登陆注册
37844800000040

第40章 CHAPTER XVIII MUSIC(1)

Boyhood is the longest time in life for a boy. The last term of the school-year is made of decades, not of weeks, and living through them is like waiting for the millennium. But they do pass, somehow, and at last there came a day when Penrod was one of a group that capered out from the gravelled yard of "Ward School, Nomber Seventh," carolling a leave-taking of the institution, of their instructress, and not even forgetting Mr. Capps, the janitor.

"Good-bye, teacher! Good-bye, school!

Good-bye, Cappsie, dern ole fool!"

Penrod sang the loudest. For every boy, there is an age when he "finds his voice." Penrod's had not "changed," but he had found it. Inevitably that thing had come upon his family and the neighbours; and his father, a somewhat dyspeptic man, quoted frequently the expressive words of the "Lady of Shalott," but there were others whose sufferings were as poignant.

Vacation-time warmed the young of the world to pleasant languor; and a morning came that was like a brightly coloured picture in a child's fairy story. Miss Margaret Schofield, reclining in a hammock upon the front porch, was beautiful in the eyes of a newly made senior, well favoured and in fair raiment, beside her. A guitar rested lightly upon his knee, and he was trying to play--a matter of some difficulty, as the floor of the porch also seemed inclined to be musical. From directly under his feet came a voice of song, shrill, loud, incredibly piercing and incredibly flat, dwelling upon each syllable with incomprehensible reluctance to leave it.

"I have lands and earthly pow-wur.

I'd give all for a now-wur, Whi-ilst setting at MY-Y-Y dear old mother's knee-ee, So-o-o rem-mem-bur whilst you're young----"

Miss Schofield stamped heartily upon the musical floor.

"It's Penrod," she explained. "The lattice at the end of the porch is loose, and he crawls under and comes out all bugs.

He's been having a dreadful singing fit lately--running away to picture shows and vaudeville, I suppose."

Mr. Robert Williams looked upon her yearningly. He touched a thrilling chord on his guitar and leaned nearer. "But you said you have missed me," he began. I----"

The voice of Penrod drowned all other sounds.

"So-o-o rem-mem-bur, whi-i-ilst you're young, That the day-a-ys to you will come, When you're o-o-old and only in the way, Do not scoff at them BEE-cause----"

"PENROD!" Miss Schofield stamped again.

"You DID say you'd missed me," said Mr. Robert Williams, seizing hurriedly upon the silence. "Didn't you say----"

A livelier tune rose upward.

"Oh, you talk about your fascinating beauties, Of your dem-O-zells, your belles, But the littil dame I met, while in the city, She's par excellaws the queen of all the swells.

She's sweeter far----"

Margaret rose and jumped up and down repeatedly in a well-calculated area, whereupon the voice of Penrod cried chokedly, "QUIT that!" and there were subterranean coughings and sneezings.

"You want to choke a person to death?" he inquired severely, appearing at the end of the porch, a cobweb upon his brow. And, continuing, he put into practice a newly acquired phrase, "You better learn to be more considerick of other people's comfort."

Slowly and grievedly he withdrew, passed to the sunny side of the house, reclined in the warm grass beside his wistful Duke, and presently sang again.

"She's sweeter far than the flower I named her after, And the memery of her smile it haunts me YET!

When in after years the moon is soffly beamun' And at eve I smell the smell of mignonette I will re-CALL that----"

"Pen-ROD!"

Mr. Schofield appeared at an open window upstairs, a book in his hand.

"Stop it!" he commanded. "Can't I stay home with a headache ONE morning from the office without having to listen to--I never DID hear such squawking!" He retired from the window, having too impulsively called upon his Maker. Penrod, shocked and injured, entered the house, but presently his voice was again audible as far as the front porch. He was holding converse with his mother, somewhere in the interior.

"Well, what of it? Sam Williams told me his mother said if Bob ever did think of getting married to Margaret, his mother said she'd like to know what in the name o' goodness they expect to----"

Bang! Margaret thought it better to close the front door.

The next minute Penrod opened it. "I suppose you want the whole family to get a sunstroke," he said reprovingly. "Keepin' every breath of air out o' the house on a day like this!"

And he sat down implacably in the doorway.

The serious poetry of all languages has omitted the little brother; and yet he is one of the great trials of love--the immemorial burden of courtship. Tragedy should have found place for him, but he has been left to the haphazard vignettist of Grub Street. He is the grave and real menace of lovers; his head is sacred and terrible, his power illimitable. There is one way--only one--to deal with him; but Robert Williams, having a brother of Penrod's age, understood that way.

Robert had one dollar in the world. He gave it to Penrod immediately.

Enslaved forever, the new Rockefeller rose and went forth upon the highway, an overflowing heart bursting the floodgates of song.

"In her eyes the light of love was soffly gleamun', So sweetlay, So neatlay.

On the banks the moon's soff light was brightly streamun', Words of love I then spoke TO her.

She was purest of the PEW-er:

`Littil sweetheart, do not sigh, Do not weep and do not cry.

I will build a littil cottige just for yew-EW-EW and I.'"

In fairness, it must be called to mind that boys older than Penrod have these wellings of pent melody; a wife can never tell when she is to undergo a musical morning, and even the golden wedding brings her no security, a man of ninety is liable to bust-loose in song, any time.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 我要娶嫦娥

    我要娶嫦娥

    我要娶嫦娥,我要娶嫦娥,我要娶嫦娥,重要的事情说三遍。我要改封神,我要改封神,我要改封神,重要的事情说三遍。我要逆西游,我要逆西游,我要逆西游,重要的事情说三遍。
  • 影后是个受气者

    影后是个受气者

    陆楠珏第一次看见她的时候,她6岁,只是小小的一只躲在长姐身后,脸上还挂着泪。他问,“你要不要和我回家?”她看了看长姐的脸色,晃晃脑袋。-当陆楠珏第二次看见她时,她16岁,虽然还是躲在长姐身后,不过脸已经面目全非。“脸怎么回事?”陆楠珏想要触碰她的脸颊,却被年祎挥开了手,“姐姐说不可以碰...”她声音又低又哑,让人心疼。“再问一遍,要不要跟我回家?”陆楠珏看着瘦骨嶙峋的女孩,疼惜的问道。“不可以,我要待在姐姐身边...”“那你记住,有事给我打电话,我随时都在。”陆楠珏递给年祎一张名片,转身走了。-仅隔几个月,陆楠珏期待的电话终于被打通。“大哥哥,可以带我回家吗?祎祎没有家了...姐姐和爸爸都不要祎祎了...”年祎带着哭腔给他打了电话。“好。”后来,年祎才知道,这个电话,只有她能打进来。——他当然知道,年祎所谓的长姐年妃只不过是拿年祎当棋子。当年妃让年祎去帮忙拍戏时,年祎兴奋的跳了起来。多年以后她才知道,姐姐只不过是不想拍戏,把自己当作替身了而已...女主性格:软弱,可爱男主性格:冷漠,霸道/爽文双洁1v1/娱乐圈/
  • 小说选刊(2012年第4期)

    小说选刊(2012年第4期)

    本期收录了众多名家的优秀作品,如王蒙的《悬疑的荒芜》,陶丽群的《一塘香荷》和郝炜的《淑婷》等,以飨读者。
  • 凤临天下之王妃有毒

    凤临天下之王妃有毒

    她,曾是举国闻名的第一美人,却因怀了野种,而被乱棍打死。腹中胎儿与她一并丧命于荒野中。她,本是人人敬重的一国之后,却因毁容,而被打入冷宫。被最致爱的人凌迟而死。当风云涌,天生异象,下血雨之时,她成了她,从此天下不再太平……这个世界,她要主宰,那些人,她要他们都跪在她脚下臣服!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 一直躲在西藏

    一直躲在西藏

    我们一直在寻找人生的意义,最后却发现根本没有意义可追寻。活着就是最大的意义。用心甘情愿的态度,过随遇而安的生活。
  • 魔女霸爱拽公子

    魔女霸爱拽公子

    “做我的男朋友,否则我可不保证不会说出去什么!”三次的告白都被他不留情的拒绝。不过秉着坚持就是胜利的原则,第四次她终于抓住了他的把柄,成功成为他的女友!她刁蛮任性,上学第一天便惹上四公子,还扬言要追上四公子之首!当魔女遇到拽公子,是她霸爱了他,还是他诱骗了她?
  • 玄尘大陆

    玄尘大陆

    无边的玄尘大陆,大大小小的宗族派别在此林立,千古血脉传承于世,通天武学流传至今,在这片大陆,人们以强者为尊,以力量为目的,不断修炼。一位堕落的少年为保护这片大陆与自己所爱的人踏上了艰苦的修炼之路。别离易,相见难,何处锁雕鞍?春将去,人未还,这其间,殃及杀愁眉泪眼。
  • 大仙侠之仙路奇谭

    大仙侠之仙路奇谭

    大唐贞观末年,赵子阳在一个普普通通的村子里出生,可怜他出生后没多久,他就永远的失去了父母,于是跟着奶奶一起生活。当他十岁时交到了第一个朋友——沈凌香。但后来经历了一些变故使他离开了凌香跟着一位仙人开始修行。十年后,他阴差阳错的再次遇到儿时玩伴。此时,他已不复当年的爽朗与活泼。因为沈凌香的坚持,最终他们结伴而行。《山河社稷图》中到底有什么秘密、神魔仙妖之间到底有什么纠葛。一个天真开朗的痴情少女,一个自知不可以拥有感情的热血少年,他们的结果究竟会怎样?漫漫修仙路中他们又将擦出怎样的火花.......
  • 富贵短篇集

    富贵短篇集

    无任何恐怖元素的。短篇集。偏现实荒诞类希望你能带着轻松的心情阅读
  • 自己是最后的医生

    自己是最后的医生

    本书共分为四册,内容包括:《黄帝内经》说起;脏腑决定病理变化;透过症状看病理变化;经络是人体内外沟通的桥梁;把握中年健康;平安度过智慧的人生等。