登陆注册
25735600000013

第13章 JOHNNY-IN-THE-WOODS(1)

JOHNNY TRUMBULL, he who had demon-

strated his claim to be Cock of the Walk by a most impious hand-to-hand fight with his own aunt, Miss Janet Trumbull, in which he had been deci-sively victorious, and won his spurs, consisting of his late grandfather's immense, solemnly ticking watch, was to take a new path of action. Johnny suddenly developed the prominent Trumbull trait, but in his case it was inverted. Johnny, as became a boy of his race, took an excursion into the past, but instead of applying the present to the past, as was the tendency of the other Trumbulls, he forcibly applied the past to the present. He fairly plastered the past over the exigencies of his day and generation like a penetrating poultice of mustard, and the results were peculiar.

Johnny, being bidden of a rainy day during the midsummer vacation to remain in the house, to keep quiet, read a book, and be a good boy, obeyed, but his obedience was of a doubtful measure of wisdom.

Johnny got a book out of his uncle Jonathan Trum-bull's dark little library while Jonathan was walking sedately to the post-office, holding his dripping umbrella at a wonderful slant of exactness, without regard to the wind, thereby getting the soft drive of the rain full in his face, which became, as it were, bedewed with tears, entirely outside any cause of his own emotions.

Johnny probably got the only book of an anti-orthodox trend in his uncle's library. He found tucked away in a snug corner an ancient collection of Border Ballads, and he read therein of many unmoral romances and pretty fancies, which, since he was a small boy, held little meaning for him, or charm, beyond a delight in the swing of the rhythm, for Johnny had a feeling for music. It was when he read of Robin Hood, the bold Robin Hood, with his dubious ethics but his certain and unquenchable interest, that Johnny Trumbull became intent. He had the volume in his own room, being somewhat doubtful as to whether it might be of the sort included in the good-boy role. He sat beside a rain-washed window, which commanded a view of the wide field between the Trumbull mansion and Jim Simmons's house, and he read about Robin Hood and his Greenwood adventures, his forcible setting the wrong right; and for the first time his imagina-tion awoke, and his ambition. Johnny Trumbull, hitherto hero of nothing except little material fist-fights, wished now to become a hero of true romance.

In fact, Johnny considered seriously the possi-bility of reincarnating, in his own person, Robin Hood. He eyed the wide green field dreamily through his rain-blurred window. It was a pretty field, waving with feathery grasses and starred with daisies and buttercups, and it was very fortunate that it happened to be so wide. Jim Simmons's house was not a desirable feature of the landscape, and looked much better several acres away. It was a neglected, squalid structure, and considered a dis-grace to the whole village. Jim was also a disgrace, and an unsolved problem. He owned that house, and somehow contrived to pay the taxes thereon.

He also lived and throve in bodily health in spite of evil ways, and his children were many. There seemed no way to dispose finally of Jim Simmons and his house except by murder and arson, and the village was a peaceful one, and such measures were entirely too strenuous.

Presently Johnny, staring dreamily out of his window, saw approaching a rusty-black umbrella held at precisely the wrong angle in respect of the storm, but held with the unvarying stiffness with which a soldier might hold a bayonet, and knew it for his uncle Jonathan's umbrella. Soon he beheld also his uncle's serious, rain-drenched face and his long ambling body and legs. Jonathan was coming home from the post-office, whither he repaired every morning. He never got a letter, never anything except religious newspapers, but the visit to the post-office was part of his daily routine. Rain or shine, Jonathan Trumbull went for the morning mail, and gained thereby a queer negative enjoy-ment of a perfectly useless duty performed. Johnny watched his uncle draw near to the house, and cruelly reflected how unlike Robin Hood he must be. He even wondered if his uncle could possibly have read Robin Hood and still show absolutely no result in his own personal appearance. He knew that he, Johnny, could not walk to the post-office and back, even with the drawback of a dripping old umbrella instead of a bow and arrow, without looking a bit like Robin Hood, especially when fresh from reading about him.

Then suddenly something distracted his thoughts from Uncle Jonathan. The long, feathery grass in the field moved with a motion distinct from that caused by the wind and rain. Johnny saw a tiger-striped back emerge, covering long leaps of terror.

Johnny knew the creature for a cat afraid of Uncle Jonathan. Then he saw the grass move behind the first leaping, striped back, and he knew there were more cats afraid of Uncle Jonathan. There were even motions caused by unseen things, and he reasoned, "Kittens afraid of Uncle Jonathan."Then Johnny reflected with a great glow of indigna-tion that the Simmonses kept an outrageous num-ber of half-starved cats and kittens, besides a quota of children popularly supposed to be none too well nourished, let alone properly clothed. Then it was that Johnny Trumbull's active, firm imagination slapped the past of old romance like a most thorough mustard poultice over the present. There could be no Lincoln Green, no following of brave outlaws (that is, in the strictest sense), no bows and arrows, no sojourning under greenwood trees and the rest, but something he could, and would, do and be.

That rainy day when Johnny Trumbull was a good boy, and stayed in the house, and read a book, marked an epoch.

同类推荐
  • 集验背疽方

    集验背疽方

    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。
  • 感类篇

    感类篇

    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。
  • 羽族单

    羽族单

    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。
  • 赠别二首

    赠别二首

    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。
  • 混元圣记

    混元圣记

    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
  • 寻梦异界

    寻梦异界

    一个失去了人心、重生在异世的神级强者,在与灵魂中的怨灵签订契约后,开始了毁灭世界的路途。他的性格黑暗却追寻光明、武力绝强却喜好阴谋、驳斥平庸却渴望淡泊。在灭世的过程中,他做了什么?遇到了什么?改变了什么?世界和他的命运又会如何变化?
  • 有一种境界叫苏东坡1

    有一种境界叫苏东坡1

    本书共分为三卷,该书为第一卷,主要讲述了青年时期的苏东坡在政治、文学上的成就及其情感生活。在政治层面,苏东坡一心为民,体恤百姓,刚直不阿,为民谋福,是百姓眼里的“活菩萨”。在文学层面,他是中国古代不可多得的文化巨人,写了很多流传至今的诗词,其中许多成为千古绝唱,堪称空前绝后的一代奇才。在情感层面,苏东坡情路不畅,第一任妻子王弗聪慧过人,却早早离开人世;第二任妻子王闰之质朴贤淑,在苏东坡遭受排挤时,默默地照顾他。
  • 锤石酱的异界物语

    锤石酱的异界物语

    没有什么介绍。从贴吧上搬过来..............................................
  • 墨武风流之葬英雄

    墨武风流之葬英雄

    英雄杀,一个曾经令武林惊悸的名字。无人知晓其来历,只知道,它曾一夜间屠尽江湖八大门派高手,原因不明,意图不清。然,他的消失亦如他的出现,十年沉寂,一夜无踪。而今,一场寿宴,引发英雄杀再现尘寰。一张葬英图谱,究竟是何人所作,又究竟葬送何人?一场江湖风雨,一场武林阴谋,尽在,墨武风流系列新作,葬英雄。
  • 童年与青春

    童年与青春

    大早上的我还在睡觉,妈妈就把我叫起来,让我跟表姐一姨妈去割猪草。没办法,只好起来了,出门时感觉妈妈怪怪的。中午回来时,妈妈躺在了床上,不会说话,还受伤了。我懵了,这是怎么回事?
  • “坟墓”

    “坟墓”

    婚姻是什么?为什么要结婚?是爱情的趋势?还是时代被逼迫的结果?究竟怎么样的婚姻才能美好的过完这一生。
  • 放下书包

    放下书包

    不定时更新一些暖文,鸡汤,短句,放下你的书包,给我一个拥抱
  • 命魂天月

    命魂天月

    六千年前,天灵世界天崩海啸,天月星双分,东西遥望,六千年后,少年执剑,又会在天灵世界掀起怎样的风浪呢?
  • 捡只恶鬼谈恋爱

    捡只恶鬼谈恋爱

    一个懵懵懂懂的受了重伤的小鬼遇见了一个帅气的能量精纯的人类,会怎么选择?小鬼:把他吃掉把他吃掉!如果小鬼不小心爱上了这个人类,还看见了他的果体,会怎么选择?小鬼:把他吃掉把他吃掉!顾糖跟顾泽吵架了,然后顾泽摔门而去。顾糖:居然敢给我离家出走!有本事就别回来了!顾泽:那是我的房子,不是你的!新书JJ存稿中,不嫌麻烦的妹子可以过去收藏一下,么么哒~对一个人最深的爱意,莫过于把自己活成了他的模样。甜宠文,1V1萌系。小攻会做饭很温暖,小受会撒娇很贴心。本文主旨→看他们秀恩爱。
  • 超级大坏人

    超级大坏人

    在幼稚园多次获得“好孩子”、“乖娃娃”称号,在校多次获得“三好学生”称号,热爱扶老奶奶过马路的陈铭某天因为做好事被讹了三千块钱。他发誓,再也不当好人了!超级坏蛋系统随之而降。漂亮学姐娇嗔道:“陈铭就是一个小坏蛋!”警花姐姐抱着胸,大声喊道:“陈铭,早晚有一天,我就将你绳之于法!”清纯学妹:“其实你们不懂铭哥哥!”可爱萝莉面色惊恐的大声喊道:“妈妈,那个坏蛋哥哥又来了,他抢了甜甜的棒棒糖!”