.10 train, we became quite anxious about the poor thing, and made inquiries concerning it.

"The 3.10 train to Ober-Ammergau," they said. "Oh, we've not thought about that yet."

"Haven't thought about it!" we exclaimed indignantly. "Well, do for heaven's sake wake up a bit. It is 3.5 now!"

"Yes," they answered, "3.5 in the afternoon; the 3.10 is a night train. Don't you see it's printed in thick type? All the trains between six in the evening and six in the morning are printed in fat figures, and the day trains in thin. You have got plenty of time.

Look around after supper."

I do believe I am the most unfortunate man at a time-table that ever was born. I do not think it can be stupidity; for if it were mere stupidity, I should occasionally, now and then when I was feeling well, not make a mistake. It must be fate.

If there is one train out of forty that goes on "Saturdays only" to some place I want to get to, that is the train I select to travel by on a Friday. On Saturday morning I get up at six, swallow a hasty breakfast, and rush off to catch a return train that goes on every day in the week "except Saturdays."

I go to London, Brighton and South Coast Railway-stations and clamour for South-Eastern trains. On Bank Holidays I forget it is Bank Holiday, and go and sit on draughty platforms for hours, waiting for trains that do not run on Bank Holidays.

To add to my misfortunes, I am the miserable possessor of a demon time-table that I cannot get rid of, a Bradshaw for August, 1887.

Regularly, on the first of each month, I buy and bring home with me a new Bradshaw and a new A.B.C. What becomes of them after the second of the month, I do not know. After the second of the month, I never see either of them again. What their fate is, I can only guess. In their place is left, to mislead me, this wretched old 1887 corpse.

For three years I have been trying to escape from it, but it will not leave me.

I have thrown it out of the window, and it has fallen on people's heads, and those people have picked it up and smoothed it out, and brought it back to the house, and members of my family--"friends" they call themselves--people of my own flesh and blood--have thanked them and taken it in again!

I have kicked it into a dozen pieces, and kicked the pieces all the way downstairs and out into the garden, and persons--persons, mind you, who will not sew a button on the back of my shirt to save me from madness--have collected the pieces and stitched them carefully together, and made the book look as good as new, and put it back in my study!

It has acquired the secret of perpetual youth, has this time-table.

Other time-tables that I buy become dissipated-looking wrecks in about a week. This book looks as fresh and new and clean as it did on the day when it first lured me into purchasing it. There is nothing about its appearance to suggest to the casual observer that it is not this month's Bradshaw. Its evident aim and object in life is to deceive people into the idea that it is this month's Bradshaw.

It is undermining my moral character, this book is. It is responsible for at least ten per cent. of the bad language that I use every year. It leads me into drink and gambling. I am continually finding myself with some three or four hours to wait at dismal provincial railway stations. I read all the advertisements on both platforms, and then I get wild and reckless, and plunge into the railway hotel and play billiards with the landlord for threes of Scotch.

I intend to have that Bradshaw put into my coffin with me when I am buried, so that I can show it to the recording angel and explain matters. I expect to obtain a discount of at least five-and-twenty per cent. off my bill of crimes for that Bradshaw.

The 3.10 train in the morning was, of course, too late for us. It would not get us to Ober-Ammergau until about 9 a.m. There was a train leaving at 7.30 (I let B. find out this) by which we might reach the village some time during the night, if only we could get a conveyance from Oberau, the nearest railway-station. Accordingly, we telegraphed to Cook's agent, who was at Ober-Ammergau (we all of us sneer at Mr. Cook and Mr. Gaze, and such-like gentlemen, who kindly conduct travellers that cannot conduct themselves properly, when we are at home; but I notice most of us appeal, on the quiet, to one or the other of them the moment we want to move abroad), to try and send a carriage to meet us by that train; and then went to an hotel, and turned into bed until it was time to start.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 清风何处不为家

    清风何处不为家

    什么是你所向往生活?什么是你想要的爱情?当经历过大起大落后的人生又回到最初的模样,你是否会懂得:人生就像手中的一杯水,经得起沸腾,又熬得过寒冷,但热水烫口,凉水冷心,也只有那最初的温度,才适合自己,抚平那干燥饥渴的喉咙。喝了这杯水,就走吧,清风何处不为家?
  • 殿下诱情:强宠呆萌悍妃

    殿下诱情:强宠呆萌悍妃

    【1V1宠文加爽文,女强男亦强,身心干净。】她吃饭,他买单。她逛街,他提货。她打架,他助威。她杀人,他毁尸灭迹。云栖拍拍他的肩:“好兄弟,一辈子。”某男眸光隐晦,“既然是好兄弟,睡在一起也正常。今晚就让我们兄弟喝点小酒,秉烛夜谈吧。”于是,夜深,蜡烛灭,云栖醉。“咦,你怎么脱衣服了。”“我喜欢裸睡。”“你怎么把我的衣服也脱了。”“你热。”第二天,云栖醉醒,某男委屈:“我把你当兄弟,你却上了我。如今清白已给了你,如果你不负责,我就不活了。”
  • 豪门恋:情锁深宅

    豪门恋:情锁深宅

    她是东城医院院长的女儿,被指定做东城首富之孙的准新娘,却不料在新婚前夕失去了清白。以为只是普通的失身却带来了剪不断的恩怨情仇,这些情仇似乎魔杖般击中她们于家的人。自己陷在和翁同旭讲不清道不明的情感纠葛里不说,妹妹竟然爱上了那个毁掉她声誉的男人关坤年。最可笑的是自己的哥哥喜欢上的龙家小姐居然是关坤年的妹妹。一群男男女女的恩怨情仇,一份份伤心欲绝的情感交集。最终谁能和相爱的人走到最后的结果!亲,加油吧!
  • 任凭花落飘零水自流

    任凭花落飘零水自流

    在他出现以前,她一直是被所有光环笼罩着的完美学霸。他出现之后,先是打破了她两年以来都是年级第一的神话,再是抢了她学生会主席的位置,最后占领了游泳部代替她成为了部长...一年后,当她以为这一切都结束的时候,又在开学典礼上看见了他。“既然逃不了了,那就在一起吧。”她抬起头冲着他笑得灿烂。
  • tfboys爱就别离开

    tfboys爱就别离开

    青春有太多伤痕,一次次的受伤~让我们分开,她们的爱情还会坚持下去,顺利下去-
  • 第一庶女

    第一庶女

    冷漠强悍的她穿越成一个花痴无能、任人欺凌的痴傻小姐?人人避而远之,鄙夷不屑。可惜!她已不是当初的她。面对一波波的阴谋陷害。她,岂能无动于衷?不久之后,脱胎换骨、绽放光芒,那些曾经瞧不起她的人纷纷傻了眼……
  • 重生之医药系统

    重生之医药系统

    意外回归,面对偏心祖父母,面对各种自私自利的亲戚,面对已知的未来。林穆璇表示背靠系统大树好乘凉。纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 夏日非蓝海水非浅

    夏日非蓝海水非浅

    她干净,纯粹,不张扬,美丽而淡漠,家庭关系让她背负着父亲欠下的巨款,母亲的离去让她难以撑起这个支离破碎的家,她本是看淡一切,知道在学校遇到了他,直到喜欢上他,直到自己越陷越深,布下了繁密心机的网,后来他再不会属于他,她输了,输得让人愈发心痛,她终于不再执念,诀别的离开....这个世界上最一尘不染的,爱一个人藏在心里
  • 请你握紧我们的手

    请你握紧我们的手

    一场流星雨让我认识了他,被他的笑容所征服,一个从阳光大男孩慢慢的脱变成成熟男人,还是挂着起初那个招牌微笑,而我因为他,认识一群同样喜欢他的小伙伴们
  • 自在天界

    自在天界

    何以逆苍天,何以成枭雄!世人皆有七分运,唯他恶果总缠身。且看不详之人如何与天争命,成就自在天界!