登陆注册
15443300000050

第50章 #Chapter III The Round Road; or, the Desertion Cha

So the great Confucius taught us that if we do always the same things with our hands and our feet as do the wise beasts and birds, with our heads we may think many things: yes, my Lord, and doubt many things.

So long as men offer rice at the right season, and kindle lanterns at the right hour, it matters little whether there be gods or no.

For these things are not to appease gods, but to appease men.'

"He came yet closer to me, so that he seemed enormous; yet his look was very gentle.

"`Break your temple,' he said, `and your gods will be freed.'

"And I, smiling at his simplicity, answered: `And so, if there be no gods, I shall have nothing but a broken temple.'

"And at this, that giant from whom the light of reason was withheld threw out his mighty arms and asked me to forgive him.

And when I asked him for what he should be forgiven he answered:

`For being right.'

"`Your idols and emperors are so old and wise and satisfying,' he cried, `it is a shame that they should be wrong.

We are so vulgar and violent, we have done you so many iniquities-- it is a shame we should be right after all.'

"And I, still enduring his harmlessness, asked him why he thought that he and his people were right.

"And he answered: `We are right because we are bound where men should be bound, and free where men should be free.

We are right because we doubt and destroy laws and customs-- but we do not doubt our own right to destroy them. For you live by customs, but we live by creeds. Behold me! In my country I am called Smip. My country is abandoned, my name is defiled, because I pursue around the world what really belongs to me.

You are steadfast as the trees because you do not believe.

I am as fickle as the tempest because I do believe.

I do believe in my own house, which I shall find again.

And at the last remaineth the green lantern and the red post.'

"I said to him: `At the last remaineth only wisdom.'

"But even as I said the word he uttered a horrible shout, and rushing forward disappeared among the trees.

I have not seen this man again nor any other man.

The virtues of the wise are of fine brass.

"Wong-Hi."

"The next letter I have to read," proceeded Arthur Inglewood, "will probably make clear the nature of our client's curious but innocent experiment.

It is dated from a mountain village in California, and runs as follows:--

"Sir,--A person answering to the rather extraordinary description required certainly went, some time ago, over the high pass of the Sierras on which I live and of which I am probably the sole stationary inhabitant.

I keep a rudimentary tavern, rather ruder than a hut, on the very top of this specially steep and threatening pass.

My name is Louis Hara, and the very name may puzzle you about my nationality. Well, it puzzles me a great deal.

When one has been for fifteen years without society it is hard to have patriotism; and where there is not even a hamlet it is difficult to invent a nation. My father was an Irishman of the fiercest and most free-shooting of the old Californian kind.

My mother was a Spaniard, proud of descent from the old Spanish families round San Francisco, yet accused for all that of some admixture of Red Indian blood. I was well educated and fond of music and books. But, like many other hybrids, I was too good or too bad for the world; and after attempting many things I was glad enough to get a sufficient though a lonely living in this little cabaret in the mountains.

In my solitude I fell into many of the ways of a savage.

Like an Eskimo, I was shapeless in winter; like a Red Indian, I wore in hot summers nothing but a pair of leather trousers, with a great straw hat as big as a parasol to defend me from the sun.

I had a bowie knife at my belt and a long gun under my arm; and I dare say I produced a pretty wild impression on the few peaceable travellers that could climb up to my place.

But I promise you I never looked as mad as that man did.

Compared with him I was Fifth Avenue.

"I dare say that living under the very top of the Sierras has an odd effect on the mind; one tends to think of those lonely rocks not as peaks coming to a point, but rather as pillars holding up heaven itself.

Straight cliffs sail up and away beyond the hope of the eagles; cliffs so tall that they seem to attract the stars and collect them as sea-crags collect a mere glitter of phosphorous. These terraces and towers of rock do not, like smaller crests, seem to be the end of the world.

Rather they seem to be its awful beginning: its huge foundations.

We could almost fancy the mountain branching out above us like a tree of stone, and carrying all those cosmic lights like a candelabrum.

For just as the peaks failed us, soaring impossibly far, so the stars crowded us (as it seemed), coming impossibly near.

The spheres burst about us more like thunderbolts hurled at the earth than planets circling placidly about it.

"All this may have driven me mad: I am not sure. I know there is one angle of the road down the pass where the rock leans out a little, and on window nights I seem to hear it clashing overhead with other rocks-- yes, city against city and citadel against citadel, far up into the night.

It was on such an evening that the strange man struggled up the pass.

Broadly speaking, only strange men did struggle up the pass.

But I had never seen one like this one before.

"He carried (I cannot conceive why) a long, dilapidated garden rake, all bearded and bedraggled with grasses, so that it looked like the ensign of some old barbarian tribe.

His hair, which was as long and rank as the grass, hung down below his huge shoulders; and such clothes as clung about him were rags and tongues of red and yellow, so that he had the air of being dressed like an Indian in feathers or autumn leaves.

The rake or pitchfork, or whatever it was, he used sometimes as an alpenstock, sometimes (I was told) as a weapon.

I do not know why he should have used it as a weapon, for he had, and afterwards showed me, an excellent six-shooter in his pocket.

`But THAT,' he said, `I use only for peaceful purposes.'

I have no notion what he meant.

同类推荐
  • 佛说金色王经

    佛说金色王经

    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。
  • 会仙女志

    会仙女志

    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。
  • 大乘净土赞

    大乘净土赞

    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。
  • 四阿含暮抄解

    四阿含暮抄解

    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。
  • 称扬诸佛功德经

    称扬诸佛功德经

    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
  • 弟子的天下行走

    弟子的天下行走

    每个人都有故事,或喜或悲。小和尚放下经书,拿起屠刀,是何缘由。他想强大,却命运多舛。当他站在世界的对立面,那时才懂得,一个人的强大不在于能毁灭什么,而是在于能保护什么。
  • 蟾蜍之梦

    蟾蜍之梦

    撑起天空的中央之龙,缚住四海的环世之龙,撑起大地的离界之龙,这里是一个与龙息息相关的世界,无数生命在龙的传说和故事中长大。在女巫詹妮弗芙的城堡中,小小的蟾蜍阿懒坚持认为自己是一只,啊不,是一位尊贵的神龙。在年复一年的嬉笑中,阿懒终于迈出了“变回”神龙的第一步,离开了熟悉的城堡,开始一蹦一蹦地蹦进了这个奇妙而多姿多彩的世界。前方等待它的究竟会是什么?
  • 异界总裁妖灵妻

    异界总裁妖灵妻

    他是风流不羁的总裁,她是娇小萌妻上古妖灵,为爱重生她损耗仙寿续千世姻缘,为爱牵手他魂归上古再修侠骨仙风,蹬三界巅峰战万世魔王,功成名就之时他选择散尽灵力甘为一世凡人,再到今生只愿执子之手。
  • 冥配

    冥配

    农历七月初七为中国的情人节,一名妓女突然失踪。这件本不应该引人注意的事情却令隍都城最有权势的孙老板坐卧不宁。鬼棺新娘,这是一件极其恐怖的事件,每年的七月十五日,鬼节的晚上,总有一具被肢解后又拼凑在一起的女尸穿着光鲜的喜服出现在孙老板所经营的贵族公墓中。一个混混的家中无意间发现了一张光盘,没有经过任何剪辑,光盘上记录着真实的杀人场面。三桩案子错踪复杂地纠缠在一起,似乎相互之间有着某种联系,又似乎根本没有联系,各色各样的人开始粉墨登场……信仰,权势,阴谋,所有的元素都交织在一起,勾勒出一副邪恶。
  • 山纪

    山纪

    大约在一百万年前,乾坤大陆仙力枯竭,繁盛了万世的修真文化走向了末路,修道者们残喘了一万年后也即将踏入穷途。就在他们心灰意冷,面临陨落时,五座蕴含着无穷仙力的仙山横空出世。仙山开始为枯竭的大陆灌充仙力,修道者如获新生。因此,衰败的修真文化再次崛起,并且迅猛发展,直至今日,实现了前所未有的繁荣,形成了又一个修仙的新纪元。一百万年来,所有的修道者都视那五座仙山为救世主,然而仙山的真正来历却无人知晓,也无从知晓。我们这个故事,就是从这五座仙山开始的……
  • 相公,你真好

    相公,你真好

    三天后、要嫁个一个不认识的人。郁闷。不能出逃、不然害了清儿。郁闷。那男人、人帅但脾气很不好。郁闷。可是、他离开我怎么那么想他呢。郁闷。我昏迷了、他居然一直守在我身边不吃不喝。郁闷。长的这么帅、惹得宋如儿一直找她麻烦。郁闷。
  • 虚空剑

    虚空剑

    虚无可破天,虚剑能开道,山川大地……难道皆是虚无?一个少年将揭开整个秘密……
  • 万道熔炉

    万道熔炉

    五百年后,修炼时代来临,强大的修士能飞天遁地,挑山扛岳,煮海焚天!本是资质平庸的王集,因为随他穿越而来的熔炉,任何武学都能在极短的时间内学会。熔炉通万界,与各个世界的天才,天骄争锋,看谁是唯一至尊。
  • 非你不娶:妖孽王爷唯爱恶女
  • 驱雷掣电

    驱雷掣电

    我若不动,晴空万里,我若一动,雷霆万钧!同样的修炼,不一样的故事。