登陆注册
26257200000005

第5章 CHAPTER I ALLAN LEARNS FRENCH(2)

There was nothing remarkable about my introduction to Marie Marais. I did not rescue her from any attack of a wild beast or pull her out of a raging river in a fashion suited to romance. Indeed, we interchanged our young ideas across a small and extremely massive table, which, in fact, had once done duty as a block for the chopping up of meat. To this hour I can see the hundreds of lines running criss-cross upon its surface, especially those opposite to where I used to sit.

One day, several years after my father had emigrated to the Cape, the Heer Marais arrived at our house in search, I think, of some lost oxen.

He was a thin, bearded man with rather wild, dark eyes set close together, and a quick nervous manner, not in the least like that of a Dutch Boer--or so I recall him. My father received him courteously and asked him to stop to dine, which he did.

They talked together in French, a tongue that my father knew well, although he had not used it for years; Dutch he could not, or, rather, would not, speak if he could help it, and Mr. Marais preferred not to talk English. To meet someone who could converse in French delighted him, and although his version of the language was that of two centuries before and my father's was largely derived from reading, they got on very well together, if not too fast.

At length, after a pause, Mr. Marais, pointing to myself, a small and stubbly-haired youth with a sharp nose, asked my father whether he would like me to be instructed in the French tongue. The answer was that nothing would please him better.

"Although," he added severely, "to judge by my own experience where Latin and Greek are concerned, I doubt his capacity to learn anything."

So an arrangement was made that I should go over for two days in each week to Maraisfontein, sleeping there on the intervening night, and acquire a knowledge of the French tongue from a tutor whom Mr. Marais had hired to instruct his daughter in that language and other subjects.

I remember that my father agreed to pay a certain proportion of this tutor's salary, a plan which suited the thrifty Boer very well indeed.

Thither, accordingly, I went in due course, nothing loth, for on the veld between our station and Maraisfontein many pauw and koran--that is, big and small bustards--were to be found, to say nothing of occasional buck, and I was allowed to carry a gun, which even in those days I could use fairly well. So to Maraisfontein I rode on the appointed day, attended by a Hottentot after-rider, a certain Hans, of whom I shall have a good deal to tell. I enjoyed very goof sport on the road, arriving at the stead laden with one pauw, two koran, and a little klipspringer buck which I had been lucky enough to shoot as it bounded out of some rocks in front of me.

There was a peach orchard planted round Maraisfontein, which just then was a mass of lovely pink blossom, and as I rode through it slowly, not being sure of my way to the house, a lanky child appeared in front of me, clad in a frock which exactly matched the colour of the peach bloom.

I can see her now, her dark hair hanging down her back, and her big, shy eyes staring at me from the shadow of the Dutch "kappie" which she wore. Indeed, she seemed to be all eyes, like a "dikkop" or thick-headed plover; at any rate, I noted little else about her.

I pulled up my pony and stared at her, feeling very shy and not knowing what to say. For a while she stared back at me, being afflicted, presumably, with the same complaint, then spoke with an effort, in a voice that was very soft and pleasant.

"Are you the little Allan Quatermain who is coming to learn French with me?" she asked in Dutch.

"Of course," I answered in the same tongue, which I knew well; "but why do you call me little, missie? I am taller than you," I added indignantly, for when I was young my lack of height was always a sore point with me.

"I think not," she replied. "But get off that horse, and we will measure here against this wall."

So I dismounted, and, having assured herself that I had no heels to my boots (I was wearing the kind of raw-hide slippers that the Boers call "veld-shoon"), she took the writing slate which she was carrying--it had no frame, I remember, being, in fact, but a piece of the material used for roofing--and, pressing it down tight on my stubbly hair, which stuck up then as now, made a deep mark in the soft sandstone of the wall with the hard pointed pencil.

"There," she said, "that is justly done. Now, little Allan, it is your turn to measure me."

So I measured her, and, behold! she was the taller by a whole half-inch.

"You are standing on tiptoe," I said in my vexation.

"Little Allan," she replied, "to stand on tiptoe would be to lie before the good Lord, and when you come to know me better you will learn that, though I have a dreadful temper and many other sins, I do not lie."

I suppose that I looked snubbed and mortified, for she went on in her grave, grown-up way: "Why are you angry because God made me taller than you? especially as I am whole months older, for my father told me so.

Come, let us write our names against these marks, so that in a year or two you may see how you outgrow me." Then with the slate pencil she scratched "Marie" against her mark very deeply, so that it might last, she said; after which I wrote "Allan" against mine.

Alas! Within the last dozen years chance took me past Maraisfontein once more. The house had long been rebuilt, but this particular wall yet stood. I rode to it and looked, and there faintly could still be seen the name Marie, against the little line, and by it the mark that I had made. My own name and with it subsequent measurements were gone, for in the intervening forty years or so the sandstone had flaked away in places. Only her autograph remained, and when I saw it I think that I felt even worse than I did on finding whose was the old Bible that I had bought upon the market square at Maritzburg.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 写给青青的信

    写给青青的信

    既然已经说了不可能,只能把故事讲完,心里有好多话要讲,无处可放,只能写出来,
  • 你与我的青葱岁月

    你与我的青葱岁月

    幼时的娃娃亲,高中时的相恋,大学时的分离。两年岁月,究竟何去何从?
  • 傲娇竹马住隔壁:101次告白

    傲娇竹马住隔壁:101次告白

    他住在她家的隔壁,一不小心霸占了她一天。从此,她被他缠上。“竹马!我不要你了!我不要你了!我不要你了!”就当她把重要的事情说了三遍之后。某男终于愿意放她走了——可是等等。。“我们已经分了!你跟着我做什么!”“是啊!你分了我的心,可你带走了我的身体!”说完,某男把一张分手协议书拿出来,上面写着分手后:除他的心不要,车子归她,房子归她,公司归她,他的身体也。。是她的。
  • 神机残篇

    神机残篇

    神机,启动一类文明的创灭至尊,偶然在米四的身上兑现了,这种兑现为他带来了各种改变,这些改变怎么看怎么像是个笑话,包括他不得不通过异性完成的神使进化,包括扭转了他价值观的宇宙元的构成,包括他居然一直生活在一个奇怪的人身边,那个奇怪的人居然来自一个结婚要买房买车的特殊世界^^^OK,米四并不想做英雄,他也将不会是一个英雄,他拥有太始之初独一无二的身份___一个性情略带猥琐的小暖男个性神使,这个神使将带着他那一堆美眉们,毁灭这个地球,做独一无二的反派!
  • 雷电侠LOL

    雷电侠LOL

    @@一次意外事故差点夺去屌丝眼镜男谢普克的生命,但也让他获得了能召唤雷电能量的特殊能力。从此,英雄救美,拯救市民,维护世界和平的重任就降落到他头上了……本书粉丝微博http://www.*****.com/?u/5796214257
  • 都市血爵

    都市血爵

    喂,我就是想吸口血。你能不能不要这么快光溜溜跑到床上做出任君采撷的模样。喂,我就是想吸口血。你们要不要为今天晚上谁暖床而打起来?你们打归打,别扒衣服啊。喂,我就是想吸口血。美女老师,我不用辅导的。即使辅导,你能不能不要穿个睡衣辅导我。什么,有人抢我女人!小弟们,过去打断他三条腿。论初生吸血鬼窃玉偷香……啊呸,吸血生存、嚣张成长的故事
  • 穿越千年当老大

    穿越千年当老大

    老大意外穿越到华夏国,阴差阳错发生了一连串让人捧腹大笑的故事,原本只想在扬州逍遥自在一世的他却意外的卷入政治斗争的旋窝,命运一步步将他推上风口浪尖,为了家人、兄弟还有心爱的女人,他最终选择了激流勇进。在社会争相攀附权贵的大背景下,在一幕幕争权夺利的斗争当中,在血雨腥风的战场上,他将怎样把握自己的命运,又将如何演义跨越千年的传说……
  • 天之恋,爱神之箭

    天之恋,爱神之箭

    这也太乌龙了吧?只是救人而已,怎么让自己变成了丘比特留在人间的孩子?可是更让人无语的事情还在后边呢,原本是为了摆脱韩千夜这个“噩梦”,想帮他撮合一段姻缘,结果爱神之箭却阴差阳错射中了校草枫溪,令他对我一见钟情,并导致两位校园风云人物同时对我展开了追求……而我也真是够白痴的,居然自动忽略了韩千夜的数次告白,让他无比纠结……迷糊又迟钝的小女生景月夕与毒蛇校草以及阳光学长之间令人哭笑不得的三角爱情游戏,正在火辣辣地上演!
  • 变态少爷PK机灵鬼丫头

    变态少爷PK机灵鬼丫头

    地震把她震到古代去,她认了!让她从天而降把帅帅的富二代给砸傻了,算她自己倒霉,她也认了,但是,可恶的是,那个傻少爷说:“你把本少爷砸傻了,你要陪我一辈子。”听听,这是一个傻子能说的话么?她的嘴角在不断的抽搐抽搐!她看他是装傻吧!行!让他装!她要让他知道厉害!情节虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 行走在冬天的云

    行走在冬天的云

    “人是什么?”“人就是一片行走在冬天的云?”“……”“生得没有着落,死得平平淡淡,似乎从来没有来过……”