登陆注册
5155500000004

第4章

Stevenson, cavalry sabers, W.Clark Russell, pistols, and Dumas; Jack London, poignards, bowie knives, Stanley Weyman, Captain Marryat, and Dumas; sword canes, Scottish claymores, Cuban machetes, Conan Doyle, Harrison Ainsworth, dress swords, and Dumas; stilettos, daggers, hunting knives, Fenimore Cooper, G.P.R.James, broadswords, Dumas; Gustave Aimard, Rudyard Kipling, dueling swords, Dumas; F.Du Boisgobey, Malay krises, Walter Scott, stick pistols, scimitars, Anthony Hope, single sticks, foils, Dumas; jungles of arms, jumbles of books; arms of all makes and periods; arms on the walls, in the corners, over the fireplace, leaning against the bookshelves, lying in ambush under the bed, peeping out of the wardrobe, propping the windows open, serving as paper weights; pictures, warlike and romantic prints and engravings, pinned to the walls with daggers; in the wardrobe, coats and hats hanging from poignards and stilettos thrust into the wood instead of from nails or hooks.But of all the weapons it was the rapiers, of all the books it was Dumas, that he loved.There was Dumas in French, Dumas in English, Dumas with pictures, Dumas unillustrated, Dumas in cloth, Dumas in leather, Dumasin boards, Dumas in paper covers.Cleggett had been twenty years getting these arms and books together; often he had gone without a dinner in order to make a payment on some blade he fancied.And each weapon was also a book to him; he sensed their stories as he handled them; he felt the personalities of their former owners stirring in him when he picked them up.It was in that room that he dreamed; which is to say, it was in that room that he lived his real life.

Cleggett walked over to his writing desk and pulled out a bulky manuscript.It was his own work.Is it necessary to hint that it was a tale essentially romantic in character?

He flung it into the grate and set fire to it.It represented the labor of two years, but as he watched it burn, stirring the sheets now and then so the flames would catch them more readily, he smiled, unvisited by even the most shadowy second thought of regret.

For why the deuce should a man with $500,000 in his pocket write romances? Why should anyone write anything who is free to live? For the first time in his existence Cleggett was free.

He picked up a sword.It was one of his favorite rapiers.Sometimes people came out of the books--sometimes shadowy forms came back to claim the weapons that had been theirs--and Cleggett fought them.There was not an unscarred piece of furniture in the place.He bent the flexible blade in his hands, tried the point of it, formally saluted, brought the weapon to parade, dallied with his imaginary opponent's sword for an instant....

It seemed as if one of those terrible, but brilliant, duels, with which that room was so familiar, was about to be enacted....But he laid the rapier down.After all, the rapier is scarcely a thing of this century.Cleggett, for the first time, felt a little impatient with the rapier.It is all very well to DREAM with a rapier.But now, he was free; reality was before him; the world of actual adventure called.He had but to choose!

He considered.He tried to look into that bright, adventurous future.Presently he went to the window, and gazed out.Tides of night andmystery, flooding in from the farther, dark, mysterious ocean, all but submerged lower Manhattan; high and beautiful above these waves of shadow, triumphing over them and accentuating them, shone a star from the top of the Woolworth building; flecks of light indicated the noble curve of that great bridge which soars like a song in stone and steel above the shifting waters; the river itself was dotted here and there with moving lights; it was a nocturne waiting for its Whistler; here sea and city met in glamour and beauty and illusion.

But it was not the city which called to Cleggett.It was the sea.

A breeze blew in from the bay and stirred his window curtains; it was salt in his nostrils....And, staring out into the breathing night, he saw a succession of pictures....

Stripped to a pair of cotton trousers, with a dripping cutlass in one hand and a Colt's revolver in the other, an adventurer at the head of a bunch of dogs as desperate as himself fought his way across the reeking decks of a Chinese junk, to close in single combat with a gigantic one- eyed pirate who stood by the helm with a ring of dead men about him and a great two-handed sword upheaved....This adventurer was--Clement J.Cleggett!...

Through the phosphorescent waters of a summer sea, reckless of cruising sharks, a sailor's clasp knife in his teeth, glided noiselessly a strong swimmer; he reached the side of a schooner yacht from which rose the wild cries of beauty in distress, swarmed aboard with a muttered prayer that was half a curse, swept the water from his eyes, and with pale, stern face went about the bloody business of a hero....Again, this adventurer was Clement J.Cleggett!

Cleggett turned from the window."I'll do it," he cried."I'll do it!" He grasped a cutlass.

"Pirates!" he cried, swinging it about his head."That's the thing-- pirates and the China Seas!"And with one frightful sweep of his blade he disemboweled a sofacushion; the second blow clove his typewriting machine clean to the tattoo marks upon its breast; the third decapitated a sectional bookcase.

But what is a sectional bookcase to a man with $500,000 in his pocket and the Seven Seas before him?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 皇冠之只有守护

    皇冠之只有守护

    这本书没有大纲!没有大纲!没有大纲!(作者想到哪,写到哪!)
  • 余无言医案及医话

    余无言医案及医话

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 陔余丛考

    陔余丛考

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 网游之巨灵骑士

    网游之巨灵骑士

    【第一本扑街之作】当本就是一流骑士行列的宋浅获得上古遗失种族巨灵一族的传承……
  • 肥妃在上,爷在下!

    肥妃在上,爷在下!

    穿越第一日,他说,“尹如初!爱我,就用你的手满足我的女人!”于是,她晕沉沉找了根香蕉。穿越第二日,他说,“尹如初!谁给你的胆子敢动我的人!”她想了想,你岳母?第三日……直到有一天,他给她灌了药,然后将她跟一个男人关在一起。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 每天读点世界常识(套装共九册)

    每天读点世界常识(套装共九册)

    本套书共九册,《美国常识》解读了留学美国名校的申请智慧,全面介绍了在美国不能不吃的各种美食。《日本常识》用简单的语言让你了解你最想知道的日本常识。《俄罗斯常识》客观详细介绍了俄罗斯在政治、经济、军事、科技、教育、人文等领域的成就。《韩国常识》提供了一套全面而实用的在韩生活攻略。《印度常识》盘点了去印度最不能错过的热门旅游景点和人气美食。《东南亚常识》带你走进陌生而神秘的东南亚世界。《欧洲常识》切合实际解读赴欧生活的实用技巧,全面普及每个人都必须知道的欧洲知识。《非洲常识》带你发现神秘而野性的土地,探索狂野又柔情的文明,领略古老与现代的融合。《巴西常识》提供了一套全面而实用的在巴西生活的攻略。
  • 软萌巨星有点萌

    软萌巨星有点萌

    天赋,演技炸裂,被看好,被授予高度评价,看过她的作品便会期待她的未来,然而还是个孩子的她,突然遭遇不测,她离开了,彻底离开了,星光璀璨的地方还会再次拥有这样的未来巨星吗?八年后,一个看似软萌软萌,似乎还有些憨憨的年轻女孩走入了大众的视野,命运的蹉跎又将会给大众一个怎样的惊喜呢?安静,不争不抢,内向的性格,似乎没有存在感,但却又每一部作品都让人眼前一亮,这样的她适合娱乐圈的生存法则吗?
  • 武狂小道士

    武狂小道士

    命冲太岁巧机缘,顽儿入武命入玄。终返凡尘续凡命,却把狂命惹玄机。武道成狂念成痴,我命劫生向天问。人若阻我我人王,天若劫我我破天。小武阴差阳错踏上问武之道,只道是华夏真功夫,岂容质疑,胆敢犯者,狂扁之,暗倾心师姐不自知,终踏问仙界,大展武狂真功夫,混迹仙界立王道……我为狂,谁与争锋?
  • 废后重生农家种田忙

    废后重生农家种田忙

    废后重生成为农家小村姑,采棉花织纺布,赚点小钱养家糊口,本想这么清贫安稳过一世,却不想极品亲戚轮番上阵找茬打秋风,逼的她不得不泼辣刁蛮不讲理!来一个怼一个,来两个怼一双,看谁还敢觊觎她与家人辛辛苦苦攒下的家业!
  • 银河英雄传说

    银河英雄传说

    我们的征途是星辰大海!影响无数作家的亚洲科幻经典,全网独家首发!距今约一千六百年之后,当时宇宙中存在着两大势力,分别是专制的由皇帝与贵族支配,实行专制体制的“银河帝国”和标榜共和主义的民主国家的“自由行星同盟”。与两家进行商业活动的国家“费沙自治领”也扮演着重要角色。这三者相互牵制而又保持微妙的均势,直到常胜的战略天才莱因哈特的出现改变了这一切,率领两万艘舰队踏上征途的他,遇上了毕生的夙敌——同盟军的杨威利,二人展开了首次的智谋激斗。当前翻译版本由田中芳树先生授权《银河英雄传说》日文原版版权,并邀请到国内翻译名家重新翻译。当前版本有别于较早流行的台湾译者的版本,更加贴合当前大陆读者的句法习惯,并在田中芳树先生本人的指导下,纠正了较早翻译版本中字词含义的些许误差。考虑到翻译团队的效率,本书选择以连载方式为读者分阶段呈现。