您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Gideon’s Band: A Tale of the Mississippi
Chapter 3. Certain Passengers
George Washington Cable
下载:Gideon’s Band: A Tale of the Mississippi.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ CHAPTER III. CERTAIN PASSENGERS
       From his dizzy outlook the older youth dropped his calm scrutiny upon the inner occupants as they alighted and followed the boy on board. First came a red-ringleted, fifteen-year-old sister, fairly good-looking, almost too free of glance, and--to her high-perched critic--urgently eligible to longer skirts. Behind her appeared an old, very black nurse in very blue calico and very white turban and bosom kerchief; and lastly a mother--of many children, one would have said--still perfect in complexion, gracefully rounded, and beautiful.
       This was the first time he on the hurricane deck had ever seen them, but he knew at once who they were and looked the closer on that account. The self-oblivious elation with which the slim lass gave her eyes and mind to everything except her own footing caused him to keep his chief watch on her. He even beckoned a black deck hand to do the same. Wherever her glance went her gay interest went with it, either in a soft soliloquizing laugh or in some demonstration less definite though more radiant; some sign of delight from her lips, her eyes, her brow, her springing step, dancing curls, or supple arms. The youth on the roof's edge deepened his frown. At a point on the stage where its sheer, naked sides spanned the narrow chasm through which the waters swept between boat and wharf, her feet strayed too near one perilous edge, and just then her eyes went up to him. The two glances had barely met when she tripped and staggered. With a dozen others aboard and ashore, he gave a start. She sent him a look of terror, then turned from deadly pale to rosy red and gasped her thanks to the smiling deckhand, whose clutch had saved her life. The next instant she was laughing elatedly to her horrified nurse, and so disappeared with her kindred on the lower deck and front stairs.
       The mellow boom of the third and last parting signal diverted the general mind, and a glance behind him showed the youth the close and welcome presence of that superior-looking man in answer to whose gesture the pilot had tolled the earlier bell. But this person was closely preoccupied. Now his capable glance ran aft along every marginal line of the boat, now it dropped below to where the big stage lay drawn in athwart the forward deck from guard to guard. Now he gave short, quiet orders to wharf and forecastle, now a single word or two to the pilot-house. Far below, the engine bells jingled. The bowline was in. A yeast of waters ran forward from the backing wheels, the breast line slacked away in fierce jerks, and the _Votaress_ began to depart.
       Meantime there was an odd stir on shore. A cab whirled up furiously and two more youths, shapely, handsome, and fashionable, twins beyond cavil and noticeably older than their twenty years, visibly rich in fine qualities but as visibly reckless as to what they did with them, sprang out, flushed and imperious, to wave the _Votaress_. One of her guards was still rubbing along the steamer beside her, but before the pair could dash aboard this other boat and half across her deck, a gap had opened, impossible to leap. They halted in rage as the more compact youth on the moving steamer's roof, catching their attention, pointed a good two miles up the river front. Yet what he said they would not have known had not her mate repeated from the forecastle:
       "Post forty-six! Drive up thah! We stop thah fo' a load of emigrants!"
       They fled back to the cab. Aboard the receding boat the ruthless engine bells jingled on; the broad waterside and the city behind it seemed, from her decks, to draw away into the western clouds, and the yellow river spread wide its shores in welcome to her swinging form. Now its mighty current seemed to quicken and quicken as she gradually overcame her down-stream drift, the ship-lined shores ceased to creep up-stream--began to creep down--and her black crew, standing close about the capstan, broke majestically into song:
       "Oh, rock me, Julie, rock me."
       From the forecastle her swivel pealed, her burgee ran down the jack-staff, a soft, continuous tremor set in among all her parts, her scape-pipes ceased their alternating roars, her engines breathed quietly through her vast funnels, the flood spurted at her cutwater, white torrents leaped and chased each other from her fluttering wheels, her own breeze fanned every brow, and the _Votaress_ was under way. _
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

Chapter 1. The Steamboat Levee
Chapter 2. The "Votaress"
Chapter 3. Certain Passengers
Chapter 4. The First Two Miles
Chapter 5. Ramsey Hayle
Chapter 6. Hayle's Twins
Chapter 7. Supper
Chapter 8. Questions
Chapter 9. Sitting Silent
Chapter 10. Peril
Chapter 11. First Night-Watch
Chapter 12. Hugh And The Twins
Chapter 13. The Superabounding Ramsey
Chapter 14. The Committee Of Seven
Chapter 15. Morning Watch
Chapter 16. Phyllis
Chapter 17. "It's A-Happmin' Yit--To We All"
Chapter 18. Ramsey Wins A Point Or Two
Chapter 19. This Way To Womanhood
Chapter 20. Ladies' Table
Chapter 21. Ramsey And The Bishop
Chapter 22. Basile And What He Saw
Chapter 23. A State Of Affairs
Chapter 24. A Senator Enlightened
Chapter 25. "Please Assemble"
Chapter 26. Alarm And Distress
Chapter 27. Pilots' Eyes
Chapter 28. Words And The "Westwood"
Chapter 29. Studying The River--Together
Chapter 30. Phyllis Again
Chapter 31. The Burning Boat
Chapter 32. A Prophet In The Wilderness
Chapter 33. Twins And Texas Tender
Chapter 34. The Peacemakers
Chapter 35. Unsettled Weather
Chapter 36. Captain's Room
Chapter 37. Basile Uses A Cane
Chapter 38. The Cane Again
Chapter 39. Fortitude
Chapter 40. Ramsey At The Footlights
Chapter 41. Quits
Chapter 42. Against Kin
Chapter 43. Which From Which
Chapter 44. Forbearance
Chapter 45. Applause
Chapter 46. After The Play
Chapter 47. Insomnia
Chapter 48. "California"
Chapter 49. Kangaroo Point
Chapter 50. "Delta Will Do"
Chapter 51. Loving-Kindness
Chapter 52. Love Runs Rough But Runs On
Chapter 53. Trading For Phyllis
Chapter 54. "Can't!"
Chapter 55. Love Makes A Cut-Off
Chapter 56. Eight Years After
Chapter 57. Farewell, "Votaress"
Chapter 58. 'Lindy Lowe
Chapter 59. "Conclusively"
Chapter 60. Once More Hugh Sings
Chapter 61. Wanted, Hayle's Twins
Chapter 62. Euthanasia
Chapter 63. The Captain's Chair